Viertel v. Body Firm Aerobics

2022 UT App 96, 516 P.3d 791
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedAugust 4, 2022
Docket20200841-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2022 UT App 96 (Viertel v. Body Firm Aerobics) 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
Viertel v. Body Firm Aerobics, 2022 UT App 96, 516 P.3d 791 (Utah Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

2022 UT App 96

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

DEAN VIERTEL, Appellant and Cross-appellee, v. BODY FIRM AEROBICS LLC, VASA TARGET LLC, VASA FITNESS LLC, SCOTT FELSTED, AND TROY PETERSON, Appellees and Cross-appellants.

Opinion No. 20200841-CA Filed August 4, 2022

Fourth District Court, Provo Department The Honorable Derek P. Pullan No. 190401248

Thomas W. Seiler, Jared L. Anderson, Derek T. Marshall, and Perris E. Nelson, Attorneys for Appellant and Cross-appellee Blake T. Ostler, Attorney for Appellees and Cross-appellants

JUDGE GREGORY K. ORME authored this Opinion, in which JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS and JUSTICE DIANA HAGEN concurred. 1

ORME, Judge:

¶1 Dean Viertel challenges the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Body Firm Aerobics, LLC; VASA Target, LLC; VASA Fitness, LLC; Scott Felsted; and Troy Peterson (collectively, Appellees). Because Viertel has not challenged each

1. Justice Diana Hagen began her work on this case as a judge of the Utah Court of Appeals. She became a member of the Utah Supreme Court thereafter and completed her work on this case sitting by special assignment as authorized by law. See generally Utah R. Jud. Admin. 3-108(4). Viertel v. Body Firm Aerobics

independent basis for the district court’s ruling on appeal, we affirm.

BACKGROUND 2

¶2 This case arises from an oral agreement in 1993, and a written agreement in 1998, between Viertel and Felsted regarding Viertel’s ownership in Body Firm Aerobics (BFA). 3 Viertel contended that in each agreement, Felsted granted him a significant ownership interest in BFA. Specifically, Viertel argued that in 1998, Felsted “confirmed in writing” and “expressly ratified” the earlier oral agreement that Viertel held a 30% interest in BFA. To substantiate his version of events, Viertel later produced a page from a notepad on which Felsted wrote: “Dean Viertel now owns and has rights to 30% of Body Firm Inc’s Stock. Which also entitles him to all of the property, equipment, and privileges.” The note was signed by Felsted as “V.P. Body Firm Inc.,” and below his signature, he wrote: “this reflects an arrangement made back some 5 plus years ago.”

¶3 From 1993 to 2001, Viertel worked for BFA providing marketing services. 4 At some point in 2000, Peterson, who at the

2. “In reviewing the court’s grant of summary judgment, we view the facts and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and recite the facts accordingly.” Ockey v. Club Jam, 2014 UT App 126, ¶ 2 n.2, 328 P.3d 880 (quotation simplified).

3. The briefing and record in this case contain extensive factual and procedural histories. But due to the procedural posture of the appeal, we have no need to lay out most of that history, and we present only the history necessary to our analysis on appeal.

4. There is some dispute in the record regarding whether Viertel’s employment with BFA ended in 1999 or 2001. This dispute is (continued…)

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time was a director of BFA, orally informed Viertel that he was not a shareholder of the company.

¶4 Nevertheless, even after Viertel’s employment with BFA ended, the company continued to make regular payments to Viertel. These payments began in 1998 and ended in 2014. In November 2014, the payments from BFA ceased, but from early 2015 to May 2015, Felsted made payments to Viertel from his personal accounts. After May 2015, all payments to Viertel from BFA or any individual affiliated with the company ceased. One month before Felsted stopped making these payments, he informed Viertel that Viertel had an equity interest in BFA and that BFA would purchase his ownership interest, though for less than what he was expecting. Over the next year, however, Viertel did not receive a purchase offer from BFA.

¶5 In 2018, VASA Target, LLC acquired BFA. 5 In July 2019, Viertel filed suit against BFA, VASA, Felsted, and Peterson asserting five causes of action. First, he sought a court order allowing him to inspect BFA’s records. Second, he sought declaratory judgment that he owned a 30% interest in BFA. Third, he alleged common law fraud on the ground that Appellees failed to disclose to him, an owner of BFA, “the existence of the negotiations and indications of interest of [VASA] and other Defendants in the acquisition, if any, of membership interests or assets of [BFA].” Fourth, he asserted that Appellees had breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing in cutting him

immaterial to the issues raised on appeal, and we do not resolve it here.

5. It is unclear from the record whether VASA Target, LLC merged with BFA or acquired it via stock purchase but the distinction is inconsequential in the context of this appeal. Thereafter, VASA Target, LLC turned management of BFA’s properties over to VASA Fitness, LLC. For ease of reference, throughout this opinion we simply refer to VASA Target, LLC and VASA Fitness, LLC collectively as VASA.

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out of the negotiations with VASA and out of his share of the sale proceeds. Fifth, he alleged breach of fiduciary duty against Felsted and Peterson because they “had an affirmative duty to” him to disclose “material facts” concerning VASA’s acquisition of BFA.

¶6 Appellees moved for summary judgment, primarily arguing that shares of BFA were never validly issued to Viertel; that any agreement to issue BFA shares lacked the requisite definiteness; and that, in any event, all Viertel’s claims were barred by the applicable statutes of limitations. Additional summary judgment motions followed from both sides, and the court eventually granted summary judgment in favor of Appellees on all Viertel’s claims and dismissed Viertel’s complaint with prejudice.

¶7 As relevant to our analysis, the court granted summary judgment to Appellees based on the following rationale. It began by granting summary judgment on Viertel’s fourth claim for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing—or as the district court called it, Viertel’s “breach of contract claim”— on two independent bases. First, it determined that “Felsted had neither actual nor apparent authority to grant Viertel shares in BFA” in 1993 or 1998 and that BFA had never ratified any such agreement, and second, it determined that “[e]ven if Scott Felsted had the apparent authority to issue shares to Viertel . . . , the promise to grant a thirty percent interest in [BFA] is not sufficiently definite to be enforced.” Piggybacking on this ruling, the court then granted summary judgment on Viertel’s first and second claims because “[w]ithout an ownership interest in [BFA], Viertel has no right to inspect the business records . . . and no right to the declaratory judgment he seeks” to confirm his ownership interest. Then, the court granted summary judgment to Appellees on Viertel’s breach of fiduciary duty claim on the basis that “Viertel did not plead any other special relationship from which a fiduciary duty might derive other than his ownership interest in BFA” and, given that Viertel had no ownership interest, there was no material dispute of fact on this claim. And finally, regarding

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Viertel’s fraud claim, the court granted summary judgment to Appellees on the ground that the applicable statute of limitations had run.

¶8 Viertel appeals.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

¶9 Viertel raises two issues that warrant our consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 UT App 96, 516 P.3d 791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/viertel-v-body-firm-aerobics-utahctapp-2022.