Jones v. Mackey Price Thompson , 355 P.3d 1000 ( 2015 )


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  •                     This opinion is subject to revision before final
    publication in the Pacific Reporter
    
    2015 UT 60
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    GREGORY N. JONES,
    Appellant,
    v.
    MACKEY PRICE THOMPSON & OSTLER, 1
    Appellees.
    No. 20130135
    Filed July 28, 2015
    Third District, Salt Lake
    The Honorable Anthony B. Quinn
    No. 060911956
    Attorneys:
    James D. Gilson, J. Tayler Fox, Salt Lake City, for appellant
    Thomas R. Karrenberg, Salt Lake City, for appellees Mackey Price
    Thompson & Ostler, Randall A. Mackey, and Gifford W. Price
    Blake T. Ostler, Salt Lake City, for appellees C. Jeffrey Thompson,
    Russell C. Skousen, Thompson & Skousen, L.L.C.,
    and Russell C. Skousen, L.L.C.
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT authored the opinion of the Court, in which
    ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE, JUSTICE DURHAM, JUSTICE PARRISH, and
    JUDGE LAWRENCE joined.
    Due to his retirement, JUSTICE NEHRING did not participate herein;
    THIRD DISTRICT JUDGE BARRY G. LAWRENCE sat.
    JUSTICE DENO G. HIMONAS became a member of the Court on
    February 13, 2015, after oral argument in this matter, and
    accordingly did not participate.
    1Randall A. Mackey, Gifford W. Price, C. Jeffrey Thompson, Russell
    C. Skousen, Thompson & Skousen, L.L.C., Jeffrey Thompson, L.L.C.,
    and Russell C. Skousen, L.L.C.
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, opinion of the Court:
    Introduction
    ¶1 This case arises out of a dispute over compensation paid to
    an attorney, Gregory Jones, by the law firm Mackey Price Thompson
    & Ostler (Mackey Price) for work Mr. Jones performed on several
    class-action contingency fee cases involving the weight-loss pill Fen-
    Phen. Mr. Jones worked on the Fen-Phen cases from 2002 to May 26,
    2005, when he abruptly developed a mental disability called
    dissociative amnesia, which prevented him from remembering
    anything prior to that date. This disability also prevented him from
    continuing to work on the Fen-Phen litigation. The Fen-Phen cases
    eventually generated $1,060,869.20 in fees, and Mr. Jones was paid
    $165,000 (or around 15 percent) of these fees.
    ¶2 Mr. Jones claims that he and Mackey Price agreed that the
    general Compensation Agreement (which entitled Mr. Jones to 80
    percent of the fees he generated from hourly work after payment of
    his overhead) would apply to the fees generated by the Fen-Phen
    litigation. In the alternative, he argues under quantum meruit that
    Mackey Price and additional Defendants were unjustly enriched by
    his work. Finally, Mr. Jones claims that a second law firm that
    worked on the Fen-Phen litigation and received a portion of the fees,
    Thompson & Skousen, is liable to him under Utah’s Fraudulent
    Transfer Act as recipients of the disputed funds.
    ¶3 Mr. Jones appeals a series of decisions by the district court.
    First, he appeals the district court’s dismissal of his contract claim on
    summary judgment. Second, he appeals the district court’s decision
    to deny his jury demand on his quantum meruit claim. Third, he
    challenges the district court’s measure of damages under his
    quantum meruit claim. Finally, he appeals the district court’s
    decision to dismiss his quantum meruit and Fraudulent Transfer Act
    claims against the individual Defendants.
    ¶4 We uphold the district court’s dismissal of Mr. Jones’s
    contract claim. Mr. Jones claimed that he and Mackey Price had
    agreed that the Compensation Agreement would govern the Fen-
    Phen fees. Mackey Price moved for summary judgment on this
    claim, arguing that it was undisputed that no such agreement was
    reached. Mackey Price directed the court to evidence supporting this
    assertion and in response, Mr. Jones failed to present affirmative
    evidence demonstrating a genuine issue of fact for trial regarding
    this claim. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of
    Mr. Jones’s contract claim.
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    Opinion of the Court
    ¶5 We reverse the denial of Mr. Jones’s jury demand because at
    the time of the ratification of the Utah Constitution a claim for
    money damages under quantum meruit was a claim at law, not in
    equity. In sending the claim back to the jury, we clarify that the
    correct measure of damages for the contract-implied-in-law branch
    of a quantum meruit claim is the benefit conferred. Finally, we
    uphold the district court’s dismissal of the individual Defendants
    from both the quantum meruit claim and the Fraudulent Transfer
    Act claim.
    Background
    ¶6 Mr. Jones began working for Mackey Price in 1991. Over the
    next ten years Mackey Price paid him a salary based on the number
    of hours he billed. The lone exception to this arrangement was a
    personal-injury contingency fee case that he originated. In January
    2001, Mr. Jones and Mackey Price began experimenting with
    different compensation arrangements to accommodate his health
    problems. Finally, in 2002, they agreed to the following
    Compensation Agreement: the first $4,000 in legal fees generated by
    Mr. Jones would go to Mackey Price to cover a portion of Mr. Jones’s
    overhead; the next roughly $2,000 would be split fifty-fifty to cover
    the remaining overhead; and once all the overhead was paid for the
    current month and all previous months, Mackey Price would retain
    20 percent of all fees generated by Mr. Jones and he would receive
    the remaining 80 percent. Although the Compensation Agreement
    was never reduced to writing, it governed compensation for Mr.
    Jones’s hourly work until he left the firm in May 2005.
    ¶7 The litigation that spawned the fee dispute between
    Mr. Jones and Mackey Price related to the diet drug fenfluramine
    and dexfenfluramine—known as Fen-Phen. In early 2002, C. Jeffery
    Thompson and Russell C. Skousen, partners at the law firm
    Thompson & Skousen, began supervising and managing the Fen-
    Phen case program. 2 As part of this program, Thompson & Skousen
    set up a client-referral program, located physicians and other Fen-
    Phen experts, arranged for financing of litigation costs, and arranged
    for clients to receive the medical testing necessary to demonstrate
    injury from the drug. They also established relationships with
    attorneys in other states to help facilitate the litigation.
    2Mr. Thompson and Mr. Skousen were also associated with Mackey
    Price, but they operated Thompson & Skousen as a separate entity.
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    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶8 Mr. Thompson and Mr. Skousen presented Mackey Price’s
    attorneys with the opportunity to work on the Fen-Phen cases. Later,
    Thompson & Skousen reached an agreement with Mackey Price
    regarding how the firms would split the fees. Under this agreement,
    Mackey Price attorneys were to be paid from Mackey Price’s
    percentage of the fees.
    ¶9 In 2002, Mr. Jones decided to work on the Fen-Phen cases
    and began contacting medical practitioners to find clients. He
    enlisted Rebekah Brown, a Mackey Price employee, to help him
    locate potential clients. Ms. Brown cold-called Dr. Poulsen, who
    entered into a services agreement with the law firm Thompson &
    Skousen. This agreement provided that Dr. Poulsen’s patients could
    receive an echocardiogram test and cardiologist evaluation paid for
    by the firm. While Mr. Thompson ultimately negotiated the service
    agreement with Dr. Poulsen, Mr. Jones did much of the other work,
    including meeting with clients from Dr. Poulsen’s office, assisting
    with their medical testing, and helping them fill out the paperwork
    to submit their claims.
    ¶10 Mr. Jones also contacted various diet centers located in
    Georgia and paid for some of the expenses he incurred to travel
    there for meetings. He performed much of the work associated with
    entering into agreements with the diet centers and he arranged to
    have their patients receive medical testing. 3 Thompson & Skousen
    made arrangements with two law firms, Armstrong & Guy and
    Thach & Thach, to manage the cases for the Georgia patients. To
    assist those firms with the Georgia cases, Mr. Jones advanced $6,000
    in personal funds and borrowed approximately $167,000 from his
    neighbor at an interest rate of 30 percent per annum to help cover
    litigation costs. He did not inform Mackey Price that he was funding
    the Georgia cases. Finally, Mr. Jones also performed a large amount
    3  The district court’s finding of facts from the bench trial
    contradicted Mr. Jones’s version of the facts on this point. The court
    found that, while Mr. Jones made the initial contact, Mr. Thompson
    and Nancy Armstrong, a partner at the law firm Armstrong & Guy,
    flew to New Orleans and Georgia to negotiate and consummate the
    service agreements. The court also found that Mr. Jones “had no
    contract with the clients in Georgia.”
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    Opinion of the Court
    of work on eight cases that originated from the medical offices of
    Dr. Brown. 4
    ¶11 The facts regarding Mr. Jones’s compensation are central in
    this appeal. Initially, Thompson & Skousen proposed that Mackey
    Price pay him 40 percent of the fees generated from the cases he
    originated. Following these discussions, Mr. Thompson told
    Mr. Jones that Mackey Price would pay him 40 percent of fees on
    cases he originated. But approximately six weeks later, Mackey Price
    adjusted the fee percentages between it and Thompson & Skousen
    and requested that Mr. Thompson stop discussing Mr. Jones’s
    compensation because he was an employee of Mackey Price, not
    Thompson & Skousen. Mr. Thompson later told Mr. Jones that
    Mackey Price did not agree to pay him 40 percent, and he urged Mr.
    Jones, on multiple occasions, to negotiate his compensation with
    Mackey Price.
    ¶12 During a discussion Mr. Jones had with Gifford Price, a
    shareholder of Mackey Price, Mr. Jones mentioned his
    understanding that he would be paid 40 percent of the fees on the
    cases he originated. Mr. Price changed the subject and would not
    discuss the compensation issue further. Both Mr. Price and Randall
    Mackey, another shareholder at Mackey Price, testified that no
    agreement was reached with Mr. Jones regarding the Fen-Phen
    cases.
    ¶13 Mr. Jones regularly had lunch with Jeffrey Olsen, another
    associate at Mackey Price. According to Mr. Olsen, Mr. Jones told
    him, on multiple occasions, that he had not yet worked out an
    agreement with Mackey Price regarding his compensation from the
    Fen-Phen cases. Mr. Olsen testified that he encouraged Mr. Jones to
    finalize a compensation structure with Mackey Price.
    ¶14 Mr. Jones also discussed his compensation with the
    neighbor who lent him the money for the Georgia cases. The
    neighbor testified that Mr. Jones initially indicated that he, Mr. Jones,
    4There is a dispute as to who originated these claims. Mr. Jones’s
    argument is founded on the deposition testimony of Rebekah Brown,
    who simply states that it was her impression that the Dr. Brown
    cases were developed from the Dr. Poulsen cases. At trial, the district
    court ultimately found that Mr. Jones had “absolutely no
    responsibility for and nothing to do with the Dr. Brown category of
    cases.”
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    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    would receive 40 percent of the fees generated from the cases, but
    that he later indicated he would receive less than 40 percent.
    ¶15 On February 12, 2005, over two years after he began
    working on the Fen-Phen cases, Mr. Jones made a hand-written
    memorandum concerning his compensation. In it he recounted the
    conversation he had with Mr. Price about his compensation:
    Finally [Mr. Price] met w/me and tried to open up the
    issue by saying ‘we need to discuss what to do with the
    60% that does not go to [Thompson & Skousen].’ I
    responded that all I knew is that I got 40% and did not
    care what the other arrangements were.
    After recounting his discussion with Mr. Price, Mr. Jones
    wrote:
    Split w/firm of Phen work – after overhead paid is 10%
    to originator 80% to me 10% to firm. Usually meant
    firm got 20% b/c firm [Gifford Price and Randall
    Mackey] originated. If this is how Phen treated, then I
    get 80%, not 40%. Bottom line: If not 40%, then 80%[.] If
    not 80% then 50%.
    ¶16 On May 26, 2005, only a few months after writing the
    memorandum, Mr. Jones abruptly developed a mental disability
    called dissociative amnesia, which prevented him from
    remembering anything prior to that date. His condition persists to
    this day. Due to this condition, he stopped working for Mackey
    Price. The legal work on Mr. Jones’s Fen-Phen cases was
    substantially completed before he became disabled. 5
    ¶17 In June 2006, Mackey Price received approximately
    $1,060,869.20 for the Fen-Phen cases that Mr. Jones had worked on,
    which it deposited in its trust account. Mr. Jones filed suit on July 19,
    2006, naming Mackey Price, Thompson & Skousen, Mr. Mackey,
    Mr. Price, Mr. Thompson, Mr. Skousen, Russell C. Skousen, L.L.C.,
    and C. Jeffery Thompson, L.L.C. as defendants. About one month
    after the lawsuit was filed, Mackey Price gave Mr. Jones less than
    two days’ notice that it was distributing a portion of the fees. Then,
    about four months later, Mackey Price informed Mr. Jones that the
    5There is a dispute of fact between the parties as to whether any
    work remained on the Fen-Phen cases. At trial, the district court
    found that there was substantial work remaining, including checking
    and rechecking client files and reclassifying various clients’ claims.
    6
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    Opinion of the Court
    rest of the fees were being distributed. From the total of $1,060,869.20
    in fees Mackey Price received, it distributed $165,000 to Mr. Jones,
    approximately $400,000 to Thompson & Skousen, and around
    $175,000 each to Mr. Mackey and Mr. Price, with the remainder
    going to Mackey Price and its creditors. 6 After these distributions
    took place, Mr. Jones amended his complaint to assert seven causes
    of action, including a claim that Mackey Price breached a contract
    not to distribute the Fen-Phen fees from the firm’s trust account
    without providing him advanced notice.
    ¶18 The Defendants filed motions for partial summary judgment
    on several of the claims in Mr. Jones’s amended complaint, including
    his contract claim against Mackey Price, his claim against all
    Defendants for quantum meruit, and his claim against all
    Defendants for fraudulent transfer. In its motion for summary
    judgment, Mackey Price argued that it was undisputed that it and
    Mr. Jones never agreed that the general Compensation Agreement
    would govern the fees from the Fen-Phen litigation. Mackey Price
    directed the court to evidence supporting this assertion. In response,
    Mr. Jones failed to present affirmative evidence demonstrating a
    genuine issue of material fact for trial regarding this claim. Thus, the
    district court granted Mackey Price’s summary judgment motion.
    The court also dismissed his quantum meruit claim against all
    Defendants on summary judgment, except Mackey Price, holding
    that Mackey Price was the only Defendant that directly benefited
    from Mr. Jones’s work. And finally, the court dismissed Mr. Jones’s
    Fraudulent Transfer Act claims against all Defendants on summary
    judgment, except Mackey Price, Mr. Mackey, and Mr. Price. The
    court concluded that the uncontroverted material facts showed that
    the distributions to Thompson & Skousen were made in good faith,
    and that Thompson & Skousen was a good faith creditor of Mackey
    Price.
    ¶19 Before trial on the remaining quantum meruit and
    Fraudulent Transfer Act claims, Mackey Price moved to strike
    Mr. Jones’s request for a jury trial on his quantum meruit claim and
    to bifurcate the trial, with the quantum meruit claim being tried first
    to the court. The court granted the motion, holding that quantum
    meruit was an equitable claim, and was, accordingly, not a claim for
    which a plaintiff may demand a jury trial.
    6 In July 2004, Mr. Jones also received $50,000 directly from
    Thompson & Skousen as part of a Mackey Price client’s settlement.
    Mr. Jones did not disclose this payment to Mackey Price.
    7
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶20 During the bench trial on his quantum meruit claim,
    Mr. Jones argued that the proper measure of damages is the benefit
    conferred upon the Defendants as a result of his work, not the
    reasonable value of the services he provided. The court disagreed
    and required Mr. Jones to show that the reasonable value of his
    services exceeded the amount Mackey Price paid him. Ultimately,
    the court concluded that he failed to establish that he provided
    services worth more than the $215,000 he received from the Fen-
    Phen fees. 7
    Standard of Review
    ¶21 Mr. Jones raises several issues on appeal. First, he argues the
    district court erred in granting Mackey Price’s motion for summary
    judgment on his breach of contract claim. “We review the district
    court’s rulings on summary judgment motions for correctness.” 8
    ¶22 Second, he argues the district court improperly denied his
    jury demand on his quantum meruit claim. Generally, “[w]hether
    there is a right to a jury trial is a question of law that we review for
    correctness.” 9 But we have stated that “[i]n circumstances where
    doubt exists as to whether the cause should be regarded as one in
    equity, or one in law,” “[u]nless it is shown that the ruling
    [determining the equitable or legal nature of the issue] was patently
    in error or an abuse of discretion, this court will not interfere with”
    the district court’s decision. 10 After reviewing this issue anew,
    however, we conclude that the legal-equitable distinction in the
    context of a jury demand is an abstract legal question. 11 The district
    7  This figure includes the $165,000 that Mackey Price paid
    Mr. Jones from the Fen-Phen proceeds and the $50,000 that
    Thompson & Skousen paid Mr. Jones. It is disputed whether the
    Thompson & Skousen payment was actually a payment or merely a
    loan.
    8 Prince, Yeates & Geldzahler v. Young, 
    2004 UT 26
    , ¶ 10, 
    94 P.3d 179
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    9 Failor v. MegaDyne Med. Prods., Inc., 
    2009 UT App 179
    , ¶ 9, 
    213 P.3d 899
    .
    10   Sweeney v. Happy Valley, Inc., 
    417 P.2d 126
    , 128−29 (Utah 1966).
    11  See Manzanares v. Byington (In re Baby B.), 
    2012 UT 35
    , ¶¶40−41,
    
    308 P.3d 382
     (discussing the distinction between findings of facts—
    where “the lower court often has a competitive advantage in its
    firsthand access to factual evidence” and conclusions of law—where
    (continued . . .)
    8
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    Opinion of the Court
    court is in no better position than we are to ascertain the nature of
    the rights asserted and the remedies sought or to conduct a historical
    analysis of a claim’s equitable or legal nature at the time of the
    ratification of the Utah Constitution. We therefore review the district
    court’s decision for correctness.
    ¶23 Third, Mr. Jones argues the district court improperly
    bifurcated the trial by trying his quantum meruit claim to the bench
    prior to trying his fraudulent transfer claim to a jury. “Rule 42(b) of
    the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure gives the trial court ‘considerable
    discretion’ to administer the business of its docket and determine
    how a trial should be conducted. We will not disturb the trial court’s
    bifurcation order unless the trial court abused its discretion.” 12 But
    we note that where a district court’s decision to bifurcate the legal
    and equitable claims and to try the equitable claims to the court first
    has the potential to deny a party a full jury trial on the legal claims,
    we will apply a heightened standard of review. 13
    ¶24 Fourth, Mr. Jones contends that the district court applied the
    wrong measure of damages to his quantum meruit claim.
    Determining the applicable measure of damages is a legal question,
    which we review for correctness. 14
    ¶25 Finally, he argues that the individual Defendants were
    improperly dismissed on summary judgment from his quantum
    “the lower court has no comparative advantage in resolving legal
    questions”).
    12 Walter Drug Co. v. La Sal Oil Co., 
    972 P.2d 1238
    , 1244 (Utah 1998)
    (citation omitted).
    13   See Beacon Theatres, Inc. v. Westover, 
    359 U.S. 500
    , 510 (1959)
    (noting that even though the trial court is accorded discretion in
    deciding whether the legal or equitable claims should be tried first
    “that discretion is very narrowly limited and must, wherever
    possible, be exercised to preserve jury trial” “[s]ince the right to jury
    trial is a constitutional one”).
    14 See Anesthesiologists Assocs. of Ogden v. St. Benedict’s Hosp., 
    884 P.2d 1236
    , 1237−38 (Utah 1994) (“[W]e must determine how the law
    of damages [applies in this case]. Because we are reviewing only
    legal questions, we accord the conclusions of the court below no
    particular deference but review them for correctness.”).
    9
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    meruit and Fraudulent Transfer Act claims. Again, we review a
    district court’s rulings on summary judgment for correctness. 15
    Analysis
    ¶26 Below, we first address Mr. Jones’s contract claim and
    uphold the district court’s dismissal of this claim on summary
    judgment. Next, we analyze the district court’s denial of Mr. Jones’s
    jury demand on his quantum meruit claim. We conclude that he was
    entitled to a jury trial because a claim for unjust enrichment seeking
    money damages, such as the one Mr. Jones now advances, was a
    claim at law at the time of the ratification of the Utah Constitution.
    Finally, we review the district court’s decision to dismiss Mr. Jones’s
    quantum meruit and Fraudulent Transfer Act claims against the
    individual Defendants and uphold this decision.
    I. We Uphold the District Court’s Dismissal of
    Mr. Jones’s Contract Claim
    ¶27 The district court dismissed Mr. Jones’s contract claim on
    summary judgment. In reviewing a grant of summary judgment we
    must determine whether “the pleadings, depositions, answers to
    interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits,
    if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact.”16
    Summary judgment is appropriate if “reasonable jurors, properly
    instructed, would be able to come to only one conclusion.” 17
    ¶28 Mr. Jones claimed that he and Mackey Price agreed that the
    general Compensation Agreement, which had applied to his hourly
    work at the firm, would apply to the fees generated in the Fen-Phen
    litigation. Mr. Jones had the burden of proof on this claim at trial.
    Mackey Price moved for summary judgment on the contract claim.
    As the movant on an issue where the nonmoving party bears the
    burden of proof at trial, Mackey Price had the initial burden to show
    through “reference to the pleadings, depositions, answers to
    interrogatories, and admissions on file . . . that there [was] no
    genuine issue of material fact” concerning this claim. 18 Mackey Price
    15   Prince, Yeates & Geldzahler, 
    2004 UT 26
    , ¶ 10.
    16 UTAH R. CIV. P. 56(c); see also Clegg v. Wasatch County, 
    2010 UT 5
    , ¶ 15, 
    227 P.3d 1243
    .
    17   Clegg, 
    2010 UT 5
    , ¶ 15.
    18 Orvis v. Johnson, 
    2008 UT 2
    , ¶ 18, 
    177 P.3d 600
     (internal
    quotation marks omitted) (“A summary judgment movant, on an
    issue where the nonmoving party will bear the burden of proof at
    (continued . . .)
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    Opinion of the Court
    met this burden by setting forth evidence showing it was undisputed
    that the parties had not agreed the Compensation Agreement would
    govern the Fen-Phen fees. This evidence included Mr. Jones’s
    admission that there was no express agreement regarding the
    distribution of the Fen-Phen fees, and testimony from Mr. Olsen and
    Mr. Jones’s neighbor negating the existence of an agreement.
    ¶29 Once Mackey Price had successfully met its burden as the
    moving party, the burden then shifted to Mr. Jones, “who may not
    rest upon the mere allegations or denials of the pleadings, but must
    set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for
    trial.” 19 The court granted Mackey Price’s motion, finding that
    Mr. Jones had failed to set forth affirmative evidence demonstrating
    a genuine issue of material fact as to this claim. We uphold the
    district court’s decision and hold that, as a matter of law, the
    affirmative evidence Mr. Jones set forth in response to the
    Defendant’s summary judgment motion failed to create an issue of
    material fact.
    ¶30 Mr. Jones claims there are two pieces of evidence that create
    a genuine issue of material fact regarding his claim that the
    Compensation Agreement governed the Fen-Phen fees. He first
    points to his February 2005 memorandum, which he claims “set[s]
    forth his understanding at the time that, absent an agreement to the
    contrary, the Compensation Agreement applied to his Fen-Phen
    cases.” Second, he points to the testimony of Rebekah Brown, where
    she stated that he was paid under the Compensation Agreement for
    a previous contingency fee case. We agree with the district court that
    neither of these pieces of evidence creates a genuine issue of material
    fact regarding the contract claim.
    trial, may satisfy its burden on summary judgment by showing, by
    reference to ‘the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories,
    and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any,’ that there
    is no genuine issue of material fact. Upon such a showing, whether
    or not supported by additional affirmative factual evidence, the
    burden then shifts to the nonmoving party, who ‘may not rest upon
    the mere allegations or denials of the pleadings,’ but ‘must set forth
    specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.’”(citation
    omitted)).
    19   
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
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    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶31 In order to create a contract, the parties must have “a
    meeting of the minds on the integral features of an agreement.”20
    This meeting of the minds requires agreement on the essential terms
    of the contract. 21 “So long as there is any uncertainty or
    indefiniteness, or future negotiations or considerations to be had
    between the parties, there is not a . . . contract.” 22 The evidence
    referenced in Mackey Price’s motion for summary judgment shows
    there was no meeting of the minds between Mr. Jones and Mackey
    Price. And the February 2005 memorandum and Ms. Brown’s
    testimony do nothing to create a factual dispute regarding this issue.
    ¶32 First, the February 2005 memorandum does not reflect a
    meeting of the minds, but merely notes a range of possible
    compensation scenarios. In the memorandum, written before he lost
    his memory, Mr. Jones records his impressions concerning various
    conversations he had pertaining to the distribution of the Fen-Phen
    proceeds. These notes discuss various fee distribution arrangements
    in numbered paragraphs, including “that originator of new cases
    would get 50% of attny fees,” that Mr. Jones would get 40 percent of
    the attorney fees from two specific cases, and that Mr. Jones had
    stated in front of Mr. Price that he got 40 percent and Mr. Price
    “never mentioned it again” and “did not dispute my position.” Mr.
    Jones then makes note of another arrangement and states that “[i]f
    this is how phen [is] treated, then I get 80%, not 40%.” Finally, the
    memorandum concludes with the statement, “[b]ottom line: If not
    40%, then 80%[;] If not 80% then 50%.”
    ¶33 When viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
    party, the first line of the “bottom line” statement could be read as
    consistent with Mr. Jones’s claim that if there was not another
    specific agreement regarding Fen-Phen (the 40% agreement), then
    the general Compensation Agreement would apply (the 80%/20%
    agreement). But there is no way to read the second line as consistent
    with his argument. The second line states that if not 80 percent
    (which is consistent with the Compensation Agreement) then 50
    percent.
    20 Prince, Yeates, & Geldzahler v. Young, 
    2004 UT 26
    , ¶ 13, 
    94 P.3d 179
     (internal quotation marks omitted).
    21   
    Id.
    22   Id. ¶ 17 (internal quotation marks omitted).
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    Opinion of the Court
    ¶34 Therefore, this memorandum does not, as Mr. Jones claims,
    “set forth his understanding, at the time that, absent an agreement to
    the contrary, the Compensation Agreement applied to his Fen-Phen
    cases.” Instead, it discusses a range of possible compensation
    arrangements and ends with a “bottom line” indicating there was
    never an agreement between the parties as to what arrangement
    would govern. The February 2005 memorandum—with its list of
    various compensation scenarios, and its “bottom line” that names
    four different compensation possibilities—did not create a factual
    dispute regarding the application of the Compensation Agreement
    to the Fen-Phen fees.
    ¶35 Next, we must consider whether Ms. Brown’s testimony
    creates a genuine issue of fact as to whether the parties agreed that
    the Compensation Agreement applied to the Fen-Phen fees.
    Mr. Jones challenges the district court’s decision to strike Ms.
    Brown’s testimony for lack of foundation and claims that her
    testimony, if admitted, would have created a genuine issue of
    material fact. We uphold the district court’s decision to exclude Ms.
    Brown’s testimony. Further, even if the district court erred in
    excluding this testimony, such error was harmless because her
    testimony does not create a genuine issue of material fact.
    ¶36 Ms. Brown testified that she “believed” there was a
    personal-injury contingency fee case that came into the firm while
    the Compensation Agreement was in place and that the fee
    distribution for that case was handled under the general
    Compensation Agreement. Mr. Jones argues that this testimony
    establishes a dispute about whether the Compensation Agreement
    applied to both his hourly work and his contingency fee work. Her
    testimony on this issue was as follows:
    Q: Do you recall there being any contingency fee
    cases during the 2002, 2005 time period?
    A: You are asking for specific clients?
    Q: No, just – not by name, but whether there were
    any contingency fee cases to your recollection that
    Greg Jones worked on during 2002 through 2005?
    A: I think there was, I think there was a personal
    injury case he was working on during that time.
    Q: Do you recall whether or not there was monies
    that were received on that case?
    A: I believe so.
    13
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    Q: And were those funds put in the formula just
    like hourly work cases?
    A: I believe it was the same, handled the same way.
    The district court concluded that this testimony was not admissible,
    because Ms. Brown used the terms “I think” and “I believe” and
    there was no information on the record showing the basis for this
    belief.
    ¶37 Rule 104 of the Utah Rules of Evidence requires that before
    admitting evidence, the court “must decide any preliminary
    question about whether a witness is qualified, a privilege exists, or
    evidence is admissible.” To prove admissibility, the party seeking to
    present the evidence must lay a factual foundation showing that the
    evidence is admissible under the relevant rules of evidence.
    ¶38 Under rule 602 of the Utah Rules of Evidence, witnesses are
    required to have “personal knowledge of the matter” about which
    they are testifying. This can be established by showing that the
    witness “had an opportunity to perceive a relevant fact, actually
    perceived it, remembers perceiving it, and can communicate that
    perception.” 23 We have explained that this rule “merely requires that
    the witness have the opportunity and the capacity to perceive the
    events in question” and does not require a court to exclude
    testimony simply because the “witness’s memory of the subject
    matter of the testimony is less than complete.” 24
    ¶39 Mr. Jones argues that Ms. Brown had the required personal
    knowledge because she “had been the office manager and secretary
    to Gifford Price and Jones, and prepared spreadsheets that were
    used to calculate the compensation of the attorneys at the firm.” But
    this general knowledge of the workings of the office does not
    necessarily establish that she had any personal knowledge about the
    prior contingency fee case. Moreover, she was Mr. Jones’s witness,
    and therefore his attorney had every opportunity to lay the proper
    foundation regarding the basis of her personal knowledge of the
    prior contingency fee case. For instance, he could have asked the
    name of the case, the date of the case, or the attorneys who worked
    on the case. Because the basis for Ms. Brown’s personal knowledge
    R. COLLIN MANGRUM & DEE BENSON, MANGRUM & BENSON
    23                                                              ON
    UTAH EVIDENCE 414 (2013).
    24   State v. Eldredge, 
    773 P.2d 29
    , 33 (Utah 1989).
    14
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    Opinion of the Court
    was not on the record, we uphold the district court’s decision to
    exclude her testimony on this point.
    ¶40 But even if the district court erred in excluding Ms. Brown’s
    testimony, this error was harmless because her testimony did not
    create a genuine issue of material fact regarding the applicability of
    the Compensation Agreement to the Fen-Phen work. Mr. Jones
    claims that she “testified that Jones was paid under the
    Compensation Agreement between 2002 and 2005 for at least one
    contingency fee case at the firm.” He points to this evidence to
    establish that, because one contingency fee case was handled under
    the Compensation Agreement, the parties must have agreed that the
    Fen-Phen cases would be as well. This logic fails, however, when one
    looks at the entirety of Ms. Brown’s testimony. When asked
    specifically about the Fen-Phen cases, she testified that they were not
    treated like other Mackey Price cases:
    Q: And was Fen Phen treated like – did you have an
    understanding as to whether the Fen Phen work that
    was being done at Mackey Price was done as a firm
    client?
    A: It was not.
    ...
    Q: How was it treated differently than other cases
    that were being handled at Mackey Price?
    A: This is my impression of that time period, but I
    do remember clearly that it was not favored at all by
    Randall and Gifford, and that there were strict, you
    know, limits put on getting involved with this,
    especially as far as using firm assets or staff, resources.
    ¶41 Further, when asked specifically about the fee arrangement
    for the Fen-Phen work, she responded, “I don’t know the details”
    and “I don’t know anything.” Taken in its entirety, Ms. Brown’s
    testimony fails to raise a genuine issue of material fact. When viewed
    in the light most favorable to Mr. Jones, her testimony may establish
    that one contingency fee case he worked on was run through the
    standard Compensation Agreement. But she also stated that the Fen-
    Phen work was handled differently than work done for standard
    firm clients and that she did not know the specific arrangement
    regarding the fees from this work. The possible application of the
    Compensation Agreement to a single contingency fee case does not
    create a factual dispute as to whether the parties agreed that it would
    apply to the Fen-Phen contingency fee cases as well. This is
    15
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    especially true given Ms. Brown’s statement that the Fen-Phen work
    was handled differently than work done for other firm clients.
    Because neither the February 2005 memorandum nor Ms. Brown’s
    testimony create a factual dispute regarding the contract claim, we
    uphold the district court’s dismissal of this claim on summary
    judgment.
    II. We Reverse the District Court’s Finding That Quantum Meruit Is
    an Equitable Claim For Purposes of a Jury Demand
    ¶42 Having concluded that Mr. Jones’s contract claim fails, we
    now turn to his claim that the district court incorrectly denied his
    jury demand. We reverse the district court on this issue because at
    the time of the ratification of the Utah Constitution a claim seeking
    money damages under the unjust enrichment branch of quantum
    meruit was a claim at law, not in equity. Next, we clarify that the
    damages owed under an unjust enrichment claim are based on the
    benefit conferred upon the defendant, but may be measured by the
    reasonable value of the plaintiff’s services in certain instances.
    A. Because a Contract-Implied-in-Law Claim for Money Damages Was a
    Legal Claim at the Time of the Ratification of the Utah Constitution, the
    District Court Erred in Concluding That it Was Equitable and in Denying
    Mr. Jones’s Jury Demand
    ¶43 We have held that article I, section 10 of the Utah
    Constitution guarantees “the right of jury trial in civil cases.” 25 But
    we have also “made it clear that this constitutional right to a jury
    trial . . . extends only to cases that would have been cognizable at
    law at the time the constitution was adopted.” 26 We have also noted
    that the district court is not tied to the parties’ characterization of the
    claims when trying to decide whether the “legal or equitable issues
    predominate,” but “should examine the nature of the rights asserted
    and the remedies sought in light of the facts of the case.” 27 Therefore,
    our task is to “examine the nature of the rights asserted and the
    remedies sought” in order to characterize Mr. Jones’s claim, and then
    to decide if that claim would have been cognizable at law or in
    equity at the time the Utah Constitution was adopted.
    25 Int’l Harvester Credit Corp. v. Pioneer Tractor & Implement, Inc.,
    
    626 P.2d 418
    , 421 (Utah 1981).
    26 Zions First Nat’l Bank v. Rocky Mountain Irrigation, Inc., 
    795 P.2d 658
    , 661 (Utah 1990) (citing Hyatt v. Hill, 
    714 P.2d 299
     (Utah 1986)).
    27   State Bank of Lehi v. Woolsey, 
    565 P.2d 413
    , 415 (Utah 1977).
    16
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    ¶44 Quantum meruit has two distinct branches—contracts
    implied in law and contracts implied in fact. 28 Mr. Jones brought a
    claim for the contract-implied-in-law branch of quantum meruit.
    Contracts implied in law, also termed quasi-contracts or unjust
    enrichment, “is a doctrine under which the law will imply a promise
    to pay for goods or services when there is neither an actual nor an
    implied contract between the parties.” 29 A contract implied in law
    claim does not require a meeting of the minds. This is in contrast to
    contracts implied in fact, which are contracts established by conduct,
    and do require a meeting of the minds. 30
    ¶45 Contracts implied in law require the plaintiff to establish
    that the defendant (1) received a benefit, (2) appreciated or had
    knowledge of this benefit, and (3) retained the benefit “under
    circumstances that would make it unjust for the defendant” to do
    so. 31 Contracts implied in law were historically included in the cause
    of action for general assumpsit. 32 In 1899, we characterized a
    contract-implied-in-law claim as a claim for implied assumpsit. In
    Short v. Bullion-Beck & Champion Mining Co., Justice Baskin described
    implied assumpsit as a claim that today we would call unjust
    enrichment:
    28 Emergency Physicians Integrated Care v. Salt Lake County, 
    2007 UT 72
    , ¶ 10, 
    167 P.3d 1080
    .
    29 Concrete Prods. Co. v. Salt Lake County, 
    734 P.2d 910
    , 911 (Utah
    1987).
    30 See Knight v. Post, 
    748 P.2d 1097
    , 1100−01 (Utah Ct. App. 1988);
    see also Judy Beckner Sloan, Quantum Meruit: Residual Equity in Law,
    42 DEPAUL L. REV. 399, 406−407 (1992).
    31Emergency Physicians, 
    2007 UT 72
    , ¶ 11 (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    32 See Austin v. Shalala, 
    994 F.2d 1170
    , 1176 (5th Cir. 1993) (noting
    that “[a] suit in quasi-contract falls under the common law writ of
    general assumpsit”) (citing RESTATEMENT (FIRST) OF RESTITUTION §
    5(a) (1937) (“The appropriate proceeding in an action at law for the
    payment of money by way of restitution is . . . in States retaining
    common law forms of action, an action of general assumpsit . . . .”));
    see also Sloan, supra note 30, at 423−25 (noting the development of
    general assumpit from including implied in fact contracts to
    including implied in law contracts).
    17
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    Where a party is employed by another to perform some
    specific act for a stipulated sum, and afterwards, at the
    request of the employer, something additional is done
    by the employe[e], without any express promise of
    payment, the law will imply a promise by the employer to
    pay what the additional service is reasonably worth, and the
    employe[e] may recover on an implied assumpsit by
    alleging . . . the facts from which the law implies a
    promise to pay. This is elementary, and therefore
    reference to authorities which support the principle is
    not necessary. 33
    Also, contracts implied in law were historically characterized as an
    action for money had and received. 34 These causes of action, which
    were equitable in nature, were nonetheless developed by the
    common law court. 35
    ¶46 At the time of the signing of the Utah Constitution, it was
    understood that a contract implied in law’s predecessor claims
    (including assumpsit and an action for money had and received)
    were claims at law, not in equity. This understanding is
    demonstrated by our early caselaw and supported by
    contemporaneous holdings in other state courts.
    ¶47 In 1897, we noted in a case involving debts owed in a
    lumbermen’s exchange that “[t]his is a simple action for money had
    and received, and corresponds with the old common-law action of
    indebitatus assumpsit. It is an action at law, and not a suit in
    equity.” 36 We did not discuss this statement further or apply it to the
    facts of the case. In 1909, however, we discussed the legal/equitable
    distinction in greater depth in a case concerning a materialman’s
    
    3357 P. 720
    , 723 (Utah 1899) (Baskin, J., dissenting) (emphasis
    added).
    34   Sloan, supra note 30, at 424.
    35 Id. at 423 (“The equitable nature of the new common law legal
    actions, such as general assumpsit and all its tributaries such as
    indebitatus assumpsit and quantum meruit, reflected the common
    law courts’ efforts to move into the Chancellor’s equitable territory.”
    (emphasis added)).
    36    Mader v. Taylor-Romney-Armstrong Co., 
    49 P. 255
    , 255 (Utah
    1897).
    18
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    Opinion of the Court
    lien. 37 In this case, the plaintiffs were pursuing a material man’s lien
    against the defendant’s property for the cost of building materials
    that were used on the property, but not paid for. 38 The lower court
    found that the plaintiffs’ lien was for less than the defendant’s
    homestead exemption and thus held that the plaintiffs were not
    entitled to judgment under the lien.39 The plaintiffs then claimed that
    they were entitled to a “personal judgment” against the property
    owner for money damages. 40 We characterized the plaintiffs’
    proposed personal judgment claim as one for assumpsit 41 and found
    that it was a claim at law, while the lien was a claim in equity.42 We
    discussed the distinction in the context of the then-recent provision
    of the Utah Constitution that merged the courts of law and equity.43
    We held that the merging of law and equity allowed the plaintiffs to
    plead both their legal claim (for money damages under assumpsit)
    and their equitable claim (for a lien requiring a sale of the property
    and a deficiency judgment from the sale proceeds) in the same
    complaint. 44 Both our statement in 1897 and discussion in 1909
    demonstrate that at the time of the ratification of the Utah
    Constitution, we viewed assumpsit as a legal claim. The fact that the
    then-justices of the Utah Supreme Court saw assumpsit as a legal
    claim is strong historical evidence that, at the time of ratification,
    assumpsit was a legal claim.
    37    Volker-Scrowcroft Lumber Co. v. Vance, 
    103 P. 970
    , 971 (Utah
    1909).
    38   
    Id.
    39   
    Id.
    40   Id. at 972.
    41 Id. (“In all these cases in which it is held that a personal
    judgment may be rendered though the lien fails it of course is also
    held that the complaint . . . must also contain all the necessary facts
    constituting both ground for relief and all the necessary allegations
    of an action in assumpsit.”).
    42 Id. (“The only relief demanded was the awarding of a lien and
    sale of the premises, and a deficiency judgment after sale. Nowhere
    is it made to appear that the action of the court was in any manner
    invoked for a personal judgment apart from the relief demanded in
    equity.” (emphasis added)).
    43   Id.
    44   Id.
    19
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶48 This conclusion is bolstered by the contemporaneous
    decisions of other state courts recognizing contract implied in law’s
    predecessor claims (assumpsit and an action for money had and
    received) to be legal. For instance, in 1890 the New York Court of
    Appeals held that an action for money had and received was an
    action at law:
    [T]he action has been frequently stated to be an
    ‘equitable one,’ that is one depending upon general
    principles of equity for the maintenance of the
    plaintiff’s claim to the money. . . . But although the
    action may be generally described as one of an
    equitable character, it never was in any aspect a suit in
    equity. . . . That an action is of an equitable nature does
    not make it an action in equity.
    When, in an action for money had and received, all the facts
    show that the plaintiff is ex aequo et bono [“from equity
    and conscience”] entitled to recover, his right to recover is a
    legal one, and maintainable in the court of law. 45
    ¶49 Just five years after the ratification of the Utah Constitution,
    another court similarly recognized the legal nature of these causes of
    action. In 1900, the North Carolina Supreme Court stated, “where
    one party has received money to which another is entitled, the law
    presumes a contract if it is necessary to do so to enable the party
    entitled to recover the same.” 46 The court goes on to find that “[t]his
    entitles the party having the right to the money to an action of debt,
    indebitatus assumpsit, which, though an action at law, was equitable
    in nature. It has been styled ‘an equitable action on the law side of
    the docket.’” 47
    ¶50 Similarly, the Wisconsin Supreme Court noted the legal
    roots of contract implied in law’s predecessor claims in 1914. The
    court noted that “[t]he complaint is for money had and received. The
    action though legal in form, the right to recover is in its nature
    equitable, and can only be enforced where the defendant has
    received money which in equity and good conscience he ought to
    45   Chapman v. Forbes, 
    26 N.E. 3
    , 4−5 (N.Y. 1890) (emphasis added).
    46   Davison v. W. Oxford Land Co., 
    36 S.E. 162
    , 163 (N.C. 1900).
    47   
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    20
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    Opinion of the Court
    pay to the plaintiff.” 48 Modern courts have also recognized this
    history and held that assumpsit is based in law and thus requires a
    jury trial.49 Based on the contemporaneous discussions of assumpsit
    by the Utah Supreme Court and our sister states, we conclude that
    assumpsit was legal in nature at the time of the ratification of the
    Utah Constitution.
    ¶51 Having examined the nature of contract implied in law’s
    predecessor claims, we turn to an analysis of the remedy sought. We
    must now determine whether the relief sought by Mr. Jones is the
    type of relief that could have been granted by a court of law at the
    time of ratification. As we have noted, in addition to the nature of
    the rights asserted, we also “examine the nature of . . . the remedies
    sought” to determine if a claim is legal or equitable. 50 The remedy
    for quantum meruit is restitution.51 Historically, the remedy of
    restitution developed along two tracks: one in the courts of law and
    another in the courts of equity. 52 Restitution is available as a legal
    Steuerwald v. Richter, 
    149 N.W. 692
    , 694 (Wis. 1914) (emphasis
    48
    added).
    49 Austin, 
    994 F.2d at 1176
     (“A suit in quasi-contract falls under
    the common law writ of general assumpsit. . . . In England in 1791,
    these actions were at law and were tried to a jury.”); Jogani v. Superior
    Court, 
    81 Cal. Rptr. 3d 503
    , 508 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008) (concluding that
    at the time of the adoption of the California constitution in 1850
    quantum meruit was an action at law); Nehi Beverage Co. of
    Indianapolis v. Petri, 
    537 N.E.2d 78
    , 85 (Ind. Ct. App. 1989) (“Our
    courts have used the phrases quasi-contract, contract implied-in-law,
    constructive contract, and quantum meruit synonymously. These are
    legal fictions providing a remedy to prevent unjust enrichment,
    thereby promoting justice and equity. But, they are legal fictions
    created by courts of law. They were triable at law and not in equity,
    thus one is entitled to jury trial upon them.”(citations omitted));
    Auburn Mech., Inc. v. Lydig Constr., Inc., 
    951 P.2d 311
    , 317 (Wash. Ct.
    App. 1998) (“Most authorities agree that quasi contract, while
    invoking equitable principles, is a legal remedy.”).
    50   State Bank of Lehi, 565 P.2d at 415.
    51 U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co. v. U.S. Sports Specialty Ass’n, 
    2012 UT 3
    , ¶
    12, 
    270 P.3d 464
     (“[R]estitution is an extracontractual remedy for a
    claim of unjust enrichment.”).
    52 Great-W. Life & Annuity Ins. Co. v. Knudson, 
    534 U.S. 204
    , 212
    (2002) (“In the days of the divided bench, restitution was available in
    (continued . . .)
    21
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    remedy where the plaintiff asks exclusively for monetary relief.53
    “These claims [for monetary relief under quantum meruit] are claims
    at law in every sense, first because they seek simple monetary relief,
    and second because they are historically brought in the separate law
    courts.” 54 But restitution can also be an equitable remedy, such as
    when a plaintiff brings a quantum meruit claim and seeks a
    constructive trust or equitable lien. 55 Because a plaintiff relying on a
    contract-implied-in-law theory may seek either a legal remedy
    (money damages), or an equitable remedy (a constructive trust or
    equitable lien), courts have tied the question of whether the plaintiff
    has a right to a jury trial to the remedy requested. 56 Our cases take a
    similar approach. For instance, in International Harvester, we held that
    a plaintiff’s foreclosure claim was legal “[s]ince [it] concerned only
    money damages.” 57 In this case, Mr. Jones seeks only money
    certain cases at law, and in certain others in equity.”); 1 DAN B.
    DOBBS, LAW OF REMEDIES § 2.6(3) (2d ed. 1993) (“[S]ome restitution
    claims were equitable. [However] [m]any restitution claims were
    brought under the common law writ of assumpsit. . . . These claims
    are claims at law in every sense . . . .”).
    53 RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF RESTITUTION AND UNJUST ENRICHMENT
    § 4 cmt. d (2011) (“If restitution to the claimant is accomplished
    exclusively by a judgment for money, without resort to any of the
    ancillary remedial devices traditionally available in equity but not at
    law, the remedy is presumptively legal.”).
    54   1 DAN B. DOBBS, LAW OF REMEDIES § 2.6(3) (2d ed. 1993).
    55  Id. § 4.3(2) 597 (“The constructive trust, like its counterpart
    remedies ‘at law,’ is a remedy for unjust enrichment.”); id. § 4.3(3)
    (“The equitable lien [may be] imposed . . . to prevent unjust
    enrichment.”); see also RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF RESTITUTION AND
    UNJUST ENRICHMENT § 4 cmt. d (2011) (“Beginning with constructive
    trust, and proceeding through every possible analogy to constructive
    trust, remedies in restitution that give the claimant ownership or
    security or priority in an identifiable asset or fund are presumptively
    derived from equity.”).
    56 Knudson, 
    534 U.S. at 215
     (“[W]hether [restitution] is legal or
    equitable in a particular case . . . remains dependent on the nature of
    the relief sought.”).
    57   Int’l Harvester, 626 P.2d at 421.
    22
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    Opinion of the Court
    damages for his quantum meruit claim. 58 Thus, he seeks a legal
    remedy, not an equitable one. Therefore, both the type of claim he
    presses and the remedy he seeks were available at law at the time of
    the ratification of the Utah Constitution.
    ¶52 Mackey Price nevertheless argues that language in our
    opinions has explicitly described quantum meruit in equitable terms.
    For instance, we have stated that quantum meruit is an “equitable
    tool that allows a plaintiff to receive restitution for the reasonable
    value of services provided to the defendant.” 59 And we have
    characterized recovery of quantum meruit as “equitable in nature.”60
    But the language in our caselaw is best explained by looking again to
    history. In Moses v. Macferlan, Lord Mansfield stated that recovery
    under unjust enrichment is required by “the ties of natural justice
    and equity.” 61 But commentators have explained Lord Mansfield’s
    use of the word “equity” as follows: “Although Mansfield’s
    description of quasi contract as ‘equitable’ has been repeated many
    times, this refers merely to the way in which a case should be
    approached, since it is clear that the action is at law and the relief
    given is a simple money judgment.” 62
    ¶53 The language from our caselaw can be similarly explained.
    When we described quantum meruit or unjust enrichment as
    “equitable,” we meant merely to describe the way in which the claim
    should be approached, given that such claims arise only where there
    is no legal contract. Our prior opinions should not be read to
    impliedly hold that a claim for quantum meruit is “equitable” for
    purposes of the right to a jury trial. 63
    58 In Mr. Jones’s Amended Complaint, he also asks the court to
    hold the fees received by Mackey Price in constructive trust. But this
    claim is separate from his claim for quantum meruit. His quantum
    meruit claim seeks only “the monetary benefits” that “Mr. Jones has
    conferred upon the Defendants.”
    59Emergency Physicians, 
    2007 UT 72
    , ¶ 10; see also TruGreen Cos. v.
    Mower Bros., 
    2008 UT 81
    , ¶ 18, 
    199 P.3d 929
     (noting that restitution
    and unjust enrichment are tools of equity).
    60   Christensen v. Abbott, 
    671 P.2d 121
    , 123 (Utah 1983).
    61   Moses v. Macferlan, 97 Eng. Rep. 676 (K.B. 1760).
    62   GEORGE E. PALMER, THE LAW OF RESTITUTION § 1.2 (1978).
    63We recognize that we have also characterized quantum meruit
    as an equitable remedy when announcing that legal remedies must
    (continued . . .)
    23
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶54 In sum, because we conclude that Mr. Jones’s unjust
    enrichment claim and his remedy of money damages would have
    been available at law when the Utah Constitution was ratified, we
    hold that the district court erred in rejecting Mr. Jones’s demand for
    a jury on this claim.
    ¶55 Because we reverse the district court’s denial of Mr. Jones’s
    demand for a jury trial, the subsidiary question of whether the court
    erred in bifurcating the trial is moot.
    A. Damages Owed Under an Unjust Enrichment Claim Are Based on the
    Benefit to the Defendant, but Can Be Measured by the Reasonable Value of
    the Plaintiff’s Services in Certain Instances
    ¶56 Because we have reversed the district court’s decision to
    deny Mr. Jones’s request for a jury trial, we need not reach the issue
    of damages. But we will nevertheless do so to give the district court
    guidance on remand. 64 Mr. Jones argues that the district court
    applied the incorrect measure of damages to his unjust enrichment
    claim when it focused mainly on the hours he worked, with the goal
    of quantifying the reasonable value of his services. Instead, he
    argues, the district court should have focused on the benefit that he
    conferred upon the Defendants. We clarify that a court should focus
    on the defendant’s gain when assessing damages for an unjust
    enrichment claim, but we recognize that in cases involving
    professional services the appropriate measure of the defendant’s
    gain will often be the value of the plaintiff’s professional services.
    ¶57 As a starting premise, “restitution should be measured to
    reflect the substantive law purpose that calls for the restitution in the
    first place.” 65 For an unjust enrichment claim, the substantive law
    purpose is to restore to the plaintiff the benefit he or she conferred
    be exhausted before equitable remedies are available. Interiors
    Contracting Inc. v. Navalco, 
    648 P.2d 1382
    , 1388 (Utah 1982). But these
    characterizations are also not controlling as they are not rooted in an
    historical analysis of the Utah Constitution’s jury grant. Also here,
    the Restatement (Third) of Restitution and Unjust Enrichment points out
    the weakness of the application of the exhaustion doctrine to unjust
    enrichment claims, which have their basis, historically, in law.
    RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF RESTITUTION AND UNJUST ENRICHMENT § 4
    cmt. e (2011).
    64   See State v. Low, 
    2008 UT 58
    , ¶ 61, 
    192 P.3d 867
    .
    65   1 DOBBS, LAW OF REMEDIES § 4.5(1) (2d ed. 1993).
    24
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    Opinion of the Court
    upon the defendant, when the retention of this benefit would be
    unjust. 66 We therefore clarify that when assessing damages for unjust
    enrichment, the court begins by looking to the value of the benefit
    conferred. Utah caselaw has recognized that the general measure of
    recovery for an unjust enrichment claim “is the value of the benefit
    conferred on the defendant (the defendant’s gain) and not the
    detriment incurred by the plaintiff.” 67
    ¶58 But in the case where the defendant has requested
    professional services, either directly or impliedly, the proper
    measure of the defendant’s gain will normally be the reasonable
    value of the plaintiff’s services. 68 In other words, in the case of
    professional services, the value of the benefit conferred is often the
    same as the value of the services rendered. In most cases involving a
    lawyer’s services, the value of those services will be measured by the
    number of hours the plaintiff lawyer worked multiplied by his or her
    hourly rate. But in contingency fee cases, such as the one before us,
    the reasonable value of the plaintiff lawyer’s services requires us to
    consider factors beyond hours worked. In such cases, the best
    measure of the value of the benefit conferred upon the defendant
    law firm by the plaintiff lawyer’s services is the value of those
    services as determined by the standards applicable to contingency
    fee cases in the legal community. In our case, Mackey Price implicitly
    requested Mr. Jones’s professional services by allowing him to work
    on the firm’s Fen-Phen litigation. Therefore, the proper measure of
    66   See RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF RESTITUTION AND UNJUST
    ENRICHMENT § 1 cmt. a (2011) (“Liability in restitution derives from
    the receipt of a benefit whose retention without payment would
    result in the unjust enrichment of the defendant at the expense of the
    claimant.”).
    67   Davies v. Olsen, 
    746 P.2d 264
    , 269 (Utah Ct. App. 1987).
    68  See RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF RESTITUTION AND UNJUST
    ENRICHMENT § 50 (2011); see also Candace S. Kovacic, A Proposal to
    Simplify Quantum Meruit Litigation, 35 AM. U. L. REV. 547, 557 (1986)
    (“[T]he reasonable market value of the plaintiff’s services can be
    viewed as the correct remedy in most quantum meruit cases, even in
    many cases in unjust enrichment because reasonable value can be
    viewed as the defendant’s gain in certain situations. The value of the
    plaintiff’s services measures the defendant’s gain when the
    defendant requests the work: the defendant’s benefit is receiving
    what he or she requested those requested services have a market
    value.”(footnote omitted)).
    25
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    damages is the reasonable value of his services. This is consistent
    with our valuation of professional services in prior caselaw. 69
    ¶59 When assessing the reasonable value of Mr. Jones’s services,
    the court should look to factors the legal community uses to value
    contingency fee cases. The district court focused heavily on
    quantifying the hours Mr. Jones worked in determining the value of
    his services to the Defendants. The court resisted a discussion of
    other factors that might affect how the contingency fees should be
    divided among the attorneys—such as the risk each party
    undertook. This narrow focus on Mr. Jones’s hours worked is
    evident in the court’s findings of fact where it discusses the
    testimony of his expert on the distribution of contingency fees. The
    court states that Mr. Jones’s expert’s “opinion is based on an
    erroneous premise. He attempts to determine how the Fen-Phen fee
    should be split among all of the attorneys, rather than issuing his
    opinion determining the reasonable value of the services of
    Plaintiff.”
    ¶60 But determining the “reasonable” value of Mr. Jones’s
    services in this contingency fee case necessarily requires
    consideration of factors beyond the hours he has spent on the case.
    While Mr. Jones’s hours is an important factor, the court should also
    consider factors commonly used to measure the value of a lawyer’s
    contribution to a contingency fee recovery, such as the relative
    importance of his role in the litigation, his personal financing of the
    case, his role in securing clients, his contribution to the management
    of the case, and his expertise and experience in the area of the law
    concerned. 70
    ¶61 Accordingly, in instructing the jury as to the damages on
    Mr. Jones’s unjust enrichment claim, the court should instruct the
    jury to consider factors such as these, or any others the court deems
    69 See Emergency Physicians, 
    2007 UT 72
    , ¶ 29 (holding that the
    proper measure of damages in a case involving physicians’ services
    was the “reasonable value of the services [the plaintiff] provided”
    (internal quotation marks omitted)); Baugh v. Darley, 
    184 P.2d 335
    ,
    339 (Utah 1947) (stating that the measure of damages in a case
    involving real estate services would be “the reasonable value of the
    services rendered”).
    70 See UTAH R. PROF’L CONDUCT 1.5 (discussing the factors to
    consider when determining a reasonable fee generally).
    26
    Cite as: 
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    Opinion of the Court
    appropriate for measuring Mr. Jones’s relative contribution to the
    recovery of the Fen-Phen fees. 71
    III. We Affirm the District Court’s Partial Dismissal of Mr. Jones’s
    Quantum Meruit and Fraudulent Transfer Act Claims
    ¶62 On summary judgment, the district court dismissed Mr.
    Jones’s claims for unjust enrichment against Mr. Mackey, Mr. Price,
    Mr. Thompson, Mr. Skousen, Thompson & Skousen, L.L.C., C.
    Jeffery Thompson, L.L.C., and Russell C. Skousen, L.L.C. The court
    concluded that Mackey Price was the only defendant Mr. Jones
    could properly sue for unjust enrichment, reasoning that the other
    Defendants “were incidental and not direct beneficiaries of any
    services performed by [Mr. Jones].”
    ¶63 The court also dismissed Mr. Jones’s Fraudulent Transfer
    Act claims against Mr. Thompson, Mr. Skousen, Thompson &
    Skousen, L.L.C., C. Jeffery Thompson, L.L.C., and Russell C.
    71 See Mulholland v. Kerns, 
    822 F. Supp. 1161
    , 1169 (E.D. Pa. 1993)
    (surveying courts approaches to valuing an attorney’s quantum
    meruit attorney fee recovery and finding that “[t]he New Jersey
    Superior Court has granted quantum meruit awards of attorneys’
    fees on an hourly basis and on a percentage basis, depending on
    which method of calculation seemed more reasonable in the
    particular case. In New York, in a fee dispute between a dismissed
    attorney and a client, the outgoing attorney was allow[ed] to choose
    to take his quantum meruit award on an hourly basis before final
    resolution of the case or as a percentage of the final recovery, when it
    was available.” (citations omitted)); Ashby v. Price, 
    445 N.E.2d 438
    ,
    444 (Ill. App. Ct. 1983) (looking to “the skill and standing of the
    attorney employed, the nature of the cause, the novelty and
    difficulty of the questions, the amount and importance of the subject
    matter, the degree of responsibility involved in the management of
    the cause, the time and labor required, the usual and customary
    charges in the community and the benefits resulting to the client”
    when determining a reasonable attorney fee for a contingency fee
    case under a quantum meruit claim); see also Paolillo v. Am. Exp.
    Isbrandtsen Lines, Inc., 
    305 F. Supp. 250
    , 251 (S.D.N.Y. 1969)
    (considering “(1) time; (2) standing of the lawyer at the bar;
    (3) amount involved; (4) benefit to the client[;] and (5) skill
    demanded” when valuing an attorney’s quantum meruit claim on a
    contingency fee case).
    27
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    Skousen, L.L.C. (Thompson & Skousen Defendants). 72 It concluded
    that “the uncontroverted material facts show that the negotiations
    between Thompson & Skousen and [Mackey Price] were in good
    faith and arm’s length as to the distribution of Fen-Phen funds to
    Thompson & Skousen, L.L.C. with Thompson & Skousen, L.L.C.
    being a good faith creditor of [Mackey Price].” We discuss each of
    these dismissals separately below and affirm in each instance.
    A. We Affirm the District Court’s Dismissal of Mr. Jones’s Claims for
    Quantum Meruit Against Mr. Mackey, Mr. Jones, and the
    Thompson & Skousen Defendants
    ¶64 As noted above, the district court dismissed Mr. Jones’s
    quantum meruit claims against all Defendants except Mackey Price
    on summary judgment. Mr. Jones argues this was error because each
    of those Defendants ultimately benefited from his work on the Fen-
    Phen cases by accepting part of the fees earned. We affirm the
    district court’s dismissal of Mr. Mackey and Mr. Price because the
    uncontroverted facts make clear that they were not direct
    beneficiaries of Mr. Jones’s work. We also affirm the dismissal of the
    Thompson & Skousen Defendants because the uncontroverted facts
    show both that they were not direct beneficiaries of Mr. Jones’s work
    and that it was not unjust for them to retain their contracted for
    payment from the Fen-Phen fees.
    ¶65 A defendant is liable under the unjust enrichment prong of
    quantum meruit only if he or she received a direct benefit from the
    plaintiff. In other words, “unjust enrichment does not result if the
    defendant has received only an incidental benefit from the plaintiff’s
    service[s].” 73 The most relevant case applying this rule is Emergency
    Physicians Integrated Care v. Salt Lake County. In that case, physicians
    provided services to Salt Lake County inmates. 74 Emergency
    Physicians Integrated Care (EPIC), a corporation that provided
    billing and collections services for the physicians, later sued the
    County seeking quantum meruit for the services its member
    72For purposes of this section, the term “Thompson & Skousen
    Defendants” includes Thompson & Skousen, L.L.C., Mr. Thompson,
    Mr. Skousen, C. Jeffery Thompson, L.L.C., and Russel C. Skousen,
    L.L.C.
    73 Emergency Physicians Integrated Care v. Salt Lake County, 
    2007 UT 72
    , ¶ 26, 
    167 P.3d 1080
    .
    74   Id. ¶ 1.
    28
    Cite as: 
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    Opinion of the Court
    physicians had provided. 75 The district court held that the County
    had a constitutional and statutory duty to provide the inmates with
    medical care and acknowledged that it satisfied this duty through
    the services provided by the plaintiff physicians. 76 But it nevertheless
    declined to grant the EPIC’s claim for quantum meruit because it
    concluded that the inmates were the direct beneficiaries of the
    physician’s services, not the County. 77
    ¶66 We reversed and concluded that the County did directly
    benefit from the plaintiff’s services. 78 In so holding, we noted that
    the County was not “acting as a passive third party to a primary
    relationship between the physicians and inmates,” but instead “the
    County ha[d] complete control over when and where medical
    services [were] provided.” 79 Further, we noted that the County had a
    duty to provide these medical services and that if the physicians had
    not done so, the County would have had to provide these services by
    other means. We held that these were “real benefits . . . sufficient to
    establish the first prong of a quantum meruit claim.” 80 We also
    recognized that “a large variety of items fall under the definition of
    benefit, including an interest in money.”81
    ¶67 It is clear that Mr. Mackey and Mr. Price benefited from
    Mr. Jones’s work in that they received money; the dispute focuses on
    whether this benefit was direct or incidental. Whether a benefit is
    direct or incidental depends on the relationship between the parties
    and whether Mr. Mackey and Mr. Price were acting as “third
    parties” to the primary relationship between Mr. Jones and the law
    firm. We agree with the district court’s conclusion that the
    undisputed facts show that Mr. Mackey and Mr. Price were third
    parties to the primary relationship between the law firm of Mackey
    Price and Mr. Jones. This primary relationship is evidenced by the
    fact that all of the direct contractual relationships involved in this
    case were with the law firm, not with Mr. Mackey or Mr. Price
    individually. Mr. Jones was an employee of the law firm. The Fen-
    75   
    Id.
    76   
    Id.
     ¶¶ 27−28.
    77   Id. ¶ 27.
    78   Id. ¶¶ 27−28.
    79   Id. ¶ 27.
    80   Id.
    81   Id. ¶ 26 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    29
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    Phen litigants were in contractual relationships with the law firm.
    Mr. Jones’s compensation agreements and contracts were all with the
    law firm, not the individual defendants. Even viewed in the light
    most favorable to Mr. Jones, these facts fail to raise a genuine issue of
    material fact concerning whether Mr. Mackey and Mr. Price directly
    benefited from his work on the Fen-Phen litigation.
    ¶68 We uphold the dismissal of the Thompson & Skousen
    Defendants because there was no genuine issue of material fact
    regarding both whether they directly benefited from Mr. Jones’s
    work and whether it was unjust for them to retain any benefit
    recieved. In order to prove quantum meruit, Mr. Jones has to show
    that the Thompson & Skousen Defendants received a benefit, had an
    appreciation or knowledge of the benefit, and accepted the benefit
    under circumstances that would make it unjust for them to retain it
    without compensating Mr. Jones. 82 As discussed above, to meet the
    first element of this test the benefit must be direct, not incidental.
    Similar to Mr. Mackey and Mr. Price, the Thompson & Skousen
    Defendants were third parties to the primary relationship between
    Mr. Jones and the law firm of Mackey Price. Any benefit they
    received from Mr. Jones’s work through fees collected on the Fen-
    Phen cases was indirect. Mr. Jones was not an employee of the
    Thompson & Skousen Defendants and had no contract for payment
    of fees from the Thompson & Skousen Defendants.
    ¶69 Further, under the third element of quantum meruit, “it is
    not enough that a benefit was conferred on the defendant, . . . rather,
    the enrichment to the defendant must be unjust in that the defendant
    received a true windfall or ‘something for nothing.’” 83 We have
    further explained that “[t]he mere fact that a third person benefits
    from a contract between two others does not make such third person
    liable.” 84 Rather “[t]here must be some misleading act, request for
    services, or the like, to support such an action.” 85
    ¶70 Mr. Jones has failed to raise a genuine issue of fact regarding
    his claim that the Thompson & Skousen Defendants received a
    82   Id. ¶ 11.
    Id. ¶ 26 (quoting 66 AM. JUR. 2D RESTITUTION
    83                                                      AND   IMPLIED
    CONTRACTS § 13 (2001)).
    84Commercial Fixtures & Furnishings, Inc. v. Adams, 
    564 P.2d 773
    ,
    774 (Utah 1977).
    85   
    Id.
    30
    Cite as: 
    2015 UT 60
    Opinion of the Court
    windfall or something for nothing or that they misled Mr. Jones
    regarding his compensation from the Fen-Phen cases. Instead, the
    Thompson & Skousen Defendants took a lead role in the Fen-Phen
    litigation and were paid for this work pursuant to an arm’s length
    contract with Mackey Price. In the summary judgment hearing, the
    district court noted that the contractual fee splitting arrangement
    between Mackey Price and Thompson & Skousen “is a fee split that
    was negotiated in good faith at arm’s length, and if anything Mackey
    Price got the better of them with respect to how the fees were
    split.” 86
    ¶71 Further, Mr. Jones did not raise a genuine issue of material
    fact as to his claim that the Thompson & Skousen Defendants
    attempted to mislead him. In fact, the record shows that
    Mr. Thompson specifically warned Mr. Jones that there was no
    agreement with Mackey Price regarding his compensation and that
    he needed to take action to get a deal in place. Because Mr. Jones
    failed to raise an issue of fact as to his claim that the Thompson &
    Skousen Defendants either benefited directly from his work or
    unjustly retained any benefit received, we uphold the district court’s
    dismissal of the quantum meruit claim against them.
    A. We Affirm the District Court’s Dismissal of Mr. Jones’s Fraudulent
    Transfer Act Claims Against the Thompson & Skousen Defendants
    ¶72 We now turn to Mr. Jones’s Fraudulent Transfer Act claims.
    In claiming that the Thompson & Skousen Defendants are liable
    under Utah’s Fraudulent Transfer Act, Mr. Jones relies on section 25-
    6-5(1) of the Utah Code, which provides:
    (1) A transfer made or obligation incurred by a debtor
    is fraudulent as to a creditor, whether the creditor's
    claim arose before or after the transfer was made or the
    obligation was incurred, if the debtor made the transfer
    or incurred the obligation:
    (a) with actual intent to hinder, delay, or
    defraud any creditor of the debtor; or
    (b) without receiving a reasonably equivalent
    value in exchange for the transfer or obligation;
    and the debtor:
    86Mr. Jones disputes that the contract was necessarily at arm’s
    length because Mr. Thompson was a director at Mackey Price.
    31
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    (i) was engaged or was about to engage
    in a business or a transaction for which
    the remaining assets of the debtor were
    unreasonably small in relation to the
    business or transaction; or
    (ii) intended to incur, or believed or
    reasonably should have believed that he
    would incur, debts beyond his ability to
    pay as they became due.
    While the Act allows a plaintiff to unwind transactions intended to
    evade a valid judgment, it also provides an exemption from this
    provision if a transferee “took in good faith and for a reasonably
    equivalent value.” 87 Mr. Jones argues that the exception is
    inapplicable here because the Thompson & Skousen Defendants
    knew about his claims to the fees and nevertheless received part of
    the fees from Mackey Price. He argues that this constitutes bad faith.
    ¶73 We have not interpreted “good faith” as used in the current
    version of the Fraudulent Transfer Act. But we have interpreted a
    former version of the statute that contained very similar language:
    “Every conveyance made, and every obligation incurred, with actual
    intent . . . to hinder, delay[,] or defraud either present or future
    creditors is fraudulent as to both present and future creditors.” 88 In
    interpreting the statute, we held that “[p]roof that a transferee of
    property knows that the transferor-debtor has preferred the
    transferee over other creditors or that the transferee actively sought
    the preference from the debtor does not support the conclusion that
    the transferee lacks good faith.” 89 We went onto explain, however,
    that if the value of the property the transferee received was greater
    than the value of the transferee’s legitimate preference, the excess is
    available to other creditors.90
    ¶74 In this case, there is no doubt that the Thompson & Skousen
    Defendants were on notice of Mr. Jones’s claim to part of the fees,
    given that they were named parties in his lawsuit. But under our
    holding in Butler, simply being on notice of another creditor’s claim
    87   UTAH CODE § 25-6-9(1).
    88Butler v. Wilkinson, 
    740 P.2d 1244
    , 1260 (Utah 1987) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    89   Id. at 1261.
    90   Id.
    32
    Cite as: 
    2015 UT 60
    Opinion of the Court
    does not foreclose the possibility that a creditor could still receive
    funds in good faith. Here, Thompson & Skousen negotiated its
    contract with Mackey Price regarding the Fen-Phen litigation long
    before it ever received the transfer of fees from Mackey Price. And in
    the interim, Thompson & Skousen managed and performed
    extensive work on the cases. The uncontroverted facts show that
    Thompson & Skousen received payment for successfully completing
    the terms of its contract with Mackey Price. Its awareness of a
    possible claim by Mr. Jones does not create a factual issue as to
    Mr. Jones’s claim that it received the payment in bad faith.
    ¶75 Our Butler decision also holds, however, that if the value of
    property the transferee received was greater than the value of the
    transferee’s legitimate preference, then the excess is available to the
    other creditors. So even if the Thompson & Skousen Defendants did
    not act in bad faith, Mr. Jones might nevertheless have a valid claim
    under the Fraudulent Transfer Act if he could show that they
    received more than the value of their “legitimate preference.” But
    Mr. Jones makes no attempt to do so in his opening brief. Only in his
    reply brief does he raise this issue, and we “will not consider matters
    raised for the first time in the reply brief.” 91 Accordingly, we
    conclude that he has failed to raise a genuine issue of fact concerning
    this claim.
    ¶76 We do note that it does not appear the Thompson &
    Skousen Defendants clearly received more than their legitimate
    preference. Among other things, the firm set up the Fen-Phen
    litigation program, found physicians and other experts, managed
    and supervised the litigation, and entered into agreements with local
    law firms near the referring physicians. Further, Mr. Thompson and
    Mr. Skousen were integral to this work. We therefore affirm the
    district court’s ruling dismissing Mr. Jones’s Fraudulent Transfer Act
    claims against the Thompson & Skousen Defendants because he has
    not raised an issue of fact concerning whether the Defendants acted
    in bad faith or received more than their legitimate preference.
    Conclusion
    ¶77 We uphold the district court’s dismissal of Mr. Jones’s
    contract claim because Mr. Jones failed to set forth affirmative
    evidence demonstrating a genuine issue of material fact as to this
    91 See Coleman ex. rel Schefski v. Stevens, 
    2000 UT 98
    , ¶ 9, 
    17 P.3d 1122
     (declining to review an issue where it was raised for the first
    time in the reply brief); see also UTAH R. APP. P. 24(c).
    33
    JONES v. MACKEY PRICE
    Opinion of the Court
    claim. We reverse the district court’s decision to deny Mr. Jones’s
    jury demand because an unjust enrichment claim for money
    damages was a claim at law at the time of the ratification of the Utah
    Constitution. To guide the district court on remand, we also clarify
    that the correct measure of damages for an unjust enrichment claim
    is the benefit conferred upon the defendant, but conclude that in this
    case, where the Defendant has requested the Plaintiff’s professional
    services, this benefit is properly measured by the reasonable value of
    those services. In addition, we uphold the district court’s dismissal
    of the individual defendants under both the unjust enrichment and
    the Fraudulent Transfers Act claims as Mr. Jones has failed to raise a
    genuine issue of material fact concerning these claims. Finally, we
    remand the case to the district court for further proceedings in
    accord with this decision.
    34
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Case No. 20130135

Citation Numbers: 2015 UT 60, 355 P.3d 1000

Filed Date: 7/28/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (18)

Mildred AUSTIN, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Donna SHALALA, ... , 994 F.2d 1170 ( 1993 )

Ashby v. Price , 112 Ill. App. 3d 114 ( 1983 )

Nehi Beverage Co., Inc. v. Petri , 537 N.E.2d 78 ( 1989 )

Beacon Theatres, Inc. v. Westover , 79 S. Ct. 948 ( 1959 )

Mulholland v. Kerns , 822 F. Supp. 1161 ( 1993 )

Paolillo v. American Export Isbrandtsen Lines, Inc. , 305 F. Supp. 250 ( 1969 )

United States Fidelity & Guarantee Co. v. United States ... , 270 P.3d 464 ( 2012 )

Coleman Ex Rel. Schefski v. Stevens , 17 P.3d 1122 ( 2000 )

Emergency Physicians Integrated Care v. Salt Lake County , 167 P.3d 1080 ( 2007 )

Clegg v. WASATCH COUNTY , 227 P.3d 1243 ( 2010 )

Prince, Yeates & Geldzahler v. Young , 94 P.3d 179 ( 2004 )

Orvis v. Johnson , 177 P.3d 600 ( 2008 )

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

Great-West Life & Annuity Insurance v. Knudson , 122 S. Ct. 708 ( 2002 )

Auburn Mechanical, Inc. v. Lydig Construction, Inc. , 89 Wash. App. 893 ( 1998 )

Davies v. Olson , 746 P.2d 264 ( 1987 )

Knight v. Post , 748 P.2d 1097 ( 1988 )

State v. Low , 192 P.3d 867 ( 2008 )

View All Authorities »