Rivera v. PNS Stores, Inc.

647 F.3d 188, 80 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 278, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 14639, 2011 WL 2749627
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 15, 2011
Docket10-50328
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 647 F.3d 188 (Rivera v. PNS Stores, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rivera v. PNS Stores, Inc., 647 F.3d 188, 80 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 278, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 14639, 2011 WL 2749627 (5th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(a) allows a district court to correct a clerical error in a judgment if the error causes the judgment to inaccurately reflect the results of the court’s adjudication. Plaintiff-Appellant Rachel Rivera contends that the district court exceeded its authority under Rule 60(a) when it corrected the judgment dismissing Rivera’s case to reflect that the dismissal was “with prejudice” instead of “without prejudice.” However, the district court had adjudicated Rivera’s claims on their merits via a grant of summary judgment, and a grant of summary judgment necessarily results in a dismissal with prejudice. Therefore, we conclude that Rule 60(a) authorized the district court to enter the corrected judgment and affirm its decision to do so.

I.

This appeal is one part of a larger dispute between these two parties that spans both state and federal court. In April of 1998 Rivera slipped, fell, and broke her hip while shopping in a store owned by the defendant-appellee PNS Stores, Inc. Eight months later Rivera filed suit against PNS in state court, alleging that PNS had negligently failed to maintain the store’s premises in a safe condition, failed to properly train its employees, and failed to properly supervise its employees. PNS removed the case to federal court, the parties conducted discovery, and PNS *192 moved for summary judgment. The magistrate judge recommended that summary judgment be granted on the ground that Rivera had no evidence as to an essential element of her premises-liability claim: namely, that PNS had either actual or constructive knowledge of the dangerous condition in its store. The district court issued a written order accepting that recommendation on January 7, 2000, and final judgment was entered the same day. Both the order and the final judgment recited that “the Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED and this case is DISMISSED without prejudice.” Neither party appealed.

About three months later, Rivera refiled her case in state court, reasserting the same three negligence theories she had asserted in the recently concluded federal-court action. PNS failed to answer the state-court petition, so in June of 2000 Rivera took a default judgment in the amount of $1.48 million. It appears that Rivera did nothing over the next nine years to enforce or execute on the state-court default judgment. It was not until February of 2009 that Rivera served a writ of execution of judgment on PNS. PNS— claiming this was the first notice it had ever received of the default judgment and vigorously disputing the judgment’s validity — filed a petition for a bill of review 1 asking the state district court to set aside the default judgment, which by this time had ballooned in size to more than $3.5 million because of the accumulation of post-judgment interest. PNS argued that the state-court default judgment was void on its face because the issues and claims it decided were res judicata in the federal district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of PNS. Rivera countered that the federal district court had deliberately dismissed the case without prejudice instead of with prejudice so that she would have the opportunity to refile her claims in state court and that PNS’s petition for a bill of review was barred by limitations.

Apparently hoping to improve its chances of convincing the state district court to set aside the default judgment, PNS returned to federal district court and filed the motion that is the subject of this appeal. PNS argued that the January 7, 2000 judgment’s denomination of the dismissal as being without prejudice was a clerical mistake that should be corrected pursuant to Rule 60(a) to reflect the court’s true intention to dismiss the case with prejudice. The district court granted the motion in May of 2009 and entered a corrected judgment nunc pro tunc reflecting that Rivera’s case had been dismissed with prejudice. The court confirmed that its intent in granting PNS’s motion for summary judgment had been to dismiss all of PNS’s claims with prejudice. Acknowledging that both the judgment and the accompanying order contained the “without prejudice” language, the court explained that the language of the judgment tracked the language of the order not because the court had twice determined that the dismissal should be without prejudice, but rather because the judgment was prepared by the clerk of court, who unwittingly tracked the incorrect language of the order in preparing the final judgment.

PNS’s hope of bolstering its prospects in state court proved to be hollow. The state district court declined to set aside the default judgment; the court of appeals affirmed. 2 Both the district court and the *193 court of appeals were aware at the time they rendered their decisions that the federal district court had reformed its judgment to reflect a dismissal with prejudice. Each concluded that this fact did not entitle PNS to relief from the state-court default judgment. 3 In the meantime, Rivera perfected this appeal, where she argues that Rule 60(a) did not authorize the district court to modify the language of the judgment.

II.

Rule 60(a) allows a district court to “correct a clerical mistake or a mistake arising from oversight or omission whenever one is found in a judgment.” 4 Because the court can exercise its authority under Rule 60(a) at any time, it may do so only to provide “a specific and very limited type of relief,” 5 relief that is different in kind from an alteration or amendment of the judgment under Rule 59(e) or relief due to mistake or inadvertence under Rule 60(b)(1). We review a district court’s decision to enter a corrected judgment under Rule 60(a) for an abuse of discretion. 6 But the determination of whether it is Rule 60(a) that authorizes the correction — as opposed to Rule 59(e) or Rule 60(b) — is a question of law that we review de novo. 7

Our past decisions have looked to three criteria to determine whether a mistake can be corrected under Rule 60(a): (1) the nature of the mistake; (2) the district court’s intent in entering the original judgment; and (3) the effect of the correction on the parties’ substantial rights. There is substantial overlap between these three criteria. 8 Each is but a slightly different way of expressing the core idea that resort to Rule 60(a) may be had when “the judgment simply has not accurately reflected the way in which the rights and obligations of the parties have in fact been adjudicated.” 9 Our consideration of these three criteria persuades us that Rule 60(a) authorized the district court to correct the judgment so as to reflect that Rivera’s claims were dismissed with prejudice.

A.

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
647 F.3d 188, 80 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 278, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 14639, 2011 WL 2749627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rivera-v-pns-stores-inc-ca5-2011.