Sportsman's Paradise, Inc. v. Sports Center, Inc.

STATON, Judge,

dissenting.

I dissent from the Majority Opinion because: it ignores the clear and unmistakable language of Trial Rule 6(B)(2); it creates a new trial rule which frustrates and circumvents the obvious purpose and scheme of the trial rules — to expedite litigation and to allow the trial judge to manage the caseload of the court in fairness to all litigants; and it perpetuates a bifurcated disparity in the application of Trial Rule 55 which should not exist.

The clear and unmistakable language of Trial Rule 6(B)(2) expressly excludes any manipulation by litigants of time constraints set forth in the rules. It provides that only in the discretion of the trial court can any enlargement of time be allowed for the doing of a required act, and it restricts even this discretion of the trial court under Rules 50(A), 52(B), 59(C), and 60(B). Trial Rule 6(BX2) reads as follows:

“(B) Enlargement. When an act is required or allowed to be done at or within a specified time by these rules, the court may at any time for cause shown:
* * * * * *
“(2) upon motion made after the expiration of the specified period, permit the act to be done where the failure to act was the result of excusable neglect; but, the court may not extend the time for taking any action for judgment on the evidence under Rule 50(A), amendment of findings and judgment under Rule 52(B), to correct errors under Rule 59(C), or to obtain relief from final judgment under Rule 60(B), except to the extent and under the conditions stated in those rules.” (emphasis added.)

Under Trial Rule 6(C), Harris was required to act by November 27, 1979. He did not request an enlargement of time from the trial court to act until March 7, 1980. The trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying an enlargement of time to Harris, since he did not demonstrate any “excusable neglect”. The Majority Opinion would allow Harris to manipulate the Trial Rules and to manipulate the timely disposition of pending litigation by the trial court. The Majority Opinion allows a tardy litigant to ignore the clear and unmistakable language of Trial Rule 6(B)(2).

A new trial rule has been created by the Majority Opinion. Trial Rule 6(B)(2) has for all practical purposes been amended. This new amended trial rule frustrates and circumvents the obvious purpose and the inherent scheme of the trial rules. Any attempt to expedite pending litigation is frustrated by permitting a litigant to delay his responsive pleading as long as he dares without any fear of sanction from the trial court; this is true because the trial court has no control over the responsiveness of a litigant. The Majority’s Amended Rule encourages litigants to negotiate and to delay litigation after an action has been filed in the trial court which results in a sudden surge of intense litigation in the trial court when those negotiations break down. Furthermore, a failure to file a responsive pleading within the twenty days without leave as provided by Trial Rule 6(C) and 6(B)(2) may well add to further litigation at trial and on appeal as it has done in the present case.

The Majority’s Amended Rule circumvents the orderly scheme of the Trial Rules to move litigation along in the trial courts and to give all litigants who have filed an action in court a reasonable opportunity to be heard. The inherent scheme of the Trial Rules gives litigants a degree of certainty that their action will be heard by the trial court if certain procedures are followed and that some litigants will not be given an unfair advantage over others by being permitted to ignore or manipulate the Trial *1077Rules. The Majority’s Amended Rule not only permits unfair advantages to procrastinating litigants, but it strips from the trial judge a very essential'tool in controlling his caseload. A trial judge’s discretion has been destroyed to deny motions which prolong litigation where no excusable neglect exists.

In the Majority Opinion’s attempt to justify its interpretation of Trial Rule 55, it indulges in a superficial and specious rationale which contains the theme of harmlessness. This rationale begins with identifying the “crucial time for determining whether a party has in fact failed to plead.” The “crucial time ... is at the time the motion for default is filed.” This time identification is gleaned from the words “failed to plead” in Trial Rule 55(A). These words, urges the Majority, “indicates that any answer filed before the motion for default is sufficient to avoid default. This is true even though the answer is untimely filed pursuant to TR. 6.” The reason that this interpretation of Trial Rule 55 “does no harm for enlargement provisions of TR. 6” is because “Trial Rule 6(B), providing for enlargement of time, would continue to be of major importance. A party could continue to request an enlargement of time either prior, or subsequent, to the expiration of a time limitation. This would assure a party that a motion for default could not be granted.”

This rationale is superficial and specious for several reasons. First, the “crucial time” to plead under the Trial Rules is clearly set forth in Trial Rule 6(C) which provides: “A responsive pleading required under these rules, shall be served within twenty (20) days after service of the prior pleadings.” This is the “crucial time” to plead an answer not anytime before a motion for default is filed. Secondly, a motion for an enlargement of time by a party would not constitute a “pleading” under Trial Rule 55. Trial Rule 7 states clearly and distinctly that pleadings shall consist of: “(1) a complaint and answer; (2) a reply to a denominated counterclaim; (3) an answer to a cross-claim; (4) a third-party complaint, if a person not an original party is summoned under the provisions of Rule 14; and (5) a third-party answer. No other pleadings shall be allowed;” therefore, the motion for an enlargement of time would not be a pleading as the Majority Opinion assumes. Thirdly, under the rationale of the Majority Opinion, its “interpretation of TR. 55 does no harm for the enlargement provisions of TR. 6.” Under its interpretation, Trial Rule 6(B)(2) is destroyed since the time to respond has been changed from twenty days from the prior pleading to prior to the filing of a motion for default. Again, the theme of “harmless” is used to circumvent the clear, unmistakable language of the Trial Rules. The Majority Opinion reasons: “In view of the fact that the motions for default were not filed until 31 days after the answers were filed, together with the fact that the Bank’s motions for summary judgment, which were totally unrelated to the failure to timely file answers, were pending when the answers were filed, it is obvious that the untimely answers were not responsible for any such delay. The late filings were therefore harmless.” This is a weak equity argument which has no place in the rationale of whether a trial judge abuses his discretion when enforcing the clear, unmistakable mandate of a Trial Rule, Trial Rule 6(B)(2) and 6(C).

The Majority Opinion perpetuates a bifurcated approach to the Rules which creates a disparity in the application of the Rules. I do not agree with the Majority that Hiatt v. Yergin (1972), 152 Ind.App. 497, 284 N.E.2d 834, a Second District Opinion, was overruled by a First District Opinion in Clark Co. St. Bank v. Bennett et al. (1975), 166 Ind.App. 471, 336 N.E.2d 663; I do not agree with the Majority that the issue in Hiatt and Clark is “totally distinct from” the issue before us. Hiatt gave immunity to the tardy, “nimble” litigants in the Second District who could plead within the three day period while Clark snatched the immunity away from those tardy “nimble” litigants in the First District.

The issue before us is much broader than the Majority’s proposal. The issue is *1078whether the clear, unmistakable time restraints of Trial Rule 6(C) can be manipulated by a litigant so that the Rule becomes meaningless or whether the trial court has discretion to give relief from the time restraints of the Rule in some instances and enforce the Rule in other instances in its efforts to manage the flow of litigation. I conclude that the trial court has discretion to enforce the Rule. Unless Harris can show that the trial court abused its discretion when it enforced Rule 6(C) against him, the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.

If a litigant can manipulate the clear, unmistakable time restraints of Trial Rule 6(C), an unmanageable bottleneck will be created in the flow of litigation through our trial courts. The appeal before us is not in a common procedural posture. After an action has been filed by the plaintiff’s attorney and an appearance has been entered by the defendant’s attorney, the option of moving for a default judgment because a responsive pleading has not been filed is usually not considered. There are several reasons for the plaintiff’s attorney’s removal of this option from his consideration. First, the attorney who filed the action assumes that moving his newly filed action through the trial court is largely up to him and not the trial judge. He and not the trial judge will grant the defendant’s attorney additional time to comply with the Trial Rules. He can do this by simply not objecting to the late response of the defendant’s attorney or by not filing a motion for a default judgment. Secondly, the attorney who filed the action may consider the moving for a default judgment unprofessional when a fellow attorney has entered an appearance and is willing to represent the defendant. Default judgments are usually taken when no one makes an appearance for the defendant or makes any overtures to resolve the dispute on the merits. Thirdly, the attorney who files the action does not usually move for a default judgment since such a motion has derogatory connotations attached to it, and it is certainly not a motion which will endear fellow attorneys with whom the filing attorney will have many cases in the future. Therefore, it is unusual for an attorney to move for a default judgment against another attorney simply because he has not filed a responsive pleading within twenty days under Trial Rule 6(C).

If the attorney filing the action rather than the trial judge decides when a responsive pleading should be filed under TR. 6(C), a bottleneck in the flow of litigation is certain to develop in our trial courts. Trial Rule 6(C) has a clear, distinct purpose — to start moving litigation through the trial court for a final determination — not to encourage an unmanageable accumulation of cases on the dockets of our courts or to mire down and impede litigation in the initial stages. Trial Rule 6(C) and 6(B)(2) give the trial judge some opportunity to manage the litigation in his court. The Majority Opinion takes this opportunity away.

I would affirm the judgment of the trial court.