Brown v. Spann, S99A1216.
Decision Date | 20 September 1999 |
Docket Number | No. S99A1216.,S99A1216. |
Citation | 520 S.E.2d 909,271 Ga. 495 |
Parties | BROWN et al. v. SPANN et al. |
Court | Georgia Supreme Court |
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
Albert H. Dallas, Thomson, for appellants.
Zachary & Segraves, Kenneth L. Levy, Kenneth W. Carpenter, Decatur, Mazursky & Dunaway, Randall A. Constantine, Atlanta, Leon Hicks, Jonesboro, for appellees.
In 1997, appellants James Brown and Reginald Simmons, alleged investors in WMLD radio station, learned that the station's manager, Darrell Spann, was negotiating the sale of the station's broadcast license. Appellants filed a petition for accounting and appointment of a receiver in the superior court, alleging that the corporation was being fraudulently and negligently managed. They also filed a motion for interlocutory injunction, seeking to enjoin the proposed sale on the ground that Spann did not have the authority to sell the license, a major asset of the corporation. Spann contends that appellants are not investors in the corporation and that he, not the corporation, is the sole owner of the broadcast license.
A hearing on the motion was held on June 30, 1998, at which time the trial court denied the motion for interlocutory injunction and ordered certain proceeds of the sale to be deposited in the court's treasury. Appellants were also put on notice that the closing of the sale would take place between July 20 and August 5, 1998. Although appellants filed a notice of appeal, they never sought a supersedeas. The closing took place on or about July 29, 1998.
Because the injunctive relief sought by appellants cannot now be granted, we find this appeal must be dismissed on the ground of mootness. Cotton v. First Nat. Bank of Gwinnett County, 235 Ga. 511, 220 S.E.2d 132 (1975). It is well established that "`if the thing sought to be enjoined in fact takes place, the grant or denial of the injunction becomes moot.'" Jackson v. Bibb County Sch. Dist., 271 Ga. 18, 19, 515 S.E.2d 151 (1999); Adams v. Smith, 240 Ga. 436, 437, 241 S.E.2d 1 (1978). A case is moot when its resolution would amount to the determination of an abstract question not arising upon existing facts or rights. Chastain v. Baker, 255 Ga. 432, 339 S.E.2d 241 (1986). Jackson, supra at 19, 515 S.E.2d 151. Further, the filing of a notice of appeal in injunction cases does not serve as a supersedeas. Citizens To Save Paulding County v. City of Atlanta, 236 Ga. 125, 223 S.E.2d 101 (1976).
Although appeals may be determined not to be moot even in the absence of a live controversy between the named parties, this is not such a case. See Collins v. Lombard Corp., 270 Ga. 120, 121-122(1), 508 S.E.2d 653 (1998) ...
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...the remedy sought in the trial court is no longer available, then the matter is moot and no longer subject to appeal. Brown v. Spann, 271 Ga. 495, 520 S.E.2d 909 (1999) (case was moot because the sale of a radio station's broadcast license sought to be enjoined by the plaintiffs had already......
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