Rhonda C. Lucas v. Peter J. Warhol

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 13, 2025
Docket23-2035
StatusPublished

This text of Rhonda C. Lucas v. Peter J. Warhol (Rhonda C. Lucas v. Peter J. Warhol) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rhonda C. Lucas v. Peter J. Warhol, (iowa 2025).

Opinion

In the Iowa Supreme Court

No. 23–2035

Submitted April 16, 2025—Filed June 13, 2025

Rhonda C. Lucas,

Appellee,

vs.

Peter J. Warhol,

Appellant.

Interlocutory appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Jeanie

Vaudt, judge.

A defendant appeals the denial of his motion to dismiss for lack of timely

service and also challenges the method of alternative service permitted by the

district court. Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, and Case Remanded.

May, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all justices joined.

Jordan R. Reed (argued) and Tyler S. Smith of Durick Tuttle Smith PLC,

Des Moines, for appellant.

Zachary C. Priebe (argued) and Jeff Carter of Jeff Carter Law Offices, P.C.,

Des Moines, for appellee. 2

May, Justice.

One of the first steps in a personal injury lawsuit is for the plaintiff to serve

the defendant with an original notice and a copy of the petition. Ordinarily, this

step needs to be completed within ninety days after the lawsuit is filed. In many

cases, this step requires relatively little effort. But not in this case.

In this case, the defendant seems to have no fixed address. He may have

experienced homelessness. Regardless, the plaintiff has struggled to serve him.

Eleven months after the lawsuit was filed, the defendant still hadn’t been served.

Ultimately, the district court permitted the plaintiff to serve the defendant

vicariously, that is, by serving an attorney who had been hired by the defendant’s

liability insurance carrier to represent the defendant. The attorney then applied

for interlocutory review on behalf of the defendant. We granted the application.

Soon after, the plaintiff moved to dismiss the appeal as moot because the plaintiff

had personally served the defendant while the application for interlocutory

review was pending. A single justice denied the motion.

Now we consider three questions. First: Should the district court have

dismissed the case because the plaintiff failed to timely serve the defendant?

Second: Did the district court err by permitting the plaintiff to serve the attorney

rather than the defendant? Third: What effect, if any, should be given to the

plaintiff’s personal service of the defendant while the application for interlocutory

review was pending?

As to the first issue, we conclude that the district court was not required

to dismiss the case. The plaintiff’s efforts to achieve service—plus the difficulty

of serving a defendant with no known address—combine to provide good cause

to extend the time for service. 3

As to the second issue, however, we conclude that the district court erred

in ordering service on the attorney. Although the insurer hired the attorney to

protect the defendant’s interests, there’s no evidence that the attorney has had

actual contact with the defendant. As far as we know, they are strangers. So we

cannot say that serving the attorney would provide the defendant with the notice

that due process requires.

As to the third issue, we conclude that the plaintiff’s personal service of

the defendant while the interlocutory review application was pending should be

treated as timely service. Within ten days after the issuance of procedendo, the

plaintiff must file a certificate of this service in the district court. Defendant

Warhol’s time to move or answer under Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.303(1) will

run from the filing of the certificate of service in the district court.

We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.

I. Background.

A. How Lawsuits Start. Because this appeal is about procedure in a civil

lawsuit, we start with a brief overview of the rules governing that procedure. The

first step in a civil lawsuit is for the plaintiff to file a petition. That starts the

lawsuit. Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.301(1). The petition generally describes the claims that

the plaintiff is pursuing, the relief she seeks (money damages, for example), and

the person from whom she seeks relief (usually called “the defendant”).

Once the petition is filed, the next step is for the plaintiff to have the

defendant served with a copy of the petition as well as another document called

“the original notice.” Id. r. 1.302(3). The contents of the original notice are

dictated by Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.302. Those required contents include

the name of the court involved, the names of the parties, the date on which the

petition was filed, the date by which the defendant must respond to the lawsuit 4

with an answer or motion, and a warning that “if the defendant” fails to timely

respond, “judgment by default may be rendered” against the defendant “for the

relief demanded in the petition.” Id. r. 1.302(1) (flush language); see also id.

r. 1.302(1)(a)–(d). The original notice must “be signed by the clerk” of court and

“be under the seal of the court.” Id. r. 1.302(2).

Formalities like these make sense because the original notice is not an

ordinary document. Rather, the “original notice is the formal writing, issued by

authority of law, for the purpose of bringing defendants into court to answer

plaintiff’s demands in a civil action.” Wilson v. Ribbens, 678 N.W.2d 417, 420

(Iowa 2004) (quoting Jacobson v. Leap, 88 N.W.2d 919, 921 (Iowa 1958)).

That purpose is achieved—the defendant is officially brought into court

and required to defend against the lawsuit—when the plaintiff personally serves

the defendant with the original notice and a copy of the petition. Generally

speaking, “[p]ersonal service” involves actually “delivering a copy” to the

defendant. Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.305. As will be explained, however, our law

sometimes permits other options.

In any event, “[t]he plaintiff is responsible for service of an original notice

and petition within the time allowed under” our rules of civil procedure. Id.

r. 1.302(3). More particularly, rule 1.302(5) says that “service of the original

notice” must occur “within 90 days after filing the petition.” Id. r. 1.302(5). If that

doesn’t happen, the court must either “direct an alternate time or manner of

service” or “dismiss the action without prejudice.” Id. But the court must not

dismiss the action if the plaintiff “shows good cause for the failure of service.” Id.

Rather, when good cause is shown, the court must “extend the time for service

for an appropriate period.” Id. 5

B. This Lawsuit. With this background in mind, we turn to the lawsuit

before us. This lawsuit is about a car accident that occurred on January 12,

2021. According to the petition, plaintiff Rhonda Lucas was driving westbound

on Interstate 80 in Des Moines. Defendant Peter Warhol was driving behind

Lucas. Warhol rear-ended Lucas. Lucas suffered injuries. Warhol received

several citations, including for leaving the scene of the accident.

On January 11, 2023, Lucas started this lawsuit by filing her petition.

Lucas named two defendants: Warhol and Progressive Direct Insurance

Company (Progressive Direct), the carrier for Lucas’s underinsured-motorist

(UIM) coverage.1

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