John B. Kugler v. Ron Nelson

CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 25, 2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of John B. Kugler v. Ron Nelson (John B. Kugler v. Ron Nelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John B. Kugler v. Ron Nelson, (Idaho Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF II}AHO

Docket No. 41039

JOHN B. KUGLER, ) 2014 Unpublished Opinion No.695 ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Filed: August 25,2014 ) v. ) Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk ) and ) RON NELSON, DAVID J. POWERS, THIS IS AN UNPUBLISHED WILLIAMJ.ARMSTRONG, ) OPIM0NANDSIIALLNOT ) BECITEDASAUTHORITY Defendants-Respondents, )

and l ) EDWINF.PRATERandSTEVENL. ) KEI\NISON, ) ) Defendants. )

Appeal from the District Court of the Fifth Judicial District, State of ldaho. Twin Falls County. Hon. G. Richard Bevan" District Jqdge.

Judgment dismissing action, affirmed.

John B. Kugler, Tacoma, Washingto4 pro se appellant.

Wright Brothers Law Office, PLLC; Brooke Baldwin Redmond. Twin Falls. for respondent.

LANSING, Judge John B. Kugler appeals from the involuntary dismissal of his civil complaint. We affpm. L BACKGROT]ND Kugler and defendants Ron Nelson, Edwin Prater, David powers, william Armstrong, and Steven Kennison were shareholders in H&M Distributing, Inc. and signatories to a stock subscription and cross-purchase agreement (shareholders agreement). pursuant to the shareholders agreement, each party subscribed to purchase a specific number of shares. The shareholders agreement provided that if any shareholder intended to sell his shares, he would provide written notice to each of the other shareholders who would then be given the opportunity to purchase those shares, in proportion to his ownership intercst, at a subsequent corporate meeting.

On May 6,2010, Kugler filed a complaint against the defendants alleging ttrat Prater had sold his shares in H&M without notice to Kugler and that each of the defendants, save for Kennison, had purchased Prater's shares. The complaint sought monetary damages for breach of the shareholders agreement. Nelson filed an answer and a motion for summary judgment. The district court granted the motion for summary judgmen! awarded attomey fees to Nelson, and included an Idaho Rule of civil Procedure 54(b) certificate certiffing the judgment as final. ,See

r.R.c.P.540). Kugler appealed from this summary judgment. In an unpublished decision, this Court reversed, concluding that genuine issues of material fact existed concerning whether Nelson breached the shareholders agreement when he purchased the Prater stock and conceming the date

of accrual of Kugler's cause of action for purposes of the statute of limitations. Kugler v. Nelson, Docket No. 39060 (ct. App. Jtne 22,2012). Based upon these determinations, we also

vacated the district court's award of attomey fees to Nelson and remanded. In the opinion, we mentioned that fraudulent concealment may play a part in the statute of limitations defense. We also noted some confusion in multiple court discussions regarding Kugler's unresolved motion to

amend his complaint and stated that this matter could again be taken up on remand.

Kugler's motion to amend his complaint had been filed on December 20. 2010. In December 2012, six months after the remand from this court, Kugler renewed the motion. Following a January 22,2013, hearing, the district court denied the motion. The districr court explained that it was denying the motion primarily because, as he had done prior to appeal, Kugler failed to provide a proposed amended complaint or otherwise provide any specific information about what additional claims he wished to assert. Kugler filed a motion for reconsideration and, three weeks later in February 2013, he submitted a proposed amended complaint for the first time since his initial motion to amend was filed in December 2010. The district court apparently denied the motion. A court trial was conducted on April 2,2013, to address Kugler's claims against Nelson, Powers, and Armstrong.l Kugler represented himself. At the close of Kugler's presentation of evidence, the district court granted the defendants' Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure 41(b) motion for involuntary dismissal on the ground that Kugler's evidence had shown no right to relief. The district court thereafter awarded attomey fees to the defendants pursuant to Idaho code $ 12-120(3), holding that the case arose from a commercial transaction. Kugler appeals. II. AI\ALYSIS Kugler lists ten2 issues in his opening brief that can be categorized as follows: (l) claims that the district court ened by setting a trial date before sorne defendants had frled an answer and by refusing to postpone the trial; (2) enor in denlng Kugler's motion to amend the complaint; (3) error in the court's findings of fact and conclusions of law; and (4) enor in awarding anomey fees to the defendants. The defendants raise as an additional issue on appeal a request for an award of attomey fees incurred on appeal.

of Kugler's claims of enor is made difiicult by the deficiencies in Reasoned review Kugler's appellate briefs and in the record on appeal. Kugler's appellate briefs contain no citations to the parts of the record relied upon, and the argument section of his brief contains no citations to authorities, both of which are required by ldaho Appellate Rule 35(a)(6). The only authorities included within his briefs are in a separate table of "Points and Authorities,' (a component of appellate briefs that has not been required by the Idaho Appellate Rules for more than two decades). The argument section of his brief contains no further reference to these authorities, leaving it to this court and the defendants to decipher which issue, if any, the cited authority applies to. Further, the argument sections of Kugler's brief do not address each issue in a separate section. lnstead, they present one undifferentiated argument. This court would be well justified in simply affirming tlle judgnrent below on the basis of this noncompliance with briefing standards and because some of the assignments of enor are too vague and indefinite to

I Kugler voluntarily dismissed the claims against defendant Prater with prejudice on July 18, 2011, and the claims against defendant Kennison were dismissed by stipulation on November 27. 2012.

' Kugler lists nine issues in the "Issues Presented on Al'peal" section of his opening brief and one issue in the "Points and Authorities" section. beaddressed. SeeBachv.Bagley, 148 Idaho784,790,229P.3d,1146,1152(2010). Thatbeing said, we will nevertheless discuss some ofthe issues for which we can discem the presentation of some argument. "That does not necessarily mean that the arguments we address were presented

in a cogent manner but merely that they were asserted to the extent that the Court deemed them to have been marginally raised." Id. at791,229 P.3d at I 153. A. Complaints Concerning the District Court's Setting of a Trial Date and Other Pretrial Matters Kugler contends that the district court ened by setting a trial date before defendants Powers and Armstrong had filed an answer. He also contends that he made numerous motions to vacate and continue that trial date because he did not have enough time to adequately prepare. Kugler also complains that the district court erred by not requiring Nelson to timely refirnd the attomey fees that Kugler had paid Nelson on the fee award predating the first appeal in this case. Kugler contends that he was prejudiced by this last error because he needed that money to hire an attomey to represent him at trial. None of these issues has been preserved for appellate review. An issue that was not presented to the court may not be raised for the first time on appeal. Bank of Commerce v. Jefferson Enterprises, LLC, ls4 Idaho 824, 828-29, 30i p.3d I g3, l g7-gg (2013); Garner v. Bartschi, 139 Idaho 430, 436,80 p.3d 1031, 1037 (2003).

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John B. Kugler v. Ron Nelson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-b-kugler-v-ron-nelson-idahoctapp-2014.