Sleepy Holdings LLC v. Mountain West Title , 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 62 ( 2016 )


Menu:
  •                         
    2016 UT App 62
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    SLEEPY HOLDINGS LLC,
    Appellant,
    v.
    MOUNTAIN WEST TITLE AND TIM HERRERA,
    Appellees.
    Opinion
    No. 20140937-CA
    Filed March 31, 2016
    Fourth District Court, Provo Department
    The Honorable Lynn W. Davis
    The Honorable Samuel D. McVey
    No. 100403357
    Jeffrey J. Goulder and Paul A. Christensen, Attorneys
    for Appellant
    Korey D. Rasmussen and Lindsay K. German,
    Attorneys for Appellees
    JUDGE J. FREDERIC VOROS JR. authored this Opinion, in which
    JUDGE STEPHEN L. ROTH and JUSTICE JOHN A. PEARCE concurred.1
    VOROS, Judge:
    ¶1    Sleepy Holdings LLC challenges the district court’s ruling
    excluding untimely disclosed evidence and granting summary
    judgment. We affirm.
    1. Justice John A. Pearce began his work on this case as a
    member of the Utah Court of Appeals. He became a member of
    the Utah Supreme Court thereafter and completed his work on
    the case sitting by special assignment as authorized by law. See
    generally Utah R. Jud. Admin. 3-108(3).
    Sleepy Holdings v. Mountain West Title
    BACKGROUND2
    ¶2      In 2007 and 2008, The Lakes at Sleepy Ridge, Inc. and
    Cambridge Partners, LLC (collectively, the Lakes) received two
    construction loans. Each loan required the Lakes to subordinate
    a prior trust deed in favor of the new loans. Mountain West
    Title, the Lakes’ escrow agent, recorded trust deeds on the two
    construction loans, but failed to record the subordinations. In the
    ensuing dispute over the subordinations, the Lakes defaulted on
    both construction loans. With the loans in default, the Lakes
    could not provide marketable title to potential buyers. One such
    buyer had contracted with the Lakes to purchase twenty lots for
    a total of $2 million. When the Lakes could not deliver clear title,
    the buyer canceled the sale.
    ¶3      The Lakes assigned its interest in the project to Sleepy
    Holdings. In October 2010, Sleepy Holdings sued Mountain
    West Title and its owner, Tim Herrera (collectively, Mountain
    West), for breach of contract, breach of fiduciary duty, and
    negligence. The complaint described the failed $2 million sale
    under the heading ‚General Allegations.‛ Sleepy Holdings filed
    initial disclosures as required by rule 26(a) of the Utah Rules of
    Civil Procedure and the case management order. The initial
    disclosures stated that ‚damages are described in the complaint‛
    and that ‚additional work will be done in assessing and
    computing such damages.‛ The initial disclosures did not
    otherwise describe the failed $2 million sale.
    ¶4      Sleepy Holdings amended its complaint twice in 2011.
    The district court then entered a new scheduling order, which
    listed June 30, 2012 as the discovery cutoff date. A month after
    2. When reviewing a district court’s rulings on a summary
    judgment motion, we recite the facts and fair inferences in the
    light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Poteet v. White,
    
    2006 UT 63
    , ¶ 7, 
    147 P.3d 439
    .
    20140937-CA                     2                 
    2016 UT App 62
    Sleepy Holdings v. Mountain West Title
    the discovery cutoff date, Sleepy Holdings’ attorneys
    determined that they would need to withdraw from the case.
    Five months later, Sleepy Holdings’ new counsel entered an
    appearance. In August 2013, more than a year after the discovery
    cutoff date, Sleepy Holdings filed its first supplemental
    disclosure. It presented damages theories, including what it
    called the lost $2 million sale.
    ¶5      Mountain West moved to strike Sleepy Holdings’ first
    supplemental disclosure and ‚to exclude damages not calculated
    by the end of the fact discovery cutoff.‛ Mountain West argued
    that Sleepy Holdings had filed its supplemental disclosure more
    than a year after the June 30, 2012 discovery cutoff date. The
    district court struck Sleepy Holdings’ first supplemental
    disclosure. Citing Bodell Construction Co. v. Robbins, 
    2009 UT 52
    ,
    
    215 P.3d 933
    , the district court reasoned, ‚The Utah Supreme
    Court has determined supplemental disclosures regarding
    damages filed a mere three weeks after the fact discovery
    deadline are prejudicial. This Court can hardly find that
    supplemental disclosures filed over a year or more than fifty-two
    weeks [after the deadline] are timely.‛ And it found that ‚no
    good cause exists to permit the untimely supplemental
    disclosures.‛
    ¶6     Shortly after Sleepy Holdings filed its first supplemental
    disclosure, Mountain West moved for summary judgment on the
    ground that Sleepy Holdings had failed to produce evidence of
    the assignment from the Lakes to Sleepy Holdings. In response
    to this motion, Sleepy Holdings filed a second supplemental
    disclosure naming witnesses able to testify about the
    assignment. Mountain West moved to strike Sleepy Holdings’
    second supplemental disclosure as untimely. The court struck
    the disclosure.
    ¶7    In June 2014, the district court judge recused himself and
    a new judge stepped in. Sleepy Holdings moved the court to
    reconsider and reverse the rulings striking both the first and
    second supplemental disclosures. Sleepy Holdings argued that
    20140937-CA                     3                
    2016 UT App 62
    Sleepy Holdings v. Mountain West Title
    ‚these Rulings prevent *Sleepy Holdings+ from presenting any
    evidence of damages, and from offering affidavit and trial
    testimony from three witnesses.‛ The court denied the motion,
    stating that ‚*a+ll disclosures should have been made when
    due.‛ The court concluded that the original judge ‚properly
    exercised his discretion and followed the law in a thorough
    ruling on this matter. There is no need to second guess him
    when he got it right.‛
    ¶8    After the district court denied the motion for
    reconsideration, Mountain West moved for summary judgment,
    arguing that the ‚case should be dismissed due to the absence of
    damages.‛ The court granted summary judgment. Sleepy
    Holdings timely appeals.
    ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶9     Sleepy Holdings first contends that the district court
    abused its discretion when it imposed the sanction of ‚excluding
    evidence of damages and then entering summary judgment
    against Sleepy Holdings.‛ We review the district court’s
    exclusion of initial disclosures for an abuse of discretion. See
    Townhomes at Pointe Meadows Owners Ass’n v. Pointe Meadows
    Townhomes, LLC, 
    2014 UT App 52
    , ¶ 13, 
    329 P.3d 815
    .
    In applying the abuse of discretion standard to the
    district court’s imposition of a particular sanction,
    we give the district court a great deal of latitude in
    determining the most fair and efficient manner to
    conduct court business because the district court
    judge is in the best position to evaluate the status
    of his [or her] cases, as well as the attitudes,
    motives, and credibility of the parties.
    Bodell Constr. Co. v. Robbins, 
    2009 UT 52
    , ¶ 35, 
    215 P.3d 933
    (alteration in original) (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    20140937-CA                     4                
    2016 UT App 62
    Sleepy Holdings v. Mountain West Title
    ¶10 Sleepy Holdings also contends that the court abused its
    discretion by barring a witness from testifying about the
    assignment from the Lakes to Sleepy Holdings. This witness was
    arguably necessary to establish that Sleepy Holdings had
    standing to sue. However, our resolution of Sleepy Holdings’
    first claim on appeal moots this second claim.
    ANALYSIS
    ¶11 Sleepy Holdings challenges the district court’s sanctions
    order excluding evidence of lost sale damages. Sleepy Holdings
    contends that its complaint constituted a sufficient disclosure of
    its damages computation and therefore that its disclosure of
    damages was timely. But even if it was not, Sleepy Holdings
    contends, the district court abused its discretion by imposing the
    sanction of barring Sleepy Holdings from presenting any
    evidence of its damages.
    A.     Sleepy Holdings did not timely disclose its damages.
    ¶12 Rule 26 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure requires
    litigants to make initial disclosures of certain fact witnesses,
    documents, and other information. See Utah R. Civ. P. 26(a)(1)(C)
    (2010).3 And rule 26(e)(1) requires a party ‚to supplement at
    appropriate intervals [initial] disclosures if the party learns that
    in some material respect the information disclosed is incomplete
    or incorrect and if the additional or corrective information has
    3. Rules 26 and 37 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure were
    amended in 2011; however, these amendments apply only to
    cases filed on or after November 1, 2011, and are therefore not
    applicable to this case. See Utah R. Civ. P. 1 advisory committee’s
    note to 2011 amendment; see also Townhomes at Pointe Meadows
    Owners Ass’n v. Pointe Meadows Townhomes, LLC, 
    2014 UT App 52
    , ¶ 13 n.2, 
    329 P.3d 815
    . Accordingly, we cite to the 2010
    versions of these rules throughout this opinion.
    20140937-CA                     5                 
    2016 UT App 62
    Sleepy Holdings v. Mountain West Title
    not otherwise been made known to the other parties during the
    discovery process or in writing.‛ 
    Id.
     R. 26(e)(1). Finally, the rule
    provides that ‚a party shall, without awaiting a discovery
    request, provide to other parties . . . a computation of any
    category of damages claimed by the disclosing party.‛ 
    Id.
    R. 26(a)(1)(C).
    ¶13 ‚A plaintiff is required to prove both the fact of damages
    and the amount of damages.‛ Stevens-Henager Coll. v. Eagle Gate
    Coll., 
    2011 UT App 37
    , ¶ 16, 
    248 P.3d 1025
    . ‚To establish the fact
    of damages, ‘*t+he evidence . . . must give rise to a reasonable
    probability that the plaintiff suffered damage.’‛ 
    Id.
     (alteration
    and omission in original) (quoting Atkin Wright & Miller v.
    Mountain States Tel. & Tel. Co., 
    709 P.2d 330
    , 336 (Utah 1985)).
    ‚While the standard for determining the amount of damages is
    not so exacting as the standard for proving the fact of damages,
    there still must be evidence that rises above speculation and
    provides a reasonable, even though not necessarily precise,
    estimate of damages.‛ TruGreen Cos., LLC, v. Mower Bros., Inc.,
    
    2008 UT 81
    , ¶ 15, 
    199 P.3d 929
     (citation and internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    ¶14 Even if a plaintiff cannot complete its computation of
    damages before future events take place, ‚the fact of
    damages . . . and the method for calculating the amount of
    damages‛ must be apparent in initial disclosures. Stevens-
    Henager, 
    2011 UT App 37
    , ¶ 22; see also Bodell Constr. Co. v.
    Robbins, 
    2009 UT 52
    , ¶ 36, 
    215 P.3d 933
    . If ‚factual contentions
    about the amount of damages . . . require further investigation or
    discovery,‛ the party must ‚undertake that investigation as early
    in the litigation process as is practicable.‛ Stevens-Henager, 
    2011 UT App 37
    , ¶ 24. And investigation and discovery must be
    completed according to the schedule set by the district court. See
    id.; see also Bodell, 
    2009 UT 52
    , ¶¶ 36–37.
    ¶15 Here, Sleepy Holdings’ initial disclosures stated that
    ‚damages are described in the complaint.‛ Sleepy Holdings’
    complaint alleged that ‚the Lakes entered into a contract . . .
    20140937-CA                     6                 
    2016 UT App 62
    Sleepy Holdings v. Mountain West Title
    providing for the sale of twenty (20) lots for the purchase price
    of $2,000,000. The circumstances created by defendants’ failure
    to obtain and record the subordination documents prevented
    said sale from moving forward causing further damage to
    plaintiffs.‛ Sleepy Holdings maintains that this statement
    constitutes an adequate computation of damages under rule 26.
    Sleepy Holdings argues that an ‚arithmetic computation‛ is
    unnecessary because ‚$2 million minus 0 equals $2 million.‛
    ¶16 This argument assumes that the contract price constitutes
    the measure of damages for the loss of a bargain. But the
    contract price represents only one element of the damage
    calculation: ‚Loss of bargain damages are calculated by taking
    the difference between the contract price of the property and the
    value of the property at forfeiture.‛ Glezos v. Frontier Invs., 
    896 P.2d 1230
    , 1235 (Utah Ct. App. 1995) (emphasis omitted). ‚A
    property’s sale price is an indication, though inconclusive, of its
    fair market value. When there is no decrease in value between
    the contract price and the fair market value at forfeiture, the
    seller may not recover loss of bargain damages.‛ 
    Id.
     (citation
    omitted). Subject to the qualifications mentioned in the cases
    quoted above, this is the sort of ‚computation of . . . damages‛
    referred to in rule 26 for a case of this type. See, e.g., Bodell, 
    2009 UT 52
    , ¶ 36 (discussing computation where plaintiff ‚disclosed
    that its damages ‘constitute the funds advanced, together with
    interest at the legal rate, less the payment received’‛).
    ¶17 Moreover, while Sleepy Holdings’ complaint describes
    the $2 million sale, it does not identify the failed sale as damages
    or offer a computation or method of calculating the damages as
    required by law. We therefore agree with the district court that
    Sleepy Holdings’ complaint and initial disclosures failed to
    satisfy the requirements of rule 26.
    ¶18 Finally, Sleepy Holdings did not supplement its
    disclosures within the discovery period. Its initial disclosures
    stated, ‚It is anticipated that as discovery and litigation proceed,
    that additional work will be done in assessing and computing
    20140937-CA                       7                 
    2016 UT App 62
    Sleepy Holdings v. Mountain West Title
    such damages and that the ultimate determination and
    computation thereof will require expert testimony. Additional
    appropriate supplementation of this part of these disclosures
    will be made.‛ As explained above, if ‚factual contentions about
    the amount of damages . . . require further investigation or
    discovery,‛ the party must ‚undertake that investigation as early
    in the litigation process as is practicable.‛ Stevens-Henager Coll. v.
    Eagle Gate Coll., 
    2011 UT App 37
    , ¶ 24, 
    248 P.3d 1025
    . And that
    investigation must be completed according to the schedule set
    by the district court. See id.; see also Bodell, 
    2009 UT 52
    , ¶¶ 36–37.
    But Sleepy Holdings did not supplement its initial disclosures
    until August 2013, more than a year after the close of discovery.
    Those supplemental disclosures, like the complaint, include no
    computation of damages as required by law. But even if they
    did, we see no abuse of discretion in the district court’s ruling
    those supplemental disclosures untimely. They indisputably
    were.
    B.     The sanctions provision of rule 26, not rule 16, applies.
    ¶19 Sleepy Holdings contends that, even if its supplemental
    disclosures were untimely, ‚the sanctions imposed were an
    abuse of discretion.‛ The district court ruled that Sleepy
    Holdings violated rule 26(a)(1)(C) and imposed the mandatory
    sanctions under rule 37(f). Sleepy Holdings argues that the
    district court should instead have applied the discretionary
    sanctions found in rule 16(d).
    ¶20 Rule 16 governs pretrial conferences, scheduling, and
    management conferences. See Utah R. Civ. P. 16. Rule 16(d) ‚is
    the source of the district court’s authority to sanction a party for
    producing untimely discovery under a scheduling order.‛
    Coroles v. State, 
    2015 UT 48
    , ¶ 20, 
    349 P.3d 739
    . The sanctions for
    rule 16 violations appear in rule 37(b)(2). If a party fails to obey
    an order entered under rule 16(b) or to obey a discovery order,
    ‚unless the court finds that the failure was substantially
    justified,‛ the court ‚may‛ impose a sanction, including
    ‚prohibit[ing] the disobedient party from supporting or
    20140937-CA                      8                 
    2016 UT App 62
    Sleepy Holdings v. Mountain West Title
    opposing designated claims or defenses or from introducing
    designated matters in evidence.‛ Utah R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2) (2010);
    see also Coroles, 
    2015 UT 48
    , ¶ 19. The key word here is may: ‚rule
    16(d) leaves the decision of whether to sanction a party to the
    broad discretion of the district court.‛ Coroles, 
    2015 UT 48
    , ¶ 22.
    ¶21 The district court did not rely on rule 16, but on rule 26,
    which governs initial disclosures and discovery. Rules 26(a) and
    26(e) require the parties to make initial disclosures and to
    supplement those disclosures as necessary. The sanctions for
    rule 26(a) and 26(e) violations appear in rule 37(f). When a party
    fails to timely make or supplement initial disclosures, rule 37(f)
    mandates that the district court exclude the untimely disclosure
    unless the failure to disclose is harmless or the non-disclosing
    party shows good cause for its non-disclosure:
    If a party fails to disclose a witness, document, or
    other material as required by Rule 26(a) or Rule
    26(e)(1), . . . that party shall not be permitted to use
    the witness, document or other material at any
    hearing unless the failure to disclose is harmless or
    the party shows good cause for the failure to
    disclose.
    Utah R. Civ. P. 37(f) (2010). ‚The sanction of exclusion is
    automatic and mandatory unless the sanctioned party can show
    that the violation of rule 26(a) was either justified or harmless.‛
    Dahl v. Harrison, 
    2011 UT App 389
    , ¶ 22, 
    265 P.3d 139
    ; see also
    Bodell Constr. Co. v. Robbins, 
    2009 UT 52
    , ¶ 35, 
    215 P.3d 933
     (citing
    Utah R. Civ. P. 37(f)).
    ¶22 We agree with the district court that rule 26 applies here.
    As explained above, the court sanctioned Sleepy Holdings for
    failure to make and supplement the initial disclosures required
    by rules 26(a) and 26(e). The district court’s ruling repeatedly
    cites rule 26; it never mentions rule 16.
    20140937-CA                      9                  
    2016 UT App 62
    Sleepy Holdings v. Mountain West Title
    ¶23 Sleepy Holdings urges us to follow Coroles. But Coroles
    did not interpret—or even mention—rule 26. The plaintiff in
    Coroles ‚violated the district court’s scheduling order.‛ Coroles,
    
    2015 UT 48
    , ¶ 21. ‚Rule 16‛—not rule 26—‚authorizes a district
    court to set discovery deadlines.‛ 
    Id. ¶ 23
    . Coroles did not
    purport to address what sanctions apply when a party fails to
    timely make or timely supplement initial disclosures under rules
    26(a) or 26(e); in fact, it never mentions initial disclosures or rule
    26. Thus, Coroles does not control here.
    C.     The rule 26 violation was not harmless.
    ¶24 As explained above, the district court did not abuse its
    discretion in ruling that Sleepy Holdings failed to disclose its
    damages computation. Further, the district court properly ruled
    that this rule 26 violation implicated the sanctions found in rule
    37(f). ‚Accordingly, the proper inquiry is whether the district
    court abused its discretion in determining that the *plaintiff’s+
    failure to disclose was not harmless and that good cause did not
    excuse its failure.‛ Townhomes at Pointe Meadows Owners Ass’n v.
    Pointe Meadows Townhomes, LLC, 
    2014 UT App 52
    , ¶ 14, 
    329 P.3d 815
    .
    ¶25 On appeal, Sleepy Holdings does not contend that the
    district court erred in failing to find that good cause excused its
    failure to disclose. But Sleepy Holdings does contend that its
    failure to disclose did not harm Mountain West, or at least that
    Mountain West could have mitigated any harm. Specifically,
    Sleepy Holdings points to the fact that Mountain West, after
    filing its motion for sanctions, struck the scheduled deposition of
    the witness Sleepy Holdings had designated pursuant to rule
    30(b)(6) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure.
    ¶26 Pursuant to rule 37(f), the district court ruled that Sleepy
    Holdings had failed to disclose its damages computation as
    required by rule 26, that Sleeping Holdings had not shown good
    cause for the failure to disclose, and that the violation was not
    harmless. Accordingly, the court concluded that Sleepy
    20140937-CA                      10                
    2016 UT App 62
    Sleepy Holdings v. Mountain West Title
    Holdings would not be permitted to use any damages
    computation at trial. In so ruling, the court relied on the Utah
    Supreme Court’s decision in Bodell Construction Co. v. Robbins,
    
    2009 UT 52
    , 
    215 P.3d 933
    . In Bodell, the supreme court held that
    the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that the
    plaintiff’s new damage theories disclosed three weeks after the
    end of fact discovery were untimely. The court also held that
    permitting the plaintiff to prove damages at trial would
    prejudice the defendant, who could no longer conduct discovery
    to rebut those damage theories. See 
    id. ¶ 37
    . The district court
    here stated that if the supreme court ‚has determined
    supplemental disclosures regarding damages filed a mere three
    weeks after the fact discovery deadline are prejudicial[, t]his
    Court can hardly find that supplemental disclosures filed over a
    year or more than fifty-two weeks are timely.‛
    ¶27 Sleepy Holdings has not shown an abuse of discretion on
    the part of the district court. First, Sleepy Holdings’ argument
    assumes that the opportunity to depose a knowledgeable
    witness after the discovery cutoff mitigates any harm caused by
    a plaintiff’s failure to disclose its damages computation early in
    the litigation. We do not believe this proposition is self-evident.
    True, Mountain West might, as Sleepy Holdings suggests, have
    simply proceeded with the deposition. But Sleepy Holdings has
    not proffered what testimony would have been given.
    Consequently, we cannot know how much detail Sleepy
    Holdings would have supplied for its damages computation—
    after all, Sleepy Holdings maintains on appeal that the $2 million
    figure alleged in its complaint constitutes an adequate
    computation of damages. Furthermore, had the deposition
    suggested additional avenues of discovery, Mountain West
    would be at a disadvantage in exploring them, as the discovery
    cutoff had by that time passed. And, as in Bodell, ‚*t+hough the
    district court could have reopened fact discovery to allow
    [further discovery on the damages issue], the court was not
    obligated to do so.‛ See Bodell, 
    2009 UT 52
    , ¶ 37. This is especially
    true, as the district court here noted, considering that the
    20140937-CA                     11                 
    2016 UT App 62
    Sleepy Holdings v. Mountain West Title
    discovery cutoff had passed a year earlier, not a mere three
    weeks as in Bodell.
    ¶28 ‚Trial courts have broad discretion to manage *their+
    docket[s] and set firm deadlines for motion practice.‛ State v.
    Gonzalez, 
    2015 UT 10
    , ¶ 48, 
    345 P.3d 1168
     (alterations in original)
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). The district
    court’s sanctions ruling, while perhaps not the only permissible
    one under the circumstances, nevertheless fell well within the
    limits of its discretion. In short, the court did not act
    unreasonably in ruling that a deposition of a rule 30(b)(6)
    witness giving unproffered testimony a year after the passing of
    the discovery cutoff did not necessarily mitigate the harm of
    Sleepy Holdings’ failure to make or supplement an initial
    disclosure of its damages computation. We therefore affirm the
    district court’s sanctions order.
    ¶29 Our affirmance of the district court’s sanctions order
    prevents Sleepy Holdings from proceeding to trial. Accordingly,
    our ruling renders the second issue on appeal, concerning the
    admissibility of certain potential trial testimony, moot.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶30   The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
    20140937-CA                    12                
    2016 UT App 62