Asset Acceptance, LLC v. Moberly

241 S.W.3d 329, 2007 Ky. LEXIS 269, 2007 WL 4460630
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 2007
Docket2006-SC-000617-DG
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 241 S.W.3d 329 (Asset Acceptance, LLC v. Moberly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Asset Acceptance, LLC v. Moberly, 241 S.W.3d 329, 2007 Ky. LEXIS 269, 2007 WL 4460630 (Ky. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Justice ABRAMSON.

By Order entered March 24, 2006, the Madison Circuit Court vacated a default judgment granted in February 2004 in favor of Asset Acceptance, LLC (Asset), against Sondra Moberly, a resident of *331 Richmond, Kentucky. Asset appealed the March 2006 Order to the Court of Appeals, but that Court, noting the longstanding rule that an order setting aside a judgment and reopening the case for trial is not final and therefore not appealable, dismissed the appeal. This Court granted Asset’s motion for discretionary review to consider Asset’s contentions that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to disturb the two-year-old judgment and that an immediate appeal should he for review of the jurisdictional challenge. In essence, Asset asks this Court to adopt the approach which the federal courts have taken in circumstances such as these for over 120 years. Having considered the federal precedent and the contrary view, we agree that in the narrow circumstances presented by this case, an order overturning a long-settled judgment should be subject to a limited jurisdictional review. Accordingly, we remand this case to the Court of Appeals to consider whether Moberly’s motion was barred by the limitations period in CR 60.02 and thus outside the trial court’s authority to grant.

RELEVANT FACTS

Asset, as the assignee of an alleged credit card debt, brought suit against Mob-erly in December 2003. According to the summons endorsement, Moberly was personally served on December 30. Moberly did not answer or otherwise respond to Asset’s complaint. On February 9, 2004, well after the twenty days allowed for Moberly’s response, Asset moved for default judgment. CR 55.01. Counsel certified that notice of the motion was mailed to Moberly on February 5. Moberly did not appear at the February 12 hearing, at the conclusion of which the trial court granted Asset’s motion and entered judgment against Moberly in the amount of $8,243.83 plus interest. The trial court’s docket sheet indicates that the judgment was entered and notice mailed to Moberly that same day. On March 30, 2004, Asset filed a judgment lien against any real estate Moberly held in Madison County, and again counsel certified that a copy of the lien had been mailed to Moberly. Moberly did not appeal from or otherwise respond to the judgment, nor did she respond to the lien. There the matter stood until February 2006, when Asset garnisheed Moberly’s bank account and collected $11,032.92 from the garnishee bank. Soon thereafter, counsel for Moberly moved pursuant to CR 55.02 and CR 60.02 to have the default judgment set aside.

Moberly averred that from November 20, 2003 until December 20, 2003, ten days before the service of Asset’s summons, she had participated in an inpatient alcohol rehabilitation program, and that even after completing the program she remained for some time incapable of managing her affairs. Although she did not deny having received the summons, Asset’s complaint, notice of Asset’s motion for default judgment, notice of the judgment itself, and notice of Asset’s lien, she asserted that in her debilitated condition she remained “completely unaware” of Asset’s suit for over two years, until the garnishment of her bank account in February 2006. This “unawareness,” she maintained, was “a reason of an extraordinary nature” entitling her to relief from Asset’s two-year-old judgment under CR 60.02(f). The trial court agreed and reopened the case for trial.

On appeal, Asset contends that Moberly’s motion alleges no more than excusable neglect, if that, and thus was outside the one-year limitations period in CR 60.02 governing such claims. Asset further contends that Moberly’s and the trial court’s invocation of CR 60.02(f) was improper and an abuse of the trial court’s authority. In these limited circumstances, Asset maintains that an immediate appeal should be *332 available to correct that abuse and to uphold the finality of its two year-old judgment.

CR 60.02 — SETTING ASIDE A JUDGMENT

CR 55.02 provides that “[f|or good cause shown the court may set aside a judgment by default in accordance with Rule 60.02.” CR 60.02, in turn, provides in pertinent part that

[o]n motion a court may, upon such terms as are just, relieve a party or his legal representative from its final judgment, order, or proceeding upon the following grounds: (a) mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect; ... or (f) any other reason of an extraordinary nature justifying relief. The motion shall be made within a reasonable time, and on grounds (a), (b), and (c) not more than one year after the judgment, order, or proceeding was entered or taken.

As often noted, default judgments are disfavored and the trial court is vested with broad discretion to set them aside. See e.g., Educator & Executive Insurers, Inc. v. Moore, 505 S.W.2d 176, 178 (Ky.1974) (asserting that courts should assess motions to set aside default judgments liberally in order that litigants “may not be deprived of their day in court.”). Nevertheless,

[t]he moving party ... cannot have the judgment set aside and achieve his day in court if he cannot show good cause and a meritorious defense.... Good cause is most commonly defined as a timely showing of the circumstances under which the default judgment was procured.

Green Seed Company, Inc. v. Harrison Tobacco Storage Warehouse, Inc., 663 S.W.2d 755, 757 (Ky.App.1984) (citing Jacobs v. Bell, 441 S.W.2d 448 (Ky.1969)).

To entitle the movant to relief, the extenuating circumstances must amount to one of the reasons specified in CR 60.02. If the circumstances constitute “mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect,” then the movant may be entitled to relief, but only if she brings her motion within the rule’s one-year limitations period. CR 60.02(f), the subsection permitting relief “within a reasonable time” for “any other reason of an extraordinary nature,” is to be invoked “only with extreme caution, and only under most unusual circumstances.” Cawood v. Cawood, 329 S.W.2d 569, 571 (Ky.1969). It is available only for reasons “not otherwise set forth in the rule,” Commonwealth v. Spaulding, 991 S.W.2d 651, 655 (Ky.1999), and ought not to be invoked so as to undermine the time constraints applicable to the other subsections. Thus, as the United States Supreme Court has explained with’ reference to the corresponding subsection of Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b), “a party who failed to take timely action due to ‘excusable neglect’ may not seek relief more than a year after the judgment by resorting to subsection (6).” Pioneer Investment Services Company v. Brunswick Associates Limited Partnership,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 S.W.3d 329, 2007 Ky. LEXIS 269, 2007 WL 4460630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asset-acceptance-llc-v-moberly-ky-2007.