GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY v. JOHNSON.
A17A0958
In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
September 28, 2017
ANDREWS, Judge.
THIRD DIVISION
ELLINGTON, P. J.,
ANDREWS and RICKMAN, JJ.
NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules
Andrew Johnson drove his vehicle at high speeds in excess of the posted speed limit while fleeing from a pursuing Georgia State Patrol officer and ignoring the officer’s visual and audible signals to stop. To stop Johnson and end the high speed pursuit, the officer used his patrol vehicle to intentionally make contact with Johnson’s vehicle with a precision immobilization technique known as the PIT maneuver. After the officer executed the PIT maneuver, Johnson’s vehicle left the road, hit a tree, and Johnson suffered various injuries.
Johnson sued the Georgia Department of Public Safety (DPS), where the officer was employed in the Georgia State Patrol Division, alleging that his injuries
As a department of the State of Georgia, the DPS is entitled to sovereign immunity provided to the State under the Georgia Constitution to the extent that such immunity has not been waived through an act passed by the General Assembly.
The first exception, set forth in
Johnson’s suit concerns a written police protection policy formulated by the DPS governing use of the PIT maneuver which sets forth factors an officer is required to consider before making a decision to use the PIT maneuver. The suit alleges that Johnson’s injuries were caused by the officer’s negligent decision to use the PIT maneuver without considering certain factors set forth in the DPS policy governing the decision which contradicted use of the maneuver under the circumstances of this case. Johnson does not claim that the policy itself is defective; rather, he claims that the officer implemented a non-defective policy in a negligent manner by failing to consider all the factors the policy required him to consider. In moving to dismiss the suit, the DPS contended to the contrary that the record shows the officer was not
With respect to the GTCA exception set forth in
In the present case, however, the factual contentions asserted by the DPS in support of its
[A]lthough
OCGA § 9-11-12 (d) clothes the court with discretion to hear jurisdictional issues in advance of trial, it is a legal discretion which must balance the factors favoring pretrial determination of a defenseagainst other circumstances favoring delay, and which generally should not be exercised to consider questions of jurisdiction which are largely co-extensive with the merits of a claim. Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil § 1373; 2A Moore’s Federal Practice § 12.16. “In exercising this discretion, the court must balance the need to test the sufficiency of the defense or objection and the right of a party to have his defense or objection promptly decided and thereby possibly avoid costly litigation against such factors as the expense and delay the hearing may cause, the difficulty or likelihood of arriving at a meaningful result at the hearing, and the possibility that the issue to be decided on the hearing is so interwoven with the merits of the case that a postponement until trial is desirable.” Wright & Miller, supra, at 709-11. In particular, “where determination of the defense will involve going into the merits, the question may well be reserved until trial. The rule is not intended to permit fragmentary and separate trials of issues that require coherent presentation for their just determination.” 2A Moore’s, supra, at 2354.
Harrison, 253 Ga. at 214-215 (punctuation omitted). Whether a trial court rules on the factual challenge to jurisdiction before trial or defers it until trial on the merits pursuant to
The second GTCA exception to the waiver of sovereign immunity on which the DPS based its
DPS’s facial challenge to subject matter jurisdiction under
Judgment affirmed in part, vacated in part, and case remanded in part.
Ellington, P. J., and Rickman, J., concur.
