Clifford P.D. Redekop Family LLC v. Utah County Real Estate LLC

2016 UT App 121, 378 P.3d 109, 814 Utah Adv. Rep. 14, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 124, 2016 WL 3162819
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJune 3, 2016
Docket20150097-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2016 UT App 121 (Clifford P.D. Redekop Family LLC v. Utah County Real Estate LLC) 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
Clifford P.D. Redekop Family LLC v. Utah County Real Estate LLC, 2016 UT App 121, 378 P.3d 109, 814 Utah Adv. Rep. 14, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 124, 2016 WL 3162819 (Utah Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion

GREENWOOD, Senior Judge:

{1 Plaintiffs The Clifford P.D. Redekop Family LLC and H. Timothy McCardell (collectively, Redekop) appeal the district court's order granting summary judgment to Defendants Utah County Real Estate LLC, Donald L. Blackwelder, and Terry A. Potter (collectively, Prudential), We affirm,

BACKGROUND

1 2 In 2005, Redekop entered into a Limit, ed Agency Consent Agreement with Prudential, Prudential represented both the buyer-Redekop-and the seller when Redekop purchased two commercial office condominiums in Utah County (the Premises). For several years, Redekop collected rent from its commercial tenants in the Premises without any problems. But in 2009, both of Redekop's tenants claimed Redekop had overstated the square footage of the Premises, stopped paying rent, and demanded a rebate of rent paid. One tenant abandoned the Premises and, apparently, the other eventually moved out. Redekop was unable to find replacement tenants, and the loss of rental income caused it to default on the loan used to finance purchase of the Premises, The lender foreclosed on the property. OC

T3 In June 2011, Redekop sued Prudential seeking damages for breach of contract, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, civil conspiracy, and negligent misrepresentation. Redekop claimed Prudential "knew that the square footage of the Premises ... was inaccurate" but misrepresented the square footage in order to "ensure the successful sale of the Premises [to Redekop] at the highest possible price."

14 A September 2012 stipulated amended case management order (the 2012 Scheduling Order) designated the fact discovery deadline as January 31, 20183, and the deadline for Redekop's expert disclosures of February 28, 2018, extending both deadlines by six months from the original order. The cutoff date for filing dispositive motions was extended to July 31, 2018. In August 2013, after months of inactivity, the district court notified the parties that it would dismiss the case unless it heard from Redekop within twenty days "showing good cause why this [case] should not be dismissed." Twenty-one days later, Redekop filed a motion, explaining that the sudden death of "one of the Redekop par-children had caused the delgy and requesting that the district court schedule a trial date. Prudential filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that Redekop had not designated an expert witness to address the professional and legal duty of a limited real estate agent. Redekop responded with a motion to strike the motion for summary judgment, in which it requested a modification of the 2012 Scheduling Order regarding designation of expert witnesses. The district court refused to consider Redekop's motion due to untimeliness but nevertheless denied Prudential's motion for summary judgment, stating that Prudential had not met its "burden of presenting evidence that no genuine issue of material fact exists in this case."

15 In its second stipulated amended case management order dated February 14, 2014 (the 2014 Scheduling Order)-seventeen months after the 2012 Scheduling Order and almost two years after the original case management order-the district court set an expert disclosure deadline of June 12, 2014, for Redekop; a rebuttal expert disclosure deadline of July 14, 2014, for Prudential; and an expert discovery completion deadline of Sép-tember 30, 2014, for both parties. Expert witness disclosures and expert reports were to comply with rule 26(a)(@8), of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. 2 The district court *112 later advised the parties that the deadlines in the 2014 Scheduling Order "are firm and will not be extended." tC

T6 Redekop timely designated its expert witnesses. The district court noted, however, that the report disclosed only the name Pon-tis Architectural Group as its expert and included only "floor plans of the commercial property in dispute" and "conclusory" square footage assessments, without explaining how those numbers were calculated. Prudential objected to the expert witness report, citing the report's insufficiency and lack of identification of any individual qualified to testify as 'an expert in the case. Prudential also attempted to communicate with Redekop to correct the report's deficiencies so that it could depose Clifford Redekop and the designated experts. When Redekop still did not supplement its expert disclosure, Prudential notified Redekop and the district court that it was cancelling the deposition of Redekop's expert scheduled to take place on the last day of expert witness discovery, After close of ' business on Séptember 30, 2014-the deadline for éxpert discovery-Redekop provided a supplement to its expert witness designation and report. The supplement contained the names of three individuals associated with Pontis Architectural Group, who Redekop explained "may" testify, along with a brochure from Pontis Architectural Group detailing biographical information for each potential witness. Prudential, on the other hand, had timely designated its rebuttal expert witnesses by its July deadline.

T7 On October 7, Prudential filed a second motion for summary judgment, arguing that the district court should exclude Redekop's expert witness dug to its failure to comply with the 2014 Scheduling Order and that, in the absence of qualified expert testimony, Redekop could not meet its burden of proof. 3 Redekop's counsel explained his noncompliance, stating that from "late-July 2014 through September 2014, [he] was mostly incommunicado professionally due to an apparent breach of [his] security and violation of [his] privacy in connection with an unrelated and highly contentious client matter." The district court rejected Redekop's explanation and excluded its expert witness and report as a sanction for noncompliance with the 2014 Scheduling Order. The district court stated that Redekop's counsel's security breach in late July "could not have affected [Rede-kop's] ability to make timely disclosures one month earlier on June 12, 2014," and that Redekop's counsel "did not communicate with opposing counsel about this problem, or seek a timely extension of time from the Court." Redekop, thus, had not shown "good cause" why it could not comply with the 2014 Scheduling Order,. The district court also found that Redekop did not comply with rule 26, because it "did not disclose the qualifications, compensation, or prior casework of any particular person working for or with Pontis Architectural Group." Citing rule 37 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, the district court found

no good cause for [Redekop's] failure to make expert discovery disclosures timely. The non-disclosure was willful. It was also prejudicial to [Prudential] as it rendered [Prudential] incapable of deposing [Rede-kop's] experts, attempting to disqualify the experts, and finding rebuttal experts.

[ 8 The district court next determined that expert testimony was needed "as to the manner in which commercial square footage is calculated in the commercial real estate industry." It noted the "common areas and storage space in the building" and questioned *113 the "manner and ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 UT App 121, 378 P.3d 109, 814 Utah Adv. Rep. 14, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 124, 2016 WL 3162819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clifford-pd-redekop-family-llc-v-utah-county-real-estate-llc-utahctapp-2016.