J. Andrew Rice and Kathryn W. Rice appeal pro se from the order of the trial court dismissing their pro se complaint against Ronald L. Cannon pursuant to OCGA § 9-11-37 (d) on the basis that they both wilfully failed to appear on more than one occasion at
1. In enumeration of errors two and three, the Rices contend that the trial court erred for various reasons in granting Cannon’s motion to dismiss their complaint as a sanction for failure to appear at their depositions. Under OCGA § 9-11-37 (d), the trial court was authorized to immediately dismiss the Rices’ complaint, without the necessity of an order compelling discovery, as a sanction for their failure to attend their duly-noticed depositions.
McConnell v. Wright,
The Rices contend the trial court erred by granting Cannon’s motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to attеnd their depositions because the court had not ruled on their pending motions seeking to compel Cannon to expand on answers he provided to their interrogatories, and seeking to compel three nonparties to provide documents sought in their nonparty requests for production of documents. We find no error. Even assuming the Rices were entitled to more complete responses to their discovery efforts, this did not excuse their repeated wilful refusal to attend their depositions. “Although a trial court may take into account both parties’ actions during discovery when determining what sanctions are appropriate, the nature of the moving party’s actions in respоnding to discovery requests does not preclude sanctions in its favor.”
West v. Equifax Credit Information Svcs.,
After the Rices received their second set of deposition notices, they filed a motion and an amendment to the motion seеking a protective order relieving them from attending the depositions. As grounds for a protective order, the Rices contended in the motion and amended motion that Cannon should be barred from taking their depositions until he gave more complete answers to their interrogatories and other nonparties produced documents they sought in nonparty requests for production of documents, and that the pending motion for the protective order itself stayed their depositions. The record shows that the trial court notified the parties of the hearing on Cannon’s motion to dismiss the complaint as a sanction for the Rices’ failure to attend their depositions, but no notice was given to the parties that the trial court would, at the same time, conduct a hearing on the Rices’ motions for a protective order. The order entered by the trial court on Cannon’s dismissal motion shows that, at the time noticed for the hearing on the dismissal motion, the court also held a hearing on the Rices’ motions for a protective order and cоncluded in the same order that those motions were denied because they “lacked
The Rices, who did not appear at the joint hearing despite receiving notice of the hearing on the dismissal motion, argue that the trial court erred by conducting a hearing on their motions for a protective order and denying the motions without giving them proper notice. We find that the grounds asserted by the Rices for a protective
order provided no basis for the trial court to order that they were not obligated to attend their depositions. OCGA § 9-11-26 (c), which provides for protective orders related to depositions, states that “for good cause shown” the court “may make any order which justicе requires to protect a party or person. . . .” This language is based on identical language contained in Rule 26 (c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Bicknell v. CBT Factors Corp.,
places the burden on the proposed deponent to get an order, not just to make a motion. And if there is not time to have his motion heard, the least that he can be expected to do is to get an order postponing the time of the deposition until his motion can be heard. He might also appear and seek to аdjourn the deposition until an order can be obtained. But unless he has obtained a court order that postpones or dispenses with his duty to appear, that duty remains.
Hepperle v. Johnston,
590 F2d 609, 613 (5th Cir. 1979). Merely filing motions for a protective order did not relieve the Rices from the duty to appear at their depositions. Moreover, as stated above, even if the Rices сould have prevailed on motions to compel more complete responses to their discovery efforts, this did not excuse them from the duty to attend their depositions. It follows that the trial court correctly concluded that nothing the Rices asserted in their motions for a protective order provided a legal basis for the court to exercise its discretion to relieve them from the duty to appear at their depositions.
Pilcher v. Stribling,
There is no merit to the Rices’ contention that they asserted a valid appearance conflict pursuant to Uniform Superior Court Rule (USCR) 17, and that the trial court erroneously failed to recognize the conflict and reschedule the hearing on Cannon’s dismissal motion. After receiving thirty days notice of the August 3, 2005 hearing date, the Rices filed a pleading six days prior to the hearing date in which they notified the trial court that, “[p]ursuant to а matter involving national security,” Mr. Rice was required by the United States Government to be at a certain undisclosed location on the date of the hearing, which prevented him attending the hearing. The pleading informed the trial court that only those with a “need to know” under federal law could be told the details regarding Mr. Rice’s conflict, and that the trial сourt had no need to know. The pleading further stated that the trial court “be hereby advised the Rices will not be able to attend the August 3, 2005 hearing scheduled by Judge Grubbs.” This notice did not inform the trial court of a scheduling conflict pursuant to USCR 17, which applies to attorneys with appearance conflicts in other courts. The trial court did not err by conducting the hеaring on Cannon’s dismissal motion on August 3, 2005, despite the above notice from the Rices and their failure to appear at the hearing.
Contrary to the Rices’ contentions, we find no error in the order by Cobb County Superior Court Judge Bodiford, to whom the present case was originally assigned, granting Cannon’s motion to transfer the
There is no merit to the Rices’ contention that, upon accepting assignment and transfer of the action, Judge Grubbs erred by failing to enter a written order pursuant to USCR 3.3 consenting to transfer of the action. We find no requirement for a written order of consent in USCR 3.3.
After Cannon filed his motion before Judge Bodiford to transfer the action to Judge Grubbs, the Rices filed a motion before Judge Bodiford seeking a ruling that Judge Grubbs was disqualified and asking for denial of the transfer motion. The Rices contend that Judge Bodiford erred by failing to rule on the disqualification motion. We find no error. The disqualification motion addressed to Judge Bodiford and filed before the action was transferred to Judge Grubbs was premature.
2. In their third enumeration of error, the Rices contend Judge Grubbs erred by refusing to recuse herself from participation in the present action.
Four days after the action was transferred from Judge Bodiford to Judge Grubbs by order filed on November 12, 2004, the Rices filed a motion to recuse Judge Grubbs based on an affidavit stating that Judge Grubbs was biased against them because, on November 2, 2004, the Rices filed a pro se complaint in the United States District Court against Judge Grubbs, individually, seeking money damages based on allegations that their rights were violated by rulings made by Judge Grubbs in the prior related action brought against them by the Lost Mountain Associations. 3 Judge Grubbs entered an order on December 1, 2004, denying the motion to recuse on the basis that thе suit against her did not require recusal and that the affidavit was legally insufficient to warrant recusal.
When a motion, accompanied by an affidavit, seeking recusal or disqualification of a judge for bias is filed pursuant to
of such a nature and intensity to prevent the complaining party from obtaining a trial uninfluenced by the court’s prejudgment. To warrant disqualification of a trial judge the affidavit supporting the recusal motion must give fair support to the charge of a bent of mind that may prevent or impede impartiality of judgment.
In re Estate of Robertson,
Judge Grubbs correctly ruled that the affidavit alleging the pending action filed against her by the Rices was legally insufficient to warrant recusal. The complaint in the action, a copy of which was attached to the affidavit, shows that it was based entirely on conclusory allegations that Judge Grubbs was biased against the Rices because she refused to grant their motion to recuse in the prior related action, and that Judge Grubbs was personally liable to the Rices for money damages because of rulings in the prior related action, which in the opinion of the Rices were void and illegal. Accordingly, the action was based on conclusory, unsubstantiаted allegations stemming directly from the Rices’ dissatisfaction with Judge Grubbs’s rulings in the prior related action.
4
“The fact that the judge has sat on prior cases of the party or ruled on prior matters in the case before the judge is legally insufficient as a grounds for
recusal.”
Baptiste v. State,
The affidavit in support of the Rices’ motion to recuse also states, without any factual elaboration, that Judge Grubbs is biased based on grounds previously assеrted by the Rices in affidavits filed in the prior related action. The record shows that, before the action was transferred to Judge Grubbs, the Rices filed a recusal motion asserting that Judge Grubbs was biased in the present action because, during the period Judge Grubbs presided over the prior related action, she was present during a conversation in which certain nonparties informed her of facts about the prior action. The Rices filed no affidavit in the present case setting forth facts supporting this recusal claim, but instead
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The general rule is that the trial court must conduct a hearing to determine if the recalcitrant party acted wilfully, unless the court can otherwise make a clear determination of wilfulness from the record. Id.
The trial court denied the Rices’ motions for a protective order before it ruled on the motion for sanctions. See
King v. Bd. of Regents &c. of Ga.,
The U. S. District Court dismissed the Rices’ complaint on December 13, 2004, for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, and after considering the Rices’ pro se appeal, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal on November 9, 2005.
Rice
v.
Grubbs,
The Rices’ dissatisfaction over the outcome of the prior fence dispute was not limited to Judge Grubbs. They have alleged that various judges, lawyers and officials in Cobb County, along with the Clerk of this Court and the office of the Georgia Attorney General, conspired to deprive them of their rights. In addition to seeking disqualification of every appellate judge on this Court, the Rices sought investigations into this matter by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the United States Department of Justice.
