530 S.E.2d 516
A99A2419.Court of Appeals of Georgia.
DECIDED: MARCH 7, 2000.
MILLER, Judge.
The issue in this case is whether a consolidated pretrial order submitted by the parties but unsigned by the court, which order fails to raise a defense mentioned in the answer, precludes the defendant from pursuing the defense in a motion prior to trial. Holding that it does not, we affirm the order dismissing the case on this defense.
On the day the statute of limitation ran,[1] Natalie Swanson and Norma Bresil sued Andy Johnson and a John Doe for personal injuries arising out of an auto accident, but failed to make any attempt to serve Johnson with process after the sheriff reported that he had moved and could not be found. Seeking uninsured motorist coverage, they timely served State Farm Automobile Insurance Company with process. State Farm answered, asserting all affirmative defenses that could be asserted by Johnson. Although no pretrial conference was held, the plaintiffs and State Farm later submitted a consolidated pretrial order to the court, which made no reference to the lack of service on Johnson and which the judge did not sign or enter. It was the judge’s practice to sign pretrial orders just before trial began.
After two calendar calls (one of which was postponed and at one of which both sides announced “ready”), State Farm moved in writing to dismiss the complaint for failure to serve Johnson and for failure to exercise due diligence to obtain service after the initial unsuccessful attempt. Plaintiffs opposed the motion on the grounds that the pretrial order jointly submitted by the parties made no reference to this defense and that it was too late to raise the issue. Finding lack of due diligence to obtain service, the court granted the motion, which order the plaintiffs appeal.
1. Service on the missing tortfeasor, whether by publication or otherwise, is a condition precedent for recovery against the uninsured motorist carrier.[2] A plaintiff must exercise due diligence in locating a missing uninsured motorist to effect service.[3] Because it is undisputed that plaintiffs failed to do anything to locate or perfect service on Johnson after the initial unsuccessful attempt, evidence supported the court’s finding of lack due diligence and justified the dismissal.[4]
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Citing OCGA § 9-11-16(b), plaintiffs maintain, however, that State Farm’s failure to mention the defense in the consolidated pretrial order precluded it from raising the defense.[5] But the judge never signed the submitted pretrial order, and thus the parties were not limited to the issues specified therein.[6]
Because the defense of insufficient service on Johnson was raised in State Farm’s answer, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in holding that State Farm’s motion on this basis, filed before trial, was proper.[7]
2. Plaintiffs’ contention that the court erred in failing to sign the proposed order is without merit. Neither OCGA § 9-11-16
nor Rule 7.2 of the Uniform Superior Court Rules requires the judge to sign a pretrial order proposed by the parties. Only if a pretrial conference is held does OCGA § 9-11-16 (b) require the court to make an order, which may or may not be in the form proposed by the parties. Here, of course, no pretrial conference was held.[8] Moreover, the statute specifies no time frame within which a pretrial order must be entered, and here the court intended to enter an order right before trial, if trial had occurred.
3. Plaintiffs also argue that State Farm waived the defense by announcing “ready” at the first calendar call (without bringing the issue to the court’s attention) and by not raising the issue in the proposed pretrial order. But once a party has raised the issue of insufficient service in its answer, that party waives the defense only if it engages in conduct so manifestly indicative of an intention to relinquish the defense that no other reasonable explanation of its conduct is possible.[9] Here the evidence did not demand a finding of waiver,[10] as (a) the defense applied to service not on State Farm itself but on the missing tortfeasor, and thus was not immediately apparent to
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State Farm, (b) the proposed pretrial order was never entered, and (c) the motion was filed prior to trial. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in considering the issue and ruling thereon.
Judgment affirmed. Pope, P.J., and Smith, J., concur.
(244 S.E.2d 860) (1978).
DECIDED MARCH 7, 2000.
Pretrial order. DeKalb Superior Court. Before Judge Weeks.
Lecora Bowen, for appellant.
Sharon W. Ware Associates, Melynee C. Leftridge, for appellee.