Ahmad v. Graco Fishing

2022 UT App 55, 511 P.3d 1183
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMay 5, 2022
Docket20200642-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 2022 UT App 55 (Ahmad v. Graco Fishing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ahmad v. Graco Fishing, 2022 UT App 55, 511 P.3d 1183 (Utah Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

2022 UT App 55

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

TARIQ AHMAD, Appellant, v. GRACO FISHING & RENTAL TOOLS INC., Appellee.

Opinion No. 20200642-CA Filed May 5, 2022

Eighth District Court, Vernal Department The Honorable Edwin T. Peterson No. 160800095

Terry R. Spencer and Reid W. Lambert, Attorneys for Appellant Joseph E. Minnock and Rod N. Andreason, Attorneys for Appellee

JUDGE GREGORY K. ORME authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER and DIANA HAGEN concurred.

ORME, Judge:

¶1 Tariq Ahmad appeals various rulings from the district court. But due to Ahmad’s untimely notice of appeal, we lack jurisdiction to consider all but one of the issues Ahmad raises. With respect to that issue, we affirm. Ahmad v. Graco Fishing

BACKGROUND1

¶2 After purchasing an oil well in 2010, Pacific Energy & Mining Company2 attempted, unsuccessfully, to get the previously unproductive well producing again. During this time, Ahmad was the secretary of Pacific and a member of its board of directors. Ahmad was also Pacific’s former president and held a “very small” ownership interest in the company.

¶3 Pacific asked Graco Fishing & Rental Tools, Inc., for an estimate for the cost of the tools necessary to fix the well and the cost for Graco to operate those tools over an eight-day period. An agreement was reached, and work commenced on the well. Soon, however, issues arose. The work took longer than eight days and a hole was drilled into the well casing.

¶4 A dispute over the scope of Graco’s work and whether Graco was liable for the damage caused to the casing soon

1. Because we lack jurisdiction over nearly all the issues Ahmad raises on appeal, see infra Section I, we need not belabor the facts underlying all aspects of the dispute between the parties. Instead, we present only the facts necessary to understand the jurisdictional issue and the single remaining issue that we have jurisdiction to consider.

2. The well was initially sold to JMD Resources and Entrada Enterprises, which were controlled by Ahmad’s wife and Pacific’s president, respectively. Those companies subsequently formed Greentown Oil, which held 100% of the working interest in the well during the time in question. Pursuant to a joint operating agreement, Pacific acted as the operator of the well on Greentown Oil’s behalf and was “required to litigate on behalf of the working interest owners.” For convenience, we refer to all actions regarding ownership and operation of the well as being undertaken by Pacific.

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followed. Pacific did not pay Graco, and Graco placed a lien on the well.

¶5 In 2016, Pacific, through its attorney, Terry Spencer, filed suit against Graco. Pacific claimed damages for the hole in the casing. Graco filed a counterclaim against Pacific for the payment owed. Graco also filed what it styled a third-party complaint against Ahmad, claiming that he had personally guaranteed the payment of Pacific’s obligations. Through Spencer, Ahmad answered the third-party complaint. Following numerous legal proceedings in state district court and Ahmad filing a complaint in the United States District Court for the District of Utah, Graco moved to have Ahmad joined as a party-plaintiff in this case. The state district court granted that motion.

¶6 The instant case proceeded to trial in June 2019, during which Spencer represented both Pacific and Ahmad. At the end of Pacific and Ahmad’s case, Graco moved for, and was granted, a directed verdict. The case was then submitted to the jury on Graco’s claims only, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of Graco. Pacific then filed a bankruptcy petition, and Ahmad attempted to move the claims against him to bankruptcy court. Apparently, due to the procedural hurdles in that process, the district court did not enter a judgment against Ahmad and Pacific until October 7, 2019. The document the court filed was titled “JUDGMENT,” and the court stated that it “enters JUDGMENT as follows” and laid out the jury’s verdict.

¶7 On November 1, 2019, pursuant to rule 59 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, Pacific, through Spencer, filed a motion for a new trial. Ahmad then filed a pro se motion on November 4, joining Pacific’s new trial motion. The court held a telephonic conference on December 2, the minutes of which indicate that Spencer appeared as “Plaintiff’s Attorney,” and a hearing on the motion for a new trial was scheduled for January 3, 2020.

¶8 Ahmad did not personally appear at the hearing. Spencer did appear, however, and informed the court that because Pacific

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was in bankruptcy, he could “only appear today on behalf of Mr. Ahmad.” Spencer then argued on Ahmad’s behalf, referring to Ahmad as “my client,” and not correcting the court when it referred to Ahmad as “your client.” On January 14, a new attorney filed a notice of substitution of counsel, indicating that she would be acting as the attorney for both Pacific and Ahmad. But just six days later, she filed a notice of withdrawal as counsel for both. Graco then filed a notice to appear or appoint counsel, in accordance with rule 74(c) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, and served it on both Pacific and Ahmad. Ahmad later admitted he received the notice, but he did not appear or appoint counsel.

¶9 On May 22, 2020, the district court issued a written order deeming the motion for a new trial to be withdrawn due both to the substitute attorney’s statement at the time of her withdrawal that “there were no pending motions before the Court” and Ahmad’s and Pacific’s failures to appear or appoint counsel. On May 28, Ahmad filed a pro se motion entitled “Motion for reconsideration of Courts Order dated May 22, 2020 Pursuant to Rule 60(b).” Ahmad argued that the court and Graco’s counsel “were properly notified,” when he filed his pro se motion on November 4, that he “did not retain counsel and was representing himself.” Ahmad further asserted that he did not receive notice of the hearing held on the motion for a new trial or of the court’s subsequent entry of judgment and, as a result, that his “right to due process” was violated. On June 15, Ahmad filed another pro se motion notifying the court that his May 28 motion “should have been titled ‘Rule 60(b) Motion to Set Aside the Court Order Dated May 22, 2020.’”3 The court denied the motion on August 6. It ruled

3. Attached to this motion was an affidavit from Spencer stating, “On Monday, November 4, 2019, Ahmad asked me why he was not included in the Motion for New Trial, I informed Ahmad that I did not represent him in his personal capacity, as the court records indicate I only represented [Pacific] in the above captioned matter.” The veracity of this assertion is certainly (continued…)

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questionable. The record before us shows that Spencer purported to represent Ahmad in the district court for years. On September 26, 2016, Spencer filed an answer to Graco’s counterclaim and so-called third-party complaint on behalf of both Pacific and Ahmad, at the bottom of which he stated that he was the “Attorney for Pacific Energy & Mining Company and Tariq Ahmad.” Then, on November 6, 2018, after Ahmad was made a party-plaintiff in the action on Graco’s motion, Spencer filed a complaint on Ahmad’s behalf against Graco, signing the complaint “Terry R. Spencer Attorney for Ahmad.” Earlier that month, Spencer also filed “Plaintiff Ahmad’s Initial Disclosures,” and he signed it “Terry R. Spencer Attorney for Plaintiffs.” Spencer then filed a motion asserting “Ahmad’s Right to Conduct Discovery After Being Joined as a Party-Plaintiff by Graco,” again signing the motion “Terry R.

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2022 UT App 55, 511 P.3d 1183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ahmad-v-graco-fishing-utahctapp-2022.