Champlin, et al. v. Bank of America (CA2 1/31/13)

This opinion clarifies something about how to take default and then decides to throw a lawyer under the bus.

When a house burned Allstate interpleaded the claim payment because various parties disputed who should get it.  The other parties answered but the bank didn’t; Allstate took default. The bank eventually appeared and moved to set it aside, presenting evidence that its copy of the application for default wasn’t sent to it until weeks after Allstate’s default application said it was and after default had been entered. Allstate didn’t object. The other parties did; though they didn’t successfully dispute the bank’s claim of delayed notice they argued that the bank had ten days after receiving that delayed notice to answer and hadn’t done so. The trial court denied the motion; the bank appealed.

The Court of Appeals reverses. The trial court “erred as a matter of law by concluding that a delay in mailing the notice would not necessarily invalidate the entry of default and preclude a default judgment.” In other words, delayed notice invalidates the default. Rule 55 says that default will be effective ten days from the filing of the application. And at one point it characterizes its provisions as requiring “notice prior to the entry of default.” Therefore, “the notice must be provided either before, or simultaneously with” the filing of the application. “A delayed notice . . . does not comply with the terms of Rule 55(a).” The argument that delayed notice simply delays the ten-day grace period is “logical” but not consistent with the rule. If the notice is delayed then the application must be re-filed.

(We say that Rule 55 “at one point characterizes’” itself as requiring notice before entry because that part – 55(a)(5) of the present version – is a summary reference to other provisions that don’t specifically say that, though they may certainly mean it. That kink in the rule was, as usual, not caught in its recent revision. But that revision was for bureaucratic convenience – adopting the Maricopa County practice of not requiring the clerk to do anything on default – so it is of course entirely understandable that no thought whatever was given to mere legal issues.)

The court says that when the bank brought up the discrepancy about the notice date Allstate’s counsel, as part of her duty of candor, should have told the court what she knew about that rather than “simply” not object to the motion. The court – deliberately, it seems – suggests that not objecting was an admission that something was wrong with the default application when a moment’s thought would show that Allstate wouldn’t, for reasons both practical and legal, contest the motion in any event. As for counsel’s duty, we wonder whether a party argued that or whether it was just the court’s churlish idea. What is a lawyer supposed to know about when some piece of paper actually went out of the office? Was she supposed to make an investigation to support one side or the other on a motion her client clearly didn’t care about and wasn’t involved in?  The court admits that the parties didn’t start arguing about the date on her default affidavit until appeal – so how did she have a duty to give testimony on a non-issue that wasn’t before the court?  And if the parties framing the issues wanted more information from Allstate, what stopped them from getting it?

(link to opinion)

Tumacacori Mission Land Devt. v. Union Pacific Railroad (CA2 1/30/13)

This res judicata case could have been short, clear, and helpful.

Tumacacori sued to establish a prescriptive easement over a Union Pacific line. UP moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted it and the Court of Appeals affirmed. After that Tumacacori moved to amend its Complaint to assert other easement theories. The trial court denied the motion; Tumacacori appealed.

The Court of Appeals affirms. It is black-letter law that a final judgment makes all claims that were or could have been brought res judicata. Tumacacori tried to argue that res judicata doesn’t apply in equity, which the court dismisses easily.

But the court doesn’t seem to feel that that’s quite enough so it adds other things, none of which are useful.

For example, the court points out that Tumacacori did not file a Rule 60(c) motion. But what difference would that have made? On what basis could the trial judge possibly have granted that motion? Its true that setting aside the judgment can be a way around res judicata but that isn’t the court’s point – it mentions 60(c) “preliminarily,” before even starting its res judicata analysis. So what is the court’s point? Goodness knows.

Tumacacori argued that the judgment was on the issue of prescriptive easement. The court points out that UP’s summary-judgment motion also dealt with easements by implied necessity. But so what? The court admits that its opinion in the first appeal talked about prescriptive easements. The point of res judicatai.e., the point of this case – is that it doesn’t matter what was actually argued since everything that could have been argued is also concluded.

UP used the term “res judicata.” The court includes a footnote to say “We use the more modern term ‘claim preclusion’ instead of res judicata.” The court is apparently proud of that, which is depressing. The movement by law professors to replace the established terms “res judicata” and “collateral estoppel” with the the bland and confusing “claim preclusion” and “issue preclusion” – which are less, not more, descriptive of the concepts – has been followed in the practice largely by those whose grasp of what any of them means is sometimes less than clear. We wish the courts could be prouder of knowledge than of modernity.

(link to opinion)

Waltner v. JPMorgan Chase (CA1 1/29/13)

Did you know that a defendant can move for summary judgment before filing an Answer?

Plaintiffs sued a bank to prevent foreclosure. The bank moved to dismiss; the trial court dismissed most of the Complaint’s 36 counts but not all of them. The bank did not file an Answer within twenty days of that ruling; instead it moved for summary judgment on the remaining counts. Plaintiffs applied for default. The trial court denied default and granted summary judgment

Plaintiffs argued that under Rule 12 a summary judgment does not extend the time to answer. The Court of Appeals affirms the trial court for two reasons.

First, “Rule 55(a) governs defaults, not Rule 12.” Rule 55 allows default when a defendant does not “plead or otherwise defend.” A summary judgment motion is not a pleading but qualifies as otherwise defending.

Second, “even if Rule 12 were relevant” summary judgment does indeed extend the time to answer. How? Because a motion to dismiss extends the time and can be converted to summary judgment. So, says the court (and manages to find some commentators on federal law to agree with it), there’s no reason not to treat a motion originally brought for summary judgment the same way.

The court seems to think it straightforward that a Rule 56 motion is a Rule 12 motion because a rule 12 motion can under some circumstances become a Rule 56 motion. One wonders why, if that’s what Rule 12 means, it doesn’t say so. Perhaps its drafters paid some attention to the structure of the procedures they were drafting, or perhaps they had in mind the complications – both procedural and substantive – that can arise from allowing pre-Answer summary judgment. In any event, it has now been allowed.

(link to opinion)