Plаintiff Tina M. Burton filed a complaint in negligence against defendant DeKalb County, alleging that on April 11, 1988, while working for the State in a building owned by the county, she slipped and fell on water the county had negligently permitted to accumulate on the rest room floor. The complaint further alleged that on March 30, 1989, plaintiff gave the county ante litem notice of her claim as required by OCGA § 36-11-1. Defendant denied liability and also raised the defenses of sovereign immunity and estoppel on the ground plaintiff had not presented notice of the claim within 12 months from the date the claim accrued as required by OCGA § 36-11-1.
Defendant county filed a motion for summary judgment supported by affidavits from the county’s chief executive officer and the county attorney attesting they had received no written notice of plaintiff’s complaint within 12 months of thе incident complained of in the complaint. The plaintiff responded with her own affidavit attesting that on March 30, 1989, her previous attorney sent a letter to Mr. Matt Russo of the DeKalb County Risk Management office informing him of plaintiff’s claim. A copy of the letter sent on plaintiff’s behalf was attached along with a copy of а letter dated April 24, 1989, from Russo, signed in his capacity as Insurance Manager of the county Risk Management Division, Department of Finance, denying the claim on the ground of sovereign immunity. The trial court issued an order granting summary judgment to the county on the ground that plaintiff failed to give notice of the claim sufficient to meet the requirеments of OCGA § 36-11-1.
In response to the plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration, the trial court permitted plaintiff to submit the affidavits of her former attorney and the attorney’s secretary, both of whom attested that the secretary had called Russo about plaintiff’s claim and Russo said the claim should be sent to his attention. The county filеd the affidavit of Russo attesting that he did not recall giving such instructions to plaintiff’s attorney. A second order was issued reaffirming the grant of summary judgment on the ground that the letter tо the insurance manager was insufficient to give ante litem notice as required by the statute and holding that even if Russo had instructed plaintiff’s attorney to send notice to him, the statutory requirements of ante litem notice may not be waived. Plaintiff appeals.
The applicable statute, OCGA § 36-11-1, provides: “All claims
By contrast, a similar statute applicable to municipalities requires a claimant to give written notice to the
“governing authority
of the municipal corporation” prior to filing suit and within six months of the happening of the event upon which the claim is predicated. (Emphasis, supplied.) OCGA § 36-33-5 (b). Nevertheless, since the purposе of the statute is simply to give the municipality notice of the grievance and an opportunity to investigate and settle the claim before suit, this court has reрeatedly held that substantial compliance with the requirements of the statute which puts the city on notice of the grievance is all that is required. See, e.g.,
Tanner v. City of Gainesville,
Defendant county argues that substantial compliance is not sufficiеnt to satisfy the requirements of the statute governing claims against a county, however. This argument is based on
Douglas County v. Brown &c. Enterprises,
Defendant county argues the same substantial compliance rules which apply to ante litem notice to cities should not apply to ante litem notice to counties because “ ‘[c]ounties are subdivisions of the state government . . . [whereas] municipalities are creatures of the legislature and their existence may be established, altered, amended, enlarged or diminished, or utterly abolished by the legislature. (Cits.)’ [Cit.]”
Miree v. United States,
The plaintiff in this case presented notice of her claim not simply to a department of the county but to the person who served as the
Judgment reversed.
