Joe P. Guinn & State Farm v. Schweitzer
This text of 945 P.2d 837 (Joe P. Guinn & State Farm v. Schweitzer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OPINION
A premature appeal to this court from a superior court ruling is not jurisdictionally defective. Barassi v. Matison, 130 Ariz. 418, 421-22, 636 P.2d 1200, 1203-04 (1981). Rather, it takes effect when the ruling is later embodied in an appealable judgment and entered by the clerk of court. Id.
We now consider the parallel question whether, after the superior court has referred a case for compulsory arbitration, a premature appeal to the superior court from the arbitration award is jurisdictionally defective. We hold, as in Barassi, that the appeal is not jurisdictionally defective and that it takes effect when the arbitration award is filed with the clerk of court.
I
The underlying personal injury lawsuit arises from an automobile accident in Mesa, Arizona. Originally filed in the superior court, the case was referred for compulsory arbitration pursuant to Rule 1(b), Uniform Rules of Procedure for Arbitration. After conducting a hearing, the arbitrator issued a final arbitration award on April 10, 1996. But for reasons uncertain in the record, the award was not filed with or entered by the clerk of the superior court until June 13, 1996. After the award was issued, but before it was filed with the clerk of court, Plaintiffs filed a notice of appeal and an amended notice of appeal. Upon Defendants’ motion, the superior court dismissed the appeal as untimely. Appeal to this court followed.
II
Before addressing the principal question whether a premature arbitration appeal is jurisdictionally defective, we dispose of Defendants’ alternative argument that Plaintiffs’ notices of appeal were untimely in any event because they were filed more than twenty days after the arbitrator mailed them his final award. 1 We disagree. In mailing the award without filing it, the arbitrator violated Rule 5(a), Uniform Rules of Procedure for Arbitration, which requires that “the arbitrator ... shall file the award with the clerk of the superior court, and on the same *118 day shall mail or deliver copies thereof to all parties or their counsel.” It is filing the award, not mailing it, that “triggers the twenty-day appeal period.” Bittner v. Superior Court, 182 Ariz. 434, 436, 897 P.2d 736, 738 (App.1995); accord Anderson v. Fidelity Southern Ins. Corp., 119 Ariz. 563, 582 P.2d 653 (App.1978). The function of mailing is not merely to provide the parties the final award but to give them notice of its filing— the event that commences the countdown to appeal.
In short, Plaintiffs’ appeal was only premature, not tardy. To the consequence of prematurity we turn.
Ill
Uniform Rules of Procedure for Arbitration 7(a), which governs appeals from compulsory arbitration, provides in part:
Any party who appears and participates in the arbitration proceedings may appeal from the award by filing a notice of appeal with the Clerk of the Superior Court within twenty days after the filing of the award. ...
(emphasis added). Defendants argue and the superior court found that the superior court lacked jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ appeal because Plaintiffs failed to file a timely notice of appeal after the arbitrator filed the award. Plaintiffs argue pursuant to Barassi that, absent any prejudice to Defendants, the prematurity of their appeal was jurisdiction-ally inconsequential and was cured when the award was filed.
In Barassi, appellants mistakenly appealed to this court from a superior court minute entry ruling before the ruling had been embodied in an appealable order and filed with the clerk of court. Like Plaintiffs, the Barassi appellants did not thereafter reappeal. Our supreme court ruled that the premature appeal sufficed to confer appellate jurisdiction:
[A] premature appeal from a minute entry order in which no appellee was prejudiced and in which a subsequent final judgment was entered over which jurisdiction may be exercised need not be dismissed.
Barassi, 130 Ariz. at 422, 636 P.2d at 1204.
The supreme court explained Barassi in part on textual grounds, comparing abrogated Rule 73(b), Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure, with superseding Rule 9(a), Arizona Rules of Civil Appellate Procedure. Rule 73(b) had required litigants to file notices of appeal “within sixty days from the entry of judgment or order appealed from.” Id. at 420, 636 P.2d at 1202 (quoting Rule 73(b), Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure (abrogated 1977)). Rule 9(a), in contrast, required litigants to file notices of appeals “not later than 30 days after the entry of judgment from which the appeal is taken.... ” Id. (quoting Rule 9(a), Arizona Rules of Civil Appellate Procedure). Given the wording of Rule 9(a), according to the court, it was “plausible” to consider a premature appeal as one filed not later than thirty days after the entry of judgment. Id. at 421, 636 P.2d at 1203.
To confine ourselves to a similar textual analysis in this case would favor Defendants. When compared with the rules considered in Barassi, Rule 7(a), Uniform Rules of Procedure for Arbitration, more closely resembles abrogated Rule 73(b) than Rule 9(a), as it requires litigants to appeal within a specified number of days “after” the entry of the arbitrator’s award.
The supreme court did not rest Barassi primarily on textual analysis, however, but on practical and equitable grounds. The court stated, in terms that apply equally to this case as. to that one:
Dismissal of the present appeal would punish the appellant for being too diligent. The underlying rationale of requiring a final judgment for appealability is to avoid the constant disruption of the trial process, to prevent appellate courts from considering issues that may be addressed later in trial, and to promote efficiency, that is, encourage the consolidation in one appeal of all error a litigant feels transpired during the trial. To permit an appeal in the instant case does not circumvent these concepts ....
*119 ... In the instant case, the appellant displayed an intent to appeal, the appellees were not prejudiced by this excess of diligence, and they may have actually been afforded additional time in which to prepare for the appeal____
Id.
We find this a compelling basis for resolving this case. Arizona courts disfavor hypertechnical arguments that needlessly deprive litigants of the right to an appeal. See McKillip v. Smitty’s Super Valu, Inc., 190 Ariz.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
945 P.2d 837, 190 Ariz. 116, 253 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 27, 1997 Ariz. App. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joe-p-guinn-state-farm-v-schweitzer-arizctapp-1997.