REIER BROADCASTING COMPANY, INC., Plaintiff and Appellant, v. MONTANA STATE UNIVERSITY-BOZEMAN, Defendant and Respondent.
No. 04-558.
Supreme Court of Montana
Submitted on Briefs March 1, 2005. Decided September 27, 2005.
2005 MT 240, 328 Mont. 471, 121 P.3d 549
For Respondent: Leslie Taylor, Montana State University, Bozeman.
CHIEF JUSTICE GRAY delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Reier Broadcasting Company, Inc., (Reier) filed an amended multi-count complaint against Montana State University-Bozeman (MSU) in the Eighteenth Judicial District Court, Gallatin County. The District Court ultimately dismissed the amended complaint and denied Reier’s first and second motions to amend the amended complaint. Reier appeals from the denial of its second motion to amend. We affirm.
¶2 The issue is whether the District Court abused its discretion in denying Reier’s second motion for leave to amend its amended complaint.
BACKGROUND
¶3 In July of 2002, Reier filed a three-count complaint in the District Court alleging that MSU had wrongfully failed to award Reier’s radio stations a contract for exclusive radio broadcasting rights to MSU athletic events. The following month, Reier filed an amended complaint as a matter of right pursuant to
¶4 In September of 2002, Reier filed its first motion to amend the
¶5 The District Court subsequently issued an order addressing all three motions. It dismissed Reier’s amended complaint and, in particular, dismissed the tort claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because the claim had not been first presented to the Montana Department of Administration as required by law. The court then denied Reier’s first and second motions to amend the amended complaint. In the latter regard, the District Court concluded an amendment challenging the constitutionality of
¶6 Reier appeals only from the District Court’s denial of its second motion for leave to amend.
DISCUSSION
¶7 Did the District Court abuse its discretion in denying Reier’s second motion for leave to amend?
¶8 A party may amend its pleadings once as a matter of course before a responsive pleading is served. A party may otherwise amend its pleading only by written consent of the adverse party or by leave of court, which must be freely given when justice so requires.
¶9 The District Court stated that Reier’s proposed declaratory
¶10 The District Court relied on Hickey v. Baker School Dist. No. 12, 2002 MT 322, 313 Mont. 162, 60 P.3d 966, and Debcon, Inc. v. City of Glasgow, 2001 MT 124, 305 Mont. 391, 28 P.3d 478, in ruling that Reier’s second motion to amend the amended complaint did not state a claim for which relief could be granted and was futile. Reier contends that Hickey and Debcon are inappropriate bases for the District Court’s determination, and we agree.
¶11 The motion to amend denied in Hickey would have added four claims against the school district by the plaintiff bus company which had bid—unsuccessfully—on a contract with the district. Hickey, ¶ 31. In Debcon, the denied motion to amend would have added a claim that the city acted in bad faith in failing to award the plaintiff engineering firm a contract. Debcon, ¶ 54. Neither Hickey nor Debcon involved an effort to assert a constitutional challenge to a statute and, for that reason alone, the cases are readily distinguishable.
¶12 Reier properly advances Hobble-Diamond Cattle Co. v. Triangle Irr. Co. (1991), 249 Mont. 322, 325, 815 P.2d 1153, 1155-56, for both the general policy in favor of allowing amendments to pleadings and the propriety of courts addressing the merits of a proposed amendment when the party opposing it contends the amendment is futile. Reier contends that its proposed second amendment to the amended complaint was neither futile nor legally insufficient. Thus, the question before us is whether Reier’s proposed second amendment to the amended complaint, to add a claim for declaratory judgment that
¶13 Here, the District Court dismissed Reier’s amended complaint and denied its first motion to amend to add another tort claim. With regard to the asserted tort claims, they had not been presented as required by the Montana Tort Claims Act,
¶15 On the somewhat unique procedural facts of this case, we cannot conclude that the District Court abused its discretion in denying Reier’s second motion to amend its amended complaint after dismissing the amended complaint. The interests of justice do not require that the motion be granted and, on this record, the amendment would have been futile.
¶16 Affirmed.
JUSTICES NELSON, LEAPHART, COTTER and MORRIS concur.
