Breyfogle v. Braun

460 N.W.2d 689, 1990 N.D. LEXIS 195, 1990 WL 127239
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1990
DocketCiv. 890377
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 460 N.W.2d 689 (Breyfogle v. Braun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Breyfogle v. Braun, 460 N.W.2d 689, 1990 N.D. LEXIS 195, 1990 WL 127239 (N.D. 1990).

Opinion

MESCHKE, Justice.

Mark C. Breyfogle appealed from an order dismissing, with prejudice, his action against the six members of the executive committee of the Protection and Advocacy Project, the director of the Project, and his supervisor, all in their official capacities, as well as against Arlene Wegner-Flaten personally and as an employee of the Project. The dismissal order was based on Breyfo-gle’s failure to timely answer a motion to dismiss. We reverse and remand for consideration of the merits of the motion.

In September 1988, Breyfogle was discharged as an employee of the Project. On Breyfogle’s grievance, the Project’s executive committee upheld his discharge, but ruled that he could be reinstated on probation if he successfully completed alcohol-dependency treatment. Breyfogle was not reinstated.

On August 21, 1989, Breyfogle sued the executive committee of the Project, its director, and his supervisor for sexual harassment, sexual discrimination, and wrongful discharge. He joined Wegner-Flaten with a claim for defamation and libel. Breyfogle sought damages, punitive damages, and reinstatement as an employee.

The Attorney General’s office asked Breyfogle’s counsel for extra time to respond to the summons and complaint. Breyfogle’s counsel extended the time until October 18, and this extension was confirmed by letter. On October 17, the State moved to dismiss for reasons of sovereign immunity and for failure to state a claim against Wegner-Flaten. Breyfogle’s counsel received his copies of the motion on October 19. The State filed the motion and an accompanying brief, but did not file or serve a notice of motion, nor did the State refer to NDROC 3.2 in its moving papers.

A local order required the movant to notice a “hearing in all eases for a date and time certain.” 1 The State did not do so, apparently unaware that it was expected to do so. Nothing happened until November 16, when Breyfogle’s counsel called the local calendar clerk, learned Judge Bohl-man was assigned to the case, and obtained a December 11 date for hearing of the motion. However, Breyfogle’s counsel did not promptly give notice of this hearing date.

On November 22, the Attorney General’s office wrote the Presiding Judge of the district, Judge Smith, requesting that “an *691 order for dismissal be executed” because Breyfogle had failed to file an answer brief within 10 days of the motion. The letter asserted that Breyfogle’s failure to timely answer authorized a “summary ruling” under NDROC 3.2. 2

Breyfogle’s counsel tells us that he .received a copy of the State’s letter requesting dismissal on November 28. On the next day, Breyfogle’s counsel hand carried a letter to Judge Smith opposing the request for dismissal, pointing out that Judge Bohlman had been assigned to the case, and questioning noncompliance by the State with “the requirements of the Procedure to Implement Rule 3.2, NDROC, promulgated as a Local Rule for the Northeast Central Judicial District by Order on 20 December 1985.”

On November 29, according to Breyfo-gle’s counsel, the calendar clerk told him that the motion would be heard by Judge Bohlman as scheduled on December 11. In fact, on November 28, Judge Smith had signed and filed an order dismissing Brey-fogle’s complaint with prejudice, ruling that Breyfogle “failed to file a responsive brief, and that the failure to file a brief is an admission that the motion is meritorious .... ” Nothing in the record indicates that a copy of this order was served on Breyfogle’s counsel.

The Attorney General’s office again wrote Judge Smith on December 4, arguing that “the Northeast Central Judicial District [had] not codified any rules regarding Rule 3.2,” and that “it [was] apparent that the order [had] not been made an official local rule as required by the North Dakota Local Court Rules.” This letter also stated, from inquiry to the clerk of court (rather than to the calendar clerk), that there had been no Judge assigned to the case, that the State’s “motion and brief were the last items filed,” and that “no mention was made of a hearing on the motion.” The State repeated that, since he had failed to timely answer the motion, Breyfogle had tacitly admitted that the State’s motion was meritorious.

On December 7, Judge Bohlman recused himself. Judge Smith entered an order assigning himself to the case on December 8. On December 7, the calendar clerk told Breyfogle’s counsel that the December 11 hearing was to be conducted by telephone to accommodate the Attorney General’s office. Breyfogle’s counsel prepared a notice dated December 7, 1989, served it on the Attorney General’s office, and filed it on December 8, 1989. The notice said:

NOTICE IS HEREBY PROVIDED that a telephonic hearing on the Defendant’s motion to dismiss, and the response of the plaintiff thereto, will be conducted ... on 11 December 1989, ... by ... conference call, with the Hon. Kirk Smith, Judge of the District Court, presiding.

*692 On December 8, Breyfogle’s counsel also filed a brief answering the motion, arguing that the action arose on contract and was not barred by sovereign immunity.

As the telephonic hearing began on December 11, the trial court changed its purpose:

[TRIAL COURT]: And the question, as I understand it, is Mr. Howe’s request to have the order to dismiss vacated because if it’s not vacated the case is dismissed.
[BREYFOGLE’S COUNSEL]: I have not received a copy of the order to dismiss yet.
[TRIAL COURT]: Well, it was dated the 28th of November and was signed and filed on that date. So your motion of hearing on the motion to dismiss is deemed to be a motion to vacate that order because if it’s not vacated we have nothing left to dismiss.

As the hearing ended, the trial court indicated that the “motion to vacate” was denied. Breyfogle’s counsel immediately filed a notice of appeal from the dismissal order not yet served on him.

Four days later, the trial court entered an order denying Breyfogle’s “request to vacate.” The order recited that the local order was not an official “local rule” and that it was not intended to alter the requirement of NDROC 3.2 “that a timely response must be made to avoid an admission that the motion is meritorious.” The merits of the State’s motion to dismiss were not determined.

On appeal, Breyfogle argues that the trial court abused its discretion in dismissing his complaint with prejudice. Breyfo-gle’s counsel explains that he did not answer the motion within 10 days, as NDROC 3.2 instructs, because he expected notice “for a date and time certain” in accordance with the local order and practice. When the trial court did not adhere to this local custom, Breyfogle’s counsel insists that he was disadvantaged and blind-sided.

Breyfogle’s counsel also urges that confusion among the judges compounded his procedural confusion, pointing out that Judge Smith entered the order of dismissal while Judge Bohlman was still assigned to the case, and that Breyfogle was not notified of the dismissal order before the hearing to “vacate” it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
460 N.W.2d 689, 1990 N.D. LEXIS 195, 1990 WL 127239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breyfogle-v-braun-nd-1990.