This case concerns OCGA § 36-11-1, which provides that “[a]ll claims against counties must be presented within 12 months after they accrue or become payable,” and if they are not so presented, “the same are barred.” Five years ago, our Court of Appeals said in Coweta County v. Cooper,
1. In January 2012, Joe Leonard, Jr., allegedly sustained injuries while riding as a passenger aboard a Whitfield County Transit Services bus. Leonard hired a lawyer, and in June 2012, his lawyer sent a letter to Robert Smalley, an attorney in Dalton, Georgia. Although Smalley is engaged in the private practice of law, he also serves as the County Attorney for Whitfield County, a position to which he was appointed prior to his receipt of the letter in June 2012. In that letter, Leonard’s lawyer referred to the injuries that Leonard allegedly sustained in January, and he asked that Smalley accept the letter as a presentment of Leonard’s claim against the County Smalley thereafter discussed the matter with one or more members of the Whitfield County Board of Commissioners, but the record does not show whether Smalley actually gave the letter itself to the members of the Board.
In January 2014, Leonard filed a lawsuit against the County, seeking to recover damages for the injuries that he allegedly had sustained two years earlier. Soon after filing the lawsuit, Leonard died, and Janice Croy — his daughter and the executrix of his estate — was substituted as plaintiff. The County then filed a motion for summary judgment under OCGA § 36-11-1, asserting that Leonard never properly presented his claim, and for that reason, it was barred. The County acknowledged the letter that Leonard’s lawyer sent to Smalley in June 2012, but it argued that the letter was not a proper presentment because Smalley was not employed by the County in house.
2. The
Before this case, we never have considered whether a claim properly might be presented to the governing authority by delivery of a presentment to anyone other than the members of the governing authority themselves. The Court of Appeals, however, has considered that question on several occasions. In Burton v. DeKalb County,
Burton was not the first case in which the Court of Appeals looked to cases interpreting and applying the municipal ante litem notice statute as an aid to its understanding of OCGA § 36-11-1, and looking to those cases in this particular context is, we think, conceptually sound. Indeed, in Davis,
To decide this case, we need not (and do not) endorse everything said by the Court of Appeals in Burton and the municipal cases on which Burton relied. It is enough that we accept the fundamental premise of those cases, the earliest of which was decided 89 years ago — that the proper presentation of a claim to a governing authority does not always and inevitably require that the presentment be directly laid in the hands of the members of the governing authority The presentment sometimes may be submitted to the governing authority by delivering it to subordinate officers of the county government.
Accepting that premise, we conclude that the county attorney is among those officers to whom a presentment properly may be delivered.
Because OCGA § 36-11-Isays nothing about the means by which a presentment properly is to be submitted to the governing authority of a county, the courts for many years have looked to the purpose of the statute in assessing the sufficiency of the manner of presentment. In Dement, we said that “the main object of the law was[,] doubtless[,] to provide that the county officials should have timely notice of all demands against the county, in order that they might intelligently and advisedly take the proper action concerning the same.”
We reject, however, the distinction that the Court of Appeals has drawn between inside and outside county attorneys. In Coweta Coun ty, the Court of Appeals cited no authority for this distinction, other than City of LaGrange v. USAAIns. Co.,
Notwithstanding that Smalley was an outside county attorney, the timely delivery of an otherwise adequate presentation of a claim against Whitfield County to Smalley would satisfy the statutory presentment requirement of OCGA § 36-11-1. The trial court erred when it concluded that a presentment delivered to Smalley could not satisfy the statutory requirement, and the Court of
3. Given our holding in Division 2, we need not address Croy’s alternative argument that the time for Leonard to satisfy the statutory presentment requirement was tolled by his alleged disability
Judgment reversed.
Notes
In the Court of Appeals, this case was styled as In re Estate of Leonard, but here, it is styled as Croy v. Whitfield County, Croy being the executrix of the Estate of Leonard.
The County also asserted that the letter did not contain enough detail to adequately present a claim, but the trial court never ruled on the content of the letter. We decide nothing about the content of the letter. That question should be resolved in the first instance by the trial court.
Judge McFadden wrote the opinion for the Court of Appeals, and Presiding Judge Andrews joined portions of it, including Division 2 (b). Presiding Judge Ellington and Judges Dillard and Branch concurred in judgment only. Presiding Judges Barnes and Miller dissented.
See Code of 1863, § 479 (“All claims against counties must be presented within twelve months after they accrue or become payable, or the same are barred . . . .”).
Early on, the justices of the inferior court were charged with oversight of the financial affairs of the county, and at that time, a presentment was properly directed to the justices. See Maddox v. Randolph County,
There are important textual differences between the municipal ante litem notice and county presentment statutes. No one should misunderstand us to suggest that the statutes should be construed consistently in every context.
When we speak of “the county attorney,” we do not mean any lawyer doing work for a county. Instead, we mean the county attorney, that is, the regular and duly appointed county attorney.
We note that the County Attorney for Whitfield County is appointed by the authority of the Board of Commissioners. See Ga. L. 1964, p. 2175, § 24 (authorizing governing authority to employ a county attorney).
That said, we are not convinced that Coweta County was wrongly decided. In that case, the presentment was addressed to someone who was not shown by the record to be the county attorney (inside or outside), an attorney at the law firm to which the presentment was delivered, or even an attorney at all. See
