A comprehensive lecture on FRCP 55 — from the mechanics of entry through the doctrine of vacatur. Covers the full Supreme Court and Fifth Circuit framework with scenario analysis for practitioners and students.
Before examining the doctrine, you must understand the rule's structure. FRCP 55 contains two distinct mechanisms that operate in sequence. Most practitioners — and many clients — treat them as a single event. They are not. Conflating them is the source of most default judgment errors.
The distinction between entry of default and default judgment is not merely academic. It governs which standard applies, what the defendant must show to get relief, and whether there is a time limit on the motion to vacate.
| Element | Entry of Default (55(a)) | Default Judgment (55(b)) |
|---|---|---|
| Who acts | Clerk of court (ministerial act) | Clerk (sum-certain only) or Court |
| What it is | A record notation of failure to respond | An enforceable judicial judgment |
| Relief awarded | None | Yes — money, injunction, or other |
| Res judicata effect | None | Yes (unless void under 60(b)(4)) |
| Enforceable by execution | No | Yes — immediately upon entry |
| Standard to set aside | "Good cause" — FRCP 55(c) | FRCP 60(b) grounds only |
| Time limit to challenge | No strict deadline (reasonable time) | 1 year for 60(b)(1)-(3); reasonable time for (4)-(6) |
FRCP 55(c) permits the court to set aside an entry of default for "good cause." This standard is intentionally more forgiving than the 60(b) standard for vacating a default judgment. The policy rationale is clear: courts strongly prefer resolving disputes on the merits rather than by default.
Each factor has a developed body of case law in the Fifth Circuit. Understanding how courts actually apply them — not just their formulation — is essential to predicting outcomes and crafting effective motions.
Once a default judgment has been entered — as opposed to a mere entry of default — the defendant can no longer proceed under FRCP 55(c). The only available vehicle is FRCP 60(b). This is a significant escalation in the difficulty of obtaining relief.
Rule 60(b)(4) is in a category of its own. Unlike every other ground for relief from judgment, there is no time limit, no balancing of equities, and no discretion. If a judgment is void, it must be vacated — period. This makes it the most powerful tool available to a defendant who can establish it.
The Supreme Court has established the foundational principles governing default judgments and relief from judgment. These cases are the trunk of the tree — everything the Fifth Circuit and district courts do flows from them.
The Fifth Circuit has developed a robust body of doctrine on default judgments. These decisions are binding on every federal district court in Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi — including the Southern District of Texas. They translate the Supreme Court's principles into the specific standards practitioners must apply in this circuit.
The following scenarios apply the doctrine to concrete fact patterns. Each one isolates a different aspect of the default judgment framework. These are the situations practitioners actually encounter.
When a client comes to you after a default or default judgment has been entered, work through this checklist in order. The most important decisions — which ground to argue, which deadline controls — depend on where in the process the case sits.
Deadlines in default judgment practice are unforgiving. The sooner you engage counsel, the more options remain available.
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