Shelley Diane Cooper and Annette Michelle Edelen, Individually and as Trustees of the Dolores S. Bryant Revocable Living Trust v. Horace E. Bryant and Nancy Elizabeth Edelen, Individually and in Her Capacity as Trustee of the Dolores S. Bryant Revocable Living Trust
Cite as 2022 Ark. App. 90
ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISIONS II, III, AND IV
No. CV-19-428
SHELLEY DIANE COOPER AND
Opinion Delivered February 23, 2022
ANNETTE MICHELLE EDELEN,
INDIVIDUALLY AND AS TRUSTEES OF
THE DOLORES S. BRYANT REVOCABLE APPEAL FROM THE BENTON
LIVING TRUST COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
APPELLANTS [NO. 04PR-16-891]
V.
HONORABLE XOLLIE DUNCAN,
HORACE E. BRYANT AND NANCY JUDGE
ELIZABETH EDELEN, INDIVIDUALLY
AND IN HER CAPACITY AS TRUSTEE OF MOTION TO DISMISS APPEAL
THE DOLORES S. BRYANT REVOCABLE GRANTED; APPEAL DISMISSED
LIVING TRUST WITHOUT PREJUDICE
APPELLEES
LARRY D. VAUGHT, Judge
This is a dispute over a trust prepared by the decedent, Dolores S. Bryant. Appellee
Horace Bryant, the decedent’s surviving spouse and stepfather to the appellants Shelley
Cooper and Annette Edelen and separate appellee Nancy Edelen, the decedent’s daughters,
filed suit to reform the trust, alleging that conflicting trust provisions could operate to
prejudice his right to occupy the residential real estate for his lifetime. The circuit court
removed appellants as trustees of the trust, granted Horace a life estate, and awarded
attorney’s fees to the appellees. This appeal challenges those rulings. However, we do not
reach the merits of the appeal because Horace has filed a motion to dismiss the appeal,
arguing that appellants failed to file a timely notice of appeal. Shelley and Annette have filed
their own motions contending that any dismissal should be without prejudice because the
order appealed from lacks finality. We conclude that the order appealed from lacks finality.
We therefore dismiss the appeal without prejudice.
This is a dispute over a trust created by Dolores. Among the trust assets was a twenty-
acre tract of real property with a residence where Dolores and her husband, Horace, resided.
Upon Dolores’s death, Horace was to be allowed to reside on the property until his death or
remarriage. All net income from the trust was to be distributed to Horace. Upon Horace’s
death, the residence and surrounding acreage were to be distributed in equal shares to
appellants Shelley and Annette and separate appellee Nancy, Dolores’s daughters. Shelley,
Nancy, and Annette were designated to serve as successor co-trustees after their mother’s
death to act collectively and jointly in such capacity by majority vote. The trust also contained
an in terrorem clause whereby the interests of any person who “contests” or “in any other
manner, attacks or seeks to impair or invalidate” any term of the trust shall be forfeited. A
dispute-resolution clause was included among the trust’s provisions. This clause set forth a
procedure for the appointment of a special trustee to resolve disputes over the trust without
resorting to litigation. Shelley and Annette contended below that failure to comply with the
dispute-resolution provision also triggers the no-contest clause.
Dolores Bryant died on July 14, 2013. The parties agree that no action to administer
the trust was taken for several years after Dolores’s death.
When Horace learned that Shelley and Annette had proposed to distribute the home
property and residence from the trust to themselves without making provision for his rights
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and interest, he filed suit against Shelley, Annette, and Nancy, individually and as co-trustees,
seeking to reform the trust, alleging that conflicting trust provisions could operate to
prejudice his right to occupy the residential real estate for his lifetime. After filing several
motions to dismiss Horace’s petition that were denied, appellants filed a counterclaim
against Horace and a cross-claim against Nancy, contending that the interests of Horace and
Nancy in the trust were forfeited under the trust’s no-contest provision.
After granting Horace’s motion for partial summary judgment on the reformation
issue and following a bench trial, on December 10, 2018, the circuit court entered a
document titled “Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law,” determining the merits of the
remaining issues. The court, among other things, removed appellants as co-trustees of the
trust and granted Horace a life estate in the residential property. The court also directed
Nancy, as the sole trustee, to distribute the accumulated trust income to Horace. The court
later awarded attorney’s fees to the appellees in February 2019. Appellants filed their notice
of appeal from both the “Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law” and the orders on
attorney’s fees on February 25, 2019.
After the appeal was perfected, Horace filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, and the
appellants filed a motion to remand for entry of a final order or, in the alternative, a motion
to dismiss the appeal without prejudice. Horace argued that the appeal should be dismissed
with prejudice because appellants failed to file a timely notice of appeal from what Horace
contends was a final, appealable order. Appellants argue that the appeal is taken from a
nonfinal order and should be dismissed without prejudice.
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The starting point is the parties’ disagreement over whether the circuit court’s
December 10, 2018 Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law constitutes an appealable
order. This analysis requires us to ask two questions: was the document an order, and if so,
was it appealable? Regarding the first question, we look to the substance of the document to
determine its nature.
Decision of this appeal, then, depends entirely upon the determination of the
character of the first court action. Formal requirements for a judgment in Arkansas
are few. It is the final determination of the right of parties in an action. . . . A
judgment must specify clearly the relief granted or other determination of the action.
The few basic requirements must be met and the judgment must clearly show that it
is the act of the law, pronounced and declared by the court upon determination and
inquiry. While a rather technical application was made of this rule in the cited case,
strict formality in language used to express the adjudication of the court is not
necessary and a “judgment” will be tested by its substance, not its form. The name by
which it is called by the court is not controlling. We have held that the designation
or title given a pleading is not controlling, but that its effect, character and sufficiency
are to be determined by its substance regardless of what it is called. There is no reason
we should not apply the same rule to a court order.
Thomas v. McElroy, 243 Ark. 465, 468, 420 S.W.2d 530, 532 (1967) (internal citations
omitted). Despite the fact that Thomas predates the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure, it has
been consistently cited since the Rules’ adoption for its holding as to what constitutes a
judgment. See David Newbern, John Watkins & D.P. Marshall Jr., Arkansas Civil Practice &
Procedure § 31-1 at 651–52 (5th ed. 2010). Our rules of civil procedure do not, in any event,
set out a list of formal requirements for a judgment other than to provide a definition of
“judgment” that includes “a decree and any order from which an appeal lies,” Ark. R. Civ.
P. 54(a), and a requirement that a judgment be set forth “on a separate document.” Ark. R.
Civ. P. 58; see also White v. Mattingly, 89 Ark. App. 55, 199 S.W.3d 724 (2004).
4
Applying the Thomas test of substance to the December 10, 2018 Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law in this case, we conclude that the circuit court entered an order instead
of mere findings and conclusions. Supporting this conclusion is the circuit court’s internal
reference to its decision as an “Order,” stating that Nancy should distribute all trust income
accrued “up to the date of the entry of this Order” to Horace. The court also dismissed
appellants’ counterclaim against Horace and concluded the decision with the words “IT IS
SO ORDERED” just above the judge’s signature.
Appellants argue that the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, even if deemed
an order, lacks finality because it fails to address, among other things, Horace’s claim for an
inventory and accounting; Nancy’s cross-claim against appellants for indemnity and possible
forfeiture of appellants’ interest in the estate; and Horace’s request to hold appellants in
contempt for failing to distribute the accumulated funds. They argue that because the
Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law lacked finality, it was never appealable, requiring
us to dismiss the case without prejudice due to lack of jurisdiction.
Appellees, on the other hand, urge us to follow Sloan v. Arkansas Rural Medical Practice
Loan & Scholarship Board, 369 Ark. 442, 445, 255 S.W.3d 834, 837 (2007), in which the
Arkansas Supreme Court held that appellate courts must first consider the jurisdictional
issue related to the timeliness of the notice of appeal before proceeding to an analysis of any
finality issues. “It is well established that this court is without authority to overrule a decision
of the supreme court.” Box v. State, 348 Ark. 116, 71 S.W.3d 552 (2002) (quoting Brown v.
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State, 63 Ark. App. 38, 44, 972 S.W.2d 956 (1998)). The question, then, is whether Sloan is
applicable to the case at bar.
We hold that it is not. Sloan does not apply here because we cannot hold litigants to
a “timeliness” requirement if they are never put on notice that the time has begun to run. In
Sloan, the finality issue was related to Rule 54(b) and that rule’s requirements for certifying
an otherwise nonfinal order for appeal. It made sense in Sloan for the Arkansas Supreme
Court to decline to reach the merits of whether the Rule 54(b) certificate in that case was
sufficient to establish appellate jurisdiction because it had already determined that the notice
of appeal from the order containing the Rule 54(b) certificate was obviously untimely. The
finality issue was, therefore, essentially moot given the lack of jurisdiction resulting from the
untimely appeal. While the rule that the court articulated in Sloan makes sense in that
context, it does not make sense where, as here, the order in question lacked either a Rule
54(b) certificate or any other indicia of appealability that would have put the parties on notice
that their time for filing a notice of appeal had started to run.
We therefore distinguish Sloan from the case at bar. Here, the court’s Findings of Fact
and Conclusions of Law did not, on its face, trigger the clock to begin running on the
appellant’s opportunity to file a timely notice of appeal. The Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law was not titled an order, was not accompanied by a judgment, and was
glaringly nonfinal because it failed to dispose of multiple claims and parties. Therefore, it
was insufficient to put the parties on notice that the time for filing an appeal had started to
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run. In fact, the record indicates that the appellants filed their notice of appeal only when it
later became clear that no subsequent final order would be forthcoming from the court.
The dissent notes that Sloan takes a categorical approach that an untimely notice of
appeal always trumps a finality problem. We do not dispute that this was the language used
in Sloan, and we acknowledge that we have no authority to overrule the supreme court. In
order to avoid a grave miscarriage of justice, we distinguish Sloan and hold that the rule that
an appellate court must evaluate the timeliness of an appeal before addressing any finality
issues is inapplicable when the order in question cannot be deemed to have put counsel on
notice that the time for filing an appeal had begun to run. Because the Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law in this case did not put the parties on notice that the order presented
an immediate opportunity to appeal, the Arkansas Supreme Court’s insistence that we
address timeliness first does not apply, and we dismiss without prejudice for lack of a final
order.
Appellants also appeal from the February 6 and February 19 orders awarding
attorney’s fees to Horace and Nancy. The appeal from the fee orders, though a collateral
matter, must also be dismissed without prejudice for lack of finality. The supreme court has
addressed the issue of an appeal from a nonfinal order that also includes an attorney’s-fee
issue:
It is of no consequence to Appellants that the matter of attorney’s fees is
ordinarily viewed by this court as a collateral issue, separate from the merits of a case.
This court’s jurisdiction is not invoked until a final order has been entered in the
trial court, with the exception of those immediately appealable orders listed in Ark.
R. App. P.–Civ. 2. Thus, a final order is a prerequisite. Without such a final order,
7
no appeal may be entertained, even on a collateral issue such as attorney’s fees.
Accordingly, because Appellants appealed from the order denying attorney’s fees
prior to the entry of a final judgment under Rule 54(b), their appeal must be
dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.
Dodge v. Lee, 350 Ark. 480, 486–87, 88 S.W.3d 843, 847 (2002). Thus, we need a final order
to have jurisdiction to hear the appeal from the fee issue. Id.; see also Crain Auto. Holdings,
LLC v. Morgan, 2020 Ark. App. 510, at 4 (Gruber, J., concurring); Am. Express Bank, FSB v.
Davenport, 2015 Ark. App. 705; Peraza v. United Fin. Cas. Co., 2015 Ark. App. 5, at 4, 453
S.W.3d 693, 695; Pridemen Team, Inc. v. Newton, 2011 Ark. App. 132. Because we do not
have a final order, we cannot consider the appeal of the attorney’s fee issue. Dodge, supra.
Motion to dismiss appeal granted; appeal dismissed without prejudice.
BARRETT and MURPHY, JJ., agree.
VIRDEN and HIXSON, JJ., concur.
HARRISON, C.J., and KLAPPENBACH, GRUBER, and BROWN, JJ., dissent.
KENNETH S. HIXSON, Judge, concurring. I vividly remember frightfully sitting in first
year Contracts class with Professor Milton Copeland as if it were yesterday. As Professor
Copeland hurled his copy of the Restatement 2nd of Contracts across the room, he
thundered, “If we don’t read the rules, why do we need this?” 1 Apparently, Judge Mike
Murphy had a similar experience in law school a few years later. In his concurring opinion
in Latham, Judge Murphy wrote the following:
1
Professor Copeland later sheepishly apologized for his theatrics.
8
“Read the dadgum statute!” So implored the late Albert Matthew Francis (“Al”) Witte
to the first-year, section-four law-school students circa 1983—in more colorful
language. Or, as he would tenderly apply it in this case, “Read the rules. Closely.”
Latham v. State, 2019 Ark. App. 323, at 6, 578 S.W.3d 732, 735, overruled by Pettry v. State,
2020 Ark. App. 162, 595 S.W.3d 442.
“Read the rules” is so ingrained into law students and lawyers that it should become
second nature. It is THE starting point in any legal analysis. Applying rules as written give
us reasonable, consistent, and predictable results on which the bench and the bar can rely.
The rationale for this application is probably stated best in the following quote from Justice
Paul Danielson: “If we interpret our rules on a case-by-case basis, being swayed by the result
of our interpretation, why then do we provide these things we call rules?” Jonesboro Healthcare
Ctr., LLC v. Eaton-Moery Envt’l Servs., Inc., 2011 Ark. 501, 385 S.W.3d 797 (Danielson, J.,
dissenting).
Not only do we have rules; we have rules to interpret rules. When construing a court
rule, we use the same means and canons of construction used to interpret statutes. State ex
rel. Rutledge v. Purdue Pharma L.P., 2021 Ark. 133, 624 S.W.3d 106. The principal rule of
statutory construction is to construe a statute just as it reads, giving the words their ordinary
and usually accepted meaning in common language. Id. That certainly makes sense. We
also have rules to distinguish between general rules and specific rules. Further, just as it has
long been the law in Arkansas that a general statute must yield when there is
a specific statute involving the particular subject matter, a general rule must also yield when
9
there is a specific rule involving the particular subject matter. See Arkansas River Rts. Comm.
v. Echubby Lake Hunting Club, 83 Ark. App. 276, 126 S.W.3d 738 (2003).
I have included this preamble to my concurrence to draw attention to a singular
purpose. In this case, there is a specific rule directly on point which according to the majority
opinion and dissenting opinion can be overlooked with impunity. I cannot overlook a
specific rule that is right on point, dispositive, and upon which the appellant justifiably
relied.
Both the majority and dissenting well-reasoned opinions go to great lengths to explain
their respective reliance on and exception on Sloan v. Ark. Rural Med. Prac. Loan & Scholarship
Bd., 369 Ark. 442, 446, 255 S.W.3d 834, 838 (2007), which held that a determination for
Rule 2 of the Arkansas Rule of Appellate Procedure–Civil “purposes is always secondary to
whether a timely notice of appeal and record has been filed.” However, both opinions omit
a more fundamental threshold inquiry that I believe is dispositive to the case. Remember,
this contested case was effectively decided by the circuit court in a document styled “Findings
of Fact and Conclusions of Law.”2 The first question therefore should be are “Findings of
Fact and Conclusions of Law” a judgment, decree, or order which is appealable in the first place?
Rule 4(a) of the Arkansas Rule of Appellate Procedure–Civil specifically provides that a
notice of appeal shall be filed within thirty (30) days from the entry of the judgment, decree or
order appealed from. In other words, Rule 4(a) presupposes that the circuit court entered a
2
Sometimes referred to herein as simply “Findings and Conclusions” for brevity.
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judgment, decree, or order from which the parties may appeal. Thus, even before we
determine the timeliness of the appeal under Rule 4 and then whether such a judgment,
decree, or order is final for purposes of Rule 2 as mandated by our supreme court in Sloan,
we must first determine whether the circuit court’s “Findings of Fact and Conclusions of
Law” are a judgment, decree, or order (collectively referred to hereafter as a judgment).
Although the majority opinion briefly addresses this issue and concludes that they are, I
conclude that they are not.
What is the starting point for such an analysis? How about read the rule. Arkansas
Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a)(1) states, “If requested by a party at any time prior to entry of
judgment, in all contested actions tried upon the facts without a jury, the court shall find the
facts specially and state separately its conclusions of law thereon, and judgment shall be entered
pursuant to Rule 58[.]” (Emphasis added.) This is a fairly elementary analysis. Step 1: Did a
party request findings of fact and conclusions of law? Answer: yes. Step 2: If a party
requested findings of fact and conclusions of law, how is the subsequent judgment to be
entered? Answer: “[the] judgment shall be entered pursuant to Rule 58.” Ark. R. Civ. P.
52(a)(1). On to Rule 58.
Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 58 provides the following in pertinent part:
upon a decision by the court granting or denying the relief sought, the court may
direct the prevailing party to promptly prepare and submit, for approval by the court
and opposing counsel, a form of judgment or decree which shall then be entered as
the judgment or decree of the court. The court may enter its own form of judgment
or decree or may enter the form prepared by the prevailing party without the consent
of opposing counsel. A judgment or decree shall omit or redact confidential
information as provided in Rule 5(c)(2).
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Every judgment or decree shall be set forth on a separate document.
(Emphasis added.) Back to our elementary analysis. Apply Rule 58. Step 3: Was there a
decision by the court granting or denying relief sought? Answer: Yes. Step 4: If yes, then a
form of judgment shall be entered as the judgment or decree of the court. Step 5: How is
that judgment set forth? Answer: Every judgment shall be set forth on a separate document.
Here is the scheme specifically created for cases disposed of by Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law. Rule 52 provides that the court shall find the facts specially and state
separately its conclusions of law thereon, then the court shall enter a judgment pursuant to
Rule 58, and then Rule 58 provides that the judgment shall be set forth on a separate
document. The rationale behind this rule is self-evident. For purposes of commencing the
thirty-day period during which the notice of appeal must be timely filed, the time commences
with the filing of the judgment. This is not unimportant semantics because it creates fatal
consequences on appeal. When does the time period commence when you have Findings
and Conclusions: On the filing of the Findings and Conclusions or upon the filing of the
judgment? Well, that certainly could be confusing. Perhaps the drafters of these rules had
this very concern in mind when they drafted Rules 52 and 58 and specifically addressing
Findings and Conclusions vis-à-vis judgments emanating therefrom. According to the Rules,
when the case is disposed of by Findings and Conclusions, a judgment on a separate
document shall be filed. There—that clears up any ambiguity or confusion. A black and
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white rule we all can live with. The thirty-day notice-of-appeal window commences with the
filing of the judgment.
This problem was also addressed in David Newbern, John Watkins & D.P. Marshall
Jr., Arkansas Civil Practice & Procedure § 31-1 at 651–52 (5th ed. 2010). An excerpt provides:
The judgment is to be distinguished . . . from the court’s written findings of fact,
conclusions of law, and opinions on which the judgment is based. . . .
Although the Supreme Court thus eschewed mere formality as a basis for
determining existence of a judgment, correct form is nonetheless important, as it may
save a dispute. One clear requirement, specified in Ark. R. Civ. P. 58, is that the judgment
“shall be set forth on a separate document.” The document should have a caption as other
papers in the proceeding and should be titled “Judgment.”
....
In a contested case tried by the court without a jury, the court must, if a party
so requests, make findings of facts and conclusions of law. While it is not necessary
that these predicates of the judgment be stated in the same document as the
judgment, it is often convenient and useful to put them there. Careful draftsmanship
requires that each portion of such a document be labeled. For example, such a
document could begin with the case caption, then have a section entitled “Findings,”
then a section entitled “Conclusions,” and last “Judgment,” followed by date of entry
and signature blocks for the judge and the party or attorney approving as to form….”
(Internal citations omitted.) As David Newbern, John Watkins & D.P. Marshall Jr., so
eloquently and perceptively observed: the clear requirement, specified in Arkansas Rule of
Civil Procedure 58, that the judgment must be set forth on a separate document “may save
a dispute.” It would have saved this one.
Perhaps, one would argue that these rules are merely guidelines, suggestions, or best
practices. But, not so fast. The word “shall” is contained in Rules 4, 52, and 58, and the
significance of the use of this word cannot be overstated. Our supreme court has repeatedly
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stated that “[t]he word ‘shall’ means mandatory compliance unless it would lead to an absurd
result.” Tollett v. Wilson, 2020 Ark. 326, at 5, 608 S.W.3d 602, 606; see Vaughn v. Mercy Clinic
Ft. Smith Communities, 2019 Ark. 329, 587 S.W.3d 216. Therefore, the word “shall” as it is
used in Rules 4, 52, and 58 must be construed to mean mandatory compliance unless it leads
to an absurd result.
So, what happened here. The court entered Findings of Fact and Conclusions of
Law. Appellants waited for the court to either enter a judgment or appoint one of the
attorneys to draft such a judgment. Appellants’ attorney even contacted the court three times
requesting a judgment or appointment. Admittedly, the judgment could be very simple and
abbreviated such as, “The court adopts its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law and
enters judgment as set forth therein.” But importantly, there would be a judgment on a
separate document that satisfies Rule 58 which would have clearly commenced the thirty-day
notice-of appeal-window. Instead, here we have a hybrid which creates the very problem that
David Newbern, John Watkins & D.P. Marshall Jr., warned us about.
What was this hybrid deviation from Rules 52 and 58? At the end of the thorough
21-page, 92-paragraph Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law and just above the court’s
signature, the phrase “It is so ordered” was inserted. A judgment on a separate document
was never entered. As previously mentioned, the appellants’ attorney contacted the court
three times requesting a judgment to be entered or an appointment to draft a judgment.
The circuit court’s case manager responded to these communications in an email on
February 13, 2019. She stated in relevant part that “[t]he document entitled Findings of Fact
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and Conclusions of Law by the Court filed December 10, 2018 ending with ‘IT IS SO
ORDERED’ constitutes, in the opinion of the Court, that final order and nothing further
was required except the separate orders regarding the award of attorney fees.” The very
avoidable predicament perceived by David Newbern, John Watkins & D.P. Marshall Jr., was
conceived.
So, here is the question. Despite the clear and unambiguous language in Rules 52
and 58 that specifically require a judgment to be set forth in a separate document when a
case is disposed of on Findings and Conclusions, does the inclusion of the phrase “It is so
ordered” magically transform an otherwise unappealable document into a final judgment
which commences the thirty-day notice-of-appeal window? I do not believe it does. I find
our supreme court’s opinion in Thomas v. McElroy, 243 Ark. 465, 420 S.W.2d 530 (1967),
to be instructive on this point. Despite the fact that Thomas predates our Rules of Civil
Procedure, it has been consistently cited since the Rules’ adoption for its holding as to what
constitutes a judgment. See David Newbern, John Watkins & D.P. Marshall Jr., Arkansas
Civil Practice & Procedure § 31-1 at 651–52 (5th ed. 2010). In Thomas, McElroy had filed suit
against Thomas for unpaid rent. On March 25, 1966, a bench trial was held, and the trial
court entered Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. At the bottom of the Findings and
Conclusion was the phrase “It is so ordered” followed by the trial court’s signature. Almost
a year later, on March 3, 1967, a judgment was entered. Thomas appealed the March 3,
1967, judgment. The Thomas court could have held that the March 25, 1966, Findings of
Fact and Conclusions of Law was a judgment, that appellant had failed to timely appeal, and
15
dismissed the appeal. Instead, in reviewing the Findings of Fact and Conclusion of Law vis-
à-vis the Judgment, the Supreme Court explained that “decisions, opinions, and findings of
a court do not constitute a judgment or decree” but “merely form the bases upon which the
judgment or decree is subsequently to be rendered and are not conclusive unless
incorporated in a judgment or a judgment be entered thereon.” Id. at 469, 420 S.W.2d at
533. It instead analogized them to jury verdicts: “They are more in the nature of the verdict
of a jury and no more a judgment than such a verdict.” Id., 243 Ark. at 470, 420 S.W.2d at
533. Applying those principles to the decree in Thomas, our supreme court held that “the
action of the court on March 25, 1966, was deficient as a final determination of the rights
of the parties.” Id. at 469, 420 S.W.2d at 534.
The same is true here. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law are not a judgment.
As stated in Thomas, despite the fact that the Findings and Conclusions included the phrase
“It is so ordered,” the action of the circuit court was deficient as a final determination of the
rights of the parties. Appellants had the right to justifiably rely on the unambiguous language
in Rules 52 and 58. As stated by Justice Danielson, “If we interpret our rules on a case-by-
case basis, being swayed by the result of our interpretation, why then do we provide these
things we call rules?” Jonesboro Healthcare Ctr., LLC v. Eaton-Moery Envt’l Servs., Inc., 2011
Ark. 501, 385 S.W.3d 797 (Danielson, J., dissenting). Accordingly, I would dismiss without
prejudice on this basis for a lack of jurisdiction as we have previously done when an appeal
is prematurely filed from a letter opinion. See Panhandle Oil & Gas, Inc. v. BHP Billiton
Petroleum (Fayetteville) LLC, 2016 Ark. App. 376, 499 S.W.3d 667.
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I concur with the majority opinion’s conclusion that the appeal should be dismissed
without prejudice for the reasons set forth in this concurrence.
VIRDEN, J., joins in this concurrence.
RITA W. GRUBER, Judge, dissenting. I agree with the majority that this appeal must
be dismissed. Where we part ways is that I believe case law requires the appeal to be dismissed
with prejudice because it is untimely.
The supreme court’s opinion in Sloan v. Arkansas Rural Medical Practice Loan &
Scholarship Board, 369 Ark. 442, 255 S.W.3d 834 (2007), is controlling here. Like this case,
Sloan involved an untimely notice of appeal. The supreme court rejected the Sloans’ motion
to dismiss their appeal under Ark. R. Civ. P. 54(b) for lack of a final order, stating that the
appellate court must first consider the jurisdictional issue related to the timeliness of the
notice of appeal before it proceeds to the finality issue. Id. at 445, 255 S.W.3d at 837. The
court continued:
The timely filing of the notice of appeal and record is a threshold jurisdictional
prerequisite for this court. Rule 4(a) of the Arkansas Rules of Appellate Procedure–
Civil states in relevant part that “a notice of appeal shall be filed within thirty (30)
days from the entry of the judgment, decree or order appealed from.” Ark. R. App. P.–
Civ. 4(a) (emphasis added). As a matter of practice, our clerk will not allow an appeal
to proceed without both a timely notice of appeal and record. The reason for this
practice is that Ark. R. App. P.–Civ. 4 is paramount to appellate-court jurisdiction.
The plain language of the rule requires that the notice of appeal be filed within thirty
(30) days from the judgment decree or order appealed from. Rule 4(a). While Ark. R.
App. P.–Civ. 2 sets forth the orders that are appealable, it is for the appellate court to
determine whether the order properly fits within one of Rule 2’s subsections once an
appeal is lodged. For example, Ark. R. App. P.–Civ. 2(a)(11) provides that an appeal
may be taken from an order that adjudicates fewer than all the claims or the rights
and liabilities of fewer than all the parties if the circuit court has directed entry of a
final judgment as to one or more but fewer than all the claims or parties and has
17
made an express determination that there is no just reason for delay and has executed
the certificate required by Ark. R. Civ. P. 54(b). Whether an order has properly been
appealed pursuant to Rule 54(b) is indeed a jurisdictional question, which this court
may address sua sponte. See, e.g., Jones v. Huckabee, 363 Ark. 239, 213 S.W.3d 11
(2005). However, such a determination for Rule 2 purposes is always secondary to
whether a timely notice of appeal and record has been filed.
Sloan, 369 Ark. at 445–46, 255 S.W.3d at 837–38; see also Massanelli v. Massanelli, 2016 Ark.
App. 90, at 5 (Harrison, J., concurring) (discussing Sloan and its implications); Pockrus v.
Morris, 2020 Ark. App. 364, at 6, 608 S.W.3d 159, 162; Fire Sys. Tech., Inc. v. First Cmty. Bank,
2015 Ark. App. 334, 464 S.W.3d 125.
The majority dismisses the appeal without prejudice because the December 2018
order is not final. Sloan does not give us that option. Instead, Sloan takes a categorical
approach that an untimely notice of appeal always trumps a finality problem, going so far as
emphasizing the word “always” to demonstrate this. We, as an intermediate court, cannot
carve out a finality exception from the supreme court’s categorical pronouncement.
The manner in which the majority distinguishes Sloan turns Sloan on its head and
puts finality before timeliness. The majority’s statement that the order does not, on its face,
put counsel and the parties on notice that the order in question is triggering the thirty-day
clock for the filing of a notice of appeal is simply wrong. The very factors the majority cites
in concluding that the “Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law” is an “order” also serve to
give that notice. In fact, this question has been addressed, to a meaningful degree, by the
Arkansas Supreme Court in Smith v. Estate of Howell, 372 Ark. 186, 189–90, 272 S.W.3d
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106, 109.1 Regardless, litigants and their attorneys have a duty to remain abreast of the
progress of a case in which they are involved. Lilly v. Earl, 299 Ark. 103, 109, 771 S.W.2d
277, 280 (1989); Jetton v. Fawcett, 264 Ark. 69, 73, 568 S.W.2d 42, 44 (1978). Moreover, the
distinction is unworkable and fails to achieve its intended result in this very case. For
example, Shelley and Annette should have also known that an appealable order was entered
when Horace and Nancy filed their separate motions seeking attorney’s fees. Parties do not
generally file motions for attorney’s fees unless the case is at an end. See Ark. R. Civ. P.
1
Here is our supreme court’s analysis and holding, both of which refute the position
that a Rule 52-related order does not provide “notice” of the need to appeal, and that a
comprehensive Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law is “not a judgment” for purposes
of Ark. R. App. P.–Civ. 3 and 4:
The issue presented in this appeal is whether the Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law filed on October 11, 2006, was an order approving the
settlement. Smith asserted that the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law
was not an order. We disagree. An order is a determination by a court on
“some subsidiary or collateral matter arising in an action not disposing of the
case on the merits but adjudicating a preliminary point or directing some step
in the proceedings.” Thomas v. McElroy, 243 Ark. 465, 470, 420 S.W.2d 530,
533 (1967) (quoting 49 C.J.S. Judgments § 5 (1947)). There is no merit to
Smith’s claim that the circuit court failed to enter an order approving the
settlement agreement.
Upon entry, the order approving the settlement was subject to appeal.
See West, supra. Smith attempts to appeal the order now; however, he neither
filed an objection pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. § 28-1-116(d) (Repl. 2004) to
preserve the issue as part of the appeal from the order of final distribution nor
did he file a timely notice of appeal to appeal the order separately. A timely
filed notice of appeal is required to provide this court with appellate
jurisdiction. U.S. Bank v. Milburn, 352 Ark. 144, 100 S.W.3d 674 (2003).
Thus, this court lacks jurisdiction to address Smith’s argument that the circuit
court erred in approving the settlement. Smith, 372 Ark. at 189-190, 272
S.W.3d at 109.
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54(e)(2) (“[T]he motion must be filed and served no later than 14 days after entry of judgment;
must specify the judgment and the statute or rule entitling the moving party to the award; and
must state the amount or provide a fair estimate of the amount sought.”) (Emphasis added.).
Nancy filed her motion seeking attorney’s fees and costs on December 21, 2018; Horace
filed his motion on December 26. Although Shelley and Annette responded to the motions
for attorney’s fees on January 2, 2019, it was not until February 6 that they inquired of the
circuit court about the entry of an appealable order. February 6 was also the day the court
entered its order awarding attorney’s fees to Horace. Thus, it was the neglect of appellants
and their attorney, not the form of the order, that resulted in appellants’ failing to file a
timely notice of appeal.
I am authorized to state that Chief Judge Harrison and Judges Klappenbach and
Brown join in this dissent.
L. David Stubbs; and Taylor & Taylor Law Firm, P.A., by: Andrew M. Taylor and Tasha
C. Taylor, for appellants.
Cochran Law Firm, by: Tamra Cochran, for separate appellee Horace Bryant.
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