Park v. Strick

669 P.2d 78, 137 Ariz. 100, 1983 Ariz. LEXIS 227
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1983
Docket16397-SA
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 669 P.2d 78 (Park v. Strick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Park v. Strick, 669 P.2d 78, 137 Ariz. 100, 1983 Ariz. LEXIS 227 (Ark. 1983).

Opinion

*101 FELDMAN, Justice.

This special action was filed after petitioner’s motion for relief from judgment pursuant to Ariz.R.Civ.P. 60(c) was denied by the trial court. 1 Having concluded that the case raises issues of substantive importance and that remedy by appeal is inadequate, we accepted jurisdiction pursuant to Ariz.Const. art. 6, § 5, and Ariz.R.Sp.Act. 4, 17A A.R.S.

On May 22, 1981, petitioner filed an action for dissolution of his marriage to the respondent, Dorothy E. Park. A decree of dissolution was entered after trial and petitioner made a timely motion for a new trial. This motion was argued to the trial court on October 1,1982, and taken under advisement. Later that same day, the trial court entered a minute entry denying the petitioner’s motion. This minute entry was never received by petitioner’s attorney.

On October 7,1982, respondent’s attorney presented a formal, written order denying the motion for a new trial to the trial judge, who signed the order on that same day. The order did not mention the name of petitioner’s attorney, nor did it contain a certificate of mailing or service. Petitioner’s attorney did not receive a copy of the formal, written order. 2 The trial court signed a minute entry reflecting entry of the formal, written order which was filed with the clerk on October 7, 1982. The deputy clerk who prepared the minute entry did not mail a copy of it to petitioner’s attorney, as required by Rule 77(g), because his name did not appear on the formal written order which had been prepared and submitted by respondent’s counsel. The affidavit of the deputy clerk stated that the standard practice in her office is to obtain the names and addresses of the attorneys to whom minute entries are mailed from the written order or judgment submitted to the court for signature.

In early December 1982, petitioner’s attorney contacted the trial judge to discover the status of his motion for new trial. He was informed that the judge was on vacation until December 13. On December 17, the attorney called the court and discovered that the minute entry denying his motion had been signed and filed with the clerk on October 7.

Petitioner immediately filed a motion for relief from judgment pursuant to Rule 60(c). 3 Since petitioner had no knowledge of the order denying his motion for new trial and had received no notice of the entry of that order, he had failed to file notice of appeal within thirty days; appeal was therefore precluded. Ariz.R.Civ.App.P. 9. Petitioner therefore moved the court to vacate the order denying the motion for new trial and to reenter it in order to recommence the time period for filing a notice of appeal. Respondent opposed this motion. The trial court heard oral argument on the issue and denied the motion, finding that (1) petitioner’s counsel did not receive the minute entry showing the ruling of October 1, 1982; (2) the formal written order submitted to the court by respondent’s attor *102 ney was sent by respondent but was never seen by petitioner’s counsel; (3) the minute entry reflecting that the order was signed on October 7,1982 was sent to respondent’s attorney but never sent to petitioner’s counsel; (4) in equity the court would have been inclined to grant the relief requested but lacked jurisdiction to do so under the rule of Vital v. Johnson, 128 Ariz. 129, 624 P.2d 326 (App.1980).

Based on the denial of his motion, petitioner sought relief in this court. In the usual case, Rule 60(c) is invoked so that a party may obtain relief from a judgment or order in order to assert some defense to the relief granted by that judgment or order. In this case and in Vital, supra, relief was sought under Rule 60(c) for a different purpose — in order to re-start the time period for filing notice of appeal by having the trial court first vacate the order and then reenter it. We accepted the petition in order to examine the decision in Vital, supra, and the interplay between Rules 60(c) and 77(g). 4

In Vital, the appellant brought an action in superior court to obtain a reversal of a decision upholding her discharge from employment. The trial court heard argument on the matter, read the parties’ memoran-da, took the matter under advisement, and entered judgment on March 17, 1980. Neither counsel received a copy of the minute entry or notice of the entry of judgment as required by Rule 77(g). Appellant wrote the clerk of the court on April 29, 1980 to inquire about the appeal, but did not receive a response. On July 3,1980, appellant first found out that judgment had been entered on March 17 and immediately moved to set the judgment aside pursuant to Rule 60(c)(6). The trial court vacated the judgment and then reentered it. Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal from the “new” judgment.

The court of appeals dismissed the appeal as untimely. Relying on the language of Rule 77(g) and this court’s decision in Old Pueblo Transit Co. v. Corporation Commission, 73 Ariz. 32, 236 P.2d 1018 (1951), the Vital court found that under all circumstances the trial court lacked authority to vacate a judgment and reenter the same in order to recommence the time for filing a notice of appeal. 128 Ariz. at 132, 624 P.2d at 329. Specifically rejecting the analysis of the federal courts on this issue, the court concluded: “We are not at liberty to change the plainly stated effect of [Rule 77(g) ]; to do so, by reference to Rule 60(c)(6) or any other rule of less specific application, would simply deny the efficacy of Rule 77(g).” Id. at 131, 624 P.2d at 328.

Initially we believe the Vital court’s reliance on our decision in Old Pueblo was misplaced. In Old Pueblo, the clerk failed to send the proper notice to the parties. The appellant in that case, however, had actual knowledge of the entry of judgment prior to the expiration of the appeal period yet failed to timely file. The appellant’s only argument, therefore, was that the appeal time should begin to run from the service of the notice required by Rule 77(g) 5 and not from the entry of judgment. We rejected this argument. The holding in *103 Old Pueblo is simply that the time period for appeal begins to run from the date of entry of judgment; notice of the entry is not necessary to start the appeal time running. 73 Ariz. at 36, 236 P.2d at 1021. Thus, Old Pueblo did not address the issue of whether a trial court had authority to set aside a judgment when the parties had no knowledge that it had been entered and the purpose was to allow reentry of judgment so that an appeal could be taken.

The federal approach to this issue interprets a trial court’s power to vacate a judgment more broadly than the court in Vital.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
669 P.2d 78, 137 Ariz. 100, 1983 Ariz. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/park-v-strick-ariz-1983.