American West Enterprises, Inc. v. CNH, LLC , 155 Idaho 746 ( 2013 )


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  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 40230
    AMERICAN WEST ENTERPRISES, INC.,                      )
    an Idaho corporation,                                 )   Twin Falls, November 2013 Term
    )
    Plaintiff-Appellant-Cross Respondent,            )   2013 Opinion No. 140
    )
    v.                                                    )   Filed: December 20, 2013
    )
    CNH, LLC,                                             )   Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
    )
    Defendant-Respondent-Cross                        )
    Appellant.                                        )
    ________________________________________
    Appeal for the District Court of the Fifth Judicial District of the State of
    Idaho, Minidoka County. Hon. Jonathan P. Brody, District Judge.
    The district court is affirmed in the grant of summary judgment to Respondent
    and affirmed in its denial of Appellant’s request to amend complaint and
    is reversed in denial of attorney fees and costs. This case is remanded for
    the sole purpose of awarding costs and attorney fees in district court.
    Attorney fees and costs on appeal are awarded to Respondent.
    Robinson, Anthon & Tribe, Rupert, attorneys for Appellant. Brent Taylor
    Robinson argued.
    Jones, Gledhill, Fuhrman & Gourley, Boise, attorneys for Respondent.
    Christopher Graham argued.
    ______________________________
    SCHROEDER, J. pro tem
    I.
    Nature of Case
    This is an appeal from the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Case New
    Holland, Inc. (“CNH”) in a suit brought by American West Enterprises (“American West”) in an
    effort to recover the cost of a remanufactured tractor engine sold by CNH to a local seller,
    Pioneer Equipment Company (“Pioneer”), and purchased by American West. The district court
    dismissed American West’s claim of implied warranty because there was no privity between
    American West and CNH. The district court also rejected American West’s claims that it was an
    intended third party beneficiary of a contract between CNH and Pioneer and that Pioneer was an
    1
    agent of CNH. American West appeals. The district court denied CNH’s request for attorney fees
    and costs below. CNH cross-appeals.
    II.
    Factual and Procedural Background
    In August 2007, American West entered into an agreement with Pioneer to replace the
    engine in a Case IH 3394 tractor which American West originally purchased in 1997. Pioneer
    was an authorized dealer of CNH. Pioneer ordered a new engine and core from CNH and
    installed the engine and core on American West’s Case IH 3394. In the two years following the
    installation of the new engine, the tractor was used for only fifteen hours. American West sold
    the Case tractor to Frank Jensen in the spring of 2009. Jensen used the tractor for four to five
    hours before the engine stopped working. American West refunded Jensen the purchase price of
    the tractor and took it to Pioneer to diagnose the problem. Pioneer requested CNH to warrant the
    tractor engine. CNH refused to warrant the engine because the time limit on any warranty had
    expired.
    On March 18, 2011, American West filed a Complaint naming CNH as defendant,
    alleging breach of the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose.
    American West demanded reimbursement for the cost of parts and labor. CNH answered and
    subsequently filed a motion for summary judgment, asserting that American West’s claims were
    barred by a lack of privity between the parties. American West sought leave to amend its
    complaint to include claims as a third party beneficiary of an oral contract between CNH and
    Pioneer and that Pioneer was CNH’s agent.
    The district court granted CNH’s motion for summary judgment and denied American
    West’s motion to amend the complaint. The district court found that privity of contract was
    required to recover for economic loss in a breach of an implied warranty case and that there was
    no privity between American West and CNH. The district court also found that American West
    was not the intended third party beneficiary of the agreement between Pioneer and CNH and that
    American West failed to allege any facts indicating that Pioneer was the agent of CNH. The fact
    that Pioneer was an authorized dealer of CNH was not in and of itself sufficient to establish an
    agency relationship. The district court entered final judgment in favor of CNH and against
    American West.
    2
    CNH requested attorney fees and costs pursuant to I.C. § 12-120(3). The district court
    denied CNH’s motion for attorney fees on the basis that it was unable to find a commercial
    transaction between CNH and American West.
    American West appealed, maintaining that the district court erred when it ruled that
    privity of contract was required and when it denied American West’s motion to amend its
    complaint. CNH filed a cross-appeal, maintaining that the district court erred in ruling that CNH
    could not recover attorney fees pursuant to I.C. § 12-120(3).
    III.
    Standard of Review
    An appeal from summary judgment is reviewed under the same standard a district
    court uses when granting a motion for summary judgment. Under Rule 56(c) of
    the Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure, summary judgment is proper if the pleadings,
    depositions, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that
    there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is
    entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. If the evidence reveals no disputed
    issues of material fact, then summary judgment should be granted. In making this
    determination, all disputed facts are liberally construed in favor of the non-
    moving party. Circumstantial evidence can create a genuine issue of material fact.
    Inferences that can reasonably be made from the record are made in favor of the
    non-moving party. However, the non-moving party may not rest on a mere
    scintilla of evidence. If the record raises neither a question of witness credibility
    nor requires weighing the evidence, then summary judgment should be granted.
    The moving party is entitled to judgment when the nonmoving party fails to make
    a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that
    party’s case.
    Parkwest Homes, LLC v. Barnson, 
    154 Idaho 678
    , 682, 
    302 P.3d 18
    , 22 (2013) (internal citations
    and quotations omitted).
    IV.
    The District Court Did Not Err When It Ruled That Privity of Contract Was Required
    for American West’s Breach of Implied Warranty Claim Against CNH.
    The district court granted CNH summary judgment on American West’s warranty action
    on the basis that privity of contract is required to recover for economic loss for breach of an
    implied warranty. There was no privity of contract between American West and CNH. The
    district court recognized that this Court held in Salmon Rivers Sportsman Camps, Inc. v. Cessna
    Air Co., 
    97 Idaho 348
    , 
    544 P.2d 306
    (1975), that there might be a situation in which the privity
    requirement might be removed because of unfair prejudice, but that was not this case.
    3
    American West argues that the privity requirement in Salmon Rivers was overruled in
    State v. Mitchell Const. Co., 
    108 Idaho 335
    , 
    699 P.2d 1349
    (1984), in which three justices
    expressed their view that Salmon Rivers was no longer valid. In Salmon Rivers, plaintiff brought
    suit alleging breach of implied warranty to recover damages sustained when their Cessna aircraft
    suffered a mechanical failure. Salmon 
    Rivers, 97 Idaho at 348
    , 544 P.2d at 306. The plaintiffs
    challenged the district court’s ruling that privity of contract must exist between it and the
    defendant before it could recover. 
    Id. at 351,
    544 P.2d at 309. This Court held that in a products
    liability case the plaintiff must tie the type of recovery to the legal ground for their action. This
    Court narrowly considered the type of action involved and limited its ruling to “whether a
    plaintiff may maintain an action against a manufacturer, with which it is not in privity of
    contract, to recover economic loss on the ground of breach of implied warranty within the
    contract statute of limitations.” 
    Id. After considering
    the complicated nature of warranty cases as
    a hybrid creature of contract and tort, this Court was convinced that the case before it presented a
    contract action to recover under the theory of breach of implied warranty. 
    Id. at 354,
    544 P.2d at
    312. This rule was based primarily on the commercial nature of the action and on the principle
    that the implied terms of a warranty can only arise from an agreement between two or more
    parties. 
    Id. In Clark
    v. International Harvester Company, 
    99 Idaho 326
    , 
    581 P.2d 784
    (1978), this
    Court was asked to decide whether the purchaser of a defective product may recover those
    damages in a negligence action brought against the manufacturer, where there was privity of
    contract. 
    Id. This Court
    clarified that this case did not present the same issue as Salmon Rivers:
    this case is not like [Salmon Rivers] in which the plaintiffs sought damages for
    economic loss for breach of an implied warranty. In that case, we did not rule
    whether such damages were recoverable in a negligence action, but held that a
    plaintiff who was not in privity of contract with the defendant could not recover
    economic losses based on a breach of an implied warranty.
    
    Id. at 332,
    581 P.2d at 790.
    In State v. Mitchell Construction Co., the State brought an action to recover the cost of
    repair for a defective roof from its contractor, Mitchell Construction. 
    108 Idaho 335
    , 
    699 P.2d 1349
    (1984). Mitchell brought a third party complaint against the architect, the roof
    subcontractors, and the subcontractor’s supplier, Neogard, to indemnify its potential liability. 
    Id. at 336,
    699 P.2d at 1350. Mitchell and Neogard had no direct dealings with each other. 
    Id. The district
    court ruled that economic damages cannot be recovered in a breach of implied or express
    4
    warranty action in the absence of privity of contract. 
    Id. On appeal,
    this Court acknowledged the
    Salmon Rivers rule requiring privity of contract with respect to implied warranty actions, but the
    Court declined to address whether privity of contract was necessary for express warranty actions
    because Mitchell failed to allege sufficient facts indicating the existence of an express warranty.
    
    Id. at 337,
    699 P.2d at 1351. Justice Donaldson concurred as to the result but questioned the
    continued validity of Salmon Rivers. 
    Id. (Donaldson, J.
    concurring). He argued that the UCC was
    an adequate mechanism through which manufacturers could limit their potential liability to
    unknown users of their products by employing the disclaimer provisions of the UCC. 
    Id. at 338,
    699 P.2d at 1352 (Donaldson, J. concurring). Justice Huntley dissented and agreed with Justice
    Donaldson that Salmon Rivers should be overturned and also disagreed with the Court’s
    conclusion that there was no privity of contract. 
    Id. at 339,
    699 P.2d at 1353 (Huntley, J.
    dissenting). On rehearing, Justice Donaldson and Justice Huntley continued to adhere to their
    positions. 
    Id. at 341,
    699 P.2d at 1355. However, Justice Bistline changed his opinion and
    dissented. Justice Bistline wrote “I now fully agree with the views earlier expressed by Chief
    Justice Donaldson and Justice Huntley that Salmon Rivers should be overruled, and so vote.” 
    Id. (Bistline, J.
    dissenting).
    In Tusch Enterprises v. Coffin, the purchaser of duplexes brought suit against vendors
    seeking compensation for structural defects. 
    113 Idaho 37
    , 
    740 P.2d 1022
    (1987). The majority
    in that case wrote “three members of this Court expressed the view that this privity requirement
    should be abolished.” 
    Id. at 50,
    740 P.2d at 1035. The Court declined to clarify the validity of
    Salmon Rivers because Coffin was not a goods case. 
    Id. In dicta,
    the majority did express a
    principle that if in a negligence action, negligence can be preempted by contract, then in an
    implied warranty case, contract principles should be given a freer hand to resolve injuries. 
    Id. Justice Bistline
    concurred in the decision but wrote separately “to inform the trial bench and bar
    that the [Salmon Rivers] case, which is recognized as having continued but doubtful validity in
    the opinion for the Court, was specifically overruled in the [Mitchell] case . . . .” 
    Id. at 51,
    740
    P.2d at 1036 (Bistline, J. concurring).
    In Ramerth v. Hart, 
    133 Idaho 194
    , 
    983 P.2d 848
    (1999), the plaintiff, a buyer and seller
    of an airplane, brought suit against a mechanic who had performed work on the airplane before
    the sale of the airplane. The plaintiff asserted claims for negligence and breach of warranty. The
    plaintiff had never met the defendant nor had any business dealings with the defendant. 
    Id. at 5
    
    197, 983 P.2d at 851
    . There was no contractual privity between the parties. 
    Id. Nonetheless, the
    plaintiff argued that it should be permitted to pursue its implied warranty claim against defendant
    despite the lack of privity. 
    Id. This Court
    , in a unanimous decision clarified the validity of
    Salmon Rivers:
    Despite Justice Bistline’s opinion, however, the majority opinion in Tusch
    recognized the continuing validity of Salmon Rivers . . . We conclude, therefore,
    that Salmon Rivers remains valid. We are not persuaded that the rule announced
    in Salmon Rivers should be relaxed to allow a claim for breach of implied
    warranty on the facts of this case.
    
    Id. at 198,
    983, P.2d at 852. This Court held that the primary argument in support of relaxing the
    Salmon Rivers rule was the perception of unfairness because the economic loss rule coupled with
    the privity requirement might work to prevent a party from redressing their injuries. 
    Id. But the
    Court did not find this a case in which the plaintiff was unfairly prejudiced sufficient to support
    further relaxation of Salmon Rivers. 
    Id. Privity of
    contract is required in a contract action to recover economic loss for breach of
    implied warranty, potentially unless the application of this rule would have the effect of unfairly
    prejudicing the plaintiff. 
    Id. A plaintiff
    can seek recovery of damages in a products liability action for personal
    injury, property damage, and economic loss. Although personal injuries stand
    distinctly apart from the other two categories, a delineation between the latter two
    is necessary. Property damage encompasses damage to property other than that
    which is the subject of the transaction. Economic loss includes costs of repair and
    replacement of defective property which is the subject of the transaction, as well
    as commercial loss for inadequate value and consequent loss of profits or use.
    Salmon Rivers, 97 Idaho at 
    351, 544 P.2d at 309
    .
    The Idaho Court of Appeals addressed the potential to relax the Salmon Rivers rule on the
    basis of unfair prejudice in Nelson v. Anderson Lumber Company, 
    140 Idaho 702
    , 
    99 P.3d 1092
    (Ct. App. 2004), holding that a party is not unfairly prejudiced where the privity requirement and
    the economic loss rule work to preclude a party from recovering if the party had a viable cause of
    action against another party. 
    Id. at 711,
    99 P.3d at 1101. The mere inability to be fully
    compensated for losses is not sufficient to relax the Salmon Rivers rule.
    The district court did not err when it dismissed American West’s breach of an implied
    warranty action against CNH on the basis of a lack of privity. The economic loss rule is
    applicable because American West only sustained economic losses. American West was not in
    privity with CNH. American West may have had a cause of action against Pioneer from which it
    6
    purchased the allegedly defective tractor engine. However, American West did not pursue any
    action against Pioneer, the entity with which it had direct business dealings.
    V.
    The District Court Did Not Err When It Found That American West Was Not an Intended
    Third Party Beneficiary of The Agreement Between CNH and Pioneer.
    The district court denied American West’s request to amend its complaint to assert that it
    was the intended third party beneficiary of Pioneer’s agreement with CNH. The district court
    noted that there was no written contract between CNH and Pioneer to construe to determine
    whether American West was the intended beneficiary, but the district court was able to construe
    a verbal contract between the parties. There was no evidence demonstrating that the contract
    between Pioneer and CNH was intended for American West’s benefit. The district court noted
    that CNH’s sole purpose of providing an engine to Pioneer was to make a profit from its
    equipment, and that Pioneer’s purpose was to procure the parts necessary to replace American
    West’s engine for a profit. The district court ruled that American West was therefore not a direct
    beneficiary. (Id.)
    Under Idaho law [I.C. § 29-102], if a party can demonstrate that a contract was
    made expressly for its benefit, it may enforce that contract, prior to rescission, as
    a third-party beneficiary. The test for determining a party’s status as a third-party
    beneficiary capable of properly invoking the protection of I.C. § 29-102, is
    whether the agreement reflects an intent to benefit the third party. The third party
    must show that the contract was made primarily for his benefit, and that it is not
    sufficient that he be a mere incidental beneficiary. Further, the contract itself must
    express an intent to benefit the third party. This intent must be gleaned from the
    contract itself unless that document is ambiguous, whereupon the circumstances
    surrounding its formation may be considered . . . a party must show that the
    contract was made for its direct benefit, and that it is not merely an indirect
    beneficiary.
    Idaho Power Co. v. Hulet, 
    140 Idaho 110
    , 112–13, 
    90 P.3d 335
    , 337–38 (2004) (internal
    citations and quotations omitted). A party can be an intended or incidental beneficiary of an oral
    contract. See 
    Nelson, 140 Idaho at 709
    , 99 P.3d at 1099. A party is not the intended third party
    beneficiary of subsequent contracts a contractor enters with others so as to satisfy its own
    obligations. 
    Id. (citing 9
    Corbin on Contracts § 779D (1979); Restatement (Second) of Contracts
    § 302, ills. 19 (1981)).
    American West was in need of a new engine for its Case tractor. It contracted with
    Pioneer, a Case authorized retailer, for a new tractor engine. Pioneer accepted American West’s
    7
    business and contracted with American West to replace and install a new Case engine, including
    $3,000 in labor fees. Pioneer was obligated to provide American West with certain benefits, and
    if Pioneer failed to provide those benefits, it would be liable to American West. Pioneer did not
    have all of the materials necessary to replace the tractor engine on American West’s tractor, so it
    entered into a subsequent agreement with CNH to acquire an engine that Pioneer would install
    on American West’s tractor. The agreement between Pioneer and CNH added nothing to what
    American West was already entitled to receive from its agreement with Pioneer. If Pioneer failed
    to satisfy its obligations, it would be liable. Additionally, American West failed to identify any
    circumstance or language demonstrating that either Pioneer or CNH expressly intended to benefit
    American West with their transaction. CNH sold Pioneer an engine at a profit, and Pioneer
    obtained an engine that it installed on a tractor for a profit. CNH provided affidavits that it was
    unaware of the existence of American West at the time of its transaction with Pioneer and was
    wholly unaware of any agreement between Pioneer and American West. American West failed to
    rebut that evidence.
    The record supports the district court’s determination that American West was not an
    intended third party beneficiary.
    VI.
    The District Court Did Not Err When It Found That Pioneer Was Not The Agent of CNH.
    The district court denied American West’s request to amend its complaint to assert that
    Pioneer was an agent of CNH, because there was no evidence presented demonstrating that
    Pioneer was acting in any manner but in its own interests—not in the interests of CNH.
    The existence of an agency relationship is a question of fact, but where the question
    depends on the construction of a legal instrument, the question becomes one of law. See Idaho
    Lumber, Inc. v. Buck, 
    109 Idaho 737
    , 741, 
    710 P.2d 647
    , 651 (1985); Adkison Corp. v. Am. Bldg.
    Co., 
    107 Idaho 406
    , 409, 
    690 P.2d 341
    , 344 (1984). Express authority is the authority that a
    principal has explicitly granted to the agent to act in the principal’s name.
    There are three separate types of agency, any of which are sufficient to
    bind the principal to a contract entered into by an agent with a third party, and
    make the principal responsible for the agent’s tortious acts, so long as the agent
    has acted within the course and scope of authority delegated by the principal. The
    three types of agencies are: express authority, implied authority, and apparent
    authority.
    8
    Both express and implied authority are forms of actual authority. Express
    authority refers to that authority which the principal has explicitly granted the
    agent to act in the principal’s name. Implied authority refers to that authority
    which is necessary, usual, and proper to accomplish or perform the express
    authority delegated to the agent by the principal
    Apparent authority differs from actual authority. It is created when the
    principal voluntarily places an agent in such a position that a person of ordinary
    prudence, conversant with the business usages and the nature of a particular
    business, is justified in believing that the agent is acting pursuant to existing
    authority. Apparent authority cannot be created by the acts and statements of the
    agent alone.
    Bailey v. Ness, 
    109 Idaho 495
    , 497–98, 
    708 P.2d 900
    , 902–03 (1985) (internal citations and
    quotations omitted).
    It is generally recognized that an authorized dealer is not an agent of a manufacturer
    absent some quantum of control. See Doll v. Ford Motor Co., 
    814 F. Supp. 2d 526
    , 540 (D. Md.
    2011) (ruling that the sole fact that dealership was an authorized Ford dealer was insufficient to
    demonstrate the existence of an agency relationship); Theos & Sons, Inc. v. Mack Trucks, Inc.,
    
    729 N.E.2d 1113
    , 1122 (Mass. 2000) (holding that one party’s “representation of itself as an
    authorized parts and service dealer of Mack is not a sufficient ground for [a party] to reasonably
    believe that [the other party] had apparent authority to act as Mack’s agent.”); Connick v. Suzuki
    Motor Co., 
    675 N.E.2d 584
    , 592 (Ill. 1997) (“Plaintiffs, in their complaint, alleged that they
    purchased their vehicles from authorized Suzuki dealers . . . . Such allegations alone are . . .
    insufficient to plead agency because they contain no facts to support a finding that the local
    Suzuki dealers had actual or apparent authority to act on Suzuki’s behalf”); Bruce v. ICI
    Americas, Inv., 
    933 F. Supp. 781
    , 789–90 (S.D. Iowa 1996) (ruling that there was insufficient
    evidence that manufacturer exercised control over authorized dealers to lead to agency
    relationship); Cline v. Allis-Chalmers Corp., 
    690 S.W.2d 764
    , 769 (Ky. Ct. App. 1985) (holding
    that being an authorized dealer alone is insufficient to establish agency).
    American West did not raise facts sufficient to demonstrate that Pioneer was acting as the
    agent of CNH. There is no contention that Pioneer had express authority from CNH. American
    West was the authorized dealer of CNH; CNH trained Pioneer mechanics; CNH and Pioneer
    jointly advertised; CNH and Pioneer were allegedly in constant communication. None of these
    facts demonstrate that Pioneer had any authority to act on CNH’s behalf. All facts that American
    West asserts to support its agency argument arise from the manufacturer-authorized dealer
    9
    relationship. The manufacturer-authorized dealer relationship alone is insufficient to give rise to
    an agency relationship. The facts are insufficient to establish implied authority.
    American West also failed to demonstrate that Pioneer had any apparent authority from
    CNH. A manufacturer-authorized dealer relationship alone is insufficient to give rise to an
    agency relationship. American West does not assert that they believed that Pioneer was acting on
    behalf of CNH. American West paid Pioneer to purchase and install a new engine on its tractor
    from CNH. American West and Pioneered requested CNH to warrant the replaced tractor engine
    after its failure. The request by American West and Pioneer to CNH, rather than simply
    American West to Pioneer, indicates that there was no apparent authority. Ultimately, American
    West relies entirely on the manufacturer-authorized dealer relationship for its argument of
    apparent authority. There is insufficient evidence to establish apparent authority.
    VII.
    The District Court Erred In Denying CNH’s Request For Attorney Fees and Costs.
    CNH requested attorney fees and costs pursuant to I.C. § 12-120(3), which permits the
    recovery of attorney fees and costs in a commercial transaction. The district court denied CNH’s
    request for attorney fees and costs because it concluded that American West’s complaint did not
    constitute a civil action to recover on a commercial transaction, finding that there was no
    commercial transaction because there existed no contract between the parties.
    Idaho Code Section 12-120(3) provides for attorney fees to the prevailing party in a civil
    action to recover on “any commercial transaction.” Commercial transactions are all transactions
    except for personal or household purposes. I.C. § 12-120(3). Whether there is a commercial
    transaction is a question of law over which the Supreme Court exercises free review. See Great
    Plains Equip. v. Northwest Pipeline Corp., 
    136 Idaho 466
    , 470, 
    36 P.3d 218
    , 222 (2001). “Where
    a party alleges the existence of a contractual relationship of a type embraced by section 12-
    120(3) . . . that claim triggers the application of [I.C. § 12-120(3)] and a prevailing party may
    recover fees even though no liability under a contract was established.” Farmers Nat. Bank v.
    Shirey, 
    126 Idaho 63
    , 73, 
    878 P.2d 762
    , 772 (1994). “This same principle applies where the
    action is one to recover in a commercial transaction, regardless of the proof that the commercial
    transaction alleged did, in fact, occur.” Magic Lantern Prod. v. Dolsot, 
    126 Idaho 805
    , 808, 
    892 P.2d 480
    , 483 (1995). Idaho courts will consider whether the parties alleged the application of
    I.C. § 12-120. See Fritts v. Liddle & Moeller Const., 
    144 Idaho 171
    , 174–75, 
    158 P.3d 947
    , 950–
    10
    51 (2007) (“[both parties] in their answer and counterclaim . . . clearly allege that I.C. § 12-120
    applies.”); Cannon Builders, Inc. v. Rice, 
    126 Idaho 616
    , 624, 
    888 P.2d 790
    , 798 (Ct. App. 1995)
    (“the nature of the suit, which includes a claim that Crooks was entitled to enforce the Rice-
    Cannon contract as a third-party beneficiary, was sufficiently based on a commercial transaction
    . . . .”).
    Though CNH and American West did not deal directly with each other, American West
    alleged CNH breached an implied warranty, which would be a commercial transaction. This
    Court has made clear that the failure of a party’s claims based on a commercial transaction does
    not absolve a party of the attorney fees and costs that would be awarded under I.C. § 12-120.
    American West tried to recover on the commercial nature of a transaction: the breach of an
    implied warranty. It also sought to assert that it was a third party beneficiary of the commercial
    agreement between CNH and Pioneer. American West claimed it was entitled to attorney fees
    pursuant to I.C. § 12-120(3) because this was a commercial transaction. Though American West
    backtracked after CNH was found not liable on the alleged commercial transaction, that assertion
    triggered the application of I.C. § 12-120(3). CNH is entitled to attorney fees and costs below
    and on appeal.
    VIII.
    Conclusion
    The district court is affirmed in its grant of summary judgment to CNH and affirmed in
    its denial of American West’s request to amend its complaint. The district court is reversed in its
    denial of attorney fees and costs pursuant to I.C. § 12-120(3). The case is remanded to the district
    court for the sole purpose of finding costs and attorney fees incurred in the district court.
    Attorney fees and costs on appeal are awarded to CNH.
    Chief Justice BURDICK, Justices EISMANN, J. JONES and HORTON, CONCUR.
    11