Dan Morris served NorthPoint Group Holdings, LLC and Point Satellite, LLC (the “defaulting defendants”), among others, with his complaint for breach of contract, injunctive relief, and attorney fees. The defaulting defendants failed to file timely answers and then moved to open default after the expiration of the 15-day statutory grace period 1 but before the entry of final judgment. The trial court denied the motion to open default and entered judgment in favor of Morris. On appeal, the defaulting defendants claim that the trial court erred (i) in concluding that this was not a prоper case to open default and (ii) in awarding damages to Morris, notwithstanding the default. Finding that the trial court properly declined to open the default in light of the defaulting defendants’ failure to provide a reasonable explanation for their failure to file a timely answer, and that the trial court correctly awarded liquidated damages, we affirm.
1. “On appellate review of a trial court’s order granting [or denying] a motion to open default, we must determine whether all the conditions set forth in OCGA § 9-11-55 have been met and, if so, whether the trial
The defendants other than the defaulting defendants were served on April 15 or April 16, 2008 and answered on May 15, 2008. Robert F. Goodman, Jr., the registered agent for the defaulting defendants, was served with the summons and complaint on April 28, 2008. The follоwing day, Larry Milder, a manager for Point Satellite, received correspondence from a paralegal with Goodman’s office stating that she was enclosing two original counterparts of the summons and referencing the named defendants in the action, including the defaulting defendants. Ron Onorato, a manager member of both defaulting defendants, also acknowledged receipt of the letter.
Milder ultimately received service copies of the entries of service, summons, and complaint for four of the defendants named in the lаwsuit. Milder and Onorato each averred that “[i]t is unclear what happened to service copies of the Entries of Service, Summons, and Complaint for [the defaulting defendants].” Both maintained that they “do not believe” they received service copies for the dеfaulting defendants.
The seven named defendants, including the defaulting defendants, hired legal counsel to represent them. At the initial meeting with the defendants’ attorney, Milder delivered to the attorney what he believed to be all of the pleadings in his possession. The attorney then filed an answer on behalf of the defendants other than the defaulting defendants. According to the attorney, he had no knowledge that the defaulting defendants had been served with the lawsuit until Morris filed an affidavit of noncompliance. The attorney further averred, “[i]t is unclear what happened with respect to [the defaulting defendants].”
The defaulting defendants moved to open default on the grounds that it was a “proper case” for purposes of OCGA § 9-11-55 (b). Applying
BellSouth Telecommunications v. Future Communications,
(a) Thе defaulting defendants claim that the trial court improperly interpreted and applied BellSouth to require that they show a reasonable excuse or explanation for their failure to answer. We disagree.
Under OCGA § 9-11-55 (b), a prejudgment default may be opened on one of three grounds if four conditions are met. The three grounds are: (1) providential cause, (2) excusable neglect, and (3) proper case; the four conditions are: (1) showing made under oath, (2) offer to plead instanter, (3) announcement of ready to proceed with trial, and (4) setting up a meritorious defense.
(Footnote omitted; emphasis in original.)
Water Visions Intl. v. Tippett Clepper Assocs.,
Of the three grounds for opening defаult under OCGA § 9-11-55, a “proper case” is the broadest, “as if reaching out to take in every conceivable case where injustice might result if the default were not opened[.]”
Axelroad v. Preston,
(b) The defaulting defendants further contend that the trial court failed to recognize that they presented a proper case for opening the default notwithstanding their inability to explain with certainty the failure to file a timely answer. Again, we disagree.
Although the affidavits of Milder, Onorato, and the defaulting
defendants’ attorney provide a factual background, they do not provide an explanation why, аfter being properly served, the defaulting defendants failed to file an answer. Thus, the trial court, in its words, was “left to guess” whether the failure to file amounted to wilful disregard of process. The trial court did not err in concluding that the offered explanation, “[i]t is unclear what happened,” was insufficient to allow it to open the default. See
Ga. Kidney &c. Specialists,
supra,
(c) The defaulting dеfendants further argue that they showed that Morris was not a real estate broker and so lacked standing to sue for a commission, and that, given the opportunity, they could show that the closing upon which Morris claimed a commission did not occur. Therefore, the defaulting defеndants contend, they asserted a meritorious defense and satisfied the traditional requirement for opening the default as a “proper case.” We disagree.
A defendant can demonstrate a meritorious defense “by showing that if relief from default is granted, the outcome of the suit may be different from the result if the default stands.” (Citation and punctuation omitted.)
Boggs Rural Life Center v. IOS Capital,
2. The defaulting defendants further argue that the trial court erred in awarding a monetary judgment to Morris, notwithstanding the default, because Morris did not set forth a cause of action against the defaulting defendants and because the allegations of the complaint defeat his claims. We disagree.
In its order denying the defaulting defendants’ motion to oрen default, the trial court concluded that Morris was entitled to the entry of a default judgment and directed that
As a rule,
a judgment by default properly entered against parties sui juris operates as an admission by thе defendant of the truth of the definite and certain allegations and the fair inferences and conclusions of fact to be drawn from the allegations of the declaration. Conclusions of law and facts not well pleaded and forced inferences are not аdmitted by a default judgment.
(Citation and punctuation omitted.)
COMCAST Corp.,
supra,
a defendant in default is in the position of having admitted each and every material allegation of the plaintiff s petition except as to the amount of ex delicto or unliquidated ex contractu damages alleged. The default concludes the defendant’s liability, and estops him from offering any defenses which would defeat the right of recovery.
(Citation omitted; emphasis supplied.) Id.
The defaulting defendants point to paragraph 13 of the verified complaint, in which Morris avers that he “was employed as an independent contractor performing real estate marketing services for NorthPoint Sales and Marketing.”
2
The defaulting defendants
further rely on paragraphs 24, 33, and 34, in which Morris refers to Pоint Satellite’s obligation to pay real estate commissions to North-Point Realty Partners and that “NorthPoint Realty Partners and Bob Alvarez, in turn, had a duty and obligation to pay . . . commissions ... to Morris.” The defaulting defendants argue that while the complaint may show a claim against NorthPоint Realty, Morris’s complaint demonstrates that neither defaulting defendant had an obligation to pay him commissions. See
Grand v. Hope,
The defaulting defendants overlook material allеgations of the complaint. According to the complaint, Point Satellite entered into a Purchase Agreement with 3CK Development, LLC, and was obligated to pay NorthPoint Realty a commission equal to
51h%
of the total purchase price of the property. Thе complaint asserts that Morris was a third-party beneficiary of that contract. More specifically, the complaint alleges that pursuant to the Purchase Agreement, a Memorandum of Record was executed by “NorthPoint Group and Bob Alvarez,” who agreed thаt Morris was to receive “two percent (2%) of the total purchase price upon closing,” while NorthPoint Realty would retain a 14/2% commission and a third party, Eugene Chung, would receive the other 2% commission.
3
Thus, taking the allegations of the complaint as true, Point Satellite was contractually obligated to pay the commission, a portion of which was to be distributed to Morris in accordance with the Memorandum of Record executed pursuant to the Purchase Agreement. “NorthPoint Group,” which is alleged in the complaint to include
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
OCGA § 9-11-55 (a).
Assuming, but not deciding, that Morris would otherwise be required to prove that he
was a licensed broker to recover against the defaulting defendants on the merits, see OCGA § 43-40-24, in light of the Civil Practice Act “it is not necessary for the plaintiff to plead the existence of such a license in order to state a claim!.] [Cit.]”
Myers v. Wynn,
Paragraph 25 of the complaint provides, in relevant part, that “pursuant to Paragraph 6 of the Purchase Agreement, NorthPoint Group and Bob Alvarez executed a Memorandum of Record . . . stating that the real estate commission in the amount of five and one-half percent (5V2%) of the total purchase price of the property was to be distributed as follows: . . . Morris was to receive two percent (2%) of the total purchase price upon closing. ...”
Paragraph 35 of the complaint alleges: “NorthPoint Group and Bob Alvarez agreed that two percent (2%) of the total purchase price . . . would be paid to Morris as his share of the real estate commissions.” Paragraph 31 alleges that “the defendants” (which would include the defaulting defendants) are liable for his share of the real estate commission.
