Certiorari was granted in this case to consider whether a party can amend his pleadings after reversal on appeal of a trial court’s order denying a motion for summary judgment but before the appeal remittitur is entered in the trial court by asserting a new theory of recovery in the amendment.
Defendants Summer and Summer-Minter & Associates, Inc., moved for summary judgment and their motion was denied by the trial court but certified for review on appeal. The case then came directly to this court and, after examination of the pleadings and evidence considered on the motion, we reversed the denial of summary judgment. That decision is reported in
The fourth amended complaint changed the plaintiffs’ theory of recovery from essentially one of civil conspiracy to defraud to one of tortious interference with the rescue of the property. The last amendment, however, introduced no new facts in the case not already appearing in the affidavits considered on the motion for summary judgment or ascertainable from the third amended complaint.
Therefore, by way of restatement, the question now presented is whether after this court reversed the trial court’s denial of defendants’ motion for summary judgment, but before the remittitur became the judgment of the trial court, the plaintiffs can amend their complaint by alleging a new theory of recovery.
We view this case as one of public gravity and importance since, in our judgment, it deals with the function and efficacy of Georgia’s motion for summary judgment and will have an impact on trial practice throughout the State.
We look first to the purpose of the summary judgment provisions of our law as viewed by the two appellate courts of this State in several reported cases of both courts. "The purpose of the Summary Judgment Act. . .is to eliminate the necessity for a trial by jury where, giving the opposing party the benefit of all reasonable doubts and all favorable inferences that may be drawn from the evidence, there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.”
Holland v. Sanfax Corp.,
Code Ann. § 81A-156 (e) provides in part that "When a motion for summary judgment is made . . ., an adverse party may not rest . . . [on] his pleading, but his reponse . . . must set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. If he does not so respond, summary judgment, if appropriate, shall be entered against him.” (Emphasis supplied).
It is thus seen that it is the duty of each party at the hearing on the motion for summary judgment to present his case in full.
Crutcher v. Crawford Land Co.,
supra;
Studstill v. Aetna Cas. &c. Co.,
Prior cases of this court dealing with amendment of the pleadings, and the distinction made when a general demurrer was overruled rather than denied, do not require a similar holding in this summary judgment case. For example, in
Sammons v. Tingle,
In the present case, plaintiffs restyled their original complaint, framed according to a civil conspiracy theory of recovery, to conform to a different theory of recovery based on tortious interference with rescue of property. This second theory of recovery, if it exists at all, was ascertainable under the original complaint as amended. Under our practice of notice pleading, the plaintiff has the benefit of any theory of recovery which can be gleaned from his complaint. Accordingly, restyling the complaint in terms of a theory of recovery ascertainable in the original case did not cause the case to survive the prior adjudication on the merits.
When viewed in proper perspective under present practice in Georgia, summary judgment under our law is just what the name implies. It is an abbreviated trial, but of no less importance than any other trial on the merits of the case. One must prepare for a summary judgment hearing with the same thoroughness and expectation of finality one must contemplate for any trial. We cannot authorize these plaintiffs to launch a new lawsuit through amendment after our final decision on summary judgment any more than we can permit a defendant to employ a new defense following a ruling on summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff as to liability. As said by the court in Hart v. Knox County, 79 FSupp. 654 (E. D. Tenn. 1948): "Plaintiffs would shift their ground and try a new theory of recovery. The effect of the amendment they propose would be not to conform the pleadings to a judgment they have won, but to jeopardize and perhaps to overthrow a judgment they have lost. It is a prime purpose of [the law] to avoid the necessity of new trials because of procedural irregularities, not to set judgments aside and make new trials necessary. If this latter application of the rule were permitted, a losing party, by motions to amend and rehear, could keep a case in court indefinitely, trying one theory of recovery or defense after another, in the hope of finally hitting upon a successful one. Courts draw the dividing line between this use of amendment and those uses aimed at conformity.” See also Trantham v. Canal Ins. Co., 117 FSupp. 241, 247, affirmed 220 F2d 752 (6th Cir. 1955) where the Federal District Court found for the plaintiff on the merits and refused defendant leave to amend, holding that defendant’s proposed counterclaim "is nothing more than a device calculated to force a new trial of the case, the next one under a new theory of defense which, if
What was said by this court in
Gay v. Crockett,
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed with direction that upon receipt of the remittitur by the trial court a judgment be entered in favor of the appellants in certiorari.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Prior to 1968, Georgia practice permitted a very liberal right of amendment to the pleadings, the genesis of which is apparently to be found in Ga. L. 1853-54, pp. 48-49, authorizing amendment
