Roseana E.D. Palmer v. Mariana Stones Corporation, and Does 1 through 10

2021 Guam 5
CourtSupreme Court of Guam
DecidedJune 25, 2021
DocketCVA19-002
StatusPublished

This text of 2021 Guam 5 (Roseana E.D. Palmer v. Mariana Stones Corporation, and Does 1 through 10) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Guam primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roseana E.D. Palmer v. Mariana Stones Corporation, and Does 1 through 10, 2021 Guam 5 (guam 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF GUAM

ROSEANA E.D. PALMER, Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

MARIANA STONES CORPORATION, and DOES 1 through 10, Defendant-Appellant.

Supreme Court Case No.: CVA19-002 Superior Court Case No.: CV0709-13

OPINION

Appeal from the Superior Court of Guam Argued and submitted on May 1, 2020 Via Zoom video conference

Appearing for Defendant-Appellant: Appearing for Plaintiff-Appellee: Peter C. Perez, Esq. Genevieve P. Rapadas, Esq. (Argued) Law Office of Peter C. Perez Kathleen V. Fisher, Esq. DNA Bldg. Sarah L. Fabian, Esq. 238 Archbishop Flores St., Ste. 802 Calvo Fisher & Jacob LLP Hagåtña, GU 96910 259 Martyr St., Ste. 100 Hagåtña, GU 96910 Palmer v. Mariana Stones Corp., 2021 Guam 5, Opinion Page 2 of 19

BEFORE: F. PHILIP CARBULLIDO, Chief Justice; ROBERT J. TORRES, Associate Justice; KATHERINE A. MARAMAN, Associate Justice.

TORRES, J.:

[1] Defendant-Appellant Mariana Stones Corporation appeals the trial court’s second amended

judgment, which the court entered after finding Mariana Stones Corporation failed to establish its

affirmative defenses of frustration of purpose and impossibility or impracticability. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

[2] This case arises from Plaintiff-Appellee Roseana E.D. Palmer’s complaint against Mariana

Stones Corporation (“MSC”) alleging one cause of action for breach of contract. Palmer owns Lot

No. 3-2 in Dededo, in an area known as Urunao (“Lot No. 3-2”). Palmer and MSC entered a lease

agreement for MSC to “lease the Property so that it can extract aggregate thereon.” Record on

Appeal (“RA”), tab 1, Ex. A at 1 (Lease Agreement, Sept. 3, 2011) (“Lease Agreement”). Under

the Lease Agreement, MSC was to use the leased property to extract and remove aggregates1 for

five years from September 1, 2011, until August 31, 2016. In exchange, MSC was to pay Palmer:

(1) $50,000.00 on March 1, 2012; and (2) beginning on June 1, 2012, a minimum of $8,000.00 per

month in rent through the remainder of the Lease Agreement. Alternatively, if the actual aggregate

MSC removes from the property, valued at $2.00 per cubic yard, results in an amount greater than

the minimum rent for that month (i.e., $8,000.00), then MSC would instead pay that higher

amount.

[3] Lot No. 3-2 is adjacent to and south of the federally-owned Guam National Wildlife

Refuge. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (“USFWS”) owns and manages the refuge. Getting

1 The Lease Agreement states: “Lessor hereby leases the Property exclusively to Lessee for (a) exploring for, developing, extracting, processing, removing and selling, when and as determined by Lessee, mineral materials which may be used or useful as aggregate . . . and (b) uses and activities determined by Lessee to be necessary or desirable in connection therewith[.]” RA, tab 1, Ex. A at 2 (Lease Agreement, Sept. 3, 2011). Palmer v. Mariana Stones Corp., 2021 Guam 5, Opinion Page 3 of 19

to Lot No. 3-2 by vehicle requires use of an easement that runs through the refuge.2 A sign at the

entrance of the refuge states: “Entering Guam Wildlife Refuge Special Regulations Apply.” RA,

tab 99 at 3 (Finds. Fact & Concl. L., Feb. 22, 2018). The trial court found that, before entering the

Lease Agreement, Palmer and MSC’s representatives saw the refuge sign, but neither knew of any

federal permit requirements to cross the easement onto Lot No. 3-2.

[4] In 2012, USFWS informed MSC that MSC needed a special use permit to transport

aggregate through the refuge using the easement. MSC applied for the permit, but USFWS

rejected the application. MSC did not appeal the denial. For some period, MSC continued to

transport aggregate over the easement and refuge, resulting in at least twenty violation notices

from USFWS.3

[5] MSC eventually ceased extracting aggregate from the Leased Property. The U.S.

Attorney’s Office for the Districts of Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands (“USAO”) gave the

parties four alternatives for accessing the leased property, but the record does not indicate that

MSC pursued any of these alternatives. See Appellant’s Br. at 21 n.3 (Sept. 9, 2019); Appellee’s

Br. at 7 (Oct. 23, 2019). To date, MSC has made only two payments to Palmer: $10,000.00 on

April 2, 2012, and $40,000.00 on August 2, 2012.4 MSC has extracted about 300 cubic yards of

aggregate from Lot No. 3-2, amounting to $600.00 as valued under the Lease Agreement’s terms.

[6] MSC’s answer to Palmer’s complaint raised several affirmative defenses, including that

MSC’s failure to pay was “excused under the doctrines of Frustration of Purpose of Contract,

The District Court of Guam had granted the easement to Urunao’s landowners in 1994 through a consent 2

decree. RA, tab 99 at 3 (Finds. Fact & Concl. L., Feb. 22, 2018). 3 According to those USFWS notices, MSC violated 50 C.F.R. § 27.97, which states: “Private operations. Soliciting business or conducting a commercial enterprise on any national wildlife refuge is prohibited except as may be authorized by special permit.” RA, tab 99 at 4-5 (Finds. Fact & Concl. L.); 50 C.F.R. § 27.97. 4 MSC did not make any monthly payments from June 1, 2012, to August 31, 2016. RA, tab 99 at 5 (Finds. Fact & Concl. L.). Palmer v. Mariana Stones Corp., 2021 Guam 5, Opinion Page 4 of 19

Impossibility, and Impracticability,” and that Palmer’s damages “were caused, in whole or part,

due to the intervening and or superseding causes outside and beyond Defendant’s control.”5 RA,

tab 5 at 3 (Answer, June 21, 2013). Palmer later moved for summary judgment. The trial court

found Palmer met the summary judgment burden on her breach of contract claim, but genuine

issues of material fact existed on the foreseeability element of MSC’s frustration of purpose

defense, which precluded the court from granting summary judgment.

[7] Before the initially–scheduled bench trial in 2014, MSC’s trial brief elaborated on its

frustration of purpose defense and raised two new defenses: force majeure, and Palmer’s failure

to mitigate damages as a landlord. In response, Palmer filed a motion in limine to exclude from

trial any evidence on MSC’s force majeure and mitigation defenses, arguing (1) MSC had waived

those affirmative defenses by failing to raise them in its first responsive pleading, and (2) allowing

them would prejudice Palmer because MSC raised the defenses shortly before trial. The trial court

granted Palmer’s motion. MSC moved to amend its answer and to set aside the trial court’s

decision and order on the motions in limine. The trial court denied both motions.

[8] The bench trial began in 2017. Referring to its earlier decision on the motions in limine,

the court limited the trial only to the question of MSC’s defenses on frustration of purpose and

impossibility or impracticability. The court eventually decided for Palmer, concluding (1) MSC

proved none of the elements of its frustration of purpose defense; and (2) MSC failed to prove its

impossibility or impracticability defense since the supervening event was foreseeable, and the

USAO had indicated alternative routes to Lot No. 3-2. The court awarded Palmer damages

amounting to $408,000.00, pre- and post-judgment interest at six percent per annum, and

attorney’s fees and costs.

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