Travis Thomas v. Phyllis Robinson and Sylvester Robinson
Travis Thomas v. Phyllis Robinson and Sylvester Robinson
Opinion
Cite as
2020 Ark. App. 103Reason: I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS document Date: 2021-06-30 12:34:31 DIVISION III Foxit PhantomPDF Version: 9.7.5 No. CV-19-350
Opinion Delivered February 12, 2020
TRAVIS THOMAS APPEAL FROM THE JEFFERSON APPELLANT COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 35CV-16-610] V. HONORABLE ROBERT H. PHYLLIS ROBINSON AND WYATT, JR., JUDGE SYLVESTER ROBINSON APPELLEES AFFIRMED
BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge
Travis Thomas appeals the Jefferson County Circuit Court’s order granting his
motion to dismiss a complaint filed by Phyllis and Sylvester Robinson. The court dismissed
the complaint without prejudice; Thomas asserts that the complaint should have been
dismissed with prejudice. We affirm the circuit court’s order.
The genesis of this case is a car accident that occurred on 27 September 2014,
wherein Phyllis Robinson was injured after her car was rear-ended by Jaylan Haskin, who
had been rear-ended by Travis Thomas. This court has previously explained the relevant
underlying facts:
On 21 September 2016, the Robinsons filed a complaint against Jaylan Haskin and Travis Thomas. (Jaylan Haskin was dismissed from the case and is not a party to this appeal.) A summons was prepared that same day. In January 2017, the Robinsons moved for more time to serve legal process and explained that the summons had been “diligently provided to a process server who has diligently attempted to obtain service but cannot locate that Defendant.” They asked for an additional 120 days to serve Thomas, which 1 the court granted. On January 25, the Robinsons’ counsel filed an affidavit for warning order that stated:
1. I am attorney for the Plaintiff and am licensed to practice law in the State of Arkansas.
2. Plaintiffs engaged the services of a process server to obtain service on Defendant. The professional process server attempted service on numerous occasions but has been unable to locate the Defendant. See attached Exhibit A, non-est return of service.
3. After a diligent inquiry, the whereabouts of the Defendant, Travis Thomas, remain unknown.
4. Therefore, a Warning Order should be issued for this Defendant and duly published.
The record reflects, and the parties do not dispute, that no exhibit was filed with the affidavit although paragraph 2 indicated that an exhibit was attached to the affidavit.
In due course the clerk issued a warning order. Thereafter, the Robinsons filed a second affidavit that recited (1) the warning order had been published in the time and manner required by law, and (2) a restricted- delivery mailing of the summons, complaint, and warning order to Thomas’s last-known address had been “returned to sender” marked as “attempted–not known” and “unable to forward.”
After Thomas did not answer the complaint within thirty days of the warning order’s first publication, the Robinsons moved for a default judgment against Thomas and asked the circuit court to find Thomas liable for the reasons alleged in the complaint. The court entered a default judgment. Thomas answered the Robinsons’ complaint (in early October 2017) and denied that he acted negligently or caused any harm to the Robinsons.
The Robinsons moved to strike Thomas’s answer as untimely. Thomas then moved to set aside the default judgment, citing insufficient service of process. He specifically argued that the Robinsons did not make the obligatory diligent inquiry into his whereabouts as Ark. R. Civ. P. 4(f) requires. He pointed out that the affidavit failed to provide details of the attempted service effort, including the address or addresses at which service was attempted; nor did the affidavit explain any further attempts to locate Thomas. The Robinsons stood on the affidavit but attached to their response the return of service in which the process server stated, “Non-Est unable to 2 locate defendant. Last known addresses which were no longer good were 66 Cypress Dr. Pine Bluff AR 71603 and 4400 Union Ave Apt 9 Pine Bluff Arkansas. No other addresses were found for the defendant.”
Thomas v. Robinson,
2018 Ark. App. 550, at 1–3,
562 S.W.3d 905, 907.
The circuit court denied the motion to set aside and granted the Robinsons’ motion
to strike Thomas’s answer as untimely. Thomas appealed to this court, and we reversed and
remanded, holding that the diligent-inquiry affidavit the Robinsons filed to support their
warning-order effort was insufficient. Our opinion stated, “Insufficient service of process
can void a judgment; and a void judgment can in turn be set aside. We therefore reverse
the circuit court’s order . . . and remand for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.” Thomas,
2018 Ark. App. 550, at 7,
562 S.W.3d at 910.
Upon remand, Thomas moved to dismiss the Robinsons’ complaint with prejudice,
arguing that the Robinsons had failed to obtain valid service on him, that the time to do so
had long since expired, and that the lawsuit must therefore be dismissed as a matter of law.
The Robinsons denied that the dismissal should be with prejudice, asserting that the circuit
court had previously found that they completed proper service on Thomas, and “[a]lthough
this finding was later reversed on appeal, under Arkansas law it triggers the protection of the
savings statute and precludes Defendant’s request for dismissal with prejudice.” The
Robinsons also argued that dismissal should be without prejudice because “the record
establishes that Plaintiffs, regardless of any prior service-related finding, timely completed
the steps for service by Warning Order, even if one of their steps was later determined to
be imperfect.” In reply, Thomas insisted that this was not one in which service was
completed and was later found to be defective. “Instead, Plaintiff’s [sic] simply filed an
3 insufficient and defective Affidavit for Warning Order and proceeded to claim service upon
the Defendant without complying with the requirements for service of process or
completing service upon Defendant.” On 12 February 2019, the circuit court issued a
three-sentence order that granted Thomas’s motion to dismiss without prejudice. Thomas
now appeals the circuit court’s order.
When issues turn on court rules and precedents about commencement of service,
which are issues of law, our review is de novo. Clouse v. Ngau Van Tu,
101 Ark. App. 260,
274 S.W.3d 344(2008). Service of valid process is necessary to give a court jurisdiction
over a defendant. City of Tontitown v. First Sec. Bank,
2017 Ark. App. 326,
525 S.W.3d 18.
Our service rules place “an extremely heavy burden on the plaintiff to demonstrate that
compliance with those rules has been had.” Williams v. Stant USA Corp.,
2015 Ark. App. 180, at 3,
458 S.W.3d 755, 758(citing Brown v. Ark. Dep’t of Human Servs.,
2013 Ark. App. 201, at 4 (emphasis in original)).
Rule 4(i)(1) of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure provides, “If service of the
summons and a copy of the complaint is not made on a defendant within 120 days after the
filing of the complaint or within the time period established by an extension granted
pursuant to paragraph (2), the action shall be dismissed as to that defendant without prejudice
on motion or on the court’s initiative.” Ark. R. Civ. P. 4(i)(1). However, Rule 4(i) must
be read in conjunction with other procedural rules, such as the statute of limitations, and
the dismissal-without-prejudice language in Rule 4(i) does not apply if the plaintiff’s actions
are otherwise barred by the running of the statute of limitations. McCoy v. Montgomery,
370 Ark. 333,
259 S.W.3d 430(2007).
4 Rule 4(f)(1) authorizes service by warning order if it appears from the affidavit of a
party or his or her attorney that “after diligent inquiry, the identity or whereabouts of a
defendant remains unknown.” Ark. R. Civ. P. 4(f)(1). Affidavits that are conclusory and
contain no indication of what steps were taken as part of the required “diligent inquiry” are
insufficient under the Rule. See XTO Energy, Inc. v. Thacker,
2015 Ark. App. 203,
467 S.W.3d 161. The burden is on the moving party to demonstrate to the court that he or she
actually attempted to locate the defendant. Morgan, supra.
Thomas argues that because there was no service within the service period, dismissal
of the complaint is mandatory, and a dismissal should be with prejudice because the statute
of limitations has run. He distinguishes this case from Cole v. First National Bank of Ft. Smith,
304 Ark. 26,
800 S.W.2d 412(1990), which the Robinsons cited to support their argument
that the savings statute applies. In Cole, the Arkansas Supreme Court held that the plaintiff
had completed service for purposes of the savings statute when it sent the complaint and
summons by certified mail addressed to the defendant at his post office box, and the
defendant’s stepdaughter accepted service and signed the return receipt. Although the circuit
court found that service had been perfected, the Arkansas Supreme Court held that the
defendant’s stepdaughter was not his agent and thus service had not been perfected.
Nevertheless, the Arkansas Supreme Court held that the savings statute applied; under that
provision, “if any action is commenced within time, and the plaintiff suffers a nonsuit, or
after a judgment for him the judgment is reversed on appeal, the plaintiff may commence a
new action within one (1) year after nonsuit or when the judgment is reversed.”
Id. at 30,
800 S.W.2d at 414–15 (citing
Ark. Code Ann. § 16-56-126(1987)).
5 Thomas argues that Cole is distinguishable because here, the affidavit and the default
order were drafted by the Robinsons’ attorney; thus, “the errors in those documents were
created by the Appellees, not by independent findings of the trial judge as in Cole.” Thomas
contends that the defects in the warning order “should have been obvious to the drafter
when the affidavit was drafted in June 2017.” Thomas also asserts that Cole differs from this
case because in Cole, there was an actual attempt at service by personal delivery of a mailed
summons with a return receipt. But here, the parties admitted that they never achieved
personal service and that they “then relied on their own patently defective affidavit to
procure a warning order.”
Thomas denies that this case involves “completed but imperfect” service and likens
the situation to McCoy v. Robertson,
2018 Ark. App. 279,
550 S.W.3d 33. In McCoy, the
circuit court dismissed a medical-malpractice claim with prejudice, and this court affirmed,
holding that while the return of service is prima facie evidence that service was made as
stated, there was “simply no proof of timely service presented to support McCoy’s claim
that the doctors had been served.” Id. at 14,
550 S.W.3d at 40. No green cards had been
returned for three of the doctors, and the one green card that was returned had been signed
by someone not proved to be the doctor’s agent for service. Thomas argues that the
Robinsons likewise failed to make a prima facie case of service.
Finally, Thomas tries to distinguish
Clouse, supra,in which the circuit court found,
and this court affirmed, that the plaintiff’s lawsuit against his former chiropractor had been
commenced by plaintiff completing timely but defective service of his complaint and
summons; thus, the savings statute applied. The Clouse opinion made clear that there are
6 two alternatives: either there is no service at all, in which case the savings statute is not
triggered; or there is timely but imperfect service, in which case the savings statute applies.
Thomas insists that cases permitting invocation of the savings statute have involved attempts
at personal service by process server or certified mail, except Cole, which involved a party’s
reliance on findings independently made by the court.
The Robinsons respond by asserting two undisputed facts: (1) they completed each
step for serving Thomas via the warning order and made a prima facie case as to proof of
service, and (2) prior to the expiration of the statute of limitations, the circuit court found
the Robinsons’ service was proper and entered a default judgment. They argue that based
on those facts and established law, the circuit court properly dismissed the complaint without
prejudice. The Robinsons contend that this is the exact situation in which the savings
statute is meant to apply—when a default judgment is entered but later reversed on appeal.
See Rettig v. Ballard,
2009 Ark. 629, at 4,
362 S.W.3d 260, 262(“The savings statute reflects
the General Assembly’s ‘intent to protect those who, although having filed an action in
good faith and in a timely manner, would suffer a complete loss of relief on the merits
because of a procedural defect.’” (quoting Linder v. Howard,
296 Ark. 414, 417,
757 S.W.2d 549, 551(1988))). The Robinsons also cite Cole’s statements that “the appellee had the
right to rely on the trial court’s award of a default judgment. The trial court found that the
appellant was properly served, and it would be unfair to expect the appellee not to rely on
this finding and believe that its action was timely commenced.” Cole,
304 Ark. at 31,
800 S.W.2d at 415.
7 In reply, Thomas continues to insist that the Robinsons never achieved any kind of
service on him and asserts that “[n]one of the cases accepting the ‘defective service’ excuse have
involved service by warning order.” (Emphasis in original.) He also cites a recent court of
appeals case in which we affirmed the circuit court’s decision to set aside a default judgment
and dismiss the complaint with prejudice, even though there had been multiple attempts at
service. Eliasnik v. Y & S Pine Bluff, LLC,
2018 Ark. App. 138,
546 S.W.3d 497. But in
that case, the circuit court found that the service attempts were not made in good faith; we
have no such finding in this case.
We hold that Thomas’s attempts to distinguish Cole and Clouse are unpersuasive.
The Robinsons timely filed their complaint and served Thomas via warning order, and
“[w]hen a plaintiff files his case during the limitations period, and serves it promptly but
imperfectly under Rule 4, if the limitations period has expired then he deserves the grace
period provided by our savings statute to refile his case and serve it properly.” Clouse, 101
Ark. App. at 266–67,
274 S.W.3d at 348(citing
Cole, supra).We therefore affirm the circuit
court’s decision to dismiss the complaint without prejudice.
Affirmed.
GLADWIN and WHITEAKER, JJ., agree.
Smith, Williams, Hughes & Meeks, LLP, by: Gene Williams, for appellant.
Bridges, Young, Matthews & Drake, PLC, by: John P. Talbot, for appellees.
8
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