Medical Assurance Company of Mississippi v. Ronald v. Myers, Sr. ( 2005 )


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  •                       IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2005-IA-01001-SCT
    MEDICAL ASSURANCE COMPANY OF MISSISSIPPI
    v.
    RONALD V. MYERS, SR., M.D.
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                           05/04/2005
    TRIAL JUDGE:                                HON. JANACE H. GOREE
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                  HOLMES COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:                    JEFFREY RYAN BAKER
    WALTER T. JOHNSON
    C. R. MONTGOMERY
    ROBERT M. JONES
    J. COLLINS WOHNER
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:                     H. L. MERIDETH, JR.
    DAVID L. MERIDETH
    EDWARD BLACKMON, JR.
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                         CIVIL - TORTS-OTHER THAN PERSONAL
    INJURY & PROPERTY DAMAGE
    DISPOSITION:                                REVERSED AND REMANDED - 05/17/2007
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    EN BANC.
    DICKINSON, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    The central issue on appeal in this action between a doctor and his former medical
    malpractice insurer is venue. The Chancery Court of Holmes County originally granted the
    insurer’s motion to transfer the case to the Circuit Court of Madison County. Five months
    later, the chancellor granted the doctor’s motion to reconsider and transferred the case to the
    Circuit Court of Holmes County instead. The issue before this Court is whether – after
    transferring the case to Madison County – the chancery court abused its discretion by
    granting the doctor’s motion to reconsider and transferring the case to the Circuit Court of
    Holmes County.
    BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    ¶2.    Medical Assurance Company of Mississippi (“MACM”) insured Dr. Ronald V. Myers
    from 1998 through 2004, but the company elected not to renew his coverage when his policy
    expired on January 1, 2005, under its own terms. One reason for MACM’s decision was Dr.
    Myers’s refusal to allow its Risk Management Department to conduct a full review of his
    practices in Tchula (Holmes County), Belzoni (Humphreys County), Greenville (Washington
    County), and Indianola (Sunflower County).
    ¶3.    Believing MACM owed him a statutory duty to renew his policy, Dr. Myers sued the
    company for damages and petitioned for an injunction to force it to insure him. On
    December 8, 2004, Dr. Myers filed his complaint in the Chancery Court of Holmes County.
    One week later, MACM filed a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and,
    alternatively, moved the court to transfer the case to the Circuit Court of Madison County.
    ¶4.    Chancellor Janace H. Goree heard arguments on the issues of jurisdiction and venue
    on December 16, 2004. That same day, the chancellor ruled from the bench that Dr. Myers’s
    action was essentially a contract claim, so the Chancery Court of Holmes County did not
    have subject matter jurisdiction. The chancellor concluded by stating “the Court is going to
    hereby transfer this case to the Circuit Court of Madison County.” Thereafter, the parties
    agreed to prepare an order consistent with this ruling. The order, filed January 27, 2005,
    incorporated the bench ruling in toto.
    2
    ¶5.    On December 22, 2004, Dr. Myers filed with the chancery court a Motion to Reopen
    and Reconsider. The motion asked the court to reopen the case for the admission of
    additional evidence and reargument and to reconsider the bench ruling transferring the case
    to the Circuit Court of Madison County. On January 6, 2005, this Court decided Snyder v.
    Logan, 
    905 So. 2d 531
     (Miss. 2005), a case dealing with permissible venues for an action
    between an insured and her insurer under the former venue statute. Dr. Myers thereafter
    argued in his February 7, 2005, brief supporting his motion that Snyder represented a change
    in controlling venue law and justified the court’s reconsideration of the case.
    ¶6.    On April 12, 2005, the chancellor held a hearing on Dr. Myers’s motion to
    reconsider.1 After taking the matter under advisement, the chancellor granted Dr. Myers’s
    motion to reconsider the issue of venue. The chancellor found that credible evidence
    satisfactorily established a factual basis to support Dr. Myers’s preference of venue in
    Holmes County. The order concluded, “IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED AND ADJUDGED
    that this case shall be transferred to the Circuit Court of Holmes County, Mississippi.”
    ¶7.    On May 23, 2005, MACM filed its Petition for Permission for Interlocutory Appeal,
    which this Court granted. MACM argues that the chancery court had no authority to
    entertain any motions, including a motion to reconsider, after ruling from the bench and
    entering an order transferring the case to the Circuit Court of Madison County. MACM also
    argues that venue is proper in Madison County. Because we conclude that the proper county
    1
    Dr. Myers chose to abandon his motion to reopen and proceed only on his motion to
    reconsider. Therefore, only the motion to reconsider is before this Court on appeal.
    3
    of venue in this case is Madison County, we need not address the question of whether the
    chancellor had authority to consider the motion for reconsideration.2
    DISCUSSION
    ¶8.    The question before us is whether, after it transferred this case to Madison County,
    the chancery court abused its discretion by granting Dr. Myers’s motion to reconsider, and
    then transferring the case to the Circuit Court of Holmes County.
    Relief under Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)
    ¶9.    MACM argues the chancery court erred in granting Dr. Myers’s motion to reconsider
    because he failed to satisfy the requirements of Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b) for
    relief from an order. Dr. Myers asserts the chancery court properly entertained his motion
    because the court failed to consider the venue issue when it transferred the case to the Circuit
    Court of Madison County based on its lack of subject matter jurisdiction, and because the
    chancery court’s ruling was not a “final judgment, order or proceeding.”
    ¶10.   Rule 60(b) governs relief from a judgment or order based on mistakes, inadvertence,
    newly discovered evidence, fraud, and other specified circumstances. It states, in part:
    On motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party or his
    legal representation from a final judgment, order, or proceeding for the
    following reasons:
    (1)     fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct of an adverse party;
    (2)     accident or mistake;
    (3)     newly discovered evidence which by due diligence could not have been
    discovered in time to move for a new trial under Rule 59(b);
    2
    The timing of the transfer of jurisdiction to a transferee court is a matter more appropriately
    addressed by this Court pursuant to its rule-making authority.
    4
    (4)    the judgment is void;
    (5)    the judgment has been satisfied, released, or discharged, or a prior
    judgment upon which it is based has been reversed or otherwise
    vacated, or it is no longer equitable that the judgment should have
    prospective application;
    (6)    any other reason justifying relief from the judgment.
    The motion shall be made within a reasonable time, and for reasons (1), (2)
    and (3) not more than six months after the judgment, order, or proceeding was
    entered or taken.
    Miss. R. Civ. P. 60(b).
    ¶11.   A trial court’s grant of relief under Miss. R. Civ. P. 60(b) is reviewed for abuse of
    discretion. R. N. Turnbow Oil Invs. v. McIntosh, 
    873 So. 2d 960
    , 963 (Miss. 2004). In his
    December 20, 2004, motion to reconsider, Dr. Myers simply asked the court to reopen the
    case for the admission of additional evidence and reargument and to reconsider its bench
    ruling transferring the case to the Circuit Court of Madison County. In his brief filed two
    months later, Dr. Myers argued that a case handed down by this Court on January 6, 2005,
    Snyder v. Logan, 
    905 So. 2d 531
     (Miss. 2005), constituted an intervening change in
    controlling law. This basis for reconsideration does not fit within the first five enumerated
    reasons for relief under 60(b). As such, this Court must determine whether the trial court
    abused its discretion by granting relief pursuant to the catchall category of 60(b)(6), “any
    other reason justifying relief from the judgment.” Significantly, “[r]elief under Rule 60(b)(6)
    is reserved for extraordinary and compelling circumstances.” Briney v. U.S. Fid. & Guar.
    Co., 
    714 So. 2d 962
    , 966 (Miss. 1998).
    5
    ¶12.   Although never explicitly stated, the chancery court apparently granted Dr. Myers’s
    motion to reconsider because it did not specifically address and analyze the issue of venue
    in its original order transferring the case to the Circuit Court of Madison County. In contrast,
    the court’s May 10, 2005, order did include findings of fact and conclusions of law
    explaining its decision to transfer the case to Dr. Myers’s original venue choice – Holmes
    County. However, unless extraordinary and compelling circumstances justified the transfer
    from the Circuit Court of Madison County to the Circuit Court of Holmes County, the first
    order transferring the case to the Circuit Court of Madison County must be enforced.
    Venue: The Circuit Court of Holmes County
    ¶13.   Both parties agree the circuit court, rather than the chancery court, has jurisdiction in
    this case. The dispute concerns whether the Circuit Court of Holmes County is a proper
    venue for Dr. Myers’s action. While Dr. Myers acknowledges that Madison County would
    also be a permissible venue, he claims that his choice of venue – Holmes County – should
    be respected because “the plaintiff is entitled to choose between any of the permissible venue
    options where credible evidence or factual basis supports the venue selected.” Wal-Mart
    Stores, Inc. v. Johnson, 
    807 So. 2d 382
    , 387 (Miss. 2001). MACM, on the other hand,
    contends that Madison County is the only proper venue given the facts of this case.
    ¶14.   This Court has held that “[a]n application for change of venue is addressed to the
    discretion of the trial judge, and [her] ruling thereon will not be disturbed on appeal unless
    it clearly appears that there has been an abuse of discretion or that the discretion has not been
    justly and properly exercised under the circumstances.” Guice v. Miss. Life Ins. Co., 836
    
    6 So. 2d 756
    , 758 (Miss. 2003). Pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. Section 11-11-3 (Rev. 2004),
    venue is appropriate in the following counties:
    Civil actions of which the circuit court has original jurisdiction shall be
    commenced in the county where the defendant resides, or, if a corporation, in
    the county of its principal place of business, or in the county where a
    substantial alleged act or omission occurred or where a substantial event that
    caused the injury occurred.
    The defendant MACM has its principal place of business in Madison County, so a substantial
    alleged act, omission, or injury-causing event must have occurred in Holmes County to make
    it a proper venue for this action.
    ¶15.    Significantly, the Legislature amended Section 11-11-3, effective September 1, 2004,
    to set venue where substantial acts or events causing the injury occurred, not where the cause
    of action accrued, as was permissible under the former statute. Since Dr. Myers filed his
    action on December 8, 2004, the current statute, quoted above, controls the disposition of this
    case.
    ¶16.    Given this foundation, we must determine whether the chancery court abused its
    discretion in finding that credible evidence supported Dr. Myers’s position that a substantial
    act, omission, or injury-causing event (or substantial component thereof) occurred in Holmes
    County. If no basis exists for such a finding, then the chancellor’s decision granting Dr.
    Myers’s Motion to Reconsider must be reversed, and the original judgment transferring the
    case to the Circuit Court of Madison County must be reinstated.
    1.     Whether Snyder v. Logan changed controlling venue law
    ¶17.    Contrary to Dr. Myers’s claims, Snyder did not represent a change in controlling
    venue law. In that case, the plaintiff, Snyder, purchased auto insurance from the defendants
    7
    in December 2000, but the policy was cancelled in December 2001 for failure to pay the
    premiums. 905 So. 2d at 532. Snyder paid the requested amount and was informed that she
    would be covered from January 7, 2002, through February 7, 2002. Id. On January 8, 2002,
    Snyder was involved in a single-car accident. When the defendants denied her claim, she
    filed suit in Jefferson County Circuit Court for misrepresentation, negligence, breach of
    contract, and bad faith. Id.
    ¶18.   The trial court found venue to be appropriate where Snyder purchased her auto
    insurance (Adams County), where one defendant had a registered agent for process (Rankin
    County), and where the plaintiff conducted business with another defendant (Warren
    County), but not in Jefferson County. Id. Interpreting the former venue statute, and relying
    on Stubbs v. Mississippi Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Co., 
    825 So. 2d 8
    , 13 (Miss.
    2002), the Court found that the plaintiff’s action against her insurer could be brought in
    Jefferson County because the car accident occurred there. Snyder, 905 So. 2d at 534.
    ¶19.   The decision did not break any new ground, but merely relied on prior
    pronouncements of this Court regarding the former venue statute. Its position that an action
    could be properly filed in multiple venues, including where a substantial alleged act or
    injury-causing event occurred, was anything but novel. The rationale of the Court advanced
    in Snyder was the same reasoning propounded by the Court in cases decided before the
    chancery court ruled to transfer Dr. Myers’s case.
    2.     Whether the chancellor’s findings support the venue change
    8
    ¶20.   In its Order Granting Reconsideration of Venue, the chancery court made the
    following findings of fact justifying transfer of the case to the Circuit Court of Holmes County:
    (1)       Myers completed his application to [MACM] for the malpractice
    insurance in Holmes, County, Mississippi.
    (2)       MACM issued the policy from Madison County to Myers in Holmes
    County, Mississippi.
    (3)       The second quarter of premium was paid by Myers to MACM from
    Holmes County and mailed to MACM in Madison County.
    (4)       There were discussions between Myers and MACM in 2004, by mail
    and probably by telephone, from and between Holmes County and
    Madison County about insurance coverage on a clinic in Tupleo [sic]
    that was ultimately excluded from coverage by MACM.
    (5)       There were multiple written communications to and from Myers in
    Holmes County and to and from MACM in Madison County pertaining
    to a review by MACM Risk Management Committee at various Myers’
    clinics, including the clinic in Holmes County, Mississippi.
    (6)       The letter advising Myers that his malpractice insurance had been
    cancelled [3] was sent by U.S. Mail in Tchula, Holmes County,
    Mississippi, and received by him in Tchula, Holmes County,
    Mississippi.[4]
    (7)       One of the clinics operated by Myers and insured by MACM is located
    in Tchula, Holmes County, Mississippi.
    (8)       Myers selected Holmes County, Mississippi to file his lawsuit.
    ¶21.   As stated above, the venue statute permits a case to be filed where a substantial
    alleged act, omission, or injury-causing event occurred. Therefore, even if an act or omission
    did not cause the injury, it can nevertheless establish venue if it is both substantial and
    3
    Dr. Myers’s suit against MACM is for failing to renew his policy, not for cancelling it.
    4
    This appears to be a misstatement by the chancery court. The non-renewal notice was sent
    by MACM from Madison County to Dr. Myers in Holmes County.
    9
    alleged by the plaintiff. Dr. Myers’s complaint does not allege that his decision not to give
    MACM’s risk management team full access to his practice, including his practice in Holmes
    County, contributed to his claim. Thus, that fact – even if true – does not meet the “alleged”
    portion of the test.
    ¶22.   Next, we note that the basis for Dr. Myers’s action was MACM’s decision not to
    renew his coverage once it expired on January 1, 2005, under its own terms. With respect
    to establishing Dr. Myers’s cause of action and claims of wrongful conduct, we find little or
    no relevance to the particular place he completed his application or mailed his premium
    payments. Dr. Myers is not claiming that MACM rejected his application or decided not to
    renew his policy for failure to pay premiums. Completing an application in, and making
    payments from, Holmes County cannot be considered substantial acts or injury-causing
    events in this case.
    ¶23.   Additionally, the chancery court’s finding of communications “from and between
    Holmes County and Madison County” and “to and from Myers in Holmes County and to and
    from MACM in Madison County” is an insufficient basis for establishing venue. MACM
    never communicated to Dr. Myers from Holmes County, and all of MACM’s deliberations,
    meetings, correspondence, and communication with Dr. Myers occurred in or were
    transmitted from its offices in Madison County. MACM never met with Dr. Myers in
    Holmes County, but the parties did meet in Madison County. In other words, Dr. Myers is
    suing MACM based on the company’s own acts or omissions, all of which occurred in
    Madison County.
    10
    ¶24.   The location of the mailbox where Dr. Myers received his policy, non-renewal notice,
    or other communications from MACM is likewise immaterial. As MACM properly notes,
    “Dr. Myers’s receipt of information in Holmes County is a passive function of his presence
    there and is not a substantial event causing the damages he claims.” Along those same lines,
    Dr. Myers is not claiming that his own actions or communications contributed to his injuries,
    so where he performed those actions or from where he made those communications does not
    impact this Court’s venue analysis. Since it is MACM’s decision not to renew the insurance
    policy that is the alleged cause of Dr. Myers’s injuries, every substantial act, omission, or
    injury-causing event occurred in Madison County.
    ¶25.   Finally, Dr. Myers argues that because he operated a clinic in Holmes County, a
    substantial injury-causing event occurred or accrued in Holmes County. However, under
    the amended statute, venue is no longer set by where a cause of action accrued. Even though
    Dr. Myers claims he was damaged when he experienced being uninsured in Holmes County
    (and in Humphreys, Washington, and Sunflower counties), this could be the result of
    substantial acts, omissions, or injury-causing events which occurred in Madison County
    alone. Following Dr. Myers’s logic, a plaintiff injured in an automobile accident in Madison
    County could establish venue in every county in which the plaintiff traveled simply by
    showing that, in each county, his or her injuries worsened.
    ¶26.   The venue statute does not allow the “piling” of acts or events to establish venue. It
    specifically requires a substantial alleged act, omission, or injury-causing event to have
    happened in a particular jurisdiction in order for venue to be proper there. In American
    Home Products Corp. v. Sumlin, 
    942 So. 2d 766
     (Miss. 2006), the plaintiff filed suit against
    11
    a pharmaceutical company for injuries sustained from taking Redux. The plaintiff obtained
    the prescription, filled it, and ingested the pills in Wayne County. Id. at 771. However, she
    filed suit in Smith County because the echocardiogram revealing her injuries was performed
    there. Id. Whether the test was properly performed was a major point of contention between
    the parties. Id. at 769. Nevertheless, this Court held that venue was only proper in Wayne
    County, saying “the performance and interpretation of an echocardiogram, alone, is not
    sufficient so as to constitute a ‘substantial component’ of this claim.       Likewise, any
    emotional distress or psychological pain resulting from the findings of an echocardiogram
    does not constitute a substantial component of the claim.” Id. at 771 (internal citations
    omitted). Thus, the performance of an echocardiogram or the place where the plaintiff
    experienced her injuries was not “substantial” enough to establish venue in a particular
    county. The same is true of the receipt of correspondence, the location of a single clinic in
    a multi-clinic operation, or the place where Dr. Myers “experienced” being uninsured.
    ¶27.   We conclude the chancery court abused its discretion in finding credible evidence
    supported transfer of the case to the Circuit Court of Holmes County. Madison County was
    the county of proper venue under Section 11-11-3, and the chancellor’s original decision to
    transfer the case there was correct. Therefore, the chancery court improperly granted Dr.
    Myers’s motion to reconsider its original order transferring the case to the Circuit Court of
    Madison County, as there were no extraordinary circumstances compelling relief from the
    original order.
    CONCLUSION
    12
    ¶28.   For the reasons discussed herein, we reverse the chancery court’s Order Granting
    Reconsideration of Venue, reinstate the chancery court’s original order transferring the case
    to the Circuit Court of Madison County, and remand the case for further proceedings
    consistent with its opinion.
    ¶29.   REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    SMITH, C.J., WALLER, P.J., EASLEY, CARLSON AND RANDOLPH, JJ.,
    CONCUR. DIAZ, P.J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION.
    GRAVES, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
    DIAZ, PRESIDING JUSTICE, DISSENTING:
    ¶30.   Because the majority today declines to address the critical issue at hand in this case,
    I must respectfully dissent. The threshold issue that must be decided before any other is
    whether the chancery court retained the jurisdiction to reconsider the motion to transfer
    venue after previously ordering the transfer. Instead of deciding this point, the majority leaps
    ahead of itself and concludes that venue is proper. In my view, this issue must addressed
    first, and we provide no guidance to the Bench and Bar by ignoring it.
    ¶31.   There is only one practical method for determining at what point a transferring court
    loses jurisdiction over a case after granting a motion to change venue. Simply, the full
    transfer of a case should not be effected until after a motion for reconsideration has been
    granted or denied by a trial court (assuming, of course, that one is filed). This bright-line
    method avoids the needless complications that have arisen in other jurisdictions and
    preserves uniformity with other motions. Just as we will not find error with a trial court
    regarding issues never presented to it for consideration, we should not find error when a trial
    court has never had the opportunity to correct itself. See Mills v. Nichols, 
    467 So. 2d 924
    ,
    13
    931 (Miss. 1985). Other methods that involve immediate transfers from court to court would
    squander judicial resources and slow the passage of justice. It goes without saying that the
    trial court which ruled on the original motion is in the best position to adjudicate if a motion
    for reconsideration is worthy of deliberation or simply a repeat of the arguments the court
    has already considered. The original court can best separate the wheat from the chaff.
    ¶32.   The majority also misplaces its analysis of motions to reconsider upon Mississippi
    Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). The trial court ruled verbally on December 16, 2004, and the
    motion to reconsider was filed on December 22. Because the motion to reconsider was filed
    less than ten days after the ruling, it was filed pursuant to Rule 59. See MRCP 59(e);
    Cannon v. Cannon, 
    571 So. 2d 976
    , 978 (Miss. 1990) (if a “motion was filed more than ten
    days after the entry of the final judgment . . . [the] appeal cannot be considered under Rule
    59”); Bresler v. Bresler, 
    824 So. 2d 641
    , 642 (Miss. Ct. App. 2002) (motions to reconsider
    will be treated “as a Rule 59 motion [when] filed within ten days after the judgment”);
    compare MRCP 60, which focuses exclusively on mistakes, inadvertence, fraud, or new
    evidence, and which allows six months’ time to file a motion. For a discussion of the
    differences between the rules, see Bruce v. Bruce, 
    587 So. 2d 898
    , 903 (Miss. 1991), which
    makes clear that “Rule 60(b) is for extraordinary circumstances, for matters collateral to the
    merits, and affords a much narrower range of relief than Rule 59(e).”
    ¶33.   Because today the majority forgoes providing practical guidance to our trial courts and
    practitioners on this sticky procedural issue, and because it misapprehends the process by
    which a motion to reconsider is filed, I must respectfully dissent.
    14