Smith v. Grand Canyon Expeditions Co.

2003 UT 57, 84 P.3d 1154, 489 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2003 Utah LEXIS 137, 2003 WL 22950137
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 2003
Docket20010667
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 2003 UT 57 (Smith v. Grand Canyon Expeditions Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Grand Canyon Expeditions Co., 2003 UT 57, 84 P.3d 1154, 489 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2003 Utah LEXIS 137, 2003 WL 22950137 (Utah 2003).

Opinion

*1157 NEHRING, Justice:

¶ 1 This appeal concerns the termination of Marc Smith’s employment and the amount of money owed Mr. Smith by Grand Canyon Expeditions for the purchase of Mr. Smith’s stock in the company. This appeal comes to us for interlocutory review of rulings made by the trial court on Smith’s motion for leave to amend his complaint and three summary judgment motions brought by Grand Canyon. We affirm the decisions of the trial court on all issues except the trial court’s refusal to dismiss the individual defendants. On that issue, we reverse the decision of the trial court and remand for dismissal of the individual defendants.

¶ 2 For many years, Mr. Smith worked for a river rafting company, Grand Canyon Expeditions, Inc. That company is not the defendant here. Grand Canyon Expeditions, Inc. was sold to another group of individuals, including defendants Mathis and Denoyer, and was renamed Grand Canyon Expeditions Company. This company and its employees are the defendants here, to whom we will collectively refer as “Grand Canyon.”

¶ 3 Smith stayed on with the new company as vice president of operations and acquired a shareholder interest. The terms of Mr. Smith’s employment with Grand Canyon were set out in an employment agreement. As a shareholder in Grand Canyon, Mr. Smith executed a buy-sell agreement with the company providing that upon leaving Grand Canyon, his stock would be repurchased by the remaining shareholders for a certain percentage of the net book value.

¶ 4 After six years, Mr. Smith was asked to leave Grand Canyon. The parties disagree over the reasons for Mr. Smith’s departure, but it is clear that a fetid atmosphere enveloped them by the summer of 1992. Grand Canyon believed it had grounds to dismiss Mr. Smith for cause. Mr. Smith rejected any claim that he was blameworthy. In this setting, Mr. Smith and Grand Canyon negotiated and signed a separation agreement that called for Mr. Smith’s resignation and detailed the effect of his resignation on both the employment and buy-sell agreements.

¶ 5 The purpose, scope, and legal consequences of the separation agreement are central to this appeal. Several provisions of the separation agreement feature prominently in our analysis and therefore merit mention, including (1) Mr. Smith’s agreement to resign, (2) agreement on the value of Mr. Smith’s Grand Canyon stock together with payment terms, (3) Grand Canyon’s agreement to pay Mr. Smith severance pay “in lieu of any other amounts or benefits which may be due from the Corporation as provided in the Employment Agreement or otherwise,” and (4) Grand Canyon’s agreement to waive the non-compete clause in the employment agreement. Grand Canyon paid, and Mr. Smith accepted, the payments promised in the separation agreement.

¶ 6 The hope that the separation agreement would bring peace to the conflict between Grand Canyon and Mr. Smith proved to be illusory. Several years after Mr. Smith left the company, Grand Canyon received a refund of nearly a million dollars that it had paid to the state of Arizona as a “transaction privilege tax.” The Arizona Supreme Court held the tax to have been unlawfully collected from companies like Grand Canyon and ordered retroactive refunds. The refund to Grand Canyon included tax payments made during the years Mr. Smith was with the company. Although Grand Canyon passed some of the refund through to customers, it appropriately retained most of it as corporate income.

¶ 7 At the time Mr. Smith left Grand Canyon, the company had sought the refund, but the Arizona Supreme Court had not yet ruled on the matter. The refund was not mentioned in the separation agreement.

¶ 8 Mr. Smith sued Grand Canyon and its principals. He claimed that Grand Canyon breached the employment contract by terminating him. He also claimed that Grand Canyon breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing by artificially undervaluing the buyout value of Mr. Smith’s stock and by refusing to include the Arizona tax refund as part of the net book value of Grand Canyon. Mr. Smith also unsuccessfully sought to amend his complaint to seek *1158 recovery of a portion of the tax refund under an unjust enrichment theory.

¶ 9 Meanwhile, Grand Canyon also filed a series of motions for summary judgment. When the dust settled, the trial court (1) dismissed Mr. Smith’s breach of contract claim relating to his termination by reason of accord and satisfaction, (2) dismissed Mr. Smith’s implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing claims as they related to the valuation of his Grand Canyon stock, (3) preserved Mr. Smith’s claim that Grand Canyon breached its implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing relating to the Arizona tax refund, (4) dismissed Mr. Smith’s claim for punitive damages, (5) dismissed Mr. Smith’s claim for attorney fees, and (6) denied Mr. Smith’s motion to amend his complaint to assert a claim for unjust enrichment.

¶ 10 In this interlocutory appeal, we review each of these rulings as well as the trial court’s denial of a motion made by the individual defendants to dismiss the claims as against them.

I. MR. SMITH’S EMPLOYMENT-RELATED CLAIMS

¶ 11 We first take up the trial court’s determination that Mr. Smith’s employment claims are barred by accord and satisfaction. “We review the district court’s summary judgment ruling for correctness, granting no deference to its legal conclusions.” Woodbury Amsource, Inc. v. Salt Lake County, 2003 UT 28, ¶ 4, 73 P.3d 362.

¶ 12 Before turning to the merits of this issue, we address Mr. Smith’s procedural challenge. ' Mr. Smith claims that pursuant to rule 8(e) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, Grand Canyon was required to plead accord and satisfaction as an affirmative defense. Mr. Smith argues that because it did not, Grand Canyon should not be permitted to prevail on this theory. It is clear, however, that Grand Canyon raised accord and satisfaction in its motion for summary judgment, and Mr. Smith did not object. We have previously noted that

rule 8(c), U.R.C.P., requires that affirmative defenses be pleaded. It is a good rule whose purpose is to have the issues to be tried clearly framed. But it is not the only rule in the book of Rules of Civil Procedure. They must all be looked to in the light of their even more fundamental purpose of liberalizing both pleading and procedure to the end that the parties are afforded the privilege of presenting whatever legitimate contentions they have pertaining to their dispute. What they are entitled to is notice of the issues raised and an opportunity to meet them. When this is accomplished, that is all that is required. Our rules provide for liberality to allow examination into and settlement of all issues bearing upon the controversy, but safeguard the rights of the other party to have a reasonable time to meet a new issue if he so requests.

Union Bank v. Swenson, 707 P.2d 663, 668 (Utah 1985); Cheney v. Rucker, 14 Utah 2d 205, 381 P.2d 86, 91 (1963). Here, no one questions that Mr. Smith had adequate notice that Grand Canyon intended to employ the affirmative defense of accord and satisfaction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2003 UT 57, 84 P.3d 1154, 489 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 2003 Utah LEXIS 137, 2003 WL 22950137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-grand-canyon-expeditions-co-utah-2003.