CHENA OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY, P.C. and DALE HARDY, CNM, Petitioners, v. LAUREN BRIDGES, on behalf of S.B., her minor child; and BANNER MEDICAL GROUP d/b/a Fairbanks Memorial Hospital and Tanana Valley Clinic, Respondents. BANNER MEDICAL GROUP d/b/a Fairbanks Memorial Hospital and Tanana Valley Clinic, Petitioner, v. LAUREN BRIDGES, on behalf of S.B., her minor child; CHENA OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY, P.C., and DALE HARDY, CNM, Respondents.
Supreme Court Nos. S-17464/17473 (Consolidated)
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
January 21, 2022
No. 7580
BORGHESAN, Justice.
Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.gov. Superior Court No. 4FA-17-01308 CI.
Petitions for Review from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Fourth Judicial District, Fairbanks, Michael A. MacDonald, Judge.
Appearances: Scott J. Gerlach and Max D. Holmquist, Jermain Dunnagan & Owens, P.C., Anchorage, for Petitioner and Respondent Chena Obstetrics & Gynecology, P.C. Howard A. Lazar, Delaney Wiles Inc., Anchorage, for Petitioner and Respondent Dale Hardy, CNM. John J. Tiemessen, Clapp Peterson Tiemessen & Thorsness, LLC, Fairbanks, for Petitioner and Respondent Banner Medical Group d/b/a Fairbanks Memorial Hospital and Tanana Valley Clinic. Robert John, Law Office of Robert John, Fairbanks, for Lauren Bridges, on behalf of S.B., her minor child, Respondent.
Before: Bolger, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, and Borghesan, Justices. [Carney, Justice, not participating.]
OPINION
BORGHESAN, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
After Lauren Bridges‘s daughter S.B. was born severely disabled, Bridges sued the many healthcare providers involved in S.B.‘s birth. When Bridges‘s attorneys failed to timely oppose the defendants’ motions for summary judgment, the superior court granted summary judgment and then final judgment in favor of all defendants. Bridges then moved for relief from judgment under
We hold that the superior court did not abuse its discretion in finding the neglect of Bridges‘s counsel inexcusable and denying relief under Rule 60(b)(1). But we reverse the superior court‘s decision granting relief under Rule 60(b)(6). An attorney‘s neglect, whether excusable or inexcusable, cannot be grounds for relief from judgment under Rule 60(b)(6) unless the attorney abandons the client. Because that is not what the record shows, we reverse the superior court‘s ruling and remand for entry of judgment in favor of the defendants.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
In July 2010 Lauren Bridges gave birth to S.B. at Fairbanks Memorial Hospital. S.B. was transferred to Providence Alaska Medical Center and diagnosed with hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy.2 During her hospitalization at Providence, S.B. developed microcephaly.3 She now has cerebral palsy, seizures, and developmental delays.
B. Proceedings
1. Initial proceedings
In January 2017 Bridges brought a medical malpractice suit on S.B.‘s behalf. Bridges alleged that negligent care during labor and delivery caused S.B.‘s irreversible brain damage and resulting hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy, seizures, cerebral palsy, and developmental delays. Following procedural clarifications, the named defendants were Dale Hardy, a certified nurse-midwife who had assisted with the delivery; Hardy‘s employer, Chena Obstetrics and Gynecology, P.C. (Chena); and Banner Medical Group d/b/a Fairbanks Memorial Hospital and Tanana Valley Clinic (Banner).
Anchorage attorney Michele Power filed the complaint. In June the court granted permission to appear pro hac vice on Bridges‘s behalf to Michigan attorneys Todd Schroeder, Richard Counsman, and Brian McKeen.4
2. Summary and final judgment
a. Hardy and Chena‘s motion for summary judgment
In May 2018 Hardy, joined by Chena, sought summary judgment.5 Hardy presented a nurse-midwife‘s expert opinion that his treatment of Bridges had met the relevant standard of care. Bridges did not file a timely opposition, and in June the court granted summary judgment in favor of Hardy and Chena.
Bridges moved for reconsideration. She argued that Hardy‘s summary judgment motion “is prematurely brought before the Court and should be denied” and that “[a]s discovery progresses, [Bridges] will raise genuine issues of material fact against Mr. Hardy.” Chena and Hardy opposed reconsideration, pointing out that Bridges‘s late-filed motion for reconsideration had “failed to present any admissible evidence to rebut the expert affidavit.” The court denied reconsideration.
b. Banner‘s motion for summary judgment
In May 2018 Banner moved to compel Bridges to provide responses to Banner‘s discovery requests. Although the responses had been due in March, and although Banner had repeatedly inquired about the status of the responses, it still had not received them. Banner then filed a second motion to compel in June, claiming that Bridges had “served Banner with a set of severely deficient discovery responses” and had failed to respond to Banner‘s attempt to confer about the deficiencies. The court granted both motions to compel.
Banner then moved for summary judgment in July, relying on affidavits in which a neonatologist and an obstetrician opined that Banner‘s employees had met the requisite standards of care. Bridges did not timely oppose the motion, and the court granted it ten days after the deadline passed. Four days later the court processed — but did not accept for filing — Bridges‘s late opposition to summary judgment, which included two
In August Bridges moved for reconsideration of Banner‘s summary judgment. Bridges also attempted to file a motion under Civil Rule 56(f) for more time to oppose summary judgment,6 but the motion was not accepted for filing. The court explained that Bridges had already late-filed her response to Banner‘s summary judgment motion, that her response had not been accompanied by a motion to accept late filing, and that judgment had already been entered by the time Bridges‘s response was received. Bridges then filed a motion contending that her response had been erroneously rejected by the court clerk and arguing that the court should accept her late opposition to Banner‘s summary judgment. After a delay caused by Bridges‘s improper service, Banner responded to the motion and asked that it be struck from the record.
c. Final judgment
Chena, Hardy, and Banner all sought entry of final judgment, and in October the superior court granted final judgment in their favor. First, it noted that because over 30 days had passed since Bridges‘s motion for reconsideration, “that motion is taken as denied.”7 Second, the court granted Banner‘s motion to strike Bridges‘s response. Third, the court ruled that “because all of plaintiff‘s claims have been dismissed and relief denied, entry of final judgment is appropriate.” The court issued a separate order noting that Bridges‘s counsel had consistently failed to comply with requirements for pleadings filed by pro hac vice counsel and that future non-compliant filings would be rejected.8
3. Civil Rule 60(b) motion for relief from judgment
On the same day final judgment was entered, Bridges sought relief from both summary judgment orders under
Bridges first argued that under Civil Rule 60(b)(1) she was entitled to relief due to “mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect.” Contending that her attorneys’ staff had improperly calendared the date for response to Hardy‘s summary judgment motion, she argued that this clerical error led to her late filing and constituted excusable neglect. Regarding her response to Banner‘s summary judgment motion, she argued that it was filed “only days after the deadline” and that “any neglect should be deemed excusable” because she had been waiting for notarized affidavits from her experts and had filed the response promptly once the affidavits were received.
Bridges alternatively argued that the court should grant relief under Rule 60(b)(6). Relief is available under this subsection of the rule for “any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.” This ground “is reserved for extraordinary circumstances not covered by the preceding clauses” of the rule.9 Bridges argued that extraordinary circumstances were present because “[Bridges] has the required expert support through proper affidavits to show that questions of material fact exist which would normally prevent a grant of summary judgment.” Further, she argued that there would be no prejudice to the defendants because they “would then only be put in a position to have to defend a meritorious lawsuit, which . . . puts [them] in the same position they were in prior to the grant of summary
4. Hearing on Rule 60(b) relief
A hearing on the Rule 60(b) motion was held in January 2019. Bridges‘s counsel McKeen began by describing the history of the case. He indicated that the court could take testimony from himself or from Bridges‘s counsel Counsman; the court directed McKeen to “[c]ontinue on as you see fit.” McKeen continued to describe the case without being sworn in.
McKeen claimed that his firm‘s failure to timely respond to Hardy and Chena‘s summary judgment motion was because of differences between Michigan and Alaska procedure. In Michigan, he said, “We are used to the hearing date triggering the due date for the response.” He also claimed that Power had failed to alert pro hac vice counsel to the motion‘s due date, and mentioned as a “mitigating factor” that Counsman is “essentially a single parent” who was responsible for his daughter‘s wedding preparations the previous August.
McKeen then addressed Banner‘s motion for summary judgment, emphasizing that Bridges‘s counsel had not received the motion until July 11 even though it was filed on July 2.10 He indicated that it “was a matter of some considerable, you know, logistical challenge” to get notarized affidavits from plaintiff‘s experts “in the time frame that was required.” He said that Counsman had emailed Banner‘s counsel to ask for additional time to respond to the motion but that Banner had declined to provide an extension, even though McKeen “would have expected” a courtesy extension. Counsman then “somehow, perhaps because of distractions with the impending wedding preparations, . . . had it in his mind that the response was due on July 27th.” When Counsman ultimately filed the response, it was “[t]echnically” “three or perhaps four days too late,” which McKeen argued caused “zero prejudice.” McKeen also claimed that Counsman had had three different legal assistants since the case had started and that “it is extremely difficult to hire good paralegal talent” in Detroit.
The court explained that Rule 60(b) relief is available only if the movant can show a valid argument on the merits and pointed out that Bridges still had not filed an expert affidavit to rebut Hardy and Chena‘s motion for summary judgment. McKeen replied that although he was new to Alaska procedure, he had “read Rule 60 over and over and over again,” and did not “see where there‘s any provision in there that requires affidavits.” He also indicated that he could provide the court an affidavit from a certified nurse-midwife “within a very short period of time.” At the end of the hearing, McKeen said that if the court wished, Bridges‘s counsel would submit an affidavit. The court said that it would leave that to counsel‘s discretion.
Two days after the hearing, Bridges moved to allow the filing and consideration of a certified nurse-midwife‘s affidavit. The affidavit expressed the expert opinion that Hardy had violated the standard of care. The accompanying motion argued that after the court granted Hardy‘s motion for summary judgment, Bridges had “lacked a vehicle by which [Bridges] could submit an appropriate affidavit to the Court to show that [Bridges] could indeed show that a genuine issue of material fact exists.” Bridges argued that the court should deem the affidavit timely filed under Alaska Civil Rules 6(b)(2) and 94.11 Chena, Hardy, and Banner opposed Bridges‘s motion to allow the affidavit.
5. Superior court‘s orders granting relief from judgment and defendants’ petitions for review
In early April the court granted Bridges‘s Rule 60(b) motion as well as her motion to
Hardy, Chena, and Banner petitioned for review of the order granting Bridges‘s Rule 60(b) motion, and we granted review.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“A trial court‘s ruling on an
IV. DISCUSSION
The superior court denied relief under Rule 60(b)(1) but granted relief under Rule 60(b)(6). Hardy, Chena, and Banner argue that the superior court abused its discretion by granting relief under Rule 60(b)(6); Bridges responds that we may affirm on the alternative ground that the superior court abused its discretion by not granting relief under Rule 60(b)(1).14 To address these issues in a logical sequence, we first consider Rule 60(b)(1), then Rule 60(b)(6).
A. The Superior Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion By Refusing To Grant Relief Under Rule 60(b)(1).
Bridges argues that the superior court erred by failing to grant relief under Rule 60(b)(1), which permits the court to grant relief from judgment due to “mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect.” First, she argues that her counsel‘s neglect was excusable. Second, she argues that even if her counsel‘s neglect is inexcusable, it falls within what she calls an “injustice exception” that permits relief under Rule 60(b)(1). Neither argument is persuasive.
1. The superior court did not abuse its discretion by finding the failures of Bridges‘s counsel inexcusable.
We clarified our approach to excusable neglect under Rule 60(b)(1) in Erica G. v. Taylor Taxi, Inc.15 In that case, we quoted the Second Circuit‘s description “of excusable neglect as a somewhat elastic concept that may encompass delays caused by inadvertence, mistake, or carelessness, at least when the delay was not long, there is no bad faith, there is no prejudice to the opposing party,
As an initial matter, no admissible evidence supports the excuses proffered by Bridges‘s counsel at the January 2019 hearing. Counsel‘s unsworn statements were not testimony.
But even if we consider these unsworn representations as admissible evidence, the superior court did not abuse its discretion by finding these excuses insufficient. Whether pro hac vice counsel missed Hardy and Chena‘s summary judgment motion response deadline because office staff incorrectly calendared it or counsel miscalculated it due to unfamiliarity with Alaska procedure, neither mistake excuses local counsel‘s failure to correct the error. And deciding to wait for expert affidavits before opposing Banner‘s summary judgment — i.e., knowingly missing a response deadline while waiting for the relevant evidence without asking the court for an extension — is simply no excuse at all. Counsel‘s explanations make discerning the actual reason for the failures difficult. In addition to claiming that counsel purposely waited for expert affidavits before opposing Banner‘s summary judgment, Bridges‘s counsel also represented that his colleague had the wrong date in mind because he was busy planning his daughter‘s wedding. The fact that several of these excuses were not mentioned until the hearing further supports the superior court‘s decision not to credit them. These inconsistent and insufficient explanations are very similar to the “shifting” and “myriad” explanations in Erica G., which “undercut even those that most closely resemble excusable neglect.”18 The superior court did not abuse its discretion by holding that Bridges‘s attorneys’ errors were not excusable.19
2. Attorney neglect that is not excusable does not warrant relief under Rule 60(b)(1), even to prevent injustice.
Bridges argues that even if her attorneys’ neglect is not excusable, she is entitled to relief under Rule 60(b)(1) to avoid injustice, citing our decisions in Erica G.20 and Farrell ex rel. Farrell v. Dome Laboratories, Inc., a Division of Miles Laboratories, Inc.21 In Farrell we stated that although “an attorney‘s failure to advance a legal argument or claim, whether attributable to mistake, inadvertence or neglect, typically does not warrant relief,” an exception is recognized “where the failure to provide relief would result in an injustice.”22 Bridges contends that this exception “would then apply in this case if the mistakes of counsel were inexcusable.” But that is an incorrect reading of Farrell, the decisions it relied on, and Erica G.
In Farrell we supported our statement about an “exception” by citing two Seventh Circuit decisions involving excusable neglect.23 In A. F. Dormeyer Co. v. M. J. Sales & Distributing Co. default judgment was
By citing these cases for the “exception,” Farrell established that although an attorney‘s failure to advance a legal claim due to mistake, inadvertence, or neglect is usually inexcusable, in exceptional cases an attorney‘s neglect may be excusable and can therefore be grounds for relief under Rule 60(b)(1).28 This was the case in both Dormeyer and Fleming: Even though the attorney in Dormeyer failed to properly serve the answer on the court and the attorney in Fleming failed to properly interpret the law, their conduct was nonetheless deemed excusable neglect. The Farrell “exception” is therefore similar to the U.S. Supreme Court‘s statement in Pioneer that “[a]lthough inadvertence, ignorance of the rules, or mistakes construing the rules do not usually constitute ‘excusable’ neglect, it is clear that ‘excusable neglect’ . . . is a somewhat ‘elastic concept’ and is not limited strictly to omissions caused by circumstances beyond the control of the movant.”29 This reading of Farrell is consistent with the language of Rule 60(b)(1) itself, which refers only to “excusable neglect” and makes no exception for injustice. It also explains why cases since Farrell have not discussed or applied an “exception” for inexcusable neglect under Rule 60(b)(1).30
Nor did our decision in Erica G. expand Farrell to create an “injustice exception.” In Erica G., after affirming the superior court‘s ruling that the excuses tendered by counsel were not valid, we also quoted Farrell in pointing out that Erica had “not carried her burden of demonstrating that . . . ‘the failure to provide relief would result in an injustice.’ ”31 Bridges emphasizes that we used this language only after determining that Erica‘s counsel‘s neglect was inexcusable; from this she reasons that a court may grant relief under Rule 60(b)(1) for inexcusable neglect if not doing so would cause injustice.
Bridges misreads Erica G. We stated that to succeed Erica would have had to show both “the existence of ‘mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect’ ” and “that the superior court‘s refusal to relieve her from the final judgment was ‘manifestly unreasonable.’ ”32 Our discussion of whether Erica had shown that denying relief would result in injustice pertains to that latter question. There is no indication that we intended to depart from the framework established by the rule‘s text and precedent by relieving the movant from having to show that the neglect was “excusable” — i.e. that “movant‘s excuse
B. Granting Relief Under Rule 60(b)(6) Due To Bridges‘s Counsels’ Neglect Was Error.
In addition to Rule 60(b)‘s five specific grounds for relief, the rule permits a court to grant relief for “any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.” Yet that broad language is limited by the “mutual exclusivity rule“: Grounds for relief described in the first five subsections of Rule 60(b) cannot be grounds for relief under the sixth subsection.34
Quoting our decision in Farrell, the superior court reasoned that although an attorney‘s “mistake, inadvertence or neglect[] typically does not warrant relief” under Rule 60(b)(1), “[a]n exception to this general rule is recognized . . . where the failure to provide relief would result in an injustice.” The court granted Bridges relief under Rule 60(b)(6) because of the “injustice that will result if this case is not allowed to proceed on the merits.”
The superior court‘s reading of the Farrell decision and resulting interpretation of Rule 60(b)(6) were erroneous. Because of the rule of mutual exclusivity, garden-variety attorney mistakes and inexcusable neglect that do not merit relief under Rule 60(b)(1) cannot support relief from judgment under Rule 60(b)(6). And although attorney neglect so gross as to constitute abandoning the client might be grounds for relief under Rule 60(b)(6), the record in this case does not support relief on this theory. We therefore reverse the grant of relief from judgment under Rule 60(b)(6).
1. We did not hold in Farrell that relief for attorney neglect is available under Rule 60(b)(6) to avoid injustice.
Our Farrell decision does not authorize relief from judgment under Rule 60(b)(6) for inexcusable attorney neglect, even to avoid injustice. Our reference to injustice in that case pertained only to Rule 60(b)(1).35 This is clear from our refusal to entertain relief on that ground because the motion was not filed within a year of the judgment from which relief was sought36 — a limit that applies to Rule 60(b)(1), but not Rule 60(b)(6).37
Moreover, in Farrell we expressly declined to consider whether the attorney‘s neglect justified relief under subsection (b)(6) because of the mutual exclusivity rule. “It is well settled that clause (6) and the first five clauses of Rule 60(b) are mutually exclusive. Relief under clause (6) is not available unless the other clauses are inapplicable.”38 We reasoned that the attorney‘s neglect “may have been cognizable under clause (1) had [a] motion for relief been filed in a timely fashion.”39 Because the movant did not point to anything suggesting “something more than one of the grounds stated in the first five clauses,” we concluded that “the mutual exclusivity rule therefore bar[red] relief under clause (6).”40 Although Farrell does not rule out the possibility of relief under Rule 60(b)(6) for attorney neglect, it certainly does not hold that relief for attorney neglect is available under that rule to avoid injustice.
2. Bridges is not entitled to relief under Rule 60(b)(6).
The petitioners argue that attorney neglect is never grounds for relief from judgment under Rule 60(b)(6) due to the mutual exclusivity
Bridges argues that we should adopt an approach taken by several federal courts holding that gross attorney neglect may be grounds for relief under subsection (b)(6). Although federal courts recognize the mutual exclusivity rule when interpreting the analogous federal rule, several circuit courts have also held that gross attorney neglect may be grounds for relief under subsection (b)(6). Chena and Hardy argue that our precedents explicitly exclude the possibility of relief based on attorney neglect under subsection (b)(6), no matter what variety. But we have not applied the mutual exclusivity rule in such airtight fashion.43
Some of our decisions suggest that attorney neglect can in rare circumstances be grounds for relief under Rule 60(b)(6). For example, our first case articulating the mutual exclusivity rule was O‘Link v. O‘Link.44 Noting the mutual exclusivity rule, we analyzed under Rule 60(b)(6) the appellant‘s claim that he had been “ill-advised by his attorney“; finding no “extraordinary circumstances” we decided that the claim “fit[] neatly into subsection (b)(1)” and denied relief.45 Our language left open the possibility that even if a claim falls under another subsection, relief might be available under Rule 60(b)(6) in “extraordinary circumstances.”46 Similarly, in Hartland v. Hartland we noted the mutual exclusivity rule before concluding that the case failed to “present an extraordinary case for relief under [subsection] (b)(6).”47 We noted that even if there were malpractice as alleged, it was “highly questionable” whether that “appreciably affected the result.”48 Our language again left open the possibility of relief under Rule 60(b)(6) in an “extraordinary case.”49
Other decisions suggest attorney neglect may be grounds for relief under only subsection (b)(1). In Neilson v. Neilson a father moved for 60(b) relief from a child custody agreement, citing “bankruptcy, poverty, medical conditions, and his attorneys’ performance.”50 Analyzing his claims under Rule 60(b)(6), we wrote that the factors the father cited, “and especially any neglect on his attorneys’ part, fall under the first clause of the Rule 60(b) umbrella: mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect.”51 Noting that Rule 60(b)(1) relief was time-barred, we concluded “that the superior court did not abuse its discretion in denying [the father‘s]
Our decision in Rill v. State, Department of Highways touches on the issue of gross neglect by an attorney but, contrary to Bridges‘s suggestion, does not resolve it.53 In that case, Justice Rabinowitz disagreed with the court‘s definition of “excusable neglect” and offered his own definition: “Rule 60(b)(1) can properly be read to include within the notion of ‘excusable neglect’ instances in which an attorney wholly fails to represent the client‘s interests, assuming that the client reasonably believed that the attorney would provide such representation.”54 The Rill majority addressed the dissent in a footnote: “The arguments raised by Justice Rabinowitz in his dissent relate much more to
Looking to federal law, we observe that the majority of circuit courts that have addressed this issue recognize gross attorney misconduct as a grounds for relief under
First, [Rule 60(b)(6)] is remedial in nature and thus must be liberally applied. Second, judgment by default is an extreme measure and a case should, “whenever possible, be decided on the merits.” Additionally, our holding makes common sense, as is evident from the facts in the case before us. When an attorney is grossly negligent, as counsel was here, the judicial system loses credibility as well as the appearance of fairness, if the result is that an innocent party is forced to suffer drastic consequences.61
We hold, however, that to warrant relief under Rule 60(b)(6) gross attorney neglect must rise to the level of abandoning the client. To allow relief under Rule 60(b)(6) for attorney neglect merely because it is gross (as opposed to ordinary) would be inconsistent with the principle that the attorney is the client‘s agent,64 negate Rule 60(b)(1)‘s express terms providing that only “excusable” neglect is grounds for relief from final judgment, and run counter to the mutual exclusivity rule. In Tani, for instance, counsel failed to file a timely answer, failed to serve the answer on opposing counsel, failed to obey a court order to serve the answer and to call opposing counsel, and failed to file an opposition to the resulting motion for a default judgment.65 The Ninth Circuit concluded that counsel had “virtually abandoned his client by failing to proceed with his client‘s defense despite court orders to do so.”66 Such abandonment is a prerequisite for relief based on attorney neglect under Rule 60(b)(6). As Justice Rabinowitz wrote in his dissenting opinion in Rill, in most cases “the client ‘voluntarily chose th[e] attorney as his representative . . . and [therefore] cannot . . . avoid the consequences of the acts and omissions of his freely selected agent.’ ”67 But that rationale is unpersuasive “in cases in which the attorney has provided no representation at all.”68 The kind of attorney conduct that is grounds for relief under Rule 60(b)(6) must be different not only in degree but also in kind from garden-variety neglect, whether excusable or inexcusable.
The record in this case does not establish abandonment that can justify relief from judgment. Bridges‘s attorneys failed to oppose Chena and Hardy‘s summary judgment request, but moved for reconsideration shortly after it was granted and opposed Chena‘s motion for final judgment. They failed to respond to Banner‘s first set of discovery requests until compelled, but did ultimately respond, albeit with “severely deficient” responses. They were late in opposing Banner‘s summary judgment motion and requested an extension of time to oppose summary judgment, but then moved for relief under Rule 60. It is true that many of these filings were late, improperly served, or lacked necessary signatures under Rule
V. CONCLUSION
We therefore REVERSE the superior court‘s decision granting Bridges relief from judgment and REMAND for entry of judgment in favor of the defendants.
BORGHESAN, Justice.
