Phillips v. Gieringer

108 P.3d 889, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 31, 2005 WL 564165
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 2005
DocketS-10909
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 108 P.3d 889 (Phillips v. Gieringer) 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
Phillips v. Gieringer, 108 P.3d 889, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 31, 2005 WL 564165 (Ala. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Traci Phillips was involved in an automobile accident with Carl Gieringer, who was insured under the same State Farm auto insurance policy as his father, Robert Gier-inger. After some negotiation and discussion of the case with State Farm, Phillips mistakenly named Carl’s father as the defendant driver in the complaint which she filed in a personal injury suit. After the statute of limitations had run, Phillips moved to amend the complaint to name Carl as a defendant. Because Carl maintained that he was unaware of the lawsuit during the limitations *891 period, the superior court dismissed the complaint on statute of limitations grounds, concluding that the new complaint did not relate back to the timely filing against Carl’s father. Phillips appeals. Because there is a rebutta-ble presumption that notice of the complaint and knowledge of the mistake can be imputed to an insured through his insurance company, we reverse the superior court’s decision.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On August 16, 1999, Carl Gieringer and Traci Phillips were involved in an automobile accident in the Aaska Regional Hospital parking lot. Athough Carl was not a minor, he was insured under the same State Farm auto insurance policy as his father, Dr. Robert Gieringer, and was driving his mother’s ear at the time of the accident. Phillips, a nurse, states that she knew of Dr. Robert Gieringer and learned at the time of the accident that the driver was his son.

In April 2001 Phillips retained attorney Robert Rehbock to represent her in her claim of injuries received due to the accident. Rehbock contacted State Farm on April 30, 2001 to inform the company that he would represent Phillips on her claim, and a State Farm adjuster responded in May 2001, asking for Phillips’s medical records and stating that State Farm would make a settlement offer after reviewing the records and evaluating the claim. State Farm’s letter identified “our insured” as “Robert Gieringer.”

Phillips hand delivered a copy of a draft complaint to State Farm on July 16, 2001, with a letter to the adjuster explaining that due to the “steadily approaching statute of limitations deadline,” Phillips would file a complaint to preserve her claim if a settlement could not be reached. Two days later, on July 18, 2001, Phillips filed a complaint against “Robert E. Gieringer” but described the “defendant” in her complaint as the driver of the motor vehicle and directed all her claims against the driver.

Athough Phillips knew that the driver was the son of Dr. Robert Gieringer, Phillips’s counsel mistakenly assumed that the son had the same name as the father. The police report of the accident stated that the driver’s name was Carl Gieringer, but Phillips’s counsel did not have a copy of the accident report when drafting the complaint.

In December 2001 Phillips faxed a letter to the State Farm adjuster requesting Robert Gieringer’s address for service of process. The letter explained, “[t]he only address we have is Dr. Robert E. Gieringer’s office and it was Dr. Gieringer’s son who should be properly served in this matter. We do not wish to inconvenience Dr. Gieringer.... ” State Farm’s adjuster provided the name of Dr. Gieringer’s son as “Karl Gieringer” and noted that “Karl” was believed to be a student attending college outside Aaska. Phillips’s attorney wrote to State Farm in late January 2002 to apologize for his error, but this time he misidentified the son as “Keith” or “Kieth.” Phillips asked a second time for the son’s address and requested that State Farm inform the insureds of the complaint against the son and to direct the matter to the son’s counsel. Phillips also moved to amend the complaint to name “Keith” Gier-inger as the defendant, and the superior court granted leave for the amendment.

Counsel for State Farm, Joe Huddleston, responded to Phillips in February 2002 stating: “we are not in a position to follow your instructions to notify Robert or Carl Gieringer of anything because no action has been filed against them. I suspect that neither one of them has any knowledge of this case because you have never properly filed or served either one of them.” The letter ended by stating “the statute of limitations on this matter ran approximately six months ago.”

On March 7, 2002, the superior court granted Phillips’s second motion to amend the complaint to name Carl Gieringer as the defendant. Ater an unsuccessful effort to locate Carl Gieringer, Phillips moved for service by publication on April 2, 2002. The superior court granted the motion, finding that it appeared from Phillips’s affidavit that “Defendant has received constructive notice by the results of Plaintiffs efforts to serve Defendant....”

But Carl Gieringer stated in an affidavit signed in New Hampshire that “[t]he first *892 time that I learned that a lawsuit had been filed against me was in late April of 2002 or early May.” Carl Gieringer moved to dismiss the claim on statute of limitations grounds in May 2002. Oral argument on the motion to dismiss was held on August 20, 2002. The superior court initially ordered that due to the lack of evidence regarding the length of Gieringer’s absence from the state, Phillips would have one month “to produce evidence that Gieringer’s absence from the state brings his complaint within the statute of limitations.” On November 25, 2002, the superior court granted Carl’s motion for reconsideration and his motion to dismiss, concluding that his absence from the state did not toll the statute of limitations because Gier-inger was “at all times open to substituted service of process through the commissioner” of administration under AS 09.05.020 and AS 09.05.040. The superior court further ruled that Phillips’s second amended complaint did not relate back to the timely original complaint because Carl’s “unchallenged affidavit conclusively establishes that he was unaware of the lawsuit until late April or May of 2002.” Phillips moved for reconsideration of this order but his motion was denied. The court entered judgment for Carl Gieringer and awarded attorney’s fees on January 14, 2003. Phillips appeals.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

The superior court granted Carl Gieringer’s Alaska Civil Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. A motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) requires that the plaintiffs factual allegations be taken as true, and that matters outside of the pleadings should be excluded from the superior court’s consideration. 1 In this case the superior court relied on Carl Gieringer’s “unchallenged affidavit” when ruling that Phillips’s amended complaint did not relate back. The superior court also held “[e]ven when the facts are construed in favor of Phillips, there remains no genuine issue of material fact, and Mr. Gieringer is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” This ruling implies that the superior court may have converted the Rule 12(b)(6) motion to a summary judgment motion. Alaska Civil Rule 12(b)(7) provides, in relevant part:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Eric Forrer v. State of Alaska and Lucinda Mahoney
471 P.3d 569 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2020)
Maldonado v. Pratt
2016 COA 171 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2016)
Sellers v. Kurdilla
377 P.3d 33 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2016)
Ranes & Shine, LLC v. MacDonald Miller Alaska, Inc.
355 P.3d 503 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2015)
Jonathan Lasek v. Laurie Celik
Supreme Court of Vermont, 2012
Larson v. State, Department of Corrections
284 P.3d 1 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2012)
Costello v. Casler
254 P.3d 631 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2011)
Lindeman v. State
244 P.3d 1151 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2011)
Pan v. Bane
2006 OK 57 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 P.3d 889, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 31, 2005 WL 564165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-gieringer-alaska-2005.