Donahue Schriber Realty Group, L.P. v. Salinas ( 2014 )


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  •                      Salinas. Salinas was awarded $2,181,750 and judgment was entered
    holding Donahue and Malco jointly and severally liable.
    Donahue and Malco appealed that judgment to this court, but
    Malco also filed post-trial motions pursuant to NRCP 59(e) and NRCP
    60(b) asking the district court to amend the wording of the judgment to
    conform to the verdict and to amend the judgment to apply several
    liability only. The district court denied both motions, and Malco appealed
    those orders as well. On appeal, Donahue argues that the district court
    erred in refusing to allow the amount of workers' compensation benefits to
    come into evidence. Additionally, Malco argues that the district court
    erred in denying its motion requesting that several liability only, rather
    than joint and several liability, be applied to the judgment. And, as a
    threshold issue, Salinas challenges this court's jurisdiction to consider this
    appeal.
    This court has jurisdiction over Donahue's appeal from the final judgment'
    Salinas argues that this court lacks jurisdiction to consider
    Donahue's appeal because, although the appeal was timely filed on August
    25, 2011, following the notice of entry of the final judgment, Malco made
    subsequent motions under NRCP 59(e) to amend or alter the judgment,
    and Donahue did not file additional notices of appeal following the district
    court's denial of those motions.
    Pursuant to NRAP 4(a)(6), this court may dismiss as
    premature an appeal that has been timely filed pursuant to a final
    judgment but before all motions delineated under NRAP 4(a)(4), including
    1 We  separately address below Salinas's challenge to this court's
    jurisdiction to consider Malco's joint and several liability argument.
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    NRCP Rule 59 motions, have been decided by the district court. However,
    if "a written order or judgment, or a written disposition of the last-
    remaining timely motion listed in Rule 4(a)(4), is entered before dismissal
    of the premature appeal, the notice of appeal shall be considered filed on
    the date of and after entry of the order. . . dispos[ing] of the last-
    remaining timely motion." NRAP 4(a)(6).
    Here, as Salinas concedes, Donahue timely filed its notice of
    appeal on August 25, 2011, after entry of the final judgment. Entry of the
    district court's order on the last-remaining timely motion occurred on
    February 7, 2012. Because this appeal was not dismissed as premature
    before entry of the district court's final order on the last-remaining timely
    motion, we conclude that Donahue's appeal is considered timely filed as of
    the date of entry of the order on the last-remaining timely motion and this
    court has jurisdiction to hear the appeal.
    The district court committed reversible error by failing to admit as evidence
    the amount of workers' compensation benefits Salinas received
    Donahue and Malco argue that the district court erred when it
    refused to admit evidence regarding the amount of workers' compensation
    benefits paid to Salinas. Donahue and Malco contend that NRS
    616C.215(10) requires admission of this evidence. Salinas counters that
    the amount was not required to be admitted, that any error was harmless
    because Donahue and Malco were not prejudiced, and that if the amount
    is required to be admitted, then NRS 616C.215 is unconstitutional. 2
    2 Salinas also argues that Donahue and Malco may not raise this
    issue on appeal because it was not preserved below. We conclude that this
    argument lacks merit. During the pretrial motions in limine, the parties
    fully briefed the issue of whether evidence of workers' compensation
    benefits paid to Salinas was admissible, and Donahue and Malco argued
    continued on next page...
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    NRS 616C.215(10) states that [iln any trial of an action by
    the injured employee, . . . the jury must receive proof of the amount of all
    payments made or to be made by the insurer or the Administrator."
    (Emphasis added.) In Tri-County Equipment & Leasing, L.L.C. v. Klinke,
    this court reversed a judgment on a jury verdict where the district court
    had refused to admit evidence of the amount of workers' compensation
    received by the plaintiff. 128 Nev. „ 
    286 P.3d 593
    , 596-97 (2012).
    Despite our holding in Tr-County, Salinas argues that because the
    mandate in NRS 616C.215(10) is entirely for the benefit of the plaintiff,
    we should determine that the plaintiff may waive that requirement.
    Citing Cramer v. Peavy, 
    116 Nev. 575
    , 581, 
    3 P.3d 665
    , 669 (2000), Salinas
    maintains that this court characterized the legislative intent behind the
    statute as a desire to curb speculation by juries that results in reduced
    awards for plaintiffs. But Salinas fails to recognize that in Tr-County we
    specifically discussed Cramer and held that NRS 616C.215 was meant to
    benefit both plaintiffs and defendants, and its primary purpose was to
    "avoid confusing the jury about the payment and nature of workers'
    compensation benefits, and their relation to the damages 
    awarded." 128 Nev. at 286
    P.3d at 596.
    ...continued
    that the exact amount was admissible. The district court then held a
    hearing on the issue and ruled that evidence that Salinas received
    workers' compensation benefits was admissible, but the exact amount of
    benefits paid was not because it was "immaterial." Thus, this issue was
    preserved for appeal. See Richmond V. State, 
    118 Nev. 924
    , 932, 
    59 P.3d 1249
    , 1254 (2002) (holding that a motion in limine is sufficient to preserve
    an issue for appeal when the issue has been briefed, the district court has
    fully considered the issue, and the court has made "a definitive ruling").
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    Furthermore, the plain language of the statute requires that
    the jury "must receive proof of the amount of all payments made." NRS
    616C.215(10) (emphasis added). There is nothing in the statute's
    language to indicate that disclosure occurs only when the plaintiff
    requests it, or that plaintiff can waive this requirement.     See Potter v.
    Potter, 
    121 Nev. 613
    , 616, 
    119 P.3d 1246
    , 1248 (2005) ("When the language
    of a statute is clear and unambiguous, its apparent intent must be given
    effect.").
    Salinas also argues that even if the amount of workers'
    compensation benefits she received was required to be disclosed, any error
    was harmless. Although our review of the record reveals that the jury
    heard testimony regarding the amount billed by Salinas's medical care
    providers, there is nothing in the record to show the amount of workers'
    compensation benefits Salinas received or the amount actually paid to her
    medical care providers by the workers' compensation carrier. Thus, we
    cannot conclude that the error was harmless. In fact, while the record
    before us is limited, Salinas testified in her deposition that she received
    $8,615.49 in workers' compensation benefits, yet the jury awarded her
    $63,000 in past medical expenses. The large discrepancy, without more
    information, precludes any harmless error analysis.
    Finally, Salinas argues that if NRS 616C.215 is interpreted to
    require the amount of workers' compensation benefits paid to the
    employee to be disclosed to the jury, then it is unconstitutional because it
    violates the employee's equal protection rights. However, Salinas admits
    that there is no suspect class or fundamental right at issue and that
    rational basis review applies.
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    This court reviews the constitutionality of a statute de novo.
    Zamora v. Price, 
    125 Nev. 388
    , 391, 
    213 P.3d 490
    , 492 (2009). NRS
    616C.215 was enacted out of concern that juries were speculating as to the
    amount of the workers' compensation benefits received and reducing the
    award accordingly. See 
    Cramer, 116 Nev. at 581
    , 3 P.3d at 669. Because
    requiring the jury to hear the amount of workers' compensation benefits
    received by a plaintiff is rationally related to the government interest in
    obtaining jury verdicts based on the law and facts, as opposed to
    speculation, we conclude that NRS 616C.215 does not violate equal
    protection. See 
    Zamora, 125 Nev. at 395-96
    , 213 P.3d at 495 (stating that
    under "rational basis review . . we will not overturn a law unless the
    treatment of different groups 'is so unrelated to the achievement of any
    combination of legitimate purposes that we can only conclude that the
    [L]egislature's actions were irrational" (second alteration in original)
    (quoting Barrett v. Baird, 
    111 Nev. 1496
    , 1509-10, 
    908 P.2d 689
    , 698-99
    (1995), overruled on other grounds by Lioce v. Cohen, 
    124 Nev. 1
    , 17, 174
    P.3d 970,980 (2008))).
    Accordingly, we conclude that the district court committed
    reversible error when it refused to allow admission of evidence regarding
    the amount of workers' compensation benefits paid to Salinas. However,
    because the error is related solely to the issue of damages, and is not
    interrelated or connected to the issue of liability or the allocation of
    liability, we further conclude that any new trial would be limited solely to
    the issue of damages. Cf. Shere v. Davis, 
    95 Nev. 491
    , 493, 
    596 P.2d 499
    ,
    500 (1979) (holding that a new trial on liability and damages is
    appropriate only where there is an "interrelationship of the liability and
    damage issues").
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    This court does not have jurisdiction to consider Malco's joint and several
    liability argument
    Malco argues that the district court erred in applying joint and
    several liability to the amount of the judgment because, pursuant to NRS
    41.141, Maleo should only be held severally liable. Malco further argues
    that although NRCP 60(b) motions are limited in their scope, its motion
    was also validly brought pursuant to NRCP 59(e). Salinas argues that
    this court lacks jurisdiction to consider Malco's joint and several liability
    argument on appeal. We agree with Salinas.
    Notice of entry of the judgment was served on July 27, 2011.
    On August 3, 2011, an amended judgment was entered that simply
    corrected a clerical error, but the notice of entry of the amended judgment
    was not served until December 27, 2011. On August 4, 2011, Malco filed
    its first post-trial motion pursuant to NRCP 59(e) without arguing that
    joint and several liability was inapplicable. Although the district court
    orally denied that motion at a hearing held in late August 2011, notice of
    entry of the order was not served until February 7, 2012.
    Malco timely appealed the final judgment on August 25, 2011.
    In the meantime, on October 14, 2011, Malco filed another motion
    pursuant to NRCP 60(b) or, alternatively, NRCP 59(e), arguing for the
    first time that the judgment should be altered or amended because joint
    and several liability was inapplicable and that it should only be held
    severally liable. The district court denied that motion and the entry of
    that order was served on December 9, 2011. We first address Malco's
    arguments regarding the NRCP 59(e) alternative basis for its October
    2011 motion.
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    NRCP 59(e)
    A party seeking to alter or amend a judgment must file a
    motion "no later than 10 days after service of written notice of entry of the
    judgment." NRCP 59(e). Malco unpersuasively argues that we have
    jurisdiction to consider this issue since a "second" judgment was entered in
    August 2011, but written notice of entry of the "second" judgment was not
    served until December 2011. Thus, its NRCP 59 motion filed in October
    2011 was timely. We disagree.
    The very authority Malco cites in support of its argument
    states that the time for filing motions only runs from the second judgment
    if that judgment makes "a change of substance which 'disturbed or revised
    legal rights and obligations."    Cornist v. Richland Parish Sch. Bd., 
    479 F.2d 37
    , 39 (5th Cir. 1973) (quoting FTC v. Minneapolis-Honeywell
    Regulator Co., 
    344 U.S. 206
    , 212 (1952)). This is consistent with this
    court's similar pronouncement in Morrell v. Edwards that an amended
    judgment only affects the timing of an appeal when it "affect[s] the legal
    rights and obligations of the parties" as set out in the original judgment.
    
    98 Nev. 91
    , 92-93, 
    640 P.2d 1322
    , 1324 (1982). In this case, the amended
    judgment did not make any substantive changes affecting the legal rights
    or obligations of the parties; it merely corrected a clerical error. Therefore,
    the time for filing NRCP 59 motions was not altered by the entry of the
    amended judgment, and we conclude that, to the extent that Malco's
    October 2011 motion was based on NRCP 59(e), it was untimely. 3
    3 In
    furtherance of its argument regarding the timeliness of its NRCP
    59(e) motion, Malco appears to infer that the timing for filing such a
    motion was extended because its first NRCP 59(e) motion was timely filed
    in August and, since notice of entry of the order denying that motion was
    not served until February 2012, the August motion was still pending
    continued on next page...
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    NRCP 60(b)
    Salinas argues that even if Malco's motion was made pursuant
    to Rule 60(b), this court still does not have jurisdiction because Malco had
    already filed a notice of appeal, and that divested the district court of
    jurisdiction to consider the motion. Malco argues that its October 2011
    motion was made pursuant to NRCP 60(b), as well as NRCP 59(e), and the
    motion was timely under NRCP 60(b) because it was filed within 6 months
    of service of the notice of entry of judgment. Because its motion was
    timely made, Mateo argues that the district court had jurisdiction to
    consider and deny the motion pursuant to this court's holding in Foster v.
    Dingwall, 
    126 Nev. 49
    , 52-53, 
    228 P.3d 453
    , 455 (2010).
    Generally "the perfection of an appeal divests the district
    court of jurisdiction"; however, the court does "retain[ ] a limited
    jurisdiction to review motions made in accordance with" the procedures set
    forth in NRCP 60(b).      
    Foster, 126 Nev. at 52
    , 228 P.3d at 455. When
    reviewing such motions, "the district court has jurisdiction to direct
    briefing on the motion, hold a hearing regarding the motion, and enter an
    order denying the motion."      
    Id. at 52-53,
    228 P.3d at 455. This court
    clarified that, while the district court "lacks jurisdiction to enter an order
    granting such a motion" it "does have jurisdiction to deny such requests."
    
    Id. at 53,
    228 P.3d at 455. Thus, although the district court had
    ...continued
    before the court. However, Malco does not cite to any authority, nor are
    we aware of any, to support this proposition. Moreover, under NRAP
    4(a)(4)(C), a motion made pursuant to NRCP 59 will toll the time for filing
    a notice of appeal, but the rule makes no mention of tolling the time to file
    additional NRCP 59(e) motions beyond that rule's mandated period of "no
    later than 10 days after the service of the entry of the judgment."
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    jurisdiction to consider and deny Malco's NRCP 60(b) motion, we
    nonetheless conclude that the motion was an improper NRCP 60(b)
    motion.
    NRCP 60(b) allows the district court to relieve a party from a
    final judgment for several enumerated reasons, including, among others,
    mistake, inadvertence, and excusable neglect. Although Malco couched its
    October 2011 motion as a NRCP 60(b) motion, Malco did not specify the
    basis for which it was seeking relief under NRCP 60(b). Rather, the
    motion focused mainly on the law of joint and several liability and Malco's
    reasoning for why it should only be held severally liable. Thus, we
    conclude that the October 2011 motion was not a proper NRCP 60(b)
    motion, but rather, was a NRCP 59(e) motion that we have already
    concluded was untimely filed. As such, we further conclude that we are
    without jurisdiction to review the issue of joint and several liability raised
    by Malco on appea1. 4
    Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above, we
    ORDER the judgment of the district court AFFIRMED with
    the exception of its award of damages. On the issue of damages, we
    4We   have considered Donahue's and Malco's other assignments of
    error raised on appeal conclude that they lack merit.
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    REVERSE that portion of the district court's judgment AND REMAND
    this matter to the district court for further proceedings consistent with the
    order.
    Gibbons
    , J.
    Pickering                                    Hardesty
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    Parraguirre                                  Do
    J
    Saitta
    cc:      Chief Judge, The Eighth Judicial District Court
    Hon. Joseph T. Bonaventure, Senior Judge
    Larry J. Cohen, Settlement Judge
    Law Offices of Kenneth E. Goates
    Hall Jaffe & Clayton, LLP
    Lewis Roca Rothgerber LLP/Las Vegas
    Stovall & Associates
    Thomas & Springberg, P.C.
    Eighth District Court Clerk
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