Appellant-plaintiff filed suit, seeking to recover a sum that it had paid appellee-defendant pursuant to an allegedly fraudulent no-fault insurance claim. Appellant attached to its complaint requests for admission by appellee. Included among appellant’s requests was an admission that appellee “is liable to [appellant] for $3,472.58, the total PIP benefits received by [her] from [appellant], as a result of the . . . fraudulent claim.” Appellee filed a timely pro se answer, but she failed to file either a timely response to the requests for admission or a request for an extension of time within which to respond. Appellant subsequently moved for summary judgment. The trial court denied appellant’s motion, but certified its order for immediate review. Appellant applied to this court for an interlocutory appeal and the instant case results from the grant of that application.
When the time for responding to requests for admission has “expired without answer or objection, then the requests are admitted subject only to the requestee’s opportunity under [OCGA § 9-11-36] (b)
on motion
to have his admissions ‘withdrawn’ if he shows that such action will aid in the presentation of the merits and if the other party fails to show that he will be prejudiced.” (Emphasis in original.)
National Bank of Ga. v. Merritt,
“If a party served with a request for admission does not serve an answer or objection and does not move for an extension of time or to withdraw the admissions resulting from a failure to answer, the matter stands admitted. [Cits.]”
Albitus v. Farmers & Merchants Bank,
Judgment reversed.
