Michael Bagby v. First Street Deli II, LLC, and Kim Harker and Alexis Brown, individually

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMarch 5, 2025
Docket24-0488
StatusPublished

This text of Michael Bagby v. First Street Deli II, LLC, and Kim Harker and Alexis Brown, individually (Michael Bagby v. First Street Deli II, LLC, and Kim Harker and Alexis Brown, individually) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Michael Bagby v. First Street Deli II, LLC, and Kim Harker and Alexis Brown, individually, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-0488 Filed March 5, 2025

MICHAEL BAGBY, Plaintiff-Appellant,

vs.

FIRST STREET DELI II, LLC, and KIM HARKER AND ALEXIS BROWN, individually, Defendants-Appellees. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Buchanan County, Richard D.

Stochl, Judge.

Michael Bagby appeals the district court’s remand order which entered

judgment against First Street Deli II, LLC, Kimberly Harker, and Alexis Brown, and

found Bagby partially waived his right to collect late fees. AFFIRMED.

Benjamin M. Lange of Swisher & Cohrt, PLC, Independence, and Austin

McMahon of Swisher & Cohrt, PLC, Waterloo, for appellant.

Jeremy B. Hahn of Roberts & Eddy, P.C., Independence, for appellees.

Considered by Tabor, C.J., and Ahlers and Sandy, JJ. 2

SANDY, Judge.

Michael Bagby appeals the district court’s remand order entering judgment

against First Street Deli II, LLC (the LLC), Kimberly Harker, and Alexis Brown

(collectively, the debtors), and finding Bagby partially waived his right to collect late

fees. Bagby argues the district court (1) exceeded the scope of the remand,

(2) erred by ruling on the issue of waiver, and (3) erred by finding a partial waiver.

We affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

We summarized the underlying facts of this case in Bagby’s initial appeal:

The parties entered into the contract in question on August 31, 2020. The language of the contract is straightforward: Bagby was to loan $15,000 to the LLC, Harker, and Brown . . . . The debtors were to repay Bagby $15,000 in six months, with a specific schedule outlined for twenty payments of $750 that would be due roughly every one to two weeks. There would be a late fee of $25 per day applied to any past-due payments. In reality, Bagby only loaned the debtors $10,000, and they made fifteen of the twenty payments for a total of $11,250 in return. Many of the payments were submitted late. Bagby never supplied the debtors with an invoice or other notice of the amount due until this lawsuit was filed in July 2021. He provided an accounting of the loan in which he applies late fees from the eighth payment onward, even though five of the first seven payments were received late. In this accounting, Bagby applies new payments to the late fees first rather than to the principal amount owed. The contract was silent as to how future payments should be applied in relation to late fees. Importantly, Bagby’s accounting reflects that the debtors owed a principal amount of $15,000 despite him only loaning them $10,000. Harker testified that this discrepancy in the principal was purposeful, as they had orally agreed to this arrangement in order for Bagby to avoid claiming interest for tax purposes. Bagby estimated a total amount remaining due of $50,775 and requested the court enter a judgment whereby additional late fees would be added from the date he filed suit up until judgment. For context, Bagby and Harker have known each other for more than twenty years. They engaged in a romantic relationship, which Bagby described as “casino buddies,” from approximately April 2018 until June 2020. Harker explained the relationship 3

continued in an on-again, off-again fashion until May 2021. Although Bagby disputed this timeline, he acknowledged they were romantically involved again after June 2020. Prior to the contract in question, Bagby loaned Harker varying amounts of money in a personal capacity. We do not have substantial information about these dealings. At some point, Harker asked Bagby to purchase a deli shop that she was planning to buy with her daughter (co-debtor Brown) and lease it to them. Bagby declined. On August 29, Harker was at Bagby’s home explaining that she needed $10,000 in order to move forward with the purchase of the deli shop in a couple of days. Bagby acknowledges that Harker was in a bad state and that she told him that she was going to commit suicide on his front lawn. The parties dispute whether Harker requested a loan from Bagby or he offered her the money. In any event, they agreed to proceed with a loan. Initially, Harker offered a $10,000 loan in exchange for $20,000 paid back in two months. These were the same terms she proposed to three other people who declined her offer. Harker and Bagby ultimately lowered the repayment plan to $15,000 over a six-month period. Harker typed up the contract and included the aforementioned late-fee provision. It is not clear who proposed this clause. Harker and her daughter, Brown, signed the contract in their individual capacities and on behalf of the LLC.

Bagby v. First St. Deli II, LLC, No. 22-1704, 2023 WL 5092833, at *1 (Iowa Ct.

App. Aug. 9, 2023).

Following the September 2022 bench trial, the district court found the

contract to be unconscionable and the late fees to be against public policy. The

district court dismissed Bagby’s petition. We reversed on initial appeal, finding the

contract was not unconscionable, the late fees were not a penalty, and remanded

to the district court for “entry of an order consistent with this opinion” and to

“determine the consequences of [the late-fee] clause in light of the overall

disposition.”

On remand, the district court entered judgment against the debtors “in the

amount of $26,865.00 plus statutory interest from the date of the filing of the

petition.” The court found Bagby partially waived his right to collect late fees, as 4

he only first “notified [the debtors] of his intent to impose late fees in his suit filed

on July 28, 2021. He is entitled to late fees for those dates after the filing through

[January 24, 2024]. 910 days have elapsed since filing. Bagby is entitled to

$23,115.00 in late fees.” Costs were assessed to the debtors.

Bagby now appeals.

II. Standard of Review

We review “a judgment entered after a bench trial . . . for correction of errors

at law.” Metro. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co. v. Auto-Owners Mut. Ins. Co., 924

N.W.2d 833, 839 (Iowa 2019); see also Iowa R. App. P. 6.907. We are bound by

the district court’s factual findings “if supported by substantial evidence.” Metro.

Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., 924 N.W.2d at 839.

III. Discussion

On appeal Bagby argues the district court (1) exceeded the scope of the

remand, (2) erred by ruling on the issue of waiver, and (3) erred by finding a partial

waiver.

A. Scope of Remand

The first approach by which Bagby challenges the district court’s finding that

he partially waived late fees is to argue that such a determination exceeded the

scope of the remand.

“It is a fundamental rule of law that a trial court is required to honor and

respect the rulings and mandates by appellate courts in a case.” City of Okoboji

v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 744 N.W.2d 327, 331 (Iowa 2008). “A mandate to the district

court contained in a decision of this court becomes the law of the case on remand,

and a district court that misconstrues or acts inconsistently with the mandate acts 5

illegally by failing to apply the correct rule of law or exceeding its jurisdiction.” Id.

at 330.

In Okoboji, our supreme court held that “the district court must not read the

mandate in a vacuum, but must consider the full opinion of the appellate court and

the circumstances the opinion embraces.” Id. at 332. Meaning the district court

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Michael Bagby v. First Street Deli II, LLC, and Kim Harker and Alexis Brown, individually, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-bagby-v-first-street-deli-ii-llc-and-kim-harker-and-alexis-iowactapp-2025.