NOTICE: This opinion is subject to modification resulting from motions for reconsideration under Supreme Court Rule 27, the Court’s reconsideration, and editorial revisions by the Reporter of Decisions. The version of the opinion published in the Advance Sheets for the Georgia Reports, designated as the “Final Copy,” will replace any prior version on the Court’s website and docket. A bound volume of the Georgia Reports will contain the final and official text of the opinion.
In the Supreme Court of Georgia
Decided: October 15, 2024
S24A0789. RBC GLOBAL ASSET MANAGEMENT (U.S.), INC. v.
LATTIMORE.
ELLINGTON, Justice.
RBC Global Asset Management (U.S.), Inc., (“Global”) appeals
from the order of the State Court of Fulton County denying its
motion to set aside the garnishment default judgment entered
against it in favor of Markisha Lattimore. Global, a registered
investment advisor, contends that the trial court erred in denying
its motion to set aside the default judgment, arguing that Lattimore
failed to obtain personal jurisdiction over Global when it initiated
the garnishment action using a garnishment summons form that did
not apply to Global. We agree with Global and reverse the order of
the state court.
1. Standard of Review and Pertinent Facts. An appellate court
reviews an order resolving a motion to set aside a default judgment
for an abuse of discretion. Ameriprise Holdings, Inc. v. McCampbell,
371 Ga. App. 323, 323 (899 SE2d 509) (2024). A trial court abuses
its discretion when it commits “a significant legal error or a clear
error as to a material factual finding.” Rockdale Hosp., LLC v.
Evans, 306 Ga. 847, 851 (834 SE2d 77) (2019).
The pertinent facts of this case are not in dispute. In September
of 2022, Lattimore obtained a judgment exceeding $20 million
against Kim Brothers Kickin’ Kids, LLC (“Kickin’ Kids”). There is
no evidence in the record indicating that Lattimore engaged in postjudgment discovery or that she tried to collect the judgment directly
from Kickin’ Kids. Instead, on December 30, 2022, Lattimore
initiated garnishment actions against twelve financial services
companies, including Global. She did so by using the statutory form
“Summons for Garnishment on a Financial Institution” found in
OCGA § 18-4-76. There is no evidence in the record that any of the
garnishees actually held any of Kickin’ Kids’ assets. Upon receiving
the summons, Global determined that it held no money or property
2
for Kickin’ Kids; however, it failed to respond to the summons or
otherwise notify Lattimore of that fact. When Global failed to
answer the summons within 15 days, Lattimore moved for a
garnishment default judgment of $20,325,479.45 – the full amount
of the underlying tort judgment against Kickin’ Kids plus postjudgment interest. 1 Lattimore purportedly mailed the motion and
exhibits to Global’s registered agent, but Global’s agent stated in an
affidavit that she did not receive the motion and, consequently, did
not respond to it. On May 17, 2023, the state court entered a default
judgment against Global for the full amount of the underlying
judgment and, thereafter, Lattimore served the default judgment on
Global. Global did not move to reduce the default judgment within
1 OCGA § 18-4-22 provides:
When a garnishee is a financial institution and fails or refuses to
file a garnishee answer by the fifteenth day after the date of service
of the summons of garnishment, such garnishee shall
automatically be in default. The default may be opened as a matter
of right by the filing of a garnishee answer within 15 days of the
day of default and payment of costs. If the case is still in default
after the expiration of the period of 15 days, judgment by default
may be entered at any time thereafter against such garnishee for
the amount remaining due on the judgment obtained against the
defendant as shown in the plaintiff’s affidavit of garnishment.
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the next 90 days as provided in OCGA § 18-4-24 (a).
On October 23, 2023, Global moved to set aside the default
judgment pursuant to OCGA § 9-11-60 (d) and the state court’s
inherent authority. Global argued that, because it is a registered
investment adviser and not a bank or other repository of client funds
falling within the definition of “financial institution” in OCGA § 18-4-1 (4), Lattimore improperly served it using the summons form for
a financial institution. Because Lattimore used the wrong
garnishment summons form, Global contended that Lattimore failed
to obtain personal jurisdiction over it and the garnishment action
and resulting default judgment are invalid under OCGA § 18-4-7 (d).
Global also argued that, if the $20 million default judgment against
it were allowed to stand, the application of the garnishment statutes
under the facts of this case would impose a penalty that violates the
due process, equal protection, and excessive fines provisions of the
United States and Georgia Constitutions. Global also attached to its
motion a form garnishee answer stating that it held no property,
money, or accounts of the tortfeasor defendant, Kickin’ Kids.
4
The state court denied Global’s motion, ruling, in pertinent
part, that Global is a financial institution, that Lattimore used the
correct summons form and process to obtain its default judgment,
and that Global waived any defect in the form used to initiate the
garnishment action. 2 Global timely filed with this Court an
application for discretionary appeal from the state court’s order. We
granted the application and asked the parties to consider whether
the state court erred when it ruled: Global is a “financial institution”
as defined in OCGA § 18-4-1 (4), Lattimore used the correct
garnishment summons form to initiate the garnishment action
2 The court also ruled that the garnishment summons notified Global of
the consequences of its failure to timely respond. Global had 90 days to reduce
its liability to $50 after receiving the judgment, but it failed to take advantage of that opportunity. See OCGA § 18-4-24 (a). The court also ruled that nothing
in OCGA § 9-11-60 (d) allows parties to challenge the constitutionality of a
default judgment. Yet, notwithstanding its position that it lacked jurisdiction
to set aside the default judgment on such grounds, the court held that, in these
circumstances, no due-process violation occurred because the garnishee had
actual notice of the consequences of engaging in the specified wrongful conduct.
The court did not address Lattimore’s equal protection argument. The court
also ruled that no excessive fine exists here because OCGA § 18-4-22 sets the
amount of default judgments and garnishment courts lack authority to reduce
that amount. Finally, the court ruled that the amount of the garnishment
judgment was not excessive because the appellate courts have “affirmed dozens
of default judgments of $1 million or more.”
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against Global, and Global could not challenge in its motion to set
aside whether Lattimore had obtained personal jurisdiction over it
because she had used the incorrect garnishment summons form.3 As
explained more fully below, Lattimore initiated the garnishment
action using the wrong summons form; therefore, she failed to obtain
personal jurisdiction over Global. Because the state court abused its
discretion in denying Global’s motion to set aside the garnishment
default judgment on this ground, we reverse the order appealed.
2. The state court erroneously concluded that Global is a
“financial institution” as defined in OCGA § 18-4-1 (4), and that
Lattimore therefore used the correct form of garnishment summons
when initiating this garnishment action. The parties do not dispute
that Global is a “registered investment adviser,” as that term is
3 We also asked the parties to consider whether the state court erred by
ruling that Georgia’s garnishment statutes are constitutional as applied in this
case and whether the state court erred by ruling that Global could not raise a
constitutional challenge in its motion to set aside the garnishment default
judgment. We do not reach these questions because we are able to resolve the
merits of this appeal on the statutory arguments presented in support of
Global’s claims of error. State v. Randall, 318 Ga. 79, 81 (2) (897 SE2d 444)
(2024) (“Generally speaking, this Court will not reach novel constitutional
questions when a case can be resolved without passing on such issues.”).
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defined under state law and federal regulations. 4 Global advises
institutions on investment strategies and offers management
services for institutional clients and large investment portfolios. A
Global corporate representative stated in an affidavit that Global
does not “market its advisory services to retail clients” and does not
have retail locations “open to the general public.” Global is “not a
federal or state chartered commercial or savings bank,” nor is it a
“savings and loan association,” “credit union,” “insurance company,”
“benefits association,” “safe-deposit company,” “trust company” or
“money market mutual fund.”
The garnishment chapter defines “financial institution” to
mean:
every federal or state chartered commercial or savings
4 In a sworn affidavit, a Global executive stated that Global “is a
registered investment adviser . . . as defined in 15 U.S.C. § 80b-2 (a) (11); its
Central Registration Depository No. is 107173, and its Securities and
Exchange Commission No. is 801-20303.” An investment advisor “registered
under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, 15 U.S.C. Section 80b-1, et seq.” is
defined as a “Federal covered investment adviser” under the Georgia Uniform
Securities Act of 2008. OCGA § 10-5-2 (8). Federal covered investment advisers
are required “to file a notice, a consent to service of process,” and to pay certain fees in order to transact business lawfully in Georgia. OCGA § 10-5-34 (c).
Global filed an exhibit showing that it “became notice filed or registered” in
Georgia on March 3, 1997.
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bank, including savings and loan associations and
cooperative banks, federal or state chartered credit
unions, benefit associations, insurance companies, safedeposit companies, trust companies, any money market
mutual fund, or other organization held out to the public
as a place of deposit of funds or medium of savings or
collective investment.
OCGA § 18-4-1 (4). The definition of “financial institution” does not
include “registered investment advisors.” In fact, the Georgia
Uniform Securities Act of 2008 defines “investment adviser” to
specifically exclude a “bank or savings institution” as well as a
“credit union” – those two institutions that are first on the list in
OCGA § 18-1-4 (4). See OCGA § 10-5-2 (17) (E, F). Registered
investment advisors do not accept or hold bank deposits or savings
accounts; in fact, they are statutorily forbidden from doing so. See
OCGA § 7-1-241 (a) (“No person or corporation may engage . . . in
the business of banking or receiving money for deposit or
transmission” except “a bank, a national bank, a credit union,”
among other banking entities). The same is true at the federal level.5
5 Global, as a registered “investment adviser,” may not function as a
“bank or any bank holding company[,]” except under circumstances not
8
Global’s corporate representative confirmed that Global does not
hold bank deposits or savings accounts and that it does not have
actual custody of client funds.6
Additionally, as a registered investment advisor, Global does
not hold itself “out to the public as a place of deposit of funds or
medium of savings or collective investment” as required by the
garnishment chapter. OCGA § 18-4-1 (4).7 This final clause of the
statutory definition of “financial institution” is not read broadly as
a catch-all for any type of financial entity; rather, as this Court has
held, it is merely reiterative of the type of organizations specifically
pertinent here. See 15 USC § 80b-2(a)(11). Unless registered investment
advisers are also “qualified custodians” – which Global is not – they are
forbidden from “hav[ing] custody of client funds or securities.” 17 CFR §
275.206(4)-2(a).
6 Pursuant to Securities and Exchange Commission regulations (Rules
and Regulations, Investment Advisers Act of 1940), Global may have “deemed
custody” of portfolios or funds that it manages, even though those funds are
held by others. “Deemed custody” is a term of art used to indicate managerial
control of the funds for investment purposes, not actual possession or custody.
See 17 C.F.R. § 275.206(4)-2 (custody of funds or securities of clients by
investment advisers). Global’s SEC filings list the companies that actually hold
its clients’ funds.
7 We note that, in the banking industry, a “medium of collective
investment” is simply a trust account where depositor funds are held
collectively and permitted to be commingled. See 12 CFR § 9.18; see also OCGA
§ 7-1-313 (authorizing trust companies to establish and maintain “collective
investment funds”).
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listed in the statute. See Blach v. Diaz-Verson, 303 Ga. 63, 64-66
(810 SE2d 129) (2018) (“Or” is used as a reiterative term, and “in the
context of the chapter as a whole, the natural and reasonable use of
this phrase at the end of subsection (4) of OCGA § 18-4-1 is to
describe generally all the entities listed earlier in the subsection.
That is, that a ‘financial institution,’ for purposes of a garnishment
on a financial institution pursuant to OCGA § 18-4-4 (c) (2), is an
entity that is a place of deposit for a defendant’s funds or medium
for a defendant’s savings or investments, for example, those listed
in the subsection.” (citations omitted.)). See also Bissonnette v.
LePage Bakeries Park St., 601 U.S. 245 (144 SCt. 905, 218 LE2d
2024) (2024) (in the phrase “seamen, railroad employees, or any
other class of workers engaged in foreign or interstate commerce,”
the residual clause is “controlled and defined by reference to the
specific categories . . . that precede it” (quotation omitted)). Thus,
the clause “or other organization held out to the public as a place of
deposit of funds or medium of savings or collective investment” is
most naturally read as drawing meaning from, as well as providing
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meaning to, the first clause rather than expanding the definition to
include other kinds of financial entities. See Blach, 303 Ga. at 66. In
short, the defining characteristic of a “financial institution” as used
in this statute is “an entity that holds an account where a
defendant’s funds are deposited, saved, or invested.” Id. Global does
not meet that definition because it does not hold such client
accounts.
Given that Global does not meet the definition of a financial
institution under the statute, Lattimore used the wrong summons
form to initiate her garnishment action against Global. The
garnishment code provides one summons form for a general
garnishment and a different form for garnishments on a “financial
institution.” See OCGA §§ 18-4-74, 18-4-76, 18-4-78, and 18-4-80. It
also provides: “When a plaintiff uses the incorrect form for a
summons of garnishment of any type, the garnishment shall not be
valid and the garnishee shall be relieved of all liability.” (OCGA §
18-4-7 (d) (emphasis added)). In this case, Lattimore used the
garnishment summons form for a financial institution, a form that
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did not apply to Global; therefore, the garnishment was invalid.
Consequently, Lattimore failed to obtain personal jurisdiction over
Global. See Jahanbin v. Rafieishad, 292 Ga. 806, 807 (741 SE2d 648)
(2013) (“Without proper service, the trial court did not obtain
jurisdiction over [the defendant] and thus erred in denying [his]
motion to set aside the final judgment.”); Lewis v. Capital Bank, 311
Ga. App. 795, 797 (717 SE2d 481) (2011) (“A court obtains
jurisdiction of the person of the garnishee . . . only after he has been
served with proper process or waives service of process by appearing
voluntarily or some other affirmative act.”).
3. The state court abused its discretion by ruling that Global
could not raise the personal-jurisdiction defect resulting from
Lattimore’s use of the incorrect summons form in its motion to set
aside the garnishment default judgment on the theory that Global
had waived its challenge to the form of the garnishment summons
by not raising that challenge in an answer or motion to dismiss. See
OCGA § 9-11-12 (h) (1) (B). The waiver provision of § 9-11-12 (h) (1)
(B) does not apply to a party who moves to set aside a default
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judgment on the ground of lack of personal jurisdiction premised on
insufficient service of process. See DeJarnette Supply Co. v. F.P.
Plaza, Inc., 229 Ga. 625, 626 (193 SE2d 852) (1972). As we explained,
“[w]here there has been no legal service on the defendant and no
waiver of service, the court has no jurisdiction to enter any judgment
in the case unless it be one dismissing the case for lack of
jurisdiction.” Id. at 625. Thus, if the process defense is meritorious,
as it is here, the default judgment must be set aside. Id. at 626.
Moreover, the garnishment code expressly provides that using
the incorrect form for a summons of garnishment renders the
garnishment invalid and relieves the garnishee of all liability. See
OCGA § 18-4-7 (d). Plainly, it imposes no requirement that the
garnishee raise the incorrect-summons issue in an answer or motion
to dismiss, and it provides no exception for liability resulting from a
default judgment. Because the garnishment action was initiated by
the wrong summons form, the defect was not waived under the
circumstances of this case. See Ameriprise Holdings, 371 Ga. App.
323, 328 n.23 (899 SE2d 509) (2024) (“[I]n light of the clear directive
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contained in OCGA § 18-4-7 (d) . . . [,] we decline to hold that the
failure to raise this [incorrect-summons-form] defense prior to the
motion [to set aside] is subject to waiver under OCGA § 9-11-12
(h).”). Further, the argument Lattimore made below that Global
waived its insufficient-process defense because it had actual notice
of Lattimore’s garnishment action has been rejected by the Court of
Appeals, and we likewise reject it. See, e.g., Lewis, 311 Ga. App. at
799 (That “the garnishee may have received actual notice does not
obviate the need for proper service of process” or prevent a court
from setting aside a default judgment for insufficient service of
process. (citation and punctuation omitted)). And finally,
Lattimore’s argument that Global waived its insufficient-process
and lack-of-personal-jurisdiction defenses in this case because it
answered a financial-institution summons in a different case
involving a different plaintiff is untenable. See Klinghoffer v. S.N.C.
Achille Lauro, 937 F.2d 44, 50 n.5 (2d Cir. 1991) (“A party’s consent
to jurisdiction in one case . . . extends to that case alone. It in no way
opens that party up to other lawsuits in the same jurisdiction in
14
which consent was given, where the party does not consent and no
other jurisdictional basis is available.”); see also Quire v. Clayton
Cnty. Dep’t of Fam. & Child. Servs., 242 Ga. 85, 87 (249 SE2d 538)
(1978) (explaining that, even for the non-jurisdictional defense of
lack of venue, a party’s “appearance in [one] suit cannot have the
effect of waiving their right to object to improper venue in a separate
. . . suit”). Because Lattimore failed to obtain personal jurisdiction
over Global when it used the incorrect garnishment summons form,
the state court abused its discretion in denying Global’s motion to
set aside the garnishment default judgment. See OCGA § 9-11-60
(d) (1) (“A motion to set aside may be brought to set aside a judgment
based upon . . . [l]ack of jurisdiction over the person[.]”).
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur, except Boggs, C.J.,
not participating, and Pinson, J., disqualified.
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