Brett Paes v. Bear Communications, LLC

568 S.W.3d 52
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 13, 2019
DocketWD81599
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 568 S.W.3d 52 (Brett Paes v. Bear Communications, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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

Opinion

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:

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568 S.W.3d 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brett-paes-v-bear-communications-llc-moctapp-2019.