John R. Wilver and C. W. Holmes v. Gerda Wootten Fisher

387 F.2d 66, 11 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 1183, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 4160
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 1967
Docket9463_1
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 387 F.2d 66 (John R. Wilver and C. W. Holmes v. Gerda Wootten Fisher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John R. Wilver and C. W. Holmes v. Gerda Wootten Fisher, 387 F.2d 66, 11 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 1183, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 4160 (10th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

BREITENSTEIN, Circuit Judge.

In 1962 appellee-plaintiff brought a stockholder’s derivative suit against the appellants-defendants. Among other things the complaint charged that defendant Wilver, the president of the company, had breached his fiduciary obligations to the company by individually dealing in oil and gas properties with funds loaned to him by the corporation and that defendant Holmes, a director of the company, had participated in and profited from Wilver’s dealings. Wilver’s answer to the complaint alleges that the plaintiff is estopped to maintain the action and that the action was “not filed in good faith but for coercive purposes.”

On February 12, 1965, the plaintiff filed interrogatories to be answered by the defendants. 1 Within the times fixed by Rule 33, F.R.Civ.P., the defendants made no objections, no answers, and no request for additional time to answer and did not answer any interrogatories. On March 24, 1965, the plaintiff filed a motion for default under Rule 37(d) for failure to answer. Thereafter, the time to answer was extended on several occasions. On November 3, 1965, a second motion for default judgment was presented. On November 9 the defendants filed objections to the interrogatories. On December 1, 1965, by agreement of the parties a Master was appointed to obtain answers to the interrogatories. The defendants withdrew their objections to the interrogatories and deposited $4,000 to pay the fees and expenses of the Master. The court ordered that the motions for default be held in abeyance until the report of the Master. The Master was authorized to recommend forms of an *68 swers and to recommend whether the motions for default should be sustained or overruled. 2

The Master conducted numerous hearings, and filed his report on December 9, 1966. He recommended that the motion for default against defendant Holmes be overruled. As to defendant Wilver the Master concluded that he “has submitted no valid excuse for his non-answers to a major portion of interrogatories XVI and XVIII,” and recommended that if the court upheld the Master’s rulings on the excuses presented, and if Wilver did not submit complete answers “within the time specified in any order of this court approving the report,” judgment by default should be entered against Wilver.

No party objected to the Master’s report or asked the court to approve it. Without notice to anyone, the court on January 1$, 1967, approved the report with modifications, granted the motions for default against both Wilver and Holmes, and entered a judgment against them which directed an accounting, imposed a trust on all money or properties of the two defendants received by them from the purchase and sale of mineral interests, enjoined them from transferring any cash or property, and ordered money damages in an amount to be determined after the accounting.

The defendants filed a motion asking the court to vacate the January 18 order. On January 24, 1967, the court modified the January 18 order to permit Wilver to expend funds to pay delay rentals and certain expenses and further ordered:

“Defendant John R. Wilver be and he hereby is granted a period of fifteen (15) days from the date hereof or until February 8, 1967 within which to fully answer interrogatories XVI, XVIII and XX heretofore served upon him by the plaintiff.”

On February 10, the court ordered that the Master meet with Wilver and “obtain from him answers supplementing the answers heretofore given.” This was done and the Master filed a report on February 13 which recommended approval of the amended answers. On the same day after a hearing the court held that one interrogatory was only partially answered and that copies of income tax returns furnished by the defendants were not certified as the court had required. On February 18, the court made an order which concluded thus:

“ * * * that the defendants, John R. Wilver and C. W. Holmes, have failed to excuse or explain their delay and neglect which resulted in the entry of judgment on January 18, 1967 and that said defendants have failed to show a meritorious defense or that a trial will result in a judgment different from the one sought to' be vacated and that it is the court’s duty to deny defendants’ ‘Motion,’ as amended, to vacate the court’s order and judgment of January 18, 1967, * * *

We have here a relatively simple case in which the complaint charges breaches of fiduciary obligations and the defenses are denials, estoppel, and bad faith on the part of the plaintiff. The ease was *69 filed in 1962 and should have been disposed of long ago. We see no reason for the procedural entanglements which the record presents.

The defendants neither objected to, nor answered, the interrogatories within the times fixed by Rule 33. These failures subjected them to the sanctions authorized by Rule 37(d). The plaintiff’s motion for default should have been promptly heard and determined. Instead the court held the motion in abeyance and appointed a Master. The plaintiff acquiesced in such action. He thereby waived his right to insist upon the time requirement of Rule 33.

Rule 53(b) says that: “A reference to a master shall be the exception and not the rule.” The trial court made no finding of an exceptional circumstance. His order of reference refers generally to delay on the part of the defendants, the variety, number, and complicated nature of the problems, the issues involved, and “the best interests of justice.” None of these amount to an exceptional circumstance. A trial judge must exercise discretion in the determination of an exceptional circumstance, and that discretion is reviewable by the court of appeals. 3

We are- unaware of any decisions which approve the appointment of a Master to supervise the answers to interrogatories. Here the Master was given the power to restate the questions and to recommend the answers. The fact that the parties agreed to such anomalous procedure does not make it permissible. The parties, not a Master, ask the questions and give the answers. The court has control over and responsibility for the discovery procedures authorized by the rules. The order of reference here borders on an abdication of judicial function 4 and is not justified by the record.

We must take the case in the pattern set by the lawyers and the trial court. The Master did what the court told him to do and made his report. We are concerned with what happened thereafter.

Rule 37(d) provides that if a party “fails to serve answers to interrogatories,” the court “on motion and notice” may enter a judgment of default. Rule 55(b)(2) says that if a party has appeared in an action, he must be served with written notice of an application for a default judgment at least three days before the hearing of such application.

Between the time of the filing of the Master’s report and the entry of default judgment on January 18, 1967, no notice was given by or to anyone that a default judgment would be sought or entered. The defendants moved to vacate the default judgment on several grounds among which was the lack of notice.

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Bluebook (online)
387 F.2d 66, 11 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 1183, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 4160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-r-wilver-and-c-w-holmes-v-gerda-wootten-fisher-ca10-1967.