Malissa Johnson brought suit against Denolius Farley and City Wide Cab, Inc. to recover damages for injuries she incurred when a taxi driven by Farley, whom Johnson alleged was employed by City Wide, collided with Johnson’s car. After granting City Wide’s motion to withdraw an admission of agency, the trial court granted summary judgment to City Wide. Johnson appeals from the judgment entered in favor of City Wide.
1. Appellant first contends the trial court erred by granting appellee’s motion for withdrawal of its admission. Appellant served her request for admission on May 9, 1990, fourteen days after appellee filed its answer and nine days before appellee’s attorneys of record moved to withdraw as counsel for appellee and Farley. Appellee then failed to answer the request within the requisite time period (see OCGA § 9-11-36 (a) (2)), thereby resulting in an admission that “at the time of the collision, Denolius Farley was acting as a servant of [appellee].” Appellee’s counsel reentered the case two months later and filed a suggestion of Farley’s death. In May 1991, counsel moved to withdraw the admission and also moved to dismiss the claim against Farley on the ground that no motion for substitution had been filed within 180 days as required by OCGA § 9-11-25 (a) (1). The court granted both motions and in August granted appellee’s motion for summary judgment.
Pursuant to OCGA § 9-11-36 (b), as construed in
Cielock v. Munn,
In support of its motion to withdraw admissions, appellee submitted the affidavit of its manager, Wallace Maffett, who averred that appellee provides a dispatch service to taxi drivers who operate as independent contractors, that appellee has never employed a taxi driver, and that appellee did not employ Farley on the date in question. Maffett also averred that appellee’s manager at the time the admissions were served had been ill with Parkinson’s disease. This testimony satisfied the first prong because the denial of agency by a person in authority was credible and showed that the denial was not being offered solely for delay but instead was proffered to correct an erroneous admission. Compare Intersouth, supra at 728 (1).
Further, we hold that appellant failed to satisfy the second prong of the inquiry. Appellant’s argument that she was prejudiced by losing the opportunity to establish agency through the admission is without merit, for being compelled to try the merits of a case does not constitute the type of prejudice needed to warrant denial of a motion to withdraw admissions.
Alexander v. H. S. I. Mgmt.,
For the foregoing reasons, we hold the trial court did not abuse its discretion by granting appellee’s motion to withdraw admissions. See
Battle v. Strother,
2. Appellant also contends that even if the admission properly was withdrawn, a fact question remains as to agency. The evidence in the record concerning the question of agency consists of Maffett’s affidavit discussed in Division 1, appellant’s affidavit submitted in opposition to the summary judgment motion, and appellant’s deposition. In her affidavit, appellant averred that at the scene of the collision Farley told her he was employed by appellee and that a man who identified himself as Farley’s supervisor then arrived and made the same statement. However, in her deposition, appellant testified only that at the scene Farley contacted someone she “guess[ed] was his *504 supervisor,” and that she did not know what else Farley might have said at the scene because she was in pain from her injuries at the time.
It is well established that when either the principal or the agent denies the existence of any agency relationship, that denial may sustain a motion for summary judgment.
Bennett v. Miller,
Judgment affirmed.
