559 S.E.2d 447
No. S01G0766.Supreme Court of Georgia.
DECIDED: FEBRUARY 4, 2002.
SEARS, Presiding Justice.
We granted certiorari to review Division 2 of the Court of Appeals’s decision in Nolan Road West, Ltd. v. PNC Realty HoldingCorp.[1] More specifically, we are concerned with whether the Court of Appeals correctly ruled that venue in a suit against a limited partnership is proper in a county to which the limited partnership’s sole connection is the residence of one of its limited partners. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that, under the circumstances of this case, venue is not proper in such a county.[2]
Art. 6, Sec. 2, Para. 4 of the Georgia Constitution provides that “[s]uits against joint obligors, joint tortfeasors, joint promisors, copartners, or joint trespassers residing in different counties may be
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tried in either county.” In the present case, citing Farmers Hardware of Athens, Inc. v. L.A. PropertiesLtd.,[3] for the proposition that “`the constitutional and statutory provisions as to venue of suits against partners must apply to a limited partnership,'”[4] the Court of Appeals held that, because one of Nolan Road West’s (hereinafter “Nolan”) limited partners resided in Fulton County, venue was proper there even though that was Nolan’s sole connection with the county.[5] We disagree with this holding.
1. First, the Court of Appeals erred in concluding that the statement from Farmers Hardware that the constitutional venue provision regarding copartners applied to limited partnerships mandated the ruling in this case that Nolan could be sued in the county of residence of one of its limited partners. In this regard, although Farmers Hardware correctly states that the constitutional venue provisions concerning partners applies to limited partnerships, it is a separate issue whether a limited partner should be considered a copartner within the meaning of that provision, and Farmers Hardware in no way undertook to resolve that issue. The reason it did not is that in FarmersHardware, no partner, limited or general, resided in the county in which the suit had been filed.[6] The issue of venue therefore was resolved adversely to the plaintiff simply by rejecting the plaintiff’s assertion that a limited partnership should be treated as an unincorporated organization or association for purposes of venue, and by instead concluding that the constitutional venue provision regarding “copartners” applied to limited partnerships.[7]
2. We now undertake to resolve whether a limited partner may be treated as a copartner for purposes of our constitutional venue provision.
In interpreting Art. 6, Sec. 2, Para. 4 with regard to venue against joint trespassers, we have held the provision was “evidently intended to declare what might be the venue in suits where persons were jointly liable for a tort.”[8]
Similarly, with regard to copartners, it is reasonable to interpret the provision to apply to partners who are jointly liable in the action at issue. The use of the prefix “co” implies just such a joint liability requirement.
We thus examine whether a limited partner of a limited partnership may be considered a copartner within the foregoing meaning of our constitutional venue provision.
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“A limited partnership is . . . a form of business organization in which one or more of the owners are general partners who are personally liable to the creditors of the business and who manage the business, and in which one or more of the owners are limited partners who are not personally liable to creditors of the business.”[9] In Georgia, OCGA § 14-9-303[10] sets forth the principle that limited partners are not personally liable for the obligations of the partnership.[11]
Because we have concluded that a “partner” may only be considered a “copartner” within the meaning of Art. 6, Sec. 2, Para. 4 of our Constitution if the “partner” is jointly liable in the action at issue, and because limited partners are not personally liable for the obligations of the partnership, we conclude that limited partners generally cannot be considered a copartner within the meaning of Art. 6, Sec. 2, Para. 4. Moreover, in the present case, because Nolan’s limited partner who resides in Fulton County is not personally obligated for the damages at issue, and because Brannen/Goddard has predicated venue in Fulton County on the mere fact that the limited partner resides there, venue is not proper in Fulton County. Accordingly, we reverse the Court of Appeals’s holding to the contrary.
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.
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DECIDED FEBRUARY 4, 2002.
Certiorari to the Court of Appeals of Georgia — 248 Ga. App. 248.
Chamberlain, Hrdlicka, White Williams, James L. Paul, Matthew J. McCoyd, for appellant.
Morris, Manning Martin, Lewis E. Hassett, Jessica F. Pardi, Parker, Hudson, Rainer Dobbs, J. Marbury Rainer, Charles W. Lyons, Perry A. Phillips, for appellees.