Court Opinion

ID: 4103242
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-11-30 16:02:57.293483+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:46:04.302052
License: Public Domain

Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 574

                   ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
                                      DIVISION I
                                      No. CV-16-146

                                                 Opinion Delivered   November 30, 2016

TRAVIS SEXTON, CHRISTINA BARGIEL,                APPEAL FROM THE SEBASTIAN
and BEAVER LIQUOR, INC.                          COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
                      APPELLANTS                 FORT SMITH DISTRICT
                                                 [NO. CV-13-0901]
V.
                                                 HONORABLE JAMES O. COX,
SCOTT SOWELL, LYNN SOWELL, and                   JUDGE
TOWN & COUNTRY, LLC
                     APPELLEES                   AFFIRMED

                               LARRY D. VAUGHT, Judge

       Appellants Travis Sexton, Christina Bargiel, and Beaver Liquor, Inc., appeal the

Crawford County Circuit Court’s October 22, 2015 order granting summary judgment in favor

of appellees Scott Sowell, Lynn Sowell, and Town & Country, LLC. Appellants argue that the

circuit court’s damage award was clearly erroneous. Because the appellants’ argument on

appeal is not preserved, we affirm.

       This case involves the purchase of a liquor store located in Fort Smith, Arkansas. In

May 2012, appellants and appellees entered into an asset-purchase agreement, whereby

appellants agreed to pay appellees $450,000 for the store assets. Appellants paid appellees

$80,000 at closing, with the remaining $370,000 to be paid pursuant to a promissory note

executed by appellants contemporaneously. The note provided that appellants were to make

monthly payments of $7,153.14 to appellees beginning July 15, 2012, and continuing for sixty

months until paid in full. Appellants also contemporaneously executed and delivered to
                                  Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 574

appellees a security agreement, pledging all of the assets of the store as collateral for payment

of the indebtedness. Finally, the parties executed an assignment of sublease, wherein appellees

assigned their rights, title, and interest pursuant to a sublease of the store premises to

appellants.

       From July 2012 through April 2013, appellants made the required payments pursuant

to the asset-purchase agreement, although some of the payments may not have been timely.

In May 2013, appellant Travis Sexton asked appellee Scott Sowell if he would accept half of

the May payment, and Sowell agreed. Appellants made the June and July 2013 payments.

       Around midnight on August 11, 2013, Sowell texted Sexton and asked for a meeting.

At that meeting, Sowell told Sexton that appellees had repossessed the assets and had changed

the locks at the store.

       Appellants filed a complaint for breach of the asset-purchase agreement and for

conversion against appellees on September 18, 2013.1 Appellees answered and filed a

counterclaim, alleging that appellants had breached the asset-purchase agreement and the

sublease. Thereafter, appellees filed a motion for summary judgment claiming that notice prior

to their repossession of the assets was not required pursuant to the asset-purchase agreement

and the assignment of sublease/sublease. Appellants filed a competing motion for summary

judgment on September 11, 2015, arguing that the facts were undisputed that appellees

breached the asset-purchase agreement by repossessing the store without notice.

       1On October 8, 2015, appellants filed an amended complaint, adding a claim for unjust
enrichment.
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       On October 19, 2015, the circuit court issued a letter opinion denying appellants’

motion for summary judgment and granting appellees’ motion. The court found that based on

the contracts executed by the parties, the facts were undisputed that appellants were in breach

and that appellees were not required to provide notice prior to repossessing the assets. The

circuit court granted appellees rescission of the contracts, awarding appellees possession of

the assets, which it found had retained their $450,000 purchase-price value. The court awarded

no other damages, finding that appellees’ repossession expenses of approximately $81,324.13

were offset by appellants’ $80,000 down payment. On October 22, 2015, the circuit court

issued an order granting summary judgment in favor of appellees.2

       On November 3, 2015, pursuant to Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 52(b), appellants

filed a motion to amend findings of fact and order granting summary judgment. They argued,

for the first time, that the circuit court, when it rescinded the contracts, should have restored

the status quo by accounting for the monthly payments they had made against the promissory

note, entitling them to an award of $91,666.69.3

       On November 19, 2015, appellants filed a notice of appeal from the October 22, 2015

summary-judgment order. Thereafter, appellees, on November 30, 2015, filed a response to

appellants’ motion to amend findings of fact and order granting summary judgment,

requesting the circuit court to remove all references to rescission in its order because neither

       2The  summary-judgment order disposes of appellants’ conversion and unjust-
enrichment claims.

       3Appellants  argued that to restore the parties to the status quo, they were entitled to
$80,000 for their down payment plus $92,990.82 for the monthly payments they had made for
a total of $172,990.82 and that appellees were entitled to $81,324.13 for their repossession
expenses. The difference is $91,666.69.
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party requested rescission. On December 7, 2015, the circuit court entered an amended order

granting summary judgment, which was identical to the October 22, 2015 summary-judgment

order except it contained no rescission findings. Appellants did not file an amended notice of

appeal from the December 7, 2015 order.

       On appeal, appellants raise the argument they made in their November 3, 2015 Rule

52(b) posttrial motion to amend. They contend that, based on the circuit court’s rescission of

the contracts, it erred in failing to account for the monthly payments they made against the

asset-purchase agreement and in failing to award them $91,666.69 to restore the status quo.

We cannot reach the argument because it is not preserved for appeal.

       Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 52(b)(1) provides that if the court neither grants nor

denies the motion within thirty days of the date on which it is filed, it shall be deemed denied

as of the thirtieth day. Ark. R. Civ. P. 52(b)(1) (2016). Here, the circuit court did not take action

on appellants’ motion to amend within the thirty-day window; thus, the motion was deemed

denied on December 3, 2015.

       Because appellants’ November 19, 2015 notice of appeal was filed before the

disposition of their motion to amend, the notice is treated as filed on December 4, 2015, the

day after their motion to amend was deemed denied. Ark. R. App. P.–Civ. 4(b)(2) (2016).

Pursuant to Rule 4(b)(2), appellants’ notice of appeal was effective to appeal only the underlying

order, in this case the October 22, 2015 order granting summary judgment. Ark. R. App. P.–

Civ. 4(b)(2).4 See Tate-Smith v. Cupples, 355 Ark. 230, 244, 134 S.W.3d 535, 543 (2003) (holding

       4The Addition to Reporter’s Notes to Rule 52, 1999 Amendment, provides further
explanation of the rule, stating that the effect of paragraph (b)(2) is to suspend a premature
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that when a posttrial motion has been deemed denied, the only appealable matter is the original

order). Here, appellants’ argument on appeal was made for the first time after the circuit court’s

entry of the October 22, 2015 order granting summary judgment. They could not have made

the rescission-damages argument prior to the entry of the October 22, 2015 because neither

party pled or argued for rescission at trial.

       Appellants’ argument on appeal stems from the deemed denial of their November 3,

2015 motion to amend factual findings and order granting summary judgment. According to

Rule 4(b)(2), a party who seeks to appeal from the denial of the Rule 52(b) motion shall, within

thirty days, amend the previously filed notice. Ark. R. App. P.–Civ. 4(b)(2). See Addition to

Reporter’s Notes to Rule 52, 1999 Amendment (stating that a party seeking to appeal from

disposition of the posttrial motion must amend the original notice to so indicate).

       Appellants did not file an amended notice of appeal from the denial of its November

3, 2015 motion to amend. Therefore, their argument on appeal—the one they made only in

their motion to amend—is not preserved. See Vibo Corp. v. State ex rel. McDaniel, 2011 Ark. 124,

at 12–13, 380 S.W.3d 411, 420–21 (citing Rule 4(b)(2) and holding that the appellant failed to

preserve its argument on appeal where its notice of appeal was filed prior to the disposition

of its motion to amend and was treated as filed on the day after the motion was deemed denied;

that notice was effective to appeal only the underlying judgment; and the appellant failed to

amend the previously filed notice of appeal to include an appeal from the denial of its motion

to amend or alter the judgment); Tate-Smith, 355 Ark. at 244 n.3, 134 S.W.3d at 543 (holding

notice until the motion is ruled on or deemed denied, and a new notice is not necessary to
appeal the underlying case.

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that when a posttrial motion has been deemed denied, the only appealable matter is the original

order and that any previously filed notice of appeal must be amended to appeal from the

deemed-denied motion). Accordingly, we are precluded from reaching appellants’ point on

appeal because it is not preserved. We must affirm.5

       Affirmed.

       ABRAMSON and BROWN, JJ., agree.

       Parker Law Firm, PLLC, by: Stephen C. Parker, Jr., for appellants.

       Hardin, Jesson & Terry, PLC, by: Robert M. Honea; and Witt Law Firm, P.C., by: Neva B.

Witt, for appellees.

       5It is of no significance that the circuit court entered an amended order granting
summary judgment on December 7, 2015. The order was ineffective as to arguments made by
appellants in their motion to amend because that motion had already been deemed denied.
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