WILLIFORD v. BROWN
S16A0177
Supreme Court of Georgia
May 9, 2016
785 SE2d 864
NAHMIAS, Justice
The issue in this case is whether equitable relief is available in Georgia for an adult child of an elderly but competent parent to compel the parent‘s new spouse to give the child unimpeded access to the parent. The trial court held that such relief is not available, and we affirm that judgment.
Mrs. Brown also filed a motion to dismiss the petition for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. See
2. Before considering the merits of this appeal, we address our jurisdiction to decide it. See Lay v. State, 289 Ga. 210, 211 (710 SE2d 141) (2011) (“‘[I]t is the duty of this Court to inquire into its jurisdiction in any case in which there may be a doubt about the existence of such jurisdiction.‘” (citation omitted)). Ms. Williford‘s notice of appeal invoked this Court‘s current general appellate jurisdiction over “[a]ll equity cases.”
“Whether an action is an equity case for the purpose of determining jurisdiction on appeal depends upon the issue raised on appeal, not upon how the case is styled nor upon the kinds of relief which may be sought by the complaint. That is, ‘equity cases’ are those in which a substantive issue on appeal involves the legality or propriety of equitable relief sought in the superior court — whether that relief was granted or denied. Cases in which the grant or denial of such relief was merely ancillary to underlying issues of law, or would have been a matter of routine once the underlying issues of law were resolved, are not ‘equity cases.‘”
Durham v. Durham, 291 Ga. 231, 231-232 (728 SE2d 627) (2012) (quoting Beauchamp v. Knight, 261 Ga. 608, 608-609 (409 SE2d 208) (1991)).
Most cases that come within this Court‘s traditional equity jurisdiction do so because the trial court balanced the equities in determining whether to grant or deny a well-established form of equitable relief, and the issue on appeal is the propriety of the relief that was granted or denied. Here, however,
Under the current appellate jurisdiction scheme, this Court, rather than the Court of Appeals, should decide in the first instance whether the novel equitable remedy that was sought in and denied by the trial court is available in Georgia — that is, the issue of “the legality ... of [the] equitable relief sought in the superior court.” Beauchamp, 261 Ga. at 609. See also Stark v. Hamilton, 149 Ga. 227, 228, 230 (99 SE 861) (1919) (affirming the equitable remedy crafted by the trial court after noting that “[t]he case under consideration differs on its facts from any case heretofore decided by this court and from any of the cases cited from other States“). Accordingly, we will retain Ms. Williford‘s appeal.
We note, however, that because we decide below that the equitable remedy that Ms. Williford seeks is not available under Georgia law, a request in a future case for the same remedy on similar facts would be properly denied based on the legal precedent established in this case, and thus that decision if challenged on appeal would not invoke our equity jurisdiction under Beauchamp. Cf. Zepp v. Mayor & Council of Athens, 255 Ga. 449, 451 (339 SE2d 576) (1986) (holding that where this Court has upheld a law against a constitutional attack, future cases raising the same attack do not come within this Court‘s appellate jurisdiction over constitutional questions). We also note, blissfully, that the need for Georgia‘s appellate courts and appellate litigants to engage in many intricate jurisdictional analyses of this sort will dissipate as of January 1, 2017. See footnote 1 above.
3. On the merits, Ms. Williford contends first that the trial court “erred when it ruled it cannot hear equitable petitions regarding domestic matters.” This contention mischaracterizes the trial court‘s ruling. The court‘s order dismissing Ms. Williford‘s petition did note that, “as a general matter, equity should not interfere in domestic matters,” but the court then went on to discuss and distinguish cases involving domestic matters where this Court held that an equitable remedy was available. For example, the trial court cited Stark, where this Court affirmed an equitable remedy granted to the father of a minor girl debauched by a man who had “induced her to abandon her parental abode and live with him in a state of adultery and fornication,” explaining:
While courts of equity are reluctant to interpose in controversies growing out of merely personal or domestic relations, and will ordinarily leave the parties to pursue the remedies open to them in the courts of common law, still when “property rights or questions concerning property arise between husband and wife, parent and child, [or] guardian and ward,” jurisdiction will be taken, in a proper case, in order that full and adequate relief may be granted to the injured party, [and this principle also applies where] “the complainant‘s status and personal rights were ... threatened or ... invaded by the action of the defendants....”
149 Ga. at 229 (citations omitted). See also Crawford v. Wilson, 139 Ga. 654, 654 (78 SE 30) (1913) (recognizing the equitable remedy of “virtual adoption“).
Thus, contrary to Ms. Williford‘s assertion, the trial court did not flatly rule that it could not hear her equitable petition because it involved a domestic matter. Instead, the court properly recognized equity‘s general reluctance to interfere in cases involving personal and domestic matters that do not also implicate the plaintiff‘s legal status or personal or property rights before explaining why, under the case law, an equitable remedy was not appropriate in Ms. Williford‘s
Ms. Williford next contends that the trial court “erred when it ruled an adult child does not have a right to unrestrained visitation with a parent.” However,
[e]quity jurisdiction is established and allowed for the protection and relief of parties where, from any peculiar circumstances, the operation of the general rules of law would be deficient in protecting from anticipated wrong or relieving for injuries done.
The authorities on which Ms. Williford relies do not require a different result. As the trial court explained, Stark involved a father‘s property right to the benefits of his minor child‘s labor. See 149 Ga. at 230-231. Toler v. Goodin, 200 Ga. 527 (37 SE2d 609) (1946), was a “virtual adoption” case like Crawford, which the trial court cited and distinguished, and like all virtual adoption cases, Toler involved property rights based on an alleged unwritten agreement with partial performance. See Toler, 200 Ga. at 534 (“This was not a suit to require any one to adopt the plaintiff, but it was a suit to establish title to property by decreeing the plaintiff entitled thereto as a child of the alleged obligors, just as though she had been legally adopted according to the alleged agreement.“).
Ms. Williford also relies on Gearllach v. Odom, 200 Ga. 350 (37 SE2d 184) (1946), which involved a man‘s equitable claim to set aside his marriage to a woman who was already married. At the time, Georgia‘s divorce laws did not recognize a prior undissolved marriage as a valid ground for divorce, so the trial court granted the wife‘s general demurrer. This Court reversed, explaining:
Should both of these parties die and the [wife‘s] representative or heirs make claim to the [husband‘s] estate, they would under this legal presumption have all the rights a valid marriage would give the [wife]. The burden would then be upon the [husband‘s] representative or heirs, as the case may be, to prove that the [wife‘s] previous marriage had not been dissolved. In that situation she, being dead, could not disclose whether or not she had procured a divorce, and it would become necessary to examine all court records where such a divorce might lawfully have been granted. This would include examination of court records of 159 counties in this State, similar records of other States, and even foreign countries. These considerations require a candid admission that the relief here sought is important and essential to the full protection of vital and far-reaching [property] rights and interests of the [husband].
Id. at 353. By contrast, Ms. Williford did not allege any threat to her legal status or identify any actual or threatened invasion of her personal or property rights as a result of Mrs. Brown‘s alleged interference with her ability to visit or communicate with Mr. Brown.
Finally, in her brief on appeal, Ms. Williford relies heavily on
The father, mother, or child of any pauper contemplated by Code Section 36-12-2, if sufficiently able, shall support the pauper. Any county having provided for such pauper upon the failure of such relatives to do so may bring an action against such relatives of full age and recover for the provisions so furnished. The certificate of the judge of the probate court that the person was poor and was unable to sustain himself and that he was maintained at the expense of the county shall be presumptive evidence of such maintenance and the costs thereof.
Putting aside Ms. Williford‘s failure to cite this statute in the trial court,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur.
DECIDED MAY 9, 2016.
Douglas T. Kidd, for appellant.
Moore & Hicks, Daniel J. Moore, L. Lee Hicks II, for appellee.
