OPINION
Plaintiff in a' personal injury action appeals an adverse jury verdict and the trial court’s denial of his motions for a directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The primary issue is whether a broadly phrased release, which does not name defendant, should be deemed to have released defendant from liability. We hold it does not and remand for a new trial.
FACTS
On May 3, 1986, appellant Harold Krauss, a Colorado resident, was sleeping in the back seat of a car he borrowed from his parents when the driver fell asleep. The car ran off 1-70 in southern Utah and crashed, resulting in Krauss’s permanent paraplegia. Krauss sued the State of Utah, specifically naming the Utah Department of Transportation (UDOT), under a theory of negligent design and location of *1017 the guardrail that the ear struck. On March 13, 1987, Krauss, with advice of his attorney, signed a document releasing his parents, the driver, their insurance companies and “any and all other persons, firms and corporations, whether herein named or referred to or not, of and from any and all” causes of action in exchange for $200,000, the liability policy limits for the driver and owners of the car. UDOT paid no consideration for the release and did not participate in the negotiations incident to the release. Indeed, UDOT was apparently unaware that such negotiations had taken place.
Before trial, UDOT claimed that Krauss released it from liability by signing the release quoted above and moved for summary judgment on that basis. The trial court denied UDOT’s motion. After a four-day jury trial, UDOT and Krauss each filed motions for a directed verdict, which the court rejected. The jury received a special verdict form, the first question of which asked jurors whether Krauss “discharged or released defendant State of Utah from liability, if any, for his injuries.” The remaining eight interrogatories required the jury to assess whether UDOT was negligent, and, if so, how much Krauss was entitled to as damages. The special form instructed the jurors that if they found Krauss did in fact release UDOT from liability, they should not answer the remaining interrogatories. The jury found that Krauss released UDOT from liability, did not answer any further interrogatories, and returned its verdict to the court. Krauss moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, which the court denied.
On appeal, Krauss asserts the release contained boilerplate language which did not discharge UDOT from liability because it was not specifically named. Krauss argues such specificity is required under Utah Code Ann. § 78-27-42 (1992), which provides: “A release given by a person seeking recovery to one or more defendants does not discharge any other defendant unless the release so provides.” Krauss also contends that the trial court erred by (1) denying his motion for a directed verdict, (2) allowing the release issue to go to the jury, and (3) denying his motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Ultimately, because these issues distill into a claim that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict, we discuss them in that context within.
1
Cerritos Trucking Co. v. Utah Venture No. 1,
APPLICATION OP SECTION 78-27-42
Krauss’s initial claim, that Utah Code Ann. § 78-27-42 (1992) precludes UDOT from availing itself of the release, requires this court to interpret that statutory provision. Interpreting a statute is purely a matter of law, and we therefore accord no deference to the trial court’s interpretation.
Ward v. Richfield City,
The parties offer three lines of cases from other jurisdictions as justification for their preferred statutory construction. These cases can be roughly categorized as following either the specific identity rule, the intent rule, or the four corners rule. The “specific identity rule,” Krauss’s preferred construction, provides that “the release of one tortfeasor does not discharge other tortfeasors unless the latter are named in the release or are otherwise specifically identifiable from the face of the instrument.”
Moore v. Missouri Pac. R.R.,
We eschew the notion that any of these “special” rules provides a unique principle for interpreting releases under the pertinent statute. We adhere instead to the straightforward concept that releases are contractual provisions and should be interpreted according to well developed rules of contract interpretation.
See, e.g., Simonson v. Travis,
A. Specific Identity Rule
While the best evidence of legislative intent is the plain language of a statute, in eases like the present one, where statutory language is ambiguous, we avail ourselves of any relevant legislative history.
See Hansen v. Salt Lake County,
Krauss asserts that section 78-27-42 requires that all releasees be specifically named or clearly described. In essence, he would have us interpret section 78-27-42 to mean: “A release given by a person seeking recovery to one or more defendants does not discharge any other defendant unless the release expressly names or clearly refers to that defendant.” While some courts with statutes similar to ours believe it necessary to adopt the specific identity rule in order to effect the legislative intent to abolish the harsh common law rule,
see Bjork v. Chrysler Corp.,
In
Neves v. Potter,
The [Uniform Contribution Among Tort-feasors Act] does not discharge joint tortfeasors “unless [the release] terms so provide,” while the [Uniform Joint Obli *1019 gation Act] does not release joint tortfea-sors “unless [the release] terms expressly so provide.”_ Had the General Assembly intended to require that express designation was a prerequisite to releasing a joint tortfeasor, it could have adopted a version of the UJOA rather than the UCATA.
Id. at 1053 (emphasis in original). This reasoning is persuasive in view of the Utah Legislature’s ability to select from the same choices available to the Colorado Legislature. We accordingly do not read sec-tibn 78-27-42 to automatically nullify a release as to a party that is not expressly named or precisely described in the release document. If the Legislature had intended that result, it could easily have said so. 3
B. Four Corners and Intent Rules
As noted above, the four corners rule and the intent rule are not rules uniquely applicable to releases under section 78-27-42, but are instead manifestations of certain principles of general contract interpretation. Utah courts have historically analyzed releases pursuant to general contract principles.
See Simonson v. Travis,
In order for a release to be enforceable, it “must at a minimum be unambiguous, explicit, and unequivocal.”
Si-monson,
Viewed in the context of these principles, it is abundantly clear that the four corners and intent rules are not mutually exclusive, but instead represent different stages of contract interpretation. In cases cited by UDOT as applying the four corners rule, courts found, in the context of particular facts, that boilerplate release language similar to that involved in the present case was unambiguous as a matter of law.
See, e.g., Mussett v. Baker Material Handling Corp.,
INTENT OF PARTIES REGARDING UDOT
A. Release’s Facial Ambiguity
Our task in the instant case is to determine whether UDOT, in light of the fact that it was not a party to the release and provided no consideration for the release, was, in effect, a third party benéfi-ciary of the release agreement. “In Utah, ‘[a]s a general rule, the rights of third-party beneficiaries are determined by the intentions of the parties to the subject contract.’ ”
Palmer v. Davis,
Applying the principles outlined above, our first task is to assess whether the language of the release unambiguously demonstrates the contracting parties’ intent to confer a benefit on UDOT, thereby releasing it from any potential liability. The document in question reads, with our emphasis, as follows:
FOR AND IN CONSIDERATION OF the payment to me/us of the sum of ($200,000) Two hundred thousand and no/100 Dollars, and other good and valuable consideration, I/we, being of lawful age, have released and discharged, and by these presents do for myself/ourselves, my/our heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, release, acquit and forever discharge Penny Urguhart, Ray Leigh, Harold Krauss, Matthias Krauss, Reinhilde Krauss, Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company and Farmers Insurance Exchange and any and all other persons, firms and corporations, whether herein named or referred to or not, of and from any and all past, present and future actions, causes of action, claims, demands, damages, costs, loss of services, expenses, compensation, third party actions, suits at law or in equity, including claims or suits for contribution and/or indemnity, of whatever nature, and all consequential damage on account of, or in any way growing out of any and all known and unknown personal injuries, death and/or property damage resulting or to result from an accident that occurred on or about the 3rd day of May 1986, at or near 1-15 between Salwia [sic] & Richfield, Utah.
The emphasized language, which lies at the heart of this dispute, is ambiguous because one can only guess, upon a simple reading of the text, whether governmental entities, such as UDOT, come within the contract’s term, “persons, firms and corporations.”
UDOT argues that the phrase “all other persons, firms and corporations” clearly and unambiguously encompasses government entities. Essentially, UDOT claims that it falls within the description of “persons” for purposes of the release because a *1021 provision of the Utah Governmental Immunity Act, Utah Code Ann. § 63-30-4(l)(b) (Supp.1992), provides: “If immunity from suit is waived by this chapter, consent to be sued is granted, and liability of the entity shall be determined as if the [government] entity were a private person.” UDOT would have us believe that merely because UDOT is liable to the extent that a person would be when its sovereign immunity is statutorily waived, the term “persons” must embody government entities when used in contract parlance. UDOT, however, provides no case law or elaboration to remedy the flawed logic inherent in its proposition. We are not trying to determine the nature and limit of liability per section 63-30-4(l)(b), and we perceive no indication that this statute provides clear meaning to the term “persons” as it is used in all legal contexts. Therefore, section 63-30-4(l)(b) does not serve to demonstrate the clear unambiguous intent of the parties to the agreement in using the term “persons” in an unrelated context. 4
While UDOT emphasizes that Krauss had the benefit of counsel in considering the release, we can readily envision Krauss and his counsel reading the release, carefully studying the language, noting the absence of the category of defendant they had in mind to sue, and signing the agreement, fully expecting to sue UDOT because as a government agency it was not included in the release language. This is not to say that counsel would not have been more prudent to bring the release language to the insurance carrier’s attention in order to explicitly reserve Krauss’s right to sue UDOT. Our task, however, is not to determine whether Krauss proceeded by the safest course, but is instead to determine whether the parties to the release contract, in employing the words used, intended UDOT to be released.
Because UDOT does not clearly and unequivocally fall either within or without the ambit of the phrase “other persons, firms and corporations,” we hold the release “may be understood to reach two or more plausible meanings” and is thus ambiguous in expressing the contracting parties’ intent with respect to whether UDOT — or at least a category of potential defendants which includes UDOT — was released.
Larson v. Overland Thrift & Loan,
B. Extrinsic Evidence of Intent
Since the release language is ambiguous, the trial court correctly denied UDOT’s pretrial motion for summary judgment and, at trial, properly admitted extrinsic evidence in order that the jury could make the factual determination of what the contracting parties intended with the release.
See Kimball v. Campbell,
In contemplation of the marshaling requirement, Krauss submits that there is no evidence he can point to that supports the jury’s verdict. Krauss asserts that the only evidence presented to the jury with respect to the contracting parties’ intent was his own testimony that he did not intend to release UDOT. Considering the jury’s verdict — that Krauss released UDOT — we must assume that it chose not to believe his testimony. A jury could no more have inferred from Krauss’s testimony that the contracting parties intended to release UDOT, than it could have made that inference if Krauss had taken the stand, given his name, and stepped down. The jury could, at most, have given Krauss’s testimony no weight, wholly disregarding his testimony. It could not, by any rational process, have concluded that his testimony was evidence the parties intended to release UDOT from liability. We therefore agree with Krauss that neither his own testimony nor any inference properly drawn therefrom would support the jury verdict.
Krauss further maintains that the affidavit of Robert Snow, a claims adjuster, who acted on behalf of the driver’s and owners’ insurers, conclusively validated his claim that none of the parties to the release intended UDOT as a beneficiary of the release. In his affidavit, Mr. Snow stated that “our intent was to only have our insureds and our companies released. It was not the intent to have anyone else released, such as the State of Utah.” Krauss submitted the affidavit to the court with his memorandum in opposition to UDOT’s motion for summary judgment. Mr. Snow, however, never testified at trial, nor was his affidavit offered into evidence. Consequently, the Snow affidavit cannot be considered in assessing whether the jury’s verdict is sustainable.
No other evidence, either directly or through inference, supports the jury’s verdict that Krauss released UDOT from liability. UDOT makes much of the fact that Krauss signed the release after consulting with his attorney and claims that the language made it clear to counsel that UDOT would be discharged by the general language of the release. As noted in our prior discussion concerning the document’s ambiguity, the mere fact that counsel reviewed the release is entirely neutral. Krauss’s attorney might well have conducted a careful inspection of the language and concluded that since the term “governmental entity” was absent from an otherwise carefully worded document, UDOT would continue to be susceptible to suit. The fact that Krauss signed a release with advise of counsel provides no evidence and creates no inference that Krauss intended to release UDOT from liability for his injuries.
Neither UDOT nor Krauss directs our attention to any other evidence presented at trial which supports or undermines the jury’s verdict. While UDOT admits the evidence supporting the jury’s determination “was not voluminous,” it may more accurately be described as nonexistent. Without a scintilla of evidence to demonstrate any intent to release UDOT, “reasonable people could not differ on the outcome of the case” and we must conclude that there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict.
Id. Cf. Simonson v. Travis,
G. Tie-breaker
Since no evidence suggests the parties to the release intended to release UDOT, and since the jury apparently discredited Krauss’s testimony that he did not intend to release UDOT, the parties to the instant action stand in something of a tie with respect to their competing positions as to what the parties to the release intended. Simply put, no relevant evidence credited *1023 by the jury clarifies the ambiguity one way or the other. Recourse must therefore be had to other established legal doctrines to properly resolve this appeal.
First, under well established contract interpretation principles, if a court after considering all extrinsic evidence “is still uncertain as to the intention of the parties[,] ... ambiguities should be construed against the drafter.”
Wilburn v. Interstate Elec.,
Second, when a party not specifically named in a release attempts to avail itself of the release, that party bears the burden of proving it is an intended beneficiary of the release.
See McCullough v. Bethany Medical Center,
CONCLUSION
The release agreement is ambiguous with respect to the contracting parties’ intent to release UDOT from liability. Because no evidence supported the jury’s conclusion that the parties intended to release UDOT, we reverse the jury verdict, construe the contract against UDOT, and conclude Krauss did not release UDOT from liability. Accordingly, we remand for a new trial.
GARFF and GREENWOOD, JJ., concur.
Notes
. The State, for the first time on appeal, also raises an issue concerning Krauss’s compliance with the notice requirements of Utah Code Ann. § 63-30-12 (1989). We have considered the arguments in the context of this case and conclude they have no merit.
See State v. Carter,
. As enacted in 1973, section 78-27-42 read:
A release by the injured person of one joint tortfeasor, whether before or after judgment, does not discharge the other tortfeasors, unless the release so provides, but reduces the claim against the other tortfeasors by the greater of: (1) The amount of the consideration paid for that release; or (2) the amount or proportion by which the release provides that the total claim shall be reduced.
1973 Utah Laws, ch. 209, § 6.
. Krauss also argues that adopting the specific identity rule would promote clarity and reduce litigation because no question would exist concerning who was actually released by an agreement. This argument is unpersuasive. If we adopted the specific identity rule, parties would merely argue about ambiguity at a different level of specificity. For example, a party might specifically release ABC Corp., then attempt to sue a wholly owned subsidiary of ABC Corp. which had a similar name — perhaps "ABC of Utah.” Quite predictably, plaintiff and ABC Corp.'s subsidiary would squabble over whether ABC of Utah was sufficiently described by the term ABC Corp.
. UDOT also suggests that we should construe the term "person” in its broadest legal sense. Thus, the term person should be construed to mean any legally cognizable entity. However, if the parties to the release intended to give the term that meaning, the additional words "firm” and “corporation” would be entirely superfluous, because they, too, are encompassed in the broadest legal sense of "person.” Since the drafter specifically named both firms and corporations after the term “persons,” the drafter must have used "persons” in a more limited sense than is urged by UDOT.
