Court Opinion

ID: 4433299
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-08-26 18:09:50.618864+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:52:58.385552
License: Public Domain

08/26/2019
                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
                             AT JACKSON
                                  June 18, 2019 Session

SOLOMON MENCHE v. WHITE EAGLE PROPERTY GROUP LLC ET AL.

                 Appeal from the Chancery Court for Shelby County
                  No. CH-16-1060 JoeDae L. Jenkins, Chancellor
                      ___________________________________

                            No. W2018-01336-COA-R3-CV
                        ___________________________________

THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., dissenting.

       I respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision to affirm the trial court’s award
of attorney’s fees and expenses to the defendants following the entry of an agreed order
granting a voluntary nonsuit to the plaintiff. Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 41.01
governs voluntary dismissals and provides in pertinent part:

       (1) Subject to the provisions of Rule 23.05, Rule 23.06, or Rule 66 or of
       any statute, and except when a motion for summary judgment made by an
       adverse party is pending, the plaintiff shall have the right to take a
       voluntary nonsuit to dismiss an action without prejudice by filing a written
       notice of dismissal at any time before the trial of a cause and serving a copy
       of the notice upon all parties, and if a party has not already been served
       with a summons and complaint, the plaintiff shall also serve a copy of the
       complaint on that party; or by an oral notice of dismissal made in open
       court during the trial of a cause; or in jury trials at any time before the jury
       retires to consider its verdict and prior to the ruling of the court sustaining a
       motion for a directed verdict. If a counterclaim has been pleaded by a
       defendant prior to the service upon the defendant of plaintiff’s motion to
       dismiss, the defendant may elect to proceed on such counterclaim in the
       capacity of a plaintiff.

       Prior to the adoption of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure, our Supreme
Court rendered an opinion in Thompson v. Thompson, 40 Tenn. 527, 528 (1859),
concerning the effect of a plaintiff’s voluntary dismissal of an action. In Thompson,
following the plaintiff’s voluntary nonsuit of her complaint for divorce, her attorneys
filed an application in the matter, seeking payment of their fees for services rendered to
her. Id. The trial court subsequently ordered that the plaintiff’s husband would be
required to pay such fees. Id. On appeal, the High Court reversed the trial court’s ruling,
stating:

       It is clear that the Chancellor had no power to make any such order. First,
       by section 3199 of the Code, “suits may be dismissed, in writing, out of
       term time as well as in term.” Under this provision, the present suit was
       dismissed. The dismissal, in vacation, puts an end to the suit, and
       terminates the control of the court over it, as fully as a dismissal in term
       time. By the dismissal in either mode, by the voluntary act of the parties,
       the power and jurisdiction of the court over the parties and the cause are at
       an end, except, to render a judgment for the costs of suit, or to make such
       orders as may be indispensable to give effect to the dismissal. In this view,
       the order of the Chancellor was wholly unauthorized.

Id.

        Similarly, under the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure, this Court has ruled that
the trial court has no power to act in a matter following a plaintiff’s decision to seek a
voluntary dismissal pursuant to Rule 41.01. See Rose v. Bushon, No. E2015-00644-
COA-R3-CV, 2016 WL 7786449, at *4 (Tenn. Ct. App. Mar. 28, 2016). In Rose, the
plaintiff filed a notice of voluntary dismissal with the trial court concerning her claim
following her receipt of a motion filed by the defendants in which they sought to
disqualify the plaintiff’s counsel. Id. at *1. Despite the filing of the notice of voluntary
dismissal, the trial court proceeded with a previously scheduled hearing on the motion to
disqualify. Id. The plaintiff’s counsel did not appear at the hearing, assuming that the
case would be dismissed. Id. The trial court entered a subsequent order dismissing the
matter in accordance with the plaintiff’s notice of voluntary dismissal. Id.

        Nine days later, the Rose defendants filed a motion seeking to alter or amend the
order of dismissal, arguing that the trial court had, at the hearing, orally granted their
motion to disqualify the plaintiff’s counsel and granted them attorney’s fees. Id. The
trial court subsequently entered an order granting the motion to disqualify, which order
also provided that the plaintiff would pay attorney’s fees to the defendants in the amount
of $7,779. Id. The trial court noted that the order would be entered nunc pro tunc to the
date of the hearing. Id. The plaintiff then filed a motion seeking to have this order set
aside, which the trial court denied. Id.

       On appeal to this Court, the Rose plaintiff argued that the trial court erred in
ordering the disqualification of her counsel and awarding attorney’s fees to the
defendants after her complaint had been voluntarily dismissed pursuant to Rule 41.01.
Id. This Court agreed, stating in pertinent part:

                                           -2-
       In the present case, it is undisputed that none of the “exceptions” in Rule
       41.01 are applicable here. It is also undisputed that plaintiff’s notice of
       voluntary nonsuit was properly filed in the trial court on October 13, 2014,
       the same day plaintiff sent notice of same to defendants’ counsel. Under
       the plain language of Rule 41.01 and the opinions construing it, the nonsuit
       was taken and occurred on that date, and all that remained was the
       “ministerial and procedural” step of entry of an order of dismissal without
       prejudice. The trial court took that step one week later by entry of its order
       on October 20, 2014. There is no subsequent order in the record that
       discusses, alters, amends, vacates, or otherwise disturbs this order. Under
       these circumstances, we conclude that it was error for the trial court to
       order the disqualification of plaintiff’s counsel and award attorney’s fees,
       after plaintiff had functionally and effectively ended this action by
       exercising her right to take a voluntary nonsuit.

Id. at *4 (emphasis added). Ergo, this Court unequivocally held in Rose that absent a
subsequent order vacating or “otherwise disturb[ing]” an order of voluntary dismissal, the
trial court loses the authority to act in the matter. See id.; see also Martin v. Washmaster
Auto Ctr., Inc., No. 01-A-01-9305-CV-00224, 1993 WL 241315, at *2 (Tenn. Ct. App.
July 2, 1993) (“No present controversy exists after the plaintiff takes a nonsuit. The
lawsuit is concluded and can only be resurrected if and when the plaintiff recommences
the action.”).

        The majority distinguishes the Rose case based on the fact that in Rose, no motion
for summary judgment had been filed by the opposing party. The majority opinion states
that “[b]ecause Appellee’s motion for summary judgment was pending, Appellant’s
nonsuit was dependent upon Appellees’ consent or a determination by the trial court that
the circumstances warranted dismissal despite the pendency of a motion for summary
judgment.” The majority further states that “Appellant admits [in his brief] that
Appellees had the right to insist that certain issues be reserved when the order of
voluntary dismissal was entered but contends that Appellees[] failed to properly exercise
that right.” Accordingly, the majority opinion concludes that, for these reasons, “Rose is
simply inapposite here.”

       I respectfully submit that the reasons provided for distinguishing the Rose opinion
appear to present a distinction without a difference. Although the Rose Court notes that
none of the “exceptions” listed in Rule 41.01 were present, presumably highlighting that
no motion for summary judgment had been filed and that no statute or rule precluded a
voluntary nonsuit, the Rose Court proceeded to analyze the issue pursuant to the
applicable case law concerning Rule 41.01. See Rose, 2016 WL 7786449, at *4. In other
words, the Rose Court’s mention of the fact that no exception was present in that case
simply pointed out that there was no issue regarding a pending summary judgment
motion or contradictory rule or statute that would need to be analyzed. In contrast to the
                                            -3-
majority opinion’s suggestion, I submit that the lack of a pending summary judgment
motion was not the predicate of the Rose Court’s ruling concerning the effect of a Rule
41.01 voluntary dismissal.

       The majority primarily relies on this Court’s ruling in Thompson v. Logan, No.
M2005-02379-COA-R3-CV, 2007 WL 2405130, at *10 (Tenn. Ct. App. Aug. 23, 2007);
however, I believe the Thompson opinion to be more distinguishable from the facts of the
case at bar than the Rose opinion. In Thompson, the defendant had filed a pretrial motion
to compel regarding discovery, in which he also sought attorney’s fees. Id. The trial
court did not rule on the motion when it later entered its judgment following a bench trial.
Id. After the plaintiffs filed their notice of appeal, the trial court set a hearing concerning
the claim for attorney’s fees contained in the pretrial motion to compel. Id. at *9.
Despite the plaintiffs’ objection, the trial court awarded attorney’s fees to the defendant.
Id.

       On appeal, the Thompson plaintiffs argued that the trial court had lost jurisdiction
to award sanctions after the notice of appeal was filed and that jurisdiction rested solely
with this Court. Id. Although acknowledging that the trial court retained the authority to
act on “ancillary” or “collateral” matters after the filing of a notice of appeal, such as
enforcement and collection of a judgment, this Court determined that “motions made
before judgment based on prejudgment conduct” should not be considered “ancillary” to
the judgment. Id. at *10. Nonetheless, this Court ultimately determined that the trial
court’s judgment following trial was not final because it left unresolved the issue of
attorney’s fees to be awarded in the discovery dispute. Id. at *11. The Thompson Court
therefore treated the subsequent order awarding fees as the final order and the plaintiffs’
notice of appeal as premature but still effective. Id.

       On this point, the majority opinion states that the “holding” from Thompson is that
“a case cannot be final and appealable under Rule 3 in the absence of an adjudication of a
pending prejudgment motion for sanctions.”1 Although this is a correct statement of the
law with regard to judgments rendered by a trial court with a claim for attorney’s fees
remaining unresolved, it does not necessarily follow that the same would be true with
regard to a voluntary dismissal of a lawsuit by a plaintiff, especially a voluntary dismissal

1
  The majority opinion distinguishes this Court’s opinion in Johnson v. Parkwest Medical Center, No.
E2013-01228-COA-R3-CV, 2014 WL 3765702, at *1 (Tenn. Ct. App. July 31, 2014), from the “holding”
of Thompson, noting that Johnson also involved an unresolved pretrial motion for sanctions that was not
addressed by the trial court’s final judgment. In Johnson, however, the pretrial motion for sanctions was
filed by the plaintiff rather than the defendant, and when the trial court entered its final order in the
matter, the court stated that it was dismissing all of the plaintiff’s claims against the defendant. Id. at *3.
Therefore, the trial court’s order in Johnson appeared to be a final order because it disposed of all of the
plaintiff’s claims, and the parties treated it as such. Id. The issue of sanctions was remanded by this
Court because the matter was remanded to the trial court for reconsideration of the trial court’s grant of
partial summary judgment. Id. at *9.
                                                    -4-
to which the defendants have acquiesced without reserving their motion for attorney’s
fees or sanctions. I therefore submit that the facts in Rose are more analogous to the facts
in the instant action.

       As the majority opinion properly points out in footnote seven, a previously pled
counterclaim would survive the voluntary nonsuit—such is clearly specified in Rule
41.01. See Salsman v. Texcor Indus., Inc., No. W2001-00730-COA-R9-CV, 2002 WL
1838135, at *3 (Tenn. Ct. App. July 29, 2002). This Court has also held that the trial
court retains jurisdiction to extend or enforce a protective order entered in a matter that
was later voluntarily dismissed, based largely on the protections provided by Tennessee
Rule of Civil Procedure 26.03. See Autin v. Goetz, 524 S.W.3d 617, 637-38 (Tenn. Ct.
App. 2017).2 Neither of these scenarios applies to this action because the case at bar does
not involve a counterclaim or a motion to extend a protective order.

       For the foregoing reasons, I am of the opinion that the trial court erred in awarding
sanctions to the defendants after the defendants had acquiesced in the plaintiff’s request
to voluntarily dismiss his claims and the trial court had granted the dismissal. As this
Court concluded in Rose, the plaintiff “had functionally and effectively ended this action”
by taking a voluntary nonsuit. See 2016 WL 7786449, at *4. At that point, the present
controversy no longer existed. See Martin, 1993 WL 241315, at *2. I therefore
respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision to affirm the trial court’s judgment.

                                                            _________________________________
                                                            THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, JUDGE

2
  In Autin, this Court stated that Salsman stands for the proposition that “the trial court retains jurisdiction
to grant a motion that was pending prior to the filing of plaintiff’s notice of voluntary dismissal.” See 524
S.W.3d at 637. Salsman, however, involved a motion to amend to add a counterclaim, which was filed
before the nonsuit was taken. See 2002 WL 1838135, at *2. The Salsman Court determined that because
the motion to amend to add a counterclaim was pending when the nonsuit was taken, the counterclaim
would be deemed pled and would therefore fall into the exception for counterclaims found within Rule
41.01. Id. at *4.
                                                     -5-