Michael P. Lenaghan and Margaret Lenaghan v. Pepsico, Inc., Pepsi-Cola of Michigan, Inc., and Frito-Lay, Inc., Jointly and Severally

961 F.2d 1250
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 11, 1992
Docket91-1616
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 961 F.2d 1250 (Michael P. Lenaghan and Margaret Lenaghan v. Pepsico, Inc., Pepsi-Cola of Michigan, Inc., and Frito-Lay, Inc., Jointly and Severally) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael P. Lenaghan and Margaret Lenaghan v. Pepsico, Inc., Pepsi-Cola of Michigan, Inc., and Frito-Lay, Inc., Jointly and Severally, 961 F.2d 1250 (6th Cir. 1992).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

The defendants appeal from the district court’s decision to enter judgment for the plaintiffs upon a mediation panel’s decision. The court entered judgment after finding that the defendants failed to reject the panel’s decision within the time specified by a local court rule. Finding that the defendants’ failure to reject on time was excusable, we reverse and remand.

[1252]*1252I.

The plaintiffs, Michael and Margaret Lenaghan, filed this action against the defendants, Mr. Lenaghan’s former employers, in a Michigan state court in September 1989. The defendants, Pepsico, Inc., Pepsi-Cola of Michigan, Inc., and Frito-Lay, Inc., removed the case to federal district court two months later.

In October 1990, the parties stipulated to an order referring the case to non-binding mediation. See Local Rule 32, E.D.Mich. The mediation panel heard arguments on January 8, 1991. At the conclusion of the hearing, the panel announced an evaluation in favor of the plaintiffs for $45,000 and handed copies of the evaluation to counsel for both sides. The defendants’ attorney immediately informed the plaintiffs’ attorney that the defendants would reject the evaluation.

The local mediation rule requires that: Written acceptance or rejection of the Mediation Panel’s evaluation shall be given to the Tribunal Clerk within 28 days of the mailing of the evaluation.... At the expiration of the above period, the Tribunal Clerk shall send a notice indicating each counsel’s acceptance or rejection of the evaluation.

Local Rule 32(e)(5). The rule further provides that, “[i]f the Mediation Panel’s evaluation is not rejected by any of the parties within 28 days, a judgment shall be entered by the Court in the amount of the award.” Local Rule 32(j)(l).

On February 5, 1991, 28 days after receiving the panel’s decision, the defendants’ counsel mailed a rejection notice to the tribunal clerk. The tribunal clerk received the rejection three days later. The clerk then notified the district court and the parties that the plaintiffs had accepted the panel’s evaluation and that the defendants had accepted the evaluation by filing a late rejection.

The plaintiffs immediately filed a motion for entry of judgment on the panel evaluation. The court held two hearings on the motion. At both hearings, the defendants conceded that they had filed the rejection late, but urged the court to excuse the mistake. The district court rejected the defendants’ entreaties and entered judgment on the mediation panel’s evaluation.

Two days later, the defendants filed a motion to reconsider, arguing for the first time that the February 5 mailing was timely and, alternatively, that the court lacked authority to enter judgment as a sanction for a procedural default. The district court denied the motion without opinion. The defendants then filed a motion to set aside the judgment, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e). This motion again advanced the arguments raised in the motion to reconsider and added a claim that the decision deprived the defendants of their right to a jury trial. The district court denied this second motion, again without opinion. This appeal followed.

II.

Before deciding whether the district court abused its discretion by refusing to relieve the defendants from the consequences of their procedural misstep, we first must consider the defendants’ claim that the rejection notice was timely. We disagree.

The defendants argue that they satisfied the requirement that a rejection “be given” to the tribunal clerk within 28 days by mailing the rejection on the 28th day. Thus, the defendants argue that “be given” is synonymous with “be sent.” We find that a more natural reading of the phrase is that the tribunal clerk must receive the rejection within 28 days. The language following the disputed phrase that requires the tribunal clerk to send notice of the results “at the expiration” of the 28-day period bolsters our conclusion. The tribunal clerk cannot send such notice at the end of the 28th day if he or she has not yet received rejections mailed that day.

The seemingly contrary interpretation of Local Rule 32 appearing in Lofton v. J.L. Hudson Co., No. 86-1538 (6th Cir. Apr. 14, 1987) [816 F.2d 680 (table)], does not change our conclusion. In Lofton, a party mailed a notice rejecting a mediation evaluation two days before the deadline, but [1253]*1253sent the rejection to the court instead of to the tribunal clerk. The court received the rejection on the day of the deadline and returned it to counsel. The tribunal clerk finally received the rejection six days after the deadline. We affirmed the district court’s refusal to allow a late filing. In passing, we stated that the local rule requires rejections “to be mailed to the tribunal within 28 days.” Lofton, slip op. at 3. That statement was not a holding, and, Lofton, unlike this case, did not turn on the distinction between mailing and receipt. The reference to mailing in Lofton was in the context of to whom it should be mailed, not when it should be mailed. We therefore decline to attach any significance to that statement, particularly since it appears in an unpublished opinion.1

The defendants also argue that the 28-day period never began because the tribunal clerk did not mail the panel’s evaluation to the parties. Although Local Rule 32 does state that the clock begins to run when the clerk mails the evaluation, no mailing was necessary in this case because the mediation panel physically handed copies of the evaluation to counsel on the day of the hearing. A mailing is only necessary when the panel does not decide the case immediately. See Local Rule 32(e)(4) (requiring panel to “notify” counsel of its evaluation within 14 days of hearing); see also MGM Brakes Div. of Indian Head, Inc. v. Uni-Bond, Inc., 111 Mich. App. 467, 315 N.W.2d 170, 172 (1981) (holding that, under identical “mailing” language in Wayne County rule, clock began running when panel physically served evaluation to counsel), remanded on other grounds, 417 Mich. 905, 330 N.W.2d 853 (1983).

We therefore find that the district court correctly determined that the defendants’ rejection notice was given to the tribunal clerk three days late.

III.

The defendants next argue that Local Rule 32, by allowing or mandating the entry of a judgment based on a procedural error, violates the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and' the Seventh Amendment. We disagree.

The federal rules allow district courts to adopt local rules “not inconsistent with these rules.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 83. The defendants contend that Local Rule 32 is inconsistent with Fed.R.Civ.P. 55(a), which allows a court to enter a default judgment against a party that “has failed to plead or otherwise defend.”

The defendants have not suffered a default judgment in this case. See Leal v.

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