The MARTA (Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority) Act, Ga. L. 1965, pp. 2243, 2265, provides that any suit or action against MARTA shall be brought in the Superior Court of Fulton County. This interlocutory appeal involves the question of whether or not MARTA and its bus operator may be sued for negligence as joint tortfeasors in a county other than Fulton County, i.e., the county of residence of a third joint tortfeasor.
Immediately after alighting from a MARTA bus a child was struck and killed by a truck driven by a resident of DeKalb County. The parents-plaintiffs brought a
Section 10. (t) of the MARTA Act, Ga. L. 1965, pp. 2243, 2265
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provides: "Any action to protect or enforce any rights under the provisions of this Act or any suit or action against such Authority, except as provided in section 9 (c),
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shall be brought in the Superior Court of Fulton County, Georgia, and any action pertaining to validation of any bonds issued under the provisions of this Act shall likewise be brought in said court, which shall have exclusive, original jurisdiction of such actions.” This provision is not limited to suits arising out of revenue bonds
(MARTA v. McCain,
The plaintiffs contend that this provision of the MARTA Act is unconstitutional because it contravenes the venue provision of the Constitution, Code Ann. § 2-4304, which provides for an action against joint tortfeasors in the county of residence of any joint tortfeasor.
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Under MARTA Act § 10 (t), a single suit against joint tortfeasors including MARTA could only
MARTA argues that such limitation on the right to proceed against MARTA as a joint tortfeasor is permissible, urging that, when expressly waiving sovereign immunity from liability in tort, the state may prescribe the terms and conditions upon which it consents to be sued. See
Williams v. Lawler Hosiery Mills, Inc.,
The General Assembly may fix the residence of MARTA for venue purposes when it is sued alone (Code Ann. § 2-4306), but the Constitution, § 2-4304, provides the venue when MARTA is sued as a joint tortfeasor.* *** 7 Here venue in DeKalb County was proper and the court below erred in dismissing the complaint against MARTA and its operator for lack of venue.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
The rationale for dismissing the bus operator, a resident of Fulton County, is unclear. His dismissal must be reversed in any event.
Section 10 of the Act deals with revenue bonds issued by the Authority.
(Footnote added.) Section 9 (c) deals with review by the superior courts of MARTA’s determinations as to scheduled services and charges.
Code Ann. § 2-4304: "Suits against joint obligors, joint promisors, co-partners, or joint trespassers,
It has been said that an authority is not the state, or a part of the state, or an agency of the state.
Sheffield v. State School Bldg. Authority,
MARTA urges that the constitutional amendment authorizing its creation, § 2-8605 of the Constitution of 1945, relieves it from being restricted by other provisions of the Constitution. If that were so, MARTA could take private property without compensation. We read that
We are not unmindful that section 10 (t) of the MARTA Act authorizes suit against MARTA only in the Superior Court of Fulton County as opposed to simply in Fulton County. See MARTA
v. McCain,
