Roark v. Farmers Group, Inc.

2007 NMCA 074, 162 P.3d 896, 142 N.M. 59
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 2007
DocketNos. 26,400, 24,287
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 2007 NMCA 074 (Roark v. Farmers Group, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roark v. Farmers Group, Inc., 2007 NMCA 074, 162 P.3d 896, 142 N.M. 59 (N.M. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

FRY, Judge.

{1} This case is the consolidation of two appeals from two separate actions involving the same parties and the same dispute. At its most simple, the dispute is about insurance coverage. The first action was brought by First New Mexico Bank (Bank) against Gary Roark and Roark’s insurer, Farmers Insurance Company of Arizona and related parties (collectively, Farmers). After a default judgment against Roark, a jury resolved that case in favor of Farmers. Bank appealed the first action, arguing that the trial court erred in certain evidentiary rulings and in denying Bank’s motion to amend the complaint. While that appeal was pending, Bank and Roark filed another lawsuit against Farmers in a different county alleging the same claims that Bank had sought to add in the proposed amended complaint that was denied, and being appealed, in the first action. The trial court in the second action consolidated Bank’s claims against Farmers with the first action. Bank then appealed the order of consolidation in the second action.

{2} We affirm the evidentiary rulings and the denial of Bank’s motion to amend the complaint in the first action. We reverse the order of consolidation by the trial court in the second action and remand that part of the case for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

{3} In 1999, Roark obtained financing from Bank to purchase a pickup truck. Roark pledged the truck as collateral for the loan. As a condition of the loan, Roark agreed to obtain comprehensive insurance covering the truck. Roark obtained the insurance through Farmers, which in turn provided Bank with a lienholder’s certificate of insurance that stated, “EFFECTIVE DATE: 09-22-1999” and “EXPIRATION DATE: CONTINUOUS UNTIL CANCELLED.” At some point, Farmers cancelled Roark’s insurance policy on the truck for non-payment of the premiums. Roark reinstated the policy, but for general liability coverage as opposed to comprehensive coverage. The truck was subsequently stolen, and Farmers denied Bank’s claims for coverage based on its position that no policy was in force on the date of loss.

{4} In 2001, Bank first filed suit against Farmers and Roark in Hidalgo County District Court seeking money damages (the first lawsuit). Bank obtained a default judgment against Roark. Bank alleged that Farmers failed to provide Bank with notice of cancellation, and thus that Farmers was still liable for the loss as the insurer of the truck. Farmers denied that it had failed to provide proper notice of cancellation to Bank. Following the default judgment against Roark, the only issue remaining in the case was whether Farmers properly provided notice of cancellation to Bank. Approximately two months prior to trial, Bank filed a motion to amend its original complaint, and the proposed amended complaint included new causes of action. The trial court reserved ruling on the motion to amend the complaint pending the outcome of a jury trial on the issue in the original complaint. At trial, the jury returned a verdict for Farmers, finding that Farmers did not “fail to mail a notice of cancellation to [Bank] in compliance with the terms of the insurance policy or state law.” The trial court denied Bank’s motion to amend the complaint.

{5} Bank appealed from the judgment in the first lawsuit on the grounds that the trial court should have allowed Bank to amend its complaint to include additional claims, and that the trial court erred in excluding and admitting various testimony and evidence. The merits of that appeal are the subject of the first of the two appeals that we have consolidated in this opinion.

{6} While the first lawsuit was pending before this Court on appeal, Bank joined with Roark and filed a new action in Grant County (the second lawsuit) against Farmers. The second lawsuit was premised on the same transaction that gave rise to the first lawsuit. The complaint in the second lawsuit was based on the same causes of action raised in the proposed amended complaint that was denied in the first lawsuit. Bank claims that it filed the second lawsuit in contemplation of the statute of limitations expiring and because of newly discovered evidence. Farmers disputed the existence of such evidence.

{7} Farmers asserted the affirmative defenses of res judicata and collateral estoppel in its answer to the second lawsuit. However, instead of filing a motion to dismiss based on principles of preclusion, Farmers filed a motion to consolidate the second lawsuit with the first under Rule 1-042 NMRA. The trial court in the second lawsuit granted the motion to consolidate Bank’s claims against Farmers with the first lawsuit that was already on appeal. In the order consolidating the second lawsuit with the first lawsuit the court cited “common factual issues.”

{8} Bank opposed consolidation. After unsuccessful attempts to get the court in the second lawsuit to reconsider its order, Bank appealed the issue. Bank also petitioned this Court for a writ of error, but Bank admits in its briefs that it did so in an untimely fashion, and this Court denied the petition. The merits of the appeal from the order of consolidation are the subject of the second of the two consolidated appeals we address in this opinion.

{9} We provide additional facts as necessary throughout the opinion.

DISCUSSION

{10} We first address Bank’s claims on appeal arising from the trial in the first action. Bank argues that the trial court erred by: (1) denying its motion to amend the complaint; (2) admitting Farmers’ Exhibit 1 and testimony of Farmers’ witness, Jeff Fitzgerald; and (3) striking the testimony of Bank’s expert witness, Ted Knight. We affirm the trial court in the first case on all of these grounds raised in Bank’s appeal.

{11} We then address Bank’s appeal of the consolidation order by first examining whether the order of consolidation is final for appeal. We conclude that it is, and we therefore address the merits of the consolidation order issue. We reverse the trial court in the second case and hold that the order of consolidation was improper under the circumstances.

I. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion When It Denied Bank’s Motion to Amend the Complaint

{12} Twenty months after the filing of the original complaint and after the close of discovery, Bank filed a motion to amend the complaint to include claims of estoppel, insurance bad faith, violations of the statutory schemes contained in NMSA 1978, §§ 59A-16-4 (1984), -20 (1997), commonly referred to as the Insurance Code, and NMSA 1978, §§ 57-12-2 (2003), -10 (2005), commonly referred to as the Unfair Practices Act. Farmers opposed Bank’s motion to file the amended complaint as untimely and claimed that allowing Bank to amend the complaint would substantially prejudice Farmers’ interests. In response, Bank suggested that the trial court could eliminate px^ejudice to Farmers “by bifurcating the issues and by trying the issues in the original [cjomplaint first.” Rather than rule on the motion to amend immediately, the trial court postponed its ruling and thereby effectively bifurcated the issue of the notice of cancellation from the other issues raised by Bank in the proposed amended complaint.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 NMCA 074, 162 P.3d 896, 142 N.M. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roark-v-farmers-group-inc-nmctapp-2007.