Sandra Foster v. the Manhattan Group, LLC, D/B/A Foster Motor Co.

2023 Ark. App. 210
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 12, 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2023 Ark. App. 210 (Sandra Foster v. the Manhattan Group, LLC, D/B/A Foster Motor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sandra Foster v. the Manhattan Group, LLC, D/B/A Foster Motor Co., 2023 Ark. App. 210 (Ark. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Cite as 2023 Ark. App. 210 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CV-22-292

Opinion Delivered April 12, 2023 SANDRA FOSTER APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE JEFFERSON V. COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NOS. 35CV-21-332 & 35DR-20-1071] THE MANHATTAN GROUP, LLC, D/B/A FOSTER MOTOR COMPANY APPELLEE HONORABLE LEON N. JAMISON, JUDGE

REMANDED TO SUPPLEMENT THE RECORD

RITA W. GRUBER, Judge

Sandra Foster appeals a Jefferson County Circuit Court judgment granting

$13,906.15 in attorney’s fees to appellee, The Manhattan Group, LLC, d/b/a Foster Motor

Company. Sandra asserts that the circuit court erred in doing so. We remand for

supplementation of the record.

I. Procedural and Factual History

This case has a convoluted procedural history. On June 11, 2021, The Manhattan

Group, Inc., d/b/a Foster Motor Company (TMG) filed a complaint for replevin against

Sandra in case number 35CV-21-332, in the Jefferson County Circuit Court, Fifth Division

(replevin case). The complaint alleged that on February 15, 2017, Sandra’s then husband,

Noel Foster d/b/a Foster Motor Company, executed a promissory note and security agreement on behalf of the Foster Motor Company for the sum of $55,200 for the purchase

of a 2016 GMC Yukon Denali, and on March 8, title to the Yukon was issued to the “Foster

Motor Company.” The complaint further alleged that TMG had permitted Sandra to have

possession of the Yukon but was no longer willing to do so; on May 5, 2021, it demanded

that Sandra return the vehicle, but Sandra had refused to respond to the demand and had

not returned the Yukon; and TMG had made and was continuing to make all the Yukon

payments—$650 a month—and was being deprived of its use and benefits due to Sandra’s

unlawful detention of the Yukon. The complaint was supported by the affidavit of Lana

Foster1 as “an officer in the plaintiff corporation.” On June 18, Sandra answered, asserting

that the Yukon was marital property, and all interests in it should be determined in the

divorce proceedings between Sandra and Noel Foster in case number 35DR-20-1071, in the

Jefferson County Circuit Court, Fourth Division (divorce case), and the replevin case should

be “transferred” to the divorce case.

On June 22, Sandra filed a “Motion to Transfer” the replevin case to the same

division presiding over the divorce case. The motion asserted that TMG had “made

themselves necessary parties in the divorce case” and requested the following relief:

WHEREFORE, Sandra Foster respectfully asks the Court to transfer this case to 4th Division to be combined or consolidated with Sandra Foster vs. Noel Foster, Fourth Division Jefferson County Circuit Court, case number 35DR- 20-l071, for her costs, attorney fees and all other just and proper relief to which she is entitled.

1 Lana Foster is Noel Foster’s sister-in-law.

2 That same day, TMG responded to the motion to transfer, reasserting its ownership of the

Yukon and denying that the replevin case should be transferred. On August 31, an order

was entered stating that a hearing was held regarding the transfer motion on August 9, and

“[b]ased on the pleadings, the documents on file, the testimony at the hearing, and all other

relevant matters,” the motion was granted. The order further stated that the replevin case

would “be transferred to the 4th Division Jefferson County Circuit Court for consideration

in connection with case number 35DR-20-1071.” The transcript from that hearing is not

contained in the record before this court.

On September 2, a letter to the attorneys for TMG, Sandra, and Noel was filed, stating

that the court presiding over the divorce case would accept the transfer of the replevin case.

While the electronic file stamp reflected the replevin case number, underneath it appeared

for the first time, “C11WD04,” rather than “C11WD05,” which had been reflected on all

other previous filings in the replevin case. The “C11WD04” designation appeared on all

further filings made under the replevin case number in the record before this court.

On September 20, TMG filed an amended complaint under the replevin case

number, adding a claim for conversion while modifying the style of the case from “The

Manhattan Group, Inc., d/b/a Foster Motor Company” to “The Manhattan Group, LLC.,

d/b/a Foster Motor Company.” The style of the case now also reflected that the replevin

case was consolidated with the divorce case and that TMG had been made a third-party

defendant in the divorce case. The amended complaint made the same substantive

allegations regarding the replevin claim. With respect to the conversion claim, TMG alleged

3 that it was the lawful owner of the Yukon; it had informed Sandra that she was no longer

permitted to possess it and demanded its return; she had failed to return the Yukon, and she

was intentionally exercising “dominion and control over the vehicle in violation of” TMG’s

rights.

On October 5, an order was filed under the replevin case number reflecting that a

hearing had been conducted “in this matter” on September 21, at which TMG, as plaintiff

and third-party defendant, appeared through counsel, as did Sandra, and Noel. The circuit

court made the following findings of fact that are relevant for appeal purposes: (1) the

“parties” settled all issues in the divorce case except whether the Yukon was property of Noel

and Sandra and therefore marital property; (2) at the “same time” the court must decide if

the Yukon was owned by TMG; (3) an order was entered transferring the replevin case on

August 31, 2021; and (4) the replevin case was consolidated with the divorce case. The circuit

court concluded that TMG was the lawful owner of the Yukon, and it was entitled to

immediate possession of the Yukon. The court awarded TMG $3250 in damages,

representative of “the five loan payments that TMG could have avoided by selling” the Yukon

had Sandra returned it when demanded to do so. The court further identified TMG as the

prevailing party and stated that it would conduct “further proceedings for [Sandra’s] . . .

retention, diminution in value, any damages to the vehicle while in [Sandra’s] . . . possession,

4 and attorney’s fees.” On October 20, Sandra filed a “Motion to Dismiss / Answer to

Amended Complaint” under the replevin case number, generally denying the allegations.2

On November 1, Sandra filed a six-page “Response to Motion for Attorney’s Fees and

Costs” under the replevin case number. Her responses were primarily in the following

format: “Defendant admits the allegations in Paragraph two (2) of TMG’s Motion for

Attorney’s Fees and Costs.” However, no motion for fees is in the record before this court.

On November 2, TMG filed a letter under the replevin case number, stating that it had filed

a motion for attorney’s fees and costs; Sandra had responded; TMG anticipated filing a reply

within the next few days; once the reply was filed, a copy would be sent to the court’s

chambers; and a hearing was requested. The record does not contain any reply.

On January 15, 2022, a hearing on the fee motion was held at which Sandra appeared

pro se, and TMG appeared through counsel. Lana Foster testified. The attorney’s bills were

introduced as exhibits but not the motion itself. Sandra also briefly testified. On February

15, a “Judgment” was filed under the replevin case number. The “Judgment” stated that a

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Related

Sandra Foster v. the Manhattan Group, LLC, D/B/A Foster Motor Company
2023 Ark. App. 560 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2023)

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2023 Ark. App. 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandra-foster-v-the-manhattan-group-llc-dba-foster-motor-co-arkctapp-2023.