Shadix v. Carroll County

Decision Date22 October 2001
Docket NumberNo. S01G0570.,S01G0570.
Citation554 S.E.2d 465,274 Ga. 560
PartiesSHADIX et al. v. CARROLL COUNTY et al.
CourtGeorgia Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Gary Paul Bunch, Gary Bunch, P.C., Atlanta, for Appellant.

Richard A. Carothers, Thomas Monroe Mitchell, Carothers & Mitchell, LLC, Buford; Thurbert E. Baker, Atty. Gen., David A. Runnion, Asst. Atty. Gen., Daniel M. Formby, Deputy Atty. Gen., Dept. of Law, Atlanta; David Augustus Basil, Carrolton, for Appellee.

SEARS, Presiding Justice.

For a second time now this Court has granted certiorari in this matter. In our first grant of certiorari, we considered only one of the two divisions in a Court of Appeals' opinion, and we reversed. On remand, the Court of Appeals held that because our opinion did not contain express language limiting our reversal to only the one division considered, it was "constrained" to vacate both divisions of its earlier opinion. That ruling has now prompted us to grant certiorari for a second time. As explained below, we conclude that the Court of Appeals' most recent ruling erroneously extended the `law of the case' doctrine to an issue that was neither considered nor decided by this Court. However, as explained below, the final judgment of the Court of Appeals was correct, albeit for the wrong reasons. Therefore, we affirm.

Three appellate opinions underlie this, our most recent, grant of certiorari:

Shadix I

In Division One of Shadix v. Carroll County ("Shadix I"),1 the Court of Appeals considered a Carroll County special purpose local option sales tax ("SPLOST") imposed by referendum for the raising of "not more than $34 million" (1) for a period of time not to exceed four years for purposes of road and bridge improvements, and (2) for a period of time not to exceed five years for purposes of other capital improvements. A taxpayer association brought suit seeking declaratory and injunctive relief to halt the collection of SPLOST proceeds. The trial court denied relief, and ruled that the SPLOST would terminate at the end of five years. In Division One of Shadix I, the Court of Appeals reversed the trial court's ruling, and held that the SPLOST terminated when the $34 million was raised, and not at the conclusion of a predetermined time period.2

In Division Two of Shadix I, the Court of Appeals considered counts 4, 5 and 6 of the plaintiffs' original complaint. Count 4 had sought to enjoin Carroll County from using tax revenues collected during the SPLOST's fifth year for road and bridge improvements. Count 5 had sought to enjoin the County from spending any SPLOST proceeds collected in excess of $34 million. Count 6 had sought to enjoin the County from failing to maintain required records of its spending of SPLOST proceeds. The trial court had granted summary judgment to the County on all three of these claims. The Court of Appeals also reversed that ruling, and then remanded the entire matter to the trial court with direction that discovery be conducted on Counts 4, 5 and 6, and that proper findings of fact and conclusions of law then be made.3 That action was forestalled, however, by this Court's first grant of certiorari in this matter.

Shadix II

In Carroll County v. Shadix ("Shadix II"),4 this Court granted certiorari to consider only Division One of Shadix I. Division Two of Shadix I was not implicated in our certiorari question and was not addressed in this Court's opinion. Shadix II reversed Division One of Shadix I, and held that the SPLOST terminated at the end of five years, regardless of whether more than $34 million in tax revenues was raised. The matter was then returned to the Court of Appeals so that the judgment of this Court could be entered.

Shadix III

On remand in Shadix v. Carroll County ("Shadix III"),5 the Court of Appeals held that in light of this Court's ruling in Shadix II, Shadix I was vacated in its entirety-including Division 2 of Shadix I—and the trial court's judgment was affirmed. The Court of Appeals rejected appellants' arguments that Shadix III erroneously construed the "law of the case doctrine," and that because Division 2 of Shadix I was not considered by the Supreme Court in Shadix II, Division 2 of Shadix I should remain undisturbed. The Court of Appeals concluded that because Shadix II reversed Shadix I, and because there was no language in Shadix II limiting its holding to only Division 1 of Shadix I, it was "constrained" to vacate Shadix I in its entirety and to affirm the earlier judgment of the trial court. This Court has now granted a second petition for certiorari in order to consider the Court of Appeals' ruling in Shadix III. As explained below, we conclude that Shadix III improperly extended the `law of the case' doctrine to issues that were neither considered nor ruled upon by this Court in Shadix II. However, even though Shadix III was based upon faulty reasoning, it reached the correct conclusion and therefore will be affirmed.

1. As recently held in Security Life Ins. Co. of America v. Clark,6 the `law of the case' rule makes "`any ruling by the Supreme Court ... binding in all subsequent proceedings in that case in the lower court[s].'"7 It is a jurisprudential axiom that Georgia's courts are required to adhere to the `law of the case' rule in all matters which they decide.8 Even when the law subsequently changes, appellate rulings remain binding as between parties to a case, so long as the evidentiary posture of the case remains unchanged.9

In Security Life, we noted that "when the Supreme Court affirms in part and reverses in part a decision of the Court of Appeals, any portions of the Court of Appeals' decision that are not considered by the Supreme Court are unaffected by the Supreme Court's opinion."10 This principle's application is not limited to situations where this Court expressly reverses in part and affirms in part. Rather, it also extends to situations where this Court simply reverses a ruling appealed from without also expressly affirming, or even addressing, a different portion of that same opinion.11

This is not to say, however, that those portions of a Court of Appeals' decision not considered or addressed by the Supreme Court when reversing also become the law of the case. The `law of the case' rule, it must be remembered, applies only "to actual decisions, not to issues raised ... but never ruled upon."12 Thus, when the Supreme Court grants certiorari to consider only a particular portion of a Court of Appeals' opinion and reverses based upon that portion, it is only those issues actually considered and ruled upon by this Court that fall within the `law of the case' doctrine.

Whenever this Court considers only a portion of a Court of Appeals' opinion and reverses, it is for the Court of Appeals to determine on remand whether the portions of its earlier opinion that were not considered by this Court are consistent with this Court's ruling. If such portions are consistent with this Court's ruling, then they become binding upon the return of the remittitur. If, however, such portions are not consistent with this Court's ruling, the Court of Appeals must enter an appropriate disposition concerning those portions that reconciles them with this Court's ruling.

It follows that the Court of Appeals, when considering the effect of a reversal from this Court, should not look for nomenclature in our opinion to define the scope of our ruling. No such "magic words" are required to circumscribe our reversals. To reiterate, whenever this Court reverses a Court of Appeals' opinion without considering or addressing a division of that opinion, we do not determine our reversal's impact upon that particular division, and we leave it to the Court of Appeals to determine what impact, if any, our reversal has upon that particular division.13

Therefore, when faced with the Supreme Court's reversal of one of its opinions, the Court of Appeals is required: (1) to read this Court's opinion within the context of the opinion being reversed; (2) to determine whether any portions of the opinion being reversed were neither addressed nor considered by the Supreme Court; and (3) enter an appropriate disposition with regard to those portions that is consistent with the issues addressed and considered by this Court.

2. We now apply these principles to this matter. In Shadix III, the Court of Appeals ruled that due to "the absence of any language limiting the decision [of the Supreme Court in Shadix II] to Division [One of Shadix I]," it was required to treat Shadix II as if it reversed both Division One and Division Two of Shadix I.14 This conclusion was reached even though our ruling in Shadix II neither addressed nor decided any of the issues discussed in Division Two of Shadix I. Thus, the Court of Appeals treated Shadix II's silence on Division Two of Shadix I as a reversal of that Division, when in fact Shadix II's only ruling was to reverse Division One of Shadix I. In essence, then, Shadix III erroneously extended the `law of the case' doctrine to issues that were neither considered nor addressed by this Court when reversing.

When, in Shadix II, this Court reversed the Court of Appeals' ruling in Shadix I, we only considered and only addressed Division One of Shadix I. Therefore, on remand, the Court of Appeals should have determined whether Division Two of Shadix I could be reconciled with our reversal in Shadix II, and should have entered an appropriate disposition with regard to Division Two.

3. In the interest of judicial economy, we will now determine the effect of our reversal in Shadix II upon Division Two of Shadix I. In Division Two, the Court of Appeals had reversed the trial court's grant of summary judgment to Carroll County on Counts 4, 5 and 6 of the original complaint.

A. The parties have conceded before this Court that Count 5, which had sought to enjoin the County from spending any SPLOST proceeds...

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