Arlington Management v. Urology Clinic , 2021 UT App 72 ( 2021 )


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    2021 UT App 72
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    ARLINGTON MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATES, INC.,
    Appellant,
    v.
    UROLOGY CLINIC OF UTAH VALLEY, LLC,
    Appellee.
    Opinion
    No. 20190503-CA
    Filed July 9, 2021
    Fourth District Court, Provo Department
    The Honorable Thomas Low
    No. 160401231
    R. Stephen Marshall and Kevin Paulsen,
    Attorneys for Appellant
    Rodney R. Parker and Todd E. Zenger,
    Attorneys for Appellee
    JUDGE DIANA HAGEN authored this Opinion, in which
    JUDGES JILL M. POHLMAN and RYAN M. HARRIS concurred.
    HAGEN, Judge:
    ¶1     Arlington Management Associates Inc. (Arlington)
    appeals the district court’s order granting summary judgment to
    Urology Clinic of Utah Valley LLC (the Clinic). Arlington sued
    for breach of contract, alleging that the Clinic had failed to pay
    for management services that Arlington had provided pursuant
    to the parties’ written management agreement (the Management
    Agreement). The Clinic moved for summary judgment, in part,
    because Arlington had failed to withdraw its compensation from
    the Clinic’s operating account on a monthly basis as
    contemplated by the contract. In response, Arlington claimed
    that the Clinic had modified the contract by asking Arlington not
    to withdraw its monthly compensation and promising to pay “at
    Arlington Management v. Urology Clinic
    a later date.” Accepting these facts as true for purposes of the
    motion, the district court ruled that the Clinic was nonetheless
    entitled to judgment for two reasons: (1) Arlington was the first
    to breach the contract by failing to either pay itself monthly or
    reserve the payment as contemplated by the Management
    Agreement, and (2) the Clinic’s promise to pay at a later date
    was not specific enough to be enforced. Arlington now appeals
    the district court’s order granting summary judgment to the
    Clinic.
    ¶2     Arlington also appeals the district court’s denial of its
    cross-motion for partial summary judgment. The court denied
    that motion “for the same reasons that [the Clinic’s] motion for
    summary judgment [was] granted” and because there were
    “several disputes of material fact.”
    ¶3   Because issues of material fact precluded the district court
    from granting either the Clinic’s or Arlington’s motion for
    summary judgment, we vacate the district court’s order and
    remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶4      The Clinic and Arlington entered into the Management
    Agreement in 2009. At that time, the Clinic’s executive manager,
    Dr. Stewart Landau, and Arlington’s president, Rebecca Landau,
    were married. Dr. Landau signed the agreement on behalf of the
    Clinic, 1 and Ms. Landau signed the agreement on behalf of
    Arlington. Under the agreement, Arlington would provide the
    1. In opposition to Arlington’s cross-motion for partial summary
    judgment, the Clinic disputed whether Dr. Landau had authority
    to enter into the Management Agreement on behalf of the Clinic.
    But for purposes of its own motion for summary judgment, the
    Clinic assumed the existence of a contract between itself and
    Arlington.
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    Arlington Management v. Urology Clinic
    Clinic with management services in exchange for monthly
    payments of $10,000. Relevant to this appeal, the agreement
    contained the following provisions:
    Section 6.3 Expenditures. [The Clinic] shall
    establish a separate bank account (the “[O]perating
    Account”) for the Practice, on which [Arlington]
    or its designated employee(s) shall have
    exclusive signature authority. The funds in the
    Operating Account shall be, and shall remain at all
    times, [the Clinic’s] property. Within twenty (20)
    working days after the end of each month,
    [Arlington] shall submit to [the Clinic] an
    accounting of the expenditures for the previous
    calendar month. From the Operating Account,
    [Arlington] shall pay or reserve each month the
    following items:
    (a) Operating Expenses. All operating expenses of
    the Practice including, but not limited to, all
    amounts for salaries and wages, employee fringe
    benefits, payroll taxes, supplies, materials, repairs,
    maintenance, all utility charges, real property taxes
    and assessments on the Practice and insurance and
    bond premiums with respect to the operations of
    the Practice.
    (b) Management Fees. All management fees owed to
    [Arlington] pursuant to this Agreement.
    ....
    Section 12.2 Unpaid Sums. On termination of this
    Agreement, [the Clinic] promptly shall pay to
    [Arlington] any unpaid sums due under this
    Agreement, prorated through the effective date of
    such termination.
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    Arlington Management v. Urology Clinic
    ¶5      For the first four months after signing the Management
    Agreement, Arlington paid itself $10,000 per month from
    the operating account. Thereafter, Arlington stopped
    withdrawing its compensation from the operating account but
    accrued the Clinic’s obligation to Arlington on the Clinic’s
    accounting records each month. Thus, after the first four months,
    Arlington did not receive any payment from the Clinic. Years
    later, the Clinic terminated the agreement but refused to pay
    Arlington for the months Arlington received no payment for its
    services. Arlington then filed suit against the Clinic for breach of
    contract, alleging that Arlington was entitled to the remaining
    payments.
    ¶6     The Clinic moved for summary judgment on the grounds
    that Arlington had caused its own damages by not withdrawing
    its monthly payment, failed to mitigate damages by not
    reserving the funds, and waived the Clinic’s obligation to pay
    Arlington for its services. In opposition to the Clinic’s motion,
    Arlington argued that the parties had orally modified the terms
    of the Management Agreement. In support, it submitted a
    declaration from Ms. Landau swearing that Dr. Landau, on
    behalf of the Clinic, had “approached [her] and requested that
    Arlington not withdraw its monthly compensation” but
    promised that “Arlington would receive full compensation for
    its provision of management services at a later date.” For
    purposes of the motion only, the Clinic did not contest these
    facts but argued that the oral modification failed as a matter
    of law.
    ¶7     After filing its opposition, Arlington filed its own
    motion for partial summary judgment on its breach of
    contract claim. The Clinic opposed the motion, arguing
    that Arlington had no right to enforce the agreement because
    it was the first to breach. Specifically, the Clinic argued
    that Arlington had failed to provide exclusive management
    services to the Clinic as required by the Management
    Agreement.
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    Arlington Management v. Urology Clinic
    ¶8      The district court granted the Clinic’s motion for
    summary judgment, concluding that the asserted oral
    modification “lacked enforceable terms regarding the time for
    payment to Arlington” and therefore could not operate to
    modify the Management Agreement. It also concluded that
    Arlington had “breached the agreement first” when it failed to
    “pay itself as directed to do within the agreement” and “failed to
    set aside money to pay itself later.” Based on these conclusions,
    the court determined that “[a]s the party that breached first,
    Arlington [could not] sue for enforcement of the very term it
    breached.” The court denied Arlington’s motion for partial
    summary judgment for the same reasons but also ruled, in the
    alternative, that “several disputes of material fact would have
    prevented the court from granting [Arlington’s] motion for
    summary judgment, including the issue of whether Arlington
    actually did perform its duties under the Management
    Agreement.” The court then dismissed Arlington’s complaint in
    its entirety and entered final judgment in favor of the Clinic.
    ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶9     Arlington appeals the district court’s ruling granting
    summary judgment in favor of the Clinic and denying
    Arlington’s motion for partial summary judgment on its breach
    of contract claim. In reviewing a district court’s summary
    judgment ruling, we review its “legal conclusions and ultimate
    grant or denial of summary judgment for correctness.” Cochegrus
    v. Herriman City, 
    2020 UT 14
    , ¶ 14, 
    462 P.3d 357
     (cleaned up). We
    review “the facts and all reasonable inferences in a light most
    favorable to the party opposing the motion.” Rusk v. Harstad,
    
    2017 UT App 27
    , ¶ 3, 
    393 P.3d 341
     (per curiam) (cleaned up).
    ANALYSIS
    ¶10 Neither party is entitled to summary judgment in this
    case. “Summary judgment is only appropriate ‘if the moving
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    Arlington Management v. Urology Clinic
    party shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material
    fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law.’” Arnold v. Grigsby, 
    2018 UT 14
    , ¶ 8, 
    417 P.3d 606
     (quoting
    Utah R. Civ. P. 56(a)). Accordingly, the “district court must deny
    a motion for summary judgment if it finds that there is a genuine
    issue of material fact that bears on its legal determination or if it
    finds, as a matter of law based on the undisputed facts, that the
    moving party is not entitled to a legal ruling in its favor.”
    Normandeau v. Hanson Equip. Inc., 
    2009 UT 44
    , ¶ 9, 
    215 P.3d 152
    .
    To determine whether a genuine factual dispute exists, we ask
    “whether reasonable jurors, properly instructed, would be able
    to come to only one conclusion, or if they might come to
    different conclusions, thereby making summary judgment
    inappropriate.” Cochegrus, 
    2020 UT 14
    , ¶ 14 (cleaned up).
    ¶11 The district court granted the Clinic’s motion for
    summary judgment and denied Arlington’s cross-motion for
    partial summary judgment. We first address the Clinic’s motion
    for summary judgment and reverse the court’s determination
    that the Clinic was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. We
    then address the court’s denial of Arlington’s cross-motion and
    affirm the court’s ruling that genuine issues of material fact
    precluded summary judgment on Arlington’s breach of contract
    claim.
    I. The Clinic’s Motion for Summary Judgment
    ¶12 Arlington argues that the district court erred in granting
    the Clinic’s motion for summary judgment. For purposes of the
    motion, the court assumed that the oral modification occurred
    but concluded that the Clinic was nonetheless entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law for two reasons relevant to this
    appeal. First, the court ruled that Arlington breached the
    Management Agreement by failing to either pay itself or set
    aside the amount owed on a monthly basis and that Arlington’s
    first breach excused the Clinic’s non-performance. Second, the
    court concluded that, even if the alleged oral modification of the
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    Arlington Management v. Urology Clinic
    agreement excused Arlington from making monthly
    withdrawals, the terms of that modified agreement were not
    specific enough to be enforceable. 2 We disagree with the court’s
    reasoning on both points.
    ¶13 First, the Clinic is not entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law based on the first breach rule. “Under the first breach rule[,]
    a party first guilty of a substantial or material breach of contract
    . . . can neither insist on performance by the other party nor
    maintain an action against the other party for a subsequent
    failure to perform.” CCD, LC v. Millsap, 
    2005 UT 42
    , ¶ 29, 
    116 P.3d 366
     (cleaned up). But whether “a party performed under a
    contract or breached a contract is a question of fact.” iDrive
    Logistics LLC v. IntegraCore LLC, 
    2018 UT App 40
    , ¶ 43, 
    424 P.3d 2
    . The district court also appears to have partially based its
    ruling on Arlington’s failure to allege facts relating to the oral
    modification in its complaint. Specifically, the court stated that
    Arlington’s complaint “alleges the Management Agreement as
    the sole basis for [its] claims; there is no allegation of a separate
    oral agreement or oral terms that amend the Management
    Agreement.” Arlington’s breach of contract claim was based on
    the Clinic’s promise in the Management Agreement to pay
    Arlington $10,000 per month for its services. The oral
    modification to delay those payments did not become relevant
    until the Clinic argued that, by failing to pay itself as required in
    the Management Agreement, Arlington had caused its own
    damages, failed to mitigate its damages, or waived its right to be
    paid. But Arlington had no obligation to plead facts as “an
    anticipatory response to an expected affirmative defense.” See
    Bright v. Sorensen, 
    2020 UT 18
    , ¶ 38, 
    463 P.3d 626
    . In any event,
    the Clinic assumes that “the trial court did not base its summary
    judgment on that skeptical view” of Arlington’s complaint, and
    does not advance it as an alternative basis for affirmance on
    appeal.
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    Arlington Management v. Urology Clinic
    970. And whether such a breach is material is also a question of
    fact. See Cross v. Olsen, 
    2013 UT App 135
    , ¶ 29, 
    303 P.3d 1030
    .
    ¶14 The district court ruled that the Clinic was excused from
    performing under the Management Agreement because
    Arlington had breached its duty under Section 6.3(b) to either
    “pay or reserve each month . . . [a]ll management fees owed to”
    Arlington. It was undisputed, for purposes of summary
    judgment only, that Arlington agreed to the Clinic’s request that
    it “not withdraw its monthly compensation” from the operating
    account in exchange for a promise that it would be paid at a later
    date. It was also undisputed that Arlington did not withdraw its
    compensation from the Clinic’s operating account but accrued
    the Clinic’s obligation to Arlington on the Clinic’s accounting
    records each month. Based on these limited undisputed facts, we
    cannot conclude that the Clinic is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law.
    ¶15 As an initial matter, there are genuine issues of material
    fact as to whether the oral modification excused Arlington’s
    failure to pay itself or, at a minimum, to withdraw the funds
    necessary to cover an eventual payment. A reasonable jury
    might conclude, as the district court did, that Arlington had a
    duty to reserve funds that was not modified by the oral
    agreement. But a reasonable jury could also conclude that the
    parties intended that by forgoing payment, Arlington would
    leave the funds in the operating account for the Clinic’s use.
    ¶16 Even if the factfinder were to conclude at trial that
    Arlington did breach Section 6.3 by failing to either pay itself or
    reserve funds, a question of fact remains as to whether that
    breach was material. Arlington argues that the alleged breach
    “was at most a technical breach, not a material one” that excused
    the Clinic’s performance because it “only affected the timing of
    payment” and did not go “to the main purpose or object of the
    parties in entering into the agreement.” Under the first breach
    rule, only a material breach that “goes to the heart of the contract
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    Arlington Management v. Urology Clinic
    itself” will justify nonperformance by the other party. See Cross,
    
    2013 UT App 135
    , ¶ 28. Materiality “turns on a number of
    factors” and should “ordinarily be resolved by the fact finder.”
    
    Id. ¶¶ 28
    –29. “Summary judgment is appropriate on such factual
    questions when they fall on either end of a factual continuum:
    when there could be no reasonable difference of opinion, or
    when the facts are so tenuous, vague, or insufficiently
    established that determining the factual issue becomes
    completely speculative.” 
    Id. ¶ 29
     (cleaned up). Here, the district
    court did not address the materiality requirement. Without such
    an analysis examining the “issue through the lens of the
    foregoing standards,” the district court “erred in granting
    summary judgment on the factual question of material breach.”
    See 
    id. ¶ 30
    .3
    ¶17 Second, we disagree with the district court’s conclusion
    that the asserted oral modification, as described by Ms. Landau,
    was too non-specific to be enforceable. “It is well-settled law that
    the parties to a contract may, by mutual consent, alter all or any
    portion of that contract by agreeing upon a modification thereof.”
    Rapp v. Mountain States Tel. & Tel. Co., 
    606 P.2d 1189
    , 1191 (Utah
    1980) (emphasis added). The parties acknowledge that a contract
    may be modified by an oral agreement even if, as in this case, the
    contract says it can be modified only in writing. See, e.g., R.T.
    Nielson Co. v. Cook, 
    2002 UT 11
    , ¶ 13 n.4, 
    40 P.3d 1119
    . The
    modified terms “govern the rights and obligations of the parties
    under the contract, and any pre-modification contractual rights
    3. We do not mean to suggest that materiality is the only factual
    issue that remains unresolved. For instance, there may be
    questions of fact as to whether the Clinic is equitably estopped
    from raising the first breach rule as a defense. See State Dep't of
    Hum. Servs. ex rel. Parker v. Irizarry, 
    945 P.2d 676
    , 678 (Utah 1997)
    (stating that “the issue of whether equitable estoppel has been
    proven is a classic mixed question of fact and law”).
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    Arlington Management v. Urology Clinic
    which conflict with the terms of the contract as modified must be
    deemed waived or excused.” Rapp, 606 P.2d at 1191.
    ¶18 For purposes of the Clinic’s motion for summary
    judgment, the district court accepted as true that the Clinic asked
    Arlington to “not withdraw its monthly compensation” as
    required by Section 6.3 of the Management Agreement but that
    the Clinic still promised that “Arlington would receive full
    compensation for its provision of management services at a later
    date.” However, the court ruled that the oral modification was
    unenforceable because it “lacked enforceable terms regarding
    the time for payment to Arlington.” We disagree.
    ¶19 A modification can affect “the provisions which were
    discussed [as part of the modification], but not [the] provisions
    which were ignored.” See Mann v. American W. Life Ins. Co., 
    586 P.2d 461
    , 464 (Utah 1978). The limited facts on the record at the
    summary judgment stage do not establish, as a matter of law,
    that the parties’ alleged oral modification altered or otherwise
    addressed Section 12.2 of the Management Agreement. That
    provision states, “On termination of this Agreement, [the Clinic]
    promptly shall pay to [Arlington] any unpaid sums due under
    this Agreement, prorated through the effective date of such
    termination.” Although the “later date” for payment was not
    specified in the oral modification, Section 12.2 of the
    Management Agreement provided a backstop, indicating that
    the Clinic could not postpone its payment obligation beyond the
    date of termination. Whether the oral modification waived or
    excused Section 12.2 cannot be determined on this summary
    judgment record.
    ¶20 Even setting Section 12.2 aside, a reasonable time frame
    for repayment may be implied. “An implied reasonable time
    limit is as much a part of the agreement as those terms that are
    expressed, and it has long been recognized that if a contract fails
    to specify a time of performance the law implies that it shall be
    done within a reasonable time under the circumstances.”
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    Arlington Management v. Urology Clinic
    NetDictation LLC v. Rice, 
    2019 UT App 198
    , ¶ 27, 
    455 P.3d 625
    (cleaned up). As such, failure to specify a time for repayment at a
    later date did not render the oral modification unenforceable as a
    matter of law. Therefore, we vacate the entry of summary
    judgment in the Clinic’s favor.
    II. Arlington’s Motion for Summary Judgment
    ¶21 Having persuaded us that the district court erred in
    granting the Clinic’s motion for summary judgment, Arlington
    urges us to go one step further and reverse the court’s denial of
    Arlington’s cross-motion for summary judgment on its breach of
    contract claim. The district court principally denied Arlington’s
    motion “for the same reasons that [the Clinic’s] motion for
    summary judgment was granted.” But the court also ruled, in
    the alternative, that there were “several disputes of material fact
    that would have prevented the court from granting [Arlington’s]
    motion for summary judgment, including the issue of whether
    Arlington actually did perform its duties under the Management
    Agreement.”
    ¶22 We agree with the district court that questions of material
    fact preclude summary judgment on Arlington’s contract claim.
    In addition to those disputed facts already identified in Part I of
    this opinion, the parties dispute whether Arlington performed
    its duties under the Management Agreement, a necessary
    element of Arlington’s breach of contract claim. See Carmichael v.
    Higginson, 
    2017 UT App 139
    , ¶ 10 n.5, 
    402 P.3d 146
     (listing
    elements of a breach of contract claim, including “performance
    by the party seeking recovery” (cleaned up)). Ms. Landau’s
    declaration broadly asserted that Arlington had “timely
    performed all obligations and duties that it was required to
    perform under the Management Agreement.” As further factual
    support for this assertion, Arlington pointed to Ms. Landau’s
    deposition testimony that Arlington provided services
    “regarding lots of financial aspect[s] of insurance and
    employees, etc.,” and that Arlington “was also involved in
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    Arlington Management v. Urology Clinic
    communications with [the Clinic’s] billing professionals and ‘a
    myriad of things.’” In opposing Arlington’s motion, the Clinic
    disputed that Arlington had performed the “promised services
    in Articles 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6” of the Management Agreement and
    offered Dr. Landau’s declaration that Arlington had failed to
    “regularly attend[] or participate[] in the [Clinic’s]
    administrative meetings,” that he personally provided oversight
    on accounting matters “many times,” and that he and others
    performed the management duties that Arlington had agreed to
    exclusively provide.
    ¶23 Arlington argues that the Clinic did not set forth specific
    facts demonstrating a genuine dispute for trial because it “failed
    to cite a single instance where Arlington failed to perform as
    anticipated under the [Management] Agreement.” But the facts
    set forth by the Clinic were at least as specific as the evidence
    offered by Arlington, the moving party who would bear the
    burden of establishing its breach of contract claim at trial. See
    Salo v. Tyler, 
    2018 UT 7
    , ¶ 26, 
    417 P.3d 581
     (“A movant who seeks
    summary judgment on a claim on which it will bear the burden
    of persuasion at trial cannot seek summary judgment without
    producing affirmative evidence in support of the essential
    elements of its claim.”). The limited evidence regarding
    Arlington’s performance did not establish that no genuine issue
    of material fact remained for trial. Therefore, the district court
    correctly denied Arlington’s cross-motion for partial summary
    judgment on that basis.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶24 Issues of material fact preclude summary judgment in
    favor of either party. Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s
    ruling granting summary judgment for the Clinic and affirm the
    court’s ruling denying partial summary judgment for Arlington.
    We remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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