T1 Appellants Daynight, LLC; KK Machinery Pty. Ltd.; and Paul LaMarr (collectively, KK Machinery) appeal the district court's decision to grant appellee Mobilight, Ine's motion for sanctions and the сourt's subsequent entry of default judgment against KK Machinery. KK Machinery also appeals the district court's ruling granting attorney fees and costs to Mobilight. We affirm.
I. Default Judgment
T2 At oral argument, KK Machinery conсeded that it takes no issue with the district court's basic decision to impose sane-tions against it, but rather contends that the district court abused its discretion by entering a default judgment against it-a sanction KK Machinery considers excessive and unduly harsh.
1
KK Machinery's arguments rely heavily on the jurisprudence of discovery sanctions found in rule 37(b)(2) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure.
2
See Utah R. Civ.
Nothing in this rule limits the inherent power of the court to take any action authorized by Subdivision (b)(2) if a party destroys, conceals, alters, tampers with or fails to preserve a document, tangible item, electronic data or other evidence in violation of a duty. Absent exceptional cireum-stances, a court may not impose sanctions under thеse rules on a party for failing to provide electronically stored information lost as a result of the routine, good-faith operation of an electronic information systеm.
Id. 37(g) (emphasis added). Thus, a district court has the power to take "any action authorized by [rule 37](b)(2)," id., including entry of a default judgment, see id. 37(b)(2)(C). Furthermore, even if rule 37(g) did require a showing of "willfulness" on the part of KK Machinery, the district court concluded that KK Machinery "chose to willfully and in bad faith destroy the laptop," as evidenced in the KK Machinery-produced video, wherein KK Machinery employees spoke of their destruction of "potential[ly] harmful evidence that might link [them] to any sort of lawsuit." Moreover, KK Machinery's destruction of the laptop does not qualify for rule 87(g)'s good-faith exception because, although the employees claimed they were destroying the laptop to avoid harassment from Mobilight, KK Machinery had already filed a complaint for trespass against Mobilight five days before the laptop was destroyed. Additionally, actions and words attributable to KK Machinery after it filed suit, including throwing the laptоp off a building; running over the laptop with a vehicle; and stating, "[If] this gets us into trouble, I hope we're prison buddies," unquestionably demonstrate bad faith and a general disregard for the judicial prоcess.
¶ 3 While we agree that a default judgment sanction is an extreme one, see W.W. & W.B. Gardner, Inc. v. Park W. Vill., Inc.,
II. Attorney Fees
{4 KK Machinery asserts that the district court abused its discretion by awarding Mobilight its requested attorney fees and costs. Specifically, KK Machinery claims Mobilight failed to properly apportion its fees and costs. A trial court's award of attorney fees is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. See Vаlcarce v. Fitzgerald,
T5 KK Machinery correctly states that Mobilight and the district court are required "to allocate the prevailing party's attorney fees among those claims for which it is entitled to an award of attorney fees and those for which it is not." Ellsworth Paulsen Constr. Co. v. 51-SPR, LLC,
T6 As to KK Machinery's argument that Mobilight failed to segregate fees that relate to the claims remaining to be tried in this case, it is clear from the differences in the first and second affidavits of Mobilight's counsel that no fees for work done on claims remaining to be tried were included in the second affidavit Moreover, the district court carefully reviewed Mobilight's counsel's аffidavits and "determine[d] that the apportioned amount of fees sought"-and the emphasis is the district court's-"[was] appropriate and necessarily incurred in furtherance of Mobilight's trаde secret-related claims." We see no error in the district court's decision to award attorney fees and costs to Mobilight as it did. 4
17 Affirmed.
T8 WE CONCUR: JAMES Z. DAVIS, Presiding Judge, and CAROLYN B. McHUGH, Associate Presiding Judge.
Notes
. In its appеllate brief, KK Machinery argues that the district court abused its discretion by imposing any sanctions against it for the destruction of evidence because its destruction of the evidence was not willful, in bad faith, or part of a pattern of egregious behavior that disregarded court orders. To some extent, KK Machinery utilizes these same arguments later in its brief to contend that thе district court's use of default judgment as a sanction was unusually harsh. However, given KK Machinery's concession at oral argument that some type of sanction against it was indeed apрropriate in this case, we turn our attention directly to its severity-of-sanction argument, and we address its individual arguments against the propriety of any sanction only to the extent that they аlso relate to the severity-of-sanction issue.
. KK Machinery cites cases interpreting rule 37(b)(2) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, see Utah R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2), a provision that is not at
We emphasize that the district court awarded attorney fees and costs to Mobilight pursuant to attorney fee provisions in the parties' written agreements and the Utah Uniform Trade Secrets Act, see Utah Code Ann. § 13-24-5 (2009). The attorney fee award was not a further sanction under rule 37, intended to further punish KK Machinery for the destruction of evidence.
. Given our disposition, Mobilight is also entitled to its attorney fees reasonably incurred in this apрeal. See Valcarce v. Fitzgerald,
