Case Information
*1
This opinion is subject to revision before final
Publication in the Pacific Reporter
IN THE
S UPREME C OURT OF THE S TATE OF U TAH
D AVID AND K ATHERYN ARVER , Appellants ,
v. T HOMAS , M.D., et. al., Appellees.
No. 20140197 Filed October 10, 2014 Third District, Salt Lake The Honorable Denise P. Lindberg No. 070901824 Attorneys:
Clark Newhall, Salt Lake City, for appellants Carolyn Stevens Jensen, Jesse A. Frederick, Salt Lake City, for appellees
C HIEF J USTICE D URRANT authored the opinion of the Court, in which SSOCIATE C HIEF J USTICE N EHRING , J USTICE D URHAM , J USTICE P ARRISH , and J USTICE L EE joined.
C HIEF J USTICE D URRANT , opinion of the Court:
Introduction
This matter cоmes before the court on an appeal following
the district court’s entry of an order purporting to reissue a judgment pursuant to rule 60(b) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. We conclude that the district court erred in reissuing the judgment and that we lack jurisdiction to address the underlying merits of the appeal.
Background
¶2 David and Katheryn Garver filed a medical mаlpractice action against Dr. Thomas Rosenberg and several other medical providers. The claims brought by David Garver were referred to arbitration. The claims brought by Katheryn Garver were stayed pending the outcome of the arbitration proceedings. The Garvers filed an appeal in this court shortly after the arbitration panel issued its decision but prior to the district court confirming that arbitration ruling or disposing of Katheryn Garver’s separate claims. According to the district court’s subsequent observation, the Garvers’ counsel nonetheless ―continued filing motions in the case, and those matters were fully briefed and addressed by the court without [any party asserting] that the court lacked jurisdiction.‖
¶3 On March 15, 2013, the district court entered a judgment confirming the arbitration decision and dismissing the remainder of the pending claims. That judgment resolved all claims as to all parties. We subsequently dismissed as premature the appeal that had preceded the March 15 judgment. The Garvers failed to file a separate timely appeal of the March 15 judgment. On May 21, 2013, more than sixty days after entry of the
March 15 judgment, the Garvers filed a motion pursuant to rule 60(b) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. That motion presumed that the district court had been divested of jurisdiction by the Garvers’ premature notice of appeal and that it lacked jurisdiction to enter the March 15 judgment. The district court аgreed with those contentions and purported to reissue the judgment. In so doing, it purported to ―amend‖ the judgment, but it did not grant any affirmative relief other than reissuance of the original judgment, and it did not substantively alter the original decision. The Garvers then filed another notice of appeal. We agreed
to retain the case but also notеd that our appellate jurisdiction may be limited to reviewing the district court’s order purporting to amend and reissue the judgment dismissing the case. We requested that the parties file supplemental briefing addressing the question of ―whether a premature notice of appeal divests a district court of jurisdiction to enter subsequent rulings on the merits of thе case before it.‖ We have jurisdiction pursuant to Utah Code section 78A- 3-102(3)(j).
Standard of Review
¶6 ―Whether a trial court has subject matter jurisdiction [is] a question of law, which this Court reviews under a correction of error standard. . . .‖
Analysis As discussed below, the Garvers’ premature appeal did not
divest the district court of jurisdiction to enter its March 15 judgment. Accordingly, the Garvers’ deadline for filing a notice of appeal expired thirty days lаter, and it was error for the district court to rule otherwise. Our rules of civil and appellate procedure provide a set of mandatory, and jurisdictional, prerequisites that must be met before jurisdiction transfers from the district court to the appellate court. Where a party fails to comply with the rules, jurisdiction remains with the district court. We begin by emphasizing, as we have done in a number of
recent decisions, that parties ―may appeal only from a final,
appealable order‖ issued in accordance with rule 7(f)(2) of the Utah
Rules of Civil Procedure, unless an exception to the rule applies.
J.M.W. v. T.I.Z. (In re Adoption of Baby E.Z.)
,
P.3d 619; see also U TAH R. P. 3(a) (―An appeal may be taken from a district or juvenile court to the appellate court with jurisdiction over the appeal from all final orders and judgments . . . .‖ (emphasis added)). C IV 7(f)(2) (―Unless the court approves the proposed
order submitted with an initial memorandum, or unless otherwise
directed by the court, the prevailing party shall, within 21 days after
the court’s decisiоn, serve upon the other parties a proposed order in
conformity with the court’s decision.‖).
See Bradbury v. Valencia
,
is improper if it is taken from an order or judgment that is not final, unless it fits within an exception to the final judgment rule.‖ (citation omitted)); A.J. Mackay Co. v. Okland Constr. Co. , 817 P.2d 323, 325 (Utah 1991) (―[T]here are exceptions to the final judgment rule when the order in question is eligible for certification under Utah Rule of Civil Prоcedure 54(b) and has been properly certified or when we have given permission in advance to the parties to take an appeal
(continued) This ―rule is a mandatory prerequisite to appellate jurisdiction,‖ and ―[c]ompliance with rule 7(f)(2) is not discretionary. The rule must be satisfied before a district court’s decision is considered final and appealable.‖ [5] If ―the final judgment rule is not satisfied, we lack jurisdiction over the appeal and must dismiss it.‖ [6] As we stated in Powell v. Cannon , where an arbitration panel’s decision is at issue, the decision is not final and appealable ―[u]ntil the district court enters judgment on the arbitration award.‖ [7] This is because, by statute, ―[a]n agreement to arbitrate providing for arbitration in this state confers exclusive jurisdiction on the court to enter judgment on an award under this chapter.‖ [8] Rule 4 of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure also
imposes strict jurisdictional limitations on the exercise of the right to
appeal. Once a final judgment on the merits is entered in a civil case,
parties have only thirty days to filе a notice of appeal from the
judgment, though the district court may extend this time period
under certain circumstances. Although a party may toll this period
by filing certain postjudgment motions, filing a motion under
from an interlocutory order under Utah Rule of Appellate Procedure
5.‖).
King
,
as a matter of right from the trial court to the appellate court, the notice of appeal required by Rule 3 shall be filed with the clerk of the trial court within 30 days after the date of entry of the judgment or order appealed from.‖). Id. 4(e) (―The trial court, upon a showing of excusable neglect or
good cause, may extend the time for filing a notice of appeal upon motion filed not later than 30 days after the expiration of the time prescribed by paragraphs (a) and (b) of this rule.‖). Additionally, as of November 1, 2013, an amendment to rule 4 provided district courts with the authority to reinstate the period for the filing of a notice of appeal, provided certain strict requirements specified by the new subparagraph (g) are satisfied.
rule 60(b) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure does not toll the time period to appeal the judgment. [11] Once a notice of appeal is filed, jurisdiction transfers from
the district court to the appellate court for most matters in the case. [12] But the notice must be timely —an untimely notice may ―trigger stern consequences,‖ precluding the appellate court from exercising jurisdiction. To be timely, a notice of appeal cannot be filed too late, but it also cannot be filed too early. At the very earliest, the notice may be filed ―after the announcement of a decision, judgment, or order.‖ If it is filed before the court announces its decision, there is no ―final order[] [or] judgment[]‖ to appeal from. At the very latest, Thomas v. Thomas , 2014 UT Apр 72, ¶ 2, 323 P.3d 612 (per curiam); see also U TAH R. A PP . P. 4(b) (providing an exclusive list of postjudgment motions that toll the time for appeal). As we recently clarified in Wisan v. City of Hildale , district courts
retain authority to deny motions under rule 60(b) even after a notice of appeal is filed. 2014 UT 20, ¶ 21, 330 P.3d 76 (―Notwithstanding the filing of a notice of appeal, the district court still had jurisdiction to rule on the 60(b) motion pending before it.‖). ―Howevеr, if the district court is inclined to grant the motion, the movant must obtain an order of remand from the [appellate] court before an appropriate order or judgment is actually entered.‖ Baker v. Western Sur Co ., 757 P.2d 878, 880 (Utah Ct. App. 1988) (emphasis added).
We also note that if the district court finds a valid basis for relief
under rule 60(b), and elects to grant that relief in a manner that alters
the original judgment, any such modification may be challenged by a
separate appeal.
See White v. State
,
District courts rеtain jurisdiction over other similar post-
judgment proceedings, including the issuance of stays pending
appeal and orders relating to enforcement of a judgment when a
judgment is not stayed pending appeal.
See, e.g., Cheves v. Williams
,
decisions, including in Wood v. Turner , that suggests that any notice of appeal—whether premature or not—still divests district courts of jurisdiction. Several of these opinions predate the current version of our rules of appellate procedure, however, which nоw clarifies that a notice of appeal must be filed, at the earliest, after the court announces its judgment. And none of the cases that the Garvers cite Supra ¶ 9. Federal courts, under a nearly identical federal rule of appellate
procedure, have concluded that a premature notice of appeal does
not divest the district court of jurisdiction over the case.
Riggs v.
Scrivner, Inc.
,
A number of Utah cases also reference the importance of a
timely
notice of appeal in connection with their discussion of divestment of
jurisdiction.
See, e.g., State v. Bisner
, 2001 UT 99, ¶¶ 29, 39, 37 P.3d
1073 (describing the ―timely‖ filing of notice of appeal as the act that
divested a district court of jurisdiction);
State v. Brown
,
cite Wood , which states that a ―premature filing of thе notice of appeal . . . should not be regarded as a defect which will ipso facto
(continued) deemed valid a premature filing of a notice of appeal where the filing was before the announcement of the judgment. Still, we recognize the confusion that the language in these opinions may have caused. Accоrdingly, we now clarify that any of our prior decisions generally stating that a notice of appeal divests the district court of jurisdiction should be construed as referring to timely notices of appeal. And to the extent our prior decisions state or imply that a notice of appeal filed before announcement of the judgment divests а district court of jurisdiction, we disavow such statements. In sum, jurisdiction transfers from the district court to the
appellate court only where: (1) the district court has at the very least announced its decision, and a subsequent final judgment is entered in conformity with the announcement; and (2) the appealing party files a timely notice of appeal. In othеr words, the timing of a party’s appeal is central to the transfer of jurisdiction from the district court to the appellate court. Here, the Garvers’ timing was significantly off, and
jurisdiction over the case therefore never transferred to the appellate
court. After the district court compelled arbitration and after the
arbitration panel announced its decision, the Garvers filed a notice of
appeal on November 16, 2012, challenging only the district court’s
order that compelled arbitration. We dismissed this appeal as
premature on May 8, 2013, because there was neither a ―final
entirely deprive the appellate court of jurisdiction. It is an
irregularity which would be grounds for dismissal of the appeal
within the discretion of the court.‖
New Era Indus., Inc
.,
case and cannot be challenged in the context of this appeal. order[]‖ in the case, nor did the Garvers properly seеk interlocutory relief. Before we dismissed the appeal, however, the district court
affirmed the arbitration panel’s decision on March 15, 2013, in what became the necessary final judgment in the case, disposing of all claims as to both Mr. and Mrs. Garver. Although the Garvers had thirty days to appeal from this judgment, they failed to do so. Instead, they filed a mоtion under rule 60(b), contending that the district court lacked jurisdiction to enter its March 15 judgment. In essence, they argued that their premature notice of appeal filed on November 16, 2012, divested the district court of jurisdiction, so the district court’s March 15 judgment was improper. The district court agreed and entered a ruling on February 21, 2014, granting the Garvers’ rule 60(b) motiоn and purporting to ―reissue‖ the judgment. This was error. As described above, a premature notice of
appeal does not effectuate a transfer of jurisdiction to review the merits of a case. Accordingly, the district court in this case retained jurisdiction. Parties cannot circumvent the jurisdictional deadlines prescribed by rule 4 of thе Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure with a postjudgment motion under rule 60(b) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure asking the district court to reissue the judgment. And district courts lack the authority to acquiesce to such a request. Where an appeal is patently premature, district courts need not be concerned that they lack jurisdiction to рroceed with a case. And where the jurisdictional question is in doubt, district courts have tools at their disposal, including the power of a stay, to resolve these concerns.
3(a); s
ee Powell
,
appeal of certain interlocutory decisions pertaining to arbitration, an order compelling arbitration is not one of them. It is true that an appellate court is the ultimate judge of its own
jurisdiction.
See Powell
,
(continued)
Conclusion The district court erred in assuming it was divested of
jurisdiction by the Garvers’ premature notice of appeal. That court had jurisdiction to issue the Mаrch 15, 2013, judgment; and, because the Garvers failed to timely appeal that judgment, we lack jurisdiction to address any challenge to the merits. The district court’s ruling on the rule 60(b) motion also did not substantively alter the March 15 judgment, nor could it under the Utah Court of Appeals’ ruling in Baker Thus, there is no issue that remains for us to review and we dismiss the appeal.
binding on an appellate court. Nonetheless, district courts retain inherent authority to manage their proceedings to promote efficiency in the judicial process and to prevent attempts (conscious or otherwise) to abuse that process. To that end, a district court may stay proceedings pending an appellate decision on the jurisdictional issue. Lewis v. Moultree , 627 P.2d 94, 96 (Utah 1981) (―It lies within the inherent power of the courts to grant a stay of proceedings. It is a discretionary power, and the grounds therefor necessarily vary according to the requirements of each individual case.‖) And rule 8 of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure provides an independent mechanism for аppellate courts to stay a ―judgment or order‖ of a district court in any circumstance where it appears a district court has exceeded its discretion by declining to acknowledge a timely appeal or by declining to grant a stay. Baker v. W. Sur Co ., 757 P.2d 878, 880 (Utah Ct. App. 1988)
(requiring district courts to obtain an order of remand from the appellate court before granting a rule 60(b) motion).
