Pletnikoff v. Johnson

765 P.2d 973, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 152, 1988 WL 130807
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1988
DocketS-2269
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 765 P.2d 973 (Pletnikoff v. Johnson) 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
Pletnikoff v. Johnson, 765 P.2d 973, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 152, 1988 WL 130807 (Ala. 1988).

Opinions

[974]*974OPINION

MOORE, Justice.

Patrick Pletnikoff was the defendant in criminal and civil proceedings arising out of the alleged rape of Sherrie Johnson. In the criminal proceedings, a jury convicted Pletnikoff of rape; the court of appeals reversed the conviction and ordered a retrial; and Pletnikoff pled nolo contendere prior to the second trial. In the civil proceedings, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Johnson on the issue of liability on the basis of the prior jury conviction and the subsequent plea of nolo contendere. The trial court also granted summary judgment in favor of Johnson on the issue of damages. Pletnikoff appeals the civil judgment.

I.

On April 2,1983, Patrick Pletnikoff allegedly raped Sherrie Johnson. A jury found Pletnikoff guilty of two counts of first degree sexual assault on September 22, 1983. On January 31, 1985, Sherrie Johnson filed a complaint seeking civil damages for her alleged rape. Representing himself, Pletnikoff filed an answer, dated March 2, 1985, denying Johnson’s allegations. On August 20, 1985, the trial court granted Johnson’s motion for summary judgment on the issue of liability, based on Pletnikoff’s criminal conviction.

On May 30, 1986, the court of appeals overturned Pletnikoff’s conviction, finding that the jury could have been prejudiced by the trial court’s admission of inadmissible evidence and by an erroneous jury instruction. Pletnikoff v. State, 719 P.2d 1039 (Alaska App.1986). In the pending civil proceedings, Johnson brought this to the attention of the trial court in an ex parte motion for a continuance of the civil trial, then scheduled to begin on August 11, 1986. The court continued the trial, explaining that “the fact of a new criminal trial changes the legal basis of the partial summary judgment granted 20 August 1985 and reopens the issues in this case on liability as well as damages.”

Prior to his second criminal trial, Pletni-koff pled nolo contendere to the criminal charges.

Meanwhile, in the civil proceedings, Johnson’s attorney, Jeri Bidinger, attempted to serve Pletnikoff with a first set of requests for admissions on October 3, 1986. Biding-er sent the requests to the Wildwood Correctional Center, the address Pletnikoff provided to the court. The requests were returned as not deliverable. Bidinger made two more unsuccessful attempts in December of 1986 to deliver the requests to other possible addresses.

Johnson filed a motion for partial summary judgment on the issue of liability, dated March 4,1987. In that motion, Johnson argued that summary judgment on the issue of liability was appropriate based on the initial jury verdict against Pletnikoff, the subsequent plea of nolo contendere, and the facts that the evidence found inadmissible by the court of appeals would have been admissible in a civil proceeding and the jury instruction found erroneous by the court of appeals would have been correct for a civil proceeding. On March 4, 1987, after inquiring with the Department of Corrections as to the whereabouts of Plet-nikoff, Bidinger mailed the summary judgment papers and the request for admissions to Pletnikoff at the Cook Inlet PreTrial Facility, 1300 East Fourth Avenue, Anchorage. A month later, Bidinger discovered that the mailing address of the Cook Inlet Pre-Trial Facility was P.O. Box 103155, Anchorage, and not the street address to which she had previously sent the papers. However, Bidinger also discovered that mail addressed to the street address, 1300 East Fourth Avenue, is delivered and distributed to the inmates. To further ensure service, Bidinger sent a second set of summary judgment papers to the Cook Inlet Pre-Trial Facility’s post office box.

Pletnikoff did not oppose the motion for summary judgment. On April 3, 1987, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Johnson on the issue of liability.

Johnson moved for partial summary judgment on the issue of damages on May 15, 1987. Johnson based this motion on [975]*975Pletnikoff’s failure to respond to the request for admissions. Johnson argued that, since Pletnikoff did not respond to the requests, the requests were deemed admitted and therefore no genuine issue of material fact remained on the issue of damages. Pletnikoff did not oppose this motion. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Johnson on the issue of damages and entered judgment for Johnson in the amount of $2,142,721.89.

Pletnikoff appeals, claiming: (1) the motion for partial summary judgment on the issue of liability was never served on Plet-nikoff; (2) the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on the issue of liability because the jury verdict against Pletnikoff was overturned; (3) the requests for admissions were never served on Pletnikoff; and (4) the amount of damages awarded to Johnson was improper.

II. SUMMARY JUDGMENT ON THE ISSUE OF LIABILITY

A. Service of Process

Pletnikoff argues that the superior court should not have granted Johnson’s motion for summary judgment on the issue of liability because Johnson did not serve the motion on Pletnikoff before the court granted the motion.

Civil Rule 5(b) describes how service is effectuated:

Service upon the attorney or upon a party shall be made by delivering a copy to him or by mailing it to him at his last known address or, if no address is known, by leaving it with the clerk of the court.... Service by mail is complete upon mailing.

Johnson mailed a copy of the motion papers to Pletnikoff s last known address at the Cook Inlet Pre-Trial Facility on March 4, 1987. According to Civil Rule 5(b), service was complete at that time. Furthermore, it is clear that Pletnikoff actually received the summary judgment papers in early March 1987, as he refers to them in his proposed order to dismiss, which accompanied a motion to dismiss dated March 9, 1987.

B. Grant of Summary Judgment on the Issue of Liability

As we concluded above, Johnson served Pletnikoff with her summary judgment motion on March 4, 1987. Pletnikoff had fifteen days to respond, Alaska R.Civ.P. 77(c), but did not do so. The court entered summary judgment in Johnson’s favor on the issue of liability on April 6, 1987.

The proponent of a summary judgment motion has the initial burden of establishing the absence of genuine issues of material fact and his or her right to judgment as a matter of law. See Alaska R.Civ.P. 56; see also Weaver Bros. v. Chappel, 684 P.2d 123, 126 (Alaska 1984). The proponent has no absolute right to summary judgment merely because the opponent fails to respond. Dome Laboratories v. Farrell, 599 P.2d 152, 159 n. 24 (Alaska 1979).

Johnson argues in both her summary judgment papers and her appellate brief that the jury verdict finding Pletnikoff guilty of sexual assault, ultimately overturned by the court of appeals in Pletnikoff v. State, 719 P.2d 1039 (Alaska App.1986), established Pletnikoff’s liability in the civil case.

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Bluebook (online)
765 P.2d 973, 1988 Alas. LEXIS 152, 1988 WL 130807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pletnikoff-v-johnson-alaska-1988.