Fulghum Fibres, Inc. v. Stokes

186 So. 3d 970, 2015 WL 132445
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 9, 2015
Docket2130551 and 2130552
StatusPublished

This text of 186 So. 3d 970 (Fulghum Fibres, Inc. v. Stokes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fulghum Fibres, Inc. v. Stokes, 186 So. 3d 970, 2015 WL 132445 (Ala. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

PITTMAN, Judge.

These appeals (transferred to this court by our supreme court pursuant to Ala. Code 1975, § 12-2-7(6)) arise from a civil action' brought in the Monroe Circuit Court by C. Dwayne Stokes (“the employee”). In his original complaint, filed in March 2011, the employee asserted a single claim seeking an award of benefits under the Alabama Workers’ Compensation Act, Ala.Code 1975, § 25-5-1 et seq. (“the Act”), against his former employer, Frisco Forest Products, LLC (“the employer”); that complaint contained no demand for a trial by jury, because the Act provides that claims as to benefits available under the Act are to be decided by the trial judge sitting without a jury. See Ala.Code 1975, § 25-5-89. In July 2011, the employee amended his complaint to add claims of negligence and wantonness against a number of third parties — Fulg-hum Fibres, Inc. (“Fulghum”); Alphonso Gross; Jeffrey Stanford; Bryan Madden; Robert Maxwell; John Straiton; and various fictitiously named defendants — who, the employee alleged, had breached duties of care so as to have proximately caused the employee’s purported workplace injury. In his amended complaint,-the employee demanded a jury trial “of all issues ... which [we]re triable to a jury,” and the trial court-set the case for a jury trial to take place in August 2012.

Before that trial took place, Stanford, Madden, Maxwell, and Straiton filed in July 2012 a motion for a summary judgment as to all claims asserted against them. A “memorandum of fact and law” was subsequently filed in support of that motion; however, that filing listed Fulg-hum and Gross as additional movants. The trial court entered an order on August 8, 2012, granting the motion as to Stanford, Madden, Maxwell, and Straiton, but it denied the motion as to all other defendants; however, the trial court did not direct the entry of a final judgment pursuant to Rule 54(b), Ala. R. Civ. P., as to that partial summary judgment.

'The case then went to trial on the negligence claim1 against Fulghum and Gross, with the employee and those defendants presenting evidence and arguments and the employer additionally participating by way of limited questioning and argument addressed to the location of the employee at the time his alleged injury occurred: At the conclusion of the trial, the jury was given a verdict form containing the following textual groupings, setting forth three alternative findings:

“We, the jury, find in favor óf the plaintiff [employee] and against the defendants and assess the plaintiffs damages at $_
“We, the' jury, find for the plaintiff and against the following defendant^):
“1. Alfonso [sic] Gross
“2. Fulghum Fibres, Inc.
“and assess the plaintiffs damages at $-1
“We, the jury, further find in favor of the following defendant(s):-
“1. Alfonso [sic] Gross
“2. Fulghum Fibres, Inc.”

After jury deliberations took place, the foreperson of the jury reported that the jury had reached a verdict, and the foreperson returned the verdict form to the trial court. The form, as completed, bore a handwritten circle around the name of “Fulghum Fibres, Inc.” in the second textual grouping, and the damages figure of “$65,000” immediately thereafter; neither the second nor the third textual grouping [972]*972bore any markings in the proximity of Gross’s name. The trial court directed the clerk to “publish the verdict,” at which time the clerk stated the verdict as: “We, the jury[,] find for the plaintiff and against the following defendant, Fulghum Fib[re]s Incorporated and assess the [pjlaintiffs damages at sixty-five thousand dollars.” The trial court then polled the jury, and each juror responded that the verdict was his or her own verdict; however, no order or judgment on the jury’s verdict was immediately entered by the trial court.

The employee thereafter filed a motion seeking a new trial as to the negligence claims. In his motion, the employee contended (a) that the jury had returned no verdict at all as to Gross’s liability; (b) that, in the alternative, if the jury’s verdict were interpreted as a verdict in Gross’s favor, the verdict as a whole was inherently inconsistent; and (c) that the jury had awarded inadequate damages as a matter of law. Gross and Fulghum filed a response in opposition to the employee’s motion, asserting that the jury verdict was neither incomplete nor inconsistent, that the verdict did not award inadequate damages, and that the employee’s objections were untimely. On December 4, 2012, the trial court entered an order granting a new trial on the inadequate-damages ground cited by the employee in his motion.

On January 3, 2013, Gross and Fulghum filed a motion seeking reconsideration of the order granting a new trial and, noting the pendency of the workers’ compensation claim against the employer, requesting that the trial court instead direct the entry of a final judgment pursuant to Rule 54(b) in favor of Gross and against Fulghum so as to reflect, in the moving parties’ view, the apparent intent of the jury. That motion was denied on January 8, 2013, immediately before the circuit judge who had presided over the trial of the action left office; that judge’s successor in office re-cused himself, and the case was assigned by the Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court to another judge. Gross and Fulghum renewed their motion to vacate the order granting a new trial and for the entry of a final judgment, and the trial court set the case for a status and motion hearing to be held in August 2013. On September 17, 2013, the trial court entered an order that vacated the December 4, 2012, order granting a new trial; found that a judgment was due to be entered in the employee’s favor for $65,000 on his claim against Fulghum and entered in Gross’s favor on the employee’s claim against Gross; determined that there was no just reason for delay; directed the immediate entry of a final judgment as to those rulings as to less than all claims against all parties pursuant to Rule 54(b); and set the workers’ compensation matter for a subsequent hearing..

On October 17, 2013, the 30th day after the entry of the September 17, 2013, judgment, the employee filed a motion directed to that judgment in which he sought an order granting him a new trial as to his claims against Gross and Fulghum. Unlike the previous motions filed by the parties after the rendition of the jury’s verdict, which were subject to the power held by trial courts to revisit their interlocutory orders at any time, see Rule 54(b), Ala. R. Civ. P., the employee’s October 17, 2013, motion was a true postjudgment motion cognizable under Rule 59(a), Ala. R. Civ. P., because it was aimed at obtaining relief with respect to a final judgment. See Malone v. Gainey, 726 So.2d 725, 725 n. 2 (Ala.Civ.App.1999) (“[A] Rule 59 motion may b,e made only in reference to a final judgment or order.”). No other timely postjudgment motions were filed as to the September .17, 2013, final judgment. On October 29, 2013, the trial court requested [973]*973that it be provided a transcript of the original trial proceedings and directed that proceedings on the workers’ compensation claim be continued generally pending a ruling on the October 17, 2013, new-trial motion.

Rule 59.1, Ala. R. Civ. P., provides as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 So. 3d 970, 2015 WL 132445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulghum-fibres-inc-v-stokes-alacivapp-2015.