This was a relatively light week, in terms of issued decisions. The Arkansas Court of Appeals issued eleven decisions on April 8, 2026. Two decisions appeared on the Arkansas Supreme Court's docket issued the next day. We'll note two of those Court of Appeals decisions - see if you can spot a theme!
In Golden v. State, 2026 Ark. App. 226, the Court of Appeals affirmed, but noted problems with Golden's statement of the case and the facts. The court cited Ark. Sup. Ct. R. 4-2(a)(6) and quoted the requirements for concise statements without argument and discussing all material facts and procedural information contained in the record.
Here, the statement of the case consists of eight short sentences basically stating that appellant was charged, tried, and convicted. Clearly, this is woefully deficient and ordinarily merits rebriefing. However, Rule 4-2(b) allows an appellee’s brief to supplement the statement of the case if the appellee believes it to be insufficient, which the State did in this case.
Golden, 2026 Ark. App. 226, at 1 n.1. Since the State saved the day, the court did not order rebriefing "this time because it is not in the interest of judicial economy to do so." Id. (emphasis in original).
Another footnote in Golden finds that an argument was preserved, despite the State's insistence to the contrary.
The State argues that appellant’s argument is not preserved because appellant mistakenly references only the motion for continuance filed by [a private attorney attempting to appear] and not the motion filed and argued by appellant’s counsel. Because appellant’s counsel essentially adopted the motion for continuance filed by [the private attorney] and because both motions argued that a continuance was needed to allow appellant to proceed with private counsel, we address appellant’s arguments on appeal.
Id. at 11 n.2.
Foster v. Sutton, 2026 Ark. App. 224, also addressed a deficient statement of the case and the facts. A footnote references Ark. Sup. Ct. R. 4-2(a)(6) and quotes the requirements to discuss all material facts and procedural information, and to cite to pages in the record where those items can be found. "Terry's statement of the case does none of these things" but the court did not order rebriefing "because the appellees' brief supplies the missing information in the missing format." Foster, 2026 Ark. App. 224, at 6-7 n.1. The court also concluded that certain arguments were not preserved for appeal because they "were neither presented to nor ruled on by the circuit court." Id. at 7.
Thanks for reading.


