Appellant instituted the instant tort action, seeking damages
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based upon appellee’s alleged commission of perjury while he was a witness in an earlier civil action wherein appellant was the losing party. See
Shepherd v. Shepherd,
1. The Georgia courts have apparently never dealt with the question of the viability of a claim for damages based upon the alleged commission of perjury in a previous civil action. Compare
Williams v. Dykes,
In addition to being predicated upon persuasive reasons, this rule recognized in other jurisdictions is otherwise entirely consistent with the existing provisions of Georgia law. An action for damages based upon alleged perjury is in the nature of a collateral attack on the previous judgment. Under Georgia law, unless a judgment is void on its face, it may not be attacked collaterally. OCGA § 9-11-60 (a);
Long v. Long,
Accordingly, we find that the rule followed in other jurisdictions is a sound one, and we hereby expressly adopt it as the rule which will be followed in Georgia. Where a judgment has allegedly been infected by perjury, the remedy is the institution of a direct attack upon that judgment and not a civil action against the alleged perjurer. Thus, *687 appellant has no viable claim and the trial court’s grant of summary judgment was not erroneous.
2. Our holding in Division 1 renders appellant’s remaining enumeration of error moot.
Judgment affirmed.
