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Supreme Court of Alabama Opinions | Varden Capital Properties, LLC v. Reese | Docket: 1190692 Opinion Date: December 18, 2020 Judge: Sellers Areas of Law: Civil Procedure, Personal Injury | Varden Capital Properties, LLC ("Varden"), appealed an interlocutory circuit court order denying Varden's motion for summary judgment based on the statute of limitations. Alexis Reese alleges that, on October 29, 2016, she suffered a fall on real property owned or maintained by Varden. On October 29, 2018, exactly two years later, on the last day before the statute of limitations expired, Reese sued Varden, alleging negligence and wantonness. Reese did not request the circuit clerk to serve the complaint and summons by certified mail. Instead, she submitted a summons along with her complaint indicating that a private process server would be used to accomplish service. A process server served the complaint and summons at an address in Montgomery on February 6, 2019, 100 days after the complaint was filed. The address to which the materials were served was not Varden's; notwithstanding, Varden learned of the suit and appeared for the sole purpose of filing a motion to quash service. The trial court gave Reese more time to serve Varden's agent at the correct address. On June 14, 2019, Reese served Varden by certified mail by the deadline set by the trial court. The Alabama Supreme Court reversed, finding that although Reese used a process server in an attempt to ensure that service was made at the correct address, she pointed to no evidence of intent, no evidence establishing when she hired a process server, and no evidence demonstrating that any steps at all were taken to discover the proper address for service. Indeed, even 100 days after filing the complaint, she simply served it at the incorrect address she had when the complaint was filed, "indicating that any effort to identify the correct address was minimal at best." | | Williams v. Mari Properties, LLC | Docket: 1190555 Opinion Date: December 18, 2020 Judge: Stewart Areas of Law: Civil Procedure, Real Estate & Property Law, Trusts & Estates | Eleanor Williams appealed a probate court order denying her request for redemption of certain real property. In 2003, the State purchased property located in Birmingham ("the property") at a tax sale after the then owners, Benjamin and Marzella Rosser, failed to pay ad valorem taxes. The State sold the property in 2016 for $1,000 to Waynew Global Holdings, LLC ("WGH"). In February 2017, WGH sold the property to Mari Properties, LLC ("Mari"), for $5,000, and Mari recorded the deed to the property. Williams claimed that she inherited the property from the Rossers in or around March 2003. In September 2017, Williams petitioned for redemption of the property under section 40-10-120, Ala. Code 1975, with which she tendered $1,100. The probate court granted Williams petition, thereby ordering Mari to compute and submit the amount of those items and stated that, upon receipt of those figures, the probate court would enter an amendment to the order and direct payment by Williams. The probate court did not vest title of the property in Williams. Mari, however, moved to vacate the probate's order, arguing the court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction over the redemption petition because, it argued, Williams was required under 40-10-120 to redeem the property through statutory redemption within three years of the May 13, 2003, tax sale. Mari contended in the motion that the only redemption process available to Williams was judicial redemption under section 40-10-83, Ala. Code 1975, and that the circuit court had exclusive jurisdiction over that process. Despite Mari's filing of the notice of appeal to the circuit court, the parties continued filing documents in the probate court. By March 6, 2020, the probate court reversed course, vacating its earlier judgment in favor of Williams for redemption under 40-10-120, and holding that Williams should have filed her redemption petition with the circuit court. The Alabama Supreme Court determined that once Mari appealed to the circuit court, the probate court's jurisdiction was divested, making all orders filed after Mari's circuit court suit void. | | Martin v. Martin | Docket: 1181002 Opinion Date: December 18, 2020 Judge: Mitchell Areas of Law: Civil Procedure, Trusts & Estates | Thomas Martin ("Thomas") appealed a circuit court judgment dismissing his declaratory-judgment action for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. Henry Thomas Martin ("Henry") died and was survived by his wife, Sheila Martin ("Sheila"), and his two children, Thomas and Dawn Michelle Martin ("Dawn"). Among other dispositions, Henry's will created a testamentary trust for the benefit of Dawn ("the testamentary trust"). The will directed the trustee to hold 25% of Henry's residuary estate in trust and to pay Dawn, in estimated equal monthly installments, the net income from the trust along with any surplus net incomes. Following Henry's death, Dawn died without a will. Henry's will was silent, however, about what happened to the principal of the testamentary trust upon Dawn's death. While the probate court proceedings were pending, Thomas filed a complaint at circuit court seeking a judgment to declare: (1) his interest in reversions held by Henry's heirs; (2) the proper distribution of any property held in such an reversionary trust; and (3) the various rights of the parties to Henry's assets at the time of Henry's death. Shiela, as personal representative to the estate, moved to dismiss Thomas' suit, arguing the circuit court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction. The Alabama Supreme Court reversed the circuit court, finding that although certain probate courts in Alabama were vested with jurisdiction to hear cases involving testamentary tryst, the probate court in this case was not one of them. As a result, only the circuit court held subject-matter jurisdiction to consider arguments about whether the testamentary trust continues or has terminated. | | Newsome v. Balch & Bingham, LLP, et al. | Dockets: 1180302, 1180252 Opinion Date: December 18, 2020 Judge: Per Curiam Areas of Law: Civil Procedure | Attorney Burt Newsome and his law practice Newsome Law, LLC (collectively, "the Newsome plaintiffs"), sued attorney Clark Cooper; Cooper's former law firm Balch & Bingham, LLP ("Balch"); John Bullock; Claiborne Seier ("Seier"); and Don Gottier (collectively, "the defendants") alleging the defendants combined to have Newsome arrested on a false charge with the intent of damaging his reputation and law practice. The trial court ultimately entered judgments in favor of defendants, while reserving jurisdiction to make a later award of attorney fees and costs under the Alabama Litigation Accountability Act ("the ALAA"). After the Newsome plaintiffs appealed the initial judgments against them, the trial court awarded Balch, Bullock, Seier, and Gottier attorney fees and costs under the ALAA. The Newsome plaintiffs then filed another appeal seeking the reversal of those awards. The Newsome plaintiffs made "myriad arguments" about how the trial court allegedly erred and why the judgments entered in favor of the defendants should have been reversed. The Alabama Supreme Court found the Newsome plaintiffs failed to produce substantial evidence supporting their claims even after conducting extensive discovery; the trial court therefore appropriately entered summary judgments in favor of defendants. | |
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