Borg-Warner Acceptance Corporation (BWAC), a Delaware corporation, filed suit against Lovett & Tharpe, Inc., a Georgia corporation, in a Missouri state court in 1982. Lovett & Tharpe received notice of the suit but failed to appear and defend. The Missouri court subsequently entered a default judgment in favor of BWAC after concluding that Lovett & Tharpe had conducted sufficient business in Missouri to subject it to in personam jurisdiction. The present diversity action began several months later when BWAC filed suit against Lovett & Tharpe in the District Court for the Southern District of Georgia in an attempt to domesticate and collect the Missouri judgment. Lovett
&
Tharpe opposed a motion for summary judgment by BWAC on the grounds that the Missouri court lacked in personam jurisdiction, rendering the default judgment void and unenforceable. The district court,
Both parties to this action mistakenly relied on an ambiguous footnote in a recent opinion in arguing that this issue is one of first impression. In
Fehlhaber v. Fehlhaber,
BWAC cross-appeals claiming that the trial court abused its discretion in denying a motion to amend the complaint in order to seek damages provided by Georgia law against a “stubbornly litigious” defendant. We believe the appropriate disposition of this issue is to vacate the order of the district court and remand with instructions to re-examine the question. The district court’s order denying the motion gives no reason or explanation for its decision. We note that, depending on the merits of the defense, Lovett & Tharpe’s “stubbornness” may turn out to be a bad faith avoidance of debt, or it may have been a very successful litigation strategy.
REVERSED in part and VACATED and REMANDED in part.
