Arkansas
Process Serving Laws
(Rules of Civil Procedure in the
United States)
Quick Answers:
Who can be a process server in
Arkansas?
Any adult over the age of eighteen
(18) years old, that is not a party
to the case, or a member of a
corporation or organization that is
a party, may serve (deliver) the
papers.
Does Arkansas require process
servers to be licensed?
No.
Are there any day or time restrictions to
service of process in Arkansas?
No.
Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure
are from
CivilProcedure.info
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
site
Because the laws of process service
may change from time to time, please
check the
Arkansas Courts website for
updated rules of civil procedure in
Arkansas.
Rules of Civil
Procedure in Arkansas:
Rule 4.
Summons.
(a)
Issuance. Upon the filing of the
complaint, the clerk shall forthwith
issue a summons and cause it to be
delivered for service to a person
authorized by this rule to serve
process.
(b) Form.
The summons shall be styled in
the name of the court and shall be
dated and signed by the clerk; be
under the seal of the court; contain
the names of the parties; be
directed to the defendant; state the
name and address of the plaintiff's
attorney, if any, otherwise the
address of the plaintiff; and the
time within which these rules
require the defendant to appear,
file a pleading, and defend and
shall notify him that in case of his
failure to do so, judgment by
default may be entered against him
for the relief demanded in the
complaint.
[Official Form
of Summons
HTML,
WP5.1]
(c) By Whom
Served. Service of summons shall
be made by (1) a sheriff of the
county where the service is to be
made, or his or her deputy, unless
the sheriff is a party to the
action; (2) any person not less than
eighteen years of age appointed for
the purpose of serving summons by
either the court in which the action
is filed or a court in the county in
which service is to be made; (3) any
person authorized to serve process
under the law of the place outside
this state where service is made; or
(4) in the event of service by mail
or commercial delivery company
pursuant to subdivision (d)(8) of
this rule, by the plaintiff or an
attorney of record for the
plaintiff.
(d)
Personal Service Inside the State.
A copy of the summons and complaint
shall be served together. The
plaintiff shall furnish the person
making service with such copies as
are necessary. Service shall be made
upon any person designated by
statute to receive service or as
follows:
(1) Upon an
individual, other than an infant by
delivering a copy of the summons and
complaint to him personally, or if
he refuses to receive it, by
offering a copy thereof to him, or
by leaving a copy thereof at his
dwelling house or usual place of
abode with some person residing
therein who is at least 14 years of
age, or by delivering a copy thereof
to an agent authorized by
appointment or by law to receive
service of summons.
(2) When the
defendant is under the age of 14
years, service must be upon a parent
or guardian having the care and
control of the infant, or upon any
other person having the care and
control of the infant and with whom
the infant lives. When the infant is
at least 14 years of age, service
shall be upon him.
(3) Where the
defendant is a person for whom a
plenary, limited or temporary
guardian has been appointed, the
service must be upon the individual
and the guardian. If the person for
whom the guardian has been appointed
is confined in a public or private
institution for the treatment of the
mentally ill, service shall be upon
the superintendent or administrator
of such institution and upon the
guardian.
(4)
Where the defendant is incarcerated
in any jail, penitentiary, or other
correctional facility in this state,
service must be upon the
administrator of the institution,
who shall deliver a copy of the
summons and complaint to the
defendant. A copy of the summons and
complaint shall also be sent to the
defendant by first class mail and
marked as "legal mail" and, unless
the court otherwise directs, to the
defendant's spouse, if any.
(5) Upon a domestic or foreign
corporation or upon a partnership,
limited liability company, or any
unincorporated association subject
to suit under a common name, by
delivering a copy ofthe summons and
complaint to an officer, partner
other than a limited partner,
managing or general agent, or any
agent authorized by appointment or
by law to receive service of
summons.
(6) Upon the
United States or any officer or
agency thereof, by service upon any
person and in such manner as is
authorized by the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure or by other federal
law.
(7) Upon a
state or municipal corporation or
other governmental organization or
agency thereof, subject to suit, by
delivering a copy of the summons and
complaint to the chief executive
officer thereof, or other person
designated by appointment or by
statute to receive such service, or
upon the Attorney General of the
state if such service is accompanied
by an affidavit of a party or his
attorney that such officer or
designated person is unknown or
cannot be located.
(8)(A)(i)
Service of a summons and complaint
upon a defendant of any class
referred to in paragraphs (1)
through (5), and (7) of this
subdivision (d) may be made by the
plaintiff or an attorney of record
for the plaintiff by any form of
mail addressed to the person to be
served with a return receipt
requested and delivery restricted to
the addressee or the agent of the
addressee. The addressee must be a
natural person specified by name,
and the agent of the addressee must
be authorized in accordance with
U.S. Postal Service regulations.
However, service on the registered
agent of a corporation or other
organization may be made by
certified mail with a return receipt
requested.
(ii) Service
pursuant to this paragraph (A) shall
not be the basis for the entry of a
default or judgment by default
unless the record contains a return
receipt signed by the addressee or
the agent of the addressee or a
returned envelope, postal document
or affidavit by a postal employee
reciting or showing refusal of the
process by the addressee. If
delivery of mailed process is
refused, the plaintiff or attorney
making such service, promptly upon
receipt of notice of such refusal,
shall mail to the defendant by first
class mail a copy of the summons and
complaint and a notice that despite
such refusal the case will proceed
and that judgment by default may be
rendered against him unless he
appears to defend the suit. Any such
default or judgment by default may
be set aside pursuant to Rule 55(c)
if the addressee demonstrates to the
court that the return receipt was
signed or delivery was refused by
someone other than the addressee or
the agent of the addressee.
(B)
Alternatively, service of a summons
and complaint upon a defendant of
any class referred to in paragraphs
(1)-(5) and (7) of this subdivision
of this rule may be made by the
plaintiff by mailing a copy of the
summons and the complaint by
first-class mail, postage prepaid,
to the person to be served, together
with two copies of a notice and
acknowledgement conforming
substantially to a form adopted by
the Supreme Court and a return
envelope, postage prepaid, addressed
to the sender. If no acknowledgement
of service is received by the sender
within twenty days after the date of
mailing, service of such summons and
complaint shall be made pursuant to
subdivision (c)(1)-(3) of this rule
in the manner prescribed by
subdivisions (d)(1)-(5) and (d)(7).
Unless good cause is shown for not
doing so the court shall order the
payment of the costs of personal
service by the person served if such
person does not complete and return
within twenty days after mailing,
the notice and acknowledgement of
receipt of summons. The notice and
acknowledgement of receipt of
summons and complaint shall be
executed under oath or affirmation.
(C) Service of
a summons and complaint upon a
defendant of any class referred to
in paragraphs (1) through (5) and
(7) of this subdivision may also be
made by the plaintiff or an attorney
of record for the plaintiff using a
commercial delivery company that (i)
maintains permanent records of
actual delivery, and (ii) has been
approved by the circuit court in
which the action is filed or in the
county where service is to be made.
The summons and complaint must be
delivered to the defendant or an
agent authorized to receive service
of process on behalf of the
defendant. The signature of the
defendant or agent must be obtained.
Service pursuant to this paragraph
shall not be the basis for a
judgment by default unless the
record reflects actual delivery on
and the signature of the defendant
or agent, or an affidavit by an
employee of an approved commercial
delivery company reciting or showing
refusal of the process by the
defendant or agent. If delivery of
process is refused, the plaintiff or
attorney making such service,
promptly upon receipt of notice of
such refusal, shall mail to the
defendant by first class mail a copy
of the summons and complaint and a
notice that despite such refusal the
case will proceed and that judgment
by default may be rendered against
the defendant unless he or she
appears to defend the suit. A
judgment by default may be set aside
pursuant to Rule 55(c) if the court
finds that someone other than the
defendant or agent signed the
receipt or refused the delivery or
that the commercial delivery company
had not been approved as required by
this subdivision.
(e) Other
Service. Whenever the law of
this state authorizes service
outside this state, the service,
when reasonably calculated to give
actual notice, may be made:
(1) By
personal delivery in the same manner
prescribed for service within this
state;
(2) In any
manner prescribed by the law of the
place in which service is made in
that place in an action in any of
its courts of general jurisdiction;
(3) By mail as
provided in subdivision (d)(8) of
this rule;
(4) As
directed by a foreign authority in
response to a letter rogatory or
pursuant to the provisions of any
treaty or convention pertaining to
the service of a document in a
foreign country;
(5) As
directed by the court.
(f) Service
by Warning Order.
(1) If it
appears by the affidavit of a party
seeking judgment or his or her
attorney that, after diligent
inquiry, the identity or whereabouts
of a defendant remains unknown, or
if a party seeks a judgment that
affects or may affect the rights of
persons who are not and who need not
be subject personally to the
jurisdiction of the court, service
shall be by warning order issued by
the clerk. This subdivision shall
not apply to actions against unknown
tortfeasors.
(2) The
warning order shall state the
caption of the pleadings; include,
if applicable, a description of the
property or other res to be affected
by the judgment; and warn the
defendant or interested person to
appear within 30 days from the date
of first publication of the warning
order or face entry of judgment by
default or be otherwise barred from
asserting his or her interest. The
party seeking judgment shall cause
the warning order to be published
weekly for two consecutive weeks in
a newspaper having general
circulation in the county where the
action is filed and to be mailed,
with a copy of the complaint, to the
defendant or interested person at
his or her last known address by any
form of mail with delivery
restricted to the addressee or the
agent of the addressee.
(3) If the
party seeking judgment has been
granted leave to proceed as an
indigent without prepayment of
costs, the clerk shall conspicuously
post the warning order for a
continuous period of 30 days at the
courthouse or courthouses of the
county wherein the action is filed.
The party seeking judgment shall
cause the warning order to be
mailed, with a copy of the
complaint, to the defendant or
interested person as provided in
paragraph (2). Newspaper publication
of the warning order is not
required.
(4) No
judgment by default shall be taken
pursuant to this subdivision unless
the party seeking the judgment or
his or her attorney has filed with
the court an affidavit stating that
30 days have elapsed since the
warning order was first published as
provided in paragraph (2) or posted
at the courthouse pursuant to
paragraph (3). If a defendant or
other interested person is known to
the party seeking judgment or to his
or her attorney, the affidavit shall
also state that 30 days have elapsed
since a letter enclosing a copy of
the warning order and the complaint
was mailed to the defendant or other
interested person as provided in
this subdivision.
(g) Proof
of Service. The person effecting
service shall make proof thereof to
the clerk within the time during
which the person served must respond
to the summons. If service is made
by a sheriff or his deputy, proof
may be made by executing a
certificate of service or return
contained in the same document as
the summons. If service is made by a
person other than a sheriff or his
deputy, the person shall make
affidavit thereof, and if service
has been by mail or commercial
delivery company, shall attach to
the affidavit a return receipt,
envelope, affidavit or other writing
required by Rule 4(d)(8). Proof of
service in a foreign country, if
effected pursuant to the provisions
of a treaty or convention as
provided in Rule 4(e)(4), shall be
made in accordance with the
applicable treaty or convention.
(h)
Amendment. At any time in its
discretion and upon such terms as it
deems just, the court may allow any
summons or proof of service thereof
to be amended unless it clearly
appears that material prejudice
would result to the substantial
rights of the party against whom the
summons is issued.
(i) Time
Limit for Service.
If service of the summons is not
made upon a defendant within 120
days after the filing of the
complaint, the action shall be
dismissed as to that defendant
without prejudice upon motion or
upon the court's initiative. If a
motion to extend is made within 120
days of the filing of the suit, the
time for service may be extended by
the court upon a showing of good
cause. The order granting any such
extension, however, must be entered
within 30 days after the motion to
extend is filed, or by the end of
the 120-day period, whichever date
is later. If service is made by mail
pursuant to this rule, service shall
be deemed to have been made for the
purpose of this provision as of the
date on which the process was
accepted or refused. This paragraph
shall not apply to service in a
foreign country pursuant to Rule
4(e) or to complaints filed against
unknown tortfeasors.
(j) Service
of Other Writs and Papers.
Whenever any rule or statute
requires service upon any person,
firm, corporation or other entity of
notices, writs, or papers other than
a summons and complaint, including
without limitation writs of
garnishment, such notices, writs or
papers may be served in the manner
prescribed in this rule for service
of a summons and complaint.
Provided, however, any writ, notice
or paper requiring direct seizure of
property, such as a writ of
assistance, writ of execution, or
order of delivery shall be made as
otherwise provided by law.
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, 1999 Amendment:
Subdivision (c)(2) has been amended
by deleting the word "a" before the
word "summons." This amendment is
intended to make plain that private
process servers may be appointed by
standing order as well as on a
case-by-case basis. In addition,
subdivision (e)(3) has been amended
to provide that service by mail
outside the state in accordance with
the requirements of subdivision
(d)(8), which governs service by
mail inside the state. This change
makes the two provisions consistent.
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, 2001 Amendment:
Subdivision (a) has been revised to
provide that service may be made
only by a person "authorized by this
rule to serve process." Previously,
the rule allowed anyone "authorized
by law" to serve process and thus
incorporated statutes permitting or
requiring certain persons to make
service. See, e.g, Nelson v.
Wakefield, 282 Ark. 285, 668
S.W.2d 29 (1984) (service on sheriff
by deputy held improper in light of
Ark. Code Ann. §§ 16-58-112, which
provides that "in an action wherein
the sheriff is a party or is
interested, [process] shall be
directed to the coroner or, if he is
interested to some constable").
Applying
Nelson to other statutes could
defeat the purpose of subdivision
(c) of the rule, which limits
service to a particular person,
including a sheriff, a deputy, or a
person at least 18 years of age
appointed by the court. For example,
Ark. Code Ann. §§ 16-58-107(2)
authorizes service "[b]y any person
appointed by the officer to whom the
summons is directed." This provision
would allow a sheriff, deputy
sheriff, or a person appointed by
the court to designate someone else
to serve process, a result contrary
to the purpose of the subdivision
(c), i.e., to give the court
control over private process
servers. Also, paragraph (3) of the
statute allows service "[b]y any
person not a party to the action, in
all actions arising on contract for
the recovery of money only." In such
cases, no court appointment would be
necessary, and even someone under 18
could make service so long as he or
she were not a party. Other statutes
are not as troublesome as Section
16-58-107 but are not necessary in
light of Rule 4. See Ark.
Code Ann. §§§§ 16-58-108, 16-58-109,
16-58-113, 16-58-118, 16-58-119.
These statutes are deemed
superseded, as are Sections
16-58-107 and 16-58-112.
New language
in subdivision (c)(1) treats the
problem that Section 16-58-112 was
meant to address, i.e.,
service by a sheriff or deputy when
the sheriff is a party. In that
situation, neither the sheriff nor a
deputy may serve process. Thus,
service must be accomplished
pursuant to one of the other
provisions of subdivision (c),
e.g., by someone appointed by
the court or by mail.
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, 2002 Amendment:
Subdivision (c)(4) has been amended
to refer to service by a commercial
company, an option authorized by new
paragraph (C) of subdivision (d)(8)
and discussed below. Over the years,
lawyers have questioned the efficacy
of service by mail under paragraph
(A) of subdivision (d)(8), in part
because the postal service does not
always follow its own rules
regarding restricted delivery mail.
Subdivision
(d) has been revised to provide that
service shall be made as provided in
that subdivision or "upon any person
designated by statute to receive
service." This provision
incorporates statutes which, for
example, provide for service on the
registered agent of a corporation.
E.g., Ark. Code Ann. §§
4-26-503, 4-27-1510. It was deemed
advisable in light of case law
suggesting that Rule 4 is exclusive
as to the recipients of process,
despite language in subdivisions
(d)(1) & (5) permitting service on
an "agent authorized . . . by law to
receive service of summons." See,
e.g., May v. Bob Hankins
Distributing Co., 301 Ark. 494,
785 S.W.2d 23 (1990).
Subdivision
(d)(4) has been amended to require
the plaintiff not only to serve the
superintendent of the correctional
facility housing the defendant (as
well as the defendant's spouse, if
any, unless the court orders
otherwise), but also to send a copy
of the summons and complaint, marked
as "legal mail," to the defendant by
first class mail. This additional
safeguard is similar to that found
in substituted service statutes.
E.g., Ark. Code Ann. §§
16-58-120(b)(2)(B) (in addition to
serving Secretary of State,
plaintiff must mail copy of summons
and complaint to defendant at last
known address).
New paragraph
(C) of subdivision (d)(8) permits
service by "a commercial delivery
company that (i) maintains permanent
records of actual delivery and (ii)
has been approved by the circuit
court in which the action is filed
or in the county where service is to
be made." Service of papers by
commercial delivery companies under
Rule 5 has been allowed for more
than a decade with no apparent
problem. See Rule 5(b)(2) &
Addition to Reporter's Notes, 1989
Amendment. Rule 5(b)(2) has been
amended to require court approval of
the commercial delivery company, a
requirement imposed by new paragraph
(C) of this rule.
Paragraph (C)
is more restrictive than Ark. Code
Ann. §§ 1-2-122(b), which allows
service by "an alternative mail
carrier." The statute has thus been
superseded with respect to service
of process. Paragraph (C) contains
additional safeguards similar to
those found in paragraph (A) for
service by mail and requires, as
does subdivision (c)(2) with respect
to service by a private person, that
the commercial delivery company be
approved by the circuit court of the
county where the action is filed or
where service is to be made. This
approval may be in the form of a
standing order or may be made on a
case-by-case basis, as under
subdivision (c)(2). See
Addition to Reporter's Notes to Rule
4, 1999 Amendment.
The rule has
also been amended to provide uniform
requirements for warning orders.
Those requirements are contained in
revised subdivision (f), which deals
with both situations in which
service by warning order is
permissible, i.e., "when the
identity or whereabouts of a
defendant remains unknown, or if a
party seeks a judgment that affects
or may affect the rights of persons
who are not and who need not be
subject personally to the
jurisdiction of the court." Former
subdivision (j) has been deleted and
former subdivision (k) redesignated
as subdivision (j).
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, 2003 Amendment:
Subdivision (d)(4) has been revised
by replacing the phrase "confined in
a state or federal penitentiary or
correctional facility" with
"incarcerated in any jail,
penitentiary, or other correctional
facility in this state." This change
makes the terminology consistent
with that used in Rule 12(a), as
amended in 2003.
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, 2004 Amendment:
Subdivision (d)(8)(A) of the rule
has been divided into two
paragraphs. In a change that
reflects settled case law, paragraph
(A)(i) has been rewritten to state
expressly that the agent of the
addressee "must be authorized in
accordance with U.S. Postal Service
regulations." See Green v.
Yarbrough, 299 Ark. 175, 771
S.W.2d 760 (1989). For the
applicable postal service
regulations, see Domestic Mail
Manual S916.
More
importantly, paragraph (A)(i) has
been amended to establish less
onerous requirements when service is
made on the registered agent of a
corporation or other organization.
In that situation, the new last
sentence provides that service may
be made by certified mail, return
receipt requested. Because delivery
need not be restricted, there is no
requirement that the addressee be a
natural person or that the agent of
the addressee be authorized in
accordance with postal service
regulations. See generally
Domestic Mail Manual S912 (certified
mail), S915 (return receipt).
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, 2006 Amendment:
Subdivision (d)(8)(A) of the rule
has been divided into two
paragraphs. In a change that
reflects settled case law, paragraph
(A)(i) has been rewritten to state
expressly that the agent of the
addressee "must be authorized in
accordance with U.S. Postal Service
regulations." See Green v.
Yarbrough, 299 Ark. 175, 771
S.W.2d 760 (1989). For the
applicable postal service
regulations, see Domestic Mail
Manual S916.
More
importantly, paragraph (A)(i) has
been amended to establish less
onerous requirements when service is
made on the registered agent of a
corporation or other organization.
In that situation, the new last
sentence provides that service may
be made by certified mail, return
receipt requested. Because delivery
need not be restricted, there is no
requirement that the addressee be a
natural person or that the agent of
the addressee be authorized in
accordance with postal service
regulations. See generally
Domestic Mail Manual S912 (certified
mail), S915 (return receipt).
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, 2006 Amendment:
Rule 4(d)(4) has been amended to
delete the untoward reference to the
"keeper" of a jail, penitentiary, or
other correctional facility. The
term "administrator" has been
substituted for "superintendent."
Rule 4(i), which governs the time
limit for service, has been amended
to set a reasonable deadline for
getting an order entered on a motion
to extend time for service. In
Edwards v. Sazabo Foods, 317
Ark. 369, 877 S.W.2d 932 (1994), the
supreme court rejected an effort to
require that both the motion for
extension of time to serve and the
order granting that motion must be
filed within the 120-day period.
This amendment leaves Edwards
intact. To encourage prompt service,
and discourage filing a motion to
extend but not securing an order
promptly, the amendment sets a
deadline for the entry of that
order: thirty days after the motion
is filed, or the end of the 120-day
period, whichever date is later. The
alternative deadlines eliminate the
possibility that an early motion for
extension will inadvertently reduce
the time allowed for extending the
time for service.
Rule 5.
Service and filing of pleadings and
other papers.
(a)
Service: When Required. Except
as otherwise provided in these
rules, every pleading and every
other paper, including all written
communications with the court, filed
subsequent to the complaint, except
one which may be heard ex parte,
shall be served upon each of the
parties, unless the court orders
otherwise because of numerous
parties. No service need be made
upon parties in default for failure
to appear, except that pleadings
asserting new or additional claims
for relief against them shall be
served in the manner provided for
service of summons in Rule 4. Any
pleading asserting new or additional
claims for relief against any party
who has appeared shall be served in
accordance with subdivision (b) of
this rule.
In an action
begun by seizure of property, in
which no person need be or is named
as defendant, any service required
to be made prior to the filing of an
answer, claim or appearance shall be
made upon the person having custody
or possession of the property at the
time of its seizure.
(b)
Service: How Made.
(1) Whenever
under this rule or any statute
service is required or permitted to
be made upon a party represented by
an attorney, the service shall be
upon the attorney, except that
service shall be upon the party if
the court so orders or the action is
one in which a final judgment has
been entered and the court has
continuing jurisdiction.
(2) Except as
provided in paragraph (3) of this
subdivision, service upon the
attorney or upon the party shall be
made by delivering a copy to him or
by sending it to him by regular mail
or commercial delivery company at
his last known address or, if no
address is known, by leaving it with
the clerk of the court. Delivery of
a copy for purposes of this
paragraph means handing it to the
attorney or to the party; by leaving
it at his office with his clerk or
other person in charge thereof; or,
if the office is closed or the
person has no office, leaving it at
his dwelling house or usual place of
abode with some person residing
therein who is at least 14 years of
age. Service by mail is
presumptively complete upon mailing,
and service by commercial delivery
company is presumptively complete
upon depositing the papers with the
company. When service is permitted
upon an attorney, such service may
be effected by electronic
transmission, provided that the
attorney being served has facilities
within his office to receive and
reproduce verbatim electronic
transmissions. Service by a
commercial delivery company shall
not be valid unless the company: (A)
maintains permanent records of
actual delivery, and (B) has been
approved by the circuit court in
which the action is filed or in the
county where service is to be made.
(3) If a final
judgment or decree has been entered
and the court has continuing
jurisdiction, service upon a party
by mail or commercial delivery
company shall comply with the
requirements of Rule 4(d)(8)(A) and
(C), respectively.
(c)
Filing.
(1) All papers
after the complaint required to be
served upon a party or his attorney
shall be filed with the clerk of the
court either before service or
within a reasonable time thereafter.
The clerk shall note the date and
time of filing thereon. However,
proposed findings of fact, proposed
conclusions of law, trial briefs,
proposed jury instructions, and
responses thereto may but need not
be filed unless ordered by the
court. Depositions, interrogatories,
requests for production or
inspection, and answers and
responses thereto shall not be filed
unless ordered by the court. When
such discovery documents are
relevant to a motion, they or the
relevant portions thereof shall be
submitted with the motion and
attached as an exhibit unless such
documents have already been filed.
The clerk shall not refuse to accept
for filing any paper presented for
that purpose solely because it is
not presented in the proper form. In
counties where the county clerk
serves as the ex officio clerk of
any division of the circuit court,
the filing requirement for any
pleading, paper, order, judgment,
decree, or notice of appeal shall be
satisfied when the document is filed
with either the circuit clerk or the
county clerk.
(2) If the
clerk's office has a facsimile
machine, the clerk shall accept
facsimile transmissions of any paper
filed under this rule and may charge
a fee of $1.00 per page. Any
signature appearing on a facsimile
copy shall be presumed authentic
until proven otherwise. The clerk
shall stamp or otherwise mark a
facsimile copy as filed on the date
and time that it is received on the
clerk's facsimile machine during the
regular hours of the clerk's office
or, if received outside those hours,
at the time the office opens on the
next business day.
(d) Filing
With the Judge. The judge may
permit papers or pleadings to be
filed with him, in which event he
shall note thereon the filing date
and forthwith transmit them to the
office of the clerk. If the judge
permits filing by facsimile
transmission, the provisions of
subdivision (c)(2) of this rule
shall apply.
(e) Proof
of Service. Every pleading,
paper or other document required by
this rule to be served upon a party
or his attorney, shall contain a
statement by the party or attorney
filing same that a copy thereof has
been served in accordance with this
rule, stating therein the date and
method of service and, if by mail,
the name and address of each person
served.
Addition to
Reporter's Notes (1999):
Subdivision (c)(2) of this rule does
not authorize the filing of
judgments, decrees or orders by
facsimile transmission. However,
Administrative Order No. 2(b), as
amended in 1999, requires any
clerk's office with a facsimile
machine to "accept facsimile
transmission of a judgment, decree
or order filed in such manner at the
direction of the court." The faxed
judgment, decree or order is
effective when entered by the clerk.
To ensure the permanency of official
court records, the original
judgment, decree or order must be
substituted for the facsimile copy
within 14 days of transmission, but
this step does not have any bearing
on the effectiveness of the faxed
document or the time for taking an
appeal.
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, 2000 Amendment:
Subdivision (c)(1) of the rule has
been amended to provide that
discovery materials, except for
requests for admission, shall not be
filed with the clerk unless the
court so orders. This is the
practice in the federal district
courts in Arkansas and in several
states. See Rule 5.5(f),
Rules of the U.S. District Courts
for the Eastern and Western
Districts of Arkansas; Rule
2-401(d)(2), Md. R. Civ. P.; Rule
191.4, Tex. R. Civ. P. Under the
prior version of the rule, the
filing of such materials was
optional absent a court order.
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, 2002 Amendment:
Since 1989, subdivision (b)(2) has
allowed service of papers, other
than the summons and complaint, on
attorneys via commercial delivery
companies. This subdivision has been
amended to allow service by this
method on parties as well, but with
the safeguard that the commercial
delivery company be court-approved.
Section 1-2-122(b) of the Arkansas
Code, which allowed service by "an
alternative mail carrier," has been
deemed superseded.
Subdivision
(b)(2) has also been revised to
provide that "service by commercial
delivery company is presumptively
complete upon depositing the papers
with the company." This provision
parallels that for service by mail,
which "is presumptively complete
upon mailing." Subdivision (b)(3),
which applies when the circuit court
has continuing jurisdiction, has
been amended to reflect the addition
of new paragraph (C) of Rule
4(d)(8).
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, 2005 Amendment:
Rule 5(c)(1) has been amended.
In some counties, the county clerk
serves as the ex officio clerk of
the probate division of the circuit
court. Ark. Code Ann. §
14-14-502(b)(2)(B). Uncertainties
have arisen in these circumstances
about the effect of filing a
pleading or paper with the wrong
clerk. A sentence has been added to
subsection (c)(1) to make plain
that, in these counties, a party
complies with Rule 5 when the
document is file marked by either
the circuit clerk or the county
clerk. Similar clarifying language
has been added to Rule of Civil
Procedure 3(b) (filing a complaint),
Administrative Order Number 2
(clerk's docket and filing), and
Rule of Appellate Procedure-Civil
3(b) (filing a notice of appeal).
Rule 45.
Subpoena.
(a) Form
and Issuance. A subpoena issued
by the clerk shall be under seal,
state the name of the court and the
title of the action, and command
each person to whom it is directed
to appear and give testimony at the
time and place therein specified. An
attorney admitted to practice in
this State, as an officer of the
court, may also issue and sign a
subpoena in any action pending in a
court of this State in which the
attorney is counsel of record.
(b) For
Production of Documentary Evidence.
A subpoena issued pursuant to
subdivision (d), (e), or (f) of this
rule may also command the person to
whom it is directed to produce the
books, papers, documents, or
tangible things designated therein;
but the court, upon motion made
promptly and in any event at or
before the time specified in the
subpoena for compliance therewith,
may (1) quash or modify the subpoena
if it is unreasonable or oppressive
or (2) condition denial of the
motion upon the advancement by the
person in whose behalf the subpoena
is issued of the reasonable cost of
producing the books, papers,
documents or tangible things.
(c)
Service. A subpoena for a trial
or hearing or for a deposition may
be served at any place within this
State in the manner prescribed in
this subdivision. A subpoena for a
trial or hearing or for a deposition
may be served by the sheriff of the
county in which it is to served, by
his deputy, or by any other person
who is not a party and is not less
than eighteen (18) years of age.
Service shall be made by delivering
a copy of the subpoena to the person
named therein; provided, however,
that a subpoena for a trial or
hearing may be served by telephone
by a sheriff or his deputy when the
trial or hearing is to be held in
the county of the witness'
residence. A subpoena for a trial or
hearing or for a deposition may also
be served by an attorney of record
for a party by any form of mail
addressed to the person to be served
with a return receipt requested and
delivery restricted to the addressee
or agent of the addressee.
(d)
Subpoena for Trial or Hearing.
At the request of any party the
clerk of the court before which the
action is pending shall issue a
subpoena for a trial or hearing, or
a subpoena for the production at a
trial or hearing of documentary
evidence, signed and sealed, but
otherwise in blank, to the party
requesting it, who shall fill it in
before service. The subpoena may
also be issued by an attorney
pursuant to subdivision (a) of this
rule. Notice of the subpoena shall
be promptly given to all parties in
the manner prescribed by Rule 5(b).
A witness, regardless of his county
of residence, shall be obligated to
attend for examination on trial or
hearing in a civil action anywhere
in this State when properly served
with a subpoena at least two (2)
days prior to the trial or hearing.
The court may grant leave for a
subpoena to be issued within two (2)
days of the trial or hearing. The
subpoena must be accompanied by a
tender of a witness fee calculated
at the rate of $30.00 per day for
attendance and $0.25 per mile for
travel from the witness' residence
to the place of the trial or
hearing. In the event of telephone
service of a subpoena by a sheriff
or his deputy, the party who caused
the witness to be subpoenaed shall
tender the fee prior to or at the
time of the witness' appearance at
the trial or hearing. If a
continuance is granted and if the
witness is provided adequate notice
thereof, reservice of the subpoena
shall not be necessary. Any person
subpoenaed for examination at the
trial or hearing shall remain in
attendance until excused by the
party causing him to be subpoenaed
or, after giving testimony, by the
court.
(e)
Subpoena for Taking Depositions:
Place of Examination. Upon the
filing of a notice of deposition
upon oral examination pursuant to
Rule 30(b), the clerk of the court
in which the action is pending
shall, upon the request of the party
giving notice, issue a subpoena in
accordance with the notice. The
subpoena may also be issued by an
attorney pursuant to subdivision (a)
of this rule. The subpoena may
command the person to whom it is
directed to produce and permit
inspection and copying of designated
books, papers, documents, or
tangible things which constitute or
contain matters within the scope of
the examination permitted by Rule
26(b), but in that event the
subpoena will be subject to the
provisions of Rule 26(c) and
subdivision (b) of the rule. The
witness must be
properly served
at least five (5) business days
prior to the date of the deposition,
unless the court grants leave for
subpoena to be issued within that
period. The subpoena must be
accompanied by a tender of a witness
fee calculated at the rate of $30.00
per day for attendance and $0.25 per
mile for travel from the witness'
residence to the place of the
deposition.
The person to
whom the subpoena is directed may,
within ten (10) days after the
service thereof or on or before the
time specified in the subpoena for
compliance if such time is less than
ten (10) days after service, serve
upon the attorney causing the
subpoena to be issued written
objection to inspection or copying
of any or all of the designated
materials. If objection is made, the
party causing the subpoena to be
issued shall not be entitled to
inspect and copy the materials
except pursuant to an order of the
court before which the deposition
may be used. The party causing the
subpoena to be issued may, if
objection has been made, move, upon
notice to the deponent, for an order
at any time before or during the
taking of the deposition.
A witness
subpoenaed under this subdivision
may be required to attend a
deposition at any place within 100
miles of where he resides, or is
employed, or transacts his business
in person, or at such other
convenient place as is fixed by an
order of court.
(f)
Depositions for Use in Out-of-State
Proceedings. Any party to a
proceeding pending in a court of
record outside this state may take
the deposition of any person who may
be found within this state. A party
who has filed a notice of deposition
upon oral examination in an
out-of-state proceeding, which
complies with Rule 30(b), may file a
certified copy thereof with the
circuit clerk of the county in which
the deposition is to be taken;
whereupon, the clerk shall issue a
subpoena in accordance with the
notice. A deposition, including any
subpoenas issued therefor, shall be
subject to these rules as well as to
any rule or statute creating a
privilege or immunity from
discovery. Any objection or motion
for protective order with respect to
the deposition shall be heard by a
circuit judge of the county in which
the deposition is to be taken.
(g)
Contempt. When a witness fails
to attend in obedience to a subpoena
or intentionally evades the service
of a subpoena by concealment or
otherwise, the court may issue a
warrant for arresting and bringing
the witness before the court at a
time and place to be fixed in the
warrant, to give testimony and
answer for contempt.
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, 2000 Amendment:
Subdivision (a) has been amended to
permit an attorney admitted to
practice in Arkansas, as an officer
of the court, to issue subpoenas in
Arkansas cases in which he or she is
counsel of record. Cross-references
to subdivision (a) have also been
added to subdivisions (d) and (e) of
the rule. This authority does not
apply to subpoenas pursuant to
subdivision (f), which governs
depositions for use in out-of-state
proceedings; accordingly, a subpoena
under subdivision (f) may be issued
only by the clerk. The phrase
"admitted to practice" in amended
subdivision (a) refers not only to
attorneys licensed in Arkansas, but
also to those admitted pro hac
vice.
In 1991, the
corresponding federal rule was
amended to allow attorneys to issue
subpoenas. See Rule 45(a)(3),
Fed. R. Civ. P. The federal rule
expressly provides for sanctions,
including lost earnings and
reasonable attorneys' fees, against
an attorney "responsible for
issuance and service of a subpoena"
that "impos[es] an undue burden or
expense on the person subject to
that subpoena." Rule 45(c)(1), Fed.
R. Civ. P. While a similar provision
has not been added to the Arkansas
rule, the courts have inherent
authority to sanction attorneys who
abuse their power to issue
subpoenas.
The following
form for subpoenas is adopted and
shall be published in the notes
immediately following Rule 45 in the
Court Rules volume of the Arkansas
Code:
Subpoena Form
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, 2001 Amendment:
Subdivision (b) of the rule has been
amended to emphasize that a subpoena
duces tecum is permissible
only in connection with a
deposition, hearing, or trial. This
has always been the case under Rule
45, but a clarifying amendment was
deemed advisable in light of recent
cases in which lawyers have employed
subpoenas to obtain documents from
non-parties without a deposition.
The Supreme Court has not adopted a
provision authorizing a subpoena
solely to compel a non-party to
produce documents or submit to an
inspection. Compare Rules
34(c) & 45(a)(1)(C), Fed. R. Civ. P.
It also
appears that some attorneys
construed Rule 45 as not only
allowing such a subpoena, but
permitting one without notice to
opposing counsel. Under the amended
rule, there is no doubt but that
these so-called "stealth subpoenas"
are improper and that notice is
necessary for any subpoena. If the
subpoena is issued in connection
with a deposition, subdivisions (e)
and (f) expressly require notice of
the deposition. Moreover, a new
sentence has been added to
subdivision (d) requiring that
notice of a subpoena for a trial or
hearing "be promptly given to all
parties in the manner prescribed by
Rule 5(b)."
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, May 2001
Amendment: Subdivision (f) has
been amended by deleting the
reference to chancery judges.
Constitutional Amendment 80
established circuit courts as the
"trial courts of original
jurisdiction" in the state and
abolished the separate chancery and
probate courts.
Addition to
Reporter's Notes, 2002 Amendment:
The third sentence of subdivision
(f) has been amended to expressly
provide that a deposition taken for
use in an out-of-state proceeding is
subject to the Rules of Civil
Procedure, as well as to any rule or
statute "creating a privilege or
immunity from discovery."
Previously, this sentence stated
only that the Rules applied to
subpoenas issued for such
depositions. Also, the last sentence
of subdivision (f) has been revised
to include a specific reference to
motions for protective orders made
with respect to the deposition
pursuant to Rule 26(c). The former
version of this sentence mentioned
only objections.
Addition to
Reporter's Notes Regarding Subpoena
Form (January, 2002): This form
was designed for civil cases,
including probate and juvenile
matters, and should not be used in
criminal proceedings. It is based on
the form used in the federal courts.
See Form AO 88, Subpoena in a
Civil Case (Rev. 1994), reprinted in
1B Federal Procedural Forms §§
1:1270 (1999). However, it departs
from the federal model as necessary
to accommodate differences between
the Arkansas Rules of Civil
Procedure and the federal rules.
Rule 45 does
not mention the form, but the
Supreme Court's order of adoption
describes it as "official." In re
Arkansas Rules of Civil Procedure,
340 Ark. 731, 733 (2000). Although
use of an exact reproduction of the
form is not mandatory, a subpoena
must include all information called
for by the form. For example, the
second page of the form contains a
"notice to persons subject to
subpoenas" intended to advise those
persons of their rights and duties
under Rule 45. A subpoena without
this information would be subject to
challenge. However, so long as the
necessary information is included,
use of a "home-grown" document
should not be fatal.
Additional
information may be included if it is
not inconsistent with Rule 45 or the
form itself. For instance, a
subpoena issued by the clerk might
contain the name, address and phone
number of the attorney who requested
its issuance. Other information can
be added in certain spaces on the
form. The division in which the case
is pending may also be included
along with the street address in the
box labeled "place of testimony."
On the other
hand, modification of the form in
such a way that distorts the
controlling law or misleads the
recipient is impermissible. Under
Rule 45(b), for example, a subpoena
duces tecum directed to a
non-party is permissible only in
connection with a deposition,
hearing, or trial. Consequently,
adding to the form a box to be
checked and an accompanying
statement to the effect that the
recipient is commanded to permit
inspection of specified documents at
counsel's office on a given date, is
not permissible. By contrast, the
federal form offers this option,
which is available under the federal
rules. See Rules 34(c) &
45(a)(1)(C), Fed. R. Civ. P.
Unless a
statute provides a procedure
different from that specified in
Rule 45, the rule and the form are
applicable in probate and juvenile
cases. Certain probate matters -
such as will contests and adoptions
- are "special proceedings" within
the meaning of Rule 81(a) and thus
excepted from the Rules of Civil
Procedure if a statute sets out a
different procedure. E.g.,
Brantley v. Davis, 305 Ark. 68,
805 S.W.2d 75 (1991). Some juvenile
matters may also be special
proceedings. See Kelley v. State,
191 Ark. 848, 88 S.W.2d 65 (1935).
If there is no such statute, then
the rules apply. Norton v. Hinson,
337 Ark. 487, 989 S.W.2d 535 (1999).
There appears
to be only one statute that uses the
word "subpoena" in connection with
probate cases, and it does not
conflict with Rule 45. See
Ark. Code Ann. §§ 5-2-317(b)(3). By
statute, the Rules of Civil
Procedure apply to "all proceedings"
in juvenile cases "until rules of
procedure for juvenile court are
developed and in effect," except as
otherwise provided by the juvenile
code. Ark. Code Ann. §§ 9-27-325(f).
No such rules have been promulgated,
and the only statute dealing with
subpoenas in juvenile cases is not
inconsistent with Rule 45. See
Ark. Code Ann. §§ 9-27-310(e).
Accordingly, the rule and the
subpoena form apply in probate and
juvenile proceedings.
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