Young v. Hobbs

916 P.2d 485, 1996 Alas. LEXIS 51, 1996 WL 240193
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1996
DocketS-6416
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 916 P.2d 485 (Young v. Hobbs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Hobbs, 916 P.2d 485, 1996 Alas. LEXIS 51, 1996 WL 240193 (Ala. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The central issue presented by this appeal is whether the superior court properly ruled that the parties agreed to a settlement contract.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Dale Young and Marion Hobbs were involved in Wilderness Acquisitions, Inc., a corporation which attempted to build a wilderness lodge on Baranof Island in Southeast Alaska. In the course of the corporation’s dissolution, a number of issues were contested, and eventually litigated, including the issue of ownership of high density polyethylene pipe that had been transported to the Baranof Island property.

Before the corporation was dissolved, Young purchased a security interest in the corporation’s property, and eventually obtained a foreclosure of this security interest. In the underlying litigation, Young filed a motion requesting determination of the ownership of the pipe which had been removed from Baranof Island by Hobbs. The superi- *486 or court ordered Hobbs to return the pipeline to the island, holding “that the pipeline ... was appurtenant to the property purchased by Dale Young at the foreclosure sale[.]” 1 Subsequently, in an effort to have Hobbs comply with the superior court’s order requiring return of the pipe, Young filed a motion for order to show cause. The motion was stayed pending a settlement conference scheduled for March 11,1994.

The settlement conference was not limited to the pipe issue; rather it was intended to resolve all outstanding issues relating to the corporation’s dissolution. Accordingly, for several days prior to the settlement conference, Young, Hobbs, and the other corporate members met in an attempt to define and resolve all pending issues. Of significance are three preliminary meetings at which Young and Hobbs discussed the existing pipe dispute: (1) a meeting on March 9; (2) a meeting at Young’s house the morning of March 10; and (3) a meeting on the evening of March 10. At issue in this appeal is whether, as a result of these meetings, Young and Hobbs agreed to settle the pipe dispute.

At the global settlement conference held on March 11, all interested parties reached a settlement that was memorialized on the record in Judge Ripley’s chambers. Included in the recorded settlement was a reference to the Young-Hobbs pipe dispute:

Included in this settlement is an agreement between Dale Young and Marion Hobbs for return of the pipe removed from Baranof Warm Springs. That agreement is attached to this settlement and incorporated by reference.

Young and Hobbs, as well as their counsel and other interested parties, were present when the superior court’s recitation was made, and no objections were raised. After the recitation, Judge Ripley concluded the settlement conference by stating:

We recognize that there are going to be documents prepared for dismissal for confession of judgment without action and all the corporate business, but the — this deal is binding as of now, and if there is any dispute over the language, we all agree it’s to be submitted to me informally. We can go on the record, argue it one time, I’ll give a ruling as to what we meant if there’s a dispute over the language, and it will be binding.
Any problems with that?
Okay. I recognize that this has been an incredible amount of give and take. It’s now 7:21 in the evening, but in a legal sense we’ve assumed since everybody’s here and everybody has heard this put on record, that it is legally binding, it’s voluntarily done by each with the full knowledge of your — the consequences, and I congratulate you for your ability to do this.
If there’s nothing else, we’re off record at 7:21.

Though the recorded settlement agreement referred to a side-agreement purporting to settle the pipe dispute between Young and Hobbs, the post-conference drafting process revealed that their dispute was far from resolved. Young contended that their agreement was fully reflected in a written draft that he had prepared and handed to Hobbs when the parties met for the third time on the night of March 10. Hobbs argued that the written draft was deficient. Hobbs additionally argued that both he and Young knew that the written draft was not a complete expression of their agreement. The parties disputed whether Young was to pay Hobbs for the cost of his labor for installing the pipeline on the Baranof Island property, a term absent from Young’s written draft.

The superior court’s underlying order required Hobbs to return the pipe to Baranof Island “in its same condition” — namely, unas-sembled. Hobbs argued that Young had agreed during their negotiations that Hobbs would be compensated for his labor cost in installing the pipe. Hobbs brought Young’s written draft with him to the settlement conference, discussed with Young what he considered to be its deficiencies, and made handwritten additions to it during the recitation of *487 the global settlement agreement. Immediately alter the settlement conference ended, the parties presented their dispute to Judge Ripley, who decided to hold a hearing regarding the particulars of Young and Hobbs’s pre-conference negotiations. At the hearing, Young and Hobbs, as well as others who were privy to the negotiations, testified. Neither Young nor Hobbs explicitly disputed the existence of an agreement. Rather, each asserted that his respective version of the draft represented the agreement.

At the conclusion of the hearing, the superior court entered the following findings of fact:

2. ... Marion Hobbs presented evidence that a material term of the settlement agreement was that he was to be paid by Dale Young for the labor costs for Marion Hobbs and his company to obtain certain permits and to install a water pipeline on Dale Young’s property in Baranof Warm Springs_ Marion Hobbs’ version of the agreement is set forth in Plaintiffs Exhibit 1.
3. Dale Young denied that the settlement contained any requirement that he pay Marion Hobbs for his labor. Dale Young presented testimony that Defendant’s Exhibit A contained all the material terms of their agreement. Dale Young testified that the payment of Marion Hobbs for his labor costs was never discussed as part of this settlement agreement.
4. Since the dispute centers over the parties’ respective versions of the agreement, credibility is a major issue. After consideration of the testimony, the court resolves questions of credibility in favor of Marion Hobbs. The preponderance of the evidence favors Hobbs’ version of the settlement agreement. All of the witnesses, except Dale Young, recall that the settlement offer conveyed by Marion Hobbs to Dale Young contained a provision for the payment of Marion Hobbs’ labor to install the pipeline on Dale Young’s property. A number of the witnesses were present when discussions occurred, either between the parties or in the parties’ presence, over the disputed term.
5.

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Bluebook (online)
916 P.2d 485, 1996 Alas. LEXIS 51, 1996 WL 240193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-hobbs-alaska-1996.