JKR Realty Associates, Ltd. (JKR), as landlord, entered into a
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ten-year commercial lease with Health Dent. Thereafter, Health Dent filed for bankruptcy and executed an assignment of its lease to Dental One Associates, Inc. (Dental One). Dental One took possession of the property and continued to occupy it for several years. When Dental One eventually vacated the premises without paying all of the rent due under the lease, JKR brought suit seeking to recover that unpaid rent. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of JKR, and Dental One appealed. Among its other contentions as to why the trial court erred in granting summary judgment, Dental One asserted that JKR had failed to prove satisfaction of a condition precedent to enforceability of the lease assignment. Noting that the transcript of the hearing on the summary judgment motion revealed that Dental One had raised no such “objection to [JKR’s] prima facie case” in the trial court, the Court of Appeals held that “the ground urged in this enumeration was waived below and is not preserved for appellate review.”
Dental One Assoc. v. JKR Realty Assoc.,
We granted Dental One’s petition for certiorari to review the holding of the Court of Appeals that, in an appeal from the grant of summary judgment, an assertion by the non-moving party that the movant failed to prove a prima facie case is not preserved for appellate review unless expressly raised below. We conclude that the Court of Appeals erred in so holding, because the issue in an appeal from the grant of summary judgment is whether the movant met the burden established by OCGA § 9-11-56 (c) and, in addressing that issue on appeal, the non-moving party is entitled to advance all arguments without regard to whether they were raised by way of objections below. However, it also appears that the error of the Court of Appeals was, under the circumstances of this case, harmless. Therefore, we disapprove of Division 2 of Dental One Assoc. v. JKR Realty Assoc., supra, but, applying the “right for any reason” principle, we affirm the judgment of affirmance reached therein.
1. The grant of summary judgment is authorized only when there is no remaining genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. OCGA § 9-11-56 (c). The movant does not show entitlement to judgment as a matter of law unless, construing the evidence most favorably for the non-moving party, a prima facie case is shown.
Meade v. Heimanson,
2. The contingency which Dental One urges as a condition precedent to enforceability of the lease assignment against it is the approval thereof by the bankruptcy court. There is some doubt whether this is a condition precedent to enforceability of the assignment against Dental One as the proposed-lessee, rather than a mere recognition that the then-lessee, Health Dent, was subject to the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court. See
Cowen v. Snellgrove,
Judgment affirmed.
