In April 1992 a criminal arrest warrant was issued and executed against Charles Waters for the offense of trafficking in cocaine. On May 18, 1992, the warrant was dismissed by the Chief Magistrate of Columbia County at the request of the Sheriff’s Department. In February 1996, Waters filed this action against Berry Walton as administrator of the estate of Bryant Walton for malicious prosecution, false arrest, and false imprisonment. Waters alleged that Bryant Walton caused his arrest by planting the cocaine in his automobile and supplying false information to law enforcement authorities. The trial court granted summary judgment to Walton on the ground that Waters’s claims were barred by the two-year statute of limitation applicable to injuries to the person. OCGA § 9-3-33. This appeal *120 ensued. 1 We agree with the trial court’s conclusion and affirm.
A malicious prosecution action must be brought within two years after termination of the underlying prosecution in plaintiff’s favor.
Daniel v. Ga. R. Bank &c. Co.,
Waters urges us to adopt a new rule, however, that even when a criminal action has been favorably terminated by dismissal, an action for malicious prosecution may be brought within two years of the expiration of the statute of limitation on the underlying criminal charge. Under this argument, Waters would have been entitled to bring his action within six years of the April 1992 incident — two years after the expiration of the four-year statute of limitation on the criminal charge.
It is true, as argued by Waters, that a magistrate’s dismissal does not bar a further criminal action.
Ayala,
supra at 115, n. 1. See also
Vadner v. Dickerson,
These arguments are unconvincing. We first note that Waters *121 produced no evidence that Walton’s identity was unavailable until after the expiration of the statute of limitation. Second, although a prosecution may be reinstituted after dismissal of a warrant, the law is well settled that a magistrate’s dismissal is prima facie evidence that the prosecution terminated favorably to the accused, subject to the opposing party’s burden to show that the prosecution did not in fact so terminate. See generally Vadner, supra at 256.
On motion for summary judgment, Walton submitted evidence that on May 15, 1992, approximately a month after Waters’s arrest, Captain Adams of the Columbia County Sheriff’s Department sent a letter to the Columbia County Chief Magistrate. The letter recited that the informant who provided the department with information leading to Waters’s arrest “could possibly have planted the drugs in Mr. Waters’ vehicle” and that “an interview of the informant had verified this fact.” Based on this information, Adams requested that the warrant be dismissed, and it was dismissed three days later. Although the letter recited that an investigation continued and that “charges against the informant and any other parties involved will be forthcoming,” Adams testified via affidavit that this investigation was “an investigation of the alleged informant and others. It was not an investigation of Charles Wendall Waters.” In opposition to the motion, Waters presented no evidence that the investigation against him continued or that he was again charged with the offense of trafficking in cocaine. Although a prosecution could have been reinstituted against Waters, none was forthcoming, and Waters even concedes in his appellate brief that no charges were made against him before expiration of the applicable statute of limitation. Waters failed to meet his burden of showing that the prosecution did not in fact terminate against him by the reinstitution of further investigation or prosecution. The prosecution against Waters therefore terminated in May 1992, when the magistrate dismissed the criminal warrant, and Waters was required to file this action within two years of that date.
Essentially, Waters argues that the dismissal somehow did not terminate the action in his favor and that the action was conclusively terminated in April 1996 only after expiration of the statute of limitation. But if we were persuaded by this argument, Waters’s claim was premature. He filed it in February 1996, before the limitation period expired. Under Waters’s theory, he filed his complaint before the action terminated favorably to him, and his claim for malicious prosecution was subject to dismissal. See
Vadner,
supra,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Although Waters enumerated as error the grant of summary judgment with regard to the entire action, he cites no authority and makes no argument in his brief concerning the claims of false arrest and false imprisonment. Because enumerations not supported in the brief are deemed abandoned, Court of Appeals Rule 27 (c) (2), we consider here only the grant of summary judgment with regard to the malicious prosecution claim.
We recognize that the holding in Ayala “is subject to the defendant’s right to show that in fact the prosecution has not ended.” Ayala at 117. Walton, however, does not make this argument but instead correctly contends that the prosecution did in fact terminate in Waters’s favor.
