Atlanta Empowerment Zone Corporation (“Zone”) filed an Application for Confirmation of Sale Under Power (the “Application”) in the Superior Court of Clayton County. According to the Application, Light Energy Management, Inc. had defaulted under the terms of a promissory note payable to Zone in the principal amount of $3,250,000. The note was secured by real estate subject to a deed to secure debt recorded in the Superior Court of Fulton County. In accordance with the power of sale contained in the security deed, and after advertisement of the sale, the property was sold at auction to Zone for $650,000. Zone asked the trial court to confirm and approve the sale in accordance with OCGA § 44-14-161.
In its answer, Light Energy claimed the Application was fatally defective because it was not brought in the county where the real property at issue was located. Acknowledging that the land was located in Fulton County, Zone moved to transfer the case to the Superior Court of Fulton County. The trial court denied the motion to transfer and dismissed the Application for lack of venue. Zone appeals, contending that the Application is a “civil proceeding,” and the trial court therefore erred in failing to transfer the case in accordance with Uniform Superior Court Rule 19.1. We disagree and affirm.
[T]he Georgia Constitution provides: “any court shall transfer to the appropriate court in the state any civil case in which it determines that jurisdiction or venue lies elsewhere.” Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. VI, Sec. I, Par. VIII. This constitutional mandate was implemented in the Uniform Transfer Rules, enacted in 1984. Section T-4 of the Uniform Transfer Rules provides “when a party makes a motion to dismiss, or any other motion or defense, on the basis that the court in which the case is pending lacks jurisdiction or venue or both(, s)uch motion shall be treated as a motion to transfer pursuant to these rules.”
(Citation and footnote omitted.)
McDonald v. MARTA,
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OCGA § 44-14-161 is a special statutory procedure not generally analogous to a civil suit. “The proceeding ... is not a ‘suit’ but an application to the ‘Judge of the Superior Court.’ ”
Jonesboro Investment Trust Assn. v. Donnelly,
Vlass v. Security Pacific Nat. Bank,
Another reason for not treating the Application as a civil case subject to transfer or, as Zone argues, a civil “proceeding” subject to USCR 19.1,
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is that the specific requirements of the confirmation process are not amenable to transfer to another court. The confirmation application must be reported to a judge in the superior court of the county where the land lies. OCGA § 44-14-161 (a).Afilingwiththe clerk of the superior court of the county in which the land lies is
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insufficient. “The judge himself, not the clerk of court, is the one to whose attention the report of sale and its particulars must be brought.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.)
John Alden Life Ins. Co. v. Gwinnett Plantation,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
“[A] timely motion in any pending civil action or proceeding (1) by any party, that jurisdiction is lacking or that venue is improper, or (2) by the court, sua sponte, that subject matter jurisdiction is lacking, shall be treated as a motion to transfer the action to another court, whether in the same or another county of this state.” USCR 19.1 (A).
