SILER v. JOHNS
69042
Court of Appeals of Georgia
March 7, 1985
(327 SE2d 810)
Decided February 15, 1985 — Rehearing denied March 7, 1985
Robert E. Keller, District Attorney, Clifford A. Sticher, Assistant District Attorney, for appellee.
Beasley, Judge.
Defendant-appellant Siler appeals the denial of her motion to dismiss plaintiff-appellee Johns’ action on open account as barred by the statute of limitation for lack of timely service of process.1
On June 4, 1980, appellee filed suit to recover medical fees incurred on account from March 15, 1977 to January 30, 1978, within the four-year statute of limitation of
On May 19, 1982 appellant was finally personally served. She again answered the complaint raising defenses of the statute of limitation and improper service and moved to dismiss the complaint on these grounds on August 29, 1983. After a hearing on September 7, in which the only evidence was the prior record, the trial court, after reviewing also subsequent correspondence which is not in the record, denied the motion to dismiss on October 31. It stated that because appellant‘s affidavit indicated that she lived at her listed address sporadically from June 1980 through June 1981, the efforts made by appellee to serve her did not evidence such a lack of diligence that the complaint should be dismissed. Trial on March 12, 1984, resulted in judgment and verdict for appellee. Held:
“Where the statute of limitation accrues between the date of filing and the date of service, whether or not it relates back (if the service is more than five days after the filing) depends on the length of time and the diligence used by the plaintiff.” Scoggins v. State Farm &c. Ins. Co., 156 Ga. App. 408, 410 (274 SE2d 775) (1980). See
Our review of the record is handicapped by the absence of any transcript from the two hearings on the subject, the correspondence of September 1983 which may have included undisputed facts, and any evidence of the sheriff‘s attempt at service. It is the parties’ responsibility to assure that the record supporting the positions taken in their briefs is properly before the court.
Based on what is before us, it appears that defendant owned two residences, one in Florida, where she spent most of her time during the period in question, and one in Norcross. The complaint was filed June 4; she was not in Norcross until July 21. From then through June of 1981, she was at the Norcross residence on a number of occasions, sometimes several a month, but generally only for a few days at a time. The great majority of her time was spent in Florida. While the focus must be on what plaintiff did, his failure to perfect service may be excused by defendant‘s unavailability for service. Here his attorney left telephone messages which she says she did not receive; personal visits to the residence did not yield a response; and plaintiff finally went to the trouble and expense of serving defendant by publication. Although the record does not show what occurred when the sheriff sought service, it can be inferred that service was attempted, as the law required him to do so upon receipt of the complaint and summons from the clerk, whose duty it was to deliver it to him for service.
While the long delay here is not fully explained by plaintiff, and plaintiff‘s efforts to catch defendant when she was in Norcross are not spelled out with particularity as they should be, the factor of dual residency contributed to the unfruitfulness of plaintiff‘s efforts. The point is that he made them, and they were minimally sufficient to support the trial court‘s ruling below.
Judgment affirmed. Carley, J., concurs. Birdsong, P. J., concurs specially.
Stuart A. Kurtz, for appellant.
Fred W. Minter, for appellee.
Birdsong, Presiding Judge, concurring specially.
Because there is no evidence in this record to explain fully the
The unexplained passage of 714 days between complaint and service of process upon its face cries out for a finding of lack of diligence and is wholly inconsistent with the demands for speedy and fair justice. A full development of facts in the record may well have mandated a different result. However in the face of the presumption of regularity of performance of duties by a public official, the exercise of discretion by the trial court following a hearing on the issue requires an affirmance of that exercise.
