Arreola v. Ortiz ( 2016 )


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    1         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    2 LORENZO ARREOLA,
    3          Plaintiff-Appellee,
    4 v.                                                                            NO. 34,107
    5 CARLOS ORTIZ,
    6          Defendant-Appellant.
    7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOÑA ANA COUNTY
    8 James T. Martin, District Judge
    9 Law Office of Elliot Mohler
    10 Elliott A. Mohler
    11 Las Cruces, NM
    12 for Appellee
    13 Charles E. Hawthorne, Ltd.
    14 Charles E. Hawthorne
    15 Ruidoso, NM
    16 for Appellant
    17                                 MEMORANDUM OPINION
    18 HANISEE, Judge.
    19   {1}    Defendant Carlos Ortiz appeals the district court’s summary judgment in
    1 Plaintiff Lorenzo Arreola’s favor on his claims against Defendant to quiet title to
    2 certain property in the City of Sunland Park, New Mexico and for ejectment and
    3 breach of contract, and the district court’s later judgment awarding Plaintiff damages
    4 for breach of contract after a bench trial. We affirm.
    5 I.      BACKGROUND
    6   {2}   In 1987 Plaintiff and Jesus Valles purchased 3.5 acres of land in Sunland Park
    7 from Nora Green for $55,000. The sale deed was not recorded. Shortly after the sale,
    8 Plaintiff and Valles executed a contract under which Plaintiff agreed to pay Green
    9 $17,500 of the purchase price, with Valles paying the remainder. The agreement
    10 provided that Plaintiff and Valles would split the land between them, with Plaintiff
    11 receiving one and one-half acres and Valles receiving the remaining two acres. The
    12 agreement did not specify which acreage would belong to Plaintiff and which to
    13 Valles.
    14   {3}   Plaintiff constructed and operated an auto salvage business and leased portions
    15 of his land to small businesses and other individuals on one part of the property. In
    16 1996 Plaintiff constructed a boundary wall across the property. That same year, a
    17 metes and bounds survey of the property Plaintiff possessed was conducted, and the
    18 survey describes Plaintiff’s land as occupying 1.37 acres of the tract Plaintiff and
    19 Valles had purchased from Green.
    2
    1   {4}   In 2000 Plaintiff leased his salvage yard to Defendant. The lease permitted
    2 Plaintiff to increase the rent owed by Defendant if property taxes increased. The lease
    3 was for a ten-year term, expiring June 1, 2010. Under the terms of the lease,
    4 Defendant was obliged to pay Plaintiff $1,250 in monthly rent for the first four years
    5 of the lease term, and $1,450 per month for the remaining six years of the lease. In
    6 2006 Plaintiff and Defendant agreed to modify the lease to increase Defendant’s
    7 monthly rent payment to $1,700 because Defendant had constructed a building on
    8 Plaintiff’s property (thereby increasing the amount of property tax owed by Plaintiff)
    9 and because Plaintiff had rented an apartment on the property to Defendant. The
    10 modification further provided that Defendant would leave the building on the land
    11 after the lease expired and pay the water bill.
    12   {5}   Defendant claims that before the lease expired, he entered into an agreement to
    13 purchase Valles’s portion of Green’s property from Valles’s heirs, and that the
    14 purchase included land occupied by Plaintiff and leased to Defendant, which
    15 Defendant refers to as the “Disputed Tract.” When the lease expired, Plaintiff alleges
    16 that Defendant refused to vacate Plaintiff’s land and damaged the building he had
    17 constructed on Plaintiff’s property. Plaintiff brought suit against Defendant for
    18 ejectment, breach of contract, and violations of the Uniform Owner-Resident
    19 Relations Act (UORRA), NMSA 1978, §§ 47-8-1 to -52 (1975, as amended through
    3
    1 2007). Plaintiff later amended the complaint to name Valles’s heirs as defendants to
    2 an action to quiet title.
    3   {6}   Plaintiff moved for summary judgment, arguing that the signed agreement
    4 dividing Green’s land between Plaintiff and Valles and Plaintiff’s subsequent
    5 possession of the property at issue established that he had superior title to the portion
    6 of the land that Defendant continued to occupy after the lease expired. In the
    7 alternative, Plaintiff argued that the undisputed facts established that Plaintiff had
    8 obtained title to the property in question from Valles and his heirs through adverse
    9 possession. Plaintiff argued that he was also entitled to summary judgment on his
    10 breach of contract claim based on Defendant’s failing to pay rent, utilities, and by
    11 damaging the building Defendant had constructed and agreed to leave on Plaintiff’s
    12 property after the lease expired. Plaintiff contended as well that he was entitled to
    13 summary judgment on his claim for ejectment based on Defendant’s refusal to leave
    14 Plaintiff’s property after the lease expired, and on his UORRA claim based on
    15 Defendant’s damage to and failure to pay rent on the apartment he had leased from
    16 Plaintiff.
    17   {7}   Neither Defendant nor Valles’s heirs (who were represented by the same
    18 attorney before the district court) responded to Plaintiff’s motion for summary
    19 judgment. The district court found that Defendant and Valles’s heirs’ failure to
    4
    1 respond to Plaintiff’s motion amounted to an admission of Plaintiff’s statement of
    2 undisputed material facts. The district court granted Plaintiff’s motion with respect to
    3 the quiet title and ejectment claims in whole, as well as the breach of contract claim
    4 with respect to liability. However, the district court concluded that Plaintiff was not
    5 entitled to summary judgment as to the amount of damages stemming from Plaintiff’s
    6 breach of the lease agreement, and denied the motion with respect to Plaintiff’s
    7 UORRA claim.
    8   {8}   The district court held a bench trial as to Defendant’s liability under UORRA
    9 and to determine the amount of damages caused by Defendant’s breach of the lease
    10 agreement. After the trial, the district court issued written findings of fact and
    11 conclusions of law finding in Defendant’s favor on Plaintiff’s UORRA claim and
    12 fixing Defendant’s liability for breaching the lease agreement at $35,700 in lost rent,
    13 $706.27 in utility bill payments, and $6,000 for the value of the building Defendant
    14 had damaged. Defendant appeals, raising several claims of error.
    15 II.     STANDARD OF REVIEW
    16   {9}   Summary judgment “shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings, depositions,
    17 answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any,
    18 show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party
    19 is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Rule 1-056(C) NMRA. “We review the
    5
    1 district court’s decision to grant summary judgment de novo.” Hydro Res. Corp. v.
    2 Gray, 2007-NMSC-061, ¶ 14, 
    143 N.M. 142
    , 
    173 P.3d 749
    . Generally, New Mexico
    3 courts view summary judgment with disfavor, preferring trials over summary
    4 disposition. Romero v. Philip Morris Inc., 2010-NMSC-035, ¶ 8, 
    148 N.M. 713
    , 242
    
    5 P.3d 280
    . Accordingly, we review the facts and make all reasonable inferences from
    6 the record in favor of the nonmoving party. T.H. McElvain Oil & Gas Ltd. P’ship v.
    7 Benson-Montin-Greer Drilling Corp., 2015-NMCA-004, ¶ 19, 
    340 P.3d 1277
    , cert.
    8 granted, 2014-NMCERT-012, 
    344 P.3d 988
    .
    9   {10}   With respect to the district court’s findings of fact based on evidence submitted
    10 at the trial on damages and Plaintiff’s UORRA claim, our standard of review requires
    11 the district court’s findings to be supported by substantial evidence. Wisznia v. N.M.
    12 Human Servs. Dep’t, 1998-NMSC-011, ¶ 10, 
    125 N.M. 140
    , 
    958 P.2d 98
    . We do not
    13 reweigh the evidence presented at a bench trial and do not second guess the district
    14 court’s assessments of witnesses’ credibility or its resolution of conflicting evidence
    15 or testimony. 
    Id. Basically, “[t]he
    reviewing court must affirm if there is any
    16 reasonable ground that supports the [district] court’s decision, the question being
    17 whether there is evidence to support the result reached, rather than whether the
    18 evidence would have supported a different result.” 
    Id. However, we
    do not defer to
    19 any conclusions of law made by the district court based on its findings of fact. 
    Id. 6 1
    III.     DISCUSSION
    2   {11}   Defendant raises five issues on appeal, which we consolidate into four: (1)
    3 whether the district court correctly found that Plaintiff had obtained title to the
    4 property in question from Valles and his heirs through adverse possession; (2) whether
    5 the district court correctly held that Defendant was liable to Plaintiff for rent between
    6 the date the lease term expired and when Defendant left Plaintiff’s land; (3) whether
    7 the district court erred when it did not reduce its damage award by the amount of rent
    8 Plaintiff received from other tenants after Defendant’s lease expired; and (4) whether
    9 the district court should have reduced the amount of rent Defendant owed Plaintiff
    10 after the lease expired based on Defendant’s continued occupation of only a portion
    11 of the total property.
    12 A.       The District Court Did Not Err in Granting Plaintiff’s Motion for
    13          Summary Judgment on His Claims for Quiet Title, Ejectment, and Breach
    14          of Contract
    15   {12}   Defendant’s first issue on appeal challenges the district court’s decision to enter
    16 summary judgment in Plaintiff’s favor on his quiet title, ejectment, and breach of
    17 contract claims. Before we proceed to the merits of the district court’s ruling, we must
    18 first address a procedural question arising from Defendant’s failure to respond to the
    19 motion. In its order granting the motion, the district court noted that Defendant’s
    20 failure to respond to Plaintiff’s motion amounted to an admission of Plaintiff’s
    7
    1 statement of material facts. In our calendar notice, we asked the parties to “address the
    2 application of Atherton v. Gopin, 2015-NMCA-003, 
    340 P.3d 630
    , cert. granted,
    3 [2014]-NMCERT-[012, 
    344 P.3d 988
    ] to the district court’s ruling that Defendant’s
    4 failure to timely respond to Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment amounts to an
    5 admission of the facts [set out in the motion] and the effect that this ruling had on the
    6 district court’s ultimate findings and conclusions.”
    7   {13}   Defendant’s brief in chief does not squarely address this question, and instead
    8 argues that the district court “granted [Plaintiff’s motion for] summary judgment
    9 based upon the belief that [Defendant’s] failure to respond timely constituted consent
    10 to grant the motion.” Defendant’s recharacterization of the issue in this manner is
    11 understandable: In Atherton we held that a district court may not grant a motion for
    12 summary judgment as unopposed based solely on a party’s failure to respond to the
    13 motion. 
    Id. ¶ 24.
    Instead, “ ‘the district court must assess despite the lack of a response
    14 whether, on the merits, the moving party satisfied the burden under Rule 1-056(C)’
    15 ” of establishing that there is no genuine dispute as to any fact material to the claim
    16 on which summary judgment is sought. Atherton, 2015-NMCA-003, ¶ 24 (alteration
    17 omitted) (quoting Lujan v. City of Albuquerque, 2003-NMCA-104, ¶ 18, 
    134 N.M. 18
    207, 
    75 P.3d 423
    ).
    19   {14}   Here, however, the district court did not conclude that Defendant’s failure to
    8
    1 respond to Plaintiff’s motion amounted to a consent to the granting of the motion.
    2 Instead, the district court concluded that Defendant’s failure to respond amounted to
    3 an admission of Plaintiff’s statement of undisputed material facts. This conclusion is
    4 supported by Rule 1-056(D)(2), which provides that “[a]ll material facts set forth in
    5 the statement of the moving party shall be deemed admitted unless specifically
    6 controverted.” If a nonmoving party’s failure in his or her response to challenge a
    7 statement of material fact in a motion for summary judgment amounts to an admission
    8 of the fact, it stands to reason that a failure to file a response altogether should have
    9 the same effect.
    10   {15}   This is not to say that a district court must take the facts set out in a motion for
    11 summary judgment as admitted when no response is filed and ignore any tardy attempt
    12 by the nonmoving party to put material facts into dispute. Here, however, unlike
    13 Atherton and Lujan, Defendant never sought leave to file a response out of time, nor
    14 did Defendant submit a motion to reconsider after the court granted Plaintiff’s motion.
    15 See Atherton, 2015-NMCA-003, ¶ 8; Lujan, 2003-NMCA-104, ¶ 6. We will not find
    16 an abuse of discretion where a party never asked for the district court to exercise its
    17 discretion in the first place. See Rule 12-216(A) NMRA (“To preserve a question for
    18 review it must appear that a ruling or decision by the district court was fairly
    19 invoked[.]”). Accordingly, we limit our review of the district court’s order granting
    9
    1 Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment to whether the motion and any evidence
    2 Plaintiff submitted in support thereof “show that there is no genuine issue as to any
    3 material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.”
    4 Rule 1-056(C).
    5   {16}   Turning to this question, Defendant raises two arguments that Plaintiff’s motion
    6 did not make out a prima facie case for summary judgment on Plaintiff’s quiet title,
    7 ejectment, and breach of contract claims. First, Defendant contends that the agreement
    8 between Plaintiff and Valles partitioning Green’s property “was a nullity for a lack of
    9 a legal description of which part of the Green Tract each party was acquiring.”
    10 Second, Defendant argues that the district court’s conclusion that Plaintiff had
    11 acquired title to the property at issue through adverse possession was in error because
    12 the evidence Plaintiff provided in support of his motion for summary judgment did not
    13 establish that he held title to the land in question under color of title and had paid ad
    14 valorem taxes on the property during the period of adverse possession. See NMSA
    15 1978, § 37-1-22 (1973) (setting out elements of adverse possession including that the
    16 adverse possession be “commenced and continued under a color of title and claim of
    17 right inconsistent with and hostile to the claim of another” and requiring the person
    18 claiming adverse possession to “have for the period mentioned in this section
    19 continuously paid all the taxes, state, county and municipal, which during that period
    10
    1 have been assessed against the property”).
    2 1.       The Record Supports a Finding That Plaintiff Held the Land in Question
    3          Under Color of Title
    4   {17}   Section 37-1-22 provides that a person may obtain title to property through
    5 “adverse possession continuously and in good faith under color of title for ten years.”
    6 The possession must be “ ‘actual, visible, exclusive, hostile[,] and continuous.’ ”
    7 Polaco v. Prudencio, 2010-NMCA-073, ¶ 15, 
    148 N.M. 872
    , 
    242 P.3d 439
    (quoting
    8 Bd. of Trs. of Tecolote Land Grant v. Griego, 2005-NMCA-007, ¶ 9, 
    136 N.M. 688
    ,
    9 
    104 P.3d 554
    ). Section 37-1-22 further provides that “in no case must adverse
    10 possession be considered established within the meaning of the law, unless the party
    11 claiming adverse possession, his predecessors or grantors, have for the period
    12 mentioned in this section continuously paid all the taxes, state, county and municipal,
    13 which during that period have been assessed against the property.” (Internal quotation
    14 marks omitted.)
    15   {18}   Defendant first argues that the district court’s order granting Plaintiff’s motion
    16 for summary judgment should be reversed because the district court failed to make a
    17 finding that Plaintiff possessed the land in question under color of title. But we can
    18 affirm if the evidence supports a finding that Plaintiff held the property in question
    19 under color of title, so long as it is not unfair to the appellant to do so. See B.T.U.
    20 Block & Concrete, Inc. v. Ortega, No. 32,092, mem. op. ¶ 6 (N.M. Ct. App. May 19,
    11
    1 2014) (non-precedential) (evaluating the merits of the district court’s ultimate finding
    2 that a party had obtained title by adverse possession despite the district court’s failure
    3 to make necessary findings of fact); see also Cordova v. World Fin. Corp. of N.M.,
    4 2009-NMSC-021, ¶ 18, 
    146 N.M. 256
    , 
    208 P.3d 901
    (“[I]t is established law that our
    5 appellate courts will affirm a district court’s decision if it is right for any reason, so
    6 long as the circumstances do not make it unfair to the appellant to affirm.”). Because
    7 Defendant argues on appeal whether the deed was sufficient to give Plaintiff color of
    8 title over the property in question, it would not be unfair to affirm on this basis. So we
    9 address the issue on the merits instead of remanding for the district court to make a
    10 finding of fact as to whether Plaintiff held the property in question under color of title.
    11   {19}   Relying on In re Estate of Duran, 2003-NMSC-008, 
    133 N.M. 553
    , 
    66 P.3d 12
    326, Defendant argues that the deed conveying the property as a whole to Plaintiff and
    13 Valles was insufficient to establish that Plaintiff possessed the property in question
    14 under color of title against his cotenant because as Defendant states, In re Estate of
    15 Duran requires a cotenant to establish adverse possession against another cotenant
    16 [with] a heightened quantum of proof. But In re Estate of Duran is distinguishable on
    17 its facts. There, the party sought to obtain title to an entire estate against cotenants.
    18 2003-NMSC-008, ¶¶ 2-5. In such a circumstance, the Court noted the “color of title”
    19 requirement of adverse possession “operates in a way that is even more restrictive for
    12
    1 a claimant who is a cotenant . . . because it is unlikely that one who already has legal
    2 title to an interest in property as a cotenant would be able to acquire title to the
    3 property as a whole from some outside source.” 
    Id. ¶ 31.
    Here, Plaintiff did not seek
    4 to obtain title through adverse possession to the entire tract of land that he and Valles
    5 held as tenants in common; rather, he asserted that he had obtained through adverse
    6 possession the property at issue through the agreement dividing the land between the
    7 two cotenants.
    8   {20}   To be sure,
    9          [w]here possession is consistent with the rights of owners of record title,
    10          nothing but clear, unequivocal and notorious disclaimer and disavowal
    11          will render it adverse. There must be something which amounts to an
    12          ouster, either actual notice or acts and conduct that will clearly indicate
    13          that the original permissive use has changed to one of an adverse
    14          character.
    15 
    Id. ¶ 10
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). But Defendant does not
    16 dispute the evidence showing that Plaintiff and Valles exercised exclusive control over
    17 discrete portions of the tract they had purchased from Green after they agreed to
    18 divide the property, which tends to show that Plaintiff exercised exclusive control
    19 over the property at issue for at least ten years. So we are in no position to evaluate
    20 whether an agreement between cotenants to divide the property which does not
    21 describe the precise dimensions of the division standing alone is sufficient to work a
    22 partition or satisfy the adversity requirement. See Hagopian v. Saad, 
    199 A. 433
    , 434
    13
    1 (Conn. 1938) (“[Adversity] is satisfied by the execution by [the cotenants] of the
    2 original agreement and by their continued acquiescence in the resulting occupation.”);
    3 see also In re Estate of Duran, 2003-NMSC-008, ¶ 12 (“We have said that property
    4 may be partitioned by an agreement of the cotenants, orally or otherwise, so long as
    5 all of the cotenants have the capacity to contract.”). The most that Defendant offers
    6 on this point is an unsupported assertion that the agreement between Plaintiff and
    7 Valles “was a nullity for a lack of a legal description of which part of the Green Tract
    8 each party was acquiring.” We have no occasion to consider whether this assertion is
    9 correct because Defendant cites no legal authority in support of the contention. See In
    10 re Adoption of Doe, 1984-NMSC-024, ¶ 2, 
    100 N.M. 764
    , 
    676 P.2d 1329
    (“[W]here
    11 arguments in briefs are unsupported by cited authority, [we assume that] counsel[,]
    12 after diligent search, was unable to find any supporting authority.”).
    13 2.       There Was Sufficient Evidence in the Record to Support the District
    14          Court’s Finding That Plaintiff Had Paid Ad Valorem Taxes Throughout
    15          the Ten-Year Statutory Period of Adverse Possession
    16   {21}   Defendant next argues that summary judgment was improper because Plaintiff
    17 did not submit any evidence that would allow the district court to conclude that
    18 Plaintiff had paid ad valorem taxes on the property he claimed title to through adverse
    19 possession, as Section 37-1-22 requires. But Plaintiff’s affidavit in support of his
    20 motion for summary judgment states that he paid his share of the property taxes on his
    14
    1 parcel throughout the period of adverse possession. Moreover, Plaintiff attached tax
    2 receipts for the property in question covering the years 1991 through 2009 to his
    3 affidavit. Defendant does not explain why Plaintiff’s affidavit or the tax receipts
    4 submitted in support are insufficient to make a prima facie case for summary
    5 judgment on that issue, thereby shifting the burden to Defendant to submit evidence
    6 that Plaintiff had not in fact paid taxes on the property. See Roth v. Thompson, 1992-
    7 NMSC-011, ¶ 17, 
    113 N.M. 331
    , 
    825 P.2d 1241
    (“Upon the movant making a prima
    8 facie showing [that he is entitled to summary judgment], the burden shifts to the party
    9 opposing the motion to demonstrate the existence of specific evidentiary facts which
    10 would require trial on the merits.”). Accordingly, we reject this argument summarily.
    11   {22}   Having rejected both of Defendant’s arguments challenging the district court’s
    12 grant of summary judgment to Plaintiff on the issue of his ownership of the property
    13 in question, we affirm the district court on this issue.
    14 B.       Defendant Failed to Preserve His Argument That as a Good Faith
    15          Purchaser He Was Not Liable to Plaintiff for Rent
    16   {23}   Defendant contends there is substantial evidence in the record that he purchased
    17 Valles’s heirs’ interest in the land Valles and Plaintiff had purchased from Green, and
    18 that he remained on Plaintiff’s property based on his reliance in good faith on Valles’s
    19 heirs’ representation that they owned the property in question. Defendant contends
    20 that under NMSA 1978, Section 14-9-3 (1990), he is not liable for rent on the property
    15
    1 as a “purchaser of real property . . . who has invested money in the property without
    2 notice of a third party’s unrecorded interest in the property.” Initially, we note that
    3 Defendant does not dispute that he agreed to lease the property in question from
    4 Plaintiff, so even taking Defendant’s understanding of the law as correct we would
    5 find it difficult to accept that Defendant did not have notice of Plaintiff’s interest. But
    6 in any event, Defendant never raised this argument before the district court, and has
    7 therefore forfeited the issue on appeal. See Rule 12-216(A). Defendant responds that
    8 we should consider the issue preserved because the district court’s decision not to
    9 allow closing arguments prevented Defendant from raising the issue. See Rule 12-
    10 216(A) (stating that “if a party has no opportunity to object to a ruling or order at the
    11 time it is made, the absence of an objection does not thereafter prejudice the party”).
    12 But Defendant had ample opportunity to argue this issue: the parties both submitted
    13 proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law prior to the bench trial, and
    14 Defendant made no mention of the issue in his submissions there or elsewhere.
    15 Accordingly, Defendant failed to preserve the issue for review on appeal. See
    16 Woolwine v. Furr’s, Inc., 1987-NMCA-133, ¶ 20, 
    106 N.M. 492
    , 
    745 P.2d 717
    (“To
    17 preserve an issue for review on appeal, it must appear that appellant fairly invoked a
    18 ruling of the [district] court on the same grounds argued in the appellate court.”).
    19 C.     Defendant Failed to Preserve His Argument That the District Court
    20        Should Reduce Any Rent Owed by Defendant to Plaintiff by the Amount
    16
    1          Plaintiff Received From Leasing the Property After the Lease Expired
    2   {24}   In his third issue on appeal, Defendant argues that the district court ought to
    3 have reduced its award of damages by the amount of rent that Plaintiff received from
    4 leasing the part of his property that Defendant did not continue to occupy beyond the
    5 lease term to a different tenant. Defendant claims that he preserved this argument in
    6 his answer to Plaintiff’s amended complaint, but we see no mention there or anywhere
    7 else in the record that Defendant made this argument to the district court. Accordingly,
    8 it was not preserved for review on appeal.
    9 D.       Defendant Failed to Preserve His Argument That the District Court
    10          Should Reduce the Rent Owed by Defendant to Plaintiff by the Portion of
    11          the Property Defendant Ceased Occupying When the Lease Expired
    12   {25}   Defendant raises a related argument that because he only continued to occupy
    13 a small portion of Plaintiff’s property after the lease expired, the district court ought
    14 to have reduced its award of damages correspondingly. Defendant maintains that we
    15 should deem this issue preserved because the district court’s decision not to allow
    16 closing arguments at the end of the bench trial precluded him from invoking the
    17 district court’s ruling on this issue But like Defendant’s second issue on appeal,
    18 Defendant had other opportunities to raise the issue, either before or during trial.
    19 Accordingly, the issue was not preserved and we decline to review it on appeal.
    20 IV.      CONCLUSION
    17
    1   {26}   The district court’s order granting Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment in
    2 part is affirmed. The district court’s award of damages after a bench trial is also
    3 affirmed.
    4   {27}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    5                                                 _________________________________
    6                                                 J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
    7 WE CONCUR:
    8 _________________________________
    9 RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Judge
    10 _________________________________
    11 LINDA M. VANZI, Judge
    18