Mounteer v. HOA for the Colony , 422 P.3d 809 ( 2018 )


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  •                   This opinion is subject to revision before final
    publication in the Pacific Reporter
    
    2018 UT 23
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    MOUNTEER ENTERPRISES, INC.,
    Appellee,
    v.
    HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION FOR THE COLONY AT WHITE PINE CANYON,
    Appellant.
    No. 20170165
    Filed June 5, 2018
    On Direct Appeal
    Third District, Summit County
    The Honorable Kara Pettit
    No. 110500200
    Attorneys:
    Joseph E. Wrona, Jared C. Bowman, Park City, for appellee
    Troy L. Booher, Beth E. Kennedy, Salt Lake City, for appellant
    ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE authored the opinion of the Court, in
    which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, JUSTICE HIMONAS, JUSTICE PEARCE, and
    JUSTICE PETERSEN joined.
    ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE, opinion of the Court:
    ¶1       The Homeowners Association for the Colony at White
    Pine Canyon (HOA) hired Mounteer Enterprises, Inc. to provide
    snow removal services. The contract required Mounteer to maintain
    a certain amount of insurance coverage. And when the HOA
    discovered that Mounteer had failed to purchase the required
    insurance, the HOA terminated the contract.
    ¶2       Mounteer filed suit, asserting that the HOA had waived
    its right to terminate the contract on that ground. It reasoned that the
    HOA had effectively waived the insurance requirement by accepting
    Mounteer’s certificates of insurance and by making payments to
    Mounteer despite its noncompliance. The HOA responded by
    MOUNTEER ENTERPRISES v. HOA FOR THE COLONY
    Opinion of the Court
    pointing to an antiwaiver clause in the contract—a provision stating
    that the HOA’s failure to notice a deficiency in Mounteer’s insurance
    coverage cannot be construed as a waiver of the insurance provision.
    ¶3      The HOA moved for summary judgment on the
    antiwaiver issue and moved to exclude evidence relating to a
    previous contract between the parties. The district court denied both
    motions and a subsequent motion for judgment notwithstanding the
    verdict.
    ¶4      We reverse the district court’s denial of the HOA’s
    motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. We hold that a
    party may implicitly waive an antiwaiver provision through
    conduct, but there must be clear intent to waive both the underlying
    provision and the antiwaiver provision. And we conclude that the
    HOA’s failure to insist on performance of the insurance provision
    here does not establish such clear intent.
    I
    ¶5        In 2006, the Homeowners Association for the Colony at
    White Pine Canyon entered into a four-year contract with Mounteer
    Enterprises, Inc. for snow removal services at its development in
    Park City, Utah. The contract required Mounteer to maintain $7
    million of aggregate liability insurance with (1) a general liability
    policy for $1 million per occurrence and $5 million in the aggregate
    and (2) an umbrella policy for $1 million per occurrence and $2
    million in the aggregate.
    ¶6       The contract provided that if Mounteer failed to
    purchase the necessary insurance the HOA could immediately
    terminate the contract, withhold payments until Mounteer cured the
    default, or purchase the required insurance and deduct the
    premiums from payments due to Mounteer. The contract also
    contained an antiwaiver provision. That provision stated that
    “[f]ailure of the [HOA] to demand such certificate or other evidence
    of full compliance with these insurance requirements or failure of the
    [HOA] to identify a deficiency in the form that is provided shall not
    be construed as a waiver of Mounteer’s obligation to maintain such
    insurance.”
    ¶7       During the four-year contract ending in November 2010
    Mounteer submitted four insurance certificates to the HOA. Each
    certificate showed only $5 million of aggregate liability insurance
    coverage. And the HOA paid Mounteer for its services despite this
    deficiency. In 2010 the two parties entered into a new four-year
    contract with substantially similar terms, including identical
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                            Opinion of the Court
    insurance requirements and antiwaiver provision. The major
    difference between the contracts was a reduction in the mileage
    Mounteer would be servicing, as the HOA gave part of its snow
    removal business to another company.
    ¶8      Three months into the 2010 contract, the HOA asked
    Mounteer to surrender over three miles of the roadway Mounteer
    was contracted to service. When Mounteer refused, the HOA told
    Mounteer that it planned to find a way to terminate the contract. The
    HOA then terminated the contract after finding that Mounteer had
    purchased only $5 million of insurance coverage.
    ¶9      Mounteer sued for breach of contract and breach of the
    implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. It asserted that the
    HOA had implicitly waived its right to require strict compliance
    with the insurance provision when the HOA approved the
    certificates of insurance and paid Mounteer every billing cycle. And
    it claimed that this conduct was enough to overcome the existence of
    the antiwaiver provision.
    ¶10      The HOA moved for summary judgment. It argued that
    it had not waived the insurance requirement by its conduct because
    the antiwaiver provision expressly foreclosed a finding of such
    waiver. The HOA also filed a motion in limine, seeking to exclude
    evidence that Mounteer had purchased $5 million of aggregate
    liability insurance every year from 2006 to 2010 and had submitted
    certificates of insurance to that effect.
    ¶11      The district court denied both motions. It first held that
    the HOA’s “pattern of inaction from 2006 to 2011” was relevant to
    show “an intent to relinquish the right to demand strict compliance
    with the insurance provisions.” It also held that “[i]t is within the
    jury’s power to find that [an antiwaiver] provision was itself waived
    or modified by the parties’ agreement or conduct.” (Internal
    quotation marks omitted). And it accordingly instructed the jury that
    “[t]he existence of an anti-waiver provision is merely one factor to
    consider in determining whether a party has waived its right under
    the agreement, and a no-waiver provision can itself be waived.”
    ¶12    The jury found the HOA liable for breach of contract and
    awarded Mounteer $578,000 in damages. The district court then
    awarded Mounteer attorney fees and costs as the prevailing party.
    ¶13      The HOA filed this appeal. It challenges the district
    court’s denial of its motion for judgment notwithstanding the
    verdict, a question we review for correctness. See USA Power, LLC v.
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    MOUNTEER ENTERPRISES v. HOA FOR THE COLONY
    Opinion of the Court
    PacifiCorp, 
    2016 UT 20
    , ¶ 29, 
    372 P.3d 629
    . It also appeals the denial
    of its motion in limine.
    II
    ¶14      We reverse the district court’s denial of the motion for
    judgment notwithstanding the verdict without reaching the HOA’s
    motion in limine argument. We find that the HOA did not waive its
    right to require $7 million in insurance coverage and to terminate the
    contract immediately upon default.
    ¶15      We conclude first that Mounteer must establish a clear
    waiver of both the insurance provision and the antiwaiver provision.
    We accept that conduct alone can impliedly waive a contractual
    provision even with the existence of an antiwaiver provision; but we
    hold that such conduct must evidence an intentional relinquishment
    of the party’s contractual rights. And we conclude that the mere
    failure to enforce the underlying contractual provision does not rise
    to this level. We turn second to the question whether Mounteer must
    show proof of prejudice to prevail on its waiver claim. And we
    conclude that prejudice is not an element of waiver.
    A
    ¶16      The contract between the parties clearly states that the
    HOA could terminate the contract in the event Mounteer failed to
    purchase $7 million of aggregate liability insurance. Mounteer looks
    for a way around this language by an appeal to the doctrine of
    waiver. This doctrine looks to the conduct or communication of the
    parties to determine whether the HOA waived its right to insist on
    performance under the contract.
    ¶17      Courts do not lightly consider a contract provision
    waived, however. A party may establish waiver only where there is
    an “intentional relinquishment of a known right.” Wilson v. IHC
    Hosps., Inc., 
    2012 UT 43
    , ¶ 61, 
    289 P.3d 369
    (citation omitted). Such
    waiver can be express or implied. 
    Id. ¶ 62.
    And though waiver may
    be implied, the party asserting implied waiver must establish that
    the other party “intentionally act[ed] in a manner inconsistent with
    its contractual rights . . . .” Meadow Valley Contractors, Inc. v. State
    Dep’t. of Transp., 
    2011 UT 35
    , ¶ 45, 
    266 P.3d 671
    (citation omitted).
    ¶18     So if the otherwise-breaching party can show that the
    other party intentionally waived its rights under the contract,
    noncompliance with the relevant provision will not be construed as a
    breach. This is because a waiver of a contract provision is itself a
    modification of the agreement between the parties, and when
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    established should have as much binding power as the contract
    itself. Thus, waiver prevents a “waiving party from lulling the other
    party into a belief that strict compliance with a contractual duty will
    not be required” and then enforcing its contractual rights upon
    default. 13 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 39:15 (4th ed. 2018).
    ¶19     The calculus changes, however, when a contract also
    contains an antiwaiver provision. Antiwaiver provisions aim to give
    contracting parties flexibility in enforcing their rights under the
    contract—enforcement that would often be to the detriment of the
    other party—without “result[ing] in a complete and unintended loss
    of its contract rights if it later decides that strict performance is
    desirable.” 
    Id. § 39:36.
    So if the specific language of the antiwaiver
    clause expressly precludes parties from construing certain conduct
    as a waiver of contractual rights, courts must enforce this provision
    as part of the parties’ agreement. When a contract contains an
    antiwaiver provision, a party cannot waive a contractual right
    merely by failing to enforce the provision establishing that right. See
    
    id. ¶20 The
    bite of an antiwaiver provision, however, is
    tempered by the general view that a party may waive a contract
    provision despite the existence of an antiwaiver clause. See 
    id. Even an
    antiwaiver provision is subject to waiver, in other words. After
    all, parties always have the right to modify their rights by amending
    the contract, and waiver of an antiwaiver provision is just such an
    intentional modification of the contract.
    ¶21      For these reasons a party asserting waiver in the face of
    an antiwaiver clause must establish “a clear intent to waive both the
    [antiwaiver] clause and the underlying contract provision.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    And this second waiver must meet the same
    standard as waiver of the underlying provision—there must be an
    intentional relinquishment of that right.1 See id.
    _____________________________________________________________
    1 The district court relied on dicta from ASC Utah, Inc. v. Wolf
    Mountain Resorts, L.C., stating that “the existence of an antiwaiver
    provision [is] merely one factor to consider in determining whether a
    party has waived its rights under the agreement.” 
    2010 UT 65
    , ¶ 37,
    
    245 P.3d 184
    . This is correct in the sense that the existence of an
    antiwaiver provision “is not determinative” and such a provision
    “can itself be waived.” 
    Id. ¶¶ 37–38.
    But ASC Utah does not relieve
    Mounteer of its burden of establishing that the HOA intentionally
    (continued . . .)
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    MOUNTEER ENTERPRISES v. HOA FOR THE COLONY
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶22     This requirement gives the antiwaiver provision effect.
    An antiwaiver provision embodies the agreement between the
    parties—an agreement that specifically prohibits the mere failure to
    enforce a contractual right as being construed as waiver of that right.
    Allowing waiver where the party has not clearly waived the
    antiwaiver provision would undo this agreement and would “beg[]
    the question of validity of the non-waiver clause.” Van Bibber v.
    Norris, 
    419 N.E.2d 115
    , 121 (Ind. 1981); see also Shields Ltd. P’ships v.
    Bradberry 
    526 S.W.3d 471
    , 484 (Tex. 2017) (“Such a contract-
    enforcement principle would be ‘illogical since the very
    conduct which the clause is designed to permit [without effecting a
    waiver would be] turned around to constitute waiver of the clause
    permitting [a party to engage in] the conduct [without effecting a
    waiver].’” (alterations in original) (citation omitted)).
    ¶23      That leaves the question of what a party must show to
    establish waiver of both the underlying provision and the antiwaiver
    clause. We have held that an express waiver of a contractual right is
    sufficient to waive both provisions. See Calhoun v. Universal Credit
    Co., 
    146 P.2d 284
    , 285–86 (Utah 1944). But we have not considered
    whether an antiwaiver provision may be waived impliedly—by the
    mere failure to insist on performance of the underlying provision of
    a contract.
    ¶24      We now reach that question. And we conclude that the
    mere failure to insist on performance of an underlying contract
    provision is insufficient to establish the intentional relinquishment of
    a party’s rights under the antiwaiver provision. We so hold because
    the failure to insist on performance after breach is entirely consistent
    with the rights set out in the antiwaiver provision—rights of
    flexibility that often benefit the otherwise-breaching party. And a
    finding of waiver in such circumstances would thus render the
    antiwaiver provision meaningless.
    ¶25       To establish a waiver of both the insurance clause and
    the antiwaiver provision Mounteer would have to present evidence
    sufficient to establish that the HOA effectively agreed not to demand
    performance. An express waiver would do that. If Mounteer could
    show that the HOA expressly agreed to abandon its right to insist on
    (continued . . .)
    relinquished its rights in both the insurance provision and the
    antiwaiver provision.
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    the insurance provision then the HOA could not point to the
    antiwaiver clause in response; an express waiver is a clear
    abandonment of the antiwaiver clause in this circumstance.
    ¶26      But the mere failure to insist on performance under the
    insurance provision cannot give Mounteer a reasonable basis for
    concluding that the HOA relinquished its right to insist on exact
    performance. Again, such conduct is entirely compatible with the
    antiwaiver clause. And Mounteer is accordingly in no position to
    insist that the HOA’s failure to insist on performance changes the
    parties’ agreement.
    ¶27       In so holding we do not foreclose the possibility that
    implied waiver may be effected by conduct more clearly amounting
    to affirmative disavowal of the underlying provision of a contract.
    The question, again, is whether such conduct is sufficient to establish
    a reasonable basis for the conclusion that a party has effectively
    agreed not to insist on performance. And conduct more extensive
    than that at issue here could possibly satisfy that standard.
    ¶28     The circumstance at issue in ASC Utah, Inc. v. Wolf
    Mountain Resorts, L.C., 
    2010 UT 65
    , 
    245 P.3d 184
    , may be one
    example. ASC Utah involved the alleged waiver of an arbitration
    clause by a party’s extensive participation in litigation over several
    years (and even the assertion of a counterclaim). Such conduct seems
    distinguishable from the mere failure to insist on a contracting
    party’s performance of a contractual duty. When a party engages
    actively in litigation it has (at least arguably) affirmatively
    disavowed the right to arbitrate. And such affirmative disavowal can
    be viewed as sufficient to establish a reasonable basis for the
    conclusion that a party intends to disregard the agreement to
    arbitrate (and also waived the antiwaiver provision). That is the
    holding of the ASC Utah case.2
    ¶29     And we find ASC Utah distinguishable from the one
    presented here. Here the HOA merely failed to notice the deficiency
    in the insurance certificates and to immediately insist on
    performance of the insurance requirement. Such failure cannot
    amount to waiver without eviscerating the antiwaiver provision.
    That provision gave the HOA the flexibility not to inspect the
    _____________________________________________________________
    2 ASC Utah can also be understood as an express waiver case, in
    that the waiving party there “expressly stated its intent” to waive
    “on the record.” 
    2010 UT 65
    , ¶ 30.
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    MOUNTEER ENTERPRISES v. HOA FOR THE COLONY
    Opinion of the Court
    insurance certificates without giving up its right to enforce the
    provision if it found that Mounteer had breached. There was nothing
    in the conduct of the HOA that indicated its intent to disavow the
    insurance provision.
    ¶30     When Mounteer failed to acquire sufficient insurance it
    ran the risk that the HOA would discover the deficiency and
    terminate the contract. And the HOA was thus within its rights in
    terminating Mounteer for its failure to secure the liability insurance
    required by the contract. We reverse on this basis.
    B
    ¶31     The HOA has also contended that even if it intentionally
    relinquished its rights in the insurance provision and the antiwaiver
    provision, we cannot find waiver because there is no prejudice. We
    need not reach this issue because we have ruled in the HOA’s favor
    without regard to any proof of prejudice. But we address this
    question because the briefing in this case has highlighted a point of
    tension in our case law—on whether prejudice is a required element
    of waiver.
    ¶32       For a time we articulated a standard formulation of
    waiver that did not mention any requirement of proof of prejudice.
    In Soter’s, Inc. v. Deseret Federal Savings & Loan Ass’n, for example, we
    stated that waiver is the “intentional relinquishment of a known
    right.” 
    857 P.2d 935
    , 942 (Utah 1993). And we made no reference to a
    requirement of proof of prejudice. The prejudice element crept into
    our cases, however, in In re Estate of Flake, 
    2003 UT 17
    , ¶ 31, 
    71 P.3d 589
    . There we made reference to a requirement of proof of prejudice
    through reliance on a court of appeals decision, Interwest Constr. v.
    Palmer, 
    886 P.2d 92
    (Utah Ct. App. 1994). Our subsequent cases have
    gone both ways—sometimes we have followed Soter’s without
    mentioning prejudice, see, e.g., Lane Myers Constr., LLC v. Nat’l City
    Bank, 
    2014 UT 58
    , ¶ 31, 
    342 P.3d 749
    , and sometimes we have
    followed Estate of Flake by including the element of prejudice, see,
    e.g., Meadow Valley Contractors, Inc., 
    2011 UT 35
    , ¶ 45.
    ¶33      This tension is problematic. The time has come for us to
    clarify our law and to speak with one voice. And we now repudiate
    the requirement of proof of prejudice as an element of waiver. The
    prejudice requirement is a doctrinal misfit in the law of waiver. See
    13 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 39:28 (noting that “there is no need to
    show reliance by the party asserting or claiming the waiver”);
    Johnston Equip. Corp. of Iowa v. Indus. Indem., 
    489 N.W.2d 13
    , 17 (Iowa
    1992) (“Prejudice is irrelevant to a claim of waiver.”). Waiver is
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    dependent only upon a showing of words or conduct manifesting
    the “intentional relinquishment of a known right.” See Wilson, 
    2012 UT 43
    , ¶ 61 (citation omitted). Prejudice, on the other hand, is
    relevant only as an element of estoppel. A party may be estopped
    from contradicting a prior “statement, admission, act, or failure to
    act” only upon a showing that another party was harmed by its
    reliance on the prior statement or act. See Nunley v. Westates Casing
    Servs., Inc., 
    1999 UT 100
    , ¶ 34, 
    989 P.2d 1077
    (citation omitted).
    ¶34      We now so hold. And we repudiate our prior decisions
    that speak of prejudice as an element of waiver.
    III
    ¶35    We reverse the district court’s decision denying the
    HOA’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Mounteer
    produced no evidence of waiver beyond the HOA’s failure to insist
    on performance of the insurance requirements. And because the
    HOA was within its rights to terminate the contract, Mounteer’s
    claim of breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair
    dealing necessarily fails.
    ¶36   We also reverse the district court’s award of attorney
    fees to Mounteer as the prevailing party. And because the HOA is
    now the prevailing party, we remand to the district for an award of
    its fees.
    9