CBS ENTERPRISES LLC AND ALLEN MYERS, Appellants, v. LARRY T. SORENSON, Appellee.
No. 20160897-CA
THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
Filed January 5, 2018
2018 UT App 2
JUDGE DAVID N. MORTENSEN authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES GREGORY K. ORME and MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN concurred.
Third District Court, Salt Lake Department; The Honorable Robert P. Faust; No. 150903522; Daniel E. Witte, Attorney for Appellants; Larry T. Sorenson, Appellee Pro Se
Opinion
MORTENSEN, Judge:
¶1 Appellants CBS Enterprises LLC and Allen Myers (collectively, CBS) filed suit against Larry T. Sorensen in the district court, alleging that they were part owners of a Chinese jade artifact valued at $34 million. After initially staying the proceedings to allow for resolution of a related federal case, the district court dismissed CBS‘s complaint for failure to prosecute. CBS now appeals, arguing that the dismissal was an abuse of the district court‘s discretion. Because we agree, we reverse and remand.
¶2 Most of the details of the underlying dispute in this case are irrelevant to the appeal. What is important, however, is the procedural path the case has followed. In May of 2015, CBS filed
¶3 Roughly a year after the district court proceedings had been stayed, the court provided notice to the parties of its sua sponte motion to dismiss the case “for lack of prosecution pursuant to Rule 4-103” of the Utah Rules of Judicial Administration. The court stated, “Unless a written statement is received by the court within 20 days of this notice showing good cause why this shоuld not be dismissed, the Court will dismiss without further notice.” CBS accordingly filed a written objection approximately one week later. Counsel for CBS followed up with the district court by telephone to ensure that the court had received the objection. Counsel also asked if a hearing had been or would be scheduled. According to CBS, its counsel was told that “no hearing was currently scheduled and that one might never be scheduled (and indeed, was likely not to be scheduled),” but that counsel would be contacted if that changed.
¶4 In its objection, CBS argued that it had “good cause why this case should not be dismissed” and that “aggressive litigation is occurring to continue to prosecute the matter.” Specifically, CBS explained that the jade artifact had been “held as evidence in a federal criminal investigation until August 2016“—the same month the district court moved to dismiss the case for failure to prosecute. It provided the district court with the nаmes and case numbers of federal cases that implicated the artifact. The objection concluded with a request that, if the district court did “not summarily agree that good cause has been shown,” the court set “a hearing to further discuss the situation.”
¶5 The district court obliged, sending out notice on September 22, 2016, of a hearing scheduled for less than one
¶6 Three days later, on October 1, 2016, CBS filed a “motion for reconsideration to alter or amend judgment and to vacate or clarify dismissal.” In it, CBS alleged that no party had received actual notice of the September 28 hearing. And CBS reiterated its reasons why the case should not have bеen dismissed, including that “litigation is indeed being actively and properly prosecuted.”
¶7 But beyond simply rehashing the reasoning set out in its objection, CBS also detailed apparent flaws in the notice and hearing process, explaining that counsel for CBS had not received actual notice of either thе hearing or its resolution until he engaged in his standard periodic review of “the dockets for his various cases on Greenfiling just as a precaution.”1 CBS argued that its failure to appear at the hearing was attributable to mistake, inadvertence, or excusable neglect, citing
¶8 Without addressing CBS‘s
Further, on August 31, 2016 a Notice of Intent to Dismiss was given to Plaintiff, to which an objection was filed on September 8th 2016. The Court having read the objection still had concerns regarding the content of the objection, so it set a[n in-]court hearing on the matter and provided notice to counsel of the hearing at the email address on file with the Court and at which counsel had received previous[] notices. Counsel failed to appear at the in[-]court hearing and the case was dismissed. Therefore, the Court finds more than adequate opportunity was provided to prevent this case from being dismissed and again, denies the Motion . . . .
¶10 The district court admittedly has broad discretion in deciding whеther a case should be dismissed for failure to prosecute, and we will not reverse
absent an abuse of discretion and a likelihood that an injustice has occurred. Further, [i]n determining whether the court abused its discretion, we balance the need to expedite litigation and efficiently utilize judicial resоurces with the need to allow parties to have their day in court. Thus, we review for abuse of discretion the [district] court‘s decision to dismiss for failure to prosecute.
Cheek v. Clay Bulloch Constr., Inc., 2011 UT App 418, ¶ 6, 269 P.3d 964 (alteration in original) (citations and internal quotation
¶11 The district court was correct that our rules of civil procedure do not contemplate motions to reconsider. See Lindstrom v. Custom Floor Covering Inc., 2017 UT App 141, ¶ 10, 402 P.3d 171 (referring to a motion to reconsider as “a motion that does not exist under the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure“). And we afford district courts discretion in deciding whether to entertain such motions. See A.S. v. R.S., 2017 UT 77, ¶ 28 (reiterating that “motions to reconsider are not recognized anywhere in either the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure or the Utah Rules оf Civil Procedure, and . . . that [district] courts are under no obligation to consider motions for reconsideration and any decision to address or not to address the merits of such a motion is highly discretionary” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)). But CBS‘s motion was not a classic motion to reconsider, at leаst not exclusively.2 And a court may not re-
¶12 CBS, perhaps ill-advisedly, captioned its motion as one “for reconsideration.” But the caption also indicated that CBS sought “to alter or amend judgment” and that it wanted to “vacate or clarify dismissal.” Not only did the motion‘s caption indicate that it was not solely one for reconsideration, but also the substance of the motion made that abundantly clear. In the opening paragraph of its motion, CBS explained that it sought relief under
¶13 Furthermore, considering the merits of CBS‘s motion, it is apparent that the district court abused its discretion by denying relief. CBS specifically argued that its nonapрearance at the hearing was the result of mistake, inadvertence, or excusable neglect; that it was not equitable for the order of dismissal to have prospective application; and that the complex nature of the interplay between the state and federal systems in this dispute
¶14 Even setting aside the fact that this case had been stayed by the district court when the district court ordered its dismissal, we have no difficulty concluding that CBS was entitled to relief for excusable neglect. When the district court first notified the parties that it was considering dismissing the case, it did so by saying dismissal would result “[u]nless a written statement is received . . . showing good cause why this should not be dismissed.” (Emphasis added.) The logical reading of that quаlification is that if such a written statement were received, the case would not be dismissed. And CBS filed a written objection, detailing why the case should not be dismissed. It would have been reasonable for CBS to believe that it had complied with the district court‘s notice. The court made no mention of a hearing. It instructed the parties to provide a written statement or this case would be dismissed. And CBS provided a written statement.
¶15 Of course, that was not the end of things. Counsel for CBS had contacted the district court after filing the objection and was told that a hearing had not been scheduled and likely would not be scheduled. But CBS, in its objectiоn, had suggested that if the district court was unsatisfied with its explanation of why the case should not be dismissed, the court should schedule a hearing. The district court, in its order denying CBS‘s request for relief, explained that it “still had concerns regarding the content of [CBS‘s] objection,” and therefore scheduled a hearing. But in doing so, it gavе less than one week‘s notice.
¶16 And to compound the situation further, counsel for CBS maintained that he had not received actual notice of the hearing.
¶17 But our analysis does not end there, lest on remand the district court see fit to again reach the question of whether the case should be dismissed for failure to prosecute. On the record
¶18 To determine “whether a [district] court has abused its discretion in dismissing a case for failure to prosecute,” we typically consider five factors:
(1) the conduct of both parties; (2) the opportunity each party has had to move the case forward; (3) what each party has done to move the case forward; (4) the amount of difficulty or prejudice that may have been caused to the other side; and (5) most important, whether injustice may result from the dismissal.
Cheek v. Clay Bulloch Constr., Inc., 2011 UT App 418, ¶ 7, 269 P.3d 964 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).6 But these factors are less applicable where, as hеre, there was an agreement between all parties and approved by the district court that the proceedings would be stayed.
¶19 In August of 2015, a year before dismissal, the district court had ordered the case stayed. In doing so, it specified that the case would resume “only after . . . future order of this Court.” The first аnd only “future order” was not one that could have triggered the commencement of “normal accrual of litigation deadlines and litigation activities“; rather, the next order was the order of dismissal, which of course could not trigger the resumption of litigation activities because it ended the case. By ordering dismissal without first entering an order to
¶20 While we are typically “reluctant to second-guess a trial court‘s interpretation of its own order,” State v. L.A., 2010 UT App 356, ¶ 16 n.4, 245 P.3d 213, this is an unusual instance involving a district court‘s complete disregard for its own order, rather than its interpretation of it. Indeed, nowhere in the district court‘s order of dismissal or denial of CBS‘s motion does the district court acknowledge the earlier order. Under these circumstances, it was an abuse of the district court‘s discretion to order that a stayed case be dismissed for failure to prosecute.
¶21 We reverse the district court‘s order denying relief under
