Kirk v. Demientieff

145 P.3d 512, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 154, 2006 WL 2847850
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 2006
DocketS-11760
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 145 P.3d 512 (Kirk v. Demientieff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kirk v. Demientieff, 145 P.3d 512, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 154, 2006 WL 2847850 (Ala. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Attorney Kenneth Kirk appeals the superi- or court's denial of his motion to intervene in a tort suit brought by his former client, Laverna Demientieff. Kirk sought to intervene in that suit to appeal the superior court's order denying relief from its earlier judgment dismissing Demientieff's complaint for violating the statute of limitations. Dem-ientieff had no interest in appealing that judgment-or the subsequent order denying relief from the judgment-because she had fired Kirk and was suing him for malpractice. In moving for intervention, Kirk claimed that Demientieff's refusal to appeal the order denying relief from the judgment gave him an adequate justification to intervene. The superior court rejected his motion, finding that it was untimely because Kirk could have intervened on the same ground more than a year earlier, when Demientieff had refused to directly appeal the original judgment of dismissal. Because the record supports the superior court's finding that Kirk reasonably should have moved to intervene sooner, we hold that the court did not abuse its discretion in denying Kirk's motion to intervene.

II. FACTS

A driver employed by United Companies injured Laverna Demientieff in an auto accident in Bethel on October 31, 2000. Demien-tieff hired the Anchorage law firm of Kenneth Kirk and Associates (Kirk) to represent her in her tort action against United Companies. Kirk sent Demientieff's complaint by express mail to the superior court in Bethel on October 30, 2002, the day before the statute of limitations on the claim expired. Although the complaint arrived at the Bethel Post Office and was apparently placed in the court's post office box that day, the court did not acknowledge receiving it for filing until November 4, 2002.

United moved to dismiss the complaint for violating the statute of limitations. Kirk opposed the motion on behalf of Demientieff, offering evidence to show that the complaint had arrived in Bethel on October 31, that the post office had attempted delivery that day, but that the court simply missed the delivery. On March 26, 2003, despite Demientieff's opposition, Superior Court Judge Leonard R. Devaney granted United's motion to dismiss, expressly confining his ruling to the pleadings.

*514 Demientieff moved for reconsideration on April 3, 2008. Pointing to the evidence presented in support of her opposition, Demien-tieff argued that the superior court erred by basing its dismissal entirely on the pleadings. The superior court never ruled on Demien-tieff's motion for reconsideration; thus, under Alaska Civil Rule 77, the motion was deemed denied thirty days after being filed. 1 On July 22, 2008, the superior court issued a final judgment dismissing Demientieff's case.

Meanwhile, on April 4, 2003, the day after Kirk filed Demientieff's motion for reconsideration, Demientieff hired a new lawyer, who sent Kirk. a letter advising him that Demien-tieff did not want Kirk to take any further action in her case. After noting that he had "reviewed the order from Judge Devaney granting the motion to dismiss for failure to file the suit within the statute of limitations," Demientieffs new attorney advised Kirk to "contact your malpractice carrier and put them on notice that Ms. Demientieff has hired my firm to represent her in an action against your office." On April 8 Demien-tieff's attorney filed a formal notice of substitution of counsel with the superior court in Bethel. And on April 15, 2008, he sent Kirk another letter, expressly refusing to supplement Kirk's April 3 motion for reconsideration and unequivocally advising Kirk that Demientieff would not appeal the superior court's order of dismissal, because "I believe that such an appeal would be without merit."

Despite the substituted appearance by Demientieffs new counsel and the April 15 letter advising Kirk to take no further action in the case, on May 1, 2003, Kirk filed a "Sworn Supplement to Motion to Reconsider," in which, acting as "former attorney for the Plaintiff," he informed the court that the Bethel Postmaster had told him that the post office in Bethel received an express mail delivery for the court on October 31, 2002, and had placed a notice to that effect in the court's post office box that morning. "It is possible," Kirk's supplement observed, "that the person who picked up the mail for the courthouse that day, simply took the slip with him or her, without picking up that mail itself." Kirk went on to argue that, "[iln those cireumstances, the case should not be dismissed under the statute of limitations." Beyond submitting this supplemental information, Kirk did not file anything seeking further relief; nor did he seek to intervene in the case at that time.

In late August 2003, thirty days after the superior court entered its July 22 judgment dismissing Demientieff's case, the allowable time for appealing that judgment expired without any appeal having been filed. 2

On September 24, 2003, Demientieff filed a malpractice action against Kirk's law firm. About nine months later, in May 2004, Kirk, through his malpractice attorney, stipulated with Demientieff's attorney to let Kirk's attorney file on Demientieff's behalf a motion for relief from judgment seeking to set aside the order dismissing her personal injury claim as time-barred. Under the terms of the stipulation, however, the malpractice action would go forward regardless of the motion; and Demientieff expressly "d[id] not agree ... or in any way bind herself to the prosecution of an appeal if the motion is unsuccessful."

In keeping with the stipulation, Kirk's counsel filed a motion for relief from judgment on June 15, 2004, nearly eleven months after Judge Devaney entered the final judgment dismissing Demientieffs case. The motion asked the court to grant Demientieff relief from judgment under Alaska Civil Rule 60(b)(1) on account of mistakes of law allegedly made by the court. 3 The argument advanced in the new motion was essentially similar to the one set out in the earlier motion for reconsideration but offered additional evidence. The new evidence suggested that the complaint was placed in the court's Bethel post office box on October 31, 2002, but that the court failed to pick up its mail from its box until November 4. Citing analogous cases from other jurisdictions, the *515 motion asserted that, under these circumstances, the complaint should have been deemed filed when it was placed in the court's post office box.

United opposed Demientieffs motion for relief from judgment, characterizing it as "nothing more than an untimely appeal." On October 12, 2004, after considering Demien-tieff's motion and United's opposition, Judge Devaney entered an order denying relief from judgment, primarily because the motion was untimely. In ruling that Demientieff had taken too long to seek relief, the court emphasized that under Rule 60(b)(1), a motion for relief from judgment based on a mistake of law ordinarily must be filed within the time frame allowed for a direct appeal-thirty days. Here, the court pointed out, Kirk waited nearly eleven months after entry of judgment before filing Demientieff's motion.

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Bluebook (online)
145 P.3d 512, 2006 Alas. LEXIS 154, 2006 WL 2847850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirk-v-demientieff-alaska-2006.