Farris v. Conger , 490 S.W.3d 684 ( 2016 )


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  •                                  Cite as 
    2016 Ark. App. 230
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISIONS I, II & III
    No. CV-15-622
    FELICIA FARRIS, M.D.                               Opinion Delivered   April 27, 2016
    APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
    V.                                                 THIRD DIVISION
    [NO. 60CV-13-4022]
    HONORABLE CATHLEEN V.
    CYNTHIA L. CONGER C.P.A. and                       COMPTON, JUDGE
    CONGER WEALTH MANAGEMENT
    APPELLEES                     AFFIRMED
    PHILLIP T. WHITEAKER, Judge
    Felicia Farris, M.D., appeals from an order of the Pulaski County Circuit Court
    granting the motion for summary judgment filed by appellees Cynthia Conger and Conger
    Wealth Management (collectively, CWM). The circuit court found that Farris’s cause of
    action sounded in negligence, rather than in contract, and that her complaint was barred by
    the three-year statute of limitations attendant to negligence actions. We agree and affirm.
    The facts of the case are not in dispute. Farris and CWM entered into a contract by
    which CWM agreed to provide wealth-management services to Farris. On November 11,
    2008, Farris learned of an opportunity to purchase a parcel of real estate at a foreclosure sale,
    and she asked CWM to transfer money from her Fidelity Investment account to her personal
    checking account so that she could purchase the property at the sale. CWM advised Farris
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    that the cutoff for initiating a timely Federal Reserve Wire Network (FRWN) money
    transfer was 3:00 p.m. on November 13; however, CWM did not initiate the transfer until
    3:21 p.m. CWM also initiated an Automated Clearing House transfer, rather than a FRWN
    transfer, which would take several days to clear. The property was sold to someone else at
    the sale. Farris was ultimately able to purchase the property, but she had to spend $51,843.98
    to do so instead of $22,286.70.
    Farris filed a breach-of-contract complaint against CWM on October 10, 2013,1
    asserting that, by failing to timely transfer the funds, CWM had breached its written wealth-
    management agreement with her. Farris sought restitution, lost profits, costs and fees,
    prejudgment interest, and punitive damages. CWM filed a motion to dismiss on the grounds
    that Farris’s complaint sounded in tort, rather than in contract, and thus the three-year statute
    of limitations for a negligence action had expired. CWM subsequently filed a motion for
    summary judgment, asserting the same reasoning.
    The circuit court granted CWM’s motion for summary judgment. The court found
    that the complaint contained a claim of breach of contract, but then noted that “the question
    then becomes whether the reference to the contract is the sort of specific promise that
    transforms the gist of the action from one for negligence into one for breach of the written
    agreement.” The court concluded that it did not and that the complaint was “based upon a
    negligence claim cloaked as a contract claim.” Accordingly, the court determined that
    1
    A breach-of-contract claim has a five-year statute of limitations. Ark. Code Ann. §
    16-56-111(a) (Repl. 2005).
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    Farris’s claim was barred by the statute of limitations and granted CWM’s summary-judgment
    motion.
    Ordinarily, our review of a grant of summary judgment is well settled. A circuit court
    may grant summary judgment when there are no genuine issues of material fact to be
    litigated, and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Lucci Corp. v.
    Breaux Mfg. Co., 
    2013 Ark. App. 705
    , at 3. Once the moving party has established a prima
    facie entitlement to summary judgment, the opposing party must meet proof with proof and
    demonstrate the existence of a material issue of fact. 
    Id. at 3–4.
    We determine if summary
    judgment was appropriate based on whether the evidence presented by the moving party in
    support of the motion leaves a material fact unanswered. 
    Id. at 4.
    We view the evidence in
    the light most favorable to the party against whom the motion was filed, resolving all doubts
    and inferences against the moving party. 
    Id. However, a
    different standard applies in this
    appeal.
    Here, the circuit court’s dismissal of Farris’s complaint was based on its
    characterization of the nature of her claim, which resulted in the court’s finding that Farris’s
    cause of action was barred by the running of the statute of limitations. When this occurs, our
    analysis is somewhat different. In McQuay v. Guntharp, the supreme court explained that in
    such circumstances, the appellate court “must look to the complaint itself” in reaching its
    conclusions regarding the statute of limitations. 
    331 Ark. 466
    , 470, 
    963 S.W.2d 583
    , 584
    (1998) (citing O’Bryant v. Horn, 
    297 Ark. 617
    , 
    764 S.W.2d 445
    (1989); Dunlap v. McCarty,
    
    284 Ark. 5
    , 
    678 S.W.2d 361
    (1984)); see also Goldsby v. Fairley, 
    309 Ark. 380
    , 
    831 S.W.2d 3
                                     Cite as 
    2016 Ark. App. 230
    142 (1992) (in making the determination on the application of the statute of limitations, this
    court looks to the complaint itself, despite the fact that the trial court had granted summary
    judgment). The scope of judicial focus when deciding whether a contract or tort statute of
    limitations applies is based upon the “gist” of the allegations raised in the complaint. Tony
    Smith Trucking v. Woods & Woods, Ltd., 
    75 Ark. App. 134
    , 136, 
    55 S.W.3d 327
    , 329 (2001).
    Based upon the above authority, we turn our attention to Farris’s complaint. In
    determining the “gist” of her complaint, we must look to the facts alleged, as Arkansas does
    not recognize notice pleadings, only fact pleadings. 
    Id. Moreover, only
    facts alleged in the
    complaint are treated as true, not the plaintiff’s theories, speculation, or statutory
    interpretation. Worden v. Kirchner, 
    2013 Ark. 509
    , 
    431 S.W.3d 243
    ; Dockery v. Morgan, 
    2011 Ark. 94
    , 
    380 S.W.3d 377
    .
    Farris’s complaint states that her action is one for breach of contract. In order for the
    contract statute of limitations to apply, there must have been a breach of a specific promise.
    Sturgis v. Skokos, 
    335 Ark. 41
    , 
    977 S.W.2d 217
    (1998). Thus, to determine whether Farris’s
    complaint sounds in contract or in tort, we must determine what specific contractual
    agreement she contends was breached. In her breach-of-contract count, Farris alleged the
    following:
    Conger Wealth Management had exclusive control over Dr. Farris’s Fidelity
    Investment Account. By agreeing and assuring Dr. Farris that they would execute
    transfer of funds in a timely fashion so that the funds [would be] available to purchase
    the property and in failing to do so, the defendants breached the written Wealth
    Management Services contract with Dr. Farris.
    The defendant’s breaches of contract include, but are not limited to, failing to
    arrange for execution of the brokerage transaction as directed by Dr. Farris in a timely
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    fashion and in compliance with paragraph 5 of the written Wealth Management
    agreement.
    This breach of contract proximately caused Dr. Farris financial damages that
    would not have occurred otherwise.
    The crux of Farris’s complaint is that CWM failed to transfer funds from one account
    to another in a sufficiently timely manner to enable her to purchase the property she desired.
    Specifically, Farris alleged a breach of contract in CWM’s failure “to arrange for execution
    of the brokerage transaction as directed by Dr. Farris in a timely fashion and in compliance
    with paragraph 5.” In 
    O’Bryant, supra
    , the supreme court stated that a complaint must show
    that the plaintiff’s cause of action was based upon the writing in order for the statute of
    limitations for written contracts to apply. We therefore turn to paragraph 5 of the contract.
    Paragraph 5 is captioned “Execution of Brokerage Transactions” and addresses how
    CWM arranges for the execution of securities brokerage transactions. The bulk of the
    paragraph explains how CWM will arrange for such transactions through a broker-dealer and
    will engage in best practices to accomplish brokerage transactions. Farris, however, points to
    a portion of one particular sentence in that paragraph. As quoted by Farris, that sentence
    declares that “[w]e shall endeavor to process all Account transactions in a timely manner[.]”
    Farris thus argues that because CWM did not process her account transaction in a timely
    manner, it breached its written agreement.
    That is not the entirety of that sentence, however. In full, it reads as follows: “We
    shall endeavor to process all Account transactions in a timely manner, but do not represent
    nor warrant that any such transaction shall be processed or effected by the Broker-Dealer on
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    the same day as requested.” This is more in the nature of a disclaimer, rather than a specific
    promise. Moreover, to the extent that it can be construed as a promise, it is a promise to
    attempt to perform diligently.
    The question then becomes whether a promise to perform diligently can form the
    basis of a breach-of-contract claim. The answer is that it cannot. In Sturgis v. 
    Skokos, supra
    ,
    the supreme court held that a failure to “proceed diligently” was not a breach of a specific
    promise but was nothing more than negligence. Similarly, in Tony Smith Trucking v. Woods
    & 
    Woods, supra
    , this court held that a contractual agreement to perform detailed duties to the
    best of one’s “knowledge, skill and ability,” “at most represent[ed] a general duty to represent
    appellants with diligence. A violation of that obligation is, by definition, nothing more than
    negligence.” Tony Smith 
    Trucking, 75 Ark. App. at 138
    –39, 55 S.W.3d at 331.
    Supreme court caselaw is thus clear that an allegation of a failure to perform diligently
    amounts to negligence. Farris alleged that CWM breached paragraph 5 of the agreement.
    The applicable portion of paragraph 5, however, promises nothing more than an attempt to
    perform diligently. As such, on its face, Farris’s complaint does not raise a contract claim.
    The circuit court did not err in concluding that the gist of Farris’s complaint sounded in
    negligence and that, as a result, the complaint was time-barred.
    Affirmed.
    GLADWIN , C.J., and VIRDEN , GRUBER, HIXSON , and BROWN , JJ., agree.
    HARRISON , GLOVER , and HOOFMAN , JJ., dissent.
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    2016 Ark. App. 230
    BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge, dissenting. I respectfully dissent from the
    majority’s opinion. Like the circuit court before it, this court has judged the merit of Farris’s
    contract claim rather than focusing on the sole issue that was before the circuit court when
    it dismissed Farris’s amended complaint: accepting all of her allegations as true, and looking
    only at the amended complaint and the written contract that Farris attached to it, did she
    allege the “gist” of a contract claim for the purpose of deciding whether the five-year statute-
    of-limitations period applies? The answer is yes. Whether she has a winning or losing claim
    is not before us.
    This case turns on fundamentals, and a basic tenet of pleading is that a party states a
    contract claim if she “assert[s] the existence of a valid and enforceable contract between the
    plaintiff and defendant, the obligation of the defendant thereunder, a violation by the
    defendant, and damages resulting to plaintiff from the breach.” Perry v. Baptist Health, 
    358 Ark. 238
    , 244, 
    189 S.W.3d 54
    , 58 (2004). Here, Farris attached to her amended complaint
    a written agreement between the parties and stated that it governed the parties’ wealth-
    management relationship. She also factually alleged that Conger breached the agreement by
    failing to correctly and timely execute a brokerage transaction as the written contract required
    Conger to do. Farris then specifically stated that she was damaged given Conger’s failure to
    perform under the contract. Because we must assume that Farris’s allegations are true given
    the legal question presented—a point of procedure on which we all agree—I would hold that
    the circuit court erred in concluding that the complaint was time-barred.
    The majority’s affirmance opens the law of pleading and statutes of limitations to a
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    degree that will encourage more parties to ask circuit courts to decide how a plaintiff’s
    complaint should be characterized. This is not a desirable development on the whole,
    especially given the wide gate this case arguably creates.
    The claim-characterization doctrine applied in this case stems from a short line of cases
    that primarily involved complaints where a negligence claim was characterized as a contract
    claim for the purpose of avoiding the shorter limitations periods that typically apply in tort
    cases. As the majority itself recognizes, when two or more statutes of limitations could apply,
    then courts must determine the core of the case by looking solely at the complaint. McQuay
    v. Guntharp, 
    331 Ark. 466
    , 
    963 S.W.2d 583
    (1998). But if there is doubt on which statute
    should be applied, courts should favor the one that gives a plaintiff more, not less, time.
    Sturgis v. Skokos, 
    335 Ark. 41
    , 48, 
    977 S.W.2d 217
    , 220 (1998) (“If two or more statutes of
    limitations apply, generally the statute with the longest limitations period will govern.”). This
    basic rule was not applied in this case.
    The time-bar question can certainly turn on whether the plaintiff has satisfied
    Arkansas’s fact-pleading requirements.        
    McQuay, supra
    .      In my view, however, Farris
    sufficiently stated a contract claim, in part, because “a breach of contract is not treated as a tort
    if it consists merely of a failure to act (nonfeasance) as distinguished from an affirmatively
    wrongful act (misfeasance).” Morrow v. First Nat’l Bank of Hot Springs, 
    261 Ark. 568
    , 
    550 S.W.2d 429
    (1977). Farris’s amended complaint does not necessarily allege misfeasance.
    Instead, she alleges that Conger failed to perform in accordance with a contractual term. That
    is wholly consistent with a contract claim. See, e.g., Zufari v. Architecture Plus, 
    323 Ark. 411
    ,
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    914 S.W.2d 756 
    (1996) (plaintiff’s complaint sufficiently pled a breach-of-contract claim and
    five-year limitations period applied).
    This court recently, and correctly, applied the gist-of-the-complaint rule in Moody v.
    Tarvin, 
    2016 Ark. App. 169
    . There, Moody alleged that he sustained serious physical injuries
    caused by a maintenance person who worked for the Tarvins at the trailer park they owned.
    
    Id. Moody contended
    that the Tarvins had a duty to provide him with a safe living
    environment as a result of their landlord-tenant relationship and they knew or should have
    known of the maintenance person’s alleged violent tendencies. 
    Id. Moody attached
    a written
    landlord-tenant contract to his complaint. 
    Id. But unlike
    this case, there was a question
    whether Moody even signed the contract. And the contract in Moody primarily addressed rent
    payments, pet policies, and yard maintenance. 
    Id. The contract
    said nothing about protecting
    tenants from harm that could befall them at a third-party’s hand. We affirmed the circuit
    court’s summary judgment in the Tarvins’ favor because Moody’s complaint did not come
    close to alleging a contract claim, and the deadline to file tort claims had expired. 
    Id. Moody presented
    a case in which the courts were justifiably asked to reject a plaintiff’s
    characterization of her own complaint. But this case is far from Moody. The majority doesn’t
    address Moody, though it does invoke two other cases to support its conclusion that Farris’s
    complaint could not possibly assert a contract claim.
    The first case is an attorney-malpractice case, Sturgis, 
    335 Ark. 41
    , 
    977 S.W.2d 217
    .
    Here, no particular professional-responsibility rule or malpractice statute was argued to the
    circuit court so as to bring this case within Sturgis’s orbit. The second case my colleagues put
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    stock in is Tony Smith Trucking v. Woods & Woods, Ltd., 
    75 Ark. App. 134
    , 
    55 S.W.3d 327
    (2001). There, clients sued their accountant in contract and in tort because the accountant
    allegedly caused an IRS audit. The contract provisions in that case were admittedly
    broad—“duties [for the accountant to perform] to the best of his knowledge, skill, and
    ability”—and this court acknowledged that the circuit court’s “conclusion that the gist of the
    action is negligence is further supported by the fact that the original complaints filed by
    appellants alleged only negligence, but were soon amended to include breach of contract.”
    
    Id. at 138–39,
    55 S.W.3d at 330–31. So Tony Smith Trucking is distinguishable from this case,
    too, as a technical matter.
    The deepest problem with the majority opinion is not a point of legal finery on
    whether preexisting cases can be sufficiently distinguished from this one or not, but that it
    must interpret the contract to conclude that the written agreement can’t possibly support an
    actionable promise. This is a curious tack because, once again, fundamental tenets of contract
    law oppose the maneuver. What the parties understood a certain paragraph to mean—and
    the conduct it could or could not cover—is often the merits question in a contract case. See,
    e.g., Prochazka v. Bee-Three Dev., LLC, 
    2015 Ark. App. 384
    , 
    466 S.W.3d 448
    . Maybe the
    provision in paragraph 5 is a disclaimer that is not actionable in the manner that Farris asserts
    in her complaint. Maybe not. Whatever the answer, the issue strikes me as a contract-
    interpretation point on the claim’s merit.
    I understand the allure to end this case given the developed record the parties made
    in the circuit court. But on the whole, I am unwilling to deny Farris a merit decision based
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    on a limitations argument that is grounded in an uncommon and inherently slippery claim-
    characterization doctrine. The circuit court’s decision should be reversed because it (1)
    considered material outside the complaint and (2) then concluded that the amended complaint
    sounded solely in tort. The complaint should not have been time-barred, especially when no
    defending party has presented any reason why applying the longer limitations period would
    be prejudicial.
    GLOVER and HOOFMAN, JJ., join.
    Cullen & Co., PLLC, by: Tim J. Cullen, for appellant.
    David Hargis, for appellee.
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