Kenneth W. Tilley, Individually and as Trustee of the Kenneth Tilley Family Trust v. Malvern National Bank and Stephen Moore

2025 Ark. 29
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 10, 2025
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 Ark. 29 (Kenneth W. Tilley, Individually and as Trustee of the Kenneth Tilley Family Trust v. Malvern National Bank and Stephen Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Kenneth W. Tilley, Individually and as Trustee of the Kenneth Tilley Family Trust v. Malvern National Bank and Stephen Moore, 2025 Ark. 29 (Ark. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. 29 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CV-24-283

Opinion Delivered: April 10, 2025

KENNETH W. TILLEY, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS TRUSTEE OF THE KENNETH APPEAL FROM THE GARLAND TILLEY FAMILY TRUST COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT APPELLANT [NO. 26CV-11-1194]

V. HONORABLE RALPH C. OHM, JUDGE MALVERN NATIONAL BANK AND STEPHEN MOORE AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED APPELLEES AND REMANDED IN PART.

SHAWN A. WOMACK, Associate Justice

This is the third time this case has been before us. This time around, Kenneth Tilley

appeals the circuit court’s order granting summary judgment to Malvern National Bank and

Stephen Moore, the bank’s former vice president of commercial lending (collectively,

MNB). Tilley makes three arguments for why we should reverse the award of summary

judgment in favor of MNB. First, Tilley argues the circuit court violated the mandate by

considering MNB’s motion for summary judgment on remand. Second, he argues the

circuit court committed reversible error when it came up with its own, unargued rationale

for granting MNB’s motion for summary judgment. Third, Tilley argues that, had the

circuit court granted summary judgment for the reasons MNB argued below, there remain

disputed issues of material facts, and MNB is not entitled to summary judgment. We affirm

in part and reverse and remand in part. I. Background

The underlying dispute revolves around Tilley’s claim that MNB engaged in a series

of unfair dealings when Tilley sought to finance a real estate development project with

MNB in 2009 and 2010 for a total loan value of $350,000. In 2011, Tilley sued MNB and

brought claims for breach of contract, promissory estoppel, violations of the Arkansas

Deceptive Trade Practices Act (ADTPA), tortious interference with a business relationship,

negligence, and fraud.

In the first appeal, this court reversed the circuit court’s decision to strike Tilley’s

jury demand from his complaint “because no Arkansas statute or Arkansas rule of civil

procedure expressly provides for predispute waivers of the right to a jury trial.” 1 After the

case was remanded but before Tilley’s jury trial was scheduled, the General Assembly passed

Act 13 of 2018. The circuit court asked the parties to brief the effect of Act 13 on the case

and eventually found that Tilley’s right to a jury trial had been obviated by Act 13. As a

result, the circuit court reinstated the verdict from the earlier bench trial. Tilley again

appealed, and this court again reversed because “[t]he circuit court had no jurisdiction to

even entertain the question of whether Act 13 could have retroactively breathed life into

the pre-dispute jury-waiver clause” under the Tilley I mandate.2

On remand from Tilley II, the original circuit judge overseeing the case retired, and

MNB moved for summary judgment (for a third time) on all of Tilley’s claims. Tilley

opposed summary judgment both on the merits and on a procedural issue. Procedurally,

1 Tilley v. Malvern Nat’l Bank, 2017 Ark. 343, at 14, 532 S.W.3d 570, 578 (Tilley I). 2 Tilley v. Malvern Nat’l Bank, 2019 Ark. 376, at 7, 590 S.W.3d 137, 142 (Tilley II).

2 Tilley argued that the circuit court could not consider MNB’s motion for summary

judgment because this court remanded Tilley II “for a jury trial.”3 On the merits, Tilley

argued that there were disputed material facts for every claim and that summary judgment

was therefore inappropriate.

At a hearing on MNB’s motion for summary judgment, the circuit court noted “that

there are a lot of material facts that are in issue; however, there are facts that definitely appear

to not be in issue.” Regardless, the circuit court granted MNB’s motion for summary

judgment, finding that Tilley’s “unilateral decision to reduce the collateral from 233.65 acres

to 128.7 acres was a material alteration of the agreement, commitment, promise, or

understanding, if any, between him and Defendants for a loan in excess of $221,000[,]” and

MNB was thereby “not obligated to proceed with a loan in an amount greater than

$221,000.” This, however, was not one of the many arguments that MNB had advanced

in its motion for summary judgment. Tilley timely appealed the adverse judgment, which

this court has jurisdiction over as a subsequent appeal.4

II. Discussion

Tilley argues that we should reverse the award of summary judgment in favor of

MNB for three reasons: (1) the circuit court violated the Tilley II mandate by considering

MNB’s motion for summary judgment on remand; (2) the circuit court improperly

concocted its own reasons to award summary judgment that were separate and distinct from

3 Id. at 2, 590 S.W.3d at 139. 4 Ark. Sup. Ct. R. 1-2(a)(7).

3 what MNB had argued; and (3) summary judgment was inappropriate even for the reasons

that MNB raised below because there are disputed material facts.

A. The Tilley II Mandate

Tilley first argues that the circuit court should never have considered MNB’s third

motion for summary judgment because this court remanded the case “for a jury trial.” 5

MNB first responds that Tilley’s argument is unpreserved because Tilley failed to develop

the argument below and never obtained a ruling on it from the circuit court.

Regarding Tilley’s development of the argument below, this was the first argument

he raised in his response to MNB’s motion for summary judgment. Tilley’s argument takes

up a majority of the page, and it is sufficiently developed. And even though the circuit

court did not explicitly address Tilley’s mandate argument in its order granting MNB

summary judgment, that is inapposite. Compliance with the mandate on remand is an issue

of subject-matter jurisdiction that can be raised at any time, including for the first time on

appeal.6 This is an issue of subject-matter jurisdiction because the mandate tells a circuit

court, among other things, what it has the jurisdiction to consider on remand. Thus, Tilley

has not waived his mandate argument.

5 Tilley II, 2019 Ark. 376, at 2, 590 S.W.3d at 139. 6 Ward v. State, 2017 Ark. 215, at 3, 521 S.W.3d 480, 482 (“On remand, the circuit court was vested with jurisdiction only to the extent conferred by our opinion and mandate.”); Ibsen v. Plegge, 341 Ark. 225, 229, 15 S.W.3d 686, 689 (2000) (“the issue of jurisdiction is one that can be raised at any time, even for the first time on appeal”); Kelley v. Washington, 311 Ark. 73, 77, 843 S.W.2d 797, 799 (1992) (discussing the effect of this court’s mandate as one of subject-matter jurisdiction).

4 On to the Tilley II mandate itself, Tilley contends that it limited the circuit court to

one thing on remand: have a jury trial on all of Tilley’s claims against MNB. MNB, on the

other hand, argues that the mandate in Tilley II did not “preclude the circuit court from

applying Ark. R. Civ. P. 56 to determine whether genuine issues of material fact remained

to be decided before holding a trial” because “[t]he previous appeals did not consider that

issue—they held that a jury waiver that Tilley signed was unenforceable.” We agree with

MNB.

As this court recognized in Tilley II, the law-of-the-case doctrine—a significant

feature of a mandate’s power—“prohibits a court from reconsidering issues of law and fact

that have already been decided on appeal.”7 The only issue in Tilley I and Tilley II was

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