Court Opinion

ID: 2722652
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-09-02 15:05:12.134918+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:46:57.422096
License: Public Domain

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 1        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

 2 PATRICIA GUNDERSEN and
 3 JOHN MONAFO,

 4          Petitioners-Appellants,

 5 v.                                                                                   NO. 32,851

 6 CITY OF ROSWELL MUNICIPAL COURT,

 7          Respondent-Appellee,
 8 and

 9   LARRY LOY, Municipal Court Judge,
10   BELINDA FRANCO, Municipal Court Clerk,
11   LISA FRESQUEZ, Municipal Court Clerk,
12   JOHANNA CANTU, Municipal Court Clerk,

13          Parties In Interest-Appellees.

14 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF CHAVES COUNTY
15 Freddie J. Romero, District Judge

16 Patricia Gundersen
17 John Monafo

18 Roswell, NM

19 Pro Se Appellants

20 Hinkle, Hensley, Shanor & Martin, L.L.P.
 1 Richard E. Olson
 2 Roswell, NM

 3 for Appellees

 4                             MEMORANDUM OPINION

 5 VIGIL, Judge.

 6   {1}   Plaintiffs appeal the district court’s refusal to issue a writ of mandamus to the

 7 Roswell Municipal Court. We issued a notice proposing to affirm the district court.

 8 Plaintiffs have responded with a memorandum in opposition, and we have carefully

 9 considered the arguments raised in that memorandum. However, we continue to

10 believe our proposed disposition is correct. We therefore affirm for the reasons stated

11 in this opinion and in the notice of proposed disposition.

12   {2}   As the parties are aware, the legal issue in this case concerns the meaning of the

13 word “issue” in Rule 8-602(A)(3) NMRA, which states that the municipal court judge

14 or clerk “shall issue a subpoena, signed but otherwise in blank, to a party requesting

15 it, who shall fill it in before service.” Plaintiffs argue that this language requires the

16 Municipal Court to provide the physical subpoena form itself to litigants who request

17 issuance of a subpoena. Defendants, on the other hand, contend that litigants such as

18 Plaintiffs must provide the blank form, which will then be signed by the clerk or judge

19 and thereby “issued.”

                                               2
 1   {3}   In the notice of proposed disposition we pointed out that the language of the

 2 rule does not clearly answer the question presented in this case, and we discussed

 3 alternate sources of meaning for the word “issue,” including the Black’s Law

 4 Dictionary definition: “[t]o be put forth officially.” Black’s Law Dictionary 908 (9th

 5 ed. 2009). We also pointed out that in most contexts, courts do not provide litigants

 6 with the physical materials that are necessary to prosecute their case, such as paper on

 7 which to prepare pleadings, computers for filing pleadings electronically, or prepared

 8 orders that a party wishes to have signed by a judge. We concluded by proposing to

 9 hold that the important aspect of the term “issue” in Rule 8-602(A)(3) is the fact that

10 a municipal court imbues the subpoena form with official authority, and that provision

11 of the physical piece of paper making up the subpoena is not contemplated by the rule.

12 We therefore proposed to affirm the district court’s decision.

13   {4}   Plaintiffs have raised a number of arguments in response to the proposed

14 summary disposition. Initially, they inquire about the conversion of this case from an

15 application for interlocutory appeal to an appeal from a final order; they ask whether

16 this Court has considered the arguments and authorities presented in the application

17 for interlocutory appeal, as well as the attachments to that application. The answer is

18 that we have reviewed all of the legal discussion and materials contained in the

19 application and attached thereto.

                                              3
 1   {5}   Plaintiffs next ask for an opportunity to file an amended docketing statement,

 2 or alternatively to have this case placed on the general calendar, or that we review de

 3 novo the meaning of the term “issue.” As to the first request, Plaintiffs have not

 4 indicated why an amended docketing statement would be necessary or helpful in this

 5 case. The application for interlocutory appeal sets out all the necessary facts and

 6 clearly raises the quite narrow legal issue that is at stake in this appeal—the proper

 7 construction of Rule 8-602(A)(3). We therefore deny Plaintiffs’ request. As for the

 8 request to place this case on the general calendar, we do not believe this is the type of

 9 case that would benefit from full briefing. The legal issue involved—whether litigants

10 in municipal courts can be required to submit blank subpoena forms in order to have

11 a subpoena issued—is not significant to a great number of people. Furthermore, it is

12 not complicated, as it requires a simple judgment call concerning the meaning of the

13 rule in question. We therefore deem it appropriate to decide this case on the summary

14 calendar. Finally, we agree with Plaintiffs’ request that we make a de novo

15 determination concerning the meaning of Rule 8-602(A)(3) and the term “issue.”

16 Construction of a rule or statute is a legal question that is addressed de novo by an

17 appellate court, and we have applied that principle in this case. See Grygorwicz v.

18 Trujillo, 2009-NMSC-009, ¶ 7, 145 N.M. 650, 203 P.3d 865 (stating that a lower

19 court’s interpretation of court rules is reviewed de novo).

                                               4
 1   {6}   Plaintiffs next argue that the meaning of the rule should be determined by its

 2 context, the rules of grammar, and the common usage of the words used in the rule.

 3 We completely agree with this statement. See NMSA 1978, § 12-2A-2 (1997). As we

 4 pointed out in the notice of proposed disposition, the word “issue” has a number of

 5 common usages. In our notice we focused on a particular usage which has nothing to

 6 do with physically transferring a piece of paper, but instead relates to clothing a

 7 subpoena with the official authority that is necessary to compel an individual’s

 8 attendance at a hearing or trial. We consider that aspect of “issuance” to be by far the

 9 most significant for carrying out the purposes of a subpoena. Furthermore, we have

10 pointed out the context of the rule, which is part of a system of litigation in which

11 litigants, not the courts, provide their own litigation materials. We therefore believe

12 our construction of Rule 8-602(A)(3) is the correct one.

13   {7}   Plaintiffs next engage in argument based on a similar rule as well as the

14 language of Rule 8-602(A)(3), contending our proposed construction of the rule is

15 erroneous. They point to Rule 1-045.1 NMRA, which according to Plaintiffs is the

16 only instance in New Mexico’s various rules of civil procedure in which a rule

17 explicitly requires parties to submit a form to a court clerk prior to issuance of a

18 subpoena. Rule 1-045.1(B)(1) concerns issuance of a foreign subpoena, and states that

19 a party requesting issuance of such a subpoena “must submit a foreign subpoena to the

                                              5
 1 clerk of the district court where the discovery is sought to be conducted.” According

 2 to Plaintiffs, the absence of a submission requirement in Rule 8-602(A)(3) means the

 3 Municipal Court cannot require such submission. We do not agree. We note first that

 4 Rule 1-045.1’s separation of the party’s act of submission from the court’s act of

 5 issuance of the subpoena supports our interpretation of the word “issue” as it is used

 6 in the rules of civil procedure in general – that it refers to the clothing of the subpoena

 7 with official authority, rather than to both the provision of the physical subpoena form

 8 and the imbuement of that form with the power of the court. We also note that

 9 although Rule 8-602(A)(3) does not mandate the submission of a subpoena form to

10 the clerk, it also does not prohibit a court from requiring such submission. It is

11 possible that in certain circumstances, it will be easier and more cost-effective for a

12 municipal court to both provide the form and give it official effect by issuing it. We

13 see no reason that would not be allowed under the rule; however, we do disagree with

14 Plaintiffs’ argument that the rule requires a municipal court to follow that practice.

15   {8}   Plaintiffs maintain that our proposed construction of Rule 8-602(A)(3) ignores

16 parts of that rule. We point out, however, that other parts of the rule support our

17 construction. Specifically, the second sentence of the rule, discussing subpoenas duces

18 tecum, states that a “judge or clerk may issue a subpoena duces tecum to a party only

19 if the subpoena duces tecum is completed by the party prior to issuance by the judge

                                                6
 1 or clerk.” Rule 8-602(A)(3). If “issuing” a subpoena duces tecum required the court

 2 to both provide the form and sign it, it would not be possible for the party to complete

 3 the subpoena prior to issuance. Instead, this sentence contemplates that a party will

 4 obtain a form for a subpoena duces tecum, complete it, and then submit it to the court,

 5 which will then issue it. We see no reason why the Supreme Court, in enacting Rule

 6 8-602(A)(3), would have used the word “issue” in two different ways in the same rule.

 7 We therefore will not construe the rule to require a municipal court to both provide

 8 the physical subpoena form to a litigant and, in addition, to do what is necessary to

 9 provide that form with official imprimatur. Again, we note that the rule does not

10 preclude a court from doing so; it simply does not require such action.

11   {9}    Plaintiffs’ final argument is a global one, emphasizing the authorities they have

12 cited supporting their interpretation of the rule. We agree that persuasive arguments

13 can be made on both sides of this issue. However, given the context of Rule 8-

14 602(A)(3) as well as the textual analysis set out above, we continue to believe that our

15 interpretation of the rule is correct.

16   {10}   For the reasons discussed in this Opinion and in our notice of proposed

17 disposition, we affirm the district court’s decision.

18   {11}   IT IS SO ORDERED.

19                                           __________________________________

                                                7
1                               MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge

2 WE CONCUR:

3 ___________________________________
4 RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Chief Judge

5 ___________________________________
6 J. MILES HANISEE, Judge

                                  8