Jаmes P. Davis, Quarry Development Company, and Community Title Company appeal the judgment of the District Court
The litigation culminating in this appeal began when United States Fidelity and Guar
At the conclusion of the trial, the jury renderеd a verdict in favor of USF & G on USF & G’s claim for breach of contract against Concrete and Quarry. The jury also found in favor of Concrete on Concrete’s cross-claim for breach of contrаct against Quarry and on Concrete’s third-party claim for breach of contract against Davis. Thereafter, Concrete filed a motion anticipating that USF & G would seek prejudgment interest from Cоncrete and asserting that USF & G should not be awarded prejudgment interest. In the alternative, Concrete moved the District Court to award prejudgment interest to Concrete from Quarry and Davis contingent upon a determination by the District Court that USF & G was entitled to prejudgment interest from Concrete. As anticipated, USF & G filed a motion with the District Court seeking prejudgment interest from Concrete and Quarry. The District Court determined that USF & G was not entitled to prejudgment interest and therefore denied the motion of USF & G seeking prejudgment interest and the contingent motion of Concrete seeking prejudgment interest in the event it was awarded to USF & G.
USF & G appealed the denial of its motion, and Concrete cross-appealed. In its notice of appeal, Concrete stated, as one of several grounds for appeal, that it was seeking prejudgment interest against Quarry and Davis, “but only in the event [USF & G] prevails in its appeal which seeks a reversal of the District Court’s Order denying [USF & G’s] Motion for pre-judgment intеrest.” Notice of Appeal of Concrete Holding Company at 1-2, United States Fidelity & Guar. Co. v. Concrete Holding Co., No. 492-CV-02218-CDP (E.D.Mo. May 8, 1997). However, in its brief in the first appeal, Concrete did not raise the issue of its contingent claim against Quarry and Davis for prejudgment interest.
This Court decided the appeal in a per curiam opinion, which states, “After review of the record in the context of the parties’ arguments, we find the record suppоrts the district court’s decisions with the exception of the court’s ruling on [USF & G’s] request for prejudgment interest.” United States Fidelity & Guar. Co. v. Concrete Holding Co.,
On remand, the District Court entered an amended judgment awarding prejudgment interest to USF & G consistent with the mandate of this Court. The District Court, on Concrete’s motion, alsо determined that Concrete had not waived its claim for prejudgment interest and that Concrete was entitled to an award of prejudgment interest against Quarry and Davis in an amount equal to the prejudgment interest awarded to USF & G. Davis now appeals the judgment of the District Court awarding Concrete prejudgment interest.
Before we can determine whether the District Court complied with this Court’s prior mandate, we must determine what the scope of the prior mandate was. Although Concrete stated in its notice of appeal that it was seeking prejudgment interest against Davis in the event USF & G was awarded prejudgment interest against Concrete, Concrete never raised in its appellate brief the denial of its contingent motion for prejudgment interest. It is axiomatic that an appellant’s brief on appeal fixes the scope of the issues to be reviewed on aрpeal. See Anderson v. Beatrice Foods Co.,
Davis argues then that because Concrete failed to raise the issue of prejudgment interest in the first appeal, Concrete thereby abandonеd any claim it may have had for prejudgment interest. “Our general rule is that ‘a party’s failure to raise or discuss an issue in his brief is to be deemed an abandonment of that issue.’ ” United States v. Eldeeb,
Furthermore, any claim Concrete, as an indemnitee, had to prejudgment interest from Quarry and Davis was contingent upon any right USF & G had to an award of prejudgment interest against Concrete. When the District Court denied USF & G’s motion requesting prejudgment interest, the condition requisite for Concrete’s claim failed. Therefore, at the time of USF & G’s appeal, the issue of Concrete’s claim to prejudgment interest was relevant only if the Court reversed the decision of the District Court denying USF & G’s motion. See 15A Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller, Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3904, at 203-04 (2d ed.1991) (“Cross-appeal ... is not required to preserve the right to orderly disposition of issues that become relevant only because of reversal.”). For these reasons, we hold Concrеte did not abandon its claim to prejudgment interest in the first appeal.
Because the denial of Concrete’s initial motion for prejudgment interest was not a subject of this Court’s per curiam oрinion and mandate, and because Concrete did not abandon its claim for prejudgment interest, the District Court was free on remand to grant the motion for prejudgment interest that is the issue in this appеal. See Borchers v. Commissioner,
Finally, we note that notwithstanding Davis’s strenuous arguments against the District Court’s ruling awarding prejudgment interest to Concrete, conspicuously absent is an argument that, passing over the procedural issue Davis has raisеd, Concrete is not entitled to prejudgment interest as a matter of contract. It is uncontested that Concrete is entitled, by the terms of the indemnification agreement, to recoup from Quarry аnd Davis the amount of prejudgment interest for which Concrete is liable to USF & G.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Catherine D. Perry, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. Concrete also filed a counter-claim against USF & G. The jury resolved the counter-claim in favor of USF & G, and the counter-claim is not implicated in this appeal.
. Apparently, Davis is liable to Concrete fоr the indemnification obligations of Quarry by reason of Concrete’s piercing the corporate veil surrounding Quarry to reach Davis.
. Davis argues that the Court's use of the phrase "district court’s decisions” in affirming the District Court in the first appeal includes the District Court’s decision to deny Concrete’s initial motion for prejudgment interest. See United States Fidelity & Guar. Co. v. Concrete Holding Co.,
