Morningside Developers, LLC v. Copper Hills Custom Homes, LLC , 785 Utah Adv. Rep. 44 ( 2015 )


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    2015 UT App 99
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    MORNINGSIDE DEVELOPERS, LLC,
    Plaintiff,
    v.
    COPPER HILLS CUSTOM HOMES, LLC,
    Defendant, Third-party Plaintiff, and Appellant,
    v.
    WELLS FARGO BANK, NA; BANK OF AMERICA, NA; AND MORTGAGE
    ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC.,
    Third-party Defendants and Appellees.
    Memorandum Decision
    No. 20130658-CA
    Filed April 23, 2015
    Third District Court, Salt Lake Department
    The Honorable Keith A. Kelly
    No. 070914123
    Nate D. Ashcraft, Attorney for Appellant
    Timothy Curtis, Attorney for Appellees Bank of
    America, NA and Mortgage Electronic Registration
    Systems, Inc.
    Laura S. Scott and Nicole G. Farrell, Attorneys for
    Appellee Wells Fargo Bank, NA
    JUDGE JAMES Z. DAVIS authored this Memorandum Decision, in
    which JUDGES GREGORY K. ORME and JOHN A. PEARCE concurred.
    DAVIS, Judge:
    ¶1     Copper Hills Custom Homes, LLC (Copper Hills) appeals
    the district court’s reinstatement of an order of dismissal for
    failure to prosecute. We vacate in part and affirm in part.
    ¶2   Copper Hills provided construction contracting services
    to Morningside Developers, LLC (Morningside) on eight
    Morningside v. Copper Hills
    separate parcels of real property in 2006. After Morningside
    failed to pay Copper Hills for its work, Copper Hills recorded
    mechanics’ liens against each of the parcels and ultimately filed
    eight separate lien foreclosure actions. In October 2007,
    Morningside filed suit against Copper Hills for breach of
    contract, fraud, and related claims. In October 2009,
    Morningside’s claims and Copper Hills’ foreclosure claims were
    consolidated into a single action. Soon after, Copper Hills’
    attorney withdrew.
    ¶3      Neither party took any further action in the case, and on
    October 14, 2010, the district court issued an order to show cause
    why the case should not be dismissed (the first OSC). See
    generally Utah R. Jud. Admin. 4-103(2) (“If a certificate of readi-
    ness for trial has not been served and filed within 330 days of the
    first answer, the clerk shall mail written notification to the
    parties stating that absent a showing of good cause by a date
    specified in the notification, the court shall dismiss the case
    without prejudice for lack of prosecution.”). New counsel for
    Copper Hills appeared at the hearing on the first OSC and
    indicated that Copper Hills was still interested in pursuing the
    case and that he intended to file a motion to amend Copper
    Hills’ foreclosure complaints to consolidate them into a single
    complaint. The district court agreed to strike the first OSC
    provided that Copper Hills file the motion within thirty days.
    Copper Hills filed the motion within thirty days but never
    actually amended the complaint or took any further action to
    pursue its claims. According to Copper Hills, “extreme financial
    difficulties” stemming from the recession left it “without the
    resources required to aggressively pursue its claims.” The
    district court never ruled on the motion to amend.
    ¶4     On November 18, 2011, the district court issued another
    order to show cause (the second OSC). This time, neither party
    appeared at the hearing, and on January 26, 2012, the district
    court dismissed the case without prejudice (the January 2012
    Dismissal). In June 2012, Copper Hills moved the court to set
    aside the order of dismissal on the ground that notice of the
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    Morningside v. Copper Hills
    second OSC was mailed to Copper Hills’ former counsel and
    Copper Hills was therefore unaware of it. On September 25,
    2012, the district court issued an order granting the motion (the
    Set Aside Order) but expressed concern “about the overall
    neglect of all of the parties in moving this case forward” and
    warned that it would dismiss the case “if no party has submitted
    a Rule 16(b) certification of readiness for trial within 90 days.”
    ¶5      After the district court set aside the dismissal, Copper
    Hills filed an amended complaint adding twenty-five additional
    parties, including Appellees, who had interests in the parcels on
    which Copper Hills had filed mechanics’ liens. Copper Hills then
    filed a certificate of readiness for trial on December 21, 2012. The
    district court held a scheduling conference on February 15, 2013,
    at which it expressed concern about Copper Hills adding so
    many parties late in the litigation. In light of its concern, the
    district court issued a new order to show cause (the third OSC)
    ordering the parties to address whether the Set Aside Order
    should be vacated and the January 2012 Dismissal reinstated.
    Following a hearing, the district court issued an order in which it
    vacated the Set Aside Order and dismissed the case with
    prejudice (the Final Dismissal). Copper Hills appeals.
    ¶6      Copper Hills asserts that the district court abused its
    discretion by dismissing the case with prejudice. “In reviewing a
    trial court’s decision to dismiss for failure to prosecute, we
    accord the trial court broad discretion and do not disturb its
    decision absent an abuse of discretion and a likelihood that an
    injustice has occurred.” Hartford Leasing Corp. v. State, 
    888 P.2d 694
    , 697 (Utah Ct. App. 1994).
    ¶7     As a threshold matter, we must determine whether the
    Final Dismissal constituted a new order of dismissal pursuant to
    rule 41(b) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure or a reinstatement
    of the January 2012 Dismissal, which was entered pursuant to
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    Morningside v. Copper Hills
    rule 4-103 of the Utah Rules of Judicial Administration.1 Rule 4-
    103 permits the district court to issue an order to show cause sua
    sponte regarding failure to prosecute “*i+f a certificate of
    readiness for trial has not been served and filed within 330 days
    of the first answer.” Utah R. Jud. Admin. 4-103(2). Dismissal
    pursuant to this rule is without prejudice. Id.; see also Panos v.
    Smith’s Food & Drug Ctrs., Inc., 
    913 P.2d 363
    , 364–65 (Utah Ct.
    App. 1996). Under rule 41(b), on the other hand, “a trial court
    has the discretion to dismiss an action with prejudice for failure
    to prosecute without justifiable excuse.” Rohan v. Boseman, 
    2002 UT App 109
    , ¶ 28, 
    46 P.3d 753
    ; see also Utah R. Civ. P. 41(b)
    (“Unless the court in its order for dismissal otherwise specifies, a
    dismissal under this subdivision . . . operates as an adjudication
    upon the merits.”). Thus, dismissal with prejudice would be
    appropriate only if the Final Dismissal were a new order issued
    under rule 41(b).2
    ¶8     We conclude that the Final Dismissal was a reinstatement
    of the January 2012 Dismissal rather than a new order of
    dismissal pursuant to rule 41(b). In support of their argument
    that the Final Dismissal was based on rule 41(b), Appellees point
    out that in responding to the third OSC, they addressed the
    Westinghouse factors relevant to a rule 41(b) analysis and asserted
    that the case should be dismissed under rule 41(b). See
    1. Because the district court made no findings in connection with
    the January 2012 dismissal, the parties do not dispute that it was
    a rule 4-103 dismissal rather than a rule 41(b) dismissal. See Utah
    R. Civ. P. 52(a) (requiring the district court to enter findings of
    fact in support of a dismissal under rule 41(b)).
    2. While it may seem that we are approaching this appeal
    backward by considering whether the dismissal should have
    been with or without prejudice before examining whether the
    dismissal was itself appropriate, we cannot examine the
    propriety of the dismissal until we have determined which rule
    of procedure controls.
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    Morningside v. Copper Hills
    Westinghouse Elec. Supply Co. v. Paul W. Larsen Contractor, Inc.,
    
    544 P.2d 876
    , 879 (Utah 1975). Appellees assert that their
    invocation of rule 41(b) in their response, combined with the
    district court’s detailed findings regarding Copper Hills’ failure
    to move the case along, indicates that the Final Dismissal was
    intended to be a rule 41(b) dismissal.
    ¶9     Admittedly, the district court’s analysis of factors that
    would be relevant to a rule 41(b) analysis and its decision to
    dismiss with prejudice lend some credence to Appellees’
    argument. However, the third OSC specifically directed the
    parties to address whether the Set Aside Order should be
    vacated and the January 2012 Dismissal reinstated, not whether
    the district court should enter a new order of dismissal pursuant
    to rule 41(b). Furthermore, the district court never characterized
    its Final Dismissal as a dismissal under rule 41(b), and the Final
    Dismissal never explicitly mentioned rule 41(b) or the
    Westinghouse factors. Rather, the district court determined,
    consistent with its framing of the issue in the third OSC, that the
    Set Aside Order “should be vacated and the *January 2012
    Dismissal] should be reinstated.” Although the district court
    made findings that could have supported a dismissal for failure
    to prosecute under rule 41(b), and those findings were
    supported by sufficient evidence, its analysis ultimately focused
    on whether the Set Aside Order should be vacated. The court’s
    intent to reinstate the January 2012 Dismissal is apparent not
    only in its ultimate order vacating the Set Aside Order but in its
    analysis, where it concluded that Copper Hills’ motion to set
    aside should never have been granted in the first place because it
    was not timely and that dismissal should be reinstated because
    Copper Hills failed to comply with the court’s condition that it
    be ready for trial within ninety days. Because it reinstated the
    January 2012 Dismissal, which was entered pursuant to rule 4-
    103, rather than entering a new order of dismissal pursuant to
    rule 41(b), the district court had no basis for dismissing the case
    with prejudice. Further, the reinstatement of the January 2012
    Dismissal presumably reinstated the entire order, which
    explicitly provided that the dismissal was to be without
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    Morningside v. Copper Hills
    prejudice. Thus, assuming that the district court’s reinstatement
    of the January 2012 Dismissal was appropriate, the dismissal
    should have been without prejudice.
    ¶10 Having determined that the Final Dismissal reinstated the
    January 2012 Dismissal, we next turn to the question of whether
    the district court abused its discretion in vacating the Set Aside
    Order and reinstating the January 2012 Dismissal. Because
    Copper Hills did not receive notice of the second OSC, the
    district court gave it an opportunity to avoid dismissal by
    getting the case ready for trial in a timely manner. However, the
    Set Aside Order was a conditional order, which the district court
    warned it would revoke “if no party has submitted a Rule 16(b)
    certification of readiness for trial within 90 days of the date of
    this order.” Although Copper Hills arguably complied with this
    condition by submitting the certificate of readiness on December
    21, 2012, the district court found,
    [T]he Certificate was incorrect because the
    Consolidated Case is not ready for trial. To the
    contrary, at the time the Certificate of Readiness
    was filed, the recently served defendants were in
    the process of filing answers to the First Amended
    Complaint. No initial disclosures have been
    exchanged[,] . . . no depositions have been taken
    and no written discovery has been served.
    Because Copper Hills failed to comply with the condition
    outlined in the Set Aside Order, the district court did not abuse
    its discretion by reinstating the January 2012 Dismissal.3
    3. We acknowledge that vacating the Set Aside Order and
    reinstating the January 2012 Dismissal may have been a more
    confusing approach than simply entering a new order of
    dismissal pursuant to either rule 4-103 or rule 41(b). However,
    (continued…)
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    Morningside v. Copper Hills
    ¶11 Furthermore, any injustice to Copper Hills that may have
    occurred as a result of the district court’s failure to provide
    notice of the second OSC was cured by the third OSC hearing, at
    which Copper Hills was given a full opportunity to make “a
    showing of good cause” why the case should not be dismissed.
    See Utah R. Jud. Admin. 4-103(2). The district court made
    extensive findings regarding whether Copper Hills’ dilatory
    behavior was justified, ultimately finding that both Copper Hills
    and Morningside had “adopted a conscious strategy to do as
    little as possible and drag out the *case+” and that even Copper
    Hills’ financial limitations did not provide a sufficient excuse for
    the extensive delay in the case. The district court did not abuse
    its discretion in so finding, particularly in light of the fact that
    Copper Hills had also failed to promptly ready the case for trial
    as directed in the Set Aside Order.
    ¶12 In sum, we conclude that the Final Dismissal must be
    regarded as a reinstatement of the January 2012 Dismissal, which
    was entered pursuant to rule 4-103, and that the district court
    did not abuse its discretion in reinstating that order, so
    characterized. Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s Final
    Dismissal insofar as it dismisses the case with prejudice, and we
    affirm the district court’s reinstatement of the January 2012 order
    dismissing the case without prejudice.
    (…continued)
    given the conditional nature of the Set Aside Order, the district
    court’s action was not an abuse of its discretion.
    20130658-CA                     7                 
    2015 UT App 99
                                

Document Info

Docket Number: 20130658-CA

Citation Numbers: 2015 UT App 99, 348 P.3d 726, 785 Utah Adv. Rep. 44, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 96, 2015 WL 1848026

Judges: Davis, Orme, Pearce

Filed Date: 4/23/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/13/2024