George Clift Enters. v. Oshkosh Feedyard Corp.

306 Neb. 775, 947 N.W.2d 510
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 14, 2020
DocketS-19-700
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 306 Neb. 775 (George Clift Enters. v. Oshkosh Feedyard Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George Clift Enters. v. Oshkosh Feedyard Corp., 306 Neb. 775, 947 N.W.2d 510 (Neb. 2020).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 11/09/2020 02:10 AM CST

- 775 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 306 Nebraska Reports GEORGE CLIFT ENTERS. v. OSHKOSH FEEDYARD CORP. Cite as 306 Neb. 775

George Clift Enterprises, Inc., a Texas corporation, doing business as Eslabon Properties, appellant and cross-appellee, v. Oshkosh Feedyard Corporation, a Nebraska corporation, and Terry Jessen, appellees and cross-appellants, and Jeff Betley et al., appellees. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed August 14, 2020. No. S-19-700.

1. Motions for Continuance: Appeal and Error. A trial court’s grant or denial of a continuance is within the discretion of the trial court, whose ruling will not be disturbed on appeal in the absence of an abuse of discretion. 2. Attorney Fees: Appeal and Error. On appeal, an appellate court will uphold a lower court’s decision allowing or disallowing attorney fees for frivolous or bad faith litigation in the absence of an abuse of discretion. 3. Moot Question: Justiciable Issues: Appeal and Error. Mootness is a justiciability question that an appellate court determines as a matter of law when it does not involve a factual dispute. 4. Pretrial Procedure. Generally, the control of discovery is a matter for judicial discretion. 5. Summary Judgment: Motions for Continuance: Affidavits. Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1335 (Reissue 2016) provides a safeguard against an improvi- dent or premature grant of summary judgment. 6. ____: ____: ____. As a prerequisite for a continuance, additional time, or other relief, a party is required to submit an affidavit stating a reason- able excuse or good cause for the party’s inability to oppose a summary judgment motion. 7. Summary Judgment: Motions for Continuance: Pretrial Procedure. In ruling on a request for a continuance or additional time in which to respond to a motion for summary judgment, a court may consider - 776 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 306 Nebraska Reports GEORGE CLIFT ENTERS. v. OSHKOSH FEEDYARD CORP. Cite as 306 Neb. 775

whether the party has been dilatory in completing discovery and prepar- ing for trial. 8. Appeal and Error. To be considered by an appellate court, an alleged error must be both specifically assigned and specifically argued in the brief of the party asserting the error. 9. Brokers: Property: Contracts: Sales. A broker employed for a definite time to effect a sale of property must perform whatever obligations the contract imposes upon the broker within the time limited. 10. Brokers: Real Estate: Contracts: Sales. Ordinarily, a real estate bro- ker who, for a commission, undertakes to sell land on certain terms and within a specified period is not entitled to compensation for his or her services unless he or she produces a purchaser within the time limit who is ready, willing, and able to buy upon the terms prescribed. 11. Brokers: Contracts: Sales. The right to compensation based on the broker’s production of a purchaser ready, willing, and able to buy upon terms specified by the principal or satisfactory to him or her is not impaired by the subsequent inability or unwillingness of the owner to consummate the sale on the terms prescribed. 12. ____: ____: ____. In a listing agreement contemplating the negotiation of terms, a commission is not earned by the broker until an agreement upon the terms is reached between the buyer and seller. 13. Brokers: Property: Contracts: Sales. When the broker has failed to perform the condition upon which he or she was to be paid, there is an end to the contract; all contractual obligations of the owner toward the broker are terminated and the parties stand as if a contract had never been made; the market for the sale of the owner’s property is not cir- cumscribed by the fact that some or all available purchasers have there- tofore been approached by the broker. 14. Brokers: Contracts: Sales. Clauses in exclusive listing agreements set- ting forth a protection, extension, or safety period after the listing period are strictly construed as setting the limits of the time period in which a sale must take place for a commission to be recoverable. 15. ____: ____: ____. Protection clauses are meant to protect a broker from losing a commission earned during a listing period due to evasive con- duct of the buyer and seller. 16. Contracts: Waiver: Proof. A written contract may be waived in whole or in part, either directly or inferentially, and the waiver may be proved by express declarations manifesting the intent not to claim the advan- tage, or by so neglecting and failing to act as to induce the belief that it was the intention to waive. 17. Breach of Contract: Damages: Proximate Cause: Proof. In any damage action for breach of contract, the claimant must prove that - 777 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 306 Nebraska Reports GEORGE CLIFT ENTERS. v. OSHKOSH FEEDYARD CORP. Cite as 306 Neb. 775

the breach of contract complained of was the proximate cause of the alleged damages. 18. Breach of Contract: Damages. There must be a causal relationship between the damages asserted and the breach of contract relied upon. 19. Judgments: Breach of Contract: Damages: Proof. Proof which leaves the causal relationship between the damages asserted and the breach of contract relied upon in the realm of speculation and conjecture is insuf- ficient to support a judgment. 20. Conspiracy: Words and Phrases. A civil conspiracy is a combination of two or more persons to accomplish by concerted action an unlaw- ful or oppressive object, or a lawful object by unlawful or oppres- sive means. 21. Conspiracy: Torts: Proof. A claim of civil conspiracy requires the plaintiff to establish that the defendants had an expressed or implied agreement to commit an unlawful or oppressive act that constitutes a tort against the plaintiff. 22. Conspiracy: Damages. The gist of a civil conspiracy action is not the conspiracy charged, but the damages the plaintiff claims to have suf- fered due to the wrongful acts of the defendants. 23. Actions: Conspiracy. A civil conspiracy is actionable only if the alleged conspirators actually committed some underlying misconduct. 24. Actions: Conspiracy: Torts. Without an underlying tort, there can be no cause of action for a conspiracy to commit the tort. 25. Torts: Intent: Proof. To succeed on a claim for tortious interference with a business relationship or expectancy, a plaintiff must prove (1) the existence of a valid business relationship or expectancy, (2) knowledge by the interferer of the relationship or expectancy, (3) an unjustified intentional act of interference on the part of the interferer, (4) proof that the interference caused the harm sustained, and (5) damage to the party whose relationship or expectancy was disrupted. 26. ____: ____: ____. One of the basic elements of tortious interference with a business relationship requires an intentional act that induces or causes a breach or termination of the relationship or expectancy. 27. Brokers: Real Estate: Contracts: Sales. Real estate broker agreements, like other contracts, contain an implied covenant of good faith pursuant to which the seller impliedly covenants he or she will do nothing that will have the effect of destroying or injuring the right of the broker to earn a commission. 28. Judges: Words and Phrases. A judicial abuse of discretion exists when the reasons or rulings of a trial judge are clearly untenable, unfairly depriving a litigant of a substantial right and denying just results in mat- ters submitted for disposition. - 778 - Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets 306 Nebraska Reports GEORGE CLIFT ENTERS. v. OSHKOSH FEEDYARD CORP. Cite as 306 Neb. 775

29. Actions: Attorney Fees: Words and Phrases. Frivolous for the pur- poses of Neb. Rev. Stat.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
306 Neb. 775, 947 N.W.2d 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-clift-enters-v-oshkosh-feedyard-corp-neb-2020.