Summary
Judgment reversed. McMurray, P. J., Birdsong, P. J., Pope, P. J., Andrews, Johnson, Blackburn and Smith, JJ., concur. Beasley, C. J., dissents.
Summary
Judgment reversed. McMurray, P. J., Birdsong, P. J., Pope, P. J., Andrews, Johnson, Blackburn and Smith, JJ., concur. Beasley, C. J., dissents.
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Lawrence D. Kupferman, Drew Findling, for appellants.
Walter and Joan Aycock sued Laura and Thomas Calk for injunctive relief and damages allegedly arising out of an ongoing feud between the parties. The complaint asserted causes of action for stalking, deprivation of the Aycocks' right of privacy, and assault and battery. The Calks answered the complaint and counterclaimed for damages allegedly resulting from stalking, slander, deprivation of the full use and enjoyment of their property, and assault and battery. The Aycocks moved the court to strike the Calks' counterclaim on the ground that the Calks were required to assert their claims in an earlier action between the parties and that the claims were therefore barred by the doctrines of res judicata and/or collateral estoppel. The trial court granted the Aycocks' motion and ruled, sua sponte, that because the Aycocks' complaint arose out of the same set of facts which formed the basis of the earlier action, it too was subject to dismissal. The trial court accordingly dismissed the Aycocks' complaint. The Aycocks appeal from that order, asserting that the trial court did not have the authority to dismiss their complaint sua sponte. We agree and therefore reverse.
It is clear that in dismissing the Aycocks' complaint, the trial court considered matters outside the pleadings, thereby converting the order into one for summary judgment. OCGA
While the record as it stands may support the trial judge's ruling, it also shows that the Aycocks were not notified that the trial court intended to rule upon the merits of their claim and that they were not provided a full and final opportunity to respond to the court's sua sponte review. The notice requirement is clear, simple to meet, and necessary. We should not muddy the waters by assuming a party had notice where the record shows none was given. We are thus required to remand the cause so that the Aycocks may be given such fair notice and an opportunity to respond.
BEASLEY, Chief Judge, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent, as it is time to end this litigation between neighbors.
1. Before addressing the issue of notice, I note that the appeal was originally filed in this Court. It was transferred to the Supreme Court because it is from the dismissal of a complaint for a restraining order, the primary relief requested. Plaintiffs only later added by amendment prayers for monetary damages. It is thus a suit in equity involving an extraordinary remedy See Higgins v. Dept. of Public Safety,
2. In the exercise of jurisdiction of the appeal, this Court should affirm the trial court with direction to enter summary judgment because the dismissal is in effect a summary judgment for defendants. The intended result is correct, but what must be clarified is that the case is properly ended. Where the trial court incorrectly grants summary judgment rather than a motion to dismiss, in cases such as Rehco Corp. v. Calif. Pizza Kitchen,
Plaintiffs had full notice that the trial court would consult the record in the first suit, i.e., Calk v. Aycock et al., CA No.
The trial court in this case found that "[t]here is no dispute that this action, filed one day before the final hearing in Calk v. Aycock, arises out of the same set of facts which formed the basis for that action." Plaintiffs do not demonstrate, by ordering transmittal of the record in the Calk case, that the pleadings show that the present suit arises out of a different transaction or occurrence than was the subject of the Calk suit. OCGA
John L. Welsh II, for appellees.
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