(dc) District court rule. Rule 40 applies in the district courts except that the reference to sixty (60) days at Rule 40(a) is reduced to fourteen (14) days, the exceptions (1), (3), (4), (5), and (6) in Rule 40(a) are inapplicable to district courts, and the provision for notice in Rule 40(b) is altered so as to require notice to all parties instead of notice to “all out-of-county attorneys of record.”
Ala. R. Civ. P. 40
Committee Comments on 1973 Adoption
The broad discretion given by the court in Rule 40, A.R.C.P., is not dissimilar to the latitude under the Rules of Practice in Circuit and Inferior Courts. Tit. 7, Appendix, Code 1940. For example, in Knowles v. Blue, 209 Ala. 27, 30, 95 So. 481 (1923), Judge Thomas held as follows:
“Statutes prescribing the order of trial of causes on the docket have been said to be merely directory. The rule in question, as codified, has the force and effect of a statute, is directory, and vests a large discretion in the trial court in the disposition of the causes in such order as to economically and speedily dispose of pending causes without injustice to parties litigant and their counsel.”
To the same effect see Southern Ry. v. Smith, 268 Ala. 235, 105 So.2d 705 (1958).
The rule carries forward the provisions of Tit. 7, ยง 249, Code 1940 in its requirement that cases must be set at least 20 days before the date of trial. The rule clearly places the duty upon the clerk to give prompt notice of a setting to all out of county attorneys. This should not alter any present practices currently employed for the giving of notice to local attorneys.
District Court Committee Comments
In the circuit courts Rule 40(b) imposes a duty upon the clerk to notify all “out-of-county attorneys” of the trial docket. This rule was drawn so as to preserve practices currently in effect for the giving of notice to local attorneys. However, in district court, Rule 40(dc) will require some notice to all attorneys or the parties of the setting of cases for trial. It is envisioned that, in the contested cases, the district court would notifier each litigant by postcard or some other simple means of the setting of a case for trial.