MIKELL, Judge.
ProNvest, Inc., and Signix, Inc., plaintiffs below, appeal from the trial court's grant of summary judgment against them on all of their claims
Two orders were entered by the trial court on September 29, 2009, one granting summary judgment to Levy and the other granting summary judgment to DocuSign, Inc., on all plaintiffs' claims. A notice of appeal was filed on October 29, 2009, stating that plaintiffs/appellants were appealing both orders granting summary judgment. An amended notice of appeal was filed on January 6, 2010, stating that "Plaintiffs' original Notice of Appeal. . . also included an appeal from the September 29, 2009 order granting DocuSign's motion for summary judgment. . . . Plaintiffs hereby withdraw their appeal of the DocuSign Order." (Emphasis supplied.)
1. In their first enumeration of error, appellants contend that "[t]he trial court erred in requesting that Levy's counsel draft the order granting Levy's motion for summary judgment and adopting that order without notice to Appellants' counsel and without giving Appellants' counsel an opportunity to respond."
The only record citations put forth in support of this argument are to the first page of the trial court's 13-page order granting summary judgment to Levy, which contains nothing to indicate by whom it was drafted, and to the billing statement of Levy's counsel, submitted in support of his motion for attorney fees, which states: "28-Aug-09 Preparation of Proposed Order 14 pages." The transcript of the hearing on the motions for summary judgment does not show that the trial court made a request of counsel for a proposed draft of the order, and there is no showing that the proposed order is the one entered by the trial court. Therefore, appellants have failed to carry their burden and establish error.
2. Appellants' remaining enumerations of error fail because, in its order granting summary judgment to DocuSign, Inc., the trial court ruled conclusively on all of the issues appellants raise as error.
As stated above, appellants have specifically withdrawn their appeal of the trial court's order granting summary judgment to DocuSign, Inc., on all claims made against it. That order found that the Georgia Trade Secrets Act ("GTSA"), OCGA § 10-1-760 et seq., explicitly abolishes all other causes of
Further, that order concluded that the employment contract signed by Levy and the Salesforce.com agreement, the breach of which underpinned all claims against Levy and DocuSign, Inc., were legally unenforceable.
Therefore, the rulings made in the trial court's grant of summary judgment to DocuSign, Inc., are conclusive as between plaintiffs and Levy and the arguments made here concerning the same theories of recovery against Levy are barred by res judicata.
Judgment affirmed.
SMITH, P.J., and ADAMS, J., concur.