Lead Opinion
This сase comes to us from the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, wherein the City of Atlanta and certain officers of the City’s police department are challenging the district court’s denial of their motion to set aside a consent order, entered in resolution of a suit in which they were the named defendants. The consent order incоrporated a settlement agreement executed by two assistant city attorneys (on behalf of defendants) and counsel for plaintiffs. The consent order provides for the payment of $37,500 to plaintiffs and also requires the City to place limitations on its police officers’ arrest powers, dictates revisions to the police department’s field manual, and mandates changes to be made both in the police academy training program for recruits and in the in-service training for regular officers.
Defendants moved to set aside the consent order on the basis that the city attorneys who executed the settlement agreement were without authority to do so and the Atlanta City Council had refused to adopt the agreement. Defendants filed in the district court a certified copy of the applicable provisions of the Code of Ordinances of the City of Atlanta, including § 4-2007, which sets forth the sole power conferred by the City on its attorneys as to settlement of claims against the City. That ordinance provides:
The city attorney shall have authority, without approval of the council, to settle all claims and suits for sums not to exceed $500 in each instance. Settlement of claims and suits in excess of $500 shall first be approved by the council.
The Eleventh Circuit certified the following question to this Court:
Does an express restriction on a City attorney’s right to settle a cause of action embodied in a municipal ordinance, which is not specifically communicated by the City or its attorney to an opposing party, circumscribe the City attorney’s apparent authority to bind his client to a settlement agreement?
Although the Eleventh Circuit stressed that “[n)othing in this certification, including the particular phrasing of the foregoing question, is intended to limit the Supreme Court of Georgia in its consideration of the problem presented,” Black v. City of Atlanta,
Powers of all public officers are defined by law and all persons must take notice thereof. The public may not be es-topped by the acts of any officer done in the exercise of an unconferred power.
OCGA § 45-6-5. This Court has applied that principle for over a century. Penitentiary Co. v. Gordon,
Public sector attorneys, such as the assistant city attorneys in this case, are public officers. See Smith v. Mueller,
the duty of any person dealing with [a] municipality in a contractual relation to see that there has been a compliance with the mandatory provisions of the law limiting and prescribing its powers [,]
Wiley v. City of Columbus,
[u]nder Georgia law an attorney of rеcord has apparent authority to enter into an agreement on behalf of his client and the agreement is enforceable against the client by other settling parties. [Cits.] . . . The authority may be considered plenary unless it is limited by the client and that limitation is communicated to opposing parties. [Cits.]
Id. at 674-675.
While this Court has limited the application of Brumbelow, particularly in those situations where the contrаct of settlement negotiated by counsel can become the judgment of a court, e.g., Bridges v. Bridges,
While the authority of private sector attorneys negotiating private settlements between private parties may be considered plenary under Brumbelow, the same cannot be said of public sector attorneys. We recognize and reiterate that at all times, an attorney at law is an officer of the court. Sams v. Olah,
This Court is not called upon in this case
to drаw a sharp line between incidental matters which a municipality, as other clients, in the handling of a lawsuit must [necessarily] leave to the discretion of its attorney, guided by such informal counsel as personal contact may supply, and matters more importantly affecting the rights of the client and the objectives of the suit.
Town of Bath v. Norman,
In this case, plaintiffs were presumed to know that the authority conferred on the assistant city attorneys to enter into the monetary settlement of plaintiffs’ claim was limited to $500. Furthermore, plaintiffs were under a duty to determine that the Council had preap-proved the settlement terms as to monetary amounts in excess of $500.
That does not end the inquiry, however, because it is well-established that
an estoppel arises as against the denial of agency when a principal places a purported agent in a position оf apparent authority so that a person of ordinary prudence conversant with business usages and the nature of the particular business is justified in assuming that such agent has the authority to perform a particular act and deals with the agent upon that assumption. [Cits.]
Intl. Indem. Co. v. Odom,
“[t]he doctrine of estoppel is not applied as freely against a municipal corporation as against an individual. Municipalities act in both a governmental and a proprietary capacity, and an estoppel is not asserted if such will embarrass a municipality in its capacity as a governing body or operate to prevent it from exercising its police power. . . [.] While a municipality is not estopped to deny the validity of a contract wholly beyond its powers, it may be estopped by the exercise of contractual powers legally vested in it, and even by the exercise of governmental powers, to prevent manifest injustice and wrongs to private persons, where the restraint placed upon a municipality to accomplish that рurpose does not interfere with the exercise of governmental powers of the municipality. A municipality is subject to the rules of estop-pel in those cases wherein equity and justice require their application, and may be estopped under certain circumstances by its act and conduct.”
City of Summerville v. Ga. Power Co.,
In the instant case, “aside from the fact thаt prudence would have dictated that [plaintiffs] obtain written authorization,” City of Jersey City v. Roosevelt Stadium, supra at 815 (II), “[t]here can be no estoppel by conduct where both parties have equal knowledge or equal means of knowing the truth. [Cit.]” Tybrisa Co. v. Tybeeland,
Accordingly, in answering the Eleventh Circuit’s question in the affirmative, we hold that a public seсtor attorney’s authority, like that of any other public officer, is defined and prescribed by law, including municipal ordinances such as the municipal ordinance in issue in this case.
Certified question answered in the affirmative.
Notes
We intimate no opinion as to the propriety or enforceability of the injunctive provisions.
To the extent that City of Atlanta v. Frank,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
In the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Black and other named plaintiffs brought suit against appellants, the City of Atlanta and several of its police officers. Prior to trial, the City, through its attorneys of record, and the plaintiffs, through their attorneys of record, entered into an agreement settling all issues in the litigation. In reliance upon representations of counsel, the district court entered a consent order delineating the terms of the settlement. The consent order was signed by counsel for the parties and provided, in part, as follows: “The parties have executed and agree to the provisions of this consent order by and through their undersigned counsel of record.” (Emphasis supplied.) Relying entirely upon OCGA § 45-6-5, this court holds that the certified question concerning the validity of that settlement must be answered in the af
An attorney in the employ of a governmental entity may be a “public officer” in the same general sense as any other governmental employee. “Any one is a public officer who is appointed by the government and has any duty to perform concerning the public.” Tem-pleman v. Jeffries,
In my opinion, the “powers” and “аcts” of an attorney engaged in representing a governmental entity in a legal proceeding are in no way equivalent to the “powers” and “acts” of a “public officer” as that term is employed in OCGA § 45-6-5. Until today’s decision, the “powers” and “acts” of such an attorney have always been deemed to be those of an “officer of the cоurt.” “An attorney does not hold an office or public trust, in the constitutional or statutory sense of that term, but is an officer of the court.” (Emphasis supplied.) Sams v. Olah,
[a]n. attorney at law, even if he be also a city attorney, acting for a client in a legal proceeding is not an “officer of the city” .... He is then an officer of the court, and all of the presumptions of that office attach to him.
City of Atlanta v. Frank,
The lawyer stands in a unique position in our society. He is by virtue of the practice of his profession an officer of the court. [Cits.] . . . “The office of attorney is indispensable to the administration of justice and is intimate and peculiar in its relation to, and vital to the well-being of, the court.”
Sams v. Olah, supra at 504 (7). It necessarily follows that, when an attorney undertakes to represent a governmental entity in a legal proceeding, his or her “powers” and “acts” must be deemed to be those of an “officer of the court” and not those of a “public officer” within the ambit of OCGA § 45-6-5.
Since OCGA § 45-6-5 clearly does not apply in this сase, the controlling authority is Brumbelow v. Northern Propane Gas Co.,
Moreover, the ordinance here in question specifies that only settlements for amounts over $500 must first be specifically approved by the City Council. Thus, that ordinance does not impose any limitation on counsel’s authority to settle a case on behalf of appellants. To the contrary, the ordinance constitutes an expansion of counsel’s authority in that regard by providing that all settlements for less than $500 are deemed to be pre-approved by the City Council. Therefore, the majority errs in cоncluding that plaintiffs had equal knowledge that the settlement was unauthorized. Even if the existence of the ordinance had been communicated, the plaintiffs would have known only that counsel’s offer to settle their claims for $37,500 was not a pre-approved offer from the City Council, but was one which counsel was authorized to make after obtaining the approval of the City Council. Notwithstanding such a disclosure, plaintiffs and the district court still would have been entitled to assume that counsel had obtained the City Council’s necessary approval of the settlement offer before signing the consent order in their capacity as the City’s attorneys of record, unless plaintiffs had actual knowledge to the contrary. See Wilson v. Anderson,
Regardless of the degree of actual authority extended by a principal to his agent as between the two of them, nonetheless the principal will be liable for certain acts of his agent within the sсope of the agent’s apparent authority. [Cit.]
City of Gainesville v. Pritchett,
By answering the certified question in the affirmative, this court, in effect, holds that the City’s attorneys are not “officers of the court” upon whose authority and representations the trial court and opposing counsel were justified in placing their reliance. With this holding, I cannot agree. “The client’s remedy, where there have been restrictions not communicated to the opposing party, is against the attorney who overstepped the bounds of his agency, not against the third party.” Brumbelow v. Northern Propane Gas Co., supra at 675 (2). In my opinion, the question certified to this court by the United States Court of Appeals should be answered in the negative.
I am authorized to state that Justice Thompson joins in this dissent.
