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In the Matter of Tamorra A. Boyd

2022-12-20

Summary

Holding. The court vacated the special master's order granting the motion for default, the special master's report and recommendation, and the Review Board's report and recommendation, and remanded the matter to the special master with direction to hold a hearing on the motion for default and Boyd's request to open the default.

The State Bar of Georgia brought disciplinary charges against attorney Tamorra A. Boyd based on allegations that she allowed a mortgage loan modification company to use her name and license to operate in Georgia and failed to provide promised services to a client. A special master granted the State Bar's motion for default when Boyd failed to timely file an answer to the formal complaint, despite Boyd's efforts to obtain counsel through her malpractice insurance. The special master then recommended a six-month suspension based on the deemed-admitted facts.

Boyd appealed to the Review Board, which found that she had been responsive to the disciplinary process overall and that her failure to timely answer was inconsistent with her other cooperative conduct. The Review Board determined this was a proper case for opening the default under Georgia's strong public policy favoring resolution of cases on the merits rather than by default.

The Georgia Supreme Court agreed with the Review Board's approach, emphasizing that trial courts have broad authority to open defaults and that the proper-case standard should be applied liberally. The court noted that Boyd's omissions—while improper—did not demonstrate the level of complete non-engagement typical in disciplinary defaults. Accordingly, the court vacated all prior orders and remanded the matter for a hearing on the motion for default and Boyd's request to open it.

Summary generated by law.co from the public-domain opinion. The opinion text itself is public domain.

Key issues

  • Whether a default judgment should be opened when a respondent fails to timely answer a formal complaint but demonstrates overall responsiveness to disciplinary proceedings
  • Application of the 'proper case' standard under Georgia's Civil Practice Act to attorney disciplinary matters
  • Whether a respondent's delays attributable to insurance company processing and counsel retention constitute excusable neglect or support opening a default

Procedural posture

The State Bar filed a formal complaint in January 2021; after Boyd failed to timely answer, the special master granted the State Bar's motion for default and recommended suspension; Boyd appealed to the Review Board, which recommended remand for a hearing on the merits; the State Bar then filed exceptions to the Review Board's recommendation before the Georgia Supreme Court.

Authorities cited

Opinion

majority opinion

In the Supreme Court of Georgia

Decided: December 20, 2022

S22Y0940. IN THE MATTER OF TAMORRA A. BOYD.

PER CURIAM.

The State Bar initiated this disciplinary matter in January

2021 with the filing of a Formal Complaint, charging respondent

Tamorra A. Boyd (State Bar No. 201382) with numerous violations

of the Georgia Rules of Professional Conduct (“GRPC”), see Bar Rule

4-102 (d), stemming from her allegedly having allowed a California

mortgage loan modification company to use her name and license to

operate in Georgia and having failed to provide a Georgia client who

retained Boyd via that loan modification company with the services

for which they contracted. Without holding a hearing, the special

master, LaVonda R. DeWitt, granted the State Bar’s motion for

default, denied Boyd’s request to open the default, and issued a

Final Report and Recommendation in which she recommended that the Court suspend Boyd for six months as discipline for her conduct.

Boyd filed exceptions seeking review by the Review Board, and after

consideration, the Review Board recommended that this Court

remand the matter to the special master to proceed with a hearing

on the merits or, in the alternative, for a hearing on the motion for

default. We agree that a remand to the special master for a hearing

on the motion for default is appropriate.

On the relevant issues, the record shows that in September

2018 a couple filed a grievance against Boyd with the State Bar and

it was referred to the State Disciplinary Board (“SDB”) for

investigation. Boyd filed a lengthy, sworn response to the grievance

in October 2018, but the case then stalled for more than a year and

a half until, in May 2020, the SDB found probable cause to charge

Boyd with violations of the GRPC. In spite of State Bar Rules 4-211

(a) and 4-204.4 (a), which generally require a formal complaint to be

filed within 30 days of a probable cause determination unless the

SDB has been granted an extension of time, the Bar did not file the

formal complaint in this Court or request appointment of a special

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master until eight months later, on January 28, 2021. On February

1, 2021, the Bar mailed the formal complaint to the post-office box

Boyd listed as her official address with the Bar’s membership

department, and when the 14-day deadline for Boyd to return an

acknowledgement of service passed, the Bar immediately undertook

to serve Boyd by publication. See Bar Rule 4-203.1 (a) (stating that

a lawyer’s choice to provide only a post-office box address to the

Membership Department constitutes an election to waive personal

service). Service by publication was completed on March 5, 2021,

and, on March 15, 2021, Boyd filed an acknowledgement of service,

but she failed to timely file her answer or to timely seek an extension

of time in which to do so.

On April 27, 2021, the Bar moved for default judgment and

Boyd’s attorney, Ecleynne Mercy, emailed the Bar, seeking an

extension of time and explaining that she had been “recently

retained” and that there had been a “significant delay” due to a

“slight misunderstanding” with Boyd’s malpractice insurance

carrier. The same day, the special master directed Boyd to respond

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to the Bar’s motion for default within 30 days. On May 27, 2021,

Boyd filed, through counsel, a response to the motion for default that

referred to several attached documents, including various letters

and emails, an affidavit made under oath, and a proposed answer,

most of which were not included in her initial submission. After the

Bar filed a reply brief on May 28, 2021 noting Boyd’s failure to attach

the exhibits, Boyd filed an Amended Response, which included the

previously-omitted exhibits. Considered together, Boyd’s responses

sought to set aside the default and attempted to make out a proper

case for doing so. And, although the two responses filed by Boyd’s

counsel are not entirely consistent, they provide some evidence that

as early as February 4, 2021, Boyd was taking steps to respond to

the formal complaint by contacting her malpractice insurance

company to ask about coverage and submitting the necessary claim

application to obtain coverage; that there may have been a delay of

several weeks before the insurance company actually approved

counsel to represent Boyd; that Boyd immediately forwarded the

approval letter to counsel once counsel was approved by the

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insurance company; and that additional delays ensued as counsel

and the insurance company communicated through Boyd regarding

payment. Notably, in those exchanges, it appears that Boyd

repeatedly forwarded each party’s emails to the other promptly, only

to have the other party delay for days or weeks before forwarding its

response. In the end, Boyd’s counsel failed to file her answer to the

formal complaint in a timely manner.

Without holding a hearing, the special master issued an order

on the motion to default and on Boyd’s request to open the default.

In the order, the special master properly noted that the Civil

Practice Act generally applies to Bar disciplinary matters, see Bar

Rule 4-221.2 (b) (“In all proceedings under this Chapter occurring

after a finding of Probable Cause . . . the procedures and rules of

evidence applicable in civil cases under the laws of Georgia shall

apply”); see also In the Matter of Turk, 267 Ga. 30, 31 (1) (471 SE2d

842) (1996) (“OCGA § 9-11-55 (b) applies in disciplinary

proceedings.”). She also noted that in order to authorize the opening

of a default under the Civil Practice Act in a Bar disciplinary case,

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a respondent must show “providential cause,” “excusable neglect,”

or a “proper case,” and the rules require that her “showing shall be

made under oath, shall set up a meritorious defense, shall offer to

plead instanter, and shall announce ready to proceed with the trial.”

OCGA § 9-11-55; see also Turk, 267 Ga. at 31.

After reviewing the record, the special master held that Boyd

had ignored the Bar Rules by failing to file a timely answer, failing

to timely request an extension of time in which to file an answer,

and failing to initiate any contact with the Bar before it filed its

motion for default; that her exhibits contradicted her claim that her

insurance company delayed in appointing counsel for this matter;

and that she had not “provided a reasonable explanation for her

failure to timely answer.” Based on these findings, the special

master concluded that Boyd had not shown excusable neglect; that

she had not shown that this is a “proper case” for opening default;

and that she had not even established the conditions precedent to

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consideration of her claims of excusable neglect or a proper case1

since the only allegations of fraud and criminal activity that she

made in her effort to establish a meritorious defense were vague and

conclusory and since the assertions made in her responses to the

Bar’s motion for default were not made under oath. Thus, the special

master declined to open the default and, instead, granted the Bar’s

motion for default. Two months later, the special master entered a

report and recommendation, finding that the facts and violations

alleged in the formal complaint were deemed admitted by Boyd’s

default and recommending a six-month suspension for Boyd’s

admitted violations. Boyd sought review by the Review Board of both

the finding as to default and the recommended level of discipline.

The Review Board considered the record as a whole and

determined that Boyd had been responsive to these proceedings and

had repeatedly demonstrated her desire to proceed with the case on

the merits. The Review Board ruled that Boyd’s failure to timely

1 Boyd did not argue that the default should be opened on the ground of providential cause.

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answer the formal complaint was inconsistent with her other

conduct in these proceedings and was addressed by the filing of her

response to the motion for default. Given the strong public policy in

favor of resolving cases on the merits rather than by default, the

Review Board concluded that after consideration of “all the facts,”

this was a proper case to open default. See Exxon Corp. v. Thomason,

269 Ga. 761, 761 (504 SE2d 676) (1998) (holding that OCGA § 9-11-55 (b) should be liberally construed to keep with the “strong public

policy of this state favoring resolution of cases on their merits”); In

the Matter of Lasonde, 260 Ga. 843 (400 SE2d 322) (1991) (case

remanded to the special master for opening of default under the

policy of resolving cases on the merits); see, e.g., OCGA § 9-11-1

(providing that the Civil Practice Act “shall be construed to secure

the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action”);

OCGA § 9-11-8 (f) (providing that “[a]ll pleadings shall be so

construed as to do substantial justice”). It accordingly recommended

that this Court accept its findings in that regard and remand this

case to the special master to proceed with a hearing on the merits, a

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hearing on the motion for default, or at least a hearing on what

factors might exist in aggravation and mitigation of discipline.

The State Bar filed lengthy exceptions to the Review Board’s

report and recommendation, arguing, in pertinent part, that this

Court should reject the Review Board’s recommendations because

the Review Board improperly applied the law to find that Boyd had

made a proper case for opening the default and that the record does

not support the Review Board’s conclusion that Boyd presented a

“meritorious defense.” Boyd has not responded to the State Bar’s

exceptions.2

After reviewing the record and pretermitting whether the

Review Board exceeded its authority in this case, we conclude that

under the circumstances of this case, a hearing should be held on

the State Bar’s motion for default and on Boyd’s request that the

special master open the default. At the outset, we note that trial

2 Boyd filed a “Motion for Continuance” on September 27, 2022, in which she sought an extension of time to file her response to the State Bar’s exceptions. Because this request was filed more than three months after the date her response was due, it was dismissed as untimely. See Supreme Ct. R. 12.

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courts have “very ample powers” to open defaults and that the

proper-case ground for opening a default should be liberally applied

so as to keep with the policy of deciding cases on their merits, see

Bowen v. Savoy, 308 Ga. 204, 209 (839 SE2d 546) (2020). And, as the

Review Board noted, defaults in disciplinary cases most often

involve respondents who completely fail to respond to disciplinary

proceedings. See In the Matter of Wadsworth, 312 Ga. 159 (861 SE2d

104) (2021); In the Matter of Davis, 311 Ga. 797 (860 SE2d 467)

(2021). Here, the record suggests that Boyd cooperated and

participated in the Bar’s investigation of the complaint and

processes. Although she admittedly failed to file a timely response

after acknowledging service, as she worked with her insurance

carrier to obtain counsel, and her pleadings were imperfect in both

form and substance, her omissions do not appear to rise to the level

of failure to engage with, or affirmative disregard for, the

disciplinary process.

Accordingly, we vacate the special master’s order granting the

Bar’s motion for default, the special master’s Report and

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Recommendation, and the Review Board’s Report and

Recommendation, and we remand this matter to the special master

with direction that she set a hearing on the Bar’s motion for default

and Boyd’s request to open the default.3 If, after that hearing, the

special master decides to open the default, the matter should

proceed with discovery and a hearing on the merits of the formal

complaint. See Bar Rule 4-213. If the special master again grants

the motion for default, she may consider whether it would be

appropriate to set a hearing to consider any matters in mitigation or

aggravation of punishment. Compare In the Matter of Fagan, 314

Ga. 208, 212 n.1 (876 SE2d 242) (2022) (“[T]he Bar Rules do not give

3 Because we remand this case to the special master for a hearing on the Bar’s motion for default and Boyd’s request to open the default, we note that the special master, in deciding that Boyd had not met her burden of showing a “proper case” under OCGA § 9-11-55 (b), relied on Boyd’s failure to “provide [] a reasonable explanation for the failure to timely answer” and failed to consider “all the facts,” as required by the default judgment statute. See Bowen, 308 Ga. at 208. As we recently explained in Bowen, however, the plain language of OCGA § 9-11-55 (b) instructs that when determining whether a proper case exists for the opening of default, the absence of a reasonable explanation is not dispositive, and a special master must consider all of the facts, including whether the failure to file a timely answer resulted from “willful or gross negligence” and “[w]hether [the State Bar] will be harmed or prejudiced by opening the default.” Id. at 208-209.

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the Special Master authority to sua sponte invite and receive any

evidence, including mitigation, when a party is currently in

default.”) with In the Matter of Farnham, 312 Ga. 65, 70 (860 SE2d

547) (2021) (directing special master to set a hearing on mitigating

and aggravating factors where respondent submitted pleadings to

the special master raising the possibility that such factors existed,

if, on remand, the State Bar’s motion to strike is granted). Compare

Bar Rule 4-212 (a) (providing only that if the respondent fails to

timely answer a formal complaint, “the facts alleged and violations

charged in the formal complaint shall be deemed admitted”) with

Bar Rule 4-208.1 (b) (providing that if notice of discipline is not

timely rejected, the respondent “shall be in default” and “shall have

no right to any evidentiary hearing”).

Vacated and remanded with direction. All the Justices concur.

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