MONTE DAVIS v. LAND-RON, INC.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 22, 2024
DocketA24A0179
StatusPublished

This text of MONTE DAVIS v. LAND-RON, INC. (MONTE DAVIS v. LAND-RON, INC.) 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
MONTE DAVIS v. LAND-RON, INC., (Ga. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Court of Appeals of the State of Georgia

ATLANTA,____________________ May 22, 2024

The Court of Appeals hereby passes the following order:

A24A0179. MONTE DAVIS v. LAND-RON, INC. et al.

In 2018, Monte Davis filed this negligence action naming multiple entities as defendants, including Land-Ron, Inc. and Intercontinental Hotels Group Resources, Inc. (“IHG”). Davis subsequently filed a motion seeking to substitute HH TRS FP Portfolio, LLC as a defendant in place of IHG. On October 10, 2019, the trial court entered an order dropping IHG from the case, but denying the addition of HH TRS FP Portfolio, LLC as a party defendant. Davis then filed a “motion to add HHC TRS FP Portfolio, LLC” as a party-defendant. The trial court entered an order denying that motion on December 10, 2019. To contest those adverse rulings, Davis filed a notice of appeal on July 6, 2023.1 As explained below, because Davis’s notice of appeal was not filed within 30 days of any appealable decision or judgment, this Court lacks jurisdiction.

1 In his notice of appeal, Davis states that “[he] files his Notice of Appeal from the Order Denying Motion To Substitute Parties, which was entered on October 10, 2019 and the Order Denying Motion To Add a Party Defendant, which was entered on December 10, 2019.” Similarly, in his appellate brief, Davis contends in the “ENUMERATION OF ERRORS” section: 1. The Trial Court erred in entering the Order, which erroneously denied the . . . Motion to Substitute Proper Party Defendant; and 2. The Trial Court erred in entering the . . . Order, which erroneously denied the Appellant’s . . . Motion to Add HHC TRS FP Portfolio, LLC (“HHC”) as a Party Defendant. 1 “The proper and timely filing of a notice of appeal is an absolute requirement to confer appellate jurisdiction on an appellate court.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Perlman v. Perlman, 318 Ga. App. 731, 739 (4) (734 SE2d 560) (2012). As a general rule, to obtain a direct appeal, “[a] notice of appeal shall be filed within 30 days after entry of the appealable decision or judgment complained of[.]” OCGA § 5-6-38 (a). Here, the notice of appeal was filed more than three years after the complained of orders were entered.

Davis nevertheless posits that “this Court has appellate jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (1).” He cites that (defendant) Land-Ron, Inc. meanwhile moved for summary judgment; that the trial court denied that motion; and that this Court concluded in an unpublished decision that Land-Ron, Inc. was entitled to summary judgment and thus reversed the trial court’s judgment. See Land-Ron, Inc. v. Davis, ___ Ga. App. __ (Case No. A23A0319) (June 9, 2023) (hereinafter “Land-Ron I”). Davis asserts that, after this Court issued the remittitur,2 the remittitur was filed in the trial court’s clerk’s office on July 3, 2023, and that he filed his notice of appeal on July 6, 2023.

Even accepting, for the sake of argument, Davis’s assertion that his notice of appeal was filed three days after the filing of the remittitur in the trial court, the notice of appeal failed to perfect jurisdiction of this appeal. The statutory provision upon which Davis relies authorizes direct appeals only from “final judgments, that is to say,

2 This Court’s records in Land-Ron I confirm that the remittitur was issued on June 27, 2023. See generally Young v. Jones, 140 Ga. App. 66, 68 (230 SE2d 32) (1976) (on motion for rehearing) (reciting that “this court will take judicial notice of its own records, and will of its own motion, or at the suggestion of counsel, inspect the records of this court in a former appeal of the same case”) (citation and punctuation omitted). 2 where the case is no longer pending in the court below[.]” (Emphasis supplied) OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (1). Thus, even presuming that Land-Ron, Inc. was the sole remaining defendant when this Court was deciding Land-Ron I, Davis has cited no authority supporting his premise that, after an appellate court reverses a trial court’s judgment, a direct appeal may lie from the mere filing of the remittitur by the trial court’s clerk’s office. And we find none.

Rather, we are bound by Supreme Court of Georgia’s precedent explaining that

[t]he trial court . . . was re-invested with jurisdiction when the Court of Appeals reversed [the denial of the motion for summary] judgment and caused its remittitur to be transmitted to and filed in the clerk’s office of the trial court. . . . The filing of a remittitur . . . served no function except to notify officially the trial court that its judgment[ ] had been reversed and that the case[ ] [was] being sent back to that court for further action.

(Emphasis supplied.) Hagan v. Robert & Co. Assoc., 222 Ga. 469, 471 (1) (150 SE2d 663) (1966); see Holton v. Lankford, 189 Ga. 506, 512 (1) (6 SE2d 304) (1939) (“The judgment of reversal, without more, operated only to vacate the orders and the decree as therein stated, and to reinvest the trial court with jurisdiction, on the filing of the remittitur in the office of the clerk of the trial court. It did just this, and nothing more.”).

As the Supreme Court of Georgia has explained further,

3 [OCGA § 5-6-103] declares that a decision of this court shall be certified under the seal of this court to the court below and shall be respected, and in good faith carried into full effect, by the court below. When the remittitur from this [C]ourt on the case’s former appearance here reached the trial court, the only action under our decision and judgment that the court below could take was to make the judgment of this court the judgment of the trial court and to enter an order [in accordance therewith].

(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Summer-Minter & Assocs. v. Giordano, 231 Ga. 601, 607 (203 SE2d 173) (1973) (citing former Code § 6-1804, which contained the material language of OCGA § 5-6-10).4 See generally Shepherd v. Shepherd, 243 Ga.

3 See generally OCGA § 5-6-10 (“The decision of the appellate court and any direction awarded in the case shall be certified by the clerk to the court below, under the seal of the court. The decision and direction shall be respected and carried into full effect in good faith by the court below. The remittitur shall contain nothing more, except the costs paid in the appellate court.”). 4 Such principles are also set out in Giordano v. Stubbs, 356 F. Supp. 1041, 1044 (N.D. Ga. 1973) (“Under Georgia law the decision of an appellate court must be respected and in good faith carried into full effect by the court from which the appeal was taken, Ga. Code Ann. § 6-1804 (1964), and generally the lower court fulfills this obligation by promptly entering an order making the judgment of the appellate court its judgment upon receipt of the remittitur. Such an order is known as a judgment on the remittitur.

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MONTE DAVIS v. LAND-RON, INC., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monte-davis-v-land-ron-inc-gactapp-2024.