Court Opinion

ID: 9348872
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-12-20 15:02:00.353863+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:41:46.874320
License: Public Domain

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
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  official text of the opinion.

In the Supreme Court of Georgia

                                                  Decided: December 20, 2022

S22A1099. STATE OF GEORGIA et al. v. FEDERAL DEFENDER
                 PROGRAM, INC. et al.

      MCMILLIAN, Justice.

      After an order was issued setting the execution of Virgil Delano

Presnell, Jr., the Federal Defender Program, Inc., (“Federal

Defender”) 1 filed a breach of contract action against the State of

Georgia and Christopher M. Carr in his official capacity as Attorney

General (collectively, the “State”) alleging that the State breached a

contract governing the resumption of the execution of death

sentences in Georgia after the COVID-19 pandemic.                                             The State

      1 The Federal Defender is a domestic nonprofit corporation whose
Capital Habeas Unit represents death row inmates in post-conviction
proceedings in the federal courts and in clemency proceedings before the State
Board of Pardons and Paroles. Presnell later joined the lawsuit; we refer to the
Federal Defender and Presnell collectively as “Appellees.”
contends that the trial court erred in denying its motion to dismiss

based on sovereign immunity and in granting the Appellees’

emergency motion for a temporary restraining order and an

interlocutory injunction. 2 As explained below, we conclude that an

e-mail exchange between a deputy attorney general and certain

capital defense attorneys, including an attorney employed by the

Federal Defender, constituted a written contract sufficient to waive

sovereign immunity in this matter, and we in turn conclude that the

trial court did not abuse its discretion in weighing the equities in

granting the Appellees’ motion for injunctive relief. Accordingly, we

affirm.

     1.   Background.      “The grant or denial of an interlocutory

injunction rests in the sound discretion of the trial court. . . .

However, where there is no conflict in the evidence, the judge’s

discretion in granting or denying the interlocutory injunction

becomes circumscribed by the applicable rules of law.” Shiva Mgmt.,

     2 The Court thanks the Southern Center for Human Rights for its amicus
curiae brief.
                                    2
LLC v. Walker, 283 Ga. 338, 340 (658 SE2d 762) (2008) (citation and

punctuation omitted). In this case, the relevant facts as developed

at the evidentiary hearing on the State’s motion to dismiss on

sovereign immunity grounds and the Appellees’ motion for

interlocutory injunction are uncontested and show the following.

     On May 14, 2020, then-Chief Justice Harold Melton created the

Judicial COVID-19 Task Force (“Task Force”) to advise the Judicial

Council of Georgia and this Court regarding the implementation of

measures to address the challenges facing the courts and affected

parties as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. The Task Force

created several sub-committees, including the Criminal Committee

(“Sub-Committee”), whose purpose was to focus on issues related to

COVID-19’s effect on the criminal justice system in Georgia. In the

Fall of 2020, in response to an invitation from the Task Force, the

Georgia Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (“GACDL”)

prepared draft legislation to address the capital defense bar’s

concerns about how the restrictions necessitated by COVID-19 had

resulted in a backlog of execution-eligible inmates. This backlog not

                                 3
only hindered capital defense counsel’s ability to prioritize clemency

investigations for the growing number of inmates eligible for

execution but also impaired counsel’s ability to meet with their

clients and conduct investigations in order to prepare for clemency

proceedings and adequately represent their clients.

     On February 4, 2021, Anna Arceneaux, the Executive Director

of the Georgia Appellate Practice & Educational Resource Center

(“Georgia Resource Center”), and Sabrina Graham, a Senior

Assistant Attorney General and the Chief of the Capital Litigation

Section of the Attorney General’s Criminal Justice Division, each

addressed the Sub-Committee during its meeting at which the

GACDL’s proposed legislation was discussed. In response, Sub-

Committee members asked that, instead of pursuing legislation,

Arceneaux and Graham work together to reach an agreement

regarding the orderly management of the cases of execution-eligible

inmates. Arceneaux and Graham agreed to do so and to report back

to the Sub-Committee. On February 10, 2021, Arceneaux, together

with Jill Benton, the Supervising Attorney for the Federal

                                  4
Defender’s Capital Habeas Unit, and David DeBruin, 3 a private

attorney who represents death row inmate Billy Raulerson, met via

video conference with Graham and Beth Burton, the Deputy

Attorney General of the Criminal Justice Division, to discuss the

terms of an agreement that they could present to the Task Force.

Two days later, Arceneaux sent an e-mail to Burton and Graham

with a proposed “Memorandum of Understanding” (“MOU”) that

was based on the parties’ discussions at that video conference. After

discussing the proposed MOU with Arceneaux multiple times

during the next two months, Graham called Arceneaux on April 14,

2021, to tell her that she would be receiving an e-mail from Burton

memorializing the terms of the agreement.

      Shortly after Graham’s call, Arceneaux received an e-mail from

Burton that began with the following:

      Anna, instead of a formal MOU, we will agree, and this
      email serves as the agreement, that:

      3 The group of attorneys involved in the negotiations included counsel for
all of the inmates who became execution-eligible during the time period
covered by the “Order Declaring Statewide Judicial Emergency,” which was
issued by then-Chief Justice Melton on March 14, 2020, and which, after 15
extensions, expired on June 30, 2021.
                                       5
      Our office will not pursue an execution warrant from the
      District Attorney in the below defined cases before: 1) the
      final COVID19 judicial emergency order entered by the
      Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia expires; 2)
      the Georgia Department of Corrections lifts its
      suspension of legal visitation, and normal visitation
      resumes; and [3)] a vaccination against COVID19 is
      readily available to all members of the public.

Burton’s e-mail further stated that the “agreement applie[d] only to

death-sentenced prisoners whose petition for rehearing or rehearing

en banc was denied by the Eleventh Circuit while the State of

Georgia remained under judicial emergency order” and that, with

one named exception, 4 the Attorney General’s office agreed “not [to]

      4 The named exception was Billy Raulerson. According to the record,
during the time period in which the COVID-19 judicial emergency order was
in effect, the United States Supreme Court denied ten Georgia death row
inmates’ petitions for certiorari from the denial of their federal habeas
petitions; therefore, the appeals of these ten inmates were exhausted, and the
inmates became execution-eligible. However, the Agreement “applie[d] only to
death-sentenced prisoners whose petition for rehearing or rehearing en banc
was denied by the Eleventh Circuit while the State of Georgia remained under
judicial order,” and two of the ten inmates who became execution-eligible
during the judicial emergency, Raulerson and Michael Nance, were not in this
group, because their petitions for rehearing en banc in the Eleventh Circuit
were denied before the judicial emergency order went into effect. Nevertheless,
the Agreement included special terms specific to Raulerson and Nance
regarding when the Attorney General’s office would seek execution orders in
their cases.
       The provision regarding Nance’s case is not relevant to this appeal. With

                                       6
pursue an execution warrant of any prisoner . . . before a total of at

least six months after the time the above-three conditions [we]re

met.” Burton’s e-mail concluded by stating that the agreement was

“made with the understanding that the District Attorney

maintain[ed] the sole authority to obtain an execution warrant.”

      Arceneaux replied to the e-mail, adding Benton and DeBruin

as addressees, and she informed Burton and Graham that she had

let the GACDL know about the agreement so that the GACDL could

share it with the Task Force at the meeting taking place that

afternoon. In the same e-mail thread, both Benton and DeBruin

responded seeking a similar clarification regarding the agreement,

and Graham replied that they had the correct understanding with

respect to the timing of the execution orders, stating: “Yes, we

regard to Raulerson, the Agreement provided that, after the three conditions
were met, “and no earlier than August 1, 2021, [the Attorney General’s] office
intend[ed] to request an execution warrant for [Raulerson and would] provide
Raulerson’s counsel with notice of at least three months after the three-above
conditions [we]re met before pursuing an execution warrant.” The record
shows that, when the Attorney General’s office started the process of
reinitiating executions, the office worked first toward obtaining an execution
order for Raulerson but then changed course and sought an execution order for
Presnell due to Raulerson’s counsel’s “previously noticed plans to be out of the
country” from May 11 to May 22, 2022.
                                       7
confirm that’s the agreement.” (This April 14, 2021 e-mail exchange

is hereinafter referred to as “the Agreement.”).

     Over a year later, on April 27, 2022, the Superior Court of Cobb

County entered an order for the execution of Presnell, setting a

window for that execution of noon on May 17 to noon on May 24,

2022, and the Department of Corrections (“DOC”) scheduled the

execution for May 17 at 7:00 p.m.           See OCGA § 17-10-40

(establishing the procedure for scheduling executions). In response,

on May 9, 2022, the Federal Defender filed on its own behalf a

complaint against the State alleging a breach of the Agreement and

seeking a temporary restraining order and an interlocutory

injunction in order to halt Presnell’s scheduled execution and to

foreclose the scheduling of executions for the other inmates covered

by the Agreement. On May 13, 2022, Presnell, represented by the

Federal Defender, filed a motion to intervene as a plaintiff, which

the trial court orally granted at a hearing on May 16, 2022.

     At the hearing, the Appellees conceded that the first condition

– the expiration of the final COVID-19 judicial emergency order –

                                  8
had been satisfied, but they contended that the second and third

conditions had not yet been satisfied. As to the second condition, the

Appellees asserted that the DOC still maintained a “Modified

Visitation” policy that placed numerous restrictions on both normal

visitation and legal visitation and that differed materially from the

DOC’s pre-pandemic visitation policies. The Appellees contended

that these restrictions seriously impaired the ability of capital

defenders, including lawyers at the Federal Defender, to effectively

represent their clients in clemency and other pre-execution

proceedings. As to the third condition, the Appellees argued that

the condition regarding the availability of a COVID-19 vaccine had

not been satisfied, because children under the age of five years were

not eligible to receive the vaccination at that time. As a result, (1)

the DOC prohibited visitors under the age of five years from entering

state prisons, and execution-eligible inmates were prevented from

visiting affected family members, and (2) capital defenders with

children in this age group were hindered in representing their

clients for fear of transmitting the virus to their children. Finally,

                                  9
the Appellees contended that the State breached the Agreement by

giving the Federal Defender, as counsel for Presnell, only two days’

notice of its intent to pursue an execution order in his case, instead

of waiting until six months after the three conditions had been met

before seeking such an order. 5

     Accordingly, the Appellees urged the trial court to enter a

temporary restraining order and an interlocutory injunction

prohibiting the State, along with anyone acting in active

participation or concert with it, from pursuing an execution order for

eligible prisoners who are subject to the Agreement and from taking

any action in furtherance of any previously issued execution order

that is subject to the Agreement, including the order issued with

respect to Presnell, until six months after (1) the DOC returned to

“normal visitation” and (2) a COVID-19 vaccine became readily

available to “all members of the public.” The State, in turn, urged

the trial court to dismiss the complaint based on sovereign immunity

     5 At the hearing, while the Appellees presented testimony and other
evidence to support their contentions, the State elected not to present any
witnesses or to cross-examine any of the Appellees’ witnesses.
                                    10
and argued that, in any event, a consideration of the relevant factors

did not support a temporary restraining order or an interlocutory

injunction.

     At the hearing on May 16, 2022, the trial court orally denied

the State’s motion to dismiss based on sovereign immunity, after

concluding that the Agreement constituted a valid written contract,

and orally granted the Appellees’ motion for a temporary restraining

order and an interlocutory injunction.       The trial court entered

written orders the following day, May 17, 2022. The temporary

restraining order issued by the trial court was to be in effect for only

30 days, and it therefore is no longer at issue in this appeal. The

trial court’s interlocutory injunction “applies until a final judgment

in th[e] case or six months have passed after (1) the [DOC] lifts all

COVID-19 restrictions on visitation and restores normal visitation

procedures and [after] (2) a Covid-19 vaccine is available to all

members of the public.” As a result of the trial court’s grant of

injunctive relief, Presnell’s execution was effectively stayed. This

                                  11
appeal followed.6

      2. This Court’s Jurisdiction. Although no party has questioned

our jurisdiction in this appeal, “it is our duty to inquire into our

jurisdiction ‘in any case in which there may be a doubt about the

existence of such jurisdiction.’” Brock v. Hardman, 303 Ga. 729, 729

(1) (814 SE2d 736) (2018) (citation omitted). For the reasons that

follow, we conclude that we do have jurisdiction in this case.

      Since 2017, the Georgia Code has provided that the Court of

Appeals rather than this Court has appellate jurisdiction in “[a]ll

equity cases, except those cases concerning proceedings in which a

      6 On May 17, 2022, the State filed in this Court an “Emergency Appeal,
and in the Alternative, Emergency Application for Discretionary Appeal,”
which was docketed as Case No. S22W1021. The State did not seek a
supersedeas from the trial court or from this Court, however, and the
temporary restraining order and interlocutory injunction remained in place
while the execution order in Presnell’s case expired. See OCGA § 9-11-62 (a);
Brown v. Spann, 271 Ga. 495, 496 (520 SE2d 909) (1999) (“[T]he filing of a
notice of appeal in injunction cases does not serve as a supersedeas.”). On May
23, 2022, this Court received and docketed the record in the matter, which
included a notice of appeal that the State had filed on May 17, 2022, stating
that it was appealing from the judgment denying its motion to dismiss and
granting a temporary restraining order and an interlocutory injunction. On
June 7, 2022, this Court struck Case No. S22W1021 from its docket and re-
docketed the notice of appeal previously docketed under that case number as a
direct appeal under Case No. S22A1099.

                                      12
sentence of death was imposed or could be imposed and those cases

concerning the execution of a sentence of death[,]” which are

reserved to this Court. OCGA § 15-3-3.1 (a) (2) (enacted by Ga. L.

2016, p. 883, § 6-1 (c)). In this case, the State claims that the trial

court abused its discretion in granting the Appellees’ request for an

interlocutory injunction concerning the timing for seeking orders for

the execution of specified death sentences from the superior courts

of the counties where those sentences were originally imposed. See

OCGA § 17-10-40 (a) (providing the procedure for execution orders).

Therefore, this case is both a case “concerning proceedings in which

a sentence of death was imposed” and a case “concerning the

execution of a sentence of death.” OCGA § 15-3-3.1 (a) (2). See

Brock, 303 Ga. at 730-31 (1) (considering identical exception

language in OCGA § 15-3-3.1 (a) (4) to hold that “a mandamus

petition brought by a prisoner convicted of murder claiming a right

to free records of his murder case for the purpose of challenging that

conviction is a case ‘concerning [the] proceedings’ in which a

sentence of death could have been imposed” and, therefore, that this

                                  13
Court has jurisdiction in such cases).

     As to whether this action is an equity case for the purpose of

determining jurisdiction on appeal as opposed to a breach of contract

case, that question “depends upon the issue raised on appeal, not

upon how the case is styled nor upon the kinds of relief which may

be sought by the complaint.” Beauchamp v. Knight, 261 Ga. 608,

609 (2) (409 SE2d 208) (1991) (emphasis in original), disapproved on

other grounds by Gilliam v. State, 312 Ga. 60, 63-64 (860 SE2d 543)

(2021).    In other words, “‘equity cases’ are those in which a

substantive issue on appeal involves the legality or propriety of

equitable relief sought in the superior court – whether that relief

was granted or denied.” Id. However, “[c]ases in which the grant or

denial of such relief was merely ancillary to underlying issues of law,

or would have been a matter of routine once the underlying issues

of law were resolved, are not ‘equity cases.’” Id. See also Saxton v.

Coastal Dialysis & Med. Clinic, Inc., 267 Ga. 177, 179 (476 SE2d

587) (1996) (explaining that the case was “not an ‘equity’ case” for

purposes of determining general appellate jurisdiction, because the

                                  14
grant of equitable relief in the form of an injunction “was merely

ancillary to the underlying legal issue of whether the trial court

properly construed [the appellant]’s non-competition covenant”). In

short, for a matter to come within the framework of an equity case,

“the lower court must have rendered a judgment based upon

equitable principles, and that decision must be the primary issue on

appeal.” Warren v. Bd. of Regents of the Univ. System of Ga., 272

Ga. 142, 145 (527 SE2d 563) (2000). This is just such a case.

     Here, the primary issue on appeal is the trial court’s decision

regarding the Appellees’ request for an interlocutory injunction. As

the discussion below in Division 4 shows, the trial court balanced

the relative equities and determined that an interlocutory

injunction should issue “to preserve or restore the status quo and

keep the parties from injuring one another until the court has had a

chance to try the case.” Bishop v. Patton, 288 Ga. 600, 604 (3) (a)

(706 SE2d 634) (2011), disapproved on other grounds by SRB

Investment Svcs., LLLP v. Branch Banking & Trust Co., 289 Ga. 1,

5 (3) n.7 (709 SE2d 267) (2011). See Lee v. Environmental Pest &

                                15
Termite Control, Inc., 271 Ga. 371, 373 (2) (516 SE2d 76) (1999) (“A

trial court may issue an interlocutory injunction to maintain the

status quo until the final hearing if, by balancing the relative

equities of the parties, it would appear that the equities favor the

party seeking the injunction.”). Although the underlying action here

is one of breach of contract, the trial court did not reach the final

merits of that claim, which is merely ancillary to the main issue in

this appeal. See City of Waycross v. Pierce County Bd. of Commrs.,

300 Ga. 109, 112 (1) (793 SE2d 389) (2016) (stressing that a trial

court’s finding of a substantial likelihood of success on the merits is

not the determining factor in balancing the relative equities of the

parties and that it also is not the same as a showing of ultimate

success on the merits); Byelick v. Michel Herbelin USA, Inc., 275 Ga.

505, 506-07 (2) (570 SE2d 307) (2002) (“The purpose of an

interlocutory injunction is preliminary and preparatory; it looks to

a future final hearing, and while contemplating what the result of

that hearing may be, it does not settle what it shall be.” (emphasis

in original; citation and punctuation omitted)).

                                  16
      Because the trial court determined that under the facts an

interlocutory injunction was warranted pending a final disposition

of the case, the resolution of this appeal turns on the propriety of a

discretionary ruling entered in equity. See City of Waycross, 300 Ga.

at 111 (1) (“[T]he trial court must make a judgment call regarding

the equities presented, and the court is vested with broad discretion

in making that decision.” (citation and punctuation omitted)).

Jurisdiction is properly in this Court under OCGA § 15-3-3.1 (a) (2)

because equitable principles were at the core of the trial court’s

determination as to whether to grant the Appellees’ motion for an

interlocutory injunction, that interlocutory injunction is the primary

issue on appeal, and the appeal concerns a case in which a death

sentence was imposed and the execution of a death sentence. 7 See

      7 The State also appeals the trial court’s judgment denying its motion to
dismiss based on sovereign immunity. We have held that a trial court’s order
on sovereign immunity is interlocutory in nature, and in order to invoke this
Court’s jurisdiction, an appeal of such an order ordinarily “must be pursued
through the interlocutory procedures of OCGA § 5-6-34 (b).” Rivera v.
Washington, 298 Ga. 770, 777 (784 SE2d 775) (2016). See Duke v. State, 306
Ga. 171, 172 (1) (829 SE2d 348) (2019) (explaining that an appellate court’s
jurisdiction to consider an appeal depends on whether the appeal is taken in
substantial compliance with the applicable rules of appellate procedure).

                                      17
WXIA-TV v. State of Ga., 303 Ga. 428, 432 (1) n.5 (811 SE2d 378

(2018) (“We also have jurisdiction of appeals from injunctions

‘concerning proceedings in [murder cases].’” (quoting OCGA § 15-3-

3.1 (a) (2); insertion in original)). Cf. Pittman v. Harbin Clinic

Professional Assn., 263 Ga. 66, 66-67 (428 SE2d 328) (1993) (holding

that an appeal did not sound in equity, because the trial court’s

orders regarding injunctive relief “were secondary to the principal

issue of the construction of the contracts – an issue of law”).

      3. Sovereign Immunity. Having determined that we properly

have jurisdiction in this appeal, we must first address whether the

trial court erred in ruling that the April 14, 2021 e-mail exchange

between the Attorney General’s office and the Federal Defender

However, the State was not required to follow OCGA § 5-6-34 (b) here, because
orders granting or refusing applications for interlocutory injunctions are
directly appealable under OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (4). Therefore, given the State’s
right to directly appeal the granting of the application for interlocutory
injunction, it was entitled under OCGA § 5-6-34 (d) to also seek appellate
review of the trial court’s denial of its motion to dismiss on sovereign immunity
grounds. See Grogan v. City of Dawsonville, 305 Ga. 79, 84 (2) (823 SE2d 763)
(2019) (“Construing this provision, we have held that, where an order would
require a discretionary application to be appealed, such an application is
unnecessary when the order is appealed with another order that may be
appealed by a notice of appeal.”).
                                       18
constituted a written contract sufficient to waive sovereign

immunity. See Polo Golf & Country Club Homeowners Assn., Inc. v.

Cunard, 306 Ga. 788, 790 (1) (a) (833 SE2d 505) (2019) (“Sovereign

immunity is a threshold determination that must be ruled upon

prior to the case moving forward on the more substantive matters.”

(emphasis in original)); McConnell v. Dept. of Labor, 302 Ga. 18, 19

(805 SE2d 79) (2017) (“[T]he applicability of sovereign immunity is

a threshold determination, and, if it does apply, a court lacks

jurisdiction over the case and, concomitantly, lacks authority to

decide the merits of a claim that is barred.” (footnote omitted)).

     The Georgia Constitution provides that “sovereign immunity

extends to the state and all of its departments and agencies” and

that the State’s sovereign immunity can only be waived by a

constitutional provision or an act of the General Assembly that

specifically provides for such a waiver and the extent thereof. Ga.

Const. of 1983, Art. I, Sec. II, Par. IX (e). See Ga. Dept. of Natural

Resources v. Center for a Sustainable Coast, Inc., 294 Ga. 593, 602

(2) (755 SE2d 184) (2014) (adopting “a bright line rule that only the

                                  19
Constitution itself or a specific waiver by the General Assembly can

abrogate sovereign immunity” based on “the only natural and

reasonable reading of Paragraph IX regarding waivers and

sovereign immunity”). Here, the Appellees brought their lawsuit

against the State and the Attorney General in his official capacity;

therefore, sovereign immunity would bar the Appellees’ action

unless it came within some exception.          See OCGA § 45-15-1

(providing for “an Attorney General of the state”); OCGA § 45-15-30

(“There is created a Department of Law with the Attorney General

at the head thereof. . . .”). One of the exceptions to the defense of

sovereign immunity is for “any action ex contractu for the breach of

any written contract . . . entered into by the state or its departments

and agencies.” Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. I, Sec. II, Par. IX (c). See

also OCGA § 50-21-1 (a) (“The defense of sovereign immunity is

waived as to any action ex contractu for the breach of any written

contract . . . entered into by the state, departments and agencies of

the state, and state authorities.”).

     “[B]ecause sovereign immunity is jurisdictional, it requires the

                                  20
plaintiff to prove any waiver thereto and is properly raised [as a

defense] under OCGA § 9-11-12 (b) (1).” Spann v. Davis, 312 Ga.

843, 850 (2) n.11 (866 SE2d 371) (2021) (emphasis in original). To

meet this burden, the plaintiff must show “that the contract sought

to be enforced is in writing and contains all of the terms necessary

to constitute a valid contract.” Ga. Dept. of Community Health v.

Data Inquiry, LLC, 313 Ga. App. 683, 685 (1) (722 SE2d 403) (2012).

In considering a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter

jurisdiction on sovereign immunity grounds under OCGA § 9-11-12

(b) (1), a trial court is not confined to the allegations of the complaint

but is authorized to “hear the matter on affidavits presented by the

respective parties, [or to] direct that the matter be heard wholly or

partly on oral testimony or depositions.” OCGA § 9-11-43 (b). See

Rivera v. Washington, 298 Ga. 770, 778 (784 SE2d 775) (2016)

(explaining that a trial court may receive evidence and make

relevant factual findings to decide the threshold issue of whether a

defendant’s entitlement to sovereign immunity deprives the court of

subject matter jurisdiction).

                                   21
      In this case, the Appellees claim that the State waived its

sovereign    immunity       by   entering     into    the   Agreement       as

memorialized in the e-mail exchange between Arceneaux, Burton,

Graham, and others. The trial court held a hearing during which it

received additional evidence from the Appellees, 8 which the court

relied on in its order denying the motion to dismiss based on

sovereign immunity. Furthermore, on appeal the State does not

enumerate as error any ruling by the trial court regarding the

nature of the evidence upon which the trial court based its

jurisdictional determination.          Therefore, “[w]hether sovereign

immunity has been waived under the undisputed facts of this case

is a question of law, and this Court’s review is de novo.” Ga. Dept.

of Labor v. RTT Assoc., Inc., 299 Ga. 78, 81 (1) (786 SE2d 840) (2016).

See also Center for a Sustainable Coast, 294 Ga. at 596 (2). For the

reasons set forth below, we conclude as a matter of law that the

Appellees’ action ex contractu was not barred by sovereign

      8As noted above, the State did not seek to introduce any evidence or live
testimony at the hearing, and it also refused the opportunity to cross-examine
the Appellees’ witnesses.
                                      22
immunity and reject the State’s arguments that (1) as a matter of

general principles of contract, e-mails cannot create a written

contract sufficient to waive sovereign immunity; (2) the Georgia

Uniform Electronic Transactions Act (“GUETA”), see OCGA § 10-12-

1 et seq., does not apply to the Agreement; (3) the Agreement did not

include a written signature; (4) the Agreement failed to specify

parties who are able to contract because Burton did not have the

authority to contract on behalf of the Attorney General’s office and

the Federal Defender was not a party to the Agreement; (5) the

Agreement is not supported by adequate consideration; and (6) the

terms of the Agreement are too vague to be enforceable.

     (a)   The State first contends that the trial court erred in

denying its motion to dismiss because “no Georgia appellate court

has ever held that mere e-mails create a written contract sufficient

to waive sovereign immunity” and an exchange of e-mails involving

state employees therefore cannot ever form a written contract for

sovereign immunity purposes. See RTT Assoc., 299 Ga. 78; Bd. of

Regents of the Univ. System of Ga. v. Winter, 331 Ga. App. 528 (771

                                 23
SE2d 201) (2015), overruled on other grounds by Rivera, 298 Ga. at

778 n.7; Data Inquiry, 313 Ga. App. 683.

     While it is true that no appellate court in this State has

explicitly held that e-mails may constitute a written contract for

purposes of waiving sovereign immunity, none of the cases that the

State relies upon holds that e-mails cannot ever form a written

contract sufficient to waive sovereign immunity. RTT Associates

involved a written contract between a vendor and a state agency.

See 299 Ga. at 78. After the contract expired, the parties continued

to communicate and work together on the project until the parties

became dissatisfied and the vendor sued for breach of contract. See

id. at 79. This Court held that the parties’ course of conduct could

not extend the terms of the written contract and waive sovereign

immunity. See id. at 82-83. However, it is not clear whether any e-

mail correspondence was actually a part of the record in RTT

Associates, and we note that our opinion in the case did not refer to

or make any determination regarding any e-mails between the

parties.

                                 24
     Data Inquiry is also inapposite.      In that case, a vendor

performed work for a state agency pursuant to a services agreement,

even though the agreement was still being negotiated and the

agreement expressly provided that it would not be effective until

executed by both parties and the state agency paid a retainer. See

Data Inquiry, 313 Ga. App. at 683-84.       In suing for breach of

contract, the vendor submitted the proposed contract between the

parties and e-mails, which “showed that the protective order [that

was required by the terms of the proposed agreement] was still in

the drafting stages and that the [parties] were still negotiating its

terms.” Id. at 685. No one in Data Inquiry contended, as in this

case, that the e-mail correspondence constituted the final written

contract between the parties, and the Court of Appeals never

considered that issue.

     Lastly, the State points to Winter. In that case, the Court of

Appeals rejected Winter’s argument that he accepted an offer of

employment via e-mail, stating only that “[t]here [wa]s no evidence

whatsoever of a written employment agreement dated at or about

                                 25
the time that Winter contends he accepted employment.” Winter,

331 Ga. App. at 532 (2) (a). A review of the facts in Winter shows

that, even assuming that the parties’ e-mails constituted an offer

and acceptance, it is unclear whether the e-mail exchange at issue

contained all of the other necessary terms of the contract. See id. at

528-29; Moreno v. Strickland, 255 Ga. App. 850, 852 (1) (567 SE2d

90) (2002) (“A definite offer and complete acceptance, for

consideration, create a binding contract.”). Moreover, in a footnote,

the Court of Appeals also rejected “Winter’s argument that pursuant

to the former Georgia Electronic Records and Signature[s] Act (Ga.

L. 1997, p. 1052, § 1) his emails constituted signed writings

sufficient to establish a written agreement for purposes of waiving

sovereign immunity” because Winter had not shown that he had

ever provided an electronic signature or that the Board of Regents

had agreed to be bound by electronic signatures. 9 Winter, 331 Ga.

App. at 532 (2) (a) n.6.

     9  The Georgia Electronic Records and Signatures Act was replaced by the
GUETA in 2009. See OCGA § 10-12-1 et seq. (as amended by Ga. L. 2009, p.
698, § 1).
                                     26
     In short, the State has not cited a single case, nor are we aware

of one, in which our appellate courts have adopted a per se rule that

e-mails cannot create a written contract sufficient to waive

sovereign immunity. To the contrary, the great weight of authority

has indicated that, as a general matter, e-mails may constitute

written contracts. See, e.g., LNV Corp. v. Studle, 322 Ga. App. 19,

22-23 (2), (2) (a) (743 SE2d 578) (2013) (holding that an e-mail

exchange between the parties’ attorneys constituted a written

contract where counsel for one party “unambiguously” set forth the

terms of a settlement offer and counsel for the other party

“unequivocally” accepted the offer); Johnson v. DeKalb County, 314

Ga. App. 790, 793-94 (1) (726 SE2d 102) (2012) (holding that an e-

mail exchange between counsel for the parties constituted an

enforceable written contract where the county renewed its offer in

an e-mail to the appellants, “the essential elements of the agreement

were clear,” and appellants’ counsel “unequivocally accepted” the

county’s offer). Accord Lytle v. King’s Constr. Co., No. 1:14-cv-288-

GGB, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 188427, at *7-8 (IV) (N.D. Ga. July 30,

                                 27
2015) (“Georgia courts have held that a contract (specifically a

settlement agreement) may be formed over e-mail.” (citing LNV

Corp., 322 Ga. App. 19)).         Accordingly, we see no reason under

general principles of contract law why a contract cannot be

memorialized in an e-mail for purposes of determining whether the

State has waived its sovereign immunity.

      (b)   The State also contends that the trial court erred in

applying OCGA § 10-12-7 of the GUETA 10 to support that the e-mail

exchange forming the Agreement constituted a valid written

contract for sovereign immunity purposes because the Appellees

presented no evidence that the Attorney General or the Department

of Law had “agreed to send, accept, or rely upon electronic

signatures or authorized his subordinates to do so in this instance

      10 OCGA § 10-12-7 (a) provides that “[a] record or signature shall not be
denied legal effect or enforceability solely because it is in electronic form.” In
addition, that statute goes on to state that “[a] contract shall not be denied
legal effect or enforceability solely because an electronic record was used in its
formation,” OCGA § 10-12-7 (b), and that “[i]f a law requires a record to be in
writing, an electronic record shall satisfy the law,” OCGA § 10-12-7 (c). An e-
mail satisfies the definition of an “[e]lectronic record.” See OCGA § 10-12-2 (7)
(“‘Electronic record’ means a record created, generated, sent, communicated,
received, or stored by electronic means.”).
                                       28
or in any e-mail communication.”         See OCGA § 10-12-18 (a)

(providing that each state agency “shall determine whether, and the

extent to which, it will send and accept electronic records and

electronic signatures to and from other persons and otherwise

create, generate, communicate, store, process, use, and rely upon

electronic records and electronic signatures”); OCGA § 10-12-18 (c)

(providing that, apart from an exception not relevant here, the

GUETA shall not require a state agency “to use or permit the use of

electronic records or electronic signatures”).

     To determine whether the GUETA applies, we begin by

examining the text, structure, and history of the GUETA. As we

have explained,

     [i]n interpreting statutes, we presume that the General
     Assembly meant what it said and said what it meant.
     And so we must read the statutory text in its most natural
     and reasonable way, as an ordinary speaker of the
     English language would. The common and customary
     usages of the words are important, but so is their context.
     For context, we may look to other provisions of the same
     statute, the structure and history of the whole statute,
     and the other law – constitutional, statutory, and common
     law alike – that forms the legal background of the
     statutory provision in question. Moreover, all statutes

                                  29
     relating to the same subject matter are to be construed
     together, and harmonized wherever possible.

Langley v. State, 313 Ga. 141, 143 (2) (868 SE2d 759) (2022)

(citations and punctuation omitted).           In addition, “[w]hen we

consider the meaning of a statutory provision, we do not read it in

isolation, but rather, we read it in the context of the other statutory

provisions of which it is a part.” Hartley v. Agnes Scott College, 295

Ga. 458, 462 (2) (b) (759 SE2d 857) (2014) (citation and punctuation

omitted).

     OCGA § 10-12-3 (a) provides that “[e]xcept as otherwise

provided in subsection (b) of this Code section,[11] this chapter shall

apply to electronic records and electronic signatures relating to a

transaction.” In turn, a “[t]ransaction” is defined as “an action or

set of actions occurring between two or more persons relating to the

conduct of business, commercial, or governmental affairs.” OCGA §

10-12-2 (16).     And “[p]erson means an individual, corporation,

business trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company,

     11  The State does not claim that any of the exceptions under subsection
(b) applies here.
                                     30
association, joint venture, governmental agency, public corporation,

or any other legal or commercial entity.” OCGA § 10-12-2 (12).

“Governmental agency” is further defined as “an executive,

legislative, or judicial agency, department, board, commission,

authority, institution, or instrumentality of the federal government

or of a state or of a county, municipality, or other political

subdivision of a state.” OCGA § 10-12-2 (9). However, the GUETA

is applicable “only to transactions between parties each of which has

agreed to conduct transactions by electronic means.” OCGA § 10-

12-5 (b). “Whether the parties agree to conduct a transaction by

electronic means is determined from the context and surrounding

circumstances, including the parties’ conduct.” Id.

     Here, it is clear under the plain language of the GUETA that

the Agreement constitutes a “transaction” under the Act and that

the State and the Appellees are considered “persons” involved in

that “transaction.”   Therefore, the key question is whether the

parties agreed to conduct the transaction by electronic means under

OCGA § 10-12-5 (b). Although the trial court did not expressly rule

                                 31
on this issue, it implicitly found the GUETA to be applicable by

applying OCGA § 10-12-7 to find that the e-mail exchange forming

the Agreement constituted a valid written contract for sovereign

immunity purposes. Moreover, in denying the State’s motion to

dismiss, the trial court found that “the parties intended to be bound

by the Agreement”; that the e-mail “was the result of months of

negotiations between the Attorney General’s Office and the parties

by way of Anna Arceneuax”; that the Attorney General was aware

of the negotiations; that the e-mail was “initiated by Deputy

Attorney General Beth Burton”; that the e-mail states, “Anna,

instead of a formal MOU, we will agree, and this email serves as the

agreement that . . .”; and that Graham subsequently confirmed the

Agreement by e-mail reply. In addition, the trial court found that

the State “presented no evidence to refute [Appellees’] contention

that Graham and Burton had authority to negotiate and bind.”

These findings are sufficient to support the trial court’s implicit

conclusion that the State consented to conducting the transaction by

electronic means. See OCGA § 10-12-5 (b).

                                 32
     Furthermore, despite the State’s contentions, nothing in OCGA

§ 10-12-18 (a) or (c) excepts the State from the GUETA under these

circumstances.    Although subsection (a) mandates that “each

governmental agency in this state shall determine whether, and the

extent to which, it will send and accept electronic records and

electronic signatures[,]” it does not require that this determination

be made in any particular form and does not preclude the State from

determining to enter into the Agreement by e-mail. And there was

no evidence presented that the State had made a determination not

to enter into the Agreement by e-mail. Likewise, subsection (c) only

makes clear that a governmental agency is not required to use

electronic records or electronic signatures but does not prohibit the

State from choosing to do so.

     Moreover, construing OCGA § 10-12-18 (a) and (c) as the State

urges us to do would allow governmental agencies to invoke OCGA

§ 10-12-18 to invalidate an electronic transaction despite the fact

that “the context and surrounding circumstances, including the

parties’ conduct,” demonstrated that the parties had agreed to

                                 33
conduct the transaction electronically, thereby rendering OCGA §

10-12-5 (b) meaningless with respect to governmental agencies. See

Scott v. State, 295 Ga. 39, 40 (1) (757 SE2d 106) (2014) (“[A] statute

is to be construed to give sensible and intelligent effect to all its

provisions and to refrain from any interpretation which renders any

part of the statute meaningless.” (citation and punctuation

omitted)).

     Accordingly, we reject the State’s argument that OCGA § 10-

12-18 (a) and (c) required the Appellees to show that the Attorney

General or the Department of Law had expressly adopted the

GUETA in order for its provisions to apply. Instead, we conclude

that, because the term “transaction” in the GUETA is defined to

include actions between two or more persons relating to the conduct

of “governmental affairs,” OCGA § 10-12-2 (16), and the term

“person” is defined to include a “governmental agency,” OCGA § 10-

12-2 (12), when a governmental agency such as the Department of

Law is engaged in a transaction within the scope of the GUETA, see

OCGA § 10-12-3, its provisions will apply, if “the context and

                                 34
surrounding     circumstances,   including   the   parties’   conduct,”

demonstrate that the parties “agreed to conduct [the particular]

transaction[ at issue] by electronic means,” OCGA § 10-12-5 (b). And

because the evidence supports the trial court’s implicit conclusion

that the State determined to conduct the transaction by electronic

means, the trial court did not err in applying the GUETA to the facts

of this case.

     (c) Having concluded that the parties agreed to conduct the

transaction at issue by electronic means, we must next determine

whether the April 14 e-mail exchange actually constitutes a written

contract between the parties that waives sovereign immunity. “To

constitute a valid contract, there must be parties able to contract, a

consideration moving to the contract, the assent of the parties to the

terms of the contract, and a subject matter upon which the contract

can operate.” OCGA § 13-3-1. Unless all of these essential terms

are in writing, there is no enforceable written contract for sovereign

immunity purposes. See Bd. of Regents of the Univ. System of Ga. v.

Tyson, 261 Ga. 368, 369-70 (1) (404 SE2d 557) (1991) (holding that,

                                  35
where the essential term of consideration was not contained in the

contract but instead had to be implied from the parties’ conduct,

there was no written contract for sovereign immunity purposes).

     Moreover, because “[g]eneral rules of contract law that might

otherwise support a claim for breach of contract damages between

private parties . . . will not support a claim against the state or one

of its agencies if the contract is not in writing so as to trigger the

waiver of sovereign immunity,” a party may not recover for breach

of contract against the State based on an implied contract, on a

theory of quantum meruit, or on the parties’ course of conduct. RTT

Assoc., 299 Ga. at 82-83 (2). Relying on this principle of law, the

State contends that the e-mail exchange constituting the Agreement

was insufficient to waive sovereign immunity because it did not

contain all of the necessary elements of a contract. We disagree.

     As an initial matter, the State contends that only a signed

written contract is sufficient to waive sovereign immunity.

Pretermitting whether the State is correct that a written contract

must be signed in order to waive sovereign immunity, we reject the

                                  36
contention that the trial court erred in finding that the Agreement

“was signed with [Burton’s] electronic signature.” 12

      In subdivision (b) above, we concluded that the GUETA applies

to this transaction, and that Act specifies that, “[i]f a law requires a

signature, an electronic signature shall satisfy the law.” OCGA §

      12  The Appellees correctly point out that the plain language of both the
constitutional and the statutory provisions waiving sovereign immunity for
breach of contract claims requires only that a contract be written, and not that
it be signed, in order to waive sovereign immunity. See Ga. Const. of 1983, Art.
I, Sec. II, Par. IX (c); OCGA § 50-21-1 (a). Yet, despite the fact that no specific
signature requirement appears in the constitutional or statutory provisions in
Georgia law governing the waiver of sovereign immunity for ex contractu
claims, see Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. I, Sec. II, Par. IX (c); OCGA § 50-21-1 (a),
this Court, without any analysis or explanation, imported such a requirement
into a sovereign immunity case directly from a case that concerned the Statute
of Frauds. See Tyson, 261 Ga. at 369 (1) (adopting a rule permitting the
formation of a contract from multiple, signed, contemporaneous documents,
relying on Baker v. Jellibeans, Inc., 252 Ga. 458, 460 (1) (314 SE2d 874) (1984),
a Statute of Frauds case where signatures were clearly required). See also
RTT Assoc., 299 Ga. at 87 (3) (citing Tyson, 261 Ga. at 369 (1)). The Court of
Appeals has followed suit numerous times. See, e.g., Winter, 331 Ga. App. at
533-34 (2) (b) (i), 534 (2) (b) (ii) (citing Tyson, 261 Ga. at 369 (1), and Baker,
252 Ga. at 460 (1)); Bd. of Regents of Univ. System of Ga. v. Ruff, 315 Ga. App.
452, 456-57 (2) (726 SE2d 451) (2012) (quoting Bd. of Regents of the Univ.
System of Ga. v. Doe, 278 Ga. App. 878, 881 (1) (a) (630 SE2d 85) (2006), which
relied on Tyson, 261 Ga. at 369-70 (1), and Baker, 252 Ga. at 459 (1)), overruled
on other grounds by Rivera, 298 Ga. at 778 n.7; Data Inquiry, 313 Ga. App. at
686-87 (1) (b) (citing Tyson, 261 Ga. at 369-70 (1)). However, because we
conclude that the trial court did not err in finding that the Agreement
contained Burton’s electronic signature, we need not consider whether Tyson
and its progeny correctly required a signed writing in order to waive sovereign
immunity.

                                        37
10-12-7 (d). An “[e]lectronic signature” is defined as “an electronic

sound, symbol, or process attached to or logically associated with a

record and executed or adopted by a person with the intent to sign

the record.” OCGA § 10-12-2 (8). This Court has not considered how

these rules apply to e-mails.              However, while the National

Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (“NCCUSL”)

commentary to the UETA cannot change the plain meaning of our

relevant statutes, we find that commentary instructive on this

issue. 13 The comment to § 2 explains that “[t]he idea of a signature

      13  The General Assembly replaced the Georgia Electronic Records and
Signatures Act with the GUETA effective July 1, 2009, by adopting in its
entirety and essentially verbatim the UETA. See Ga. L. 2009, p. 698, § 1;
OCGA § 10-12-4. “The UETA was originally drafted by NCCUSL in 1999.” 2
James S. Rankin, Jr., Kaplan’s Nadler: Ga. Corp. Law, LP & LLC § 15:16 n.2
(Oct. 2022 update). Therefore, we see the NCCUSL commentary to the UETA,
which is available at the Uniform Law Commission’s website at
https://higherlogicdownload.s3-external-1.amazonaws.com/UNIFORMLAWS/UETA_
Final%20Act_1999.pdf?AWSAccessKeyId=AKIAVRDO7IEREB57R7MT&Expire
s=1670428064&Signature=LMmys4%2Fctn70VhNz7Og44Hddvps%3D, as
useful in construing the GUETA. See State v. Almanza, 304 Ga. 553, 559 (3)
n.6 (820 SE2d 1) (2018) (noting that “although Advisory Committee Notes [to
the Federal Rules of Evidence] are not binding precedent and cannot change
the plain meaning of the law or rules, they are highly persuasive (unlike
ordinary legislative history)”); Bishop, 288 Ga. at 606-07 (3) (b) (quoting the
official commentary and citing the prefatory note to the Uniform Fraudulent
Transfer Act (“UFTA”) promulgated by the NCCUSL, on which the Georgia
UFTA was modeled, in addressing an issue involving the Georgia UFTA).
                                      38
is broad and not specifically defined” and that “[n]o specific

technology need be used in order to create a valid signature.” UETA

§ 2, cmt. at 8.   The commentary also points out that the Act’s

definition only requires (1) “that the signer execute or adopt the

sound, symbol, or process with the intent to sign the record” and (2)

“that the symbol must in some way be linked to, or connected with,

the electronic record being signed.”     Id. at 9.   Accordingly, “the

critical element is the intention to execute or adopt the sound or

symbol or process for the purpose of signing the related record.” Id.

In particular, “the mere inclusion of one’s name as a part of an e-

mail message” may suffice if the other essential elements in the

definition are met. Id. at 10. “Whether any particular record is

‘signed’ is a question of fact[, and p]roof of that fact must be made

under other applicable law.” Id. at 8.

     The evidence shows that Burton’s e-mail containing the terms

of the Agreement included her manually-typed name at the bottom

of the e-mail and that she was identified as its sender by her name

and e-mail address at the top of the e-mail. In the body of the e-

                                 39
mail, Burton clearly identified the Agreement as the replacement

for the previously negotiated MOU and as what the Attorney

General’s office considered to be the final agreement between the

parties. Burton’s manually-typed name constitutes an “electronic

symbol,” and, because Burton included the terms of the Agreement

in the body of her e-mail, her manually-typed name followed directly

after the terms of the Agreement, which both evidences her intent

to sign the Agreement and clearly connects her signature with the

Agreement.

     Similarly, the trial court’s finding that “[s]aid email was

ratified by Sabrina Graham” is supported by evidence showing that

Graham confirmed the Agreement in an e-mail that identified

Graham as its sender by her name and e-mail address at the top of

the e-mail, that contained her manually-typed name at the

conclusion of the e-mail, and that was in the same e-mail exchange

as Burton’s e-mail containing the terms of the Agreement.

Accordingly, after applying the plain meaning of OCGA § 10-12-7 (d)

and § 10-12-2 (8) to these facts, we conclude that the requirements

                                40
for an electronic signature under the GUETA have been met with

regard to both Burton and Graham. 14 See Intl. Casings Group, Inc.

v. Premium Standard Farms, Inc., 358 FSupp2d 863, 873 (II) (A) (2)

(b) (W.D. Mo. 2005) (holding that the names of the parties’

representatives at the header of the e-mails or typed at the bottom

of the e-mails, combined with evidence that the named individuals

pushed the “send” button to deliver the e-mails, were sufficient to

constitute an “electronic signature” under Missouri’s UETA);

Waddle v. Elrod, 367 SW3d 217, 228-29 (Tenn. 2012) (holding that

the typed name of the attorney representing the party to be charged

appearing at the end of an e-mail confirming the terms of a

settlement agreement constituted an “electronic signature” under

Tennessee’s UETA).

      (d)   The State also contends that the Agreement failed to

      14   To the extent that the State is arguing that a written contract
otherwise sufficient to waive sovereign immunity must include the signatures
of all of the parties to the contract, we note that Benton was involved in the e-
mail exchange concerning the Agreement and provided her electronic
signature showing her assent to the terms of the Agreement on behalf of the
Federal Defender. Thus, we conclude that representatives of both the State
and the Federal Defender signed the Agreement with their electronic
signatures.
                                       41
specify parties who are able to contract because (1) Burton did not

have the authority to contract and (2) the Federal Defender was not

a party to the Agreement. We disagree as to both.

     In ruling on the issue of whether Burton had the authority to

contract, the trial court considered the following undisputed

evidence.   Burton is a Deputy Attorney General, i.e., “a senior

administrator at the Attorney General’s Office.”    In her role as

Deputy Attorney General, she not only participated with Senior

Assistant Attorney General Graham on the State’s behalf in

months-long negotiations regarding the subject of the Agreement

but, in fact, she “spearhead[ed]” those negotiations.    No other

persons from the Attorney General’s office, including the Attorney

General himself, participated directly in those negotiations. On

March 11, 2021, Graham e-mailed Arceneaux that she was awaiting

“input” from the Attorney General, evidencing his awareness of the

negotiations and the terms of the Agreement. In the same e-mail,

Graham wrote that she was “still working on the DAs” and added

that, “[s]o far the DAs ha[d] agreed to the timeline proposal,”

                                42
thereby indicating that she had the authority to consult with and

negotiate for the affected district attorneys – the very parties that

the State now claims are the only persons who are able to obtain an

execution order. On March 16, 2021, Graham told Arceneaux in an

e-mail regarding the proposed MOU that she had “[t]ouched base

with the Deputy AG” and that “he w[ould] be getting back with

[them] soon.”

     It appears from the record that, after the initial meeting on

February 10, 2021, Graham and Arceneaux conducted most or all of

the negotiations to finalize an agreement between the parties.

However, on April 14, 2021, which was approximately a month after

Graham had indicated that she was awaiting responses from the

Attorney General and the Deputy Attorney General, Graham called

Arceneaux to say that Burton, Graham’s supervisor, would be

sending an e-mail memorializing the terms of the agreement,

thereby indicating that the necessary authority to enter into the

forthcoming agreement had been obtained. Soon thereafter, Burton

did in fact send an e-mail to Arceneaux in which she unambiguously

                                 43
stated that “th[e] email” contained the terms to which the Attorney

General’s office “w[ould] agree” and that, “instead of a formal MOU

[which Graham and Arceneaux had been negotiating], . . . th[e]

email serve[d] as the agreement.”

     At the hearing and in its order denying the State’s motion to

dismiss, the trial court described the foregoing evidence and then

pointed out that the State had identified no statutory restriction on

Graham’s or Burton’s general authority to negotiate and contract on

behalf of the Attorney General’s office and had presented no

evidence or case law suggesting that either Graham or Burton was

not acting as an agent or designee of the Attorney General and the

Attorney General’s office in this particular matter. Accordingly, the

trial court ruled that Burton and Graham had the authority to

negotiate the Agreement and that Burton had the authority to

contract on behalf of the State.

     The State asserts that the trial court’s ruling was error,

arguing that, under OCGA § 45-15-3 (2), the Attorney General has

the duty “to prepare all contracts and writings in relation to any

                                   44
matter in which the state is interested” and that, under OCGA § 45-

15-30, the Attorney General is the head of the Department of Law

and as such “define[s] the duties and responsibilities of any attorney

or other employee of the said department.” Therefore, the State

contends, only the Attorney General is authorized to contract on

behalf of the State or the Department of Law unless that authority

is expressly delegated. See City of Baldwin v. Woodard & Curran,

Inc., 293 Ga. 19, 28 (2) (c) (743 SE2d 381) (2013) (“[T]he power of

public officials in Georgia is limited by the laws that prescribe their

authority.”). Accordingly, the State argues, because the Appellees

did not present affirmative evidence that the Attorney General or

the State of Georgia explicitly authorized Burton to enter into a

contract on their behalf – such as evidence of a written policy in

which the Attorney General expressly delegated the authority to

contract to deputy attorneys general collectively or to Burton

specifically – the trial court erred in finding that Burton had such

authority.

     However, OCGA § 45-15-3 generally describes the duties of the

                                  45
Attorney General’s office. It is axiomatic that the Attorney General

is not legally required to personally carry out every one of the duties

listed in that statute but that he or she may appoint appropriate

staff to assist him or her in doing so. See, e.g., Outdoor Advertising

Assn. of Ga., Inc. v. Garden Club of Ga., Inc., 272 Ga. 146, 149-50 (2)

(a) (527 SE2d 856) (2000) (stating that the evidence showed that,

when the litigation involved was filed, the office of the Attorney

General entered an appearance as counsel for the Department of

Transportation and that “[t]hen[-]Deputy Attorney General George

P. Shingler had primary responsibility for the case,” that “Shingler

never discussed the case with [the Attorney General],” that “[the

Attorney General] made no court appearances in connection with

the litigation,” and that the Attorney General “was not personally

and substantially involved in the deliberative processes regarding

those matters”). Indeed, OCGA § 45-15-30, cited by the State for the

proposition that the Attorney General is the head of the Department

of Law, created the “Department of Law with the Attorney General

at the head thereof and with such numbers of deputy attorneys

                                  46
general, assistant attorneys general, special assistant attorneys

general, other attorneys, paraprofessional personnel, and other

employees or independent contractors as the Attorney General shall

deem necessary to carry out the functions of the Attorney General

and the Department of Law.” (emphasis supplied).

     As relevant here, OCGA § 45-15-30 also authorizes the

Attorney General “to determine the title and to change the title of

any attorney . . . of the Department of Law . . . in order to define the

duties and responsibilities of any attorney” of the department. In

that regard, the Appellees presented evidence at the hearing that

shows the following. Burton serves as the Deputy Attorney General

of the Criminal Justice Division, which makes her “the highest-

ranking state criminal lawyer in Georgia.”          According to the

organizational chart of the Attorney General, she serves directly

under the Chief Deputy Attorney General, who serves directly under

the Attorney General. In her role as Deputy Attorney General of the

Criminal Justice Division, Burton oversees the Capital Litigation

Section, the Post-Conviction Litigation Section, and the Public

                                  47
Safety Section. The Criminal Justice Division represents the State

of Georgia in all capital felony appeals in both state and federal

courts. The division also provides general legal representation to

the various public safety and law enforcement agencies in the State,

including but not limited to the DOC and the State Board of Pardons

and Paroles – both agencies that had an interest in or were affected

by the Agreement.

     Graham is Assistant Attorney General and the Section Chief

of the Capital Litigation Section. She reports to Deputy Attorney

General Burton.     Furthermore, according to the record, either

Burton or Graham, as Deputy Attorney General and Assistant

Attorney General respectively, is listed as counsel for the

respondent in the federal habeas proceedings in every case affected

by the Agreement. The record also supports a conclusion that in

their specific positions on the Attorney General’s staff and in their

capacity as counsel in the cases involved, Burton and Graham were

authorized to act on behalf of the Attorney General. See Riding v.

Ellis, 297 Ga. App. 740, 741 (678 SE2d 178) (2009) (stating that the

                                 48
defendants, a professor and other personnel at a state university,

“were represented in the federal action by appellee Ralph Ellis, in

his capacity as an assistant attorney general with the Attorney

General’s Office” and that Ellis negotiated a settlement agreement

with the plaintiff, a former student).

     The State also cites OCGA § 45-6-5 for the proposition that a

state agency’s employees cannot bind the State absent an express

power to do so, but that statute merely provides that “[p]owers of all

public officers are defined by law and all persons must take notice

thereof.” As explained above, the duties and responsibilities of the

Attorney General include, “[w]hen he deems it advisable,

prepar[ing] all contracts and writings in relation to any matter in

which the state is interested.” OCGA § 45-15-3 (2). The subject

matter of the Agreement – the orderly management of execution-

eligible capital cases following the COVID-19 pandemic – is clearly

a matter in which the State is interested, and, accordingly, the

Attorney General acting through appropriate staff had the power to

contract in this matter.

                                  49
     Finally, the State relies on three cases to support their

contention. However, we conclude that those cases are inapposite,

as each involved a city official’s authority, or lack thereof, to enter

into binding contracts on behalf of the city based on mandatory

provisions of the law, such as municipal ordinances and city

charters. See Woodard & Curran, 293 Ga. at 29 (2) (d) (holding that

a purported municipal contract between the city and a service

provider was ultra vires and void because it was signed by the

mayor, who had no unilateral authority under the city charter to

approve contracts that would bind the city); H.G. Brown Family Ltd.

Partnership v. City of Villa Rica, 278 Ga. 819, 820-21 (1) (607 SE2d

883) (2005) (holding that the city’s contract to purchase property was

“ultra vires, null and void” because the city did not comply with the

requirements in its charter); City of Atlanta v. Black, 265 Ga. 425,

425-26 (457 SE2d 551) (1995) (holding that a restriction in a

municipal ordinance that required the city attorneys to obtain the

city council’s approval prior to settling claims in excess of $500

circumscribed the city attorneys’ apparent authority to bind the city

                                  50
to a settlement agreement for payment of $37,500 where the

plaintiffs took no steps to ascertain whether the city attorneys had

obtained the necessary approval and the city attorneys did not

represent that they had).

     In contrast in this case, the State fails to point to any law,

regulation, or policy expressly circumscribing Burton’s or Graham’s

authority to negotiate and bind the Attorney General and the State

to the Agreement, nor has the State taken the position that Burton

or Graham were not actually given the authority by the Attorney

General to enter into the Agreement, arguing only that the

Appellees have failed to produce evidence of any such designation of

authority. Moreover, at the hearing on the State’s dismissal motion,

counsel for the Attorney General’s office stated that she did not

contend that Graham or Burton went “rogue,” and the trial court

stated that “certainly it d[id] not appear to the [c]ourt . . . , even by

the State’s own argument, that Ms. Burton or Ms. Graham we[nt]

rogue.”

     Accordingly, in the absence of proof of a limitation on Burton’s

                                   51
or Graham’s authority to represent the State, we conclude that the

undisputed evidence in this case supports the trial court’s ruling

that the Attorney General was aware of the Agreement, that Burton

and Graham had the authority to negotiate its terms, and that

Burton had the authority to contract on behalf of the Attorney

General and the State in this instance. See DeKalb County v. DRS

Investments, Inc., 260 Ga. App. 225, 227 (1) (581 SE2d 573) (2003)

(holding that a senior assistant county attorney had authority to

bind the county to a consent order with an outdoor advertising

business, where neither a relevant ordinance delineating the county

attorney’s role nor the business’s inquiry of the county attorney

yielded any express limitation upon the county attorney’s settlement

authority); City of Columbus v. Barngrover, 250 Ga. App. 589, 598

(5) (b) (552 SE2d 536) (2001) (holding that, in the absence of a

specific limitation on the city attorney’s authority, the trial court did

not err in charging the jury that the city was bound by the conduct

of the city attorney).

     As for the other parties to the Agreement, the State cursorily

                                   52
argues that, because Burton’s initial e-mail stating what the

Attorney General’s office agreed to was sent only to Arceneaux, an

attorney for the Georgia Resource Center, and not to the Federal

Defender or any of its attorneys, the Appellees are not identified as

parties to the Agreement. See RTT Assoc., 299 Ga. at 82 (2).

     Even though Burton sent the initial e-mail laying out the terms

of the Agreement to Arceneaux, the record supports the trial court’s

finding that the parties understood Arceneaux to be negotiating on

behalf of the Georgia Resource Center, the Federal Defender, and

DeBruin, who had all participated in previous negotiations with the

Attorney General’s office regarding the subject matter of the

Agreement and who together represented all of the inmates affected

by the Agreement. Accordingly, upon receiving Burton’s initial e-

mail and before responding, Arceneaux added to the e-mail thread

DeBruin, a private attorney representing one of the inmates affected

by the Agreement, and Benton, who represented the Federal

Defender, an entity representing several of the inmates affected by

the Agreement. Moreover, when Benton sought clarification of the

                                 53
Agreement’s terms, Graham affirmed the Agreement in a response

to her, Arceneaux, and DeBruin.             Accordingly, all are expressly

identified in writing in the e-mail exchange that forms the

Agreement. 15 Thus, we reject the State’s contention that the e-mail

exchange did not identify the Appellees as parties to the Agreement.

      (e)   The State also argues that the Agreement is not a valid

contract because it is not supported by consideration.

      “It is axiomatic that a contract without consideration is

invalid.” Thomas Mote Trucking, Inc. v. PCL Civil Constructors,

Inc., 246 Ga. App. 306, 310 (3) (540 SE2d 261) (2000). See OCGA §

      15 On appeal, the State does not specifically argue that Presnell is not a
party to the Agreement, nor does the State dispute the trial court’s ruling that,
because Presnell’s petition for rehearing en banc was denied by the Eleventh
Circuit during the time that the statewide judicial emergency order was in
effect, Presnell is a third-party beneficiary of the Agreement. See OCGA § 9-
2-20 (b) (“The beneficiary of a contract made between other parties for his
benefit may maintain an action against the promisor on the contract.”); Dillon
v. Reid, 312 Ga. App. 34, 40 (4) (717 SE2d 542) (2011) (stating that the third-
party beneficiary need not be specifically named in a contract as long as the
contracting parties’ intention to benefit the third party is shown on the face of
the contract). See also Youngblood v. Gwinnett Rockdale Newton Community
Svc. Bd., 273 Ga. 715, 718 (4) (545 SE2d 875) (2001) (holding that, to the extent
the written agreements between a state agency and a third party constituted
written contracts conferring a benefit upon the appellant as an intended
beneficiary, the state agency’s sovereign immunity was waived).
                                       54
13-3-40 (a) (“A consideration is essential to a contract which the law

will enforce.”). Furthermore, “consideration must be stated in the

contract or at least be ascertainable from the contract.” Newell

Recycling of Atlanta, Inc. v. Jordan Jones & Goulding, Inc., 317 Ga.

App. 464, 466 (731 SE2d 361) (2012) (citations and punctuation

omitted). However, all that the law requires “is that the contract

furnish a key by which the consideration may be ascertained.” Id.

(citation and punctuation omitted). “To constitute consideration, a

performance or a return promise must be bargained for by the

parties to a contract.” OCGA § 13-3-42 (a). “A performance or return

promise is bargained for if it is sought by the promisor in exchange

for his promise and is given by the promisee in exchange for that

promise.” OCGA § 13-3-42 (b).

     “[S]light consideration is sufficient to sustain a contract,

and . . . , where there is consideration to support the contract, courts

do not inquire into the adequacy of contract consideration.” ALR

Oglethorpe, LLC v. Fidelity Nat. Title Ins. Co., 361 Ga. App. 776, 781

(2) (b) (863 SE2d 568) (2021) (citations and punctuation omitted).

                                  55
“It is not essential that the person to whom the consideration moves

should be benefited, provided the person from whom it moves is in a

legal sense injured.” Wolfe v. Breman, 69 Ga. App. 813, 817 (26 SE2d

633) (1943). “[F]orbearance to exercise a legal right” is sufficient

consideration to support a contract, “the alteration in position being

regarded as a detriment that forms a consideration independent of

the actual value of the right forborne.” Id. See 3 Williston on

Contracts § 7:45 (4th ed. May 2022 update) (“[F]orbearance to do

something which one is legally entitled to do, of almost any

character, will be sufficient. . . .”).

      Viewing the e-mail exchange constituting the Agreement with

those principles in mind, we conclude that the consideration can be

ascertained from the first line of Burton’s e-mail stating that the

Agreement was to be in lieu of “a formal MOU,”16 which the parties

      16In the trial court and at oral argument, the State argued that, by using
this language, Burton rejected a formal MOU because she did not want to enter
into a contract and that “there’s a difference between an agreement and a
contract.” At oral argument, the State also argued for the first time that
Burton’s e-mail was a “position statement” rather than a contract. However,
we reject the State’s contentions. “Under Georgia common law, ‘agreement’

                                      56
had been pursuing through negotiations at the request of the Task

Force Sub-Committee to try to reach an agreement instead of

proposing legislation, and can be further ascertained by Arceneaux’s

response to Burton that, upon receipt of Burton’s e-mail containing

the terms of the Agreement, she “let GACDL know [that day] so they

could hopefully share with the task force at [that day’s] meeting.”

This exchange shows that, in return for the Attorney General’s

promise to pursue execution orders for the inmates covered by the

Agreement only under the Agreement’s terms, the Federal Defender

relinquished its right to continue to seek a formal MOU with the

Attorney General or to pursue with the GACDL’s help other,

perhaps-more-favorable means of resolution through the Task

Force, such as legislation. Such forbearance is valid consideration.

See OCGA § 13-3-42 (c) (2) (providing that consideration may consist

and ‘contract’ are synonymous.” John K. Larkins, Jr. & Hon. John K. Larkins
III, Ga. Contracts Law and Litigation § 1:2 n.3 (2d ed. Sept. 2022 update)
(citing Douglass v. W.L. Williams Art Co., 143 Ga. 846, 847 (85 SE2d 993)
(1915) (“There is no difference between a ‘contract’ and an ‘agreement.’”)).
Moreover, “[a]s a code of the common law, the Code contains [the following]
definition of a contract: ‘A contract is an agreement between two or more
parties for the doing or not doing of some specified thing.’” Id. at § 1:2 (quoting
OCGA § 13-1-1 (emphasis supplied)).
                                        57
of forbearance); Antoskow & Assoc., LLC v. Gregory, 278 Ga. App.

468, 471 (629 SE2d 1) (2005) (“Any benefit accruing to him who

makes the promise, or any loss, trouble, or disadvantage undergone

by, or charge imposed upon, him to whom it is made, is sufficient

consideration to sustain a contract.” (citation and punctuation

omitted)).

     (f) On appeal, the State argues for the first time that the

Agreement is unenforceable because it is vague, pointing to the

provision that it “will remain in effect only through August 1, 2022,

or one year from the date on which the above-three conditions are

met, whichever is later.” The Appellees contend that the State

waived this argument by not raising it in the trial court.

     Because “[f]airness to the trial court and to the parties

demands that legal issues be asserted in the trial court, . . . absent

special circumstances, an appellate court need not consider

arguments raised for the first time on appeal.” Pfeiffer v. Ga. Dept.

of Transp., 275 Ga. 827, 829 (2) (573 SE2d 389) (2002) (footnotes

omitted). However, such “special circumstances” include sovereign

                                 58
immunity claims. See id. at 829 (2) n.10. That is because “sovereign

immunity of a State agency is not an affirmative defense, going to

the merits of the case; instead, it raises the issue of the trial court’s

subject matter jurisdiction to try the case.” Dept. of Transp. v.

Kovalcik, 328 Ga. App. 185, 189-90 (1) (b) (761 SE2d 584) (2014)

(citation and punctuation omitted). See Spann, 312 Ga. at 850 (2)

(“[W]e have held that Georgia courts have no subject matter

jurisdiction when sovereign immunity applies.”). A “court’s lack of

subject-matter jurisdiction cannot be waived and may be raised at

any time either in the trial court, in a collateral attack on a

judgment, or in an appeal.” Abushmais v. Erby, 282 Ga. 619, 622 (3)

(652 SE2d 549) (2007) (citation and punctuation omitted).            See

OCGA § 9-11-12 (h) (3) (“Whenever it appears, by suggestion of the

parties or otherwise, that the court lacks jurisdiction of the subject

matter, the court shall dismiss the action.”). Moreover, the State

asserted its immunity as a general matter in its motion to dismiss

and argued its immunity at the hearing. Therefore, we will address

its newly raised vagueness argument made in support of its overall

                                   59
sovereign immunity claim.

      The State argues that the Agreement is vague because it does

not provide “a specific termination date” and that, therefore, “if the

conditions are never met, then the [Agreement] could conceivably

enjoin executions in Georgia forever.”17                   It is true that

“indefiniteness in subject matter so extreme as not to present

anything upon which the contract may operate in a definite manner

renders the contract void.” Burns v. Dees, 252 Ga. App. 598, 602 (1)

(a) (557 SE2d 32) (2001) (citation and punctuation omitted).

However, a contract is enforceable if “it is expressed in language

sufficiently plain and explicit to convey what the parties agreed

upon.” Laymac v. Kushner, 349 Ga. App. 727, 733 (2) (824 SE2d 768)

(2019) (citation and punctuation omitted).               A contract “will be

sufficiently definite and certain if it contains matter which will

      17 The State overstates its case. The trial court’s interlocutory injunction
only enjoins the “State of Georgia and Christopher M. Carr, in his official
capacity as Attorney General of the State of Georgia, and anyone acting in
active participation or concert with them, . . . from pursuing any execution
warrant for death-eligible prisoners, other than Billy Raulerson, whose
petitions for rehearing before the Eleventh Circuit were denied during the
statewide judicial emergency.” (emphasis supplied).
                                       60
enable the courts, under proper rules of construction, to ascertain

the terms and conditions on which the parties intended to bind

themselves.” Davidson Mineral Properties, Inc. v. Baird, 260 Ga. 75,

79 (7) (390 SE2d 33) (1990) (citation omitted).

     Here, the Agreement’s duration is sufficiently definite and

ascertainable from its language about the time for performance and

the conditions under which it will terminate. Accordingly, it is not

void for vagueness. See Alexis, Inc. v. Werbell, 209 Ga. 665, 670-71

(1) (f) (75 SE2d 168) (1953) (holding that a contract providing that it

would be binding so long as the corporation existed was enforceable);

Mori Lee, LLC v. Just Scott Designs, Inc., 325 Ga. App. 625, 630 (2)

(754 SE2d 616) (2014) (holding that an agreement providing that it

“would continue for as long as both parties conducted business” was

not rendered void by “this indefinite duration”); Triple Eagle Assoc.,

Inc. v. PBK, Inc., 307 Ga. App. 17, 22-23 (2) (a) (704 SE2d 189) (2010)

(holding that “the phrase ‘suitable period of time’” did not render a

settlement agreement unenforceable).

     (g) For all of the reasons set forth at length above in this

                                  61
division, we conclude that the April 14 e-mail exchange constituting

the Agreement formed a valid written contract between the parties

and that the trial court, therefore, properly denied the State’s

motion to dismiss on sovereign immunity grounds.

     4. The Interlocutory Injunction. The State contends that the

trial court abused its discretion by issuing an interlocutory

injunction.   “The purpose of an interlocutory injunction is to

preserve the status quo, as well as balance the conveniences of the

parties, pending final resolution of the litigation.”       Veterans

Parkway Developers, LLC v. RMW Dev. Fund II, LLC, 300 Ga. 99,

102 (793 SE2d 398) (2016). We have previously explained:

     An interlocutory injunction is an extraordinary remedy,
     and the power to grant it must be “prudently and
     cautiously exercised.” However, to be effective, the
     decision to grant an interlocutory injunction must often
     be made under time constraints that do not allow for the
     careful deliberation and reflection that accompany a full
     trial on the merits. Thus, the trial court must make a
     judgment call regarding the equities presented, and the
     court is vested with broad discretion in making that
     decision.    See OCGA § 9-5-8 (“The granting and
     continuing of injunctions shall always rest in the sound
     discretion of the judge. . . .”). The grant or denial of an
     interlocutory injunction will not be reversed on appeal

                                 62
     unless the trial court made an error of law that
     contributed to the decision, there was no evidence on an
     element essential to relief, or the court manifestly abused
     its discretion.

City of Waycross, 300 Ga. at 110-11 (1) (citations omitted).

     In deciding whether to impose an interlocutory injunction, a

trial court should consider whether the following factors exist:

     (1) there is a substantial threat that the moving party will
     suffer irreparable injury if the injunction is not granted;
     (2) the threatened injury to the moving party outweighs
     the threatened harm that the injunction may do to the
     party being enjoined; (3) there is a substantial likelihood
     that the moving party will prevail on the merits of her
     claims at trial; and (4) granting the interlocutory
     injunction will not disserve the public interest.

City of Waycross, 300 Ga. at 111 (1) (citation omitted). Because the

test for granting an interlocutory injunction is a balancing test, the

movant need not prove all four factors to obtain injunctive relief. See

id. In this case, however, after balancing the equities, the trial court

determined that all four factors weighed in favor of granting the

interlocutory injunction. For the reasons discussed below, we see no

abuse of discretion in the trial court’s decision to do so.

     (a) We have held that the first factor concerning the threat of

                                   63
irreparable injury to the moving party “is the most important one,

given that the main purpose of an interlocutory injunction is to

preserve the status quo temporarily to allow the parties and the

court time to try the case in an orderly manner.” Western Sky

Financial, LLC v. State of Ga., 300 Ga. 340, 354 (2) (b) (793 SE2d

357) (2016) (citation and punctuation omitted). In considering this

factor, the trial court pointed to evidence showing that COVID-19-

related visitation restrictions had impaired the Federal Defender’s

ability to conduct adequate clemency investigations and the

evidence showing that such investigations are a substantial

undertaking requiring the collection of considerable evidence and

the preparation of numerous witnesses to testify at the proceedings.

The uncontested evidence also showed that, because of the lack of

notice, Presnell’s clemency hearing included no live testimony,

including no expert testimony, unlike past clemency proceedings in

death penalty cases. The trial court found unconvincing the State’s

argument that the Federal Defender had years to prepare for

Presnell’s clemency hearing because the evidence showed that

                                64
suitable preparation for clemency proceedings must take place in

proximity to the hearing, as the type of evidence that is persuasive

in a clemency hearing is evidence of an inmate’s relatively recent

prison behavior and current physical and mental condition.

Specifically with respect to Presnell, the trial court observed that,

without an injunction, he would lose his ability to protect his rights

under the Agreement because he would be executed as scheduled.

Accordingly, the trial court ruled that the Appellees would “suffer

irreparable injury if they were permanently denied the bargained-

for time and notice to prepare a clemency investigation.”

     In addition, the trial court rejected the State’s argument that

irreparable harm does not exist because Presnell’s clemency hearing

has already taken place and the Federal Defender was able to

represent Presnell, pointing to evidence that, when executions have

been stayed in the past and new execution orders have later been

issued in death row inmates’ cases, the inmates have received

second clemency hearings. Specifically, the evidence showed that,

during the approximately eight years preceding Presnell’s clemency

                                 65
hearing, the Board of Pardons and Paroles has held clemency

hearings for every one of the twenty-two individual execution orders

that were issued, regardless of whether the individual had

previously had a clemency hearing.

     On appeal, the State contends that the trial court erred by

concluding that Presnell could receive a second clemency hearing

based on evidence indicating that other death row inmates had done

so, because the decision of whether to grant an inmate a second

clemency hearing is at the discretion of the State Board of Pardons

and Paroles, as illustrated by the fact that neither the trial court nor

the Appellees have cited any rule or statute showing otherwise.

However, the State misconstrues the trial court’s ruling.            In

balancing the equities, the trial court determined that, based on the

evidence, there was a “‘substantial threat’” that the Appellees would

suffer irreparable injury if the injunction were not granted. City of

Waycross, 300 Ga. at 111 (1) (emphasis supplied).              Such a

determination did not require the trial court to find that Presnell

was guaranteed a second clemency hearing but only that it is likely

                                  66
that the Board of Pardons and Paroles will grant him one given past

experience.   Because the trial court’s determination here had

support in the evidence, there was no abuse of discretion.       See

Western Sky Financial, 300 Ga. at 354 (2) (b) (holding that the trial

court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that the threat of

irreparable harm weighed in favor of injunctive relief where there

was evidence supporting the trial court’s determination).

     The State also argues that the trial court abused its discretion

in weighing this factor in favor of granting the injunction because

the United States Constitution does not guarantee the right to a

“lengthy” pre-clemency preparation period like the one that the

Appellees sought. See Ohio Adult Parole Auth. v. Woodard, 523 U.S.

272, 289 (118 SCt 1244, 140 LE2d 387) (1998) (Connor, J.,

concurring in part and concurring in the judgment) (recognizing that

“some   minimal    procedural    safeguards   apply    to   clemency

proceedings” (emphasis in original)). Thus, the State contends that

Presnell’s rights were adequately protected, given that the Federal

Defender had over six months to investigate and prepare for his

                                 67
clemency hearing between the exhaustion of Presnell’s appellate

rights in October 2021 when the United States Supreme Court

denied his petition for certiorari in his federal habeas proceedings,

see Presnell v. Ford, ___ U.S. ___ (142 SCt 131, 211 LE2d 45) (2021),

and May 16, 2022, when Presnell’s clemency hearing took place.

However, the State’s argument here only highlights the fact that the

Agreement provided additional bargained-for benefits beyond

minimal federal due process protections. It also fails to take into

account the effect of the COVID-19 restrictions on counsel’s

investigations and preparations.18

      As for the Federal Defender, without the interlocutory

injunction it would have lost the notice that it had negotiated in

      18 In its reply brief, the State argues that “[a]ny delay in Presnell’s
execution is only a byproduct” of the interlocutory injunction and that,
therefore, the possibility of his earlier execution should not be considered a
grave harm to be remedied by an injunction. However, the State’s circular
argument fails. Presnell’s execution was “delay[ed]” as a result of the
interlocutory injunction in part because the trial court weighed the factor
concerning the threat of irreparable injury to the moving party in favor of
granting injunctive relief based in some measure on its determination that,
without the granting of such relief, Presnell would be executed as scheduled
and, as a result, would suffer grave and irreparable injury in that he would
forever lose his ability to protect his rights as a third-party beneficiary under
the Agreement.
                                       68
order to adequately prepare for the clemency proceedings of all of its

clients affected by the Agreement, including Presnell. Without this

notice, the Federal Defender had no way of knowing when the

Attorney General’s office would resume seeking execution orders or

which of the multiple execution-eligible inmates the Attorney

General’s office would seek an order for first. Consequently, in order

to be adequately prepared, the Federal Defender would need to

prepare all of its execution-eligible clients’ clemency cases

simultaneously. The evidence supports the trial court’s finding that

adequate preparation for clemency proceedings in death penalty

cases requires collecting considerable evidence and preparing

numerous witnesses to testify at a hearing, including in some cases

expert witnesses.

     Accordingly, given the facts of this case, where the Appellees

specifically bargained for protection against such potential harm,

where the undisputed evidence supports the trial court’s finding

that there was a substantial threat that the Appellees would suffer

irreparable harm if injunctive relief were not granted, and where

                                 69
monetary damages could not adequately compensate Presnell or the

Federal Defender for the immediate and irreparable harm that they

would suffer without the granting of injunctive relief, the trial court

did not abuse its discretion in ruling that this factor favored the

granting of injunctive relief. See Sherrer v. Hale, 248 Ga. 793, 797

(2) (285 SE2 714) (1982) (holding that an injunction was properly

granted where the appellee did not have “an adequate remedy at law

(money damages)”); English v. Little, 164 Ga. 805, 806 (139 SE 678)

(1927) (“Injunction is an appropriate remedy in a proper case to

prevent acts in violation of contract, producing irreparable injury to

the plaintiff. . . .”).

      (b)    The trial court ruled that both the factor of threatened

harms and the factor of the public interest weighed in favor of

granting injunctive relief. In ruling that the threatened harm that

the State would suffer if the injunction were granted was not

outweighed by the threatened harm that the Appellees would suffer

if the injunction were not granted, the trial court found that (1) the

Appellees only sought to enforce “the terms of an Agreement [that

                                  70
the State] drafted and agreed to” in order that the Federal Defender

could adequately prepare for its clients’ clemency proceedings and

that (2) an interlocutory injunction would “simply hold [the State] to

[its] Agreement by postponing Mr. Presnell’s execution warrant – it

would not stop him from being executed altogether.”

     In considering the factor of potential disservice to the public

interest, the trial court first observed that granting the injunction

was “consistent with the public’s interest in ensuring that reliable

procedures are followed before the State imposes the ultimate

punishment of death on any person,” citing Woodson v. North

Carolina, 428 U.S. 280, 305 (III) (C) (96 SCt 2978, 49 LE2d 944)

(1976) (acknowledging a heightened “need for reliability in the

determination that death is the appropriate punishment in a specific

case”). Next, the trial court noted that our appellate courts have

held that “[e]nforcing agreements generally serves the public

interest ‘by encouraging the right and freedom to contract,’” quoting

Wood v. Wade, 363 Ga. App. 139, 151 (2) (e) (869 SE2d 111) (2022)

(punctuation omitted). See also Nat. Cas. Co. v. Ga. School Bds.

                                 71
Assn.-Risk Mgmt. Fund, 304 Ga. 224, 229 (818 SE2d 250) (2018)

(“[I]t is the paramount public policy of this State that courts will not

lightly interfere with the freedom of parties to contract on any

subject matter, on any terms, unless prohibited by statute or public

policy, and injury to the public interest clearly appears.” (citation

and punctuation omitted)). Finding that “this public interest is

implicated even more when the State is a party to the contract,

because if [the State] cannot be trusted to honor [its] agreements in

these circumstances, it will substantially undermine the public’s

confidence in its government,” the trial court then concluded that

granting an interlocutory injunction would not disserve the public

interest.

     The State argues that the trial court abused its discretion in

weighing both of these factors in favor of granting an interlocutory

injunction. See Owens v. Hill, 295 Ga. 302, 313 (4) (c) (758 SE2d

794) (2014) (“‘[T]he State and the victims of crime have an important

interest in the timely enforcement of a sentence.’” (quoting Hill v.

McDonough, 547 U.S. 573, 584 (III) (126 SCt 2096, 165 LE2d 44)

                                  72
(2006)). However, as the trial court concluded, an injunction here

ensures that executions will proceed on the timeline that the State

itself proposed – a timeline that the State presumably thought

served the interests of justice when the State proposed it.

Accordingly, under the circumstances here, we discern no abuse of

discretion in the trial court’s weighing of these factors in favor of the

Appellees’ right to obtain what they bargained for, particularly in

light of the public policy favoring the enforcement of contracts and

considering the threatened harm to the Appellees if injunctive relief

were not granted. See Wood, 363 Ga. App. at 151-52 (2) (e).

     (c)   The trial court ruled that the Appellees had shown a

substantial likelihood that they would succeed on their claim that

the State had breached the Agreement. The trial court first found

that the second and third conditions to the resumption of executions

contained in the Agreement had not been satisfied based on the

undisputed evidence showing that (1) “normal legal visitation” and

“normal visitation” at Georgia prisons “ha[d] not resumed [in]

that . . . the [DOC] continue[d] to impose significant limitations on

                                   73
visitation” and (2) “children under the age of five still [we]re not

eligible for any COVID-19 vaccine” and, therefore, “the vaccine [wa]s

not available to all members of the public.” The trial court then

described the undisputed evidence showing that, despite the

Agreement, Senior Assistant Attorney General Graham had asked

the Cobb County District Attorney to seek an execution order for

Presnell from the Superior Court of Cobb County where Presnell

was tried and that the Attorney General’s office had worked toward

obtaining an execution order for death row inmate Raulerson before

it began seeking Presnell’s execution order. Based on the foregoing

evidence, the trial court determined that the Appellees had shown a

substantial likelihood that the Attorney General’s office had

breached its promise to not pursue execution orders from the district

attorneys in the cases covered by the Agreement before the

Agreement’s three conditions were satisfied and its promised notice

was provided.

     The State argues, however, that even if the e-mail exchange

formed a written contract sufficient to waive sovereign immunity,

                                 74
there was no material breach, because it had substantially complied

with the Agreement before seeking the execution order in Presnell’s

case. See Dennard v. Freeport Minerals Co., 250 Ga. 330, 332 (1)

(297 SE2d 222) (1982) (“Our general rule with respect to compliance

with contract terms is not strict compliance, but substantial

compliance.”); OCGA § 13-4-20 (“Performance, to be effectual, . . .

must be substantially in compliance with the spirit and the letter of

the contract. . . .”). The trial court rejected this argument, finding

that, in order to make its “substantial compliance” argument, the

State “must contort” the plain language of the Agreement, “which

[its] own representatives drafted.”

     Looking first to the condition that the Attorney General’s office

would not pursue an execution order from the district attorney in

the defined cases before “the [DOC] lift[ed] its suspension of legal

visitation, and normal visitation resume[d],” the State argues that

this condition had been substantially satisfied because the

undisputed evidence shows that on April 7, 2021, the DOC had lifted

its total suspension of visitation and instituted “modified” visitation

                                  75
procedures and that this modified visitation shows that visitation

had resumed at the time that Presnell’s execution order was issued,

albeit admittedly with restrictions. According to the State, a “new

standard” of visitation now exists with regard to both legal and

normal visitation as a result of the DOC’s need to adapt to the “new

normal” in a post-pandemic society. Thus, the State contends that

at the time that the execution order in Presnell’s case was obtained,

the new standard for legal and normal visitation had been resumed

and that neither logic nor the Agreement’s language requires that

legal or normal visitation return to exactly how it was before the

pandemic.

     However, we reject the contention that the resumption of

“modified” or restricted visitation on April 7, 2021, was what the

parties intended regarding the second condition of the Agreement,

given the fact that the parties entered the Agreement a week after

the DOC initiated this visitation policy. Moreover, there is at least

some evidence in the record to support the trial court’s finding that,

at the time that Presnell’s execution order was issued, the DOC’s

                                 76
“modified” normal and legal visitation procedures “continue[d] to

impose significant limitations on visitation.”

      With respect to the third condition, the Agreement states that

“[the Attorney General’s] office will not pursue an execution warrant

from the District Attorney in the below defined cases before . . . a

vaccination against COVID19 is readily available to all members of

the public.” (emphasis supplied). The State argues that multiple

FDA-approved vaccines have been “widely available” since the

Winter of 2020 and that the trial court’s “extreme interpretation” of

the term “all members of the public” as including children under five

years of age is contrary to the “substantial compliance” rule. 19

      19 The State also argues that whether this condition was satisfied should
have no bearing in Presnell’s case, claiming that “[he] is not eligible to be in
the presence of children because of his convictions.” The State does not explain
the basis for this assertion, nor did the State present any evidence below to
support it. Moreover, pretermitting the relevance of the State’s assertion
generally, the Appellees argued in the trial court that the fact that no vaccine
was available to children under age five years not only led the DOC to prohibit
visitors in that age group to the prisons, thereby preventing execution-eligible
inmates from visiting with affected family members, but they also argued and
presented supporting evidence that this age limitation hindered capital
defenders with children in this age group, including Presnell’s counsel, in
representing their clients because of a fear of transmitting the virus to their
children.
                                      77
However, the Agreement’s plain language, drafted by the State,

places no limitation on the age of who is considered a member of the

public.   Furthermore, whatever the availability of a COVID-19

vaccine in the Winter of 2020, that level of availability could not

have been what the parties intended as satisfying the third

condition of the Agreement, given the fact that the parties entered

the Agreement on April 14, 2021, well over three months after that

level of availability had already been attained.

     Moreover and most significantly, as the trial court correctly

pointed out, the State’s “substantial compliance” argument ignores

a fundamental part of the Agreement – that the State was to provide

six months’ notice after all three conditions were met before seeking

an execution order.    It is well-established that, “if the parties

expressly agree that time shall be important; if they stipulate that a

thing shall be done or not done, at a given time, then time is of the

essence of the contract, and it must be observed.” Sneed v. Wiggins,

3 Ga. 94, 102 (1847) (emphasis in original). See Piedmont Center 15,

LLC v. Aquent, Inc., 286 Ga. App. 673, 676 (649 SE2d 733) (2007)

                                 78
(relying on Sneed to conclude that time was of the essence in a

lease’s cancellation provision and that the parties therefore had to

strictly comply with the provision). Cf. Electronic Data Systems

Corp. v. Heinemann, 268 Ga. 755, 757 (4) (493 SE2d 132) (1997)

(stating that “[t]he courts should hesitate to rewrite private

contracts” to toll time limits).

     The State does not argue that it substantially complied with

this six-month notice provision, and the undisputed evidence shows

that the Appellees did not receive their bargained-for notice in order

to adequately prepare for Presnell’s clemency proceedings. “One

party may not render a performance or give a consideration which

is materially different, and still substantially comply with those

contract terms generally.”         Dennard, 250 Ga. at 333 (1) n.2.

Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its

discretion in rejecting the State’s “substantial compliance”

argument and instead concluding that the Appellees had shown a

substantial likelihood of succeeding on the merits of their breach of

contract claim. Compare id. at 333 (1) (holding that the appellee

                                    79
substantially complied with the contract where “[t]he additional

consideration which [the appellant] receive[d] d[id] not materially

alter the consideration for which her predecessor bargained” and she

therefore “suffer[ed] no damage” but rather “gain[ed] a monetary

benefit”) with Lager’s, LLC v. Palace Laundry, Inc., 247 Ga. App.

260, 262 (1) (543 SE2d 773) (2000) (rejecting the appellant’s

argument     that   it   “substantially   complied”   with   the   early

termination procedure in the parties’ contract by orally complaining

and later cancelling the contract by letter because the appellant did

not comply with “the contract’s unambiguous notice provision” to

provide the vendor with a written complaint stating the nature of

the deficiencies and an opportunity to cure them).

     (d) In addition to the factors ordinarily considered in whether

to grant an interlocutory injunction, the trial court addressed and

rejected three additional arguments that the State raised below as

to why an interlocutory injunction should not be granted, which the

State now argues was error. We disagree as to each.

     (i)   The State argues that the granting of an interlocutory

                                   80
injunction was improper because the relief that the Appellees sought

involved the undoing of a past act, namely, the undoing of the

issuance of Presnell’s execution order. See Lue v. Eady, 297 Ga. 321,

333 (3) (d) (773 SE2d 679) (2015) (“Injunctive relief . . . does not

provide a remedy for acts already completed.”). The trial court

properly rejected this argument, ruling that the interlocutory

injunction “would enjoin only [the State’s] future actions in

furtherance of th[e execution order in Presnell’s case], including

taking further steps to carry out the execution of Mr. Presnell.”

     (ii) The State also argues that it is not able to provide the relief

that the Appellees sought. In support, the State correctly points out

that an execution order may only be requested from and granted by

the superior court of the county in which an inmate’s death penalty

case was tried, see OCGA § 17-10-40 (a), and that the district

attorney is the only party authorized to represent the State in all

criminal cases in the superior court, see McLaughlin v. Payne, 295

Ga. 609, 612 (761 SE2d 289) (2014) (“Under our State Constitution,

‘[i]t shall be the duty of the district attorney to represent the state

                                   81
in all criminal cases in the superior court of such district attorney’s

circuit. . . .’” (quoting Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. VI, Sec. VIII, Par. I

(d)). Therefore, the State contends that the district attorneys in the

cases of the inmates affected by the Agreement are the only parties

legally able to obtain the execution orders in those cases and that,

because those district attorneys are not parties to this litigation, the

Appellees’ request to enjoin the State from pursuing an act that only

the district attorneys may perform is “absurd.”

     Both the law and the evidence presented at the hearing show

that the Attorney General is heavily involved in death penalty cases,

including the execution process. See OCGA § 17-10-33 (providing

that, when a defendant is sentenced to death, a certified copy of the

sentence is sent to the Attorney General); OCGA § 17-10-40 (a)

(providing that a certified copy of an order fixing a new time period

for the execution of a death sentence must be “sent immediately” to

the Attorney General); OCGA § 45-15-3 (5) (providing that the

Attorney General “represent[s] the state in all capital felony actions

before [this] Court); OCGA § 9-14-45 (providing that, if a habeas

                                  82
petitioner is being detained under the custody of the DOC, a copy of

the petition must be served on the Attorney General). And, in fact,

the evidence showed that Graham initiated the process for obtaining

the execution order for Presnell by requesting that the district

attorney obtain the order. In addition, the evidence presented below

included the current version of Georgia’s written protocol for lethal

injections, which was adopted on July 17, 2012. The protocol sets

out a detailed procedure for executing a condemned inmate.

According to that protocol, the last step in the “Preparation of the

Condemned” before the actual execution itself begins requires that

“[t]he Attorney General, or the Attorney General’s designee, shall

advise the [DOC] Commissioner as to whether or not to proceed”

with the execution.   Ga. Dept. of Corrections, Ga. Diagnostic &

Classification Prison, Lethal Injection Procedures, II (D) (10).

Accordingly, the record supports the trial court’s finding that “the

Attorney General’s office is so ingrained in Georgia’s process of

carrying out executions that the proposed injunction would, as a

practical matter, prevent the issuance of execution warrants for

                                 83
prisoners who fall in the scope of the Agreement until the terms of

that Agreement are met.”

     (iii) In the last of the three additional arguments, the State

argues that, before the interlocutory injunction issued, district

attorneys were authorized to seek execution orders for execution-

eligible death row inmates and the DOC was authorized to

effectuate such orders. However, the State contends that this is no

longer the case and that, therefore, the interlocutory injunction

interrupted the status quo.

     As the trial court correctly stated, the interlocutory injunction

does not prevent a district attorney from acting alone to obtain an

execution order. Instead, as the trial court explained in its order,

the injunction prevents the defendant parties to this action, namely,

the Attorney General and the State of Georgia, which includes “its

subordinate departments and employees,” “from having any

involvement in th[e execution] process or from initiating any

execution contrary to the terms of the Agreement, even if a district

attorney did act by himself or herself to obtain a warrant.”

                                 84
Accordingly, the trial court properly determined that the

interlocutory injunction would protect and maintain the status quo

“by returning the parties to their positions before [the State’s

alleged] breach.” See Byelick, 275 Ga. at 506 (1) (holding that the

status quo that warranted protection by an interlocutory injunction

was the position that the parties were in prior to the time that the

plaintiff’s breach of contract claim arose).

     (e) Finally, the State argues that the interlocutory injunction

is “impractical and onerous” on the DOC, who cannot comply with

execution orders until it changes its visitation policies, and on

parties who are not even bound by the Agreement, including district

attorneys who might otherwise seek execution orders. However, the

interlocutory injunction issued by the trial court properly restrained

     Defendants State of Georgia and Christopher M. Carr, in
     his official capacity as Attorney General of the State of
     Georgia, and anyone acting in active participation or
     concert with them . . . from (1) pursuing any execution
     warrant for death-eligible prisoners, other than Billy
     Raulerson, whose petitions for rehearing before the
     Eleventh Circuit were denied during the statewide
     judicial emergency or (2) taking any action in furtherance
     of any previously issued execution warrant for any such
                                  85
     death-eligible prisoners identified above including the
     warrant issued with respect to Mr. Virgil Presnell, Jr.

See OCGA § 9-11-65 (d) (providing in pertinent part that an

injunction “is binding only upon the parties to the action, their

officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys, and upon those

persons in active concert or participation with them” (emphasis

supplied)). Therefore, the interlocutory injunction affects the State

“no more than necessary to preserve the status quo and protect [the

Appellees] from the threatened harm.” Grossi Consulting, LLC v.

Sterling Currency Group, LLC, 290 Ga. 386, 389 (2) (722 SE2d 44)

(2012).   And we conclude that “the injunction is not overly broad,

but is tailored to the facts and law of this case.” Bd. of Commrs. of

Spalding County v. Stewart, 284 Ga. 573, 575 (3) (668 SE2d 644)

(2008).

     (f) For all of the reasons discussed above, we conclude that the

trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting the Appellees’

motion for an interlocutory injunction. See City of Waycross, 300

Ga. at 111 (1).

                                 86
      Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Peterson,
P. J., and Pinson, J., disqualified, and Warren, J., not participating.

                                  87
     BETHEL, J., concurring.

     Wisdom, Justice, and Moderation. Those words are engraved

upon the Great Seal of the State of Georgia and are recited when we

pledge allegiance to the flag of the State of Georgia. 20 They

symbolize the three pillars upon which sound government and our

State Constitution rest.

     With those principles in mind, I highlight a few facts apparent

from the record in this case which are, of course, included in the

broader recitation of the record found in the opinion of the Court. An

Assistant Attorney General and her supervisor, a Deputy Attorney

General, both clearly and unambiguously agreed to a course of

conduct related to the function of the Department of Law over which

they had supervisory authority. The State now wishes not to follow

that agreed-upon course of conduct. This litigation follows.

     The Office of the Attorney General should have mooted this

case before it was filed by simply fulfilling the promises its attorneys

made – even if the State later had reservations about the binding

     20   See OCGA §§ 50-3-2 and 50-3-30 (c).
                                      88
effect of the words of its Deputy Attorney General and Assistant

Attorney General. Instead, the State elected to attempt to avoid

honoring the agreement they made.

      “Inside every cynical person, there is a disappointed idealist,”

a comedian once said. But his words are, of course, no laughing

matter. Cynicism is an infectious and contagious thing that eats at

the fibers of the fabric which hold together human society.

Government is often an accidental vector of our society’s cynicism.

It really should avoid being an intentional one.

      Though it may prove inconvenient, uncomfortable, or

undesirable to the State, when both a Deputy and an Assistant

Attorney General are on record agreeing that the State will do or not

do something, absent a showing that those lawyers were engaged in

an illegal or unethical endeavor21 or that honoring the agreement

will incur an unauthorized cost to the State, everyone should be able

      21There has been no suggestion by the State of impropriety of this sort.
Nor has there been a suggestion that the agreement here was entered into
against the wishes or direction of the Attorney General or other person in the
supervisory chain.
                                     89
to count on the State to honor its word. Not because it entered a

contract that waived sovereign immunity. Not because the party

asking the State to do as it said it would was sufficiently copied on

an electronic communication message or was a third-party

beneficiary. Not because the author of a message followed the correct

electronic “pinky swear” that is necessary to transform a statement

into a binding commitment. Rather, the State should keep its

promises because The People of Georgia, who are the very source of

the State’s sovereignty, are owed a government that honors its

commitments.

     In a society governed by the rule of law, courts must entertain

lawfully filed cases and vindicate rights of parties, as defined by the

law. And if the law allowed the State to avoid fulfilling the promises

it made here, this Court would be bound to allow that. For the

reasons explained in the opinion of the Court, however, the law

thankfully does not allow that avoidance here. It’s a shame anyone

thought it appropriate to ask.

     I am authorized to state that Chief Justice Boggs, Justice

                                  90
Ellington, Justice McMillian, Justice LaGrua, and Justice Colvin

join in this concurrence.

                              91