Appellant, John L. Bakker, D.D.S., appeals two orders of the Washington County Circuit Court dismissing without prejudice two complaints against him for dental malpractice, breach of fiduciary duty, outrageous conduct, and invasion of privacy. The dismissals were granted based on failure to serve Appellant with the summonses. Appellant contends the dismissals should have been with prejudice because separate Appel-lees Anna Ralston and Judy Champlin had previously taken voluntary nonsuits. We find merit to Appellant’s argument and therefore affirm the orders of dismissal but modify them as being with prejudice.
This appeal consolidates two cases filed separately by Appellee Ralston and Appellee Champlin; both cases involve the same issue on appeal. The court of appeals certified this case to us pursuant to Ark. Sup. Ct. R. l-2(d). This appeal requires interpretation of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure, specifically Rules 4 and 41, and resolution of a conflict between a decision of this court and the court of appeals.
Appellee Champlin filed her first complaint on March 5, 1992. Appellee Ralston filed her first complaint on December 10, 1993. Both complaints were dismissed by voluntary nonsuits on December 15, 1994. Both complaints were refiled on June 20, 1995, but summonses were never served on Appellant. Neither Appellee Champlin nor Appellee Ralston moved for an extension of the 120-day period to obtain service as provided in ARCP Rule 4(i).
Relying on Rifle 4(i), Appellant filed motions to dismiss both complaints for failure to obtain service upon him. Appellant argued that, although Rule 4(i) provides that a dismissal for failure to obtain service be without prejudice, these dismissals should be with prejudice pursuant to ARCP Rule 41(b) because Appellees had previously dismissed their complaints voluntarily. The trial court entered an order granting Appellant’s motion to dismiss, but denying the request that the dismissal be without prejudice. This appeal followed. Appellant makes the same argument on appeal that he made to the trial court in his motion to dismiss.
We note that neither Appellee Champlin nor Appellee Ral-ston have challenged on appeal the trial court’s findings that service was not obtained or that an extension was not sought. Consequently, those issues are not before us in this appeal. We note also that Appellee Champlin and Appellee Ralston did not file a brief in this appeal.
Rule 4(i) provides in pertinent part that “[i]f service of the summons is not made upon a defendant within 120 days after the filing of the complaint, the action shall be dismissed as to that defendant without prejudice upon motion or upon the court’s initiative.” Rule 41(b), however, provides:
In any case in which there has been a failure of the plaintiff to comply with these rules. . . the court shall cause notice to be mailed to the attorneys of record . . . that the case will be dismissed for want of prosecution .... A dismissal under this subdivision is without prejudice to a future action by the plaintiff unless the action has been previously dismissed, whether voluntarily or involuntarily, in which event such dismissal operates as an adjudication on the merits.
Although without expressly addressing the overlap of these two procedural rules, this court has stated that when a dismissal is granted for failure to obtain service and the plaintiff has previously taken a voluntary nonsuit, the second dismissal is to be with prejudice. Dougherty v. Sullivan,
Dougherty,
Our decision today and our decision in Dougherty,
For the reasons aforementioned, the dismissals in these cases should have been granted with prejudice to future actions as adjudications on the merits. As is our practice in such cases, we affirm the result but modify to the extent the dismissals are with prejudice. See generally Ratliff v. Moss,
Affirmed as modified.
