Mendenhall v. Summerwood Investments

2024 UT App 45, 548 P.3d 904
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedApril 4, 2024
Docket20210144-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 UT App 45 (Mendenhall v. Summerwood Investments) 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
Mendenhall v. Summerwood Investments, 2024 UT App 45, 548 P.3d 904 (Utah Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 UT App 45

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

DEBRA MENDENHALL AND GARY MENDENHALL, Appellants, v. SUMMERWOOD INVESTMENTS, LLC; SUMMERWOOD CONDO PARTNERS, LLC; SUMMERWOOD CORPORATION, INC.; HANDS ON CAPITAL, INC.; AND BME ENTERPRISES, LLC, Appellees.

Opinion No. 20210144-CA Filed April 4, 2024

Fourth District Court, Provo Department The Honorable Darold J. McDade No. 090401280

Bruce M. Pritchett, Jonathan R. Rudd, and Jeremy C. Sink, Attorneys for Appellants Robert G. Crockett, Tanner J. Bean, Mark F. James, and Mitchell A. Stephens, Attorneys for Appellees

JUDGE JOHN D. LUTHY authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES DAVID N. MORTENSEN and RYAN D. TENNEY concurred.

LUTHY, Judge:

¶1 Debra and Gary Mendenhall appeal from the district court’s denial of their motion to intervene in this litigation, which arises out of an agreement between Summerwood Condo Partners, LLC (Condo Partners) and business entities previously owned by Trevor and Linda Woolf. The Mendenhalls also appeal from the district court’s dismissal of the underlying action. We conclude that the Mendenhalls’ appeal from the order denying their motion to intervene was untimely. We further conclude that the Mendenhalls lack standing to appeal from the dismissal of the underlying action. Accordingly, we dismiss the appeal. Mendenhall v. Summerwood Investments

BACKGROUND

¶2 The Mendenhalls and the Woolfs are cousins. In 2003, the Mendenhalls loaned money to the Woolfs to assist the Woolfs in financing a condominium complex. At the time, the Woolfs owned two holding companies, Summerwood Corporation, Inc. and Hands On Capital, Inc. (collectively, Hands On), which in turn owned Summerwood Investments, LLC (Summerwood). Summerwood owned the condominium complex.

¶3 In 2008, Condo Partners, an unrelated entity, entered an agreement to purchase Summerwood from Hands On (the Purchase Agreement). The sale closed that same year. At the time of the sale, the Woolfs still owed the Mendenhalls a substantial amount of money on their loan. The Purchase Agreement, however, included provisions under which Hands On might receive title to three condominium units. The Woolfs assert that the value of those units was roughly equal to the amount they owed the Mendenhalls and that they, as owners of Hands On, intended to use those units to pay their debt to the Mendenhalls. In the end, however, Condo Partners did not transfer title to any condominium units to Hands On.

¶4 The Woolfs then recorded a notice of interest against several condominium units, and Condo Partners and Summerwood (collectively, Condo Partners) responded by filing a Verified Petition to Nullify Wrongful Lien, thereby initiating this litigation. The Woolfs filed an answer. They also (as counterclaim petitioners), together with Hands On (as a third- party petitioner), asserted claims against Condo Partners for, among other things, an order requiring Condo Partners to convey to them three condominium units or the value of three condominium units. Additionally, the Woolfs at some point drafted and signed a document purporting to assign from Hands On to the Mendenhalls “a 100% undivided interest, other rights

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and titles in Three (3) of the Condominium Units described in [the Purchase Agreement]” (the Assignment).

¶5 After this litigation commenced, the Woolfs filed for bankruptcy, and eventually the bankruptcy court approved the sale of Hands On to BME Enterprises, LLC (BME Enterprises). Apparently aware that Hands On, under its new ownership, intended to settle and dismiss this litigation, thereby ending any chance for the Woolfs to obtain the three condominium units and thereby pay their debt to the Mendenhalls, the Mendenhalls filed a motion to intervene, asking the court to substitute them in as the real parties in interest in place of the Woolfs and Hands On. In support of their motion, the Mendenhalls produced the Assignment, which (as already noted) purports to have transferred “a 100% undivided interest, other rights and titles in Three (3) of the Condominium Units described in [the Purchase Agreement]” from Hands On to the Mendenhalls.

¶6 Condo Partners opposed the motion, arguing that the Woolfs and Hands On’s claims had not been assigned to the Mendenhalls but, instead, had been acquired by BME Enterprises when it purchased the Woolfs’ interest in Hands On out of the bankruptcy estate. Then BME Enterprises filed its own motion to intervene, asking to be substituted in as the real party in interest in place of the Woolfs. The district court granted BME Enterprises’ motion and substituted it in as the real party in interest in place of the Woolfs. The court also provisionally granted the Mendenhalls’ motion to intervene so that they could litigate the issue of whether Hands On’s interest in the Purchase Agreement and claims arising under the Purchase Agreement had been conveyed to them by the Assignment.

¶7 Following discovery, Condo Partners moved for summary judgment on the Mendenhalls’ motion to intervene, arguing that the Assignment was not valid and that, even if it was, it conveyed to the Mendenhalls only proceeds of the Purchase Agreement—

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i.e., whatever condominium units Hands On actually received— and, therefore, that the Mendenhalls lacked standing to intervene. The Mendenhalls opposed summary judgment, arguing that the Assignment was valid and clearly conveyed more than just proceeds of the Purchase Agreement. The district court denied Condo Partners’ motion for summary judgment, and the case proceeded to a bench trial on the issues related to the Mendenhalls’ intervention.

¶8 After the trial, the district court entered an order on January 15, 2021, vacating its prior provisional order of intervention and ultimately denying the Mendenhalls’ motion to intervene. Then on January 21, 2021, based on a settlement agreement between the parties to the underlying action—Condo Partners, Hands On, and BME Enterprises (collectively, the Appellees)—the court issued a judgment dismissing the underlying action with prejudice.

¶9 On February 19, 2021, the Mendenhalls filed a notice of appeal from both the January 15 order denying their motion to intervene and the January 21 judgment dismissing the underlying action. Following initial briefing and oral argument on appeal, this court asked the Mendenhalls and the Appellees for supplemental briefing. With their supplemental brief, the Appellees filed a motion to dismiss the appeal, arguing that this court lacks jurisdiction. 1 The Mendenhalls submitted no response to the Appellees’ motion to dismiss.

ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶10 We first address the jurisdictional issues raised by the Appellees. See Living Rivers v. Executive Dir. of the Utah Dep’t of

1. “A lack of jurisdiction can be raised by the court or either party at any time.” A.J. Mackay Co. v. Okland Constr. Co., 817 P.2d 323, 325 (Utah 1991) (cleaned up).

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Env’t Quality, 2017 UT 64, ¶ 26, 417 P.3d 57 (“Before we consider the arguments before us on appeal, we must evaluate [the jurisdictional issue].”); Employers’ Reinsurance Fund v. Utah Labor Comm’n, 2013 UT App 139, ¶ 6, 304 P.3d 470 (per curiam) (“It is a court’s first duty to determine if it has jurisdiction.”). “Whether appellate jurisdiction exists is a question of law, which we review for correctness.” First Nat’l Bank of Layton v. Palmer, 2018 UT 43, ¶ 5, 427 P.3d 1169 (cleaned up).

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Bluebook (online)
2024 UT App 45, 548 P.3d 904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mendenhall-v-summerwood-investments-utahctapp-2024.