Lead Opinion
A three-year-old boy drowned when his uncle drove the car in which the uncle, the boy’s father, and the boy were all riding into a lake at the apartment complex where the father and son lived. The parents of the boy, Allan Ali Allan and Abeer Allan (the Allans), brought this wrongful death and negligence action against their landlord and the owner of the complex, Jefferson Lakeside, L.P. In Case No. A15A0246, the Allans appeal the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to Jefferson Lakeside; in Case No. A15A0247, Jefferson Lakeside cross-appeals the denial of its motion to exclude an expert’s testimony ruling. After the Allans had filed their notice of appeal, however, the trial court dismissed that notice on the ground that they had not timely completed the record. In Case No. A15A0479, we reverse the dismissal of the Allans’ notice of appeal, but we affirm
Case No. A1SA0479
1. The Allans first argue that the trial court abused its discretion when it dismissed their notice of appeal. We agree.
OCGA § 5-6-48 (c) provides that a trial court is authorized to dismiss an appellant’s notice of appeal “where there has been an unreasonable delay in the filing of [a] transcript and it is shown that the delay was inexcusable and was caused by [the appealing] party.” OCGA § 5-6-48 (f) provides, however, that
. . . [a]n appeal shall not be dismissed nor consideration thereof refused because of failure of the court reporter to file the transcript of evidence and proceedings within the time allowed by law or order of court unless it affirmatively appears from the record that the failure was caused by the appellant.
(Emphasis supplied.) Although the time elapsed between the filing of the notice of appeal and the completion of the appellate record gave rise to a presumption of unreasonable delay by the Allans, the evidence does not support a determination that the delay in this case was inexcusable in that it was caused by them. The trial court thus abused its discretion by dismissing the Allans’ notice of appeal.
A trial court’s discretion to dismiss an appeal under OCGA § 5-6-48 “is a legal discretion which is subject to review in the appellate courts.” Young v. Climatrol Southeast Distrib. Corp.,
The Allans filed their timely notice of appeal from the trial court’s grant of summary judgment on September 30, 2013. The notice of appeal designated inclusion of the transcript of the oral argument hearing on summary judgment as part of the appellate record. Only four days later, on October 4,2013, counsel for the Allans e-mailed the trial court’s official court reporter, ordered the transcript of the hearing on the summary judgment motion, and inquired as to the cost of preparing that transcript. On October 7, the court reporter informed counsel that the cost of preparation would be “extra” and in addition to the “shared takedown amount” paid at the hearing, but that she needed to “get back to [counsel] with an estimate” of the preparation cost. A few minutes later, counsel repeated to the court reporter that he needed to know what and where to pay, to which the court reporter replied, “I will get back to you and I will begin the transcript as soon as possible.”
Counsel for the Allans averred that in the three weeks following this exchange with the court reporter, and having been promised that the reporter would ££begin the transcript as soon as possible,” counsel made “several inquiries with the Clerk ... regarding the transmittal of the record to the appellate court,” in response to which the clerk first told counsel that the clerk was “waiting for the transcript to be filed before finalizing the Cost Billing Form,” but later said that “the transcript was filed” and then that “the record was complete and that the Cost Billing Form was finalized.” The trial court thus clearly erred when it found that counsel for the Allans “made no further inquiry into the status of the transcript [after October 7, 2013] until Defendant filed the [motion to dismiss the notice of appeal].”
Further, on October 22, 2013, or more than a week before the expiration of 30 days after the filing of the Allans’ notice of appeal, counsel received the Cost Billing Form from the clerk, the total amount of which included a line item charge of $35, designated as “Transcript.” Counsel paid this bill on November 8,2013. Nowhere in the record or the trial court’s order is there any evidence to contradict counsel’s reasonable inference that this line item charge referred to
This undisputed evidence makes clear that the Allans’ delay in filing the transcript of the oral argument hearing was excusable and not caused by them. See Welch,
Case Nos. A15A0246, A15A0247
2. In Case No. A15A0246, the Allans argue that the trial court erred when it granted Jefferson Lakeside summary judgment on the Allans’ negligence claims because genuine issues of material fact remain as to those claims. We disagree.
To prevail at summary judgment under OCGA § 9-11-56, the moving party must demonstrate that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the undisputed facts, viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, warrant judgment as a matter of law. OCGA § 9-11-56 (c). A defendant may do this by showing the court that the documents, affidavits, depositions and other evidence in the record reveal that there is no evidence sufficient to create a jury issue on at least one essential element of plaintiff’s case.
Lau’s Corp. v. Haskins,
As the father retrieved the cigarettes, the uncle saw a navigation system in the glove compartment and asked his brother to give it to him. When the father did so, and as the uncle attached the navigation system to the dashboard, the uncle lifted his foot off the brake, pressed the accelerator, saw that the contents of the glove compartment were falling onto the floor, and “found [him] self in the air.” The car struck the curb, went over it, the sidewalk, up 14 feet of slope, and down an additional 36 feet into the lake, where the car briefly floated. The father opened the front passenger door in an attempt to reach his son, at which water rushed into the car, cutting off its engine and electricity. Although the father could not swim, he managed to escape from the water with help from a bystander, but neither the father nor the uncle was able to free the child before the car became almost completely submerged and the child drowned. Although the uncle was not charged with any crime, a Cobb County police sergeant testified that had the incident occurred on a public road, rather than private property, the uncle would have been charged with failure to maintain lane and second-degree vehicular homicide.
In this wrongful death and negligence action filed against Jefferson Lakeside in March 2012, the Allans allege that their son died as a proximate result of Jefferson Lakeside’s negligence in failing to install a guardrail between the access road and the lake. The Allans also assert claims for negligent infliction of emotional distress and loss of consortium, seeking compensatory and punitive damages. The Allans retained expert witness Richard Rice, who averred that Jefferson Lakeside owed the public a duty to install a guardrail between the road and the lake and that its failure to do so violated applicable
As Jefferson Lakeside pointed out below, the outcome of this appeal is controlled by longstanding law to the effect that a landowner cannot be liable as a matter of law for injury resulting from a substantially unforeseeable event because the landowner owes no duty to guard against such an event.
Under OCGA § 51-3-1, an owner or occupier of land is liable to invitees “for injuries caused by his failure to exercise ordinary care in keeping the premises and approaches safe.” To state a cause of action for such negligence, a plaintiff must prove “a legally attributable causal connection between the defendant’s conduct and the alleged injury.” Southern Bell Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Dolce,
Under Georgia law, “questions of negligence and proximate cause are ordinarily reserved for the jury, but in plain and undisputed cases the court may make a determination as a matter of law.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Hercules v. Lewis,
[a]n event is not regarded as being foreseeable if it is one in the nature of an extraordinary coincidence, or a conjunction of circumstances, or which would not occur save under exceptional circumstances; if it is unusual and unlikely to happen, or if it is a rare event in experience, or if other and contingent experiences preponderate largely in causing the injurious effect.
Standard Oil Co. v. Harris,
[a] prior and remote cause can not be made the basis of an action if such remote cause did nothing more than furnish the condition, or give rise to the occasion by which the injury was made possible, if there intervened between such prior or remote cause and the injury a distinct, successive, unrelated, efficient cause of the injury. If no danger existed in the condition except because of the independent cause, such condition was not the proximate cause.
Southern Bell,
[o]ne is bound to anticipate and provide against what usually happens and what is likely to happen; but it would impose too heavy a responsibility to hold him bound in like manner to guard against what is unusual and unlikely to happen, or what is only remotely and slightly probable.
Feldman v. Whipkey’s Drug Shop,
Some of the above restatements of Georgia law come from cases in which, like the appeal before us, a car has ended up in a place improbably far from where it was supposed to remain, with catastrophic results. Feldman involved a plaintiff who was using a telephone booth at the edge of the sidewalk adj acent to the front of the defendant’s drug store when a vehicle jumped the sidewalk and crashed into the booth, seriously injuring the plaintiff.
By contrast, when a car may be anticipated to intrude upon a space sufficiently close to a place where invitees are expected to stand or sit, we have held that a jury may consider whether a landowner could be held liable for the outcome of such an event, which was reasonably foreseeable under the circumstances. See Chatmon v. Church’s Fried Chicken,
The Allans argue that Jefferson Lakeside can be held liable for the results of the uncle’s driving here because such erratic driving may reasonably be anticipated. On the contrary, it was not foreseeable that any driver on this access road would unintentionally accelerate from a full stop and cross a curb, a sidewalk, 14 feet up a slope, and 36 feet downward from the top of that slope before entering the lake at issue. Because Jefferson Lakeside could not be negligent as a matter of law for failing to foresee the events at issue here,
3. Because we affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to Jefferson Lakeside on the ground that it owed no duty of care to foresee or take precautions to avoid the death of this decedent by installing a guardrail, the matter of the admissibility of Rice’s expert testimony is moot. We therefore dismiss Case No. A15A0247.
Judgment affirmed in Case No. Al 5A0246. Judgment reversed in Case No. A15A0479. Appeal dismissed in Case No. Al 5A0247.
Notes
In the first sentence of the argument section of its appellee’s brief in Case No. A15A0479, involving the dismissal of the Allans’ notice of appeal, Jefferson Lakeside states its belief that the underlying appeals “should be decided on their merits.” To do so would require reversing the trial court’s dismissal of the notice of appeal.
The trial court’s order also consistently misnames the parties and their positions. After first stating that “the ultimate duty to ensure timely preparation and filing of a transcript falls with Defendant [rather than plaintiffs], not the Official Court Reporter,” the court repeated its error three more times: that “Defendant,” rather than plaintiffs, “failed to follow up” with the reporter; that “Defendant failed to seek appropriate relief from the Court”; and that “the delay [in filing the transcript] was unreasonable, inexcusable, and caused by Defendant” such that “Defendant’s notice of appeal is hereby dismissed.”
Only Jefferson Lakeside’s reply briefs in support of its summary judgment motion and the exclusion of Rice’s testimony, and not its initial briefs, appear in the appellate record.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
Allan Ali Allan and Abeer Issa Allan, the parents of the minor child who died in the automobile accident described in the majority opinion, filed a notice of appeal from the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Jefferson Lakeside, L.P. (Case No. A15A0246). Jefferson Lakeside filed a motion in the trial court to dismiss the appeal because of a delay in the filing of a transcript designated by the parents as necessary for consideration of the appeal. The trial court granted the motion and dismissed the appeal, and the parents appealed from the dismissal order in Case No. A15A0479. Because I conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by dismissing the appeal, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s reversal of the dismissal order in Case No. A15A0479.
The parents’ September 30, 2013 notice of appeal designated inclusion of the transcript of the proceedings of the oral argument hearing on summary judgment as part of the appellate record. Where the notice of appeal designates for inclusion in the appellate record a transcript of proceedings in the trial court, it is the appellant’s duty to have the court reporter prepare the transcript at the appellant’s expense and file the transcript with the clerk of the trial court within 30 days after filing the notice of appeal, unless the appellant obtains an extension of time before the expiration of the period for filing. OCGA §§ 5-6-37; 5-6-39; 5-6-41 (c), (e); 5-6-42. Accordingly, the parents had a duty to pay the court reporter to prepare and file the transcript no later than October 30,2013, or to obtain an extension of time before the filing deadline. On July 30, 2014, Jefferson Lakeside filed a motion in the trial court to dismiss the appeal pointing out that 302 days had passed since the parents filed their notice of appeal on September 30, 2013 designating inclusion of the transcript; that the transcript had not been filed with the clerk of the trial court; and that no extension of time for doing so had been requested or obtained. The record shows that, only after receiving the motion to dismiss did counsel for the parents determine from the court reporter the cost of having the reporter prepare and file the transcript. At that point, the parents paid the court reporter, and the reporter prepared and filed the transcript with the clerk of the trial court on July 30, 2014 — over eight months after the transcript was due to be filed.
Pursuant to OCGA § 5-6-48 (c), the trial court is authorized to dismiss an appeal “where there has been an unreasonable delay in the filing of the transcript and it is shown that the delay was inexcusable and was caused by [the appealing] party.” To dismiss an appeal, the trial court must find all three criteria set forth in OCGA § 5-6-48 (c). First, the trial court must make a threshold finding that the delay in filing was unreasonable, which “refers principally to the length and effect of the delay.” Sellers v. Nodvin,
Thus, OCGA § 5-6-48 (c) requires the trial court to determine the length of the delay, the reasons for the delay, whether the appealing party caused the delay, and whether the delay was inexcusable, and then to exercise discretion in deciding whether to dismiss the appeal. The trial court’s ruling will be reversed on appeal only for abuse of discretion.
Propst v. Morgan,
On appeal, the parents contend that the court reporter was at fault, asserting that “the trial court’s Official Court Reporter had failed to file the transcript, and that Appellant’s counsel had taken extensive measures to ensure that the transcript was filed.” The parents’ response to the motion to dismiss in the trial court showed that, within 30 days of their September 30, 2013 notice of appeal, their counsel contacted the court reporter by e-mail on October 4, 2013, ordered the transcript of the hearing, and asked the reporter about the cost of having the transcript prepared. On October 7, 2013, the court reporter responded by e-mail and informed counsel that the cost of preparation would be “an extra cost” in addition to the “shared takedown amount” that was paid at the hearing, and stated that she needed to look at the estimated pages “and get back to you with an estimate” of the cost. On October 7, 2013, counsel told the court reporter by e-mail to let him know what to pay and where to send payment, and the court reporter responded by e-mail on the same day that “I will get back to you and I will begin the transcript as soon as possible.” That was the last communication between counsel and the court reporter until counsel received Jefferson Lakeside’s motion to dismiss the appeal filed on July 30, 2014. After the dismissal motion was filed, counsel immediately contacted the court reporter to determine the cost of preparing the transcript, and immediately paid the court reporter to prepare the transcript. The court reporter responded to counsel by e-mail on August 1,2014 thanking counsel for payment, attaching a receipt for payment, and informing counsel that the reporter prepared the transcript and filed it in the clerk’s office on July 30, 2014.
Nevertheless, the parents contend that filing the transcript over eight months late was excusable and not their fault. In response to Jefferson Lakeside’s motion to dismiss, counsel for the parents
I had no reason to believe or suspect that the transcript had not been filed given the e[-]mail communications with the court reporter communicating to me that it would be done... [and] [i]t was not until I received Defendant^’] Motion to Dismiss that I realized that the transcript had not actually been filed as agreed upon.
I find no reasonable basis for the parents’ counsel to assume, based on conversations with the clerk’s office, that the court reporter prepared the designated transcript, filed it with the clerk, and authorized the clerk to include a bill for the transcript (in the amount of $35) as part of the clerk’s bill for the record. To the contrary, the last e-mail communication between counsel and the court reporter on October 7, 2013, indicated that counsel asked the court reporter to inform him of the cost of preparing the designated transcript and where to send payment, and the court reporter responded, “I will get back to you and I will begin the transcript as soon as possible.” As the record shows, the court reporter did not thereafter contact counsel to inform him of the cost of preparing the transcript, and the reporter did not prepare or file the transcript because she had not been paid. Under these circumstances, it was not reasonable for counsel to let the deadline expire for having the transcript prepared and filed without making any further effort to contact the court reporter to inquire about the status of the transcript preparation. Where the appellant has designated a transcript for inclusion in the record on appeal, OCGA § 5-6-42 provides that, “the appellant shall cause the transcript to be prepared and filed [by the court reporter].” Instead of
“[T]he burden to keep accurately informed of the status of transcript preparation remains with the party having the responsibility to file the transcript and it cannot be shifted to the court reporter .’’Jackson v. Beech Aircraft Corp.,
The record shows that the delay in filing the transcript delayed the docketing of the appeal and delayed any decision on appeal for at least one term of this Court. For this reason, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in making the threshold finding that the delay in filing the transcript was unreasonable. The trial court also found, as set forth above, that the record showed a failure to communicate with the court reporter about the status of transcript preparation. Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by granting the motion to dismiss the appeal on the additional basis that the unreasonable delay in filing was inexcusable and was caused by the parents.
Because the trial court correctly dismissed the parents’ appeal from the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Jefferson Lakeside, the dismissal order in Case No. A15A0479 should be affirmed, and the appeal in Case No. A15A0246, and the related cross-appeal in Case No. A15A0247, should be dismissed.
In a footnote quoting the appellee’s brief filed by Jefferson Lakeside in Case No. A15A0479, the majority opinion states: “Jefferson Lakeside states its belief [in the brief] that the underlying appeals ‘should be decided on their merits.’ ” The majority then concludes that, to reach the merits, “would require reversing the trial court’s dismissal of the notice of appeal.” The footnote appears to suggest that Jefferson Lakeside has conceded on appeal that the trial court erred by dismissing the parents’ appeal. To be clear, the appellee, Jefferson Lakeside, did not concede that the trial court’s grant of its motion to dismiss the appeal should be reversed. The appellee’s brief in Case No. Á15A0479 argues that the trial court’s order dismissing the appeal should be affirmed, while alternately urging this Court to affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to appellee on the merits in Case No. A15A0246. There is nothing unusual about the appellee’s alternative contentions.
The trial court’s order entered on September 16, 2014 dismissing the appeal correctly states that the matter before the court is the “Defendant’s ‘Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ Appeal.’ ” But in some places the order mistakenly transposes the terms Defendant and Plaintiff, and mistakenly states that “Defendant’s notice of appeal is hereby dismissed.” This is a mere misnomer, and the Court’s order plainly and undisputedly dismisses the Plaintiff’s notice of appeal. Moreover, the parents’ notice of appeal in Case No. A15A0479 confirms this by stating that their appeal is from “the Order Granting Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiffs’ Appeal. . . entered in this action with the Clerk of Court on September 16, 2014.”
