concurring. I concur in denying the petition for rehearing, but do not agree that the rehearing should be based on the law of the case. I would reach the merits of the case.
In August 1992, the Hawkinses sold some land in Conway County to McDonald’s. The parties agreed to a restrictive covenant in which the Hawkinses would not use their adjoining land for certain types of restaurant purposes for a twenty-year period. In November 1992, three months later, the Hawkinses filed suit against McDonald’s to have the restrictive covenant declared void.
On November 4, 1992, a summons and petition were mailed to McDonald’s. They received them on November 6. The summons warned McDonald’s, an out-of-state corporation, that it had twenty days in which to answer. According to our Rule of Civil Procedure, an out-of-state corporation actually has thirty days in which to respond.
On December 17, 1992, or forty-one days after service was perfected, the chancellor entered a default judgment voiding the covenant. On January 15, 1993, McDonald’s filed a motion to set aside the default judgment. The basis of the motion was the erroneous warning of the time in which to respond and that it had a meritorious defense. On March 4, 1993, the chancellor heard the motion. McDonald’s presented testimony and evidence in support of its motion. The chancellor asked the parties whether the motion was deemed denied under Ark. R. App. R 4 (c) and (d) because it had not been heard within thirty days from filing of the motion. The trial court did not rule on the merits of the motion and asked the parties to file briefs on both the merits and the question about Ark. R. App. P. 4. McDonald’s Corp. v. Hawkins, 315 Ark. 487, at 488, 868 S.W.2d 78, 79 (1994). (Ark. R. App. P. 4 involves disposition of posttrial motions. Quite different, Rule 60 of the Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure involves relief from a judgment, decree, or order.)
On March 15, 1993, the chancellor had not ruled on the motion. McDonald’s attorneys feared that the motion would be deemed denied if not ruled on in thirty days and gave notice of appeal solely on that one issue. This notice of appeal was the first step in the process that eventually resulted in opinion in Hawkins I.
On April 30, 1993, or forty-five days after the notice of appeal was filed, the chancellor denied the motion to set aside the default judgment on its merits. The Hawkinses pointed this out in their brief on appeal in Hawkins I. Consequently, we held that the chancellor had not ruled that the petition was deemed denied, and the only issue on appeal was therefore moot. We said:
[W]hen there is no party that has been disadvantaged by an adverse ruling, there is no justiciable issue, and the appellate court has no jurisdictional basis upon which to entertain the appeal. That is exactly what confronts us in this case. McDonald’s prevailed before the chancellor on the sole point raised in this appeal and has no standing to prosecute the matter further at the appellate level.
The appeal, therefore, is dismissed.
Hawkins, 315 Ark. at 489-90, 868 S.W.2d at 80. In summary, we dismissed McDonald’s first appeal because we had “no jurisdictional basis.”
After the chancellor’s ruling on the merits on April 30, 1993, McDonald’s gave a second notice of appeal. That notice of appeal eventually resulted in our opinion in this case, McDonald’s Corp. v. Hawkins, 319 Ark. 1, 888 S.W.2d 649 (1994), in which we held that the law of the case doctrine prevented McDonald’s from raising an issue about the merits of the chancellor’s ruling. We' said that McDonald’s should have raised any question about the merits of the ruling in the Hawkins I. I think we were wrong in so holding. McDonald’s gave its first notice of appeal forty-one days before the chancellor decided the merits of the motion. McDonald’s could not have raised an issue about a ruling on the merits when the chancellor still had not decided the issue. In addition, we held that we had “no jurisdictional basis” for the first appeal. If we had no jurisdictional basis for the first appeal, then the doctrine of law of the case should not attach to the second appeal.
Still, I would deny the petition for rehearing on the merits of the case. Under the facts of this case, it is immaterial that the summons erroneously warned McDonald’s that it had twenty days to respond, rather than thirty days, because service was had on November 6, 1992, and McDonald’s did- not respond until January 15, 1993, which was sixty-nine days later.