Case Information
*1 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I
No. CV-14-721 RUSSELL CAGLE AND GENEVA Opinion Delivered MARCH 18, 2015 CAGLE
APPELLANTS APPEAL FROM THE POLK COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. CV-13-123]
HONORABLE TED C. CAPEHEART, JEFFREY TERWILLIGER SPECIAL JUDGE
APPELLEE
AFFIRMED BART F. VIRDEN, Judge
Appellants Russell and Geneva Cagle assert that though they failed to perfect service on appellee Jeffrey Terwilliger, they should have been allowed to take advantage of Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-56-126, the savings statute, because they were defrauded into believing service was not necessary. The circuit court dismissed the case with prejudice. We affirm.
Russell and Geneva Cagle were involved in a car accident with Jeffrey Terwilliger on September 4, 2010, and sustained injuries from the collision. The Cagles had until September 4, 2013, to file a complaint against Terwilliger before the three-year statute of limitations ran. On August 20, 2013, they filed their complaint and had 120 days, until December 18, 2013, to perfect service. A summons was also issued on August 20, but service was never completed, and the Cagles do not dispute that fact. On October 18, 2013, Terwilliger filed a response, though he had not yet been served, and in his response he reserved the right to object on
jurisdictional grounds. Specifically, in paragraph two of his response he stated:
The Defendant reserves the right to plead further and reserves objections on the basis of (1) lack of jurisdiction over the subject matter (2) lack of jurisdiction over the person, (3) improper venue (4) insufficiency of process, (5) insufficiency of service process[.]
December 18, 2013 passed without completion of service upon Terwilliger. On February 7, 2014, Terwilliger filed a motion to dismiss with prejudice pursuant to Rule 12 of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure. On February 25, 2014, the Cagles filed their response to the motion to dismiss, asserting Terwilliger waived any further need for service by filing a response to the complaint. They alleged they were deceived by Terwilliger into not perfecting service and attached an affidavit to their response to his motion relating the details of the alleged fraud. Orvin Foster, attorney for the Cagles, stated in the affidavit that a couple of days after he filed the complaint, a representative of Terwilliger called him and wanted to negotiate a settlement. Foster asserted the representative asked him to forgo service of summons during that time, thereby tricking him into letting the time for service lapse. The Cagles asserted the filing of the answer to the complaint reserving the lack-of-service defense was intentionally deceitful and in furtherance of the fraud.
Terwilliger’s attorney, Roy Gene Sanders, denied the allegation of deceit in his response and attached a series of letters from Progressive Northwestern Insurance Company documenting a lack of communication from Foster about the Cagles’ case. The letters to Foster document unheeded requests for medical bills, unreturned phone calls, and a general lack of communication by phone and by mail. The letters to Terwilliger notified him of a lawsuit that would be filed against him. Sanders also included an affidavit from Elizabeth Hill,
one of the claims adjusters involved in the case, who stated Foster repeatedly failed to provide information, and ignored her attempts to communicate with him. Sanders asserted the letters from the claims adjuster indicated the lawsuit was active, progressing, and gave Foster every indication that service should be completed. Hill, in her affidavit, also stated she had no knowledge of an agreement between the parties to “hold off on service.”
The circuit court dismissed the suit with prejudice, and we affirm.
I.
Standard of Review
The interpretation of statutes and court rules on appeal is de novo.
Ligon v. Stewart
,
II.
Applicable Law
Pursuant to Rule 12 of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure, certain defenses shall
be asserted in the first responsive pleading, or by motion before pleading, including the
defenses of insufficiency of process or insufficiency of service of process.
See
Ark. R. Civ. P.
12(b)(4)-(5) (2003). Rule 3 of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure provides that an action
is commenced by filing a complaint with the clerk of the proper court.
Bodiford v. Bess
, 330
Ark. 713,
commencement date is dependent upon meeting the requirements of Rule 4 of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure. Under Rule 4(a), the clerk must issue a summons upon the filing of a complaint. Rule 4(i) mandates the time limit for service:
(1) If service of the summons and a copy of the complaint is not made upon 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 upon motion or upon the court’s initiative[.]
Rule 4(i) must be read in light of other procedural rules, such as the statute of limitations.
Bodiford
,
supra
, at 715, 926 S.W.2d at 862.For example, the dismissal without prejudice
language in Rule 4(i) does not apply if the plaintiff’s action is otherwise barred by the running
of a statute of limitations. . Arkansas law is long settled that service of valid process is
necessary to give a court jurisdiction over a defendant.
Raymond v. Raymond
,
The Cagles argue that the savings statute should be available to them because they were
defrauded into believing they did not have to complete service. In
Forrest City Machine Works,
Inc. v. Lyons
,
[To] toll the limitations period and to invoke the saving statute, a plaintiff need only file his or her complaint within the statute of limitations and complete timely service
on a defendant. A court’s later ruling finding that completed service invalid does not disinherit the plaintiff from the benefit of the saving statute.
The savings statute permits a new commencement of the action, in other words an
opportunity to correct a dismissal without prejudice, by timely service of valid process when
the statute of limitations would otherwise bar the suit.
Rettig v. Ballard
,
The Cagles assert the present case is analogous to
Eddinger v. Wright
,
In contrast with Eddinger , the only evidence Terwilliger intended to mislead the Cagles into believing they had properly served him was the assertion that an adjustor requested waiting on service while they negotiated a settlement, which Terwilliger’s attorney denied
occurred. Terwilliger, on the other hand, included in his response many letters from the claims adjuster showing the progress of the case, the need for communication, and the imminence of a lawsuit. In an affidavit, Elizabeth Hill, a claims adjuster, stated she had no knowledge of an agreement between the parties that the Cagles would “hold off on service.”
Our supreme court has previously held that filing a response to a complaint before
service is perfected does not lead to service becoming unnecessary.
Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co.
v. Campbell
,
For the first time on appeal, the Cagles assert Terwilliger did not plead sufficient facts
to reserve the defense of lack of service in accordance with Rule 8 of the Arkansas Rules of
Civil Procedure. Appellant must raise an issue with specificity and make an argument to the
circuit court for it to be preserved on appeal.
Greenwood v. Anderson
,
The Cagles did not complete service, and the statute of limitations ran in the meantime. They are barred by our court rules, and the savings statute does not apply under the present facts.
Affirmed.
G RUBER and G LOVER , JJ., agree.
Orvin W. Foster , for appellants.
Matthews, Sanders & Sayes , by: Doralee Chandler and Roy Gene Sanders , for appellee.
