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: August 16, 2023
S23Y0743. IN THE MATTER OF RAMON DAVID SAMMONS JR.
PER CURIAM.
This disciplinary matter is before the Court on the report and
recommendation of the State Disciplinary Review Board (“Review
Board”), which reviewed the report and recommendation issued by
Special Master Charles D. Jones, at the request of Ramon David
Sammons Jr. (State Bar No. 623560), pursuant to Bar Rules 4-214
and 4-216. The formal complaint upon which this disciplinary
proceeding was based alleged that Sammons, who has been a
member of the Georgia Bar since 1999, had violated Rules 1.2 (a)
(lawyer shall abide by a client’s decisions concerning the scope and
objectives of representation and shall consult with the client as to
the means by which they are to be pursued); 1.3 (lawyer shall act
with reasonable diligence in representation); 1.4 (lawyer shall
reasonably communicate with the client); and 5.5 (lawyer shall not
engage in the unauthorized practice of law) of the Georgia Rules of
Professional Conduct (“GRPC”) found in Bar Rule 4-102 (d).1
After the Bar’s initial attempt to personally serve Sammons
could not be perfected, it served him by publication and then moved
for an entry of default against Sammons. However, the Special
Master then suggested that the Bar make “more effort” to perfect
personal service upon Sammons, and the Bar was able to discover
Sammons’s correct home address and personally served him there.
Sammons then filed his answer to the formal complaint within 30
days, as required by Bar Rule 4-212 (a). Nonetheless, the Special
Master later entered an order of default against Sammons, followed
by the Special Master’s report and recommendation that Sammons
be disbarred. Sammons filed exceptions to and requested review of
the Special Master’s report and recommendation. In its report, the
Review Board recommended that the Special Master’s entry of
1 The maximum penalty for violations of Rules 1.2, 1.3, and 5.5 is
disbarment; the maximum penalty for a violation of Rule 1.4 is a public
reprimand.
2
default against Sammons be vacated and that the case be remanded
back to the Special Master for discovery and an evidentiary hearing
on the merits of the alleged rule violations. The State Bar filed
exceptions to the Review Board’s report and recommendation, and
Sammons has responded. After considering the record and the
parties’ arguments, we conclude that under the particular
circumstances of this case, default should not have been entered
against Sammons. We therefore vacate the Special Master’s default
order and his report and recommendation and remand this matter
to the Special Master for proceedings on the merits of the alleged
rule violations.
1. Procedural Background.
On October 28, 2020, after a finding of probable cause by the
State Disciplinary Board, the State Bar filed the formal complaint
underlying this matter. The formal complaint alleged that
Sammons violated Rules 1.2 (a), 1.3, 1.4, and 5.5 during the course
of his representation of an elderly client and her daughter in a
personal injury matter against a nursing home due to Sammons’s
3
repeated and ongoing inaction in the matter; his misrepresentations
to the daughter; his failures to communicate with or respond to the
daughter; his participation in the matter during periods when he
was either suspended from the practice of law for CLE deficiency or
ineligible to practice for nonpayment of dues; and his ultimate
abandonment of the matter. On November 13, 2020, the Special
Master was appointed.
On February 18, 2021, the Bar filed an entry of service non est
inventus,2 dated December 7, 2020, as well as a return of service by
publication. On February 22, 2021, the Bar filed a motion for
default. The record reflects that on March 3, 2021, the Special
Master emailed counsel for the Bar, stating
I need to see more effort at personal service on Mr.
Sammons. Nothing in the materials provided to me
indicate anyone attempted personal service on Mr.
Sammons at his personal residence, most notorious
abode, or present place of business. Beyond that, the
hearsay contained in Para. 6 [of the Bar’s motion for
2 “The Latin term, sometimes shortened to ‘non est’ or abbreviated as
‘n.e.i.,’ means ‘he is not found,’ and is used to indicate that the person in
question could not be found within the jurisdiction.” In the Matter of Arrington,
314 Ga. 696, 697 n.3 (878 SE2d 534) (2022) (citing “Non est inventus,” Black’s
Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019)).
4
default], suggests Mr. Sammons does not work at 307
14th Street NW, Atlanta, GA 30318. That causes me
concern for a number of reasons, but as a practical matter
you may not have the correct email address for Mr.
Sammons.
As it stands now, I will not grant the motion for default
judgment. Let me know what you want to do. I can rule
or you can withdraw it subject to my suggestions outlined
above. Please make this email part of the record.
If you have any questions or concerns feel free to contact
me.
In response, the Bar discovered Sammons’s home address and
on March 10, 2021, personally served him with the petition for
appointment of a special master, the order appointing the special
master, the notice of a finding of probable cause, and the formal
complaint, and filed an entry of service that same day. On March
24, 2021, Sammons filed his answer and response to the formal
complaint, as well as his answer and response to the Bar’s motion
for default. Sammons denied the alleged misconduct and rule
violations and asserted defenses of insufficiency of process,
insufficiency of service of process, and failure of timely service.
5
2. Special Master’s Order Entering Default against Sammons.
On October 27, 2021, after accepting briefing on the default
motion but without holding a hearing, the Special Master issued its
order granting the Bar’s motion for default. In that order, the
Special Master set forth the following applicable Bar Rules: “Receipt
of a Return of Service Non Est Inventus shall constitute conclusive
proof that service cannot be perfected by personal service,” Bar Rule
4-203.1 (b) (3) (i); “If personal service cannot be perfected, . . . service
may be accomplished by publication . . .[,]” Bar Rule 4-203.1 (b) (3)
(ii); and “[Respondent] shall file and serve his answer to the formal
complaint . . . within 30 days after service of the formal complaint.
If the respondent fails to answer or to obtain an extension of time
for his answer, the facts alleged and violations charged in the formal
complaint shall be deemed admitted.” Bar Rule 4-212 (a). The
Special Master noted that Sammons did not file an answer to the
formal complaint within 30 days of the Bar’s service by publication,
did not request an extension, and did not move to open default. The
Special Master also explained that after the Bar moved for default,
6
he suggested that it make additional efforts to personally serve
Sammons; that in response, the Bar discovered Sammons’s home
address and personally served him there; and that Sammons then
filed his answers and responses to the formal complaint—denying
the allegations of the complaint without further explanation—and
to the motion for default.
The Special Master rejected Sammons’s argument that the Bar
did not exercise the necessary due diligence in locating him before
moving for default. The Special Master explained that Bar Rule 4-
203.1 requires lawyers to keep the Bar informed of their official
address and any changes thereto, and that the Bar may rely on that
information in all efforts to perfect service upon a lawyer, meaning
it was Sammons who had the responsibility to keep the Bar apprised
of the information needed to serve him—a responsibility he failed to
fulfill. The Special Master therefore determined that the Bar was
authorized under the Bar Rules to first attempt service at the
address provided by Sammons and then, after that attempt failed,
to serve him by publication, which it did, and that Sammons “has
7
not contested or otherwise shown that the State Bar’[s] service of
Respondent was done in violation of Bar Rule 4-203.1,
notwithstanding my subsequent direction that the State Bar serve
Respondent at his home. . . . The State Bar having properly served
Respondent according to its rules, and Respondent having failed to
file a timely answer, Respondent is in default.”3
The Special Master then concluded that he was authorized to—
and would—treat Sammons’s response to the Bar’s motion for
default as a motion to open default, but that Sammons’s request to
open default did not satisfy OCGA § 9-11-55 or the standards set
forth in In the Matter of Turk, which was Sammons’s burden to
show. See In the Matter of Turk, 267 Ga. 30, 30 (471 SE2d 842)
(1996) (“OCGA § 9-11-55 (b) applies in disciplinary proceedings.
Thus, in order to authorize the opening of [his] default, [Respondent]
must show providential cause, excusable neglect[,] or a proper
case.”) (citation and punctuation omitted); see also Butterworth v.
3 The Special Master also noted that Sammons made an unsupported
claim that he emailed a response to the notice of investigation to the Bar’s
investigator, but that this did not change the Special Master’s analysis.
8
Safelite Glass Corp., 287 Ga. App. 848, 849 (652 SE2d 877) (2007)
(“Compliance with the four conditions . . . [i.e., the 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],
however, is a condition precedent; absent the showing of . . . [these
conditions], a trial court has no discretion to open a default.”)
(citations omitted). The Special Master determined that Sammons
failed to meet the conditions precedent, see In the Matter of Starling,
297 Ga. 359 (773 SE2d 768) (2015); Butterworth, 287 Ga. App. at
849-850, and that, regardless, he also failed to show providential
cause, excusable neglect, or a proper case authorizing the opening of
default, see Bowen v. Savoy, 308 Ga. 204, 207 (839 SE2d 546) (2020);
Turk, 267 Ga. at 30-31.
3. Special Master’s Report and Recommendation.
On September 12, 2022, the Special Master issued his report
and recommendation, noting that by virtue of Sammons’s default,
he was deemed to have admitted the facts as set forth in the formal
complaint. See Bar Rule 4-212 (a). The Special Master determined,
9
based on the ABA Standards for Imposing Lawyer Sanctions (“ABA
Standards”), that Sammons’s misconduct was knowing and
intentional; that Sammons caused his client actual and permanent
injury (because the statute of limitations ran on his client’s claim);
that the following aggravating factors existed: a dishonest or selfish
motive, a pattern of misconduct, multiple offenses, bad faith
obstruction of the disciplinary proceeding, a refusal to acknowledge
the wrongful nature of his conduct, a vulnerable victim, substantial
experience in the practice of law, and indifference to making
restitution, see ABA Standard 9.22 (b), (c), (d), (e), (g), (h), (i), and
(j); and that the following mitigating factors existed: absence of a
prior disciplinary record and personal problems, see ABA Standard
9.32 (a) and (c). The Special Master recommended that Sammons
be disbarred for violating Rules 1.2 (a), 1.3, and 5.5 (a), and publicly
reprimanded for violating Rule 1.4. Sammons filed exceptions to
and requested review of the Special Master’s report and
recommendation.
10
4. Review Board’s Report and Recommendation.
On review, the Review Board issued its report and
recommendation, concluding that the entry of default against
Sammons was error and therefore recommending that the case be
remanded to the Special Master for an evidentiary hearing on the
merits of the alleged rule violations. The Review Board noted that
the Bar has the burden of proving each element of the alleged rule
violations by clear and convincing evidence and that the Review
Board may reverse the Special Master’s findings of fact if they are
clearly erroneous or manifestly in error, but that his conclusions of
law are reviewed de novo. See Bar Rule 4-216 (a).
The Review Board recounted that at the Special Master’s
suggestion, the Bar took additional steps to perfect personal service
on Sammons, who, pursuant to Bar Rule 4-212, filed his answer
within 30 days of being personally served. The Review Board
acknowledged that “the rules regarding procedure of default and
service do not mirror the Georgia Civil Practice Act,” but stated it
was “worth noting” that the entry of service non est inventus, dated
11
December 7, 2020, and the proof of service by publication were not
filed until February 18, 2021; that under OCGA § 9-11-4 (h), “‘[i]f
proof of service is not filed within five business days [of the service
date], the time for the party served to answer the process shall not
begin to run until such proof of service is filed’”; and that under
OCGA § 9-11-55, a respondent could open the default as a matter of
right within 15 days of an answer being due. The Review Board
opined:
The Review Board has serious concerns about the rules
giving the State Bar the ability to effectuate service by
publication, especially when a lawyer can be so easily
found, as was the case of the Respondent. The Review
Board understands that the Bar Rules are what governs
lawyers that practice in the State of Georgia, and that
publication is a permissible (while certainly not
preferred) method of service. In the case of the
Respondent, the Special Master and the State Bar chose
to go beyond the minimum required by the rules and have
the Respondent personally served after the service by
publication was effectuated. The Respondent then
answered timely after personal service was effectuated.
The State Bar and the Special Master should now be
estopped from seeking and entering a Default Judgment
based upon the original service by publication, when
personal service was then made and an answer was
timely filed.
12
Therefore, the Review Board recommended that “the entry of default
be vacated, and that the case be remanded back to the Special
Master for discovery and an evidentiary hearing as if no default had
been granted.”
5. State Bar’s Exceptions.
The Bar contends that the Special Master did not err when he
applied the Bar Rules precisely to the facts of Sammons’s default.
The Bar acknowledges that under Bar Rule 4-221.2 (b), “the
procedures and rules of evidence applicable in civil cases under the
laws of Georgia shall apply, except that the quantum of proof
required of the State Bar shall be clear and convincing evidence,”
but argues that nothing in this rule suggests that when there is
some conflict between the Bar Rules and the Georgia Civil Practice
Act (“CPA”), the CPA was meant to abrogate the Bar Rules. More
specifically, the Bar argues that the Review Board incorrectly
applied OCGA §§ 9-11-4 (h) and 9-11-55 (a) and their different
service and default rules—such as the requirement that a return of
service be filed or the ability to open default within 15 days as a
13
matter of right—contrary to Bar Rules 4-203.1 and 4-212 (a),
respectively.
The Bar also acknowledges that the Special Master initially
prompted it to track down and personally serve Sammons—despite
that suggestion being erroneous and not required by the Bar Rules—
but contends that the Special Master later issued an order that fully
considered the Bar Rules and correctly found Sammons to be in
default because the Bar made prima facie showings that it had
properly served Sammons and that he was in default according to
the Bar Rules. See Bar Rule 4-203.1 (a), (b) (3) (i), (ii). The Bar
argues that Sammons’s default was consistent with his failure to
engage with the disciplinary process, including his non-
responsiveness during the investigative phase, as well as his failure
to provide an updated address to the Bar as required by the Bar
Rules. The Bar also argues that the Special Master correctly
concluded that Sammons did not satisfy the requirements to open
default.
14
The Bar contends that the Review Board erred when it applied
the principle of judicial estoppel to the Special Master’s timely
reconsideration of his prior erroneous and informal suggestion to
track down and personally serve Sammons, despite that suggestion
contradicting the Bar Rules. In sum, the Bar argues that the Review
Board’s “concerns” that the Court-promulgated Bar Rules are
contrary to the legislatively enacted CPA do not warrant rejection of
the Special Master’s application of the Bar Rules to the facts of this
case.
6. Sammons’s Response to the State Bar’s Exceptions.
Sammons maintains his position that the Bar did not exercise
due diligence in locating him as required by OCGA § 9-11-4 and Bar
Rule 203.1 and that therefore he was not in default. He argues—
relying in large part on the COVID-19 lockdowns of 2020 and the
difficulties arising therefrom—that the Special Master erred in
granting the Bar’s motion for default and in refusing to open the
default. Sammons also argues that contrary to the Bar’s position,
he has engaged in the disciplinary process, with any failures being
15
caused by circumstances such as the difficulties arising from the
pandemic lockdowns, as well as his own misunderstanding of the
process.
7. Analysis and Conclusion.
After reviewing the record, and pretermitting whether the
Review Board’s analysis contained certain legal errors, we conclude
that under the circumstances of this case, Sammons was not in
default at the time the Special Master issued the order entering
default against him. Accordingly, the Special Master’s order on the
State Bar’s motion for default and his report and recommendation,
which relied upon that entry of default, are due to be vacated and
the case remanded to the Special Master for proceedings on the
merits of the violations alleged in the formal complaint.
In disciplinary proceedings, the Bar is entitled to rely upon
the Bar Rules. That includes the Bar Rules permitting service by
publication if personal service cannot be perfected, see Bar Rule 4-
203.1 (b) (3) (ii), and authorizing the entry of default against a
respondent who fails to timely answer after such service, see Bar
16
Rule 4-212 (a). A special master, therefore, would err in denying a
motion for default in such circumstances and instead requiring
additional efforts at personal service beyond those required by the
Bar Rules. See Bar Rule 4-203.1 (b) (3) (i); see also Bar Rule 4-203.1
(a). Here, however, after the Special Master’s email, the Bar chose—
whether at the suggestion of the Special Master or not—to take
additional steps to discover Sammons’s home address and to perfect
personal service upon him on March 10, 2021. The Bar’s motion for
default remained pending, having neither been granted nor denied,
when Sammons, on March 24, 2021, “file[d] and serve[d] his answer
to the formal complaint of the State Bar of Georgia pursuant to Rule
4-221 (b) within 30 days after service of the formal complaint.” Bar
Rule 4-212 (a). At that point, Sammons was not in default and an
order of default should not have been entered against him. Cf.
OCGA § 9-11-55 (a) (providing that if an answer is not timely filed,
“the case shall automatically become in default”) (emphasis
supplied); In the Matter of Boyd, 315 Ga. 390, 394 (882 SE2d 339)
(2022) (noting that “defaults in disciplinary cases most often involve
17
respondents who completely fail to respond to disciplinary
proceedings,” 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”) (emphasis supplied).
We acknowledge the Bar’s predicament of being prompted by
the Special Master to take additional efforts at personal service to
avoid having its motion for default denied. Nevertheless,
Sammons’s timely answer after the Bar personally served him
should not have been followed by a grant of that motion. After the
Special Master’s email, the Bar was left with the decision to either
stand on its prior service by publication and its motion for default
based thereon—with the right to seek review if the Special Master
indeed denied that motion and issued a report and recommendation
in accordance with such denial, see Bar Rules 4-214; 4-216—or to
follow the path it ultimately took, providing Sammons with a new
opportunity to file a timely answer under the Bar Rules.
Although we do not adopt the full analysis of the Review Board,
we do agree with its ultimate recommendation that “the entry of
18
default be vacated, and that the case be remanded back to the
Special Master for discovery and an evidentiary hearing as if no
default had been granted.” Accordingly, we vacate the Special
Master’s order granting the Bar’s motion for default and the Special
Master’s report and recommendation, and we remand this matter to
the Special Master with direction that he decide the merits of the
case in accordance with the applicable rules and law.
Vacated and remanded with direction. All the Justices concur.
19
PETERSON, Presiding Justice, concurring specially.
I share the Review Board’s “serious concerns about the rules
giving the State Bar the ability to effectuate service by publication,
especially when a lawyer can be so easily found, as was the case”
with Mr. Sammons. The policy underlying the State Bar disciplinary
process has a strong preference for “deciding cases on their merits,”
rather than by default. In the Matter of Boyd, 315 Ga. 390, 394 (882
SE2d 339) (2022). This policy is frustrated – and discipline bears
little relation to protecting the public – when a disciplinary matter
is resolved on default grounds because the lawyer did not have
actual notice of the proceeding.
Default is a necessary part of the disciplinary process because
many lawyers who commit serious violations simply refuse to
participate in the process. The public would be at considerable risk
if those lawyers were allowed to evade discipline simply by staying
on the sidelines. But that’s not what happened here, and enforcing
default in these circumstances (instead of proceeding to the merits)
would not protect the public.
20
Rule 9.3 requires lawyers to “respond to disciplinary
authorities in accordance with State Bar Rules.” The maximum
penalty for violation of that rule is merely a public reprimand. And
there is no Rule of Professional Conduct imposing discipline for a
lawyer’s failure to update their official address on file with the Bar,
as required by Rule 4-203.1. But when default is the result of
personal service attempted only on the address on file – without any
attempt to determine whether a different, correct address is readily
ascertainable – followed by service by publication, it converts a
violation of those two requirements into the functional equivalent of
an automatic disbarment. This is not how the system should work.
Whether or not the Bar was authorized to serve by publication, it
should not have done so before taking the simple steps that found
Mr. Sammons. Accordingly, I concur in the judgment only.
21