Brown v. Richards

840 P.2d 143, 194 Utah Adv. Rep. 34, 1992 Utah App. LEXIS 143, 1992 WL 207684
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedAugust 24, 1992
Docket900639-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 840 P.2d 143 (Brown v. Richards) 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
Brown v. Richards, 840 P.2d 143, 194 Utah Adv. Rep. 34, 1992 Utah App. LEXIS 143, 1992 WL 207684 (Utah Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

BENCH, Presiding Judge:

Appellants, David K. Richards and David K. Richards & Company, (collectively “Richards”), appeal the trial court’s judgment based upon special jury interrogatories regarding a commercial transaction entered into between Richards and appellees, Boyd J. Brown and Interwest Aviation Corporation, (collectively “Brown”). Brown cross-appeals. We affirm in part, and reverse and remand in part.

BACKGROUND

Facts

This case arises out of a complex transaction where Brown, the principal shareholder of Interwest Aviation Corporation (Interwest), sold his Interwest stock and several other assets to Richards through numerous agreements and options. We summarize the facts to include only those directly pertinent to our analysis.

Interwest was a fixed-based operation located on the east side of the Salt Lake International Airport. In addition to providing services such as maintenance, refueling, and de-icing, Interwest bought and sold aircraft and operated a charter service. Interwest was located in a building owned personally by Brown (the Interwest Building). Brown also owned a neighboring hangar, known as the Executive Air Services Building (Executive Air Building).

In simple terms, the parties agreed that Richards would buy fifty percent of Brown’s stock in Interwest for $450,000; Richards would then have the option after one year to buy the remainder of the stock for an additional $450,000 (collectively “the Interwest purchase agreement”). Richards also purchased sixty percent of Brown’s ownership of the Interwest Building with an option to purchase the remaining interest after one year (collectively “the Inter-west Building agreement”). Richards was also given an option to purchase the Executive Air Building.

The parties formally memorialized their agreements in writing as of April 23, 1984. Richards eventually exercise4 his options to purchase Brown’s remaining interests in Interwest and the Interwest Building, but he did not exercise the option on the Executive Air Building.

Richards made principal and interest payments from April, 1984 to April, 1986. During that time, Brown and Richards jointly managed Interwest. Richards then defaulted. Brown sued Richards for his failure to make the payments owing on the Interwest purchase agreement and the In-terwest Building agreement. Brown also claimed, notwithstanding the written Inter-west purchase agreement, that the purchase price of the corporation was to increase by $500,000 if Richards failed to exercise the option to buy the Executive Air Building. Richards counterclaimed for fraud, negligent misrepresentation, breach of warranty, and breach of fiduciary duty. 1 The matter was submitted to a jury on special interrogatories at the close of an eight-week trial.

Jury Verdict

In response to the special interrogatories, the jury found that Brown did not substantially perform the agreement to sell *147 Interwest. It further found that Brown had defrauded Richards with regard to the sale of Interwest. With respect to the question of damages, the jury found that the difference between the value of Inter-west, as misrepresented by Brown, and its true value, as received by Richards, was $500,000. The jury also awarded Richards $550,000 in punitive damages.

In addition to its finding of fraud, the jury found that Brown had breached warranties in the sale of Interwest and awarded Richards another $100,000 damages. Finally, the jury found that Brown breached fiduciary duties owed to Richards during the period of their joint ownership of Interwest and awarded Richards an additional $300,000 in damages.

Regarding the Interwest Building agreement, the jury found that Brown had substantially performed the agreement to sell the Interwest Building and did not misrepresent the value of the building. Pursuant to the special interrogatory, the jury found that Richards breached the Inter-west Building agreement and awarded Brown $407,259 in damages.

The question was also put to the jury whether Richards had agreed to pay an additional $500,000 for Interwest if he did not exercise the option on the Executive Air Building. The jury found that Richards had agreed to such an increase in price. The jury found, however, that despite Richards’s failure to exercise the Executive Air Building option, Richards did not breach the agreement to increase the purchase price and did not award Brown any damages.

Trial Court’s Judgment

Richards submitted a proposed judgment based upon the jury’s answers to the special interrogatories, and Brown objected. Several hearings were held due to objections raised by Brown until the trial court finally entered final judgment on the special interrogatories and its own supplemental findings.

Despite the jury’s finding that Brown did not substantially perform the Interwest purchase agreement, the trial court awarded Brown the contract amount plus interest just as if he had prevailed on his claim against Richards. The trial court also awarded Brown $500,000 plus interest on his claim that the purchase price of Inter-west was to increase if Richards did not exercise his option on the Executive Air Building.

The trial court then awarded Richards $500,000 plus interest on his fraud claim as the difference between the value of Inter-west as represented by Brown and the value of the assets Richards received. Richards was also awarded the $550,000 found by the jury as punitive damages.

As to Richards’s breach of warranty claim, the trial court ruled that the damages found by the jury were duplicative of the damages it found on the fraud claim. It therefore refused to award Richards $100,000 as found by the jury to be his damages from Brown’s breach of warranty. It did, however, award Richards the full $300,000 found by the jury to have been the damages resulting from Brown’s breach of fiduciary duty. The trial court did not disturb the jury’s findings regarding Brown’s damages resulting from Richards’s breach of the Interwest Building agreement.

Finally, the trial court awarded attorney fees to both parties according to the contract upon which they prevailed: $435,000 to Richards pursuant to the Interwest purchase agreement, and $250,000 to Brown pursuant to the Interwest Building agreement.

We will identify the parties’ alleged errors as we consider them. The parties raise fifteen separate issues with many sub-issues and alternative arguments. We have fully reviewed, but do not address, every issue and argument raised by the parties. The unaddressed claims and arguments are either mooted by our analysis, or we simply decline to address them. See State v. Carter, 776 P.2d 886, 888-889 (Utah 1989) (appellate court has discretion as to the extent of its opinion).

*148 PURCHASE PRICE

Richards asserts that the trial court erred in denying him a directed verdict regarding Brown’s claim that Richards agreed to an increased purchase price of Interwest if Richards did not exercise the Executive Air Building option.

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Bluebook (online)
840 P.2d 143, 194 Utah Adv. Rep. 34, 1992 Utah App. LEXIS 143, 1992 WL 207684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-richards-utahctapp-1992.