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Dillard, Presiding Judge. Ansley Clanton appeals the trial court’s denial of her motion for service by publication in her negligence action against Willie Taylor, in which she also sought to recover from her uninsured motorist carrier, Encompass Home and Auto Insurance Company, as well as the court’s grant of Encompass’s motion to dismiss her complaint. Specifically, Clanton argues the trial court (1) applied the wrong due-diligence standard in denying her motion for service by publication, and (2) erred in finding that laches barred her from receiving the benefit of service by publication under OCGA § 33-7-11. For the following reasons, we affirm. The record shows that, on July 26, 2021, Clanton filed a negligence complaint against Taylor, arising from a car accident that occurred on September 8, 2020. In the complaint, Clanton alleged Taylor’s negligence caused her both physical and mental pain and suffering. Clanton served Encompass—as her uninsured motorist carrier—with a copy of the summons and complaint. And on August 27, 2021, Encompass filed its answer, asserting several affirmative defenses and contending Clanton was not entitled to recovery. Then, on October 19, 2021, Taylor filed an answer by special appearance, denying many of the complaint’s allegations and asserting several affirmative defenses. Relevant here, Taylor contended, inter alia, that the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction over him and service was insufficient. Shortly thereafter, on November 3, 2021, Clanton filed a “motion for appointment of special agent for service,” specifically requesting that Kimberly Butts—a Georgia process server—be appointed. The trial court granted the motion, appointed Butts as the process server, and authorized her to personally serve Taylor with the summons and complaint. According to Butts, she called Taylor on December 12, 2021, and was advised that he had moved to Indiana. Taylor also gave Butts his then-current Indiana address. Despite this information, Butts continued making unsuccessful attempts to serve Taylor at his “home of record” in Thomaston, Georgia.[1] And after her final attempt on December 21, 2022, Butts contacted the apartment manager at the Thomaston address, and he also advised that Taylor had moved to Indiana to live with his daughter in early 2020. The manager gave Butts Taylor’s Indiana address, and she then called Taylor’s daughter, who confirmed that Taylor had been living with her since January 2020. Given this information, on February 14, 2022, Clanton filed a motion for appointment of an Indiana-based special agent for service, which the trial court granted. And on January 11, 2022, the deputy sheriff in Lake County, Indiana unsuccessfully attempted to serve Taylor.[2] Over one year later, on January 23, 2023, Clanton filed a motion for service by publication. Encompass opposed the motion and moved for the case to be dismissed. Specifically, Encompass alleged Clanton had not been diligent in her efforts to serve Taylor, and the case should be dismissed because the statute of limitations had expired. Following a hearing on the matter,[3] the trial court denied Clanton’s motion for service by publication and granted Encompass’s motion to dismiss. This appeal follows. This Court reviews a trial court’s denial of a motion for service by publication and associated dismissal of a complaint for an abuse of discretion.[4] But when a question of law is at issue, “such as whether the statute of limitations bars an action, we owe no deference to the trial court’s ruling and apply the plain legal error standard of review.”[5] With these guiding standards of review in mind, we turn to Clanton’s claims of error. 1. To begin with, Clanton argues the trial court applied the wrong due-diligence standard in denying her motion for service by publication when she was seeking to recover only from Encompass. We disagree. As we have previously explained, this Court has interpreted the Uninsured Motorist Act to “require, as a condition precedent to a suit against the insurance carrier, that the insured first sue and recover a judgment against the uninsured motorist, whether known, or unknown.”[6] Prior to 1972, if for any reason a known uninsured motorist could not be personally served, “the condition precedent could not be met and the insured could not recover from his uninsured motorist carrier.”[7] The General Assembly then amended the statute to “allow service on the known uninsured motorist by publication upon a showing of due diligence on the part of the insured.”[8] But although service by publication “would not provide the court with jurisdiction to enter an in personam judgment against the uninsured motorist, it would allow the court to enter a ‘nominal judgment’[[9]] against the uninsured motorist sufficient to satisfy the condition precedent.”[10] Nevertheless, the amendment did not “eliminate the need to meet the condition precedent of a judgment against the uninsured motorist; it simply provided the means by which the condition precedent could be met.”[11] As explained in Division 2 infra, when a plaintiff seeks service by publication, she must exercise due diligence in attempting to personally serve the defendant, but a heightened level of due diligence is required when, as here, the statute of limitations has expired, and the defendant has challenged the sufficiency of service in court. Clanton appears to contend that she should be held to a lower due-diligence standard because when she moved for service by publication, she had already settled this case with Taylor, and she was seeking recovery only from Encompass.[12] But the record is devoid of any evidence that she settled her claim against Taylor or that he was otherwise removed from the case as a defendant. More importantly, the trial court made no mention of a settlement in its order, and it certainly did not rule upon whether a settlement with Taylor would relieve Clanton from satisfying the uninsured motorist act’s due-diligence requirements. Needless to say, we are a court of review, “not of first view[,]“[13] and “[i]ssues which have not been ruled on by the trial court may not be raised on appeal.”[14] As a result, we decline to address the substance of this claim of error. 2. Next, Clanton claims the trial court erred by finding that laches applied in denying her motion for service by publication. Again, we disagree. Ordinarily, the correct legal standard for due diligence for service by publication under OCGA § 33-7-11 (e) is “diligence in determining that an uninsured motorist is either out of state or avoiding service.”[15] Nevertheless, Georgia law provides that when an action is filed before the applicable statute of limitation[s] expires but is not served upon the defendant within the limitation[s] period or within five days thereafter, the plaintiff must establish that he acted in a reasonable and diligent manner in attempting to insure that proper service was effected as quickly as possible; and if the plaintiff is guilty of latches[[16]] in this regard, service will not relate back to the time of filing of the complaint for the purpose of tolling the statute of limitation[s].[17] But when, as here, the defendant has “raised a service defense in court[[18]] and the statute of limitation[s] has expired, the plaintiff bears an even higher duty of the ‘greatest possible diligence‘ to ensure proper and timely service.”[19] Turning to the instant case, Clanton’s accident occurred on September 8, 2020, and she filed her negligence action against Taylor approximately ten months later on July 26, 2021. And because Clanton sued Taylor to recover for personal injuries, the statute of limitations for her negligence claim expired on September 8, 2022—two years from the date of the accident.[20] It is undisputed, then, that as of December 12, 2021, Clanton knew Taylor had moved to Indiana in 2020, and Taylor himself told the process server his then-current address. Nevertheless, Clanton’s appointed process server made at least three more unsuccessful attempts to serve Taylor at his previous residence in Georgia. And while the trial court granted Clanton’s request to appoint a process server in Indiana, there was only a single unsuccessful attempt to serve Taylor there on January 11, 2022. Then, although there were no more attempts to serve Taylor in Indiana, Clanton did not file her motion for service by publication until January 23, 2023—over four months after the statute of limitations expired the prior September.[21] Moreover, according to the trial court, Clanton could not explain why she waited over one year after learning of Taylor’s Indiana address to file her motion or why she made no attempts to effectuate service until four months after the expiration of the statute of limitations. Ultimately, the court found that a delay of four months between the expiration of the statute of limitations and seeking service by publication—especially when Clanton knew since 2021 that Taylor could not be served in Georgia—was insufficient to establish that she acted in a reasonable and diligent manner to ensure proper service was made as quickly as possible.[22] Nevertheless, relying on this Court’s decision in Smith v. Brooks,[23] Clanton contends the appropriate due-diligence standard is whether she exercised due diligence in determining whether Taylor was out of state or avoiding service. She notes that, similarly to this case, the plaintiff in Smith did not file his motion for service by publication until four months after the statute of limitations expired.[24] And despite those circumstances, we reversed the trial court’s denial of the plaintiff’s motion for service by publication and remanded for the trial court to determine whether the plaintiff exercised due diligence in determining whether the defendant lived out of state or was avoiding service.[25] To be sure, Clanton is right that “[t]he correct legal standard for due diligence for service by publication under OCGA § 33-7-11 (e) is diligence in determining that an uninsured motorist is either out of state or avoiding service.”[26] But here, unlike in Smith, the trial court did apply the due-diligence standard under OCGA § 33-7-11 (e), finding that Clanton “likely met the legal standard for determining that [Taylor] resides out of state.” And importantly, even if a plaintiff satisfies the requirements of OCGA § 33-7-11 (e), this Court has held that if the defendant raises a service defense in court (which Taylor and Encompass both did), and the statute of limitations has expired, “the plaintiff bears an even higher duty of the ‘greatest possible diligence’ to ensure proper and timely service.”[27] So, we disagree with Clanton that Smith has any bearing on the outcome of this appeal. In sum, we reiterate that the determination of whether the plaintiff was “guilty of laches in failing to exercise due diligence in perfecting service after the running of the statute of limitations is a matter within the trial court’s discretion and will not be disturbed on appeal absent abuse.”[28] And under the circumstances of this case, we cannot say the trial court abused its discretion in finding that, following the expiration of the statute of limitations, Clanton failed to exercise the greatest possible diligence in attempting to serve Taylor.[29] For all these reasons, we affirm the trial court’s denial of Clanton’s motion for service by publication and its grant of Encompass’s motion to dismiss. Judgment affirmed. Rickman and Pipkin, JJ., concur.

 
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