WHITNEY NAT. BANK v. Smith
This text of 613 So. 2d 312 (WHITNEY NAT. BANK v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
WHITNEY NATIONAL BANK OF NEW ORLEANS
v.
Cecil G. Smith, Jr., a/k/a, Gill Smith.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*313 Daniel J. Mulholland, Alan W. Perry, Fred Krutz, III, Forman Perry Watkins & Krutz, Jackson, for appellant.
Terryl K. Rushing, Alston Rutherford Tardy & Van Slyke, Jackson, R.L. Netterville, Natchez, for appellee.
En Banc.
BANKS, Justice, for the Court:
Here we are compelled to treat an instance wherein a court, without notice to the plaintiff, entered an ex parte order amending a previous order, from dismissal of plaintiff's claim without prejudice, to dismissal with prejudice. Finding that the procedure utilized egregiously offends all notions of due process and acceptable conduct, and further that the amending order, on its merits, was patently unjustified, we reverse and render.
I
The matter involves the efforts of plaintiff Whitney National Bank of New Orleans (Whitney), to collect the balance due on a note allegedly made by Cecil Gill Smith, a Natchez lawyer. Whitney initiated proceedings in a federal court in Louisiana. After some negotiations between the parties, those proceedings were dismissed without prejudice for failure to prosecute. Whitney again instituted proceedings in the federal district court in Louisiana. In this proceeding, on June 3, 1987, Whitney took a default judgment against Smith in the amount alleged to be due on the note, after Smith failed to answer or otherwise appear. It is when Whitney sought to enroll and execute on that judgment in the courts of our state, that proceedings which led to this appeal began.
Whitney filed its judgment in Adams and Jefferson Counties, Mississippi, where Smith is alleged to have property, and instituted proceedings in the Circuit Court of Adams County to have the judgment enforced on February 2, 1988. On February 25, the court granted Smith 45 days in which to answer. On April 26, Smith having failed to answer, Whitney obtained entry of default and served notice of a motion for default judgment on Robert Netterville, Esq. Smith responded, pro se, with a motion to strike the default and to continue the motion for default judgment asserting a previous commitment, improper service of the notice of motion on an attorney not of record and a meritorious defense to the action on the merits. Smith filed an answer and counter-claim alleging damages for the wrongful enrollment of a void judgment with his motion. The court entered an order continuing the motion for default judgment.
Whitney served notice of deposition upon Smith to take his deposition. Smith then, on May 10, 1988, moved for summary judgment asserting the insufficiency of service for the Louisiana judgment and a motion to quash the notice of deposition. Whitney then filed a motion for leave to amend to assert a direct claim on the note. The motion for leave to amend was granted by order entered May 13. On May 18, the court, at Whitney's behest, entered an order dismissing the judgment from the rolls of Adams and Jefferson Counties without prejudice. Two days later Smith voluntarily dismissed his counter-claim.
On May 24, 1988, Smith filed an affidavit in support of his motion for summary judgment, a motion to dismiss the amendment to the complaint under Rule 12(b)(6) and a notice scheduling the motions for hearing on May 31. Whitney responded with a motion for continuance asserting its right to ten days to respond to the affidavit. An agreed setting for June 10 was arrived at by the parties. On June 7, Whitney notified Judge Benoist that it had instituted proceedings on the note in the federal district *314 court, that it confessed that the Louisiana judgment was void, and that it was willing to dismiss its direct claim without prejudice.
Thereafter both sides prepared proposed orders and there was a discussion concerning the orders with Judge Benoist. A partial record of that discussion was preserved. On June 10, 1988, the court entered an order granting Smith's motion for summary judgment and dismissing his counter-claim and Whitney's claim on the note without prejudice.
The federal litigation proceeded. Smith defended there asserting, inter alia, that the debt on the note had merged into the Louisiana judgment and further that the decision of the Circuit Court of Jefferson County striking that judgment from the rolls was res judicata. Whitney responded that the judgment in question had been set aside in Louisiana.
Smith secured copies of the documents from the Louisiana court verifying that the Louisiana judgment had been vacated on Whitney's motion on June 7. Thereafter, he approached Judge Edwin Benoist, ex parte, without notice, complaining that the actions in Louisiana had been taken without his knowledge and that he was therefore entitled to an order dismissing Whitney's action with prejudice. Judge Benoist, who had presided over all proceedings to date, acquiesced and, still without notice, entered an order dismissing Whitney's claim with prejudice on November 18, 1988. That order read in pertinent part as follows:
This cause came on this day on motion of defendant, Cecil Gill Smith, Jr., ore tenus, under Rule 60(a) and 60(b)(2) and (3), and the court, being duly advised of the premises that the Judgment, rendered herein on 10 June, 1988, should have read "with prejudice". The court has ascertained that there is newly discovered evidence that has been uncovered which by due diligence could not have been discovered at the time of the hearing; therefore, the Court sustains the motion of Cecil Gill Smith, Jr., and the Court on its own motion and own initiative, after being full advised of the premises, as authorized by Rule 60, corrects the mistake and corrects the Judgment to read as follows:
* * * * * *
That defendant's MOTION TO DISMISS THE AMENDMENT TO THE COMPLAINT of plaintiff be and the same is granted, with prejudice to the plaintiff.
About ten days later, Smith, through counsel, served a copy of this order on Whitney as an attachment to a filing in the federal court litigation. Whitney moved to set aside the order. That motion was heard by Philip Corby, Esq., an acting circuit judge, because Judge Benoist was unavailable, due to an illness from which he never recovered. At the hearing, Smith admitted the ex parte communication and suggested that in his view Judge Benoist had changed the order because of what had been done in Louisiana. Smith testified that he prepared this order before ever speaking to Judge Benoist and that the only "new evidence" discussed was the revelation that Whitney had vacated the Louisiana judgment on June 7.
Judge Corby, nevertheless, refused to set aside the order and this appeal ensued from his order and the order of Judge Benoist. Whitney filed appeal to this Court from the order amending the judgment and the denial of the Rule 60(b) Motion to Vacate the Amended Judgment. Whitney seeks review of the following issues:
I. Whether the Amended Judgment which resulted from an ex parte, meeting between Smith and Judge Benoist denied Whitney Due Process and should therefore be vacated?
II. Whether Whitney's claim on the Note should have been dismissed with prejudice.
II
Whitney and Smith urge different standards of review. Whitney maintains that since Judge Benoist granted Smith's motion to dismiss, the standard of review can *315 be found in Lester Eng. v. Richland Water & Sewer Dist., 504 So.2d 1185 (Miss. 1987).
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613 So. 2d 312, 1993 WL 31067, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-nat-bank-v-smith-miss-1993.