Lead Opinion
In this interlocutory review, we must decide if good cause existed to excuse untimely service of process when the plaintiff, who failed to negotiate an enforceable agreement with the defendant’s insurance representative to delay service, took no action to institute service of process of a lawsuit on the defendant within the time period required by Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.302(5). The district court held good cause existed and denied defendant’s motion to dismiss. We transferred the case to the court of appeals, and they affirmed. On further review, we affirm the decision of the court of appeals and the judgment of the district court. We remand for further proceedings.
I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
Sharece Rucker was involved in an automobile accident with Mike and Sherie Taylor on January 15, 2009. Rucker sought legal assistance from attorney Hugh Field to pursue a claim against the Taylors to recover compensation for injuries she suffered from the accident. Field corresponded with a claims representative for the Taylors’ insurance company for the purpose of settling the claim. The correspondence was primarily directed at updating the claims representative on Ruck-er’s injuries and treatment status and was exchanged between April 3, 2009, and December 8, 2010.
On December 8, 2010, Field sent a formal settlement demand letter to the insurance company. On December 20, claims representative Brent Kneip responded to the letter with a counteroffer for settlement. On December 22, Field mailed a letter to Kneip stating in part:
We are filing the enclosed Petition at Law for [Sharece Rucker], but will wait to serve it until our negotiations break down. I will give you 21 days thereafter to seek counsel and defend.
I don’t see any reason why we shouldn’t be able to work out a settlement.
Kneip did not respond to the December 22 letter.
On December 29, Rucker commenced an action against the Taylors by filing a petition in district court as forecasted in the December 22 letter. See Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.301(1). Pursuant to court rules, she was obligated to serve the Taylors with notice of the lawsuit within ninety days. See id. r. 1.302(5). Rucker took no action to satisfy this requirement, also as forecasted in the letter.
Instead, on January 13, 2011, Field sent another letter to Kneip, enclosing some employment and medical records concerning Rucker. Kneip responded to this letter on January 31. He thanked Field for the January 13 letter and requested additional medical records. Nothing was said about the December 22 proposal.
Nevertheless, Field and Kneip continued to negotiate during February and March, periodically exchanging offers of settlement. Kneip sent a settlement offer to Field on March 4, and Field made a counteroffer in a letter dated March 16.
The next communication between the parties was a letter from Field to Kneip on April 19. It requested an update on his March 16 settlement offer.
On March 29, the ninety-day period for service elapsed. On April 4, a district court administrator notified Field that no proof of service had been filed. The notice scheduled a conference to determine the
The Taylors subsequently filed a motion in district court to dismiss the petition for failure to accomplish timely service of process. Following a hearing on the motion, the district court denied the motion, stating:
The court finds that good cause exists for Plaintiffs failure to serve Defendants with notice of the lawsuit. The court finds that good cause, in this case, as the claims representative took advantage of the Plaintiffs straight forward offer to hold off serving the notice of the lawsuit in return for the exchange of additional information and continued settlement negotiations. From the affidavits and the argument of counsel, it appears to the court Plaintiffs attorney clearly was operating under the assumption that by continuing to correspond, negotiate, and exchange documentation, Plaintiffs counsel believed the allied claims representative had accepted and/or acquiesced in Plaintiffs offer to hold off service pending negotiations.
The Taylors sought interlocutory review, and we transferred the case to the court of appeals. The court of appeals affirmed the decision of the distinct court. It rejected the Taylors’ argument that good cause did not exist for failure to accomplish timely service of process because no express agreement existed between the parties to suspend service.
The Taylors sought and were granted further review. They argued that no agreement, either express or implied, was formed to justify the failure to accomplish timely service. They asserted Rucker made no offer that could create a contract to delay service of process because the December 22 letter from Field never explicitly mentioned the ninety-day service deadline, and Kneip was not a lawyer trained in the particulars of court rules to understand the legal requirements of service of process. Additionally, they argued Kneip never accepted any offer, and to hold otherwise would impose an unfair affirmative duty on claims representatives of insurance companies to respond to claimants’ attorneys making proposals to delay timely service. They argued this duty would bind insurance companies to agreements they did not want and did not expressly accept.
In response, Rucker asserted the parties formed an implied agreement by continuing to negotiate after the proposal was made. She also argued good cause existed to extend time for service because the conduct of the insurance claims representative in continuing to negotiate after the December 22 letter misled her attorney into believing the Taylors would not seek a dismissal for failing to accomplish timely service.
II. Scope of Review.
We review decisions by the district court to grant a motion to dismiss for correction of errors at law. Crall v. Davis,
When the district court makes findings of fact, those findings “are binding on appeal unless not supported by substantial evidence.” McCormick v. Meyer,
III. Discussion.
On many occasions in the past, we have interpreted the “good cause” standard for justifying the failure to timely serve the original notice and petition following the filing of a lawsuit. See, e.g., Crall,
We begin by putting our service rule in perspective. A civil action is commenced upon the filing of a petition in district court. Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.301(1). Our rules of procedure then require a plaintiff to serve the defendant with process within ninety days of filing the petition or risk dismissal either upon motion of the defendant or on the initiative of the court. Id. r. 1.302(5). The rule specifies in pertinent part:
If service of the original notice is not made upon the defendant ... within 90 days after filing the petition, the court, upon motion or its own initiative after notice to the party filing the petition, shall dismiss the action without prejudice as to that defendant.... If the party filing the papers shows good cause for the failure of service, the court shall extend the time for service for an appropriate period.
Id.
Although the wording of the rule does not expressly permit a defendant who was served beyond the ninety-day period to move for dismissal, we have held a defendant may move for dismissal. See Meier,
Regarding a showing of good cause, we have said:
“[T]he plaintiff must have taken some affirmative action to effectuate service of process upon the defendant or have been prohibited, through no fault of his [or her] own, from taking such an affirmative action. Inadvertence, neglect, misunderstanding, ignorance of the rule or its burden, or half-hearted attempts at service have generally been waived as insufficient to show good cause. Moreover, intentional nonservice in order to delay the development of a civil action or to allow time for additional information*600 to be gathered prior to ‘activating1 the lawsuit has been held to fall short of [good cause].”
Henry,
We elaborated on this definition in Wilson, stating:
“[G]ood cause is likely (but not always) to be found when the plaintiffs failure to complete service in timely fashion is a result of the conduct of a third person, typically the process server, the defendant has evaded service of the process or engaged in misleading conduct, the plaintiff has acted diligently in trying to effect service or there are understandable mitigating circumstances.... ”
Wilson,
This elaboration in Wilson illustrates the influence of the facts of each case in the interpretive process. In Henry, the plaintiffs’ out-of-state attorney was engaged in settlement negotiations with the defendant’s insurance claims representative over plaintiffs’ claim for injuries.
We affirmed the decision of the district court to dismiss the case. Id. at 193. We held that the defendant’s insurance representative’s knowledge that the petition had been filed and continued settlement negotiations with plaintiffs counsel did not establish good cause. Id. at 192-93. We found good cause based on these circumstances would undermine the purpose of the rule to move cases along in the court system once they had been filed. See id. at 193.
On the other hand, in Wilson, the parties sought to form an agreement to delay service for the purpose of continuing their settlement negotiations, which they memorialized in a pair of letters exchanged shortly after the plaintiff filed a petition in district court.
Although the plaintiff in Wilson, as in Henry, purposely did not timely serve the defendant because of the ongoing, good-faith settlement negotiations between the parties, we found, unlike in Henry, good cause could exist. Id. at 422. We reached this conclusion, even though the conduct of the parties — the agreement to delay service — undermined the underlying purpose of the service rule to move cases along, as in Henry. See id. at 423 (“[T]he court system has a keen interest, notwithstanding the wishes of the parties, to keep the wheels of justice in motion.”). We found the additional fact in Wilson of an agreement between the parties to delay service could support good cause. Id. at 422. Thus, we implicitly modified Henry’s conclusion, holding good-faith settlement negotiations can satisfy the good-cause standard when accompanied by an agreement between the parties to delay service. See id.
For sure, courts can always enforce the service rule on their own initiative to achieve its purposes, independent of the course of conduct of the parties. See Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.302(5). Additionally, a defendant may also uphold the purpose of the service rule by moving to dismiss for untimely service. See Meier,
Of course, this case would be quickly resolved on the basis of stare deci-sis if Rucker’s attorney and the Taylors’ insurance claims representative had entered into an express agreement, as was done in Wilson. Rucker, nevertheless, argues the same result is achieved with an implied agreement. We agree with Ruck-er that the holding in Wilson applies equally to implied agreements.
We have said of implied contracts:
A contract may be express or implied. When the parties manifest their agreement by words the contract is said to be express. When it is manifested by conduct it is said to be implied in fact. Both are true contracts formed by a mutual manifestation of assent by the parties to the same terms of the contract. The differentiation arises from the method of proving the existence thereof.
Ringland-Johnson-Crowley Co. v. First Cent. Serv. Corp.,
Or, as the Restatement (Second) of Contracts states:
Contracts are often spoken of as express or implied. The distinction involves, however, no difference in legal effect, but lies merely in the mode of manifest*602 ing assent. Just as assent may be manifested by words or other conduct, sometimes including silence, so intention to make a promise may be manifested in language or by implication from other circumstances, including course of dealing or usage of trade or course of performance.
Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 4 cmt. a at 14; see also 1 Joseph M. Perillo, Corbin on Contracts § 1.19, at 55, 57-58 (rev. ed.1993).
Yet, “[a]n implied-in-fact contract requires mutual manifestation of assent.” Nichols v. City of Evansdale,
We objectively analyze whether a contract has been formed. Anderson,
Additionally, it is important to recognize for the purposes of this case that “[e]ven though a manifestation of intention is intended to be understood as an offer, it cannot be accepted so as to form a contract unless the terms of the contract are reasonably certain.” Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 33(1) at 92. “The fact that one or more terms of a proposed bargain are left open or uncertain may show that a manifestation of intention is not intended to be understood as an offer or as an acceptance.” Id. § 33(3) at 92; see also Anderson,
Applying these principles, we conclude there was no implied contract in this case to apply the Wilson holding. The December 22 letter fell short of an offer to modify the ninety-day service requirement. The letter contained only a vague allusion suggesting that service would occur at some point in the future once negotiations fail. But, it was too vague to constitute an offer to alter the rule by delaying service in exchange for a promise not to seek a dismissal.
Furthermore, we recognize that silence does not normally constitute an acceptance of an offer. See Prestype Inc. v. Carr,
With no express or implied contract to serve as the basis for good cause, we return to consider whether the circumstances of this case can nevertheless satisfy the good-cause standard of rule 1.302(5). We begin by reiterating that
With respect to the conduct of Rucker in this case, we observe that her attorney, Field, communicated his plan to purposely delay service of process to the Taylors’ insurance representative, unlike the plaintiff in Henry, but like the plaintiff in Wilson. Compare Henry,
Importantly, the action by the insurance representative in this case in continuing to negotiate with Rucker’s attorney with knowledge that Rucker did not plan to timely serve the petition made it inequitable for the Taylors to subsequently seek dismissal of the case after an inquiry by the court administrator into the absence of service prompted Rucker to serve the Tay-lors. While mere knowledge by the insurance representative of the existence of a lawsuit is not relevant to the good-cause determination, see Henry,
The Taylors were not obligated to respond to the plan by Rucker to delay service. Yet, their actions in not responding to his plan and continuing to negotiate with knowledge that Rucker was going to delay service made it “understandable” for Rucker not to timely serve, and these actions brought the doctrine of estoppel into play to make it inequitable for the Taylors to seek a dismissal under the circumstances. By engaging in the precise conduct attorney Field requested under his plan, the Taylors insurance representative gave Field an impression the plan was acceptable.
Because the substantive rights of a plaintiff can be at stake through the application of a statute of limitations, it is important that the good-cause standard under rule 1.302(5) not be applied too narrowly. As observed under the analogous federal rule,
[a] dismissal without prejudice under Rule 4(m) for failure to serve process is intended to leave the plaintiff in the same position as if the action never had been filed. This raises a difficult question when the statute of limitations has expired between the filing of the complaint and the dismissal of the action for noncompliance with Rule 4(m). Although technically the dismissal is without prejudice, realistically if the plaintiffs action is now barred by the running of the limitations period his or her rights have effectively been terminated.
Moreover, one federal court has noted that the time limit for service was not meant to be “enforced harshly and inflexibly.” See United States v. Ayer,
IV. Conclusion.
We conclude the district court did not commit legal error by concluding good cause existed for the failure to accomplish timely service of process. We affirm the decision of the court of appeals and the judgment of the district court.
DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS AND JUDGMENT OF DISTRICT COURT AFFIRMED; CASE REMANDED.
Notes
. Until now, we seemingly had landed in favor of moving cases along. "To do otherwise permits cases to sit in the system growing whiskers, an unnecessary and most undesirable result.” Wilson,
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. Today’s majority effectively overrules our precedent requiring the defendant’s agreement or misleading conduct amounting to an estoppel to extend Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.302(5)’s ninety-day deadline to serve suit papers and replaces that clear, bright-line rule with an amorphous standard. A party may now evade the ninety-day service requirement without an agreed extension simply by negotiating and sending a letter the majority acknowledges
contained only a vague allusion suggesting that service would occur at some point in the future once negotiations fail. But, it was too vague to constitute an offer to alter the rule by delaying service in exchange for a promise not to seek a dismissal.
Under our existing precedent, exceeding the ninety-day deadline was deemed to be presumptively abusive and shifted the burden to the plaintiff to show justification. See Meier v. Senecaut,
This framework, I believe, provided clear guidance to the bar and to district courts. The majority now casts aside that framework and substitutes a new, circular approach under which “good cause” can be shown by “an examination of all of the
We squarely held in Henry that “settlement negotiations, even if done in good faith, do not constitute adequate justification or good cause for delaying service.”
If we were to allow delays in service for ongoing settlement negotiations, plaintiffs would have no incentive to serve the defendant within a reasonable time. Further, we do not see how service of the original notice and petition is a hindrance to the settlement process. Prompt service allows a defendant to investigate the claims and prepare its defense, thus contributing to its evaluation of a case. If the parties wish to continue settlement discussions beyond the limitations period, the plaintiff should secure a statute of limitations extension, in writing, from the defendant and the defendant’s insurer.
Henry,
In Wilson, we reiterated that “good-faith settlement negotiations standing alone do not constitute good cause for delays in service beyond the ninety-day limit.”
Moreover, this Court rejects the basic premise that negotiations to resolve an action can constitute good cause for failing to serve. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide clear, fixed dates by which action must be taken for many salutary purposes. Opposing parties have the benefit of being able to know (or at least predict) when action will be taken against them; clients have the assurance that their counsel will be required to afford timely attention to their case; and the court system is assured that parties will not “reserve a table” by filing a complaint, and then negotiate endlessly at their leisure while the court’s docket becomes crowded with aging, dormant cases.
Rees v. Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs, Civ. Action No. 07-CV-00230-MSK-KLM,
In Wilson, we held that an agreement to delay service may constitute “good cause” under rule 1.302.
It nearly goes without saying that the doctrine of stare decisis is one of the bedrock principles on which this court is built. It is an important restraint on judicial authority and provides needed stability in and respect for the law.
Kiesau v. Bantz,
Stare decisis should carry special weight, I believe, when we are interpreting our own rale. “If that rule is now found to be too harsh and inelastic, we have reserved the power to ourselves ... to amend it.” Stolar v. Turner,
The majority acknowledges there was no agreement, either expressed or implied, to extend the time for service. Rucker never contended that the defendant engaged in conduct that would amount to an estoppel to excuse the untimely service. Nevertheless, the majority says that dismissal is inequitable because of “the action by the insurance representative in this case in continuing to negotiate with Rucker’s attorney with knowledge that Rucker did not plan to timely serve the petition” — essentially the argument we rejected in Henry. The majority tries to distinguish Henry on grounds that the adjuster in that case was unaware plaintiffs counsel planned to delay service. Nothing in Henry indicates that distinction made a difference. To the contrary, the Henry court stated, “It is irrelevant whether or not State Farm knew the Henrys intended to file a lawsuit.”
The majority also states, “The Taylors were not obligated to respond to the plan by Rucker to delay service. Yet, their actions in not responding to his plan and continuing to negotiate” make dismissal “inequitable.” This strikes me as doubly incorrect. In the first place, we are holding in this case that the insurer did have a duty to respond if it wanted to be able to assert the ninety-day deadline for service. Second, we are, in effect, shifting the burden that was previously on the plaintiff to show “justification.” Meier,
I prefer to see cases resolved on their merits, and I think there is something to
A significant advantage of this approach is that it allows for some play in the joints. District courts would have the ability either to afford or to deny relief to the plaintiff in a case like this without being subject to an appellate reversal. Unfortunately, under the majority’s approach, the legal rule is ill-defined and the district court has no discretion in applying it. This seems to me likely to lead to increased appellate litigation in this area.
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
MANSFIELD, J., joins this dissent.
