Clarence Bivines v. Rebekah C. Johnson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJuly 30, 2024
Docket2023-CA-00565-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Clarence Bivines v. Rebekah C. Johnson (Clarence Bivines v. Rebekah C. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarence Bivines v. Rebekah C. Johnson, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2023-CA-00565-COA

CLARENCE BIVINES APPELLANT

v.

REBEKAH C. JOHNSON APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/28/2023 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. KATHY KING JACKSON COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: JACKSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: JAMES (JAY) R. FOSTER II ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: THOMAS RAY JULIAN NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 07/30/2024 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE WILSON, P.J., McCARTY AND EMFINGER, JJ.

EMFINGER, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Clarence Bivines sued Rebekah Johnson regarding injuries stemming from a car

accident. On July 6, 2021, the County Court of Jackson County granted Johnson’s “Motion

to Withdraw Admissions and for Leave of Court to Respond to Requests for Admissions.”

Further, the county court denied the motion for summary judgment Bivines had filed. The

county court reasoned that because Johnson’s motion to withdraw her admissions was

granted, Bivines’ motion for summary judgment was moot.1 On March 28, 2023, on appeal,

the Circuit Court of Jackson County entered an order affirming the county court’s rulings.

1 Notably, Bivines and Johnson proceeded to trial on March 28 and 29, 2022. Rather than filing an interlocutory appeal from the county court’s July 6, 2021 order regarding the withdrawal of admissions, Bivines appealed to the circuit court after the county court entered a judgment in his favor on April 6, 2022, in the amount of $12,000. Bivines appealed from this order.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. On March 15, 20l9, Bivines and Johnson were involved in an automobile accident in

Gautier, Mississippi. On September 23, 2020, Bivines filed a complaint against Johnson in

the County Court of Jackson County, Mississippi, regarding the accident. Johnson was

served with process on October 26, 2020. Along with the complaint, Johnson was served

with seventy-nine requests for admissions. A notice of service was filed on November 13,

2020. Bivines mailed Johnson a second and third set of requests for admissions on

November 18, 2020, and January 29, 2021. It is undisputed that Johnson received and failed

to answer the requests for admissions in a timely manner as prescribed by Mississippi Rule

of Civil Procedure 36.

¶3. Johnson’s counsel argued that while it was undisputed that Johnson failed to timely

answer Bivines’ complaint and respond to multiple discovery requests, the failure to respond

was not intentional but, rather, caused by an email transmission error. Johnson argued that

she turned over the complaint and discovery requests to her insurance carrier (Geico) as soon

as she received them, and, in turn, Geico purportedly forwarded the file including the

complaint and discovery requests to its counsel. Counsel testified that he did not receive any

information regarding Johnson’s file until after he received a phone call from Geico in

February 2021, inquiring on the status of the case. Counsel testified:

I get a phone call in February 2021 wanting to know the status of this case, and I looked . . . my first reaction is I’d never heard of it. I looked and we had no

2 file. I looked in my email. I never received the transmittal of the case. So I immediately pulled up the docket. There had been no default filed. I immediately filed an answer. I realized that there were also requests for admissions. . . . So I immediately thereafter filed this motion to set aside – well, not set aside, but seeking an order from the Court allowing me to answer these admissions out of time.

Johnson filed her answer to Bivines’ complaint on February 15, 2021, and her motion for

leave to file answers to the requests for admissions on April 13, 2021.

¶4. Bivines filed his motion and brief for summary judgment on April 27, 2021. In the

summary judgment motion, Bivines requested that the court “enter an [o]rder granting the

Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment on liability and on the matters of pain and

suffering and emotional suffering and prohibit any evidence, argument, and/or cross-

examination which contradicts the admissions in any way.”

¶5. After a hearing on June 15, 2021, the county court entered an order granting Johnson’s

motion to withdraw admissions and denying Bivines’ motion for summary judgment. As

noted, the parties proceeded to trial on March 28-29, 2022, and the jury returned a verdict in

Bivines’ favor for $12,000 in damages. Bivines timely filed a notice of appeal from the

county court’s order granting Johnson’s motion to withdraw her admissions and denying

Bivines’ motion for summary judgment.2

¶6. The sole issue Bivines raised on appeal to the circuit court read, “Has Rule 36 of the

Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure been judicially abrogated?” While Bivines did not

2 Bivines did not appeal the jury’s verdict or the amount of damages the jury awarded him. He raises no error concerning the actual jury trial in county court.

3 expressly request a new trial, it appears that his goal was to obtain a new trial where the

admissions are deemed admitted, and Johnson is prohibited from presenting evidence at the

new trial contrary to the admissions. The parties filed briefs with the circuit court, and the

court heard oral argument on the issue. During the oral argument, the circuit judge asked

counsel for Bivines, “But my question is, you won the case. What are you trying to get out

of it now?” Bivines’ counsel responded:

Well, if you look at the admissions, Your Honor, those request for admission go through extensively, and I think would even give me a potential punitive damages instruction for being on a cell phone at the time, if I recall correctly, at the time of the wreck, and that wasn’t done in this case. Of course, I can’t get that if I don’t have any proof of it.

When the judge asked if he put on any proof of that at trial, counsel admitted that he did not.

Later in the argument, the judge asked Bivines’ counsel why he did not file an interlocutory

appeal when the county court denied his motion for summary judgment and ruled regarding

the admissions. Bivines’ counsel responded, “I think it would have been pointless; but,

having said that, I don’t think I was required to. . . .”

¶7. On March 28, 2023, the circuit court entered an order affirming the county court’s

July 2021 order. Bivines filed his notice of appeal on April 25, 2023.

ANALYSIS

¶8. On appeal Bivines presents the following question and statement: “Has Rule 36 of the

Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure been [j]udicially abrogated? If the answer is ‘no’ and

this [r]ule still exists, then this case should be reversed.” While Bivines’ motion for

4 summary judgment was also addressed in the circuit court’s order dated March 28, 2023,

Bivines does not raise the denial of that motion in his notice of appeal or his “Statement of

Issues Presented for Review” in his brief before this Court. Further, the motion for summary

judgment is not mentioned in his initial brief.3 Bivines’ brief on appeal, just as in circuit

court, requests that “this Court enter an Order reversing the county court Order and finding

that the Request for Admissions are admitted and prohibiting the presentation by the defense

of any evidence, testimony, inference, or cross-examination contrary to the admissions at

trial.”

¶9. Decisions the trial court makes regarding discovery will be examined by an appellate

court under an abuse of discretion standard. Prime Rx LLC v.

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Bluebook (online)
Clarence Bivines v. Rebekah C. Johnson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarence-bivines-v-rebekah-c-johnson-missctapp-2024.