Utley v. Heckinger

362 S.W.2d 13, 235 Ark. 780, 1962 Ark. LEXIS 664
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 26, 1962
Docket5-2809
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 362 S.W.2d 13 (Utley v. Heckinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Utley v. Heckinger, 362 S.W.2d 13, 235 Ark. 780, 1962 Ark. LEXIS 664 (Ark. 1962).

Opinion

Sam Robinson, Associate Justice.

This action grows out of a traffic mishap which occurred about 2:30 a.m., July 10, 1959, on Highway 55 north of James Mill Overpass in Crittenden County. Three vehicles were involved; a truck equipped as a wrecker, a heavily loaded Diamond T truck, and a 1954 Pontiac. The wrecker was owned by appellant, E. L. Heckinger, and operated by his employee, appellee, Yernon Odell Griggs. The truck was owned by appellant, M. T. Utley, and was being driven by his employee, Jimmy Marshall. The Pontiac was owned and being driven by appellee, Mary White. Burdie Mae Cross, J. D. Cross, and Betty Jean Cross, minors and relatives of Mary White, were also occupants of the Pontiac.

Griggs had driven the wrecker belonging to Heckinger to the above mentioned point on Highway 55 to pull a truck out of a ditch. After performing that task, the wrecker was stopped partly on the paved portion of the highway so that the equipment used in pulling the truck onto the pavement could be loaded onto the wrecker. The truck that had been in the ditch proceeded on its way and was not involved in the collision that followed.

While Griggs, the driver of the wrecker, was loading the chains, pulleys, etc., Mary White, driving her Pontiac with the Cross children as passengers or guests, approached from the north. There was a heavy fog, and a short distance behind the White car, travelling in the same direction, was the Utley truck.

There is evidence to sustain a finding that the Utley truck struck the rear end of the Mary White Pontiac and knocked it into the Heckinger wrecker. All three vehicles were damaged. Mary White received serious injuries, and the Cross children were injured to some extent.

This action was commenced by Heckinger and Griggs filing suit against Utley. Heckinger seeking compensation for damages to his wrecker, and Griggs seeking compensation for alleged personal injuries. Utley filed an answer and cross-complaint denying liability and alleging negligence on the part of Heckinger and Griggs. Also, Utley made Mary White a third-party defendant and alleged that the accident was due to the negligence of Heckinger, Griggs, and Mary White, and asked that he he awarded judgment against all of them for damages to his truck and cargo.

Mary White answered Utley’s complaint and filed a cross-complaint and also made Heckinger and Griggs third-party defendants. The Court gave the parties 90 days additional time in which to plead. Heckinger filed his answer to Utley’s cross-complaint one or two days after the allotted time had expired. Later, Utley filed a motion to dismiss the Heckinger answer to the cross-complaint because it was not filed in statutory time. The answer to the cross-complaint was filed on August 16, 1960. The motion to dismiss was not filed by Utley until the 27th day of November, 1961, at which time depositions had been taken and the parties were in court ready for trial. Utley waived the right to have the answer to the cross-complaint dismissed by not mailing a motion to that effect in apt time. Burton v. Sanders, 230 Ark. 67, 321 S. W. 2d 209.

Lovie Allen, for herself and as mother and next friend of the Cross minors, filed suits against Utley, Heckinger and Griggs, alleging damages she had sustained by reason of medical expenses for the children and damages suffered by the children by reason of alleged personal injuries. The cases were consolidated for trial.

Griggs filed no answer to Utley’s cross-complaint. Utley filed a motion for a default judgment. Ark. Stats. 27-1135 provides: “A defendant to any complaint or cross-complaint must appear or plead either generally or specially the first day after expiration of the period of time set forth below, as the case may be: First: Where the summons has been served twenty (20) days in any county in the state.” Ark. Stats. 29-401 provides: “Judgment by default shall be rendered by the Court in any case where an appearance or pleading, either general or special, has not been filed within the time allowed by this Act; provided, that the Court may for good cause allow further time for filing an appearance or pleading, if application for granting further time is made before expiration of the period within which the appearance or pleading should have been filed; and that nothing in this Act shall impair the discretion of the Court to set aside any default judgment upon showing of excusable neglect, unavoidable casualty or other just cause.” No attempt was made to show excusable neglect, unavoidable casualty or other just cause for Griggs’ failure to answer Utley’s cross-complaint. Therefore, under the provisions of Ark. Stats. 29-401, Utley was entitled to a default judgment on his cross-complaint against Griggs, and since Utley’s judgment on the cross-complaint should have been rendered prior to the actual trial, Griggs could not recover on his complaint. “If more than one action between the same parties and with reference to the same subject-matter is pending, the first judgment rendered in either action bars the other action, regardless of priority in time of commencement.” Sims v. Miller, 151 Ark. 377, 236 S. W. 828, Adams and Rusher v. Henderson, 197 Ark. 907, 125 S. W. 2d 472. It follows that the judgment in favor of Griggs in the sum of $225.00 must be reversed and his complaint dismissed. It might be added that Griggs’ failure to answer Utley’s cross-complaint resulting in a default judgment, is in noway prejudicial to Heckinger or Utley.

We come now to the principal point in controversy between Heckinger, Utley, Mary White, and Lovie Allen in her own right, and as mother and next friend of the-Cross minors. In selecting the jury, the Court, over the objection of Utley, directed the Clerk to furnish the parties a list of 21 veniremen from which to select a jury of 12. The Court allowed Heckinger and Griggs to challenge three, allowed White and Allen to challenge three, and allowed Utley to challenge three. Ark. Stats. 39-229 provides: “Each party shall have three [3] peremptory challenges, which may be made orally — but if either party shall desire a panel, the court shall cause the names of twenty-four [24] competent jurors, written upon separate slips of paper, to he placed in a box to be kept for that purpose, from which the names of eighteen [18] shall he drawn and entered on a list in the order in which they were drawn, and numbered. Each party shall be furnished with a copy of said list, from which each may strike the names of three [3] jurors and return the list so struck to the judge, who shall strike from the original list the names so stricken from the copies, and the first twelve [12] names remaining on said original list shall constitute the jury.” Ark. Stats. 39-231 provides: “ ... Where there are several persons on the same side, the challenge of one [1] shall be the challenge of all under this subdivision. ’ ’

The statute does not provide for a total of more than 18 veniremen, drawn from a total of 24, from which to select a jury of 12. In Fidelity-Phenix Fire Ins. Co. v. Friedman, 117 Ark. 71, 174 S. W. 215, the Court said: “It is evident that if the contention now made by the defendants should be sustained by the court that one of the principal objects of the statute would be defeated. If the defendants were each entitled to three peremptory challenges then it follows as a matter of course that the plaintiffs would be entitled to three peremptory challenges against each of the defendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
362 S.W.2d 13, 235 Ark. 780, 1962 Ark. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utley-v-heckinger-ark-1962.