59 entries in 'Procedure'

  1. Court Unconvinced by "You Haven't Said So Before"Argument
  2. "Excusable Neglect" Is No Excuse for Filing an Untimely Response to a Rule 56 Motion
  3. You Can Designate New Evidence in a Reply During Summary Judgment
  4. A Landlord's Failure to File a Timely Summary Judgment Response Gives the Tenant an Automatic Win
  5. Not Doing Anything in a Case for Almost a Decade Will Get You Dismissed
  6. Court Cannot Grant Summary Judgment Because Plaintiff Has Not Quantified Damages
  7. Proof of a Negative Not Required for Summary Judgment
  8. A Nonparty Is Not Entitled to a Change of Judge in Contempt Proceedings
  9. Indiana Supreme Court Refines Standard of Review for Preliminary Injunctions
  10. An Appeal from an Order without Rule 54(b)'s Magic Language is Premature
  11. A Motion Seeking Certification of an Interlocutory Order Must Be Filed within 30 Days
  12. State's Evidence Excluded Because Its Witness & Exhibit List Was Untimely
  13. Indiana Supreme Court Identifies Several Serious Deficiencies in CHINS Proceeding
  14. Remonstrators Must Move to Stay Proceedings on Appeal
  15. Appeal Dismissed Because of "Flagrant and Numerous" Appellate Rules Violations
  16. Test for Federal Abstention Is Not the Same as the Test for Res Judicata
  17. Failing to File an Answer to a Will Contest May Result in a Default Judgment
  18. How Do You Waive a Judgment on the Evidence Argument?
  19. Know Your Local Rules
  20. A Court Cannot Exclude Evidence Because It Is Self-Serving
  21. Why Filing an Appellate Brief Matters
  22. Indiana Court of Appeals Disagrees Over Effect of Admissions
  23. Substantial Compliance with Contents of Notice of Appeal Is Insufficient
  24. Court Shows It Is Serious About Appellate Procedure
  25. Partial Judgment Awarding Damages Is Appealable as a Matter of Right
  26. Another Jury Verdict Is Reinstated Because Trial Court Did Not Provide Specific Reasons for Setting the Verdict Aside
  27. Party Who Doesn't Respond to a Motion for Summary Judgment in 30 Days Is Not Saved by Filing Cross-Motion
  28. Dispute in Court of Appeals Over What Inferences Are Reasonable
  29. Court of Appeals Provides Lesson in How to Ensure a Case Stays Dismissed under T.R. 41(E)
  30. Indiana Does Not Apply Same Standard for Relating Back as Federal Courts
  31. Jury Verdict Reinstated Because Trial Court Did Not Provide Specific Reasons for Setting Verdict Aside
  32. When Does an Amended Complaint Relate Back in Federal Court?
  33. Request a Stay if You Are Trying to Have a District Judge Removed Via Mandamus
  34. Default Judgment Set Aside Because of Insufficient Process
  35. Defaulted Defendant Allowed Hearing on Unliquidated Damages, Even Though Issue Was Waived
  36. Exhibits Attached to a Complaint Cannot Be Considered When Ruling on a 12(B)(6) Motion
  37. Party Can Appeal After an Order Denying a Rule 59(e) Motion from a Denial of 60(B) Relief
  38. In Federal Court, the Denial of Summary Judgment Cannot Be Reviewed After Trial
  39. Posner on Plausability
  40. District Court Erred By Not Allowing Plaintiff to Amend Complaint After 12(b)(6) Dismissal
  41. Order Granting Summary Judgment to Insurer on Duty to Defend Is Not Immediately Appealable
  42. When Mirror-Image Suits Filed in 7th Circuit, There Is No Presumption in Favor of First-Filed Forum
  43. Always File Your 56(F) Motion
  44. 7th Circuit Holds that Plaintiff May Present Facts Outside Complaint in Opposition to 12(b)(6) Motion
  45. Proof That You Should File a Cross-Appeal If There Is More Than One Way to Support the Trial Court's Judgment
  46. Indiana Supreme Court Amends Rules as to CCS Entries, Model Jury Instructions, Security for Stay During Appeal, and Other Matters.
  47. Motion under 12(B)(1) Can Be Converted to a 12(B)(6), But the 12(B)(1) Evidence Must Be Ignored If the Parties Are Not Afforded the Opportunity to Present Rule 56 Materials
  48. Published Opinion Dismisses Appeal Sua Sponte Pursuant to Trial Rule 53.3(A)
  49. Trial Rule 7(A) Requires a Responsive Pleading to a Will Contest
  50. Party Must Do More than Indirectly Mention an Issue to Preserve It for Appeal
  51. Those who Live in Glass Houses ...
  52. Court of Appeals Finds Excusable Neglect for Pro Se Appellant
  53. Party Can Present Issue for First Time in Motion to Correct Error
  54. Order Signed by Magistrate Can Be Final
  55. Court of Appeals Criticizes Wholesale Adoption of Proposed Findings
  56. 7th Circuit Clarifies Federal Pleading Standard
  57. Careful Pleading Potentially Saves Case from Dismissal
  58. Failing to Appeal an Adverse Judgment
  59. A Reminder to Build Your Record

Court Unconvinced by "You Haven't Said So Before"Argument

Procedure/Appellate Bookmark and Share
April 3, 2012

When I was an appellate clerk, one of my co-clerks commented on how most of the cases we dealt with were hard. My response was that the easy cases usually didn't make it to the appellate courts. For that reason, I've always felt that part of any appellate court's job in our common-law system is to make law. The Indiana Court of Appeals proved that point in Zeise & Sons Excavating, Inc. v. Boyer Const. Corp., ___ N.E.2d ___ (Ind. Ct. App. 2012), Cause No. 45A03-1104-PL-180.
Lesson:
    Equity, rather than law, governs piercing the corporate veil.

Brad A. Catlin
Price Waicukauski & Riley, LLC
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"Excusable Neglect" Is No Excuse for Filing an Untimely Response to a Rule 56 Motion

Procedure/Summary Judgment Bookmark and Share
April 2, 2012

Trial Rule 56 provides that a response to a motion for summary judgment is to be filed within 30 days after service of the motion. Attorneys who miss this deadline try to find ways around it; the attorney in Delage Laden Fin. Servs., Inc. v. Community Mental Health Center, Inc., ___ N.E.2d ___ (Ind. Ct. App. 2012), Cause No. 15A05-1107-CC-366, is no exception.  In order to save his client's case, counsel argued that Trial Rule 6(B)(2) gives him an opportunity to correct any mistake caused by excusable neglect. But while the trial court agreed, the Court of appeals did not.
Lesson:
    A party's failure to respond to a motion for summary judgment within the time required by Rule 56 cannot be forgiven by reliance on excusable neglect.

Brad A. Catlin
Price Waicukauski & Riley, LLC
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You Can Designate New Evidence in a Reply During Summary Judgment

Procedure/Summary Judgment Bookmark and Share
March 25, 2012

Last week, the Indiana Court of Appeals clarified one aspect of the procedure surrounding summary judgment in Auto-Owners Ins. Co. v. Benko, ___ N.E.2d ___ (Ind. Ct. App. 2012), Cause No. 75A04-1108-CT-440. The Court also addressed the application of the statute of limitations in a UIM action.
Lessons:
  1. A party who has moved for summary judgment may file a reply brief that designates additional evidence under Trial Rule 56.
  2. Courts will not encourage insureds to file UIM claims at the same time that they file a complaint against a tortfeasor.
Brad A. Catlin
Price Waicukauski & Riley, LLC
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A Landlord's Failure to File a Timely Summary Judgment Response Gives the Tenant an Automatic Win

Procedure/Summary Judgment Bookmark and Share
March 16, 2012

This blog has warned you before about the dangers of not timely responding to a motion for summary judgment. The Indiana Court of Appeals provided that lesson again in Guardianship of Gardner v. Prochno, ___ N.E.2d ___ (Ind. Ct. App. 2012), Cause No. 50A03-1108-PL-385.
Lessons:
  1. All evidence submitted to a court in response to a motion for summary judgment that is untimely will be stricken.
  2. A landlord must give written notice to terminate a year-to-year lease.
Brad A. Catlin
Price Waicukauski & Riley, LLC
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Not Doing Anything in a Case for Almost a Decade Will Get You Dismissed

Procedure/Failure to Prosecute Bookmark and Share
March 16, 2012

The Indiana Court of Appeals recently decided a case that was old. As the Court in United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joinders of America, Local Union No. 2371 v. Merchandising Equip. Group, Division of MEG Manufacturing Corp., ___ N.E.2d ___ (Ind. Ct. App. 2012), Cause No. 33A05-1107-CP-345, points out, the trial court's order dismissing the case for failure to prosecute came after the case had been pending for over 18 years and the plaintiffs took no action to push the case to resolution for a decade. However, the plaintiffs had a good reason for opposing the dismissal--their summary judgment motion had been awaiting a decision for fourteen years. The Court's rationale, therefore, helps demonstrate a party's obligation to keep a case moving forward.
Lessons:
  1. A plaintiff must have a very good excuse for not taking any action in a case for almost a decade to avoid dismissal.
  2. Waiting for a judge to rule on a dispositive motion is not a good excuse for not actively litigating a case.
Brad A. Catlin
Price Waicukauski & Riley, LLC
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Court Cannot Grant Summary Judgment Because Plaintiff Has Not Quantified Damages

Procedure/Summary Judgment Bookmark and Share
March 16, 2012

In Malik v. Falcon Holdings, LLC, ___ F.3d ___ (7th Cir. 2012), Cause No. 11-2815, a district court granted summary judgment to the defendants on grounds rejected by the Seventh Circuit. The defendants tried to defend the judgment by arguing that summary judgment was proper for other reasons, reasons the Court quickly rejected.

Defendants do try to defend their judgment by arguing that plaintiffs waited too long to quantify their damages. According to defendants, details should have been set out before the close of discovery, perhaps as early as the initial disclosures under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(a)(1)(A), and plaintiffs' delay entitles them to prevail outright. This is absurd. Litigants are entitled to use discovery to learn facts (such as how much Sentinel received in the buyout) that will affect the remedy; a party can wait until the facts are in hand before adding specifics to the claim adumbrated in the complaint. Anyway, if defendants thought that plaintiffs had failed to perform their obligations under the rules, they should have asked the district judge for a sanction before discovery closed rather that waiting (as they did) until their motion for summary judgment. Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(c)(1) gives the judge discretion to match a remedy to the wrong.


Lessons:
  1. A defendant cannot obtain summary judgment merely because a plaintiff has not quantified his damages.
  2. The proper avenue to challenge a plaintiff's failure to quantify damages is through Civil Rule 37.
Brad A. Catlin
Price Waicukauski & Riley, LLC
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Proof of a Negative Not Required for Summary Judgment

Procedure/Summary Judgment Bookmark and Share
February 27, 2012

The Indiana Court of Appeals has issued a decision that may have a large impact on summary judgment practice in Indiana. In Commr. of the Indiana Dept. of Ins. v. Black, ___ N.E.2d ___ (Ind. Ct. App. 2012), the Court essentially held that Indiana will apply the standard set forth in Celotex v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317 (1986), at least in some circumstances.
Lessons:
  1. The Celotex rule now applies to Indiana state court cases and Jarboe does not (subject to further ruling by the Indiana Supreme Court).
  2. An appellate court can convert a 12(B)(6)motion to a motion for summary judgment without giving notice and an opportunity to be heard if there’s no prejudice to the parties.
Ronald J. Waicukauski
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A Nonparty Is Not Entitled to a Change of Judge in Contempt Proceedings

Procedure Bookmark and Share
February 9, 2012

In In re the Paternity of N.T., ___ N.E.2d ___ (Ind. Ct. App. 2012), Cause No. 09A02-1108-JP-693, the trial court began contempt proceedings against a child's mother and stepfather because they hid the child from the father for over four years. The stepfather had not previously been a party tot he proceedings and moved for a change of judge after he was served with the application for contempt. The trial court granted that motion and the father appealed.

On appeal, the Court held that courts have the inherent power to hold nonparties in contempt and that doing so does not make them parties to the proceeding. As only parties are entitled to a change of judge under Trial Rule 76, the trial court erred when granting the stepfather's motion.

Lesson:
  1. A nonparty is not entitled to a change of judge merely because contempt proceedings have been brought against that nonparty.
Brad A. Catlin
Price Waicukauski & Riley, LLC
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Indiana Supreme Court Refines Standard of Review for Preliminary Injunctions

Procedure/Appellate Bookmark and Share
January 6, 2012

On December 29, 2011, the Indiana Supreme Court decided a challenge to Indiana's Autodialer Law, a law that regulates the use of devices that select and dial telephone numbers and then disseminate prerecorded messages to those numbers in State of Indiana v. Economic Freedom Fund, ___ N.E.2d ___ (Ind. 2011), Cause No. 07S00-1008-MI-411. The court found that the trial court erred in finding that the law's challengers had a reasonable likelihood of success on their claims. But while the merits are interesting, the part of this decision that will likely have the greatest effect on Indiana's legal community is the portion of the opinion that addressed the standard of review.
Lessons:
  1. Review of a grant or denial of a preliminary injunction is confined to the law applied by the trial court, and and appellate court should evaluate only the merits of arguments reached by the trial court.
  2. It is unclear whether this standard applies to other instances in which findings of fact and conclusions of law are mandatory under Trial Rule 52(A).
Brad A. Catlin
Price Waicukauski & Riley, LLC
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An Appeal from an Order without Rule 54(b)'s Magic Language is Premature

Procedure/Appellate Bookmark and Share
December 29, 2011

The Indiana Law Update is back from its brief hiatus (Merry Christmas to you, too) and is gearing up for the end-of-the-year festivities--that time of year in which appellate courts try to clear their dockets before opening a new calendar. Therefore, we have a lot to cover in a short period of time.

Our intent is to cover the cases decided since December 13, 2011 in chronological order. The first case we bring to you was decided by the Seventh Circuit on December 15, 2011 and addressed an issue that I am surprised was not addressed earlier. In Brown v. Columbia Sussex Corp., ___ F.3d ___ (7th Cir. 2011), Cause No. 10-3849, the Court was asked to determine whether it had jurisdiction over an order which did not contain 54(b) language if the district court entered a new order containing such language while the appeal was pending. The Court held that it did have jurisdiction.
Lessons:
  1. An appeal from an interlocutory order entered without 54(b) language may be treated as premature if the district court later enters an identical order containing the 54(b) magic language.
  2. Appeals from orders which would be "clearly interlocutory" to an unsophisticated litigant cannot be saved in such a manner.
Brad A. Catlin
Price Waicukauski & Riley, LLC
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