Moon Lake Electric Ass'n v. Ultrasystems Western Constructors, Inc.

767 P.2d 125, 99 Utah Adv. Rep. 25, 1988 Utah App. LEXIS 189, 1988 WL 142046
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedDecember 29, 1988
Docket870212-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 767 P.2d 125 (Moon Lake Electric Ass'n v. Ultrasystems Western Constructors, Inc.) 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
Moon Lake Electric Ass'n v. Ultrasystems Western Constructors, Inc., 767 P.2d 125, 99 Utah Adv. Rep. 25, 1988 Utah App. LEXIS 189, 1988 WL 142046 (Utah Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

BENCH, Judge:

Plaintiff appeals entry of summary judgment denying it forfeiture of defendants’ bid bond. We consider three issues on appeal: 1) was the appeal timely filed? 2) was plaintiff’s motion for new trial properly denied? 3) were the defendants entitled to summary judgment? We affirm.

Plaintiff Moon Lake Electric Association, Inc. (Moon Lake), is a Utah corporation and rural electric cooperative. In August 1985, Moon Lake solicited bids for construction of an electrical substation in the Rangely oilfield, Rio Blanco, Colorado. Each bidder was required to furnish a bid bond in the amount of 10% of the bid price. The bid bond was to be forfeited if. the successful bidder failed to execute contract documents or furnish a contractor’s bond.

Five bids were received. The lowest bid, $213,300, was submitted by defendant Ul-trasystems Western Constructors, Inc. (Ul-trasystems), a California corporation. Approximately one week after Moon Lake determined to accept this bid, Ultrasystems notified Moon Lake that the bid amount was in error. Ultrasystems stated that its bid had been calculated on the premise that certain items would be bolted, rather than welded with aluminum, as had been intended by Moon Lake. Moon Lake had manifested this intention by sending bidders a materials list specifying parts which by their nature required welding. None of the construction drawings, however, called for welding as a method of assembly. Ultra-systems estimated the cost of such welding to be an additional $75,000.

Moon Lake then decided to award the project to another bidder for $329,800, and to seek forfeiture of Ultrasystems’s bid bond. Ultrasystems refused to surrender the bond. Moon Lake filed suit against Ultrasystems and the bond issuer, Industrial Indemnity Company (Industrial), a California corporation.

Ultrasystems filed a motion for summary judgment in which Industrial later joined. Three affidavits supported the joint motion. Moon Lake thereafter submitted a memorandum opposing defendants’ motion for summary judgment and making its own motion for summary judgment. No affidavits were filed with Moon Lake’s memorandum. By minute entry filed January 20, 1987, the trial court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Following the filing of this entry, but prior to the trial court’s order of dismissal filed February 2, Moon Lake filed two supplemental affidavits. On February 9, Moon Lake filed a “Motion for New Trial or to Set Aside *127 Summary Judgment.” Subsequently, the trial court, with a new judge presiding, denied Moon Lake’s motion by order dated March 10. This appeal was filed on March 23, 1987.

I. TIMELINESS OF THE APPEAL

Ultrasystems argues that this court lacks jurisdiction because Moon Lake failed to file its appeal within thirty days of the order granting summary judgment. See R. Utah Ct.App. 4(a). Ultrasystems bases this argument on the premise that Moon Lake’s motion for a new trial was improper in that there is no such procedure under Utah law to challege a summary judgment. Thus, under the holding of Burgers v. Mai-ben, 652 P.2d 1320 (Utah 1982), Ultrasys-tems claims that plaintiff’s “improper” motion for a new trial did not extend the time in which to file a notice of appeal. In support of its contention, Ultrasystems refers to one aspect of the trial court’s order in which the trial court stated it could find “no basis under Rule 59 [Utah R.CÍV.P.] for granting a new trial when in fact no trial was held.”

Neither Utah R.Civ.P. 59 (new trial) nor Utah R.Civ.P. 56 (summary judgment) directly addresses the availability of a motion for a “new” trial following summary judgment. Our analysis of Rule 59(a) and the rationale behind it leads us to conclude that such a motion is, nonetheless, procedurally correct.

Bailey v. Sound Lab, Inc., 694 P.2d 1043 (Utah 1984), supports our conclusion. In that case, the Utah Supreme Court dismissed an appeal from a partial summary judgment because a motion for new trial had not been resolved in the lower court. The case was then remanded to allow for disposition of the pending Rule 59 motion. It is unlikely that the court would have remanded the case to resolve the pendency of an improper motion. In remanding, the court implied that Rule 59 motions are appropriate after summary judgment. 1

The implication in Bailey is supported by authority in at least two neighboring jurisdictions. Arizona’s Rule 59(a) is substantively similar to our own rule. 2 In a line of cases beginning with Maganas v. Northroup, 112 Ariz. 46, 537 P.2d 595 (1975), the Arizona Supreme Court has held that a summary judgment may be challenged by means of a motion for new trial arid that the timely filing of such a motion extends the time in which to appeal. The court has reasoned that it is unrealistic to hold that the only remedy left to an unsuccessful litigant after a summary judgment is to file an appeal. Id. 537 P.2d at 597. The language of their procedural rule is “broad enough to accommodate the policy that a litigant should be given the opportunity to persuade the trial court of its error before proceeding by appeal.” Hegel v. O’Malley Ins. Co., Inc., 117 Ariz. 411, 573 P.2d 485, 486 (1977), vacated on other grounds, 122 Ariz. 52, 593 P.2d 275 (1979). Colorado has similarly ruled in Granite State Ins. Co. v. Carter, 532 P.2d 780 (Colo.Ct.App.1975).

Although Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(a) is phrased differently than our rule, like our Rule 59(a) it speaks in terms only of new trials. Nonetheless, “[t]he concept of a new trial under Rule 59 is broad enough to include a rehearing of any matter decided by the court without a jury.” 11 A. Wright & C. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2804 (1973). While there may be some logic in concluding that there can be no new trial where no trial has yet occurred, *128 we should be less concerned with what this “reconsideration” procedure may be called so long as the procedure is available to litigants. 3

We, therefore, conclude that Moon Lake’s motion was procedurally correct. Since it was filed on February 9, 1987, which was within ten days of entry of the order of summary judgment, it was timely under the requirements of Utah R.Civ.P. 59(b). As provided in Hume v. Small Claims Court, 590 P.2d 309 (Utah 1979), a timely motion for new trial tolls the time permitted for appeal of a judgment until such time as the codrt makes an entry granting or denying the motion.

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767 P.2d 125, 99 Utah Adv. Rep. 25, 1988 Utah App. LEXIS 189, 1988 WL 142046, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moon-lake-electric-assn-v-ultrasystems-western-constructors-inc-utahctapp-1988.