Hoyt Inv. v. BLOOMINGTON COM. & TR. CTR.
This text of 418 N.W.2d 173 (Hoyt Inv. v. BLOOMINGTON COM. & TR. CTR.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
HOYT INVESTMENT COMPANY, et al., Respondents,
v.
BLOOMINGTON COMMERCE AND TRADE CENTER ASSOCIATES, et al., Petitioners, Appellants,
The Port Authority of the City of Bloomington, The City of Bloomington, and The Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission, Defendants.
Supreme Court of Minnesota.
Robert J. Sheran, Theresa B. Bonner, Luke H. Terhaar, Minneapolis, for Bloomington Commerce and Trade Center.
James R. Bresnahan, William D. Paul, St. Paul, for Hoyt Inv.
Considered and decided by the court en banc without oral argument.
COYNE, Justice.
On petition of Bloomington Commerce and Trade Center Associates, a partnership between individuals William O. Cooley and Arthur J. Petrie, we granted further review of an order of the court of appeals which granted respondent Hoyt Investment Company's petition for extraordinary relief and directed the trial court to enter judgment in favor of Hoyt in accordance with the court of appeals' earlier opinion in Hoyt Investment Company v. Bloomington Commerce and Trade Center Associates, 390 N.W.2d 325 (Minn.App.1986), petition for further review denied September 24, 1986. We affirm.
*174 While the facts underlying this controversy were detailed in the earlier court of appeals' opinion, it is necessary to summarize the facts as well as the unusual procedural history to fully understand the issue in the context in which it arises.
On July 21, 1981, the Cooley-Petrie partnership, as purchaser, and the Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission, as seller, entered into a purchase agreement for the sale of property on which Metropolitan Stadium is located. Thereafter, on July 30, 1981, Hoyt Investment, a partnership of Bruce K. Hoyt and Steven B. Hoyt, commenced suit against Cooley-Petrie, the Commission, and others seeking to have that sale set aside. Voluntary dismissal of the suit followed the December 1981 execution of a settlement agreement requiring Cooley-Petrie to pay $250,000 to Hoyt "upon the closing of the July 21, 1981 Agreement, between Cooley-Petrie and the Commission * * *" or no monies in the event no closing occurred; in exchange, Hoyt agreed to refrain from interfering with Cooley-Petrie's efforts to acquire the property.
Cooley-Petrie did not acquire the property on the initial or extended closing date of January 4, 1984 and subsequently quitclaimed its interest to the ultimate purchaser, the Port Authority of the City of Bloomington. Hoyt commenced this action on September 6, 1984 against all parties to the sale negotiations alleging, among a number of claims, that Cooley-Petrie owed it $250,000 pursuant to the 1981 settlement agreement. Cooley-Petrie answered by general denial and alleged in its counterclaim that Hoyt had breached the agreement by interfering with Cooley-Petrie's rights to acquire the property and that its tortious interference caused Cooley-Petrie to sustain damages in excess of $50,000.
Upon trial, the district court considered Cooley-Petrie's argument that because no "closing" pursuant to the 1981 purchase agreement had occurred, Hoyt was not entitled to payment under the settlement agreement, as well as specific evidence in support of Cooley-Petrie's counterclaim for tortious interference. Despite the evidence offered, Cooley-Petrie neither attempted to prove damages caused by the alleged interference nor requested any findings in this regard. The trial court found that no "closing" had occurred and that the provision of the settlement agreement requiring payment to Hoyt was null and void. Although at the close of trial both parties submitted proposed findings and conclusions dealing with Hoyt's alleged breach, the trial court did not rule on that question, but entered judgment in favor of the defendants, and Hoyt appealed.
The court of appeals reversed, determining that indeed a "closing" within the meaning of the settlement agreement had occurred and holding that Hoyt was "entitled to recover $250,000 plus interest * * *." Hoyt Inv. Co. v. Bloomington Commerce and Trade Center Associates, 390 N.W.2d 325, 333 (Minn.App.1986). The parties made no reference to the question of Hoyt's alleged breach in the briefs submitted and the appellate court did not address the issue beyond its declaration that Hoyt was entitled to recover. Similarly, Cooley-Petrie's first petition for further review contained neither mention of its counterclaim nor reference to Hoyt's alleged breach of contract as an alternative defense to Hoyt's $250,000 claim. Not until its objections to Hoyt's October 2, 1986 bill of costs and disbursements did Cooley-Petrie first question the propriety of the entry of judgment in accordance with the court of appeals' decision that Hoyt was entitled to recover $250,000 plus interest.
On October 8, 1986 Hoyt obtained an ex parte order for judgment against the named defendants in accordance with the first court of appeals' opinion. The defendants moved the trial court to vacate the order claiming not only that it was issued ex parte in violation of the rules of civil procedure, but also that it was premature until the trial court disposed of the undecided claim of Hoyt's alleged breach. The trial court vacated its order upon its recognition of the order's ex parte nature, but acknowledged that it had not decided the interference claim and indicated its willingness to hear arguments in this regard.
*175 In response to the trial court's comments, Hoyt petitioned the court of appeals for alternative writs of prohibition or mandamus directing the trial court to enter judgment in compliance with the original appellate court decision. The court of appeals granted the relief, acknowledging that the question of Hoyt's alleged interference had been litigated but not decided; the court however concluded that Cooley-Petrie was barred from asserting the undecided claim to preclude the entry of judgment because they had failed to either request additional findings pursuant to Minn. R.Civ.P. 52.02 or to notice review of the defense. Cooley-Petrie filed its second petition for further review and it is that matter which is now before this court.
We note that while these proceedings were pending in this court, the trial court did in fact enter judgment, Cooley-Petrie appealed to the court of appeals from the judgment and by order of this court dated September 4, 1987, all proceedings in the court of appeals were stayed pending final disposition of this matter.
While we agree with the ultimate disposition by the court of appeals, we conclude that neither Minn.R.Civ.App.P. 106 nor Minn.R.Civ.P. 52.02 would have provided a vehicle appropriate for securing a remand, and comments by the appellate court to the contrary impose requirements not contemplated by either rule.
Minn.R.Civ.App.P. 106 authorizes a respondent to obtain review of issues not raised on appellant's appeal but which may adversely affect respondent and promotes judicial economy by allowing an appellate court to resolve all disputed issues in a single appeal. Arndt v. American Family Ins. Co., 394 N.W.2d 791, 793-94 (Minn. 1986).
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