dissenting.
The majority rejects appellant’s first argument, that her payment was the equivalent of posting a supersedeas bond, because it is raised for the first time on appeal, and therefore not properly preserved. I agree. However, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s conclusion that appellant’s second argument provides a basis for reversal because I do not think it was properly preserved for our review either.
At the hearing on appellee’s motion to dismiss in circuit court, the following colloquy occurred:
[Appellant’s Counsel]: My case is decided by the supreme court in 2006. It says the only thing that is needed to perfect an appeal is to have the record filed.
UThe Court: Well that’s not really the issue. The issue is, what is the nature of the money paid to the district court? The defendant is contending that it was satisfaction of the judgment. The plaintiff is contending that it was what?
[Appellant’s Counsel]: A nullity, surplusage. Something that was done at the direction of the court.
The Court: I find no evidence in the file or in the district court docket sheets that required her to do anything, other than have a judgment against her. I find no bond in the file.
[Appellant’s Counsel]: None is required, Your Honor.
[Appellee’s Counsel]: Precisely.
The Court: If there’s no bond in the file, there’s no supersedeas bond, then the court has to treat, money paid to the court as satisfaction of the judgment. The motion to dismiss is sustained.
(Emphasis added.) This colloquy represents the sum and substance of appellant’s argument to the circuit court. District Court Rule 9 governs an appeal from district court to circuit court, and, as acknowledged by both parties before the circuit court in the above colloquy, the filing of a bond is not a necessary prerequisite for appealing a district court’s decision to circuit court.
In its own order, the circuit court concluded “that by tendering funds in the amount of the judgment in district court, Sharon Carter voluntarily satisfied the judgment obtained therein against her, thereby barring her right to appeal the judgment.” The circuit court then granted appellee’s motion to dismiss and remanded the case to the district court for distribution of the money held in the court’s registry.
The circuit court dismissed the case based on its conclusion that appellant voluntarily paid the judgment, rendering the issues in that court moot. In Lytle v. Citizens Bank of Batesville, 4 Ark. App. 294, 296-98, 630 S.W.2d 546, 547 (1982), we explained:
Some jurisdictions hold that the payment of a judgment under any circumstances bars the payer’s right to appeal. However, in the majority of jurisdictions, the effect of the payment of a judgment upon the right of appeal by the payer is determined by whether the payment was voluntary or involuntary. In other words, if the payment was voluntary, then the case is moot, but if the payment was involuntary, the appeal is not precluded. The question which often arises under this rule is what constitutes an involuntary payment of a judgment. For instance, in some jurisdictions the courts have held that a payment is involuntary if it is made under threat of execution or garnishment. There are other jurisdictions, however, which adhere to the rule that a payment is involuntary only if it is made after the issuance of an execution or garnishment. Another variation of this majority rule is a requirement that if, as a matter of right, the payer could have posted a supersedeas bond, he must show that he was unable to post such a bond, or his payment of the judgment is deemed voluntary. For a discussion of the various rules, along with citations to the various jurisdictions, see: Defeated Party’s Payment or Satisfaction of, or Other Compliance With, Civil Judgment as Barring His Right to Appeal, Annot. 39 A.L.R.2d 153 (1955); 4 Am.Jur.2d Appeal and Error, 260 at 755 (1962); Metropolitan Development and Housing Agency v. Hill, 518 S.W.2d 754 (Tenn.App.1974).
We adopt the majority rule as the better reasoned rule. Thus, if appellant’s payment was voluntary, then the case is moot, but if the payment was involuntary, this appeal is not precluded. In applying this rule to the facts at bar, we must determine whether the payment made by appellant was voluntary or involuntary. In doing so, we believe that one of the most important factors to be considered is whether appellant was able to post a supersedeas bond at the time he satisfied the judgment. The record supports the conclusion that he could have done so.
There is nothing in the record which shows appellant even requested the court to set the amount of a supersedeas bond, much less to show his financial inability to pay such cost. Obviously, appellant had the financial ability and resources to borrow $13,364 so he could satisfy the judgment in full. There is no evidence to indicate the posting of a supersedeas bond would have been a greater or lesser financial burden on appellant than his full payment of the obligation imposed under the judgment. For whatever reasons, appellant simply chose to forego his right to request a bond in an effort to stay the trial court’s judgment and any subsequent proceedings to enforce it.
(Emphasis added.)
]7As her second argument to our court, appellant contends that the circuit court erred in ruling that her payment into the district court’s registry was a voluntary payment of the judgment because she alleges that she made this payment at the direction of the district-court judge as a prerequisite for prosecuting her appeal to circuit court. She now contends in her brief that when she “made the deposit into the registry of the court every person involved (she, Ms. Crawford, the district court judge, and the district court clerk) knew she was doing so only so she could prosecute her appeal to circuit court, not to pay the judgment.” She then discusses our court’s adoption of the majority rule in Lytle, supra, and concludes her argument as follows:
Looking to the undisputed facts in the record it is clear that there was never any intent that the payment into the registry of the court be a satisfaction of the judgment. In fact, the money was held in the registry and not paid to Ms. Crawford. While Ms. Carter may not have realized the district court judge did not know the law concerning what was required in order to prosecute an appeal to the circuit court, her own similar ignorance of the intricacies of our procedural rules should not support a finding that her intent to stay the operation of the judgment by the deposit of funds with the clerk can be converted into an intent to satisfy the judgment and fore-go her appeal.
(Emphasis in original.) I dissent from the majority’s reversal on this argument.
In granting appellee’s motion to dismiss, the circuit court considered items outside the pleadings, including appellant’s affidavit; therefore, we are treating the dismissal as a summary judgment. Kyzar v. City of W. Memphis, 360 Ark. 454, 201 S.W.3d 923 (2005); Ark. R. Civ. P. 12(b). On appeal, in reviewing this summary judgment, I accept as undisputed fact appellant’s assertion in her affidavit that “I was told by the district court judge to do this [i.e., post the full amount of the judgment to be paid into the registry of the court].” Paragraph 4 of appellant’s affidavit, however, explains:
| RThis payment was made with the intent of being a prerequisite for filing the appeal, and not with the intent of satisfying the judgment to foreclose the appeal.
What she did not assert in this paragraph was that the district court told her that she had to make the payment as a prerequisite for filing the appeal; and as previously set forth, no such argument was made to the circuit court during the hearing on the motion to dismiss — in fact, it was acknowledged by both parties that a bond was not a necessary prerequisite for appeal to circuit court.
Thus, the undisputed fact that was actually before the circuit court was that the district-court judge told appellant to post the full amount of the judgment to be paid into the registry of the court. In my opinion, this undisputed assertion, taken as fact, does not justify reversal of this case. Appellant did not fully develop any arguments with respect to how this fact rendered her payment involuntary. During the colloquy with the circuit court, responding to the circuit court’s specific question concerning appellant’s position regarding the nature of the money paid to the district court, appellant’s counsel said, “A nullity, surplusage. Something that was done at the direction of the court.” Appellant gave no indication to the circuit court that she considered the district court’s directive to be compulsory. To be sure, appellant acknowledged both in paragraph three of her Answer to the Motion to Dismiss and in her colloquy with the circuit court that District Court Rule 9 does not require a party to post an appeal bond or a supersedeas bond for the circuit court to acquire jurisdiction of an appeal.
Consequently, contrary to the basis upon which the majority opinion reverses the circuit court’s decision, appellant’s affidavit does not raise an issue of material fact because, even | naccepting her assertion as true, appellant does not present a convincing argument, either before the trial court or our court on appeal, why the district court’s alleged statement requires reversal. In short, appellant did not explain below, or in this appeal, how, even if the district court told her to make such a payment, the instruction rendered her payment involuntary. Where an argument is not fully developed at the trial level or on appeal, it is not preserved for our review. Finley v. Farm, Cat, Inc., 108 Ark. App. 292, 288 S.W.3d 685 (2008).
I am authorized to state that Judge PITTMAN, Judge GLADWIN, and Judge ROBBINS join in this dissent.