| ^Appellants, Joy Danielle Dachs, individually and as special representative of the estate of Elizabeth Anne Dachs, deceased, and Joshua Allen Dachs, individually, petitioned this court for review of a decision of the court of appeals, which affirmed the Greene County Circuit Court’s order granting summary judgment to Appellees, Barry D. Hendrix, M.D.; 2Family Practice Clinic; Hendrix Medical Services, PLLC; Paragould Physicians Management, LLC (hereinafter referred to collectively as “the physician defendants”); and Rebecca Fisher, L.P.N.; Cynthia A. Bartholomew, R.N.; Arkansas Methodist Hospital Corporation d/b/a/ Arkansas Methodist Hospital, and d/b/a Arkansas Methodist Medical Center; and Continental Casualty Company (hereinafter referred to collectively as “the hospital defendants”). Dachs v. Hendrix,
We granted review to address two issues of first impression: whether an amended complaint asserting survival and wrongful-death claims that were time-barred can relate back to a timely filed original complaint that alleged individual claims in addition to the survival and wrongful-death claims asserted by an improper party, and whether the death of a minor removes the minority-tolling provision of the Medical Malpractice Act. We are precluded from reaching these two issues, however, because Appellants failed to include in the addendum the hospital defendants’ brief in support of their first motion for summary judgment.
|sThis missing brief in support of the summary judgment motion is “essential to an understanding of the case” as required by Ark. Sup.Ct. R. 4-2(a)(8), because it contains argument and citations to authority advanced by the hospital defendants on the issues of Appellants’ standing or lack thereof and whether the original complaint was therefore a nullity, which is one of the very issues Appellants challenge on appeal and upon which we granted review. Moreover, we have recently stated that “an order of a circuit court cannot be reviewed for error when the addendum fails to include the documents on which the order was based.” Bryan v. City of Cotter,
We stated in Bryan that “[w]e have always shown a preference for a bright-line rule with an objective standard, requiring the inclusion of pleadings and motions that led to the order being appealed, over the subjective test advocated by the dissent.” Id. at 5,
It is Appellants’ burden to provide us with a record, abstract, addendum, and brief that allows us to understand issues presented on appeal. Meyer,
Rebriefing ordered.
