Mitchell Scruggs, Eddie Scruggs, Scruggs Farms & Supplies, LLC, and Scruggs Farm Joint Venture v. Farmland Mutual Insurance Company
This text of Mitchell Scruggs, Eddie Scruggs, Scruggs Farms & Supplies, LLC, and Scruggs Farm Joint Venture v. Farmland Mutual Insurance Company (Mitchell Scruggs, Eddie Scruggs, Scruggs Farms & Supplies, LLC, and Scruggs Farm Joint Venture v. Farmland Mutual Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2021-CA-00877-SCT
MITCHELL SCRUGGS, EDDIE SCRUGGS, SCRUGGS FARMS & SUPPLIES, LLC, AND SCRUGGS FARM JOINT VENTURE
v.
FARMLAND MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/25/2021 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JOHN R. WHITE TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: JIM WAIDE RACHEL PIERCE WAIDE MICHAEL O. GWIN COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LEE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS: JIM WAIDE ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: MICHAEL O. GWIN NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - INSURANCE DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 03/09/2023 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
BEFORE KING, P.J., MAXWELL AND GRIFFIS, JJ.
MAXWELL, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Almost two decades ago, this Court handed down Farmland Mutual Insurance Co.
v. Scruggs, 886 So. 2d 714 (Miss. 2004). In that opinion, this Court held that Farmland
Mutual Insurance Co., the liability insurer for Mitchell Scruggs, Eddie Scruggs, Scruggs
Farms & Supplies LLC, and Scruggs Farm Joint Venture (collectively, Scruggs), had no duty
to defend Scruggs in a federal lawsuit by Monsanto Company. Id. The reason no coverage
applied was because Monsanto had alleged that Scruggs committed the intentional act of conversion by saving and using unlicensed seeds. Id. at 719-21. Eight years later, in 2012,
Scruggs scored a victory in federal court. Monsanto Co. v. Scruggs, 890 F. Supp. 2d 729
(N.D. Miss. 2012). A district court judge overturned a jury’s verdict that Scruggs had
willfully violated Monsanto’s patents. Id. at 742. Consequently, Scruggs was not liable for
treble damages and attorney’s fees. Id.
¶2. With this federal ruling of no willfulness in hand, Scruggs returned to state court in
2013. Citing Rule 60(b) of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure, Scruggs asked the Lee
County Circuit Court to reopen and vacate the final judgment entered in 2004 in favor of
Farmland on the coverage issue. Scruggs asserted this Court’s opinion had been erroneously
decided based on facts that came to light in Monsanto.
¶3. The circuit court rejected the motion as untimely under Rule 60(b). Scruggs has
appealed. While Scruggs asserts the motion was timely, we find the motion’s timing is
irrelevant. Simply put, Rule 60(b) is not a procedural vehicle for a trial court to overturn a
mandate issued from this Court. Trial courts lack jurisdiction to entertain such requests.
George v. Caldwell, 98 Miss. 820, 54 So. 316 (1911). And lack of jurisdiction is something
this Court can—and should—take notice of sua sponte. E.g., Hotboxxx, LLC v. City of
Gulfport, 154 So. 3d 21, 27 (Miss. 2015) (citing City of Madison v. Bryan, 763 So. 2d 162,
166 (Miss. 2000); In re City of Biloxi, 113 So. 3d 565, 570 (Miss. 2013)). Because the trial
court lacked jurisdiction to grant Scruggs’s request, we affirm the circuit court’s denial of
the motion.
2 ¶4. Scruggs argued the Rule 60(b) motion to the Lee County Circuit Court. But the
judgment Scruggs sought to alter came from this Court, the Supreme Court. By asking the
circuit court to grant relief from this Court’s decree, by means of a Rule 60(b) motion,
Scruggs was really requesting the circuit court violate the mandate rule.
¶5. “A ‘mandate’ is the official notice of action of the appellate court, directed to the
court below, advising that court of the action taken by the appellate court, and directing the
lower court to have the appellate court’s judgment duly recognized, obeyed, and executed.”
5 Am. Jur. 2d Appellate Review § 679, Westlaw (database updated Mar. 2023). And in
American courts, following an appellate decision, the mandate rule applies. “The mandate
rule is a specific application of the ‘law of the case’ doctrine . . . .” 5 Am. Jur. 2d Appellate
Review § 684, Westlaw (database updated Mar. 2023). Under the “‘mandate rule,’ when a
case has been decided by an appellate court on appeal, . . . whatever was before the appellate
court, and disposed of by its decree, is considered as finally settled . . . .” Id. Thus, the
mandate rule stands as “a jurisdictional bar on the inferior court’s authority to reconsider
issues that were expressly or impliedly decided in a previous appeal.” Id.
¶6. “This fundamental rule binds every court to honor rulings in the case by superior
courts.” Casey v. Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa., 14 F.3d 848, 856 (3d Cir. 1994). As the
United States Supreme Court has stated, “In its earliest days this Court consistently held that
an inferior court has no power or authority to deviate from the mandate issued by an
appellate court.” Briggs v. Pa. R.R. Co., 334 U.S. 304, 306, 68 S. Ct. 1039, 92 L. Ed. 1403
(1948) (emphasis added). Almost two centuries ago, the Supreme Court of Arkansas
3 summed up this long-standing jurisdiction rule well—as an inferior court, the trial court “is
bound by the judgment or decree as the law of the case, and . . . cannot vary it, or judicially
examine it for any other purpose than execution.” Fortenberry v. Frazier, 5 Ark. 200, 202
(1843). “It can give no other or further relief as to any matter decided by the Supreme Court,
even where there is error apparent . . . .” Id. (emphasis added).
¶7. The almost twenty-year-old opinion and mandate Scruggs seeks to overturn conferred
no jurisdiction to the trial court. No issues were remanded for further proceedings. Instead,
this Court definitively ruled that Farmland Mutual had no duty to defend. Farmland, 886
So. 2d at 721. And we reversed the trial court’s ruling that Farmland had a duty to defend
and rendered judgment in Farmland’s favor. Id. Following the denial of Scruggs’s motion
for rehearing, the mandate issued in December 2004. Once the “final decree had been
entered by this court, . . . the cause was at an end.” George, 54 So. at 316. And the circuit
court could grant no relief on the coverage question. See City of Cleveland v. Mid-S.
Assocs., LLC, 94 So. 3d 1049, 1051 (Miss. 2012) (holding that, “after the case was rendered,
the chancery court had no jurisdiction to adjudicate” any issues).
¶8. Because the circuit court lacked jurisdiction to grant Scruggs’s Rule 60(b) motion
based on the mandate rule, we affirm.
¶9. AFFIRMED.
RANDOLPH, C.J., KITCHENS AND KING, P.JJ., COLEMAN, BEAM, CHAMBERLIN, ISHEE AND GRIFFIS, JJ., CONCUR.
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Mitchell Scruggs, Eddie Scruggs, Scruggs Farms & Supplies, LLC, and Scruggs Farm Joint Venture v. Farmland Mutual Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-scruggs-eddie-scruggs-scruggs-farms-supplies-llc-and-scruggs-miss-2023.