OPINION
Case Summary
Aрpellants-Plaintiffs Montgomery, Zuker-man, Davis, Inc., and Instant Access Storage Systems, Inc. (“Insured”) appeal the adverse summary judgment entered in favor of their insurer and its agents, Appellees-Defendants Chubb Group of Insurance Companies, Federal Insurance Company, and Chubb & Son, Inc. (“Insurance Company”). We dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. However, we grant Insurance Cоmpany’s request for an award of appellate attorney’s fees.
Issues
The dispositive issues may be restated as:
I.Whether Insured’s failure to file the record of proceedings with this court within ninety days of the date it filed its prae-cipe has divested this court of jurisdiction to determine the merits of this appeal. II. Whether Insured’s conduct in prosecuting this appeal, including its failure to disclose the fаct that it had filed a praecipe for the purposes of filing an appeal on November 1, 1996, warrants an award of appellate attorney fees in favor оf Insurance Company.
Facts
The dispositive facts reveal that on October 2,1996, the trial court entered the following order styled “ORDER ON MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT:”
Comes now the Court after having conducted oral argument on Defendant’s, Chubb Group of Insurance Companies and Chubb and Son, Inc. (collectively referred to as “Federal Insurance Company”), Motion for Summary Judgment, and finds as follows, to wit:
1. No genuine issues of material fact remain for trial.
2. There is no factual dispute and this cause may be determined as a matter of law.
3. The law is with the Defendants and against the Plaintiffs.
4. Federal Insurance Company’s Motion for Summary Judgment is granted.
(R. 77; pertinent part only). Accordingly, on November 1, 1996, Montgomery filed a timely “PRAECIPE FOR RECORDS FOR PURPOSE OF FILING AN APPEAL.” (Supp. R. 7). However, no petition for an extension of time in which to file the record was ever filеd in this court.
In January of 1998, Montgomery filed another “PLAINTIFFS’ PRAECIPE FOR RECORD AND NOTICE OF INTENT TO APPEAL.” (R. 188-191). The record of proceedings was filed in this Court on April 9, 1998, almost a year and a half after the first praecipe had been filеd.
Discussion and Decision
I. Jurisdiction
It is the duty of the Court of Appeals to determine whether it has jurisdiction
Indiana Appellate Rule 3(B) reads in pertinent part as follows:
[T]he record of the proceedings must be filed with the clerk of the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals within ninety [90] days from the date the рraecipe is filed.
Filing of the record is a jurisdictional act, and the failure to timely file the record is clear grounds for dismissal of the appeal.
American Fletcher National Bank and Trust Co. v. Pavilion, Inc.,
Insured argues the triаl court’s October 2, 1996, order granting summary judgment is not a final judgment upon which an appeal could be taken. Specifically, Insured points out that the trial court did not use the words “deсreed” or “adjudged,” nor did it enter a formal judgment or separate document entitled “Entry of Judgment.” Insured argues that these formalities are required under Ind. Trial Rules 54(A) and 58 before a final аppealable judgment is effected. We disagree.
A final appealable order or judgment is one which disposes of all of the issues as to all of the parties and рuts an end to the particular case.
Stowers v. Norwest Bank Indiana, N.A.,
The October 2, 1996, order, as set out abovе, plainly states 1) that no genuine issue of material fact remains for trial, 2) that the cause may be determined as a matter of law, and 3) that Insurance Company’s motion for summary judgment is granted. Even if the trial court’s October 2, 1996, order lacked some of the details or formalities generally required in a judgment, it is abundantly clear that the order disposed of all of the issues as to all of the parties and put an end to the case. Therefore, the October 2, 1996, order was a final appealable order or judgment.
Moreover, Insured сannot show that it was misled or prejudiced by the form of the October 2, 1996 order/judgment. Insured’s contention that it did not consider the trial court’s October 2,1996, order a final, appeal-аble order or judgment is belied by the fact that Insured filed a “PRAECIPE FOR RECORDS FOR PURPOSE OF FILING AN APPEAL” on November 1, 1996, within thirty days of the October 2,1996, order. It is axiomatic that an appeal is initiated by filing with the clerk of the trial court a praecipe within thirty days after “the entry of a final judgment
or appealable final or-
Based on the above, we find that this court lacks jurisdiction to decide the merits of this appeal due to Insured’s failure to file the record with the clerk of this cоurt within ninety days of the timely filed November 1, 1996, praecipe. The untimely filing of the record has resulted in the forfeiture of Insured’s right to appeal and we are without jurisdiction to decide the merits of this appeal. Therefore, we must dismiss.
II. Appellate Attorney Fees
Insurance Company has requested an award of appellate attorney fees based upon Insured’s conduct in prosecuting this appeal. At the outset, we note that Indiana Appellate Rule 15(G) provides this court with discretionary authority to award damages in favor of the appellee when we
affirm
the judgment. Therefore, at first blush it would appear that we lack the authority to make such an award under the present circumstances under which we
dismiss
the appeal for lack of jurisdiction. Nevertheless, we hold we have the inherent authority to make an award of appellate attorney fees under the present circumstanсes despite the language of App.R. 15(G).
See Matter of Estate of Kroslack,
In the present ease, Insured filed a thirty page brief along with a ninety-one pаge appendix which contained evidence outside the record. However, the most important factor in our decision to award appellate attorney’s fees is that Insured failed to disclose in its Statement of the Case or elsewhere in its brief that it had filed a “PRAE-CIPE FOR RECORDS FOR PURPOSE OF FILING AN APPEAL” on November 1, 1996, within thirty days of the trial court’s summary judgment order. The filing of this praecipe, as noted above, undermined Insured’s contention that it had not considered the trial court’s order granting summary judgment a final appealable order. Moreover, Insured failed tо include in the record submitted on appeal the November 1, 1996, praecipe. This failure required Insurance Company to file a supplemental record containing thе praecipe and other important records supporting the trial court’s grant of summary judgment.
We recognize that an appellate tribunal must use extreme restraint when exercising its discretionary power to award damages on appeal because of the potential chilling effect upon the exercise of the right to appeal.
See John Malone Enterprises, Inc. v. Schaeffer,
We hold that Insured’s conduct in the present case was sufficiently similar to the conduct sanctioned in Posey to justify the imposition of a reasonable attorney’s fee. Therefore, we remand with instructions that the trial court enter an award of attorney fees as may be determined to be appropriate. See id.
Appeal dismissed, cause remanded for an award of attorney fees.
