FRANKLIN COLLECTION SERVICE, INC. v. Stewart

863 So. 2d 925, 2003 WL 23096508
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 2003
Docket2002-IA-00591-SCT to 2002-IA-00599-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 863 So. 2d 925 (FRANKLIN COLLECTION SERVICE, INC. v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FRANKLIN COLLECTION SERVICE, INC. v. Stewart, 863 So. 2d 925, 2003 WL 23096508 (Mich. 2003).

Opinion

863 So.2d 925 (2003)

FRANKLIN COLLECTION SERVICE, INC. and Unknown Attorney "A"
v.
Jerry STEWART and Leola Stewart.
Franklin Collection Service, Inc. and Attorney T. Dale Beavers
v.
R.D. Malone.
Franklin Collection Service, Inc. and Attorney Jeffrey Waldo
v.
Brenda Cockrell.
Franklin Collection Service, Inc. and Attorney Mary E. Mason
v.
Walter & Ethel Woods.
Franklin Collection Service, Inc. and Attorney Jeffrey Waldo
v.
William D. Binion.
Franklin Collection Service, Inc. and Attorney T. Dale Beavers
v.
Shalonda Jones a/k/a Shalonda Smart.
Franklin Collection Service, Inc. and Attorney T. Dale Beavers
v.
Annie P. Tate.
Franklin Collection Service, Inc. and Attorney T. Dale Beavers
v.
Lee V. Wilkerson.
Franklin Collection Service, Inc. and Attorney Mary E. Mason
v.
Bessie M. Neal.

Nos. 2002-IA-00591-SCT to 2002-IA-00599-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

December 31, 2003.

*927 William V. Westbrook, III, Gulfport, John Paul Barber, Charles G. Perkins, Macon, attorneys for appellants.

Armstrong Walters, Thomas L. Kesler, Columbus, Bennie L. Turner, West Point, attorneys for appellees.

EN BANC.

COBB, Justice, for the Court.

¶ 1. Franklin Collection Service, Inc. (Franklin) filed nine separate actions in the Noxubee County Justice Court over a period of four and a half years between June 1996 and December 2000. All sought to obtain judgments for unpaid medical bills owed to various medical service providers plus attorney's fees and court costs. It is undisputed that each of the justice court defendants was a Noxubee County resident and was properly served with process. Each of the standard "form" complaints stated the amount owed to the service provider plus a specific amount for the attorney's fee and for court costs. Further, the complaints stated that the debts were incurred upon open account, that the indebtedness had been assigned fully to Franklin, that a written demand for payment had been made more than 30 days before the suit was filed, and that the debtors had failed or refused to pay. In addition, the complaint stated that Franklin had hired counsel to prosecute the collection suit. None of the justice court defendants answered the complaint filed against them, and default judgments were entered against each one. Details of each of the nine complaints, including the following itemization of the judgments, are as follows:

     Date of      Name of    Name of Service        Debt    Atty   Court  Total     % Atty
     Judgment     Debtor     Provider               Owed    Fee    Costs  Judgment   Fee
1.  05-16-96      Stewart    Clay Co. Med. Center   $644    $ 50    $52     $  745     08%
2.  06-16-98      Cockrell   Columbus Foot Clinic   $403    $100    $79     $  582     25%
3.  11-10-98      Binion     Gold's Gym             $163    $ 50    $54     $  267     31%
4.  04-27-99      Neal       Columbus Orthopaedic   $130    $ 50    $54     $  234     38%
5.  04-11-00      Jones      Robert Trotter, M.D.   $ 57
                             Family Health Clinic   $179
                             Jeffrey Chain, M.D.    $204
                             Columbus Orthopaedic   $190    $150    $54     $  834     24%
6.  04-11-00      Malone     Clay Co. Med. Center   $295    $ 75    $54     $  424     25%
7.  08-08-00      Tate       Lance Busch, M.D.      $102
8.  10-10-00      Wilkerson  Cardiology Assoc. N.M. $878    $175    $54     $1,107     20%
9.  No date       Woods      Family Health Clinic   $479
                             Kemper Comm. Hosp.     $173    $150    $54     $ 856      23%

With the exception of Mrs. Neal, whose $50 attorney fee was $7 more than one-third of her indebtedness, the percentage of the debt owed which was allocated for attorney's fees was well within the presumptively reasonable one-third of the indebtedness which this Court has traditionally approved as reasonable awards of attorneys' fees in collection matters.[1]*928 ¶ 2. On December 18, 2000, each of the debtors filed separate civil actions against Franklin in the Noxubee County Circuit Court, alleging that the debts sued upon were not open accounts and that Franklin and its attorneys perpetrated a fraud on the court[2] and abuse of process on the debtors. In January 2001, the case was removed to federal court. In June of 2001 it was remanded to the Noxubee County Circuit Court, after the federal court held that the debtor's action was not completely preempted by the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act.

¶ 3. On April 4, 2002, the Noxubee County Circuit Court entered an order denying the motion to dismiss or for summary judgment filed by Franklin, and certified four issues for interlocutory appeal to this Court, which are consolidated into the three issues discussed below. We granted Franklin's petitions to bring these consolidated interlocutory appeals. See M.R.A.P. 5.

FACTS

¶ 4. For the purposes of this opinion the facts are limited to those which led to this appeal, not the underlying facts which led to the original complaints in justice court against the circuit court plaintiffs.

¶ 5. These actions involve eleven plaintiffs, all Noxubee County residents against whom Franklin, through attorneys T. Dale Beavers (Beavers), Mary E. Mason (Mason), Jeffrey Waldo (Waldo), and Unknown Attorney A (Attorney A), instituted collection proceedings in the Justice Court of Noxubee County, concerning unpaid medical bills for various medical services. It is undisputed that service of process was properly obtained on all, that the amount billed by the medical providers was owed, and that none of the justice court defendants appeared in the justice court or contested the allegations in the complaint in any way. In due time, default judgments were entered. In all cases, the judgment sought by Franklin included the debt amount, plus a specific attorney's fee, plus court costs. No appeals were perfected by any of the justice court defendants.

¶ 6. On December 18, 2000, the justice court defendants filed their circuit court complaints, in separate actions, against Franklin and Beavers, Mason, Waldo and Attorney A, seeking, as damages, recovery of the attorney's fees awarded by the justice court judgments and also seeking punitive damages and court costs, based upon a putative claim for "misrepresentation and abuse of process" and "perpetrat[ion of] a fraud on the Justice Court of Noxubee County." Franklin responded by filing a motion to dismiss or for summary judgment, arguing that because none of the justice court judgments had been appealed, any challenge in the circuit court concerning the propriety of the "open account" attorney's fee remedy, as well as the fee amount awarded, was barred.

¶ 7. The circuit court denied Franklin's motion to dismiss or for summary judgment; however, leave was given for Franklin to seek an interlocutory appeal. Four issues were certified for these consolidated interlocutory appeals. After careful consideration, this Court finds that the challenge to the application of the open account collection law and procedure raised by the plaintiffs is barred by the *929 doctrine of res judicata and that the assertions made regarding misrepresentation, fraud and abuse of process are without merit. Accordingly, this Court reverses and renders the judgment of the Noxubee County Circuit Court. For the sake of clarity, the issues have been combined and reworded.

DISCUSSION

I.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
863 So. 2d 925, 2003 WL 23096508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-collection-service-inc-v-stewart-miss-2003.