Jensen v. Cannon ( 2020 )


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    2020 UT App 124
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    JODI JENSEN,
    Appellant and Cross-appellee,
    v.
    GARY CANNON,
    Appellee and Cross-appellant.
    Opinion
    No. 20190433-CA
    Filed August 27, 2020
    Third District Court, Salt Lake Department
    The Honorable Patrick Corum
    No. 160904276
    Bruce M. Pritchett Jr. and Robert D. Strieper,
    Attorneys for Appellant and Cross-appellee
    Julianne P. Blanch, Alissa M. Mellem, and Aaron
    Worthen, Attorneys for Appellee and
    Cross-appellant
    JUDGE JILL M. POHLMAN authored this Opinion, in which
    JUDGE DAVID N. MORTENSEN concurred. JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS
    concurred in part and concurred in the result, with opinion.
    POHLMAN, Judge:
    ¶1     Jodi Jensen and Gary Cannon divorced in March 1998.
    More than a decade later, Jensen filed an independent action
    seeking relief from the parties’ divorce decree on the basis that
    Cannon failed to disclose certain assets during the divorce
    proceedings. The district court largely resolved the dispute in
    Cannon’s favor through summary judgment and a bench trial. In
    this appeal and cross-appeal, Jensen and Cannon challenge
    several of the district court’s rulings resolving Jensen’s claims
    and denying Cannon’s motions. We affirm the challenged
    rulings.
    Jensen v. Cannon
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2     Jensen and Cannon married in 1987 and divorced in 1998.
    Before the parties divorced, they entered into a settlement
    agreement resolving “any and all disputes” regarding “the
    distribution of real and personal property acquired by them
    during the course of their marriage” and dividing identified
    assets. (Cleaned up.) The agreement was incorporated into the
    divorce decree.
    ¶3     Some years later, Jensen began to suspect that Cannon
    had not disclosed all of his assets during the divorce
    proceedings. She accordingly filed suit against Cannon in 2009,
    alleging that Cannon had committed fraud in not disclosing
    certain assets. After several years, that case was dismissed
    without prejudice by stipulation. In 2016, within one year of the
    dismissal, Jensen re-filed her complaint, again alleging that
    Cannon committed fraud by not disclosing certain assets during
    the divorce proceedings. She subsequently amended her
    complaint, adding claims for breach of the covenant of good
    faith and fair dealing, negligent misrepresentation, unjust
    enrichment, accounting, and fraudulent nondisclosure.
    ¶4     As relevant here, Jensen alleged that at the time of their
    divorce, Cannon held an interest in two assets: a 3.89-acre parcel
    of real property Jensen has identified on appeal as the Riverton
    Corners property and an option (the Option Agreement) to
    purchase a different 3.4-acre parcel of land Jensen has identified
    as the Green property. Jensen claimed that Cannon did not
    disclose either asset during the divorce proceedings.
    ¶5     Cannon moved for summary judgment on all Jensen’s
    claims. He argued that Jensen’s non-fraud claims should be
    dismissed because they constituted an “improper[] attempt to
    modify the divorce decree” and were untimely and improper
    under rule 60 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. He also
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    argued that Jensen could not prove her fraud-related claims by
    clear and convincing evidence. And he requested attorney fees
    pursuant to Utah Code section 78B-5-825, contending that
    Jensen’s claims both lacked merit and were brought in bad faith.
    ¶6      The district court granted the motion in part and denied it
    in part. The court awarded Cannon judgment on some of
    Jensen’s fraud-based claims but concluded that Jensen could
    “proceed with her [fraud] and [fraudulent nondisclosure] causes
    of action” with respect to the Riverton Corners and Green
    properties. The court also dismissed Jensen’s claims for breach of
    the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligent
    misrepresentation, accounting, and unjust enrichment. The court
    rendered no ruling on Cannon’s request for bad faith attorney
    fees in its summary judgment ruling.
    ¶7     The case proceeded to a bench trial. At the trial’s
    conclusion, the court determined that Jensen had not carried her
    burden of proving her fraud claims by clear and convincing
    evidence. The court stated that the central issue on the fraud
    claims was whether Cannon knew the Option Agreement and
    the Riverton Corners property were assets “that he needed to
    disclose during the divorce.” The court found that Cannon
    credibly testified that he did not know he was required to
    disclose those assets and that he therefore did not have the intent
    required for fraud.
    ¶8     The district court also denied Cannon’s request for bad
    faith attorney fees under Utah Code section 78B-5-825. It
    determined that the case was “brought in good faith” and on
    that basis denied the request.
    ¶9   Finally, the district court also denied a motion filed by
    Cannon for sanctions against Jensen under rule 11 of the Utah
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    Rules of Civil Procedure. 1 During the proceedings, Jensen had
    filed a motion in limine requesting that the court sanction
    Cannon under rule 37 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure for
    spoliation of the Option Agreement. She asked the court to
    presume that a physical copy of the Option Agreement once
    existed and to impose an adverse inference in her favor that had
    the document been disclosed, it would have shown that Cannon
    “had an ownership interest in the Green Property during the
    marriage that was not disclosed.” The court denied Jensen’s
    motion.
    ¶10 In response, Cannon filed a motion requesting that Jensen
    be sanctioned under rule 11 for filing the spoliation motion,
    claiming that at the time Jensen filed the motion she did not
    have, and was not likely to attain, evidentiary support for her
    contentions. See Utah R. Civ. P. 11(b)(3), (c) (providing that, by
    presenting a motion to the court, the attorney certifies that,
    having conducted a reasonable inquiry, “the allegations and
    other factual contentions have evidentiary support or . . . are
    likely to have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportunity
    for further investigation or discovery,” and that an “appropriate
    sanction” may be imposed for a violation of subsection (b)).
    Following trial, the court determined that while there “may not
    be direct evidentiary support for” the contention that the Option
    Agreement had been in writing and that Cannon had spoliated
    the document, “there [were] inferences” supporting the
    contention, and on that basis denied Cannon’s motion.
    ¶11 Jensen now appeals the district court’s conclusion that she
    failed to prove her fraudulent nondisclosure claim with respect
    1. We read Cannon’s motion for rule 11 sanctions as against
    Jensen’s counsel rather than against Jensen herself. However, the
    parties on appeal treat the motion as though it were filed against
    Jensen, and we accordingly follow suit.
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    to the Option Agreement and the Riverton Corners property. She
    also appeals the court’s dismissal of her non-fraud claims on
    summary judgment. Cannon cross-appeals, challenging the
    court’s denial of his request for bad faith attorney fees and for
    rule 11 sanctions based on Jensen’s spoliation motion. Cannon
    also requests attorney fees on appeal under rule 33 of the Utah
    Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶12 Jensen first challenges the district court’s determination
    that she did not prove her fraudulent nondisclosure claim
    regarding the Riverton Corners property and the Option
    Agreement, arguing that the court misconstrued the elements of
    the claim. We review a district court’s legal conclusions for
    correctness. See Reynolds v. MacFarlane, 
    2014 UT App 57
    , ¶ 11,
    
    322 P.3d 755
    ; see also Nielsen v. Spencer, 
    2008 UT App 375
    , ¶ 10,
    
    196 P.3d 616
     (stating that we review issues concerning the
    elements of a tort claim for correctness).
    ¶13 Jensen next challenges the district court’s dismissal of her
    non-fraud claims on summary judgment. She argues that the
    district court erroneously dismissed those claims due to its
    misinterpretation of rule 60(d) of the Utah Rules of Civil
    Procedure. Summary judgment should be granted “if the
    moving party shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any
    material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law.” Utah R. Civ. P. 56(a). We review a district court’s
    grant of “summary judgment for correctness, viewing the facts
    and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in the light most
    favorable to the nonmoving party.” Penunuri v. Sundance
    Partners, Ltd., 
    2017 UT 54
    , ¶ 14, 
    423 P.3d 1150
     (cleaned up). And
    we review a district court’s “interpretation of a rule of civil
    procedure for correctness.” Lodge at Westgate Park City Resort
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    & Spa Condo. Ass’n Inc. v. Westgate Resorts Ltd., 
    2019 UT App 36
    ,
    ¶ 18, 
    440 P.3d 793
     (cleaned up).
    ¶14 On cross-appeal, Cannon challenges the district court’s
    denial of his request for attorney fees under Utah Code section
    78B-5-825. Under that section, a court in a civil action “shall
    award reasonable attorney fees to a prevailing party if the court
    determines that the action or defense to the action was without
    merit and not brought or asserted in good faith.” Utah Code
    Ann. § 78B-5-825(1) (LexisNexis 2018). As relevant here, whether
    Jensen acted in good faith is a “question of fact,” and we review
    the district court’s determination on that point for clear error. See
    Bresee v. Barton, 
    2016 UT App 220
    , ¶ 15, 
    387 P.3d 536
     (cleaned
    up); see also Rocky Ford Irrigation Co. v. Kents Lake Reservoir Co.,
    
    2020 UT 47
    , ¶ 77 (affording a “substantial measure of discretion”
    to a district court’s bad faith finding).
    ¶15 Finally, Cannon challenges the district court’s denial of
    his motion for sanctions against Jensen under rule 11 of the Utah
    Rules of Civil Procedure. We review factual findings related to
    the rule 11 determination for clear error and the court’s legal
    conclusions for correctness. See Gillmor v. Family Link, LLC, 
    2012 UT 38
    , ¶ 9, 
    284 P.3d 622
    ; Westmont Mirador LLC v. Shurtliff, 
    2014 UT App 184
    , ¶ 8, 
    333 P.3d 369
    .
    ANALYSIS
    I. Jensen’s Appeal
    A.     Fraudulent Nondisclosure
    ¶16 Jensen challenges the district court’s determination that
    she did not prove all the elements of her fraudulent
    nondisclosure claim by clear and convincing evidence. “To
    prevail on a claim for fraudulent nondisclosure, a plaintiff must
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    prove by clear and convincing evidence that (1) the defendant
    had a legal duty to communicate information, (2) the defendant
    knew of the information he failed to disclose, and (3) the
    nondisclosed information was material.” Anderson v. Kriser, 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶ 22, 
    266 P.3d 819
     (cleaned up); accord Hess v. Canberra
    Dev. Co., 
    2011 UT 22
    , ¶ 29, 
    254 P.3d 161
    ; Mitchell v. Christensen,
    
    2001 UT 80
    , ¶ 9, 
    31 P.3d 572
    .
    ¶17 In evaluating Jensen’s fraudulent nondisclosure claim, the
    district court determined that the “core issue” regarding the
    Option Agreement and the Riverton Corners property was
    whether Cannon knew that they were “asset[s] that he needed to
    disclose during the divorce.” The court found that Cannon
    credibly testified with respect to both “that he did not know” he
    needed to disclose them. Regarding the Option Agreement
    specifically, the court found that Cannon had an “option with
    the Greens[] to act as their real estate agent,” not an option “to
    purchase and hold the land,” and that there was no “clear and
    convincing evidence that [Cannon] knew [the Option
    Agreement] was an asset that would require disclosure” where,
    at the relevant time, “he did not believe the real estate option to
    have value,” given that it “was a potential future interest in
    land.” And for the Riverton Corners property, the court
    determined that “there was no evidence” that Cannon “intended
    to deceive” Jensen about the property. The court found that
    Cannon “convincingly testified” that he “did not view [the
    property] as something he needed to disclose as an asset”
    because he did not believe he owned an interest in it.
    ¶18 Jensen argues that the court “erred when it extended the
    element of knowledge” beyond mere knowledge of the asset to
    Cannon’s knowledge that “he had to disclose the assets.” She
    faults the court for basing its judgment on Cannon’s “testimony
    that he did not believe he had to disclose” the Option Agreement
    and the Riverton Corners property rather than on his knowledge
    of these properties in the abstract. In this respect, she contends
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    that the relevant issue to prove the fraudulent nondisclosure
    claim was simply whether Cannon knew of the Option
    Agreement and the Riverton Corners property, and that it was
    inappropriate for the court to consider Cannon’s subjective belief
    about whether they were “assets” that needed to be disclosed. 2
    ¶19 Jensen’s argument has some appeal. After all, in
    articulating the three-part test applied to fraudulent
    nondisclosure claims, intent to deceive is not identified as an
    element of the tort. See Anderson, 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶ 22. The test
    speaks only of duty, knowledge, and materiality. 
    Id.
     And in that
    respect, the articulation of the tort is similar to constructive
    fraud, which does not require a showing of intent to deceive. See
    Jensen v. IHC Hosps., Inc., 
    944 P.2d 327
    , 339 (Utah 1997)
    (“Constructive fraud requires two elements: (i) a confidential
    relationship between the parties; and (ii) a failure to disclose
    material facts.”); d’Elia v. Rice Dev., Inc., 
    2006 UT App 416
    , ¶ 51,
    
    147 P.3d 515
     (holding that intent to defraud is not an element of
    constructive fraud), holding modified on other grounds by Jones
    & Trevor Mktg., Inc. v. Lowry, 
    2012 UT 39
    , 
    284 P.3d 630
    .
    ¶20 We also recognize that in other jurisdictions, the tort of
    fraudulent nondisclosure has been described a variety of ways,
    some of which do not necessarily depend on establishing a
    fraudulent intent. For example, some courts separately recognize
    the tort of fraudulent concealment, which requires an intent to
    2. Jensen also challenges the court’s conclusion regarding the
    duty element of her fraudulent nondisclosure claim. The court
    determined that Jensen “did not meet her burden of proof in
    establishing” that Cannon had a duty “to disclose any of the
    information she claimed he withheld.” However, because we
    ultimately affirm the district court’s conclusions with respect to
    the knowledge element of her claim, we have no need to address
    Jensen’s arguments regarding the other elements.
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    conceal, and the tort of fraudulent nondisclosure, which requires
    only the breach of a duty to disclose. See United States v. Colton,
    
    231 F.3d 890
    , 898–900 & n.2 (4th Cir. 2000) (explaining the
    difference between fraudulent concealment, which requires an
    intent to deceive, and fraudulent nondisclosure, which requires
    the failure to disclose when there is a duty to do so, and
    collecting cases from jurisdictions that recognize a distinction
    between fraudulent concealment and fraudulent nondisclosure
    on this basis and those that do not); Wells Fargo Bank v. Arizona
    Laborers, Teamsters & Cement Masons Local No. 395 Pension Trust
    Fund, 
    38 P.3d 12
    , 21–22, 35–36 (Ariz. 2002) (en banc) (discussing
    the difference between fraudulent concealment, which requires
    an intent to conceal, and fraudulent nondisclosure, which
    requires only a duty to disclose). See generally Restatement
    (Second) of Torts §§ 550, 551 (Am. Law Inst. 1977) (discussing
    requirements of concealment versus nondisclosure).
    ¶21 Utah, however, does not draw a distinction between the
    torts of fraudulent nondisclosure and fraudulent concealment. In
    this state, “the elements for fraudulent nondisclosure are
    essentially the same as those for fraudulent concealment,” and
    our courts have “sometimes used the names of the two causes of
    action interchangeably.” Anderson, 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶ 22 n.11. And
    while intent is not a listed element of fraudulent nondisclosure
    claims, our supreme court has nevertheless emphasized that
    “fraudulent nondisclosure is an intentional tort” and that “intent
    is the hallmark” of intentional torts. Id. ¶ 26.
    ¶22 In so stating, the Anderson court plainly described the tort
    of fraudulent nondisclosure as dependent on the actor’s intent.
    Id. ¶¶ 25–26; see also Marcantel v. Michael & Sonja Saltman Family
    Trust, No. 2:16-cv-250-DBP, 
    2019 WL 1262648
    , at *5–7, *11 (D.
    Utah Mar. 19, 2019) (discussing Anderson, explaining that
    fraudulent intent is an element of the tort of fraudulent
    nondisclosure, and applying the element of intent accordingly to
    resolve the fraudulent nondisclosure claims at issue). To make
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    this point, the Anderson court contrasted fraudulent
    nondisclosure with negligent nondisclosure, explaining that the
    “essential difference” between the two claims “is the mental
    state of the defendant that the plaintiff must establish in order to
    prevail.” Anderson, 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶ 25. For fraudulent
    nondisclosure, a defendant must have “a willful intent to
    deceive,” while for negligent nondisclosure, the plaintiff “is not
    required to demonstrate any wrongful intent on the part of the
    defendant.” 
    Id.
     (cleaned up); see also Price-Orem Inv. Co. v. Rollins,
    Brown & Gunnell, Inc., 
    713 P.2d 55
    , 59 n.2 (Utah 1986) (explaining
    that “negligent misrepresentation does not require the intentional
    mental state necessary to establish fraud”); Shah v. Intermountain
    Healthcare, Inc., 
    2013 UT App 261
    , ¶ 11, 
    314 P.3d 1079
     (“The
    elements of negligent misrepresentation are similar to those of
    fraud except that negligent misrepresentation does not require
    the intentional mental state necessary to establish fraud.”
    (cleaned up)); Moore v. Smith, 
    2007 UT App 101
    , ¶ 36 n.12, 
    158 P.3d 562
     (stating that the “only difference between” claims for
    negligent misrepresentation and fraudulent concealment is that
    negligent misrepresentation requires a “lesser mental state”).
    ¶23 Applying these principles, we conclude that the district
    court properly considered Cannon’s beliefs—i.e., his mental
    state—in determining whether Cannon knew of the information
    he failed to disclose. To be sure, Cannon knew of the Option
    Agreement and the Riverton Corners property during the
    divorce proceedings. But importantly, the court credited
    Cannon’s testimony that he did not know that the Option
    Agreement and the Riverton Corners property were “asset[s]”
    responsive to Jensen’s discovery request. And because Cannon
    did not know they were responsive to Jensen’s discovery,
    Cannon lacked a “willful intent to deceive,” as is required for
    fraudulent nondisclosure. See Anderson, 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶¶ 25–26
    (cleaned up); see also Marcantel, 
    2019 WL 1262648
    , at *6–7
    (looking at the circumstances surrounding the alleged
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    fraudulent nondisclosure to conclude that a mere knowledge of
    an easement and a failure to disclose it did not amount to
    fraudulent intent).
    ¶24 In his separate opinion, Judge Harris disagrees with our
    interpretation of Anderson. He contends that in applying the
    supreme court’s instruction about willful intent to the
    circumstances of this case, we have “tack[ed] on a new fourth
    element never before discussed as such by any Utah appellate
    opinion.” Infra ¶ 58. We respectfully disagree with Judge
    Harris’s assessment of our analysis. We have not added a fourth
    element to the tort of fraudulent nondisclosure any more than
    the supreme court did in Anderson. Rather, we believe we are
    merely following the lead of Anderson in recognizing that an
    intent to deceive must necessarily inform the application of the
    tort’s three elements.
    ¶25 The court in Anderson addressed the contours of the
    second element of the tort: that “the defendant knew of the
    information he failed to disclose.” 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶¶ 22, 24 (cleaned
    up). In particular, the court resolved “whether satisfaction of this
    element requires a showing of actual, or merely constructive,
    knowledge,” id. ¶ 24, emphasizing that the tort of fraudulent
    nondisclosure is a tort committed by someone acting with
    fraudulent intent, or the intent to deceive, id. ¶¶ 25–26. The court
    then concluded that the tort must require actual knowledge of
    the undisclosed information, because to conclude otherwise
    would overlook the intentional nature of the tort. Id. ¶ 26. The
    court explained it would be “unreasonable and illogical to infer
    that the defendant intended to conceal [a nondisclosed] fact” if
    the defendant did not have actual knowledge of it. Id.
    ¶26 Similarly, here, the three elements of nondisclosure do not
    answer the specific question the district court (and now this
    court) have been called on to resolve: whether satisfaction of the
    knowledge element requires that Cannon knew of the Option
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    Agreement and the Riverton Corners property in the abstract or
    that he knew that the properties were assets as defined by
    Jensen’s discovery requests. To answer that question, we do not
    add a fourth element to the tort. Instead, like the supreme court
    in Anderson, we resolve that unanswered question by
    acknowledging that “fraudulent nondisclosure is an intentional
    tort.” 
    Id.
     And we conclude that when a defendant like Cannon
    lacks the knowledge that a particular property is an asset for
    purposes of discovery (as the district court found), “it is both
    unreasonable and illogical to infer that [he] intended to conceal
    that fact.” 
    Id.
     “Indeed, permitting a plaintiff to state a claim for
    fraudulent nondisclosure without proving actual knowledge on
    the part of the defendant would allow a plaintiff to convert
    merely negligent acts into fraudulent acts.” 
    Id.
    ¶27 Finally, we take no issue with Judge Harris’s conclusion
    that fraudulent intent for purposes of a fraudulent nondisclosure
    claim may be inferred when a plaintiff shows that a defendant
    had actual knowledge of a material fact and failed to disclose
    that fact. See infra ¶¶ 60, 63. The supreme court made that clear
    in Anderson. 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶ 26. But we do not read Anderson as
    requiring such an inference. And we view it as inconsistent with
    the designation of fraudulent nondisclosure as an intentional tort
    to insist that such an inference must be drawn in this case where
    the court found, as a factual matter, that Cannon did not know
    the Option Agreement and the Riverton Corners property were
    assets to be disclosed. Such a conclusion, in our opinion, would
    render Cannon liable for fraudulent nondisclosure even where
    the court found that he carried no fraudulent intent. And that is
    a conclusion we cannot square with Anderson.
    ¶28 For these reasons, we conclude that the court did not
    improperly extend or apply the elements of fraudulent
    nondisclosure in considering Cannon’s beliefs about whether the
    Option Agreement and the Riverton Corners property had to be
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    disclosed. Accordingly, we affirm the court’s judgment on
    Jensen’s fraudulent nondisclosure claim. 3
    B.    Jensen’s Non-fraud Claims
    ¶29 In addition to asserting claims for fraud and fraudulent
    nondisclosure, Jensen sought relief from the divorce decree
    based on theories of negligent misrepresentation, breach of the
    implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, accounting, and
    unjust enrichment (the non-fraud claims). Cannon moved for
    summary judgment on these claims, arguing that they were
    untimely and improper under rule 60(d) of the Utah Rules of
    Civil Procedure. The district court agreed and granted Cannon’s
    motion. The court adopted Cannon’s construction of rule 60(d),
    concluding that “in attacking the underlying settlement
    agreement,” the “only appropriate actions are the fraud related
    claims.”
    ¶30 Jensen challenges the court’s summary judgment
    decision, contending that the plain language of rule 60(d)
    permits parties to seek relief from a judgment based on claims
    3. On appeal, Jensen also asserts claims of error regarding
    related aspects of the court’s fraudulent nondisclosure rulings.
    Jensen challenges the court’s valuation of the Option Agreement,
    its assessment of Cannon’s ownership in the Riverton Corners
    property without reference to partnership law, and its exclusion
    of an amended expert report appraising the value of the
    Riverton Corners property. She additionally challenges the
    court’s alternative determination that all Jensen’s claims are
    barred by the doctrine of laches. However, because we affirm the
    court’s determination that Jensen did not establish her claims of
    fraudulent nondisclosure regarding the Option Agreement and
    the Riverton Corners property by clear and convincing evidence,
    we have no occasion to reach these other claims of error.
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    other than fraud. Although we agree with Jensen that fraud is
    not the only theory allowed in an independent action for relief
    from a judgment, we do not agree that the district court erred in
    granting summary judgment against Jensen on her particular
    non-fraud claims.
    ¶31 Rule 60 recognizes two avenues by which a litigant may
    seek relief from a final judgment. See Pepper v. Zions First Nat’l
    Bank, NA, 
    801 P.2d 144
    , 150 (Utah 1990) (“[D]espite the doctrine
    of res judicata, [rule 60] expressly recognizes two different
    methods for attacking a judgment.”). First, rule 60(b) permits a
    party to move a district court for relief from a judgment based
    on several enumerated grounds, such as excusable neglect,
    newly discovered evidence, and fraud, each of which is subject
    to time constraints set out in subsection 60(c). See Utah R. Civ. P.
    60(b), (c) (requiring a motion for relief from a judgment based on
    grounds such as excusable neglect, newly discovered evidence,
    and fraud to be filed within ninety days of the entry of
    judgment, while a motion based on other reasons under
    subsection (b) must be filed “within a reasonable time”).
    ¶32 Second, rule 60(d) separately recognizes a district court’s
    inherent power to entertain an independent action for relief from
    a judgment. 
    Id.
     R. 60(d); see also State v. Boyden, 
    2019 UT 11
    , ¶ 39,
    
    441 P.3d 737
    ; St. Pierre v. Edmonds, 
    645 P.2d 615
    , 618 (Utah 1982)
    (recognizing a “court’s historic powers to relieve a party” from
    judgment and explaining that rule 60 “does not limit the power
    of a court to entertain an independent action” (cleaned up)).
    Because the availability of an independent action flows from a
    “court’s historic powers to relieve a party” from judgment, the
    time frames set forth in rule 60(c) do not apply. See St. Pierre, 645
    P.2d at 618. “Rather, the doctrine of laches and other equitable
    principles determine the time within which the action must be
    brought.” Id.
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    ¶33 When Jensen discovered Cannon’s alleged fraud, the
    window of time for her to seek relief for that fraud under rule
    60(b) had long since expired. See Utah R. Civ. P. 60(b)(3), (c)
    (providing that a motion for relief from a judgment or order on
    the basis of fraud must be filed “not more than 90 days after
    entry of the judgment or order”). Thus, her only option was to
    seek relief from the divorce decree by filing an independent
    action as endorsed by rule 60(d). And while Jensen originally
    asserted only fraud claims, she later amended her complaint to
    add the non-fraud claims, including a claim for negligent
    misrepresentation. 4
    ¶34 Rule 60(d) states, “This rule does not limit the power of a
    court to entertain an independent action to relieve a party from a
    judgment, order or proceeding or to set aside a judgment for
    fraud upon the court.” 
    Id.
     R. 60(d). “When we interpret a rule of
    civil procedure, we look to the express language of the rule and
    to cases interpreting it.” Drew v. Lee, 
    2011 UT 15
    , ¶ 16, 
    250 P.3d 48
    . The dispute before us centers on the final phrase of the rule:
    “for fraud upon the court.” Jensen argues that the phrase
    modifies only the clause that immediately precedes it—“to set
    aside a judgment”—and thus the rule permits actions “to relieve
    a party from a judgment, order or proceeding” based on causes
    of action other than fraud. The district court and Cannon
    disagree, concluding that “for fraud upon the court” modifies
    the entire provision, meaning the only claim recognizable in an
    independent action for relief from judgment is fraud.
    4. Jensen’s non-fraud claims sound in negligence, contract, and
    equity. Yet on appeal, she makes no distinction between them
    and refers to them collectively as “causes of action based in
    negligence.” Thus, we follow Jensen’s lead and consider her four
    non-fraud claims collectively as based in negligence.
    20190433-CA                    15              
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    ¶35 Neither party dissects the grammar of the sentence; each
    simply insists his or her interpretation is the right one. And, in
    fairness, the sentence could perhaps be read either way. 5 But this
    issue does not come to us on a blank slate. Our supreme court
    has previously endorsed the viability of independent actions for
    relief from a judgment on grounds other than fraud. Thus, on
    this point we agree with Jensen.
    ¶36 In St. Pierre v. Edmonds, 
    645 P.2d 615
     (Utah 1982), the court
    acknowledged the district court’s power to entertain an
    independent action predicated on “duress” arising out of the
    “physical and mental intimidation” directed at the appellant by
    the other party in the underlying suit. 
    Id.
     at 618–20. And in
    Gillmor v. Wright, 
    850 P.2d 431
     (Utah 1993), the court recognized
    accident and mutual mistake as grounds on which an
    independent action may be asserted in equity under rule 60. 6 Id.
    5. The federal counterpart to Utah’s rule 60(d) appears to be
    clearer (at least grammatically) on this point, providing, “This
    rule does not limit a court’s power to: (1) entertain an
    independent action to relieve a party from a judgment, order, or
    proceeding; . . . or (3) set aside a judgment for fraud on the
    court.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(d).
    6. Although Gillmor and St. Pierre were decided under a previous
    version of rule 60, the previous rule’s provision for an
    independent action is nearly identical to the current rule 60(d).
    Compare Utah R. Civ. P. 60(d) (“This rule does not limit the
    power of a court to entertain an independent action to relieve a
    party from a judgment, order or proceeding or to set aside a
    judgment for fraud upon the court.”), with Pepper v. Zions First
    Nat’l Bank, NA, 
    801 P.2d 144
    , 150 n.1 (Utah 1990) (setting forth
    the previous version of rule 60, which provided, at the end of
    subsection (b), “This rule does not limit the power of a court to
    (continued…)
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    at 435–36. In fact, the Gillmor court rejected the appellant’s
    reading of St. Pierre as providing that “an independent action in
    equity is justified only when particularly egregious behavior has
    resulted in an unconscionable judgment or order.” Id. at 435.
    Observing that “St. Pierre involved allegations of fraud upon the
    court,” the court explained, “The case did not state that an
    independent action will only lie for such claims or that such an
    action is no longer viable to remedy errors based on mutual
    mistakes of fact in legal descriptions.” Id. In support, the court
    pointed to its reliance in St. Pierre on federal treatises for the
    proposition that although “relief from a judgment by an
    independent action on the basis of accident or mistake is less
    common than relief on the basis of fraud,” “both accident and
    mistake afford the basis for relief in an appropriate situation.” Id.
    at 435–36 (cleaned up); see also 11 Charles Alan Wright & Arthur
    R. Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure § 2868 (3d ed. 2012)
    (explaining that under federal rule 60(d), “[r]esort to an
    independent action may be had only rarely, and then only under
    unusual and exceptional circumstances,” and that while “[t]he
    most common ground for an independent action is fraud, . . . the
    action also will lie on the basis of mistake”).
    ¶37 Although Gillmor and St. Pierre compel us to conclude
    that “fraud upon the court” is not the only basis for relief from
    judgment in an independent action, Jensen has not persuaded us
    that her negligence-based claims are a viable basis for such relief.
    Rather, our courts have generally rejected the idea that claims
    akin to negligence are adequate to wage an independent
    collateral attack on a judgment.
    (…continued)
    entertain an independent action to relieve a party from a
    judgment, order or proceeding or to set aside a judgment for
    fraud upon the court” (cleaned up)).
    20190433-CA                     17               
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    ¶38 In this respect, the decision in Christensen v. Christensen,
    
    619 P.2d 1372
     (Utah 1980), is noteworthy. There, the court
    rejected an appellant’s attempt to set aside an award of property
    to her former husband based on a claim of negligent
    misrepresentation. 
    Id.
     at 1372–74. The appellant had originally
    argued in her independent action that her ex-husband had
    fraudulently misrepresented the value of certain property—an
    apartment complex—during the divorce proceedings. 
    Id.
     at
    1372–73. After the district court ruled against her on the fraud
    claim, she argued that “even though [the ex-husband’s] conduct
    did not constitute fraud, the Court should have modified the
    original decree and given her part of the equity in the apartment
    complex in light of the disparity between the actual value of the
    property and the value she was led to believe that it had at that
    time.” Id. at 1373. The supreme court rejected her claim. Left
    with only “an alleged nonfraudulent misrepresentation by the
    [ex-husband],” the court held that “[s]uch facts would not justify
    . . . overturning a stipulated property settlement and
    redistributing the property.” Id. The court expressed sympathy
    for the appellant’s position but affirmed the district court, stating
    that it “[could not] now upset a stipulated property settlement
    because of her having relied upon values furnished by her
    husband in an adversary proceeding.” Id. at 1373–74.
    ¶39 To the extent Jensen seeks to rely on an alleged negligent
    misrepresentation during the course of her divorce proceeding,
    in our view, there is no basis on which to distinguish this case
    from Christensen. At the very least, we are aware of no case in
    Utah (nor has Jensen directed us to one) where a court has
    permitted a collateral attack on a judgment through an
    independent action raising only negligence-based claims. 7 Like
    7. This view appears to be consistent with federal law
    interpreting and applying federal rule 60(d). See United States v.
    (continued…)
    20190433-CA                     18               
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    in Christensen, Jensen may have been mistaken as to the value of
    her stipulated property settlement due to the alleged negligent
    misrepresentations of her husband, but such facts are inadequate
    to relieve her from the divorce decree. See id.; see also Pepper, 801
    P.2d at 150–51 (explaining that while rule 60(b) “sets forth
    several grounds for setting aside a judgment by motion,” several
    of those grounds “would not be an adequate ground for an
    independent collateral attack on a judgment,” such as relief
    sought due to excusable neglect); Beagley v. Spurling, No.
    981515-CA, 
    1998 WL 1758335
    , at *1 (Utah Ct. App. 1998) (per
    curiam) (stating that rule 60 “does not authorize an independent
    action asserting the grounds enumerated” in rule 60(b) and that
    “several grounds for setting aside a judgment by motion would
    not be an adequate ground for an independent attack on a
    judgment” (cleaned up)). For these reasons, we conclude that the
    district court did not err in dismissing Jensen’s non-fraud claims.
    (…continued)
    Beggerly, 
    524 U.S. 38
    , 47 (1998) (determining that allegations that
    the government “failed to thoroughly search its records and
    make full disclosure to the Court” regarding a land grant at issue
    did not “approach [the] demanding standard” such that
    “allow[ing] the judgment to stand” would work a “grave
    miscarriage of justice” (cleaned up)); Haik v. Salt Lake City Corp.,
    No. 2:12-CV-997 TS, 
    2013 WL 968141
    , at *7–8 (D. Utah Mar. 12,
    2013) (concluding that allegations that the defendants “failed to
    provide allegedly relevant information” with respect to change
    applications did “not meet the high burden necessary to bring an
    independent action,” as described in Beggerly), aff’d, 567 F. App’x
    621 (10th Cir. 2014). See generally United States v. Buck, 
    281 F.3d 1336
    , 1341 (10th Cir. 2002) (stating that the “independent action”
    for relief under rule 60 is “a narrow avenue” that “should be
    available only to prevent a grave miscarriage of justice” (cleaned
    up)).
    20190433-CA                     19               
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    II. Cannon’s Cross-appeal
    ¶40 In his cross-appeal, Cannon challenges the district court’s
    denial of both his request for bad faith attorney fees under Utah
    Code section 78B-5-825 and his motion for sanctions under rule
    11 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. He also requests an
    award of attorney fees on appeal pursuant to rule 33 of the Utah
    Rules of Appellate Procedure. We address each issue below.
    A.     Bad Faith Attorney Fees
    ¶41 Cannon challenges the district court’s denial of fees under
    section 78B-5-825, claiming that the district court’s finding “that
    the case was brought in good faith” is clearly erroneous.
    (Cleaned up.) To prove his claim, he characterizes the “entire
    case” as “a fishing expedition and an excuse to engage [him] in
    expensive, stressful litigation for a decade.” He also assigns bad-
    faith motives to Jensen, pointing generally to Jensen’s failure to
    actively pursue her case for many years following the filing of
    her first complaint.
    ¶42 To receive an award of attorney fees under section
    78B-5-825, the moving party bears the burden of proving “two
    distinct elements,” namely, that the claim lacks merit and that
    the action was not brought in good faith. In re Discipline of
    Sonnenreich, 
    2004 UT 3
    , ¶ 46, 
    86 P.3d 712
    . Good faith, for
    purposes of the latter element, is defined as having “(1) an
    honest belief in the propriety of the activities in question; (2) no
    intent to take unconscionable advantage of others; and (3) no
    intent to, or knowledge of[,] the fact that the activities in
    question will hinder, delay, or defraud others.” Id. ¶ 48 (cleaned
    up). “To establish a lack of good faith, or ‘bad faith’ under
    section [78B-5-825], a party must prove that one or more of these
    factors is lacking.” Id.
    20190433-CA                      20              
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    ¶43 We conclude that Cannon has not demonstrated that the
    district court erred by denying his request for attorney fees. As
    the party requesting fees under section 78B-5-825, Cannon bore
    the burden of proving that Jensen brought this action in bad
    faith. And although Cannon posits and ascribes to Jensen
    bad-faith motives favorable to his position, he relies exclusively
    on accusation and points to no record evidence demonstrating
    that Jensen did not believe in the propriety of her claims or that
    she filed this action with the intent to “hinder, delay, or
    defraud.” See 
    id.
     (cleaned up). For example, Cannon complains
    that Jensen did not meaningfully investigate her claims until
    filing this action in 2016, but he cites no supporting evidence and
    fails to tie even the allegation to the applicable standard.
    Similarly, Cannon’s generic complaints about Jensen’s failure to
    actively prosecute her 2009 case do little to establish that she
    filed the present case in bad faith.
    ¶44 We review the district court’s finding regarding bad faith
    for clear error, Bresee v. Barton, 
    2016 UT App 220
    , ¶ 15, 
    387 P.3d 536
    , and will reverse that finding only if it is “against the clear
    weight of the evidence” or “we otherwise reach a firm conviction
    that a mistake has been made,” Grimm v. DxNA LLC, 
    2018 UT App 115
    , ¶ 12, 
    427 P.3d 571
     (cleaned up). While litigating with
    Jensen over the course of the last decade has undoubtedly been
    expensive and frustrating for Cannon, his arguments have not
    persuaded us that the court clearly erred in finding that Jensen
    brought this action in good faith. 8
    8. Cannon also challenges the district court’s denial of bad faith
    attorney fees by arguing that Jensen’s action was meritless.
    However, because we have affirmed the court’s good faith
    determination, it is unnecessary for us to address whether
    Jensen’s case lacked merit. See Utah Code Ann. § 78B-5-825(1)
    (LexisNexis 2018) (providing that a district court shall award bad
    (continued…)
    20190433-CA                    21               
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    B.    Rule 11 Sanctions
    ¶45 Cannon next argues that the district court erred
    in denying his motion for sanctions against Jensen under rule
    11 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. He contends
    that Jensen’s motion in limine regarding spoliation contained
    a baseless allegation lacking evidentiary support—that the
    Option Agreement was “in writing at one point,” but “no
    longer exists” because Cannon “intentionally destroyed [it].”
    See Utah R. Civ. P. 11(b)(3) (providing that, by filing a motion
    with the court, the attorney certifies “that to the best of the
    person’s knowledge, information, and belief, formed after an
    inquiry reasonable under the circumstances, . . . the allegations
    and other factual contentions have evidentiary support or, if
    specifically so identified, are likely to have evidentiary support
    after a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or
    discovery”).
    ¶46 The district court denied Cannon’s motion because it
    determined that while “there may not be direct evidentiary
    support for the contention” that Cannon spoliated a written
    version of the Option Agreement, “there are inferences” that
    could support that position. The court reached this conclusion by
    considering the circumstances surrounding the Option
    Agreement, including the parties to the contract and their
    experience, as well as the type of contract involved and statute of
    frauds considerations. In this respect, the court stated that while
    it did not view Jensen’s spoliation motion to be a “good motion,”
    it did not believe the motion rose to the level of a rule 11
    violation.
    (…continued)
    faith attorney fees if it concludes that the case was both without
    merit and brought in bad faith).
    20190433-CA                     22              
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    ¶47 On appeal, Cannon assails the court’s denial of his
    motion, arguing that by accusing him of spoliation, Jensen
    necessarily asserted that he “intentionally and inappropriately”
    destroyed the Option Agreement document and that sanctions
    are merited for such an assertion because it was “baseless.” 9
    Cannon also contends that because Jensen “permitted so many
    years to go by” before actively prosecuting her case, she could
    not “in good faith” ask the district court to infer that Cannon
    spoliated a decades-old document. We disagree.
    ¶48 Our courts have explained that “rule 11(b)(3) sets a
    relatively low standard requiring some factual basis after a
    reasonable inquiry, permitting sanctions against plaintiffs only
    for bringing a claim merely founded on innuendo and
    suspicion.” Heartwood Home Health & Hospice LLC v. Huber, 
    2020 UT App 13
    , ¶¶ 36–37, 39–40, 
    459 P.3d 1060
     (cleaned up)
    (vacating rule 11 sanctions related to a failure to withdraw
    certain claims where, despite the fact that the claims were
    “anemic,” they nevertheless “had not become plainly frivolous
    or completely lacking in evidentiary support”); see also Morse v.
    Packer, 
    2000 UT 86
    , ¶¶ 28–29, 
    15 P.3d 1021
     (explaining that rule
    11 sanctions should not be imposed “whenever there are factual
    errors” but that they should be reserved for “misstatements”
    that are “significant” and “critical,” and concluding that
    sanctions were appropriate where, given the record, “a
    statement in [a] pleading . . . clearly lacked evidentiary support”
    (cleaned up)).
    9. In support of his rule 11 motion, Cannon claimed that Jensen’s
    “motion in limine accuses [him] of intentionally destroying
    evidence with the purpose of harming his ex-wife.” In other
    words, the premise of the rule 11 motion was that Jensen had
    accused Cannon of intentionally destroying the Option
    Agreement in bad faith.
    20190433-CA                    23               
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    ¶49 At the outset, we are not persuaded that Jensen’s
    spoliation motion was tantamount to an accusation of an
    intentional and inappropriate destruction of the Option
    Agreement. For one thing, nowhere in her motion in limine,
    seeking sanctions under rule 37, did Jensen accuse Cannon of
    acting in bad faith. For another, the premise underlying
    Cannon’s argument—that a spoliation accusation necessarily
    implies a bad faith motive—is not sound. As this court has
    explained, “a party who destroys or conceals relevant evidence
    need not do so willfully or in bad faith to trigger the penalties
    outlined in rule 37.” Ockey v. Club Jam, 
    2014 UT App 126
    , ¶ 11,
    
    328 P.3d 880
    ; see also Daynight, LLC v. Mobilight, Inc., 
    2011 UT App 28
    , ¶ 2, 
    248 P.3d 1010
     (explaining that spoliation “is on a
    qualitatively different level than a simple discovery abuse” and
    that a spoliation determination “does not require a finding of
    willfulness, bad faith, fault or persistent dilatory tactics or the
    violation of court orders before a court may sanction a party”
    (cleaned up)).
    ¶50 We also agree with the district court that given the type
    of agreement involved—an option related to the sale of
    real estate involving sophisticated players—Jensen’s allegations
    of a written Option Agreement and its spoliation did not
    clearly lack evidentiary support. Rather, the motion presented a
    colorable argument based on inferences that could be drawn
    from the circumstances surrounding the agreement’s genesis.
    And other than suggesting that the court ought to have
    adopted an inference that Jensen’s dilatory conduct contributed
    to the destruction of any Option Agreement document and
    pointing to circumstances he believes to be favorable to
    his position, Cannon does not engage with the court’s
    actual reasoning on the issue or the evidence supporting its
    rule 11 determination. See Federated Cap. Corp. v. Shaw, 
    2018 UT App 120
    , ¶ 20, 
    428 P.3d 12
     (explaining that an appellant
    who “does not meaningfully engage with the district court’s
    20190433-CA                    24               
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    reasoning” necessarily “falls short of demonstrating any error
    on the part of the district court”). Thus, although her claim
    was ultimately unsuccessful, we conclude that it was
    not frivolous of Jensen to argue to the district court that
    “there would be something in writing” memorializing the
    Option Agreement and that Cannon had a hand in failing to
    preserve it.
    ¶51 Because Cannon has not persuaded us that the district
    court erred by denying his request for rule 11 sanctions, we
    affirm the court’s resolution of the motion.
    C.    Rule 33 Fees on Appeal
    ¶52 Finally, Cannon requests his attorney fees on appeal
    pursuant to rule 33 of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    Rule 33(a) provides that when an “appeal taken under
    these rules is either frivolous or for delay, [the appellate
    court] shall award just damages, which may include . . .
    reasonable attorney fees, to the prevailing party.” The
    imposition of sanctions under rule 33 is a serious matter,
    “only to be used in egregious cases.” Pyper v. Reil, 
    2018 UT App 200
    , ¶ 28 n.3, 
    437 P.3d 493
     (cleaned up). While Jensen may not
    have prevailed on her appellate claims, this is not an egregious
    case. Thus, we decline to award Cannon his attorney fees on
    appeal.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶53 We affirm on the issues raised by Jensen’s appeal. First,
    we conclude that the district court appropriately determined
    that Jensen did not establish her fraudulent nondisclosure
    claims. Second, we conclude that the court properly dismissed
    Jensen’s negligence-based claims under rule 60 of the Utah Rules
    of Civil Procedure.
    20190433-CA                    25             
    2020 UT App 124
    Jensen v. Cannon
    ¶54 We also affirm on the issues raised by Cannon’s cross-
    appeal. Specifically, we affirm the district court’s denial of
    Cannon’s request for bad faith attorney fees and his motion for
    sanctions pursuant to rule 11 of the Utah Rules of Civil
    Procedure.
    HARRIS, Judge (concurring in part, and concurring in the
    result):
    ¶55 I concur without reservation in Parts I.B. and II of the
    majority opinion. That is, I agree with the majority’s disposition
    of Cannon’s cross-appeal, as well as with the majority’s
    explanation of why the district court was correct to dismiss
    Jensen’s non-fraud claims on summary judgment. But I cannot
    sign on to the majority’s analysis in Part I.A., regarding Jensen’s
    claim for fraudulent nondisclosure, because in my view the
    majority adds a fourth element to our supreme court’s three-
    element test for establishing fraudulent nondisclosure under
    Utah law. Nevertheless, I concur in the result reached by the
    majority, because I am persuaded that the district court correctly
    dismissed Jensen’s fraudulent nondisclosure claim on the
    alternative ground that it was barred by the doctrine of laches.
    I.
    ¶56 In the course of analyzing whether the district court
    properly dismissed Jensen’s claim for fraudulent nondisclosure,
    we are called upon to interpret our supreme court’s statements
    in Anderson v. Kriser, 
    2011 UT 66
    , 
    266 P.3d 819
    , and apply those
    statements to the facts of this case. As an introductory matter, I
    readily acknowledge that Anderson, as applied to the question
    presented here, is difficult to interpret, and that it may well be
    that our supreme court intended Anderson to read as the majority
    has interpreted it. But I read Anderson differently, and perceive
    therein an intent by our supreme court to set out a broader
    version of the fraudulent nondisclosure tort, and I write
    20190433-CA                    26               
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    separately in an effort to articulate that interpretation.
    Ultimately, this may be an instance in which our supreme court
    may need to take an appropriate opportunity to clarify its
    intentions regarding the contours of the fraudulent
    nondisclosure tort.
    ¶57 In my view, our supreme court has articulated the tort of
    fraudulent nondisclosure as containing three elements—not
    four. At the outset of its analysis, the majority correctly recites
    those elements. See supra ¶ 16 (citing Anderson, 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶ 22).
    They are as follows: “(1) the defendant had a legal duty to
    communicate information; (2) the defendant knew of the
    information he failed to disclose; and (3) the nondisclosed
    information was material.” 10 Anderson, 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶ 22 (cleaned
    up). In every case in which our supreme court has discussed
    fraudulent nondisclosure, it has described the tort as being
    comprised of these same three elements. See, e.g., Hess v. Canberra
    Dev. Co., 
    2011 UT 22
    , ¶ 29, 
    254 P.3d 161
    ; Mitchell v. Christensen,
    
    2001 UT 80
    , ¶ 9, 
    31 P.3d 572
    . To my knowledge, the court has
    never described this tort as containing a fourth element.
    10. The district court did not correctly recite the three elements.
    It misstated the first element by proclaiming that the duty in
    question had to be a “fiduciary duty,” which is a contention
    unsupported by any case law of which I am aware. As our
    supreme court articulates this element, the duty in question does
    not necessarily have to be “fiduciary” in nature. See, e.g.,
    Anderson v. Kriser, 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶ 22, 
    266 P.3d 819
    . The district
    court also misstated the third element, articulating that element
    as an “intentional failure to disclose to plaintiff’s detriment.” As
    discussed generally herein, our supreme court has never
    included “intent to deceive” or “intentional failure to disclose”
    as one of the elements of the tort of fraudulent nondisclosure.
    20190433-CA                     27               
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    ¶58 Yet both the district court as well as the majority in this
    case tack on a new fourth element never before discussed as
    such by any Utah appellate opinion. 11 According to the majority,
    a plaintiff who wishes to make out a valid claim for fraudulent
    nondisclosure must not only satisfy the three listed elements, but
    in addition must also prove that the defendant had a “willful
    intent to deceive” the plaintiff. See supra ¶¶ 22–23. In my view,
    the addition of this fourth element is unsupported by existing
    Utah Supreme Court precedent.
    ¶59 I have no quarrel with the majority’s observation—
    supported by Anderson—that fraudulent nondisclosure is an
    intentional tort, and that such torts are generally distinguished
    from non-intentional torts by the “mental state of the defendant
    that the plaintiff must establish in order to prevail.” See
    Anderson, 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶¶ 25–26. But I read Anderson as
    explaining that the three elements, as listed, have an intent
    requirement already baked into them, and that a plaintiff who
    satisfies all three listed elements has raised a sufficient inference
    that the defendant acted intentionally. 12 Id. ¶ 26. In this way, the
    11. I recognize that one local federal court recently held, like the
    majority does here, that under Utah law, the tort of fraudulent
    nondisclosure has a fourth element, holding that—in addition to
    the three elements recited by the Utah Supreme Court—a
    plaintiff “must also show clear and convincing proof of intent to
    deceive.” See Marcantel v. Michael & Sonja Saltman Family Trust,
    No. 2:16-cv-250-DBP, 
    2019 WL 1262648
    , at *5 (D. Utah Mar. 19,
    2019). In my view, the federal court’s analysis suffers from the
    same potential infirmities as the majority’s.
    12. The majority reads Anderson differently, offering its
    viewpoint that a district court is not required to draw such an
    inference, even where all three elements are otherwise met. See
    (continued…)
    20190433-CA                     28               
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    three listed elements already distinguish the tort from its
    negligence-based cousin; no unlisted fourth element is necessary
    for this purpose.
    ¶60 As the court explained in Anderson, “fraudulent intent is
    often difficult to prove by direct evidence” and, “[b]ecause of
    this difficulty,” in other contexts—citing specifically to criminal
    theft and bankruptcy nondischargeability cases, see 
    id.
     ¶ 26
    n.26—“fraudulent intent is often inferred based on the totality of
    the circumstances in a case.” Id. ¶ 26. The court then explained
    that, in the specific context of a fraudulent nondisclosure claim,
    “fraudulent intent may be inferred” when the three listed
    elements of the tort are met, that is, “when a plaintiff
    demonstrates that a defendant had actual knowledge of a
    material fact and that the defendant failed to disclose that fact.”
    Id. The court explained that this formulation of the tort
    sufficiently distinguishes it from the tort of negligent
    nondisclosure, which does not require a plaintiff to demonstrate
    the defendant had actual knowledge of the material information,
    but instead merely requires a showing that the defendant should
    have been aware of the material information. See id.
    ¶61 In my view, this formulation of the tort is not only
    sufficiently distinct from negligent nondisclosure, but it is also—
    as the majority acknowledges, supra ¶ 19—consistent with our
    law’s formulation of other similar intentional torts, such as
    (…continued)
    supra ¶ 27. But if that’s true, then there exists a separate inquiry,
    beyond the three listed elements, that a district court must
    undertake: namely, examining whether an intent inference
    should be drawn on the facts of the particular case. This looks a
    lot like a fourth element to me, even though the majority
    maintains that it has “not added a fourth element to the tort of
    fraudulent nondisclosure.” See supra ¶ 24.
    20190433-CA                     29               
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    constructive fraud. See Jensen v. IHC Hosps., Inc., 
    944 P.2d 327
    ,
    339 (Utah 1997) (stating that the tort of constructive fraud
    contains only “two elements: (i) a confidential relationship
    between the parties; and (ii) a failure to disclose material facts”).
    And—as the majority also acknowledges, supra ¶ 20—it is also
    consistent with the manner in which some other states formulate
    the elements of the fraudulent nondisclosure tort. See, e.g.,
    Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 550, 551 (Am. Law Inst. 1977)
    (describing the tort of “fraudulent concealment” as containing
    an explicit requirement that the defendant acted “intentionally,”
    but describing the tort of “fraudulent nondisclosure” as
    containing no such requirement).
    ¶62 The majority points out that our supreme court has used
    the terms “fraudulent concealment” and “fraudulent
    nondisclosure” more or less interchangeably, and has even noted
    that the elements of the two torts are “essentially the same,” see
    supra ¶ 21 (citing Anderson, 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶ 22 n.11), and infers
    from that fact that the apparently-combined tort must look more
    like fraudulent concealment than fraudulent nondisclosure, and
    therefore must have a separate intent requirement. But it is just
    as easy to draw the opposite inference from the supreme court’s
    apparent merger of the two torts: that the merged tort looks
    more like fraudulent nondisclosure, as described in the
    Restatement, and does not have a separate intent requirement. 13
    In my view, this inference is supported by the fact that, as noted
    13. I also note that our supreme court does not appear to have
    yet been confronted with a case that required it to squarely
    address the question of whether, and to what extent, the two
    torts (fraudulent concealment and fraudulent nondisclosure) are
    separate under Utah law, and therefore acknowledge the limited
    utility of the inferences drawn here by both the majority’s
    opinion and mine.
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    above, our supreme court has, without exception, described this
    merged tort as containing three—and only three—elements,
    none of which contains an explicit intent requirement. This
    inference is also supported by the fact that, in certain other
    jurisdictions, the difference between fraudulent concealment
    and fraudulent nondisclosure is that the more active
    concealment tort requires a showing of “intent to mislead”
    but does not require a showing that there was any “duty to
    speak,” whereas the more passive nondisclosure tort requires a
    showing that there is a duty to speak but does not require a
    showing of intent to deceive. See United States v. Colton, 
    231 F.3d 890
    , 899 & n.2 (4th Cir. 2000) (citing cases). Because the tort, as
    articulated by our supreme court, contains a requirement that
    there be a duty to disclose, and contains no explicit requirement
    that there be intent to deceive, to my mind that tort appears a lot
    more like fraudulent nondisclosure than fraudulent
    concealment.
    ¶63 For all of these reasons, I would conclude that the district
    court erred by requiring Jensen to prove, as part of her
    fraudulent nondisclosure claim, that Cannon had a specific
    intent to deceive her. Jensen should only be required to prove
    the three elements of the tort listed in Anderson. Under my
    interpretation of that case, Jensen can make out a valid claim by
    demonstrating that Cannon had a duty to disclose the Riverton
    Corners property and the Option Agreement to Jensen during
    the divorce proceedings; that Cannon had actual knowledge of
    those assets; and that those assets were material. As our supreme
    court has explained, once those three elements are met, the
    district court “may . . . infer[]” the requisite level of intent on the
    part of Cannon. See Anderson, 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶ 26.
    ¶64 If the majority had adopted my interpretation of
    Anderson—that the tort of fraudulent nondisclosure does not
    require a direct showing of intent to deceive—we would have
    had to confront a number of additional questions regarding the
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    viability of Jensen’s fraudulent nondisclosure claim. First, we
    would have had to determine whether the “legal duty to
    communicate information” described in the first element of the
    tort, see id. ¶ 22 (cleaned up), includes discovery disclosure
    obligations imposed by rule 26 of the Utah Rules of Civil
    Procedure. I acknowledge that turning discovery violations into
    potential torts is something that could have negative unintended
    consequences, but discovery disclosure obligations are arguably
    “legal” duties, and other states have determined that pretrial
    disclosure obligations do qualify as the kind of duty that can
    trigger the tort, albeit perhaps with additional restrictions. See,
    e.g., Allstate Ins. Co. v. Dooley, 
    243 P.3d 197
    , 204–05 (Alaska 2010)
    (holding that “a cause of action for fraudulent concealment of
    evidence may be maintained in Alaska only when a plaintiff
    lacks another sufficient remedy,” because “most discovery
    violations can be appropriately addressed with our existing
    civil rules,” and because “the tort of fraudulent concealment
    of evidence [should] be available only when evidence is
    concealed until after judgment is entered and the time for
    seeking relief from judgment under Civil Rule 60(b) has
    expired”); Rosenblit v. Zimmerman, 
    766 A.2d 749
    , 757 (N.J. 2001)
    (describing a “slight modification” to the tort when it “occurs in
    a litigation context”).
    ¶65 Second, if discovery disclosure obligations qualify as legal
    duties for the purposes of the tort, we would then have had to
    determine whether Cannon had a duty to disclose the specific
    properties at issue here: the Riverton Corners property and the
    Option Agreement. Because the discovery rules obligated him to
    disclose his “assets” to Jensen, we would have then had to
    determine whether the Riverton Corners property and the
    Option Agreement were “assets” subject to Cannon’s disclosure
    obligation. That inquiry, in turn—at least with respect to the
    Riverton Corners property—may have required us to analyze
    partnership law, given Cannon’s defense that the Riverton
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    Corners property did not belong to him or his partnership but,
    instead, belonged to his partner. 14
    ¶66 Next, we may have had to confront other issues raised by
    Jensen in her appeal, including whether the district court
    properly excluded one of Jensen’s expert witnesses, and whether
    the district court correctly valued the Option Agreement.
    II.
    ¶67 But I need not further explore these issues in this
    concurring opinion, because in my view the district court’s
    alternative disposition of Jensen’s claim for fraudulent
    nondisclosure—that Jensen’s suit was barred by the equitable
    doctrine of laches—was correct. On that basis, I concur in the
    result reached by the majority opinion.
    ¶68 The doctrine of laches “has two elements: (1) a party’s
    lack of diligence and (2) an injury resulting from that lack of
    diligence.” Insight Assets, Inc. v. Farias, 
    2013 UT 47
    , ¶ 19, 
    321 P.3d 1021
     (cleaned up). As our supreme court has explained, “laches
    14. Both the majority and the district court framed the question
    as “whether satisfaction of the knowledge element requires that
    Cannon knew of the Option Agreement and the Riverton
    Corners property in the abstract or that he knew that the
    properties were assets as defined by Jensen’s discovery
    requests.” See supra ¶ 26. But I read Anderson as having answered
    that question: the “knowledge” necessary to satisfy the second
    element is simply knowledge “of the information he failed to
    disclose,” Anderson, 
    2011 UT 66
    , ¶ 22 (cleaned up), and not
    necessarily knowledge of whether the information in question
    had to be disclosed. Here, Cannon had actual knowledge of the
    properties, and may therefore be liable under Anderson if the
    properties actually were his assets and he failed to disclose them.
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    is based upon the maxim that equity aids the vigilant and not
    those who slumber on their rights.” Id. ¶ 17 (cleaned up).
    Accordingly, the doctrine of laches punishes plaintiffs whose
    litigation delays harm the other parties involved in a suit: “not
    mere delay, but delay that works a disadvantage to another,” is
    of “legal significance” in a laches analysis. Id. (cleaned up). The
    doctrine is an equitable one “founded upon considerations of
    time and injury.” Id. (cleaned up). At its essence, laches “is a
    negative equitable remedy which deprives one of some right or
    remedy to which he would otherwise be entitled, because his
    delay in seeking it has operated to the prejudice of another.”
    Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints v. Horne,
    
    2012 UT 66
    , ¶ 37, 
    289 P.3d 502
     (cleaned up).
    ¶69 The language of the two-part laches test, as articulated by
    our supreme court, is broad. That test requires a defendant to
    demonstrate the existence of two elements: the plaintiff’s “lack of
    diligence,” and a resulting injury to the defendant. Insight Assets,
    
    2013 UT 47
    , ¶ 19. So, although laches cases often turn on whether
    the plaintiff delayed in bringing suit in the first place, see Veysey
    v. Veysey, 
    2014 UT App 264
    , ¶ 16, 
    339 P.3d 131
     (asking whether
    “the plaintiff unreasonably delayed in bringing an action” to
    fulfill the first laches element), the doctrine is not limited in
    application to only that circumstance. As our supreme court has
    explained, “laches is designed to shelter a prejudiced defendant
    from the difficulties of litigating meritorious claims after an
    unexplained delay,” Horne, 
    2012 UT 66
    , ¶ 37, and no Utah case of
    which I am aware has limited the definition of laches-triggering
    “delay” to the delay in filing the lawsuit in the first place.
    ¶70 Other courts have expressly recognized that the equitable
    doctrine of laches can apply when a litigant who files an
    otherwise-timely lawsuit takes an inordinately long time to
    prosecute it. See, e.g., Miller v. Bloomberg, 
    466 N.E.2d 1342
    , 1346
    (Ill. App. Ct. 1984) (stating that “failure to prosecute an action
    after its commencement can also constitute laches”); Thompson v
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    State, 
    31 N.E.3d 1002
    , 1007 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015) (holding that the
    doctrine of laches applies to unreasonable delays in “prosecuting
    a . . . petition”); see also Atlas One Fin. Group, LLC v. Alarcon, No.
    12-23400-Civ-COOKE/TURNOFF, 
    2014 WL 12570243
    , at *4 (S.D.
    Fla. Mar. 31, 2014) (“Under the doctrine of laches, a person
    otherwise entitled to relief may be barred from recovery if he has
    failed to bring or, having brought, has failed to prosecute, a suit
    for so long a time and under such circumstances that it would be
    inequitable to permit him now to prosecute the suit.”).
    ¶71 Accordingly, in my view the district court properly
    determined, as a legal matter, that the doctrine of laches can
    apply to situations in which a litigant takes an unreasonably
    long time to prosecute a lawsuit, and is not limited to situations
    in which a litigant unreasonably delays in filing one. See Veysey
    v. Nelson, 
    2017 UT App 77
    , ¶ 5, 
    397 P.3d 846
     (“Whether laches
    applies is a question of law, which we review for correctness.”).
    ¶72 After it is established, as a legal matter, that the doctrine
    can apply in a particular case, the “application of laches to a
    particular set of facts and circumstances presents a mixed
    question of law and fact,” a framework whereunder “we review
    the [district] court’s conclusions of law for correctness and will
    disturb its findings of fact only if they are clearly erroneous.” 
    Id.
    (cleaned up). In my view, the district court’s underlying factual
    findings regarding laches were not clearly erroneous, and the
    court did not err by concluding that Cannon was prejudiced by
    Jensen’s unreasonable delay in prosecuting the case.
    ¶73 The district court determined that the filing of Jensen’s
    lawsuit occurred within the applicable statute of limitations, and
    no party has appealed that determination. Accordingly, the
    district court does not appear to have held any pre-filing delay
    against Jensen in connection with its laches analysis. Instead, the
    court noted that, after the suit was filed, almost nothing occurred
    for some six years, resulting in multiple order-to-show-cause
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    Jensen v. Cannon
    hearings before the suit was eventually dismissed, without
    prejudice. Another whole year passed before the suit was refiled,
    resulting in approximately seven years of post-filing delay that
    the district court attributed entirely to Jensen. The court found
    that, during that time, witnesses’ “memories faded and
    documents were destroyed in the normal course of purging old
    documents,” with the result that, when trial finally occurred,
    “the extreme passage of time had taken its toll,” and “witnesses
    who testified at trial sometimes struggled with remembering
    things,” including important things like whether certain
    agreements were ever reduced to writing. Reasoning from these
    factual findings, the court concluded that “[i]n a case as old as
    this, prejudice to the defendant can practically be presumed,”
    but found that, in this case, “there was also actual prejudice,”
    including witnesses with poor memories and documents that
    had been lost.
    ¶74 I discern no error in the district court’s findings or
    conclusions with regard to laches, and therefore I would affirm
    the court’s dismissal of Jensen’s fraudulent nondisclosure claim
    on that basis. I therefore concur in the result reached by the
    majority.
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