OPINION
1 Riсhard Gardiner appeals from the trial court's order denying his motion for attorney fees. In this case, we examine whether attorney fees incurred in pursuing a fraudulent transfer action are recoverable as consequential damages stemming from a prior breach of contract. Because we hold that the trial court failed to еngage in the appropriate analysis of this issue, we remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. j
BACKGROUND
¶ 2 Gardiner obtained a judgment of $7182, plus interest and costs, against Interport, Ine. (Interport) for breach of contract. The breach of contract suit was tried and decided in Virginia. Gardiner then domesticated the judgment in Utah.
¶ 3 While the Virginia aсtion was underway, Interport's president, William York Jr., transferred Interport's only asset, a warehouse in Delta, Utah, to his parents, William York Sr. and Betty York. After the judgment was domesticated, Gardiner filed a petition for relief in Utah against Interport and Betty York, 1 alleging that the transfer of the warehouse was fraudulent. Gardiner sought either a judgment lien or avoidance of the transfer. See Utah Code Ann. § 25-6-8 (1998) (setting forth the remedies of eredi-tors who seek relief from debtors' fraudulent transfer of assets). The trial court entered a default judgment against Interport after it failed to defend. A bench trial was held with Betty York as the remaining defendant. The trial court found that Interport had transferred the warehouse with the intent to defraud Gardiner and authorized a judgment lien against the property. 2
¶ 4 Gardiner then filed a motion to recover the attorney fees he incurred in pursuing the fraudulent transfer litigation. The trial court denied the motion. When the trial court denied Gardiner's motion to reconsider the attorney fee ruling, he appealed.
ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶5 The sole issue on appeal is whether the trial court erred in denying Gardiner's request for attorney fees. Whether attorney fees should be awarded is a legal issue that we review for correctness. See Valcarce v. Fitzgerald,
I. The Trial Court's Decision
¶ 6 Gardiner requested an award of attorney fees at the conclusion of trial,. The trial court denied the motion, reasoning that there was "no basis[,] either statutory or contractual[,] why the fees should be awarded." Gardiner then filed a motion to reconsider,
3
clarifying that his argument for attorney fees was based on the "third-party litigation exception" to the general rule that attorney fees are only recoverable when authorized by statute or contract. In his memorandum in support оf his motion to reconsider, Gardiner cited Macris & Associates v. Neways, Inc.,
[Gardiner] ... cites the [clourt to the case of [Collier] for the proposition that there is a "third party exception" to the general rule that a court should not award attorney[ ] fees unless there is a statutory or contractual basis to do so. The [cJourt finds the Collier decision to bе limited only to the situation where an insurer breaks its contract with an insured, which is not the situation in the present case.
Although the trial court correctly noted that Collier identified a right to attorney fees that is unique to the insurance context, it confused that rule with the more general third-party litigation exception. See
¶ 7 The Collier court, however, noted that the Utah Supreme Court in Canyon Country Store v. Bracey,
¶ 8 The Collier court ultimately concluded that an award of attorney fees was inappropriate in that. case because neither the third-party litigation exception nor the insurance contract exception applied. See
II. The Third-Party Litigation Exception as Applied to This Case
¶ 9 On appeal, Gardiner argues that he is entitled to an award of attorney fees because Interport's actions caused him to incur those fees in obtaining a judgment lien against the warehousе. In his brief, Gardiner argues primarily that Interport's fraudulent transfer was the wrongful act that caused him to engage in litigation with Betty York.
6
We reiterate that the third-party litigation exception "allows recovery of attorney fees as consequential damages, but only in the limited situation where the defendant's breach of contract foreseeably caused the plaintiff to incur attorney fees through litigation with a third party." Collier,
¶ 10 In Macris & Associates v. Neways, Inc.,
¶ 11 This court reversed, reasoning that the UFTA was a codification of the common law and should be liberally construed. See id. at ¶ 16 ("'[UInless displaced by [the UFTA], the principles of law and equity, including merchant law and the law relating to principal and agent, equitable subordination, estoppel, laches, fraud, misrepresentation, duress, coercion, mistake, insolvency, or other validating or invalidating cause, supplement [(the UFTA's]l provisions'") (quoting
¶ 12 Despite this court's holding that the failure of the UFTA to include an attorney fees provision did not necessarily bar an award of attorney fees. under the third-party litigation exception, we nonetheless held that Macris had to demonstrate that the fraudulent transfer action was a natural consequence of Images's original breach of contract. See id. at ¶ 22. "[Elven though Mаcris [was] entitled to seek attorney fees incurred in pursuing a UFTA claim using the third-party litigation exception, it [was] limited by the requirements of the exception." Id. at ¶ 18. Where the third-party litigation exception is at issue, and the cause of action for which attorney fees are sought arises under the UFTA, a party is not foreclosed from obtaining attorney fees merely because the UFTA contains no fee provision. However, to recover under the third-party litigation exception, the movant must show that the original breach of contract foreseeably caused it to incur attorney fees as consequential damages in the subsequent UFTA litigation with the third party. Cf. Collier v. Heinz,
¶ 13 Gardiner, thereforе, has the burden of demonstrating that it was foreseeable that Interport's breach of contract would subject him to attorney fees in the fraudulent transfer action against Betty York. Whether expenses are foreseeable and therefore recoverable as consequential damages flowing from a breach of contract is а question of fact appropriately resolved by the trial court. See Moore v. Energy Mut. Ins. Co.,
¶ 14 Consequential damages are "those reasonably within the contemplation of, or reasonably foreseeable by, the parties at the time the contract was made."
7
Beck v. Farmers Ins. Exch.,
¶ 15 In Pacific Coast Title Insurance Co. v. Hartford Accident & Indemmity Co.,
to be compensable, the loss must result from the breach in the natural and usual course of events, so that it can fairly andreasonably be said that if the minds of the parties had avertеd to breach when the contract was made, loss of such character would have been within their contemplation.
Id. The court then reasoned that the award of attorney fees to Pacific Coast was appropriate because it was foreseeable that the contractor's failure to pay the workers "would bring abоut the series of events" that occurred, including the filing of liens and Pacific Coast's retention of attorneys to defend against foreclosure. Id. at 908; see also Fleck v. National Prop. Mgmt., Inc.,
¶ 16 With these principles in mind, the trial court must determine whether it was reasonably foreseeable, at the time that Gardiner and Interport contracted, that In-terport's breach of contract would cause Gardiner to incur attorney fees in thе fraudulent transfer action against Betty York. If the trial court concludes that the attorney fees were foreseeable and that they resulted from Interport's breach, then the fees are awardable as consequential damages under the third-party litigation exception. If, however, the likelihood of an action under the UFTA in the event of breach was not within the contemplation of the parties at the time of contracting, or there was no causal link between the fees and the breach, no award of attorney fees is appropriate under the third-party litigation exception. See Collier v. Heinz,
CONCLUSION
¶ 17 Although the trial court correctly concluded that the insurancе case exception was unavailable to support an award of attorney fees, it erred by failing to analyze whether Gardiner's fees are recoverable under the third-party litigation exception. We remand to the trial court for a determination of whether the attorney fees Gardiner incurred in pursuing the fraudulent transfer actiоn were a reasonably foreseeable consequence of Interport's breach.
1 18 Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. William York Sr. passed away during this time and was not a party to the fraudulent transfer action.
. Betty York appealed the trial court's ruling that the transfer was fraudulent. We affirmed the trial court's decision in Gardiner v. York,
. Although postjudgment motions to reconsider are no longer valid, see Gillett v. Price,
. Although this opinion refers to the third-party litigation exception only in the context of contract law, the exception also applies in tоrt law. See South Sanpitch Co. v. Pack,
. As noted, Interport was originally a defendant in thе fraudulent transfer action, but after Inter-port failed to defend, the trial court entered a default judgment against Interport and the case went to trial against Betty York only.
. Gardiner asserts that "[the] fraudulent transfer necessitated the litigation against Betty York to void the transfer of, or to have a judgment lien on, the warehouse." At another point in his brief, Gardiner contends that "it was foreseeable that Interport's breach of contract and fraudulent conveyance to a third party would compel Gardiner to pursue action, thus incurring attorney[] fees, against Betty York in order to collect on his Virginia judgment."
. By contrast, "general damages" are "those flowing naturally from the breach." Beck v. Farmers Ins. Exch.,
