After Timothy Broyles, age 16, was shot and killed outside a Kroger store by a store employee on June 11, 1989, the deceased’s divorced parents, Robert Broyles and Hilary Bush, separately filed and
The following wrongful death actions were filed and voluntarily dismissed by either Broyles or Bush prior to Bush’s present action:
1. On July 7, 1989, Broyles filed the first wrongful death action against The Kroger Company (Kroger) in U. S. District Court. Broyles voluntarily dismissed this action on July 13, 1989.
2. On July 14, 1989, Broyles filed the second action against Kroger and John Muyquiz, the gunman, in Fulton Superior Court.
3. On December 12, 1989, Bush filed a third action against Kroger in Fulton Superior Court.
4. On July 17, 1990, the second and third actions were consolidated by order of the Fulton Superior Court.
5. On August 29, 1990, Broyles filed a voluntary dismissal of the second action, and on October 15, 1990, Bush voluntarily dismissed the third action. 1
6. On April 23, 1991, Bush filed another wrongful death action in DeKalb Superior Court naming as defendants, Kroger and the following defendants associated with the ownership and management of the shopping center where the Kroger store was located: LaVista Associates, Inc. (LaVista); PM Realty Advisors, Inc. (PM Realty); Public Employees Retirement System of Nevada (Public Employees Retirement System), and Wheeler Management, Inc. Bush voluntarily dismissed this action on June 3, 1991.
Subsequent to the above filings and dismissals, Bush filed the present wrongful death action on June 4, 1991, against Kroger; LaVista; Public Employees Retirement System; PM Realty; and, Belco Electric, Inc. (Belco) (alleged to be responsible for maintenance of lighting at the shopping center), all of whom raised timely defenses of res judicata based on the previous voluntary dismissals under OCGA § 9-11-41 (a), and moved for dismissal from the action.
Case No. .A92A0481 (Kroger)
Prior to the present complaint, this wrongful death claim had been previously brought in the first action separately filed and dis
The trial court recognized that the wrongful death claim had been voluntarily dismissed on three previous occasions, but held that each parent had a right to assert a wrongful death cause of action independent of the other so that an adjudication on the merits of Bush’s claim would occur only after three such actions in which Bush was a plaintiff were voluntarily dismissed. Since Bush had brought and voluntarily dismissed the action only twice prior to filing the present action, the trial court found there was no adjudication on the merits.
Under OCGA § 19-7-1, the right to recover for the wrongful death of a child, who dies without leaving a spouse or child, is a single cause of action vested jointly in the parents of the deceased if they are married and living together. Under OCGA § 19-7-1 (c) (2) (C), “[i]f both parents are living but are divorced, separated, or living apart, the right shall be in both parents. However, if the parents are divorced, separated, or living apart and one parent refuses to proceed or cannot be located to proceed to recover for the wrongful death of a child, the other parent shall have the right to contract for representation on behalf of both parents, thereby binding both parents, and the right to proceed on behalf of both parents to recover for the homicide of the child with any ultimate recovery to be shared by the parents as provided in this subsection.”
In the case of parents divorced, separated or living apart, the statute creates a single cause of action vested in both parents, which may be brought by both parents together, or by one parent on behalf of both parents.
Bell v. Sigal,
As provided in OCGA § 9-11-3, “[a] civil action is commenced by filing a complaint with the court.” See
Harris v. Sampson,
We find the previous complaints filed by Broyles and Bush were actions commenced and voluntarily dismissed within the meaning of OCGA § 9-11-41 (a). The present wrongful death action pending against Kroger was previously filed and voluntarily dismissed three times, once separately by Broyles, once by Broyles and Bush in the consolidated action, and once separately by Bush. Accordingly, there was an adjudication on the merits, and the trial court erred by deny
Case No. A92A0480 (Belco)
Case No. A92 A0482 (LaVista)
Case No. A92A0483 (PM Realty et al.)
As to the remaining four appellants, LaVista, PM Realty, and Public Employees Retirement System were named as defendants in only one of the previously dismissed wrongful death actions, and Belco was named as a defendant for the first time in the present action. These appellants argue that under OCGA § 9-11-41 (a) three previous voluntary dismissals of the wrongful death action operates as an adjudication on the merits as to them even though they have not been defendants in three previous dismissals of the action. 3 In other words, they argue that the controlling factor is the third voluntary dismissal of the same cause of action rather than the named party defendants.
The filing of a voluntary dismissal of an action in accordance with OCGA § 9-11-41 (a) is without prejudice, “except that the filing of a third notice of dismissal operates as an adjudication upon the merits.” Although various defendants were named in the suits, the present action, and all of the previous actions brought and voluntarily dismissed by Broyles and Bush, sought recovery on the same claim, the wrongful death of their son as a result of being shot outside the Kroger store. Under the plain language of OCGA § 9-11-41 (a), an adjudication on the merits is based not on a requirement that the same defendant was three times dismissed, but because an action seeking recovery on the same claim was brought and voluntarily dismissed three previous times. Thus, the statute is designed to prevent a plaintiff from repeatedly filing actions for the same claim against any defendant, not only previously named defendants. See
Harris,
supra at 243;
Southeastern Hose v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am.,
Judgments reversed in Case Nos. A92A0480, A92A0481, A92A0482, and A92A0483.
Notes
Since the second and third actions had been previously consolidated, we treat these as a single voluntary dismissal of one action under OCGA § 9-11-41 (a).
Bush argues that such a rule is subject to abuse by one parent who may, without notice to the other parent, file and voluntarily dismiss an action three times and destroy any right of recovery. In most instances a parent’s diligent pursuit of rights under OCGA § 19-7-1 (c) to exercise control in the suit and participate in distribution of any proceeds will be sufficient protection of the right to recovery. Nevertheless, in bringing a wrongful death claim a parent is not free to deliberately or negligently abuse these procedures to the detriment of the other parent. Parents who are divorced, separated or living apart owe to one another a duty analogous to that of a surviving spouse’s duty to surviving children to “prudently, assert, prosecute, or settle the wrongful death claim,” and a failure to do so which proximately causes the loss of the other’s right to recovery may subject them to liability. See
O’Kelley v. Hosp. Auth. of Gwinnett County,
LaVista’s constitutional claims were not presented to or ruled upon by the trial court, and present nothing for appellate review.
Archie v. Scott,
