Imholte Farms Partnership v. John Kerwin
This text of Imholte Farms Partnership v. John Kerwin (Imholte Farms Partnership v. John Kerwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2016).
STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A16-0542
Imholte Farms Partnership, Respondent,
vs.
John Kerwin, et al., Appellants.
Filed January 9, 2017 Affirmed Ross, Judge
Sherburne County District Court File No. 71-CV-14-732
Thomas G. Jovanovich, Jessie L. Sogge, Jovanovich, Kadlec & Athmann, PA, St. Cloud, Minnesota (for respondent)
Allison F. Eklund, Eklund Law, PC, Roseville, Minnesota (for appellants)
Considered and decided by Ross, Presiding Judge; Cleary, Chief Judge; and Jesson,
Judge.
UNPUBLISHED OPINION
ROSS, Judge
Imholte Farms Partnership sued John Kerwin after Kerwin’s cattle wandered into
an Imholte Farms cornfield and damaged its crop. The parties tried to settle their
disagreement, but they could not come to terms over a potentially remedial property swap. Kerwin asked the district court to enforce the attempted settlement anyway. He made this
request by letter two weeks before trial and then arrived the day of trial attempting to serve
his settlement-enforcement summary-judgment motion on Imholte Farms. The district
court denied the motion as untimely. The jury heard the merits of the case and decided in
Imholte Farms’s favor. Kerwin appeals the district court’s refusal to enforce the attempted
settlement agreement, but he concedes that his motion was untimely and he otherwise
identifies no reversible error. We therefore affirm.
FACTS
John Kerwin’s cattle left his land and ambled onto the neighboring Imholte Farms
Partnership cornfield on multiple occasions between June and September 2013. The cows
ate, trampled, or lay on stalks, prompting Imholte Farms to sue Kerwin for $10,659.60 in
damages. The district court issued a scheduling order under which the parties were to
complete mediation by October 17, 2014, file all dispositive and nondispositive motions
by November 14, 2014, and commence a jury trial on January 20, 2015.
The parties tentatively settled their dispute on October 16, 2014. The settlement
included a plan for the parties to swap parcels, but finalizing the property swap proved
difficult because of a Minnesota Land Trust conservation easement that required the trust’s
consent, which it did not convey. Imholte Farms notified the district court in September
2015 that the tentative settlement had failed. The district court set a new trial date of
January 19, 2016, and, meanwhile, the parties attempted to negotiate a new deal.
The parties failed to reach a new agreement. About two weeks before trial, Kerwin’s
attorney withdrew. Kerwin sent a letter to the district court asking it either to continue the
2 trial so he could find a new attorney or to enforce the original settlement agreement. He
explained the terms of that failed agreement and attached a copy. The district court denied
his request for a continuance and declined to consider or enforce the purported agreement.
Kerwin arrived the morning of trial attempting to move for summary judgment
based on the failed settlement agreement. He argued that Imholte Farms had misunderstood
the conservation easement’s effect and that the agreement’s terms could still be performed.
The district court refused to consider Kerwin’s motion because it was both untimely and
unfiled. The court directed the case to trial, and the jury found Kerwin liable in a verdict
that awarded Imholte Farms $10,890 in damages. The district court entered judgment on
the verdict, including treble damages, for a total award of $32,670. Kerwin appeals.
DECISION
Kerwin argues that the district court should have enforced the settlement agreement
and not proceeded to trial. But he challenges none of the district court’s three essential
decisions: (1) it denied Kerwin’s continuance request; (2) it treated Kerwin’s request to
enforce the settlement agreement as a summary-judgment motion; and (3) it denied
Kerwin’s summary-judgment motion as untimely, not reaching its merits. Because Kerwin
does not contest any of these decisions, his appeal cannot succeed.
Kerwin’s brief does mention the fact that the district court denied his continuance
request and declares baldly that “[a]n appropriate course of action” would have been to
grant it. The declaration does not develop into an argument supported by reason or
authority. So we do not consider it further. See Anderson v. Comm’r of Health, 811 N.W.2d
162, 166 (Minn. App. 2012), review denied (Minn. Apr. 17, 2012).
3 Kerwin instead attempts an end-around argument to reach the merits of his
summary-judgment theory. He acknowledged at oral argument that the district court may
characterize a settlement-enforcement request as a motion for summary judgment under
Voicestream Mpls., Inc. v. RPC Props., Inc., 743 N.W.2d 267, 273 (Minn. 2008) (holding
that a district court shall treat a motion to enforce a settlement agreement as it would a
motion for summary judgment). And he acknowledged that his motion was untimely. He
suggests that he is not actually appealing from the summary-judgment decision but, rather,
from the result of a trial that should have never taken place (because of the summary-
judgment decision).
At oral argument, Kerwin theorized that the district court should not have proceeded
to trial because an enforceable settlement agreement was in place and the merits of his
settlement-enforceability argument warrant our attention. The theory essentially urges us
to disregard both the dispositive nature of the district court’s untimeliness decision and the
dispositive effect of Kerwin’s failure to challenge that decision on appeal. We can do
neither. And if these obstacles were not enough, he faces two more: he has also not
attempted to overcome the bar to appellate review resulting from the district court’s
decision not to address the merits of the argument (see Thiele v. Stich, 425 N.W.2d 580,
582 (Minn. 1988) (holding that an appellate court generally considers only those issues
presented to and considered by the district court)) or to overcome his failure to successfully
introduce a copy of the alleged settlement agreement into the record (see id. at 582–83
(holding that appellate courts may not consider matters outside the record)).
4 Kerwin added at oral argument that we should reach the merits because the district
court treated him unfairly, urging that district courts should relax the procedural rules for
unrepresented parties. But his urging contradicts established standards. See Minn. R. Gen.
Pract. 1.04; Heinsch v. Lot 27, 399 N.W.2d 107, 109 (Minn. App. 1987) (stating that pro
se litigants are generally held to the same standards as attorneys and that unfamiliarity with
procedural rules is not good cause to excuse untimely action). The district court exhibited
no unfair bias on account of Kerwin’s status as an unrepresented party.
Our conclusive, threshold issue remains whether the district court erred by denying
Kerwin’s summary-judgment motion as untimely under the court’s scheduling order. We
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