Trans-Western v. US Gypsum Co , 379 P.3d 1200 ( 2016 )


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  •                  This opinion is subject to revision before
    publication in the Pacific Reporter
    
    2016 UT 27
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    TRANS-WESTERN PETROLEUM, INC.,
    Appellant,
    v.
    UNITED STATES GYPSUM COMPANY,
    Appellee.
    No. 20140453
    Filed June 16, 2016
    On Certification from the
    United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
    The Honorable Paul J. Kelly, Jr.
    Case Nos. 13-4012 and 13-4021
    Attorneys:
    Thomas W. Clawson, Stephen K. Christiansen,
    Salt Lake City, for appellant
    Patricia W. Christensen, Matthew J. Ball,
    Salt Lake City, for appellee
    JUSTICE HIMONAS authored the opinion of the Court, in which
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE,
    and JUDGE ORME joined.
    Having been recused, JUSTICE DURHAM did not participate herein:
    COURT OF APPEALS JUDGE GREGORY K. ORME sat.
    JUSTICE JOHN A. PEARCE became a member of the Court
    on December 17, 2015, after oral argument in this matter,
    and accordingly did not participate.
    JUSTICE HIMONAS, opinion of the Court:
    INTRODUCTION
    ¶ 1 The following question is before us upon certification
    from the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit:
    TRANS-WESTERN v. U.S. GYPSUM
    Opinion of the Court
    “How should expectation damages be measured for the breach of
    an oil and gas lease?” For reasons detailed below, we hold that
    expectation damages for the breach of an oil and gas lease are
    measured in much the same way as expectation damages for the
    breach of any other contract. Such damages may include general
    (or direct) and consequential (or special) damages. “[G]eneral
    damages are those that flow naturally from the breach . . . .”
    McCleve Props., LLC v. D. Ray Hult Family Ltd. P’ship, 
    2013 UT App 185
    , ¶ 17, 
    307 P.3d 650
    (citation omitted). Within the context of
    this case, we measure general damages as the difference between
    the contract price of the lease and the market value of the lease at
    the time of the breach. Consequential damages, on the other hand,
    are those that are “reasonably within the contemplation of, or
    reasonably foreseeable by, the parties at the time the contract was
    made.” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    And we measure consequential
    damages “not by the value of the promised performance alone but
    by the gains such performance could produce for collateral
    reasons, or the loss that is produced by the absence of such
    performance.” DAN B. DOBBS, LAW OF REMEDIES § 12.1(1) (2d ed.
    1993). We further hold that trial courts may, in their discretion,
    allow the use of post-breach evidence to help establish and
    measure expectation damages.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶ 2 The Tenth Circuit case at issue concerns Trans-Western
    Petroleum, Inc. (Trans-Western), a Colorado corporation involved
    in the buying and selling of oil and gas leases, and United States
    Gypsum Company (U.S. Gypsum), a Delaware corporation that
    owns the oil and gas beneath 1,720 acres in Sevier County, Utah.
    In August 2004, Trans-Western contacted U.S. Gypsum and
    expressed interest in an oil and gas lease for a section of its
    acreage in Sevier County. At the time, the oil and gas interest for
    that section of land had been leased to other parties, who had
    assigned their leasehold interest to an entity known as Wolverine.
    This preexisting lease, known as the “Wolverine lease,” was due
    to expire on August 17, 2004. U.S. Gypsum agreed to lease that oil
    and gas interest to Trans-Western for a term of five years starting
    on August 17, 2004, and executed the lease on September 15, 2004.
    ¶ 3 But within weeks of the execution of the lease,
    U.S. Gypsum breached the Trans-Western lease because of
    Wolverine’s assertion that the Wolverine lease was still in force.
    The underlying events are not in dispute. On October 1, 2004,
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                           Opinion of the Court
    Wolverine informed Trans-Western by letter that Wolverine
    believed its lease was still in force and that it did not recognize
    Trans-Western’s interest in the property. Wolverine also sent U.S.
    Gypsum a copy of the letter. Upon receiving the letter from
    Wolverine, U.S. Gypsum sent a letter dated October 7, 2004, to
    Trans-Western purporting to rescind the lease between the parties
    “on the basis of a mistake of fact with respect to the status of the
    Wolverine [l]ease.”
    ¶ 4 After this attempted unilateral rescission by U.S.
    Gypsum, Trans-Western filed suit in September 2006 for
    declaratory judgment and damages against Wolverine, U.S.
    Gypsum, and another party 1 in federal district court. The parties
    agreed that the court would first address the validity of the
    Wolverine lease, and U.S. Gypsum did not participate in the
    briefing on that issue. The federal district court determined that
    the Wolverine lease ended in August 2004. On appeal, this
    determination was upheld by the Court of Appeals for the Tenth
    Circuit. After settlement of the issue regarding when the
    Wolverine lease ended, Trans-Western pursued an amended
    complaint in the federal district court asserting claims against
    U.S. Gypsum for breach of contract and breach of the covenant of
    quiet enjoyment.
    ¶ 5 The district court issued its findings of fact and
    conclusions of law on November 29, 2012, and a final judgment on
    December 27, 2012. The court found that the Trans-Western lease
    was valid as of August 17, 2004, that U.S. Gypsum had
    wrongfully rescinded the lease, and that the rescission constituted
    a breach of contract and a breach of the covenant of quiet
    enjoyment. The court also established that the value of the Trans-
    Western lease did not change between the execution of the lease
    on September 15, 2004, and the breach of the lease on October 7,
    2004. In light of these findings, the district court awarded nominal
    damages of one dollar to Trans-Western for its claim for breach of
    contract. After the parties appealed to the Court of Appeals for the
    Tenth Circuit, the Court of Appeals certified to us the question of
    1   Other parties were added to the suit in January 2007;
    however, none of these unnamed parties are involved in the
    certified question before this court.
    3
    TRANS-WESTERN v. U.S. GYPSUM
    Opinion of the Court
    how to measure expectation damages for the breach of an oil and
    gas lease.
    STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶ 6 “On a certified question, we are not presented with a
    decision to affirm or reverse, and traditional standards of review
    do not apply. Therefore, [o]n certification, we answer the legal
    questions presented without resolving the underlying dispute.”
    Garza v. Burnett, 
    2013 UT 66
    , ¶ 9, 
    321 P.3d 1104
    (alteration in
    original) (citation omitted).
    ANALYSIS
    ¶ 7 U.S. Gypsum asserts that the appropriate measure of
    damages for its breach of the oil and gas lease should be based on
    the value of the lease at the time of the breach. The measure
    U.S. Gypsum urges us to adopt is essentially the same as the one
    used for measuring general damages for the breach of a contract
    to sell real estate, “with appropriate adjustments in the form of
    words used”: general damages for the breach of such a contract
    are measured as the difference between the price paid for the
    lease and the market value of the lease at the time of breach. DAN
    B. DOBBS, LAW OF REMEDIES § 12.15(2) (2d ed. 1993). Trans-Western
    claims that this measure of damages would fail to place it, as the
    nonbreaching party, “in as good a position as if the contract had
    been performed.” Instead, Trans-Western argues that the measure
    of damages should be based on an amount that it could have sold
    the lease for during the period of the lease. Trans-Western further
    argues that, in applying this measure, courts should allow
    “consideration of the best evidence available, including
    post-breach evidence.”
    ¶ 8 We hold that the appropriate measure of expectation
    damages for the breach of an oil and gas lease is much the same as
    the measure of expectation damages for a breach of contract and
    may include both general and consequential damages. We
    measure general damages in the context of this case as the
    difference between the contract price of the lease and the market
    value of the lease at the time of breach. 2 And we measure
    2 Courts usually measure general and consequential damages
    at the same time. See generally Fifth Third Bank v. United States, 
    518 F.3d 1368
    (Fed. Cir. 2008). But this is not always the case. For
    (cont.)
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                            Opinion of the Court
    consequential damages “not by the value of the promised
    performance alone but by the gains such performance could
    produce for collateral reasons, or the loss that is produced by the
    absence of such performance.” DOBBS, LAW OF REMEDIES § 12.1(1).
    We also hold that courts have discretion to permit parties to
    introduce post-breach evidence to establish and measure their
    expectation damages.
    I. EXPECTATION DAMAGES FOR THE BREACH OF
    AN OIL AND GAS LEASE ARE MEASURED THE
    SAME WAY AS EXPECTATION DAMAGES
    FOR A BREACH OF CONTRACT
    ¶ 9 It is well established under Utah law that, generally
    speaking, leases are treated the same way as other contracts. See
    Richard Barton Enters., Inc. v. Tsern, 
    928 P.2d 368
    , 376 (Utah 1996)
    (“[P]rinciples of contract law rather than property law govern[]
    the law of damages in computing a lessee’s liability for damages
    for breach of a lease.”); Reid v. Mut. of Omaha Ins. Co., 
    776 P.2d 896
    ,
    904 (Utah 1989) (recognizing the “modern view that leases are
    essentially commercial transactions, contractual in nature”); Hall
    v. Warren, 
    632 P.2d 848
    , 850 (Utah 1981) (“This obligation is in
    accord with the contemporary approach toward leased
    instance, with respect to consequential lost profits, it has been said
    that “the rule favoring the measurement of damages as of the time
    of the breach does not apply . . . to anticipated profits or to other
    expectancy damages that, absent the breach, would have accrued
    on an ongoing basis over the course of the contract.” Anchor Sav.
    Bank, FSB, v. United States, 
    597 F.3d 1356
    , 1369 (Fed. Cir. 2010)
    (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). In
    circumstances such as those, “damages are measured throughout
    the course of the contract.” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    This same logic
    applies to damages from a continuing breach. Such damages are
    not measured “immediately after the initial injury [because that]
    would be unduly restrictive and would not compensate plaintiffs
    fully for their injury.” Brighton Homes, Inc. v. McAdams, 
    737 S.W.2d 340
    , 343 (Tex. Ct. App. 1987). Rather, if “a continuing breach . . .
    [is] a continuing cause of damage,” a court may measure the
    damage “up until the time of trial.” 
    Id. Moreover, the
    measure of
    general damages may vary depending on the nature of the breach.
    See DAN B. DOBBS, LAW OF REMEDIES § 12.15(3).
    5
    TRANS-WESTERN v. U.S. GYPSUM
    Opinion of the Court
    habitations which emphasizes the contractual nature of the
    relationship between the landlord and tenant instead of viewing a
    lease simply as [a] demise of real estate.”). Accordingly, if an oil
    and gas lease is just a lease, under our precedent we treat an oil
    and gas lease as any other contract, barring some persuasive
    reason to do otherwise.
    ¶ 10 The strictest view among authorities is that “the oil and
    gas lease is not really a lease anywhere,” HOWARD R. WILLIAMS &
    CHARLES J. MEYERS, OIL AND GAS LAW § 414 (2015) (citation
    omitted)—that because “an oil and gas lease is not a ‘lease,’ . . . an
    analogy between an oil and gas lease and an ordinary lease . . .
    cannot represent the law,” A. W. Walker, Jr., The Nature of the
    Property Interests Created by an Oil and Gas Lease in Texas, 7 TEX.
    L. REV. 539, 559 & n.83 (1929). A somewhat softer view that does
    not reject all similarities to a normal lease sees an oil and gas lease
    as more similar to a real-estate deed than “an ordinary real-
    property lease.” JOHN S. LOWE ET AL., OIL AND GAS LAW 181 (6th
    ed. 2013). 3
    ¶ 11 Since an oil and gas lease is either not a lease or at most a
    quasi-lease, authorities have warned that oil and gas interests
    “should not be handled within the straitjacket of common law
    concepts.” WILLIAMS & MEYERS, OIL AND GAS LAW § 213 (2015). 4
    Instead, some have urged courts to flesh out the law of oil and gas
    leases as specific issues arise in litigation rather than adopt “an
    3 See also 2 EUGENE KUNTZ, OIL AND GAS § 18.2 (1989) (“The
    instrument is called an oil and gas lease, but the word ‘lease’
    should not be taken as a technical term which carries with it all of
    the law relating to landlord and tenant.”); Unit Petroleum Co. v.
    David Pond Well Serv., Inc., 
    439 S.W.3d 389
    , 396 (Tex. Ct. App.
    2014) (noting that “an oil and gas ‘lease’ is not a lease in a
    traditional sense”).
    4  See also 2 KUNTZ, OIL AND GAS § 25.1 (1989) (“[C]onsiderable
    difficulty is encountered in applying common law concepts
    regardless of the nature of the lessee’s interest under the theory
    entertained in the particular jurisdiction.”); Lynch v. State Bd. of
    Equalization, 
    210 Cal. Rptr. 335
    , 337 (Ct. App. 1985) (“[C]ourts
    [have] attempted to fashion rules of law [for oil and gas leases] by
    analogies drawn from other fields of law which were often inapt
    for comparison.”).
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                              Opinion of the Court
    early arbitrary classification” that essentially determines all future
    aspects of such a lease. 2 EUGENE KUNTZ, OIL AND GAS § 23.2
    (1989). 5
    ¶ 12 Given the sui generis nature of oil and gas leases, courts
    have deemed attempts to classify oil and gas interests “as thorny a
    problem as has challenged the ingenuity and wisdom of
    legislatures [and courts].” 
    Lynch, 210 Cal. Rptr. at 337
    (citing R.R.
    Comm’n v. Rowan & Nichols Oil Co., 
    310 U.S. 573
    , 579 (1940)
    (alteration in original)). With this in mind it is not surprising that
    there is a lack of consensus as to how to classify such a lease and
    which law should govern. 6 For instance, while jurisdictions
    generally treat oil and gas leases as both a contract and a
    conveyance, 7 courts classify the rights attached to such a “lease”
    quite differently. LOWE ET AL., OIL AND GAS LAW 177, 181 (6th ed.
    2013). Thus, in some jurisdictions the lessee’s interest is “a fee
    simple determinable estate in the oil and gas in place,” whereas
    other courts characterize “the interest as a grant of an irrevocable
    license or profit a prendre.” 
    Id. at 181.
    And usually these
    classifications are based “upon whether the state follows an
    ownership-in-place or exclusive-right-to-take theory of oil and gas
    rights.” 
    Id. These varying
    classifications can matter because they
    5 See also Heiner v. S.J. Groves & Sons Co., 
    790 P.2d 107
    , 113
    (Utah Ct. App. 1990) (“Many legal scholars contend that landlord-
    tenant or real property law concepts should not be mechanically
    applied in mining and oil and gas cases.”).
    6 See 2 KUNTZ, OIL AND GAS § 18.2 (1989) (“The oil and gas lease
    and the rights created thereby have been variously classified by
    the courts for various reasons. The classifications are so numerous
    and so inconsistent that a single classification of the oil and gas
    lease for all purposes is not possible. . . . It can only be said that
    the rights under an oil and gas lease have been classified as realty,
    personalty, chattel real; as corporeal or incorporeal; as fees,
    profits, or licenses, depending upon the purpose for which the
    classification is made and depending upon the terminology used
    to describe rights in oil and gas under the theory of ownership
    entertained in the particular jurisdiction.”).
    7 See 
    id. (“The oil
    and gas lease . . . is a conveyance of an
    interest in real property . . . . It is also an executory contract . . . .”).
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    TRANS-WESTERN v. U.S. GYPSUM
    Opinion of the Court
    “often determine[] the nature and extent of the lessee’s rights.” 8
    
    Id. And this
    has led various jurisdictions to “rel[y] on the areas of
    contract law, property law, landlord-tenant law, oil and gas law
    and vendor-purchaser law with differing results.” Heiner v. S.J.
    Groves & Sons Co., 
    790 P.2d 107
    , 113 (Utah Ct. App. 1990).
    ¶ 13 With that in mind, however, we do not see that the
    specific classifications of the oil and gas lease in various
    jurisdictions make any difference as to the type of expectation
    damages available when a contract is breached in the oil and gas
    context. We are aware of no jurisdiction that has carved out a
    special rule for oil and gas leases with respect to the formulation
    of the measure of expectation damages. And we can imagine no
    theoretical reason for doing so. We therefore, for the limited
    purpose of expectation damages in a breach of contract claim, will
    treat oil and gas leases as we would treat any other lease under
    Utah law. 9 And we do not reach more fundamental questions of
    exactly how to classify an oil and gas lease and which law applies
    outside of the narrow certified question we answer here.10
    8 For instance, “a profit a prendre or a license is incorporeal and
    nonpossessory,” and thus “the interest may be abandoned and is
    not subject to the possessory remedies of trespass and ejectment.”
    JOHN S. LOWE ET AL., OIL AND GAS LAW 181–82 (6th ed. 2013).
    Accordingly, “[t]he lessee’s interest must be protected by
    nonpossessory actions, such as a quiet title suit.” 
    Id. at 182.
    On the
    other hand, “if a state’s courts classify the leasehold interest as a
    fee simple estate . . . then the interest is corporeal and possessory
    in nature,” which means that “the common law rules of
    abandonment should not apply, but the possessory remedies of
    trespass and ejectment will be available.” 
    Id. Furthermore, “how
    the courts classify the leasehold interest may also have substantial
    bearing upon the application of statutory provisions governing
    taxation, intestate succession, and judgment liens.” 
    Id. 9 Trans-Western
    argues that the covenant of quiet enjoyment is
    also implicated in the question the Tenth Circuit certified to us.
    We do not read the question that way and thus do not reach any
    issues regarding the breach of that covenant in the context of an
    oil and gas lease.
    This opinion should not be read to extend our conclusions as
    10
    to which law applies beyond the narrow realm of expectation
    (cont.)
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                           Opinion of the Court
    Consequently, we turn to our contract jurisprudence to aid in our
    determination of the proper measure of expectation damages for
    the breach of an oil and gas lease.
    ¶ 14 Utah law provides the injured party in a breach of
    contract action with “a right to damages based upon his
    expectation interest.” TruGreen Cos., L.L.C. v. Mower Bros., Inc.,
    
    2008 UT 81
    , ¶ 10, 
    199 P.3d 929
    (citation omitted). This expectation
    interest is generally measured by “(a) the loss in the value . . . of
    the other party’s performance caused by its failure or deficiency,
    plus (b) any other loss, including incidental or consequential loss,
    caused by the breach, less (c) any cost or other loss . . . avoided by
    not having to perform.” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    11
    ¶ 15 Our courts have alternatively, but equally correctly,
    defined expectation damages as including “those flowing
    naturally from the breach” (general damages) and “those
    reasonably within the contemplation of, or reasonably foreseeable
    by, the parties at the time the contract was made” (consequential
    damages). Machan v. UNUM Life Ins. Co. of Am., 
    2005 UT 37
    , ¶ 15,
    damages in a breach of contract claim for an oil and gas lease. “In
    Utah, the nature of the interest created by an oil and gas lease has
    not been determined.” 2 KUNTZ, OIL AND GAS § 23.27 (1989). And
    we do not define that interest here as that question has not been
    certified to us or briefed by the parties. We also see the wisdom in
    not adopting “an early arbitrary classification” and instead
    allowing the “various incidents and . . . full characteristics [of an
    oil and gas lease to be] revealed by litigation as specific problems
    arise.” 
    Id. § 23.2.
    We therefore save all of these issues for another
    day when they are properly before us.
    11 We caution that, in addition to general and consequential
    damages, the measure of expectation damages also includes other
    losses caused by the breach (e.g., incidental losses). We further
    caution that the remedy for breach of a contract in general and, by
    extension, for breach of a lease, is not limited to expectation
    damages. Other potential remedies may include substitution
    performance costs and reliance damages. DOBBS, LAW OF REMEDIES
    §§ 3.3(5), 12.2(2), & 12.3(1) (2d ed. 1993). Nothing in this opinion
    should be interpreted as narrowing the broad formulation of
    general damages or the applicability of such other remedies.
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    TRANS-WESTERN v. U.S. GYPSUM
    Opinion of the Court
    
    116 P.3d 342
    (citation omitted). 12 The overarching goal of
    expectation damages and, hence, of general and consequential
    damages, is to compensate the nonbreaching party “for actual
    injury sustained, so that [the nonbreaching party] may be
    restored, as nearly as possible, to the position [it] was in prior to
    the injury.” Mahmood v. Ross, 
    1999 UT 104
    , ¶ 19, 
    990 P.2d 933
    (citation omitted). “The difference between the two types of
    damages is of importance because,” among other reasons,
    “[consequential] damages must ordinarily be pleaded in order to
    be recovered.” Cohn v. J.C. Penney Co., 
    537 P.2d 306
    , 307 (Utah
    1975).
    ¶ 16 General damages for a breach of contract or lease are
    measured by “the market value of the very thing promised, at the
    time of performance.” DOBBS, LAW OF REMEDIES § 12.1(1). Such
    general damages “are said to be implied in law” because they are
    “the probable and necessary result of[] the injury.” 
    Cohn, 537 P.2d at 307
    –08. Hence, “[t]hey are damages which everybody knows
    are likely to result from the harm described.” 
    Id. at 307.
    Thus, the
    general rule is that “the measure of damages for breach of an
    executory contract to purchase real property or an interest
    therein[] is the difference between the contract price and the
    market value of the land at the time of the breach.” Justheim
    Petroleum Co. v. Hammond, 
    227 F.2d 629
    , 637 n.9, (10th Cir. 1955)
    (citing, among other cases, Dopp v. Richards, 
    135 P. 98
    (Utah 1913)).
    For the purposes of the narrow question certified to us, we are
    treating an oil and gas lease as akin to a contract for an interest in
    property. Therefore, the same general rule should apply, meaning
    that we measure general damages for the breach of the oil and gas
    lease as the difference between the contract price of the lease and
    the market value of the lease at the time of the breach. But see
    supra ¶ 8 n.2.
    ¶ 17 Consequential damages, in contrast, “are measured . . .
    by the gains [the promised] performance could produce . . . or the
    12  When writing about expectation damages, courts and
    commentators often refer to general damages as direct damages
    and consequential damages as special damages. See, e.g., McCleve
    Props., LLC v. D. Ray Hult Family Ltd. P’ship, 
    2013 UT App 185
    ,
    ¶ 17, 
    307 P.3d 650
    ; DOBBS, LAW OF REMEDIES § 12.2(3). The
    distinction is one of phraseology, not substance.
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                           Opinion of the Court
    loss that is produced by the absence of such performance.” DOBBS,
    LAW OF REMEDIES § 12.1(1). They “are the natural, but not the
    necessary, result of an injury . . . and thus are not implied by law.”
    
    Cohn, 537 P.2d at 308
    . Therefore, consequential damages “mean[]
    particular items of damages which result from circumstances
    peculiar to the case at hand.” Prince v. Peterson, 
    538 P.2d 1325
    ,
    1328 (Utah 1975). To recover consequential damages, an injured
    “party must prove (1) that consequential damages were caused by
    the contract breach; (2) that consequential damages ought to be
    allowed because they were foreseeable at the time the parties
    contracted; and (3) the amount of consequential damages within a
    reasonable certainty.” Mahmood, 
    1999 UT 104
    , ¶ 20.
    ¶ 18 Both general and consequential damages may be
    recovered in an appropriate case:
    We again reiterate that, in addition to general
    damages, one is entitled to recover those
    [consequential] damages which arise from
    circumstances peculiar to a particular case, provided
    they may be reasonably supposed to have been
    within the contemplation of the parties when the
    contract was made, and provided further, that they
    are properly pleaded and proved.
    Ranch Homes, Inc. v. Greater Park City Corp., 
    592 P.2d 620
    , 624 (Utah
    1979) (footnote omitted); see also Mahmood, 
    1999 UT 104
    , ¶ 19.
    ¶ 19 When we apply the rule for general damages, as
    described above, it is clear that Trans-Western is entitled to
    general damages, as measured by the difference between the
    contract price of its oil and gas lease and the market value of that
    lease at the time of U.S. Gypsum’s breach. As to Trans-Western’s
    claim that it is entitled to the value of the lost profit from a
    hypothetical sale of its lease to a third party sometime during the
    lease term of five years, that claim is a claim for lost profits and,
    because it results from “collateral business arrangements”
    peculiar to the case, is a claim for consequential damages. DOBBS,
    LAW OF REMEDIES § 3.3(4); see also In re Indesco Int’l, Inc., 
    451 B.R. 274
    , 313–14 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2011). 13 Trans-Western may be
    13 “One common form of consequential damages is . . . lost
    profits.” DOBBS, LAW OF REMEDIES § 3.3(4). And while “[l]awyers
    often speak loosely about ‘profits,’ . . . not all lost gains are lost
    (cont.)
    11
    TRANS-WESTERN v. U.S. GYPSUM
    Opinion of the Court
    entitled to such consequential damages 14 if it can (1) establish that
    those damages were caused by U.S. Gypsum’s breach,
    (2) establish that those damages were foreseeable at the time the
    parties entered into the lease, and (3) establish those damages
    with reasonable certainty. See Mahmood, 
    1999 UT 104
    , ¶ 20. 15
    profits and not all lost gains are measured by consequential
    damages.” 
    Id. Consider the
    following hypothetical: “the plaintiff
    contracts to purchase Blackacre for $10,000 and at the time of
    performance its market value is $20,000, then the plaintiff surely
    has an expectancy; but since that expectancy reflects a market gain
    in the very performance contracted for, it is an item of general
    damages,” not consequential damages. 
    Id. § 12.2(3).
    Alternatively,
    suppose a plaintiff owns a movie theater and leases property next
    to the theater from a landlord for parking, and the landlord then
    denies plaintiff access to the parking lot, thereby breaching the
    lease. Without convenient parking, film enthusiasts take their
    business elsewhere. The plaintiff sues for the movie theater’s lost
    profits, which are consequential damages.
    14 We are cognizant that Trans-Western claims that the issue of
    consequential damages is not before us. However, given that the
    question certified to us centers entirely on how expectation
    damages are to be measured, and given that consequential
    damages are an essential feature of expectation damages, we do
    not see how we could answer the question without addressing
    consequential damages. We are also cognizant that the federal
    district court appears to have already decided the consequential
    damages issue.
    15 We note our agreement here with the statement of the court
    in Anchor Savings Bank, FSB, v. United States, 
    597 F.3d 1356
    , 1369
    (Fed. Cir. 2010), that lost profit damages “that absent the breach,
    would have accrued on an ongoing basis over the course of the
    contract,” may be “measured throughout the course of the
    contract.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted); see also supra ¶ 8
    n.2.
    We further note that there is good authority from outside of
    Utah that explicitly stands for the proposition that, “while
    consequential damages may be recovered only where the amount
    of loss is also capable of proof with reasonable certainty[,] with
    respect to general damages, however, the amount need not be
    (cont.)
    12
    Cite as: 
    2016 UT 27
                          Opinion of the Court
    ¶ 20 In sum, since the general rules for measuring expectation
    damages apply to claims for expectation damages for the breach
    of an oil and gas lease, the appropriate measure of general
    damages for such a breach is the difference between the contract
    price of the lease and the market value of the lease, which,
    depending on the circumstances, may be at the time that the lease
    was breached or throughout the lease (e.g., in the case of a
    continuing breach). Additionally, consequential damages are also
    available provided they have been appropriately pleaded and
    proved.
    reasonably certain.” In re Indesco Int’l, Inc., 
    451 B.R. 274
    , 317
    (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. 2011) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Moreover, “[t]he non-breaching party need only provide a stable
    foundation for a reasonable estimate of the damage incurred
    before an award of general damages can be made.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). The principal reason appears to be the
    aphorism of visiting “the burden of uncertainty . . . upon the
    wrongdoer.” 
    Id. And while
    there is no equivalent, overt statement
    in Utah law of which we are aware, our courts appear, on some
    occasions, to have adopted the same proposition:
    The proof of amount of damages is a less exacting
    standard [than the proof that damages exist]
    because [i]t is, after all, the wrongdoer, rather than
    the injured party, who should bear the burden of
    some uncertainty in the amount of damages. Thus,
    [t]he amount of damages may be based upon
    approximations, if the fact of damage is established,
    and the approximations are based upon reasonable
    assumptions or projections. Nonetheless, there still
    must be evidence that rises above speculation and
    provides a reasonable, even though not necessarily
    precise, estimate of damages.
    Ron Case Roofing & Asphalt Paving, L.L.C. v. Sturzenegger, 2007 UT
    App 100, ¶ 14, 
    158 P.3d 556
    (second and third alterations in
    original) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Because
    this issue has not been briefed in the case at bar, we decline to
    openly adopt or reject the In re Indesco International, Inc.
    proposition at this time.
    13
    TRANS-WESTERN v. U.S. GYPSUM
    Opinion of the Court
    II. THE TRIAL COURT HAS DISCRETION TO PERMIT THE
    USE OF POST-BREACH EVIDENCE TO ESTABLISH
    AND MEASURE EXPECTATION DAMAGES
    ¶ 21 Having determined how to establish expectation
    damages for the breach of an oil and gas lease, we now turn to the
    question of whether parties may use post-breach evidence to
    prove such damages. 16 We hold that a trial court has discretion to
    allow parties to use post-breach evidence to establish and
    measure their expectation damages. 17
    ¶ 22 “[W]here it is necessary to fashion an appropriate award,
    a court may consider post-breach evidence when determining
    damages in order to place the non-breaching party in as good a
    position as [it] would have been had the contract been
    performed.” Anchor Sav. Bank, FSB, v. United States, 
    597 F.3d 1356
    ,
    1369–70 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Several courts have considered post-breach evidence in the
    context of awarding expectancy damages when determining a lost
    profits award. See, e.g., Peck Iron & Metal Co. v. United States, 
    603 F.2d 171
    , 175 (U.S. Ct. Cl. 1979) (use of post-breach evidence to
    determine a general damages claim); 
    Anchor, 597 F.3d at 1370
    (use
    of post-breach evidence to determine a consequential lost profits
    claim). While we acknowledge the existence of authorities to the
    contrary, we agree with those cited above and think courts should
    likewise be able to consider post-breach evidence in establishing
    and measuring expectation damages for the breach of an oil and
    gas lease, if they determine it appropriate to do so in the context
    16 In our order accepting the certified question, we requested
    that the parties address the question “in the particular context of
    the issues pending on appeal before the Tenth Circuit.” Having
    had the benefit of the parties’ briefing and arguments, we agree
    with Trans-Western that the certified question fairly implicates
    the “evidence plaintiffs will be called upon to use in establishing
    their damages” and, therefore, proceed to provide some guidance
    on the issue.
    17 While Trans-Western has phrased this issue in terms of its
    use of the best “evidence . . . available at trial,” it appears to us
    that what is really in dispute is the use of post-breach evidence to
    establish expectation damages. We focus our analysis accordingly.
    14
    Cite as: 
    2016 UT 27
                           Opinion of the Court
    of a particular case. This approach is most consistent with our aim
    of affording district courts wide latitude in fashioning suitable
    damage awards. See, e.g., Clayton v. Crossroads Equip. Co., 
    655 P.2d 1125
    , 1130 (Utah 1982).
    ¶ 23 Thus, when claiming general damages, parties may be
    able to use post-breach evidence to help establish the value of a
    lease at the time of breach. For example, if a landlord breaches a
    lease by denying the plaintiff possession and then turns around
    and re-leases the property a few days later, this subsequent lease
    would be considered post-breach evidence and would likely also
    be credible evidence of the value of the plaintiff’s lease at the time
    of the breach. There is no persuasive reason why we should
    prohibit parties from introducing such evidence to establish their
    general damages simply because that evidence is post-breach. The
    same holds true with respect to consequential damages. Indeed,
    we can readily envision cases in which a plaintiff can and should
    be able to establish and measure consequential damages that take
    the form of lost profits with post-breach evidence. 18
    CONCLUSION
    ¶ 24 Although we have never before dealt with the specific
    question of how expectation damages are to be measured for the
    breach of an oil and gas lease, the answer is a familiar one because
    under Utah law we generally treat leases like other contracts. And
    we see no reason to vary from that practice here. Therefore,
    expectation damages for the breach of an oil and gas lease, just
    like expectation damages for a breach of contract, may consist of
    general and consequential damages. General damages are to be
    measured as the difference between the contract price of the lease
    and the market value of the lease at the time of the breach.
    Consequential damages are unique to a particular case, and
    18  This is not, however, an open invitation for courts to admit
    post-breach evidence without first subjecting it to appropriate
    scrutiny. Post-breach evidence, like any other evidence, must
    meet the evidentiary standards for admissibility (e.g., the
    evidence must be relevant and may not be speculative). See Cook
    Assocs., Inc. v. Utah Sch. and Institutional Tr. Lands Admin., 2010 UT
    App 284, ¶ 36, 
    243 P.3d 888
    . We expect that trial courts, in their
    discretion, will properly apply the tools in their evidentiary tool
    kits to guard against improper awards.
    15
    TRANS-WESTERN v. U.S. GYPSUM
    Opinion of the Court
    parties must establish that they were caused by the breach,
    establish that they were foreseeable, and establish the amount of
    damages with reasonable certainty. Finally, in the discretion of the
    trial court, parties may introduce post-breach evidence to
    establish and measure their expectation damages.
    16
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Case No. 20140453

Citation Numbers: 2016 UT 27, 379 P.3d 1200

Filed Date: 6/16/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (18)

justheim-petroleum-company-a-corporation-v-laurence-hammond-and-c-d , 227 F.2d 629 ( 1955 )

Fifth Third Bank v. United States , 518 F.3d 1368 ( 2008 )

Lynch v. State Board of Equalization , 210 Cal. Rptr. 335 ( 1985 )

Railroad Commission of Texas v. Rowan & Nichols Oil Co. , 60 S. Ct. 1021 ( 1940 )

In Re Indesco Intern., Inc. , 451 B.R. 274 ( 2011 )

Anchor Sav. Bank, FSB v. United States , 597 F.3d 1356 ( 2010 )

Brighton Homes, Inc. v. McAdams , 737 S.W.2d 340 ( 1987 )

Mahmood v. Ross , 990 P.2d 933 ( 1999 )

Hall v. Warren , 632 P.2d 848 ( 1981 )

Prince v. Peterson , 538 P.2d 1325 ( 1975 )

Ranch Homes, Inc. v. Greater Park City Corp. , 592 P.2d 620 ( 1979 )

Cohn v. JC Penney Company, Inc. , 537 P.2d 306 ( 1975 )

Garza v. Burnett , 321 P.3d 1104 ( 2013 )

MacHan v. Unum Life Insurance Co. of America , 116 P.3d 342 ( 2005 )

Ron Case Roofing & Asphalt Paving, L.L.C. v. Sturzenegger , 158 P.3d 556 ( 2007 )

Heiner v. S.J. Groves & Sons Co. , 790 P.2d 107 ( 1990 )

Cook Associates., Inc. v. Utah School & Institutional Trust ... , 243 P.3d 888 ( 2010 )

TruGreen Companies, L.L.C. v. Mower Bros., Inc. , 199 P.3d 929 ( 2008 )

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