OPINION ON REHEARING
We grant Appellants-Defendants Kimberly Stephens’s (“Stephens”) and The Cincinnati Insurance Companies’s (“CIC”) joint petition for rehearing, for the limited purpose of addressing their contention that, regardless of whether Appellees-Plaintiffs’ motions were deemed motions to correct error or motions to reconsider, the same procedural outcome ensues; namely, that Plaintiffs nonetheless are prohibited from amending their complaint to add Stephens as a defendant in the underlying causes.
Stephens and CIC premise their Petition for Rehearing upon the contention that because this Court determined that Plaintiffs’ motions, originally captioned “Motion[s] to Correct Error[,]” were, in fact, motions to reconsider, said determination “brings those motions squarely within T.R. 53.4(B).” (Petition at 6.) Thus, Stephens and CIC continue, Plaintiffs’ motions, filed on May 28, 1999 and June 1, 1999, were automatically deemed denied pursuant to Indiana Trial Rule 53.4(B) on June 4, 1999 and June 8, 1999 respectively; therefore, the trial court erred when it subsequently granted said motions on June 23, 1999. Moreover, because Plaintiffs did not certify for appeal the April 29, 1999 order of the trial court which denied Plaintiffs’ prior motions to amend their complaints and add Stephens as a defendant, Stephens and CIC assert “there is no appealable ruling over which this Court has jurisdiction.” (Petition at 7.) We disagree.
Initially, we note that Stephens and CIC misapprehend the purpose of Indiana Trial Rule 53.4(B). Indiana Trial Rule 53.4 states, in pertinent part:
(A) Repetitive motions and motions to reconsider ruling on a motion. No hearing shall be required upon a repetitive motion or upon motions to reconsider orders or rulings upon a motion. Such a motion by any party or the court or such action to reconsider by the court shall not delay the trial court or any proceedings in the case, or extend the time for any further required or permitted action, motion, or proceedings under these rules.
(B) Effect of court’s delay in ruling wpon repetitive motion or motion to reconsider ruling on a motion. Unless such a motion is ruled upon within five (5) days it shall be deemed denied....
Appellate courts have repeatedly held that this rule is designed to prevent delay through the filing of repetitive motions.
See Waldron v. Wilson,
Based on the foregoing, our earlier decision is hereby affirmed. 1
Notes
. While Stephens and CIC did not raise this issue in their Petition, we discovered through our review of this matter on rehearing that we inadvertently cited the case of
St. Margaret Mercy Healthcare Centers, Inc. v. Lake County,
