Martin v. Hamilton State Bank

746 S.E.2d 750, 323 Ga. App. 185, 2013 Fulton County D. Rep. 2523, 2013 WL 3663719, 2013 Ga. App. LEXIS 667
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 16, 2013
DocketA13A0272, A13A0630
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 746 S.E.2d 750 (Martin v. Hamilton State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Hamilton State Bank, 746 S.E.2d 750, 323 Ga. App. 185, 2013 Fulton County D. Rep. 2523, 2013 WL 3663719, 2013 Ga. App. LEXIS 667 (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Phipps, Chief Judge.

In Martin v. Hamilton State Bank,1 (hereinafter “Martin I”) the first appearance of this dispute before this court, we affirmed the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to Bartow County Bank wherein the evidence showed that Larry Martin had failed to make payments required under the terms of several promissory notes and that Bartow County Bank had declared a default for nonpayment and accelerated the debt due under the notes.2 In reaching our decision we noted that, “After the notice of appeal was filed below, the assets of Bartow County Bank apparently were assigned to Hamilton State Bank,” and we allowed Hamilton State Bank (hereinafter “HSB”) to be substituted as a party for Bartow County Bank.3

Just over a month after Martin had filed in the trial court his notice of appeal giving rise to Martin I, HSB filed in the trial court a motion for substitution of party plaintiff, asserting that Bartow County Bank no longer had any interest in the assets associated with Martin’s loan, asserting that HSB owned Martin’s loan assets entirely, and moving for HSB’s substitution as the party plaintiff in place of Bartow County Bank. Approximately eight days after the motion for substitution of party was filed, the trial court entered two consent orders whereby Martin and HSB agreed that HSB would be substituted for Bartow County Bank as party plaintiff in the case, that the judgment entered in favor of Bartow County Bank and against Martin had been assigned to HSB and that the records of the superior court would be changed to reflect the assignment of that judgment to HSB; and that Martin would post a supersedeas bond in a set amount or pledge additional collateral with an agreed value of said set amount to secure the judgment entered in favor of HSB.

After the Supreme Court of Georgia denied a petition for writ of certiorari in Martin I, and after the remittitur from this court had issued, but before it was filed with the trial court clerk, Martin filed [186]*186in the trial court a document entitled “Defendant’s Emergency Motion for Expedited Hearing to Limit Fi Fa and Enforcement of Judgment and for Injunctive Relief Pursuant to Rule 6.7, URSC.” The remittitur was thereafter filed with the trial court clerk, and the trial court entered an order on the remittitur, responding therein to Martin’s emergency motion, and adopting this court’s decision in Martin I as the judgment of the trial court. It is from this order that Martin appeals in Case No. A13A0272.

After Martin filed a notice of appeal (giving rise to Case No. A13A0272), HSB moved the trial court to dismiss the appeal. The trial court entered an order in which it declined to dismiss the appeal, but ruled that the supersedeas bond it had ordered Martin to post after the filing of the notice of appeal giving rise to Martin I had expired. In the same order, the trial court thereupon issued another supersedeas bond — this one, from Martin’s appeal of the trial court’s order on the remittitur (Case No. A13A0272). It is from this order that Martin appeals in Case No. A13A0630.

Case No. A13A0272

1. Martin, in his emergency motion, asked the trial court to: (1) require that HSB prove that it had paid consideration for the judgment it had been assigned from Bartow County Bank; (2) limit any fi. fa. issued on the judgment to the amount of consideration HSB had paid for the judgment; (3) limit HSB’s enforcement of the judgment to the amount of the fi. fa.; and (4) enjoin the issuance of the fi. fa. to HSB and entry of the judgment on the general execution docket until such time as HSB established the consideration it had paid for the judgment.

Martin challenges the trial court’s adoption of the remittitur, particularly taking issue with that portion of the order wherein the trial court stated that at the time of Martin’s involvement with setting the supersedeas bond, Martin had an opportunity to raise the issue he now raises on appeal as to the consideration purportedly paid by HSB to purchase the judgment; but, Martin did not “challenge the value of [HSBj’s rights as successor.” Instead, the trial court stated, he had, in a supersedeas bond filed with the court, “bound himself to [HSB] (not Bartow County Bank) ... as principal and surety, for payment of the judgment in full.”

Indeed, the record shows that after Martin filed the notice of appeal giving rise to Martin I, he consented to the entry of two orders that were signed and filed the same day. In one order, Martin agreed to the substitution of HSB as party plaintiff for Bartow County Bank, [187]*187pursuant to OCGA § 9-11-25 (c).4 In the other order, Martin agreed forthetrialcourtto“[o]rder[ ], [d]ecree[ ], and [a]djudge[ ]”thatthe judgment entered in favor of Bartow County Bank and against Martin, “has been assigned to [HSB] and the records of the Superior Court shall be changed to reflect the assignment of that judgment to [HSB]”; that Martin is “ordered to post a supersedeas bond in [a set amount] to secure the judgment in favor of [HSB]”; that in lieu of posting the supersedeas bond in the amount set, Martin could, within a set time, pledge additional collateral with an agreed value of the amount of the bond set and which was “acceptable to [HSB]”; that in the event collateral “acceptable to [HSB]” was not pledged, and no supersedeas bond was posted within the time set, “the automatic supersedeas provided by law shall be lifted and [HSB] shall have such remedies as are available under the law in such circumstances”; and that in the event Martin pledged collateral “acceptable to [HSB]” in lieu of bond, the automatic supersedeas would remain in full force and effect during the course of the appeal.

In his appellate brief, Martin cites Durham v. Crawford5 and other cases for the following general rule:

[A] former judgment binds only as to the facts in issue and events existing at the time of such judgment, and does not prevent a re-examination even of the same questions between the same parties, if in the interval the material facts have so changed or such new events have occurred as to alter the legal rights or relations of the litigants; although, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, the facts as they existed at the time of the former judgment would be presumed to continue.6

Martin asserts that at the time the trial court issued its order granting summary judgment leading to Martin I, the “purported assignment of [Bartow County Bank]’s . . . judgment against [Martin]” had not yet occurred. Thus, he argues, when the remittitur from this court was filed in the trial court, re-vesting jurisdiction of the case in the trial court, material facts had changed or new events had occurred; those facts or events altered the legal rights or relations of [188]*188the litigants, requiring a re-examination of the issues between the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
746 S.E.2d 750, 323 Ga. App. 185, 2013 Fulton County D. Rep. 2523, 2013 WL 3663719, 2013 Ga. App. LEXIS 667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-hamilton-state-bank-gactapp-2013.