Kennestone Hospital, Inc. sued Sherri Hopson in her home county of Gwinnett to recover amounts due for medical services. Hop-son counterclaimed in tort, alleging that the hospital improperly released her mental health records to a third party. The hospital obtained summary judgment on the past due amounts, which judgment was not appealed, and then moved to have the case transferred to its home county of Cobb to have thе counterclaim tried there. The Gwinnett court transferred the case to Cobb, but the Cobb court transferred the case back to Gwinnett. We granted an interlocutory appeal to resolve the question of where venuе properly lies to try Hopson’s counterclaim. We hold that since the hospital brought suit in Gwinnett, it consented to that court resolving the counterclaim, and therefore venue properly lies in Gwinnett. Accordingly, we affirm.
*124 The rеlevant facts are undisputed. The hospital brought suit in Gwinnett State Court against Hopson (a resident of Gwinnett), claiming that she owed $704.37 plus interest in unpaid medical bills arising out of three visits to the hospital. One of those visits was for mental heаlth treatment she received in March 1996. Hopson counterclaimed in various tort counts based on the hospital’s alleged improper release (to a third party) of a copy of her mental health records from the March 1996 visit.
The hospital moved for summary judgment on its complaint and on all counts in the counterclaim, which motion the Gwinnett court granted. Not contesting the judgment on the medical bills, Hopson appealed the summary judgment оn the counterclaim to this Court. In
Hopson v. Kennestone Hosp.,
On remand, the hospital immediately moved to have the case transferred to Cobb County, its county of residence. The hospital argued that since the summary judgment on the complaint for medical bills was not appealed, that issue was no longer pending, leaving only the unrelated counterclaim against the hospital to be tried. The hospital claimed that since it was now the defendant, proper venue lay in its county of residence. The Gwinnett court agreed and held that because the counterclaim was not sufficiently related to the main claim, venue was improper in Gwinnett, and the court transferred the case to Cobb State Court.
Hopson then moved the Cobb court to transfer the matter back to Gwinnett. Holding that the counterclaim did not have to be related to the main claim originally filed in Gwinnett, the Cobb court transferred the case back to Gwinnett for disposition and certified its order for immediate review. To resolve this “ping-pong” match, we granted the hospital’s application for interlocutory review.
1. The Georgia Constitution generally provides that a civil case shall be tried in the county where the defendant resides. Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. VI, Sec. II, Par. VI. Regarding counterclaims, Georgia law has long held that a party that files suit in a Georgia court submits himself to that court’s jurisdiction and venue relating to all matters directly connected with the cаse that he had originated.
Ray v. Home & Foreign Investment
&c.
Co.,
The first question is whether the requirement — that the counterclaim be related or germane to the main claim to have proper venue — survived the passage of the Civil Practice Act. That Act includes OCGA § 9-11-18 (a), which provides that “[a] party asserting a claim to relief as an original claim, counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim may join, either as independent or as alternate claims, as many claims, legal or equitable, as he has against an oрposing party.” These would include both compulsory counterclaims (which arise out of the transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the complaint) and permissive counterclaims (which are not so related to the complaint). OCGA § 9-11-13 (a), (b). Indeed, “[a] counterclaim may or may not diminish or defeat the recovery sought by the opposing party. It may claim relief exceeding in amount or different in kind from that sought in the pleading of the opposing party.” OCGA § 9-11-13 (c). Thus,
Dixie Home Builders v. Waldrip,
Some cases have held that one or more of these statutory provisions have eliminated the need for the counterclaim to be related to the main claim in order for vеnue to try the counterclaim to be proper in a county that is not the residence of the plaintiff. In
Hughes v. Hughes,
Similarly,
Ledford v. Bowers,
On the other hand, other cases hold that the CPA did not diminish the requirement that a counterclaim be related to the main action to withstand a venue challenge. Quoting
Ledford,
supra,
2. We need not decide, however, whether the relatedness requirement is still viable. Here the counterclaim wаs sufficiently *127 related to the main claim to meet the relatedness requirement, and therefore under either approach the hospital consented to the Gwinnett court trying the counterclaim when it invoked the jurisdiction of that court to pursue its contract claim against Hopson.
The hospital in its main claim sought to recover for monies due arising out of the contractual relationship created between the hospital and Hopson when she sought and was given health care services from the hospital. Part of those services included mental health treatment. Hopson in her counterclaim alleges that the hospital improperly released the records of that mental health treatment, causing her damages that she seeks to recover in tort. The common nexus between the claims is the mental health treatment the hospital gave to Hopson, which led to certain contractual and legal obligations incurred by both parties. Indeed, the hospital admitted below that it was seeking to recover monies due “for the treatment at issue in Defendant’s Counterclaim.”
This commonality is nоt only sufficient to meet the broad similarity or connectedness test followed in
Bragg,
supra,
The Cobb trial court did not err in transferring the case to Gwinnett for disposition of the counterclaim.
Judgment affirmed.
