PHIPPS, Presiding Judge.
Michelle Thompson and other residents of East Point sued William C. Meredith Company, Inc. (the corporation), alleging that operations at the corporation's nearby facility were tortiously emitting chemicals and noxious odors upon their properties and that they were entitled to injunctive relief and damages. Among the other defendants,
The corporation is in the business of manufacturing and treating wooden utility poles. The corporation obtains unfinished poles from various third parties; at its East Point facility, the corporation then treats the poles with a solution containing the preservative/pesticide pentachlorophenol ("penta"). The treatment process involves placing the timber into a retort (a huge vessel), which contains the solution. Once treated, the poles are either sent to customers or stored upon the facility's yard. According to the residents, the corporation's operations emit penta and other chemicals into the air.
Penta is regulated by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Consequently, it may be sold only to licensed applicators; the corporation is operating under such a license, and the EPA has approved the use of penta for treating wooden poles. While the corporation's facility is located in the vicinity of residential neighborhoods, it is situated upon property that is zoned light industrial, where it has operated since 1921. The corporation employs approximately 18 individuals to run the treatment and manufacturing process. And according to the individual defendants, at all relevant times, the corporation was duly permitted by the Georgia Environmental Protection Division (EPD) to operate its wood preservative facility.
Alleging nonetheless that the East Point facility was tortiously emitting chemicals and noxious odors upon their properties, the residents set forth in their complaint numerous theories against the three named individuals affiliated with the corporation. During discovery, these individual defendants described their corporate roles as follows. Meredith deposed that his involvement with the corporation focused on sales and marketing. Schneider stated that his responsibilities included handling customers, scheduling logistics, and buying and selling certain wood. Castle stated that he was responsible for supervising the manager of quality control and treating, as well as the manager of shipping and receiving.
The individual defendants moved for summary judgment, pointing out that the numerous claims against them stemmed from alleged chemical and odor emissions from the corporation's operations. They cited the principle that a corporation possesses a legal existence separate and apart from that of its
They argued, however, that there was no evidence of any such tortious act that would entitle the residents to damages from them; that the evidence instead showed that they had operated a lawful business in compliance with local, state, and federal laws and regulations governing air emissions; and that their roles in overseeing the overall operations of the business were insufficient to trigger personal liability for damages.
The residents countered that the individual defendants were not entitled to summary judgment on the asserted theories of nuisance,
Alternatively, the residents took the position that, because the individual defendants had not supported their motion with any sworn statement(s) that they had not directed, participated in, or taken part in the underlying conduct about which the residents were complaining, the individual defendants had not pierced their pleadings and consequently were not entitled to summary judgment.
Adopting this latter position, the trial court denied the motion, explaining, "Neither an unsupported denial of the plaintiffs' allegations, nor an unsupported assertion that the plaintiffs had no evidence to prove their allegations will support summary judgment." The court determined:
The trial court certified its order for immediate review, and this court granted the individual defendants' application for interlocutory review. For reasons explained below, we vacate the denial of summary judgment and remand the case with direction.
To be entitled to summary judgment, the individual defendants were not required to present sworn statements as contemplated by the trial court's ruling. "Under Lau's Corp. v. Haskins,
Where a defendant moving for summary judgment "discharges this burden, the nonmoving party cannot rest on its pleadings, but rather must point to specific evidence giving rise to a triable issue."
As detailed above, the individual defendants did not attempt to affirmatively disprove that they had engaged in the particular acts about which the residents complained; rather, the individual defendants argued that the evidence did not show that they were involved in or had performed any particular act constituting a tort for which the residents were entitled to recover damages from them personally. To this end, the individual defendants' counsel conceded at the summary judgment hearing that there was no dispute that they had "operated the business"; counsel argued that the evidence nevertheless showed that the individual defendants' particular acts were lawful and that his clients could not be held personally liable inasmuch as they had acted only within their corporate capacities in performing functions for the corporation.
And in this appeal, the individual defendants contest the denial of their summary judgment motion as erroneously eviscerating the corporate shield afforded to officers, directors, and shareholders, thereby impermissibly exposing their personal assets to liability for the (alleged) torts of the corporation. They maintain that they cannot be held personally liable for damages because they were involved only in the routine operations of the business and there was a complete absence of any violation of federal or state air emissions law and/or regulation.
The trial court did not reach this asserted ground, however, having denied the individual defendants' motion for summary judgment for the reason that they had not presented sworn statements to negate alleged facts. Because the individual defendants were not so limited in their quest for summary judgment, the denial of summary judgment based solely on that ground was premature.
ANDREWS and McFADDEN, JJ., concur.