Lead Opinion
OPINION
¶ 1 Bike Fashion Corp., Southam Properties and Prospect Holdings (“Bike”) appeal an adverse judgment and denial of their motion for new trial. Robert F. and Ann Kramer (“Kramer”) and Mount Royal Management appeal the denial of their request for attorneys’ fees. We affirm in part, reverse in part and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
¶ 2 In 1987, Capital Development, a corporation controlled by William Dinneen, purchased property at Bell Road and 21st Street in Phoenix (“the Property”). Bike Fashion Corp. v. Kramer, 1 CA-CV-97-0499 (Ariz.App. Jan. 26, 1998), mem. decision at 3. Dinneen and Kramer solicited investors to form a general partnership, Bell 20/21, to purchase the Property from Capital Development. Id. Bike became a general partner in the Bell 20/21 partnership, as did Regis Properties, a corporation controlled by Kramer. Id. The partnership documents designated Freeport Financial Corporation, a corporation controlled by Dinneen, as managing partner. Before consummating the sale of the Property to Bell 20/21, however, Dinneen and another corporation controlled by Kramer, Mount Royal Management, secretly raised the Property’s price by $173,000. Id.
¶ 3 Once the Bell 20/21 partnership owned the Property, the partners disagreed about its disposition. While Kramer and Dinneen wanted to develop the Property, other partners sought a buyer. Id. In either situation, any conveyance of the Property required the consent of the partners holding 51% of the profits and losses of the Bell 20/21 partnership. Id.
¶ 4 Kramer and Dinneen formed a new partnership, Bell Place Partners. Id. They then used the Property to secure loans and sold the Property to their new partnership, doing so without the consent of the Bell 20/21 partnership. Id.
¶ 5 Meanwhile, Bike, unaware of the Property’s sale, believed it had found a potential buyer for the Property. Id. at 4. However, when the potential buyer learned from the newspaper of the Property’s sale, the buyer withdrew. Id.
¶ 6 Eventually Bell 20/21 regained the Property, but Bike sued for an accounting. Id. The complaint asserted five claims for recovery: accounting, breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, aiding and abetting the breaches of implied covenants, breach of contract against Regis Properties, and fraudulent transfer and conveyance. Id. The trial court ruled that claims two, three and four sounded in tort and were barred by the statute of limitations. Id. It therefore limited the bench trial to the accounting claim, about which it concluded that the “partners who benefitted from the undisclosed $173,000 markup violated the fiduciary duty owed to the other partners.” Id.
¶ 7 On appeal, this court determined that the trial court had erred in dismissing Bike’s claims for breach of contract and remanded the case for the reinstatement of those claims. Id. It also concluded that there was insufficient evidence for the trial court to pierce the corporate veil between Kramer and Mount Royal Management. Id. Kramer did not challenge the trial court’s finding concerning his alter-ego relationship to Regis Properties.
¶ 8 On remand, Bike claimed that Kramer had breached the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing by assisting Freeport Financial Corporation, the managing partner, in transferring the property without the consent required by the partnership agreement. Kramer responded that the agreement only barred the managing partner, not him as a general partner, from conveying the Property without the requisite consent.
¶ 9 The jury returned a verdict in favor of Kramer. The court denied Bike’s motion for new trial and entered judgment for Kramer.
¶ 10 The parties appealed. Bike raises one issue: Whether it is entitled to a new trial because the court incorrectly instructed the jury that there could be no violation of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing if there was an express contract provision relating to the same subject. Kramer and related parties raise three issues: Whether the trial court erred in finding Regis Properties to be Kramer’s alter ego; whether the decision of this court reversing the trial court’s finding that Mount Royal Management was Kramer’s alter ego served to void the judgment against Mount Royal; and whether the trial court erred in denying Kramer’s application for attorneys’ fees and costs as the prevailing party in the litigation.
DISCUSSION
A. Implied Covenant of Good Faith and Fair Dealing
¶ 11 Over Bike’s objection, the trial court instructed the jury as follows:
A party to a contract is not liable for breach of an implied contract provision where there is an express written contract provision between the parties relating to the same subject.
The court also instructed the jury regarding the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, stating,
Every party to a contract has a duty to act fairly and in good faith. This duty is implied by law and need not be in writing.
Bike claims that the instruction regarding implied contract eviscerated the instruction regarding implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. It maintains that it therefore is entitled to a new trial, and we agree.
¶ 12 While a trial court is not required to instruct the jury on every nuance of law suggested by counsel, Fridena v. Evans,
¶ 13 Arizona “law implies a covenant of good faith and fair dealing in every contract.” Rawlings v. Apodaca,
¶ 14 The law on the relationship between a contract’s express terms and the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing is turbid. The general rule is that an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing cannot directly contradict an express contract term. See Scheck v. Burger King Corp.,
¶ 15 In applying these principles, the trial court erred. The “instructions given create[d] substantial doubt as to whether or not the jury was properly guided in its deliberations.” Gemstar Ltd. v. Ernst & Young,
¶ 16 Kramer misplaces reliance on Chanay v. Chittenden,
¶ 17 Contrary to Kramer’s contention, a party may breach the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing even if the express terms of the contract speak to a related subject. In SunAmp Systems,
¶ 19 The error in the instructions was compounded and of substantial prejudice to Bike because Kramer extensively argued to the jury the contention that there could be no breach of contract for those actions the contract did not expressly prohibit.
B. Regis Properties as Kramer Alter Ego
¶ 20 Kramer asserts that the trial court erred in finding Regis Properties to be his alter ego, but this issue is precluded because it could have been raised by Kramer on the first appeal as he did the trial court’s determination that Mount Royal Management was his alter ego. Appeals “cannot be allowed piecemeal” and thus issues that “should have been raised on the first appeal may not be presented to nor considered by this court on the second appeal.” Hurst v. Hurst,
C. Judgment Against Mount Royal Management
¶ 21 In the first trial, the court entered judgment against Mount Royal Management for $43,725 plus interest for its role in the secret markup of the price when the Property was sold to Bell 20/21. Because Mount Royal was not a partner in Bell 20/21, Kramer asserts that its only connection to this litigation is through him.
¶ 22 After this court reversed for lack of sufficient evidence the finding that Mount Royal served as Kramer’s alter ego, upon remand Kramer failed to pursue the contention he now raises regarding the judgment against Mount Royal. The argument therefore has been waived. See Dugan v. Fujitsu Bus. Communications,
¶ 23 Kramer appeals the trial court’s denial of attorneys’ fees. He claims entitlement pursuant to the provision in the Bell 20/21 partnership agreement giving the prevailing party fees and costs expended for litigation between the parties. However, because of the preceding analysis and disposition, Kramer has not been determined to be the prevailing party in this litigation.
CONCLUSION
¶ 24 For the preceding reasons, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The partnership certificate stated "[t]he right and responsibility to manage and conduct the partnership affairs including the right to sell, transfer, assign, convey or encumber the partnership assets shall be vested exclusively in Freeport Financial Corporation, an Arizona corporation, the managing partner herein. The managing partner, Freeport Financial Corporation, an Arizona corporation, must first obtain consent of the partners holding at least fifty-one percent (51%) of the profits and losses of the partnership before it can be said to be vested to the right to ... (iv) sell, transfer, convey or hypothecate any and/or all of the partnership property.”
. Bike admitted in the pre-trial statement that the conveyance claim constituted part of its accounting action.
. "A party enjoys discretion in the relevant sense when the express terms of the contract do not specify how a party is to behave in all circumstances.” Steven J. Burton & Eric G. Andersen, Contractual Good Faith: Formation, Performance, Breach, Enforcement § 1.2.1 at 4 (1995). Such is the situation in this case.
. Even if the instruction regarding an implied contract stated a correct legal principle, it had no application to the legal issue whether the defendants breached an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Underscoring this point, one author has stated that the "obligation of good faith is ‘constructive’ rather than ‘implied’.” 3A Corbin on Contracts § 654A at 106. Explaining this phraseology is the idea that the obligation of good faith is not implied at all but is in fact imposed by statute, see U.C.C. § 1-203 (1998), or common law. Id. ("Our unwillingness to allow people to disclaim the obligation of good faith shows that the obligation cannot be implied, but is law imposed.") (citation omitted).
. In closing argument, Kramer stated:
Now, the plaintiffs, I told you they don't have an implied contract count that they can pursue. At least from my perception, they have a written contract that they can pursue. Unfortunately, what are they going to sue on on [sic] a written contract, because the written contract says Freeport Financial’s the managing partner? So how can they sue Regis or Mount Royal for breach of a contract when that wasn’t his responsibility and that wasn’t something he was prohibited from doing?
Kramer ended his closing argument by insisting:
You’ll see there that they — these partners could not have had an understanding that no partner could transfer the property because there were no understandings that'were available to the partners other than what was in this document [referring to the partnership agreement and certificate of general partnership]. And this document says only Freeport can transfer the property.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
¶ 25 I join fully in parts B, C and D of the majority decision. I concur with the result in part A, dealing with the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, because I believe the result is required by the Arizona Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Wells Fargo Bank v. Arizona Laborers, Teamsters and Cement Masons Local No. 395 Pension Trust Fund,
