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Doyle, Presiding Judge. This appeal arises from a renewal action filed by the parents of A. S. (a minor) on her behalf and individually against The Howard School, Inc.; Meghan Doyle; and Jacob Dannenfelser. The defendants moved to dismiss the renewal action because it was accepted for filing by the superior court clerk five days after the six-month renewal deadline, but the trial court denied the motion after granting the parents’ motion to revert to the original date that the action was submitted for filing. The defendants appeal, contending that the trial court erred because the renewal action was not properly filed within the six-month deadline. For the reasons that follow, we affirm. “We review the trial court’s ruling on a motion to dismiss under the de novo standard of review.”[1] Here, the relevant record is undisputed and shows that A. S. had been a student at The Howard School, and on March 27, 2018, the plaintiffs sued the defendants seeking damages arising from alleged mistreatment of A. S. by Doyle (a teacher at The Howard School) and Dannenfelser (a high-school student at The Howard School). The alleged misconduct occurred between the fall of 2015 and May 2016, so the two-year statute of limitation applicable to personal injury claims ended in May 2018.[2] On September 6, 2019, the plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed the action without prejudice. One day shy of six months later, on Thursday, March 5, 2020, the plaintiffs submitted an electronic filing of the renewal action using the e-filing system of the Superior Court of Fulton County. The next day, Friday, March 6, the plaintiffs’ attorney noticed that the case had not been marked as accepted for docketing and called the clerk’s office.[3] The attorney continued to monitor the docket, calling the clerk’s office each business day until Wednesday, March 11, when the e-filing was returned for non-payment of an “additional parties fee.” It is undisputed that the attorney had paid the original filing fee (applicable to an action against a single defendant) calculated by the e-filing system at that time, but apparently, according to the plaintiffs’ appellate brief and argument in the trial court, their attorney failed to check a box on the e-filing form that would prompt the proper calculation of the fee applicable to this action against three defendants.[4] The plaintiffs’ attorney then spoke again with the clerk’s office and properly re-filed the case on March 11, 2020, with payment of the additional filing fee. The renewal complaint that appears in the record is stamped as filed on that date. A week later, on March 18, 2020, the plaintiffs filed a motion to revert the filing date to March 5, the date they initially submitted the renewal complaint.[5] The motion was supported by an affidavit from plaintiffs’ counsel explaining the above facts, and an e-filing receipt showing the March 5 submission of the complaint, certificate of payment of costs, a verification, and summonses for the three defendants. The receipt also broke down the calculation of the fees charged and paid at that time: the standard $214 single-defendant court case fee, the $6.73 payment service fee, and the $19 e-file fee. In May 2020, the defendants moved to dismiss the renewal action as untimely, and in November 2021, the trial court held a hearing at which all parties were represented but no sworn testimony was taken. Thereafter, the trial court entered an order denying the defendants’ motion to dismiss and granting the plaintiffs’ motion to revert the filing date to March 5, 2020. The trial court issued a certificate of immediate review, and this Court granted the defendants’ applications for interlocutory appeal.[6] The defendants contend that the trial court erred by granting the motion to revert the filing date because the clerk properly rejected the original filing, and thus the renewal action was barred by the statute of limitation. We disagree. The process for filing a complaint is governed by the Civil Practice Act and the Uniform Superior Court Rules (“USCR”). The Civil Practice Act, at OCGA § 9-15-4 (a), provides in part that “[a] clerk of the superior court shall not be required to file any civil case or proceeding until the fee required by Code Section 15677 [authorizing the collection of filing fees] . . . has been paid to the clerk.” Likewise, USCR 36.10 provides that complaints presented to the trial court clerk for filing “shall be filed only when accompanied by the proper filing fee, fee for sheriff service or a pauper’s affidavit. . . .” But Rule 36.16 (I) provides an avenue for correcting deficiencies: “Upon physical acceptance and review of an efiling and discovery that it was misfiled or is otherwise deficient or defective, a clerk shall as soon as practicable provide the efiler notice of the defect or deficiency and an opportunity to cure or, if appropriate, reject the filing altogether.” In Orr v. Culpepper,[7] relied on heavily by the defendants,[8] this Court stated that “the statutes making the payment of fees a prerequisite to filing a complaint are directory only, and a failure to pay these fees will not render the filing of a complaint invalid” per se.[9] Moreover, “a trial court has broad discretion to correct clerical errors including a clerk’s failure to mark a document as filed on the date that document is actually delivered to the clerk.”[10] “[T]he endorsement of the clerk as to the date of filing is the best evidence of the filing of such paper[,] . . . but this is not necessary to the act of filing. . . . The actual date of filing is the date upon which the paper is handed to the clerk to be filed. [T]here is a presumption of law that [the] entry of filing by the clerk is correct,” but this presumption is rebuttable by evidence showing another date of delivery.[11] Here, as summarized above, the plaintiffs were obligated to renew the action within six months of the September 6, 2019 voluntary dismissal, i.e., on or before March 6, 2020, at the latest.[12] The plaintiffs e-filed the renewal action on March 5, paying the fee calculated at the time it was filed; nothing in the e-filing process alerted counsel to a problem. The complaint was later returned for re-filing because of a discrepancy in the amount charged for service on the actual number of defendants, and counsel cured the defect by paying the fee immediately.[13] Counsel also moved the trial court to revert the filing date to March 5, and the court granted the motion. It is within the trial court’s discretion to grant such a motion, and the record here supports the trial court’s exercise of discretion in reverting the filing date to March 5.[14] 2. Doyle and The Howard School also argue that the complaint should have been dismissed because the plaintiffs did not exercise the proper diligence in perfecting service after renewing the action so near the expiration of the statute of limitation. If the filing of the petition is followed by timely service perfected as required by law, although the statute of limitation runs between the date of the filing of the petition and the date of service, the service will relate back to the time of filing so as to avoid the limitation. Therefore, if service is made within the fiveday grace period allowed by OCGA § 9114 (c), it relates back to the date the complaint was filed as a matter of law. And where a complaint is filed near the statute of limitation and service is made after the statute expires and after the fiveday safe harbor provision contained within OCGA § 9114 (c), the relation back of the service to the date of filing is dependent upon the diligence exercised by the plaintiff in perfecting service.[15] A trial court’s ruling on whether a plaintiff carried this burden is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.[16] Although the defendants raised this challenge below, the trial court’s order did not address it. Accordingly, we have nothing to review at this time. Judgments affirmed. Reese, J., and Senior Appellate Judge Herbert E. Phipps concur.

 
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