Case v. Municipality of Anchorage

128 P.3d 193, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 14, 2006 WL 202351
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJanuary 27, 2006
DocketA-9082
StatusPublished

This text of 128 P.3d 193 (Case v. Municipality of Anchorage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Case v. Municipality of Anchorage, 128 P.3d 193, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 14, 2006 WL 202351 (Ala. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Andrew B. Case was ticketed for speeding, and he demanded a trial on this charge. Case asserts that he received permission from the district court to attend the trial telephonically, since he was about to leave Alaska to study in Europe.

Case's trial was set for the afternoon of October 18, 2004. But Case failed to telephone the district court at the appointed time. After waiting for approximately forty minutes, Magistrate Jennifer K. Wells proceeded with the trial. The officer who gave Case the speeding citation testified that Case had indeed committed this offense. Based on this testimony, and based on Case's failure to appear, Magistrate Wells entered a default judgement against Case pursuant to Alaska District Court Criminal Rule 8(d)(6) 1

Some ten weeks later, Case filed the first of a series of pleadings in which he asked the district court to set aside this default judgement under District Court Criminal Rule 8%), and to reschedule his trial.

Although Magistrate Wells initially indicated that she believed Case had not acted with due diligence, she later conceded that Case might have been confused concerning the hour when he was supposed to call the court, given the time difference between Alaska and Spain. However, Magistrate Wells noted another deficiency in Case's pleadings.

Under the Alaska appellate cases construing Alaska Civil Rule 60(b) (the civil rule counterpart to District Court Criminal Rule 8), a party seeking relief from a default judgement must assert that they have a meritorious defense to the opposing party's claim(s). In other words, a party seeking relief from a default judgement must show the court that there is, in fact, something to be litigated. 2

As Magistrate Wells pointed out, Case never asserted that he had a meritorious defense to the speeding citation. In fact, Case expressly contended that he had no obligation to assert a defense. Case argued that a traffic citation "is- a criminal matter", and that "requiring a defendant to show [a] defense would impermissibly require that the defendant waive his right to remain silent in order to obtain a [trial]".

Magistrate Wells rejected this contention. And, because Case failed to assert a defense to the speeding charge, the magistrate denied his motion to set aside the default judgement. Case then filed this appeal.

Case renews his contention that, to the extent that Alaska law requires him to plead a meritorious defense to the speeding charge in order to get the default judgement set aside, Alaska law violates his Fifth Amendment right to remain silent. However, Case fails to cite any relevant case law to support this proposition.

*195 Case's Fifth Amendment argument might be stronger if Alaska law required the moving party to prove a meritorious defense as a pre-condition to setting aside a default judgement. But the burden on the moving party is simply to convince the court that there is something to litigate if the matter went to trial.

The Alaska Supreme Court most recently addressed this point in Cook v. Rowland, 49 P.3d 262 (Alaska 2002). Here is how the supreme court described the rule that a party seeking to set aside a default judgement must demonstrate a "meritorious defense":

It is not necessary that the defendant show that, if [the default is set aside], the ultimate outcome [of the litigation] will be different[. But] the defendant must demonstrate that the outcome might be different if a trial were held.
Showing a meritorious defense demands more than a perfunctory statement that a meritorious defense exists. The defaulting party may be required to show that there is a factual or legal basis for the tendered defense. [The appellant in this case] contends that this requirement only means that a defendant must say more than the conclusory statement "I have a defense." But the exact standard is not so easily defined, because the amount of proof required will change based on the persuasiveness of the other equitable factors considered under [Civil] Rule 55(e)'s requirement of good cause.
[On the other hand, we reject the appel-lee's argument] that a meritorious defense [always] requires both a claim of defense and a factual representation supporting that claim.... [In several ... cases we have not required evidencel[,] but have found a meritorious defense when facts supporting a claim of defense are merely alleged. Again, the existence and quality of evidence establishing a meritorious defense is a factor to be weighed in determining whether good cause exists to set aside the default judgment.

Cook v. Rowland, 49 P.3d at 265-66 (emphasis added) (footnotes and internal quotations omitted).

In other words, the rule does not require the presentation of an extensive or full-blown defense. In some instances (as noted in Cook v. Rowland), the defendant's burden can be satisfied by simply presenting an arguable theory of defense-allegations which, if ultimately supported by credible evidence, would defeat the opposing party's claim.

Case argues that the Fifth Amendment protects a criminal defendant from disclosing even this much about his case. But, as we noted above, Case has failed to provide us with any authority to support this assertion. And our own research has not revealed any cases on point.

Moreover, we note that even though Alaska's privilege against - sélf-incrimination (Alaska Constitution, Article I, Section 9) has repeatedly been interpreted as providing broader protection than the corresponding federal privilege, 3 the Alaska Supreme Court has nevertheless held that requiring a criminal defendant to give advance notice of their intention to raise a defense of "alibi" does not violate the defendant's privilege against self-incrimination. Scott v. State, 519 P.2d 774, 786-87 (Alaska 1974).

We do not suggest that Case's constitutional argument is frivolous. However, because we must presume that the "meritorious defense" requirement is constitutional, it is Case's burden to affirmatively demonstrate that this requirement violates his Fifth Amendment privilege.

It is sufficient, for present purposes, to note that (1) Case has failed to cite any authority to support his Fifth Amendment assertion, (2) our own research has revealed no case law that prohibits courts from enfore-ing a "meritorious defense" requirement against criminal defendants, and (8) even under Alaska constitutional law as expounded in Scott, the "meritorious defense" requirement appears not to infringe the privilege against self-incrimination, at least to the extent that the "meritorious defense" rule *196 merely requires defendants to give advance notice of their general theory of defense.

Given these cireumstances, we conclude that we need not-and should not-definitively resolve the Fifth Amendment issue raised by Case in this appeal. Rather, as we said in Nason v.

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Related

Scott v. State
519 P.2d 774 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1974)
Balchen v. Balchen
566 P.2d 1324 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1977)
Hertz v. Berzanske
704 P.2d 767 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1985)
State v. Gonzalez
853 P.2d 526 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1993)
Gregor v. Hodges
612 P.2d 1008 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1980)
Markland v. City of Fairbanks
513 P.2d 658 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1973)
Beavers v. State
998 P.2d 1040 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2000)
Zok v. Municipality of Anchorage
41 P.3d 154 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2001)
In the Disciplinary Matter Involving Beconovich
884 P.2d 1080 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1994)
Nason v. State
102 P.3d 962 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2004)
Cook v. Rowland
49 P.3d 262 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2002)

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Bluebook (online)
128 P.3d 193, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 14, 2006 WL 202351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-v-municipality-of-anchorage-alaskactapp-2006.