Calvin Carrick v. Mid Ark Outside Storage LLC

2025 Ark. App. 296
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMay 7, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 296 (Calvin Carrick v. Mid Ark Outside Storage LLC) 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
Calvin Carrick v. Mid Ark Outside Storage LLC, 2025 Ark. App. 296 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 296 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CV-24-317

Opinion Delivered May 7, 2025 CALVIN CARRICK APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI COUNTY APPELLANT CIRCUIT COURT, FOURTH DIVISION [NO. 60CV-22-7813] V. HONORABLE HERBERT WRIGHT, JUDGE MID ARK OUTSIDE STORAGE LLC AFFIRMED APPELLEE

WAYMOND M. BROWN, Judge

Appellant Calvin Carrick brings this pro se appeal from the Pulaski County Circuit Court’s

order denying his motion to compel return of personal property or judgment for the value thereof.

We affirm.

This matter began on November 14, 2022, as a complaint in unlawful detainer related to

Carrick’s rental of a commercial storage lot from appellee Mid Ark Outside Storage LLC (“Mid

Ark”). The complaint alleged that following Carrick’s failure to pay rent, Mid Ark gave notice to

Carrick to vacate the property; he failed to do so. On November 21, Carrick filed an answer and

counterclaim for breach of contract, false business records, defamation, and abuse of legal process

with intent to harass. On November 22, Mid Ark filed an amended complaint in unlawful detainer,

a request for admissions, and an answer to and motion to dismiss Carrick’s counterclaim. Carrick’s counterclaim was dismissed on December 15 for failure to respond to Mid Ark’s motion to dismiss

in a timely manner.

On December 28, Mid Ark moved to deem its November 22 request for admissions admitted

and for immediate possession. Carrick responded on January 5, 2023, stating that “[t]he only

admission [he] makes is to incorrectly tabulating the days to respond to motions, only counting

business days. This was [his] mistake.”

Following the February 14 hearing on the unlawful-detainer complaint, on February 23,

judgment was entered in favor of Mid Ark. The circuit court deemed Mid Ark’s request for

admissions admitted as the result of Carrick’s failure to timely respond. The court found that the

request for admissions resolved all material issues of fact in favor of Mid Ark, Carrick unlawfully

detained the property, and Mid Ark is entitled to immediate possession of the premises. The circuit

clerk was ordered to enter a writ of possession for the property, and Mid Ark was awarded $1700.00

for compensatory damages and $5100.00 for treble damages in addition to the recovery of filing,

service, and attorney’s fees in the amount of $2162.50. Carrick was ordered to, within forty-five

days of entry of the judgment, file with the court clerk a schedule, verified by affidavit, of all of his

property, both real and personal, including money, bank accounts, rights, credits, and choses in

action held by himself or others for him and specify the particular property that he claims as exempt

under the provisions of the law.

Carrick moved for a new trial, stating that he filed a Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”)

request for the audio recording of the February 14 hearing and alleging that Mid Ark committed

fraud. Mid Ark responded, stating that Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 59 governs new-trial

motions, and Carrick failed to state a Rule 59 basis for new trial. The motion for new trial was

2 denied by order entered on February 28. Carrick filed a notice of appeal on March 8. This court

granted Mid Ark’s motion to dismiss the appeal on August 25 because Carrick failed to submit a

timely and complete record.

On October 30, Mid Ark moved for an order of abandonment. Mid Ark stated that since the

February 23 judgment, Carrick had failed to remove his property from the storage lot. As such, the

property was abandoned, and Carrick no longer had a right to the property. Mid Ark also filed a

motion to compel and for contempt alleging that Carrick had failed to comply with the February

judgment’s provision requiring him to submit a schedule of assets. Mid Ark stated its belief that the

failure to comply was an attempt to hide assets to avoid payment of the judgment. Carrick

responded, denying that he had abandoned the property or was hiding assets. On January 25, 2024,

the circuit court entered an order to compel Carrick to file his schedule of assets by January 29. The

court also entered an order of abandonment, granting Mid Ark ownership of the property Carrick

left on its premises, deeming that the property had been abandoned. Carrick filed his schedule of

assets on January 29.

Then, on February 5, Carrick filed a motion to compel return of personal property or

judgment for the value thereof, stating that Mid Ark “manipulated, converted, and stole [ ] Carrick’s

personal property, without lawful jurisdiction or any court order to do so.” The circuit court denied

Carrick’s motion. This denial is the subject of the appeal before this court.

First, we address Mid Ark’s contention that the appeal should be dismissed without reaching

the merits of Carrick’s arguments. Mid Ark argues that, among other things, Carrick failed to timely

tender his brief on appeal.

3 Our review has confirmed that Carrick’s appellate brief was timely filed. Carrick filed this

appeal and lodged a record on May 16, 2024. The appellant shall, within forty days of lodging the

record, file the appellant’s brief with the clerk.1 Accordingly, Carrick’s brief was due on June 25.

On that date, he attempted to tender his brief, but it was rejected. The clerk of this court granted

Carrick an extension of time, until July 9, to correct the brief. Carrick tendered his corrected brief

on July 9. Therefore, it is timely.

For reversal, Carrick argues that the circuit court erred in denying his motion to compel the

return of his personal property. He contends that Mid Ark’s unlawful-detainer complaint contained

“countless lies, misrepresentations, and false allegations” and was “wholly fraudulent.” Carrick,

referencing statements made during the February 14, 2023, unlawful-detainer hearing, further

alleged judicial bias, lack of impartiality, perjury, and due-process violations. Carrick argues that

Mid Ark’s motion for abandonment contained the same “predictable misrepresentations.” He claims

that on March 23, 2023, he attempted to retrieve his property from Mid Ark’s lot; however, Carrick

filed a police report when Mid Ark prevented him from accessing the storage lot, stating he was

banned from the property.2

1 See Ark. Sup. Ct. R. 4-4(b). 2 The police report indicates that officers responded to a dispute at Mid Ark’s storage facility. Carrick claimed he was attempting to retrieve approximately twenty vehicles that he had been storing on the lot, but Mid Ark would not allow him to do so. Mid Ark informed officers that the matter had already been settled in court and that Mid Ark now owned the property. The report states that officers utilized the CourtConnect database and confirmed Mid Ark had been awarded ownership of the property Carrick left on the lot. Carrick was advised that he was banned from the property and would be arrested if he returned.

4 Carrick additionally argues that he was denied access to his property on January 19, 2024.

He claims that in a phone-conference hearing held on January 18, the circuit court gave him seven

days to retrieve his personal property. Carrick states that when he arrived at the storage facility on

January 19, “he found much of his personal property missing.” Carrick contacted police and filed a

theft-of-property report. He maintains that this is a case of “scams gone wild” “with the aid of a biased

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Related

Hunt v. Perry
162 S.W.3d 891 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2004)
Simmons v. Estate of Wilkinson
885 S.W.2d 673 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1994)

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