North Fork Special Service District v. Bennion ( 2013 )


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    2013 UT App 1
    _________________________________________________________
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    NORTH FORK SPECIAL SERVICE DISTRICT,
    Plaintiff and Appellee,
    v.
    ROBERT BENNION,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Opinion
    No. 20111026‐CA
    Filed January 4, 2013
    Fourth District, Provo Department
    The Honorable Steven L. Hansen
    No. 080400633
    Jeffrey T. Colemere and Brady T. Gibbs, Attorneys for Appellant
    Kasey L. Wright and Melissa K. Mellor, Attorneys for Appellee
    JUDGE CAROLYN B. MCHUGH authored this Opinion, in which
    JUDGES JAMES Z. DAVIS and J. FREDERIC VOROS JR. concurred.
    McHUGH, Judge:
    ¶1     Robert Bennion appeals from the trial court’s entry of
    summary judgment in favor of the North Fork Special Service
    District (the District) for past due service fees and interest charges
    that exceed $200. Bennion also challenges the trial court’s award of
    attorney fees under Utah Code section 78B‐5‐825. See Utah Code
    Ann. § 78B‐5‐825 (LexisNexis 2012). We vacate the judgment and
    remand for the entry of a new judgment consistent with this
    opinion.
    North Fork v. Bennion
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2      At all times relevant to this action, Bennion owned residen‐
    tial property located within the District’s service boundaries, the
    District provided him with water, fire protection, and garbage
    collection services, and it routinely sent Bennion quarterly invoice
    statements. Sometime in early 1998, the lateral water line (the
    Bennion Line) between Bennion’s property and the District’s main
    water line (the Main Line) began to develop serious leaks, and the
    District informed Bennion that it was his duty to repair it. In
    response, Bennion stopped using the property, closed the valve
    where the water enters the Bennion Line, and notified the District
    that he no longer wished to receive water. Despite that request, the
    District continued to send water to the Bennion Line in order to
    provide water to other customers who had connected to the
    Bennion Line.1 Bennion has refused to pay the District for any
    service fees after 1998.
    The 1998 Case
    ¶3      Shortly after Bennion closed the valve to the Main Line, a
    neighbor who received water from the District through the Bennion
    Line filed suit seeking an injunction barring Bennion from shutting
    off the water (the 1998 Case). Bennion counterclaimed, seeking an
    injunction against the neighbor’s use of the Bennion Line. In
    addition, Bennion joined the District as a third‐party defendant and
    sought an injunction preventing it from using the Bennion Line to
    deliver water to its other customers. The trial court issued a
    temporary restraining order preventing Bennion from shutting off
    the water. It also struck Bennion’s pleadings and dismissed his
    1. Although a customer’s lateral line is typically used exclusively
    to deliver water to that customer’s property, the District and
    Bennion’s predecessor‐in‐interest had agreed to allow other
    customers to receive water through the Bennion Line.
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    claims for injunctive relief with prejudice as a discovery sanction.
    Bennion did not appeal that decision.
    The 2002 Case
    ¶4      On March 29, 2002, the District sued Bennion for overdue
    charges, including excess water fees for the leaked water, which
    were calculated according to a graduated scale for usage above
    5,000 gallons per month (the 2002 Case). Bennion filed a counter‐
    claim for damages, which the 2002 court dismissed in 2004 for
    failure to file a notice of claim as required by the Governmental
    Immunity Act and, because the claims could have been brought in
    the 1998 Case, they were barred by res judicata. Subsequently, on
    November 10, 2005, the 2002 court granted partial summary
    judgment and awarded the District base user fees and accrued
    interest for the period of January 1, 1997, through January 25, 2002.
    After a bench trial on October 10, 2008, the 2002 court ruled that
    Bennion was responsible for maintenance of the Bennion Line and
    for the excess water fees, “regardless of whether [Bennion] actually
    uses such water or whether the water is lost through leaks located
    in the [Bennion Line].” The 2002 court reasoned that Bennion was
    “the owner of the [Bennion Line]” and “that [Bennion] prohibited
    [the District] from placing a meter on the [Bennion Line] that
    would have more accurately determined how much water was
    actually used by [Bennion].” The court ordered Bennion to pay for
    the excess water fees accrued between November 1, 1997, and May
    1, 1998, plus interest and attorney fees. Bennion appealed the 2002
    court’s decision, which we dismissed due to Bennion’s failure to
    file a timely notice of appeal. See North Fork Special Serv. Dist. v.
    Bennion, 2006 UT App 447U (mem.).
    The 2006 Case
    ¶5      On May 25, 2006, the District brought a condemnation action
    against Bennion to establish an easement across Bennion’s property
    for the purpose of constructing a waterline to service the District’s
    other customers (the 2006 Case). On September 22, 2006, the 2006
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    court determined that the Bennion Line was “leaking and losing
    hundreds of gallons of water each week.” Therefore, it granted the
    District immediate occupancy of a portion of Bennion’s property to
    construct a new waterline or repair the existing one. Bennion
    petitioned for interlocutory appeal, which we denied.
    The Current Case
    ¶6      On February 29, 2008, the District filed another complaint
    against Bennion to collect base user fees, excess user fees, and
    interest associated with water taken from the Bennion Line since
    March 31, 2002, and seeking $250,000 in punitive damages (the
    Current Case). Bennion answered the complaint and filed a Motion
    to Dismiss, arguing that the District was not entitled to punitive
    damages and that the District’s claims were barred by the applica‐
    ble statute of limitations. After a hearing on August 25, 2008, the
    trial court dismissed the District’s claim for punitive damages and
    ruled that a four‐year statute of limitations applied, effectively
    prohibiting the District from recovering any fees or interest
    incurred prior to February 28, 2004. It also ordered the parties to
    provide supplemental briefing as to the applicability of Utah Code
    section 17B‐1‐904, which limits the amount a local district can
    collect for past due fees.
    ¶7     In response, Bennion filed a supplemental memorandum
    claiming that because his property is residential, Utah Code section
    17B‐1‐904 limits the total amount the District could recover to $200.
    Bennion argued that by adopting Utah Code section 17D‐1‐106,
    which became effective on May 8, 2008, the Utah Legislature
    intended for the $200 recovery limit on local districts to apply
    retroactively to special service districts. The District argued that
    there was no retroactive effect. After briefing was complete, and
    without seeking permission, Bennion filed a supplemental reply
    memorandum outlining the legislative history of the relevant code
    sections and arguing, for the first time, that Utah Code section 17B‐
    2‐804, the predecessor statute to section 17B‐1‐904, limited the
    District’s recovery to no more than $200 for the period from its
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    effective date of May 3, 2004, to when it was repealed and replaced
    by section 17B‐1‐904 on April 30, 2007.
    ¶8      On September 25, 2008, the trial court ruled that the Dis‐
    trict’s recovery was not limited to $200 because “[a]lthough, as
    noted by [Bennion], section 17B‐1‐904 was enacted in 2004,[2] it did
    not apply to special service districts until May 5, 2008 when section
    17D‐1‐106 was enacted, which was approximately two months after
    the case was filed by [the District].” The court further explained,
    In the absence of language in the stat‐
    ute showing an intent on the part of
    the legislature that section 17D‐1‐106
    should be applied retroactively to
    make section 17B‐1‐904 and other sec‐
    tions applicable to special service dis‐
    tricts, the court declines to apply it
    retroactively to cap [the District’s]
    service fee damages to $200.
    In denying Bennion’s Motion to Dismiss, the court did not address
    whether section 17B‐2‐804 limited the District’s fees to $200 during
    the period of May 3, 2004, to April 30, 2007, when that statute was
    in effect. It also did not consider whether section 17B‐1‐904 limited
    the amount of interest that could accrue after its effective date.
    ¶9     On May 19, 2010, the District filed a Motion for Summary
    Judgment and supporting memorandum claiming that Bennion
    was liable for base user fees and excess water fees for the period
    from February 28, 2004, through March 31, 2009. The District also
    sought interest on those fees for the period between April 30, 2004,
    2. We note that the trial court incorrectly referenced section 17B‐1‐
    904 as being enacted in 2004. We provide a more detailed analysis
    of the evolving statutory scheme later in this opinion. See infra
    ¶¶ 27–49.
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    through May 14, 2010. Finally, the District alleged that it was
    entitled to attorney fees pursuant to Utah Code section 78B‐5‐825.
    In support of its fees claim, the District argued that it was “forced
    to pursue litigation for over eight years in an attempt to” obtain
    delinquent fees and that, in light of the prior judgments against
    him, Bennion’s defense of the Current Case constituted bad faith.
    ¶10 Bennion responded to the District’s Motion for Summary
    Judgment with a memorandum in opposition (the Opposition
    Memorandum), which disputed that he had acted in bad faith.
    Additionally, Bennion argued that summary judgment was
    improper as a matter of law because both sections 17B‐2‐804 and
    17B‐1‐904 applied to the Current Case, during different time
    periods. The District filed a motion to strike portions of the
    Opposition Memorandum, including Bennion’s arguments
    regarding sections 17B‐2‐804 and 17B‐1‐904. It asserted that these
    arguments should be stricken because they had “already been
    briefed by the parties, and this Court signed a decision on October
    1, 2008, rejecting [Bennion’s] arguments related to Utah Code
    [section] 17B‐1‐904.”
    ¶11 After a hearing on June 8, 2011, the trial court granted
    summary judgment and struck Bennion’s statutory arguments as
    redundant. Although the motion was one for summary judgment,
    on October 13, 2011, the trial court issued “Findings of Fact and
    Conclusions of Law on Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment.”
    In the “Findings of Fact” section, the trial court stated that Bennion
    was the owner of the Bennion Line and that he was responsible for
    its maintenance. The court also stated as a finding of fact that
    Bennion owed base user fees in the amount of $3,711; excess water
    fees in the amount of $95,330 for the period between February 28,
    2004, through March 31, 2009; and interest at the rate of 12% per
    annum for the period of April 30, 2004, through June 8, 2011, in the
    amount of $61,155. In addition, the trial court concluded that the
    District was entitled to continuing interest of 12% per annum until
    the judgment is paid in full. The court further found that
    “Bennion’s actions and continued litigation have been pursued in
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    bad faith” and ordered him to pay the District’s attorney fees in the
    amount of $11,362. Bennion filed a timely appeal.
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶12 First, Bennion argues that the trial court erred in granting
    the District’s summary judgment motion because it failed to apply
    Utah Code sections 17B‐2‐804 and 17B‐1‐904 to limit the amount of
    user fees, excess water fees, and interest that the District could
    recover against him. See Utah Code Ann. § 17B‐2‐804 (LexisNexis
    2004);3 id. § 17B‐1‐904 (2009). Summary judgment is proper if “there
    is no genuine issue as to any material fact and . . . the moving party
    is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Utah R. Civ. P. 56(c).
    “We review the trial court’s summary judgment for correctness,
    considering only whether the trial court correctly applied the law
    and correctly concluded that no disputed issues of material fact
    existed.” Baxter v. Saunders Outdoor Adver., Inc., 
    2007 UT App 340
    ,
    ¶ 6, 
    171 P.3d 469
     (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    Additionally, “[i]ssues of statutory interpretation are questions of
    law that we review for correctness.” In re R.B.F.S., 
    2012 UT App 132
    , ¶ 10, 
    278 P.3d 143
     (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    ¶13 Second, Bennion contends that the trial court erred by
    determining as a matter of law that he was responsible to maintain
    the Bennion Line and to pay any excess water fees resulting from
    unrepaired leaks in it. As stated above, we review summary
    judgment for correctness. See Baxter, 
    2007 UT App 340
    , ¶ 6. “Our
    review is limited to determining whether the district court correctly
    applied the summary judgment standard in light of the undisputed
    material facts.” Raab v. Utah Ry. Co., 
    2009 UT 61
    , ¶ 10, 
    221 P.3d 219
    .
    3. Utah Code section 17B‐2‐804 was repealed and replaced with
    Utah Code section 17B‐1‐904, effective April 30, 2007. See Act of
    Apr. 30, 2007, ch. 329, § 468, 2007 Utah Laws 1723, 2007–14.
    20111026‐CA                       7                  
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    ¶14 Third, Bennion argues that the trial court erred when it
    awarded the District attorney fees because even if Bennion’s
    defenses were advanced in bad faith, they were not without merit.
    A prevailing party is entitled to an award of attorney fees pursuant
    to section 78B‐5‐825 if the action was both “without merit” and
    “not brought or asserted in good faith.” See Utah Code Ann.
    § 78B‐5‐825 (LexisNexis 2012). “The trial court’s determination that
    an action lacks merit . . . is a question of law, which we review for
    correctness.” Edwards v. Powder Mountain Water & Sewer, 
    2009 UT App 185
    , ¶ 13, 
    214 P.3d 120
    .
    ANALYSIS
    I. Statutory Interpretation
    ¶15 Bennion argues that the trial court erroneously granted
    summary judgment when it failed to interpret and apply sections
    17B‐2‐804 and 17B‐1‐904 to limit the District’s recovery to $200 for
    water it provided to Bennion’s residential property.4 See Utah Code
    Ann. § 17B‐2‐804; id. § 17B‐1‐904. He therefore asks that we reverse
    and remand to the trial court for readjustment of past due service
    fees and interest.
    ¶16 The District first argues that we should not consider
    Bennion’s section 17B‐2‐804 claim because he did not “specifically
    appeal the order striking” that argument from his Opposition
    Memorandum. The District also contends that this claim was not
    4. Bennion argued before the trial court that both sections 17B‐2‐
    804 and 17B‐1‐904 limit the District’s recovery to a total of $200
    during the applicable time periods. On appeal, Bennion argues that
    these sections limit the District’s recovery to $200 per month.
    During oral argument, Bennion clarified that although the statutes
    do not state the $200 as a monthly limitation, the $200 is limited per
    form notice, which can be sent every thirty days.
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    properly preserved in the trial court because his supplemental
    reply memorandum was untimely and was not adequately briefed
    in any other pleading. In the alternative, the District argues that
    even if the claim has been preserved, the trial court correctly
    determined that the District’s recovery is not limited to $200. In
    particular, the District argues that section 17B‐2‐804 is ambiguous,
    the other provisions in the statute are inconsistent with a $200
    limitation, and the imposition of such a limit is contrary to the
    general purposes of Title 17B, Chapter 2, Part 8. Although the
    District disputes the preservation and applicability of section 17B‐
    2‐804, it offers no response to Bennion’s arguments on appeal
    regarding section 17B‐1‐904.
    A. Jurisdiction and Preservation
    ¶17 Before reaching the merits of Bennion’s claims on appeal, we
    address the District’s argument that Bennion was required to
    “specifically appeal the order striking the [portions of his]
    pleading” related to the $200 fee limitation of section 17B‐2‐804. See
    
    id.
     § 17B‐2‐804(3)(b)(i)(B). It is unclear from the District’s appellate
    brief whether it challenges the sufficiency of the notice of appeal to
    confer jurisdiction on this court to consider the decision striking
    Bennion’s argument, or the adequacy of Bennion’s appellate briefs
    in challenging that decision. Because the District indicated during
    oral argument that it intended to raise both arguments, we consider
    each in turn, beginning with the scope of the notice of appeal.
    ¶18 On October 13, 2011, the trial court issued an order striking
    portions of Bennion’s Opposition Memorandum and issued a
    separate order granting summary judgment in favor of the District.
    Rule 3(d) of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure provides, “The
    notice of appeal shall specify the party or parties taking the appeal;
    shall designate the judgment or order, or part thereof, appealed
    from; shall designate the court from which the appeal is taken; and
    shall designate the court to which the appeal is taken.” Utah R.
    App. P. 3(d). Utah precedent interpreting rule 3(d) clarifies that
    Bennion was not required to identify the interim order striking his
    20111026‐CA                        9                   
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    section 17B‐2‐804 argument in the notice of appeal. “[W]e have
    long adhered to the policy that where the notice of appeal
    sufficiently identifies the final judgment at issue and the opposing
    party is not prejudiced, the notice of appeal is to be liberally
    construed.” Goggin v. Goggin, 
    2011 UT 76
    , ¶ 24, 
    267 P.3d 885
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly,
    Bennion need not “indicate that the appeal also concerns
    intermediate orders or events that have led to that final judgment.”
    See Zions First Nat’l Bank, N.A. v. Rocky Mountain Irrigation, Inc., 
    931 P.2d 142
    , 144 (Utah 1997); see also Scudder v. Kennecott Copper Corp.,
    
    886 P.2d 48
    , 50 (Utah 1994) (“When appealing from an entire final
    judgment as [Bennion] did here, it is not necessary to specify each
    interlocutory order of which [Bennion] seeks review.”). Instead,
    “the relevant inquiry is whether the prior orders not named in
    [Bennion’s] notice of appeal were ‘intermediate orders’ that led to
    a final, appealable order.” See Speros v. Fricke, 
    2004 UT 69
    , ¶ 16, 
    98 P.3d 28
    . Where the “intermediate order of the court . . . constitutes
    one link in the chain of rulings leading to dismissal,” Bennion is
    entitled to challenge it based on a notice of appeal identifying the
    final order. See Braun v. Nevada Chems., Inc., 
    2010 UT App 188
    , ¶ 10,
    
    236 P.3d 176
    .
    ¶19 The trial court’s order striking portions of Bennion’s
    Opposition Memorandum constitutes an intermediate “link in the
    chain of rulings” that led to summary judgment in favor of the
    District. See id.; Speros, 
    2004 UT 69
    , ¶ 18 (determining that a notice
    of appeal encompasses all orders that amount to “intermediate
    steps along the way to the final judgment”). Indeed, the order
    striking portions of Bennion’s brief and the order granting
    summary judgment in favor of the District were issued the same
    day. See In re B.B., 
    2002 UT App 82
    , ¶ 10, 
    45 P.3d 527
     (concluding
    that notice of appeal that only mentioned one of the two orders,
    although “not ideal,” served to notify the opposing parties that
    both of the trial court’s orders from the same hearing were being
    appealed, “particularly where the orders bear the same date”). The
    summary judgment order does not address Bennion’s statutory
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    arguments because it relies upon the contemporaneous order
    striking them from his Opposition Memorandum.
    ¶20 Additionally, the District has advanced no argument
    suggesting that it has been prejudiced. See Goggin, 
    2011 UT 76
    , ¶ 24;
    Speros, 
    2004 UT 69
    , ¶ 16 n.2. Bennion’s notice of appeal sufficiently
    notified the District that he was challenging the trial court’s
    judgment awarding the District damages in an amount that
    exceeds the limit provided by the identical language of sections
    17B‐2‐804 and 17B‐1‐904. “Because [Bennion] complied with rule
    3(d) and generally designated the final judgment in [his] notice of
    appeal, [he is] not precluded from alleging errors in any
    intermediate order involving the merits or necessarily affecting the
    judgment as long as such errors were properly preserved.” See
    Zions First Nat’l Bank, 931 P.2d at 144.
    ¶21 The District also asserts that Bennion’s section 17B‐2‐804
    argument was not properly preserved. While the District
    acknowledges that Bennion raised the issue of the $200 limitation
    in the context of section 17B‐1‐904 during the hearing on the
    Motion to Dismiss and in a supplemental brief, it asserts that he
    did not raise his argument in the context of section 17B‐2‐804. The
    District asks us to ignore Bennion’s second supplemental
    memorandum, which it acknowledges raised section 17B‐2‐804,
    because it was not authorized or accepted by the trial court. Indeed,
    the trial court makes no reference to this pleading in its decision
    denying Bennion’s Motion to Dismiss, which analyzes only the
    applicability of the $200 limitation under section 17B‐1‐904.
    However, even ignoring that uninvited memorandum, we
    conclude that Bennion adequately raised the $200 limitation in the
    context of section 17B‐2‐804 in the trial court.
    ¶22 Later in the trial court proceedings, the District moved for
    summary judgment. In opposition to that motion, Bennion
    expressly argued that both sections 17B‐2‐804 and 17B‐1‐904
    limited the District’s recovery to $200. “To preserve an issue for
    appeal, an appellant must present it to the trial court ‘in such a way
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    that the trial court has an opportunity to rule on that issue.’” Allen
    v. Ciokewicz, 
    2012 UT App 162
    , ¶ 26, 
    280 P.3d 425
     (quoting 438 Main
    St. v. Easy Heat, Inc., 
    2004 UT 72
    , ¶ 51, 
    99 P.3d 801
    ). Preservation
    requires that the trial court be given “‘notice of the asserted error
    and allows for correction at that time in the course of the
    proceeding.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting 438 Main St., 
    2004 UT 72
    , ¶ 51). Thus, “an
    issue is preserved only if (1) it is ‘raised in a timely fashion,’ (2) it
    is ‘specifically raised,’ and (3) ‘supporting evidence or relevant
    legal authority’ is introduced.” 
    Id.
     (quoting 438 Main St., 
    2004 UT 72
    , ¶ 51). By including his section 17B‐2‐804 argument in his
    Opposition Memorandum to summary judgment, Bennion timely
    and specifically raised it in the trial court.
    ¶23 However, the District argues that Bennion failed to cite
    relevant legal authority. While the District is correct that Bennion
    cites no relevant case law, it is also true that there are no Utah
    appellate decisions interpreting section 17B‐2‐804. Under these
    circumstances, Bennion adequately introduced the relevant legal
    authority by citing the language of the statute. Thus, Bennion’s
    claim that section 17B‐2‐804 limited the District’s recovery to $200
    was timely placed before the trial court, specifically raised in a way
    that the trial court had an opportunity to rule on it, and supported
    by the only relevant legal authority available. See Ciokewicz, 
    2012 UT App 162
    , ¶ 26. We are also convinced that where Bennion
    raised his section 17B‐2‐804 claim after the trial court rejected
    section 17B‐1‐904 as inapplicable to the relevant time period, the
    relevance of the issue was apparent and our consideration of it is
    fair. See Patterson v. Patterson, 
    2011 UT 68
    , ¶ 16, 
    266 P.3d 828
    (“Notions of fairness therefore dictate that a party should be given
    an opportunity to address the alleged error in the trial court.”).
    ¶24 The District next contends that Bennion has not adequately
    preserved his section 17B‐2‐804 argument because he has not
    argued on appeal that the trial court erred in striking the portion of
    his Opposition Memorandum addressing that statute. In support,
    the District relies on our decision in Maese v. Tooele County, 
    2012 UT App 49
    , 
    273 P.3d 388
    . In Maese, we refused to consider the content
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    of an affidavit stricken by the trial court on foundational grounds
    in determining whether the trial court had correctly granted
    summary judgment. 
    Id. ¶ 8
    . Although the appellant relied on the
    stricken affidavit in his challenge of the trial court’s decision
    granting summary judgment in favor of the appellee, he did not
    argue on appeal that the trial court erred in striking the affidavit.
    
    Id.
     Because the appellant had not advanced any argument on
    appeal as to why the content of the affidavit should be considered,
    we declined to consider it. 
    Id. ¶25
     Unlike the appellant in Maese, Bennion challenges the trial
    court’s summary judgment ruling by asserting on appeal that
    sections 17B‐2‐804 and 17B‐1‐904 precluded summary judgment in
    the amount awarded as a matter of law. By striking portions of his
    brief, the trial court refused to consider Bennion’s legal argument,
    not evidence of controverted factual questions.5 That distinction is
    important because “[o]ur preservation requirement is self‐imposed
    and is therefore one of prudence rather than jurisdiction.”
    Patterson, 
    2011 UT 68
    , ¶ 13. “[I]n assessing the application of our
    preservation rule,” we consider its effect on the underlying policies
    of “judicial economy and fairness.” See 
    id. ¶ 15
    . In furthering
    judicial economy, “the preservation rule should be more strictly
    applied when the asserted new issue or theory ‘depends on
    controverted factual questions whose relevance thereto was not
    made to appear at trial.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting James v. Preston, 
    746 P.2d 799
    ,
    801 (Utah Ct. App. 1987)). With regard to fairness, because “the
    responsibility for detecting error is on the party asserting it, not on
    5. Bennion also acknowledged during oral argument that this case
    differs from Maese because, if the trial court was correct in its
    interpretation of section 17B‐1‐904, it was also correct that
    Bennion’s reliance on section 17B‐2‐804 was redundant where the
    language of the statutes is identical. However, the trial court never
    interpreted the statutory language of section 17B‐1‐904; it
    concluded that the section did not apply to special service districts
    during the relevant period.
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    the court,” we believe that “[i]t generally would be unfair to
    reverse a district court for a reason presented first on appeal.” 
    Id. ¶ 16
    .
    ¶26 As discussed, the resolution of whether section 17B‐2‐804
    limits the District’s recovery to $200 is a question of law that does
    not involve controverted factual questions. We also conclude that
    it is fair to consider the statutory arguments because they are not
    raised for the first time on appeal. Bennion asserted that the
    District’s recovery is limited to $200 during the proceedings in the
    trial court and advanced the identical language of sections 17B‐1‐
    904 and 17B‐2‐804 in support of that argument. Under these
    circumstances, we exercise our discretion to consider the
    applicability of the statutory limitations on appeal.
    B. The Evolving Statutory Scheme
    ¶27 We now consider Bennion’s claim that the trial court
    awarded judgment in amounts that exceed the applicable statutory
    limits on the District’s recovery. Our task is complicated by the fact
    that the statutory scheme governing the recovery of fees by special
    service districts has evolved. “As a general rule, when adjudicating
    a dispute we apply the version of the statute that was in effect ‘at
    the time of the events giving rise to [the] suit.’” Harvey v. Cedar Hills
    City, 
    2010 UT 12
    , ¶ 12, 
    227 P.3d 256
     (alteration in original) (quoting
    Taghipour v. Jerez, 
    2002 UT 74
    , ¶ 5 n.1, 
    52 P.3d 1252
    ). The Utah
    Legislature has included a restriction on retroactive application of
    the Utah Code, stating, “A provision of the Utah Code is not
    retroactive, unless the provision is expressly declared to be
    retroactive.” See Utah Code Ann. § 68‐3‐3 (LexisNexis 2011). The
    Utah Supreme Court has cautioned that “exceptions to this general
    rule are rare.” See Harvey, 
    2010 UT 12
    , ¶ 13. Here, the events giving
    rise to the District’s suit were Bennion’s repeated failures to pay for
    the water provided by the District. Thus, we use the dates that the
    water fees were incurred to determine the statutory scheme
    applicable to the District’s recovery.
    20111026‐CA                        14                   
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    ¶28 The trial court granted the District summary judgment for
    base water fees and excess water fees incurred by Bennion from
    February 28, 2004, through March 31, 2009, prejudgment interest
    from April 30, 2004, to May 14, 2010, and postjudgment interest at
    the rate of 12% per annum until paid. Thus, the award spans the
    period from February 28, 2004, through the present. Due to changes
    in the restrictions on recovery, there are four distinct time periods
    covered by the award that are relevant to the calculation of the
    District’s recovery.
    ¶29 From February 28, 2004, until the effective date of section
    17B‐2‐804 on May 3, 2004, there were no restrictions on the
    District’s recovery of water fees, attorney fees, costs, or interest
    from its residential customers. Consequently, Bennion does not
    challenge the District’s right to recover its actual fees and expenses
    for that period. As a result, the trial court’s award of fees incurred
    from February 28, 2004, through May 2, 2004, and the costs and
    expenses incurred by the District in collecting those fees, are not in
    dispute.
    ¶30 On May 3, 2004, section 17B‐2‐804—as well as section 17A‐1‐
    205, which made the provisions of section 17B‐2‐804 for local
    districts equally applicable to special service districts—became
    effective. See Utah Code Ann. § 17B‐2‐804 (LexisNexis 2004)
    (current version at id. § 17B‐1‐904 (2009)); id. § 17A‐1‐205 (2004)
    (“Each special district under this title is subject to the provisions of
    Title 17B, Chapter 2, Part 8, Collection of Water and Sewer Service
    Fees, to the same extent as if the special district were a local district
    under Title 17B, Chapter 2, Local Districts.”). Relying on these
    statutes, Bennion claims that the District can recover no more than
    $200 for the three‐year period from May 3, 2004, until the April 30,
    2007 repeal of section 17A‐1‐205. The District denies that these
    statutes provide such a limit on its recovery. Accordingly, we must
    determine the impact of section 17B‐2‐804 on the District’s recovery
    for fees, costs, expenses, or interest arising out of water fees
    incurred from May 3, 2004, through April 29, 2007.
    20111026‐CA                        15                   
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    ¶31 Effective April 30, 2007, the Utah Legislature repealed
    section 17B‐2‐804 and renumbered it as section 17B‐1‐904 without
    modification of the relevant language.6 Compare Utah Code Ann.
    § 17B‐2‐804 (LexisNexis 2004), with id. § 17B‐1‐904 (2009). Section
    17A‐1‐205 was also repealed, but not replaced, in 2007. See Act of
    Apr. 30, 2007, ch. 329, § 468, 2007 Utah Laws 1723, 2007–14. Thus,
    the repeal of section 17A‐1‐205 left section 17B‐1‐904 applicable
    only to local districts. One year later, the legislature remedied this
    apparent oversight by enacting section 17D‐1‐106, which became
    effective May 5, 2008.7 See Utah Code Ann. § 17D‐1‐106 (LexisNexis
    2009) (current version at id. § 17D‐1‐106 (Supp. 2012)). During the
    approximate one‐year gap between the repeal of section 17A‐1‐205
    and the adoption of section 17D‐1‐106, Bennion concedes that there
    was no limit on the amount that a special service district could
    recover from a residential customer.
    6. In relevant part, section 17B‐1‐904 states, “A local district may
    file a civil action against the customer if the customer fails to pay
    the past due service fees and collection costs within 30 calendar
    days from the date on which the local district mailed notice under
    Subsection (2)(b).” Utah Code Ann. § 17B‐1‐904(5)(a) (LexisNexis
    2009); see also id. § 17B‐2‐804(3)(a) (2004) (same). It further provides,
    “In a civil action under this Subsection (5), a customer is liable to
    the local district for an amount that: (A) consists of past due service
    fees, collection costs, interest, court costs, a reasonable attorney fee,
    and damages; and (B) if the customer’s property is residential, may
    not exceed $200.” Id. § 17B‐1‐904(5)(b)(i) (2009); see also id. § 17B‐2‐
    804(3)(b)(i) (2004) (same).
    7. Section 17D‐1‐106 states, “A special service district is, to the
    same extent as if it were a local district, subject to and governed by
    . . . Title 17B, Chapter 1, Part 9, Collection of Service Fees and
    Charges.” Id. § 17D‐1‐106(1)(f) (LexisNexis 2009) (current version
    at id. § 17D‐1‐106(1)(g) (Supp. 2012)); see also id. § 17A‐1‐205 (2004)
    (same).
    20111026‐CA                        16                   
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    ¶32 As of May 8, 2008, when section 17D‐1‐106 made section
    17B‐1‐904 applicable to special service districts, Bennion claims that
    the District’s right to recover money damages from a residential
    customer in a civil action was again statutorily limited to $200. On
    appeal, however, Bennion challenges only the trial court’s award
    of interest at 12% after May 8, 2008.
    ¶33 We now undertake the analysis of the statutes that Bennion
    argues placed restrictions on the District’s recovery for the two
    contested time periods. We begin with section 17B‐2‐804, which
    governs fees incurred from May 3, 2004, through April 29, 2007.
    Although the relevant language of section 17B‐2‐804 is identical to
    that contained in section 17B‐1‐904, the focus of Bennion’s
    argument under each statute, which we explain in more detail
    below, is not. Therefore, we separately address the impact of each
    statute on the District’s right to recover interest on unpaid water
    fees.
    1. Section 17B‐2‐804
    ¶34 Bennion argues that the plain language of section 17B‐2‐804
    limits the fees and interest that the District can collect to $200. See
    
    id.
     § 17B‐2‐804(3)(b)(i)(B) (LexisNexis 2004). The District disagrees
    and contends that section 17B‐2‐804 is ambiguous, that the other
    provisions in the statute are inconsistent with such a limit, and that
    the intent and purpose of Title 17B, Chapter 2, Part 8, was to allow
    a service district to collect all delinquent user fees.
    ¶35 “Principles of statutory interpretation require us to look first
    [] to the plain language with the primary objective of giving effect
    to the legislature’s intent.” In re R.B.F.S., 
    2012 UT App 132
    , ¶ 15,
    
    278 P.3d 143
     (alteration in original) (citation and internal quotation
    marks omitted). In doing so, we read “[t]he plain language of a
    statute . . . as a whole, and its provisions [should be] interpreted in
    harmony with other provisions in the same statute and with other
    statutes under the same and related chapters.” State v. Schofield,
    
    2002 UT 132
    , ¶ 8, 
    63 P.3d 667
     (first alteration in original) (citation
    20111026‐CA                       17                  
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    and internal quotation marks omitted). Additionally, “[w]hen
    interpreting a statute, we assume, absent a contrary indication, that
    the legislature used each term advisedly according to its ordinary
    and usually accepted meaning.” Hutter v. Dig‐It, Inc., 
    2009 UT 69
    ,
    ¶ 32, 
    219 P.3d 918
    . When the plain language is clear, no other
    interpretive tools are needed because our inquiry is complete. See
    C.T. ex rel. Taylor v. Johnson, 
    1999 UT 35
    , ¶ 13, 
    977 P.2d 479
     (“[I]t is
    elementary that we do not seek guidance from legislative history
    and relevant policy considerations when the statute is clear and
    unambiguous.”). If the language of the statute “is ambiguous—in
    that its terms remain susceptible to two or more reasonable
    interpretations after we have conducted a plain language
    analysis—we generally resort to other modes of statutory
    construction and ‘seek guidance from legislative history’ and other
    accepted sources.” Marion Energy, Inc. v. KFJ Ranch P’ship, 
    2011 UT 50
    , ¶ 15, 
    267 P.3d 863
     (quoting Taylor ex rel. Taylor v. Ogden City Sch.
    Dist., 
    927 P.2d 159
    , 167 (Utah 1996) (Durham, J., dissenting)).
    ¶36    Section 17B‐2‐804 provides,
    A customer is liable . . . for past due
    service fees and collection costs if: (a)
    the customer has not paid service fees
    . . . ; (b) the [special service] district
    mails the customer notice as provided
    in Section 17B‐2‐805; and (c) the past
    due service fees remain unpaid 15 days
    after the local district has mailed
    notice.
    See Utah Code Ann. § 17B‐2‐804(1) (LexisNexis 2004). If the past
    due service fees and collection costs remain unpaid thirty days
    after the district mails notice to the customer as provided in section
    17B‐2‐805 (the Form Notice), see id. § 17B‐2‐805 (current version at
    id. § 17B‐1‐904(4) (2009)), the district may make an offer to settle
    with the customer without filing a civil action, see id. § 17B‐2‐804(2)
    (current version at id. § 17B‐1‐904(3) (2009)). The settlement amount
    20111026‐CA                       18                   
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    may include past due service fees, collection costs, and damages,
    as well as an attorney fee “not to exceed $50,” but “if the
    customer’s property is residential, [the settlement amount] may not
    exceed $100.” See 
    id.
     § 17B‐2‐804.
    ¶37 If the customer does not pay within thirty days of the date
    the district mailed the Form Notice, another option available to a
    special service district is to bring a civil action. See id. § 17B‐2‐
    804(3). The express statutory language states that in such a civil
    action, “a customer is liable to the local district court for an amount
    that: (A) consists of past due service fees, collection costs, interest,
    court costs, a reasonable attorney’s fee, and damages; and (B) if the
    customer’s property is residential, may not exceed $200.” Id. § 17B‐2‐
    804(3)(b)(i) (emphasis added). The District argues that the statute
    is ambiguous and that the correct interpretation limits only
    collection costs to $200. However, the District provides no
    argument as to why the other items listed in section 17B‐2‐
    804(3)(b)(i)(A), including past due service fees, interest, court costs,
    a reasonable attorney fee, and damages do not fall within the two
    hundred dollar limitation. Moreover, the words “an amount,”
    “that,” and “consists of” all indicate that the legislature intended
    for one comprehensive award under the provision and that, when
    it involved a residential property, the amount of that total award
    “may not exceed $200.” See id. Because “[w]e presume that the
    legislature used each word advisedly and [gave] effect to each term
    according to its ordinary and accepted meaning,” we find no
    ambiguity in section 17B‐2‐804(3)(b)(i). See Pearson v. South Jordan
    City, 
    2012 UT App 88
    , ¶ 18, 
    275 P.3d 1035
     (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted). Furthermore, we reject the District’s
    invitation to ignore the express statutory language that includes
    “past due service fees, collection costs, interest, court costs, a
    reasonable attorney’s fee, and damages,” as the components of “an
    amount” which cannot exceed $200 for residential property. See
    Utah Code Ann. § 17B‐2‐804(3)(b)(i).
    ¶38 Nevertheless, the District argues that a plain reading of the
    $200 residential limitation would undermine the other provisions
    20111026‐CA                       19                   
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    found in section 17B‐2‐804, as well as the intent and purpose of
    Title 17B, Chapter 2, Part 8. In particular, the District argues that
    such an interpretation would render the right to bring a civil action
    meaningless because the court’s “filing fee alone would be more
    than $200.” Our “duty to give effect to the plain meaning of a
    statute . . . should give way if doing so would work a result so
    absurd that the legislature could not have intended it.” State v.
    Jeffries, 
    2009 UT 57
    , ¶ 8, 
    217 P.3d 265
    . If the plain language of the
    statute “creates an absurd, unreasonable, or inoperable result, we
    assume the legislature did not intend that result.” 
    Id.
     In order “[t]o
    avoid an absurd result, we endeavor to discover the underlying
    legislative intent and interpret the statute accordingly.” Id.; see also
    In re Z.C., 
    2007 UT 54
    , ¶ 12, 
    165 P.3d 1206
     (“In defining the
    parameters of what constitutes an absurd result, we note the
    inherent tension in this canon of construction between refraining
    from blind obedience to the letter of the law that leads to patently
    absurd ends and avoiding an improper usurpation of legislative
    power through judicial second guessing of the wisdom of a
    legislative act.”). “A further exception to the plain meaning rule
    arises with our duty to read and interpret statutory provisions in
    harmony with other provisions in the same statute and with other
    related statutes.” 
    Id. ¶ 9
    . Essentially, “statute[s] should be
    construed . . . so that no part [or provision] will be inoperative or
    superfluous, void or insignificant, and so that one section will not
    destroy another.” 
    Id.
     (alterations in original) (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    ¶39 Notwithstanding the District’s contrary suggestion, our
    reading of the plain language in section 17B‐2‐804 is harmonious
    with Title 17B, Chapter 2, Part 8, as a whole. In particular, the
    section immediately following section 17B‐2‐804 leaves no doubt
    on this issue. In section 17B‐2‐805, the Utah Legislature has
    provided the Form Notice that must be sent to a delinquent
    customer before that customer is liable for past fees, the district can
    make a settlement offer, or the district can bring a civil action. See
    Utah Code Ann. §§ 17B‐2‐804, ‐805. The Form Notice must include
    the “[a]ccount or invoice number(s)” and the “[a]mount past due.”
    20111026‐CA                       20                   
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    See 
    id.
     § 17B‐2‐805(1)(d). In addition, the Form Notice must state, in
    relevant part,
    You are further notified that if you do
    not pay the past due amount and the
    $20 collection costs within 30 calendar
    days from the day on which this notice
    was mailed to you, an appropriate civil
    legal action may be filed against you
    for the past due amount, interest, court
    costs, attorney’s fees, and damages in
    an amount equal to the greater of $100
    or triple the past due amounts, but the
    combined total of all these amounts may
    not exceed $200 if your property is
    residential.
    See id. (emphasis added).
    ¶40 The plain language of the Form Notice unambiguously
    provides that while a special service district can recover up to triple
    the past due amounts in overdue fees, interest, court costs,
    damages, and attorney fees when the delinquent customer is a
    commercial property owner, the maximum amount recoverable
    against a residential property owner may not exceed $200 for “the
    combined total of all these amounts.” Id. There is simply no way to
    read the Form Notice as limiting only the collection costs to $200,
    as the District suggests. And we can conceive of no reason that the
    Utah Legislature would include a Form Notice that does not
    accurately inform the residential customer of the potential liability.
    Additionally, section 17B‐2‐801 defines “[c]ollection costs” as “an
    amount, not to exceed $20, to reimburse a [special service] district
    for expenses associated with its efforts to collect past due service
    fees from a customer.” Id. § 17B‐2‐801(1) (current version at id.
    § 17B‐1‐904 (2009)). If collection costs cannot, by definition, exceed
    $20, a $200 limit on the recovery of collection costs as argued by the
    20111026‐CA                       21                  
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    District would create an inherent inconsistency within Title 17B,
    Chapter 2, Part 8, as a whole.
    ¶41 Appellate courts have a “duty to read and interpret
    statutory provisions in harmony with other provisions in the same
    statute and with other related statutes.” Jeffries, 
    2009 UT 57
    , ¶ 9.
    Essentially, “statute[s] should be construed . . . so that no part [or
    provision] will be inoperative or superfluous, void or insignificant,
    and so that one section will not destroy another.” 
    Id.
     (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted). When we harmonize the $200
    recovery limitation for residential properties in a civil suit with
    other provisions of section 17B‐2‐804, it is not absurd, inoperative,
    superfluous, void, or insignificant. See 
    id. ¶¶ 8
    –9. First, the $200
    recovery cap in section 17B‐2‐804(3)(b)(i) has limited applicability
    because it does not apply to commercial property owners or other
    non‐residential owners. See Utah Code Ann. § 17B‐2‐804(2)(b)(i)(B)
    (LexisNexis 2004) (current version at id. § 17B‐1‐904(5)(b)(i) (2009)).
    Additionally, there is nothing in section 17B‐2‐804(3) that prevents
    the District from bringing a single civil action to recover the $200
    available each time a residential customer fails to pay past due
    service fees that were the subject of a Form Notice. See id. § 17B‐2‐
    804(3)(a) (2004). The Form Notice indicates that “if [a customer
    does] not pay the past due amount,” then the District may pursue
    a civil action and collect as much as $200. See id. § 17B‐2‐805(1)(d)
    (current version at id. § 17B‐1‐904(4)(a)(iv) (2009)). That “[a]mount
    past due,” must be listed in the Form Notice, thereby tying the $200
    recovery to the amount stated in the Form Notice. See id. The
    District could send multiple Form Notices to a single residential
    customer, stating past due amounts from different invoices, and
    then bring a single civil action to collect the $200 available in past
    due service fees, costs, interest, and attorney fees for the failure to
    pay the amount stated in each Form Notice.
    ¶42 Furthermore, the provisions in section 17B‐2‐804 are not
    contradictory to or superfluous of the $200 recovery limitation. See
    id. §§ 17B‐2‐804, ‐805 (2004). Section 17B‐2‐804(2) provides that the
    District may offer to forego civil action if the customer pays an
    20111026‐CA                       22                  
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    amount, consisting of past due service fees, collection costs,
    prelitigation damages, and attorney fees, that may not exceed $100
    when the customer’s property is residential. See 
    id.
     § 17B‐2‐804(2).
    Rather than showing a legislative intent contrary to the plain
    language of section 17B‐2‐804(3)(b)(i)(B), this provision indicates
    that the legislature has consistently provided special service
    districts with minimal financial incentive to pursue monetary
    sanctions against residential property owners.
    ¶43 The other remedies available to the District for the
    nonpayment of residential service fees coexist harmoniously with
    the $200 limitation on recovery prescribed by section 17B‐2‐804.
    Notably, the Utah Legislature provided special service districts
    with the remedy of discontinuing services in the event of
    nonpayment. See id. § 17B‐2‐802 (current version at id. § 17B‐1‐903
    (2009)). Likewise, a special service district can “certify past due
    service fees and other amounts for which the customer is liable . . .
    to the treasurer or assessor of the county in which the customer’s
    property is located” and, upon certification, that amount
    “become[s] a lien on the customer’s property . . . .” See id. § 17B‐2‐
    803(1) (current version at id. § 17B‐1‐902 (2009)). Rather than
    conflicting with these alternative remedies, section 17B‐2‐804(5)
    expressly indicates that “[t]his chapter may not be construed to
    limit a local district that furnishes water or provides sewer service
    from obtaining relief to which it may be entitled under other
    applicable statute or cause of action.” Id. § 17B‐2‐804(5) (2004).
    Thus, the plain reading of section 17B‐2‐804 functions
    harmoniously with the rest of Title 17B, Chapter 2, Part 8, by
    allowing a special service district to discontinue services or to file
    a lien against a delinquent residential property owner, but
    permitting it to recover only limited damages in a civil action.
    ¶44 While “[w]e recognize that a court should not follow the
    literal language of a statute if its plain meaning works an absurd
    result,” we also acknowledge our duty “to interpret the words used
    by the legislature, not to correct or revise them.” Stewart v. Bova,
    
    2011 UT App 129
    , ¶ 21, 
    256 P.3d 230
     (citations and internal
    20111026‐CA                      23                  
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    quotation marks omitted). The plain language of section 17B‐2‐804
    limits a local district’s recovery of delinquent fees, collection costs,
    interest, court costs, reasonable attorney fees, and damages in a
    civil action against a residential property to $200 when the
    customer fails to pay after receiving notice as provided in section
    17B‐2‐805. This result is not “so absurd that the legislative body
    which authored the legislation could not have intended it.” See In
    re Z.C., 
    2007 UT 54
    , ¶ 13, 
    165 P.3d 1206
    . The limitation on recovery
    under each notice is indicative of the Utah Legislature’s policy
    choice in favor of encouraging a local district to discontinue
    services quickly or place a lien on the property, rather than
    continuing to provide services and later seeking substantial
    damages from a residential property owner. The wisdom of that
    policy decision is reflected by the facts of this case, where the
    residential property owner requested that services be discontinued
    to avoid mounting excess water fees.
    ¶45 The plain language of section 17B‐2‐804 provides that a
    special service district may not recover more than $200 from a
    residential customer in a civil action brought after the customer has
    failed to pay within thirty days after statutory notice is sent. For
    each such failure to pay after statutory notice, the $200 limit applies
    to the combined total of past due service fees, collection costs,
    interest, court costs, reasonable attorney fees, and damages. See
    Utah Code Ann. § 17B‐2‐804(3)(b)(i). Thus, for any fees incurred
    between May 3, 2004, and April 29, 2007, the period that section
    17B‐2‐804 was in effect and applicable to special service districts,
    the District’s total recovery is limited to $200 for each Form Notice
    that it sent to Bennion identifying those past due amounts.8 See id.
    8. At oral argument, Bennion acknowledged that the record on
    appeal does not indicate whether the District sent Bennion one or
    more Form Notices for fees incurred during this period and that
    “perhaps” the District sent a Form Notice once a month, but
    ultimately he claims that there was only one Form Notice sent
    (continued...)
    20111026‐CA                       24                   
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    § 17B‐2‐804(3)(b)(i) (current version at id. § 17B‐1‐904(5)(b)(i)
    (2009)); id. § 17B‐2‐805 (2004) (current version at id. § 17B‐1‐
    904(4)(a)(iv) (2009)). We therefore remand for determination of
    proper fees for the period of May 3, 2004, through April 29, 2007.
    2. Section 17B‐1‐904
    ¶46 When the Utah Legislature repealed and renumbered
    section 17B‐2‐804 as section 17B‐1‐904, it included the Form Notice
    language. Compare Utah Code Ann. § 17B‐2‐805 (LexisNexis 2004),
    with id. § 17B‐1‐904(4)(a)(iv) (2009). This section remains in effect
    today. Because the language of section 17B‐1‐904 is identical to that
    used in section 17B‐2‐804, we interpret these provisions
    consistently as limiting the District’s recovery to $200 for the
    combined total of the water fees, costs, interest, and attorney fees
    that remain unpaid after statutory notice is sent to a residential
    customer.
    ¶47 The trial court included prejudgment interest of $61,155 in
    the judgment it entered, and it also awarded postjudgment interest
    of 12% per annum until that judgment is paid in full.9 Bennion
    argues that the trial court erred by failing to apply the $200 per
    Form Notice limitation to the interest accrued from the date section
    17B‐1‐904 became effective to special service districts, May 5, 2008,
    through the present.10 See id. § 17D‐1‐106(f) (2009) (current version
    at id. § 17D‐1‐106(1)(g) (Supp. 2012)) (applying the restrictions to
    8. (...continued)
    during the period.
    9. The water fees at issue in this case were incurred from February
    2004 through October 2007.
    10. Because Bennion does not argue that the trial court’s award of
    base user fees accumulated during that time period is also subject
    to the $200 limitation under section 17B‐1‐904, we do not disturb
    the trial court’s ruling on those fees.
    20111026‐CA                      25                  
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    special service districts)). Although the District disputes the
    applicability of section 17B‐2‐804, it offers no response to Bennion’s
    argument that when the Utah Legislature made section 17B‐1‐904
    applicable to special service districts on May 5, 2008, it limited all
    sums due, including interest, from that date forward to $200 per
    Form Notice.
    ¶48 In considering whether the trial court’s order incorrectly
    included interest at 12% per annum after May 8, 2008, we again
    begin with the plain language of the statute. See In re R.B.F.S., 
    2012 UT App 132
    , ¶ 15, 
    278 P.3d 143
    . Section 17B‐1‐904, like its
    predecessor section 17B‐2‐804, provides that before “a customer is
    liable to a [special] service district for past due service fees and
    collection costs,” the special service district must “mail . . . the
    customer notice as provided in Subsection (4).” See Utah Code Ann.
    § 17B‐1‐904(2) (2009); id. § 17D‐1‐106(1)(f). Section 17B‐1‐904(4)
    requires that the notice inform the customer that,
    if you do not pay the past due amount
    and the $20 collection costs within 30
    calendar days . . . , an appropriate civil
    legal action may be filed against you
    for the past due amount, interest, court
    costs, attorney fees, and damages . . . ,
    but the combined total of all these
    amounts may not exceed $200 if your
    property is residential.
    See id. § 17B‐1‐904(4)(a)(iii). As with section 17B‐2‐805, section 17B‐
    1‐904(4) leaves no doubt that the total recovery available to the
    district against a residential customer who does not pay within
    thirty days of notice is $200. Compare id. § 17B‐1‐904(4), with id.
    § 17B‐2‐805 (2004); see also id. § 17B‐1‐904(5)(b) (2009) (providing
    that a district’s recovery in a civil action against a residential
    customer “may not exceed $200”). The components of the amount
    limited to $200 expressly includes “interest.” See id. § 17B‐1‐
    904(4)(a)(iii); id. § 17B‐1‐904(5)(b)(i)(A). Thus, we agree with
    20111026‐CA                       26                  
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    Bennion that the Utah Legislature has limited the amount of
    interest that the District can recover.
    ¶49 However, as previously discussed, the $200 limitation in
    section 17B‐1‐904 is applicable to the past due amounts identified
    by “[a]ccount or invoice number(s)” in the Form Notice. See 
    id.
    § 17B‐1‐904(4)(a)(iii). The interest limitation in the statute also
    relates specifically to the fees that are the subject of the Form
    Notice. See id. § 17B‐1‐904(5)(a). For fees incurred before the
    adoption of section 17B‐2‐804, or during the one‐year gap between
    the adoption of section 17B‐1‐904 and the adoption of section 17D‐
    1‐106, there was no requirement that the District send a Form
    Notice, and likewise no limitation on the principal amount or
    interest it could recover. Thus, we reject Bennion’s argument that
    the trial court improperly awarded interest at 12% per annum on
    unpaid water fees first incurred during those periods. With respect
    to water fees incurred while section 17B‐2‐804 or section 17B‐1‐904
    were applicable to special service districts, however, the Utah
    Legislature has expressly limited the District’s recovery, inclusive
    of interest, to $200 under each Form Notice. Therefore, the trial
    court could not ignore that express limitation by awarding the
    District interest over the $200 limit incurred while either of those
    statutes applied to special service districts. We therefore remand
    for a determination of that amount.
    II. Ownership and Maintenance of the Bennion Line
    ¶50 Next, Bennion contends that summary judgment was
    improperly granted in the Current Case because the evidence
    provided to the trial court raised an issue of material fact
    concerning whether the District was responsible for the
    maintenance of the Bennion Line.11 Specifically, he contends that
    11. Bennion also claims that even if the District would not
    generally be responsible for maintenance of the Bennion Line, it
    (continued...)
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    under controlling Utah precedent, the District became responsible
    for maintenance of the Bennion Line after the 2002 court granted an
    easement to the District in its order of immediate occupancy. Based
    on that proposition, Bennion argues that the District is responsible
    for any excess water fees from the date of the order, September 22,
    2006, until October 2007, when the District repaired the Bennion
    Line and the excess water charges ceased. The District counters that
    the trial court correctly determined that Bennion was responsible
    for water released from the Bennion Line.12
    ¶51 Our task of reviewing the correctness of the trial court’s
    summary judgment ruling is complicated by its execution of an
    order prepared by counsel and captioned as “Findings of Fact and
    Conclusions of Law on Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment.”
    See Thayne v. Beneficial Utah, Inc., 
    874 P.2d 120
    , 125 (Utah 1994)
    (noting that the trial court “shall . . . issue a brief written statement
    of the ground for its decision” granting summary judgment, but
    “need not enter findings of fact and conclusions of law” (citations
    and internal quotation marks omitted)). Because summary
    11. (...continued)
    undertook that responsibility when it acquired an easement over
    Bennion’s property through the order of immediate occupancy.
    Because Bennion did not preserve this issue by first raising it in the
    trial court, we decline to consider it. See Utah R. App. P. 24(a)(5);
    Marchand v. Marchand, 
    2006 UT App 429
    , ¶ 8, 
    147 P.3d 538
     (“As a
    general rule, appellate courts will not consider an issue . . . raised
    for the first time on appeal unless the trial court committed plain
    error or the case involves exceptional circumstances.” (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted)).
    12. The District also contends that because Bennion has failed to
    marshal the evidence, this court should assume the findings were
    correct and adequately supported by the record. However,
    marshaling has no application to a statement of uncontested facts
    supporting summary judgment.
    20111026‐CA                        28                   
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    judgment is appropriate only when there are no issues of material
    fact in dispute, we assume that these “findings” were meant to
    reflect the uncontested facts supporting the trial court’s decision.
    See Essential Botanical Farms, LC v. Kay, 
    2011 UT 71
    , ¶ 12, 
    270 P.3d 430
     (“Our review is limited to determining whether the district
    court correctly applied the summary judgment standard in light of
    the undisputed material facts.” (citations and internal quotation
    marks omitted)).
    ¶52 Those undisputed facts include that “[the District] is not
    responsible for maintenance of lateral water lines that connect to
    the main water lines of [the District’s] water delivery system.
    Rather, individual property owners are responsible for the
    maintenance of lateral water lines servicing their properties.”
    Additionally, the undisputed facts state, “Prior to November 1997
    through March 31, 2009, Bennion has been the owner of [the
    Bennion Line],” and, “Bennion is responsible for water taken out
    of the [Bennion Line] regardless of whether or not he personally
    utilizes the water.” For convenience, we refer to these undisputed
    facts as the Responsible Party Facts.
    ¶53 Although couched as a challenge to a factual finding,
    Bennion essentially contends that the Responsible Party Facts are
    disputed. However, he is precluded from disputing them by the
    doctrine of res judicata, which refers “to the overall doctrine of the
    preclusive effects to be given to judgments.” Moss v. Parr Waddoups
    Brown Gee & Loveless, 
    2012 UT 42
    , ¶ 20, 
    285 P.3d 1157
     (citations and
    internal quotation marks omitted). Res judicata includes “two
    branches”—“claim preclusion and issue preclusion.” 
    Id.
     (citations
    and internal quotation marks omitted). “Claim preclusion
    corresponds to causes of action; issue preclusion corresponds to the
    facts and issues underlying causes of action.” 
    Id.
     (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted). Under issue preclusion,
    “‘parties or their privies’” are prevented “‘from relitigating facts
    and issues in the second suit that were fully litigated in the first
    suit.’” 
    Id. ¶ 23
     (emphasis omitted) (quoting Jensen ex rel. Jensen v.
    Cunningham, 
    2011 UT 17
    , ¶ 41, 
    250 P.3d 465
    ).
    20111026‐CA                      29                  
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    Issue preclusion applies only when the
    following four elements are satisfied:
    (i) the party against whom issue
    preclusion is asserted was a party to or
    in privity with a party to the prior
    adjudication; (ii) the issue decided in
    the prior adjudication was identical to
    the one presented in the instant action;
    (iii) the issue in the first action was
    completely, fully, and fairly litigated;
    and (iv) the first suit resulted in a final
    judgment on the merits.
    
    Id.
     (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶54 Bennion’s challenge to the Responsible Party Facts is barred
    by the issue preclusion branch of the res judicata doctrine because
    this issue was litigated and determined in the 2002 Case. There, the
    2002 court ruled that “[the District] is not responsible for
    maintenance of lateral water lines that connect to the main water
    lines of [the District’s] water delivery system. Rather, individual
    property owners are responsible for the maintenance of lateral
    water lines servicing their properties.” Additionally, the 2002 court
    ruled that “[p]rior to November 1997 through [November 25, 2008],
    [Bennion] has been the owner of [the Bennion Line] . . . .” The 2002
    court further determined that “[Bennion] is responsible for the
    water that is taken out of [the District’s] water system by the
    [Bennion Line] regardless of whether [Bennion] actually uses such
    water or whether the water is lost through leaks located in the
    [Bennion Line].” The arguments Bennion raised in the 2002 Case
    about ownership and maintenance of the water line are identical to
    the arguments that he makes in the Current Case. The 2002 Case
    was between the same parties as the Current Case, the District and
    Bennion; the issue was completely, fully, and fairly litigated in a
    trial on the merits; and because Bennion did not timely appeal the
    2002 court’s decision, see North Fork Special Serv. Dist. v. Bennion,
    20111026‐CA                       30                   
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    2006 UT App 447U (mem.), it is final. As a result, Bennion is
    precluded from challenging the Responsible Party Facts in the
    Current Case by the issue preclusion branch of res judicata. See
    Collins v. Sandy City Bd. of Adjustment, 
    2002 UT 77
    , ¶¶ 12–13, 
    52 P.3d 1267
    .
    III. Attorney Fees
    ¶55 Finally, Bennion asserts that the trial court erred when it
    awarded the District its attorney fees under Utah Code section 78B‐
    5‐825 because, despite the trial court’s finding that Bennion’s
    actions and continued litigation were pursued in bad faith, his
    defenses were meritorious. Section 78B‐5‐825 provides, “In civil
    actions, the court shall award reasonable attorney fees to a
    prevailing party if the court determines that the action or defense
    to the action was without merit and not brought or asserted in
    good faith.” Utah Code Ann. § 78B‐5‐825(1) (LexisNexis 2012).
    “Accordingly, a finding of both lack of merit and bad faith are
    required to award attorney fees.” In re Olympus Constr., LC, 
    2009 UT 29
    , ¶ 29, 
    215 P.3d 129
    .
    ¶56 In determining whether there is merit to a claim, an
    appellate court focuses on whether the claim was “frivolous or of
    little weight or importance having no basis in law or fact.” Warner
    v. DMG Color, Inc., 
    2000 UT 102
    , ¶ 22, 
    20 P.3d 868
     (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted). Where an appellate court finds
    as a matter of law that a party’s claim has merit, it need not reach
    the second, factual “bad faith” element of section 78B‐5‐825. See In
    re Olympus Constr., 
    2009 UT 29
    , ¶ 8 n.1.
    ¶57 Bennion presented arguments to the trial court that sections
    17B‐2‐804 and 17B‐1‐904 limit the water fees, costs, attorney fees,
    and interest that a special service district can recover from a
    residential customer in a civil action brought after the customer
    refuses to pay the amounts identified in a Form Notice. In granting
    the District’s motion for summary judgment, the trial court
    determined that “Bennion’s actions and continued litigation had
    20111026‐CA                     31                  
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    been pursued in bad faith.” However, the trial court made no
    determination regarding the merit of Bennion’s claims. Moreover,
    our analysis that sections 17B‐2‐804 and 17B‐1‐904 plainly limit the
    District’s recovery establishes that Bennion’s claims were neither
    “frivolous” nor “of little weight or importance having no basis in
    law or fact.” See Warner, 
    2000 UT 102
    , ¶ 22 (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s
    award of attorney fees.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶58 The trial court erred in entering summary judgment in
    amounts exceeding $200 per Form Notice for the water fees
    incurred while either section 17B‐2‐804 or section 17B‐1‐904 were
    in effect and applicable to special service districts. See Utah Code
    Ann. § 17B‐2‐804 (LexisNexis 2004); id. § 17B‐1‐904 (2009); id. § 17A‐
    1‐205 (2004); id. § 17D‐1‐106 (2009). Because Bennion’s claims were
    not without merit, the trial court erred in awarding attorney fees to
    the District under section 78B‐5‐825. See id. § 78B‐5‐825 (2012).
    ¶59 The Summary Judgment is vacated, with instructions to
    enter a new judgment as follows:
    1.     The actual past due water fees from February 28,
    2004, until the adoption of sections 17B‐2‐804 and
    17A‐1‐205 on May 3, 2004, plus all collection costs,
    interest, attorney fees, and damages incurred with
    respect to those past due service fees;
    2.     An amount up to $200 for the combined total of the
    past due service fees, collection costs, interest, court
    costs, attorney fees, and damages for each Form
    Notice the District sent to Bennion for water fees
    incurred from May 3, 2004, through April 29, 2007;
    20111026‐CA                      32                  
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    North Fork v. Bennion
    3.       The actual past due water fees incurred from the
    repeal of section 17A‐1‐205 on April 30, 2007, until
    the adoption of section 17D‐1‐106 on May 5, 2008,
    plus all collection costs, interest, attorney fees, and
    damages incurred with respect to those past due
    service fees; and
    4.       Interest in an amount that does not exceed $200 for
    each Form Notice that the District sent to Bennion for
    water fees incurred on or after May 5, 2008.
    ____________________
    20111026‐CA                      33                  
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