Shauna White v. Westlake Financial Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedAugust 23, 2023
DocketA23A0830
StatusPublished

This text of Shauna White v. Westlake Financial Services (Shauna White v. Westlake Financial Services) 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
Shauna White v. Westlake Financial Services, (Ga. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

FIFTH DIVISION MCFADDEN, P. J., BROWN and MARKLE, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

August 23, 2023

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A23A0830. WHITE v. WESTLAKE FINANCIAL SERVICES.

MCFADDEN, Presiding Judge.

This case presents an issue of first impression, in that we are called upon to

administer a portion of our version of the Uniform Commercial Code which has not

been previously addressed in a Georgia appellate decision. But administering that

provision, which limits the availability of renewal actions for breach of contracts for

the sale of goods, requires only that we hold that it means what it says and that no

other statute contradicts it.

After we granted her application for interlocutory review, Shauna White filed

this appeal from the trial court’s order denying her motion to dismiss Westlake

Financial Services’s second complaint against her. She argues that the second

complaint should be dismissed because it is not a renewal action, since OCGA § 11- 2-725 (3) prohibits the renewal of an action dismissed for failure to prosecute, as

Westlake’s first complaint was. And she argues that the complaint cannot proceed as

an original action because it is barred by the running of the four-year statute of

limitation in OCGA § 11-2-725 (1). We agree, so we reverse.

The relevant facts are largely undisputed. In February 2015, White entered a

retail installment contract for the purchase of a car, and at some point, the contract

was assigned to Westlake Financial Services. White stopped making payments after

May 2017, and the car was repossessed. The car was sold at auction, after which

Westlake filed suit against White to collect a deficiency balance. The complaint was

filed on April 14, 2021. On April 22, 2022, the trial court dismissed the case without

prejudice for want of prosecution because Westlake did not appear at a hearing on its

motion for summary judgment.

The next month, after the four-year statute of limitation had run, see OCGA §

11-2-725 (1); SunTrust Bank v. Venable, 299 Ga. 655 (791 SE2d 5) (2016), Westlake

filed a second complaint. White answered the complaint, asserted counterclaims, and

filed a motion to dismiss on the ground that the complaint was barred by the running

of the statute of limitation. Westlake responded that the complaint was a renewal of

the complaint timely filed in 2021.

2 The trial court denied White’s motion to dismiss, agreeing with Westlake that

it was entitled to renew its 2021 action. After the trial court denied White’s motion

for reconsideration and we granted her application for interlocutory appeal, White

filed this appeal.

White argues that OCGA § 11-2-725 (3) prevented Westlake from filing the

second complaint as a renewal action, which would have saved it from the running

of the statute of limitation, so the trial court erred in denying her motion to dismiss.

We agree.

That statute is in our version of the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), OCGA

§ 11-1-101 et seq., and applies to contracts for the sale of goods, such as the contract

at issue here. See Venable, 299 Ga. at 657-660. The statute provides:

Where an action commenced within the [four-year statute of limitation of OCGA § 11-2-725 (1)] is so terminated as to leave available a remedy by another action for the same breach such other action may be commenced after the expiration of the time limited and within six months after the termination of the first action unless the termination resulted from voluntary discontinuance or from dismissal for failure or neglect to prosecute.

OCGA § 11-2-725 (3) (emphasis supplied). Because the termination of Westlake’s

first complaint “resulted. . . from dismissal for failure . . . to prosecute,” Westlake is

3 not entitled to avail itself of OCGA § 11-2-725 (3) to renew the action and to avoid

the statute of limitation problem. So the trial court erred in denying White’s motion

to dismiss.

Westlake concedes that the general renewal statute, OCGA § 9-2-61, does not

apply because that statute expressly provides that it “shall not apply to contracts for

the sale of goods covered by Article 2 of Title 11.” OCGA § 9-2-61 (b).

But, Westlake argues, it was entitled to renew its complaint under OCGA § 9-

11-41. Subsection (e) of that statute does include a provision regarding renewal. But

that subsection is inapplicable. It provides:

Any action in which no written order is taken for a period of five years shall automatically stand dismissed, with costs to be taxed against the party plaintiff. . . . When an action is dismissed under this subsection, if the plaintiff recommences the action within six months following the dismissal then the renewed action shall stand upon the same footing, as to limitation, with the original action.

OCGA § 9-11-41 (e). Here, however, the trial court dismissed Westlake’s first

complaint for want of prosecution because Westlake did not appear at a hearing on

its motion for summary judgment; the complaint was not “automatically . . .

4 dismissed” under OCGA § 9-11-41 (e). So the complaint was not “dismissed under

[that] subsection” and OCGA § 9-11-41 (e)’s renewal language does not apply.

Westlake argues that OCGA § 9-11-41 controls because it was enacted after

OCGA § 11-2-275. But, as noted, the only provision of OCGA § 9-11-41 that

concerns renewal is OCGA § 9-11-41 (e), which unambiguously applies to automatic

dismissals under the five-year rule. See Southern States Chemical v. Tampa Tank &

Welding, __ Ga. __, __ (2) (__ SE2d __) (Case No. S23A0273, decided May 31,

2023) .

Further, “a specific statute governs over a more general statute where they are

in conflict.” Ga. Mental Health Inst. v. Brady, 263 Ga.

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Related

Georgia Mental Health Institute v. Brady
436 S.E.2d 219 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1993)
Portwood v. Ford Motor Co.
701 N.E.2d 1102 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1998)
Grynberg v. Questar Pipeline Co.
2003 UT 8 (Utah Supreme Court, 2003)
In the Interest of C. M. B., a Child
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Suntrust Bank v. Venable
791 S.E.2d 5 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2016)

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Bluebook (online)
Shauna White v. Westlake Financial Services, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shauna-white-v-westlake-financial-services-gactapp-2023.