FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
September 17, 2008
PUBLISH Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
SHEREE L. HUKILL,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v. No. 07-5168
OKLAHOMA NATIVE AMERICAN
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
COALITION, d/b/a/ Spirits Of Hope;
PAULINE MUSGROVE,
Defendants-Appellants,
and
NICK DOOLEY, CHARLOTTE
JOHNS, JEANIE JONES, ANGELA
KNIFECHIEF, JAIME LEVERETT,
Defendants.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OKLAHOMA
(D.C. No. 06-CV-662-CVE)
Submitted on the briefs: *
*
After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined
unanimously to grant the parties’ request for a decision on the briefs without oral
argument. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(f); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is therefore
(continued...)
Debra W. McCormick, Rubenstein, Bryan, McCormick & Pitts, Edmond,
Oklahoma; Patricia Kirch, Rainey Martin LLP, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for
Defendants-Appellants.
Matthew B. Free, Best & Sharp, Tulsa, Oklahoma, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Before HOLMES, PORFILIO, and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges.
PORFILIO, Circuit Judge.
Defendants Pauline Musgrove and Oklahoma Native American Domestic
Violence Coalition (d/b/a “Spirits of Hope”) appeal the district court’s denial of
their motion to set aside a default judgment in favor of plaintiff Sheree L. Hukill.
Because Ms. Hukill did not properly serve Ms. Musgrove and Spirits of Hope, the
district court did not have jurisdiction over them, and we conclude that it was
required to set aside the default judgment. We therefore reverse and remand to
the district court with directions to vacate the default judgment against these
defendants.
Background
The relevant facts are not in dispute. Ms. Hukill worked for Spirits of
Hope as a grant writer and staff attorney until her employment was terminated in
December 2004. Following her termination, she filed a lawsuit in Oklahoma state
*
(...continued)
ordered submitted without oral argument.
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court against Spirits of Hope, Ms. Musgrove, and other defendants. Ms. Hukill
voluntarily dismissed her state-law action in October 2006 and filed this
federal-court action against the same defendants two months later. Before
attempting to serve Spirits of Hope and Ms. Musgrove with the federal summons
and complaint, Ms. Hukill’s counsel contacted the lawyer who represented them
in the state-court action to inquire whether he would accept service on behalf of
his clients. Their lawyer responded that his clients would not authorize him to do
so.
Ms. Hukill elected to serve Spirits of Hope and Ms. Musgrove by following
state law, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 4(e)(1) and 4(h)(1)(A), pursuant to an Oklahoma
statute which provides that “[s]ervice by mail shall be accomplished by mailing a
copy of the summons and petition by certified mail, return receipt requested and
delivery restricted to the addressee.” Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 2004(C)(2)(b).
Ms. Hukill mailed both summonses to the Spirits of Hope business address. One
summons was addressed to “Pauline Musgrove c/o Spirits of Hope Coalition” and
was marked for restricted delivery. Aplt. App. at 76. The other summons was
addressed to “Spirits of Hope Coalition c/o Pauline Musgrove” and was not
marked for restricted delivery. Id. at 74. At the time of these mailings,
Ms. Musgrove was the executive director of Spirits of Hope and its registered
agent for service of process, but she did not sign for either delivery. The same
person, “L. Vollintine,” signed both return receipts. See id. at 74, 76. At that
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time, L. Vollintine was not an employee, officer, board member, or director of, or
an agent authorized to receive service of process on behalf of, Spirits of Hope.
None of the other defendants who were served by plaintiff were employees,
officers, or directors of, or agents authorized to accept service of process for,
Spirits of Hope at the time Ms. Hukill filed her complaint or effected service
upon them. See id. at 71.
After the defendants failed to respond to the complaint, Ms. Hukill moved
for default judgment, indicating that Spirits of Hope and Ms. Musgrove had each
been served by certified mail. The district court granted the motion and entered
judgment against Spirits of Hope, Ms. Musgrove, and the other defaulting
defendants, 1 jointly and severally, for more than $100,000. Less than a month
later, Spirits of Hope and Ms. Musgrove filed a motion to set aside the default
judgment against them under Fed. R. Civ. P. 55(c) and 60(b), contending that the
judgment was void because they were never properly served. 2 They did not allege
in their motion that they had not ultimately received the summons and complaint
or that they were unaware of the lawsuit. They argued that, under Oklahoma law,
statutes prescribing the manner of service must be strictly complied with.
1
Ms. Hukill’s motion sought a default judgment as to all but one defendant,
who she later served by publication and obtained a separate default judgment
against.
2
None of the other defaulting defendants moved to set aside the default
judgment. Hereafter, “defendants” refers to Spirits of Hope and Ms. Musgrove.
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Ms. Hukill opposed the motion, asserting that only substantial compliance with
the Oklahoma statute was required.
The district court denied defendants’ motion to vacate the default judgment,
holding that substantial compliance is the proper standard under Oklahoma law.
The court focused on the mailing addressed to Ms. Musgrove, which was marked
for restricted delivery, as required by the statute. Acknowledging that the post
office did not enforce the delivery restriction when it permitted L. Vollintine to
accept the mailing and sign the return receipt, the court reasoned that Ms. Hukill
substantially complied with the statute. It emphasized defendants’ failure to
assert that they did not receive the summons and complaint, as well as the
evidence that they were aware of the pendency of the lawsuit based on their
refusal to allow their counsel to accept service. The district court concluded that
service upon Ms. Musgrove individually, and as an officer and service agent for
Spirits of Hope, was valid under Oklahoma law because “[m]ore than a
reasonable probability exists that defendants had actual notice of the civil action.3
3
Having found that the service upon Ms. Musgrove and Spirits of Hope was
valid, the district court proceeded to determine whether the default judgment
should nonetheless be set aside. See United States v. Timbers Preserve, Routt
County, Colo., 999 F.2d 452, 454 (10th Cir. 1993) (setting forth requirements for
setting aside a default judgment). Because we conclude that service was not
valid, we do not reach the parties’ contentions regarding the culpability of
defendants’ conduct, whether they have a meritorious defense, or prejudice to
Ms. Hukill. See id.
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Aplt. App. at 104. Ms. Musgrove and Spirits of Hope filed a timely appeal of the
district court’s ruling.
Standards of Review
We generally review a district court’s denial of a motion to set aside a
default judgment under Rules 55(c) 4 and 60(b) for an abuse of discretion. United
States v. Timbers Preserve, Routt County, Colo., 999 F.2d 452, 454 (10th Cir.
1993). But we apply a different standard of review to rulings under Rule
60(b)(4), which permits a court to relieve a party from a final judgment that is
void. Where Rule 60(b)(4) is properly invoked, “relief is not a discretionary
matter; it is mandatory,” Orner v. Shalala, 30 F.3d 1307, 1310 (10th Cir. 1994)
(quotation omitted), and, accordingly, our review is de novo, see Wilmer v. Bd. of
County Comm’rs, 69 F.3d 406, 409 (10th Cir. 1995).
In this case our decision turns on the application of Oklahoma law, which
we also construe de novo. See Cooper v. Cent. & Sw. Servs., 271 F.3d 1247, 1251
(10th Cir. 2001); see also Burnham v. Humphrey Hospitality Reit Trust, Inc.,
403 F.3d 709, 715-16 (10th Cir. 2005) (applying Kansas law to determine whether
service of corporation under Rule 4(h)(1)(A) substantially complied with state
law); Tex. W. Fin. Corp. v. Edwards, 797 F.2d 902, 905-06 (10th Cir. 1986)
(applying Texas law to determine whether service of individual strictly complied
4
Rule 55(c) provides, in pertinent part, that “[t]he court may set aside . . . a
default judgment under Rule 60(b).”
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with state long-arm statute). We must “ascertain and apply Oklahoma law with
the objective that the result obtained in federal court should be the result that
would be reached in an Oklahoma court. In so doing, we must apply the most
recent statement of state law by the state’s highest court.” Cooper, 271 F.3d at
1251 (citation and quotations omitted).
Discussion
“[A] default judgment in a civil case is void if there is no personal
jurisdiction over the defendant.” United States v. Bigford, 365 F.3d 859, 865
(10th Cir. 2004) (emphasis and quotation omitted). And “service of process
[under Fed. R. Civ. P. 4] provides the mechanism by which a court having venue
and jurisdiction over the subject matter of an action asserts jurisdiction over the
person of the party served.” Okla. Radio Assocs. v. F.D.I.C., 969 F.2d 940, 943
(10th Cir. 1992). Rule 4 permits service of a summons and complaint upon an
individual by “following state law for serving a summons in an action brought in
courts of general jurisdiction in the state where the district court is located or
where service is made.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 4(e)(1). The same method may be used
to serve a corporation. Id. at 4(h)(1)(A).
Here, Ms. Hukill chose to serve Spirits of Hope and Ms. Musgrove by
certified mail pursuant to Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 2004(C)(2). As we have noted,
§ 2004(C)(2)(b) requires such service to be sent “by certified mail, return receipt
requested and delivery restricted to the addressee.” Section 2004(C)(2)(c)
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provides further that, with respect to an individual, “[a]cceptance or refusal of
service by mail by a person who is fifteen (15) years of age or older who resides
at the defendant’s dwelling house or usual place of abode shall constitute
acceptance or refusal by the party addressed.” Id. For service upon a
corporation, “acceptance or refusal by any officer or by any employee of the
registered office or principal place of business who is authorized to or who
regularly receives certified mail shall constitute acceptance or refusal by the party
addressed.” Id. 5
Defendants contend that Ms. Hukill’s attempted service upon them failed to
comply with the Oklahoma statutory requirements in several respects. As to
service on Ms. Musgrove, they argue that (1) plaintiff failed to mail the summons
and complaint to her house or usual place of abode and (2) although the mailing
was sent with delivery restricted to the addressee, it was not received by
Ms. Musgrove herself, but was accepted by another person not residing at her
dwelling house or abode. As to service on Spirits of Hope, they assert that (1) the
5
The district court appears to have concluded that § 2004(C)(2)(c) is wholly
inapplicable to this case because it pertains only to the issuance and setting aside
of default judgments, and “[t]he Federal rules defer to Oklahoma law only in
regard to the manner of service, not in regard to default judgment.” Aplt. App. at
101 n.7. To the extent that subsection (c) addresses state-law procedures related
to default judgments, we agree with the district court. But, as illustrated here,
that subsection also defines who may accept or refuse service by mail on behalf of
a corporation, as well as when acceptance or refusal of service by mail by
someone other than the individual party addressed nonetheless constitutes
acceptance or refusal of service by that party. See Mortgage Elec. Registration
Sys., Inc. v. Crutchfield, 144 P.3d 196, 200-01 (Okla. Civ. App. 2006).
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mailing was not sent with delivery restricted to the addressee and (2) it was not
accepted by an officer or an employee authorized to or who regularly receives
certified mail. Defendants contend further that Ms. Hukill knew or should have
known that L. Vollintine was not authorized to accept service for Ms. Musgrove
or Spirits of Hope, yet plaintiff represented to the court that service upon them
was proper.
We agree with defendants’ contentions regarding noncompliance with the
statutory requirements, with one exception. We reject defendants’ assertion that
Ms. Hukill was required to serve Ms. Musgrove at her residence. Section
2004(C)(2)(b) does not specify a location to which the certified mailing must be
sent, providing instead that delivery must be restricted to the addressee. While
§ 2004(C)(2)(c) defines who may accept service by mail for an individual if the
mailing is sent to her “dwelling house or usual place of abode,” it does not limit
the place of service by mail to that location.
But our inquiry does not end with our determination that Ms. Hukill’s
attempted service on defendants failed to comply fully with the Oklahoma
statutory requirements. Although defendants argued in the district court that valid
service must strictly comply with § 2004, the parties agree on appeal that
Oklahoma applies the rule of substantial compliance. They further agree that the
Oklahoma Supreme court definitively adopted this rule in Graff v. Kelly, 814 P.2d
489, 495 (Okla. 1991) (“We conclude and so hold that the Oklahoma Pleading
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Code requires substantial compliance in order for the trial court to have
jurisdiction over the person of the defendant.”). Nor have we found any
Oklahoma Supreme Court case after Graff explicitly applying a strict compliance
rule. But the parties differ as to how the substantial compliance rule would be
applied in this case by the Oklahoma Supreme Court.
In holding that Ms. Hukill substantially complied with the service-by-mail
requirements in § 2004(C)(2), the district court relied on the following language
in Shamblin v. Beasley, 967 P.2d 1200, 1209 (Okla. 1998):
Service is not subject to invalidation for any departure from the
mode prescribed by statute. When it is alleged that there was want of
strict compliance with statutory requirements for service, the court
must in every case determine whether the found departure offends the
standards of due process and thus may be deemed to have deprived a
party of its fundamental right to notice.
Applying this test, the district court concluded that the post office’s failure to
enforce the restricted delivery on Ms. Hukill’s certified mailing to Ms. Musgrove
was an insubstantial departure from the statutory requirements, in light of
defendants’ actual knowledge of the lawsuit. 6 In support of the substantial
sufficiency of her service, plaintiff also relies on the Oklahoma Supreme Court’s
6
The district court concluded “that plaintiff’s failure to check the restricted
delivery box on the return receipt addressed to Spirits of Hope is inconsequential,
because the combined service on Musgrove substantially complied with [the]
Oklahoma statute.” Aplt. App. at 103.
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statement in Vance v. Federal National Mortgage Ass’n, 988 P.2d 1275
(Okla. 1999), that
[i]t is not every variance in the service of process which will
invalidate it. Rather to impugn the efficacy of service which is valid
on the face of the pertinent judgment roll a challenger must prove
that the departure offends articulated standards of due process and
hence deprives it of a fundamental right to notice. . . . In Shamblin v.
Beasley the Court adopted a totality-of-circumstances test to assay
the probability that service actually imparts the degree of notice
which is constitutionally prescribed. The adopted test requires that
under all the circumstances present in a case there be a reasonable
probability the service of process employed apprizes its recipient of
the plaintiff’s pressed demands and the result attendant to default.
Id. at 1279-80 (footnote omitted).
Defendants, on the other hand, rely on Graff for their contention that
Ms. Hukill’s efforts at service did not substantially comply with the requirements
for service by mail under § 2004(C)(2). In Graff, the plaintiff attempted to serve
the defendant, an individual, by personal delivery. 814 P.2d at 491. Section
2004(C)(1)(c)(1) provides that service upon an individual may be made
by delivering a copy of the summons and of the petition personally or
by leaving copies thereof at the person’s dwelling house or usual
place of abode with some person then residing therein who is fifteen
(15) years of age or older or by delivering a copy of the summons
and of the petition to an agent authorized by appointment or by law
to receive service of process.
But, rather than delivering the summons directly to the defendant, the process
server left it with a receptionist at his business address. 814 P.2d at 491. In his
motion to set aside a default judgment, the defendant argued that service on his
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receptionist was not a proper substitute service under § 2004. Id. at 491-92. The
plaintiff countered that service was proper because the receptionist was
defendant’s agent, or because the defendant had received actual notice of the
lawsuit. Id. at 492.
The Oklahoma Supreme Court applied a three-part test to determine
whether the service was sufficient: “(1) Is there a statute authorizing the method
of service employed?; (2) Have the requirements of the statute been observed?;
and (3) Have fundamental due process requirements been met?” Id. at 493
(quotation omitted). It answered the first question affirmatively, noting that
§ 2004(C)(1)(c)(1) provides for service of process on an agent appointed by the
individual or by law. Id. But it concluded that the requirements of that section
were not met because the receptionist was not an agent authorized by the
defendant or by law to accept service. Id. at 494-95. “This result [made]
addressing the third . . . question, concerning whether fundamental due process
requirements have been met, unnecessary.” Id. at 496. Thus, applying the
substantial compliance rule, see id. at 495, and despite the defendant’s failure to
deny that he had received actual notice, see id. at 492, the Oklahoma Supreme
Court nonetheless held in Graff that service was invalid based upon the statutory
requirements for service by personal delivery, where the process server served
“an employee, not the defendant, at that defendant’s place of employment,”
id. at 490.
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In this case the district court acknowledged that Graff “explicitly replaced
strict compliance with the substantial compliance doctrine,” Aplt. App. at 102,
but distinguished its facts and holding as applying solely to service by personal
delivery and not to service by mail. The court instead applied the very broad
language regarding substantial compliance in Shamblin, which was decided after
Graff, to hold that acceptance of service by mail by someone allegedly
unauthorized was nonetheless substantial compliance in light of the defendants’
failure to deny that they had received actual notice of the lawsuit. But, after
Shamblin, the Oklahoma Supreme Court applied its holding in Graff to service by
mail in Ferguson Enterprises, Inc. v. H. Webb Enterprises, Inc., 13 P.3d 480
(Okla. 2000).
In Ferguson Enterprises, the plaintiff sent a summons by certified mail to a
defendant corporation’s principal place of business out of state, 7 but the return
receipt was marked “Refused.” Id. at 481 (quotation omitted). The defendant
became aware of the lawsuit upon receiving discovery requests from the plaintiff,
but apparently did not file an answer. See id. In moving to set aside the default
judgment, the defendant contended that the service was invalid because it was
refused by someone in the defendant’s office who was not authorized to accept or
7
Section 2004(E)(2)(c) provides that service may be made outside of
Oklahoma “in the manner prescribed by [§ 2004(C)(2)],” which governs service
by mail. There is no indication in Ferguson Enterprises whether the certified
mailing was sent with restricted delivery.
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refuse service. See id. at 481, 482 n.3. The Oklahoma Supreme Court rejected
the Court of Civil Appeals’ conclusion that the plaintiff substantially complied
with the service statute, see id. at 482, and citing Graff, held that “[h]ere there
was no service shown as service was refused by an allegedly unauthorized
person,” id. at 483-84.
Ferguson Enterprises is the most recent statement of state law by the
state’s highest court. Under the holdings in Graff and its progeny, Ferguson
Enterprises, we are constrained to conclude that the Oklahoma Supreme Court
would hold that a plaintiff fails to substantially comply with a service statute
specifying who is authorized to accept or refuse service on behalf of the
defendant, when service is accepted or refused by an unauthorized person.
Moreover, despite the apparent inconsistency between Graff and Ferguson
Enterprises on the one hand, and Shamblin and Vance on the other, we conclude
that the latter cases appear to be distinguishable from the facts of and issues
raised in this case. While Shamblin and Vance set forth in very broad terms an
approach to be taken when a plaintiff fails to strictly comply with a service
statute, in both of these cases the court was concerned with whether, despite
technical compliance with the applicable statutory requirements, the service was
nonetheless insufficient to satisfy fundamental due process requirements.
Shamblin involved the sufficiency of notice of a tax resale by a county to
the owners of the property, a married couple, and to the mortgagee. 967 P.2d at
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1203-04. The applicable statute for service by mail required only “notice by
certified mail, by mailing to the owner of said real estate . . . and to all
mortgagees of record of said real estate a notice stating the time and place of said
resale and showing the legal description of the real property to be sold.” Id. at
1204 n.4 (alterations omitted). The court considered whether service by mail
upon the wife by delivery to her husband was insufficient to satisfy due process.
Id. at 1203. The Oklahoma Supreme Court did not disagree with the trial court’s
conclusion that the county complied with the statutory requirements, which did
not include restricted delivery to the wife or a return receipt. See id. at 1204-05.
But the court proceeded to analyze whether the husband’s acceptance of service
for his wife was nevertheless constitutionally infirm, see id. at 1208-11,
concluding that “the service on the wife through her husband does not fall here
below the minimum standards of process that [were] her due.” Id. at 1211.
Likewise, as required by the statute, service was sent by certified mail to the
mortgagee of the property, but the lender contended that the service failed to
satisfy due process because an unauthorized person accepted the mailing. Id. at
1206. As to the lender, the court concluded that fact issues in dispute precluded
summary judgment. Id. at 1213. 8
8
The only notice in Shamblin that failed to comply with the applicable
statutory requirements was the separate publication notice, which was alleged not
to identify the location of the resale, among other irregularities. See id. at
1211-12. But the court’s conclusion that the irregularities did not affect the
(continued...)
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In its constitutional analysis, Shamblin cited with approval another case in
which a notice by mail technically complied with the applicable statute, but was
held to be insufficient to satisfy due process. See 967 P.2d at 1209 n.30, 1212
n.45 (citing Luster v. Bank of Chelsea, 730 P.2d 506, 509-10 (Okla. 1986)
(“Although [plaintiffs] argue the trial court correctly found that all matters
pertaining to the tax certificates and the sale at the tax resale were in compliance
with the statutes, this is not determinative of this appeal.”)).
In Vance, the Oklahoma Supreme Court again considered whether service
which satisfied the statutory requirements was constitutionally infirm. In that
case, service in a foreclosure action was personally delivered to one of the
defendants, but she claimed it was invalid because her mental disability prevented
her from recognizing she had been sued. 988 P.2d at 1277. The court declined to
affirm the lower court’s grant of summary judgment on the constitutionality of the
service because of disputed facts concerning the defendant’s mental incapacity.
Id. at 1281.
In this case, as in Graff and Ferguson Enterprises, defendants did not raise
a constitutional claim that service was invalid despite technical compliance with
the applicable statute. They argued that service was invalid because it did not
8
(...continued)
constitutional efficacy of the publication notice is not pertinent to the issue raised
in this case, whether service by mail that is accepted by an unauthorized person is
valid service under § 2004(C)(2).
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satisfy the statutory requirements. In fact, after determining that the plaintiff
failed to substantially comply with the statute, the Oklahoma Supreme Court did
not reach the question of fundamental due process in Graff. See 814 P.2d at 496.
The other cases relied upon by the district court in finding substantial
compliance are also distinguishable from this case. In Nikwei v. Ross School of
Aviation, Inc., 822 F.2d 939, 943 (10th Cir. 1987), and Coulsen v. Owens,
125 P.3d 1233, 1237 (Okla. Civ. App. 2005), the defendants argued that service
was invalid because the certified mailings did not specify restricted delivery. But
in both cases, despite that irregularity, either the defendant himself or another
person authorized under § 2004(C)(2)(c) accepted or refused the service by mail.
See Nikwei, 822 F.2d at 943-44 (affirming trial court’s determination that service
at residence was refused either by defendant or by his wife); Coulsen, 125 P.3d at
1235 (noting process was served on the defendant who forwarded it to his
insurance company). Thus, these cases stand for a proposition not at issue in the
present case: when service is delivered to or refused by the addressee, or by an
authorized person, the failure to specify restricted delivery does not prevent
substantial compliance with the statute.
In contrast, it is undisputed here that Ms. Hukill failed to obtain restricted
delivery to Ms. Musgrove. Nor did she obtain delivery to “a person who is fifteen
(15) years of age or older who resides at [Ms. Musgrove’s] dwelling house or
usual place of abode,” or to an “officer or [an] employee of the registered office
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or principal place of business [of Spirits of Hope] who is authorized to or who
regularly receives certified mail.” § 2004(C)(2)(c). Thus, because Ms. Hukill’s
attempted service by mail was accepted by an unauthorized person, it did not
substantially comply with the statute and was invalid. See Ferguson Enter.,
13 P.3d at 484; Graff, 814 P.2d at 490. Moreover, although we concur with the
district court’s conclusion that defendants had actual notice of the lawsuit in this
case, the holdings in Graff and Ferguson Enterprises preclude us from finding,
based upon that conclusion, that Ms. Hukill substantially complied with the
requirements for service by mail under § 2004(C)(2). See 13 P.3d at 482, 484;
814 P.2d at 492.
Conclusion
Because the service in this case, attempted under Oklahoma law, did not
substantially comply with the law of that state, the district court did not have
personal jurisdiction over Ms. Musgrove and Spirits of Hope. Therefore, the
district court erred in denying defendants’ motion to set aside the default
judgment under Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(4). We REVERSE the district court’s
judgment and REMAND with directions to vacate the default judgment entered
against these defendants.
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