We granted Harold Korey’s petition for writ of certiorari from the Court of Appeals’ opinion in
Korey v. BellSouth,
BellSouth brought suit seeking to hold Korey individually liable on an unpaid telephone account he opened in May 1985. Korey answered claiming that the account was opened by a company that was doing business as Atlanta Temps, Inc.; he later stated in an interrogatory response that the account was opened by a different business which subsequently transferred the account to Atlanta Temps. Atlanta Temps was not incorporated until August 1986. Bell-South supported its motion for summary judgment with an affidavit averring that Korey established the account on behalf of Atlanta Temps. The Court of Appeals acknowledged that “BellSouth would not ordinarily be entitled to recover from Korey because it had knowingly done business with Atlanta Temps, Inc. after it was created. See OCGA § 14-2-204.” Korey, supra at 858. However, the Court of Appeals affirmed the grant of summary judgment to BellSouth by construing against Korey the unexplained contradiction in Korey’s testimony regarding the entity for whom the account was established.
Prophecy Corp.
stands for the position that self-contradictory testimony is construed against the equivocator, absent a reasonable
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explanation for the contradiction. Id.,
The record in this case contained other evidence that supported Korey’s claim that he was not individually liable on the account. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals erred when it failed to look beyond Korey’s self-contradictory testimony to the record as a whole in determining the propriety of the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to BellSouth. We thus reverse and remand this case to the Court of Appeals for it to apply the correct rule and to determine if the trial court’s order was correct for any of the other reasons raised by Bell-South.
Judgment reversed and case remanded.
