Heidi K. Cooper v. Citimortgage, Inc.
A17D0236
Ga. Ct. App.Feb 7, 2017Background
- Heidi K. Cooper filed a second quiet-title action naming CitiMortgage and others; the trial court dismissed the suit on res judicata grounds on October 12, 2016.
- Cooper then filed motions: (1) to voluntarily dismiss two co-defendants, and (2) to amend the trial court’s final order to reflect those dismissals.
- Cooper argued the October 12 order was interlocutory because CitiMortgage’s attorney did not represent the two co-defendants she sought to dismiss.
- The trial court denied her post-judgment motions; Cooper filed a discretionary application to this Court within 30 days of that denial.
- The Court of Appeals examined whether the October 12 order was final and whether Cooper’s procedural steps preserved appellate jurisdiction.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Was the October 12 order final for appeal? | Cooper: order was interlocutory because CitiMortgage’s counsel did not represent two defendants. | Order dismissed the suit on res judicata as to all defendants; no claims remained. | Final: the order was final because it resolved the suit; appeal period began. |
| Did Cooper’s post-judgment motions toll or extend the appeal period? | Cooper: filing motions to dismiss co-defendants and to amend the order affected finality/timing. | Filing those motions were effectively motions for reconsideration and do not extend appeal time. | Denied: motions were reconsideration in substance and did not toll or extend appeal time. |
| Could the Court grant the discretionary application under OCGA § 5-6-35(j)? | Cooper sought discretionary review within 30 days of denial of motions. | The underlying order was appealable directly; no subsection of § 5-6-35 applied to permit relief. | Dismissed: Court lacked authority under § 5-6-35(j); application dismissed. |
| Is an order denying reconsideration independently appealable? | Cooper implicitly treated denial as a trigger for appeal. | Precedent: denial of reconsideration is not independently appealable and does not toll appeal deadlines. | Held: denial is not appealable on its own and does not toll appeal deadlines. |
Key Cases Cited
- Andemeskel v. Waffle House, 227 Ga. App. 887 (1997) (order that disposes of all issues is final for appeal purposes)
- Perlman v. Perlman, 318 Ga. App. 731 (2012) (timely filing of a notice of appeal is an absolute jurisdictional requirement)
- Dept. of Transp. v. Camvic Corp., 284 Ga. App. 321 (2007) (motions are construed by substance and function, not by name)
- Bell v. Cohran, 244 Ga. App. 510 (2000) (order denying motion for reconsideration is not independently appealable)
- Cheeley-Towns v. Rapid Group, Inc., 212 Ga. App. 183 (1994) (motion for reconsideration does not extend appeal time)
- Harris v. State, 278 Ga. 280 (2004) (motions to reconsider do not toll the time for filing an application to appeal)
