COPPER HILLS CUSTOM HOMES, LLC, Appellant, v. COUNTRYWIDE BANK, FSB, et al., Appellees.
No. 20160803
Supreme Court of the State of Utah
Filed August 16, 2018
2018 UT 42
On Direct Appeal. Third District, Salt Lake. The Honorable Matthew Bates. No. 150907425.
Troy L. Booher, Beth E. Kennedy, Alexandra Mareschal, Salt Lake City; Nate D. Ashcraft, Lehi, for appellant
Chandler P. Thompson, Alan M. Hurst, Salt Lake City, for appellees Countrywide Bank, FSB and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.
Bradley L. Tilt, Sara E. Bouley, Salt Lake City, for appellees Diane Griffin, Eldon E. Griffin, Marcus Griffin, Stearns Lending, Inc., and Utah Community Federal Credit Union,
Brett N. Anderson, Salt Lake City, for appellees Primelending and Jason P. Turner
Having recused himself, JUSTICE PEARCE does not participate herein; COURT OF APPEALS JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS sat.
JUSTICE HIMONAS, opinion of the Court:
¶ 1 Acting pursuant to
¶ 2 We are not oblivious to the fact that our decision today will leave the parties feeling that form has triumphed over substance. In a sense, they would not be wrong. But “we cannot fabricate the power to
I
¶ 3 The germane facts are scant and not in dispute. “Copper Hills provided construction contracting services to Morningside Developers . . . on eight separate parcels of real property in 2006.” Morningside Developers, LLC v. Copper Hills Custom Homes, LLC, 2015 UT App 99, ¶ 2, 348 P.3d 726. Claiming that “Morningside failed to pay [it] for its work, Copper Hills recorded mechanic[’]s liens against each of the parcels and ultimately filed eight separate lien foreclosure actions.” Id. In response, Morningside sued “Copper Hills for breach of contract, fraud, and related claims.” Id. The district court consolidated Morningside’s claims and Copper Hills’s foreclosure actions in October 2009. Id.
¶ 4 After two years of inaction and an intervening “order to show cause why the case should not be dismissed[,] . . . the district court dismissed the case without prejudice.” Id. ¶¶ 3–4. Copper Hills moved to set aside that dismissal. The district court granted the motion. Id. ¶ 4.
¶ 5 After the dismissal had been set aside, “Copper Hills filed an amended complaint adding twenty-five additional parties.” Id. ¶ 5. This prompted the district court to issue “a new order to show cause . . . ordering the parties to address whether” its prior decision to set aside the order of dismissal should be vacated. Id. And, “[f]ollowing a hearing, the district court issued an order in which it vacated the [order to set aside] and dismissed the case with prejudice.” Id.
¶ 6 On appeal, the court of appeals vacated the district court’s decision “insofar as it dismisse[d] the case with prejudice.” Id. ¶ 12. Then it reinstated the district court’s order dismissing the case without prejudice. Id.
¶ 7 One day shy of 180 days from when the court of appeals issued its decision, but more than eight years from when the liens were
¶ 8 Based on appellees’ argument, the district court concluded that several of Copper Hills’s liens were “time-barred, void, and unenforceable.” And, as a result, it issued the five orders presently before us.4
¶ 9 The district court sought to certify each of these orders as final and appealable under
II
¶ 11 The obvious and “principal rationale for limiting the right to appeal in this way is to ‘promote [ ] judicial economy by preventing piecemeal appeals in the same litigation to this Court.’” Anderson, 2005 UT 59, ¶ 9 (alteration in original) (citation omitted). We are also concerned that multiple rulings in the same litigation on “narrow issues taken out of . . . context” may needlessly increase the risk of inconsistent or erroneous decisions. Kennecott, 814 P.2d at 1101. Moreover, “[s]trict adherence to the final judgment rule . . . maintains the proper relationship between this Court and the [district] courts.” Powell v. Cannon, 2008 UT 19, ¶ 12, 179 P.3d 799 (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted).
¶ 12 “This court has consistently upheld the final judgment rule.” Bradbury v. Valencia, 2000 UT 50, ¶ 10, 5 P.3d 649 (citations omitted). But, as with nearly every general rule, there are exceptions. See Wash. Townhomes, LLC v. Wash. Cty. Water Conservancy Dist., 2016 UT 43, ¶ 6, 388 P.3d 753. The final judgment rule has three.
¶ 13 The first exception to the final judgment rule “is when the legislature provides a statutory avenue for appealing nonfinal orders.” Powell, 2008 UT 19, ¶ 13 (citation omitted). For example,
¶ 14 The second exception is an interlocutory appeal. Our rules of appellate procedure prescribe when an interlocutory appeal may be requested:
An appeal from an interlocutory order may be sought by any party by filing a petition for permission to appeal from the interlocutory order with the clerk of the
appellate court with jurisdiction over the case within 20 days after the entry of the order of the trial court, with proof of service on all other parties to the action.
¶ 15 The third exception, and the one with which we concern ourselves in this opinion, is an appeal brought under
When an action presents more than one claim for relief—whether as a claim, counterclaim, cross claim, or third party claim—and/or when multiple parties are involved, the court may enter judgment as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims or parties only if the court expressly determines that there is no just reason for delay. Otherwise, any order or other decision, however designated, that adjudicates fewer than all the claims or the rights and liabilities of fewer than all the parties does not end the action as to any of the claims or parties, and may be changed at any time before the entry of judgment adjudicating all the claims and the rights and liabilities of all the parties.
¶ 16 “By the terms of [r]ule 54(b), a ruling must meet three requirements in order to be appealable.” Pate v. Marathon Steel Co., 692 P.2d 765, 767 (Utah 1984); see also Butler v. Corp. of the President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, 2014 UT 41, ¶ 25, 337 P.3d 280. The first requirement is that “there must be multiple claims for relief or multiple parties to the action;” the second is that “the judgment appealed from must have been entered on an order that would be appealable but for the fact that other claims or parties remain in the action;” and the third is that the “[district] court, in its discretion, must make a[n express] determination that there is no just reason for delay.” Butler, 2014 UT 41, ¶ 25 (emphasis omitted) (citation omitted).
¶ 17 In applying these requirements, we have steadfastly adhered to a “narrow approach to 54(b) certifications” and advised our district courts to do the same. Kennecott, 814 P.2d at 1104. Two of our decisions merit particular attention: Kennecott, 814 P.2d 1099, and Bennion v. Pennzoil Co., 826 P.2d 137 (Utah 1992) (per curiam).
¶ 18 In Kennecott, we carefully reviewed the merits of two competing “approaches to determining when a claim is separate and an order disposing of it is eligible for treatment as a ‘final’ judgment and certification under
¶ 19 Upon completing our review, we decidedly eschewed the “broad reading” afforded
¶ 20 In Bennion we took “another step toward building workable guidelines to be used by the [district] courts of this state as they judge whether a claim is separate and whether their decision to certify the claim would pass muster in our appellate courts.” 826 P.2d at 138. We did so because of the problem we often encountered in being unable to clearly “understand the . . . reasons for certification.” Id.
¶ 21 To help address this problem, we reemphasized the importance of complying with
¶ 22 And, while we are by no means tethered to the interpretation afforded by the Tenth Circuit to the federal variant of
III
¶ 23 When we apply these principles to this case, we conclude that the 54(b) certification orders at issue are deficient. There are four distinct reasons.7
¶ 24 First, the stipulation for entry of judgment and order dismissing the case, dated August 30, 2016, does not meet the second Kennecott requirement that this order is not one that would “have been entered on an order that would be appealable but for the fact that other claims or parties remain in the action.” Kennecott Corp. v. Utah State Tax Comm’n, 814 P.2d 1099, 1101 (Utah 1991) (citation omitted). The question of the amount of the award of attorney fees remained unanswered at the time of certification. Prior to November 1, 2016, the effective date of the 2016 amendments to
¶ 26 Second, the September 27 order does not meet the third requirement for 54(b) certification: an express determination “that there is no just reason for delay.”11 Butler v. Corp. of the President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, 2014 UT 41, ¶ 25, 337 P.3d 280 (citation omitted). This defect deprives us of appellate jurisdiction over the first three items set forth in the operative notice of appeal.12
¶ 28 Fourth, neither the 54(b) certifications nor the underlying orders contain the kind of careful explanation of the lack of factual overlap between the certified and remaining claims that we require to fairly evaluate the district court’s certification decisions. By way of example only, there is no discussion of what claims remain, other than attorney fees, and whether none, some, or all of those claims are based on different legal theories or operative facts. While this alone would not create a jurisdictional bar, it is self-evident that we cannot review the district court’s analysis in this regard if analysis is not provided.
IV
¶ 29 Nothing in this opinion should be interpreted as holding that the parties cannot obtain proper
