On January 17, 1997, Joel Griffin filed suit against AirTouch Cellular of Georgia, Inc. in Civil Action No. E55480, Fulton Superior Court, because AirTouch rounded up its billing for air time rates to the next minute without contract or Public Service Commission authorization, and he sought class action certification for his suit. On March 2, 1997, Doug Smith in Civil Action No. E56092, Fulton Superior Court, brought a similar suit against AirTouch. On March 11, 1997, Marlene S. Sharpie and G. Katherine Saba in Civil Action No. E56074, Fulton Superior Court, brought a similar suit against AirTouch.
AirTouch answered each suit and pled as its first defense res judicata: that a Georgia resident, Darryl B. Cohen, sued AirTouch on the same basis on September 12,1995, in
Cohen v. AirTouch Cellular,
in Civil Action No. 972438, California Superior Court of San Francisco County; that a class action was granted for California, Georgia, Kansas, Michigan, and Ohio; that the suit was amended to include AirTouch of Georgia, Inc. as a defendant; that on July 19, 1996, the trial court approved the notice to all past and present subscribers of AirTouch’s cellular telephone service; that notice went to current subscribers through their August and September statements; that former subscribers received notice by repeated publication in each market; that AirTouch paid the cost of notice, $871,777.88; that on December 13, 1996, the trial court approved the settlement as final and binding on all class members who had not opted out; that class notice went to each of the plaintiffs; and that none of the plaintiffs
timely opted out of the class action
On April 2, 1999, the Fulton Superior Court granted summary judgment on the basis of res judicata and entered the judgment of record as to each case on April 5, 1999. The trial court correctly held that res judicata barred each case.
Plaintiffs’ sole enumeration of error in all three cases is the same, i.e., that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on the basis of res judicata from the California class action consent judgment. We do not agree.
1. Full faith and credit must be accorded the final California judgment by the courts of Georgia. U. S. Const. Art. IV, § 1; OCGA § 24-7-24;
Williamson v. Williamson,
2. Purposeful minimum contacts with the forum state by a nonresident defendant satisfy due process. See
Hanson v. Denckla,
In this case, the procedural due process clause conditions were all fully met. The class representative was a knowledgeable Georgia lawyer. These plaintiffs each received actual notice by first class mail, which prompted their suits. The California trial court found the conditions to have been satisfied. In this case, the trial court also found that they had been satisfied in granting summary judgment, as do we.
3. The California judgment has been neither reversed nor set aside; therefore, it has res judicata effect. OCGA § 9-12-40;
Gilmer v. Porterfield,
Regardless of the correctness of the prior trial court’s judgment, such case cannot be relitigated.
3
Johnston v. Duncan,
The full faith and credit clause allows the judgment of a foreign
state to give rise to the doctrine of res judicata.
Chrison v. H & H Interiors,
supra at 47;
Roadway Express v. McBroom,
(a)
Court of competent jurisdiction.
The California Superior Court, as a general jurisdiction court, had subject matter jurisdiction to try class action suits sounding in tort and in contract. See generally
Morris v. Jones,
(b) Final judgment. The California Superior Court entered a final judgment that terminated the class action. The judgment was appealed to the California Court of Appeals by one of the class members, but the judgment was affirmed without application for certiorari to the California Supreme Court. Thus, the judgment was final and not contingent.
(c) Adjudication on the merits.
[A]n adjudication on the merits does not require that the litigation should be determined on the merits, in the moral or abstract sense of these words. It is sufficient that the status of the action was such that the parties might have had their suit thus disposed of, if they had properly presented and managed their respective cases. Thus, it is only where the merits were not and could not have been determined under a proper presentation and management of the case that res judicata is not a viable defense. If, pursuant to an appropriate handling of the case, the merits were or could have been determined, then the defense is valid.
(Citation and punctuation omitted; emphasis in original.) Piedmont Cotton Mills v. Woelper, supra at 110.
(d) Identity of cause of action. Plaintiffs’ complaints raise substantially all of the same theories of liability and damages as raised in the Cohen case. Thus, there was identity of issues. Atlanta J’s v. Houston Foods, supra.
(e)
Identity of parties.
For res judicata to bar a subsequent action, there must be the identity of parties or their privies so that they were before the same court at the same time when the judgment was rendered.
Waggaman v. Franklin Life Ins. Co.,
(f) Pendency of simultaneous actions. When the plaintiffs filed their suits, the California action had a final judgment and was on appeal. The California action became final prior to any adjudication to judgment in the plaintiffs’ cases.
The doctrine of res judicata may be applied where actions between the same parties in relation to the same subject matter are pending at the same time, and a judgment is rendered in one of such actions. It is immaterial whether the action in which the judgment is interposed as an estoppel was commenced before or after the action in which the adjudication was made. This rule is not affected by the failure to plead the pendency of the latter action.
(Citation and punctuation omitted.)
Darling Stores Corp. v. Beatus,
Thus, the trial court properly granted summary judgment against the plaintiffs based on the doctrine of res judicata.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Collateral attack on a foreign judgment is permitted only when procedural due process has been violated for lack of either subject matter or personal jurisdiction over the defendant, as shown by each of the cases cited by the plaintiffs. This was not the situation in this case.
However, plaintiffs seek to make a collateral attack, nonetheless, by a conflict of law argument that there was a substantive due process violation in the California judgment. See
Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Shutts,
Plaintiffs raise an adequacy of notice through publication in the market for former subscribers; since the plaintiffs all were subscribers and received notice through their monthly statements, then they lack standing to raise this on behalf of past subscribers, because no class has been certified in any of these cases, and they were not personally aggrieved by lack of notice.
A foreign judgment cannot be collaterally attacked except for lack of jurisdiction.
