CANNON AIR TRANSPORT v. Stevens Aviation

Decision Date07 May 2001
Docket NumberNo. A01A0622.,A01A0622.
Citation249 Ga. App. 514,548 S.E.2d 485
PartiesCANNON AIR TRANSPORT SERVICES, INC. v. STEVENS AVIATION, INC.
CourtGeorgia Court of Appeals

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

James S. Strawinski, Michael L. Goldberg, Atlanta, for appellant.

Kilpatrick Stockton, R. Randy Edwards, William R. Poplin, Jr., Atlanta, for appellee.

MILLER, Judge.

Among the issues on appeal are (1) whether under Uniform Superior Court Rule 19.1(G) a defendant, as opposed to the plaintiff, may pay the bill of costs needed to effectuate a transfer of a case ordered by the court, and (2) whether the evidence here supports the court's default judgment in favor of the defendant on its counterclaim. We hold that the source of the payment for transfer costs is irrelevant, so long as they are timely paid, and that the plaintiff's intentional failure to respond to discovery requests suffices to sustain the principal judgment on the counterclaim. We therefore affirm the judgment with the exception of that portion awarding defendant its attorney fees. Since the defendant failed to present evidence showing the reasonableness of those fees, we vacate this portion of the judgment and remand the case.

Dissatisfied with the repair work of Stevens Aviation, Inc. on its airplane, Cannon Air Transport Services, Inc. refused to pay the amount remaining due to Stevens, which included $20,000 it admitted was due, and instead sued Stevens in Fulton County Superior Court for breach of contract, negligence, and attorney fees. Arguing that venue was proper only in Fayette County, Stevens moved to transfer the case to Fayette Superior Court. Stevens also answered and counterclaimed for the full amount remaining due and for attorney fees.1 Stevens served interrogatories and requests to produce on Cannon, which Cannon ignored. Stevens moved to compel responses, to which motion Cannon filed no opposition. Instead, Cannon noticed the depositions of nine current or former employees of Stevens. Stevens then moved for sanctions, asking that Cannon's complaint be struck and that default judgment be entered on the counterclaim. Once again, Cannon ignored the motion.

On January 14, 1998, the Fulton judge ordered the case transferred to Fayette. Before the bill of costs for the transfer was prepared by the Fulton clerk, Cannon filed a voluntary dismissal of its complaint, attached to which was a certificate of service signed by Cannon's attorney. In fact, the dismissal was never served on Stevens. When Stevens six weeks later learned of the dismissal, it objected and moved to have the dismissal set aside. On May 28, 1998, the Fulton clerk sent out the transfer bill of costs, which Cannon declined to pay.2 Stevens paid the bill, although there was a dispute whether the payment was made within the required 20 days.3 The case was transferred to Fayette.

After an evidentiary hearing on the sanctions motion, which hearing apparently was not recorded, the Fayette court found that Cannon had willfully failed to respond to discovery. The Fayette court dismissed Cannon's complaint with prejudice and entered default judgment in Stevens's favor on its counterclaim. Cannon appealed to this Court, claiming among other things that its voluntary dismissal precluded the court from dismissing its complaint with prejudice and that Stevens's payment of transfer costs was untimely. In an unpublished opinion, 240 Ga.App. XXVI (Case No. A99A0872) (1999), we cited to Moore v. Candler Gen. Hosp.4 and held that the unserved voluntary dismissal "was invalid and of no effect." Nevertheless, we vacated the Fayette court's judgment and remanded the matter for an evidentiary hearing to determine whether the transfer costs were timely paid.

After the hearing, in which the court also received evidence on the damages sought in the counterclaim, the Fayette court found that the transfer costs were paid on June 16, 1998, which was the nineteenth day after the bill of costs had been issued. The court therefore concluded it had jurisdiction over the matter and reaffirmed its earlier findings of wilful discovery abuse by Cannon. Dismissing the complaint, the court entered default judgment in Stevens's favor on its counterclaim in the amount of $86,005.11, consisting of $36,741.31 in compensatory damages ($29,102.03 plus interest at the rate of seven per cent from December 31, 1996) and $49,263.80 in attorney fees. Cannon appeals.

1. Cannon first enumerates that Stevens's payment of the transfer costs was invalid because USCR 19.1(G) refers to the plaintiff, not the defendant, as paying transfer costs within 20 days of the bill of costs to avoid an automatic dismissal. The Supreme Court of Georgia was faced with a similar situation when a third party paid the intangible personal property tax assessed against Lombard Corporation, the party challenging the constitutionality of the tax in that case.5 Even though OCGA § 48-6-25 (now repealed6) directed that "[e]ach ... person [owning taxable property] shall report the property and pay taxes on the property as provided in this article,"7 the Supreme Court held that the third party's payment of the tax was valid and rendered the constitutional challenge moot.8 Similarly, we hold that even though USCR 19.1(G) directs the plaintiff to pay the transfer costs, Stevens's payment of the transfer costs here was valid and prevented the automatic dismissal from being triggered.9

2. Cannon contends that the trial court erred in finding that Stevens's payment of the transfer costs took place on June 16, 1998, which was the nineteenth day following the issuance of the cost bill. Cannon argues that the evidence required the court to find that the payment took place on June 24.

The appellate standard of review for bench trials of material facts is the "clearly erroneous" test, also known in civil cases as the "any evidence" rule.10 Regardless of whether evidence supports an opposite finding, we construe the evidence in favor of the trial court's finding and affirm if there is any evidence to support it.11

Here evidence supported the trial court's finding. A certified copy of the Fulton court's docket sheet was marked as "PAID" on June 16, 1998, with a specific notation that this was the date payment was received from Stevens's counsel.12 Stevens's counsel submitted its cancelled checks, dated June 16, 1998, which counsel verbally confirmed to the court were paid on that date to cover the transfer costs.13 The Fulton clerk certified the transfer record on June 19, 1998, five days before the alleged payment on June 24 and three days after June 16. The court could infer that this certification would not have taken place until payment was received. The court did not clearly err in finding that the transfer costs were paid within the required 20 days.

3. Cannon claims that its voluntary dismissal, which was filed before the costs were paid and thus before the transfer was effectuated, nullified the transfer and thus deprived the Fayette court of jurisdiction over Cannon's complaint. Cannon maintains that the Fulton court retained jurisdiction over the counterclaim.

Cannon's position ignores the express ruling of this Court in the previous appeal, in which this Court addressed this argument and concluded that because Cannon failed to serve the voluntary dismissal on Stevens, the dismissal "was invalid and of no effect."14 Under OCGA § 9-11-60(h), a ruling by this Court is binding in all subsequent proceedings in the same case, whether before the trial court or on appeal.15 Accordingly, this matter has already been decided against Cannon in a binding ruling.

4. Cannon contends that the court erred in granting default judgment on the counterclaim as a discovery sanction since Cannon's noncompliance with discovery was not wilful. The trial court recounted in detail the evidence showing Cannon's repeated and year-long failure to respond to discovery requests despite motions to compel and for sanctions. The court concluded:

Cannon has intentionally failed and refused to respond to Stevens'[s] discovery request in this case.... Cannon's refusal to respond to discovery is intentional and its continued pursuit of discovery through the noticing of numerous depositions rather than responding to a properly filed and served motion to compel was a conscious abuse of the discovery process. Consciousness of the failure to respond is further evidenced by plaintiff's counsel's failure to follow through with promises to respond and the complete disregard of two discovery motions filed by Stevens.16

Our review of a trial court's finding of a wilful refusal to comply with discovery is the "any evidence" standard.17 Not only do the pleadings and cited evidence support the trial court's finding, but we note that the evidentiary hearing on the sanctions motion apparently was not transcribed and certainly was not included in the record on appeal. "In the absence of a transcript of the hearing on appellee's motion for sanctions, we must assume the evidence supported a finding that appellant's failure to [respond] was wilful."18

The court's finding of wilful noncompliance authorized its decision to dismiss the complaint and to enter default judgment on the counterclaim.19 If, after proper service, a party or his agent fails to serve answers or objections to interrogatories or requests to produce, the presiding judge "may take any action authorized under [OCGA § 9-11-37](b)(2)(A) through (b)(2)(C)...."20 So upon Cannon's complete failure to answer or object to Stevens's interrogatories and requests to produce, the trial court was authorized to strike pleadings, to dismiss the action, or to render default judgment against the disobedient party.21 Thus, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing Cannon's complaint and in entering judgment by default on Stevens's counterclaim.22

5. Cannon urges that no evidence supported the court's awarding of $29,102.03 on the...

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