Jones v. Layton/Okland

2009 UT 39, 214 P.3d 859, 634 Utah Adv. Rep. 7, 2009 Utah LEXIS 132, 2009 WL 2015436
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 2009
Docket20070813
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 2009 UT 39 (Jones v. Layton/Okland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Layton/Okland, 2009 UT 39, 214 P.3d 859, 634 Utah Adv. Rep. 7, 2009 Utah LEXIS 132, 2009 WL 2015436 (Utah 2009).

Opinion

DURRANT, Associate Chief Justice:

INTRODUCTION

§1 The district court entered an order granting summary judgment in favor of defendant Layton/Okland after plaintiff Llewellyn Jones's heirs ("Jones") failed to timely oppose Layton/Okland's summary judgment motion. Jones moved to vacate the summary judgment order, claiming, among other things, excusable neglect pursuant to rule 60(b) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. The district court denied Jones's motion, and Jones appealed. We affirm the district court's denial.

BACKGROUND

T2 In 1998, Llewellyn Jones fell to his death while working on a construction project for which Layton/Okland was the general contractor. Jones's heirs filed a wrongful death action against Layton/Okland and Southern Steel Company, the provider of engineering services for the project.

T8 A stay order was imposed in 2001 and lifted in 2005. In December 2006, Lay-ton/Okland filed a motion for summary judgment. The motion was served by mail on Jones's counsel. Jones's counsel requested an extension of the deadline for filing an opposition memorandum to the summary judgment motion, and Layton/Okland's counsel agreed to grant the extension.

[ 4 In January 2007, after the deadline for the first extension had expired, Jones's counsel sent an email to Layton/Okland's counsel requesting a second extension until February 2, 2007. Jones's counsel and Layton/Ok-land's counsel then spoke by telephone, and, during the conversation, Jones's counsel claims that Layton/Okland's counsel gave him an open-ended extension of time in which to respond. Jones's counsel subsequently testified that, while his email had "request[ed] an extension ... to a time certain, ... in our phone call, I understood that counsel gave me an open-ended extension." Layton/Okland's counsel denied ever giving Jones's counsel an open-ended extension.

T5 On February 22, 2007-twenty days after the second extended filing deadline had expired-Layton/Okland filed a request to submit its motion for summary judgment for decision and requested that the motion be granted because it was unopposed. Despite being served with a copy of the request, *861 Jones's counsel did not respond, and the court granted Layton/Okland's motion for summary judgment on March 8, 2007, noting that Jones had failed to respond and that the apparent time for response had expired. The court requested Layton/Okland's counsel to prepare and submit the final order.

16 Layton/Okland served Jones's counsel with a proposed order on March 12, 2007. Again, Jones did not respond. The court signed and entered the order on April 2, 2007.

T7 On April 17, 2007-five weeks after the district court entered its minute entry granting summary judgment and more than two weeks after the district court entered the final summary judgment order-Jones filed two memoranda with the court. The first was a memorandum opposing Layton/Ok-land's motion for summary judgment. The second was a memorandum requesting the court to vacate its grant of summary judgment to Layton/Okland and consider the opposition memorandum timely on the ground of excusable neglect, Jones argued that "there [was] reasonable justification or excuse" for Jones's failure to respond to the summary judgment motion because Jones's counsel "understood that counsel gave him an open-ended extension" and because "he was overburdened" based on the "loss of three associates at his office." Jones did not file the requisite motion supporting the see-ond memorandum until ten days later on April 27, 2007.

[ 8 The district court reviewed Jones's motion and the supporting memoranda, heard oral argument on the issue, and determined that while Jones's counsel "acted in good faith, his omissions were neither a single act of carelessness, nor acts of a minor nature. Counsel repeatedly failed to act as a prudent lawyer would in the same cireumstances, although it was within his reasonable control." The district court then denied Jones's motion, finding no excusable neglect. Jones timely appealed, seeking a reversal of the court's denial.

T 9 We have jurisdiction pursuant to Utah Code section 78A-8-102(8)(g) (2008).

STANDARD OF REVIEW

110 We review a district court's denial of a rule 60(b) motiqn for relief from judgment for an abuse of discretion. 1

ANALYSIS

111 Jones claims that the district court erred in denying his motion to vacate the summary judgment order entered in favor of Layton/Okland by applying the wrong test to determine excusable neglect. While Jones now acknowledges that his counsel was "unquestionably negligent" by failing to timely oppose Layton/Okland's motion, he argues that "the district court placed so much emphasis on the degree of [his counsel's] negli-genee that it allowed his neglect to eclipse the doctrinal test for excusability."

1 12 Jones asserts that our prior decision in West v. Grand County 2 contains Utah's "doctrinal test" for excusable neglect and that the district court abused its discretion by failing to give adequate weight to considerations such as the severe prejudice of the denial to Jones, the lack of prejudice to Layton/Okland, and the relatively small length of the delay in context of the prior five-year stay in this case.

4 13 Jones also argues that any conception of excusable neglect requiring a rule 60(b) movant to show "due diligence" is circular. Neglect, Jones asserts, is the antithesis of diligence. Thus, he contends that this court's prior expositions of excusable neglect as the exercise of due diligence under the cireumstances 3 "convert[] the original ne- *862 gleet for which exeuse is sought into res ipsa loquitur evidence of nonexcusability." Accordingly, Jones claims that "once neglect has been found, courts are to invoke West's four-part test and make an equitable determination of exeusability governed by an assessment of all of the West factors."

{14 Layton/Okland responds by arguing that the West factors are inapposite in the context of a motion to set aside a summary judgment. According to Layton/Okland, when a party seeks to have a summary judgment set aside on the ground of excusable neglect, the applicable test is whether the moving party used due diligence and the neglect resulted from cireumstances beyond his control. Layton/Okland contends that, because Jones acknowledges that his counsel was "unquestionably negligent" and because nothing beyond his control prevented Jones's counsel from opposing Layton/Okland's summary judgment motion, the district court was correct in denying Jones's rule 60(b) motion.

15 Layton/Okland also argues that, even in the event that West does provide the applicable test for excusable neglect in this case, the district court adequately balanced the relevant considerations and therefore did not abuse its discretion. Referencing our statement from West that none of the factors set out in that case are dispositive, but "are helpful in determining the equities of whether a finding of excusable neglect is warrant ed," 4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2009 UT 39, 214 P.3d 859, 634 Utah Adv. Rep. 7, 2009 Utah LEXIS 132, 2009 WL 2015436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-laytonokland-utah-2009.