Shcharansky v. Shapiro ( 2020 )


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  •                      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 19-0739
    Filed May 13, 2020
    ALEXANDER SHCHARANSKY and TATIANA SHCHARANSKY,
    Petitioners-Appellees/Cross-Appellants,
    vs.
    VADIM SHAPIRO, BORIS PUSIN, ILYA MARKEVICH, ALEX KOMM and
    DMITRY KHOTS,
    Respondents-Appellants/Cross-Appellees.
    ________________________________
    VADIM SHAPIRO, BORIS PUSIN, ILYA MARKEVICH, ALEX KOMM and
    DMITRY KHOTS,
    Cross-Petition Plaintiffs/Appellants,
    vs.
    BORIS SHCHARANSKY, ZOYA STAROSELSKY, LEONID SHCHARANSKY,
    and SLAVA STAROSELSKY,
    Cross-Petition Defendants/Appellees.
    ________________________________
    VADIM SHAPIRO, BORIS PUSIN, ILYA MARKEVICH, ALEX KOMM and
    DMITRY KHOTS,
    Third-Party Petition Plaintiffs/Appellants,
    vs.
    CONTINUOUS CONTROL SOLUTIONS, LLC,
    Third-Party Defendant/Appellee.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Scott J. Beattie, Judge.
    The cross-petition plaintiffs and third-party petition plaintiffs appeal from jury
    verdicts finding against their claims for breach of contract and reimbursement. As
    respondents, they also challenge the scope of the trial as to the contribution claim
    2
    against them, arguing they should have been allowed to present affirmative
    defenses. The petitioners cross-appeal, challenging the district court’s ruling they
    were not entitled to prejudgment interest on their contribution claim. AFFIRMED
    ON APPEAL; REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS ON CROSS-
    APPEAL.
    Jaki K. Samuelson and Anna E. Mallen of Whitfield & Eddy, P.L.C., Des
    Moines, for appellants.
    Mark E. Weinhardt and Danielle M. Shelton of The Weinhardt Law Firm,
    Des Moines, for appellees.
    Considered by Bower, C.J., Ahlers, J., and Potterfield, S.J.* Blane, S.J.,
    takes no part.
    *Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206
    (2020).
    3
    POTTERFIELD, Senior Judge.
    Together, the Shapiro Group1 and members of the Shcharansky Group2
    owned and operated Continuous Control Solutions, Inc. (CCS). Then in 2007, the
    Shcharansky Group purchased the Shapiro Group’s shares of CCS through the
    execution of a stock purchase agreement—ending the Shapiro Group’s part in the
    business.3 That agreement, and what followed, have been the focus of nearly a
    decade of litigation.
    In this third appeal, we are asked to determine if the district court properly
    limited the scope of the 2018 trial, based on the ruling of our supreme court in
    Shcharansky v. Shapiro, 
    905 N.W.2d 579
    , 588 (Iowa 2017), so as not to include
    evidence of the Shapiro Group’s alleged affirmative defenses to Alexander and
    Tatiana Shcharansky’s contribution claim against them. Additionally, regarding
    their cross-claims for breach of contract and reimbursement, the Shapiro Group
    maintains the district court should have granted their motions for directed verdict,
    judgment notwithstanding verdict (JNOV), or new trial. Alexander and Tatiana
    Shcharansky cross-appeal, arguing the district court erred in its determination they
    were not entitled to prejudgment interest for their contribution claim; they otherwise
    ask that we affirm.
    1 The Shapiro Group includes Vadim Shapiro, Boris Pusin, Ilya Markvich, Alex
    Komm, and Dmitry Khots.
    2 The Shcharansky Group includes Alexander, Tatiana, Boris, and Leonid
    Shcharansky and Zoya and Slava Staroselsky. Alexander and Tatiana are
    married. Boris and Alexander are brothers; they are the sons of Leonid
    Shcharansky. Slava and Zoya Staroselsky are husband and wife.
    3 Alexander and Boris Shcharansky and Zoya Staroselsky were the buyer-
    members of the Shcharansky Group; only these three members of the
    Shcharansky Group signed the stock purchase agreement. Leonid Shcharansky
    and Slava Staroselsky were then appointed to the board of directors of CCS.
    4
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    Prior to September 2007, while both the Shapiro Group and members of the
    Shcharansky Group owned and operated CCS, the company borrowed $900,000
    from Wells Fargo Bank.4 Individual members of the Shapiro and Shcharansky
    Groups personally guaranteed the debt.5
    The Shapiro Group decided to sell their shares of CCS and get out of the
    business. In September 2007, the two groups—with the Shapiro Group as the
    sellers and Alexander and Boris Shcharansky and Zoya Staroselsky of the
    Shcharansky Group as the buyers—executed a stock purchase agreement. The
    agreement contained this provision:
    7.1 Buyers’ Covenants. In connection with the transfer of the
    Shares to the Buyers pursuant to this Agreement, the Buyers hereby
    covenant that as the controlling shareholders of the Corporation, the
    Buyers will cause the Corporation to:
    (a) Use best efforts to, and prior to the payment of any existing
    or new debt obligations payable by the Corporation to any Buyer or
    any Buyer's immediate relative or any entity affiliated with any Buyer
    or any Buyer's immediate relative, satisfy and repay in full all debt
    obligations of the Corporation owed to Wells Fargo Bank.
    After the execution of the stock purchase agreement, Leonid Shcharansky and
    Slava Staroselsky—other members of the Shcharansky Group—were appointed
    to CCS’s Board of Directors.
    4 CCS took out two separate loans; one for $150,000 and the other for $750,000.
    As it is unnecessary for the basis of this appeal, we do not distinguish between the
    two.
    5 Originally all members of the Shapiro Group and the three buyer-members of the
    Shcharansky Group guaranteed the loans. Tatiana Shcharansky later became a
    guarantor as well, making nine individual guarantors in total.
    5
    From the time the Shcharansky Group became the sole owners and
    operators of CCS through May 30, 2009, CCS made no payments toward the Wells
    Fargo debt.
    In April 2009, Wells Fargo obtained judgment against CCS and the
    individual guarantors for the principal amount, late fees, accrued interest, and
    attorney fees. The judgment was for more than $960,000.
    On June 1, 2009, CCS and Alexander Shcharansky entered into a
    forbearance agreement with Wells Fargo. In exchange for the bank’s agreement
    to forgo execution of the judgment, CCS agreed to pay $400,000 upon the
    execution of the forbearance agreement and deliver additional collateral in the form
    of a mortgage and security agreement for property in New York owned by Tatiana
    Shcharansky, who is married to Alexander.6 Additionally, CCS and Alexander
    agreed to make “eight equal quarterly installments of principal and accrued
    interest, each in the amount of $76,022.11, commencing on the first day of
    September, 2009 and on the first day of each December, March and June
    thereafter” with “all unpaid principal and accrued interest on the Indebtedness . . .
    fully due and payable on June 1, 2011.”
    CCS made the initial $400,000 payment and the first three quarterly
    payments of $76,022.11. Alexander Shcharansky personally made the June 2010
    payment and Tatiana personally made the September payment—though not until
    September 10. In December, rather than making the next payment of $76,022.11,
    Tatiana paid off the remaining judgment—$241,935.92.
    6 Tatiana had not previously personally guaranteed the CCS debt, but she
    executed a guaranty at this point.
    6
    In January 2011, Alexander and Tatiana Shcharansky filed a petition for
    contribution against the Shapiro Group, claiming Alexander and Tatiana paid more
    than their equitable share of the judgment against CCS. They sought 5/9 of the
    total they personally paid, or $218,877.7
    The Shapiro Group responded, filing their answer, affirmative defenses,
    counterclaims, and cross-claims.     The Shapiro group maintained Alexander’s
    claimed breach of the stock purchase agreement to cause CCS to repay the Wells
    Fargo loans precluded his and Tatiana’s right and ability to seek equitable
    contribution. They asserted it was Alexander’s conduct that caused any injury or
    damage he sustained and that the claims were barred “in whole or in part by the
    doctrines of waiver, estoppel and unclean hands.” In their counterclaims and
    cross-claims, the Shapiro Group alleged the buyer-members of Shcharansky
    Group breached the stock purchase agreement by failing to use their best efforts
    to have CCS repay its debt obligations to Wells Fargo and causing CCS to make
    payments to members of the Shcharansky Group before paying the Wells Fargo
    debt.8 The Shapiro Group also raised a counterclaim of tortious interference with
    a contract, alleging Leonid Shcharansky and Slava Staroselsky (CCS board
    members) caused CCS to make improper and excessive payments to parties and
    party relatives rather than satisfying the debt owed to Wells Fargo.
    7 Alexander and Tatiana paid $393,980.14 of CCS’s Wells Fargo debt, which was
    guaranteed by nine individuals. They sought 5/9 of that total in contribution from
    the five Shapiro Group members.
    8 The Shapiro Group also raised a claim of fraudulent misrepresentation, which
    they later asked the court to dismiss.
    7
    In May 2012, the Shapiro Group moved for partial summary judgment. They
    asserted there was no genuine issue of material fact pertaining to either Alexander
    and Tatiana Shcharansky’s contribution claim or the Shapiro Group’s breach-of-
    contract counterclaim.    The Shapiro Group claimed Alexander and Tatiana
    Shcharansky’s claim for contribution failed as a matter of law because the money
    Alexander and Tatiana used to pay CCS’s debt was not their own money.
    Additionally, the Shapiro Group argued the undisputed facts showed Alexander,
    as president of CCS, had chosen to use CCS’s money to repay loans to the
    company from family and other members of the Shcharansky Group rather than
    using those company funds in payment of the Wells Fargo debt. The Shapiro
    Group maintained this was a clear breach of the stock purchase agreement.
    Alexander and Tatiana Shcharansky resisted, arguing their contribution claim was
    not precluded because they used funds that were loaned to them in order to pay
    the Wells Fargo debt. They maintained the Shapiro group had received a benefit
    when the Wells Fargo debt was paid off since the members of the Shapiro Group
    had personally guaranteed the loan, and they asserted CCS had been unable to
    pay the loan.
    In August, the district court granted the Shapiro Group’s motion for partial
    summary judgment. The court ruled that Alexander and Tatiana Shcharansky did
    not use their own money in paying CCS’s debt to Wells Fargo; “[i]nstead, Alex and
    Tatiana were mere conduits for their parents’ money that was transferred to them
    specifically for the purpose of paying” the obligation. The court determined this
    precluded their claim for contribution from the Shapiro group. Additionally, the
    court concluded “that the Shapiro Group established its breach of contract
    8
    counterclaim as a matter of law.” It concluded the buyers’ covenant of the stock
    purchase agreement “clearly and unambiguously provides both a requirement of
    best efforts and that prior to the payment of any existing or new debt obligations
    payable by [CCS] to any buyer or buyer’s immediate relative.”            Noting the
    undisputed facts that before the Wells Fargo debt was discharged in December
    2010 (with non-CCS funds), CCS paid $90,000 on a loan obligation to an entity
    owned by three members of the Shcharansky Group, $172,000 to Leonid
    Shcharansky, $95,000 to Alexander Shcharansky, and $25,000 to Tatiana
    Shcharansky, the court concluded the buyer-members of the Shcharansky Group
    breached the stock purchase agreement.
    The Shcharanskys appealed. In Shcharansky v. Shapiro, No. 13-0151,
    
    2013 WL 6116883
    (Iowa Ct. App. Nov. 20, 2013), this court reversed the ruling
    that Alexander and Tatiana Shcharansky were not entitled to contribution as a
    matter of law, ruling there were genuine issues of material fact that must be
    decided by a fact finder, including whether members of the Shapiro Group were
    co-guarantors and whether the funds Alexander and Tatiana used to discharge
    CCS’s Wells Fargo debt were loans or gifts. Additionally, the court ruled, “In light
    of our determination that genuine issues of material fact exist on the Shcharansky
    Group’s contribution claim, it necessarily follows that the Shapiro Group is unable
    to establish a breach of contract claim predicated on damages stemming from the
    contribution claim at the summary judgment stage.”         Shcharansky, 
    2013 WL 6116883
    . The case was remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
    Id. Back at
    the district court on remand, the Shapiro Group requested leave to
    file a third-party claim against CCS for reimbursement, asserting that if the Shapiro
    9
    Group was found liable to the Alexander and Tatiana Shcharansky for contribution,
    the Shapiro Group had a claim for reimbursement from CCS. The district court
    granted the motion.
    The court bifurcated Alexander and Tatiana Shcharansky’s claim for
    contribution from the Shapiro Group’s counterclaim, cross-claim, and third-party
    claim, noting the second part of the trial would be unnecessary if Alexander and
    Tatiana could not prove their right to contribution from the Shapiro Group.
    The first part of the bifurcated proceedings was tried to the bench in
    December 2015.        In its written ruling, the court found “the evidence clearly
    demonstrated that [Alexander’s and Tatiana’s] parents actually made the
    payments to Wells Fargo and that the monies simply passed through [Alexander’s
    and Tatiana’s] bank accounts on their way to Wells Fargo.” Finding the money
    given to Alexander and Tatiana by their parents were not loans with any legal
    obligations to return the money, the court ruled the Alexander and Tatiana’s claim
    for contribution was not yet ripe, as they had not personally made more than their
    share of repayment on CCS’s Wells Fargo loan. Based on this ruling, the court
    dismissed as moot the Shapiro Group’s counterclaims, cross-claims, and third-
    party claims. The Shcharanskys again appealed.
    In Sharansky v. Komm, No. 16-1265, 
    2017 WL 2875690
    , at *5 (Iowa Ct.
    App. July 6, 2017), this court affirmed the district court ruling, stating, “Although
    the money used to discharge the joint debt came from [Alexander’s and Tatiana’s]
    accounts, they have been unable to establish that they personally were forced to
    bear more than their just share of the debt. Thus, we affirm the district court’s
    dismissal of their action for contribution.”
    10
    The Shcharanskys sought further review, which our supreme court granted.
    In Shcharansky v. Shapiro, 
    905 N.W.2d 579
    , 580 (Iowa 2017), the supreme court
    vacated the 2017 court of appeals ruling and reversed the judgment of the district
    court. The court decided that the sources of the funds used to pay the underlying
    debt were inapposite, noting “there is no evidence supporting the conclusion that
    the transfer of funds from the parents to [Alexander and Tatiana] was artificial or
    the subject of a scheme to defraud the Shapiro Group.” 
    Shcharansky, 905 N.W.2d at 588
    . The court remanded the case to the district court, instructing:
    While the issues were bifurcated for purposes of separate trials, the
    claims, counterclaims, and cross-claims remain part of a single
    court case. Further, the counterclaims, cross-claims, and third-party
    claims of the Shapiro Group appear to be intertwined with the
    Shcharanskys’ contribution claim. The Shapiro Group may be
    entitled to recover on their theories against various cross and third-
    party defendants only to the extent that it is liable to the
    Shcharanskys for contribution.
    We therefore hold only that the Shcharanskys are entitled to
    contribution from the Shapiro Group on the undisputed facts of this
    case. We remand the case to the district court for further
    proceedings on the Shapiro Group’s claims against the
    Shcharanskys.
    Id. Before the
    district court for the third time, on October 22, 2018, Shapiro
    Group filed a motion asking the court to establish the scope of the trial. The
    Shapiro Group argued the supreme court’s 2017 decision in favor of Alexander
    and Tatiana Shcharansky’s contribution claim did not consider or rule upon the
    Shapiro Group’s affirmative defenses to the claim, leaving those issues for the jury
    to decide in the upcoming trial.
    11
    In a written ruling, the district court concluded the Shapiro Group’s
    affirmative defenses to the contribution claim were no longer viable. Focusing on
    the supreme court’s “instructions on remand,” the district court ruled:
    The supreme court stated that “the Shcharanskys are entitled to
    contribution from the Shapiro Group on the undisputed facts of this
    case” and that it is to conduct further proceedings “on Shapiro-
    Group’s claims against the Shcharanskys.” The court does not
    state that the district court should conduct proceedings on whether
    the Shcharanskys may prevail in light of the affirmative defenses
    to the claim for contribution. It is the duty of this court to honor and
    respect the ruling and mandate by the appellate court in this case.
    As such, because the supreme court’s ruling does not address the
    affirmative defenses to the contribution claim, this court must follow
    the direction of the supreme court and address only the Shapiro
    Group’s claims against the Shcharanskys.
    Deciding Alexander and Tatiana Shcharansky had already won their contribution
    claim, the district court limited the scope of the trial to the Shapiro Groups’ claim
    of breach of contract against the buyer-members of the Shcharansky Group
    (Alexander and Boris Shcharansky and Zoya Staroselsky), tortious interference
    with a contract against Leonid Shcharansky and Slava Staroselsky of the
    Shcharansky Group, and their cross-claim for reimbursement from CCS.
    A multiple-day jury trial began on October 29, 2018.           At the parties’
    agreement, the court gave the jury a preliminary instruction before trial began that
    summarized the case. It said:
    This is a lawsuit about a business contract. On one side of the
    dispute are members of a group called the Shapiro Group. . . . On
    the other side of the dispute are members of a group called the
    Shcharansky Group. . . .
    A number of years ago members of both groups co-owned a
    company called Continuous Control Solutions, LLC, which we will
    call “CCS” in this trial. Members of the Shapiro Group had majority
    control of CCS. CCS borrowed $900,000 from Wells Fargo Bank.
    Members of both the Shapiro Group and the Shcharansky Group
    personally guaranteed that CCS would pay the debt to Wells Fargo.
    12
    In 2007, a dispute developed between the Shapiro Group and the
    Shcharansky Group concerning the financial difficulites of CCS.
    At this time the Shapiro Group transferred its shares of the
    CCS stock to three members of the Shcharansky Group, Alexander
    Shcharansky, Boris Shcharansky, and Zoya Staroselsky. That
    transfer is called the Stock Purchase Agreement. This is the
    business contract at issue in this lawsuit. The Stock Purchase
    Agreement had a clause in it called the “best efforts” clause. Under
    that clause, Alexander Shcharansky, Boris Shcharansky, and Zoya
    Staroselsky, the “Buyers,” promised to cause CCS to use best efforts
    to, and prior to the payment of any existing or new debt obligations
    payable by [CCS] to any Buyer or any Buyer’s immediate relative or
    any entity affiliated with any Buyer or any Buyer’s immediate relative,
    satisfy and repay in full all debt obligations of [CCS] owed to Wells
    Fargo Bank.
    When CCS could not pay the debt to Wells Fargo, Wells Fargo
    sued all of the members of the Shapiro Group and the Shcharansky
    Group who gave personal guarantees that they would pay the debt.
    Alexander Shcharansky then entered into an agreement with Wells
    Fargo to give CCS additional time to pay the debt. In 2010, after
    CCS had paid over half of the Wells Fargo debt, Alexander
    Shcharansky and his wife Tatiana Shcharansky repaid all of the
    remaining outstanding debt themselves. They then filed this lawsuit
    to have the members of the Shapiro Group reimburse them for their
    proportional shares of those payments. This court has already
    determined that Alexander and Tatiana are entitled to contribution
    from the members of the Shapiro Group, meaning that their claim for
    reimbursement has been established.
    Now, the members of the Shapiro Group claim that they are
    entitled to damages for breach of the “best efforts” clause. First, they
    allege that Alexander, Boris, and Zoya breached that clause.
    Second, they allege that two other members of the Shcharansky
    Group, Leonid Shcharansky and Slava Staroselsky, intentionally
    interfered with the performance of the “best efforts” clause. Third,
    they allege that CCS is obligated to reimburse them for any amounts
    for which they must reimburse Alexander and Tatiana. Your job will
    be to decide those claims.
    Little evidence was in dispute at trial. Alexander Shcharansky, the president of
    CCS and one of the buyers, agreed that CCS paid back loans from Shcharansky
    Group members and their families before paying the Wells Fargo debt. The
    amount paid back was in excess of $380,000. This occurred before Alexander
    and Tatiana Shcharansky personally paid approximately $394,000 of CCS’s debt
    13
    to Wells Fargo. Each side had an expert testify—an accountant who had reviewed
    CCS’s financials.   Each was asked about various payments CCS made to
    members of the Shcharansky Group and their opinion of the financial health or
    capacity of the company.
    In closing, the two sides focused on the meaning of the “best efforts”
    language in the buyers’ covenants of the stock purchase agreement. The Shapiro
    Group urged the jury to conclude that the contract imposed two separate
    obligations on the buyers—to cause CCS to use its best efforts to repay the Wells
    Fargo debt and to not make any payments “to any Buyer or any Buyer’s immediate
    relative or any entity affiliated with any Buyer or any Buyer’s immediate relative”
    before the Wells Fargo debt was paid off. The Shapiro Group maintained that it
    was not contesting CCS’s need to take loans from Shcharasnky Group members
    to “keep the doors open”—they were arguing the choice to pay back those loans
    before or instead of paying off the Wells Fargo debt breached the contract. In
    contrast, the Shcharansky Group urged the jurors to conclude the relevant
    language of the stock purchase agreement created only one obligation: that the
    buyers use their best efforts to have CCS repay the Wells Fargo debt prior to
    paying debts to related parties. Additionally, the Shcharansky Group urged that
    even if their reading of the contract was wrong—even if it imposed two
    obligations—that the Shapiro Group had failed to show a link between the buyers’
    breach and the remaining Wells Fargo debt that Tatiana and Alexander paid (as
    opposed to CCS).
    With the verdict form, the jury was asked if the Shapiro Group proved
    Alexander or Boris Shcharansky or Zoya Staroselsky breached the stock purchase
    14
    agreement; the jury marked “no” as to each of the three. The jury was asked
    whether the Shapiro Group proved either Leonid Shcharansky or Slava
    Staroselsky intentionally interfered with the “best efforts” clause of the stock
    purchase agreement, and the jury answered “no” to each. As directed, because
    the jury answered “no” to the first five questions, it did not answer question 6—the
    amount of damages incurred by the Shapiro Group as a result of any of the
    preceding. In question 7, the jury was asked whether the Shapiro Group proved
    they were entitled to reimbursement from CCS for the amounts they were
    compelled to pay on the Wells Fargo debt, and the jury marked “no.” In question
    8, the jury wrote “0” on the line for the amount of damages proved.
    A few days later, Alexander and Tatiana Shcharansky moved the court to
    enter judgment and asked the court to order “interest at the statutory rate from the
    filing of the [contribution] claim on January 10, 2011.” The Shcharansky Group
    also asked the court to enter judgment in their favor on the Shapiro Group’s claims
    and to order the Shapiro Group to pay costs.
    The Shapiro Group filed a motion for JNOV or, in the alternative, requested
    a new trial on both the breach-of-contract and the reimbursement claim pursuant
    to Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.1004(6). The Shcharansky Group resisted.
    In one written ruling, the court denied the Shapiro Group’s motions for JNOV
    and new trial. Additionally, the court denied Alexander and Tatiana Shcharansky’s
    request for prejudgment interest, concluding they were not entitled to it on their
    contribution claim “[b]ased upon the plain language of Iowa Code [section] 625.21.”
    The court later entered a final judgment order, entering judgment in favor of
    Alexander Shcharansky in the amount of $8446.90 against each of the Shapiro
    15
    Group members and judgment in favor of Tatiana Shcharansky in the amount of
    $35,328.69 against each of the Shapiro Group members.
    The Shapiro Group appeals,9 and Alexander and Tatiana Shcharansky
    cross-appeal.
    II. Discussion.
    A. Breach-of-Contract Claim.
    The Shapiro Group urges that the buyers’ covenant of the stock purchase
    agreement is unambiguous and allows for only one reasonable interpretation—
    that the contract required the buyers (1) to cause CCS to use its best efforts to
    repay the Wells Fargo debt and (2) to not make any payments “to any Buyer or
    any Buyer’s immediate relative or any entity affiliated with any Buyer or any Buyer’s
    immediate relative” before the Wells Fargo debt was paid off. The Shapiro Group
    maintains the court should have interpreted the relevant language of the stock
    purchase agreement rather than allowing the jury to do so. And, because it is
    undisputed that the buyers caused CCS to pay back the buyers and their families
    before paying off the Wells Fargo debt, the Shapiro Group argues the court should
    have determined as a matter of law that the buyers breached the stock purchase
    agreement and entered judgment in favor of the Shapiro Group.
    They purportedly moved for directed verdict, JNOV, and new trial under this
    theory and urge us to consider and reverse each of the district court’s rulings.
    1. Motions for Directed Verdict and JNOV. The Shapiro Group argues
    the district court erred in denying their motions for directed verdict and for JNOV
    9 On appeal, the Shapiro Group has not raised any issues regarding the tortious-
    interference claim against Leonid Shcharansky and Slava Staroselsky.
    16
    on the breach-of-contract claim. While the Shcharansky Group does not challenge
    error preservation, we conclude this issue has not been preserved for our review.
    “On appeal, an appellate court’s review is limited to those grounds raised in the
    defendant’s motion for a directed verdict.” Royal Indem. Co. v. Factory Mut. Ins.
    Co., 
    786 N.W.2d 839
    , 844 (Iowa 2010). “A motion for judgment notwithstanding
    the verdict must stand on grounds raised in the directed verdict motion.”
    Id. at 845.
    And “[e]rror must be raised with some specificity in a directed verdict motion.”
    Id. When the
    Shapiro Group moved for directed verdict on the breach-of-
    contract claim, they stated, “Just for the reasons that I previously stated we believe
    that all elements of breach of contract and [tortious] interference have been—have
    been developed as a matter of law.” It is unclear what “reasons previously stated”
    the Shapiro Group referred to.10        Their statements immediately before—in
    response to the Shcharansky Group’s motion for directed verdict—were
    arguments that the breach-of-contract claim was not foreclosed by the Iowa
    Supreme Court’s 2017 ruling. In their pretrial brief, filed approximately ten days
    before they moved for directed verdict, the Shapiro Group alluded to their
    understanding of the meaning of the stock purchase agreement, claiming, “In the
    Stock Purchase Agreement, Alexander Shcharansky promised to cause CCS to
    use its best efforts to repay the Wells Fargo loans in full, and to do so prior to the
    repayment of any existing or new debt obligation to any buyer or any buyer’s
    10 In their later motion for JNOV, the Shapiro Group claimed that in making their
    motion for directed verdict, they “further relied upon the arguments and authorities
    provided to the Court in its Scope of Trial submission and Trial Brief.” We assume
    their reliance on “reasons previously stated” is a request to incorporate arguments
    in prior filings, but the content was not clear at the time of the motion for directed
    verdict.
    17
    relatives or affiliated entities.” This is not enough to preserve this issue for our
    review. Especially as it is not clear the trial court understood the Shapiro Group’s
    reference; it did not rule on the motion for directed verdict with any specificity,
    stating only, “And again, [the court] believe[s] that there are sufficient matters in
    dispute taking the reasonable inferences for the nonmoving party, in this case the
    Shcharansky Group.      There are sufficient—there is sufficient evidence that a
    reasonable jury could find on those matters and the Court would as a result deny
    the Shapiro Group's motion for directed verdict.”
    2. Motion for New Trial. The Shapiro Group raised the same argument in
    their motion for new trial, claiming the jury’s verdict “is not sustained by sufficient
    evidence, or is contrary to the law.” Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.1004(6). “We review the
    denial of a motion for new trial based on the grounds asserted in the motion.” Fry
    v. Blauvelt, 
    818 N.W.2d 123
    , 128 (Iowa 2012) (citation omitted).           We review
    motions based on rule 1.1004(6) for errors at law. See
    id. Assuming without
    deciding that the stock purchase agreement is
    unambiguous and permits only the Shapiro Group’s interpretation, they
    established the buyers breached the contract by causing CCS to make payments
    to themselves and family members before CCS’s Wells Fargo debt was paid off.
    But in viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Shcharansky Group,
    the Shapiro Group did not prove damages related to that breach. See, e.g., Molo
    Oil Co. v. River City Ford Truck Sales, Inc., 
    578 N.W.2d 222
    , 224 (Iowa 1998)
    (providing as an element of breach of contract that the complaining party must
    prove “that plaintiff has suffered damages as a result of the breach”); see also
    Estate v. Pearson ex rel. Latta v Interstate Power and Light Co., 
    700 N.W.2d 333
    ,
    18
    345 (Iowa 2005) (“In reviewing the motion for new trial, ‘[w]e view the evidence in
    the light most favorable to the verdict and need only consider the evidence
    favorable to [the verdict] whether it is contradicted or not.’” (alteration in original)
    (citation omitted)).
    The evidence presented at trial could show CCS was in financial trouble
    and close to shuttering in 2007 when the Shapiro Group left the company in the
    hands of the Shcharansky Group. How the Wells Fargo debt would be handled
    was the key focus in negotiating the stock purchase agreement, as it was the only
    debt of the company the members of the two groups had individually guaranteed
    and Wells Fargo was allowed to pursue any and all of them if CCS failed to repay
    the debt.
    CCS began taking and repaying short-term loans from its owners (the
    buyers) and members of the owners’ families in order to keep the company’s doors
    open while it obtained new contracts and waited on payment for others. These
    loans were only given because CCS promised to repay the money quickly—for
    example, before a family member incurred a penalty for taking money out of their
    retirement account prematurely. By taking these loans, the company was able to
    stay afloat and, in doing so, paid approximately $640,000 on the Wells Fargo debt
    in 2009 and 2010, before Alexander and Tatiana personally repaid the remaining
    $394,000 debt in the second half of 2010.
    Even the Shapiro Group’s expert did not unequivocally opine CCS could
    have paid more of the Wells Fargo debt. The expert testified that in looking at the
    gross revenue minus all of the expenses of CCS from November 2010 to May
    2011—a period the Shapiro Group asked him to look at specifically—the company
    19
    had a “net income” of $1.4 million. During direct examination, the expert was then
    asked, “Would the company have the net income available to make payments on
    that Wells Fargo debt?” He responded:
    It would depend somewhat on the mix of the income and whether the
    receivables increase and so forth. If all that, if in a perfect world all
    this converted to cash and it was cash coming in the door minus the
    expenses going out, yes, they would have 1.[4] million dollars worth
    of profit.
    On cross-examination, the Shapiro Group’s expert agreed that showing $1.4
    million profits on the financial statements did not mean that much cash came into
    the business during that period. Specifically, part of the $1.4 million net income
    was based on the fact that a Shcharansky-family owned company forgave
    $425,000 in debt CCS owed it during that period. The expert also agreed there
    could be other noncash transactions affecting what he reported as the net income.
    The Shcharansky Group expert testified he “reviewed party loan activities
    to determine whether or not any of that activity impaired the company’s ability to
    make payments to Wells Fargo Bank.” He opined a better metric to measure
    CCS’s ability to pay more of the Wells Fargo debt was “net working capital,” which
    he described calculating by
    look[ing] at what’s called current assets. And current assets are,
    essentially, cash and things that are expected to become cash within
    the next twelve months, and so you could look at that as a closer
    measure of a company’s ability to come up with cash to make
    payments. And you could compare that to current liabilities and
    current liabilities are, essentially, obligations that are expected to
    come due within the next twelve months.
    He further explained that “[a] company with negative net working capital, it says
    that they have more obligations coming due than they have resources on hand
    right now. And so a negative working capital balance . . . would indicate that a
    20
    company does not have the ability to make cash payments.” Generally using
    CCS’s yearly balance sheets from their tax returns, the Shcharansky Group expert
    indicated CCS had a negative net working capital every year between 2007 and
    May 2018—the last point at which the expert was asked to consider leading up to
    trial. He went further, opining that while he had not reviewed the balance sheet for
    every single day over the decade-long period, he had “a high degree of confidence
    that the company has just never dug themselves out of the hole they’ve been in
    since 2007, 2008.” He testified that companies with cash-flow issues, like CCS,
    would need short-term loans in order to not go out of the business “because if you
    can’t pay your employees and you can’t pay your vendors, you just can’t stay in
    business.” When asked what would have happened to the Wells Fargo debt if
    CCS shuttered rather than taking short-term loans from related parties, the expert
    testified:
    Wells Fargo would not have been paid in full, for sure. I mean, since
    the beginning balance sheet that we looked at earlier in this
    testimony, the company’s net equity balance has been negative, and
    the company never had the ability to pay off all of its liabilities. And
    so the Wells Fargo debt certainly would have been unpaid at least in
    part at any point in time in the last decade.
    ....
    I would say the short-term loans increased the probability that
    Wells Fargo can be paid back. If the company had not borrowed
    these funds, then they could have gone out of business a long time
    ago. The fact that they are able to stay in business allowed the
    company to pay . . . over $600,000 back to Wells Fargo. And they
    would not have been able to do that had the company gone bankrupt
    prior to 2009.
    Even if we assume the buyers breached the stock purchase agreement, there is
    not substantial evidence in the record to support the Shapiro Group’s claimed
    21
    damages are related to the breach. Thus, the district court did not err in denying
    the motion for new trial.
    B. Reimbursement Claim. The Shapiro Group sued CCS as a third-party
    defendant for reimbursement of the amount of their liability for contribution. The
    Shapiro Group maintained that if they had to contribute to Alexander and Tatiana
    for the part of CCS’s obligation to Wells Fargo that Alexander and Tatiana paid
    personally, then CCS was required to reimburse the Shapiro Group members for
    that amount. See Hills Bank & Trust Co. v. Converse, 
    772 N.W.2d 764
    , 772 (Iowa
    2009) (adopting the Restatement (Third) of Suretyship and Guaranty and stating,
    “Under the Restatement, when a principal obligor has notice of the secondary
    obligation, the principal obligor has the duty to reimburse the secondary obligor to
    the extent the secondary obligor is called upon to perform, or if the secondary
    obligor settles with the obligee”).
    The parties agreed that in order for the Shapiro Group to be successful on
    their reimbursement claim against CCS, the Shapiro Group needed to prove all of
    the following:
    1. As between CCS and the Shapiro Group, CCS was the
    principal obligor to Wells Fargo.
    2. CCS and the Shapiro Group[11] did not make an express
    agreement regarding the obligations of CCS should the Shapiro
    Group pay or be compelled to pay the debt owed to Wells Fargo
    pursuant to the personal guarantees.
    11 We note this is not the instruction given to the jury. While discussing the jury
    instructions before closing arguments, the Shapiro Group asked the court to
    change the second element from “The parties did not make an express
    agreement . . .” to “CCS and the Shapiro Group did not make an express
    agreement . . .” for purposes of clarity. The Shcharansky Group did not resist the
    change, and the court agreed to do so. However, the final instructions given to the
    jury did not include the edit.
    22
    3. The Shapiro Group has been ordered to make payments
    on the debt owed to Wells Fargo pursuant to the personal
    guarantees.
    4. The Shapiro Group has been damaged by CCS’s failure to
    make payments on the debt owed to Wells Fargo.
    At the close of the evidence, it had been established that CCS was the primary
    obligor on the Wells Fargo debt while the members of the Shapiro Group were
    secondary obligors; Alexander and Tatiana Shcharansky had already won their
    contribution claim against the Shapiro Group members and the Shapiro Group
    would be ordered to make payments on that claim; and the Shapiro Group had
    been damaged by CCS’s failure to pay the debt.
    That left only the second element at issue. Under the Restatement (Third)
    of Suretyship and Guaranty, the default rule is that the primary obligor owes the
    secondary obligors if the secondary obligors settle the debt. See § 22 cmt. a (Oct.
    2019 Update) (“Just as the principal obligor impliedly agrees that it will perform the
    underlying obligation so that the secondary obligor will not have to perform, the
    principal obligor also agrees that it will reimburse the secondary obligor to the
    extent that the secondary obligor does perform, thereby fulfilling all or part of the
    underlying obligation.”). This default can be overcome by an express agreement
    limiting or foreclosing the secondary obligors’ right to reimbursement. See Hills
    
    Bank, 772 N.W.2d at 773
    (noting the primary obligor has a duty to reimburse a
    secondary obligor because “the law raises an implied promise, unless there is an
    express one”). More specifically, the question at issue here was whether the stock
    purchase agreement relieved CCS of its implied promise to reimburse the Shapiro
    Group if they were forced to pay the Wells Fargo debt.
    23
    1. Motions for Directed Verdict and JNOV. As with their motion for
    directed verdict on the breach-of-contract claim, the Shapiro Group’s motion
    regarding the reimbursement claim was not presented with enough specificity for
    us to review the issue on appeal.12 The Shapiro Group noted the element in
    dispute was whether a contractual obligation controlled CCS’s duty to reimburse,
    but, when making their motion for directed verdict, they did not make any argument
    based on the evidence presented at trial nor offer legal analysis regarding why the
    stock purchase agreement was not an express agreement controlling the issue of
    reimbursement. They stated:
    [M]oreover your Honor, we as I said earlier we disagree, but there is
    [not] a contractual obligation that takes this out of the realm of that.
    And I would draw the Court’s attention to comment A section 22 of
    that restatement section that’s been accepted by this Court. And it
    discusses the underlying obligation that this is—that this legal
    contribution claim is necessary to—because when a secondary
    obligor satisfies the obligation of a primary obligor that the primary
    obligor is enriched considering that it is—it receives its money which
    it should not, or receives its benefit and which it should not have.
    And at the expense of the secondary obligor and that is consistent
    with what [the Shcharansky expert witness] testified today that
    Tatiana paying off the loan was considered debt forgiveness. It was
    considered on the income category of CCS.
    Again, CCS got a benefit from the secondary obligor paying
    off this debt. And for those reasons we would request that the Court
    find that the elements of the legal—legal reimbursement claim have
    been established as a matter of law and grant a directed verdict on
    that claim as well as the other two claims presented by the Shapiro
    Group.
    In their motion for JNOV, the Shapiro Group addressed the issue with more
    specificity, stating:
    During closing argument, the Shcharansky Group’s counsel
    suggested the Stock Purchase Agreement was an express
    agreement that superseded CCS’s legal obligation to reimburse the
    12   The Shcharansky Group contests error preservation on this issue.
    24
    Shapiro Group. This argument is illogical and unfounded based on
    the plain language of the Stock Purchase Agreement.
    While CCS, the entity, was a signatory to the Stock Purchase
    Agreement [(SPA)], it was only because a lawsuit currently pending
    against CCS was being dismissed as part of the SPA, and the
    Shapiro Group was resigning as shareholders, resignations that
    needed to be formally accepted CCS. The relevant language of
    Section 7.1 was a covenant between the Buyers, the individual
    members of the Shcharansky Group, and the Sellers, the individual
    members of the Shapiro Group. CCS made no promises as part of
    Section 7.1. Moreover, no part of Section 7.1, nor the SPA in
    general, a fully integrated agreement, speaks to a separate
    arrangement between CCS and the members of the Shapiro Group
    (or the Shcharansky Group) should those members be compelled to
    pay pursuant to their Wells Fargo personal guaranties. Moreover,
    there was no testimony from any witness nor any document
    presented at trial that addressed any sort of separate agreement on
    that issue. Accordingly, even taking the evidence in a light most
    favorable to the Shcharansky Group, all four elements of the legal
    reimbursement against CCS were established at trial, and no
    reasonable juror could find otherwise.
    But, as we noted before, the motion for JNOV must stand on the grounds raised in
    the motion for directed verdict.13
    We give no further consideration to the Shapiro Group’s claims the district
    court erred in denying their motions for directed verdict and for JNOV on the
    reimbursement claim. See Konicek v. Lommis Bros., Inc., 
    457 N.W.2d 614
    , 617
    (Iowa 1990) (“A judgment notwithstanding verdict must stand or fall on the grounds
    stated in the motion for directed verdict. On appeal, our review is limited to those
    grounds.”).
    2. Motion for New Trial. In the their motion for new trial, the Shapiro Group
    generally argued there was not sufficient evidence to sustain the jury’s conclusion
    that the stock purchase agreement constituted an express agreement that relieved
    13While we recognize the district court rejected the reimbursement claim in its
    JNOV ruling, we are limited to the motion for directed verdict in our review.
    25
    CCS of its implied promise to reimburse the Shapiro Group for the Wells Fargo
    debt. The district court denied their motion, and we find no error in that decision.
    While the stock purchase agreement does not explicitly discuss the issue
    of reimbursement between CCS as the primary obligor and the Shapiro Group
    members as the secondary obligors, the evidence at trial could be found to show
    that this agreement was CCS’s and the Shapiro Group’s comprehensive
    agreement regarding the Wells Fargo debt—supplanting any implied promise.
    CCS had little, if any, money at the time the stock purchase agreement was
    executed, and the company was on the verge of bankruptcy. Meanwhile, the
    Shapiro Group members were each on the hook for the nearly $1 million CCS
    owed to Wells Fargo. Any implied promise to repay them had little to no value if
    CCS went bankrupt or became judgment proof.
    The Shapiro Group members were very concerned about the outstanding
    debt and made it the focus of their negotiations regarding the stock purchase
    agreement. They wanted the buyers and CCS to guarantee the Shapiro Group
    members would not have to be responsible for discharging CCS’s debt
    personally—suggesting they recognized the lack of value of an implied promise for
    reimbursement in this situation. But the buyers knew the company was in a
    precarious financial situation and may not be able to discharge the whole amount,
    and they refused to include in the stock purchase agreement language that would
    hold the Shapiro Group harmless in case Wells Fargo sought to enforce the
    personal guarantees. The “best efforts” clause was the compromise the two sides
    reached in allocating the risk regarding the unpaid Wells Fargo debt.
    26
    Next, the Shapiro Group also argues the stock purchase agreement cannot
    be an express agreement between them and CCS that overrides the implied
    promise to reimburse because the buyers’ covenant involves the Shapiro Group
    and the buyers—not CCS. As stated before, the relevant contract language is:
    7.1 Buyers’ Covenants. In connection with the transfer of the
    Shares to the Buyers pursuant to this Agreement, the Buyers hereby
    covenant that as the controlling shareholders of the Corporation, the
    Buyers will cause the Corporation to:
    (a) Use best efforts to, and prior to the payment of any existing
    or new debt obligations payable by the Corporation to any Buyer or
    any Buyer’s immediate relative or any entity affiliated with any Buyer
    or any Buyer’s immediate relative, satisfy and repay in full all debt
    obligations of the Corporation owed to Wells Fargo Bank.
    We agree that “Buyers’ Covenants” suggests duties or obligations taken on by the
    buyers rather than CCS. But the language of the section involves what the buyers
    promise—“as the controlling shareholders of” CCS—to cause CCS to do in the
    future. Moreover, CCS is a party to the stock purchase agreement. The first
    paragraph of the agreement states:
    THIS STOCK PURCHASE AGREEMENT (this “Agreement”)
    is made and entered, effective as of the 16th day of September 2007,
    by and among, Alex Shcharansky, Boris Shcharansky and Zoya
    Staroselsky (the “Buyers”), those individuals listed on Schedule A
    [the Shapiro Group], and Continuous Control Solutions, Inc., an Iowa
    corporation (the “Corporation”).
    And Vadim Shapiro signed the contract for the company as its president.
    Because the jury’s verdict in favor of CCS on the reimbursement claim is
    sustained by sufficient evidence, the district court did not err in denying the Shapiro
    Group’s motion for new trial.
    27
    C. Scope of Trial.
    The Shapiro Group maintains the district court erred in limiting the scope of
    the 2018 trial to the Shapiro Group’s cross-claims and counterclaims, preventing
    them from trying their affirmative defenses to Alexander and Tatiana
    Shcharansky’s contribution claim. They moved for new trial based on this alleged
    error. Because the motion for new trial was “based on a legal question,” we review
    for errors at law. Clinton Physical Therapy Servs P.C. v. John Deere Health Care,
    Inc., 
    714 N.W.2d 603
    , 609 (Iowa 2006) (citation omitted).
    The Shapiro Group maintains the 2017 ruling of the Iowa Supreme Court in
    Shcharansky v. Shapiro, 
    905 N.W.2d 579
    , 588 (Iowa 2017), should not have been
    understood to foreclose the litigation of their affirmative defenses to the
    Shcharanskys’ contribution claim. They argue that because the Shapiro Group
    prevailed on the issue of the contribution claim before the district court and this
    court, it was not “procedurally possible for the affirmative defenses to be
    considered.”    They understand the supreme court’s lack of mention of the
    affirmative defenses to mean the court did not consider them—leaving them viable
    on remand.
    We recognize the supreme court’s opinion did not mention the Shapiro
    Group’s affirmative defenses. But the Shapiro Group admit in their appellate briefs
    that they did not “raise[] the affirmative defenses in their briefs for the prior appeal.”
    They assert it would have been improper for them to do so without a trial record or
    ruling regarding the affirmative defenses from the district court. But the affirmative
    defenses were tried as part of the 2015 trial to the bench on Alexander and Tatiana
    Shcharansky’s contribution claim. And “[i]t is well-settled law that a prevailing party
    28
    can raise an alternative ground for affirmance on appeal without filing a notice of
    cross-appeal, as long as the prevailing party raised the alternative ground in the
    district court.” Duck Creek Tire Serv., Inc. v. Goodyear Corners, L.C., 
    7496 N.W.2d 886
    , 893 (Iowa 2011). “A successful party, without appealing, may attempt to save
    a judgment on appeal based on grounds urged in the district court but not
    considered by that court.” Moyer v. City of Des Moines, 
    505 N.W.2d 191
    , 193
    (Iowa 1993). Their initial success on the contribution claim at the district court and
    the court of appeals did not prevent the Shapiro Group from pursuing their
    affirmative defenses as alternative grounds for affirmance before the supreme
    court. Their failure to do so waived having those affirmative defenses considered.
    See 
    Shcharansky, 905 N.W.2d at 588
    (concluding “the Shcharanskys are entitled
    to contribution from the Shapiro Group on the undisputed facts” and remanding to
    the district court only “for further proceedings on the Shapiro Group’s claims
    against the Shcharanskys”); Ostrem v. Prideco Secure Loan Fund, LP, 
    841 N.W.2d 882
    , 904 (Iowa 2014) (“If we disagree with the basis for the court’s ruling,
    we may still affirm if there is an alternative ground, raised in the district court and
    urged on appeal, that can support the court’s decision.” (emphasis added)); In re
    E.S., No. 19-0944, 
    2019 WL 4678217
    , at *2 n.3 (Iowa Ct. App. Sept. 25, 2019)
    (noting that while there were other possible grounds upon which to affirm that were
    raised in the original petition, the State did “not venture to resurrect any of the other
    grounds pled in its petition” so those grounds would not be considered).
    D. Prejudgment Interest.
    Alexander and Tatiana Shcharansky cross-appeal. They argue the district
    court erred in ruling against their motion asking the court to enter judgment in their
    29
    favor “with interest at the statutory rate from the filing of the claim on January 10,
    2011.” We review for errors at law on the award (or lack thereof) of prejudgment
    interest. See Gosch v. Juelfs, 
    701 N.W.2d 90
    , 91 (Iowa 2005).
    Here, the district court determined that Iowa Code section 625.21 prevented
    the Shcharanskys from being awarded prejudgment interest. The statute says,
    “Except for an action brought pursuant to chapter 668, when the judgment is for
    the recovery of money, interest from the time of the verdict or report until judgment
    is finally entered shall be added to the costs of the party entitled to the costs.” Iowa
    Code § 625.21.
    The district court relied on section 625.21 in denying prejudgment interest
    without distinguishing between an interest award dating from a verdict and an
    interest award dating from filing a lawsuit. Section 625.21 allows for an award of
    interest from the time of the verdict—not waiting until the entry of the judgment—
    for cases not brought pursuant to chapter 668.            Here, it is undisputed the
    Shcharanskys did not bring their suit under the comparative fault act of chapter
    668. See Mulhern v. Catholic Health Initiatives, 
    799 N.W.2d 104
    , 113 (Iowa 2011)
    (noting the legislature created the comparative fault act of Iowa Code chapter 668
    in 1994 and “[b]y its terms, the purposes of the comparative fault act is to establish
    ‘comparative fault as the basis for liability in relation to claims for damages arising
    from injury to or death of a person or harm to property’” (alteration in original)
    (citation omitted)). If anything, this statute supported the entry of interest from the
    date of the verdict in November 2018, rather than the April 2019 date when the
    court entered judgment—which the district court did not do. Additionally, section
    30
    625.21 does not control the request for interest from the date of the
    commencement of an action.
    The Shcharanskys offer two “pathways” to an award of prejudgment interest
    from the commencement of their action. First, they argue section 668.13(1) allows
    for it. That section provides, “Interest shall be allowed on all money due on
    judgments and decrees on actions brought pursuant to this chapter, subject to the
    following: 1. Interest . . . shall accrue from the date of the commencement of the
    action.”   Iowa Code § 668.13(1).       But as we stated, it is undisputed the
    Shcharanskys did not bring their contribution claim pursuant to the chapter 668
    comparative fault act. And, on its face, the section is limited to “actions brought
    pursuant to this chapter.” See
    id. Baumler v.
    Hemesath, 
    534 N.W.2d 650
    , 655–
    56) (Iowa 1995), supports this understanding; in it, our supreme court rejected the
    party’s claim that interest should be governed by section 668.13 rather than
    chapter 535, noting the case was not tried pursuant to chapter 668 and therefore
    those interest provisions did not govern apply. This pathway fails.
    Second, the Shcharanskys argue section 535.2(1)(b) allows them to receive
    prejudgment interest. It provides, “[T]he rate of interest shall be five cents on the
    hundred by the year in the following cases . . . . Money after the same becomes
    due.” Iowa Code § 535.2(1)(b). The Shcharanskys maintain this section arguably
    allows them to receive interest from the date they discharged the Wells Fargo debt
    in 2010 but, as they did at the district court, they ask that we award interest from
    the date they filed suit in January 2011.
    “Generally, interest runs ‘from the time money becomes due and payable
    and, in the case of unliquidated claims, from the date they become liquidated.’”
    
    31 Hughes v
    . Burlington N. R.R. Co., 
    545 N.W.2d 318
    , 321 (Iowa 1996) (citation
    omitted). “Unliquidated damages normally become liquidated on the date of the
    judgment.”
    Id. “Iowa courts,
    however, have recognized an exception to the
    unliquidated claims rule when the damage is complete at a specified time.”
    Brenton Nat’l Bank v. Ross, 
    492 N.W.2d 441
    , 443 (Iowa Ct. App. 1992). “In such
    a situation, interest runs from the time the damage is complete even though the
    damage has not been fixed in a specific sum.”
    Id. Here, the
    damage was complete at the time Alexander and Tatiana
    discharged the Wells Fargo debt. Therefore, the district court erred in denying
    their request for interest from the day they filed their contribution claim. We reverse
    the district court’s ruling on prejudgment interest and remand for the court to
    correct the entry of judgment.
    IV. Conclusion.
    We affirm the district court ruling as to all the issues raised by the Shapiro
    Group on appeal. However, on cross-appeal, we reverse the district court’s ruling
    as to Alexander and Tatiana Shcharansky’s request for interest from the day they
    filed their contribution claim. We remand for the limited purpose of correction of
    the judgment order.
    AFFIRMED ON          APPEAL; REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH
    DIRECTIONS ON CROSS-APPEAL.