O'Brien and Associates v. Carl Kelley Construction ( 2012 )


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    1        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    2 O’BRIEN & ASSOCIATES, INC.,
    3 a New Mexico Corporation,
    4          Petitioner-Appellee,
    5 v.                                                                                    NO. 32,080
    6   CARL KELLEY CONSTRUCTION, INC.,
    7   LTD., a New Mexico Limited Liability Company;
    8   J.D. BEHLES & ASSOCIATES, P.C., a New
    9   Mexico Professional Corporation; RON MILLER,
    10   CPA, a New Mexico Professional Corporation;
    11   LUBBOCK NATIONAL BANK, a Texas Banking
    12   Corporation; and STEPHANIE O’BRIEN,
    13          Respondents-Appellants.
    14 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SIERRA COUNTY
    15 Edmund H. Kase, III, District Judge
    16 Behles Law Firm
    17 Jennie D. Behles
    18 Albuquerque, NM
    19 for Appellants Ron Miller and Behles Law Firm
    1 John Robert Beauvais
    2 Ruidoso, NM
    3 for Appellant Carl Kelley Construction
    4 Atkinson, Thal & Baker PC
    5 Douglas A. Baker
    6 Albuquerque, NM
    7 H. John Underwood
    8 Ruidoso, NM
    9 for Appellee
    10                             MEMORANDUM OPINION
    11 CASTILLO, Chief Judge.
    12        Defendants-Appellants Behles Law Firm and Ron Miller, CPA (Appellants)
    13 appeal from the district court’s ruling that Appellants are jointly and severally liable
    14 with a third defendant, Cark Kelley Construction Ltd. Co. (CKC) for costs in the
    15 amount of $7,380.43. [RP Vol.II/6747, 6749] Our notice proposed to affirm and
    16 Appellants filed a memorandum in opposition, as well as a request and an “amended
    17 request for completion of or supplement to items to be included in record on appeal.”
    18 We grant Appellants’ amended request to supplement the record on appeal. However,
    19 we remain unpersuaded by Appellants’ arguments and therefore affirm.
    20        In issue (1), Appellants continue to argue that they were not “proper parties”
    1 for purposes of a costs award. [DS 12; MIO 9-15] We understand Appellants to
    2 continue to argue that Appellant Behles Law Firm, P.C. was not a proper defendant
    3 because, while J.D. Behles & Associates claimed a lien on the property, it is now a
    4 defunct and separate entity from the Behles Law Firm. [DS 12; MIO 11-12] As we
    5 provided in our notice, the Behles Law Firm repeatedly and consistently identified
    6 itself in pleadings throughout the underlying lawsuit as the proper defendant. [RP
    7 Vol.I/6409-11, 6579] In addition, the documents by which Appellants in part claimed
    8 an interest in the property—a security agreement and transcript of judgment—were
    9 in the name of the Behles Law Firm. [RP Vol.I/6409] Because Appellant Behles Law
    10 Firm represented itself as an interchangeable entity with J.D. Behles & Associates and
    11 identified itself as a party throughout the lawsuit, we conclude that the district court
    12 appropriately treated it as a party, along with Appellant Miller and CKC, in its costs
    13 award.
    14        In conjunction with their argument contesting the Behles Law Firm as a proper
    15 party, we additionally understand Appellants to continue to dispute that Plaintiff-
    16 Appellee O’Brien & Associates (O’Brien) was the prevailing party for purposes of a
    17 costs award. In this regard, Appellants maintain that O’Brien was actually a defendant
    18 in light of Appellants’ claims or liens against the property and that O’Brien’s status
    19 as a defendant thereby precluded him from being a prevailing party for purposes of
    1 a costs award. [MIO 11] We disagree. In O’Brien & Associates, Inc. v. Behles Law
    2 Firm and Ron Miller (O’Brien I), Ct. App. No. 30,724 (filed 7-12-12), we affirmed
    3 the district court’s ruling that Appellants did not have an enforceable interest in
    4 Appellee O’Brien’s property. In doing so, we recognized that “[t]his case began life
    5 as an effort by O’Brien to cancel liens on a certain parcel of real property so that it
    6 could be sold.” Id. ¶ 1. Because O’Brien was successful in removing any clouds on
    7 the property, it is appropriate to characterize O’Brien as the prevailing party for a
    8 costs award. See generally Key v. Chrysler Motors Corp., 
    2000-NMSC-010
    , ¶ 6, 128
    
    9 N.M. 739
    , 
    998 P.2d 575
     (recognizing the presumption that the prevailing party is
    10 entitled to costs); Martinez v. Martinez, 
    1997-NMCA-096
    , ¶¶ 20-22, 
    123 N.M. 816
    ,
    11 
    945 P.2d 1034
     (recognizing that the party who quiets title in its favor may be entitled
    12 to costs); see also NMSA 1978, § 39-3-30 (1966), and Rule 1-054(D) NMRA
    13 (addressing the authority of the district court to award costs in civil proceedings).
    14 And while the presumption that a prevailing party is entitled to an award of costs may
    15 be overcome by a showing of misconduct, bad faith, or abusive tactics, see Gallegos
    16 v. Southwest Cmty. Health Servs., 
    117 N.M. 481
    , 490, 
    872 P.2d 899
    , 908 (Ct. App.
    17 1994), no such showing was made in this case. We lastly recognize that the facts in
    18 the present case are not the same as those in Key, Martinez, and Gallegos. [MIO 12-
    19 15] Our reference to these cases, however, is not for purposes of comparing the
    1 particular circumstances of each case to the present case, but instead for the basic
    2 principle addressed in these cases—that the prevailing party is entitled to costs absent
    3 a showing of misconduct, bad faith, or abusive tactics. Based on the foregoing
    4 discussion, we conclude that the district court appropriately ruled that Appellants must
    5 pay costs to the prevailing party, O’Brien.
    6         In issue (2), Appellants continue argue that they should not be held jointly and
    7 severally liable for costs with CKC because O’Brien did not pursue joint claims
    8 against them below given their separate liens on the property that arose from separate
    9 matters. [DS 2, 7-10, 13; MIO 16-20] We review the district court’s assessment of
    10 costs under an abuse of discretion standard. See Apodaca v. AAA Gas Co., 2003-
    11 NMCA-085, ¶ 103, 
    134 N.M. 77
    , 
    73 P.3d 215
    ; see also NMSA 1978, § 42-6-7 (1915)
    12 (providing that in costs for a quiet title action, “[i]f the defendant, or any of them, shall
    13 appear and disclaim all right and title adverse to the plaintiff, he shall recover his
    14 costs, and in all other cases the costs shall be in the discretion of the court.”
    15 (emphasis added)).
    16         In light of the separate liens, the district court did not assess joint and several
    17 damages against the defendants. [MIO 18] See generally Bartlett v. N.M. Welding
    18 Supply, Inc., 
    98 N.M. 152
    , 154-59, 
    646 P.2d 579
    , 581-86 (Ct. App. 1982) (setting
    19 forth the general rule that each tortfeasor is severally responsible for its own
    1 percentage of comparative fault for that injury), superseded in part on other grounds
    2 by NMSA 1978, § 41-3A-1 (1987). With respect to costs, however, Appellants have
    3 not dissuaded us of our agreement with the district court that the circumstances are
    4 such that the joint and several imposition of costs is a fair and equitable apportionment
    5 of costs between CKC and Appellants Miller and Behles Law Firm. Throughout the
    6 litigation, Appellants Miller and the Behles Law Firm acted as one and were
    7 represented by a single counsel. [RP Vol.I/6414] To the extent Appellants, and
    8 particularly Appellant Miller [MIO 16-17, 19], dispute the imposition of their joint
    9 and several costs with CKC, we again point out that CKC presented its defense at trial
    10 in conjunction with the defenses of Appellants in defending against O’Brien’s quiet
    11 title action to the property. [RP Vol.I/6414] To this end, we note also that the
    12 witnesses in both matters, as well as the exhibits, were substantially overlapping. [RP
    13 Vol.I/6414] Further, the issues between CKC and Appellants were overlapping in that
    14 their respective liens were competing in terms of priority and amount and that each
    15 of the parties asked questions during the other parties’ case. [RP Vol.I/6576-77, 6582]
    16 Although the parties’ claims to the property arose from different transactions [DS 6;
    17 MIO 17] and the dispute with CKC involved additional slander of title and prima facie
    18 tort claims and counterclaims [DS 7-8; MIO 18], O’Brien’s action to cancel the liens
    19 involved overlapping claims against the property. Given the unique circumstances of
    1 this case, we can not conclude that the district court abused its discretion, and for this
    2 reason affirm the joint and several costs award.
    3        In issue (3), Appellants continue argue that the district court had no authority
    4 to award costs because it had previously ruled that each party would be responsible
    5 for its own costs. [DS 14; MIO 20] As support for their argument, Appellants refer
    6 to proceedings in O’Brien I—specifically, the district court’s May 13, 2010, decision
    7 of the court [RP Vol.25/5968, 6017—where the district court entered its findings and
    8 conclusions and provided that the parties shall bear their own costs. [DS 5; MIO 21]
    9 Contrary to Appellants’ assertion otherwise [MIO 21], however, the district court’s
    10 findings and conclusions—entered prior to the final judgment—were not a final,
    11 binding, or otherwise appealable decision by the district court. See Curbello v.
    12 Vaughn, 
    76 N.M. 687
    , 687, 
    417 P.2d 881
    , 882 (1966) (stating that where the district
    13 court had entered findings and conclusions but had not entered an order or judgment
    14 carrying out the findings and conclusions, no final order had been entered in the case
    15 for purposes of appeal). In this regard, the decision contained only findings and
    16 conclusions and lacked decretal language. Until entry of a final judgment, the district
    17 court judge was not precluded from changing his mind [MIO 23], as he did, and
    18 concluding that O’Brien was entitled to an award of costs as the prevailing party. See
    19 State v. Diaz, 
    100 N.M. 524
    , 525, 
    673 P.2d 501
    , 502 (1983) (recognizing that while
    1 a matter is pending before the district court, a district court may change its mind at any
    2 time prior to entry of the final ruling); see also Levenson v. Haynes, 1997-NMCA-
    3 020, ¶ 10, 
    123 N.M. 106
    , 
    934 P.2d 300
     (providing that orders entered before a final
    4 judgment are interlocutory and as such the district court may revise or rescind such
    5 orders at any time before entry of final judgment). We again take notice of the
    6 proceedings from O’Brien I [RP Vol.26/6251], and refer to the district court’s
    7 September 16, 2010, final judgment, which provides that “[t]he issue of costs based
    8 on Rule 1-068 [NMRA] Offers of Settlement shall be determined by separate motion
    9 and/or cost bill.” [RP Vol.26/6248, 6251] Because the district court ultimately ruled
    10 in a final, binding decision that Appellants must pay costs [RP Vol.II/6747], any prior,
    11 non-binding conclusion was not determinative.
    12        To conclude, for the reasons stated above, as well as those provided in our
    13 notice, we affirm.
    14        IT IS SO ORDERED.
    15                                          __________________________________
    16                                          CELIA FOY CASTILLO, Chief Judge
    1 WE CONCUR:
    2 __________________________________
    3 JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
    4 __________________________________
    5 RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Judge