OPINION ON REHEARING
The following revised opinion is now the opinion of the Court.
In this workers’ compensation case, Employers Insurance of Wausau (defendant) appeals a summary judgment rendered in favor of Larry J. Halton (plaintiff). Plaintiff had served requests for admissions on defendant, along with other discovery requests, which defendant failed to answer timely. Based primarily on the deemed admissions, the trial court entered judgment that plaintiff recover approximately *463 $62,000 in workers’ compensation payments, plus lifetime medical benefits, and $20,000 in attorney’s fees.
In this appeal, defendant claims that the trial court abused its discretion in failing to grant defendant’s motion to set aside the deemed admissions and to extend time to file objections and responses to plaintiff’s requests for admissions. In urging this point, defendant claims that, under rule 169 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, it proved “good cause” for the court to allow withdrawal of the deemed admissions. We agree with defendant’s contentions. Because we conclude that its negligence in this matter did not rise to the level of conscious indifference, we reverse the summary judgment and remand this cause for trial on the merits.
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On June 16, 1988, about one month after this case was filed, plaintiff’s counsel mailed requests for admissions to defense counsel, which defense counsel admits he received “[sjhortly after that date.” The requests consisted of fifty-one statements covering every issue in the case. In support of his motion to set aside the deemed admissions, defense counsel asserted by affidavit that during the thirty-day response period allowed by rule 169, he had prepared handwritten responses to the discovery requests according to his usual custom. He maintains that he intended to submit these to his secretary for typing, which was also his customary practice.
By his affidavit, defense counsel also stated that on September 7, 1988, while reviewing the file for reasons unrelated to the discovery requests, he discovered that the handwritten responses had never been transcribed, mailed, or filed. He said that he immediately contacted plaintiff’s counsel to explain his failure to respond and to request an extension of time to prepare answers. Plaintiff’s counsel refused and informed defense counsel that he was preparing a motion for summary judgment based on the deemed admissions.
On September 9, 1988, defense counsel filed answers to plaintiff’s requests for admissions and delivered a copy to plaintiff’s counsel. On this same date, plaintiff filed his motion for summary judgment based on the deemed admissions. Ten days later, defendant filed its motion to set aside the deemed admissions and to extend time to file objections and responses. On October 4, 1988, the trial court conducted a hearing on defendant’s motions and on plaintiff’s summary judgment motion. One week later, the trial court denied defendant’s requests and granted summary judgment to plaintiff. We note that the case had been set for jury trial November 7, 1988.
II. REQUIREMENTS OF RULE 169
Rule 169 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure provides in pertinent part:
Each matter of which an admission is requested shall be separately set forth. The matter is admitted, without necessity of a court order unless, within thirty (30) days after service of the request, or within such time as the court may allow, the party to whom the request is directed serves upon the party requesting the admission a written answer or objection.
Tex.R.Civ.P. 169(1). The consequence of “deemed admissions” is that the matters are conclusively established against the admitting party unless the court, on motion, permits withdrawal or amendment of the admissions. The rule states:
[T]he court may permit withdrawal or amendment of responses and deemed admissions upon a showing of good cause for such withdrawal or amendment if the court finds that the parties relying upon the responses and deemed admissions will not be unduly prejudiced and that the presentation of the merits of the action will be subserved thereby.
Tex.R.Civ.P. 169(2). The “good cause” language was added to the rule by an amendment that took effect January 1,1988. The remaining language has been part of the rule since 1973. Since the 1988 amendment, few, if any, Texas courts have examined the “good cause” requirement under rule 169.
In construing the withdrawal prerequisites of rule 169, we must give the rule a
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liberal construction. Tex.R.Civ.P. 1;
cf. Sanders v. Harder,
A number of decisions have elaborated on the policy underlying rule 169. In Sanders the Texas Supreme Court stated:
The primary purpose of the rule is to simplify trials by eliminating matters about which there is no real controversy, but which may be difficult or expensive to prove. It was never intended to be used as a demand upon a plaintiff or defendant to admit that he had no cause of action or ground of defense.
Sanders,
As a consequence of these policies, the trial court possesses broad discretion to permit or deny withdrawal of deemed admissions. Eck
man v. Centennial Sav. Bank,
In most of the rule 169 cases prior to the 1988 amendment, the litigant seeking to avoid the consequences of failing to answer a request for admissions was required to show a legal or equitable excuse for his failure to answer.
Crime Control,
III. TEXAS CASES CONSIDERING RULE 169
In
Trevino v. Central Freight Lines, Inc.,
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In
Bragg,
also cited by plaintiff, the respondent was three months tardy with its responses to the requests for admissions. Respondent thereafter delayed an additional five months in filing a motion to extend the time to file its answers, said motion being filed on the date of trial (third setting).
Bragg,
In both Trevino and Bragg, the delays by both respondents in filing their motions for extension of time were quite lengthy (eleven months and eight months). Plainly, in Trevino, the attorney’s conduct in waiting eleven months until the day of trial to try to withdraw the deemed admissions, upon which the movant had relied in preparing his case, caused undue prejudice to the movant and would have resulted in unnecessary delay in the trial. Apparently, the attorneys in both cases gave no valid reason for their lack of compliance with the rules. More importantly, they offered no rationale for their delay in attempting to seek relief from their defaults. Such inaction by the answering party only compounds the initial breach of the rules and constitutes the sort of attorney neglect that the amended rule seeks to abolish.
Plaintiff also directs us to
Curry v. Clayton,
But, more importantly, Bragg, Trevino, and Curry are not controlling because they were decided before the “good cause” provision of rule 169 was effective. In our opinion, a respondent to a request for admissions is no longer required to show a legal or equitable “excuse” other than “good cause” in order to meet the first prong of the three-prong test for allowing the withdrawal of deemed admissions. Additionally, “good cause” can now be shown, even though a party may have been negligent, if his negligence does not rise to the level of conscious indifference.
Finally, in one of the most recent cases addressing withdrawal of deemed admissions, this Court held that where the respondent waited almost one year to file a motion to extend time to file answers, the trial court did not err in overruling the motion.
See Eckman,
Again, in Curry and Eckman, this Court seems to have stressed the answering parties’ delinquency in taking no adequate action to correct their initial failure to timely respond. A bare assertion that an attorney is “busy” cannot be enough to merit withdrawal, nor can waiting almost a year to attempt to remedy the original default.
IV. ANALOGY TO RULE 320 AND MOTIONS FOR NEW TRIAL
Defendant also directs us to rule 320 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, which governs motions for new trial after
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default judgments, urging that cases construing this rule should guide us in our construction of rule 169. Rule 320 provides, in pertinent part, that “[n]ew trials may be granted and judgment set aside for
good cause,
on motion_” Tex.R.Civ.P. 320 (emphasis added). Courts have widely construed the “good cause” language to require proof of three elements before a new trial will be granted after default judgment: (1) that defendant’s failure to answer was the result of an accident or mistake, rather than intentional or the result of conscious indifference; (2) that defendant has set up a meritorious defense; and (3) that a new trial will not cause delay or injury to the plaintiff.
E.g., Strackbein v. Prewitt,
Courts have liberally interpreted the first element in the
Craddock
formula, and each case depends on its own facts.
See The Moving Co. v. Whitten,
Moreover, courts interpreting rule 320 have said that “negligence alone will not preclude setting aside of a default judgment.”
Id.
at 402;
see also Ivy,
These cases, which construe the “good cause” language of rule 320, give us additional persuasive authority in our construction of “good cause” under rule 169. Perhaps most importantly, these cases hold that, in some situations, negligence can be a mere accident or mistake; it will not necessarily constitute conscious indifference and preclude a new trial.
See, e.g., Southland Paint Co. v. Thousand Oaks Racket Club,
V. SHOWING OF GOOD CAUSE IN PRESENT CASE
We turn to the facts of the case at bar. 1 As related above, defense counsel’s *467 affidavit set forth a number of factual statements. In our view, the most important statements are that he was never contacted by plaintiffs counsel about the tardiness of his answers and, upon discovering the missed deadline, defense counsel immediately contacted plaintiffs attorney and notified him that the responses would be filed late. Counsel’s affidavit stated that defendant disputed most of the issues that were deemed admitted, including the core issue of whether plaintiff had ever sustained an injury compensable under the worker’s compensation laws. Counsel further alleged that defendant would suffer “great hardship" if the motion to set aside and to extend time were denied. In addition, to reduce any possible prejudice to plaintiff, defendant offered to pay plaintiff’s reasonable attorney’s fees incurred in responding to defendant’s motions.
Defendant’s motion to set aside and to extend time also included factual and legal arguments supporting its “good cause” showing under rule 169. Defendant’s counsel pointed out that plaintiff had almost a month before trial to conduct additional discovery to prove the matters previously admitted. We reiterate that plaintiff had known since early July, when defendant filed its original answer, that defendant contested almost all material issues in the case.
VI. CONCLUSION
Based on the testimony of counsel in his affidavit and the additional evidence in the record, we conclude that defense counsel made a sufficient showing of “good cause” under rule 169 to warrant withdrawal of the deemed admissions. Although the responses were approximately fifty-five days late, counsel was diligent in filing the answers immediately after the missed deadline came to his attention. He was also diligent in pursuing the motion to set aside and to extend time to file answers. Plaintiff never sought responses to its discovery requests during this time, and plaintiff’s counsel never objected to those failures nor filed motions to compel or motions for sanctions to rectify the alleged discovery abuses.
Regarding the prejudice requirement of the rule, plaintiff has made no specific suggestion as to how he might be prejudiced by the withdrawal of the deemed admissions. To the contrary, defendant proved a considerable lack of prejudice. It is hard to find prejudice where the parties had almost a month before the trial in which they could conduct additional discovery about the injury and other disputed fact issues. Moreover, as we have stressed, plaintiff knew that defendant contested the very “injury” upon which plaintiff’s Industrial Accident Board award was based. Plaintiff cannot now claim prejudice by its “reliance” on the deemed admissions when he knew that defendant disputed almost every issue in the lawsuit.
The presentation of the merits will be served by withdrawal of the deemed admissions. Plaintiff will be required to prove such disputed matters as his injury, the producing cause of the injury, and the extent of his incapacity. As the purpose of rule 169 is to remove uncontested issues from the trial, we conclude that the factual matters disputed by the parties must be resolved at trial.
We have concluded that the facts of this case do not merit the ultimate sanction of deeming all facts in the case admitted against defendant. We hold that the trial court abused its discretion in failing to grant defendant’s motion to set aside and to extend time to file answers. We therefore sustain defendant’s first point of error.
VII. GRANTING OF SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Defendant asserts in his second point of error that, because the court erred in refusing to withdraw the deemed admis
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sions, the court erroneously relied upon them in granting summary judgment to plaintiff. In view of our holding under point one, we agree. The movant for summary judgment has the burden to show that no genuine issue of material fact exists and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Nixon v. Mr. Property Management,
Plaintiff’s cross-point is left without support by our ruling on defendant’s points. We reverse the summary judgment and remand this cause for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Plaintiff asserts that the record is incomplete for lack of a statement of facts pertaining to the hearing on the motion to set aside. However, there is no suggestion that any evidence was presented at that hearing. Defendant filed the affidavit upon which it relied as an exhibit to its motion. A copy of the handwritten answers were also attached.
Where there is no evidence to be presented at a simple motion hearing, it is a widespread practice to dispense with the presence of a reporter and the making of a record. In the absence of any other showing, we will assume that this hearing followed the common course for hearings of this nature. In the absence of any showing to the contrary, we assume that the trial court only heard argument at the motion hearing. We will base our decision solely upon the papers filed with the trial court as they appear in the transcript. It is unnecessary to include argument in a statement of facts.
See Barnes v. Whittington,
