Brookstone Assisted Living Opco, LLC v. Green

2025 Ark. App. 598
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 10, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 598 (Brookstone Assisted Living Opco, LLC v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brookstone Assisted Living Opco, LLC v. Green, 2025 Ark. App. 598 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 598 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISIONS II & III No. CV-24-495

BROOKSTONE ASSISTED LIVING Opinion Delivered December 10, 2025 OPCO, LLC, D/B/A BROOKSTONE ASSISTED LIVING COMMUNITY APPEAL FROM THE WASHINGTON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT APPELLANT [NO. 72CV-22-3433]

V. HONORABLE JOHN C. THREET, JUDGE JON M. GREEN, AS SPECIAL ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE REVERSED AND REMANDED OF BONNIE L. GREEN, DECEASED

APPELLEE

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

In civil litigation, little is more alluring or more treacherous than the prospect of

kicking toward an open goal. This is an appeal from the denial of Brookstone Assisted

Living Community’s motion to set aside a default judgment entered despite timely common

defenses by codefendants who were dismissed after it failed to answer. We reverse.

Jon Green’s wife Bonnie, a Brookstone resident with advanced dementia but good

mobility and physical health, was admitted to Washington Regional Medical Center

(WRMC) on 26 December 2020 for “altered mental status.” Jon pleaded in his complaint

that while at WRMC, she fell from a gurney while unattended. No x-rays were taken.

The fall was not charted, and no one told him or Brookstone about it before Bonnie was

discharged to Brookstone on December 28. Bonnie was in no condition to tell them herself either. Brookstone’s staff soon realized something was wrong with Bonnie’s leg. But before

they could x-ray it, she tried to get out of bed while unsupervised and fell again. She broke

her hip. Jon alleged that she lost all remaining quality of life between the second fall on

December 28 and her death nine months later.

He sued Brookstone and some WRMC-affiliated doctors and entities, including Dr.

Linda McGhee (collectively the “hospital defendants”), for medical negligence on 22

December 2022. Later, he filed an amended complaint and a second amended complaint.

Though some alleged facts varied by defendant, Jon stated one claim against them all under

the heading “Claims Against All Defendants.” He alleged that all defendants violated the

“respective standards of care that applied to physicians, nurses, and other medical providers

practicing in Fayetteville, Washington County, Arkansas, or a similar locality.” He also

raised general-negligence allegations against all defendants.

Brookstone did not timely answer the complaints; but other defendants did, pleading

general denials and defenses like Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), all the Rule 8

defenses, and everything else. On May 23, the circuit court dismissed Jon’s claims against

the hospital defendants without prejudice and found Brookstone in default. It entered

judgment for $671,203.80 after a damages hearing. In October, Brookstone moved to set

the default judgment aside because the hospital defendants had raised a common defense.

The circuit court denied the motion.

2 Common defense is the only issue Brookstone raises on appeal. Under settled

common-defense caselaw, the judgment must be set aside. 1 Jon tries to distinguish those

cases. In the circuit court, he conceded that if WRMC had defaulted, Dr. McGhee’s answer

would have covered the hospital “because there’s commonality there,” and her general

denial would cover Brookstone if she denied common allegations. But he contended the

allegations against the hospital defendants and Brookstone were not common and, indeed,

that their interests were adverse.

At the pleading stage, we don’t judge the common-defense doctrine solely by

comparing and contrasting facts pleaded and deciding if there is sufficient overlap. We ask

if an answering defendant’s defenses legally covered the nonanswering defendant. Contract-

claim defenses are not tort-claim defenses, so of course the subject of the lawsuit needs some

factual nexus between the answering and nonanswering defendants. But we have something

of a textbook common-defense-doctrine case given this area of the law (medical

malpractice). The case is all about one patient, and whether alleged negligence by multiple

defendants rendering her medical care resulted in injuries in two causally related incidents.

1 Jon contends that we should sustain the default judgment regardless under the abuse- of-discretion standard unless the circuit court acted “improvidently, thoughtlessly, or without due consideration.” E.g., Gulley v. State, 2012 Ark. 368, at 10, 423 S.W.3d 569, 576 (stating standard of review). The circuit court has no discretion to enter default judgment over a common defense, and abuses its discretion if it does. See Macom v. Di Cresce, 2023 Ark. App. 530, 680 S.W.3d 36. We also note that Brookstone was not in default when the court granted Jon’s motion for default judgment May 23 because the May 12 second amended complaint gave Brookstone twenty more days to answer. Ark. R. Civ. P. 15(a); Edward J. DeBartolo Corp. v. Cartwright, 323 Ark. 573, 916 S.W.2d 114 (1996); see also 2 David Newbern, John Watkins & D.P. Marshall Jr., Arkansas Civil Practice & Procedure § 19:2 (5th ed. 2010) (“[A]n amended complaint amounts to a waiver of any objection to the defendant’s untimely answer to the original complaint.”).

3 The timely answers by even one defendant, Dr. McGhee, covered Brookstone. First,

recall that Jon lumped all his fact allegations against all defendants into a single claim. Dr.

McGhee pleaded affirmatively that relief could not be granted on those facts and moved to

dismiss both complaints under Rule 12(b)(6). In Sutter v. Payne, our supreme court

specifically listed “failure to state a claim” as a defense that is “equally applicable to both co-

defendants.” 337 Ark. 330, 335–36, 989 S.W.2d 887, 889 (1999).

Second, Dr. McGhee denied “both generally and specifically, each and every material

allegation” she had not specifically admitted. And she did not admit much. A general denial

of every material allegation is a common defense because it “puts in issue the basic elements

in every lawsuit, regardless of the differing allegations of fault as to each defendant.” Firestone

Tire & Rubber Co. v. Little, 269 Ark. 636, 645, 599 S.W.2d 756, 760 (Ark. App. 1980). The

purpose and effect is “to put the plaintiff to proof on each of the allegations made in the

complaint.” Id. at 643, 599 S.W.2d at 759.

Finally, Dr. McGhee specifically denied allegations of negligence and causation

directed at Brookstone before affirmatively pleading in the same paragraph that she was not

negligent and did not proximately cause injury. The combination made clear she was

denying the allegations against all defendants, not just herself. And she was not jumping in

front of a legal bullet by denying them. Jon alleged that negligence by all defendants

(including Dr. McGhee) contributed to Bonnie’s December 28 fall at Brookstone. First,

the hospital defendants allowed Bonnie to injure her leg and failed to alert Brookstone to

the increased fall risk it would present. Then Brookstone failed to take measures to keep

4 her from trying to walk unassisted after learning of the leg injury, “which proximately

resulted in Bonnie’s second fall.”

In other words, both the hospital defendants and Brookstone were alleged to have

joint responsibility for Bonnie’s injuries from the second fall.

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Related

Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Little
599 S.W.2d 756 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 1980)
Sutter v. Payne
989 S.W.2d 887 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1999)
Gulley v. State
2012 Ark. 368 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2012)
Edward J. Debartolo Corp. v. Cartwright
916 S.W.2d 114 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1996)

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2025 Ark. App. 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brookstone-assisted-living-opco-llc-v-green-arkctapp-2025.