¶ 1 Southwest Gas Corp. and its employee Bret Taylor (referred to jointly as Southwest Gas), are two of multiple defendants in the underlying wrongful death action filed by real party in interest Briza Grubb (Grubb). In this special action, Southwest Gas challenges the respondent judge’s orders in which he concluded that, because Grubb had appealed the judgment entered in favor of another defendant, he lacked jurisdiction to conduct further proceedings involving defendants who are not parties to that judgment and was required to stay all further proceedings. We accept jurisdiction and grant relief for the reasons stated below.
Factual Background and Procedural History
¶ 2 The relevant facts and procedural history of this special action are as follows. Grubb’s late husband Michael Grubb was severely injured when a DESA Glo-Warm gas space heater he had purchased at B & D Lumber in Douglas, Arizona exploded as he attempted to ignite the pilot light. Michael died about three months later as a result of his injuries. On behalf of herself individually as Michael’s surviving spouse and their two children, and as personal representative of Michael’s estate, Grubb filed a complaint against numerous defendants, including Southwest Gas; D.D.E.K. Corp. d/b/a B & D Lumber & Hardware; Do It Best Corporation (DIB), a wholesaler of the heater; DESA, the manufacturer of the heater; and various other defendants. The respondent judge granted DIB’s motion for summary judgment and signed and filed a judgment on July 18, 2011. Pursuant to Rule 54(b), Ariz. R. Civ. P., the judgment stated there was “no just reason for delay,” directed “entry of judgment in favor of’ DIB and against Grubb, and dismissed with prejudice all of Grubb’s claims against DIB. Grubb filed a notice of appeal from that judgment on August 17; that appeal is now pending before this court. See No. 2 CA-CV 2011-0140.
¶ 3 In mid-September 2011, the respondent judge directed the parties to address his concern that he had “lost jurisdiction to hear the Summary [J]udgment Motions [before him] due to the pending Appeal.” In Grubb’s responsive memorandum, she stated, “[T]he filing of the Notice of Appeal divested the Superior Court of jurisdiction over all claims pending the Court of Appeals’ anticipated ruling on Plaintiffs’ appeal of the judgment entered in favor of Defendant Do It Best Corporation,” and that the respondent should stay all further proceedings in the trial court. Southwest Gas disagreed, stating in its memorandum that the certification of the judgment in favor of DIB as final pursuant to Rule 54(b) had been proper, the judgment was final and appealable, and the action against different defendants could proceed. Grubb filed a subsequent memorandum restating her request that the respondent stay the proceedings and suggesting the respondent should issue the stay in the exercise of his discretion for reasons of efficiency. She argued that claims such as strict liability based on products-liability law applied to all defendants and it would be more efficient for the respondent to stay further proceedings against the remaining defendants pending this court’s determination of that issue on *201 appeal in order to avoid this court having to decide the same issue more than once.
¶ 4 The respondent judge issued an order staying all further proceedings. Southwest Gas and other defendants then filed a Joint Motion to Lift Stay. The respondent denied the motion, stating that the appeal had “divested [him] of jurisdiction.” For that reason, he “decline[d]” to rule on the motion to lift the stay, stating he had “no authority to make such ruling and the appropriate forum to make such request is the Court of Appeals.” This special action followed.
Special Action Jurisdiction
¶ 5 In her response to Southwest Gas’s petition, Grubb focuses primarily on why we should not accept jurisdiction. But we find there are a number of significant reasons justifying our discretionary acceptance of special action jurisdiction here.
See Potter v. Vanderpool,
¶ 6 Second, we are inclined to accept special action jurisdiction when a party cannot obtain justice by other means.
See State ex rel. Romley v. Hutt,
¶ 7 Additionally, when, as here, the special action presents a pure question of law, it is particularly appropriate for us to accept jurisdiction.
State ex rel. Thomas v. Gordon,
Discussion
¶ 8 Section 12-2101 (A)(1), A.R.S., gives this court jurisdiction of appeals “[f]rom a final judgment.”
See also
§ 12-2101(B) (order or judgment of the kind identified in subsection (A) of statute “is appeal-able”);
Mansoori,
¶ 9 Rule 54(b) contemplates the latter exception. It provides that in a multiparty or multi-claim action, a trial court “may direct the entry of final judgment as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims or parties ... upon an express determination that there is no just reason for delay.” “In interpreting rules, we apply the same principles we use in interpreting statutes.’ ”
Osterkamp v. Browning,
¶ 10 The language of Rule 54(b) is clear and unambiguous. It plainly permits trial courts to enter judgments as to fewer than all claims or all parties in a multi-count, multi-party proceeding. Ariz. R. Civ. P. 54(b). As our supreme court has explained, the rule “is designed as a compromise between the policy against interlocutory appeals and the desirability, in a few cases, of an immediate appeal to prevent an injustice.”
S. Cal. Edison Co. v. Peabody W. Coal Co.,
¶ 11 In
Egan-Ryan Mechanical Co. v. Cardon Meadows Development Corp.,
¶ 12 Based on the clear language of Rule 54(b) and pertinent ease law,
EganRyan
in particular, we conclude trial courts generally retain jurisdiction to address matters unrelated to the appeal of a judgment properly certified as final. As noted earlier, it is for a trial judge to decide, in the exercise of his or her discretion, whether to certify a judgment as final.
S. Cal. Edison Co.,
¶ 13 For purposes of this special action, we presume the DIB judgment was properly certified as final pursuant to Rule 54(b). The *203 parties do not dispute the finality of the judgment and propriety of Rule 54(b) certification and nowhere in her response to the special action petition does Grubb claim otherwise. Although she opposed the certification of the judgment in the trial court by objecting to the lodged judgment, she treated it as final once entered and regarded the appeal as properly before this court. She filed a notice of appeal and has prosecuted the appeal actively, filing her opening and reply briefs.
¶ 14 Additionally, in her response to the special action petition Grubb implicitly concedes the DIB judgment was properly certified as final by arguing that Southwest Gas either has waived the right to challenge the judgment because it did not object in the trial court when the judgment was lodged, or lacks standing to challenge the judgment in this special action because it is not a party to that judgment. Southwest Gas questioned the propriety of the DIB judgment in this special action, but only as part of its alternative argument that if Rule 54(b) certification had been improper, the appeal from that judgment must be dismissed, “which in turn will allow the trial court to proceed with the litigation of the remaining claims.” Grubb urges us to not consider and give “absolutely no weight whatsoever” to Southwest Gas’s argument, essentially conceding the judgment properly contained Rule 54(b) language and was a final, appealable judgment. Grubb thereby has effectively defended the propriety of the respondent judge’s inclusion of Rule 54(b) language in the judgment. Moreover, nothing in the record provided establishes the respondent erred as a matter of law by certifying the DIB judgment as final pursuant to Rule 54(b). 1
¶ 15 We summarily reject Grubb’s surprising, if not disingenuous, argument that we should decline jurisdiction of this special action because, even if the respondent judge erred in concluding he was divested of jurisdiction when Grubb filed her appeal, the respondent had the inherent discretion to stay all further proceedings before him pending the outcome of the appeal. She asserts our review of this discretionary decision would be for an abuse of discretion, and argues there is no evidence the respondent’s decision to stay proceedings was “arbitrary and capricious.” Based on the record before us, however, the respondent clearly did not issue the stay as an exercise of his general discretion over his calendar and docket, as Grubb suggests. Rather, he expressly determined he lacked jurisdiction to proceed because Grubb had appealed the DIB judgment.
Disposition
¶ 16 We conclude the respondent judge abused his discretion, having erred as a matter of law by ruling that the filing of a notice of appeal from the DIB judgment divested him of jurisdiction to conduct further proceedings involving remaining defendants. Southwest Gas therefore is entitled to relief.
See
Ariz. R.P. Spec. Actions 3(c) (abuse of discretion among bases for granting special action relief);
see also Potter,
Notes
. But even if the respondent judge erred by certifying the DIB judgment as final and appealable pursuant to Rule 54(b), the filing of the notice of appeal would have been a nullity and would not have divested the respondent of jurisdiction to proceed.
See Craig v. Craig,
