Verdi Energy Group, Inc v. Nelson

2014 UT App 101, 326 P.3d 104, 759 Utah Adv. Rep. 54, 2014 WL 1716225, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMay 1, 2014
DocketNo. 201300183-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2014 UT App 101 (Verdi Energy Group, Inc v. Nelson) 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
Verdi Energy Group, Inc v. Nelson, 2014 UT App 101, 326 P.3d 104, 759 Utah Adv. Rep. 54, 2014 WL 1716225, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 103 (Utah Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion

ROTH, Judge:

{1 Verdi Energy Group, Inc. (Verdi) appeals from the district court's decisions to grant summary judgment in favor of Greg Nelson and Brigham Lundahl and to award Nelson and Lundah] their attorney fees. We affirm the summary judgment decision but reverse and vacate the award of attorney fees.

BACKGROUND 1

12 Nelson, Lundahl, and their wives owned real property containing a hydrother[107]*107mal well in Iron County, Utah. The Nelsons were 20% owners of the property, while the Lundahls owned 80%. On February 11, 2009, Verdi offered to purchase the property, including the well and certain water rights, for $400,000 with a closing date in July 2009. Verdi presented its offer on a standard real estate purchase contract (REPC) form, naming Nelson and Lundah] as the sellers (collectively, the Sellers), but not their wives. Verdi provided $8,000 in earnest money. The Sellers made a counteroffer by interlineating handwritten changes directly on the REPC and marking "COUNTEROFFER" on the signature form, which was labeled "ACCEPTANCE/COUNTEROFFER/REJECTION." The changes included a higher purchase price of $500,000 and a closing date in June 2009 rather than July. Nine days later, on February 20, Verdi sent the Sellers Addendum No. 3. Addendum No. 3 proposed the same purchase price and closing date as the Sellers' counteroffer but included a more specific legal description of the subject property (together with a detailed reference to the recorded warranty deed that had transferred ownership of the property to Nelson, Lundahl, and their wives), gave Verdi complete access to the property for purposes of conducting due diligence, and added a confidentiality provision relating to the results of Verdi's due diligence activities. Addendum No. 3 gave the Sellers until February 21, 2009, to accept its terms and provided that "[ulnless so accepted, the offer as set forth in this ADDENDUM shall lapse." The Sellers did not respond.

13 Negotiations continued for a period of months, during which Verdi made a second similar offer, which the Sellers ignored, and Lundahl presented his own offer that would have required Verdi to put $100,000 down prior to closing as evidence of its ability to purchase the property, which Verdi refused. Finally, in May 2009, Verdi presented the Sellers with Addendum No. 6. Nelson checked the acceptance box and signed his name, but Lundah] did not respond. According to Verdi, it believed its offer had been accepted, so it then undertook a number of activities that it claims amounted to part performance under the REPC. The Sellers characterize these activities as simple due diligence contemplated by the REPC provision that allowed Verdi to cancel the contract if it was unsatisfied by the results of any inspections of the property. In June 2009, the Sellers informed Verdi that they no longer wished to sell the property.

T4 On July 22, 2009, Verdi filed a complaint against the Sellers, asserting breach of contract, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, anticipatory repudiation, and constructive trust. On August 17, 2010, the Sellers moved to dismiss Verdi's complaint on the basis that the documents exchanged between the parties showed that they had never entered into a contract. The Sellers asserted that no contract had arisen from the exchange of offers and counteroffers, as evidenced by the fact that neither the REPC nor any of the addenda had been executed by Verdi as buyer and both Lun-dahl and Nelson as sellers. The Sellers also pointed out that their wives, who were joint owners of the property, had not executed any of the documents and that as a consequence, there was no agreement for the sale of the property that satisfied the Utah Statute of Frauds. The district court denied the Sellers' motion to dismiss without explanation.

T5 Verdi then amended the complaint to add claims of fraud and negligent misrepresentation, asserting that the Sellers had represented that they had full authority to sell the property and were now claiming that they could not bind their wives. Verdi claimed that these representations were made in the original written REPC and during oral negotiations leading up to Addendum No. 6. In its prayer for relief, Verdi sought specific performance of the purchase contract, imposition of a constructive trust on the property, or damages from the Sellers' failure to perform the contract.

T6 On February 9, 2011, the Sellers again moved to dismiss. With regard to the contract, negligent misrepresentation, anticipa[108]*108tory repudiation, and constructive trust claims, the Sellers once again asserted that neither the REPC nor the various addenda were enforceable because none of the documents had been accepted by both Verdi and the Sellers and because none complied with the statute of frauds, which states that "[elv-ery contract ... for the sale, of any lands ... [must be} in writing subscribed by the party by whom the ... sale is to be made, or by his lawful agent thereunto authorized in writing." Utah Code Aun. § 25-5-8 (Lexis-Nexis 2013)2 The Sellers also claimed that Verdi could not prevail on a fraud claim because it could not have reasonably relied upon the Sellers' failure to disclose their wives' ownership interests during negotiations or in the execution of Addendum No. 6 when due diligence on Verdi's part would have revealed a record title that showed the wives as co-owners. At a hearing on the motion in June 2011, the district court "determined that a motion to dismiss was not proper" but that it "would hear the matter as a motion for summary judgment." - Verdi requested a continuance, which the court granted on the basis that it needed additional briefing about whether the Sellers could bind their wives to the contract and whether Verdi's real estate agent was aware that the property had four owners, rather than two. The parties subsequently submitted additional documentation on the issue of the Sellers' authority to bind their wives to the contract.

T7 On October 25, 2011, the Sellers filed a second request to submit their motion for summary judgment. Verdi requested a hearing, but on November 1, 2011, the district court granted summary judgment to the Sellers without a hearing and in a summary order that stated simply, "Motion Granted."3 Counsel for the Sellers then prepared a supplemental order, detailing the bases for the court's ruling, to which Verdi filed a written objection. On January 8, 2012, the court issued the supplemental order, in which it concluded that Verdi's claims for breach of contract, breach of good faith and fair dealing, anticipatory repudiation, and constructive trust failed because "no contract exists" where the REPC had never been executed and neither Lundahl nor the wives had signed Addendum No. 6. It further ruled that no principal-agent relationship existed that authorized Lundahl's and Nelson's execution of the REPC or Addendum No. 6 on their wives' behalf. The district court also concluded that Verdi's fraud claim failed because by the exercise of reasonable diligence, Verdi could have learned that the wives had an interest in the property, and Verdi therefore could not show reasonable reliance on any representation by the Sellers that they owned the property. Finally, the court determined that Verdi's negligent misrepresentation claim failed because Verdi could not have reasonably relied upon any representations made in the REPC when it was never fully executed. Consequently, the court dismissed all six causes of action with prejudice.

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Bluebook (online)
2014 UT App 101, 326 P.3d 104, 759 Utah Adv. Rep. 54, 2014 WL 1716225, 2014 Utah App. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/verdi-energy-group-inc-v-nelson-utahctapp-2014.