                                  Cite as 2014 Ark. App. 476

                 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
                                         DIVISION I
                                       No. CV-13-1142


                                                   Opinion Delivered   SEPTEMBER 17, 2014
LINDA DIXON BLY, In Her Capacity as
Trustee of the Dorothy Dixon Hatchett              APPEAL FROM THE VAN BUREN
Revocable Trust                                    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
                            APPELLANT              [NO. 71CV-13-47]

V.                                                 HONORABLE MICHAEL A.
                                                   MAGGIO, JUDGE

GUY COLLISTER                                      AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED
                                   APPELLEE        AND REMANDED IN PART



                               LARRY D. VAUGHT, Judge

       This current appeal comes to this court following litigation that has spanned nearly

twenty years and a previous, related appeal: Hatchett v. Terry, 87 Ark. App. 276, 190 S.W.3d

302 (2004).

       The litigation began in 1994 when Dorothy Hatchett filed a foreclosure action against

Mary and Earl Collister. She alleged that they defaulted on mortgages executed in association

with the sale of approximately 204 acres in Van Buren County. The trial court entered an

order against Mary Collister1 in February 1995 giving Hatchett a first priority lien on the

property and a $108,324.90 judgment. The court withheld any determination regarding a

sale of the property and ordered Mary Collister to prepare an accounting of every parcel of

land. The Collisters had sold parcels of the land to third parties but the specific transfers were


       1
        Earl Collister died during the pendency of the litigation.
                                    Cite as 2014 Ark. App. 476

unknown. Mary Collister never complied with the trial court’s directive to perform an

accounting. The trial court entered an order providing that this case was not finalized and

should remain open.

          Clifford and Bonnie Terry purchased one of the parcels of land from the Collisters

that was subject to the mortgage in favor of Dorothy Hatchett. In December 2000, they

filed a quiet-title action against Dorothy Hatchett and Linda Dixon Bly, the trustee of the

Dorothy Dixon Hatchett Revocable Trust.2 Bly counterclaimed for foreclosure. Later, the

Terrys amended their complaint to join others who had purchased parcels of the mortgaged

property from the Collisters.

          In April 2003, following a trial on the merits, the trial court quieted title to the Terrys

and the other plaintiffs in that action. For practical purposes, this order accomplished what

Mary Collister was ordered to do in the 1995 case. It accounted for the parcels of land that

she and her husband sold. The order also consolidated the quiet-title action with the

foreclosure case and held that the foreclosure sale should go forward excluding the properties

purchased by the quiet-title plaintiffs. Linda Bly appealed the trial court’s 2003 order, and

this court affirmed the trial court’s ruling. Hatchett v. Terry, 87 Ark. App. 276, 190 S.W.3d

302 (2004). Neither the foreclosure nor the consolidation of the cases was the basis of the

appeal.

          There was no further action in this case until March 2013. At that time, Linda Bly



          2
      Hatchett quitclaimed her interest in the property to the Dorothy Dixon Hatchett
Revocable Trust on July 30, 1997.

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filed a motion to set a foreclosure sale and a petition for writ of scire facias to revive the 2003

judgment as it related to the foreclosure of the land. Guy Collister3 resisted the motions.

The trial court denied Bly’s motion to set a foreclosure sale based upon Ark. Code Ann. §

16-65-501 finding that Bly lacked standing, that the statute of limitations had run on the

1995 decree, and that the remaining arguments presented were moot. This timely appeal

followed.

       Whether the trial court should have granted the motion to set a foreclosure sale and

the petition for scire facias are questions of law, and therefore, we conduct our review de

novo. Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Citizens Bank & Trust Co., 2014 Ark. 20, 431 S.W.3d

292. For a de novo review, “the entire case is open for review.” Unimeks, LLC v. Purolite,

2012 Ark. 20, at 4, 386 S.W.3d 419, 421-22.

       Arkansas Code Annotated § 16-65-501(f) (Repl. 2005) provides that a writ of scire

facias must be “filed within ten years from the date of the rendition of the judgment.” The

trial court held that Linda Bly could not revive the foreclosure judgment or petition the

court for a foreclosure sale. It reasoned that the foreclosure decree was entered in 1995, and

more than ten years had passed since the date of the rendition of the judgment. Bly argues

that the 2003 order was a final decree in the foreclosure case and, therefore, capable of

revival. That order consolidated the actions, accounted for the parcels of land that were sold

by the Collisters as required by the 1995 order, and directed Bly to proceed with a



       3
        By this time, both Mary and Earl Collister were deceased, and their son, Guy
Collister, represented their interests in this litigation.

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foreclosure sale. We disagree with Bly’s argument.

       The 2003 order primarily concerned the quiet-title action. While the foreclosure

action was consolidated for certain purposes, no judgment of foreclosure was entered. The

trial court concluded that the foreclosure sale should go forward, but the order did not put

the court’s directive of sale into execution. Alberty v. Wideman, 312 Ark. 434, 436, 850

S.W.2d 314, 315 (1993). The trial judge must still appoint a commissioner and set a date,

time, and location for the sale and these provisions are necessary to effectuate the decree and

create a judgment of foreclosure. Id. at 438, 850 S.W.2d at 316. The trial court therefore

did not err when it denied the petition for scire facias because there was no foreclosure

judgment from 2003 to revive. We affirm on this issue.

       However, our review causes us to conclude that Bly is entitled to a portion of the

relief she requests because the trial court erred when it denied Bly’s motion to set a

foreclosure sale. This court previously determined that the 1995 foreclosure decree was not

a final order. Hatchett, 87 Ark. App. at 283, 190 S.W.3d at 307. In the 1995 order, the trial

court withheld any determination regarding the sale of the property until an accounting

could be performed. The trial court subsequently ordered that the 1995 case remain open

until further order of the court. The case was never closed. Because the 2003 case

determined the parcels of land that were to be excluded from the foreclosure sale and quieted

title to the owners of those parcels, the accounting is no longer necessary and the foreclosure

sale can proceed. After our de novo review, we conclude that the trial court erred in

denying the motion for foreclosure sale, and we reverse and remand this case with


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instructions for the trial court to grant this motion.

       Affirmed in part; reversed and remanded in part.

       GRUBER and WHITEAKER , JJ., agree.

       Friday, Eldredge & Clark, LLP, by: Robert S. Shafer, Harry A. Light, and Tory H. Lewis,

for appellant.

       Morgan Law Firm, P.A., by: M. Edward Morgan, for appellee.




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