Appellant Dorothy C. Thorn appeals from the trial court’s denial of her motion for a new trial relating to the court’s final judgment and order granting appellees’ (James T. Walker and Erika Walker) request for specific performance of a contract for the sale of real property by Ms. Thorn. We dismiss this appeal on the ground that it is moot.
FACTUAL SUMMARY
On May 22, 2002, Ms. Thorn executed a contract for the sale of her residential property, located on Crittenden Street in the Northwest quadrant of the District of Columbia, to the Walkers for the sum of $190,000.00. 1 To secure the contract, the Walkers paid a deposit of $1,000.00 to Ms. Thorn. The contract specified that the Walkers would apply for financing within seven days after the ratification of the contract. In that regard, the Walkers obtained a letter from Marvin Miles of Allied Home Mortgage Capital Corporation (“Allied”), dated May 27, 2002, stating that they were pre-approved for a loan of $184,300.00. The contract was contingent on a letter from a lender approving financing for the transaction. The Walkers were required to deliver the letter to Ms. Thorn no later than 192 days after ratification of the contract. Subsequently, Ms. Thorn, who had lived in the home for approximately thirty years, changed her mind. She refused to allow the Walkers access to the Crittenden Street property so that an inspection could be conducted and an appraisal prepared. In addition, she unsuccessfully tried to refund the Walkers’ $1000.00 security deposit in October 2002.
Once the parties submitted their positions as to the proper remedy, the trial court issued a written final judgment and order on November 30, 2004, granting specific performance to the Walkers (to occur no later than May 31, 2005) but indicating that settlement on the sale should not take place before January 31, 2005. In addition, the order specified other relief.
On December 17, 2004, Ms. Thorn filed a motion for a new trial, which was based on an affidavit from the General Counsel of Allied, stating that a search of the company’s records “revealed no evidence of any loan application being submitted at any time by Mr. and Mrs. Walker to [the company’s] Richmond office,” and further, the company’s “Human Resources Department could not locate an employee known as Marvin Miles [the person from Allied who had provided the Walkers with a pre-approval letter]; it appears that he was not one of our employees.” Ms. Thorn wanted to establish through the affidavit that there was no valid, binding contract because the Walkers failed to satisfy a term and condition of the contract. The Walkers opposed the motion.
In an order docketed on January 5, 2005, the trial court denied Ms. Thorn’s motion for a new trial. The trial court declared that the motion was timely filed, but that “the general counsel’s affidavit is not properly considered ‘newly discovered evidence’” because the Walkers “maintained throughout the litigation that they obtained pre-approval of a mortgage loan application through Mr. Miles and Allied []....” Therefore, Ms. Thorn “easily could have contacted Allied’s general counsel and conducted whatever other investigation was necessary in advance of trial to determine whether she had any basis upon which to challenge the assertions of [the Walkers] and Mr. Miles.” However, no question was raised about Mr. Miles “until a status hearing on November 19, 2004.... ” The court stated that it “found” the Walkers and Mr. Miles “to be credible witnesses, and the uncross-examined affidavit of the general counsel [did] nothing to change the Court’s view....” Moreover, the court concluded that “the general counsel’s affidavit does not establish that [the Walkers] made a misrepresentation or committed fraud or other misconduct.”
ANALYSIS
We first consider the argument of the Walkers that this appeal is moot since Ms. Thorn sold the Crittenden Street property to them and accepted payment, and because that property has been in
A case is moot if the parties have presented no justiciable controversy to the appellate court. “Although not bound strictly by the ‘case or controversy’ requirements of Article III of the U.S. Constitution, this court does not normally decide moot cases.”
Cropp v. Williams,
Furthermore, if a party has requested no particular relief on appeal, or the appellate court can provide no effective relief, the case is moot. “In deciding whether a case is moot, we determine whether this [c]ourt can fashion effective relief.”
Graveyard Creek Ranch, Inc. v. Bell,
Here, after the trial court rendered final judgment in favor of the Walkers and later denied Ms. Thorn’s motion for a new trial, other than filing a notice of appeal, Ms. Thorn sought no protective measure such as a stay to postpone enforcement of the judgment. Rather, she elected to comply with the judgment, selling the property to the Walkers as directed and accepting the purchase price; funds from the purchase were not placed in escrow pending the outcome of the appeal. In two of our prior cases involving property and landlord and tenant issues, we concluded that application of the mootness doctrine was inappropriate. In
Brown v. Hornstein,
The case before us is different from
Brown
and
Wright
because the record reflects that the Crittenden Street property was sold to the Walkers as required by the trial court’s final judgment and order. Moreover, on this record there is no indication that Ms. Thorn involuntarily sold the property to the Walkers after the trial court’s judgment, and that she protested the sale by seeking a stay of the trial court’s final judgment and order, or took other protective measures. Nor are we presented with a case concerning money damages where relief at the appellate level might not be foreclosed.
See Martin Dev. Co. v. Keeney Constr. Co.,
The Crittenden Street property may well have a sentimental value for Ms. Thorn since, as the record reflects, she lived there for about thirty years and worked hard to acquire and pay for the home with her husband. But as we recognized in
Settlemire, supra,
the “desire for vindication is ... inadequate to show that [the] appeal is not moot. The ‘legal interest’ at stake ‘must be more than simply the satisfaction of a declaration that a person was wronged.’ ”
In short, this appeal must be dismissed because it is moot for the reasons stated. Our conclusion is supported by a similar case,
Schuppener v. Bruno,
Finally, even assuming that Ms. Thorn’s appeal is not moot, we discern no legal principle on which we may reverse the trial court’s judgment regarding either the denial of her motion for a new trial or the trial court’s final judgment and order on the merits. We are not persuaded by Ms. Thorn’s assertion that the affidavit of the Allied general counsel, pertaining to Mr. Miles and no record of any application from the Walkers for loan pre-approval, is newly discovered evidence under Super, Ct. Civ. R. 60(b).
“This court will not reverse the denial of a motion for a new trial in the absence of a clear showing of abuse of discretion in the trial court.”
Derrington
On motion and upon such terms as are just, the Court may relieve a party or a party’s legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding for the following reasons: ... (2) newly discovered evidence which by due diligence could not have been discovered in time to move for a new trial under Rule 50(b)....
In
Madison v. Superior Iron Works and Hyman/Clark Constr. Group, Inc.,
[T]he evidence must be in fact newly discovered, that is, discovered since the trial; it must be shown that it was not due to want of diligence that the movant did not discover the evidence sooner; the evidence relied on must not be merely cumulative or impeaching; and it must be such as would probably produce a different verdict if a new trial were granted.
Id.
at 347-48 (citing
Imhoff v. Walker,
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, we dismiss Ms. Thorn’s appeal because it is moot.
So ordered.
Notes
. Subsequent to the execution of the contract, the value of the Crittenden property increased considerably.
. Despite the fact that the Walkers argued in their brief that Ms. Thorn's appeal was moot, appellant cited no authority in her reply brief showing that she still has a live case. Indeed she made no response at all to appellees’ mootness argument. Hence, she has effectively conceded that her appeal is moot.
