Easley v. Inglis

346 S.W.2d 206, 233 Ark. 589, 1961 Ark. LEXIS 452
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1961
Docket5-2364
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 346 S.W.2d 206 (Easley v. Inglis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Easley v. Inglis, 346 S.W.2d 206, 233 Ark. 589, 1961 Ark. LEXIS 452 (Ark. 1961).

Opinion

Ed F. McFaddin, Associate Justice.

This litigation stems from a traffic mishap which occurred near Malvern when an automobile driven by Miss Christine Gross (and owned by her father, Frank Gross) struck the side of a truck-trailer driven by Travis D. Easley (and owned by his father, F. A. Easley); and the Gross car swerved into a building owned by Foster Inglis and occupied by L. D. Burrow as a grocery store.

Inglis and Burrow (appellees here) sued the owners and drivers of both the Gross automobile and the Easley truck, alleging that the four defendants were jointly and severally liable to Inglis and Burrow for the damages sustained by the appellees. There were denials by each defendant; a cross-complaint by the Grosses against the Easleys; and a “counterclaim” by the Easleys against the Grosses. With issues joined, the causes were tried by the Circuit Judge, a jury being waived, and resulted in judgments in favor of Inglis for $675.00 for damage to the building, and in favor of Burrow for $750.00 for damage to the grocery fixtures and stock. These judgments were against all four of the defendants, jointly and severally. The Court also found that the defendant Christine Gross and the defendant Travis Easley were each guilty of fifty percent, negligence which caused the collision and therefore that neither the Grosses nor the Easleys could recover against the other. The Easleys appealed as against Inglis, Burrow, and the Grosses; and the Grosses appealed as against Inglis, Burrow, and the Easleys.

I. The Easleys Say: “The Court erred in refusing to grant the counterclaimants’ motion to strike the answer of the defendants, Christine Gross and Frank Gross, to the counterclaim and in failing to award a default judgment against the defendants, Christine Gross and Frank Gross, in favor of the counterclaimant, F. A. Easley, on his counterclaim.” As heretofore mentioned, the Grosses cross-complained against the Easleys, and the Easleys answered and incorporated in the answer a “counterclaim” against the Grosses alleging: that Christine Gross was a minor fourteen years of age, driving her father’s car with his knowledge and consent; that Christine Gross was guilty of all of the negligence that caused the mishap; that the damage to the Easley truck was $600.00; and that the Easleys should recover $600.00 from the Grosses and should also have judgment over against the Grosses for any amount that Inglis and Burrow might recover against the Easleys. This “counterclaim” was filed on February 4th, and twenty days later the Grosses filed an answer to the “counterclaim” denying all allegations.

The Easleys then filed a motion to strike the answer to the “counterclaim” as filed too late, and also to render judgment by default for the Easleys against the Grosses on the “counterclaim.” The Trial Court denied the said motion of the Easleys, and the first point in the Easley brief challenges this ruling of the Trial Court. The Easleys rely on § 27-1137, Ark. Stats., which reads: “If the answer contains a counterclaim or set-off, a reply shall be filed within five (5) days, or, in the cases at law, upon the calling of the case for trial, if it be called before the expiration of the said five (5) days.” The Easleys claim that under § 29-401, Ark. Stats., as amended, they are entitled to judgment by default since the Grosses did not answer the “counterclaim” within the time provided by § 27-1137, Ark. Stats. 1

We conclude that the Easleys have failed to show that the ruling of the Trial Court was erroneous, either in refusing to strike the answer of the Grosses to the “counterclaim”, or in refusing to render judgment by default against the Grosses; and there are several reasons which support our conclusions. (1) The Easleys rely on our opinion in Walden v. Metzler, 227 Ark. 782, 301 S. W. 2d 439, which was rendered when Act 49 of 1955 was in effect. After the opinion in Walden v. Metzler, the Legislature amended Act 49 of 1955 by Act 53 of 1957, which added this concluding language: “. . . and that nothing in this act shall impair the discretion of the Court to set aside any default judgment upon showing of excusable neglect, unavoidable casualty, or other just cause. ’ ’ The 1957 Amendment was considered by us in Fitzwater v. Harris, 231 Ark. 173, 328 S. W. 2d 501, in which we recognized that the Trial Court had authority to set aside a default, even if one had been granted, for either of three causes: (a) excusable neglect; (b) unavoidable casualty; or (c) other just cause. We cannot say that any of these three causes was absent in the case at bar. (2) Secondly, it is difficult to decide whether the claim of the Easleys against the Grosses was a “counterclaim” or a cross-complaint. If it were a cross-complaint, the Grosses had twenty days in which to file an answer under § 27-1135, Ark. Stats. The distinction between counterclaims and cross-complaints is so uncertain 2 in the statutory and judicial language of this State that the attorney for the Grosses might well have considered, and might have persuaded the Trial Court, that the so-called “counterclaim” of the Easleys was in fact a cross-complaint. At all events, the Trial Court could have held that the failure of the Grosses’ attorney to answer within five days might have been excusable neglect under the facts. (3) Finally on this point, we conclude that, even if the answer to the “counterclaim” had been stricken, testimony would still have been required to determine the amount of the damages that the Easleys claimed against the Grosses; and, in the trial, the Grosses could have shown under their cross-complaint against the Easleys, the same facts that were developed in this case. With those facts developed, the Trial Judge, sitting as a jury, could well have decided, as he did, that Travis Easley and Christine Gross were each fifty percent. negligent, and that consequently neither could recover against the other. We hold this point of the Easleys to be without merit.

II. The Easleys Say: “The Court erred in finding that the defendants, F. A. Easley and Travis D. Easley were liable for fifty percent of the damages suffered by the plaintiffs, and that the other defendants were liable for fifty percent of the plaintiffs’ damages; and the Court also erred in finding against F. A. Easley and Travis D. Easley, on their counterclaim, the Court’s judgment thereon is not based on the proper evidence, is not based on circumstantial evidence and is contrary to the evidence.”

The Guardian ad litem for Christine Gross, in the brief to support the cross-appeal against the Easleys, denies all of the foregoing and claims that Travis Easley was guilty of all of the negligence that caused the collision, and that Christine Gross and her father should recover damages against the Easleys.

As we see the evidence, there is an irreconcilable conflict between the testimony of Christine Gross and Travis Easley:

(a) Christine Gross testified that her car would not start; that she and her escort induced the driver of a pick-up truck to give a push to her car to start the motor; that she did not have her lights burning when the truck first began pushing her car but that she turned on the lights when the motor started, which -was about a quarter of a mile before the scene of the collision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
346 S.W.2d 206, 233 Ark. 589, 1961 Ark. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/easley-v-inglis-ark-1961.