CONNIE WATKINS AND RICHARD WATKINS v. CITY OF PARAGOULD, ACTING BY AND THROUGH THE PARAGOULD LIGHT & WATER COMMISSION
No. CV-12-898
ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS, DIVISION II
October 2, 2013
2013 Ark. App. 539
HONORABLE DAVID N. LASER, JUDGE
APPEAL FROM THE GREENE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. CV-06-335]; DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE
Appellants, Connie and Richard Watkins, appeal pro se from orders of the Greene County Circuit Court granting appellee, the City of Paragould, a prescriptive easement over appellants’ property and enjoining appellants from interfering with the easement. We dismiss the appeal due to lack of a final order.
The parties have been engaged in a long-standing conflict over the City‘s efforts to trim trees on or near appellants’ property. In November 2006, the conflict escalated to the point that appellant Connie Watkins was arrested for disorderly conduct.1 After that incident, the City filed a petition in the Greene County Circuit Court claiming an easement over appellants’ property and asking that appellants be enjoined from harassing City workers and interfering with the City‘s maintenance of its electrical lines. Appellants responded with a
The trial court heard the injunction petition over several days and entered an order on May 10, 2012, enjoining appellants from interfering with the City‘s prescriptive easement over their property. Though appellants’ counterclaim remained pending, they filed a notice of appeal from the May 10, 2012 order, from orders denying their posttrial motions, and from several previous orders. The City moved to strike the notice of appeal on the ground that no final order had been entered, due the pendency of appellants’ counterclaim. See
At a subsequent hearing, appellants expressed an interest in obtaining a Rule 54(b) certificate to allow an immediate appeal. The City‘s attorney remarked that the certificate should be attached to the judgment itself. The court acknowledged counsel‘s comment but decided to execute a “separate” certificate. Thereafter, the court issued a nunc pro tunc “Addendum,” which purported to be a Rule 54(b) certificate.
The Addendum was entered of record on August 7, 2012. It was not attached to the court‘s May 10, 2012 order; nor did it reiterate the findings and conclusions of law from the order, or incorporate or replicate the order in any way. Rather, it declared the May 10, 2012 order (and related posttrial orders) to be final and set forth facts declaring why there was no
We conclude that the Addendum does not qualify as a certificate under Rule 54(b). A proper certificate permitting an immediate appeal “shall appear immediately after the court‘s signature on the judgment . . . .”
The wisdom of placing the certificate on the judgment itself, rather than on a separate document, is apparent. The presence of the certificate is necessary to grant finality to the judgment. That, in turn, establishes the identity of the order appealed from, which must be included in the notice of appeal, and the date from which to calculate the deadline for filing the notice of appeal.
Because the circuit court‘s purported certificate in this case was not located on the judgment, it is insufficient to permit an appeal under Rule 54(b). We must therefore dismiss the appeal due to lack of a final order. We also note that, while an interlocutory order granting an injunction is immediately appealable, see
Dismissed without prejudice.
GLOVER and WHITEAKER, JJ., agree.
Richard Watkins and Connie Watkins, pro se appellants.
Michael Mosley and Hamilton, Colbert & Scurlock, LLP, for appellee.
