Henline, Inc. v. Martin

348 N.E.2d 416, 169 Ind. App. 260, 1976 Ind. App. LEXIS 909
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 26, 1976
Docket2-275A38
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 348 N.E.2d 416 (Henline, Inc. v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henline, Inc. v. Martin, 348 N.E.2d 416, 169 Ind. App. 260, 1976 Ind. App. LEXIS 909 (Ind. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

Sullivan, J.

Defendants Harley M. Henline (Harley), Ruth Henline (Ruth), Donald D. Henline (Donald), Harley M. Henline II (“Sonny”), and Henline, Inc., appeal from the trial court’s refusal to set aside its entries placing them in default for failure to timely appear and respond to plaintiff Joe W. Martin’s action for personal injuries. Finding no reversible error, we are obliged to affirm.

Plaintiff-appellee Joe W. Martin filed his complaint against the four individual Henlines and Henline, Inc. on July 26, 1974. Martin claimed $250,000 for personal injuries allegedly suffered when he was struck by a utility pole which Sonny Henline had been attempting to lower into a hole on Martin’s land by means of Henline, Inc.’s wrecker. The gravamen of the complaint was that Sonny had been negligent, and that he and the rest of the Henline family, as well as the corporate entity, were responsible to Martin for the injuries allegedly caused thereby.

Defendant Harley Henline is the president and sole shareholder of Henline, Inc. His wife Ruth and two sons Donald and Sonny are the corporation’s only other employees: Ruth serves as secretary-treasurer, and the sons operate the wrecker service in which the corporation is engaged. Ruth testified at the hearing on defendants’ motion to set aside the *262 defaults that the family incorporated its wrecker service in 1969 for the purpose of obtaining PSCI permits in the corporate name.

Martin’s complaint was filed and service issued upon all five defendants on Friday, July 26, 1974. All of the defendants except Sonny were personally served the next day. Sonny’s summons and copy of the complaint were delivered to him on Sunday, July 28. After receiving these documents, Harley called his insurance agént, who told him to bring all of the documents to the agent’s office on Monday. This Harley did, and all copies of the five defendants’ summonses and complaints were left with the agent. Harley testified that the agent had assured him that “'[h]e would take care of them and I didn’t need to worry about it.” Approximately ten days later, Harley called the agent to check upon the progress of the defense and was informed that the papers had been forwarded to the company’s claims adjuster. Defendants’ next contact with the case occurred in August, 1974, when they were informed of their default by counsel retained on their behalf by the insurance company.

Defendants’ insurance agent had forwarded all relevant documents to the company’s claims adjuster, Mr. Charles Love. Love had first learned of the suit in a routine telephone call to defendants’ agent in Huntington, Indiana on July 31. Mr. Love testified that defendants’ agent was one of eleven local agents within Love’s territory as the company’s adjuster, and that Love worked out of an office in his home in Akron, Indiana. In his conversation with defendants’ agent, Love told the agent to mail to Love’s home in Akron the summonses and complaints. The agent did so, and Love received the documents on August 2, 1974.

When Love received the papers he took no immediate action but placed them in his “Bodily Injury Folder” in his home office. Then, by Love’s own account: “I put it [the folder] on a stack of dictation that I had on the desk [in his den-office] and proceeded to take off on the road to go to. Peru to run my *263 regular territory on this Friday [August 2].” Love testified that he was kept extremely busy on his “run” through his “regular territory”, being occupied with numerous claims filed in the wake of a tornado which had passed through the area earlier in the year, and did not return to his home in Akron until approximately 2:45 P.M. on Tuesday, August 20. Soon after arriving home, Love testified that “[I] [w]ent in and sat down at the desk to dictate. I started through this pile of dictation and this file jumped out at me and I looked at the summons and noted that the return date had expired.”

Immediately after his discovery, Love called the attorneys now representing defendants, and, pursuant to their instructions, took the file and drove to the lawyers’ offices in Fort Wayne, arriving there around 6:00 P.M. on August 20. Hurried telephone calls revealed that Love’s discovery was too late. Pursuant to plaintiff’s motions, the trial court had defaulted Harley, Ruth, Donald and Henline, Inc., on Monday, August 19. The twenty days after service upon them of the complaint within which Ind. Rules of Procedure, Trial Rule 6 (C) required them to respond had expired the preceeding Friday. See TR. 6 (A). Sonny was defaulted on the very day of Love’s discovery of the summonses, inasmuch as Sonny was served a day later than his co-defendants.

The response of defendants’ counsel to these events was commendable. The attorneys immediately secured affidavits from all five defendants (Henline, Inc., by its president Harley) , and from Love attesting to the facts recited above. The affidavits and the attorneys’ appearance were promptly filed on August 21, 1974, along with a motion to set aside the defaults “pursuant to Indiana Rule of Trial Procedure 60(B) for the reason that said defaults were taken by mistake, surprise, and excusable neglect as is shown by the . . . attached . . . affidavits. . . .” After an evidentiary hearing held August 30, the trial court denied this motion and defendants appeal.

*264 *263 Before reaching the merits of this case, recent decisions of this court prompt us to comment upon the appropriate pro *264 cedures involved. Here, as in our recent decision in Glennar Mercury-Lincoln, Inc. v. Riley (1976), 167 Ind. App. 144, 338 N.E.2d 670, and the Third District’s decision in Green v. Karol (1976), 168 Ind. App. 467, 344 N.E.2d 106, no judgment was entered upon the default. In all three cases, the precise issue is the propriety of granting relief from a mere entry of default. In Glennar we treated the question according to the explicit guidelines of TR. 60(B). In Green the third District stated that: “TR. 55 does not impose explicit standards to be applied by the trial court when it is setting aside a mere entry of default. Only when a default judgment has been entered does TR. 55(C) call into play the TR. 60(B) standards. . . ,” 1 168 Ind. App. at 475, 344 N.E.2d at 111. Discussion of this seeming conflict is appropriate inasmuch as the problem is intimately related to the appealability of the trial court’s decision herein, and hence our jurisdiction of this appeal.

Prior to January 1, 1971, Ind. TR. 55(C) was identical to its federal counterpart, Fed. R. Civ. P. 55(C). Both rules differentiated between relief from an entry of default and relief from a default judgment by providing that (1) “[f]or good cause shown the court may set aside an entry of default”, and (2) a “judgment by default . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
348 N.E.2d 416, 169 Ind. App. 260, 1976 Ind. App. LEXIS 909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henline-inc-v-martin-indctapp-1976.