Ex parte Chamblee
Decision Date | 08 October 2004 |
Citation | 899 So.2d 244 |
Parties | Ex parte Troy CHAMBLEE and Tony Jackson. (In re Troy Chamblee v. Pinkerton Security & Investigations Services, Inc., and Albert Bell. Tony Jackson v. Pinkerton Security & Investigations Services, Inc., and Albert Bell). |
Court | Alabama Supreme Court |
Myron K. Allenstein and Rose Marie Allenstein of Allenstein & Allenstein, LLC, Gadsden, for petitioners.
Gregg L. Smith, Birmingham, for respondent Pinkerton Security & Investigations Services, Inc.
In this case we consider the petition for a writ of mandamus filed by Troy Chamblee and Tony Jackson, and their subsequently filed "supplemental" petition for a writ of mandamus. The petitions respectively implicate the authority of the trial judge under Rule 59.1, Ala. R. Civ. P., and Rule 60, Ala. R. Civ. P. We grant both petitions.
The underlying procedural history, which is controlling, is as follows:
Chamblee and Jackson separately sued Pinkerton Security & Investigations Services, Inc. ("Pinkerton"), and Albert Bell. The cases were consolidated for trial before Tennant M. Smallwood, Jr., circuit judge of Jefferson County.1 On July 14, 2003, Judge Smallwood entered monetary judgments in favor of each plaintiff against Pinkerton, based on a jury verdict. On July 28, 2003, Pinkerton filed its "Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law," pursuant to Rule 50, Ala. R. Civ. P.; the motion contained an alternative request for a new trial. Chamblee and Jackson filed a written opposition, and Judge Smallwood conducted a hearing on the motion on September 11, 2003. At the conclusion of the hearing, Judge Smallwood advised both counsel, Pinkerton's counsel asserts in his brief to this Court, and Judge Smallwood confirmed by entering orders purporting to amend his July 14, 2003, judgments (the procedural propriety of which petitioners have challenged, as hereinafter discussed), that Judge Smallwood contacted counsel for Pinkerton on September 24, 2003, to advise counsel that he was granting Pinkerton's motion for a judgment as a matter of law and to request that counsel prepare a proposed order reciting the grounds Judge Smallwood explained to counsel. On September 25 Pinkerton's counsel delivered a proposed order to Judge Smallwood's office.
Rule 59.1, Ala. R. Civ. P., as applicable to proceedings in the circuit court, provides:
The 90th day following the filing on July 28 of Pinkerton's motion for a judgment as a matter of law was October 26, 2003. On November 10, 2003, Judge Smallwood dated, signed, and entered an 11-page "Memorandum Opinion and Order" for the consolidated cases, setting aside the judgments he had entered in favor of Chamblee and Jackson and entering a judgment as a matter of law in favor of Pinkerton. Judge Smallwood's signature on the order is preceded by the statement, "DONE AND ORDER [sic] on this the 10th day of Nov., 2003." A separate entry was typed on the case action summary sheet for each case, also dated November 10, confirming that "Memorandum Opinion and Order (Judgment as a Matter of Law) [was] entered this date by separate paper...."
On December 11, 2003, counsel for Chamblee and Jackson wrote to Judge Smallwood to express counsel's opinion that the November 10, 2003, order was a nullity by virtue of the fact that Pinkerton's motion for a judgment as a matter of law had been denied automatically on October 26, 2003, pursuant to Rule 59.1 when the 90-day period for the pendency of a postjudgment motion had expired, and to request that Judge Smallwood enter an order setting aside the November 10 order. Receiving no response from Judge Smallwood, counsel for Chamblee and Jackson filed their petition for a writ of mandamus, asking this Court to direct Judge Smallwood to rescind his November 10, 2003, order.
On January 7, 2004, Pinkerton filed in the consolidated cases its "Motion to Amend the Record," asking Judge Smallwood, under the authority of Rule 60(a), Ala. R. Civ. P., to amend the record to reflect that Judge Smallwood had contacted Pinkerton's counsel on September 24, 2003, and had informed him that Pinkerton had prevailed on its motion for a judgment as a matter of law and had informed Pinkerton's counsel "of the reasons for the ruling and directed counsel to draft a proposed opinion including the Court's findings," and that on September 25 Pinkerton's counsel had "submitted the proposed opinion and order to the Court for the Court to review." Pinkerton's counsel asserted that "[t]he factual findings and legal conclusions of the Opinion and Order [entered on November 10, 2003,] were identical to the draft opinion and order submitted to the Court by Defendant's counsel." In its motion to amend, Pinkerton requested that Judge Smallwood "make those entries into the appropriate records to correct [sic] reflect the true facts in this matter, specifically, that the Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law was ruled upon prior to the 90 day period expiring." Pinkerton asserted that Rule 60(a) could properly be used "to make the judgment or record speak the truth" and argued that "the truth is that the Court ruled on the dispositive motion in a timely fashion and only failed to make a notation of the ruling in the case action summary sheets." Chamblee and Jackson filed a written objection to Pinkerton's motion, and Judge Smallwood conducted a hearing on the motion on January 16, 2004. Later that same day he entered an order reciting, in pertinent part:
Chamblee and Jackson's supplemental petition for a writ of mandamus is directed to the trial court's January 16, 2004, order, and argues that Judge Smallwood had "no authority or jurisdiction to continue to issue orders in this case." The petitioners thus are requesting that the writ issue to require Judge Smallwood to rescind both the order he entered on November 10, 2003, and the order he entered on January 16, 2004, after Chamblee and Jackson had filed their initial petition for the writ of mandamus.
It is unnecessary for us to decide whether the order entered by Judge Smallwood on January 16, 2004, represents a permissible exercise of the authority and discretion accorded him by Rule 60(a), Ala. R. Civ. P., to correct "[c]lerical mistakes in judgment, orders, or other parts of the record and errors arising therein from oversight or omission." Our cases interpreting and implementing Rule 59.1, Ala. R. Civ. P., have made it clear a trial judge can "dispose of" a pending post-judgment motion only by entering a ruling granting or denying the motion.
Ex parte Johnson Land Co., 561 So.2d 506, 508 (Ala.1990).
"If a trial court does not rule on a post-judgment motion within 90 days, it loses jurisdiction to rule on the...
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