Sheila BROWN v. Rico ROLAND.
Supreme Court of Tennessee, at Nashville.
Jan. 18, 2012.
June 2, 2011 Session.
357 S.W.3d 614
David J. White, Jr., Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company.
OPINION
WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which CORNELIA A. CLARK, C.J., JANICE M. HOLDER, GARY R. WADE, and SHARON G. LEE, JJ., joined.
This appeal involves the amount of damages a plaintiff may seek on a de novo appeal from a general sessions court to a circuit court. The plaintiff filed suit in the Davidson County General Sessions Court seeking damages sustained in an automobile accident. She also notified her uninsured/underinsured motorist carrier of her suit. After deciding that her damages exceeded the general sessions court‘s jurisdictional limit, the plaintiff requested the general sessions court to dismiss her suit.
I.
On the evening of December 1, 2006, Sheila Brown1 was driving on Murfreesboro Pike in Davidson County. She was followed closely by a vehicle driven by Rico Roland. When Ms. Brown slowed down, Mr. Roland was unable to stop quickly enough to avoid striking the rear of Ms. Brown‘s vehicle. Ms. Brown was injured, and her vehicle was damaged. Her medical bills amounted to $21,970.80, and her lost wages totaled $2,173.20.
Ms. Brown retained a lawyer and, on November 26, 2007, filed a civil warrant in the Davidson County General Sessions Court seeking to recover “under $25,000.00” from Mr. Roland for “painful personal injuries, medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering.” She also notified her insurance carrier, State Farm Mutual Insurance Company (“State Farm“), of her suit. Ms. Brown‘s insurance policy included uninsured/underinsured coverage.
At the trial in general sessions court on August 21, 2008, Ms. Brown‘s lawyer announced that he did not plan to present any evidence and requested the general sessions court to enter a judgment against his client. The court obliged and dismissed Ms. Brown‘s case without prejudice. On August 29, 2008, Ms. Brown perfected a de novo appeal to the Circuit Court for Davidson County. On October 28, 2008, Mr. Roland filed an answer denying that he had acted negligently and raising several affirmative defenses.
On December 18, 2008, Mr. Roland offered to settle with Ms. Brown for $25,000—the limits of his Permanent General Assurance Company policy. On the same day, Ms. Brown‘s lawyer notified State Farm by letter that Ms. Brown had accepted Mr. Roland‘s $25,000 settlement offer and that Ms. Brown and Mr. Roland had agreed that Ms. Brown would “submit her uninsured motorist claim to BINDING ARBITRATION pursuant to
State Farm made its first formal appearance in the case on March 17, 2009, when it filed a motion to dismiss Ms. Brown‘s claims. The motion relied on two grounds. First, State Farm insisted that
On March 20, 2009, Ms. Brown filed a motion in the circuit court seeking to cut off further discovery and to compel State Farm to arbitrate. On March 27, 2009, Ms. Brown filed a response to State Farm‘s motion to dismiss. She insisted that she had not voluntarily dismissed her case in general sessions court and, citing Ware v. Meharry Med. Coll., 898 S.W.2d 181 (Tenn.1995), that “she [was] no longer bound to the jurisdictional limits of her general sessions warrant” once she perfected a de novo appeal to the circuit court. Despite State Farm‘s pending motion, Ms. Brown did not file an amended complaint increasing her claim for damages.
The trial court conducted a hearing on all pending motions on April 3, 2009. Even though Ms. Brown‘s trial counsel believed that his client‘s damages exceeded $25,000,2 he steadfastly declined to file an amended complaint increasing the damages beyond the amount requested in the general sessions warrant. Despite the trial court‘s repeated cues during the April 3, 2009 hearing, Ms. Brown‘s counsel continued to insist that amended pleadings were unnecessary. Following argument by counsel, the trial court granted State Farm‘s motion to dismiss Ms. Brown‘s underinsured motorist claims against State Farm. The court explained:
[T]he point is, you‘ve got a pleading that says you‘re suing for $24,999.99. That has been appealed.
And since August of last year, when this case was appealed, there‘s never been any attempt to increase the [ad damnum], to change it, to fairly alert the defendant....
* * *
If you had amended your complaint and asked for $100,000, or whatever you wanted to ask for, then they would have been put on notice that they were subject to potentially having to pay more....
Now, granted, you can still make an oral motion sometime, and I would have to make a ruling on that. To this date, though, there‘s never been any motion to amend.
* * *
Ware [v. Meharry Medical College] is very clear, and it says that you‘re not bound by the amount that you sought at the General Sessions level.... On the other hand, when you appeal a matter from General Sessions Court ..., the only pleading we have is the civil warrant. The allegation of facts that‘s contained within the civil warrant is what we base the action on and the [ad damnum].
I am granting the motion to dismiss on the grounds that it‘s shown clearly that the full amount sued for has been tendered and accepted by the plaintiff[ ], and there‘s no further exposure to State Farm Insurance.
I respectfully deny the motions for arbitration and discovery cutoff as being moot....
[E]ven as of today, no motion to increase the [ad damnum] has been made. And [you] could have had the right at any time to file a motion had you done—It frequently happens, when you come up out of General Sessions, a lot of times people will sue for that, and they‘ll come up and say, We‘re [going to] change this, it‘s [going to] be a $100,000 case now instead of a $25,000 case, and they file a motion to increase their [ad damnum], and as soon as it comes up, they‘re usually granted without any issue, frequently, not even opposed.
There‘s never been a motion made on this. You are limited, I find ... that the [ad damnum] stated in the General Sessions’ warrant is binding at the Circuit level until and unless a motion to amend is made to modify that. And ... [t]hat being the case, you ... actually recovered more than you sued for, one penny more.
* * *
There is no exposure to State Farm. There is no cause of action ... against State Farm Insurance, because the full amount sued for has been tendered and accepted.... [Mr. Roland‘s insurer] tendered 25,000, and you‘ve accepted it. You sued for $24,999.99.... [Y]ou‘ve been made whole for what you‘ve sued for, and, therefore there‘s no exposure on the part of the uninsured motorist because you didn‘t sue for any more than that.
On April 29, 2009, the trial court filed an order predicated on the same rationale,3 dismissing State Farm from the case and denying Ms. Brown‘s motions to cut off discovery and to compel arbitration.
On May 1, 2009, Ms. Brown filed a motion to alter or amend or in the alternative to request permission to pursue a
On June 18, 2009, Mr. Roland moved to enforce his settlement agreement with Ms. Brown. Ms. Brown did not dispute that she had agreed to settle with Mr. Roland but requested that the order of enforcement state that it was without prejudice to her efforts to seek binding arbitration with State Farm. On August 7, 2009, the trial court entered an order enforcing the settlement agreement with Mr. Roland.
Ms. Brown appealed to the Court of Appeals, asserting that the trial court had erred by dismissing her claim against State Farm and by declining to compel arbitration. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court after concluding that
Ms. Brown retained a new lawyer and filed a
II.
The determination of whether a party appealing from general sessions to circuit court is bound by the amount stated in the plaintiff‘s civil warrant unless and until that amount is amended before the circuit court presents a question of law. This Court reviews decisions on questions of law de novo with no presumption of correctness. Knox Cnty. ex rel. Envtl. Termite & Pest Control, Inc. v. Arrow Exterminators, Inc., 350 S.W.3d 511, 518 (Tenn.2011); Graham v. Caples, 325 S.W.3d 578, 581 (Tenn.2010).
III.
When the Tennessee General Assembly created the general sessions courts over sixty years ago, it intended that these courts would retain the same informal procedures that characterized the practice in their predecessors, the justice of the peace courts. See Ware v. Meharry Med. Coll., 898 S.W.2d at 183. Except for circumstances not involved in this case,4 the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure do not apply to proceedings in general sessions court but do apply “after appeal or transfer of a general sessions civil lawsuit to circuit court.”
Even though the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure govern the proceedings in circuit court following a de novo appeal from general sessions court, plaintiffs appealing from a general sessions court judgment need not “replead their action, reissue process or take any other retrospective step, once a case is appealed from a general sessions court to a circuit court.” Vinson v. Mills, 530 S.W.2d 761, 765 (Tenn.1975). This principle also applies to defendants. Graham v. Caples, 325 S.W.3d at 583 (holding that a defendant was not required to replead a motion to dismiss in circuit court that had been filed in the general sessions court).
To bridge the gap between the informality of general sessions courts and the more formal proceedings before circuit courts, the General Assembly has provided that
[n]o civil case, originating in a general sessions court and carried to a higher court, shall be dismissed by such court for any informality whatever, but shall be tried on its merits; and the court shall allow all amendments in the form of action, the parties thereto, or the statement of the cause of action, necessary to reach the merits, upon such
terms as may be deemed just and proper. The trial shall be de novo, including damages.
After the creation of the general sessions courts, Tennessee‘s courts continued to recognize the common-law rule applicable to de novo appeals to circuit court that limited a plaintiff‘s recovery in circuit court to the jurisdictional limits of the general sessions court. See Kirby v. Cramer, 219 Tenn. 447, 451, 410 S.W.2d 724, 725 (1967) (noting that the plaintiff “created a ceiling upon his permissible ad damnum” by commencing his suit in general sessions court). In 1995, we addressed the continuing viability of this rule in a case in which the plaintiff had filed an amended complaint in the circuit court increasing his claim for damages beyond the general sessions court‘s jurisdictional limits. The Court of Appeals, relying on the common-law rule, reversed a $75,000 jury verdict for the plaintiff. We held that plaintiffs perfecting a de novo appeal from general sessions court to circuit court were not constrained by the limit on damages applicable to the general sessions court and, therefore, that “parties should be permitted to file amended pleadings to the fullest extent permitted by
The lynchpin of our decision in Ware v. Meharry Medical College was the fact that the plaintiff had filed an amended complaint in the circuit court increasing the amount of his claim for damages. This point has not been lost on other courts that have been called upon to apply the Ware decision. The Court of Appeals has noted repeatedly that Ware “stands for the proposition [that] the plaintiff ... may amend the complaint to seek damages in the circuit court beyond the monetary jurisdictional limits of the general sessions court.” Crowley v. Thomas, No. M2009-01336-COA-R3-CV, 2010 WL 323082, at *3 (Tenn.Ct.App. Jan. 27, 2010);5 see also Henderson v. Harlan, No. 01A01-9610-CV-00463, 1997 WL 311530, at *2 (Tenn.Ct.App. June 11, 1997); Starr Printing Co. v. Hooks, No. 02A01-9408CV-00192, 1995 WL 270933, at *1 (Tenn.Ct.App. May 4, 1995).
In 1999 the Court of Appeals addressed an issue similar to the one raised in this case in a breach of contract proceeding that originated in general sessions court. Both parties appealed from the general sessions judgment. The plaintiff sought to recover more than he had claimed in the general sessions court but failed to file an amended complaint seeking more damages. The Court of Appeals held that the failure of the plaintiff to amend his complaint after perfecting a de novo appeal from general sessions court to circuit court limited the amount of the plaintiff‘s recov-
Our holding in this case is narrow. We are not addressing Ms. Brown‘s right to amend her complaint to increase the amount of damages before the complaint was dismissed because Ms. Brown did not attempt to amend her complaint before it was dismissed. We are likewise not addressing the propriety of Ms. Brown‘s belated effort to amend her complaint after it was dismissed because she has waived her opportunity to raise this issue.6 We are addressing only whether the amount of damages a party appealing to circuit court from general sessions court seeks to recover is limited to the amount sought in the warrant filed in general sessions court until an amendment to increase the amount of damages is filed in the circuit court. We answer that question “yes.” Thus, because Ms. Brown failed to amend to increase the amount of damages beyond those specified in the warrant she filed in general sessions court, the trial court did not err by dismissing her claims against State Farm and likewise did not err by denying Ms. Brown‘s motion to compel State Farm to arbitrate.
IV.
We affirm the conclusion of both the trial court and the Court of Appeals that the amount of Ms. Brown‘s damages was limited to the amount she requested in her general sessions warrant. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court‘s dismissal of Ms. Brown‘s claims against State Farm and the denial of Ms. Brown‘s motion to compel arbitration. We tax the costs of this appeal to Ms. Brown for which execution, if necessary, may issue.
