Safaris Unlimited v. Mike Von Jones , 158 Idaho 846 ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    No. 42614
    SAFARIS UNLIMITED, LLC, a Georgia                   )
    limited liability company,                          )   Twin Falls, June 2015 Term
    )
    Plaintiff-Respondent,                          )   2015 Opinion No. 70
    )
    v.                                                  )   Filed: July 17, 2017
    )
    MIKE VON JONES,                                     )   Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
    )
    Defendant-Appellant.                            )
    _____________________________________               )
    Appeal from the District Court of the Fifth Judicial District of the State
    of Idaho, Twin Falls County. Hon. Randy J. Stoker, District Judge.
    The judgment of the district court is vacated and this case is remanded
    for further proceedings. Costs on appeal, but not attorney’s fees, are
    awarded to appellant.
    Jeffrey E. Rolig P.C., Twin Falls, attorney for appellant.
    Worst, Fitzgerald & Stover, PLLC, Twin Falls, attorneys for respondent.
    Louis V. Spiker argued.
    ______________________________________
    W. JONES, Justice
    I. NATURE OF THE CASE
    Appellant Mike Von Jones arranged to hunt big game in Zimbabwe, Africa, with HHK
    Safaris (Pvt) Ltd (“HHK”). Jones went on the hunt and received an invoice for $26,040.00 from
    Respondent Safaris Unlimited LLC (“Safaris Unlimited”). Jones then refused to pay Safaris
    Unlimited for the hunt. As a result, Safaris Unlimited filed a suit for breach of contract. Jones
    responded that he arranged and engaged in the hunt with HHK, not Safaris Unlimited, and
    therefore he had no contractual relationship with Safaris Unlimited for payment. He further
    alleged that he was entitled to offset any amount owed for the hunt with the value of certain
    trophy items from the hunt and an earlier hunt. Safaris Unlimited moved for summary judgment.
    1
    The district court granted its motion and entered judgment in favor of Safaris Unlimited. Jones
    appeals to this Court. We vacate and remand.
    II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    Safaris Unlimited is a Georgia limited liability company. HHK is a private limited
    corporation organized under the laws of Zimbabwe. The chain of ownership is as follows: (1)
    Safaris Unlimited is owned entirely by C. Martin Wood, III; (2) Wood owns fifty percent of
    Bulawayo Trading Company (Pvt) Limited (also a private limited corporation organized under
    the laws of Zimbabwe); and (3) Bulawayo Trading Company owns forty percent of HHK.
    Jennifer Ryan is the general manager of Safaris Unlimited, and Graham Hingeston is one of the
    owners and the day-to-day manager of HHK.
    Safaris Unlimited operates as a broker or booking agent for HHK. Other than the actual
    hunting services provided by HHK, Safaris Unlimited coordinates and assists on all details of the
    hunt, such as accommodations, transportation, and permits. According to Hingeston, HHK
    requires that the client pay Safaris Unlimited for the services provided by HHK in all instances.
    In exchange for the client’s agreement to pay Safaris Unlimited, HHK provides the hunting
    services. HHK does not provide hunting services except with Safaris Unlimited, and Safaris
    Unlimited only conducts business with HHK. As explained by Ryan, “In the normal course of
    business, Safaris Unlimited is entitled to the difference between HHK’s cost to provide safari
    and big game hunting services and the price charged the client by Safaris Unlimited.” Ryan
    attached to her affidavit the service agreement between Safaris Unlimited and HHK. Particularly
    relevant here, the financial management agreement of the parties provides:
    Whereas HHK is in the hunting safari business and agrees to engage SU
    [Safaris Unlimited] as a financial service agent for the sole purpose of
    coordinating safari bookings and payments from booking agents, companies and
    individuals worldwide. . . . SU shall be fully responsible for collection of all
    deposits, remaining balances and trophy fees. Deposits shall be collected for
    confirmation of a safari. Remaining balances of daily rates shall be collected prior
    to commencement of the safari and trophy fees shall be collected within 10 days
    of the completion of the safari. All funds collected on behalf of HHK shall be
    forwarded timely on request.
    From November 22, 2012, to December 1, 2012, Jones engaged in a safari and hunt of
    big game with HHK in Zimbabwe. According to Jones’s interrogatory responses, he shot a
    trophy elephant, a tuskless elephant, and a buffalo on the 2012 hunt. Jones has engaged in two
    2
    earlier hunts with HHK, one in 2010 and one in 2011. For both of these earlier hunts, Jones paid
    Safaris Unlimited with a cashier’s check after receiving an invoice from Safaris Unlimited.
    To arrange the 2012 hunt, Jones directly contacted Hingeston with HHK. Jones testified,
    “Yes, I was aware that [HHK] used [Safaris Unlimited] for a booking agent . . . previously. But
    not on the 2012 hunt.” In his deposition, Jones explained that the 2012 hunt was “different” than
    the two earlier hunts because he “had no contact with [Safaris Unlimited] whatsoever.” In the
    two earlier hunts, Jones identified his contact with Safaris Unlimited as his payment to Safaris
    Unlimited for the hunts with HHK and possibly some contact with Ryan. Although Jones could
    not remember “for sure,” he testified in his deposition that Hingeston had him contact Ryan on at
    least one of the two previous hunts. According to Jones, this contact was probably an email about
    the invoice for the hunt.
    After the 2012 hunt, on December 6, 2012, Ryan emailed Jones an invoice in the amount
    of $26,550.00. In response via email, Jones disputed a charge on the invoice (for a cameraman)
    and also informed Ryan that he had “some serious issues with the quality of service” on the 2012
    hunt. Ryan then emailed Jones a new invoice for $26,040.00, removing the disputed charge.
    Over the next two months, Ryan sent Jones four emails asking him to pay the amount owed for
    the hunt. In Ryan’s last email, she informed Jones that she would be turning over his account to
    Safaris Unlimited’s attorneys for collection. Jones did not respond to these four emails. On May
    1, 2013, counsel for Safaris Unlimited sent a demand letter to Jones for payment.
    On June 28, 2013, Safaris Unlimited filed a complaint against Jones for breach of
    contract and sought $26,040.00 in damages plus interest.
    On January 6, 2014, Jones answered. Jones admitted that Safaris Unlimited sent an
    invoice. He also admitted that he had not paid the invoice. He denied, however, that he owed the
    invoiced amount to Safaris Unlimited. He alleged that Safaris Unlimited was not the real party in
    interest and that Safaris Unlimited was acting as the collection agency for the real party in
    interest, HHK, in violation of the Idaho Collection Agency Act (ICAA). As an affirmative
    defense, he asserted that he was entitled to offset the amount owed with (1) the value of trophy-
    sized elephant tusks and a buffalo trophy from the 2012 hunt and (2) trophy animals and tusks
    from the earlier hunt in 2010. According to Jones, he did not receive these trophy items after the
    hunts.
    3
    On July 14, 2014, Safaris Unlimited moved for summary judgment. Along with other
    evidence, as discussed above, Safaris Unlimited presented another invoice for the 2012 hunt.
    This second invoice was issued by Safaris Unlimited for a total amount of $26,040.00, and it had
    a signature on the bottom from “M. Von Jones.” A licensed professional hunter employed by
    HHK stated in an affidavit that he presented Jones with this invoice at the end of the 2012 hunt.
    He also claimed that Jones signed the invoice in his presence. Relying on this invoice, Safaris
    Unlimited argued that Jones was contractually obligated to pay Safaris Unlimited for the hunt.
    Safaris Unlimited contended that HHK, as a third party, provided the consideration for Jones’s
    obligation to pay Safaris Unlimited. Safaris Unlimited also argued that it was not subject to the
    ICAA, but, even if it was, Safaris Unlimited qualified for an exemption. Finally, Safaris
    Unlimited argued that Jones was not entitled to any offset for the value of certain trophy items
    because federal and international regulations prohibited the use of the trophy items for
    commercial purposes.
    On August 18, 2014, Jones responded in opposition to Safaris Unlimited’s motion. Jones
    argued that he had a contract with HHK, not Safaris Unlimited. Citing to his deposition
    testimony, Jones denied that he viewed or signed the second invoice. He claimed that the second
    invoice did not create any contractual relationship with Safaris Unlimited. He also argued that
    Safaris Unlimited was acting as a collection agency and was not subject to an exemption to the
    ICAA. Lastly, Jones argued that he was entitled to substantial offsets. He contended that he was
    entitled to an offset for the 2012 hunt for the following reason:
    Unfortunately, contrary to what had been agreed, [Jones] was forced to share the
    camp with nine South Africans, who were extremely noisy, drunk and
    overbearing most of the time. The South Africans consumed all the food and
    drank all the Cokes and other drinks. The camp also ran out of diesel fuel. [Jones]
    left the site early. 1
    1
    An email exchange between Hingeston and Jones indicates that Hingeston informed him: “Also just to let you
    know we have some South Africans that are scheduled to hunt 23–29 there for Buff.” Jones responded: “I’m ok with
    South Africans as long as they are not a bunch of loud, arroga [sic] jackasses as I have unfortunately on occasion
    encountered in the past.” According Jones’s deposition, Jones verified with Hingeston either through email or on the
    phone that there would be two “decent” South Africans on the hunt for three days. Also according to Jones, “these
    South Africans have a reputation for being drunks and total a-holes if you’re in a camp with them.”
    On the hunt, Jones stated that the nine South Africans “were loud,” “took videos all day,” “got drunk at
    night,” and “consumed all the food.” Jones stated:
    I complained from day one. I said, what the hell is going on here? I was supposed to have two
    South Africans here, and we’ve got nine. And we’re up all night. I can’t sleep. I can’t do anything.
    I said, what’s going on? Well, somehow they found out that these guys were going to be there for
    4
    Jones also contended that “he has not received tens of thousands of dollars worth [sic] of ivory
    from the 2010 and 2012 hunts.” He argued that whether Safaris Unlimited or HHK could sell the
    trophies was irrelevant because he was deprived of the value and benefit of those items.
    On September 2, 2014, the district court heard oral argument on Safaris Unlimited’s
    motion for summary judgment. The district court then pronounced its decision on the record. The
    district court summarily found that the facts were undisputed. The district court then determined:
    Safari is owned by Mr. Wood, and Safari owns 50 percent of the Bulawayo
    Company, which owns 40 percent of the HHK Company, clearly related entities
    in this case, which I think satisfy the criteria under the Idaho Collection[ ]
    [Agency] Act which allows Safaris to bring this lawsuit in their name, albeit the
    hunting party, if you will, was HHK.
    In short, the district court ruled that Safaris Unlimited did not violate the ICAA by seeking
    payment from Jones for the hunting services provided by HHK.
    Next, the district court determined the amount owed by Jones:
    There seems to be no dispute as to the value of the hunt: The 26,000 and some
    odd dollars are set forth in the invoice. I come to that conclusion for two reasons.
    Number one, though I agree that the mere presentation of an invoice to a party
    with their responding signature doesn’t, in and itself, establish a contract, in this
    case that establishes a, I think, an acknowledgment that that is a reasonable and
    fair billing. And when you couple that with the emails that took place later
    between Mr. Jones and Ms. Ryan, the only dispute that Mr. Jones raises over that
    invoice really relates to the offset claims that he’s making. So I find that the
    $26,000 obligation is owed subject to any offset claim which I’m going to talk
    about here in a second.
    Thus, the district court determined that Jones was obligated to pay $26,040.00 for the hunt.
    Finally, the district court turned to the offset allegations. With regard to an offset for
    Jones’s dissatisfaction due to South Africans at the camp, the district court determined that there
    was no legal basis for that offset. The district court reasoned: “There’s no representation made in
    the record by Safaris or HHK or anybody else that this would be a quiet camp or that it would be
    a camp free of any of the things he’s complaining about . . . .” With regard to 2012 trophy items,
    the district court determined that Jones failed to raise an obligation on behalf of Safaris
    Unlimited or HHK to transport the trophy items. Specifically, the district court recognized that
    there was no affirmative allegation that Jones was promised shipment as a part of the invoice.
    like seven days. And that is not what [Hingeston] indicated to me. So it was a miserable hunt. I got
    the animal. But it was a miserable hunt. Absolutely the worst hunt I’ve been on in my life.
    5
    The district court acknowledged that it did not know whether there was a separate contract for
    shipment, but it concluded that the burden was on Jones to present evidence for this affirmative
    defense. The district court clarified:
    [I]f I had before me a contractual provision or agreement that said Safari or HHK
    is obligated to ship these tusks back at their cost, and that didn’t occur, I would
    agree that that would certainly amount to an offset in this case. But that’s a
    separate contractual relationship, I think, beyond the offset. I think it’s a
    counterclaim issue.
    Similarly, with regard to the 2010 trophy items, the district court stated:
    [T]here is no counterclaim before the Court, there’s no third party claim before
    the Court. If there is a contractual dispute there, it’s just not raised in this case,
    and I have to decide this matter based upon the record that I have today. I find that
    there is no merit to that argument.
    In summary, the district court rejected Jones’s attempts to offset the amount he owed to Safaris
    Unlimited. The district court then orally granted summary judgment to Safaris Unlimited on all
    issues.
    On October 27, 2014, the district court entered an amended judgment providing that
    Safaris Unlimited would recover $26,040.00 plus interest and $20,285.99 in attorney’s fees for a
    total judgment of $52,005.37. Jones appeals to this Court.
    III. ISSUES ON APPEAL
    1.        Whether the district court erred by granting Safaris Unlimited’s motion for summary
    judgment.
    2.        Whether either party is entitled to attorney’s fees on appeal.
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “On appeal from the grant of a motion for summary judgment, this Court
    utilizes the same standard of review used by the district court originally ruling on
    the motion.” Arregui v. Gallegos-Main, 
    153 Idaho 801
    , 804, 
    291 P.3d 1000
    , 1003
    (2012). Summary judgment is proper “if the pleadings, depositions, and admissions
    on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to
    any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of
    law.” [Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure] 56(c). “When considering whether the
    evidence in the record shows that there is no genuine issue of material fact, the trial
    court must liberally construe the facts, and draw all reasonable inferences, in favor
    of the nonmoving party.” Dulaney v. St. Alphonsus Reg’l Med. Ctr., 
    137 Idaho 160
    ,
    163, 
    45 P.3d 816
    , 819 (2002). “If the evidence reveals no disputed issues of
    material fact, then only a question of law remains, over which this Court exercises
    free review.” Lapham v. Stewart, 
    137 Idaho 582
    , 585, 
    51 P.3d 396
    , 399 (2002).
    Conner v. Hodges, 
    157 Idaho 19
    , 23, 
    333 P.3d 130
    , 134 (2014).
    6
    V. ANALYSIS
    A.     The district court improperly granted summary judgment to Safaris Unlimited.
    Jones contends that the district court erred by granting summary judgment to Safaris
    Unlimited. He submits three arguments in support of his position. First, Jones argues that he had
    a contract with HHK, not Safaris Unlimited. Second, Jones argues that the district court
    erroneously determined that he was not entitled to offset any amount owed with the value of
    trophy items from the 2010 and 2012 hunts. Third, Jones argues that Safaris Unlimited is acting
    as a debt collection agency subject to the ICAA.
    In response to Jones’s first argument, Safaris Unlimited contends that the invoice
    presented by the professional hunter and signed by Jones establishes a contract between Jones
    and Safaris Unlimited. In response to Jones’s second argument, Safaris Unlimited contends that
    Jones failed to properly assert his offset claims because he failed to establish any obligation on
    behalf of Safaris Unlimited to deliver the trophy items. Finally, in response to Jones’s third
    argument, Safaris Unlimited asserts that it is not attempting to collect the debt of another and,
    even if it was, it qualifies for an exemption to the ICAA.
    “The elements for a claim for breach of contract are: (a) the existence of the contract, (b)
    the breach of the contract, (c) the breach caused damages, and (d) the amount of those damages.”
    Mosell Equities, LLC v. Berryhill & Co., 
    154 Idaho 269
    , 278, 
    297 P.3d 232
    , 241 (2013). Here,
    Safaris Unlimited’s complaint unequivocally stated that it had an express or implied contract
    with Jones for the 2012 hunt. Safaris Unlimited made similar assertions in its memorandum in
    support of its motion for summary judgment. Neither the complaint nor summary judgment
    memorandum alleged that Safaris Unlimited had an agreement with HHK or an assignment of
    debt to enforce a contract between Jones and HHK. Instead, Safaris Unlimited contended
    throughout these proceedings that it sought payment for the 2012 hunt because it had an
    enforceable contract with Jones.
    The existence of a contract is a genuine issue of material fact. “As to contract disputes at
    summary judgment, ‘[w]hen the existence of a contract is in issue, and the evidence is
    conflicting or admits of more than one inference, it is for the jury to decide whether a contract in
    fact exists.’” Nix v. Elmore Cnty., 
    158 Idaho 310
    , 314, 
    346 P.3d 1045
    , 1049 (2015) (alteration in
    original) (quoting Johnson v. Allied Stores Corp., 
    106 Idaho 363
    , 368, 
    679 P.2d 640
    , 645
    (1984)). “‘Formation of a valid contract requires that there be a meeting of the minds as
    7
    evidenced by a manifestation of mutual intent to contract.’ Whether a contract has been formed
    ‘is generally a question of fact for the trier of fact to resolve.’” Bettwieser v. N.Y. Irrigation Dist.,
    
    154 Idaho 317
    , 323, 
    297 P.3d 1134
    , 1140 (2013) (quoting Thomas v. Thomas, 
    150 Idaho 636
    ,
    645, 
    249 P.3d 829
    , 838 (2011)). In this case, contrary to Safaris Unlimited’s argument on appeal,
    the purported signature of Jones at the bottom of an invoice is not sufficient to show any kind of
    contract between Jones and Safaris Unlimited for the 2012 hunt. Based upon the record at the
    time of summary judgment, Safaris Unlimited failed to prove the existence of a contract with
    Jones for the 2012 hunt. Due to the lack of evidence in the record, the district court erred by
    granting summary judgment to Safaris Unlimited for its breach of contract claim. The district
    court also erred by granting Safaris Unlimited’s motion for summary judgment as to Jones’s
    offset claims for the trophy items from the 2010 and 2012 hunts. An offset does not need to be
    pled as a counterclaim. We vacate the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Safaris
    Unlimited and remand for further proceedings.
    B.      We decline to award attorney’s fees on appeal at this time.
    Both parties request attorney’s fees on appeal. Jones contends that he is entitled to
    attorney’s fees under Idaho Code section 12-120(3). Safaris Unlimited contends that it is entitled
    to attorney’s fees under Idaho Code sections 12-120(1) and 12-120(3). Idaho Code sections 12-
    120(1) and 12-120(3) both mandate an award of attorney’s fees to the prevailing party. Med.
    Recovery Servs., LLC v. Bonneville Billing & Collections, Inc., 
    157 Idaho 395
    , 401, 
    336 P.3d 802
    , 808 (2014); Pinnacle Eng’rs, Inc. v. Heron Brook, LLC, 
    139 Idaho 756
    , 761, 
    86 P.3d 470
    ,
    475 (2004). In this case, any determination of the prevailing party is “premature” because the
    Court does “not yet know who will prevail in this action.” Spokane Structures, Inc. v. Equitable
    Inv., LLC, 
    148 Idaho 616
    , 621, 
    226 P.3d 1263
    , 1268 (2010). Therefore, we vacate the district
    court’s award of attorney’s fees to Safaris Unlimited. At the conclusion of this litigation in
    district court, the court may in its discretion award attorney’s fees to the eventual prevailing
    party and may consider, to the extent it deems proper in its discretion, an award attorney’s fees
    for this appeal.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    We vacate the judgment of the district court and remand for further proceedings. Costs,
    but not attorney’s fees, to Jones on appeal.
    8
    Chief Justice BURDICK, Justices EISMANN, J. JONES and HORTON
    CONCUR.
    9