WM. C. HETHERINGTON, JR., Vice-Chief Judge. |
1 In the underlying personal and/or private rights injury action against Defendant Communicate Now!, L.P., d/b/a Communication Solutions (Appellee), Plaintiffs Wayne Allen Schommer and Deborah Ann Schom-mer, husband and wife (collectively, the Schommers), appeal from a trial court judgment in their favor in accordance with Defendant's modified offers of judgment made pursuant to 12 0.8.Supp.2002 § 1101.1(A)
The Schommers' request for reversal of the confessed judgment is premised solely on whether the trial court erroneously invalidated Defendant's original unapportioned offer of judgment even though the Schommers had timely accepted it. We AFFIRM.
FACTS
12 According to the petition the Schom-mers filed against Defendant, Mr. Schommer went to Defendant's store to purchase a new LG Vu smartphone, during which process he authorized Defendant's employee to transfer all data from his old mobile phone to the smartphone. After completing the data transfer, the employee kept that smartphone and instead gave Mr. Schommer another new LG Vu phone, without changing the International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) number for the original LG Vu phone which was referenced in the purchase agreement. Because the employee had returned the old mobile phone, the Schommers were not concerned upon later discovering its data had not been transferred to their smartphone.
13 Unfortunately, the Schommers later learned Defendant's employee had not only "surreptiously" transferred their personal photographs to other employees and his supervisor, but also had sold the LG Vu phone with all of the Schommers' "private and confidential data" to a third party as a new device.
T4 Based on the above-described misconduct, the Schommers alleged invasion of privacy, violations of the Oklahoma Consumers Protection Act,
concealment/non-disclosure,
and negligence/negligent misrepresentation against Defendant. Their prayer for relief in the petition sought "actual damages in an amount in excess of $10,000,"
punitive damages, attorney's fees and costs, and other allowable relief.
15 Defendant answered, specifically denying Plaintiffs' allegations On August 22, 2011 Defendant filed a single Offer of Judgment, stating:
COMES NOW, [Defendant], pursuant to 12 [0.S.] § 1101.1(A), and hereby offers judgment to be taken against it for the total amount of $10,000.00 (Ten Thousand Dollars and Zero Cents) inclusive of prejudgment interest, costs and attorney fees incurred up and including the date of this Offer of Judgment.
On September 6, 2011, the Schommers each filed separate acceptances of Defendant's Offer of Judgment.
T6 On September 14, 2011, the Schom-mers moved for the court to enter judgment on the Offer of Judgment as accepted. That same day, Defendant filed its Objection to Entry of Judgment, arguing its Offer of Judgment was for $10,000.00 total, not $10,000.00 for each plaintiff. It alternatively argued the Offer of Judgment was invalid under Haddock v. Woodland Park Home, Inc., 2004 OK CIV APP 42, 90 P.3d 594, and Medlock v. Admiral Safe Co., Inc., 2005 OK CIV APP 72, 122 P.3d 883, because it failed to apportion the offer sum between the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs responded, arguing entry of judgment was mandatory because they had accepted the offer. They also argued the offer was not made to Plaintiffs "collectively" or "as a group" like the respective offers of judgment in Haddock and Medlock.
T7 On October 11, 2011, a hearing was held on, inter alia, the Schommers' motion to enter judgment and Defendant's objection to such entry, That same day and "pursuant to the Court's request at the motion hearing," the Schommers filed a Notice with one exhibit attached, i.e., a copy of the Offer To Confess Judgment for $50,000.00 filed in Tulsa County District Court. Naomi Medlock, e al., v. Admiral Safe Company, Inc., et al., Case No. CJ-2008-00732 (Medlock offer). On October 17, 2011, Defendant moved to settle journal entry, to which the Schommers filed a response.
T8 On November 15, 2011, apparently relying on the court's announcement at the October 11, 2011 hearing about its potential ruling, Defendant made separate § 1101.1(A) Offers of Judgment to the Schommers, each inclusive of prejudgment interest, costs and attorney fees, i.e., $8,000 to Mr. Schommer and $7,000 to Mrs. Schommer, respectively. Two days later, Plaintiffs filed separate acceptances of Defendant's Offers of Judgment.
T 9 By "Journal Entry" filed November 21, 2011, the trial court ruled on the several motions the parties argued at the October 11, 2011 hearing. In relevant part, the court found:
Defendant's Offer of Judgment is invalid on the basis of the language of the offer to confess judgment used in Naomé Medlock,
et al., v. Admiral Safe Company, Inc., et al., Case No. CJ-2003-00782 (Tulsa County, State of Oklahoma) and the subsequent ruling in Medlock v. Admiral Safe Company, Inc., 2005 OK CIV APP 72, 110 & T 15, 122 P.8d 888, and Haddock v. Woodland Park Home, Inc., [2004 OK CIV APP 42, 90 P.3d 5941.
In the same Journal Entry, the court expressly denied the Schommers' motion to enter judgment.
T 10 On November 22, 2011, the trial court filed a "Judgment" finding Defendant had filed on November 15, 2011 and pursuant to § 1101.1(A),
"an offer of judgment to be taken against it by [Mr. Schommmer] for $3,000.00" and "an offer of judgment to be taken against it by [Mrs. Schommer] for $7,000.00," both offers inclusive of prejudgment interest, costs and attorney fees. After finding each plaintiff had filed a written acceptance on November 17, 2011, the court entered judgment in favor of the Schommers in accordance with Defendant's November 15, 2011 Offers. Plaintiffs' appeal followed, seeking to reverse both the court's pre-judgment order and the November 22, 2011 Judgment.
ANALYSIS
{11 The trial court invalidated Defendant's first § 1101.1(A) offer of judgment for failure to apportion the offered amount of $10,000 between each plaintiff, based on the language in the Medlock offer
and the holdings in Medlock, 2005 OK CIV APP 72, 122
P.3d 883, and Haddock, 2004 OK CIV APP 42, 90 P.3d 594. The same ruling implicitly rejects the Schommers' argument the court had no discretion to refuse to enter judgment after their acceptance. Medlock and Haddock both hold § 1101.1 offers of judgment made to multiple plaintiffs in which the offered amount is not apportioned between the plaintiffs are invalid. However, neither case involved a plaintiff's timely-accepted § 1101.1 offer of judgment,
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WM. C. HETHERINGTON, JR., Vice-Chief Judge. |
1 In the underlying personal and/or private rights injury action against Defendant Communicate Now!, L.P., d/b/a Communication Solutions (Appellee), Plaintiffs Wayne Allen Schommer and Deborah Ann Schom-mer, husband and wife (collectively, the Schommers), appeal from a trial court judgment in their favor in accordance with Defendant's modified offers of judgment made pursuant to 12 0.8.Supp.2002 § 1101.1(A)
The Schommers' request for reversal of the confessed judgment is premised solely on whether the trial court erroneously invalidated Defendant's original unapportioned offer of judgment even though the Schommers had timely accepted it. We AFFIRM.
FACTS
12 According to the petition the Schom-mers filed against Defendant, Mr. Schommer went to Defendant's store to purchase a new LG Vu smartphone, during which process he authorized Defendant's employee to transfer all data from his old mobile phone to the smartphone. After completing the data transfer, the employee kept that smartphone and instead gave Mr. Schommer another new LG Vu phone, without changing the International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) number for the original LG Vu phone which was referenced in the purchase agreement. Because the employee had returned the old mobile phone, the Schommers were not concerned upon later discovering its data had not been transferred to their smartphone.
13 Unfortunately, the Schommers later learned Defendant's employee had not only "surreptiously" transferred their personal photographs to other employees and his supervisor, but also had sold the LG Vu phone with all of the Schommers' "private and confidential data" to a third party as a new device.
T4 Based on the above-described misconduct, the Schommers alleged invasion of privacy, violations of the Oklahoma Consumers Protection Act,
concealment/non-disclosure,
and negligence/negligent misrepresentation against Defendant. Their prayer for relief in the petition sought "actual damages in an amount in excess of $10,000,"
punitive damages, attorney's fees and costs, and other allowable relief.
15 Defendant answered, specifically denying Plaintiffs' allegations On August 22, 2011 Defendant filed a single Offer of Judgment, stating:
COMES NOW, [Defendant], pursuant to 12 [0.S.] § 1101.1(A), and hereby offers judgment to be taken against it for the total amount of $10,000.00 (Ten Thousand Dollars and Zero Cents) inclusive of prejudgment interest, costs and attorney fees incurred up and including the date of this Offer of Judgment.
On September 6, 2011, the Schommers each filed separate acceptances of Defendant's Offer of Judgment.
T6 On September 14, 2011, the Schom-mers moved for the court to enter judgment on the Offer of Judgment as accepted. That same day, Defendant filed its Objection to Entry of Judgment, arguing its Offer of Judgment was for $10,000.00 total, not $10,000.00 for each plaintiff. It alternatively argued the Offer of Judgment was invalid under Haddock v. Woodland Park Home, Inc., 2004 OK CIV APP 42, 90 P.3d 594, and Medlock v. Admiral Safe Co., Inc., 2005 OK CIV APP 72, 122 P.3d 883, because it failed to apportion the offer sum between the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs responded, arguing entry of judgment was mandatory because they had accepted the offer. They also argued the offer was not made to Plaintiffs "collectively" or "as a group" like the respective offers of judgment in Haddock and Medlock.
T7 On October 11, 2011, a hearing was held on, inter alia, the Schommers' motion to enter judgment and Defendant's objection to such entry, That same day and "pursuant to the Court's request at the motion hearing," the Schommers filed a Notice with one exhibit attached, i.e., a copy of the Offer To Confess Judgment for $50,000.00 filed in Tulsa County District Court. Naomi Medlock, e al., v. Admiral Safe Company, Inc., et al., Case No. CJ-2008-00732 (Medlock offer). On October 17, 2011, Defendant moved to settle journal entry, to which the Schommers filed a response.
T8 On November 15, 2011, apparently relying on the court's announcement at the October 11, 2011 hearing about its potential ruling, Defendant made separate § 1101.1(A) Offers of Judgment to the Schommers, each inclusive of prejudgment interest, costs and attorney fees, i.e., $8,000 to Mr. Schommer and $7,000 to Mrs. Schommer, respectively. Two days later, Plaintiffs filed separate acceptances of Defendant's Offers of Judgment.
T 9 By "Journal Entry" filed November 21, 2011, the trial court ruled on the several motions the parties argued at the October 11, 2011 hearing. In relevant part, the court found:
Defendant's Offer of Judgment is invalid on the basis of the language of the offer to confess judgment used in Naomé Medlock,
et al., v. Admiral Safe Company, Inc., et al., Case No. CJ-2003-00782 (Tulsa County, State of Oklahoma) and the subsequent ruling in Medlock v. Admiral Safe Company, Inc., 2005 OK CIV APP 72, 110 & T 15, 122 P.8d 888, and Haddock v. Woodland Park Home, Inc., [2004 OK CIV APP 42, 90 P.3d 5941.
In the same Journal Entry, the court expressly denied the Schommers' motion to enter judgment.
T 10 On November 22, 2011, the trial court filed a "Judgment" finding Defendant had filed on November 15, 2011 and pursuant to § 1101.1(A),
"an offer of judgment to be taken against it by [Mr. Schommmer] for $3,000.00" and "an offer of judgment to be taken against it by [Mrs. Schommer] for $7,000.00," both offers inclusive of prejudgment interest, costs and attorney fees. After finding each plaintiff had filed a written acceptance on November 17, 2011, the court entered judgment in favor of the Schommers in accordance with Defendant's November 15, 2011 Offers. Plaintiffs' appeal followed, seeking to reverse both the court's pre-judgment order and the November 22, 2011 Judgment.
ANALYSIS
{11 The trial court invalidated Defendant's first § 1101.1(A) offer of judgment for failure to apportion the offered amount of $10,000 between each plaintiff, based on the language in the Medlock offer
and the holdings in Medlock, 2005 OK CIV APP 72, 122
P.3d 883, and Haddock, 2004 OK CIV APP 42, 90 P.3d 594. The same ruling implicitly rejects the Schommers' argument the court had no discretion to refuse to enter judgment after their acceptance. Medlock and Haddock both hold § 1101.1 offers of judgment made to multiple plaintiffs in which the offered amount is not apportioned between the plaintiffs are invalid. However, neither case involved a plaintiff's timely-accepted § 1101.1 offer of judgment,
as occurred in this case, nor decided the effect of such acceptance on a plaintiff's action or claim(s) and a trial court's discretion with respect to an accepted § 1101.1 offer of judgment, as the Schom-mers construe Station Operation, LLC v. Circle K Stores, Inc., 2010 OK CIV APP 2, 113, 229 P.3d 1283. Our analysis begins with this preliminary issue.
Is Station Operation dispositive of the issue on appeal?
[ 12 To support the Schommers' argument on appeal that the trial court was required to enter judgment after they accepted Defendant's unapportioned offer of judgment, they rely only on the following paragraph from Station Operation, LLC v. Circle K Stores, Inc., 2010 OK CIV APP 2, 113, 229 P.3d 1283:
The consummation of an offer and its acceptance in a judgment under 12 O.S8.Supp.2008 § 1101.1(B) results in a judgment which constitutes 'the final determination of the rights of the parties to an action.' 12 0.8.2001 § 681. Accordingly, "acceptance of a confessed judgment removes all prejudgment issues from the trier's consideration .... [barring] the trial court from entertaining evidence material to that which is no longer within the perimeter of adjudicable controversy." Fleet v. Sanguine, Ltd., 1998 OK 76, 19, 854 P.2d 892, 898. In other words, "a § 1101 offer's acceptance extinguishes the entire cause of action and substitutes in its place the right to claim the confessed recovery." Id. at ¶9, 854 P.2d at 898-99. (Parenthetical phrases omitted; emphasis added.)
13 Like the trial court, we are not persuaded Station Operation is dispositive of the issue on appeal for two reasons. First, we are not here considering "prejudgment issues" which the plaintiffs in Fleet and Station Operation continued to pursue after acceptance of the offer to confess judgment. In Fleet, three mineral owners sued an oil and gas well operator for damages under several theories of liability and specifically invoked 52 0.8.1981 § 540(B)'s penalty provision (12% prejudgment interest for violation of § 540(A)). The Supreme Court in Fleet determined the plaintiffs' "acceptance of the [defendant's) $ 1101 offer of judgment removed from judicial inquiry all elements of the mineral owners' damages, including prejudgment interest" that was allowed for § 540(A) violations and held "it was error for the trial judge to add [such] interest to the amount of the compromised recovery." (Emphasis added). 1998 OK 76, 113, 854 P.2d 892.
114 Similarly, in Station Operation, the plaintiff, who had sought both monetary damages and injunctive relief under the Oklahoma Unfair Sales Act (the Act), unconditionally accepted the corporate defendant's § 1101.1(B) offer to confess judgment for $3,000 "without confessing any wrongdoing." The plaintiff moved for entry of a confessed judgment and requested inclusion of a permanent injunction to prevent further violations under the Act.
15 Relying on the Fleet Court's application of § 1101, the Court in Station Operation concluded, as relevant here, "[iln the absence of any intent expressed to the contrary, we must conclude the terms of the
parties' offer and acceptance comprise 'the entire obligation in suit"" The Court then found "Plaintiffs request for a permanent injunction is but another remedy sought under the same set of facts, and [his] acceptance of Defendant's offer extinguished [his] cause of action seeking redress under the Act. To hold otherwise would, in effect, allow the trial court to modify the terms of the accepted offer which is prohibited." (Emphasis added.) 2010 OK CIV APP 2, ¶19, 229 P.3d 1283.
1 16 Unlike in Station Operation and Fleet, the trial court in this case was not presented any "prejudgment issues" from the Schom-mers' action against Defendant for alleged personal and private rights injuries. By its objection to entry of confessed judgment on the first offer, Defendant sought revocation of the offer, claiming it was for $10,000 total and the Schommers' separate acceptances for $10,000 was a counter-offer, or alternatively, a finding the offer was invalid under Haddock and Medlock for lack of apportionment between the two plaintiffs. Therefore, the issue for the court was interpretation of the terms of Defendant's first offer, not prejudgment issues. We find no error with the court's implicit finding the holding in Station Operation does not apply to the facts of this case.
The First Offer
117 The Schommers argue they are each entitled to a $10,000 judgment against Defendant because unlike the offers of judgments in Medlock and Haddock, Defendant's first offer of judgment neither expressly requires the plaintiffs' joint acceptance nor indicates it was made to Plaintiffs either "collectively" or "as a group."
They contend the first offer was "an open offer to any plaintiff in the lawsuit willing to accept judgment against it for a sum certain of $10,000." Defendant disagrees, clarifying its first offer of judgment "for the total amount of $10,000.00" was made "collectively to [the Schommers]" and arguing a single offer of judgment to both plaintiffs is invalid based on the holdings in Medlock and Haddock "because of [the Schommers'] separate, individual claims."
{ 18 We are persuaded by the Defendant's last argument. In Haddock, the spouses brought an action against the defendant for the wife's personal injuries resulting from a car accident with the defendant and for loss of consortium suffered by the husband. Because the defendant's § 1101.1 offer of judgment specifically named both plaintiffs in the body of the offer and required acceptance from both to be enforceable, the Court in Haddock found such lump sum offer "prevents each plaintiff from evaluating the settlement offer against the value of his or her claim" and leads to trial court confusion "in apportioning the various responsibility for the attorney fees award after a judgment for less than the settlement offer." 2004 OK CIV APP 42, ¶ 17, 90 P.3d 594. Importantly, the Court found "(elven though the loss of consortium claim was derivative of [the wife's] claim, it is still unclear from [the defendant's] offer of judgment which portion of the offer was directed to [the wife] and which portion to her husband." Id. In Med-lock, the four plaintiffs brought a negligence action for damages allegedly caused by two defendants (a safe company and its individual owner), who raised contributory negligence as a defense against all four plaintiffs. Because of the potential reduction in value of each plaintiff's claim for negligence damages in the event of a contributory negligence verdiet against any one or more of the plaintiffs, the same reasons for invalidating the offer of judgment in Haddock apply to the un-apportioned § 1101.1 offer of judgment in Medlock.
T 19 In this case, Defendant's first offer of judgment similarly failed to consider the Schommers' individual actions, claims and damages when making a lump sum offer. Under such cireumstances, we find no error with the trial court's pre-judgment ruling Defendant's first offer of judgment was invalid based on the holdings in Haddock and
Medlock. The court's November 22, 2011 final judgment is AFFIRMED.
JOPLIN, P.J., and BUETTNER, J., concur.