Grissom v. Wilkinson ( 2013 )


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    1        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    2   JOENE GRISSOM and JOE EARL
    3   GRISSOM, Co-Personal Representatives
    4   of the ESTATE OF GENEVIEVE
    5   WILKINSON,
    6          Petitioners-Appellants,
    7 v.                                                                                   NO. 32,087
    8   JOEL W. WILKINSON, JR., deceased,
    9   GEORGE RICHARD WILKINSON and
    10   JOEL KENT WILKINSON, Successor
    11   Co-Trustees of the JOEL W. WILKINSON,
    12   JR. TRUST,
    13          Respondents-Appellees.
    14 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SAN JUAN COUNTY
    15 William C. Birdsall, District Judge
    16   Holland & Hart, LLP
    17   Larry J. Montaño
    18   Julia Broggi
    19   Santa Fe, NM
    20 for Appellants
    21 Lorenz Law
    22 Alice T. Lorenz
    23 Albuquerque, NM
    1 The Risley Law Firm, P.C.
    2 Gary Risley
    3 Farmington, NM
    4 for Appellees
    5                             MEMORANDUM OPINION
    6 VANZI, Judge.
    7   {1}   Petitioners Joe Earl and Joene Grissom (the Grissoms) appeal from the
    8 judgment entered by the district court denying their petition to set aside a quitclaim
    9 deed for fraud and constructive trust, denying their post-trial motion to amend their
    10 petition, and granting in part Respondent Joel W. Wilkinson Jr.’s creditor’s claim. The
    11 Grissoms argue that the district court erred because it did not allow them to try an
    12 undue influence claim that was not explicitly pled in their petition or to amend their
    13 petition after trial to include a separate undue influence claim. We hold that, because
    14 the district court made unchallenged findings that would preclude the Grissoms from
    15 prevailing on an undue influence claim, and because the Grissoms have failed to set
    16 forth any evidence that they were unable to present and explain how such evidence
    17 would affect the outcome of the case, there is no reversible error in the district court’s
    18 rulings. In addition, the Grissoms failed to preserve their argument regarding the
    19 creditor’s claim; therefore, we will not consider it. We affirm.
    20 BACKGROUND
    2
    1   {2}   This thirteen-year-old case revolves around the Grissoms’ attempt to set aside
    2 a quitclaim deed for mineral interests in New Mexico. When she was ninety-five years
    3 old, the Grissoms’ aunt, Genevieve (Trixie) Wilkinson, executed the subject deed,
    4 which reserved in Trixie a life estate in New Mexico mineral interests inherited from
    5 her late husband, Warlick Wilkinson, but quitclaimed her remainder interest to
    6 Warlick’s son, Joel Wilkinson. The Grissoms accuse Joel of “abusing his relationship
    7 with [Trixie] by taking advantage of her old age and frail health so as to cause her to
    8 deed to him” the New Mexico mineral interests. Joel argues, and the district court
    9 found, that Trixie intended to execute the quitclaim deed to correct an error her late
    10 husband’s lawyers had made in interpreting the law relative to her husband’s will, in
    11 order to ensure that her stepson, Joel, received what her late husband had intended.
    12   {3}   The procedural history is as follows. Three years after executing the quitclaim
    13 deed to Joel, Trixie died, and her will was admitted to probate in Oklahoma. The
    14 Grissoms are two of the beneficiaries of Trixie’s estate and co-executors of her will.
    15 Joel is not a beneficiary under the will; however, due to the quitclaim deed, upon
    16 Trixie’s death, he became entitled as a remainderman to the New Mexico mineral
    17 interests. Accordingly, Joel asserted various creditor’s claims in the Oklahoma probate
    18 action related to the New Mexico mineral interests. The Grissoms counterclaimed for
    19 fraud and constructive fraud in an attempt to set aside the deed; however, because the
    20 mineral interests in dispute are located in New Mexico, the Oklahoma probate court
    3
    1 dismissed the Grissoms’ counterclaim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction in
    2 December 2004.
    3   {4}   Nearly two years later, the Grissoms filed an application for informal ancillary
    4 probate action and informal appointment of co-personal representatives in New
    5 Mexico. Joel again asserted a creditor’s claim related to his entitlement to the New
    6 Mexico mineral interests. Rather than filing a counterclaim to Joel’s creditor’s claim
    7 as they had done in Oklahoma, the Grissoms filed a separate action in the district court
    8 to set aside the quitclaim deed. The petition in this separate action alleged two counts:
    9 (1) fraud; constructive trust (Count One), and (2) tortious interference with expected
    10 inheritance (Count Two). The district court consolidated the two New Mexico
    11 proceedings. Joel filed a motion for summary judgment on the Grissoms’ fraud and
    12 tortious interference claims, but the district court never entered a formal order on that
    13 motion.
    14   {5}   The district court ultimately held a bench trial on the Grissoms’ petition and
    15 Joel’s creditor’s claim. On the first day of trial, the Grissoms voluntarily dismissed
    16 their tortious interference with expected inheritance claim. During trial, and after
    17 dismissing their tortious interference claim, the Grissoms attempted to present
    18 evidence of undue influence. Joel objected, stating that, to the extent the Grissoms
    19 sought to introduce evidence of undue influence as an element of a tortious
    20 interference claim, that claim had been dropped, and that to the extent the Grissoms
    4
    1 intended to assert undue influence as a distinct claim, the Grissoms had failed to plead
    2 it, either independently or as part of their fraud and constructive trust claim. Before
    3 ruling, the district court examined the allegations in Count One, considered what the
    4 elements of fraud and constructive fraud are, and determined that undue influence is
    5 not an element of either type of claim. The district court also rejected the Grissoms’
    6 argument that, because they sought a constructive trust remedy in Count One, and
    7 because that remedy is consistent with an undue influence claim, they had effectively
    8 pled undue influence. The district court noted that what was before it at trial was
    9 Count One for fraud and constructive trust, that Count One did not contain an undue
    10 influence claim, and that it would not admit evidence unrelated to that count. At trial,
    11 the district court heard evidence on Count One and, at the end of the trial, issued oral
    12 findings related to that claim. Based on those findings, the district court ruled against
    13 the Grissoms.
    14   {6}   The Grissoms filed a motion to reconsider and/or for a new trial, in which they
    15 also sought for the first time to amend their petition to include a separate claim for
    16 undue influence. The Grissoms did not attach a proposed amended petition to their
    17 motion, nor did they set forth in the motion any allegations they would add to their
    18 existing petition in order to plead a separate undue influence claim. The district court
    19 denied the motion in a letter ruling.
    5
    1   {7}   Ultimately, the district court issued its final judgment denying the Grissoms’
    2 petition and granting in part Joel’s creditor’s claim. The final judgment states that it
    3 affirms and incorporates the district court’s oral and letter rulings, but the district court
    4 did not attach the relevant portions of the trial transcript or the letter ruling. This
    5 appeal timely followed.
    6 DISCUSSION
    7 The District Court Did Not Commit Reversible Error in Refusing to Allow the
    8 Grissoms to Present a Claim for Undue Influence at Trial
    9   {8}   The Grissoms first assert that the district court erred in not reading an undue
    10 influence claim in Count One of their petition. Specifically, they contend that although
    11 the petition does not explicitly state a separate claim for undue influence, Count One
    12 tracks the factors of an undue influence claim and gives a fair idea that the Grissoms
    13 asserted such a claim. As a result, the Grissoms argue that the district court erred in
    14 not allowing them to present evidence of undue influence at trial. We begin with the
    15 appropriate standard of review.
    16   {9}   The Grissoms ask us to apply de novo review to this issue because they claim
    17 the district court’s ruling barring them from trying an undue influence claim, “is
    18 tantamount to a dismissal under Rule 1-012 NMRA.” We disagree. If a district court’s
    19 decision “is made on the pleadings in response to a motion to dismiss,” we apply de
    20 novo review. City of Sunland Park v. Santa Teresa Servs. Co., 
    2003-NMCA-106
    , ¶
    6
    1 39, 
    134 N.M. 243
    , 
    75 P.3d 843
    . “However, if additional facts are presented, the
    2 standard of review appropriate to the procedural posture in which the ruling is made
    3 should be applied.” 
    Id.
     In this case, the district court’s ruling was made in response
    4 to Joel’s trial objections that the Grissoms should not be allowed to present evidence
    5 on a claim they had not explicitly asserted in their petition. We review a district
    6 court’s decision of whether to allow a claim that was not well-pled in the complaint
    7 to be presented at trial for abuse of discretion. See Estate of Gutierrez ex rel. Jaramillo
    8 v. Meteor Monument, L.L.C., 
    2012-NMSC-004
    , ¶ 24, 
    274 P.3d 97
     (holding that the
    9 district court did not abuse its discretion when it allowed a claim that was not well-
    10 pled to go to the jury); Bellet v. Grynberg, 
    1992-NMSC-063
    , ¶ 10, 
    114 N.M. 690
    , 845
    
    11 P.2d 784
     (stating that “[i]f prejudice would result, then allowing [an] unpleaded theory
    12 to be argued, and granting a[ post-trial] amendment, would be an abuse of
    13 discretion”).
    14   {10}   The Grissoms contend that although Count One is titled “fraud; constructive
    15 trust,” and the term undue influence appears nowhere in that count, the factual
    16 allegations in Count One track the legal factors of an undue influence claim. Our
    17 courts have not provided “precise elements for undue influence.” Chapman v. Varela,
    18 
    2009-NMSC-041
    , ¶ 6, 
    146 N.M. 680
    , 
    213 P.3d 1109
    . However, a presumption of
    19 undue influence “arises if a confidential or fiduciary relation with a donor is shown
    20 together with suspicious circumstances.” Id. ¶ 7 (internal quotation marks and citation
    7
    1 omitted). Suspicious circumstances include “(1) old age and weakened physical or
    2 mental condition of [donor]; (2) lack of consideration for the bequest; (3) unnatural
    3 or unjust disposition of the property; (4) participation of beneficiary in procuring the
    4 gift; (5) domination or control over the donor by a beneficiary; and (6) secrecy,
    5 concealment, or failure to disclose the gift by a beneficiary.” Id. (internal quotation
    6 marks and citation omitted). “This is not an exhaustive list, nor is it a list of
    7 circumstances that are always suspicious. Furthermore, the presence of any of these
    8 circumstances is not in itself dispositive.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation
    9 omitted).
    10   {11}   The Grissoms assert that the following allegations track that a confidential or
    11 fiduciary relationship existed: (1) Joel was a “stepson to [Trixie] Wilkinson”; (2) in
    12 or around 1998, Joel began to “actively handle” Trixie’s business affairs and became
    13 Trixie’s “business advisor”; (3) Trixie “reposed confidence in Joel”; and (4) Joel
    14 “occupied a fiduciary and confidential relation to” Trixie. Similarly, the Grissoms
    15 assert that the following allegations track that suspicious circumstances existed: (1)
    16 Trixie was ninety-five years old and with failing eyesight at the time she executed the
    17 deed (old age and weakened physical or mental condition of the donor); (2) Joel
    18 obtained the deed for “inadequate consideration” (lack of consideration); (3) Trixie’s
    19 heirs were “her four nieces, one nephew (two of which are [the Grissoms]) and a
    20 religious organization[,]” and Joel was not a named beneficiary of Trixie’s will
    8
    1 (unnatural or unjust disposition of the property); (4) Joel “prepared and obtained” the
    2 deed (participation of beneficiary); and (5) Joel “prepared and had [Trixie] execute”
    3 the deed (domination or control over the donor by the beneficiary). The Grissoms
    4 argue that because Count One tracks the factors of undue influence, because undue
    5 influence and fraud are similar claims, and because constructive trust is a remedy for
    6 both kinds of claims, the district court erred by not construing Count One to include
    7 an undue influence claim.
    8   {12}   Even were we to decide that the district court abused its discretion by not
    9 reading an undue influence claim into Count One of the petition, we affirm the district
    10 court’s decision because we hold that there is no reversible error. In civil cases, error
    11 is not grounds for setting aside a judgment unless it is “inconsistent with substantial
    12 justice” or “affects the substantial rights of the parties.” See Kennedy v. Dexter
    13 Consol. Sch., 
    2000-NMSC-025
    , ¶ 26, 
    129 N.M. 436
    , 
    10 P.3d 115
     (internal quotation
    14 marks and citation omitted). Rule 1-061 NMRA “is a mandate to grant a new trial, set
    15 aside a verdict, or vacate, modify, or otherwise disturb a judgment when, and only
    16 when, it is clear that refusal to take such action will be substantially unjust.” Fahrbach
    17 v. Diamond Shamrock, Inc., 
    1996-NMSC-063
    , ¶ 31, 
    122 N.M. 543
    , 
    928 P.2d 269
    18 (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted). “This rule applies not only
    19 to district courts, but also to appellate courts.” Gallegos v. Citizens Ins. Agency,
    20 
    1989-NMSC-055
    , ¶ 37, 
    108 N.M. 722
    , 
    779 P.2d 99
    . Furthermore, “[o]n appeal, error
    9
    1 will not be corrected if it will not change the result.” In re Estate of Heeter, 1992-
    2 NMCA-032, ¶ 23, 
    113 N.M. 691
    , 
    831 P.2d 990
    .
    3   {13}   This case presents us with a unique situation because, although the district court
    4 chose not to read a separate legal claim for undue influence into Count One, it still
    5 appeared to hear evidence and issue oral findings based on the factual allegations the
    6 Grissoms pled in Count One. Because the Grissoms contend the factual allegations in
    7 Count One track the factors of an undue influence claim, the district court essentially
    8 made findings based on what the Grissoms characterize as their undue influence
    9 claim. Put differently, the district court made its findings and decided the case based
    10 on the way the Grissoms’ petition defines their claims, not on the legal elements of a
    11 fraud or constructive fraud claim or a constructive trust remedy.
    12   {14}   Although the Grissoms assert that the district court “did not make any
    13 ‘findings’ or draw any ‘conclusions’ [related to] undue influence,” we disagree. We
    14 recognize that the district court’s findings are oral; however, the parties never
    15 requested written findings and conclusions. See Rule 1-052(A) NMRA (“In a case
    16 tried by the court without a jury . . . the court shall enter findings of fact and
    17 conclusions of law when a party makes a timely request.”). Moreover, “while all of
    18 a district court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law should typically be reduced
    19 to writing and entered along with the final order, failure to do so is not fatal if the
    20 findings and conclusions are part of the transcript on appeal.” Burris-Awalt v.
    10
    1 Knowles, 
    2010-NMCA-083
    , ¶ 10, 
    148 N.M. 616
    , 
    241 P.3d 617
    . Here, neither of the
    2 parties submitted written findings and conclusions, and the district court stated it
    3 incorporated its oral and letter rulings in its final judgment. None of the parties
    4 disputed the district court’s authority to do so, and the transcript containing those
    5 rulings is part of the transcript on appeal. Consequently, the oral findings are
    6 sufficient for our purposes on appeal. Moreover, the Grissoms did not specifically
    7 challenge any of the district court’s oral findings, so those findings are binding upon
    8 them. See Rule 12-213(A)(4) NMRA (“The argument [in a party’s brief-in-chief] shall
    9 set forth a specific attack on any finding, or such finding shall be deemed
    10 conclusive.”).
    11   {15}   The district court found that there was “little or no evidence, other than a
    12 backhanded reference in [a memorandum] to establish that Joel . . . in any way
    13 occupied a position of trust” with regard to Trixie or that Joel handled Trixie’s
    14 business affairs. These findings roughly correlate with the allegations in Count One
    15 that the Grissoms assert the existence of a confidential or fiduciary relationship
    16 between Joel and Trixie. These findings also refute that any such relationship existed
    17 and ultimately undercut the Grissoms’ undue influence claim. See In re Estate of
    18 Gersbach, 
    1998-NMSC-013
    , ¶ 8, 
    125 N.M. 269
    , 
    960 P.2d 811
     (“We have held that
    19 a confidential relationship is required in order to support a determination of undue
    20 influence.”).
    11
    1   {16}   The district court also found that, although Trixie “was an elderly lady, she had
    2 some failing eyesight [and] perhaps some physical limitations,” that there was “no
    3 testimony to indicate” that Trixie “in any way was mentally incompetent.” To the
    4 contrary, the court found that Trixie “was more than competent enough to execute a
    5 codicil to her will over a year after the execution of the quitclaim deed.” These
    6 findings also undermine the Grissoms’ ability to establish a presumption of undue
    7 influence. See In re Estate of Gonzales, 
    1988-NMCA-098
    , ¶ 16, 
    108 N.M. 583
    , 775
    
    8 P.2d 1300
     (“No New Mexico case has based a presumption of undue influence on the
    9 fact that the testator was elderly without evidence that the testator’s age had affected
    10 his or her mental ability.”). Additionally, the district court found that there was no
    11 conflict of interest with regard to Joel. Rather, it found that Trixie “was loyal to her
    12 husband and loved him greatly” and that Trixie did “the honorable thing when [she
    13 discovered] that there had been an error in the interpretation of the law relative to her
    14 husband’s will.” In characterizing what happened, the district court said that when
    15 Trixie became aware that Joel had not received what his father intended, “she may
    16 have debated whether or not she should [execute the quitclaim deed]” but that “she
    17 went ahead and she did the right thing, and the right thing was to see that Joel . . .
    18 received what his father had intended him to receive.” Although these findings are not
    19 individually linked to the specific allegations of Count One, they highlight the absence
    20 of any suspicious circumstances related to the execution of the quitclaim deed because
    12
    1 they indicate that Trixie made her own decision regarding the execution of the deed
    2 to Joel. See Farmers, Inc. v. Dal Mach. & Fabricating, Inc., 
    1990-NMSC-100
    , ¶ 6,
    3 
    111 N.M. 6
    , 
    800 P.2d 1063
     (stating that appellate court construes findings of fact
    4 liberally to sustain the judgment).
    5   {17}   Further, the district court’s findings in sum ultimately preclude the Grissoms
    6 from being able to establish undue influence. “The underlying theory of the doctrine
    7 [of undue influence] is that the donor is induced by various means to execute an
    8 instrument that, in reality, is the will of another substituted for that of the donor.”
    9 Montoya v. Torres, 
    1991-NMCA-152
    , ¶ 16, 
    113 N.M. 105
    , 
    823 P.2d 905
    . “In making
    10 its determination the court must answer the question of whether the donor would have
    11 made the gift but for the undue influence exerted over him or her.” Id. ¶ 19. Undue
    12 influence must be established by clear and convincing evidence. See Gersbach, 1998-
    13 NMSC-013, ¶ 9. “This standard requires the fact finder to reach an abiding conviction
    14 as to the truth of the facts found.” Montoya, 
    1991-NMCA-152
    , ¶ 12. “To create a
    15 presumption [of undue influence,] the party contesting an instrument has the initial
    16 burden of establishing a prima facie case of undue influence.” Id. ¶ 20. As discussed
    17 above, in order to raise this presumption, the Grissoms would need to establish both
    18 that Joel had a fiduciary or confidential relationship with Trixie and that there were
    19 suspicious circumstances. See Chapman, 
    2009-NMSC-041
    , ¶ 7. Even if we remanded
    20 the case, the Grissoms could not meet their burden to establish a prima facie case for
    13
    1 undue influence as the district court’s uncontested findings reveal that no confidential
    2 or fiduciary relationship existed between Trixie and Joel, there was no conflict of
    3 interest with regard to Joel, Trixie chose to execute the quitclaim deed to see that Joel
    4 received what his father intended him to receive, and Trixie was “more than
    5 competent” to make this choice. Nor do we believe, in light of these findings, that the
    6 Grissoms could ultimately demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that Joel
    7 induced Trixie by various means to execute the quitclaim deed.
    8   {18}   In arguing that the district court’s decision was not harmless error, the Grissoms
    9 generally state that “despite [the district court’s] stray remarks on some of the factors
    10 that may concern undue influence, [its] decision must be reversed so that [the
    11 Grissoms] can present their claim and supporting evidence on all relevant factors,
    12 including factors [the district court] may believe could not be proven based on the
    13 limited record before [it].” To the extent the Grissoms are arguing that the district
    14 court’s findings are flawed because they are stunted by the absence of evidence the
    15 district court did not allow them to introduce at trial, the Grissoms have failed to meet
    16 their burden to demonstrate prejudice. “An error is harmless unless the complaining
    17 party can show that it created prejudice.” Kennedy, 
    2000-NMSC-025
    , ¶ 26; see Scott
    18 v. Brown, 
    1966-NMSC-135
    , ¶ 20, 
    76 N.M. 501
    , 
    416 P.2d 516
     (“The plaintiffs have
    19 the burden of demonstrating that they were prejudiced by the claimed error.”); see
    20 also Farmers, Inc., 
    1990-NMSC-100
    , ¶ 8 (stating that the appellate court presumes
    14
    1 the district court is correct and the burden is on the appellant to clearly point out how
    2 the district court allegedly erred).
    3   {19}   “We compel the reversal of errors for which the complaining party provides the
    4 slightest evidence of prejudice and resolve all doubt in favor of the complaining
    5 party.” Kennedy, 
    2000-NMSC-025
    , ¶ 26. However, “[w]e will not set aside a
    6 judgment based on mere speculation that [the asserted error] influenced the outcome
    7 of the case.” Id. ¶ 27; see Fahrbach, 
    1996-NMSC-063
    , ¶ 32 (requiring direct evidence
    8 that the purported error contributed to or directly resulted in the jury’s verdict and
    9 refusing to speculate that an error influenced the jury’s verdict). The Grissoms have
    10 not met their burden on appeal to set forth direct evidence that the district court’s
    11 exclusion of evidence on undue influence prejudiced them because they do not
    12 identify on appeal what evidence they would have presented if the district court had
    13 allowed them to do so, nor do they show how the presentation of that additional
    14 evidence would affect the outcome of the case. The Grissoms therefore cannot
    15 demonstrate that a different ruling would have rendered a different result.
    16   {20}   As an initial matter, we note that the Grissoms do not claim they were deprived
    17 of the opportunity to take discovery on undue influence. They only assert that the
    18 district court erred by not allowing them to present evidence of undue influence that
    19 they already had and wished to present at trial. The fact that undue influence is an
    20 element of a tortious interference with an expected inheritance claim, a claim that was
    15
    1 in the case until the first day of trial, further indicates that the Grissoms were able to
    2 conduct discovery on undue influence. We therefore see nothing that prevented the
    3 Grissoms from being able to collect evidence on undue influence or to identify the
    4 evidence they collected and wanted to introduce to support a claim for undue
    5 influence.
    6   {21}   Second, it appears the district court admitted a large portion of the evidence the
    7 Grissoms proffered. Upon agreement of the parties, the district court reviewed all of
    8 the deposition testimony that both of the parties wished to use at trial, which
    9 comprised entire deposition transcripts and video depositions. The district court also
    10 admitted all but two of the Grissoms’ proffered documentary exhibits. The Grissoms
    11 have not appealed the district court’s evidentiary rulings on those exhibits, nor have
    12 they made any mention of them on appeal.
    13   {22}   Third, although the Grissoms highlight several times when the district court
    14 prevented them from eliciting testimony from live witnesses, they largely fail to
    15 specify what evidence they were trying to introduce during those instances and how
    16 that evidence relates to an undue influence claim. The one time the Grissoms cite to
    17 specific testimony they tried to elicit at trial, they simply excerpt part of the exchange
    18 between the parties and the district court related to the exclusion of the testimony, note
    19 that the exchange represents “just one example” of when the district court “excluded
    20 critical evidence,” and summarily conclude that as a result they were “harmed in both
    16
    1 law and fact.” However, the prejudice the Grissoms claim to have suffered as a result
    2 of that exclusion is not self-evident. In the excerpted exchange, counsel for the
    3 Grissoms stated that the objected-to testimony was “important as to one of the
    4 elements that pertains to the undue influence, the constructive fraud, that [the
    5 quitclaim deed] was kept secret from [the Grissoms] by . . . Joel.” On appeal, the
    6 Grissoms do not describe what additional testimony they would have elicited if they
    7 had been allowed to do so, how potential evidence that the quitclaim deed was kept
    8 secret from the Grissoms is “critical,” to establishing undue influence, or how that
    9 evidence would have affected the outcome of the case had the court admitted it. This
    10 showing is insufficient for the Grissoms to establish prejudice. See Fahrbach, 1996-
    11 NMSC-063, ¶ 32 (determining that the plaintiff’s failure to offer any evidence that the
    12 asserted error contributed to the ultimate result of the case rendered the error
    13 harmless).
    14   {23}   Because the Grissoms have not met their burden to prove prejudice, we cannot
    15 conclude that the district court’s asserted error influenced the outcome of the case.
    16 Seeing nothing to suggest that upholding the district court’s judgment would be
    17 substantially unjust, we hold that there was no reversible error.
    18 The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion When It Denied the Grissoms’
    19 Post-Trial Motion to Amend
    17
    1   {24}   The Grissoms also argue that the district court erred when it denied their post-
    2 trial motion to amend the petition. Because the Grissoms moved to amend their
    3 petition for the first time after the trial, we construe their motion to be made under
    4 Rule 1-015(B) NMRA. See Rule 1-015(B) (“If evidence is objected to at the trial on
    5 the ground that it is not within the issues made by the pleadings, the court may allow
    6 the pleadings to be amended and shall do so freely when the presentation of the merits
    7 of the action will be subserved thereby and the objecting party fails to satisfy the court
    8 that the admission of such evidence would prejudice him in maintaining his action or
    9 defense upon the merits.”). “A district court’s denial of a motion to amend is reviewed
    10 under an abuse of discretion standard.” Alliance Health of Santa Teresa, Inc. v. Nat’l
    11 Presto Indus., Inc., 
    2007-NMCA-157
    , ¶ 26, 
    143 N.M. 133
    , 
    173 P.3d 55
    . The denial
    12 of a motion to amend does not constitute an abuse of discretion where the amendment
    13 would have been futile. See 
    id.
     The Grissoms did not attach a proposed amended
    14 petition to their post-trial motion to amend, nor did they set forth in the motion any
    15 allegations whatsoever that they would add to their petition were they permitted to
    16 amend it. We see nothing to demonstrate that allowing the amendment would subserve
    17 the presentation of the merits of the case. Furthermore, in light of the district court’s
    18 findings, as discussed above, allowing the Grissoms to amend their petition would be
    19 futile. We hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying the
    20 amendment.
    18
    1 The Grissoms Failed to Preserve Their Argument on the Creditor’s Claim
    2   {25}   Finally, the Grissoms argue that the district court erred in granting Joel any
    3 relief under his creditor’s claim because the outcome of the creditor’s claim “hinges
    4 upon [the district court’s] erroneous dismissal of [the Grissoms’] undue influence
    5 claim,” and because New Mexico’s Uniform Principal and Income Act (UPIA),
    6 NMSA 1978, §§ 46-3A-101 to -603 (2001, as amended through 2011) is inapplicable
    7 to conveyances such as the at-issue quitclaim deed. Because we affirm the district
    8 court’s determination that the quitclaim deed is valid, we will not consider the
    9 Grissoms’ first argument. With regard to the Grissoms’ argument that the UPIA does
    10 not apply to deeds, the Grissoms concede that this is “a new argument” raised on
    11 appeal. Accordingly, because the Grissoms failed to preserve this argument for
    12 review, we will not address it here. Woolwine v. Furr’s, Inc., 
    1987-NMCA-133
    , ¶ 20,
    13 
    106 N.M. 492
    , 
    745 P.2d 717
     (“To preserve an issue for review on appeal, it must
    14 appear that appellant fairly invoked a ruling of the [district] court on the same grounds
    15 argued in the appellate court.”).
    16 CONCLUSION
    17   {26}   For the reasons set forth above, we affirm the decision of the district court.
    18   {27}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    19                                           __________________________________
    20                                           LINDA M. VANZI, Judge
    19
    1 WE CONCUR:
    2 _________________________________
    3 MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge
    4 _________________________________
    5 M. MONICA ZAMORA, Judge
    20