This Court granted certiorari to the Court of Appeals in Crowe v. Elder,
Walter E. Elder III (“decedent”) died intestate in 2004, leaving an estate valued at approximately $3,000,000. His widow, Eva Smith Elder (“Elder”), petitioned the Probate Court of Barrow County for a year’s
On May 1, 2007, Crowe, individually and as guardian ad litem for her two minor sons, along with her emancipated son, filed in the probate court a motion to set aside the year’s support award, alleging that Elder fraudulently induced Crowe and her sons to consent to the requested year’s support by promising that, after it was granted, the estate would be divided equally among Elder, Crowe, and Crowe’s three sons, who are grandsons of the decedent, but that Elder failed to honor that agreement. On December 14, 2007, the probate court dismissed the motion on the basis that it lacked equity jurisdiction.
Crowe appealed the dismissal to the superior court, and Elder filed a motion for summary judgment, which the superior court granted, after finding that Crowe had failed to state a valid claim for fraud. The superior court also found that inasmuch as Elder and Crowe were decedent’s only heirs at law, Crowe’s emancipated son and Crowe as guardian ad litem for her two minor sons were strangers to the order granting Elder’s petition for year’s support; therefore, they lacked standing to proceed as parties in the suit. Crowe appealed the grant of summary judgment to the Court of Appeals, and that Court affirmed the judgment without opinion pursuant to its Rule 36 (“Crowe I”).
In the meantime, in July 2008, Crowe filed in the superior court the present complaint for breach of contract against Elder for Elder’s failure to honor the alleged agreement regarding the ultimate distribution of decedent’s estate, that is, that it would be divided into five equal parts to go to Elder, Crowe, and decedent’s three grandsons. The superior court granted summary judgment to Elder, finding that res judicata barred Crowe’s claims.
After examining the claims in Crowe I and the instant case, the Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment of the superior court; it found it undisputed that the elements of res judicata were satisfied, and consequently, that the doctrine barred this breach of contract action. And, so it does.
As noted by the Court of Appeals, OCGA § 9-12-40 represents a codification of the common law doctrine of res judicata, and provides:
A judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction shall be conclusive between the same parties and their privies as to all matters put in issue or which under the rules of law might have been put in issue in the cause wherein the judgment was rendered until the judgment is reversed or set aside.
The purpose of the doctrine is to prevent the re-litigation of claims which have already been adjudicated, or which could have been adjudicated, between identical parties or their privies in identical causes of action. Body of Christ Overcoming Church of God v. Brinson,
Identity of parties. There is no dispute that Crowe is the plaintiff and Elder is the defendant in both suits.
Identity of causes of action. A cause of action has been deemed to be “the entire set of facts which give rise to an enforceable claim.” Morrison v. Morrison,
Prior adjudication on the merits by a court of competent jurisdiction. A probate court has broad authority to exercise its original, exclusive, and general jurisdiction over the probate of wills and “[a] 11 other matters and things as appertain or relate to estates of deceased persons.” OCGA § 15-9-30 (a) (10); Greenway v. Hamilton,
Simply, Crowe’s restyling of the present complaint in terms of a breach of contract theory of recovery which was ascertainable in the original case will not revive her cause of action for fraud that was defeated on appeal from a summary judgment ruling. Smith v. Lockridge,
Consequently, the Court of Appeals did not err in holding that res judicata bars the present complaint for breach of contract.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
296 Ga. App. XXIII (Case No. A09A0076) (Feb. 16, 2009) (cert, not applied for).
