Brett Paes v. Bear Communications, LLC , 568 S.W.3d 52 ( 2019 )


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  •                                           In the
    Missouri Court of Appeals
    Western District
    BRETT PAES,                                  )
    )
    Appellant,                   )   WD81599
    )
    v.                                           )   OPINION FILED:
    )   February 13, 2019
    BEAR COMMUNICATIONS, LLC,                    )
    )
    Respondent.                   )
    Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri
    The Honorable Kenneth R. Garrett III, Judge
    Before Special Division: Zel M. Fischer, Special Judge, Presiding, Cynthia L. Martin,
    Judge and Gary D. Witt, Judge
    Brett Paes ("Paes") appeals from a judgment setting aside a default judgment entered
    against Bear Communications, LLC ("Bear Communications"). Paes argues that the trial
    court's judgment is erroneous because Bear Communications failed to demonstrate that it
    had good cause for failing to timely respond to Paes's petition. Finding no error, we affirm.
    Factual and Procedural Background
    On April 6, 2017, Paes filed suit against Bear Communications in the Circuit Court
    of Jackson County, claiming he was wrongfully terminated in retaliation for pursuing
    workers' compensation treatment and benefits. Paes had been performing work for Baer
    Communications in Missouri as a project manager.
    Paes unsuccessfully attempted to serve process on Bear Communications at the
    office of the Missouri registered agent designated for Bear Communications with the
    Missouri Secretary of State's office. On May 3, 2017, a private process server successfully
    served Bear Communications by delivering a copy of the summons and petition on Marty
    Lund ("Lund"), the director of finance, at Bear Communications' headquarters in
    Lawrence, Kansas. Notice of a scheduled case management conference accompanied the
    summons and petition. Paes filed proof of service on June 19, 2017, noting service of
    process on Bear Communications at the Kansas address.
    Bear Communications did not file an answer to the petition, and failed to appear at
    the case management conference scheduled for August 7, 2017. The case was set for a
    default hearing on September 6, 2017. The trial court sent Bear Communications notice of
    the default hearing. The notice was mailed to the Missouri registered agent's office where
    Paes had unsuccessfully attempted service of process on Bear Communications.
    Bear Communications did not appear at the September 6, 2017 default hearing.
    Accordingly, the trial court entered a default judgment in favor of Paes, and awarded Paes
    damages in the amount of $200,000, plus costs and post-judgment interest at the statutory
    rate. The trial court mailed notice of the default judgment to the same Missouri registered
    agent's address to which notice of the default hearing had been sent.
    On November 1, 2017, Bear Communications learned of entry of the default
    judgment when it received a copy of Paes's notice of registration of the Missouri default
    2
    judgment in Kansas. On December 13, 2017, Bear Communications filed a motion to set
    aside the default judgment with suggestions in support ("Motion to Set Aside"). The
    Motion to Set Aside, which was supported by affidavits, argued that Bear Communications
    "has a meritorious defense to [Paes's] claim and can establish good cause for its failure to
    respond to [Paes's] Petition." The Motion to Set Aside asserted that Bear Communications
    had a meritorious defense because Paes was released from employment when the
    company's work in the Kansas City area was completed, and Paes refused a transfer to
    Nashville, the site of the company's next project. The Motion to Set Aside asserted that
    Bear Communications had good cause for failing to answer Paes's petition because of an
    "internal mishap." According to the Motion to Set Aside, "[u]pper management believed
    that [an] employee was handling the response, and did not learn of his failure to do so until
    after the employee was terminated for unrelated performance issues."
    Bear Communications supported its Motion to Set Aside with an affidavit by Brett
    Niles ("Niles"), the founder and chief executive officer of the company. Niles's affidavit
    acknowledged that Lund accepted service of Paes's petition on May 3, 2017; noted that
    Bear Communications received Paes's petition "during a very tumultuous time at the
    company, which included multiple setbacks in several projects in several states and the
    departure of numerous key employees"; explained that Lance Addison ("Addison"), the
    company's then-president, had been tasked with handling Paes's petition; and explained
    that the company had recently secured employment liability insurance which it believed
    would have covered the claim.
    3
    Niles's affidavit noted that at the end of August 2017, Bear Communications
    terminated Addison's employment for performance-related reasons, and that Addison left
    the company without transitioning any of his projects. As a result, Niles was unaware that
    Addison had failed to address Paes's petition. According to Niles's affidavit, if Bear
    Communications' upper-level managerial employees had known that Addison had not
    addressed Paes's petition, they would immediately have taken steps to do so. Niles's
    affidavit explained that Bear Communications did not realize that Paes's petition had not
    been addressed until November 1, 2017, when Niles learned that Paes was registering the
    Missouri default judgment in Kansas.
    Paes argued in suggestions in opposition ("Suggestions in Opposition") to the
    Motion to Set Aside that Bear Communications had not presented credible evidence
    establishing a meritorious defense. Paes also argued that Bear Communications had not
    established that it had good cause for failing to timely respond to the petition. Paes argued
    that Bear Communications' failure to respond to the petition reflected a pattern of reckless
    conduct by upper-level managerial employees. Paes argued that Bear Communications
    "intentionally and knowingly maintain[ed] a sham corporate Registered Agent office
    designed to help[] shield [it] from legal notices and service of summons and garnishments
    in Missouri," and attached a document from the Missouri Secretary of State's office
    demonstrating that Bear Communications had maintained the incorrect address for its
    Missouri registered agent for over five years. Paes argued that as a result, in twenty-four
    cases in which Bear Communications was named as a party, summons was initially issued
    to an incorrect registered agent where service could not be had. Paes also argued that
    4
    Niles's affidavit contained false statements and fabrications, and referred to
    correspondence between Addison and Bear Communications' and its counsel to challenge
    the veracity of Niles's affidavit.
    Paes's Suggestions in Opposition alternatively argued that even if the trial court
    found Niles's affidavit to be credible, it failed to establish good cause. Paes argued that
    Bear Communications' failure to respond to the petition reflected the company's pattern of
    permitting the entry of default judgments as a litigation tactic. Paes noted that based on
    Niles's affidavit, at least five upper-level managerial employees knew of Paes's petition,
    yet no one ever inquired of Addison about the status of the claim. Paes argued:
    At best, the Niles Affidavit establishes that [Bear Communications] is an
    extremely careless and reckless company that either does not have any
    standard operating procedures to handle litigation or it totally botched
    execution of those procedures--either way, [Bear Communications]
    abrogated its responsibility to respond to pending litigation and [Bear
    Communications'] conduct is inexcusable for a company with its experience,
    and sophistication.
    Bear Communications was granted leave to file reply suggestions ("Reply
    Suggestions").    The Reply Suggestions argued that Bear Communications did not
    recklessly and deliberately seek to impede the legal process. The Reply Suggestions noted
    that although Bear Communications had been inattentive in updating the address for its
    Missouri registered agent, the address for its headquarters in Lawrence, Kansas was readily
    accessible information, as demonstrated by the fact that the company was successfully
    served at that address by Paes, and by the fact the company had regularly received service
    of process at that address. The Reply Suggestions noted that while two default judgments
    had previously been entered against Bear Communications, both cases sought little
    5
    recovery, and both judgments were satisfied in full. Bear Communications thus argued
    that the prior default judgments were not indicative of a litigation tactic or a pattern of
    evading legal process. Bear Communications argued that Paes unfairly failed to alert the
    trial court that written notices were being sent to an address where Paes knew the company
    could not be found, and that was different from the address Paes used to successfully serve
    process on the company.
    The Reply Suggestions also noted that Paes's references to Addison's
    correspondence with Bear Communications and its counsel were incomplete.               Bear
    Communications attached the entirety of Addison's correspondence with the company's
    counsel, which included Addison's acknowledgment that "[k]nowing the extent of
    disorganization at Bear [Communications], it's feasible that this matter fell through the
    cracks. It's even possible that [two upper-level managerial employees] are covering their
    asses due to their negligence in handling this matter by providing you with disinformation."
    A summary of a conversation between Addison and Bear Communications' counsel was
    also attached to the Reply Suggestions. The summary noted that Addison reported it had
    always been Bear Communications' intent to respond to Paes's petition, and that Addison
    instructed the company's vice president for corporate assurance and compliance to submit
    Paes's petition to the company's insurance carrier. Since that did not happen, Addison
    believed the petition "slipped through the cracks due to . . . someone else not doing what
    they were supposed to do."
    The Reply Suggestions attached an additional affidavit from Mitch Patterson
    ("Patterson"), the vice president of corporate assurance and compliance for Bear
    6
    Communications, to support the claim that the company always intended to respond to
    Paes's petition. In his affidavit, Patterson stated that he was copied on an email from
    Addison to Bear Communications' vice president for human resources, Sean Beaver
    ("Beaver"). That email directed Beaver to ask Patterson to submit the claim to Bear
    Communications' insurance broker. Patterson's affidavit said that he compiled the relevant
    documents and put them in a file. Patterson's affidavit indicated that because the case was
    not a workers' compensation claim, he mistakenly believed Addison would thereafter take
    care of submitting the claim.        Patterson's affidavit concluded that while Bear
    Communications always intended to defend Paes's suit, "internal miscommunications or
    misunderstandings caused [Bear Communications'] failure to respond."
    The Reply Suggestions also attached a supplemental affidavit from Niles. Niles
    reiterated that he entrusted Addison with responding to Paes's petition, and that he agreed
    with Addison's statement that Bear Communications always intended to defend the suit but
    that it must have "slipped through the cracks." Niles's supplemental affidavit said that no
    employee of Bear Communications "made a deliberate choice to ignore the suit, risk the
    entry of default in this case, or otherwise impede the work of the Court."
    Paes was granted leave to file a sur-reply ("Sur-Reply"). The Sur-Reply reiterated
    Paes's arguments in the Suggestions in Opposition. The Sur-Reply attached an affidavit
    from Addison which stated that Addison was not the "exclusive person" responsible for
    coordinating Bear Communications' response to litigation and that he recalled Bear
    Communications being served with Paes's petition.
    7
    After considering this record, the trial court issued an order on March 14, 2018,
    granting the Motion to Set Aside the default judgment. The order was later denominated
    a "judgment" on March 26, 2018 ("Judgment"). The Judgment stated:
    [Bear Communications] states that, due to an error in belief that an employee
    was handling the case, [Bear Communications] was not notified of the filing
    of the lawsuit. [Bear Communications] argues that the employee who was
    responsible for handling legal claims was fired during the Answer period to
    the Petition and [Bear Communications] believed the matter was handled by
    said employee when, in fact, no response was made. [Bear Communications]
    further argues that notice regarding the default hearing was delivered to an
    improper address and was not received by [Bear Communications]. [Paes]
    responds that [Bear Communications'] conduct was reckless and aimed to
    impede the judicial process by knowingly leaving its Missouri registered
    agent address out of date. In light of the discretion afforded to the Court to
    set aside default judgments and the mistake made by [Bear
    Communications], the Court finds [the Motion to Set Aside] should be
    GRANTED.
    Paes appeals.
    Standard of Review
    Rule 74.05(d) provides that a motion to set aside a default judgment "is an
    independent action." Because a motion to set aside a default judgment is an independent
    action, "'a judgment granting or denying such a motion is a final judgment eligible for
    immediate appellate review.'" City of Kansas City v. Ross, 
    508 S.W.3d 189
    , 193 (Mo. App.
    W.D. 2017) (quoting Cook v. Griffitts, 498, S.W.3d 855, 858 (Mo. App. W.D. 2016)).
    The trial court has discretion to rule upon a motion to set aside a default judgment.
    Wanda Myers Living Trust v. Nea Lg Le, 
    459 S.W.3d 517
    , 521 (Mo. App. W.D. 2015). As
    such, we review the trial court's decision to side aside a default judgment for abuse of
    discretion. Saturn of Tiffany Springs v. McDaris, 
    331 S.W.3d 704
    , 709 (Mo. App. W.D.
    8
    2011). "'The trial court abuses its discretion when its ruling is clearly against the logic of
    the circumstances then before the trial court and is so unreasonable and arbitrary that the
    ruling shocks the sense of justice and indicates a lack of careful consideration.'" 
    Id. (quoting Peters
    v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    200 S.W.3d 1
    , 23 (Mo. App. W.D. 2006)).
    "'Missouri appellate courts have traditionally afforded significant deference to the [trial]
    court's decision to set aside a default judgment because of the public policy favoring the
    resolution of cases on the merits and the distaste our system holds for default judgments.'"
    
    Id. (quoting Brungard
    v. Risky's Inc., 
    240 S.W.3d 685
    , 686 (Mo. banc 2007)). Thus, an
    appellate court is more likely to reverse a judgment denying a motion to set aside than a
    judgment granting that relief. 
    Id. Analysis Paes
    asserts a single point on appeal. He argues that the trial court erred in setting
    aside the default judgment because Bear Communications did not establish good cause for
    failing to respond timely to Paes's petition. In separately delineated subpoints, Paes argues
    that Bear Communications did not establish good cause because: (1) its history of prior
    default judgments demonstrated that it knew of the consequences of failing to answer a
    petition, rendering the failure to respond to Paes's petition inexcusable; (2) its failure to
    update its Missouri registered agent's address recklessly impeded judicial process; (3) it
    had a culture of reckless inattention, demonstrated by the failure of the company's upper-
    level managerial employees to adopt policies and procedures to follow after being served
    with a petition; and (4) it failed to prove what, if anything, prevented Addison from timely
    responding to Paes's petition. Though structured with subpoints, Paes's point relied
    9
    collectively asserts a single claim of error--that based on the record before the trial court,
    it was an abuse of discretion to conclude that Bear Communications established good cause
    for its failure to respond to Paes's petition.
    Rule 74.05(d) provides that "[u]pon motion stating facts constituting a meritorious
    defense and for good cause shown, an interlocutory order of default or a default judgment
    may be set aside." The party seeking to set aside a default judgment bears the burden to
    prove both the "good cause" and "meritorious defense" elements. Saturn of Tiffany
    
    Springs, 331 S.W.3d at 709
    . The failure to establish either element requires a motion to
    set aside to be denied. 
    Id. On appeal,
    Paes does not challenge the trial court's finding that Bear
    Communications established it has a meritorious defense to the claim asserted in Paes's
    petition.   Paes's point on appeal is limited to challenging the finding that Bear
    Communications established good cause.
    "Good cause" is defined by Rule 74.05(d) as "includ[ing] a mistake or conduct that
    is not intentionally or recklessly designed to impede the judicial process." "'Good cause
    should be given a liberal interpretation and includes good faith mistakes and even
    negligence in failing to file a timely answer.'" Lee v. Lee, 
    449 S.W.3d 383
    , 385 (Mo. App.
    W.D. 2014) (quoting Dozier v. Dozier, 
    222 S.W.3d 308
    , 313 (Mo. App. W.D. 2007)).
    Recklessness, however, includes "'mak[ing] a conscious choice of [a] course of action,
    either with knowledge of the serious danger to others involved in it or with knowledge of
    the facts which would disclose the danger to a reasonable man.'" 
    Id. (quoting Dozier,
    222
    S.W.3d at 313). "If there is a reasonable doubt as to whether conduct was intentionally
    10
    designed or irresponsibly calculated to impede the work of the courts, it should be resolved
    in favor of good faith." Saturn of Tiffany 
    Springs, 331 S.W.3d at 709
    . As such, "[i]n a
    close case, deference must be afforded to the trial court's determination about whether
    conduct is excusable or reckless." 
    Id. at 709-10
    (citing Bell v. Bell, 
    849 S.W.2d 194
    , 198
    (Mo. App. W.D. 1993)).
    Consistent with settled jurisprudence addressing the construction and application of
    the definition of "good cause," we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion
    when it concluded that Bear Communications' failure to timely respond to Paes's petition
    was the result of a mistake or conduct that was not intentionally or recklessly designed to
    impede the judicial process. Paes obviously disagrees with this conclusion, as his brief
    repeats the evidence and arguments he presented to the trial court, which we have
    summarized above. However, Paes's regurgitation of the arguments he made before the
    trial court ignores our standard of review. Our role as a court of review is "not to hear
    evidence and, based thereon, to make an original determination." Thummel v. King, 
    570 S.W.2d 679
    , 686 (Mo. banc 1978). Instead, our charge is to "to examine asserted error in
    the trial court which is of such a nature that the complaining party is entitled to a new trial
    or outright reversal or some modification of the judgment entered." 
    Id. Here, that
    requires
    us to show deference to the trial court's determination that Bear Communications
    established good cause unless Paes establishes that the conclusion was clearly against the
    logic of the circumstances or was so unreasonable and arbitrary that it shocks the sense of
    justice and indicates a lack of careful consideration. Paes cannot sustain this burden.
    11
    The trial court reviewed affidavits which supported the conclusion that when Bear
    Communications was served with Paes's petition, the company was experiencing turmoil
    and was inexperienced in making claims under a newly purchased employment practices
    liability insurance policy. According to the affidavits, Bear Communications had always
    intended to respond to Paes's petition but failed to do so mistakenly. Niles, the company's
    founder and chief executive officer, characterized the company's default as a "mistake that
    resulted from internal miscommunications and misunderstandings" and "not a 'tactic' to
    somehow avoid the consequences of the suit." While Paes highlights contrary evidence
    that could have supported an alternative conclusion, at best the contrary evidence creates a
    reasonable doubt as to whether Bear Communications' mistake or conduct was
    intentionally or recklessly designed to impede the judicial process. "Where a reasonable
    doubt exists as to whether the conduct was intentionally designed or irresponsibly
    calculated to impede the work of courts, it should be resolved in favor of good faith."
    Myers v. Pitney Bowes, Inc., 
    914 S.W.2d 835
    , 839 (Mo. App. S.D. 1996); see also Saturn
    of Tiffany 
    Springs, 331 S.W.3d at 709
    -10. The trial court therefore did not abuse its
    discretion when it resolved conflicting evidence to conclude that Bear Communications'
    mistakes and internal mishaps were not intentional, reckless, or designed to impede judicial
    process.
    We acknowledge that in the first of Paes's four subpoints, Paes argues that a
    judgment debtor's prior default judgments preclude a finding of good cause as a matter of
    law. Paes cites Krugh v. Hannah, 
    126 S.W.3d 391
    (Mo. banc 2004), for this proposition.
    While Krugh did involve the reversal of a trial court's finding of good cause sufficient to
    12
    set aside a default judgment, and while the record in Krugh did include evidence of prior
    default judgments entered against the judgment debtor, Krugh did not hold that evidence
    of prior default judgments precludes a finding of good cause as a matter of law. Krugh
    noted that prior default judgments supported a "conclusion that [the judgment debtor] was
    well aware of the consequences of . . . inattention" making the "failure to file more
    egregious than excusable." 
    Id. at 393.
    But of particular concern to the Court in Krugh was
    the fact that: (i) the judgment debtor was gratuitously notified that her answer was several
    weeks overdue but still waited nearly two weeks to contact her insurer; and (ii) there was
    no evidence that the judgment debtor took any action whatsoever in an effort to defend
    herself during the thirty-day period before default. 
    Id. The Court
    distinguished cases
    where good cause was found to have been established, noting that in each, some evidence
    indicated that "the defendant[] had at least taken some action in their defense within the
    30-day period before default." 
    Id. Here, the
    affidavits from Bear Communications
    supported that once served, Bear Communications fully intended to defend Paes's petition
    and turned the petition over to Addison for handling.           The affidavits from Bear
    Communications supported the conclusion that Addison believed he had instructed other
    personnel in the company to prepare the necessary paperwork for submission of Paes's
    petition to Bear Communications' insurer. Though mistakes were plainly made over which
    Bear Communications exercised control, substantial evidence supported the conclusion
    that Bear Communications did not intentionally or recklessly impede judicial process by
    ignoring Paes's petition altogether during the thirty-day period before default. Krugh is not
    13
    controlling, and did not require the trial court to find the absence of good cause as a matter
    of law.
    We need not further address the arguments raised in Paes's second, third, or fourth
    subpoints, as Paes does not argue, nor cite case law to support, that the evidence referred
    to in these subpoints, all of which was considered by the trial court, required a finding of
    the absence of good cause as a matter of law.1
    Paes's point on appeal is denied.
    Conclusion
    The Judgment setting aside the default judgment is affirmed.
    __________________________________
    Cynthia L. Martin, Judge
    All concur
    1
    Paes's fourth subpoint also argues that "many of the crucial facts cited in the Judgment are wrong and
    contrary to the uncontroverted facts" so that the "[J]udgment is arbitrary, capricious and not based on careful
    consideration of the facts before the court." [Appellant's Brief, p. 49] Paes's point relied on did not raise as a claim
    of error that the Judgment includes specific factual findings that are not supported by the record. "'We do not review
    arguments and issues raised in the argument under a point that are not fairly encompassed by that point.'" Johnson
    v. Mo. Dep't of Corr., 
    534 S.W.3d 869
    , 873 (Mo. App. W.D. 2017) (quoting Nichols v. Div. of Emp't Sec., 
    399 S.W.3d 901
    , 904 (Mo. App. W.D. 2013)). In any event, even were to review and attribute merit to this unpreserved
    claim of error (which we do not), where no findings of fact or conclusions of law have been requested by the parties
    as permitted by Rule 73.01(c), the trial court is assumed to have made findings consistent with the result reached.
    Rule 73.01(c); Spencer Reed Group, Inc. v. Pickett, 
    163 S.W.3d 570
    , 573 (Mo. App. W.D. 2005). Thus, even
    without the specific factual findings Paes challenges, the record would nonetheless support the trial court's finding
    of good cause.
    14