Shirley and James Mullinax appeal the trial court’s order denying their motion to correct an alleged clerical error and granting summary judgment to their uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM) carrier, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company. Because the Mullinaxes met the conditions precedent for pursuing their UM claim, and because the trial court erred in denying their motion to rescind their voluntary dismissal with prejudice, we reverse.
In August 2007 Shirley Mullinax sued David English for personal injuries sustained during a motor vehicle collision, and her husband James Mullinax sued for loss of consortium. The Mullinaxes served a copy of the complaint and subsequent pleadings on State Farm, their UM carrier, which answered and counterclaimed against English for any sums State Farm became required to pay. Having filed defensive pleadings in its own name, State Farm became a party to the action and gained the right to assert any coverage defenses, including an alleged failure to comply with a conditiоn precedent to recovery of UM benefits.
Thompson v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
In January 2008, the Mullinaxes settled their claims against English, releasing him and his insurer for $25,000, pursuant to OCGA § 33-24-41.1. The release allocated $20,000 to settle Shirley Mullinax’s claim and $5,000 to settle James Mullinax’s claim, and the Mullinaxes agreed not to assert any claims agаinst English or his insurer “except as necessary to prosecute any claim against their uninsured motorist carrier(s).” In February 2008, counsel for the Mullinaxes filed a pleading titled “Voluntary Dismissal with Prejudice as to David English.” The body of the pleading provided that the Mullinaxes dismissed “the above-styled lawsuit with prejudice, as to Defendant David English only. All claims against the Plaintiffs uninsured motorist carrier, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company are not dismissed.”
In September 2008, State Farm moved for summary judgment, arguing that the Mullinaxes could not recover UM benefits under their policies because they failed to exhаust the limits of English’s liability coverage, each having settled for less than the $25,000 policy limit. State Farm also argued that the plaintiffs lost their right to proceed against it when they voluntarily dismissed with prejudice thеir claims against English. Because their claim against State Farm was based on their negligence claims against English, dismissing *77 English with prejudice defeated the Mullinaxes’ claim against State Farm, the insurer argued.
In rеsponse, the Mullinaxes filed a motion “to correct a clerical error in the voluntary dismissal with prejudice as to David English” and asked the trial court pursuant to OCGA § 9-11-60 (g) “to rescind the Voluntary Dismissal with Prejudice as to David English.” Along with their brief in support of this motion were attached the affidavits of the lawyers for the Mullinaxes and English, in which both stated they did not intend to dismiss the complaint against English with prejudice. English’s lawyеr stated that he prepared the formal settlement paperwork and “sent Counsel for Plaintiff a limited release, a settlement draft for $25,000, and a Voluntary Dismissal with Prejudice form to be executed.” His express intention was to send a dismissal without prejudice form that would allow their claims to proceed against the UM insurer and “effectuate the intent of the ‘limited’ (not general) releаse,” but mistakenly sent a dismissal with prejudice instead. The Mullinaxes’ lawyer said that the limited release was intended to relieve the defendant and his insurer from liability but retain the rights to pursue the Mullinaxes’ own insurer undеr their UM coverage pursuant to OCGA § 33-24-41.1. His “execution of the Voluntary Dismissal with Prejudice as to all claims of David English was a mistake committed through oversight,” and upon discovering the error he moved promptly in cooperation with English’s counsel to correct the error.
At the hearing on the motions, counsel for the Mullinaxes agreed with State Farm that a dismissal with prejudice precluded his cliеnts from obtaining a judgment against English and thus proceeding against their own insurer. He asked the court to allow him to dismiss the case without prejudice and then refile. He knew the difference between a dismissal without and a dismissal with prejudice, could not explain how he failed to catch the error, and had notified his errors and omissions (E & O) carrier of the incident. State Farm argued that the error wаs not the kind of clerical error that OCGA § 9-11-60 (g) was intended to address, but was a legal error which counsel for English included in the first draft and counsel for the Mullinaxes failed to correct despite making other changes to the document before filing it.
Ruling from the bench, the trial court acknowledged the harm ensuing to the Mullinaxes due to this error, but concluded that filing the dismissal with prejudice instead of without prejudice was “an error of law and understanding the application of the law,” a finding repeated in the court’s written order. The court also found in its written order that “neither party exhausted Defеndant’s liability coverage so as to enable either to recover UM benefits from State Farm,” relying on this court’s opinion in
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Thomp
*78
son,
1. The Mullinaxes argue the trial court erred in finding that they did not exhaust the policy limits of the defendant’s liability insurance, which is one prerequisite to their claim for UM coverage from their insurer. OCGA § 33-24-41.1 provides a statutory framework for parties to settle claims against a tortfeasor’s liability carrier and still proceed with a claim under the injured party’s UM policy. A party must exhaust available liability coverage before recovering under a UM policy.
Holland v. Cotton States Mut. Ins. Co.,
But a spouse is not entitled to recover damages for loss of consortium independent of her spouse’s claim “under the ‘bodily injury liability’ coverage in the policy.”
Bartlett v. American Alliance Ins. Co.,
In
Thompson,
a husband and wife were both injured in a car wreck. They executed a limited release of the tortfeasor and his liability insurer from any and all claims pursuant to OCGA § 33-24-41.1 in exchange for the maximum per person liability coverage of $100,000. The trial court granted the UM carrier’s motion for summary judgment as to the wife but denied it as to the husband. This court reversed in
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Thompson,
supra,
Application of standard policy provisions . . . indicates that the liability insurer’s total payments for both the husband’s bodily injury claim and the wife’s loss of consortium claim *79 added together will not exceed the limit of liability specified for injury to one person.
Thompson v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
supra,
While
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Thompson
does not address the specific situation in this case, it clarifies that “the insurer’s total liability for personal injury to one spouse and loss of consortium injury to the other will be $25,000. This limitation applies becаuse the damage to both the husband and wife arises out of a personal injury to only one person.”
Thompson v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
supra,
2. The Mullinaxes also argue that the trial court abused its discretion in denying their motion to rescind their dismissal with prejudice. OCGA § 9-11-60 (g), regarding relief from judgmеnts, provides:
Clerical mistakes in judgments, orders, or other parts of the record and errors therein arising from oversight or omission may be corrected by the court at any time of its own initiative or on the motion of any party and after such notice, if any, as the court orders.
In a similar case, our Supreme Court held that a “voluntary dismissal. . . ‘with prejudice’ was plainly a mistake.”
Page v. Holiday Inns,
Relying on
Page,
this court in another very similar case reversed a trial court’s denial of a motion to rescind a dismissal with рrejudice under OCGA § 9-11-60 (g).
Sanson v. State Farm Fire &c. Co.,
OCGA § 9-11-60 (g) “is intended to allow clerical or typographical mistakes in judgments, or
errors therein arising from oversight or omission,
to be corrected at any time.”
Cooley v. All The World,
Judgment reversed.
