On June 10,1997, Shawn Howes sued Kings Bay Chrysler Plymouth Dodge, a Georgia corporation, for wrongful foreclosure, conversion, trespass, and personal injury. Gilbert Hodge was the sole shareholder and chief executive officer of Kings Bay. By January 1998, Kings Bay had sold its assets and distributed the proceeds to Hodge. On June 26, 1999, a default judgment was entered in favor of Howes in his suit against Kings Bay in the amount of $36,212. The judgment was uncollectible because Kings Bay was insolvent. Howes then sued Hodge, claiming that Hodge was liable for the judgment entered against Kings Bay to the extent of the distributions made to Hodge by Kings Bay. In his answer, Hodge denied liability and further asserted that, as a Texas resident, he was not subject to personal jurisdiction and moved to dismiss on that ground.
1. Hodge claims that the trial court should not have entered summary judgment against him because it did not rule on his motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction. We disagree because, by his actions, Hodge waived his jurisdictional defense.
In order for a defendant’s acts to serve as a waiver of his previously asserted objection to jurisdiction, his acts or omissions to act, relied on, should be so manifestly consistent with and indicative of an intention to voluntarily relinquish a then known particular right or benefit, that no other reasonable explanation of his conduct is possible.2
Hodge moved for summary judgment on the merits without reasserting or reserving the jurisdictional objections made in his answer. In Hoffman v. Fletcher,
The result in Hoffman can be contrasted to cases such as Hight v. Blankenship,
We have also found that a party may waive the defense of improper venue by failing to elicit a ruling on the defense before entry of a ruling on the merits or commencement of trial.
[a] party against whom summary judgment has been granted is in the same position as if he suffered a verdict against him. Accordingly, appellant’s failure to object to improper venue prior to the entry of the trial court’s order was, in effect, a failure to raise the defense prior to suffering a verdict against him. By doing so, appellant waived any venue defense he possessed.11
We conclude that Hodge’s actions in (i) moving for summary judgment without reserving or reasserting his jurisdictional defense, and (ii) actively participating in the litigation and allowing final judgment to be issued without asking the trial court to address his jurisdictional defense are “manifestly consistent with and indicative of an intention to voluntarily relinquish” his defense of lack of personal jurisdiction.
2. Hodge contends that, because he was not named as a party defendant in Howes’s 1997 suit against Kings Bay, the default judgment against Kings Bay cannot be enforced against him. This argument fails because Howes’s action against Hodge was not an action to enforce the default judgment entered against Kings Bay. Hartley v. Shenandoah,
3. Hodge argues that, when Kings Bay sold its assets and distributed the proceeds to him, Howes was not a creditor of Kings Bay, and Howes only became its creditor upon obtaining the default judgment against the corporation. However, under OCGA § 18-2-1, an unliquidated tort claim may create a debtor-creditor relationship. “[A] person having a claim for unliquidated damages, because of an injury tortiously committed upon him, was, though not in a technical sense a creditor, nevertheless within the protection of the statute.”
4. Hodge contends that even if Howes could be considered Kings Bay’s creditor at the time of the asset sale and distribution, issues remained for the jury. We disagree.
Officers/directors of corporations may be held personally liable for corporate indebtedness when they make preferential transfers of corporate assets to themselves while the corporation is insolvent. Thus, we must determine whether the corporation was insolvent at the time the transfers were made.15
[t]he legislature obviously did not intend the taking party to be liable for general and punitive damages under OCGA § 18-2-22 based solely upon the fraudulent conveyance without proof of bad faith, actual fraud, or conspiracy on his part.16
However, the undisputed facts show that Hodge was the sole shareholder and chief executive officer of Kings Bay, and as such knew of Howes’s action against the corporation, and that he caused the distribution of all of the corporation’s assets to himself. It follows that Hodge’s liability does not rest “solely upon the fraudulent conveyance” of the debtor Kings Bay, but on his own actions.
5. Finally, Hodge brings our attention to the principle that a debtor may prefer one creditor over another.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The motion was part of the answer.
(Citation and punctuation omitted.) Marsh v. Wright Mem. Mortuary,
See OCGA § 9-11-12 (b).
See also Roberts v. Bienert,
Id.
Williams v. Willis,
(Citation and punctuation omitted.) Id. at 553 (1). See Wheeler’s, Inc. v. Wilson,
Banks v. McCandless,
OCGA § 18-2-1.
(Citation omitted.) Randall & Neder Lumber Co. v. Randall,
(Emphasis supplied.) Kesler v. Veal,
OCGA § 18-2-40.
See Randall & Neder, supra.
