OPINION
{1 Michelex Corporation (Michelex) challenges the district court's denial of its motion to set aside the default order and judgment against it. We affirm the entry of default judgment but remand for an evidentiary hearing on the amount Michelex owed and for other proceedings consistent with this opinion.
BACKGROUND
[ 2 In the course of attempting to collect a default judgment against Envelope Packaging of Utah, Inc., and Fernando Delgado (collectively, Enpack) for $659,678.72 plus interest and fees (the 2008 judgment), Cadler-ock Joint Venture II, LP (Cadlerock), became aware of information that suggested that Michelex, a New Jersey corporation, owed Enmpack $775,000. Cadlerock served Michelex's registered agent in Salt Lake City with a writ of garnishment, which included fifteen interrogatories. In a cover sheet, the writ instructed Michelex to mail a copy of its written responses to Cadlerock, Enpack, and the Third District Court in Utah. Michelex maintains that, with the assistance of New York counsel, it timely responded to the interrogatories and returned its responses by mail to Cadlerock's counsel, though admittedly not to the district court or to Enpack.
13 Cadlerock contends that it never received those responses, and it therefore moved, pursuant to rule 64D(j)(2) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, for an order to show cause, see Utah R. Civ. P. 64D()(2) (allowing a court to "order the garnishee to appear and show cause why the garnishee should not be ordered to pay"). The district court granted the motion, and an order to show cause was served upon Michelex. The order provided,
YOU ARE HEREBY ORDERED to appear personally or through legal counsel [to] show cause why the following should not be granted:
1. Michelex ... should not be held in contempt for its failure to respond to the Writ of Garnishment issued by this Court and served upon it.
2. Michelex should not be ordered to pay to [Cadlerock] the Judgment entered against [Enpack] ..., or an amount that this Court deems just, including, but not limited to, all amounts Michelex owes to [Enpack] ... up to the amount of the Judgment, and attorney fees and costs.
8. Such other relief as this Court deems fair and equitable.
Michelex did not appear before the district court or otherwise respond to the show cause order. Accordingly, the district court issued a $2500 bench warrant that ordered Michelex to appear for a scheduled hearing. The bench warrant did not describe the nature or the purpose of the hearing.
{4 Michelex again ignored the district court's order and did not appear for the bench warrant hearing. Cadlerock, however, did appear and requested that the court enter default judgment against Michelex for the 2008 judgment. Cadlerock proffered the deposition testimony of one of Enpack's principals, Christopher Delgado, as evidence that Michelex owed Enpack $775,000 plus interest. Cadlerock also presented some corporate filings, which it contended were indicative of a merger between Enpack and Michelex. The district court granted Cad-lerock's request.
15 Cadlerock mailed a copy of the proposed judgment to Michele's registered agent in Utah on January 12, 2009. Upon receiving the proposed order and judgment in its New Jersey offices, Michelex retained a Utah attorney. It filed an objection in the district court on January 20, 2009, the first business day after it received the proposed order and judgment. In the meantime, the district court had signed the proposed order and default judgment, which ordered Michelex to pay Cadlerock
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$803,031.31 plus postjudgment interest (the 2009 judgment). Instead of appealing the 2009 judgment, Michelex filed a motion to set it aside pursuant to rules 55(c) and 60(b) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, see Utah R. Civ. P. 55(c) (permitting a default judgment to be set aside in accordance with rule 60(b)); id. R. 60(b) (setting forth the grounds for relieving a party from judgment); see also Amico Mut. Ins. Co. v. Schettler,
ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
T6 Michelex asserts that the denial of the rule 60(b) motion was an abuse of discretion. See generally Lund v. Brown,
ANALYSIS
17 "In general, a movant is entitled to have a default judgment set aside under [rule] 60(b) [of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure] if (1) the motion is timely; (2) there is a basis for granting relief under one of the subsections of 60(b); and (8) the movant has alleged a meritorious defense." Menzies v. Galetka,
18 Michelex claims on appeal that it was entitled to relief under rule 60(b). The pertinent part of rule 60(b) provides,
On motion and upon such terms as are just, “the' court may in the furtherance of justice relieve a party or his legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding for the following reasons: (1) mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect; . or (6) any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.
Utah R. Civ. P. 60(b); see also id. R. 55(c) (permitting a district court to set aside a default judgment for good cause pursuant to rule 60(b)). Specifically, Michelex claims it is entitled to relief under subsection (b)(1) because its New York counsel acted as would a reasonably prudent attorney and its reliance upon counsel's assurances that Michelex had responded adequately thus constituted exeusable neglect. In the alternative, Michelex contends that its status as an out-of-state garnishee, which did not participate in the underlying action, entitled it to a hearing before a default judgment could be entered against it. See generally Pangea Techs., Inc. v. Internet Promotions, Inc.,
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19 "A trial court has discretion in determining whether a movant has shown . excusable neglect, and this [clourt will reverse the trial court's ruling only when there has been an abuse of discretion." Larsen v. Collina,
110 Nevertheless, we conclude that the default judgment should be reversed with respect to the amount and the case remanded for a hearing. Michelex's primary complaint in the district court and on appeal is that it was deprived of a hearing in which its financial obligations to Enpack, if any, could be determined. Our precedent states that even defaulting defendants should usually be afforded an evidentiary hearing whenever the amount owed is unliquidated under rule 55(b)(2), the provision that governs default judgments, see Utah R. Civ. P. 55(b)(2) (providing for the court to "conduct such hearings or order such references as it deems necessary and proper" when the plaintiff's claim is not for a sum certain). See also Skanchy v. Calcados Ortope SA,
11 For example, in Pitts v. Pine Meadow Ranch, Inc.,
{12 The supreme court took the same approach when it decided J.P.W. Enterprises, Inc. v. Naef,
- 13 In its decisions in Larsen v. Collina,
1 14 In this case, the relief sought from the court on Michelex's default was a judgment for "all amounts Michelex owes to [Enpack] . up to the amount of the Judgment." While the amount of the judgment against Enpack was fixed and known, the amount Michelex may have owed to Enpack was not; that amount was therefore unliquidated. Because the relief granted against Michelex was *842 in the nature of a default judgment, we believe that it was "necessary and proper," see Utah R. Civ. P. 55(b)(@2), that the district court conduct a hearing to determine exactly what, if anything, Michelex owed to Enpack.
[ 15 Although no Utah appellate court has considered whether a default judgment against a garnishee should be remanded where evidence has not been properly received on the amount the garnishee owed the judgment debtor, there is nothing in the language of rule 55(b)(2) or our precedent that renders the rule inapplicable to garnishees. Indeed, the supreme court has recognized,
A garnishee is a stranger to the principal case and an involuntary participant in the garnishment proceeding. This structural cireumstance imposes unique due process demands on garnishment procedures. The need for heightened sensitivity to due process is particularly evident where ... a plaintiff seeks to obtain a judgment from a garnishee.... [Thus,] rule 64D[ of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure] requires that a garnishee be afforded a hearing before it can be found liable to a plaintiff and have a judgment entered against it.
Pangea Techs., Inc. v. Internet Promotions, Inc.,
§16 Michelex maintains that it failed to respond because it did not owe Enpack money. Yet Cadlerock received judgment against Micheles in the amount of $803,081.31 plus postjudgment interest, following an uncontested hearing on a bench warrant. Although Michelex was notified that a hearing on the bench warrant would oceur, it was not given notice that an eviden-tiary hearing on the amount it owed pursuant to a default judgment would simultaneously be held. See generally Utah R. Civ. P. 5(a)(2)(C) (requiring that "a party in default for any reason ... be served with notice of any hearing necessary to determine the amount of damages to be entered"). Moreover, the evidence proffered at the hearing was one-sided and relatively perfunctory. Indeed, the evidence presented did not appear to rise to a level of reliability sufficient to persuade us that the bench warrant hearing itself fulfilled the hearing requirements of rule 55(b)(2). Nor does the evidence justify a judgment of over $800,000, even absent the concern about lack of adequate notice. See generally Pills v. Pine Meadow Ranch, Inc.,
T 17 In so doing, we are not exeusing Mi-chelex's behavior, which merits both censure and sanction. Rather, the district court may exercise its inherent power to impose reason
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able and proportionate monetary sanctions upon Michelex for its failure to appear or respond to court orders. See Utah Code Ann. § 78A-2-201 (2008) (including within the inherent powers of a court, the power to "enforce order in the proceedings before it," to "compel obedience," and to "control ... persons in any manner connected with a judicial proceeding"); Pitts,
{18 We affirm the entry of default judgment in terms of basic responsibility but remand for an evidentiary hearing on the amount Michelex owed and such other proceedings as may be appropriate under the cireumstances.
1119 WE CONCUR: GREGORY K. ORME and J. FREDERIC VOROS JR., Judges.
Notes
. The district court's minute entry stated that no further order was required and thus complied with the requirements of Giusti v. Sterling Wentworth Corp.,
. In so doing, the supreme court recognized that the plaintiffs had to incur significant expense to relitigate their damages and conditioned the new hearing upon the defendants paying the plain-tifls' expenses. See Pitts v. Pine Meadow Ranch, Inc.,
. Other jurisdictions faced with circumstances analogous to these have opted to set aside the default judgment on the basis of rule 60(b)(6), rather than remand for a damages hearing under rule 55(b)(2). See, eg., Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Yancey Camp Dev.,
The Utah Supreme Court, however, is not alone in its approach. See generally Capital One Servs., Inc. v. Rawls,
