Yang v. Kim

89 Va. Cir. 423, 2015 Va. Cir. LEXIS 7
CourtFairfax County Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 2015
DocketCase No. CL-2014-6744
StatusPublished

This text of 89 Va. Cir. 423 (Yang v. Kim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fairfax County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yang v. Kim, 89 Va. Cir. 423, 2015 Va. Cir. LEXIS 7 (Va. Super. Ct. 2015).

Opinion

By Judge Randy I. Bellows

This case presents the following question. Should this Court grant a defendant leave to late file a responsive pleading where: (1) defense counsel in good faith made a one day calculation error; (2) defense counsel still managed to timely serve plaintiffs with his responsive pleading; (3) defense counsel filed the responsive pleading the morning after the responsive pleading was due and, later that day, filed a motion seeking leave to file late the responsive pleading; (4) defense counsel has demonstrated throughout the litigation a consistent commitment to timely filings (this being the only exception); and (5) plaintiffs have suffered no prejudice. Given these facts, the only way this Court could rule in plaintiffs favor would be to hold that a calculation error can never excuse the late filing of a pleading and that an inadvertent error must always and inevitably lead to dismissal of a cause of action. Fortunately, the law recognizes that trial work is a human endeavor, not some robotic computational exercise where miscalculations are impossible and mistakes intolerable. Sometimes there is simply good cause to excuse a party that misses a deadline. This is one such case. For the reasons stated below, Plaintiffs’ Motion for Reconsideration is denied.

Facts and Proceedings

Plaintiffs filed the instant action on May 16, 2014, and served the defendants on May 27, 2014. Defense counsel timely filed a responsive pleading on June 17, 2014, which included a plea in bar, a motion craving oyer, demurrer, and a motion for a bill of particulars. Plaintiffs then served [424]*424all three defendants with plaintiffs first set of interrogatories and request for production of documents on May 23, 2014. Defendant Jin W. Kim’s answers to plaintiffs first set of interrogatories and first set of request for production of documents were timely delivered to plaintiffs counsel on June 23, 2014. Jin W. Kim’s supplemental answers were timely provided to plaintiffs counsel on July 8, 2014. Plaintiffs then served defendants Jin W. Kim and Jin S. Pak with plaintiffs first request for admissions on June 27, 2014. Defense counsel timely provided plaintiffs counsel with Jin W. Kim’s answers on July 17, 2014. Plaintiffs then served defendants with their second set of interrogatories and request for production of documents on July 7,2014, to which defendants timely responded on August 22,2014.

Defense counsel subsequently filed his memorandum in support of his plea in bar on September 11, 2014, and set the hearing for September 25, 2014. Plaintiffs filed their opposition to defendants’ plea in bar on September 17, 2014. At the September 25, 2014, hearing on defendants’ plea in bar, plaintiffs’ initial complaint was upheld in part and dismissed in part, and the Court granted plaintiffs leave to file an amended complaint within twenty-one days of the Court’s ruling.

Plaintiffs filed their amended complaint on October 14, 2014. Thus, pursuant to Rule 3:8 of the Rules of the Virginia Supreme Court, defendants had twenty-one days, or until November 4, 2014, to file their responsive pleadings to plaintiffs’ amended complaint. Unfortunately, defense counsel miscalculated and mistakenly believed defendants responsive pleadings were due on November 5, 2014. However, on November 4, 2014, defense counsel represents that he realized his mistake, contacted plaintiffs’ counsel by phone to inform plaintiffs counsel of his mistake and also served plaintiffs ’ counsel by hand with his responsive pleading to the amended complaint.

Plaintiffs’ counsel has a different recollection of the November 4,2014, phone call. According to plaintiffs’ counsel, defense counsel told him that the deadline was November 5, 2014, and that his purpose in calling was to set the matter for a hearing. The Court does not need to determine which of these accounts is correct because the salient and undisputed fact is that defendants’ counsel did hand serve plaintiffs’ counsel with the responsive pleading on November 4, 2014.

Although he was able to serve plaintiffs’ counsel on November 4,2014, it was too late in the day to file his responsive pleading with the Clerk of the Court. Defense counsel filed his responsive pleading with the Clerk of the Court on the morning of November 5, 2014. Defense counsel also filed a motion for leave to late file responsive pleadings in the early afternoon of November 5, 2014.

The Court heard the defendants’ motion for leave to late file responsive pleadings on Friday, January 9, 2015. After hearing oral argument, the Court found good cause and granted the defendants’ motion to late file responsive pleadings. Plaintiffs filed a motion for reconsideration on Monday, January 12, 2014.

[425]*425 Analysis

Under the rules of the Virginia Supreme Court, a defendant must file responsive pleadings within twenty-one days after service of process upon that defendant. Va. Sup. Ct. R. 3:8(a). “A defendant who fails timely to file a responsive pleading as prescribed in Rule 3:8 is in default.” Va. Sup. Ct. R. 3:19(a); AME Fin. Corp. v. Kiritsis, 281 Va. 384, 392 (2011). However, pursuant to Rule 3:19(b), “[prior] to the entry of judgment, for good cause shown, the court may grant leave to a defendant who is in default to file late responsive pleading[s].” Va. Sup. Ct. R. 3:19(b); AME Fin. Corp., at 392 {citing James v. Peyton, 277 Va. 443, 447, n. 1, (2009) (emphasis added)).

Circumstances in which courts have found good cause to exist to exercise discretion to extend the time for filing include but are not limited to:

lack of prejudice to the opposing party, the good faith of the moving party, the promptness of the moving party in responding' to the opposing parties’ decision to progress with the cause, the existence of a meritorious claim or substantial defense, the existence of legitimate extenuating circumstances....

AME Fin. Corp., at 392 (citing Westfall v. Westfall, 196 Va. 97, 103 (1954); Eagle Lodge, Inc. v. Hofmeyer, 193 Va. 864, 870 (1952); Worsham v. Nadon, 156 Va, 438, 443 (1931)). “[T]he use of the word 'may,’ as opposed to 'shall,’ in Rule 3:19(b),” indicates that “a trial court has discretion to grant or refuse the defendant’s motion for leave to file late responsive pleadings.” Id. (citing Harper v. Virginia Dep’t of Taxation, 250 Va. 184, 194 (1995) (“the word 'may’ is prima facie permissive, importing discretion”).

“[T]he decision as to whether good cause has been shown so as to allow additional time to file responsive pleadings clearly 'rests within the sound judicial discretion of the trial court, it being impossible to lay down a rule which will be binding on all cases’.” Id. (citing Eagle Lodge, Inc., 193 Va. at 870 (referring to a former statute that required the filing of the response in an equity suit within a specified time, but also permitted additional time “for good cause shown”); Specialty Hosps. of Wash., L.L.C. v. Rappahannock Goodwill Indus., 283 Va. 348, 353 (2012); see also Blinder, Robinson & Co. v. State Corp. Comm’n, 227 Va. 24, 28 (1984) (“Whether relief from a default should be granted is a question resting in the sound discretion of the trial tribunal.”).

The trial court’s exercise of discretion is not unlimited and is subject to reversal if abused. Id. at 393 (citing Walsh v. Bennett, 260 Va. 171, 175 (2000)).

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Related

AME FINANCIAL CORP. v. Kiritsis
707 S.E.2d 820 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2011)
Walsh v. Bennett
530 S.E.2d 904 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2000)
Beck v. Commonwealth
484 S.E.2d 898 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1997)
Harper v. Virginia Department of Taxation
462 S.E.2d 892 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1995)
Eagle Lodge, Inc. v. Hofmeyer
71 S.E.2d 195 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1952)
Westfall v. Westfall
82 S.E.2d 487 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1954)
Noll v. Rahal
250 S.E.2d 741 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1979)
Worsham v. Nadon
157 S.E. 560 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1931)
Blinder, Robinson & Co. v. State Corp. Commission
313 S.E.2d 652 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1984)
Bull v. Gentry
15 Va. Cir. 473 (Spotsylvania County Circuit Court, 1989)

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Bluebook (online)
89 Va. Cir. 423, 2015 Va. Cir. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yang-v-kim-vaccfairfax-2015.