Title 9, Chapter 11, Section 4
( 9-11-4)
(a) Summons -- Issuance. Upon the filing of the complaint, the clerk
shall forthwith issue a summons and deliver it for service. Upon
request of the plaintiff, separate or additional summons shall issue
against any defendants. (b) Summons -- Form. The summons shall be signed by the clerk;
contain the name of the court and county and the names of the
parties; be directed to the defendant; state the name and address of
the plaintiff's attorney, if any, otherwise the plaintiff's address;
and state the time within which this chapter requires the defendant
to appear and file appropriate defensive pleadings with the clerk of
the court, and shall notify the defendant that in case of the
defendant's failure to do so judgment by default will be rendered
against him or her for the relief demanded in the complaint. (c) Summons -- By whom served. Process shall be served by the
sheriff of the county where the action is brought or where the
defendant is found, or by such sheriff's deputy, or by the marshal
or sheriff of the court, or by such official's deputy, or by any
citizen of the United States specially appointed by the court for
that purpose, or by someone who is not a party and is not younger
than 18 years of age and has been appointed as a permanent process
server by the court in which the action is brought. Where the
service of process is made outside of the United States, after an
order of publication, it may be served either by any citizen of the
United States or by any resident of the country, territory, colony,
or province who is specially appointed by the court for that
purpose. When service is to be made within this state, the person
making such service shall make the service within five days from the
time of receiving the summons and complaint; but failure to make
service within the five-day period will not invalidate a later
service. (d) Waiver of service. (1) A defendant who waives service of a summons does not thereby
waive any objection to the venue or to the jurisdiction of the
court over the person of the defendant. (2) Upon receipt of notice of an action in the manner provided in
this subsection, the following defendants have a duty to avoid
unnecessary costs of serving the summons: (A) A corporation or association that: (i) Is subject to service under paragraph (1) or (2) of
subsection (e) of this Code section; and (ii) Receives notice of such action by an agent other than the
Secretary of State; and (B) A natural person who: (i) Is not a minor; and (ii) Has not been judicially declared to be of unsound mind or
incapable of conducting his or her own affairs.
(3) To avoid costs, the plaintiff may notify such a defendant of
the commencement of the action and request that the defendant
waive service of a summons. The notice and request shall: (A) Be in writing and shall be addressed directly to the
defendant, if an individual, or else to an officer or managing
or general agent or other agent authorized by appointment to
receive service of process for a defendant subject to service
under paragraph (1) or (2) of subsection (e) of this Code
section; (B) Be dispatched through first-class mail or other reliable
means; (C) Be accompanied by a copy of the complaint and shall identify
the court in which it has been filed; (D) Make reference to this Code section and shall inform the
defendant, by means of the text prescribed in subsection (l) of
this Code section, of the consequences of compliance and of
failure to comply with the request; (E) Set forth the date on which the request is sent; (F) Allow the defendant a reasonable time to return the waiver,
which shall be at least 30 days from the date on which the
request is sent, or 60 days from that date if the defendant is
addressed outside any judicial district of the United States;
and (G) Provide the defendant with an extra copy of the notice and
request, as well as a prepaid means of compliance in writing. (4) If a defendant located within the United States that is
subject to service inside or outside the state under this Code
section fails to comply with a request for a waiver made by a
plaintiff located within the United States, the court shall impose
the costs subsequently incurred in effecting service on the
defendant unless good cause for the failure is shown. (5) A defendant that, before being served with process, returns a
waiver so requested in a timely manner is not required to serve an
answer to the complaint until 60 days after the date on which the
request for waiver of service was sent, or 90 days after that date
if the defendant was addressed outside any judicial district of
the United States. (6) When the plaintiff files a waiver of service with the court,
the action shall proceed, except as provided in paragraph (5) of
this subsection, as if a summons and complaint had been served at
the time of filing the waiver, and no proof of service shall be
required. (7) The costs to be imposed on a defendant under paragraph (4) of
this subsection for failure to comply with a request to waive
service of summons shall include the costs subsequently incurred
in effecting service, together with the costs, including a
reasonable attorney's fee, of any motion required to collect the
costs of service.
(e) Summons -- Personal service. Except for cases in which the
defendant has waived service, the summons and complaint shall be
served together. The plaintiff shall furnish the clerk of the court
with such copies as are necessary. Service shall be made by
delivering a copy of the summons attached to a copy of the complaint
as follows: (1) If the action is against a corporation incorporated or
domesticated under the laws of this state or a foreign corporation
authorized to transact business in this state, to the president or
other officer of the corporation, secretary, cashier, managing
agent, or other agent thereof, provided that when for any reason
service cannot be had in such manner, the Secretary of State shall
be an agent of such corporation upon whom any process, notice, or
demand may be served. Service on the Secretary of State of any
such process, notice, or demand shall be made by delivering to and
leaving with him or her or with any other person or persons
designated by the Secretary of State to receive such service a
copy of such process, notice, or demand, along with a copy of the
affidavit to be submitted to the court pursuant to this Code
section. The plaintiff or the plaintiff's attorney shall certify
in writing to the Secretary of State that he or she has forwarded
by registered mail or statutory overnight delivery such process,
service, or demand to the last registered office or agent listed
on the records of the Secretary of State, that service cannot be
effected at such office, and that it therefore appears that the
corporation has failed either to maintain a registered office or
to appoint a registered agent in this state. Further, if it shall
appear from such certification that there is a last known address
of a known officer of the corporation outside the state, the
plaintiff shall, in addition to and after such service upon the
Secretary of State, mail or cause to be mailed to the known
officer at the address by registered or certified mail or
statutory overnight delivery a copy of the summons and a copy of
the complaint. Any such service by certification to the Secretary
of State shall be answerable not more than 30 days from the date
the Secretary of State receives such certification; (2) If the action is against a foreign corporation or a
nonresident individual, partnership, joint-stock company, or
association, doing business and having a managing or other agent,
cashier, or secretary within this state, to such agent, cashier,
or secretary or to an agent designated for service of process; (3) If against a minor, to the minor, personally, and also to such
minor's father, mother, guardian, or duly appointed guardian ad
litem unless the minor is married, in which case service shall not
be made on the minor's father, mother, or guardian; (4) If against a person residing within this state who has been
judicially declared to be of unsound mind or incapable of
conducting his or her own affairs and for whom a guardian has been
appointed, to the person and also to such person's guardian and,
if there is no guardian appointed, then to his or her duly
appointed guardian ad litem; (5) If against a county, municipality, city, or town, to the
chairman of the board of commissioners, president of the council
of trustees, mayor or city manager of the city or to an agent
authorized by appointment to receive service of process. If
against any other public body or organization subject to an
action, to the chief executive officer or clerk thereof; (6) If the principal sum involved is less than $200.00 and if
reasonable efforts have been made to obtain personal service by
attempting to find some person residing at the most notorious
place of abode of the defendant, then by securely attaching the
service copy of the complaint in a conspicuously marked and
waterproof packet to the upper part of the door of the abode and
on the same day mailing by certified or registered mail or
statutory overnight delivery an additional copy to the defendant
at his or her last known address, if any, and making an entry of
this action on the return of service; or (7) In all other cases to the defendant personally, or by leaving
copies thereof at the defendant's dwelling house or usual place of
abode with some person of suitable age and discretion then
residing therein, or by delivering a copy of the summons and
complaint to an agent authorized by appointment or by law to
receive service of process. (f) Summons -- Other service. (1) Service by publication. (A) General. When the person on whom service is to be made
resides outside the state, or has departed from the state, or
cannot, after due diligence, be found within the state, or
conceals himself or herself to avoid the service of the summons,
and the fact shall appear, by affidavit, to the satisfaction of
the judge or clerk of the court, and it shall appear, either by
affidavit or by a verified complaint on file, that a claim
exists against the defendant in respect to whom the service is
to be made, and that he or she is a necessary or proper party to
the action, the judge or clerk may grant an order that the
service be made by the publication of summons, provided that
when the affidavit is based on the fact that the party on whom
service is to be made resides outside the state, and the present
address of the party is unknown, it shall be a sufficient
showing of such fact if the affiant shall state generally in the
affidavit that at a previous time such person resided outside
this state in a certain place (naming the place and stating the
latest date known to affiant when the party so resided there);
that such place is the last place in which the party resided to
the knowledge of affiant; that the party no longer resides at
the place; that affiant does not know the present place of
residence of the party or where the party can be found; and that
affiant does not know and has never been informed and has no
reason to believe that the party now resides in this state; and,
in such case, it shall be presumed that the party still resides
and remains outside the state, and the affidavit shall be deemed
to be a sufficient showing of due diligence to find the
defendant. This Code section shall apply to all manner of civil
actions, including those for divorce. (B) Property. In any action which relates to, or the subject of
which is, real or personal property in this state in which any
defendant, corporate or otherwise, has or claims a lien or
interest, actual or contingent, or in which the relief demanded
consists wholly or in part of excluding such defendant from any
interest therein, where the defendant resides outside the state
or has departed from the state, or cannot, after due diligence,
be found within the state, or conceals himself or herself to
avoid the service of summons, the judge or clerk may make an
order that the service be made by publication of summons. The
service by publication shall be made in the same manner as
provided in all cases of service by publication. (C) Publication. When the court orders service by publication,
the clerk shall cause the publication to be made in the paper in
which sheriff's advertisements are printed, four times within
the ensuing 60 days, publications to be at least seven days
apart. The party obtaining the order shall, at the time of
filing, deposit the cost of publication. The published notice
shall contain the name of the parties plaintiff and defendant,
with a caption setting forth the court, the character of the
action, the date the action was filed, the date of the order for
service by publication, and a notice directed and addressed to
the party to be thus served, commanding him or her to file with
the clerk and serve upon the plaintiff's attorney an answer
within 60 days of the date of the order for service by
publication and shall bear teste in the name of the judge and
shall be signed by the clerk of the court. Where the residence
or abiding place of the absent or nonresident party is known,
the party obtaining the order shall advise the clerk thereof;
and it shall be the duty of the clerk, within 15 days after
filing of the order for service by publication, to enclose,
direct, stamp, and mail a copy of the notice, together with a
copy of the order for service by publication and complaint, if
any, to the party named in the order at his or her last known
address, if any, and make an entry of this action on the
complaint or other pleadings filed in the case. The copy of the
notice to be mailed to the nonresident shall be a duplicate of
the one published in the newspaper but need not necessarily be a
copy of the newspaper itself. When service by publication is
ordered, personal service of a copy of the summons, complaint,
and order of publication outside the state in lieu of
publication shall be equivalent to serving notice by publication
and to mailing when proved to the satisfaction of the judge or
otherwise. The defendant shall have 30 days from the date of
such personal service outside the state in which to file
defensive pleadings. (2) Personal service outside the state. Personal service outside
the state upon a natural person may be made: (A) in any action
where the person served is a resident of this state, and (B) in
any action affecting specific real property or status, or in any
other proceeding in rem without regard to the residence of the
person served. When such facts shall appear, by affidavit, to the
satisfaction of the court and it shall appear, either by affidavit
or by a verified complaint on file, that a claim is asserted
against the person in respect to whom the service is to be made,
and that he or she is a necessary or proper party to the action,
the court may grant an order that the service be made by personal
service outside the state. Such service shall be made by
delivering a copy of the process together with a copy of the
complaint in person to the persons served. (g) Territorial limits of effective service. All process may be
served anywhere within the territorial limits of the state and, when
a statute so provides, beyond the territorial limits of the state. (h) Return. The person serving the process shall make proof of
service thereof to the court promptly and, in any event, within the
time during which the person served must respond to the process.
Proof of service shall be as follows: (1) If served by a sheriff or marshal, or such official's deputy,
the affidavit or certificate of the sheriff, marshal, or deputy; (2) If by any other proper person, such person's affidavit; (3) In case of publication, the certificate of the clerk of court
certifying to the publication and mailing; or (4) The written admission or acknowledgment of service by the
defendant. In the case of service otherwise than by publication, the
certificate or affidavit shall state the date, place, and manner of
service. Failure to make proof of service shall not affect the
validity of the service. (i) Amendment. At any time in its discretion and upon such terms as
it deems just, the court may allow any process or proof of service
thereof to be amended, unless it clearly appears that material
prejudice would result to the substantial rights of the party
against whom the process issued. (j) Alternative service. The methods of service provided in this
Code section are cumulative and may be utilized with, after, or
independently of other methods of service. Whenever a statute
provides for another method of service, service may be made under
the circumstances and in the manner prescribed by the statute or
under any other methods prescribed in this Code section. The
provisions for service by publication provided in this Code section
shall apply in any action or proceeding in which service by
publication may be authorized by law; and, where by law special
provision is made for service by publication, the procedure for such
service by publication provided in this Code section may be utilized
in lieu thereof. In all cases or special proceedings where the
requirements or procedure for service, or both, are not prescribed
by law and in any situation where the provisions therefor are not
clear or certain, the court may prescribe service according to the
exigencies of each case, consistent with the Constitution. (k) Service in probate courts and special statutory proceedings. The
methods of service provided in this Code section may be used as
alternative methods of service in proceedings in the probate courts
and in any other special statutory proceedings and may be used with,
after, or independently of the method of service specifically
provided for in any such proceeding; and, in any such proceeding,
service shall be sufficient when made in accordance with the
statutes relating particularly to the proceeding or in accordance
with this Code section. (l) Forms. NOTICE OF LAWSUIT AND REQUEST
FOR WAIVER OF SERVICE OF SUMMONS
TO: (Name of individual defendant or name of officer or agent of
corporate defendant) as (title, or other relationship of
individual to corporate defendant) of (name of corporate
defendant to be served, if any) A lawsuit has been commenced against you (or the entity on whose
behalf you are addressed). A copy of the complaint is attached to
this notice. The complaint has been filed in the (court named on
the complaint) for the State of Georgia in and for the County of
(county) and has been assigned (case number of action). This is not a formal summons or notification from the court, but rather my request pursuant to Code Section 9-11-4 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated that you sign and return the enclosed Waiver of Service in order to save the cost of serving you with a judicial summons and an additional copy of the complaint. The cost of service will be avoided if I receive a signed copy of the waiver within 30 days (or 60 days if located outside any judicial district of the United States) after the date designated below as the date on which this Notice of Lawsuit and Request for Waiver of Service of Summons is sent. I enclose a stamped and addressed envelope (or other means of cost-free return) for your use. An extra copy of the Waiver of Service is also attached for your records. YOU ARE ENTITLED TO CONSULT WITH YOUR ATTORNEY REGARDING THIS MATTER. If you comply with this request and return the signed Waiver of
Service, the waiver will be filed with the court and no summons will
be served on you. The action will then proceed as if you had been
served on the date the waiver is filed except that you will not be
obligated to answer or otherwise respond to the complaint within 60
days from the date designated below as the date on which this notice
is sent (or within 90 days from that date if your address is not in
any judicial district of the United States). If you do not return the signed waiver within the time indicated, I
will take appropriate steps to effect formal service in a manner
authorized by the Georgia Rules of Civil Procedure and then, to the
extent authorized by those rules, I will ask the court to require
you (or the party on whose behalf you are addressed) to pay the full
cost of such service. In that connection, please read the statement
concerning the duty of parties to avoid unnecessary costs of service
of summons, which is set forth on the Notice of Duty to Avoid
Unnecessary Costs of Service of Summons enclosed herein. I affirm that this Notice of Lawsuit and Request for Waiver of
Service of Summons is being sent to you on behalf of the Plaintiff
on this ______ day of _______________________. _________________________________
Signature of plaintiff's attorney
or Unrepresented plaintiff WAIVER OF SERVICE OF SUMMONS To: (Name of plaintiff's attorney or unrepresented plaintiff) I acknowledge receipt of your request that I waive service of a
summons in the action of (caption of action), which is case number
(docket number) in the (name of court) of the State of Georgia in
and for the County of (county). I have also received a copy of the
complaint in the action, two copies of this instrument, and a means
by which I can return the signed waiver to you without cost to me.
I understand that I am entitled to consult with my own attorney
regarding the consequences of my signing this waiver. I agree to save the cost of service of a summons and an additional
copy of the complaint in this lawsuit by not requiring that I (or
the entity on whose behalf I am acting) be served with judicial
process in the manner provided by the Georgia Rules of Civil
Procedure. I (or the entity on whose behalf I am acting) will retain all
defenses or objections to the lawsuit or to the jurisdiction or
venue of the court except for objections based on a defect in the
summons or in the service of the summons. I understand that a judgment may be entered against me (or the
entity on whose behalf I am acting) if an answer is not served upon
you within 60 days after the date this waiver was sent, or within 90
days after that date if the request for the waiver was sent outside
the United States. This ______ day of ______________, ____. ____________________________(Signed)
(Printed or typed name of defendant)
as (title)_________________________
of (name of corporate defendant, if any) NOTICE OF DUTY TO AVOID UNNECESSARY
COSTS OF SERVICE OF SUMMONS Subsection (d) of Code Section 9-11-4 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated requires certain parties to cooperate in saving unnecessary costs of service of the summons and the pleading. A defendant located in the United States who, after being notified of an action and asked by a plaintiff located in the United States to waive service of a summons, fails to do so will be required to bear the cost of such service unless good cause be shown for such defendant's failure to sign and return the waiver. It is not good cause for a failure to waive service that a party
believes that the complaint is unfounded, or that the action has
been brought in an improper place or in a court that lacks
jurisdiction over the subject matter of the action or over its
person or property. A party who waives service of the summons
retains all defenses and objections (except any relating to the
summons or to the service of the summons), and may later object to
the jurisdiction of the court or to the place where the action has
been brought. A defendant who waives service must, within the time specified on
the waiver form, serve on the plaintiff's attorney (or unrepresented
plaintiff) a response to the complaint and also must file a signed
copy of the response with the court. If the answer is not served
within this time, a default judgment may be taken against that
defendant. By waiving service, a defendant is allowed more time to
answer than if the summons had been actually served when the request
for waiver of service was received. |