David Thomas and Cynthia Parker v. Adam Gray Amanda Cox And Dominique Belles ( 2023 )


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  •                                 Cite as 
    2023 Ark. App. 281
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION I
    No. CV-22-1
    DAVID THOMAS AND CYNTHIA     Opinion Delivered May 17, 2023
    PARKER
    APPELLANTS APPEAL FROM THE FULTON
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    [NO. 25CV-18-69]
    V.
    HONORABLE LEE WISDOM
    ADAM GRAY; AMANDA COX; AND HARROD, JUDGE
    DOMINIQUE BELLES
    APPELLEES AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED
    BRANDON J. HARRISON, Chief Judge
    This is an appeal from a dismissal with prejudice for want of service years into a
    lawsuit David Thomas and Cynthia Parker filed against Adam Gray, an emergency-room
    doctor at Fulton County Hospital, and Amanda Cox and Dominique Belles, two nurses
    who worked in the emergency department, for tortious conduct related to defendants’
    allegedly unfounded reports of elder abuse after Thomas’s elderly aunt arrived at the
    emergency room on 9 January 2017. 1 The essential facts—which every process server and
    civil practitioner should soberly digest—are these.
    Plaintiffs’ counsel filed suit and had summonses issued 6 June 2018. He retained
    Charles Keesee to serve process. By June 26, Keesee had returned proof of personal service
    1
    Fulton County Hospital Foundation, Inc., which was alleged to operate the hospital,
    was also named. The plaintiffs nonsuited their claims against it before the order on appeal
    was entered. In this opinion, “defendant” or “defendants” means the appellee defendants.
    on each defendant. Keesee had been serving process since 2012. He had been appointed
    in at least five counties. But in June 2018 he was not appointed, plaintiffs concede, in Fulton
    County, where service purportedly occurred. That appointment had expired. And some
    three years and six thousand service attempts later, when the defendants breathed life into
    their insufficient-service defense, Keesee could not say for sure whom he had served. This
    is important because the defendants swore by affidavit that he did not serve them. The
    circuit court found no service was made and granted their motions to dismiss with prejudice.
    On appeal, plaintiffs argue the circuit court should have held that defendants were
    barred from presenting these no-service arguments. Alternatively, they argue that the circuit
    court should have dismissed without prejudice on these facts. We affirm as modified to
    dismiss without prejudice.
    Our appellate courts review a circuit court’s factual conclusions regarding service of
    process under a clearly erroneous standard, but when a complaint is dismissed on a question
    of law, we conduct a de novo review. City of Tontitown v. First Sec. Bank, 
    2017 Ark. App. 326
    , at 4, 
    525 S.W.3d 18
    , 21. Disputes over whether service was had raise questions of fact,
    and “the credibility of the evidence to rebut proof of service [is] a matter for the circuit
    court to decide.” Branson v. Hiers, 
    2021 Ark. App. 284
    , at 6, 
    625 S.W.3d 748
    , 752 (citation
    omitted). We do not disturb a finding that service was (or was not) had unless we are “left
    with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.” Covenant Presbytery
    v. First Baptist Church, 
    2016 Ark. 138
    , at 4, 
    489 S.W.3d 153
    , 156 (citations omitted).
    2
    If the insufficient-service defense was not preserved, as the appellants (the plaintiffs)
    say, then we need not determine whether the circuit court’s dismissal should have been with
    or without prejudice. So we address that issue first, starting with more procedural facts.
    All defendants filed timely answers. Dr. Gray filed on his own behalf; nurses Cox
    and Belles filed jointly with the hospital. All defendants expressly asserted insufficiency-of-
    service under Rule 12(b)(5). The nurses pleaded “insufficient process and insufficient
    service of process pursuant to Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(4) and (5)” and, in
    the same paragraph, moved for dismissal of the complaint. Belt-and-suspenders. They also
    pleaded that the claims were barred by the statute of limitations. Dr. Gray pleaded that the
    plaintiffs’ claims should be dismissed under Rule 12(b)(6) and “those additional defenses set
    forth in Rule 12(b) of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure, including . . . insufficient
    service of process[.]”
    In September and October 2018, the defendants filed Rule 12(b)(6) motions to
    dismiss with prejudice and supporting briefs. The lawsuit then proceeded through discovery
    and some additional motion practice for more than two years.
    After the statutes of limitation had run, all defendants amended or supplemented their
    pending Rule 12 motions to fill out the insufficient-service defense they had pleaded. They
    stated in affidavits that they had not been served with process and, indeed, were not working
    at the hospital the day and time service was supposed to have been made. The plaintiffs
    opposed the motions with legal arguments but no new proof. Keesee supplied that through
    testimony at an April 2021 motion hearing. The defendants’ counsel attended that hearing;
    the defendants themselves did not attend. The court took the matter under advisement.
    3
    In August 2021, the circuit court reconvened. It ruled from the bench, with
    admitted regret, that it would dismiss with prejudice because neither proper service nor any
    service had occurred, the case had not commenced, and the statute of limitations had run.
    It found the defendants had not waived service, and equitable estoppel and laches defenses
    did not apply. August 23, it entered an order consistent with its bench ruling dismissing
    with prejudice. Plaintiffs timely appealed.
    Here, they first contend the defendants waived the service defense because they
    “attempt[ed] to shotgun the affirmative defenses” without stating why they thought service
    was defective. (Appt’s Br. at 8). They rely on Holliman v. Johnson, 
    2012 Ark. App. 354
    , 
    417 S.W.3d 222
    . In Holliman, this court held that a defendant who pleaded that “this Complaint
    should be dismissed pursuant to Rule 12(b) of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure” did
    not preserve the specific defenses under that rule, including insufficiency of service under
    Rule 12(b)(5). Id. at 9, 
    417 S.W.3d at 227
    . This record is not like Holliman. The defendants
    adequately provided notice of the insufficient-service defense. Of this there is no question.
    Next, plaintiffs argue that through waiver, equitable estoppel, or laches, the
    defendants forfeited that defense. They rely solely on the defendants’ conduct that transpired
    after the service attempt. In particular, the plaintiffs-turned-appellants complain that the
    defendants filed Rule 12(b)(6) motions to dismiss with prejudice in 2018, then waited years
    before springing the facts that supported their insufficient-service defense. A party can waive
    defenses to a court’s jurisdiction (including insufficiency of service) by seeking affirmative
    relief from the court. City of Tontitown, 
    2017 Ark. App. 326
    , at 5, 
    525 S.W.3d at 22
    . But
    the test for waiver is “whether the defendant seeks affirmative relief, that is, whether the
    4
    pleading filed is more than a defensive action.” Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co. v. Campbell, 
    315 Ark. 136
    , 141, 
    865 S.W.2d 643
    , 645 (1993). Moving to dismiss the plaintiff’s claim is a
    defensive action, not a request for affirmative relief. City of Tontitown, 
    2017 Ark. App. 326
    ,
    at 5, 
    525 S.W.3d at 22
    . As for the time that passed between when the insufficiency-of-
    service defenses were first asserted (2018) and when they were submitted for decision on
    the facts (2021), the passage of time alone does not “explode” a preserved defense. Our
    supreme court has cited the advent of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure as a significant
    event that distinguished older cases that applied equitable doctrines to conduct during
    litigation. See, e.g., Raymond v. Raymond, 
    343 Ark. 480
    , 486, 
    36 S.W.3d 733
    , 736 (2001);
    Divelbliss v. Suchor, 
    311 Ark. 8
    , 15, 
    841 S.W.2d 600
    , 603 (1992). Since the Rules came into
    effect, the court has entertained—but seemingly always rejected—arguments that equitable
    doctrines like estoppel or laches should prevent a defendant from raising a preserved
    insufficient-service defense because of a delay in pressing for a decision on the merit of the
    raised defense. Wallace v. Hale, 
    341 Ark. 898
    , 
    20 S.W.3d 392
     (2000); Campbell, 
    315 Ark. at 141
    , 
    865 S.W.2d at 646
    .
    There are two rule-based ways a party can forfeit an insufficient-service defense
    through acts or omissions in the proceedings. First, one could omit the defense from its
    answer, Ark. R. Civ. P. 12(h)(1)(B)—or plead it too generally, which is functionally the
    same as omitting it. See Holliman, 
    2012 Ark. App. 354
    , at 8, 
    417 S.W.3d at
    226–27. That’s
    Civ. Pro. 101 (or should be). But as we held above, the defendants in this case easily cleared
    that hurdle. More subtly, a party could also forfeit the defense by filing a motion under
    another provision of Rule 12: “If a party makes a motion under [Rule 12], but omits
    5
    therefrom any defense or objection then available to him [under Rule 12], he shall not
    thereafter make a motion based on the defense or objection so omitted.” Ark. R. Civ. P.
    12(g). But no Rule 12(g) hurdle, if there was one in these facts, was ever raised.
    The circuit court did not err when it dismissed the complaint. But should the
    dismissal have been with or without prejudice? The bookend principles are easy: If a
    plaintiff sues within the limitation period and, in the time Ark. R. Civ. P. 4(i) requires,
    completes good service on the defendant, then the suit commences under Rule 3 and the
    limitations clock stops. These are so-called “good service” cases. If, however, the plaintiff
    neither completes nor attempts service in that time, then the suit must be dismissed, and the
    limitations clock keeps ticking. Se. Foods, Inc. v. Keener, 
    335 Ark. 209
    , 215, 
    979 S.W.2d 885
    , 888 (1998); Green v. Wiggins, 
    304 Ark. 484
    , 488, 
    803 S.W.2d 536
    , 538–39 (1991).
    These are what we call “no service” cases.
    There is a third category, it seems, and in it the plaintiff completes service on the
    defendant, but either service (how do the required papers get to a person or entity) or
    process (are the papers that get to a person or entity proper in form and content) proves not
    to comply with Rule 4 when challenged. In what can be called “bad service” cases, the suit
    commences, but is dismissed without prejudice. Consequently, the plaintiff can refile and
    try again to achieve good service under the saving statute. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 16-56-126
    (Repl. 2006).
    Distinguishing between “bad service” cases and “no service” cases can be tricky. Our
    appellate courts have held, in a few opinions, that there was a “completed attempt at
    service.” No opinion of which we are aware explains how to determine when a failed
    6
    service attempt is a “completed attempt” instead of “no service.” It is a matter of degree
    and judgment. The cases do tend to combine an information gap about service-related facts
    at the time of service with a swearing match about those facts later.
    For example, in Jones v. Douglas, plaintiffs’ counsel sent process in 2008 by registered
    mail, return receipt requested, to the defendants’ post office box in Costa Rica. 
    2016 Ark. 166
    , at 9, 
    489 S.W.3d 648
    , 654. The mail was returned stamped “rehusado”—Spanish for
    “refused.” 2 At the time, service could be made “by any form of mail addressed to the person
    to be served with a return receipt requested and delivery restricted to the addressee or the
    agent of the addressee.” Ark. R. Civ. P. 4(d)(8)(A)(i) (2008). If the mail was refused, the
    plaintiff was required to “mail to the defendant by first class mail a copy of the summons
    and complaint and a notice that despite such refusal the case will proceed and that judgment
    by default may be rendered against him unless he appears to defend the suit.” Ark. R. Civ.
    P. 4(d)(8)(A)(ii).
    The defendants swore that their post office box was checked by a farm manager and
    that they did not refuse mailed service or authorize anyone else to refuse it. Jones, 
    2016 Ark. 166
    , at 9, 489 S.W.3d at 654. The circuit court found “no service” and dismissed with
    prejudice. Id. at 5, 489 S.W.3d at 651–52. Our supreme court held that the plaintiffs had
    “made a timely, completed attempt to serve appellees and should be afforded the benefit of
    the savings statute.” Id. at 9, 489 S.W.3d at 654.
    2
    This court’s vacated opinion, Jones v. Douglas, 
    2015 Ark. App. 488
    , 
    470 S.W.3d 302
    ,
    includes more detail about the record facts.
    7
    But compare McCoy v. Robertson, where service was likewise attempted by mail and
    fell on the “no service” side. 
    2018 Ark. App. 279
    , 
    550 S.W.3d 33
    . The plaintiff’s attorney
    had sent process by certified mail to doctors at their hospital addresses. 
    Id.
     at 5–7, 
    550 S.W.3d at
    36–37. The doctors appeared and defended the litigation (affirmatively pleading
    insufficiency of service), but the plaintiff could produce no evidence that the doctors or
    their agents had refused or received the mail. Id. at 3, 13–14, 
    550 S.W.3d at 35, 41
    . We
    held that the circuit court correctly dismissed with prejudice. Id. at 16, 
    550 S.W.3d at 42
    .
    Unlike in Jones, the plaintiff in McCoy “had no reason to believe that service was complete.”
    Id. at 15, 
    550 S.W.3d at 41
    .
    In White v. Owen, a “completed attempt to serve” earned relief under the savings
    statute. 
    2021 Ark. 31
    , 
    617 S.W.3d 241
    . Personal service on the defendant in a motor-
    vehicle-accident suit was unsuccessfully attempted (in an extended Rule 4(i) service
    window) at four known addresses. Id. at 2, 617 S.W.3d at 243. The final, “complete”
    attempt to serve the defendant was made on the defendant’s mother in February 2019 at her
    home address, which was listed on the collision report and the defendant’s voter registration.
    Id. at 2–3, 617 S.W.3d at 243–44. Under the then current Rule 4, service could be made
    by “leaving the process with any member of the defendant’s family at least 18 years of age
    at a place where the defendant resides.” Id. at 7, 617 S.W.3d at 246 (quoting Ark. R. Civ.
    P. 4(f)(1)(B)). The defendant’s mother either objected that he did not live there (as she
    swore in her affidavit)—or voiced no objection (as the process server swore in his). Id. at
    2–3, 617 S.W.3d at 243–44. In any event, she accepted the papers. That was not good
    8
    service on the defendant—her home was no longer a “place where the defendant reside[d]”
    on that record—but it was a good attempt. See id. at 11, 617 S.W.3d at 247–48.
    We discussed these service issues at length in Harden v. Beck, 
    2021 Ark. App. 481
    ,
    
    639 S.W.3d 401
    , an attempted-personal-service case. The defendant was not as footloose
    as in White, but what appeared to be good service fell apart later because of facts neither the
    plaintiff nor the process server could reasonably have been expected to know. The return-
    of-service indicated process for defendant Heather Beck was left with Paige Whitfield (age
    more than 14) at 51 Tate Levins Road—one trailer in a trailer court—where she resided
    with Beck. 
    Id.
     at 2–3, 639 S.W.3d at 403–04. That was one of two addresses for Beck the
    process server had found. Id. at 3–4, 639 S.W.3d at 404. Both Beck and Whitfield later
    testified they had been living together in a romantic relationship at the time—but at 47 Tate
    Levins Road, a trailer one lot away they had rented the previous month. Id. at 4–5, 639
    S.W.3d at 404–05. Both denied Whitfield was served (at either place), and Beck denied
    receiving process from Whitfield. Id. The circuit court noted Beck’s lack of credibility,
    but dismissed the plaintiffs’ claims with prejudice because it found the statute of limitations
    had run without proper service. Id. at 5–6, 639 S.W.3d at 405. We held the dismissal
    should have been without prejudice because “service was attempted and even completed on
    someone (who may or may not have been Whitfield) at 51 Tate Levins Road[,]” which was
    a sufficient attempt under the caselaw. Id. at 14–15, 639 S.W.3d at 410 (emphasis added).
    Finally, there is Clouse v. Ngau Van Tu, 
    101 Ark. App. 260
    , 
    274 S.W.3d 344
     (2008),
    a cornerstone though it speaks of “completed” service instead of a “completed attempt.”
    Clouse, like Harden, involved process handed to the right person, but at the wrong place.
    9
    Service on Dr. Clouse, a chiropractor, was attempted at his office. Id. at 261, 
    274 S.W.3d at
    344–45. Process was handed to Dr. Clouse’s wife. Id. at 261, 
    274 S.W.3d at 345
    . We
    presumed that she lived with him, id. at 261, 
    274 S.W.3d at 345
    , and that serving her at
    their “dwelling place or usual place of abode” would have been good service then under
    Rule 4(d)(1). She also worked as Dr. Clouse’s office manager. 
    Id.
     The process server
    swore Mrs. Clouse claimed to be his registered agent too. 
    Id.
     (Her affidavit was silent on
    that point.) But she was not Dr. Clouse’s registered agent, so he could not be served through
    her at the office. We held that the case timely commenced, and the plaintiff was entitled to
    “the shelter of the saving statute.” Id. at 267, 
    274 S.W.3d at 348
    .
    We infer from these cases that the rule for distinguishing a “completed attempt at
    service” from “no service” is this: If a plaintiff should reasonably believe after service is
    attempted that at least defective service is complete, then there has been a “completed
    attempt at service”—and the action commences—even if, from the defendant’s perspective,
    “no service” has occurred. We think this comports both with the General Assembly’s intent
    “to protect those who, although having filed an action in good faith and in a timely manner,
    would suffer a complete loss of relief on the merits because of a procedural defect,” 3 and a
    pragmatic understanding of when and how service occurs. Typically, parties begin litigation
    with unequal access to facts that would determine whether service is “good” or complete.
    Discovery by compulsion is not immediately available; and it might not be realistic or
    desirable, where service on a defendant appears to be complete, to require plaintiffs to spend
    
    3 Jones, 2016
     Ark. 166, at 8, 489 S.W.3d at 653 (quoting Rettig v. Ballard, 
    2009 Ark. 629
    , at 3–4, 
    362 S.W.3d 260
    , 262).
    10
    time repeating service attempts on the defendant, or prelitigating the particulars of a Rule
    12(b) defense the defendant might waive.
    In this case, process server Keesee could not testify with any certainty whom he had
    served on one June day nearly three years earlier; or so the circuit court was charged to
    decide and did, in a manner favorable to defendants.             Keesee did not ask for their
    identification or see any nametags. 4      But he also said he took the papers to hospital
    administration and told them whom he needed to serve. The administration told him to
    go to the back side of the ER, and they would send Dr. Gray out. Keesee handed the
    papers to a man who came out. A woman in hospital administration said she was calling
    the defendants in to get the papers. Keesee handed her the other two sets of papers and
    stood there until she handed them off to people who came in to receive them. No more
    detail is known to us.
    We cannot say the circuit court’s finding that, on the facts, there was no service on
    the defendants was clear error, particularly because the circuit court could weigh Keesee’s
    credibility as he testified. (To be clear, a no-service defense that prevails means the plaintiff’s
    case was never properly commenced, at all, and that’s why the saving statute cannot apply
    to that category of cases.) However, Keesee is the only witness who acknowledged being
    present for the service attempt. In the circumstances he described, he could reasonably have
    concluded that the three people who accepted process were the defendants and that service
    was complete. Under current precedent, we hold this case falls into the “completed
    attempt” line of cases, not the “no service” cases that the circuit court applied.
    4
    Of course, good service can be made on someone who is not wearing a name tag.
    11
    Consequently, the savings statute applies, and the circuit court’s dismissal should have been
    without prejudice.
    Affirmed as modified.
    GLADWIN and WOOD, JJ., agree.
    Richard E. Worsham, for appellants.
    Carithers Johnson Devenport, PLLC, by: Kelly Carithers and Colin M. Johnson, for
    separate appellee Adam Gray, M.D.
    Wright, Lindsey & Jennings LLP, by: Gary D. Marts, Jr., and Carson Tucker, for
    separate appellees Amanda Cox and Dominique Belles.
    12