Exum v. Melton

Citation244 Ga. App. 775,536 S.E.2d 786
Decision Date30 June 2000
Docket NumberNo. A00A0846.,A00A0846.
PartiesEXUM et al. v. MELTON et al.
CourtUnited States Court of Appeals (Georgia)

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Bird, Ballard & Still, William Q. Bird, Atlanta, J. Converse Bright, Valdosta, for appellants.

Watson, Spence, Lowe & Chambless, Thomas S. Chambless, Albany, Charles K. Wainright II, Macon, for appellees.

MILLER, Judge.

In June 1994, Albert L. Exum, individually and as administrator of the estate of his late wife, commenced this medical negligence action against Dawn Acree, M.D., Howard L. Melton, M.D., Melton's professional corporation, and South Georgia Medical Center in the State Court of Lowndes County. Within two weeks, service of process on Melton was attempted at his office by delivering the summons and complaint into the hands of Kristie Brown, ostensibly at Melton's "most notorious place of abode...." Service on the corporation was made by leaving a copy of the summons and complaint with Brown, ostensibly "in charge of the office and place of doing business of said Corporation in this County." Acree, Melton, and the corporation jointly answered, raising, inter alia, objections to jurisdiction, venue, and the sufficiency of service of process.

In January 1995, defendants successfully moved to extend the time for discovery until the entry of the pretrial order. In January 1998, plaintiffs dismissed the claim against South Georgia Medical Center with prejudice, and in the following September, Melton and his corporation moved to dismiss for insufficiency of service of process or, alternatively, to transfer the case to Cook County, where defendant Acree resided. This motion was granted by dismissing the case against Melton and his corporation and by transferring the case against Acree to Cook County. On appeal, Exum contends dismissal was erroneous because (1) the trial court had no jurisdiction to rule on the motion, (2) service was sufficient, (3) defendants waived any insufficiency of service of process, and (4) Melton was personally served promptly after the motion. We affirm the dismissals.

1. Jurisdiction. Exum first argues the trial court had no jurisdiction to consider the motion to dismiss, because venue (and so personal jurisdiction) vanished with the dismissal of the Medical Center, the sole resident of Lowndes County.

Under former OCGA § 9-10-31 and current OCGA § 9-10-31(a), alleged joint tortfeasors, residing in different counties, are subject to suit in any county in which one or more defendants reside.1 If the sole resident defendant is dismissed or is found not liable, venue as to the remaining defendants is said to vanish, in which case the court is without personal jurisdiction to enter a binding judgment on the merits against the nonresident defendants.2 Personal jurisdiction and venue are defenses for the defendant to raise, and may be waived,3 even though properly preserved in the pleadings.4 Here, the order granting defendants' OCGA § 9-11-12(b)(5) motion to dismiss due to insufficiency of service of process is a matter of abatement only, and not a judgment on the merits.5 After venue vanishes, the trial court still retains jurisdiction to order the case transferred to a court where venue is appropriate.6 In our view, the trial court also retains jurisdiction to consider and grant a defendant's motion to dismiss on a matter of abatement, rendering the need to transfer moot.7

2. Waiver. The alleged negligence occurred in April 1993, suit commenced in June 1994, discovery lasted four years, and then in September 1998, after the two-year statute of limitation8 and the five-year statute of ultimate repose9 had lapsed, defendants moved to dismiss due to lack of proper service.

(a) Although Exum calls this defense "boilerplate," such rhetoric does not deprive the timely objection to service of its validity.10 Receipt of the answer raising insufficiency of service of process should have put Exum and his counsel on notice of a possible jurisdictional flaw, invoking the related duty to exercise the greatest possible diligence to perfect timely service.11 Depositions and interrogatories are available to discover any evidentiary basis for such "boilerplate" defenses, and a request for admissions can promptly and economically confirm or dispel the sufficiency of service of process. If a defendant denies the sufficiency of service, he can be served again, or an acknowledgment of service of the summons and complaint can be requested.12

(b) Properly preserved13 defenses under OCGA § 9-11-12(b) can be raised as late as the pretrial conference, although they are waived if omitted from any ensuing pretrial order.14 Waiver of a Civil Practice Act § 12(b)(5) defense by any other conduct will be found only if the party acts in a manner so manifestly indicative of an intention to relinquish a known right or benefit that no other reasonable explanation of its conduct is possible.15

Here, there is no pretrial order limiting the issues for trial, and the case does not appear on any trial calendar. Engaging in extensive discovery does not conclusively manifest the intent to relinquish a known right or benefit,16 nor does it necessarily amount to consent to jurisdiction. In precedents 17 finding a waiver of a valid objection to service of process, defendant either omitted the claim from the pretrial order18 or else substantially participated in litigation on the merits before raising the objection for decision by the court.19 No such conduct was engaged in by Dr. Melton or his professional corporation. The trial court correctly concluded that no waiver occurred.

3. Valid service. The sufficiency of service is a question of fact for the trial court, whose determinations will not be disturbed on appeal if supported by evidence.20

It is undisputed that Dr. Melton was not personally served. Rather, the summons and complaint for both Dr. Melton and his professional corporation were accepted at his office by Brown, an LPN who was the office nurse. Brown's duties were to prepare patients for the doctor, give shots, take blood pressure, put patients in rooms, type charts, assist in minor surgeries, and clean up rooms afterwards. In June 1994, Dr. Melton (or his corporation) had a separate full-time employee, Missy Johnson, who was the office manager. Johnson ran the office, submitted insurance claims, and answered the telephone. Nurse Brown would help out answering the telephone. Johnson would greet patients and hand the chart to Nurse Brown, who would lead the patient to an examination room. Nurse Brown had no independent recollection of accepting the summons and complaint for either Dr. Melton or his corporation, but confirmed that, had a deputy sheriff approached her with some papers for Dr. Melton, then she probably would have put them on his desk with the rest of the mail. She also confirmed that she had never been instructed not to accept papers from a deputy. Additionally, Dr. Melton never expressly authorized Nurse Brown to act as his agent for service of process or for any other purpose.

By affidavit, Dr. Melton testified that he is the president and registered agent for service of process of his professional corporation, which is no longer in existence, and that he never gave Nurse Brown permission to accept service for himself personally or for his corporation.

(a) OCGA § 9-11-4(d)(7) directs that the summons and complaint shall be served together on the defendant personally, or by leaving copies with a resident of suitable age and discretion at defendant's dwelling, or "by delivering a copy of the summons and complaint to an agent authorized by appointment or by law to receive service of process." "Unless [the alleged agent] can in some way bind the [purported principal] in some business transaction, then he is not its agent."21 The evidence that Nurse Brown was not an authorized agent to accept service on behalf of Dr. Melton personally, or for any other purpose, is sufficient to support the trial court's conclusion that service on Dr. Melton was insufficient.22

(b) A domestic corporation shall be served by delivering the summons and complaint to the president or other officer of the corporation, secretary, cashier, managing agent, or other agent thereof.23

The defendant professional corporation was not served by delivering the summons and complaint to Dr. Melton, its president, nor to Johnson, the office manager. Nurse Brown's duties were primarily medical not managerial. Delivery of the summons and complaint to a medical assistant who serves periodically as a receptionist when the office is otherwise empty is insufficient service on the corporate defendant.24

4. Personal service on Dr. Melton after the running of the statute of ultimate repose did not vitiate the motion to dismiss under OCGA § 9-11-12(b)(5) nor render the dismissal erroneous. A second attempt at service four years after the answer raised the insufficiency of service would authorize a conclusion that plaintiff did not use all due diligence to perfect service as quickly as possible, leading to a dismissal with prejudice.25

Judgment affirmed.

POPE, P.J., and SMITH, P.J., concur.

4. "[A] person may waive or renounce what the law has established in his favor when he does not thereby injure others or affect the public interest." OCGA § 1-3-7.

6. Collipp v. Newman, supra, 217 Ga.App. at 676, 458 S.E.2d 701 (trial court erred in denying motion to transfer).

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1 books & journal articles
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    • Mercer University School of Law Mercer Law Reviews No. 53-1, September 2001
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