Koerber v. Mismash

2015 UT App 237, 359 P.3d 701, 795 Utah Adv. Rep. 15, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 250, 2015 WL 5567913
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedSeptember 17, 2015
Docket20130567-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2015 UT App 237 (Koerber v. Mismash) 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
Koerber v. Mismash, 2015 UT App 237, 359 P.3d 701, 795 Utah Adv. Rep. 15, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 250, 2015 WL 5567913 (Utah Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Amended Opinion 2

ROTH, Judge:

11 Claud R. Koerber and Jewel K. Skousen (Tenants) appeal from several orders and *704 rulings of the district court related to their dispute with Naney A,. Mismash (Landlord).We affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand the matter to the district court.

BACKGROUND

T2 Tenants and Landlord entered into a rental agreement for a house in August 2010. Tenants agreed to pay $2,000 per month in rent, pay for all of their utilities directly, and abide by certain conditions such as abstaining from making any repairs or alterations to the premises. Landlord agreed to replace the kitchen sink, repaint portions of the house, clean the carpets, and replace a coun-tertop. .

T3 Within a year, conflicts arose between the parties. Tenants claimed that Landlord had maintained the utilities in her own name (requiring Tenants to pay Landlord rather than the utility companies directly), none .of the promised maintenance and repairs had been completed, mold in their front living room had not been dealt with, window treatments and new door locks allegedly agreed to outside the terms of the written lease had not been provided, and Landlord had failed to provide reimbursement for a new water heater. Tenants sent Landlord a letter on July 9, 2011, detailing their complaints, It was accompanied by a "Notice of Recaleulation." In their letter, Tenants told Landlord that once the utilities were properly transferred into Tenants' names, they would owe the utility companies substantial back payments and late fees because of Landlord's failure to pay the utilities on time. Accordingly, they explained that "the only just solution" was to have payments made above the rental amount credited toward future rent. By Tenants' calculations, based on this offset claim, they would not owe Landlord any additional rent money until September, 2011. Tenants also stated that if Landlord failed to make the repairs within the specified time they would make the promised repairs themselves and deduct the cost from their future rent obligation.

{4 Three days later, Landlord posted a notice entitled "Notice to Quit" on Tenants' front door. The notice to quit informed Tenants that rent and utility payments for that month, July, were overdue and that if they did not pay within three days eviction proceedings would "immediately be instituted." On July 18, Tenants filed a complaint against Landlord, claiming, among other things, violations of the Utah Fit Premises Act. They also obtained a temporary restraining order enjoining Landlord from attempting non-judicial eviction efforts. The next day, Landlord served Tenants with a summons in a separate unlawful detainer action she had just filed with the district court. The district court consolidated the two cases, designating Landlord's unlawful detainer complaint as a counterclaim. - An - immediate occupancy hearing was set for August 9 on the unlawfal detainer claim.

T5 In the meantime, Landlord served Tenants with another notice to quit on August 1 and filed an amended counterclaim on August 5. The amended counterclaim added a claim for breach of contract to her prévious unlawful detainer claim; Landlord alleged that Tenants had breached the rental agreement by failing to notify Landlord of a new baby that was an occupant in the home; violating the rental agreement's pet policy; and making alterations to the home, such as installing pipes for salt water fish tanks, removing bedroom and closet doors without permission, removing a cabinet and counter-top, and hanging flat screen televisions in excess of twenty pounds on the walls. .

16 At the immediate occupancy hearing, the district court determined that Tenants could remain in possession of the home if they posted a $4,000 occupancy bond, deposited $2,000 with the court by the first of each month, and brought the utilities current. Tenants paid the bond and remained in the home for a short while. ~ |

17 .Over the next several months, Koerber became ill, Tenants stopped paying the $2,000 deposit to the court and vacated the property, and the case stalled,. . In April 2012, the district court issued a notice of its intent to dismiss the case for failure to prose *705 cute. In response, Landlord filed a motion for summary judgment on May 8, 2012. The next day, Tenants filed their own response to the district court's notice, asserting that they had not moved forward on the case because they believed the court had granted a previous extension of time "on all pending deadlines" in the case. Tenants therefore asserted that they were not required to take any action on their case until Landlord cireulated an order from the immediate occupancy hearing, which they claimed Landlord had not yet done. Tenants argued, however, that: Landlord's counterclaim should be dismissed because she had not been granted any kind of extension and yet had taken "no action from September 29, 2011 through May 8, 2012" 'on her counterclaim. Tenants also argued that Landlord's motion for summary Judgment should be stricken because Landlord had not served the motion by email as the court had previously ordered the parties to do with all filings and because, in her motion for summary judgment, she had stated no "good cause" as to why her claim should not be dismissed pursuant .to the district court's April notice.

{8 About a month later, on June 6, Landlord filed a motion for entry of default judgment against Tenants on her unlawful detain-er claim. She stated that her motion for summary judgment had been served by mail on May 8 and its accompanying memorandum by email that same day. Landlord stated that when the motion sent by mail had been returned to her as undeliverable on May 17, she mailed the motion again that same day to a different address and service had been completed. She contended that Tenants' response to her summary judgment motion was due no later than June 4 and that no such response had been filed. According ly, Landlord asserted that "briefing on this matter is complete" and submitted her summary judgment motion for decision,

T9 On June 18, Tenants filed a motion to strike Landlord's notice to submit and requested a hearing. Tenants argued that they had still not been properly served with Landlord's motion because it had not been sent by email, as the court had required the parties to do, and that they had not received the summary judgment documents Landlord purported to have sent by mail. The court declined to hear Tenants' motion to strike, and the summary judgment motion was subsequently set for hearing. Tenants never filed a written response to Landlord's motion for summary judgment:. At the hearing on the summary judgment motion on July 16, the district court granted Landlord's motion for summary judgment, dismissing all of Tenants' claims and granting judgment on Landlord's counterclaim. The court articulated two bases for this decision in its written order: (1) Tenants were served with Landlord's summary judgment motion "but chose not to file an Opposition," and (2) Tenants' "evidentiary submissions at oral argument did not comply'wi’ch [rule 7(c)(@8)(A) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure] and did not raise a genuine issue of material fact sufficient to defeat summary judgment."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 UT App 237, 359 P.3d 701, 795 Utah Adv. Rep. 15, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 250, 2015 WL 5567913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koerber-v-mismash-utahctapp-2015.