Court Opinion

ID: 4356310
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-01-07 08:06:05.209586+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:46:24.061796
License: Public Domain

Cite as 2018 Ark. 386
                   SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
                                        No.   CV-18-385

JAMES E. WHITNEY                                Opinion Delivered:   December 20, 2018
                               APPELLANT
                              PRO SE NOTICE AND ADVISEMENT
V.                            (MOTION TO FILE NONCONFORMING
                              BRIEF)
ASA HUTCHINSON, GOVERNOR      [LINCOLN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
                     APPELLEE NO. 40CV-17-80]

                                                APPEAL DISMISSED; MOTION MOOT.

                      COURTNEY HUDSON GOODSON, Associate Justice

       Appellant James E. Whitney appeals the circuit court’s denial of his motion for

reconsideration of an order that set a partial filing fee of $35 with respect to Whitney’s pro

se petition for writ of mandamus. Now before us is Whitney’s motion entitled “Notice

and Advisement” in which he seeks leave to file a brief on appeal that does not conform to

the rules of this court. Because we find that it is clear from the record that the circuit court

did not err when it denied the motion for reconsideration, we dismiss the appeal. The

motion to file a nonconforming brief is moot.

       The order setting the initial filing fee was entered on September 12, 2017. Whitney

did not file his request for reconsideration until March 28, 2018. The circuit court denied

the request because it was not timely filed pursuant to Rule 60(a) of the Arkansas Rules of

Civil Procedure (2017). Rule 60(a) allows a party to an action to file a motion for the court
to modify or vacate a judgment, order, or decree in a civil action to correct errors or

mistakes or to prevent the miscarriage of justice. Gonder v. Kelley, 2017 Ark. 239, reh’g

denied (Sept. 14, 2017). The motion must be filed within ninety days of the date the

judgment, order, or decree was entered, unless the error was a clerical error that may be

corrected at any time under Rule 60(b). Id. A true clerical error is “essentially one that

arises not from an exercise of the court’s judicial discretion but from a mistake on the part

of its officers (or perhaps someone else).” Francis v. Protective Life Ins. Co., 371 Ark. 285,

293, 265 S.W.3d 117, 123 (2007) (quoting Luckes v. Luckes, 262 Ark. 770, 772, 561
S.W.2d 300, 302 (1978)).

       Whitney did not ask for reconsideration of the September 12, 2017 order until 197

days after the order had been entered. His motion fell under that part of Rule 60 that

allows a court to modify or correct an order to prevent a miscarriage of justice.

Accordingly, Whitney’s motion was untimely, and the circuit court was not wrong to deny

it.

       Appeal dismissed; motion moot.

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