Pauline Cosper v. Hon. rea/mora

CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 2012
StatusPublished

This text of Pauline Cosper v. Hon. rea/mora (Pauline Cosper v. Hon. rea/mora) 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
Pauline Cosper v. Hon. rea/mora, (Ark. 2012).

Opinion

SUPREME COURT OF ARIZONA En Banc

PAULINE COSPER, ) Arizona Supreme Court ) No. CV-11-0083-PR Petitioner, ) ) Court of Appeals v. ) Division One ) No. 1 CA-SA 10-0266 THE HONORABLE JOHN CHRISTIAN REA, ) JUDGE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT OF ) Maricopa County THE STATE OF ARIZONA, in and for ) Superior Court the County of Maricopa, ) No. CV2009-029396 ) Respondent Judge, ) ) MARCO MORA and FLOR MORA, ) O P I N I O N ) Real Parties in Interest. ) ) __________________________________)

Special Action from the Superior Court in Maricopa County The Honorable John Christian Rea, Judge

AFFIRMED ________________________________________________________________

Opinion of the Court of Appeals Division One 226 Ariz. 438, 250 P.3d 215 (2011)

VACATED ________________________________________________________________

CAVANAGH LAW FIRM Phoenix By Steven D. Smith Thomas C. Hall Taylor C. Young Attorneys for Pauline Cosper

KNAPP & ROBERTS PC Scottsdale By David L. Abney

And

1 WILLIAM J. WOLF ATTORNEY AT LAW Phoenix By William J. Wolf Attorneys for Marco and Flor Mora ________________________________________________________________

B R U T I N E L, Justice

¶1 Arizona Rule of Civil Procedure 77(g)(1) requires that

those appealing from arbitration awards “simultaneously with the

filing of the Appeal from Arbitration and Motion to Set for

Trial . . . file a list of witnesses and exhibits intended to be

used at trial.” We hold that this list can only be supplemented

for good cause under Rule 77(g)(4).

I.

¶2 In September 2009, Marco and Flor Mora sued Pauline

Cosper for damages arising from a car accident. In August 2010,

after mandatory arbitration, the arbitrator entered an award in

favor of the Moras. The next day, Cosper filed a notice of

appeal seeking a trial de novo in superior court and a list of

witnesses and exhibits. In October 2010, Cosper filed a

supplemental witness list designating a biomechanical expert and

disclosing his report. The Moras moved to strike these

supplemental disclosures as untimely.

¶3 The superior court granted the motion, noting that

Cosper had not attempted to show good cause for the late

disclosure under subsection (g)(4). Cosper filed a special

action petition in the court of appeals. That court accepted

2 jurisdiction and granted relief, holding that “Rule 77 permits

supplemental disclosure pursuant to [Arizona Rules of Civil

Procedure] 26 through 37 within [eighty] days after the filing

of an appeal from compulsory arbitration, without requiring that

parties show good cause or obtain the permission of the court.”

Cosper v. Rea ex rel. County of Maricopa, 226 Ariz. 438, 443

¶ 18, 250 P.3d 215, 220 (App. 2011).

¶4 We granted review to clarify the requirements of Rule

77(g). We have jurisdiction under Article 6, Section 5(3) of

the Arizona Constitution and A.R.S. § 12-120.24 (2003).

II.

¶5 Rules 26 through 37 of the Arizona Rules of Civil

Procedure govern discovery generally, and Rule 26.1 imposes

disclosure obligations, including the disclosure of a party’s

expected witnesses and exhibits. Rule 77 more particularly

governs the resolution of cases subject to mandatory

arbitration, however, by limiting the time for discovery and

additional disclosures of witnesses and exhibits.

¶6 Rule 77(g) states, in pertinent part, as follows:

(1) The appellant shall simultaneously with the filing of the Appeal from Arbitration and Motion to Set for Trial referenced [in Rule 77(a)] also file a list of witnesses and exhibits intended to be used at trial that complies with the requirements of Rule 26.1 of these rules. If the appellant fails or elects not to file such a list of 3 witnesses and exhibits together with the Appeal from Arbitration and Motion to Set for Trial, then the witnesses and exhibits intended to be used at trial by appellant shall be deemed to be those set forth in any such list previously filed in the action or in the pre-hearing statement submitted pursuant to Rule 75(c) of these rules.

. . . .

(3) The parties shall have 80 days from the filing of the Appeal from Arbitration and Motion to Set for Trial to complete discovery, pursuant to Rules 26 through 37 of these rules.

(4) For good cause shown the court may extend the time for discovery set forth in subsection (3) above and/or allow a supplemental list of witnesses and exhibits to be filed.

¶7 Subsection (g)(1) requires that witness and exhibit

lists be filed simultaneously with the notice of appeal. An

appellant who fails to file a list is limited to the witnesses

and exhibits “in any such list previously filed in the action.”

Ariz. R. Civ. P. 77(g)(1). The rule’s explicit deadline for

filing witness and exhibit lists is more restrictive than the

deadlines for disclosure for non-arbitration cases under Rule

26.1(b), which generally entitles parties to supplement their

disclosures without leave of court up to sixty days before

trial.

¶8 Subsection (g)(4) also contradicts any ongoing right

4 to additional disclosure. This subsection states that “[f]or

good cause shown the court may . . . allow a supplemental list

of witnesses and exhibits to be filed.” Id. (emphasis added).

Parties cannot possess an automatic and unqualified right to

supplement witness and exhibit lists when the rule expressly

requires good cause and approval of the court. Accordingly, the

court of appeals erred in holding that the right to supplement

witness and exhibit lists exists “without requiring that parties

show good cause or obtain the permission of the court.” Cosper,

226 Ariz. at 443 ¶ 18, 250 P.3d at 220.

¶9 The court of appeals attempted to harmonize the

subsections of Rule 77(g) by concluding that during the eighty

day discovery period prescribed in (g)(3), parties have the

right to both conduct discovery and disclose additional

witnesses and exhibits. This interpretation obviates (g)(1) by

removing its mandate that witness and exhibit lists be filed

concurrently with a notice of appeal. It also means that

subsection (g)(4)’s requirement of court permission to file a

supplemental list does not apply until after eighty days. But

both the rule’s text and the consequences of creating an ongoing

eighty-day disclosure period convince us that this is not what

the rule intended.

¶10 Although Cosper correctly points out that subsection

(g)(3) refers to Rules 26 through 37, and Rule 26.1(b)(2) 5 generally allows parties to supplement their disclosures of

intended new witnesses in civil cases, we disagree that (g)(3)

creates the same right here. The rules governing non-

arbitration civil cases cannot trump Rule 77(g)(1) and (g)(4),

which specifically governs disclosure in appeals from

arbitration awards. When a specific rule conflicts with a

general one, the specific rule controls. See In re

Guardianship/Conservatorship of Denton v. Superior Court, 190

Ariz. 152, 157, 945 P.2d 1283, 1288 (1997) (explaining that

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Related

Cosper v. Rea Ex Rel. County of Maricopa
250 P.3d 215 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 2011)
Arizona Department of Revenue v. Action Marine, Inc.
181 P.3d 188 (Arizona Supreme Court, 2008)
Denton v. Superior Court
945 P.2d 1283 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1997)

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Pauline Cosper v. Hon. rea/mora, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pauline-cosper-v-hon-reamora-ariz-2012.