Hansen and Mecham Investments v. Hansen

2022 UT App 17
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedFebruary 3, 2022
Docket20191059-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2022 UT App 17 (Hansen and Mecham Investments v. Hansen) 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
Hansen and Mecham Investments v. Hansen, 2022 UT App 17 (Utah Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

2022 UT App 17

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

HANSEN & MECHAM INVESTMENTS LLC, MA SQUARED LLC, AND PATRICK HENRY & ASSOCIATES LLC, Appellees, v. BRIAN HANSEN, Appellant.

Opinion No. 20191059-CA Filed February 3, 2022

Third District Court, Salt Lake Department The Honorable Robert P. Faust No. 100906073

Gregory N. Skabelund, Attorney for Appellant Joseph Pia, Attorney for Appellees

JUDGE RYAN D. TENNEY authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER and DAVID N. MORTENSEN concurred.

TENNEY, Judge:

¶1 This case began with several hundred thousand dollars in allegedly unpaid loans, and it has since spawned over a decade of litigation. As this litigation has proceeded, the district court has issued several rulings granting partial summary judgment to the plaintiffs regarding various portions of the case.

¶2 In this appeal, defendant Brian Hansen challenges the most recent summary judgment ruling. There, the court first granted the plaintiffs’ request for summary judgment on a cause of action for breach of a guaranty. But in his opposition to that motion, Hansen had filed a sworn Declaration that created a genuine dispute of fact as to whether the plaintiffs were entitled Hansen & Mecham v. Hansen

to relief on this cause of action. We accordingly reverse the district court’s decision to grant summary judgment on it. In that same ruling, the district court also granted summary judgment in the plaintiffs’ favor on several other causes of action. But this ruling was also improper—this time because the plaintiffs had not actually requested summary judgment on those causes of action in their motion.

¶3 For the reasons set forth below, we reverse the district court’s decisions.

BACKGROUND 1

The Loans

¶4 In 2009, Brian Hansen joined with James and Dwayne Horsley (the Horsleys) to finance a loan to Teresa Collo. To assist with their own financing efforts, the Horsleys engaged three investment groups: Hansen & Mecham Investments LLC; MA Squared LLC; and Patrick Henry & Associates LLC (collectively, the Investors). The Horsleys received $300,000 from the Investors in exchange for three promissory notes, one for each Investor (the Investor Notes). Each Investor Note promised repayment of Investor funds by October 20, 2009, and each also contained an assignment clause in which the Horsleys “agree[d] to assign all Rights pertaining to [the Investors’] portion of said monies, as per agreements with Brian Hansen and Teresa [Collo]” to the Investors. The Horsleys then used the Investors’ money and $100,000 of their own money to loan $400,000 to Collo.

1. Because this comes to us on appeal from a decision granting summary judgment, we recite the facts “in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party,” which in this case is Hansen. Orvis v. Johnson, 2008 UT 2, ¶ 6, 177 P.3d 600 (quotation simplified).

20191059-CA 2 2022 UT App 17 Hansen & Mecham v. Hansen

¶5 Hansen was not a party to the loan agreement between the Horsleys and Collo, but he did provide the Horsleys with a conditional guaranty agreement (the Conditional Guaranty). Under the Conditional Guaranty, Hansen promised that if Collo did “not repay the principal amount of $400,000 to the Horsleys on or before October 12, 2009,” Hansen would “pay said amount to the Horsleys in full.” The Conditional Guaranty, however, contained a clause—commonly referred to in the litigation below and here as “the Condition Precedent”—under which the Conditional Guaranty would only take effect if Hansen “close[d] his pending financing transaction with i-Finance (or similar financial institution) for approximately $100 million.”

¶6 The repayment deadlines came and went, and the Horsleys were never paid by either Collo or Hansen. As a result, neither were the Investors.

The Complaint

¶7 Relying on the assignment clauses in the Investor Notes, the Investors filed suit in 2010 against the Horsleys, Collo, and Hansen. Their complaint pleaded seven causes of action, and it specified which cause of action was being pleaded against which defendant or group of defendants.

¶8 The first cause of action was for breach of contract. It only named the Horsleys as defendants.

¶9 As for Hansen, the Investors asserted in their “General Allegations” section that Hansen “failed to pay the Horsley Defendants the $400,000 under the Collo/Horsley Note pursuant to [Hansen’s] Guaranty.” But the Investors only named Hansen as a defendant in the fourth, fifth, and seventh causes of action, which were for fraudulent and negligent misrepresentation, promissory estoppel and detrimental reliance, and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, respectively.

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¶10 In his answer, Hansen denied that he had “any obligation to repay any amount to” the Investors or that they were entitled to any benefits from his Conditional Guaranty with the Horsleys. Hansen also defended himself against the three causes of action that had been pleaded against him.

¶11 Several years of litigation ensued, during which the Investors filed several motions for summary judgment against the Horsleys, Collo, and Hansen. Four of these motions are relevant to this appeal, and we discuss each in turn below.

The 2010 Motion

¶12 In August 2010, the Investors filed a motion for summary judgment against the Horsleys. This motion alleged that the Horsleys had “defaulted on several promissory notes/loans with the [Investors],” that “[t]he remaining principal amount ow[ed] under these notes [was] $300,000,” and that “the notes allow[ed] recovery of additional costs and fees.”

¶13 The Horsleys did not respond, and the court later granted summary judgment in the Investors’ favor. In its decision, the district court awarded the Investors “$300,000 . . . together with any interest, costs, and attorneys’ fees.”

The 2011 Motion

¶14 In January 2011, the Investors filed a motion for summary judgment against both Collo and Hansen.

¶15 With respect to Hansen, this motion did not ask for summary judgment on any of the three causes of action that the Investors had pleaded against him in their complaint. Instead, the 2011 Motion asked the court to grant “partial summary judgment against” Hansen “for the following additional claim[] asserted in their Complaint: . . . breach of guaranty against Defendant Brian Hansen.” The Investors argued that Hansen “personally guaranteed” payment on the “Collo/Horsley Note”

20191059-CA 4 2022 UT App 17 Hansen & Mecham v. Hansen

through the Conditional Guaranty and that he had breached that obligation by “fail[ing] to pay the Horsleys.”

¶16 In a written decision issued in May 2011, the district court noted that the 2011 Motion was requesting judgment against Hansen for “breach of guaranty,” and it specifically “denied” that motion “[a]gainst Brian Hansen.”

The 2019 Motion

¶17 In 2011, the Investors entered into a stipulated agreement with the Horsleys that settled the Investors’ claims against them for almost $350,000. Collecting on this judgment proved difficult, however, and after years of additional litigation that ultimately included bankruptcy proceedings, the Investors were still left unpaid.

¶18 In 2018, the Investors turned their focus back to Hansen, attempting to collect on the judgment against the Horsleys from Hansen through the Conditional Guaranty.

¶19 As the Investors pursued Hansen in court for this debt, Hansen failed to timely respond to almost every filing the Investors made with the district court. Hansen also impeded their efforts to schedule his deposition—so much so that the district court eventually authorized $7,500 in sanctions against him. Hansen’s deposition was finally held in February 2019.

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2022 UT App 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansen-and-mecham-investments-v-hansen-utahctapp-2022.