American United v. Murray , 2022 UT App 105 ( 2022 )


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    2022 UT App 105
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    AMERICAN UNITED FAMILY OF CREDIT UNIONS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    JASON MURRAY,
    Appellant.
    Opinion
    No. 20200903-CA
    Filed August 25, 2022
    Third District Court, Salt Lake Department
    The Honorable Richard D. McKelvie
    No. 160905326
    D. Scott Crook, Attorney for Appellant
    Joseph A. Skinner, Attorney for Appellee
    JUDGE RYAN D. TENNEY authored this Opinion, in which
    JUSTICE JILL M. POHLMAN and JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS concurred.1
    TENNEY, Judge:
    ¶1     After Jason Murray defaulted on over $60,000 in loans from
    American United Family of Credit Unions (American United),
    American United sued Murray to collect. Murray and American
    United soon agreed to a stipulated settlement that contained,
    among other things, a payment schedule, an attorney fee
    provision, and a Confession of Judgment under which American
    1. Justice Jill M. Pohlman began her work on this case as a member
    of the Utah Court of Appeals. She became a member of the Utah
    Supreme Court thereafter and completed her work on the case
    sitting by special assignment as authorized by law. See generally
    Utah R. Jud. Admin. 3-108(4).
    American United v. Murray
    United could later obtain an ex parte judgment against Murray if
    he didn’t comply with the payment schedule.
    ¶2      Murray defaulted on the payment schedule within a
    month of the settlement, so American United obtained a judgment
    against Murray pursuant to the Confession of Judgment. But
    despite its efforts, American United had considerable difficulty
    collecting. After four years of effort, American United filed a
    motion to augment the judgment to account for the attorney fees
    that it had incurred in its collection efforts. At that point, Murray
    filed a motion asking the court to set aside the judgment. The
    district court denied Murray’s motion, and it also augmented the
    attorney fees award to include the fees that American United had
    incurred over the previous two years.
    ¶3     Murray now challenges both rulings. For the reasons set
    forth below, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    Stipulation and Confession of Judgment
    ¶4     Jason Murray began borrowing money from American
    United in 2013. Through what the parties have referred to as Note
    I, Murray borrowed $55,091.83, and he used a Mercedes Benz to
    secure that note. Through what the parties have referred to as
    Note II, Murray borrowed $8,800. Murray also opened two credit
    cards with American United, and those cards are referred to in the
    record as Visa Card I and Visa Card II.
    ¶5      Murray failed to timely repay American United for the
    notes or his credit card debts. In August 2016, American United
    filed a complaint against Murray for, among other things, breach
    of the contracts underlying Note I, Note II, Visa Card I, and Visa
    Card II. Through an attorney, Murray answered American
    United’s complaint.
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    American United v. Murray
    ¶6     In October 2016, the parties agreed to a “Stipulated and
    Conditional Confession of Judgment” (the Stipulation). There, the
    parties agreed that the Stipulation was an effort “to avoid the
    time, expense, and potential uncertainty of progressing” with
    American United’s lawsuit against Murray. The parties further
    agreed that the Stipulation was intended “to resolve their
    differences upon the terms and conditions stated” in the
    Stipulation.
    ¶7     The Stipulation outlined the outstanding amounts that
    Murray owed under Note I, Note II, Visa Card I, and Visa Card II,
    as well as the amount of attorney fees that American United had
    incurred “in connection with this matter.” Then, in a separate
    section titled “Confession of Judgment,” the Stipulation stated,
    “Murray agrees to pay American United the sum of $74,871.91
    (which sum includes the total amount due under Note I, Note II,
    Visa Card I and Visa Card II, plus attorney fees and costs
    incurred).”
    ¶8      The Confession of Judgment also set forth a payment
    schedule, and it further stated that if Murray didn’t follow the
    schedule, Murray “stipulate[d] to entry of judgment in favor of
    American United in the amount of $74,871.91, less any amounts
    actually paid by Murray . . . together with interest accruing on the
    Judgment Amount at the rates corresponding to” the two notes
    and the two Visa credit cards. Note I and Note II were attached to
    the Stipulation, and the corresponding interest rate for each was
    listed in the notes themselves. The contracts underlying the two
    Visa credit cards were also attached to the Stipulation. The
    interest rates for the cards were not identified in those respective
    contracts; instead, those contracts stated that Murray would be
    subject to rates that had previously been provided in a “Credit
    Card Account Opening Disclosure.”
    ¶9     The Confession of Judgment also included a provision that
    we’ll refer to as the Waiver of Notice provision. This provision
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    provided that if Murray failed to keep up with the payment
    schedule, American United would “be entitled to immediately file
    this Confession of Judgment with the Court via an ex-parte
    motion and affidavit identifying the specific default and the
    appropriate Judgment Amount, without any further notice to
    Murray, and to the entry of a judgment against Murray for the
    total Judgment Amount.”
    ¶10 In a final section of the Stipulation that was titled
    “Additional Provisions,” Murray “represent[ed] and warrant[ed]
    that he has had sufficient opportunity to review this Confession
    of Judgment, either individually or through counsel of his
    choosing, and that he has voluntarily entered into this Confession
    of Judgment for its stated purpose.” The Stipulation then
    contained electronic signatures from both American United’s
    CEO and Murray, with an additional notation indicating that
    Murray’s original signature was on file.2
    Murray’s Default and the Parties’ Subsequent Motions
    ¶11 Murray defaulted less than a month after he agreed to the
    Stipulation. Shortly after his default, American United filed an ex
    parte motion and affidavit with the district court seeking a
    judgment against Murray according to the terms of the
    2. It is somewhat unclear from the record whether Murray’s
    counsel actively participated in the negotiation of the Stipulation
    and its accompanying Confession of Judgment. The Stipulation
    makes no mention of counsel having done so. But on the other
    hand, Murray’s counsel signed it as a notary, and Murray also
    specifically represented that he’d had the opportunity to review
    the document “either individually or through counsel of his
    choosing.” In any event, what ultimately matters for our
    resolution is that Murray has never argued that he did not have
    the opportunity to review the document with his counsel or that
    the electronic signature at its end was not his.
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    Stipulation and the Confession of Judgment. In November 2016,
    the district court entered a judgment (the Judgment) against
    Murray “for the confessed amount of $74,871.91, plus attorney’s
    fees of $1,032.00 and costs of $2.00, for a total judgment of
    $75,905.91, together with interest accruing at the contract rates
    corresponding to Note I, Note II, Visa Card I and Visa Card II.” A
    couple of weeks after the Judgment was entered, the district court
    entered an Abstract of Judgment, which outlined the principal
    amount and attorney fees for the Judgment and stated the
    corresponding interest rates for Note I, Note II, Visa Card I, and
    Visa Card II. The court’s docket notes that the judge signed the
    abstract on December 5, 2016.
    ¶12 Over the next four years, American United tried to enforce
    the Judgment against Murray. Its efforts included a writ of
    replevin to repossess the Mercedes Benz, several writs of
    garnishment, and various other litigation tools. Despite these
    efforts, the notes and Visa credit card debts were still not fully
    paid off.
    ¶13 In August 2020, Murray moved to set aside the Judgment
    pursuant to rule 60(b)(4) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure,
    which provides for relief from judgment when “the judgment is
    void.”3 In that motion, Murray made two main arguments.
    ¶14 Murray first argued that the Judgment had not complied
    with rule 58A(i) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. That rule
    states that when a confession of judgment is statutorily
    authorized, “the party seeking the judgment must” (among other
    requirements) file a statement “that the specified sum is due or to
    3. Murray also moved to set aside the Judgment under rule
    60(b)(6) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. The district court
    denied that part of his motion as untimely. Murray doesn’t
    challenge that denial on appeal, so we don’t discuss that aspect of
    his motion in this opinion.
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    American United v. Murray
    become due.” Utah R. Civ. P. 58A(i). Murray argued that because
    the Confession of Judgment did not include “the interest rates for
    the loans” under Visa Card I or Visa Card II, the Confession of
    Judgment had not identified the “specified sum” that he owed as
    required by rule 58A(i). From this, Murray asked the court to
    grant him relief under rule 60(b)(4), arguing that the error
    rendered the Judgment “void in its entirety.”
    ¶15 Murray’s next argument was more complicated, and it
    essentially involved three interdependent parts. According to
    Murray: (i) the Utah Consumer Credit Code (UCCC) prohibits
    creditors and debtors from entering into confessions of judgment,
    see Utah Code Ann. § 70C-2-201 (LexisNexis 2020), so the
    Confession of Judgment that he (a debtor) had entered into with
    American United (his creditor) was “void”; (ii) “[b]ecause the
    Confession of Judgment was unenforceable,” his “waiver of his
    right to notice and opportunity to respond” (i.e., the Waiver of
    Notice provision) “was also unenforceable”; and as a result, (iii)
    the “entry of the Judgment without notice to Mr. Murray violated
    his due process rights” because the Judgment was entered in
    reliance on the “unenforceable” Waiver of Notice provision.
    ¶16 A few weeks after Murray filed his motion to set aside the
    Judgment, American United filed a motion to augment the
    Judgment, asking the court to award it the attorney fees that it had
    incurred in its prolonged collection efforts. American United
    supported this motion with an affidavit and itemized timesheets.
    ¶17 The court accepted briefing from the parties on both
    Murray’s motion to set aside the Judgment and American
    United’s motion to augment the Judgment. In Murray’s
    opposition to the motion to augment, he argued that American
    United was required to have filed a separate motion to augment
    alongside each of its collection efforts during the previous four
    years. After a hearing, the district court issued a written order in
    which it denied Murray’s motion to set aside the Judgment and
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    partially granted American United’s motion to augment the
    Judgment.
    ¶18 With respect to Murray’s motion to set aside the Judgment,
    the court disposed of Murray’s rule 58A(i) argument by
    emphasizing that the “Utah Supreme Court has made clear that a
    judgment is not void merely because it is erroneous.” (Quotation
    simplified.) Citing a prior supreme court decision, the district
    court held that a judgment is instead void only where “the court
    that rendered it lacked jurisdiction of the subject matter or parties,
    or the judgment was entered without the notice required by due
    process.” (Quotation simplified.) Since the court was not
    persuaded “that the alleged failure to comply with Rule 58A
    would result in” a lack of subject matter jurisdiction or a denial of
    due process, it “decline[d] to set aside the Judgment” based on the
    alleged failure to specify the exact sum Murray owed.
    ¶19 The court also rejected Murray’s due process argument,
    concluding that his due process right to notice was not violated
    because he “was served with process on the underlying credit
    obligation” before entering into the Stipulation. The court
    emphasized that Murray “appeared in the lawsuit, was
    represented by counsel, and answered American United’s
    complaint.” The court thus concluded that, even if there was some
    infirmity in the Waiver of Notice provision, Murray had not been
    deprived of his due process rights. As a result, the court held that
    the Judgment was not void under rule 60(b)(4) of the Utah Rules
    of Civil Procedure.
    ¶20 Turning to American United’s motion to augment the
    Judgment, the district court noted that rule 73(f) of the Utah Rules
    of Civil Procedure allows a party to augment its award of attorney
    fees “within a reasonable time after the fees were incurred.” The
    court then determined “that American United’s request for
    attorney fees and costs that it incurred more than two years before
    the Motion for Fees was filed was not brought within a reasonable
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    American United v. Murray
    time,” so it “disallow[ed]” “attorney fees and costs incurred by
    American United prior to August 31, 2018.” But the court also
    concluded that American United’s request for fees incurred
    during the prior two years was filed within a reasonable time, so
    it awarded American United those fees.
    ¶21 Murray timely appealed both the denial of his motion to
    set aside the Judgment and the district court’s partial grant of
    American United’s motion to augment the Judgment. In doing so,
    Murray also moved to stay the Judgment pending his appeal, and
    the district court granted that motion.
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶22 Murray challenges the district court’s denial of his motion
    to set aside the Judgment on two grounds. First, Murray argues
    that the Judgment was void under rule 60(b)(4) of the Utah Rules
    of Civil Procedure because the Confession of Judgment was not
    compliant with the requirements set forth in rule 58A(i) of the
    Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. Second, Murray argues that the
    Waiver of Notice provision was infirm because of a UCCC
    violation and that, without a valid waiver of notice, he was
    deprived of the notice guaranteed by due process, thereby
    rendering the Judgment void under rule 60(b)(4) for this
    additional reason. Both arguments implicate our rules of civil
    procedure, and we “review a district court’s interpretation and
    application of our rules of civil procedure for correctness.” Sanders
    v. Sanders, 
    2021 UT App 122
    , ¶ 4, 
    502 P.3d 1230
    . To the extent that
    Murray’s second argument turns on an interpretation of his due
    process right to notice, we review that issue for correctness as
    well. See State v. Liti, 
    2015 UT App 186
    , ¶ 9, 
    355 P.3d 1078
    .
    ¶23 Murray also challenges the district court’s partial grant of
    American United’s motion to augment the Judgment to award
    additional attorney fees. As explained below, Murray’s specific
    challenge turns on an interpretation of our rules of civil
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    American United v. Murray
    procedure. We accordingly review this issue for correctness too.
    See Sanders, 
    2021 UT App 122
    , ¶ 4.
    ANALYSIS
    I. Motion to Set Aside the Judgment
    ¶24 Murray argues that the district court should have granted
    his motion to set aside the Judgment. Murray’s motion was filed
    pursuant to rule 60(b)(4) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure,
    which allows a court to “relieve a party . . . from a judgment” if
    “the judgment is void.” As he did below, Murray argues that the
    Judgment was void for two reasons: first, it violated rule 58A(i) of
    our rules of civil procedure; and second, the Confession of
    Judgment and its Waiver of Notice provision were invalid under
    the UCCC, so the court’s entry of the Judgment based thereon
    deprived him of due process. We disagree on both fronts.
    A.     Rule 58A(i)
    ¶25 Murray first argues that the Judgment is “void because of
    its failure to comply with Rule 58A of the Utah Rules of Civil
    Procedure.” In Murray’s view, the Confession of Judgment
    violated rule 58A(i) because it did not include “the interest rates
    for the loans, particularly Visa Card I or Visa Card II.” But we
    need not decide whether there was a rule 58A(i) violation because,
    even if there was, this alleged violation does not render the
    Judgment void for purposes of rule 60(b)(4).
    ¶26 As noted, a party can obtain relief under rule 60(b)(4) by
    showing that “the judgment is void.” Utah R. Civ. P. 60(b)(4). For
    purposes of rule 60(b)(4), our supreme court has directed us to
    “narrowly construe the concept of a void judgment in the interest
    of finality.” Migliore v. Livingston Fin., LLC, 
    2015 UT 9
    , ¶ 26, 
    347 P.3d 394
    . According to the supreme court, a “judgment is not void
    merely because it is erroneous.” 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified).
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    American United v. Murray
    Instead, “a judgment is void under rule 60(b)(4) if the court that
    rendered it lacked jurisdiction of the subject matter or parties, or
    the judgment was entered without the notice required by due
    process.” 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified); accord Judson v. Wheeler RV Las
    Vegas, LLC, 
    2012 UT 6
    , ¶ 18, 
    270 P.3d 456
    .4
    ¶27 Given this, the relevant question is whether the alleged
    failure to include a “specified sum” in the Confession of Judgment
    as required by rule 58A(i) deprived either the district court of
    jurisdiction or Murray of due process. It did not.
    ¶28 First, on the question of jurisdiction, Migliore held that
    under Utah’s rule 60(b)(4), a judgment is void “if the court that
    rendered it lacked jurisdiction of the subject matter or parties.”
    
    2015 UT 9
    , ¶ 26 (quotation simplified). Our courts have since
    construed rule 60(b)(4)’s jurisdiction component as encompassing
    challenges to both personal jurisdiction and subject matter
    jurisdiction. See, e.g., In re Estate of Willey, 
    2016 UT 53
    , ¶¶ 14, 20–
    38, 
    391 P.3d 171
    ; Sanders v. Sanders, 
    2021 UT App 122
    , ¶¶ 11–12,
    4. The supreme court based this limitation, in part, on a treatise
    that discussed the similarly worded federal rule 60(b)(4). See
    Migliore v. Livingston Fin., LLC, 
    2015 UT 9
    , ¶ 26, 
    347 P.3d 394
    (citing 11 Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice
    & Procedure § 2862 (3d ed. 2012)). Consistent with Migliore’s
    narrow view of what voidness means under the state rule, the
    United States Supreme Court has held that for purposes of the
    federal rule, “a motion under Rule 60(b)(4) is not a substitute for
    a timely appeal.” United Student Aid Funds, Inc. v. Espinosa, 
    559 U.S. 260
    , 270 (2010). Instead, “a void judgment is one so affected
    by a fundamental infirmity that the infirmity may be raised even
    after the judgment becomes final.” 
    Id.
     And the Court further
    stressed that the “list of such infirmities is exceedingly short;
    otherwise, Rule 60(b)(4)’s exception to finality would swallow the
    rule.” 
    Id.
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    American United v. Murray
    
    502 P.3d 1230
    ; Knight Adjustment Bureau v. Funaro, 
    2021 UT App 65
    , ¶¶ 20–21, 
    495 P.3d 221
    .
    ¶29 Murray has not suggested that the court lacked personal
    jurisdiction over him. And as for subject matter jurisdiction,
    Murray has provided us with no authority establishing that a rule
    58A(i) error deprives a court of subject matter jurisdiction. As a
    result, he has failed to carry his burden of persuasion as to this
    argument, and we could reject it for this reason alone. See Bank of
    Am. v. Adamson, 
    2017 UT 2
    , ¶ 13, 
    391 P.3d 196
    . But in any event,
    we see no basis for accepting it. “Subject matter jurisdiction is a
    narrow concept” that, in relevant part, refers to the court’s power
    to “adjudicate a class of cases.” Knight Adjustment Bureau, 
    2021 UT App 65
    , ¶ 16 (quotation simplified). But Utah “district courts are
    courts of general jurisdiction” and have “general power to hear
    all matters civil and criminal so long as they are not excepted in
    the Utah Constitution and not prohibited by law.” In re adoption of
    B.B., 
    2017 UT 59
    , ¶ 143, 
    417 P.3d 1
     (Lee, A.C.J., opinion of the court
    on this issue) (quotation simplified). Even if it’s true that rule
    58A(i) requires the inclusion of the interest rate in a Confession of
    Judgment, we see no basis for concluding that a failure to do so
    would somehow deprive the court of its power to adjudicate the
    class of cases to which such a suit belongs. Subject matter
    jurisdiction therefore was not implicated.
    ¶30 Second, the alleged error also did not deprive Murray of
    the notice guaranteed by due process. In this context, due process
    “‘requires notice reasonably calculated, under all the
    circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the
    action and afford them an opportunity to present their
    objections.’” Migliore, 
    2015 UT 9
    , ¶ 27 (quoting United Student Aid
    Funds, Inc. v. Espinosa, 
    559 U.S. 260
    , 272 (2010)). The United States
    Supreme Court’s decision in United Student Aid Funds is
    instructive. There, the Court considered a case in which the
    plaintiff had failed “to serve [the defendant] with a summons and
    complaint,” and the Court acknowledged that this failure
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    American United v. Murray
    “deprived [the defendant] of a right granted by a procedural
    rule.” United Student Aid Funds, 
    559 U.S. at 272
    . But even so, the
    Court held that this deprivation “did not amount to a violation of
    [the defendant’s] constitutional right to due process” because the
    party “received actual notice of the filing and contents” at issue
    with sufficient time to raise any objection. 
    Id.
     (emphasis in
    original). Because of this, the Court affirmed the denial of a
    motion filed under the similar federal rule 60(b)(4). 
    Id.
    ¶31 We reach the same conclusion here. Murray has pointed to
    what is arguably a technical defect—namely, that while the
    amounts that he owed were identified in the Confession of
    Judgment, the interest rates were not. But Murray knew that the
    Confession of Judgment didn’t contain those rates, and yet he
    signed the Stipulation that they were attached to anyway. He
    therefore received notice of the very defect at issue in time to have
    objected to it, so due process was satisfied.
    ¶32 In short, we agree with the district court that Murray has
    not shown that the alleged defect in the Confession of Judgment
    either deprived the court of jurisdiction or Murray of notice of the
    applicable interest rates. As a result, the district court did not err
    in denying Murray’s motion to set aside the Judgment under rule
    60(b)(4) on this basis.
    B.     Alleged UCCC Violation and Due Process
    ¶33 As noted, Murray’s second voidness argument has three
    sequential parts: (i) he argues that the UCCC prohibits debtors
    and creditors from entering into confessions of judgment; (ii) he
    then argues that because the Confession of Judgment was
    statutorily prohibited, the Waiver of Notice provision in the
    Confession of Judgment was likewise invalid; and (iii) from this,
    Murray claims that because there was no valid waiver of notice,
    his due process rights were violated when American United later
    relied on the Confession of Judgment to obtain the Judgment
    through an ex parte motion.
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    ¶34 We start with a note about what is (and is not) at issue here.
    As discussed, Migliore held that rule 60(b)(4) voidness can be
    established through either a lack of jurisdiction or a deprivation
    of due process. 
    2015 UT 9
    , ¶ 26. And while discussing this UCCC-
    derived argument in the opening brief, Murray did make passing
    reference to subject matter jurisdiction. But his argument focused
    on due process. And in his reply brief, Murray faulted American
    United for “spend[ing] significant time in [its] briefing arguing
    about subject-matter jurisdiction,” stating that his “arguments
    have always been rooted in the ineffectiveness of the confession
    of judgment at issue to properly waive his right to due process.”
    In light of this, we understand Murray to be relying solely on the
    due process component of rule 60(b)(4) for his UCCC-derived
    argument, so we analyze his claim accordingly. On that front, we
    reject Murray’s argument because Murray had actual notice of the
    Confession of Judgment in time to have raised any objection to it.
    ¶35 Again, “due process requires notice reasonably calculated,
    under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the
    pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present
    their objections.” Migliore, 
    2015 UT 9
    , ¶ 27 (quotation simplified).
    And due process is satisfied when a defendant has “actual notice
    of all” the claims against him, as well as “ample opportunity to
    submit evidence in his defense.” Id.; see also United Student Aid
    Funds, 
    559 U.S. at 272
     (explaining that “actual notice” “more than
    satisfie[s] [a defendant’s] due process rights”).
    ¶36 Murray clearly had “actual notice” of the claims against
    him. After being served with American United’s complaint,
    Murray answered it with the assistance of counsel and asserted
    eight affirmative defenses. And more to the point of what’s at
    issue here, Murray also had actual notice of the Confession of
    Judgment. Again, the Confession of Judgment was part of the
    Stipulation, and Murray negotiated, agreed to, and signed the
    Stipulation. Moreover, at the close of the Stipulation, Murray
    specifically “represent[ed] and warrant[ed] that he has had
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    American United v. Murray
    sufficient opportunity to review this Confession of Judgment”
    and “that he ha[d] voluntarily entered into this Confession of
    Judgment for its stated purpose.”
    ¶37 Again, a “judgment is not void merely because it is
    erroneous,” Migliore, 
    2015 UT 9
    , ¶ 26 (quotation simplified), and
    a rule 60(b)(4) motion likewise “is not a substitute for a timely
    appeal,” United Student Aid Funds, 
    559 U.S. at 270
    . If Murray
    believed that the Confession of Judgment was legally prohibited
    by the UCCC, he could have declined to sign the Stipulation. But
    what’s at issue here is a due-process-derived lack-of-notice
    argument under rule 60(b)(4). And on this, it’s clear that Murray
    had actual notice of the Confession of Judgment and ample
    opportunity to object to its terms. See Migliore, 
    2015 UT 9
    , ¶ 27. He
    therefore has not shown that the Judgment that was obtained
    from it violated his due process right to notice. As a result, the
    court did not err in denying this aspect of Murray’s rule 60(b)(4)
    motion.
    II. Motion to Augment the Judgment
    ¶38 After the district court denied Murray’s motion to set aside
    the Judgment, it partially granted American United’s motion to
    augment the prior attorney fees award to include fees that it had
    incurred while attempting to collect on the Judgment.5 The court
    based its decision on rule 73(f) of the Utah Rules of Civil
    Procedure, under which a party may seek to augment a prior
    attorney fees award “within a reasonable time after the fees were
    incurred.” Murray now challenges that decision, arguing that the
    court applied the wrong test. According to Murray, this case was
    governed by the more particular timing provision that is set forth
    5. As noted, American United asked for fees stemming from the
    previous four years of collection efforts, but the court only
    granted the request with respect to the prior two years. American
    United has not challenged that aspect of the court’s decision.
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    American United v. Murray
    in rule 73(f)(3). And according to Murray, under rule 73(f)(3),
    American United was required to file a motion to augment each
    time it pursued any post-judgment enforcement action.
    ¶39 Rule 73 sets forth an intricate set of interrelated timing
    rules, and Murray’s argument turns on an inference that he draws
    from some of the language that is found in one of its subparts. The
    applicable language from the rule and its implicated subparts is
    as follows:
    •   Rule 73(a) states that “[a]ttorney fees must be claimed by
    filing a motion for attorney fees no later than 14 days after
    the judgment is entered, except as provided in paragraph (f) of
    this rule.”
    •   Rule 73(f)’s initial language states that “[a]ttorney fees
    awarded under this rule may be augmented upon
    submission of a motion . . . within a reasonable time after the
    fees were incurred, except as provided in paragraphs (f)(1),
    (f)(2) and (f)(3).”
    •   Rule 73(f)(3) is titled “Post Judgment Collections.” It states
    that when a “party has established its entitlement to
    attorney fees” under rule 73 “and subsequently” applies
    for a listed writ or files a listed motion, “the party may
    request as part of its application for a writ or its motion that
    the party’s judgment be augmented according to the
    following schedule.” It then sets forth the “Attorney Fees
    Allowed” under that schedule, with the allotted fees
    ranging from $25 to $75.
    •   Finally, rule 73(f)(4) is titled “Fees in Excess of the
    Schedule.” It states that “[i]f a party seeks attorney fees in
    excess of the amounts set forth in paragraphs (f)(1), (f)(2), or
    (f)(3), the party shall comply with paragraphs (a) through
    (c) of this rule.”
    20200903-CA                      15              
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    American United v. Murray
    Utah R. Civ. P. 73 (emphases added).
    ¶40 Murray’s argument is that because American United was
    seeking to augment the award to recover fees incurred after the
    Judgment, it could only do so under rule 73(f)(3). Murray then
    argues that because that rule allows a party to request
    augmentation “as part of its application for a writ or its motion,”
    American United was required to have filed a motion to augment
    alongside each enforcement action.
    ¶41 We have some doubt as to whether Murray is correct about
    this, primarily because Murray is overlooking the applicable verb.
    Rule 73(f)(3) doesn’t say that a party “must” request augmented
    fees “as part of its application for a writ or . . . motion”; rather, the
    rule says that a party “may” do so. Murray has provided no
    authority stating that within the rule 73(f)(3) context, an
    augmentation request must be filed contemporaneously with the
    writ or motion at issue.6
    6. Our recent decision in Diversified Striping Systems Inc. v. Kraus,
    
    2022 UT App 91
    , is not to the contrary. There, we held that a party
    was not entitled to augmented fees under rule 73(f)(3) where the
    request for augmented fees “was not properly made as part of an
    application for a writ or a motion.” Diversified Striping Systems Inc.,
    
    2022 UT App 91
    , ¶ 101 (quotation simplified). But the party in
    question had not filed an application for a writ or one of the
    motions identified in rule 73(f)(3). As noted, however, such a writ
    or a motion is the predicate for an augmented fee request under
    rule 73(f)(3), which is why the party was not entitled to fees under
    it. We didn’t hold, however, that if a party is entitled to
    augmented fees under that rule, the party must file such a request
    alongside each enforcement action, as opposed to also being
    permitted to request augmented attorney fees in a separate filing
    later.
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    American United v. Murray
    ¶42 In any event, we need not definitively decide this issue
    here because we agree with American United’s assertion that this
    isn’t a rule 73(f)(3) case. Rule 73(f)(3) states that a party “may”
    request fees “according to” a listed “schedule” that is then laid out
    in a chart. But American United didn’t request fees pursuant to
    the rule 73(f)(3) schedule. Rather, it requested fees far in excess of
    that schedule, which means that the timeliness of its request must
    be evaluated under rule 73(f)(4), the provision that governs “Fees
    in Excess of the Schedule.”
    ¶43 Admittedly, things get somewhat circular here. As noted,
    rule 73(f)(4) states that “[i]f a party seeks attorney fees in excess of
    the amounts set forth” in paragraph (f)(3), “the party shall comply
    with paragraphs (a) through (c) of this rule.” Rule 73(a) then states
    that the party has “14 days after the judgment is entered” to file
    such a request, “except as provided in paragraph (f).” And
    “paragraph (f)” then states that a party must file such a request
    “within a reasonable time after the fees were incurred, except as
    provided in paragraph[] . . . (f)(3),” thus potentially bringing
    things back to rule 73(f)(3) (and Murray’s proposed requirement
    that fee augmentation requests must be made alongside each
    enforcement action).
    ¶44 But the problem with Murray’s argument is that rule
    73(f)(3) states that it only applies to requests for fees under its
    listed fee schedule. And this limitation is reinforced by the fact
    that rule 73(f)(4) states that it governs requests for “fees in excess
    of the schedule.” The import of this here is that because American
    United did not request fees under the rule 73(f)(3) fee schedule,
    rule 73(f)’s “except as . . .” clause was not triggered. So as a result,
    the timing sequence described above stopped at rule 73(f),
    meaning that American United’s augmentation request was
    simply required to have been made “within a reasonable time
    after the fees were incurred.”
    20200903-CA                      17               
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    American United v. Murray
    ¶45 We see no textual basis for concluding that when an
    augmentation request is governed by rule 73(f)’s “reasonable
    time” requirement, there is a categorical rule under which the
    request must be made at the same time as the writ or motion to
    which it is linked. We instead take the rule at its word:
    “reasonable time” means “reasonable time.” And as with other
    reasonableness determinations, such a determination would
    naturally turn on the circumstances of the case. Indeed, as noted
    by the district court below, in “cases like this where there are
    ongoing collection efforts, it may not make sense for the party
    seeking fees to bring a motion to augment for each batch of work
    immediately after incurring fees.”
    ¶46 As indicated above, the district court evaluated the
    circumstances of this case and drew the “reasonableness” line at
    two years, finding that it was “unreasonable” for American
    United “to wait more than two years to seek fees.” Notably,
    Murray hasn’t challenged the court’s reasonableness
    determination on appeal, instead resting on his assertion that
    American United was categorically required by rule to have filed
    a motion to augment each time it filed an enforcement action.
    Because we have now rejected that argument, we therefore affirm
    that order.7
    7. Murray also argues that a particular term from the Confession
    of Judgment required American United to support any
    augmentation request with a supporting affidavit, and he then
    claims that American United “never once filed an attorney fee
    affidavit supporting the increased attorney fee amounts.” But
    contrary to Murray’s claim, American United did file an affidavit
    with its motion to augment, and its affidavit included several
    pages of itemized time entries supporting its request. This final
    argument is based on a false premise, so we reject it.
    20200903-CA                   18              
    2022 UT App 105
    American United v. Murray
    III. Attorney Fees on Appeal
    ¶47 Finally, American United requests its attorney fees
    incurred on appeal. “When a party who received attorney fees
    below prevails on appeal, the party is also entitled to fees
    reasonably incurred on appeal.” Crane-Jenkins v. Mikarose, LLC,
    
    2016 UT App 71
    , ¶ 28, 
    371 P.3d 49
     (quotation simplified).
    ¶48 Because American United received its attorney fees below,
    and because American United prevailed on appeal, American
    United is entitled to its attorney fees “reasonably incurred on
    appeal.” 
    Id.
     (quotation simplified). We accordingly grant
    American United’s request for attorney fees and “remand to the
    district court to calculate [American United’s] reasonable fees on
    appeal consistent with this decision.” 
    Id.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶49 For the reasons set forth above, we affirm the decisions at
    issue. First, Murray has not shown that the Judgment was void
    under rule 60(b)(4) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. And
    second, Murray’s challenge to the order augmenting the attorney
    fees award is not supported by the governing rule.
    ¶50 Because American United prevailed in the proceedings
    below and has prevailed on appeal, we remand to the district
    court for the limited purpose of awarding fees reasonably
    incurred in this appeal.
    20200903-CA                   19                
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