This petition for a writ of prohibition was filed by Prairie Implement Company, Inc., one of the codefendants below, asking us to prohibit the Circuit Court of the Southern District of Prairie County from entertaining a suit brought by Margaret McMullen. Prairie Implement argues that the writ should be issued because venue does not properly lie in the county in which the suit is pending. We deny the writ.
The law governing venue is clear. Since the adoption of our Civil Code in 1869 our statutes have defined certain local actions and directed that all other actions be brought in the county of the defendant’s residence. See Ark. Code Ann. § 16-60-116 (1987). The separate districts of a county must be treated as separate counties. Smith v. Waggoner,
The respondent’s brief mentions the fact that venue is not the same as jurisdiction, suggesting that an appeal would be the only remedy available to petitioner. Indeed, we have made this distinction when there is a dispute of fact. For example, in Safeway Cab & Storage Co. v. Kincannon,
This court understands that venue is a procedural matter, not a jurisdictional one. Mark Twain Life Ins. Corp. v. Cory,
In early years we held that if a defendant filed a motion objecting to venue or a motion to quash invalid service, and the trial court ruled against him, an appeal to this court served to enter his general appearance in the case no matter how erroneous the trial court ruling might have been. Benjamin v. Birmingham,
Petitioner, Prairie Implement Company, Inc., does not maintain a place of business in the Southern District of Prairie County, nor does it have a principal office there, nor was it summoned there. The allegations of the complaint are that Margaret McMullen, in her own capacity and as the personal representative of the estate of Buddie McMullen, sued Ford Motor Credit Company, Ford Life Insurance Company, and Prairie Implement Company, Inc. She alleged that on October 19, 1989, Buddie McMullen “agreed to purchase,” through an installment sales contract, a Ford tractor from Prairie Implement and that the purchase was conditioned upon Buddie McMullen’s obtaining life insurance from Ford Life Insurance Company in an amount equal to the purchase price of the tractor. Prairie Implement acted as agent for Ford Life Insurance Company and took an application for the life insurance policy, and Buddie McMullen agreed to pay the premium on the credit life insurance, which was to be financed along with the purchase price of the tractor.
The complaint additionally stated that a representative of Prairie Implement later informed Buddie McMullen that the credit life application was incomplete, that more information about his health was needed, and that Buddie McMullen supplied this
All three defendants moved to dismiss for lack of venue, and, separately and additionally, Ford Life moved for summary judgment because it claimed there was no life insurance policy in effect. The trial judge, the highly regarded, but now deceased, Judge Cecil Tedder, denied the motion to dismiss in the only order entered in this case, finding that venue was proper as to Ford Life under a special venue statute involving the alleged breach of the contract of insurance because it was “the insured’s residence.” See Ark. Code Ann. § 23-79-204(a) (Repl. 1992). In the same order, the trial court concluded that, since venue was properly established for the breach of contract against one of the defendants, venue was also established for the breach of contract action against the other defendants, Ford Motor Credit Company and Prairie Implement. In addition, in the same order, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Ford Life and dismissed with prejudice the plaintiffs complaint against Ford Life. The record does not show that Prairie Implement presented any other motions to the trial court, or that there were any other orders.
In this petition for a writ of prohibition, the petitioner Prairie Implement argues that since venue of the contract cause of action rested entirely upon the service upon the insurance company and since that cause of action against the insurance company was dismissed with prejudice, venue was no longer proper against the other nonresident codefendants. See Universal CIT Credit Corp. v. Troutt,
The trial court, in its only ruling in this case, also held that the complaint alleges misrepresentation and that Rule 18(a) of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure permits the joinder of independent multiple claims so that the tort action could be joined with the contract action against the defendants. If the contract action can no longer be maintained against the defendants, however, the misrepresentation claim could not either unless there is some independent basis for venue in Prairie County. A venue statute provides that “any action for any type of fraud” may be brought, among other locations, in the county in which the plaintiff resides. Ark. Code Ann. § 16-60-113(b) (1987).
In the petition in this court, petitioner Prairie Implement argues that plaintiff McMullen did not make sufficient factual allegations to state a cause of action for fraud. Rule 9 of the Arkansas Rules of
In sum, we do not decide either of petitioner’s arguments for the writ because they were not raised below. We are aware that the petitioner labels this an original action in this court, and the petitioner might argue, on rehearing, that it is not necessary in an original action to have raised the issues before the trial court when the facts are undisputed. In some original actions the argument might be valid, but not when the petition is based on lack of venue. Monette Road Improvement Dist. v. Dudley,
Petition denied.
