Motion vs. answer
Posted: Sat Dec 10, 2011 1:04 pm
can someone please explain what are the benefits of filing a motion instead of an answer (in regards to rule 12)? Thanks.
Law School Discussion Forums
https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/
https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=173567
This is the key. There are assert-them-or-lose-them defenses, like venue, sufficiency of process, and personal jurisdiction that are waived if not asserted prior to answering the complaint.NoleinNY wrote:
tl;dr : Certain motions need to be offered before providing an answer.
I thought Rule 12 defenses could be asserted in an answer if the answer is D's first filing?Renzo wrote:This is the key. There are assert-them-or-lose-them defenses, like venue, sufficiency of process, and personal jurisdiction that are waived if not asserted prior to answering the complaint.NoleinNY wrote:
tl;dr : Certain motions need to be offered before providing an answer.
But they might not want to answer. There could be claims that they would have to admit to that they would rather stay silent on if they can.sundance95 wrote:I thought Rule 12 defenses could be asserted in an answer if the answer is D's first filing?Renzo wrote:This is the key. There are assert-them-or-lose-them defenses, like venue, sufficiency of process, and personal jurisdiction that are waived if not asserted prior to answering the complaint.NoleinNY wrote:
tl;dr : Certain motions need to be offered before providing an answer.
Understood-I just thought the implication of what folks were saying was that it was compulsory to raise these defenses via motion rather than permissive.birdlaw117 wrote:But they might not want to answer. There could be claims that they would have to admit to that they would rather stay silent on if they can.
NoleinNY wrote: tl;dr : Certain motions need to be offered before providing an answer.
These are both incorrect. If you file a pre-answer motion asserting a 12(b) defense and your motion is GRANTED, then you are not required to file an answer until 1) the defect is cured or 2) the case is re-filed because the judge dismissed it (and possibly never if it is an incurable defect such as failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted and the plaintiff can't fix the problem by amending their complaint)Renzo wrote: This is the key. There are assert-them-or-lose-them defenses, like venue, sufficiency of process, and personal jurisdiction that are waived if not asserted prior to answering the complaint.
I said that in my first sentence...nihilism is key wrote:NoleinNY wrote: tl;dr : Certain motions need to be offered before providing an answer.These are both incorrect. If you file a pre-answer motion asserting a 12(b) defense and your motion is GRANTED, then you are not required to file an answer until 1) the defect is cured or 2) the case is re-filed because the judge dismissed it (and possibly never if it is an incurable defect such as failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted and the plaintiff can't fix the problem by amending their complaint)Renzo wrote: This is the key. There are assert-them-or-lose-them defenses, like venue, sufficiency of process, and personal jurisdiction that are waived if not asserted prior to answering the complaint.
If you file a pre-answer motion, you must assert any and all of the four disfavored defenses which are applicable (incorrect venue, lack of personal jurisdiction, improper service of process, insufficient process) or you will lose them because these four 12(b) defenses MUST be asserted in your first response to the complaint (whether it be a pre-answer motion or an answer) (caveat: assuming they were available to you at the time - i.e. if you receive a copy of a summons without a complaint and file a 12(b)(4) motion for insufficient process, you will maintain the ability to file certain other 12(b) motions because you were unaware of what the complaint was about, but some will be lost such as personal jurisdiction and venue because those would be included in the summons)
BUT, a defendant is NOT required to file a pre-answer motion and any and all of these defenses can be raised in the answer if no pre-answer motion is made.
Basically, the benefits of filing a pre-answer motion are 1) delaying the process and increasing the amount of time you have to file an answer and 2) the possibility that you will never have to file an answer. HTH.
I did not disagree with your first sentence. I disagreed with the statement made in summary after the "tl;dr"NoleinNY wrote:
I said that in my first sentence...
As for the quoted parts... 12(b) says "A motion asserting any of these defenses must be made before pleading if a responsive pleading is allowed." Secondly, 12(h)(1)(B)(i) "A party waives any defense listed in Rule 12(b)(2)–(5) by failing to make it by motion under this rule."
That sentence you quoted means exactly what it says, but not what you think. That only means that if you want to make a motion asserting any of these defenses, the motion has to come before the responsive pleading. Notice how the language doesn't say "These defenses must be made before pleading."NoleinNY wrote:
As for the quoted parts... 12(b) says "A motion asserting any of these defenses must be made before pleading if a responsive pleading is allowed."
Did you notice how 12(h)(1)(B) said "failing to either" and then 12(h)(1)(B)(ii) said "include it in a responsive pleading"?NoleinNY wrote:Secondly, 12(h)(1)(B)(i) "A party waives any defense listed in Rule 12(b)(2)–(5) by failing to make it by motion under this rule."
Good sweet god this is so wrong it hurts.nihilism is key wrote: ...the portion of 12(b) you are quoting is with respect to defenses lost IF a party CHOOSES to assert any of those defenses in a pre-answer motion. It simply says that if you are going to make a motion to dismiss (or any other motion based on these defenses), you must make them before you answer. BUT if you do not wish to make such a motion and would prefer to assert the defenses in your answer, that is fine too. Take away: a pre-answer motion is NEVER required and a defendant will NOT lose any of the 12(b) defenses by choosing not to make a pre-answer motion.
No.StyrofoamWar wrote:Good sweet god this is so wrong it hurts.nihilism is key wrote: ...the portion of 12(b) you are quoting is with respect to defenses lost IF a party CHOOSES to assert any of those defenses in a pre-answer motion. It simply says that if you are going to make a motion to dismiss (or any other motion based on these defenses), you must make them before you answer. BUT if you do not wish to make such a motion and would prefer to assert the defenses in your answer, that is fine too. Take away: a pre-answer motion is NEVER required and a defendant will NOT lose any of the 12(b) defenses by choosing not to make a pre-answer motion.
Some defenses absolutely 100% require a pre-answer motion. Namely, any of the defenses in rule 12(b), absent extreme circumstances.
Rule 12(B) lists 7 defenses that a party may assert by motion. It also requires that you file a motion based on these defenses (Motion to Dismiss Due to [insert 12(b)(1)-(7) defense here]) PRIOR to filing a responsive pleading, if a responsive pleading is allowed. An answer is a responsive pleading. Accordingly, if you want to file a 12(b) motion, you have to do it before answering. Failure to do so waives the defense, by the very text of the rule.
You absolutely can NOT file a pleading that is part Motion to Dismiss, part answer. A party can bring up other defenses in their answer (i.e. contributory negligence, etc). However, if the defendant wants to assert any of the defenses listed in Rule 12(b), he HAS to do so before answering the pleading. Failure to do so amounts to a waiver of these defenses.
The ONLY way that you could bring up a 12(b) defense at trial is if you got served with a special pleading that does not require a responsive pleading. Your typical complaint requires a responsive pleading (an answer). I honestly can't even think of what a pleading that doesn't require a responsive pleading would be.
Please please please don't argue with this. If you refuse to believe me, go to any PACER docket for any court anywhere in any federal court and find me one motion that is both an answer and a MTD based on something from FRCP 12(b). I promise you won't find one. Because it's not allowed.
yes.birdlaw117 wrote:No.StyrofoamWar wrote:Good sweet god this is so wrong it hurts.nihilism is key wrote: ...the portion of 12(b) you are quoting is with respect to defenses lost IF a party CHOOSES to assert any of those defenses in a pre-answer motion. It simply says that if you are going to make a motion to dismiss (or any other motion based on these defenses), you must make them before you answer. BUT if you do not wish to make such a motion and would prefer to assert the defenses in your answer, that is fine too. Take away: a pre-answer motion is NEVER required and a defendant will NOT lose any of the 12(b) defenses by choosing not to make a pre-answer motion.
Some defenses absolutely 100% require a pre-answer motion. Namely, any of the defenses in rule 12(b), absent extreme circumstances.
Rule 12(B) lists 7 defenses that a party may assert by motion. It also requires that you file a motion based on these defenses (Motion to Dismiss Due to [insert 12(b)(1)-(7) defense here]) PRIOR to filing a responsive pleading, if a responsive pleading is allowed. An answer is a responsive pleading. Accordingly, if you want to file a 12(b) motion, you have to do it before answering. Failure to do so waives the defense, by the very text of the rule.
You absolutely can NOT file a pleading that is part Motion to Dismiss, part answer. A party can bring up other defenses in their answer (i.e. contributory negligence, etc). However, if the defendant wants to assert any of the defenses listed in Rule 12(b), he HAS to do so before answering the pleading. Failure to do so amounts to a waiver of these defenses.
The ONLY way that you could bring up a 12(b) defense at trial is if you got served with a special pleading that does not require a responsive pleading. Your typical complaint requires a responsive pleading (an answer). I honestly can't even think of what a pleading that doesn't require a responsive pleading would be.
Please please please don't argue with this. If you refuse to believe me, go to any PACER docket for any court anywhere in any federal court and find me one motion that is both an answer and a MTD based on something from FRCP 12(b). I promise you won't find one. Because it's not allowed.
whoa whoa whoa. I never said that. I said that you can either file a pre-answer motion to dimiss and assert the relevant 12(b) defenses there OR file an answer/responsive pleading and assert the defenses there. My point was that you are not required to file a pre-answer motion. no where in my explanation did i mention trial. My discussion was limited to the optional pre-answer motion and the answer. I feel like we are reading two different rule 12s. While it might be logical for a defendant to file a pre-answer motion, I see nowhere in the rule where it requires him to do so.StyrofoamWar wrote:Good sweet god this is so wrong it hurts.nihilism is key wrote: ...the portion of 12(b) you are quoting is with respect to defenses lost IF a party CHOOSES to assert any of those defenses in a pre-answer motion. It simply says that if you are going to make a motion to dismiss (or any other motion based on these defenses), you must make them before you answer. BUT if you do not wish to make such a motion and would prefer to assert the defenses in your answer, that is fine too. Take away: a pre-answer motion is NEVER required and a defendant will NOT lose any of the 12(b) defenses by choosing not to make a pre-answer motion.
Some defenses absolutely 100% require a pre-answer motion. Namely, any of the defenses in rule 12(b), absent extreme circumstances.
Rule 12(B) lists 7 defenses that a party may assert by motion. It also requires that you file a motion based on these defenses (Motion to Dismiss Due to [insert 12(b)(1)-(7) defense here]) PRIOR to filing a responsive pleading, if a responsive pleading is allowed. An answer is a responsive pleading. Accordingly, if you want to file a 12(b) motion, you have to do it before answering. Failure to do so waives the defense, by the very text of the rule.
You absolutely can NOT file a pleading that is part Motion to Dismiss, part answer. A party can bring up other defenses in their answer (i.e. contributory negligence, etc). However, if the defendant wants to assert any of the defenses listed in Rule 12(b), he HAS to do so before answering the pleading. Failure to do so amounts to a waiver of these defenses.
The ONLY way that you could bring up a 12(b) defense at trial is if you got served with a special pleading that does not require a responsive pleading. Your typical complaint requires a responsive pleading (an answer). I honestly can't even think of what a pleading that doesn't require a responsive pleading would be.
Please please please don't argue with this. If you refuse to believe me, go to any PACER docket for any court anywhere in any federal court and find me one motion that is both an answer and a MTD based on something from FRCP 12(b). I promise you won't find one. Because it's not allowed.
yes.[/quote]StyrofoamWar wrote: No.
I should have specified that it was the never being able to raise anything else ever again that I disagreed with. But the language clearly states that you can do it all at once if you want. But as a practical matter I don't know why anybody would ever include a MTD with an Answer. Just more work and such...[/quote]birdlaw117 wrote:yes.StyrofoamWar wrote: No.
I think the confusion in this thread is between the affirmative defenses listed in Rule 8(c), and the defenses specifically set out in Rule 12(b).StyrofoamWar wrote:I should have specified that it was the never being able to raise anything else ever again that I disagreed with. But the language clearly states that you can do it all at once if you want. But as a practical matter I don't know why anybody would ever include a MTD with an Answer. Just more work and such...birdlaw117 wrote:yes.StyrofoamWar wrote: No.
And I'm say it explicitly prohibits it.nihilism is key wrote:Let me see if I can clarify my point:
P serves D with a summons and complaint. D believes that the venue is improper. D has two options:
1) file a 12(b)(3) pre-answer motion to dismiss for improper venue
OR
2) file an answer in which he asserts all of the defenses he could conceivably use at trial as well as the 12(b)(3) motion
I am not saying it would be logical for a defendant to do such a thing. All i am saying is that FRCP R. 12 says that option #2 is valid.
This. If you argue on an exam that D waived all Rule 12 defenses save lack of subject matter jurisdiction by raising those defenses in D's answer rather than by motion prior to D's answer, you'd wrong (unless the answer is not D's first response to the complaint).nihilism is key wrote:I am not saying it would be logical for a defendant to do such a thing. All i am saying is that FRCP R. 12 says that option #2 is valid.
12(b) states: "Every defense to a claim for relief in any pleading must be asserted in the responsive pleading if one is required. But a party may assert the following defenses by motion" (insert 7 defenses) here.StyrofoamWar wrote:And I'm say it explicitly prohibits it.nihilism is key wrote:Let me see if I can clarify my point:
P serves D with a summons and complaint. D believes that the venue is improper. D has two options:
1) file a 12(b)(3) pre-answer motion to dismiss for improper venue
OR
2) file an answer in which he asserts all of the defenses he could conceivably use at trial as well as the 12(b)(3) motion
I am not saying it would be logical for a defendant to do such a thing. All i am saying is that FRCP R. 12 says that option #2 is valid.
You have to bring up 12(b) defenses by a motion after you've been served and before you answer. If you do not, and you file an answer, you can not bring up 12(b) defenses.