We granted certiorari to consider whether the Court of Appeals correctly placed the burden on the non-movant plaintiff in this case to establish his contentions as a matter of law in order to defeat summary judgment. Pertinent to this appeal, the record reflects that Solomon brought suit against Barnett, Barnett’s sole proprietorship and several corporate entities to recover his share of profits from a joint venture/partnership arrangement formed in 1998. Barnett moved for summary judgment contending that he entered into the agreement not in his individual capacity but rather on behalf of a corporate entity. Evidence established that the corporate entities had been administratively dissolved; however, Barnett introduced his averral that he was unaware of the dissolutions at the time of the transactions in issue and also evidence that the corporations had been reinstated after the filing of Solomon’s suit. See
Fulton Paper Co. v. Reeves,
The Court of Appeals affirmed the grant of summary judgment to Barnett in
Solomon v. Barnett,
[b]ecause the record here is replete with disputed facts concerning the dealings between Barnett, his corporations, and Solomon, there was no error in the trial court’s conclusion that Solomon had failed to come forward, in response to Barnett’s motion for summary judgment on the issue of corporate reinstatement, with sufficient evidence to show equitable estoppel as a defense to corporate reinstatement as a matter of law. See Eiberger v. West,247 Ga. 767 , 769 (1) (281 SE2d 148 ) (1981); Smith v. Direct Media Corp.,247 Ga. App. 771 , 773 (1) (544 SE2d 762 ) (2001).
Solomon v. Barnett,
Applying our holding in
Lau’s Corp. v. Haskins,
In light of the unresolved factual conflicts found by the Court of Appeals to exist regarding the activities that gave rise to Solomon’s assertion of equitable estoppel, it cannot be said that Barnett either affirmatively disproved or demonstrated an absence of evidence in regard to that issue. He thus failed to carry his burden. See
Lau’s Corp.,
supra,
We therefore conclude that in light of the factual findings made by the Court of Appeals, summary judgment was not appropriate in this case, making erroneous both the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to Barnett and the Court of Appeals’ affirmance of that judgment. See generally
Parker v. Crider Poultry, Inc.,
Judgment reversed.
