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Nahmias, Presiding Justice. The parties in this case have spent years engaged in a series of lawsuits. The case now before this Court concerns a claim of abusive litigation that Timothy Coen filed based on a previous contract lawsuit against his former employer that was resolved in his favor. In his abusive litigation case, Coen seeks punitive damages. In Coen v. Aptean, Inc., 346 Ga. App. 815 (816 SE2d 64) (2018), the Court of Appeals upheld the trial court’s ruling that punitive damages are not available for a statutory abusive litigation claim. See id. at 823-824. The Court of Appeals relied on its prior decisions that in turn rely on dicta in footnote 3 of this Court’s opinion in Yost v. Torok, 256 Ga. 92, 95 n.3 (344 SE2d 414) (1986), which was decided three years before the current abusive litigation statutes, OCGA §§ 51-7- 80 to 51-7-85, were enacted in 1989. See Ga. L. 1989, p. 408. OCGA § 51-7-83 (a) describes the damages that may be recovered in abusive litigation actions this way: “A plaintiff who prevails in an action under this article shall be entitled to all damages allowed by law as proven by the evidence, including costs and expenses of litigation and reasonable attorney’s fees.” We granted Coen’s petition for certiorari to decide whether that statute authorizes the recovery of punitive damages. As explained below, we conclude that punitive damages generally may be recovered in an abusive litigation lawsuit (as long as the lawsuit is not solely to recover damages for injury to peace, happiness, or feelings),[1] because the text of OCGA § 51-7-83 (a) indicates that punitive damages are included, the statute did not change the common law generally allowing punitive damages in abusive litigation cases, and punitive damages in abusive litigation cases do not always constitute an impermissible double recovery. Accordingly, we reverse the holding in Division 2 of the Court of Appeals’s opinion and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. 1. Coen worked for CDC Software Corporation from December 2011 until April 2012, when he was terminated. He then filed a lawsuit against CDC Software in DeKalb County State Court, alleging that the company breached the severance and other provisions in his employment contract. CDC Software hired the law firm Sutherland Asbill & Brennan LLP (now known as Eversheds Sutherland) to represent the company, with Allegra Lawrence- Hardy serving as lead counsel and Gabriel Mendel as associate counsel. While this contract lawsuit was pending, Aptean, Inc. acquired CDC Software and was added as a defendant as a corporate successor-in-interest. In April 2014, the trial court granted Coen partial summary judgment, ruling that the contract was valid and enforceable and there was no basis for CDC Software’s withholding payment to him.[2] Coen then filed a motion for attorney fees and litigation expenses under OCGA § 9-15-14 (a) and (b), which the trial court granted in the total amount of $176,484.80, holding CDC Software, Aptean, and Sutherland jointly and severally liable. The court found that CDC Software had “adopted a strategy of litigation by attrition,” litigating “numerous baseless defenses” despite “its lack of a justiciable defense,” and that this “strategy constitutes the very bad faith OCGA § 9-15-14 exists to prevent, and the very bad faith that warrants an award of attorneys’ fees and expenses.” In September 2014, Coen dismissed with prejudice the remaining counts in his complaint. In 2015, Coen filed three abusive litigation lawsuits in Fulton County State Court: one against Sutherland and Lawrence-Hardy, one against Mendel, and one against Aptean, CDC Software, and five officers of CDC Software. In May 2016, Coen dismissed these lawsuits without prejudice.[3] In September 2016, Coen filed a single renewal action under OCGA § 9-2-61 (a) in DeKalb County State Court, naming all of the defendants from the previous three abusive litigation lawsuits. He again raised a claim of abusive litigation and specifically requested damages for injury to his peace, happiness, or feelings; punitive damages; and attorney fees for the pending action.[4] Coen alleged, among other things, that in the contract lawsuit, the defendants “asserted baseless primary defenses and numerous boilerplate affirmative defenses, all without substantial justification and for a wrongful purpose.” He alleged that this intentionally overaggressive litigation strategy . . . caused delay[;] unnecessarily caused him time, trouble and mental distress; unnecessarily expanded the proceedings; and unjustifiably forced [him] to incur substantial fees and expenses at high financial risk to himself and his family, all to recover an obviously valid debt. In October 2016, the defendants filed motions to dismiss Coen’s claims. In May 2017, after a hearing, the trial court granted the motions to dismiss. The court held that Coen’s claim of abusive litigation failed because he did not plead special damages (and he had already recovered attorney fees and litigation costs for the underlying contract lawsuit); his claim for damages based on injury to peace, happiness, or feelings was not a stand-alone claim but was subsumed by – and thus failed with – the abusive litigation claim; and his pleading for punitive damages failed because punitive damages are not available in an abusive litigation lawsuit. The court also held that Coen’s claim for attorney fees failed because it was ancillary to his abusive litigation claim. Coen appealed. The Court of Appeals affirmed in part and reversed in part the trial court’s dismissal of Coen’s complaint. See Coen, 346 Ga. App. at 816. In Division 2 of its opinion, the Court of Appeals affirmed the dismissal of Coen’s request for punitive damages, agreeing with the trial court’s holding that a plaintiff cannot recover punitive damages for a statutory abusive litigation claim. See id. at 823-824. The Court of Appeals reversed the trial court’s holding that Coen was required to plead special damages, see id. at 821-823; that holding is not at issue here. Coen petitioned for a writ of certiorari, arguing that the Court of Appeals’s holding as to punitive damages is wrong because OCGA § 51-7-83 (a) authorizes the recovery of punitive damages in an abusive litigation case (not based solely on injured feelings). We granted his petition to consider that question.[5] 2. (a) The abusive litigation statutory tort In 1989, the General Assembly created the statutory tort of “abusive litigation,” defined as follows: Any person who takes an active part in the initiation, continuation, or procurement of civil proceedings against another shall be liable for abusive litigation if such person acts: With malice; and Without substantial justification. OCGA § 51-7-81. The statutory tort expressly replaced all other abusive litigation torts except OCGA § 9-15-14: On and after April 3, 1989, no claim other than as provided in this article or in Code Section 9-15-14 shall be allowed, whether statutory or common law, for the torts of malicious use of civil proceedings, malicious abuse of civil process, nor abusive litigation, provided that claims filed prior to such date shall not be affected. This article is the exclusive remedy for abusive litigation. OCGA § 51-7-85. As to the damages available in a statutory abusive litigation case, as mentioned above, OCGA § 51-7-83 (a) says: “A plaintiff who prevails in an action under this article shall be entitled to all damages allowed by law as proven by the evidence, including costs and expenses of litigation and reasonable attorney’s fees.” (b) “All damages allowed by law as proven by the evidence” “All damages” is a broad phrase. In Gordon v. Atlanta Casualty Co., 279 Ga. 148 (611 SE2d 24) (2005), for example, this Court applied a broad interpretation of the adjective “all” in holding that a plaintiff who was entitled to recover “all sums” under an automobile insurance statute could recover for the death of his son in a car accident, explaining: The language of the statute is plain and it is not illogical. It clearly states that the insurer is to pay “all sums which [the] insured shall be legally entitled to recover as damages from the owner or operator of an uninsured motor vehicle.” All means all, every single one. Id. at 149 (emphasis in original; quoting former OCGA § 33-7-11 (a) (1)). Punitive damages are a type of damages “allowed by law” in tort cases under certain limited conditions. See OCGA § 51-12-5.1 (b) (“Punitive damages may be awarded only in such tort actions in which it is proven by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant’s actions showed willful misconduct, malice, fraud, wantonness, oppression, or that entire want of care which would raise the presumption of conscious indifference to consequences.”).[6]And whether the conduct required for a punitive damages award is “proven by the evidence” is left to the fact-finder. Thus, at first blush, the text of OCGA § 51-7-83 (a) appears to encompass punitive damages. The defendants point out that this Court held in another case that a statute allowing a plaintiff to recover “any damages sustained” did not provide for the recovery of punitive damages. See Lyman v. Cellchem Intl., Inc. 300 Ga. 475, 477 (796 SE2d 255) (2017). We reached that conclusion in Lyman, however, primarily because “punitive damages generally are not ‘sustained’ by a plaintiff, but are imposed upon a defendant based on that defendant’s wrongful conduct.” Id. at 477. Lyman‘s reasoning does not apply to OCGA § 51-7-83 (a), which does not limit “all damages” to damages sustained; instead, “all damages” is limited only to those damages “allowed by law as proven by the evidence.”[7] (c) “Including costs and expenses of litigation and reasonable attorney’s fees” The defendants argue that “all damages” is also limited by the final phrase of OCGA § 51-7-83 (a): “including costs and expenses of litigation and reasonable attorney’s fees.” The defendants assert that expressly including litigation costs and expenses and attorney fees would be unnecessary if “all damages” truly meant all damages and that the “including” phrase therefore implies the exclusion of punitive damages. But “[Redundancy is not a silver bullet"; sometimes what appears to be redundant or superfluous language actually functions to clarify a point that otherwise might be uncertain or confusing. Rimini St., Inc. v. Oracle USA, Inc., ___ U.S. ___, ___ (139 SCt 873, 881, 203 LE2d 180) (2019). See generally Wetzel v. State, 298 Ga. 20, 32 (779 SE2d 263) (2015) ("As used in statutes, the word 'including' and the specific terms that follow it may serve to expand, to limit, or to confirm by illustration the meaning of a more general term that precedes it."). Traditionally, litigation costs and expenses and attorney fees have not been clearly recoverable in abusive litigation cases. Attorney fees and expenses of litigation generally were not recoverable in the common-law torts of malicious abuse and malicious use of legal process. See Vogtle v. Coleman, 259 Ga. 115, 118 n.3 (376 SE2d 861) (1989) ("[U]nder malicious use and abuse of process, attorney fees and expenses of litigation for having to defend the underlying suit are generally not allowed as an element of damages.”). See also id. at 117 (“The American rule has been that expenses for defending a suit are generally unavailable unless authorized by a specific statute.”). After this Court’s 1986 decision in Yost, which redesigned the two common-law torts into a new tort for abusive litigation,[8] the Court of Appeals held that plaintiffs bringing abusive litigation claims under Yost were not entitled to recover attorney fees expended in defending against the original suit or in bringing the abusive litigation suit. See Ferguson v. City of Doraville, 186 Ga. App. 430, 433-434 (367 SE2d 551) (1988). Part of that holding was overruled in Vogtle, where this Court said that “a Yost claim, like its predecessors, malicious use and abuse of process, is an independent claim for damages,” meaning that the plaintiff could seek attorney fees and expenses under OCGA § 13-6-11 for bringing the abusive litigation counterclaim. Vogtle, 259 Ga. at 118. Vogtle did not, however, overrule Fergusons holding that the Yost tort did not provide for the recovery of attorney fees for defending against the underlying abusive litigation. See Vogtle, 259 Ga. at 119. Because the recovery of litigation costs and expenses and attorney fees in abusive litigation suits has historically been much less clear than the recovery of punitive damages – which, as we discuss below, were generally allowed in common-law abusive litigation torts – there was good reason to be express in providing for the former, while not similarly spelling out the historically less disputed punitive damages.[9] 3. Although the words of OCGA § 51-7-83 (a) indicate that punitive damages generally are recoverable in abusive litigation torts, we must also consider the legal context in which this statutory text was enacted in 1989. See May v. State, 295 Ga. 388, 391 (761 SE2d 38) (2014) (“In our search for the meaning of a particular statutory provision, we look not only to the words of that provision, but we consider its legal context as well.”). The Court of Appeals cited three of its prior cases in support of its holding that punitive damages are not available in a statutory abusive litigation action: Freeman v. Wheeler, 277 Ga. App. 753, 757 (627 SE2d 86) (2006); Sharp v. Greer, Klosik & Daugherty, 256 Ga. App. 370, 372 (568 SE2d 503) (2002); and Snellings v. Sheppard, 229 Ga. App. 753, 756 (494 SE2d 583) (1997). Snellings – which the Court of Appeals rules say is not a precedential decision because one of the judges on the panel concurred only in the judgment – was the only one of those cases that considered the language of OCGA § 51-7-83 (a).[10] The court purported to interpret the statute in light of its historical legal context, reasoning that because punitive damages were not allowed in common-law abusive litigation torts, OCGA § 51-7-83 (a) also did not allow punitive damages, because it did not include language expressly altering that status quo. See Snellings, 229 Ga. App. at 756-757. The problem with this reasoning is that Snellings misunderstood the legal history of abusive litigation torts, as we will explain in the following several pages. (a) Malicious abuse and malicious use of legal process Before 1986, claims of abusive litigation in Georgia could be brought as one of two common-law torts: malicious abuse of legal process and malicious use of legal process. See Juchter v. Boehm, Bendheim & Co., 67 Ga. 534, 539 (1881) (“That the right exists to sue in all cases of the malicious abuse, or use of legal process without probable cause, is universally recognized, and needs no citation of authority.”). See also Porter v. Johnson, 96 Ga. 145, 146-148 (23 SE 123) (1895) (explaining the difference between an action for malicious abuse of legal process and an action for malicious use of legal process). Petitioners seeking to bring either one of these claims faced sometimes high barriers. For example, plaintiffs in a malicious abuse of process case had to show that the defendant had an ulterior motive in bringing the litigation. See Porter, 96 Ga. at 146 (“An action for malicious abuse of legal process will lie where legal process has been employed for some objective other than that which it was intended by law to effect . . . .”). See also Ferguson v. Atlantic Land & Dev. Corp., 248 Ga. 69, 71 (281 SE2d 545) (1981) (“Regular and legitimate use of process, though with a bad intention, is not a malicious abuse of process.” (citation and punctuation omitted)). Malicious use of process plaintiffs, on the other hand, had to prove that the defendants acted not only with malice but also without probable cause in bringing the legal action. See Porter, 96 Ga. at 147-148. Plaintiffs also were required to show that their person or property had been seized or show some other special injury and damage. See Dixie Broadcasting Corp. v. Rivers, 209 Ga. 98, 108 (70 SE2d 734) (1952). See also Tapley v. Youmans, 95 Ga. App. 161, 175 (97 SE2d 365) (1957). Humiliation or damages to reputation were not considered to be special injuries, and neither were attorney fees or expenses and costs of litigation. See Dixie Broadcasting, 209 Ga. at 108. Important to this case, however, plaintiffs in both malicious abuse and malicious use of process cases could recover punitive damages. See Dixie Broadcasting, 209 Ga. at 106 (“‘The right to recover damages exists equally in both classes of cases; but vindictive or punitive damages are only allowed where the act of the defendant was influenced by malicious motives and without probable cause.’” (quoting Jutcher, 67 Ga. at 538-539)); Woodley v. Coker, 119 Ga. 226, 226 (46 SE 89) (1903) (“Punitive damages are recoverable in an action for the malicious use of process in a civil suit.”); Crusselle v. Pugh, 71 Ga. 744, 747 (1884) (“[A] right of action exists in all cases of malicious abuse of legal process, or its use without probable cause, and . . . punitive damages may be recovered in such cases.”); Multiple Realty, Inc. v. Walker, 119 Ga. App. 393, 396 (167 SE2d 380) (1969) (upholding an award of punitive damages in malicious abuse of process case). See also 1 Am. Jur. 2d Abuse of Process § 31 (Nov. 2019 update) (“Where an abuse of process is accompanied by malice, exemplary or punitive damages may be awarded.”). (b) Yost v. Torok In 1986, this Court decided Yost v. Torok, 256 Ga. 92 (344 SE2d 414) (1986), in which certiorari was granted to “determine whether the Toroks’ complaint stated a claim for malicious abuse of process.” Id. at 92. Instead of deciding that particular question, the Yost Court announced major changes to the two common-law torts dealing with abusive litigation.[11] The Court began the opinion by discussing the elements and complexities of the two torts and noting the difficulties plaintiffs could have in recovering under those torts, explaining that the torts “provide remedies only for extraordinary circumstances” and bemoaning the lack of “internal sanctions” that would allow abusive litigation to be addressed within the allegedly abusive litigation itself. Id. at 92-95. The Court then explained that the recent enactment of OCGA § 9-15-14 provided for some internal sanctions – namely, attorney fees and litigation expenses – but did not resolve the problems “relative to other elements of recovery, specifically: special damages other than attorney’s fees and expenses of litigation; damages for mental distress, where there is either wilfulness, or wanton and reckless disregard of consequences [;] . . . or nominal damages pursuant to OCGA § 51-12-4.” Yost, 256 Ga. at 95 (emphasis in original).[12] At this point in the opinion, to conclude its discussion of the damages that the existing common-law torts had not made sufficiently attainable, the Court observed in a footnote: “Punitive damages, however, are excluded, as the tort itself is designed as a deterrent. See OCGA § 51-12-5; Westview Cemetery, Inc. v. Blanchard, 234 Ga. 540, 544 (216 SE2d 776) (1975).” Yost, 256 Ga. at 95 n.3. The Court then turned from this background discussion of the perceived problems with the common law to re-defining the malicious abuse and malicious use of process torts in this way: The tort system can (and should) provide within its own structure the means for preventing its abuse. To accomplish this, we now delineate a remedy which will (a) merge, by redefinition, the common-law claims of malicious abuse and malicious use; (b) specify a procedural mode for the disposition of the claim; and (c) assure against chain-reaction litigation by requiring that any such claims be presented as a part of the underlying action. Id. at 95. After this statement comes a footnote discussing a law review article that the Court apparently considered in fashioning the new claim. The “unfounded litigation” cause of action proposed in the article would “allow recovery of punitive damages” based on “proof of malice or other aggravating circumstances.” Id. at 95 n.4 (citing Scott Partridge, Joseph Wilkinson, & Allen Krouse, A Complaint Based on Rumors: Countering Frivolous Litigation, 31 Loy. L. Rev. 221, 254-263 (1985)). The Court also cited a law review note that advocated for the creation of a uniform statutory approach to “the problem of unfounded litigation,” and explained that in such a claim “[f] actual dishonesty and other extreme abuses could justify punitive damages.” John Raymond Jones, Liability for Proceeding with Unfounded Litigation, 33 Vand. L. Rev. 743, 772 (1980). The Court proceeded to “re-define the elements of the common-law claim” in this way: Any party who shall assert a claim, defense, or other position with respect to which there exists such a complete absence of any justiciable issue of law or fact that it reasonably could not be believed that a court would accept the asserted claim, defense, or other position; or any party who shall bring or defend an action, or any part thereof, that lacks substantial justification, or is interposed for delay or harassment; or any party who unnecessarily expands the proceeding by other improper conduct, including, but not limited to, abuses of discovery procedures, shall be liable in tort to an opposing party who suffers damage thereby. Yost, 256 Ga. at 95-96. Damages are not mentioned anywhere else in the description of this new abusive litigation tort; the focus of the redesign was on changing the procedure for bringing the tort and changing what a plaintiff must prove to prevail. See id. Yost did not purport to tinker with the types of damages that had been available under the common-law torts.[13] Moreover, punitive damages were not at issue in Yost, so Yost‘s brief mention of them in footnote 3 (at the tail end of a background discussion that was largely dicta) was pure dicta, which actually mischaracterized the state of the law regarding punitive damages in abusive litigation torts. See, e.g., Jutcher, 67 Ga. at 538-539. In support of this dicta, Yost cited only former OCGA § 51-12­5, which provided for “additional damages” to “deter the wrongdoer from repeating the trespass or as compensation for the wounded feelings of the plaintiff,” and Westview Cemetery, which held that when a plaintiff’s only injury was to peace, happiness, or feelings under the predecessor statute to the first sentence of OCGA § 51-12­6, allowing her to recover punitive damages as well would be an impermissible double recovery, see Westview Cemetery, 234 Ga. at 544-545.[14] Because footnote 3 comes at the end of the sentence that discusses the recovery of damages for mental distress based on a defendant’s willfulness or wanton and reckless disregard for consequences, perhaps the footnote was a clumsily worded attempt to say that punitive damages generally are not recoverable in addition to injured feelings damages in an abusive litigation tort – as is statutorily the rule today due to the second sentence of OCGA § 51-12-6.[15] As discussed above, in Yosts holdings – the new cause of action and procedures that the Court crafted – there is no mention of punitive damages being categorically unavailable. Instead, the Court included a footnote referencing the scholarly sources presumably used in crafting the new tort, both of which suggest that punitive damages should be available in some abusive litigation cases. In sum, the incorrect (or at least overbroad) dicta in Yost’s footnote 3 did not change the state of the law as to the recovery of punitive damages for abusive litigation torts.[16] (c) Snellings v. Sheppard After Yost, the law in Georgia as to the availability of punitive damages in abusive litigation torts remained what it had always been – punitive damages were generally recoverable in such cases as long as the plaintiffs were not seeking damages solely for injury to peace, happiness, or feelings. This was the legal landscape in which the General Assembly erected the new, statutory tort of “abusive litigation” in 1989. Eight years later in Snellings, the Court of Appeals addressed the question of whether the statutory abusive litigation tort allowed punitive damages to be recovered under OCGA § 51-7-83 (a). The Court of Appeals acknowledged the statute’s broad “all damages allowed by law” text. See Snellings, 229 Ga. App. at 756. But the court then quoted Yost‘s footnote 3 for the proposition that under the common law at the time the statute was enacted, “punitive damages were excluded from the recoverable damages for the tort of civil abuse of process.” Id. (citation and punctuation omitted). To derogate from that common law, the court reasoned, the General Assembly would have to be more explicit “to change the law so dramatically as to authorize by silence the imposition of punitive damages when such damages were hitherto forbidden.” Id. at 756­757. As explained above, however, Snellings s premise that the law at the time OCGA § 51-7-83 (a) was enacted did not allow punitive damages – a premise based solely on the misleading dicta in Yost – was wrong, and that faulty premise led the court to an incorrect conclusion.[17] In fact, because the opposite of the premise on which Snellings relied is true, the reasoning employed in that opinion actually supports the opposite of Snellings s conclusion. Because the General Assembly was legislating in a legal landscape where punitive damages were – and traditionally had been – allowed in abusive litigation torts (not based solely on injured feelings), it is presumed that the phrase “all damages allowed by law” includes punitive damages. See May, 295 Ga. at 397 (“[T]o the extent that statutory text can be as reasonably understood to conform to the common law as to depart from it, the courts usually presume that the legislature meant to adhere to the common law.”).[18] The defendants contend that even if the holding of Snellings was wrong, we should follow it because the legislature did not amend OCGA § 51-7-83 (a) after Snellings or after the Court of Appeals reached the same conclusion in Sharp in 2002. This Court has said that “[w]here a statute has, by a long series of decisions, received a judicial construction in which the General Assembly has acquiesced and thereby given its implicit legislative approval, the courts should not disturb that settled construction.” Abernathy v. City of Albany, 269 Ga. 88, 90 (495 SE2d 13) (1998). But we have also recognized that “it can be perilous to rely heavily on legislative silence and inaction to conclude that a court’s interpretation of a statute is correct.” State v. Jackson, 287 Ga. 646, 660 n.8 (697 SE2d 757) (2010). We are unpersuaded that the fact that OCGA § 51-7-83 (a) has never been amended indicates legislative approval of Snellings and Sharp. Snellings was not viewed as precedent even by the Court of Appeals; Sharp was an alternative holding that did not address the language of the statute; and this Court has never before spoken authoritatively on the issue. There has not been a “settled construction” of the statute before today. 4. Finally, the defendants assert that because, as Yost said in its footnote 3 dicta, the abusive litigation tort is already a deterrent, the addition of punitive damages is impermissibly duplicative. Over a century of Georgia law before Yost disagreed with that broad assertion, and so do we. The defendants argue that because every plaintiff who brings an abusive litigation action must prove that the defendant acted “with malice,” see OCGA § 51-7-81 (1), and because punitive damages may be awarded when a “defendant’s actions showed willful misconduct, malice, fraud, wantonness, oppression, or [an] entire want of care,” OCGA § 51-12-5.1 (b), every abusive litigation plaintiff may be entitled to punitive damages on top of other damages. This argument clearly fails with regard to abusive litigation actions in which the plaintiff seeks damages only for injury to peace, happiness, or feelings under OCGA § 51-12-6, because as noted repeatedly in this opinion, punitive damages are expressly disallowed in such cases. As for abusive litigation cases in which the plaintiff seeks other compensatory damages, the defendants’ proposition may be true, but what is wrong with that? If an abusive litigation plaintiff recovers for actual damages sustained and attorney fees and litigation expenses, an additional recovery of punitive damages does not present the double-recovery situation that cases like Westview Cemetery say must be avoided. Instead, the plaintiff is made whole with compensatory damages and attorney fees and litigation expenses, and the defendant may also be punished with punitive damages. Each award serves a different purpose. That may be why the common law generally allowed punitive damages in abusive litigation torts. Of course, if the General Assembly shares the defendants’ fear that punitive damages may become too common in abusive litigation cases, it may amend the Georgia Code to prohibit the recovery of punitive damages. For all of these reasons, we conclude that OCGA § 51-7-83 (a) allows for the recovery of punitive damages in abusive litigation lawsuits not based solely on injured feelings. We therefore overrule the contrary holdings in Snellings and Sharp, disapprove the contrary language in Freeman, and reverse the Court of Appeals’s contrary holding in Division 2 of its opinion in this case.[19] 5. The defendants also point out some perceived deficiencies in Coen’s complaint. They assert that because the only damages Coen has specifically requested other than punitive damages and litigation expenses for this suit are damages for injury to peace, happiness, and feelings under OCGA § 51-12-6, and because he alleges in his complaint that they are his “sole injury,” his request for punitive damages must fail even if punitive damages are generally recoverable in abusive litigation actions. Because the trial court and the Court of Appeals held that punitive damages are never allowed in a statutory abusive litigation action, neither court addressed these potential barriers to Coen’s recovering punitive damages, and we did not grant certiorari to consider these issues. We therefore leave them to be addressed on remand.[20] Judgment reversed in part, and case remanded. All the Justices concur.

 
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