KTM Health Care Inc. v. SG Nursing Home LLC ( 2018 )


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    2018 UT App 152
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    KTM HEALTH CARE INC.,
    Appellee and Cross-appellant,
    v.
    SG NURSING HOME LLC DBA KOLOB CARE
    & REHABILITATION OF ST. GEORGE,
    AND APEX HEALTHCARE SOLUTIONS LLC,
    Appellants and Cross-appellees.
    Opinion
    No. 20160558-CA
    Filed August 16, 2018
    Fifth District Court, St. George Department
    The Honorable Jeffrey C. Wilcox
    No. 100503405
    Gary R. Guelker and Janet I. Jenson, Attorneys for
    Appellants and Cross-appellees
    Justin D. Heideman and Justin R. Elswick, Attorneys
    for Appellee and Cross-appellant
    JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES
    GREGORY K. ORME and DAVID N. MORTENSEN concurred.
    HARRIS, Judge:
    ¶1     KTM Health Care, Inc. (Pharmacy) and SG Nursing Home
    LLC dba Kolob Care & Rehabilitation of St. George (Nursing
    Home) entered into a written agreement for Pharmacy to
    become Nursing Home’s exclusive provider of all pharmacy-
    related products and services. Soon after signing the contract,
    however, Nursing Home attempted to cancel its agreement with
    Pharmacy, apparently realizing that it was still contractually
    committed to a different provider. Pharmacy then sued Nursing
    Home, asserting claims for breach of contract as well as various
    fraud-related causes of action. Nursing Home defended the case,
    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    in part, by arguing that the parties had been mutually mistaken
    about Nursing Home’s ability to terminate its contract with its
    existing provider, and asserting that the parties had therefore
    never actually entered into an enforceable contract. Prior to trial,
    on Nursing Home’s motion, the court determined that Pharmacy
    chose to “elect” its breach of contract remedies and that it would
    not be permitted to further pursue its fraud-based remedies.
    ¶2     The case proceeded to trial, and a jury determined that
    Nursing Home breached the contract and that Pharmacy was
    entitled to over $143,000 in damages, plus attorney fees, even
    though the jury instructions made no mention of attorney fees.
    However, the jury also determined that the parties had, in fact,
    been mutually mistaken about the terms of Nursing Home’s
    contract with its previous provider. Believing that the jury’s
    answers to the questions on the special verdict form were
    inconsistent, the trial court resubmitted the case to the jury. After
    briefly re-deliberating, the jury affirmed its breach finding, but
    changed its mutual mistake finding. It also amended its damages
    award by increasing the amount of consequential damages while
    eliminating any mention of attorney fees. Following trial, the
    court refused to award Pharmacy any prejudgment interest.
    ¶3     Both parties appeal. Nursing Home asserts that the trial
    court erred in resubmitting the case to the jury. Pharmacy asserts
    that the trial court erred by excluding one of its expert witnesses,
    by dismissing its fraud-based claims prior to trial, and by failing
    to award prejudgment interest. We affirm in part, reverse in
    part, vacate the trial court’s judgment, and remand the case for
    the limited purpose of entering judgment in favor of Pharmacy
    on its breach of contract claim in an amount consistent with the
    jury’s original damages award (less attorney fees).
    BACKGROUND
    ¶4    In August 2009, Adam Katschke and a business partner
    formed Pharmacy. Pharmacy began as an “open-door”
    pharmacy, which is a “typical retail community pharmacy” that
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    is open to the public. After operating as an open-door pharmacy
    for several months, Katschke and his business partner decided
    that they wanted to grow their business, and in 2010 started
    contacting various entities in southern Utah with the goal of
    becoming a “closed-door” pharmacy. A “closed-door” pharmacy
    typically is not open to the public but, instead, serves as a
    dedicated pharmacy for one or more entities such as long-term
    care facilities, nursing homes, or assisted living centers.
    ¶5      One of the entities that Pharmacy contacted was Nursing
    Home, a facility that billed itself as “the largest skilled nursing
    facility in Southern Utah.” When Pharmacy initially contacted
    Nursing Home about becoming its pharmacy, Nursing Home
    already had an existing agreement with a different provider, but
    was considering a change due to “service issues” it was
    experiencing with that provider.
    ¶6     In March 2010, Katschke met with a representative
    (Manager) of Apex Healthcare Solutions, LLC, the company that
    owned Nursing Home and had supervisory authority over its
    employees. During the meeting, Manager indicated to Katschke
    that Nursing Home was interested in utilizing Pharmacy’s
    services, but that Katschke had to be the specific pharmacist
    assigned to the account; no one else would do. Katschke
    indicated that he would be willing to make arrangements to
    serve as the face of Pharmacy in its relationship with Nursing
    Home, and to personally work with Nursing Home during the
    contemplated closed-door contract. Although they had
    apparently come close to agreement on material terms, Nursing
    Home and Pharmacy did not sign a contract at that meeting.
    According to Katschke, Nursing Home wanted Pharmacy “to go
    write it up and give [Nursing Home] some proofs” of a
    proposed contract.
    ¶7    After meeting with Katschke, Manager contacted Nursing
    Home’s existing provider to determine whether it could
    terminate its contract. After that conversation, Manager “was
    under the impression that [Nursing Home was] on a month-to-
    month contract” with its existing provider, and that Nursing
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    Home would be able to terminate its contract and transition to a
    different provider as early as June 28, 2010. However, Nursing
    Home did not terminate its contract at that time. And Katschke,
    for his part, was unaware of the terms of Nursing Home’s
    contract with its other provider.
    ¶8     Katschke also owned and operated another pharmacy in
    Nevada (Nevada Pharmacy), and Katschke was the sole
    pharmacist staffing that pharmacy. To honor Nursing Home’s
    request that he be the face of Pharmacy for any relationship with
    Nursing Home, Katschke determined that Nevada Pharmacy
    would need to hire another pharmacist to operate it. Soon after
    the March 2010 meeting, believing that a contractual relationship
    with Nursing Home was imminent, Nevada Pharmacy made
    that hire, and agreed to retain a second pharmacist for a 36-
    month term beginning on May 1, 2010, at a rate of $45 per hour
    for a 40-hour week plus various benefits.
    ¶9     Meanwhile, Katschke began to renovate Pharmacy in
    order to come into compliance with regulations governing
    closed-door pharmacies. This involved adding shelving,
    countertops, pharmacy software, an alarm system, and a
    refrigerator. Pharmacy completed these improvements in April
    2010, and incurred over $33,000 in expenses in doing so.
    ¶10 On May 25, 2010, after some additional negotiations,
    Katschke and Manager—on behalf of their respective entities—
    signed a contract whereunder Pharmacy would become Nursing
    Home’s exclusive closed-door pharmacy beginning on June 28,
    2010 and continuing for an initial one-year term. The agreement
    contained a provision allowing for automatic renewal of the
    agreement for additional one-year periods unless, at least ninety
    days prior to the expiration of the current contractual term,
    either party provided the other with written notice of its intent
    not to renew.
    ¶11 That same day, after the contract had been signed,
    Nursing Home’s administrator (Administrator) contacted the
    existing provider to let it know that Nursing Home was “going
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    in a different direction.” The provider responded by expressing
    its view that Nursing Home did not have the right to cancel the
    contract. Administrator informed Katschke of the issue in an
    email, but initially downplayed it, stating that he thought he
    could “get this resolved within a day or two.”
    ¶12 Several days later, on June 7, however, Administrator sent
    another email to Katschke informing him that “apparently we
    are not going to be able to get out of” the contract with the other
    provider “until the end of October [2010],” despite just having
    signed a contract with Pharmacy. Administrator further
    explained that “[w]e . . . would like to do business with you but
    right now it looks like we don’t have a choice other than to take
    a step back, at least for a while.”
    ¶13 Later that month, after apparently making the
    determination that it was bound by its contract with the other
    provider, Nursing Home made the decision to renew its contract
    with that provider. The renewed contract was set to commence
    on July 1, 2010, just three days after its contract with Pharmacy
    was set to commence, and was renewable in one-year terms
    thereafter. Administrator gave Katschke the bad news on July
    11, 2010, via email: “[W]e have decided to stick with [the other
    provider] for at least another year.” Administrator’s email did
    not mention Nursing Home’s contract with Pharmacy.
    ¶14 Later that year, in October 2010, Pharmacy sued Nursing
    Home for (among other claims) breach of contract, fraud in the
    inducement, constructive fraud, intentional misrepresentation,
    and negligent misrepresentation.
    ¶15 As the case proceeded to trial, Pharmacy informed the
    court and Nursing Home of its intention to call a pharmacist
    (Pharmacy Expert) as an expert witness. Pharmacy Expert had
    experience dealing with closed-door pharmacies, and Pharmacy
    wanted him to testify about “the number of years for which
    [Pharmacy] can recover damages” for lost profits. Pharmacy
    Expert’s proposed testimony included the opinion that the
    parties likely would have renewed the contract for at least six
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    years. Nursing Home moved to exclude that testimony, arguing
    that Pharmacy Expert’s analysis was unhelpful and unreliable.
    The trial court granted Nursing Home’s motion, reasoning that
    “there are not sufficient facts in this case to support the proposed
    testimony” that Nursing Home “would have renewed its
    pharmacy provider agreement with [Pharmacy] for at least six
    years had [Nursing Home] begun using [Pharmacy] for its
    pharmaceutical needs in 2010.” Therefore, the trial court
    determined that Pharmacy Expert’s proposed testimony should
    be excluded because it would not be helpful to the jury.
    ¶16 Also prior to trial, Nursing Home asked the trial court to
    force Pharmacy to “elect its remedy,” arguing that Pharmacy “is
    seeking to recover two categories of damages that are wholly
    contradictory to one another.” Nursing Home argued that “there
    must be an election of remedies in cases involving contracts and
    deceitful inducement because the recovery of both lost profits
    and reliance damages constitutes a double recovery.” The trial
    court agreed with Nursing Home, determining that Pharmacy
    “has chosen to affirm its contract with [Nursing Home] and has
    elected money damages as the remedy for [Nursing Home’s]
    alleged breach of that contract.” From that premise, the court
    concluded that “the doctrine of election of remedies and the
    economic loss rule preclude [Pharmacy] from pursuing its tort
    claims against [Nursing Home] for fraud in the inducement,
    constructive fraud, intentional misrepresentation[,] and
    negligent misrepresentation.”
    ¶17 The case then proceeded to jury trial on Pharmacy’s claim
    for breach of contract. Pharmacy did not call a damages expert,
    choosing instead to rely on Katschke’s testimony regarding
    damages. Katschke initially testified that Pharmacy would have
    realized $401,280 in profit during the first year of its contractual
    relationship with Nursing Home. Katschke arrived at that figure
    by starting with the pricing terms of the contract, making certain
    assumptions about the number of patients and other variables,
    and computing a one-year profit estimate. On cross-examination,
    Katschke acknowledged that his figure did not include certain
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    additional overhead costs, which he estimated to be
    approximately $43,000. In the end, then, Katschke testified that
    Pharmacy sustained approximately $358,000 in lost profits
    during the relevant one-year period.
    ¶18 Nursing Home countered that testimony with a damages
    expert (Damages Expert), who was employed as a financial
    analyst for Nursing Home’s existing provider’s parent company,
    which Damages Expert characterized as the “largest long-term
    care or closed-door pharmacy operator in the country.”
    Damages expert offered his opinion that, not only did Pharmacy
    not sustain any lost profits, Pharmacy would have lost over
    $127,000 had it been Nursing Home’s exclusive provider of
    pharmacy services for the one-year term of the contract.
    Damages Expert based his calculation on an analysis of the
    revenues received and expenses incurred during the year in
    question by Nursing Home’s existing provider, and then
    adjusting that analysis based on various perceived differences
    between Pharmacy and the existing provider. On cross-
    examination, Pharmacy’s counsel called into question several of
    the assumptions that Damages Expert made during his analysis.
    ¶19 At the conclusion of the trial, Pharmacy argued to the jury
    that Nursing Home breached the contract by deciding “to stick
    with [the other provider] for at least another year.” Nursing
    Home, in contrast, argued that it was mistaken about its ability
    to terminate its contract with its other provider, and therefore
    the affirmative defense of mutual mistake applied.
    ¶20 Upon completion of closing arguments, the trial court
    submitted a special verdict form to the jury that contained a
    series of questions. The verdict form was nine pages long and
    quite complex, and after some of the questions it instructed the
    jury to proceed in one fashion if its answer was “yes,” but to
    proceed in a different fashion if its answer was “no.” In
    particular, after the question about mutual mistake, the verdict
    form stated as follows: “If you answered ‘yes’ [that mutual
    mistake existed], please proceed to the next question.” After the
    next question, the jury was instructed, regardless of the answer,
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    to “[p]roceed to” the question “on the following page” and to
    complete the remainder of the verdict form. The instructions did
    not inform the jury that, if it found the existence of a mutual
    mistake, the parties’ contract may be considered unenforceable.1
    ¶21 After deliberation, the jury found that Nursing Home
    entered into and breached a contract with Pharmacy. However,
    the jury also found that Nursing Home’s “ability to terminate its
    contract with [the other provider] was a basic assumption or an
    important fact, upon which both” parties based their contract,
    and that, at the time the contract was formed, both Pharmacy
    and Nursing Home “were mistaken regarding [Nursing Home’s]
    ability to terminate its contract” with the other provider. In
    addition, the jury found that Pharmacy sustained $143,9892 in
    “Lost Profits,” but that Pharmacy did not sustain any amount of
    “Consequential Damages.” After a line entitled, “Total Damage
    Award,” the jury wrote the phrase “$143,989 plus attorney fees.”
    ¶22 After reviewing the special verdict form in open court, the
    trial court determined that “there are inconsistencies here.” The
    court explained to the jury:
    An affirmative defense to the breach of contract is
    mutual mistake, and you found that there was [a]
    mutual mistake. If there was a mutual mistake
    made, then there was no contract. It never formed,
    1. Indeed, in its post-verdict musings, the trial court stated that
    “[p]erhaps on this one we should have said if you find mutual
    mistake . . . stop your deliberations, sign the jury verdict form
    and return it.”
    2. While this figure is certainly within the range of damages
    discussed by Katschke and Damages Expert, it is unclear from
    the record how this figure was derived. Neither Katschke nor
    Damages Expert used this figure, and neither side’s counsel
    advocated for its application during closing argument.
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    and so you couldn’t award damages. And rather
    than have this go up on appeal with that
    instruction, I would like you to go back and
    consider if, in fact, you found by clear and
    convincing evidence that there was [a] mutual
    mistake . . . , then you can’t find a contract and find
    damages.
    ¶23 The court then referenced the jury’s hand-written award
    of “attorney fees,” and made the following statement to the still-
    empaneled jury:
    As a matter of fact, the only time attorney[] fees
    can be awarded is if it’s in the contract or if there’s
    a statute. There was no statute that would be
    involved, and if you read—and I’m sure that you
    did—the contract did not have an attorney[] fees
    clause. If there had been one, we would have been
    arguing about it and about the amount. And since
    it’s not, your suggestion here plus attorney[] fees is
    also [—] I guess as a matter of law I can’t do that.
    ¶24 The court then resubmitted the case to the jury. The court
    did not restrict the number of questions the jury could
    reconsider; rather, the court simply gave the jury another
    complete copy of the special verdict form, along with the “old
    one to review,” and sent the jury back into the jury room. After
    re-deliberation, the jury reaffirmed its finding that Pharmacy
    and Nursing Home entered into a contract and that Nursing
    Home had breached that contract. However, the jury changed its
    prior finding of mutual mistake, this time answering “no” to the
    question of whether Nursing Home’s “ability to terminate its
    contract with [the other provider] was a basic assumption, or an
    important fact, upon which both” parties based their contract.
    The jury also amended its damages award. The jury again found
    that Pharmacy suffered “Lost Profits” of $143,989, but this
    time—after the court informed it that attorney fees were not
    recoverable—found that Pharmacy had also suffered
    “Consequential Damages” of $120,000. The second damages
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    verdict contained no mention of attorney fees. After it returned
    the second verdict form, the jury was discharged.
    ¶25 After trial, Pharmacy submitted a proposed judgment
    calculating its total damages as $603,980.60, apparently arriving
    at that figure after taking the jury’s award and adding interest at
    a rate of 1.5% per month, pursuant to a term of the contract.
    Nursing Home objected to the proposed judgment, arguing that
    Pharmacy’s proposed judgment was “based on an improper
    prejudgment interest rate.” Specifically, Nursing Home asserted
    that the contract’s rate of 1.5% per month applied only to
    penalties on “unpaid balances” and “invoices” and did not
    apply to the jury’s damages award because Pharmacy “never
    actually provided any drugs or medical supplies to [Nursing
    Home’s] patients.” Nursing Home also argued that if
    prejudgment interest were appropriate, it should be calculated at
    10% per annum. The trial court, however, determined that an
    award of prejudgment interest was inappropriate, no matter the
    rate, because the jury could not have reached its judgment
    amount using “fixed standards of valuation,” and must instead
    have reached its verdict based on “its best judgment.”
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶26 Both parties appeal, and together raise four issues for our
    review. Nursing Home raises one issue in its appeal, and
    Pharmacy raises three issues in its cross-appeal.
    ¶27 Nursing Home argues that the trial court should not have
    resubmitted the case to the jury after reviewing the jury’s first
    special verdict form. As we explain below, infra ¶ 46, we review
    this issue for abuse of discretion.3
    3. Nursing Home also argues that the evidence was insufficient
    to support the jury’s $120,000 award of consequential damages.
    As we discuss below, we conclude that the trial court should not
    (continued…)
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    ¶28 In its cross-appeal, Pharmacy first argues that the trial
    court should have allowed Pharmacy Expert to testify. “We
    review a district court’s decision to admit or exclude expert
    witness testimony for an abuse of discretion and will not reverse
    that decision unless it exceeds the limits of reasonability.”
    Conocophillips Co. v. Utah Dep’t of Transp., 
    2017 UT App 68
    , ¶ 12,
    
    397 P.3d 772
    .
    ¶29 Pharmacy next argues that “[t]he trial court erred in
    determining that the economic loss rule and doctrine of election
    of remedies required dismissal of [Pharmacy’s] fraud-based
    claims.” “The availability of a remedy is a legal conclusion that
    we review for correctness.” Ockey v. Lehmer, 
    2008 UT 37
    , ¶ 42,
    
    189 P.3d 51
    .
    ¶30 Finally, Pharmacy argues that the trial court erred by
    determining that Pharmacy was not entitled to prejudgment
    interest. A trial court’s decision regarding prejudgment interest
    is a question of law that we review for correctness. Smith v.
    Fairfax Realty, Inc., 
    2003 UT 41
    , ¶ 16, 
    82 P.3d 1064
    .
    ANALYSIS
    I. Nursing Home’s Appeal
    ¶31 Nursing Home argues that the trial court erred by re-
    submitting the case to the jury after it perceived inconsistencies
    in the jury’s answers to some of the questions on the special
    verdict form. As Nursing Home sees it, the trial court could have
    “reconciled” the jury’s answers to the questions, and therefore
    should not have sent the jury back for additional deliberation. To
    support its argument, Nursing Home cites several Utah cases
    (…continued)
    have resubmitted the amount-of-damages issue to the jury at all,
    and because we reach that conclusion, we need not address
    Nursing Home’s sufficiency-of-the-evidence argument.
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    instructing trial courts not to “presume inconsistency” in a jury’s
    answers to questions on a special verdict form; instead, “[w]here
    the possibility of inconsistency in jury interrogatories or special
    verdicts exists,” courts are instructed to “seek to reconcile the
    answers if possible.” Bennion v. LeGrand Johnson Constr. Co., 
    701 P.2d 1078
    , 1083 (Utah 1985); see also Neff v. Neff, 
    2011 UT 6
    , ¶¶ 49,
    76, 
    247 P.3d 380
     (stating that “with regard to a claim that a jury
    verdict is internally inconsistent, we resolve any inconsistency in
    favor of giving effect to a jury verdict,” and that “we will seek to
    reconcile the answers if possible” (quotation simplified)); Tooele
    Associates Ltd. P’ship v. Tooele City, 
    2012 UT App 214
    , ¶ 10, 
    284 P.3d 709
     (stating that a court’s “duty is to reconcile special
    verdicts if possible”).
    ¶32 This rule—imposing a strict duty on trial courts to
    reconcile potentially inconsistent answers on a special verdict
    form, if possible—makes perfect sense in the context in which
    each of these cases arose: when a court is presented with a
    potential inconsistency after the jury has been discharged. Each
    of the cases Nursing Home cites arose in this procedural posture.
    See Neff, 
    2011 UT 6
    , ¶ 31 (reviewing a post-trial motion for
    judgment notwithstanding the verdict); Bennion, 701 P.2d at 1082
    (reviewing a post-trial motion for new trial); Tooele Associates,
    
    2012 UT App 214
    , ¶¶ 7–8 (reviewing competing post-trial
    motions). After a trial court discharges the jury, it is no longer
    possible to ask the jury about any arguable inconsistencies in its
    answers to the written questions on the special verdict form. In
    that situation, rather than re-convene a new jury and put the
    parties and the court to the time and expense of a second trial,
    trial courts should of course make every effort to view the
    special verdict form in a way that permits each of the answers to
    be reconciled with the others.
    ¶33 But we do not think that this same rule should apply—at
    least not with the same force—in a situation where an arguable
    inconsistency is brought to the trial court’s attention while the
    jury remains empaneled. In that situation, it is still possible to
    ask the jury to clarify any inconsistencies in the verdict form.
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    This case presents the question of whether, and to what extent, a
    trial court has the discretion to ask a still-empaneled jury to re-
    deliberate to resolve perceived inconsistencies in a special
    verdict form. For the reasons we explain, we hold that, where a
    jury remains empaneled, a trial court need not strain quite so
    mightily to reconcile the answers on the verdict form as it must
    after the jury has been discharged, and that, in such a situation,
    trial courts possess discretion to both (a) determine whether an
    inconsistency exists in the jury’s verdict, and (b) determine
    whether to resubmit the case to the jury for re-deliberation to
    resolve the perceived inconsistency.
    A
    ¶34 The first issue that we must confront involves
    determining whether inconsistency is present in a jury verdict,
    and in calibrating the breadth of the discretion given to the trial
    court in making that determination. See Shaun P. Martin,
    Rationalizing the Irrational: The Treatment of Untenable Federal Civil
    Jury Verdicts, 
    28 Creighton L. Rev. 683
    , 713 (1995) (stating that
    “[t]he most pervasive difficulty with inconsistent verdicts . . .
    involves determining when they exist”). As noted, when the
    question arises after the jury has been dismissed, Utah law
    already provides answers to these questions: a court must strive
    to reconcile the answers given by the jury, and cannot order a
    new trial unless the jury’s answers cannot be reconciled under
    “any reasonable view.” See Neff, 
    2011 UT 6
    , ¶ 49 n.20 (stating that
    “[w]hen reviewing claims that a jury verdict is inconsistent, we
    must accept any reasonable view of the case that makes the
    jury’s answers consistent”). To our knowledge, it is an open
    question in Utah whether those same rules apply in cases where
    the potential inconsistency is brought to the court’s attention
    before the jury is discharged.4
    4. Although our supreme court, in Bennion v. LeGrand Johnson
    Constr. Co., 
    701 P.2d 1078
     (Utah 1985), did not address the
    (continued…)
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    ¶35 Other courts and commentators, however, have
    addressed this issue, and most of them are of the view that the
    rules ought to be, and are, different if the issue arises prior to the
    jury’s dismissal. See, e.g., Smith v. Riceland Foods, Inc., 
    151 F.3d 813
    , 821 (8th Cir. 1998) (stating that “[a trial] court has discretion
    to decide whether a jury’s findings on a verdict form are
    incomplete, confusing, or inconsistent and whether to resubmit
    the claim to the jury”); Veranda Beach Club Ltd. P’ship v. Western
    Surety Co., 
    936 F.2d 1364
    , 1381 (1st Cir. 1991) (stating that “if
    there was room for doubt, we believe that the trial court should
    be granted substantial latitude in determining whether or not the
    jury’s response to a verdict form which the court prepared is
    clear and free from ambiguity”); Clyma v. Sunoco, Inc., No. 03-
    CV-809, 
    2008 WL 3394616
    , at *5 (N.D. Okla. Aug. 8, 2008) (stating
    that “case law from other circuits makes clear that where a jury
    is still available, the trial court has the discretion to resubmit a
    special verdict form to the jury with a request for clarification; if
    the court elects not to seek clarification from the jury or the
    inconsistency is not noticed until after the jury has been
    (…continued)
    precise issue we address here, we view that case as generally
    supportive of our conclusions. In that case, the court held that
    the jury’s answers could conceivably be reconciled, and
    therefore affirmed the trial court’s decision to deny a post-trial
    motion regarding a potential inconsistency. See id. at 1083. After
    reaching its decision, however, the court (in dicta) chided the
    appellant for “fail[ing] to object to the verdict before the jury was
    discharged,” and stated that “[t]he rule requiring an objection if
    there is some ambiguity serves the objective of avoiding the
    expense and additional time for a new trial by having the jury
    which heard the facts clarify the ambiguity while it is able to do
    so.” Id. If the trial court were prohibited from seeking the jury’s
    input in any event (because the verdict was technically
    reconcilable), there would have been no need to chide the
    appellant for its failure to object, because its failure to object
    would have been meaningless.
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    dismissed, the court must then attempt to harmonize the
    answers, or order a new trial” (emphasis added)).5 We find these
    authorities persuasive.
    5. See also McHugh v. Olympia Entm’t, Inc., 37 F. App’x 730, 738
    (6th Cir. 2002) (stating that “we should be deferential to the
    determination of inconsistency made by a [trial] judge who has
    observed the jury during the trial, prepared the questions and
    explained them to the jury because he is in the best position to
    determine whether the answers reflect confusion or uncertainty”
    (quotation simplified)); Romano v. U-Haul Int’l, 
    233 F.3d 655
    , 671–
    72 (1st Cir. 2000) (holding that the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion when it decided to ask the jury to redeliberate
    regarding a verdict that was not necessarily inconsistent “under
    all possible views”); Richard v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., 
    853 F.2d 1258
    , 1260–61 (5th Cir. 1988) (stating that “[w]e have
    consistently given the [trial] court wide discretion in deciding
    whether the jury’s answers to the court’s questions are clear,”
    and affirming a trial court’s decision to ask the jury to
    redeliberate regarding a verdict that could potentially have been
    reconciled); 35B C.J.S. Federal Civil Procedure § 1036 (2018)
    (stating that trial courts have “the discretion to decide whether a
    jury’s findings on a verdict form are incomplete, confusing, or
    inconsistent,” and that “[w]hen a verdict appears to be internally
    inconsistent, the safest course is to defer its acceptance, consult
    with counsel, give the jury supplemental instructions, and then
    recommit the matter for further consideration”); 33 Fed. Proc., L.
    Ed. § 77:329 (2018) (stating that “it is settled that a [trial] court
    has discretion to decide whether a jury’s findings on a special
    verdict form are inconsistent”); Shaun P. Martin, Rationalizing the
    Irrational: The Treatment of Untenable Federal Civil Jury Verdicts, 
    28 Creighton L. Rev. 683
    , 725 (1995) (arguing that “courts should be
    given wide discretion in determining whether a jury’s verdict is
    unacceptably inconsistent,” and stating that “courts are not
    required to accept a jury verdict that is almost certainly derived
    from confusion, mistake, or indifference to the law, even though
    (continued…)
    20160558-CA                      15               
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    ¶36 The chief reason for taking a different approach in cases
    where the jury remains empaneled is not difficult to divine. In
    such cases, because the body that rendered the verdict remains
    available for consultation, a powerful option exists that does not
    exist later: the court can simply ask the jury what it meant.
    Exercising this option allows the court to go right to the source
    for clarification and remove any doubt about the jury’s true
    intentions. After the jury makes clear its true intentions, there is
    no longer any need for judges or attorneys to spin their wheels
    speculating about the jury’s true intent or about the verdict’s
    various possible meanings, or arguing about whether the verdict
    can (or cannot) be reconciled.
    ¶37 In order to breathe life into this approach, however, trial
    courts must be given a measure of discretion in determining
    whether inconsistencies are present in a particular verdict. This
    is so for at least two reasons. First, by definition, such an issue
    will arise in a time-sensitive setting—with the jury still
    empaneled, there will not usually be time for comprehensive
    research or briefing on the issue. In most such instances, the
    court will be assisted only by some brief and improvised oral
    argument from counsel. The court is in the position of having to
    decide, more or less on the spot, whether the jury’s answers are
    inconsistent, because once the court discharges the jury, it is no
    longer possible to seek the jury’s input. 6 In this situation, there
    seems very little possible harm (as discussed further below, infra
    (…continued)
    there may be an insubstantial (but non-zero) chance that its
    origins lie elsewhere”).
    6. This is certainly not the only situation in which trial courts
    must make quick decisions. But in this situation—unlike most
    others, in which a court often can, for instance, revisit its
    decision to exclude evidence or sustain an objection—an
    improvident decision not to seek a jury’s input can never be
    remedied, because a jury can never be recalled once discharged.
    20160558-CA                     16               
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    ¶¶ 44–45) in asking the jury to re-deliberate, but there are almost
    certainly substantial benefits (e.g., clarity) to be gained, which
    potential benefits will evaporate as soon as the jury is
    discharged. In close cases, where facial or potential
    inconsistencies are present, trial courts should be encouraged to
    seek the jury’s input while they still can, without having to
    worry about being reversed on appeal because, technically
    speaking and after comprehensive research and briefing, the
    original verdict turned out to be reconcilable after all. See
    Veranda Beach Club, 
    936 F.2d at 1381
     (stating that, “if there was
    room for doubt” about whether the verdict contained
    inconsistencies, “the trial court should be granted substantial
    latitude” to seek the jury’s input).
    ¶38 Second, the trial court will by that point have sat through
    the entire trial, and will have observed the jury’s behavior and
    attitude. The trial court will also have approved the questions
    posed to the jury, and will have also provided the jury its
    instructions that it used to interpret and fill out the verdict form.7
    For these reasons, courts have recognized that the trial judge is
    “in the best position to determine whether the answers reflect
    confusion or uncertainty,” see Smith, 
    151 F.3d at 821
     (quotation
    simplified), and “is in an excellent position to evaluate whether
    7. The trial court is under an obligation to properly instruct the
    jury, which duty includes providing a proper verdict form. See
    Ames v. Maas, 
    846 P.2d 468
    , 471 (Utah Ct. App. 1993) (noting that
    a trial court has a duty to instruct the jury on the law applicable
    to the facts of the case); see also State v. Campos, 
    2013 UT App 213
    ,
    ¶ 42, 
    309 P.3d 1160
     (stating that “[t]he duty to properly instruct
    the jury applies to the verdict form”). Indeed, the problem that
    eventually arose in this case could have been easily avoided had
    the parties and the court more carefully considered the language
    of the special verdict form, and simply instructed the jury that if
    it answered the questions regarding mutual mistake in the
    affirmative, that it should stop its deliberations and submit the
    verdict form to the court.
    20160558-CA                      17               
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    the jury will likely be able to resolve [the] uncertainty with
    proper guidance,” see Richard v. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., 
    853 F.2d 1258
    , 1260 (5th Cir. 1988). For all of these reasons, the trial
    court is in an advantaged position to be able to discern—even in
    a time-sensitive setting—whether the jury’s answers are
    inconsistent in a way that might be illuminated by additional
    jury input.
    ¶39 We therefore hold that—as long as the jury that rendered
    the verdict remains empaneled—a trial court is not under the
    same obligation to “reconcile” a jury’s answers as it is after the
    jury is discharged. A trial court may seek the jury’s input if the
    jury’s answers are potentially inconsistent, or are inconsistent
    under any reasonable view. See Veranda Beach Club, 
    936 F.2d at 1381
     (stating that a trial court may seek the jury’s input “if there
    [is] room for doubt” about whether the verdict is inconsistent). 8
    B
    ¶40 Moreover, trial courts possess the latitude to seek the
    jury’s input regarding potential inconsistencies, regardless of the
    particular form the verdict takes.
    ¶41 In some situations, trial courts—by force of rule—can
    (and sometimes must) seek the input of a still-empaneled jury
    regarding potential inconsistencies in its verdict. For instance,
    when a jury is asked to render a “general verdict” along with
    8. It is important to note that our holding in this case is
    grounded in recognizing the trial court’s discretion. We in no
    way mean to infer that a trial court must seek the jury’s input in
    all similar situations. Indeed, in such situations, a trial court may
    elect not to resubmit matters to the jury for reconsideration, and
    may determine that the jury’s answers can be reconciled without
    the need for additional deliberation. A trial court’s decision not
    to seek additional jury input will also be reviewed for abuse of
    discretion.
    20160558-CA                     18               
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    “written interrogatories upon one or more issues of fact the
    decision of which is necessary to a verdict,” a trial court “shall
    return the jury for further consideration” if its “answers are
    inconsistent with each other and one or more is likewise
    inconsistent with the general verdict,” see Utah R. Civ. P. 49(b),
    and “may return the jury for further consideration” if its
    “answers are consistent with each other but one or more is
    inconsistent with the general verdict,” 
    id.
     In the case before us,
    however, the trial court did not ask the jury to render a general
    verdict accompanied by answers to written questions. Instead,
    the trial court submitted a special verdict form to the jury.
    Special verdicts are governed by rule 49(a), not by rule 49(b), and
    rule 49(a) is silent with regard to whether a trial court can, or
    must, send a jury back for re-deliberation if its answers to the
    questions on the special verdict form are inconsistent. See
    generally Utah R. Civ. P. 49(a).
    ¶42 Courts in other jurisdictions—interpreting language
    substantively identical to the language of the applicable Utah
    rule—have determined that resubmission is an exercise best left
    to a trial court’s broad discretion, regardless of whether the issue
    arises under rule 49(a) (special verdicts) or 49(b) (general
    verdicts accompanied by interrogatories). 9 Indeed, “[t]he
    majority of [federal] circuits agree” that “resubmission of
    inconsistent verdicts” under either rule 49(a) or (b) is
    permissible. Wavelinq, Inc. v. JDS Lightwave Products Group, Inc.,
    289 F. App’x 755, 761 (5th Cir. 2008); see also Duk v. MGM Grand
    Hotel, Inc., 
    320 F.3d 1052
    , 1057 (9th Cir. 2003) (stating that,
    “where the jury is still available, a [trial] court’s decision to
    resubmit an inconsistent [special] verdict for clarification is
    within its discretion”); Auwood v. Harry Brandt Booking Office,
    Inc., 
    850 F.2d 884
    , 891 (2d Cir. 1988) (stating that, “[i]f the
    9. Where the applicable federal rule contains identical language,
    Utah appellate courts often look to federal case law for guidance
    in interpreting our own rules. See, e.g., Arbogast Family Trust v.
    River Crossings, LLC, 
    2010 UT 40
    , ¶ 16, 
    238 P.3d 1035
    .
    20160558-CA                     19               
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    inconsistency between special verdict answers is noticed prior to
    the dismissal of the jury, the trial court has the discretion to
    resubmit the issues to the jury with a request for clarification . . .
    whether or not the parties themselves request clarification”); In
    re Stanton by Brooks v. Astra Pharm. Products, Inc., 
    718 F.2d 553
    ,
    575–76 (3d Cir. 1983) (observing that “in purely pragmatic terms,
    it seems terribly inefficient not to obtain clarification from a still-
    empaneled jury of the meaning of its answers and verdict,
    especially when we consider that unclarified inconsistent
    answers often necessitate a retrial of the entire case,” and
    holding that the trial court “did not abuse its discretion in
    resubmitting ‘special questions’ to the jury, whether those
    questions be deemed to have been propounded under Rule 49(a)
    or 49(b)”). But see McCollum v. Stahl, 
    579 F.2d 869
    , 871 (4th Cir.
    1978) (noting that rule 49(a) does not explicitly provide for
    resubmission, and holding that resubmission was therefore “not
    allowable”). State courts are in agreement. See, e.g., Kanahele v.
    Han, 
    263 P.3d 726
    , 737 (Haw. 2011) (stating that, when the jury is
    “still available, it [is] within the court’s discretion” to resubmit
    the case to the jury to resolve a potential inconsistency in the
    answers on the special verdict form (quotation simplified)).
    ¶43 We find the majority interpretation persuasive. In our
    view, rule 49 of the Utah Rule of Civil Procedure should be
    interpreted to allow trial courts the discretion to seek the input
    of a still-empaneled jury, regardless of whether the jury was
    asked to return a special verdict or a general verdict with written
    interrogatories. In particular, we agree that “it seems terribly
    inefficient not to obtain clarification from a still-empaneled jury
    of the meaning of its answers and verdict, especially when we
    consider that unclarified inconsistent answers often necessitate a
    retrial of the entire case.” See Stanton, 
    718 F.2d at
    575–76; cf.
    Bennion, 701 P.2d at 1083 (stating that “[t]he rule requiring an
    objection if there is some ambiguity serves the objective of
    avoiding the expense and additional time for a new trial by
    having the jury which heard the facts clarify the ambiguity while
    it is able to do so”). When either a party or the court itself notices
    a potential inconsistency prior to the jury’s discharge, a trial
    20160558-CA                      20                
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    judge has the option of seeking clarification from the jury,
    regardless of the specific form of the verdict.
    C
    ¶44 A word of caution, however: when a trial court decides to
    send a case back to the jury for re-deliberation regarding a
    perceived inconsistency, the court must take pains to remain
    neutral, and to make sure that nothing in the court’s
    communications to the jury about the inconsistency could
    possibly be construed as encouraging the jury to reach a
    particular result after re-deliberation. The danger is that, in some
    cases, a jury may “perceive [a judge’s order to re-deliberate] to
    be judicial encouragement to alter its findings, . . . [even if] such
    influence is not intended.” See Shaun P. Martin, Rationalizing the
    Irrational: The Treatment of Untenable Federal Civil Jury Verdicts, 
    28 Creighton L. Rev. 683
    , 724 (1995).
    ¶45 In order to avoid any such perception, whenever a trial
    court orders a jury to re-deliberate regarding an inconsistency,
    the court should explain to the jury the reasons it is being asked
    to resume deliberations, but must do so in a completely neutral
    and impartial way.10 See Smith, 
    151 F.3d at
    821–22 (stating that
    “[i]f a [trial] court decides to address a jury on an inconsistency
    in its findings[,] the court must not pressure or coerce the jury,
    either explicitly or subtly, to reach a certain result through its
    direction to the jury to reconsider its findings”).
    D
    ¶46 Because we have determined that the trial court had the
    discretion to both (a) determine whether an inconsistency was
    present in the jury’s verdict, and (b) send the case back to the
    10. We would urge trial courts to seek input from counsel
    regarding the content of such supplemental instructions before
    providing those instructions to the jury.
    20160558-CA                      21               
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    jury for clarification, we review the trial court’s decisions for
    abuse of that discretion. Cf. Mota v. Mota, 
    2016 UT App 201
    , ¶ 6,
    
    382 P.3d 1080
     (reviewing a trial court’s actions for abuse of
    discretion where the statute in question allowed the trial court
    discretion, stating that “because the statute is permissive, we
    review the court’s ultimate decision . . . for an abuse of
    discretion”). In this case, the trial court gave the jury the
    opportunity to clarify two separate issues: the mutual mistake
    issue, and the attorney fees issue. In our view, the trial court did
    not abuse its discretion by seeking the jury’s input on the mutual
    mistake issue, but did abuse its discretion by allowing the jury to
    re-deliberate regarding the amount of damages to be awarded.
    1
    ¶47 The jury found both that (1) Pharmacy and Nursing
    Home entered into a contract and that Nursing Home breached
    that contract, and (2) both parties based the contract on the
    mistaken assumption that Nursing Home was able to “get out
    of” its contract with its previous provider.11 “A mutual mistake
    of fact can provide the basis for equitable rescission . . . of a
    contract[.]” Burningham v. Westgate Resorts, Ltd., 
    2013 UT App 244
    , ¶ 12, 
    317 P.3d 445
    ; see also Kendall Ins., Inc. v. R & R Group,
    Inc., 
    2008 UT App 235
    , ¶ 15 n.1, 
    189 P.3d 114
     (stating that a
    “[m]utual mistake of fact makes a contract voidable and is a
    basis for equitable rescission” (quotation simplified)). Thus,
    11. Neither party asks us to review the question of whether this
    situation could, as a matter of law, constitute a mutual mistake of
    fact. The terms of Nursing Home’s contract with its previous
    provider were knowable facts; Nursing Home simply
    misinterpreted the contract. Moreover, Pharmacy was not a
    party to that contract, and played no role in its formation and
    had no apparent reason to be familiar with its terms. However,
    while we have our doubts that these facts could, as a matter of
    law, constitute mutual mistake, we do not reach this issue
    because the parties do not ask us to do so.
    20160558-CA                     22               
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    although the jury may not have been fully aware of the legal
    import of its findings, the jury essentially found that (1) no
    contract existed due to mutual mistake, (2) Nursing Home
    nonetheless breached the contract, and (3) Pharmacy was
    entitled to damages for breach of contract. These findings were
    at least facially inconsistent, because there would be no reason
    for the jury to determine that a contract had been breached and
    that damages should be awarded if the contract did not exist in
    the first place.
    ¶48 Nursing Home nonetheless asserts that these findings can
    be reconciled. It specifically argues that “the jury’s
    determination that [Pharmacy] suffered $143,989 in lost profits
    simply reflects its initial determination that [Nursing Home]
    breached a contract with [Pharmacy],” and “does not address
    the next logical step of whether the contract is enforceable such
    that [Nursing Home] is liable for [Pharmacy’s] lost profits.”
    Nursing Home then asserts that “once the jury found that a
    mutual mistake had occurred, it was then the [trial] court’s duty
    to make the legal determination that [Nursing Home] was not
    liable for [Pharmacy’s] lost profits.” See Dishinger v. Potter, 
    2001 UT App 209
    , ¶ 17, 
    47 P.3d 76
     (observing that “the jury only finds
    the facts, and the court applies the law thereto and renders the
    verdict” (quotation simplified)). Essentially, Nursing Home
    argues that the jury’s verdict can be reconciled because its
    mutual mistake finding, as a legal matter, nullifies its
    accompanying findings of breach and damages.
    ¶49 This argument is not without force. Indeed, if this issue
    had been brought to the trial court’s attention for the first time
    after the jury had been discharged, the trial court’s duty to
    reconcile the potentially-inconsistent answers may very well
    have compelled the conclusion that no contract existed. See
    Tooele Associates, 
    2012 UT App 214
    , ¶ 10; see also Dishinger, 
    2001 UT App 209
    , ¶ 17 (observing that courts enter judgment based
    on applying the law to the jury’s findings of fact). But because
    the trial court became aware of the issue while the jury was still
    empaneled, and because the jury’s verdict was at least
    20160558-CA                     23               
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    potentially inconsistent, the trial court was within its discretion
    to ask the jury to clarify the potential inconsistency. See, e.g.,
    Romano v. U-Haul Int’l, 
    233 F.3d 655
    , 671 (1st Cir. 2000)
    (determining that a court did not abuse its discretion by seeking
    additional jury input, even though “there was not an
    inconsistency within this verdict under all possible views”);
    Richard, 
    853 F.2d at 1260
     (same).
    ¶50 In particular, we acknowledge that the trial court had
    legitimate doubts about whether the jury’s answer to the mutual
    mistake question was based on a complete understanding of the
    law as applied to the facts. First of all, the verdict form contained
    an error, in that it did not tell the jury to stop its deliberations if
    it found the presence of mutual mistake. Second, and relatedly,
    while the jury heard plenty of testimony about Nursing Home’s
    misunderstanding of the terms of its contract with its previous
    provider, neither attorney spent much time discussing mutual
    mistake, or its potential ramifications, during closing argument.
    Upon reviewing the verdict, especially under the time pressures
    associated with the situation, the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion by seeking the jury’s input for clarification. We find
    no fault in the trial court’s conclusion that the verdict was
    potentially inconsistent, nor with the trial court’s decision to ask
    the jury to confirm that the result was indeed what it intended.
    ¶51 And we likewise perceive no infirmities with the trial
    court’s statement to the jury regarding the potential
    inconsistency. The trial court objectively explained to the jury
    what the inconsistency was—specifically, that the jury’s finding
    of mutual mistake was potentially inconsistent with its findings
    of breach and damages—and asked the jury to re-deliberate on
    those issues. We perceive nothing in the trial court’s statement to
    the jury that could be interpreted, even subtly, as the trial court
    placing its thumb on the scale.
    ¶52 Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court acted within
    its discretion when it asked the jury to re-deliberate regarding
    the inconsistency in the verdict form between the jury’s mutual
    mistake finding and the jury’s breach and damages findings.
    20160558-CA                      24                
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    2
    ¶53 We reach a different conclusion, however, with regard to
    the trial court’s decision to allow the jury to re-deliberate
    regarding the amount of damages. There was not even a
    potential inconsistency in the jury’s answers on this issue, and
    therefore there was no basis to ask the jury for additional input.
    ¶54 In its initial verdict, the jury awarded Pharmacy $143,989
    in “Lost Profits” damages and $0 in “Consequential Damages.”
    In addition, the jury hand-wrote the words “plus attorney fees.”
    In connection with its discussion that the jury’s finding of
    mutual mistake and breach of contract was inconsistent, the trial
    court also explained to the jury that the court could award
    attorney fees only if authorized by statute or by contract, and
    that neither situation was applicable. After learning that
    information, and after its second round of deliberations, the jury
    amended its consequential damages award, increasing it from $0
    to $120,000, but this time did not hand-write in any award of
    “attorney fees.”
    ¶55 There was no plausible inconsistency regarding the jury’s
    initial findings regarding the amount of damages, and therefore
    there was nothing for the jury to reconsider upon re-deliberation
    regarding the amount of damages. The jury very clearly and
    unambiguously determined that Pharmacy was entitled to
    $143,989 in lost profits, $0 in consequential damages, and that
    the jury wished for Pharmacy to also recover its attorney fees.
    The entire attorney fees issue could have—and should have—
    been handled simply by excising the hand-written words “plus
    attorney fees” from the first verdict form.12 See Meadowbrook, LLC
    12. The trial court could also have avoided trouble in this case by
    providing more careful instruction to the jury when it provided
    the jury with the second special verdict form. Specifically, the
    court could have instructed the jury to re-deliberate only
    regarding a certain limited number of questions, rather than
    (continued…)
    20160558-CA                    25               
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    v. Flower, 
    959 P.2d 115
    , 117–18 (Utah 1998) (noting that “the
    determination of reasonable attorney fees is an issue generally
    left to the sound discretion of the trial court, not the jury” and
    that generally courts do not visit the issue of attorney fees “until
    one party has prevailed” (quotation simplified)). There was no
    reason for the trial court to give the jury an opportunity to
    reconsider the amount of damages it wished to award to
    Pharmacy.13
    ¶56 Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court abused its
    discretion by affording the jury a second opportunity to consider
    the amount of damages, and that this error was prejudicial, in
    that it resulted in a damages award that was $120,000 higher
    than it should have been. We therefore vacate the jury’s second
    damages award, but not the jury’s reconsidered answer
    regarding mutual mistake, and remand the case to the trial court
    with instructions to reinstate the damages amounts (less any
    attorney fees) that the jury awarded in its first verdict.
    II. Pharmacy’s Cross-Appeal
    ¶57 In its cross-appeal, Pharmacy raises three issues. First, it
    asserts that the trial court erred by excluding the testimony of
    Pharmacy Expert. Second, it asserts that the trial court erred by
    dismissing its fraud-based causes of action. Finally, it contends
    (…continued)
    allowing the jury to reconsider the form in its entirety. The trial
    court could also have opted to say nothing to the jury about the
    attorney fees issue while it remained empaneled.
    13. Such opportunities, when afforded in the absence of any
    inconsistency in the verdict form, can potentially lead to jury
    mischief. In this case, for instance, it is hard to escape the
    conclusion that the jury altered its consequential damages award
    in order to make up for the fact that Pharmacy could not recover
    attorney fees in this case.
    20160558-CA                     26               
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    that it is entitled to prejudgment interest on its damages award,
    and that the trial court erred by failing to include such interest in
    the judgment. We address each of these issues, in turn.
    A
    ¶58 First, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its
    discretion by excluding Pharmacy Expert’s testimony.
    ¶59 Under rule 702 of the Utah Rules of Evidence, “a witness
    who is qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience,
    training, or education may testify in the form of an opinion or
    otherwise if the expert’s scientific, technical, or other specialized
    knowledge will help the trier of fact to understand the evidence
    or to determine a fact in issue.” Utah R. Evid. 702(a). With expert
    testimony specifically, “[t]he ultimate question that must be
    answered” in deciding whether to admit it “is whether, on
    balance, the evidence will be helpful to the finder of fact.”
    Balderas v. Starks, 
    2006 UT App 218
    , ¶ 27, 
    138 P.3d 75
     (quotation
    simplified). Further, an expert’s testimony must be “reliably
    applied to the facts” of the case at hand. Utah R. Evid. 702(b)(3);
    see also Eskelson ex rel. Eskelson v. Davis Hosp. & Med. Ctr., 
    2010 UT 59
    , ¶¶ 18–19, 
    242 P.3d 762
     (holding that a doctor’s expert
    testimony was reliably applied to the facts of the case where the
    doctor, drawing from his “specialized knowledge in removing
    foreign objects from childrens’ ears,” offered an opinion
    regarding a perforated eardrum). Trial courts have “wide
    discretion” to determine whether expert testimony is admissible.
    Balderas, 
    2006 UT App 218
    , ¶ 27.
    ¶60 Here, the trial court determined that Pharmacy Expert’s
    proposed testimony “would not help the trier of fact to
    understand the evidence or a fact in issue,” because the facts
    were “not sufficient” to support a conclusion that Nursing Home
    would have renewed its contract with Pharmacy for six years.
    Pharmacy disagrees, and asserts on appeal that one of the
    primary issues in the case was whether it was entitled to
    damages for one year, or whether it was also entitled to damages
    for additional renewal periods. Pharmacy contends that
    20160558-CA                     27               
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    Pharmacy Expert’s testimony would have established that
    closed-door pharmacy contracts, like the one at issue here, “are
    almost always one-year contracts with auto-renewal clauses that
    are honored by the parties,” and that Pharmacy Expert would
    have testified about “the expected length of similar closed[-]door
    pharmaceutical agreements.”
    ¶61 But on the facts of this case, the parties never had an
    opportunity to contemplate whether they might want to renew
    the contract at the conclusion of the first year, because Nursing
    Home almost immediately decided not to continue its
    contractual relationship with Pharmacy. As noted above, either
    party had the right, pursuant to the non-renewal provisions of
    the contract, to end the contractual relationship after the first
    year. Nursing Home exercised this right—albeit in somewhat
    unconventional fashion—by email in July 2010, before the
    contractual relationship ever really got off the ground. Under
    these circumstances, there was therefore no need for expert
    testimony postulating about whether, and for how long, the
    parties might have renewed or extended the contract.
    ¶62 Thus, there existed a sound basis for the trial court’s
    conclusion that Pharmacy Expert’s proposed testimony would
    not have been helpful to the jury in determining any disputed
    issues, see Balderas, 
    2006 UT App 218
    , ¶ 27, and was therefore not
    “reliably applied to the facts” of the case, see Utah R. Evid.
    702(b)(3). Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion
    when it excluded Pharmacy Expert’s testimony from the jury’s
    consideration at trial.14
    14. Although Nursing Home does not raise this issue, there
    exists a separate basis upon which we could affirm the trial
    court’s decision to exclude Pharmacy Expert’s testimony:
    Pharmacy has not provided us with a transcript of the April 10,
    2013 hearing at which the trial court made its decision to exclude
    the testimony. “[I]t is the appellant’s burden to assemble,
    (continued…)
    20160558-CA                     28               
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    B
    ¶63 Pharmacy next asserts that the trial court erred by
    dismissing its claims for fraud in the inducement, constructive
    fraud,    intentional     misrepresentation,   and    negligent
    misrepresentation, based on both (1) the election of remedies
    doctrine and (2) the economic loss rule. Pharmacy argues that
    neither the election of remedies doctrine nor the economic loss
    rule compel dismissal of its fraud-based claims. We agree with
    Pharmacy that the trial court erred in dismissing these claims
    (…continued)
    transmit, and perfect the record on appeal.” Gines v. Edwards,
    
    2017 UT App 47
    , ¶ 21, 
    397 P.3d 612
     (citing Utah R. App. P. 11(c),
    (e)). An appellant is not necessarily required “to provide the
    transcript from every proceeding that occurred in a case,” but an
    “appellant is required to ‘include in the record a transcript of all
    evidence relevant to a finding or conclusion’ that is being
    challenged on appeal.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Utah R. App. P. 11(e)(2))
    (quotation simplified). In Gines, the appellant failed to provide a
    transcript of a hearing at which the trial court made a ruling
    regarding the admissibility of expert testimony. Id. ¶¶ 19, 21. On
    appeal, we concluded that the appellant had failed to carry its
    burden of demonstrating that the trial court abused its discretion
    in making its evidentiary ruling, especially where the trial
    court’s written ruling specifically stated that “[t]he basis for the
    Court’s ruling is set out in greater detail in the record of the
    hearing.” Id. ¶ 19 (quotation simplified). Similarly here, the trial
    court’s written ruling is brief, comprising only two substantive
    paragraphs, and specifically references “the reasons stated at the
    hearing” as part of the basis for the decision. Where Pharmacy
    challenges the trial court’s ruling to exclude Pharmacy Expert,
    and the court’s written ruling specifically references “the reasons
    stated at the hearing,” and Pharmacy fails to provide us with a
    transcript of that hearing, Pharmacy has—like the appellant in
    Gines—failed to meet its burden of persuasion on appeal.
    20160558-CA                     29               
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    pursuant to the election of remedies doctrine, but affirm the trial
    court’s decision based on the economic loss rule.
    1
    ¶64 A party to a lawsuit cannot have a double recovery for a
    single loss. Brigham City Sand & Gravel v. Machinery Ctr. Inc., 
    613 P.2d 510
    , 511–12 (Utah 1980) (holding that a party cannot
    “recover for the value of his property” and then also “recover
    the property”); see also Helf v. Chevron U.S.A. Inc., 
    2015 UT 81
    ,
    ¶ 68, 
    361 P.3d 63
     (stating that “[i]f a defendant wrongfully
    retains possession of a plaintiff’s cow, . . . the plaintiff may not
    recover both the cow and the reasonable value of the cow,” and
    that the plaintiff “must elect one of these two remedies”
    (emphasis in original)). To prevent this, a defendant can invoke,
    and courts can apply, the doctrine of election of remedies. This
    doctrine “is a technical rule of procedure and its purpose is not
    to prevent recourse to any remedy, but to prevent double redress
    for a single wrong.” Royal Resources, Inc. v. Gibralter Fin. Corp.,
    
    603 P.2d 793
    , 794 (Utah 1979).
    ¶65 Prior to the advent of rule 8 of the Utah Rules of Civil
    Procedure, which allows a party to “state legal and equitable
    claims . . . regardless of consistency,” 
    id.
     R. 8(e) (emphasis added), a
    party had to elect its remedy (i.e., choose between theories of
    recovery that potentially relied on inconsistent facts) upon the
    filing of a complaint, Helf, 
    2015 UT 81
    , ¶ 72. Modern pleading
    rules, however, as exemplified by rule 8, “dictate that a court
    may not require a plaintiff to elect between inconsistent claims
    prior to trial.” Id. ¶ 76.
    ¶66 Our supreme court recently discussed the election of
    remedies doctrine at length. See generally id. There, a worker was
    injured “by a poisonous gas” after she added “sulfuric acid to an
    open-air pit containing waste products from [an oil] refinery.” Id.
    ¶ 1. The worker sought and received workers’ compensation
    benefits, and then later sued her employer in district court,
    alleging that the employer was liable for an intentional tort. Id.
    ¶¶ 1, 18. The court discussed the fact that the worker’s two
    20160558-CA                       30                
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    remedies were inconsistent: in her workers’ compensation case,
    which began in administrative proceedings, the worker was
    entitled to compensation only if the incident was “an accident,”
    but in her district court case, the worker was entitled to
    compensation only if the incident constituted an “intentional
    tort” on the part of the employer. Id. ¶ 78. The court also noted
    that, as a practical matter, the worker was not able to pursue
    these two remedies as alternatives in a single lawsuit, because
    the workers’ compensation case and the district court case had to
    be pursued in separate fora. Id. ¶ 79. The court nonetheless held
    that the worker could indeed pursue both remedies, id. ¶ 86, and
    summarized the election of remedies doctrine as follows:
    As an equitable judicial principle, the election of
    remedies doctrine should be applied to produce
    fair outcomes for litigants. It certainly applies to
    prevent the worker from obtaining a double
    recovery or recovering two inconsistent remedies.
    But it should not be applied to force the worker to
    make a binding election before knowing how a
    jury will resolve an intentional tort claim.
    Id. ¶ 85; see also id. ¶ 79 (stating that “[i]f these two remedies
    could be pursued in a single forum, the answer would be
    simple” in that “[t]he worker could plead” both claims “in the
    alternative,” and then “after the fact-finder made a final
    determination regarding the nature of the injury, the worker
    would elect the remedy available under the facts found”).
    ¶67 In this case, the trial court dismissed Pharmacy’s fraud-
    based claims because it perceived Pharmacy’s claims as in
    tension with one another: to prevail on its contract-based claims,
    Pharmacy would need to prove the existence of the contract and
    rely upon its efficacy for recovery, but to prevail on its fraud-
    based claims, Pharmacy would need to prove that it had been
    defrauded in entering into the contract and would be asking for
    rescission as its remedy. The trial court concluded that Pharmacy
    was required to either affirm the contract and seek damages for
    20160558-CA                    31              
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    breach, or avoid the contract and seek reliance and/or punitive
    damages for fraud. The court then found that Pharmacy chose
    “to affirm its contract with [Nursing Home]” and “elected
    money damages as the remedy for [Nursing Home’s] alleged
    breach” of the contract. Based on what it viewed as Pharmacy’s
    “election of remedies,” the trial court then dismissed all of
    Pharmacy’s fraud-based causes of action.
    ¶68 This ruling was at odds with Helf. Rule 8(e) permits
    Pharmacy to pursue inconsistent theories at trial (i.e., breach of
    contract and fraudulent inducement), and Pharmacy should not
    have had to elect its remedy until after the jury returned a
    verdict on those theories. See Helf, 
    2015 UT 81
    , ¶¶ 79, 86 (noting
    that the worker “may not retain the inconsistent workers’
    compensation benefits and an award of tort damages” but that
    the worker only had to “elect” her remedy after the jury or
    administrative body determined the outcomes of those
    respective proceedings); see also id. ¶ 71 (stating that “if a
    plaintiff obtains a judgment authorizing a writ of replevin for the
    return of a cow wrongfully obtained by a defendant, the election
    is not final until the cow is returned,” because “[i]f the plaintiff
    later discovers that the cow had died while in the defendant’s
    possession, the plaintiff may still pursue a claim for payment of
    the reasonable value of the cow”). The trial court therefore erred
    in dismissing Pharmacy’s fraud-based claims prior to trial under
    the doctrine of election of remedies.
    2
    ¶69 We can nevertheless affirm the trial court’s dismissal of
    Pharmacy’s tort claims if those claims are barred by the
    economic loss rule, which was an alternative basis for the trial
    court’s decision to dismiss those claims. We conclude that, at
    root, Pharmacy’s fraud-based claims are based on alleged
    breaches of the same duties that Nursing Home agreed to
    assume under the parties’ contract. See Hermansen v. Tasulis, 
    2002 UT 52
    , ¶ 16, 
    48 P.3d 235
    . Accordingly, because no “independent
    duty” is at issue, those claims fall within the purview of the
    20160558-CA                     32               
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    economic loss rule, and the trial court therefore did not err when
    it dismissed Pharmacy’s tort claims pursuant to that doctrine.
    ¶70 “The economic loss rule is a judicially created doctrine
    that marks the fundamental boundary between contract law,
    which protects expectancy interests created through agreement
    between the parties, and tort law, which protects individuals
    and their property from physical harm by imposing a duty of
    reasonable care.” SME Indus., Inc. v. Thompson, Ventulett,
    Stainback & Assocs., Inc., 
    2001 UT 54
    , ¶ 32, 
    28 P.3d 669
    . When
    applied, “the economic loss rule prohibits tort claims for purely
    economic loss.” Gables at Sterling Village Homeowners Ass’n, Inc. v.
    Castlewood-Sterling Village I, LLC, 
    2018 UT 04
    , ¶ 47, 
    417 P.3d 95
    .
    Utah’s “formulation of the economic loss rule is that a party
    suffering only economic loss from the breach of an express or
    implied contractual duty may not assert a tort claim for such a
    breach absent an independent duty of care under tort law.”
    Hermansen, 
    2002 UT 52
    , ¶ 16 (emphasis in original) (quotation
    simplified).
    ¶71 Thus, to determine whether the economic loss rule bars a
    cause of action sounding in tort, we focus on the nature of the
    duties existing between the parties, and specifically on whether
    the duties existing between the parties arise as a result of the
    parties’ contract or arise from other non-contractual sources. See
    Davencourt at Pilgrims Landing Homeowners Ass’n v. Davencourt at
    Pilgrims Landing, LC, 
    2009 UT 65
    , ¶ 27, 
    221 P.3d 234
     (“Where the
    economic loss rule is at issue, the initial inquiry becomes
    whether a duty exists independent of any contractual obligations
    between the parties.” (quotation simplified)). If the tort alleges a
    breach of a duty that the contract itself imposes, then the claim is
    barred; the plaintiff can sue only for contract-based remedies. See
    Grynberg v. Questar Pipeline Co., 
    2003 UT 8
    , ¶ 52, 
    70 P.3d 1
     (noting
    that “failure to properly perform a duty assigned by the contract
    is a breach of that contract and nothing more”); see also id. ¶ 43
    (“[O]nce there is a contract, any tort claim must be premised
    upon an independent duty that exists apart from the contract.
    20160558-CA                     33               
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    All contract duties, and all breaches of those duties—no matter
    how intentional—must be enforced under contract law.”).
    ¶72 However, if the tort claim alleges a breach of a duty that is
    separate and distinct from any contractual duty existing between
    the parties, then the claim is unaffected by the economic loss
    rule; the plaintiff can proceed with that separate, non-contract
    claim. See Gables, 
    2018 UT 04
    , ¶ 48 (“If we find that an
    independent duty exists under the law, the economic loss rule
    does not bar a tort claim because the claim is based on a
    recognized independent duty of care and thus does not fall
    within the scope of the rule.” (quotation simplified)).
    ¶73 In applying the economic loss rule, our supreme court has
    occasionally suggested, in dicta, that intentional torts—and
    fraud claims specifically—fall categorically outside the ambit of
    the rule. See SME Indus. Inc., 
    2001 UT 54
    , ¶ 32 n.8, (suggesting
    that “plaintiffs may recover purely economic losses in cases
    involving intentional torts such as fraud, business disparagement,
    and intentional interference with contract” (emphasis added));
    Davencourt, 
    2009 UT 65
    , ¶ 38 (stating that, “despite the recovery
    of what would otherwise be considered economic loss damages,
    claims arising under a fiduciary duty, similar to fraud claims, lie
    outside the scope of the economic loss rule” (emphasis added)).
    Pharmacy relies on these broad assertions in support of its
    position that its fraud-based claims are not barred by the
    economic loss rule. However, we consider Pharmacy’s reliance
    on these statements misplaced.
    ¶74 As an initial matter, the footnote in SME Industries was
    written prior to Hermansen, in which our supreme court adopted
    the “independent duty” formulation of the economic loss rule.
    See Hermansen, 
    2002 UT 52
    , ¶¶ 16–17. Indeed, our supreme court
    has itself disavowed its SME Industries footnote for that precise
    reason. See Grynberg, 
    2003 UT 8
    , ¶ 49 (stating that, because SME
    Industries was decided “before we adopted” the independent
    duty formulation, “we do not find [the SME Industries footnote
    to be] persuasive authority”); see also HealthBanc Int’l, LLC v.
    Synergy Worldwide, Inc., 
    208 F. Supp. 3d 1193
    , 1197, 1199 (D. Utah
    20160558-CA                    34               
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    2016) (Parrish, J.) (stating that the Utah Supreme Court, in
    Grynberg, “specifically addressed” the SME Industries footnote
    and “repudiated” it). And we also conclude that Pharmacy
    places more weight upon the supreme court’s passing statement
    in Davencourt than it is able to bear. We view that statement as
    simply indicating that fraud-based claims can lie outside the
    scope of the economic loss rule, as long as they are grounded in
    an independent, non-contractual duty that is separate from the
    duties agreed upon in the parties’ operative contract. This
    reading is consistent with not only other Utah Supreme Court
    cases, but also with decisions from federal courts applying Utah
    law and with case law from other jurisdictions.15
    ¶75 For instance, in Grynberg, the Utah Supreme Court was
    asked to consider whether various tort claims fell within the
    economic loss rule. In that case, Questar (and/or its predecessor-
    in-interest) entered into contracts with a supplier of natural gas,
    whereunder Questar agreed to purchase natural gas at a price to
    be “determined by a formula with three variables: price, volume,
    and gross heating value.” See Grynberg, 
    2003 UT 8
    , ¶ 4. The
    supplier sued Questar, alleging that “by mismeasuring and
    wrongly analyzing the heating content of the gas,” Questar
    breached the terms of the contract. Id. ¶ 46 (quotation
    simplified). In addition to claims for breach of contract, the
    15. The Utah legislature has codified the economic loss rule, at
    least as applied to design defect and construction cases. See Utah
    Code Ann. § 78B-4-513 (LexisNexis 2012). That statute states that
    “nothing in this section precludes” a plaintiff in a design defect
    or construction case “from bringing . . . another cause of action
    . . . based on an intentional or willful breach of a duty existing in
    law.” Id. § 78B-4-513(5). To the extent that this statutory
    subsection could be construed as a broad exception to the
    economic loss rule for intentional torts, see HealthBanc Int’l, LLC
    v. Synergy Worldwide, Inc., 
    208 F. Supp. 3d 1193
    , 1198 n.1 (D. Utah
    2016), that exception would not apply here, because this case
    does not involve claims for design or construction defect.
    20160558-CA                     35               
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    supplier also brought fraud-based claims, including negligent or
    intentional misrepresentation and fraud. Id. ¶ 13. However, the
    fraud-based claims “also allege[d] mismeasurement and/or
    wrongful analysis of the heating content, the same conduct that
    is asserted in the contract claim.” Id. ¶ 46. Accordingly, our
    supreme court held that all of the supplier’s tort claims were
    barred by the economic loss rule, because “[t]he fact that the
    exact same conduct is described in both the contract and tort
    claims, and the exact same facts and circumstances are at play, is
    indicative of the overlapping duties in this case.” Id. ¶ 53.16
    ¶76 This same approach has consistently been followed by
    federal courts applying Utah law: those courts have examined
    fraud claims and other intentional torts through the
    “independent duty” lens, and have held that tort claims—even
    intentional tort claims such as fraud—are barred by the
    economic loss rule if those claims are grounded in the same
    duties that exist by virtue of the parties’ contract. See, e.g.,
    HealthBanc, 208 F. Supp. 3d at 1197, 1199–1200 (dismissing a
    claim for constructive fraud pursuant to the economic loss rule,
    because the constructive fraud claim was seeking “a tort remedy
    for breaches of duties imposed by” contract, and because there
    was no independent duty); Anapoell v. American Express Bus. Fin.
    16. The Grynberg court applied Wyoming law, not Utah law. See
    Grynberg v. Questar Pipeline Co., 
    2003 UT 8
    , ¶ 40, 
    70 P.3d 1
    .
    However, the court interpreted Wyoming law to be governed by
    the same “independent duty” principles that govern Utah law in
    this area. 
    Id.
     ¶ 43 (citing Snyder v. Lovercheck, 
    992 P.2d 1079
    ,
    1087–88 (Wyo. 1999), and stating that “the underlying premise of
    the economic loss doctrine” is “identification of the underlying
    duties governing the parties’ relationship”). As discussed, the
    court also took pains to specifically disavow its own footnote
    from SME Industries regarding intentional torts. Id. ¶ 49. Even if
    not strictly binding, we consider the court’s opinion in Grynberg
    to be very useful guidance regarding our supreme court’s view
    of the economic loss rule under Utah law.
    20160558-CA                    36              
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    Corp., No. 2:07-CV-198, 
    2007 WL 4270548
    , *6–7 (D. Utah Nov. 30,
    2007) (citing Grynberg and stating that the economic loss rule
    “applies to claims for intentional, as well as non-intentional,
    torts,” and dismissing the plaintiff’s tort claims under the
    economic loss rule because they were “part and parcel of the
    rights set forth in the” contract, and therefore were not based on
    any “duty independent of the” contract); Associated Diving
    & Marine Contractors, LC v. Granite Constr. Co., No. 2:01-CV-330,
    
    2003 WL 25424908
    , *6–7 (D. Utah July 11, 2003) (dismissing some
    of the plaintiff’s tort claims because those claims did not
    “allege anything different” than was alleged in the breach of
    contract claim, and stating that “[h]ow [the defendant]
    went about breaching that [contractual] duty, whether by
    negligence, inadvertence, misunderstanding, concealment, or
    misrepresentation is not legally supportive of a separate legal
    duty sounding in tort,” but allowing a claim for fraud in the
    inducement to proceed, because that claim included allegations
    that the defendant “committed a tort before the contract was
    ever entered into” by allegedly misrepresenting “facts before
    the” contract was awarded).17
    ¶77 Under these legal principles, to determine whether the
    economic loss rule bars the fraud-based claims that Pharmacy
    has brought in this case, we must focus on whether those claims
    17. Persuasive authority from other jurisdictions is in accord. See,
    e.g., United Vaccines, Inc. v. Diamond Animal Health, Inc., 
    409 F. Supp. 2d 1083
    , 1093 (W.D. Wis. 2006) (holding that there is a
    “narrow exception” to the economic loss rule for fraud-based
    claims when such claims are “extraneous to, rather than
    interwoven with, the contract”); Huron Tool and Eng’g Co. v.
    Precision Consulting Services, Inc., 
    532 N.W.2d 541
    , 545 (Mich. Ct.
    App. 1995) (holding that fraud-based claims that are
    “undergirded by factual allegations identical to those supporting
    their breach of contract [claims]” are barred by the economic loss
    rule, but that fraud-based claims that are “extraneous to the
    contract” are not (quotation simplified)).
    20160558-CA                     37               
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    allege breaches of duties that are extraneous to the parties’
    contract, or whether those claims allege simply that contractual
    duties were breached through misrepresentation or fraud. Such
    an inquiry requires us to carefully examine the specific claims
    Pharmacy makes in support of its fraud-based claims.
    ¶78 Pharmacy’s tort claims all contain similar allegations: that
    Nursing Home “represented to [Pharmacy] that [it] had the
    ability to comply and perform in accordance with the terms” of
    the parties’ contract, that it “would comply and perform in
    accordance with the terms” of the parties’ contract, and that
    those representations were false because Nursing Home never
    intended to honor the contract and instead was simply using its
    contractual negotiations with Pharmacy to leverage a better deal
    with its existing provider.18 It is evident, however, that these
    allegations amount to nothing more than an assertion that
    Nursing Home promised that it could and would comply with
    the terms of the parties’ contract, and that it broke those
    promises. These are quintessential breach of contract allegations,
    and they do not materially differ from the allegations Pharmacy
    makes to support its claim for breach of contract.
    ¶79 Notably, Pharmacy does not allege that Nursing Home
    made any other false representations—other than that it would
    comply with the terms of the contract—that were specifically
    intended to induce Pharmacy to enter into the contract. See
    18. The allegations undergirding Pharmacy’s claims for fraud in
    the inducement, intentional misrepresentation, and negligent
    misrepresentation are nearly identical. The allegations
    undergirding its claim for constructive fraud are phrased a bit
    differently, but the differences are ultimately immaterial. As part
    of that claim, Pharmacy alleges that Nursing Home had a duty
    to disclose to Pharmacy that it “would not terminate [its]
    apparent contract” with its existing provider, and that Nursing
    Home “had no intention of complying and performing in
    accordance with the terms” of the parties’ contract.
    20160558-CA                    38               
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    Huron Tool and Eng’g Co. v. Precision Consulting Services, Inc., 
    532 N.W.2d 541
    , 546 (Mich. Ct. App. 1995) (dismissing plaintiff’s
    fraud in the inducement claim because “plaintiff’s allegations of
    fraud are not extraneous to the contractual dispute”).19 This case
    is therefore materially indistinguishable from Grynberg, where
    our supreme court concluded that “[t]he fact that the exact same
    conduct is described in both the contract and tort claims, and the
    exact same facts and circumstances are at play, is indicative of
    the overlapping duties in this case.” 
    2003 UT 8
    , ¶ 53. In Grynberg,
    the supreme court affirmed a trial court’s dismissal of a
    plaintiff’s tort claims under the economic loss rule under such
    circumstances, and we are compelled to do the same in this case.
    C
    ¶80 Pharmacy’s final argument is that the trial court erred in
    determining that it was not entitled to any prejudgment interest,
    19. If a plaintiff alleges that the defendant induced it to enter into
    a contract by making misrepresentations regarding facts not
    incorporated into the contract, then the plaintiff’s fraud in the
    inducement claim would not be barred by the economic loss
    rule. To give one hypothetical example, if Pharmacy had
    informed Nursing Home that the contract only made financial
    sense for Pharmacy if Nursing Home had over 200 patients, and
    Nursing Home falsely represented that it did, and Pharmacy
    then entered into a “requirements” contract in reliance on that
    representation, Pharmacy’s claim for fraud in the inducement
    would not be barred by the economic loss rule, because the
    representation in question was made prior to entering into the
    contract, and was a representation that went beyond simply
    promising to deliver the contractual goods. Here, the only
    misrepresentation to which Pharmacy can point is that Nursing
    Home promised to honor the contract and then failed to do so.
    Under these circumstances, Pharmacy’s tort claims simply do
    not stem from an “independent duty” separate from the duties
    imposed by the parties’ contract.
    20160558-CA                      39               
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    regardless of the rate. We conclude that the trial court’s decision
    was correct.
    ¶81 Under Utah law, courts “award prejudgment interest in
    cases where damages are complete and can be measured by
    fixed rules of evidence and known standards of value.” Smith v.
    Fairfax Realty, Inc., 
    2003 UT 41
    , ¶ 17, 
    82 P.3d 1064
     (quotation
    simplified). In contrast, courts will not award prejudgment
    interest in cases where the trier of fact has to use its “best
    judgment in assessing the amount to be allowed for past as well
    as for future injury.” USA Power, LLC v. PacifiCorp, 
    2016 UT 20
    ,
    ¶ 100, 
    372 P.3d 629
     (quotation simplified). The question
    presented here is whether Pharmacy’s damages award for lost
    profits is the sort of damage that “can be measured by fixed
    rules of evidence and known standards of value,” or whether it
    is the sort of damage that can only be assessed by using
    nebulous “best judgment” criteria.
    ¶82 Our supreme court has stated that, “[a]lthough not per se
    excluded, we are generally reluctant to award prejudgment
    interest for unrealized profits.” 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified). This is
    because such losses “do not represent an actual, ascertainable
    loss”; rather, they are a representation of the factfinder’s “best
    approximation of that loss.” 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified). As a
    result, “the very nature of lost future profits injects an air of
    uncertainty and speculation into the calculation of damages.” 
    Id.
    (quotation simplified). Therefore, “evidence that is sufficient to
    permit a jury to consider whether to award damages for lost
    profits may still be insufficient to justify an award of
    prejudgment interest.” Id. ¶ 102.
    ¶83 For example, in USA Power, our supreme court held that
    prejudgment interest on an award of lost profits was
    inappropriate in a case where a jury found that the defendant
    misappropriated a trade secret and breached a confidentiality
    and non-disclosure agreement, id. ¶ 26, because the plaintiff
    business’s project “was not an established business with a long-
    term history of profits, there was no contract specifying the
    amount of profit [the plaintiff] would have gotten if [the
    20160558-CA                     40               
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    defendant] had not breached, and it is uncertain whether [the
    plaintiff] would have actually obtained” the additional contracts
    upon which the damages computation was based, id. ¶ 101.
    ¶84 By contrast, however, our supreme court has recognized
    that prejudgment interest is sometimes appropriate on an award
    of lost profits, if the lost profits calculation is based on “known,
    calculable figures” and is shown to be non-speculative. See Encon
    Utah, LLC v. Fluor Ames Kraemer, LLC, 
    2009 UT 7
    , ¶ 60, 
    210 P.3d 263
    . In that case, the plaintiff was seeking “recovery of damages
    for a completed percentage of work on a fixed-price contract and
    for profits on that work at a rate of 10%.” 
    Id.
     The defendant
    argued that prejudgment interest was not appropriate in that
    case, in part because the plaintiff was seeking recovery of lost
    profits. Id. ¶ 59. The supreme court was unpersuaded, on the
    facts of that case, concluding that “the profits [the plaintiff] seeks
    are known, calculable figures and are not similar to the
    speculative future profits that were at issue” in the cases cited by
    the defendant. Id. ¶ 60. Moreover, the supreme court noted that,
    “the [trial] court was not left to its best judgment to ascertain
    damages,” but instead “the court reviewed the terms of [the
    plaintiff’s] fixed price contract, the percentage of work [it]
    completed, and noted that the parties agreed that 10% profit on
    that work was reasonable.” Id. ¶ 65. The supreme court affirmed
    the trial court’s conclusion that prejudgment interest was
    appropriate in that case. Id. ¶ 69.
    ¶85 This case has much more in common with USA Power
    than it does with Encon. In this case, as in USA Power, the
    plaintiff (here, Pharmacy) was not an established business with a
    long-term history of profits, and there was no contract specifying
    the amount of profit Pharmacy would have received in the event
    Nursing Home breached the contract. See USA Power, 
    2016 UT 20
    , ¶ 101. Also, neither Katschke nor Damages Expert offered a
    damages analysis grounded in “mathematical accuracy,” id.
    ¶ 100; both made a number of assumptions that called into
    question the firmness of their respective calculations. In the end,
    the jury came up with a figure that neither witness had
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    discussed and that neither side’s attorney advocated for at
    closing. Under these circumstances, this case falls within USA
    Power’s general rule that prejudgment interest should not be
    awarded “for unrealized profits” because “damages in [such]
    cases do not represent an actual, ascertainable loss” but instead
    “represent the fact-finder’s best approximation of that loss.” 
    Id.
    (quotation simplified).
    ¶86 Accordingly, the trial court correctly determined not to
    award prejudgment interest on Pharmacy’s lost profits.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶87 With regard to Nursing Home’s appeal, we conclude that
    the trial court had the discretion to determine whether
    inconsistencies existed in the jury’s answers on the special
    verdict form and, as long as the jury remained empaneled, had
    the discretion to ask the jury to re-deliberate regarding any
    inconsistencies. The trial court properly asked the jury to
    reconsider its potentially inconsistent answers regarding mutual
    mistake, breach, and damages, but the trial court abused its
    discretion in allowing the jury to re-deliberate regarding the
    amount of damages.
    ¶88 With regard to Pharmacy’s cross-appeal, we conclude that
    the trial court acted within its discretion in excluding the
    testimony of Pharmacy Expert. We further conclude that the trial
    court should not have dismissed Pharmacy’s fraud-based claims
    based on the election of remedies doctrine, but nonetheless
    properly dismissed those claims under the economic loss rule.
    Finally, we conclude that the trial court correctly determined not
    to award prejudgment interest on Pharmacy’s damages award.
    ¶89 We therefore affirm in part and reverse in part the trial
    court’s orders, vacate the trial court’s judgment, and remand the
    case to the trial court for the limited purpose of entering
    judgment in favor of Pharmacy on its breach of contract claim in
    an amount consistent with the jury’s original damages award
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    KTM Health Care v. SG Nursing Home
    ($143,989 in lost profits, and $0 in consequential damages), but
    without attorney fees.
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