Estate Landscape v. MOUNTAIN STATES TEL.

793 P.2d 415, 1990 WL 69055
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMay 24, 1990
Docket880428-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 793 P.2d 415 (Estate Landscape v. MOUNTAIN STATES TEL.) 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
Estate Landscape v. MOUNTAIN STATES TEL., 793 P.2d 415, 1990 WL 69055 (Utah Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

793 P.2d 415 (1990)

ESTATE LANDSCAPE AND SNOW REMOVAL SPECIALISTS, INC., Plaintiff and Appellee,
v.
MOUNTAIN STATES TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY, Defendant and Appellant.

No. 880428-CA.

Court of Appeals of Utah.

May 24, 1990.

*416 Floyd A. Jensen, Salt Lake City, for defendant and appellant.

David D. Loreman and Lowell V. Summerhays, Murray, for plaintiff and appellee.

Before DAVIDSON, JACKSON and LARSON,[1] JJ.

OPINION

LARSON, Judge:

This is an action seeking to collect amounts alleged to be due under a contract for snow removal services rendered by Estate Landscape and Snow Removal Specialists, Inc. (Estate Landscape). Defendant Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Company (Mountain Bell) appeals from a judgment in favor of Estate Landscape.

Estate Landscape and Mountain Bell entered into a written contract which provided that Estate Landscape would remove snow from certain buildings occupied by Mountain Bell in return for payment at a specified rate. Estate Landscape performed its work suitably, and billed Mountain Bell twice, once for work through December 27 and again at the end of the snow season.[2] The billing separately listed each snow removal item by date.

Mountain Bell paid the first bill, but considered the $30,162.90 total of the second bill to be excessive for the services at its Alta office. It therefore sent Estate Landscape a check for only $8,613. The check did not contain a restrictive endorsement or a waiver on its face. Upon receipt of the check, Estate Landscape responded by acknowledging partial payment and requesting the balance remaining, but Mountain Bell refused to pay the balance. Next, *417 Mountain Bell sent Estate Landscape a letter[3] explaining its position concerning the bill for the Alta office. According to the letter, the contract for the Alta office provided that Estate Landscape would remove snow when it reached a depth of four inches. From snowfall records for Alta, it appeared that Estate Landscape had billed for snow removal on days when the snowfall was less than four inches. On the basis of the snowfall records, therefore, Mountain Bell refused to pay for snow removal on certain days for which Estate Landscape had charged for its services. The letter specifically detailed all contested snow removal services by date. Mountain Bell's letter concluded:

Based on the above identified billing discrepancies we have enclosed[[4]] a check for $8613.00 which is payment in full for satisfaction of contracted services. If you are not willing to accept that sum, $8613.00 in full satisfaction of sums due, DO NOT negotiate the check, for upon your negotiation of that check, we will treat the matter as fully paid.

(Emphasis in original).

When Estate Landscape received the letter, the check it had earlier received from Mountain Bell had not been cashed. Estate Landscape responded to Mountain Bell's letter by commencing this action against Mountain Bell. Initially, Estate Landscape complained for the entire $30,162.90 of its second bill for the winter of 1984-85. About two weeks after filing suit, Estate Landscape endorsed the check from Mountain Bell and cashed it, then amended its complaint against Mountain Bell to seek only the difference between the amount of the check and the amount billed.

Mountain Bell moved for summary judgment on the grounds that its letter and check tendered to Estate Landscape were an accord and satisfaction of its obligation under the snow removal contract. The district court, per Judge Michael R. Murphy, denied the motion, noting that Mountain Bell admitted that it owed the amounts tendered in the check. The case proceeded to trial before the bench.

At trial, Judge Timothy R. Hanson considered the earlier denial of summary judgment to have resolved the question of accord and satisfaction, and granted judgment to Estate Landscape for the amount of its bill, less certain charges for work not mentioned in the contract. The judgment included interest accruing before judgment, compounded annually. Mountain Bell appeals.

Factual Standard of Review in Summary Judgment

Mountain Bell now argues that the trial court erred in treating its motion for summary judgment as dispositive of its accord and satisfaction defense and thereafter refusing to reopen that issue at trial on the grounds that it was law of the case. Mountain Bell argues that the combined effect of the dispositive summary judgment and the refusal to try the issue was an unfairly skewed view of the facts in the district court. Mountain Bell argues that the court views the facts for summary judgment purposes in a light unfavorable to the moving party, and therefore, because the summary judgment was treated as conclusive against the movant, the movant here, Mountain Bell, never had a chance for a fair view of the facts on the issue.

Mountain Bell, however, is not precisely correct in thus describing a court's factual viewpoint in deciding a motion for summary judgment. Although it may be true for most summary judgments that the *418 court views the facts in favor of the non-movant, that formulation takes into account only perhaps the most common outcomes of a motion for summary judgment, in which the moving party either receives the judgment it seeks, or all judgment is denied and the issue reserved for further consideration. However, in this case, Mountain Bell moved for summary judgment, and its motion was denied on the merits, and that denial effectively disposed of Mountain Bell's accord and satisfaction defense.[5] Later, that disposition was regarded as the law of the case, and the accord and satisfaction issue was not reopened.[6]

Recognizing that the party adversely affected by the summary judgment has not had an opportunity for trial, the court views the facts in the light most favorable to that party.[7] In situations in which summary judgment is granted, the party adversely affected would be the party who did not move for summary judgment. If summary judgment is denied on the merits and a claim or defense of the movant thereby eliminated, then the facts are viewed in the light most favorable to the moving party. Summary judgment may also be denied without reaching the merits of any claim or defense, often because the court cannot reconcile the material elements of the parties' versions of the facts, and thus cannot grant a summary judgment under Utah R.Civ.P. 56(c).[8] Since any material difference in the parties' versions of the facts will preclude summary judgment, the shadings of light in which the facts are viewed cannot make a substantial difference in the result, even if the shading applied is erroneous.

In this case, Mountain Bell was the movant for summary judgment on the accord and satisfaction issue. The district court's memorandum decision on Mountain Bell's *419 motion was clearly intended to lay the defense of accord and satisfaction to rest. Since a defense of Mountain Bell's was thereby eliminated, the facts should be viewed in the light favorable to Mountain Bell. The record does not explicitly note whether the district court thus viewed the facts; however on appeal, we view the facts supporting a summary judgment through the same lens filter as the trial court.[9] Therefore, since the issue of correctness of the summary judgment on its merits is before us, we proceed to review it in the light most favorable to Mountain Bell.

Lack of an Accord

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
793 P.2d 415, 1990 WL 69055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-landscape-v-mountain-states-tel-utahctapp-1990.