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Shoob, McLain & Jessee, Earnest H. DeLong, Jr., Gregg Loomis, for appellee.G. Ralph Burger, for appellant.
1. The filing of a suit with the clerk of a court will toll the running of the statute of limitation if it is followed up with a perfection of service within the time required by law; aliter if service is delayed beyond the time specified for making it, particularly where it appears that the plaintiff has not acted with diligence in getting service perfected.
2. Where there has been delay in obtaining service for a period of two and a half years, no prior effort having been made to perfect it in the manner authorized by Code Ann. 81A-104 (d) (1), and the statute of limitation having run before any service was made, there has been such laches as to authorize the court to dismiss the suit on the ground that the action is barred.
Douglas Hilton filed suit in DeKalb Superior Court on October 8, 1968, seeking to recover from Maddox, Bishop, Hayton Frame & Trim Contractors, Inc., damages for a personal injury alleged to have been sustained on August 7, 1968. He alleged that the defendant was a corporation with its principal office and place of business located at 4850A Buford Highway, Chamblee, Georgia. Process was issued by the clerk on the same day the suit was filed, and presumably a copy of the petition and process was delivered to the sheriff for service. There was no service, however, until April 23, 1971, when the copies were served on the defendant by delivering them to Charles T. Hayton as its agent.
Thereafter on May 12, 1971, the defendant moved to dismiss the complaint because the claim was barred by the statute of limitation, and on July 1, 1971, moved for a summary judgment upon the same ground. In support of the motion defendant introduced the entries of the clerk and sheriff showing the date when the petition was filed and served, and an affidavit of Charles O. Hayton that he had, prior to October 8, 1968, and at all times since, resided at Metropolitan Trailer Park, Norcross, Georgia, that his name and address has been and is listed in the Atlanta Telephone Directory, that the address of the defendant corporation is, as alleged in the petition, 4850A Buford Highway, Chamblee, Georgia, that it is incorporated under the laws of Georgia and registered with the Secretary of State. Also tendered was a certificate from the Corporation Commissioner in the office of the Secretary of State that the defendant was incorporated April 28, 1967, in DeKalb County and continues in good standing.
In opposition to the motion plaintiff introduced an affidavit of Louis Dykes that his business address is 4850A Buford Highway, Chamblee, Georgia, where he conducts and has conducted a bookkeeping service for the past eight years; that one of his clients was the defendant, but that it does not and has never maintained an agent for service at that address, nor does it maintain an office there; that the Sheriff of DeKalb County, or some of his deputies, have tried to serve some officer or agent of the defendant at that address but were informed that the corporation did not maintain an office or agent there.
On the basis of the pleadings and evidence the defendant's motion for summary judgment was sustained, and plaintiff appeals.
Since the injury for which damages are sought was suffered August 7, 1968, this action was barred by the statute of limitation two years from that date unless the statute was tolled by the filing of the complaint.
"The mere filing of a declaration in office, unless followed by proper service upon the defendant, is not the commencement of suit." Cherry v. North & South R.,
We are persuaded that this rule continues under the Civil Practice Act. It is provided by 81A-103 that a civil action is commenced by the filing of a complaint, and under 81A-104 provision is made for the issuance and service of process--the service to be made within five days from the time of receiving the summons and complaint, although failure to make it within the five days will not invalidate a later service.
Then what effect does a belated service have, particularly where the delay is great, as here? It is laches, authorizing the court to dismiss the action where the statute of limitation had run before the service was so belatedly perfected. Although the late service is not "invalidated," it results in no pending suit between the parties until the date of the service and gives effect to the bar of the limitation. If the service had been perfected within the five days it would have related back, even though the statute ran between the filing of the petition and the perfection of service; and the suit also would be valid as a pending action upon which the plaintiff could proceed if, though late, service had been perfected before the running of the statute. No less diligence is required under the Civil Practice Act than was the case under the Practice Act of 1946.
2. Did the affidavit of Louis Dykes raise an issue of material fact? We think not. The mode for perfecting service on corporations is provided in Code Ann. 81A-104 (d) (1). It is to be made on some officer of the corporation, or some agent thereof, and if service cannot be made in that fashion then it may be made by delivery of two copies of the summons and complaint to the Secretary of State, who may perfect it by mailing to the last known address of the corporation according to the records in his office. The Dykes affidavit in no manner contravenes the possibility of perfecting service under this section, nor does it show that service could not have been so made at any time, or that any effort to do so was made. The affidavit is, under this section, wholly immaterial.
Consequently, the grant of summary judgment was proper.
Judgment affirmed. Bell, C. J., and Evans, J., concur.
1972
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