United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local Union No. 2371, Official Bargaining Agent v. Merchandising Equipment Group, Div. of MEG Manufacturing Corp.

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 8, 2012
Docket33A05-1107-CP-345
StatusPublished

This text of United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local Union No. 2371, Official Bargaining Agent v. Merchandising Equipment Group, Div. of MEG Manufacturing Corp. (United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local Union No. 2371, Official Bargaining Agent v. Merchandising Equipment Group, Div. of MEG Manufacturing Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local Union No. 2371, Official Bargaining Agent v. Merchandising Equipment Group, Div. of MEG Manufacturing Corp., (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANTS: ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE

FILED HEWLETT-PACKARD: PAUL T. DEIGNAN Taft Stettinius & Hollister LLP HENRY EFROYMSON Mar 08 2012, 8:54 am Indianapolis, Indiana Ice Miller LLP Indianapolis, Indiana CLERK of the supreme court, court of appeals and tax court ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE BANK OF AMERICA AS SUCCESSOR TO BARCLAYS BUSINESS CREDIT, INC.:

ALAN K. MILLS HOWARD E. KOCHELL MARK J. CRANDLEY Barnes & Thornburg LLP Indianapolis, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

UNITED BROTHERHOOD OF ) CARPENTERS AND JOINERS OF ) AMERICA, LOCAL UNION NO. 2371, ) OFFICIAL BARGAINING AGENT, et. al., ) ) Appellants-Plaintiffs, ) ) vs. ) No. 33A05-1107-CP-345 ) MERCHANDISING EQUIPMENT GROUP, ) DIVISION OF MEG MANUFACTURING ) CORPORATION; BARCLAYS BUSINESS ) CREDIT, INC., HEWLETT-PACKARD ) COMPANY FINANCE AND ) REMARKETING DIVISION; FIRST NAT’L ) LEASING CORP., BANK ONE, ) RICHMOND, N.A.; ) INDIANA STATEWIDE CERTIFIED ) DEVELOPMENT CORP.; XEROX ) CORPORATION; and ) STEELWORKS, INC., ) ) Appellees-Defendants. ) )

APPEAL FROM THE HENRY CIRCUIT COURT The Honorable John L. Kellam, Special Judge Cause No. 33C01-9611-CP-173

March 8, 2012

OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION

VAIDIK, Judge

Case Summary

In 2011, the trial court granted the defendants’ Trial Rule 41(E) motion to dismiss

for failure to prosecute after the case had been pending for eighteen years, the court failed

to rule on the summary judgment motions for fourteen years, and the plaintiffs took no

action to push the case to resolution for a decade. The plaintiffs now appeal the

dismissal. Given the extensive and unprecedented delay in this case and the plaintiffs’

lack of excuse for the delay, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in

dismissing this case for failure to prosecute.

Facts and Procedural History

This lawsuit dates back to the closing of a manufacturing facility in Cambridge

City, Indiana, nearly two decades ago. The plaintiffs are 220 former employees of

Merchandising Equipment Group, Division of MEG Manufacturing Corporation

(“MEG”), and the employees’ union representative, The United Brotherhood of

Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local Union No. 2371.

2 In April 1992, MEG’s assets were sold to SteelWorks, and the employees learned

shortly thereafter that they did not have jobs with either MEG or SteelWorks. MEG also

filed for bankruptcy. According to the employees, at the time of their termination they

were owed compensation for, among other things, unused vacation and sick time, unpaid

medical expenses, unpaid wages, and back pay and benefits as a result of MEG’s failure

to provide advance notice of the closure as required by federal law. The employees claim

they are entitled to $3.3 million.

In June 1992, the employees filed notices of intention to hold a mechanic’s lien,

Ind. Code § 32-28-3-1, and corporate employees’ lien, Ind. Code § 32-28-12-1, with the

Wayne County Recorder’s Office. The following June the employees and their union

(collectively referred to as “the Union”) filed a complaint against Hewlett-Packard

Company Financing and Remarketing Division (“HP”), Barclays Business Credit, Inc.

(“the Bank”),1 and other third parties that conducted business with MEG. The Union

specifically named HP and the Bank as defendants because of their security interests in

MEG’s property. That is, HP repossessed and sold its collateral previously held by MEG

pursuant to HP’s purchase money security interest in the collateral. In addition, the Bank

provided financing to MEG and took a security interest in equipment and other items of

property MEG purchased as well as a mortgage on the facility itself. The Union claimed

that pursuant to the mechanic’s lien and corporate employees’ lien statutes, the

employees’ liens were superior to HP’s and the Bank’s. This was a novel argument

under Indiana law.

1 Bank of America, N.A. is Barclays’ successor in interest and stands in its shoes for purposes of this case. Bank of America and Barclays are collectively referred to as “the Bank.” 3 The Bank filed its motion for summary judgment in late 1995, and HP filed its

motion for summary judgment in early 1996. A hearing was held on these motions in

May 1996. However, in July 1996 the trial court judge hearing the case disqualified

himself because of a conflict of interest with one of the parties, and a special judge

accepted jurisdiction in August 1996. Because there was no transcript of the earlier

summary-judgment hearing, the special judge reheard the summary-judgment arguments

in January 1997. The parties stipulated that the “time limitation for ruling upon a motion

set forth in T.R. 53.1 shall not apply to ruling upon pending summary judgment

motions.” Appellants’ App. p. 534; see also Ind. Trial Rule 53.1(A) (“In the event a

court fails for thirty (30) days to set a motion for hearing or fails to rule on a motion

within thirty (30) days after it was heard or thirty (30) days after it was filed, if no

hearing is required, upon application by an interested party, the submission of the cause

may be withdrawn from the trial judge and transferred to the Supreme Court for the

appointment of a special judge.”).

Following the January 1997 summary-judgment hearing, the parties filed

supplemental memoranda. In April 1997, the Bank filed a second motion for summary

judgment which added a federal preemption defense. Then, in October 1997, the parties

submitted a thirty-page “Outline of Oral Argument” that meticulously explained their

various positions on the summary-judgment motions.

From 1997 to 2011, the special judge did not rule on the summary-judgment

motions. During this time period, the CCS mainly shows follow-ups to the summary-

judgment motions and changes to the numerous attorneys involved in this litigation. But

4 it shows some other activity, too. For example, in February 1998, the Bank asked the

special judge to rule on the summary-judgment motions or, in the alternative, to hold a

new hearing. Appellants’ App. p. 610. In this motion, the Bank acknowledged that the

issues were “complex.” Id. The special judge, however, never ruled on this motion.

Then, in August 1999, the Bank requested a status conference. All parties appeared at the

October 1999 status conference, following which they supplemented their previous

summary-judgment filings.

In July 2001, which was approximately two years after the last status conference,

the Union requested a status conference. Id. at 24-25. This would be the first and only

action the Union took to move the litigation until HP filed a Trial Rule 41(E) motion to

dismiss for failure to prosecute in 2011. The special judge, however, did not set a

conference. After July 2001, nothing of substance occurred in the case until September

2008, when the special judge set a status conference for the following month.2 Id. at 26.

The Union blames its lack of action during these seven years on its assumption that the

special judge “was working on a ruling on the Motions for Summary Judgment.”

Appellants’ Br. p. 7. As an example of the lack of activity during this time period, the

CCS reflects a nearly four-year period where not a single CCS entry was made.

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United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, Local Union No. 2371, Official Bargaining Agent v. Merchandising Equipment Group, Div. of MEG Manufacturing Corp., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-brotherhood-of-carpenters-and-joiners-of-america-local-union-no-indctapp-2012.