Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment , 2022 UT App 37 ( 2022 )


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    2022 UT App 37
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    JON F. BUTLER,
    Appellant and Cross-appellee,
    v.
    MEDIAPORT ENTERTAINMENT INC. AND RED TOUCH MEDIA LTD.,
    Appellees and Cross-appellants.
    Opinion
    No. 20200465-CA
    Filed March 24, 2022
    Third District Court, Salt Lake Department
    The Honorable Andrew H. Stone
    No. 130901072
    Diana J. Huntsman and David C. Harless,
    Attorneys for Appellant and Cross-appellee
    Barry N. Johnson, Daniel K. Brough, and Ryan M.
    Merriman, Attorneys Appellees and
    Cross-appellants
    JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS authored this Opinion, in which
    JUDGES JILL M. POHLMAN and RYAN D. TENNEY concurred.
    HARRIS, Judge:
    ¶1      The district court excluded all evidence supporting Jon F.
    Butler’s counterclaims—filed against his former employer in
    litigation over the validity of a specific employment agreement—
    because Butler made only vague disclosures regarding the
    computation of his claimed damages. The court then summarily
    dismissed those counterclaims for lack of evidence. Butler
    appeals that dismissal, asserting that his damages disclosures
    were sufficient or, in the alternative, that his failure to make
    proper disclosures was harmless under the circumstances.
    Butler’s former employer—Mediaport Entertainment Inc.
    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    (Mediaport)—cross-appeals the denial of its motion for attorney
    fees. We affirm the district court’s rulings in all respects.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2     In 2001, Butler founded a company—Mediaport—to
    market and sell a system he invented for selecting and
    downloading music tracks onto a CD or similar device. Some
    years later, Mediaport was acquired by Red Touch Media Ltd.,
    and Butler continued to work for the company after the
    acquisition. For ease of reference, unless otherwise specified, we
    refer to the company simply as “Mediaport,” regardless of
    whether our reference points to a pre-acquisition or post-
    acquisition event.
    ¶3     In 2012, roughly a year after the acquisition, Butler
    provided the company’s new owners with a copy of an
    employment agreement (the Agreement) that he claimed he and
    Mediaport had entered into before the acquisition. The
    Agreement contained provisions stating that, upon his
    termination for any reason other than for cause, Butler would
    “be entitled to severance in an amount equal to three (3) full
    years of Base Salary,” as well as “all compensation and benefits
    earned but not yet paid,” including credit for “unused vacation,
    sick and personal days.” “Base Salary” is defined in the
    Agreement by reference to an attached “Schedule A,” which in
    turn specifies that Butler’s “Base Salary,” as of July 1, 2003, was
    $130,000 per year. The Agreement also provided that “[a]ny
    dispute, controversy, or questions arising under, out of, or
    relating to this Agreement . . . shall be referred for arbitration,”
    and that, “[i]n connection with any arbitration, the prevailing
    party shall be entitled to recover its costs and reasonable
    attorneys’ fees.”
    ¶4   In February 2013, Mediaport terminated Butler’s
    employment, and Butler claimed entitlement to the severance
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    benefits discussed in the Agreement. But Mediaport refused to
    pay those benefits, apparently espousing the belief that the
    Agreement was neither valid nor enforceable, and that it had
    additionally been superseded by another arrangement. That
    same month, Mediaport initiated this lawsuit, stating several
    claims for relief against Butler, including damages claims, but
    chiefly a request for a judicial declaration that the Agreement
    was unenforceable and that Mediaport owed Butler nothing.
    ¶5     Butler responded by filing a counterclaim. In addition to
    claims for declaratory and injunctive relief regarding the
    Agreement’s validity, Butler’s initial counterclaim contained two
    different claims for damages: one for breach of contract and
    another for conversion. Butler later amended his pleading to
    include additional damages claims; as amended, Butler’s
    counterclaim stated five such claims against Mediaport. First,
    Butler accused Mediaport of breaching the termination and
    severance provisions of the Agreement; on this claim, Butler
    sought “a sum exceeding one million dollars ($1,000,000.00).”1
    Second, Butler set forth a claim for breach of the implied
    covenant of good faith and fair dealing, accusing Mediaport of
    “diluting his shares” of stock in the company and damaging him
    “in an amount to be determined at trial, but in no event less than
    $150,000.00.” Third, Butler stated a claim of conversion, accusing
    Mediaport of improperly taking some of his personal items from
    his office while he was away, and asserting that he had been
    1. In his original counterclaim, Butler included a statement in the
    “background facts” section alleging that Mediaport had “failed
    to pay [him] three times his annual salary at the time
    [Mediaport] was acquired by Red Touch . . . , as required by” the
    Agreement. But that statement was not included in Butler’s
    amended counterclaim, which superseded the original; the
    amended document contains no direct references to Butler being
    entitled to recover three times his salary as severance.
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    damaged “in an amount to be determined by the fact-finder.”
    Fourth, Butler set forth a defamation claim, accusing Mediaport
    of “ma[king] and publish[ing] false statements” about him, and
    damaging him in an unspecified amount. Finally, Butler accused
    Mediaport of tortiously interfering with his business and
    contractual relations, asserting that he had been damaged “in an
    amount to be proven at trial, but no less than $200,000.00.”
    Butler also sought “costs and attorneys’ fees” under the “terms
    of the [Agreement].” Butler attached a copy of the Agreement to
    his amended counterclaim.
    ¶6    Butler’s initial disclosures—which he served on
    Mediaport after filing his initial counterclaim but before filing
    the amended one—contained the following damages disclosure,
    quoted here in its entirety:
    Because of the lack of documents available to
    [Butler], he cannot provide an exact calculation of
    damages at this time. It is estimated that the
    damages suffered by [Butler] approximate
    $900,000.
    Butler’s initial disclosures contained no further computation or
    categorization of damages, nor any explanation of how he
    arrived at the $900,000 figure. Butler produced some 150 pages
    of documents with his initial disclosures, but none of those
    documents purported to offer any computation of damages. And
    although Butler once supplemented his initial disclosures, that
    supplement did not provide any additional information
    regarding computation of damages. Butler never supplemented
    his damages disclosures.
    ¶7     During the discovery period, Mediaport asked Butler via
    interrogatory to “[i]dentify all facts supporting your allegation,
    contained in . . . the Counterclaim, that . . . [Mediaport is]
    indebted to [Butler] for accrued benefits under the terms of [the
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    Agreement] in a sum exceeding on[e]                  million   dollars
    ($1,000,000).” Butler responded as follows:
    All of [Butler’s] records were either turned over to
    Mediaport . . . or were retained by the company
    . . . . For this reason [Butler] cannot respond with
    certainty to this interrogatory. [Mediaport has] the
    [Agreement], which speaks for itself. Specifically,
    the contract called for severance benefits, which
    included, but were not limited to, payment of three
    times the annual salary, compensation for benefits,
    and pre-payment of legal fees in litigation to
    enforce the contract. These severance benefits have
    not been paid and are estimated to exceed
    $1,000,000.00 in value.
    ¶8     Mediaport also took Butler’s deposition and asked him
    questions about his claim for breach of the termination and
    severance provisions contained in the Agreement. When asked
    what his base salary was when he first had one, Butler
    responded that it was “130.” But Butler maintained that he had
    never actually been paid $130,000 per year because Mediaport
    had been “deferring” some of his compensation; he also had a
    hard time answering questions related to how much salary he
    had actually been paid while in Mediaport’s employ.
    ¶9     During the deposition, Mediaport asked Butler questions
    about a letter (the Hubbard Letter) that had been written by
    Mediaport’s chief operating officer (COO) in 2012, just months
    before Butler was terminated. That letter contained a tally of the
    value of the vacation and sick days Butler had purportedly
    accrued, as well as two alternative tallies of the deferred
    compensation Butler had purportedly accrued. The Hubbard
    Letter also contained a reference to a possible increase in Butler’s
    base salary, from $130,000 to $190,000.
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    ¶10 The fact discovery period ended in June 2015. After that,
    the litigation stagnated for several years, with neither party
    taking any meaningful action to move it forward toward trial.
    Finally, in early 2018, Mediaport filed a motion in limine seeking
    to exclude all of Butler’s damages-related evidence, asserting
    that Butler had failed to comply with the disclosure obligations
    set forth in rule 26(a)(1) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. At
    the same time, Mediaport also filed a motion for summary
    judgment, arguing that, if its motion in limine were granted,
    Butler would be bereft of evidence supporting his claimed
    damages and that all his claims would on that basis be subject to
    dismissal.
    ¶11 After full briefing and oral argument, the district court
    granted both motions, but only in part. The court first
    determined that Butler’s damages disclosures “fail[ed] to meet
    the requirements of” rule 26(a)(1). The court next examined
    whether Butler’s noncompliance with the rule’s requirements
    was harmless and determined that, for many of his
    counterclaims, it was not. Regarding all of Butler’s claims other
    than the one for breach of contract, the court concluded that
    Butler’s faulty disclosures had harmed Mediaport because those
    claims alleged nonspecific damages and Butler had made no
    effort, during discovery or otherwise, to illuminate the amount
    of damages he sought on those claims. The court therefore
    excluded all of Butler’s damages-related evidence related to
    those claims, and ruled that Mediaport was entitled to summary
    judgment on each of them due to Butler’s inability to prove
    damages.
    ¶12 With regard to Butler’s claim for breach of contract,
    however, the district court’s ruling was more complex. The court
    concluded that Mediaport was in possession of sufficient
    information—through sources other than Butler’s initial
    disclosures (specifically, from Butler’s counterclaim and from
    information learned during discovery)—to be able to understand
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    and defend against Butler’s claim for payment of three times his
    base salary upon termination. In the court’s view, this portion of
    Butler’s damages was “readily calculated given an existing
    salary,” and therefore Butler’s failure to provide that calculation
    in a formal damages disclosure was harmless. As to Butler’s
    claims for payment of deferred compensation and benefits upon
    termination, the court made no definitive ruling, but concluded
    that Butler’s disclosure failures might be considered harmless if
    Mediaport possessed evidence demonstrating that “the parties
    each understood that specific amounts were owing to Butler,”
    but that they would not be considered harmless if the amount of
    Butler’s entitlement were “subject to factual debate.” The court
    therefore allowed Butler’s counterclaim for breach of contract to
    survive and proceed toward trial. Sometime later, the court
    scheduled a ten-day jury trial to take place in March 2020.
    ¶13 Less than two weeks before the trial was scheduled to
    begin, Mediaport filed a renewed motion in limine, asking the
    court to reconsider its earlier decision and this time exclude
    Butler’s damages-related evidence regarding his breach of
    contract claim. In the motion, Mediaport asserted that a recent
    opinion from our supreme court—Keystone Insurance Agency,
    LLC v. Inside Insurance, LLC, 
    2019 UT 20
    , 
    445 P.3d 434
    —required
    exclusion of Butler’s damages evidence and dismissal of his last
    remaining claim for damages. The court heard argument on the
    motion at a final pretrial conference and, at the conclusion of the
    hearing, granted the motion. In the court’s view, Butler’s claims
    for post-termination deferred compensation and unpaid benefits
    were directly foreclosed by Keystone. The court noted that if it
    were to find Butler’s disclosures harmless merely because “there
    ended up being information [e.g., the Hubbard Letter] in the
    possession of [the] defendant that indicated what [the] damages
    were,” exclusion of evidence for faulty damages disclosures
    would almost never occur, because in “most every commercial
    case a plaintiff could later point to some document that supports
    their [damages] theory and say ‘That’s been my theory all
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    along.’” And while the court acknowledged that Butler’s claim
    for payment of three times his base salary at termination
    presented a closer question, the court excluded Butler’s evidence
    supporting his damages on that claim too, concluding that
    Butler’s disclosure had “lumped together” all of his contract
    claims, and that “there is debate” about the proper salary figure
    to use in the Agreement’s treble multiplier. Accordingly, the
    court excluded “all evidence” supporting Butler’s contractual
    damages claims, and on that basis dismissed Butler’s
    counterclaim for breach of contract, with prejudice and on the
    merits.
    ¶14 Following the court’s ruling, Mediaport agreed that,
    “without a claim for breach of the [Agreement] by Butler, [it
    had] no reason to try [its] claims” against him, and it consented
    to dismissal of its claims without prejudice. In light of that
    concession, Butler’s counsel agreed that “if there’s no damages,
    [then] I don’t think there’s any case left,” and the court
    determined that any decision it might make on Butler’s claims
    for declaratory relief “would be an advisory opinion,” and
    therefore that claim too was subject to dismissal.
    ¶15 Following the court’s dismissal of all claims, both sides
    filed post-judgment motions. Butler filed a motion to alter or
    amend the judgment, asking the court to reconsider its ruling.
    The court denied that motion. For its part, Mediaport filed a
    motion seeking some $200,000 in attorney fees, arguing that it
    was entitled to fees pursuant to the Agreement and Utah’s
    reciprocal attorney fees statute, see Utah Code Ann. § 78B-5-826
    (LexisNexis 2018), even though its position was that the
    Agreement was unenforceable. The court denied that motion as
    well, concluding that the attorney fees provision in the
    Agreement applied, by its terms, only to fees incurred during
    arbitration.
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶16 Both sides now appeal. Butler takes issue with the district
    court’s decision to exclude his damages-related evidence and on
    that basis dismiss his damages counterclaims.2 Mediaport, in a
    2. Butler also raises two additional arguments that do not merit
    extended discussion. First, he complains that Mediaport’s
    renewed motion in limine was, in actuality, a tardy and
    disguised motion for summary judgment. This is incorrect. We
    acknowledge Butler’s point that parties should not be able to
    dodge dispositive motion deadlines by cloaking summary
    judgment motions under a motion in limine label. But this is not
    what happened here. In this case, not only was Mediaport’s
    renewed motion in limine based on Utah Supreme Court case
    law—Keystone Insurance Agency, LLC v. Inside Insurance, LLC,
    
    2019 UT 20
    , 
    445 P.3d 434
    —issued after the dispositive motion
    deadline, but that motion sought only exclusion of certain
    evidence on entirely procedural grounds; it did not ask the court
    to summarily consider the merits of any particular claim. The
    summary judgment aspect came into play only after the court
    granted the motion in limine, leaving Butler unable to prove
    damages on any of his claims. Rather than wait until the close of
    Butler’s case-in-chief to grant an inevitable directed verdict for
    lack of proof of damages, the court acted appropriately, not to
    mention efficiently, in choosing to take up the matter prior to
    trial. Second, Butler contends that, by reconsidering its 2018
    ruling and entering summary judgment in Mediaport’s favor,
    the court denied Butler his constitutional right to his day in
    court. Not only is this argument unpreserved for our review, it
    also fails on the merits. Due process affords litigants an
    opportunity to be heard, not a guarantee of a day in court; having
    one’s case dismissed on procedural grounds does not amount to
    a due process violation unless it can be shown that the relevant
    procedural requirement “foreclose[d] [a party’s] meaningful
    (continued…)
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    cross-appeal, challenges the court’s denial of its motion for
    attorney fees.
    ¶17 Regarding Butler’s appeal, we review for correctness the
    district court’s conclusion that Butler’s disclosures were
    inadequate, because that determination is at root a question of
    interpretation of rule 26 of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. See
    Keystone Ins. Agency, LLC v. Inside Ins., LLC, 
    2019 UT 20
    , ¶ 12, 
    445 P.3d 434
     (“We review a district court’s interpretation of our rules
    of civil procedure, precedent, and common law for
    correctness.”). But we review for abuse of discretion the court’s
    determination that Butler’s faulty disclosures were not harmless.
    See id. ¶¶ 12, 18–19 (noting that the court, in that case, “did not
    abuse its discretion in finding” that a faulty disclosure was not
    harmless).
    ¶18 Regarding Mediaport’s cross-appeal, in assessing a
    district court’s decision to award (or not to award) attorney fees
    “pursuant to a contract, we review the district court’s
    interpretation of the contract language for correctness.” See
    Robinson v. Robinson, 
    2016 UT App 32
    , ¶ 44, 
    368 P.3d 147
    .
    ANALYSIS
    I. Butler’s Appeal
    ¶19 Before ordering the exclusion of all Butler’s damages-
    related evidence, the district court made two important
    (…continued)
    access to the justice system.” See In re adoption of B.Y., 
    2015 UT 67
    ,
    ¶ 27, 
    356 P.3d 1215
     (quotation simplified). Butler does not even
    attempt to make that showing; indeed, he was capable of
    complying with rule 26’s disclosure requirements, but simply
    failed to do so.
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    determinations. First, it concluded that Butler’s damages
    disclosures did not comply with the requirements of rule
    26(a)(1)(C) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. Second, the
    court determined that Butler’s failure to comply with his
    disclosure obligations was not harmless. Butler challenges both
    of these determinations, and we examine each of them in turn,
    following a brief discussion of the governing law.
    A
    ¶20 Our discovery rules—in a requirement that has been in
    place since 1999, and in its current basic form since 2011—
    require parties, at the outset of their involvement in litigation, to
    provide certain disclosures to their litigation opponents; parties
    must do so “without waiting for a discovery request.” See Utah
    R. Civ. P. 26(a)(1). In addition to information about witnesses
    and documents supporting a party’s claims, these initial
    disclosures must include information about the damages, if any,
    that parties intend to claim in the lawsuit. See 
    id.
     R. 26(a)(1)(C).
    In particular, the rule requires parties to provide their opponents
    with “a computation of any damages claimed and a copy of all
    discoverable documents or evidentiary material on which such
    computation is based, including materials about the nature and
    extent of injuries suffered.” 
    Id.
     These required initial damages
    disclosures need not, in every case, contain a to-the-penny
    calculation; indeed, the drafters of the 2011 amendments to rule
    26 recognized that parties may not know, at the outset of a case,
    exactly what their damages amount to, and that “damages often
    require additional discovery.” 
    Id.
     R. 26(a)(1) advisory
    committee’s note to 2011 amendment. But the rules specify that
    “[a] party is not excused from making disclosures or responses
    because the party has not completed investigating the case.” 
    Id.
    R. 26(d)(3); see also 
    id.
     R. 26(a)(1) advisory committee’s note to
    2011 amendment (emphasizing that damages disclosures should
    not as a matter of course simply be “deferred until expert
    discovery” because “[e]arly disclosure of damages information is
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    important” and “is a critical factor in determining
    proportionality”). In the drafters’ view, the damages disclosure
    requirement is intended to require parties to “make a good faith
    attempt to compute damages to the extent it is possible to do
    so,” and to “provide all discoverable information on the subject.”
    
    Id.
     R. 26(a)(1) advisory committee’s note to 2011 amendment.
    ¶21 And the rules require timely supplementation of all
    disclosures, including damages disclosures. See 
    id.
     R. 26(d)(5).
    Under this requirement, parties who do not possess enough
    information at the outset of a case to provide complete damages
    disclosures must supplement those disclosures as soon as they
    discover the information needed to complete the computation.
    
    Id.
    ¶22 In the years since these damages disclosure rules were
    enacted, Utah appellate courts have interpreted them to require,
    at a minimum, a disclosure that damages are in fact being
    claimed, the categories of any such damages, and a description
    of the method by which the party intends to compute those
    damages. See Keystone Ins. Agency, LLC v. Inside Ins., LLC, 
    2019 UT 20
    , ¶ 17, 
    445 P.3d 434
     (stating that “even if a plaintiff cannot
    complete its computation of damages before future events take
    place, the fact of damages and the method for calculating the
    amount of damages must be apparent in initial disclosures”
    (quotation simplified)); Vanlaningham v. Hart, 
    2021 UT App 95
    ,
    ¶ 14 n.1, 
    498 P.3d 27
     (citing federal cases, and quoting this
    language: “Where a party fails to properly identify a category of
    damages or to provide the calculations underlying it, it is within
    the court’s discretion to exclude evidence relating to those
    damages” (quotation simplified)).
    ¶23 The rule itself prescribes a penalty for noncompliance
    with these disclosure obligations: “If a party fails to disclose or
    to supplement timely a disclosure . . . , that party may not use
    the undisclosed witness, document, or material at any hearing or
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    trial unless the failure is harmless or the party shows good cause
    for the failure.” Utah R. Civ. P. 26(d)(4). On this point, the
    advisory committee was clear:
    The penalty for failing to make timely disclosures
    is that the evidence may not be used in the party’s
    case-in-chief. To make the disclosure requirement
    meaningful, and to discourage sandbagging,
    parties must know that if they fail to disclose
    important information that is helpful to their case,
    they will not be able to use that information at trial.
    The courts will be expected to enforce them unless
    the failure is harmless or the party shows good
    cause for the failure.
    
    Id.
     R. 26(a)(1) advisory committee’s note to 2011 amendment; see
    also Keystone, 
    2019 UT 20
    , ¶ 16 n.4 (quoting this note with
    approval but recognizing that courts “attach no decisional
    authority to advisory committee reports”).
    ¶24 Applying these rules and precedents, the district court
    determined that Butler’s damages disclosures were insufficient,
    and did not meet the requirements of rule 26(a)(1)(C). With
    regard to whether Butler’s failure to disclose was harmless, the
    court issued a series of rulings. First, in its 2018 ruling, the court
    determined that, regarding all of Butler’s damages claims other
    than for breach of contract, the failure to disclose was not
    harmless; Butler does not appeal that ruling. Next, in that same
    ruling the court determined that, with regard to Butler’s breach
    of contract claim, the failure to disclose was not necessarily
    harmless. In its 2020 ruling, however, the court reconsidered that
    second determination and concluded, in light of Keystone, that
    Butler’s failure to disclose was in fact not harmless, even as
    applied to his breach of contract claim. At Butler’s request, we
    now examine the propriety of the 2020 ruling, beginning with a
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    discussion of the sufficiency of Butler’s damages disclosures, and
    concluding with a discussion of harmlessness.
    B
    ¶25 We need not linger very long on the question of whether
    Butler’s damages disclosures were sufficient. They quite clearly
    were not. As noted above, Butler’s disclosures were cursory, and
    made no effort to either categorize his damages or offer any
    method by which those damages might be computed. He stated
    only that he was unable to provide an “exact calculation of
    damages at [that] time,” but that he “estimated” that his total
    combined damages, on both of his damages claims then pleaded,
    would “approximate $900,000.” At the time Butler made this
    disclosure, he had stated counterclaims for both breach of
    contract and conversion, and his disclosure made no effort to
    differentiate the damages between those claims. As was made
    clear later, even his breach of contract claim encompassed
    several different aspects of damages (e.g., benefits, deferred
    compensation, and severance), and he made no effort to
    categorize or quantify those claims either.
    ¶26 Butler also made no effort whatsoever to supplement his
    damages disclosures, even though he later amended his
    counterclaim to include three new damages claims. He did make
    one disclosure supplementation—thus evidencing an awareness
    of the requirement—but that supplementation had nothing to do
    with damages.
    ¶27 Butler attempts to justify his rather spare disclosures by
    relying on Williams v. Anderson, 
    2017 UT App 91
    , 
    400 P.3d 1071
    .
    In that case, the plaintiff’s chief damages claim was for recovery
    of 30% of the purchase price that one company paid for another.
    Id. ¶ 3. In his initial disclosures, the plaintiff stated this
    computation quite plainly, although he offered no final claimed
    damages number and did not specify the purchase price that
    would need to be multiplied by 30%. Id. ¶¶ 5, 7. We held this
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    disclosure to be sufficient, noting that it “described the precise
    components [that the plaintiff] intended to factor into his
    damages claim,” including “both the fact of damages and the
    method by which those damages would be calculated.” Id. ¶ 19.
    We stated that, because the plaintiff had described “the process
    for calculating his claimed” damages, it met the requirements of
    rule 26(a)(1)(C). Id.
    ¶28 This case is quite different from Williams. In particular,
    Butler’s damages disclosure was far less specific than the one at
    issue in Williams. Although the Williams disclosure included a
    clear formula to be used in computing the single item of
    compensatory damage, Butler’s disclosure simply stated an
    estimated number, and made no effort to offer any method by
    which that number might be computed. Moreover, in Williams,
    there was no uncertainty about the purchase price that would
    need to be multiplied by 30%; the plaintiff did not know what
    that price was at the time its disclosures were made, but the
    defendant did. See id. In this case, there was a lot of uncertainty
    about the amounts Butler was claiming as damages, even
    regarding the less complex aspects of his breach of contract
    claim. See infra ¶ 46.
    ¶29 Butler also points to documents other than his
    disclosures—such as his counterclaim, his discovery responses,
    and the Hubbard Letter—that contained information he claims
    he intended to use to prove his damages. But while those other
    sources (discussed in more depth below) may be relevant to
    whether his failure to disclose was harmless, they have no role to
    play in evaluating whether his disclosures—viewed on their
    own—met the requirements of rule 26(a)(1)(C).
    ¶30 Under the circumstances presented here, Butler’s
    damages disclosures were insufficient. Although they included
    an estimated total figure, and thus indicated that Butler would
    be claiming damages, those disclosures lumped all of Butler’s
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    damages claims together and made no effort to either categorize
    Butler’s damages claims or offer any method by which any of
    those damages might be computed. Such a disclosure falls well
    short of the mark set out in rule 26, and the district court did not
    err in so concluding.
    C
    ¶31 Because Butler’s damages disclosures were insufficient,
    Butler’s damages evidence is to be excluded unless Butler’s
    failure to disclose “is harmless” or Butler can show “good cause”
    for his failure. See Utah R. Civ. P. 26(d)(4). In his brief, Butler
    focuses almost exclusively3 on the harmlessness option, and
    asserts that his failure to disclose visited no harm on Mediaport
    because the company had access, from other sources, to
    information sufficient to allow it to defend against Butler’s
    damages claims. For the reasons discussed, we conclude that the
    district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that the
    inadequacies in Butler’s damages disclosures were not harmless.
    3. Butler contends, as an alternative to harmlessness, that he had
    “good cause” for failing to provide adequate damages
    disclosures, proffering as cause his asserted “reliance” on the
    district court’s 2018 ruling. This argument suffers chiefly from
    chronological infirmities: Butler’s failure to provide sufficient
    initial disclosures during the fact discovery period, which ran
    until 2015, cannot be justified by a 2018 court ruling. Indeed,
    Butler does not adequately explain how his failure to provide
    damages disclosures had anything to do with the court’s ruling.
    After all, the 2018 ruling was made in response to Mediaport’s
    motion challenging the adequacy of those very disclosures.
    Butler appears to argue that he relied on the 2018 ruling by
    “proceed[ing] with this case for two years” and by “preparing
    for trial,” but these actions do nothing to explain why Butler
    failed to provide adequate disclosures in the first place.
    20200465-CA                     16                
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    ¶32 Before delving into the merits of the harmlessness
    inquiry, we pause to note two procedural hurdles that work
    against Butler here. First, as previously noted, see supra ¶ 17, we
    review the district court’s harmlessness decision for abuse of
    discretion. Under this standard of review, “[t]he question
    presented is not whether we” would have made the same
    decision had we been in the district court’s shoes, but instead
    whether “we find an abuse of discretion in the district [court’s]
    decision.” See Stichting Mayflower Mountain Fonds v. United Park
    City Mines Co., 
    2017 UT 42
    , ¶ 49, 
    424 P.3d 72
    ; see also Gunn Hill
    Dairy Props., LLC v. Los Angeles Dep’t of Water & Power, 
    2015 UT App 261
    , ¶ 24, 
    361 P.3d 703
     (Orme, J., concurring) (stating that,
    under an abuse of discretion standard of review, we will affirm
    even if we might not have made the same decision, so long as
    the decision “was within the broad range of discretion entrusted
    to” the district court). Second, Mediaport bears no burden to
    demonstrate that it was harmed by Butler’s inadequate
    disclosures; instead, it is Butler who bears the burden of
    demonstrating harmlessness. See Keystone Ins. Agency, LLC v.
    Inside Ins., LLC, 
    2019 UT 20
    , ¶ 18 n.7, 
    445 P.3d 434
     (“Under a
    plain language reading of rule 26(d)(4), the burden to
    demonstrate harmlessness or good cause is clearly on the party
    seeking relief from the disclosure requirements.”).
    ¶33 On the merits of the harmlessness inquiry, the “key
    question” is “whether a plaintiff’s failure to disclose its
    categories and methods of computing damages impaired the
    defense’s ability to ‘properly build a defense against the
    damages claimed.’” Chard v. Chard, 
    2019 UT App 209
    , ¶ 45, 
    456 P.3d 776
     (quoting Keystone, 
    2019 UT 20
    , ¶ 20). Given the practical
    realities of modern litigation, most of a party’s “defense-
    building” activities take place during the discovery process.
    Indeed, we have identified several factors for courts to consider
    in assessing harmlessness in this context, all of which have to do
    with the extent of impairment to a party’s ability to build a
    defense during the discovery period and to make decisions
    20200465-CA                    17                
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    about a case that are proportionate to its size and scope. See 
    id.
    Specifically, in this context courts should consider whether a
    party, despite its opponent’s poor disclosures, was able to (1)
    “question witnesses” during discovery, (2) figure out the case’s
    “tier status” under rule 26(c), “(3) understand the nature and
    quantity of the plaintiff’s claimed damages, and (4) understand
    the scope and cost of the litigation pursued.” Id.; see also Keystone,
    
    2019 UT 20
    , ¶¶ 19–20.
    ¶34 Because this inquiry is focused on whether the potentially
    harmed party was able to appropriately deploy resources and
    discover relevant facts during the discovery period, courts
    assessing harmlessness should consider the point in time at
    which additional information that may point toward
    harmlessness was received by the opposing party. Where
    additional illuminating information was received by an
    opposing party “relatively early during the discovery period,”
    within enough time to allow that party to use that information
    while taking depositions and propounding other discovery
    requests, then any inadequacies in a party’s damages disclosures
    may turn out to be harmless. See Chard, 
    2019 UT App 209
    , ¶ 48.
    But where a party “waits until the twilight hours of fact
    discovery” or, worse, until “the close of expert discovery” to
    provide illuminating information, thereby depriving the
    opposing party of any meaningful opportunity to use, during
    discovery, the information that should have been initially
    disclosed, the faulty disclosures may well turn out to be harmful,
    especially where no extension of the discovery deadlines is
    sought or given. See Keystone, 
    2019 UT 20
    , ¶¶ 13, 19 (quotation
    simplified).
    ¶35 In addition to considering when an innocent party receives
    illuminating information, in this context we have also considered
    the relative simplicity—or complexity—of the non-disclosing
    party’s damages claims. Where the damages claims are simple
    and easily computed, courts are more likely to conclude that an
    20200465-CA                      18                
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    innocent party’s receipt of illuminating information from a
    source other than initial disclosures renders inadequate
    disclosures harmless. For instance, we concluded in Chard that a
    faulty disclosure was harmless, at least with regard to one
    discrete claim for unjust enrichment, where the non-disclosing
    party was making a simple damages claim: recovery of precisely
    $120,000, as described clearly in its pleadings and as set forth in
    two short invoices that it had produced early in the discovery
    period. See 
    2019 UT App 209
    , ¶¶ 40, 43–46; cf. Bad Ass Coffee Co.
    of Hawaii v. Royal Aloha Int’l LLC, 
    2020 UT App 122
    , ¶¶ 31–37,
    
    473 P.3d 624
     (finding a party’s damages disclosures adequate, in
    part because the damages theory was simple and partially
    stipulated and the non-disclosing party explained its theory “in
    its counterclaim and in its initial disclosures”).
    ¶36 On the other hand, where a non-disclosing party’s
    damages theories are complex, it is more difficult for that party
    to demonstrate that inadequacies in its damages disclosures
    were harmless. Our supreme court’s decision in Keystone is an
    illustrative example. In that case, the plaintiff sought and
    identified several categories of damages, including commissions
    allegedly earned, but it disclosed no damages computation at
    any point during the fact discovery period. See Keystone, 
    2019 UT 20
    , ¶ 5. Instead, the plaintiff “waited until the close of expert
    discovery to present, for the first time, its damage estimates and
    methodologies.” Id. ¶ 13. The plaintiff argued, however, that its
    failure to disclose was harmless, because the defendant had itself
    generated—and produced during discovery—both a “197-page
    spreadsheet” that the plaintiff interpreted as tracking the earned
    commissions as well as a “document summarizing” the
    spreadsheet. Id. ¶¶ 6, 22. The court rejected the plaintiff’s
    “harmlessness” argument, as well as a motion to reconsider its
    initial conclusions about the adequacy of the plaintiff’s
    disclosures, noting that the plaintiff’s damages theories—
    computation of commissions—were “more complex” than the
    simple one at issue in Williams v. Anderson, 
    2017 UT App 91
    , 400
    20200465-CA                    19                
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    P.3d 1071. See Keystone, 
    2019 UT 20
    , ¶ 23.4 The court stated that
    the plaintiff’s “focus on [the defendant’s] possession of a
    spreadsheet detailing [earned] commissions misunderstands the
    burden placed on the plaintiff by rule 26.” 
    Id.
     The court
    characterized the spreadsheet as “a mere tool that could aid in
    the calculation of damages—not a dispositive and clear recitation of
    what damages [the plaintiff] was after.” 
    Id.
     And it concluded that,
    “[w]ithout a clear computation or theory of what [the plaintiff]
    was asking for, it was left to the guesswork of [the defendant] to
    determine how the spreadsheet might inform [the plaintiff’s]
    theory of the case and what damages it was seeking.” 
    Id.
    ¶37 And in Vanlaningham v. Hart, 
    2021 UT App 95
    , 
    498 P.3d 27
    , we reached a similar conclusion. In that case, a former patient
    of a dental practice sued the clinic for malpractice. Id. ¶ 2.
    Following discovery, the district court concluded that the
    plaintiff had failed to satisfy her damages disclosure obligation
    under rule 26 because she provided only a bottom-line damages
    figure, and not a “mathematical computation or the
    methodology” explaining how that figure was derived. Id. ¶ 12
    (quotation simplified). The plaintiff appealed, arguing that her
    disclosure was adequate or, alternatively, that any inadequacy
    was harmless. Id. We rejected the plaintiff’s arguments,
    4. We recognize that some of the discussion in Keystone
    regarding the complexity of the plaintiff’s damages theory arose
    in the context of evaluating the adequacy of the plaintiff’s
    disclosures, rather than in the context of evaluating whether any
    inadequacies in the plaintiff’s disclosures were harmless. See
    Keystone, 
    2019 UT 20
    , ¶ 23. However, the relative complexity of
    the plaintiff’s damages theories is an issue that can potentially
    shed light on both the underlying adequacy of a plaintiff’s
    damages disclosures as well as whether any inadequacies in
    those disclosures were rendered harmless by other
    circumstances.
    20200465-CA                     20                
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    concluding that the disclosure was inadequate because the
    plaintiff “neglected to provide [the] [d]efendants with any
    information that would allow them to discern how the total was
    calculated,” and because the defendants “were left to guess at
    how much of [the sum total] was for past . . . treatments, as well
    as what components figured into her damages claim for future
    treatment.” Id. ¶ 15. We also noted that the plaintiff’s damages
    theories were more complex than the theories at issue in Williams
    and in Bad Ass Coffee, noting in particular that the plaintiff’s
    disclosed bottom-line damages figure did “not represent a single
    item” but instead was intended to be a composite figure
    including both past and future treatment and other items. Id.
    ¶¶ 17–18. And we concluded that the plaintiff’s inadequate
    disclosures were not harmless, because the defendants “were left
    guessing” about how the plaintiff calculated her damages, thus
    “impairing their ability to properly build a defense.” Id. ¶ 21.
    ¶38 In this case, Butler asserts that any inadequacies in his
    damages disclosures were harmless, at least with regard to his
    claim for breach of contract, because Mediaport was in
    possession of information from other sources that provided
    sufficient insight into Butler’s contractual damages claims. Some
    of the information to which Butler points—for instance,
    explanations given at the oral argument on Mediaport’s 2018
    motion, and information provided in advance of the parties’
    2018 mediation—was transmitted far too late to have made any
    difference to Mediaport’s ability to build a defense during the
    discovery period, which ended in 2015. See Keystone, 
    2019 UT 20
    ,
    ¶¶ 13, 19. But other items of information were provided earlier
    in the litigation, before the fact discovery period ended, and we
    examine those sources of information in more detail.
    ¶39 First, Butler points to allegations he made in his original
    and amended counterclaims. In the original counterclaim, Butler
    alleged that Mediaport failed to pay him “three times his annual
    salary” upon termination. That statement, however, was
    20200465-CA                    21               
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    removed from the amended counterclaim; in that amended
    pleading, Butler asserted more indirectly that he was entitled to
    compensation “as called for in” the Agreement, including
    “deferred salary and other compensation.” In making these
    statements, Butler specifically invoked paragraphs 2 and 5 of the
    Agreement, a copy of which he attached to the amended
    pleading. He asserted that, on his contract claim alone, he was
    entitled to damages “in a sum exceeding” $1 million. Paragraph
    2 of the attached Agreement specifies that Mediaport was to pay
    Butler a “Base Salary” as set forth on an attached schedule, but
    which was subject to being increased over time. The attached
    schedule indicates that, as of 2003, Butler’s Base Salary was
    $130,000. Paragraph 5 of the Agreement is a lengthy paragraph
    comprising three single-spaced pages, including seven separate
    subsections that describe things that should happen in the event
    that Butler’s employment was terminated. In particular, and
    among other things, that paragraph states that, upon
    termination, Butler would “be entitled to all compensation and
    benefits earned but not yet paid,” including the value of
    “unused vacation, sick and personal days.” It also indicates that
    Butler “shall be entitled to an amount equal to three (3) full years
    of Base Salary.”
    ¶40 Second, Butler points to his interrogatory responses, in
    which he informed Mediaport that he was seeking “severance
    benefits, which included, but were not limited to, payment of
    three times the annual salary, compensation for benefits, and
    pre-payment of legal fees in litigation to enforce the contract,”
    and that he “estimated” that these benefits collectively “exceed
    $1,000,000.00 in value.”
    ¶41 Third, Butler points to statements he made at his
    deposition, where he told Mediaport that his base salary had, at
    first, been “130” but that he had never actually been paid that
    amount because Mediaport had been “deferring” some of his
    compensation. But in that same deposition, he also had a hard
    20200465-CA                     22                
    2022 UT App 37
    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    time providing specific answers to questions related to how
    much salary he had actually been paid while employed by
    Mediaport.
    ¶42 And finally, Butler points to the Hubbard Letter, in which
    Mediaport’s COO set out a purported tally of the amount of the
    value of vacation and sick days Butler had accrued, as well as
    two alternative purported tallies of the deferred compensation
    Butler had accrued. The letter also contained a reference to a
    possible increase in Butler’s salary, from $130,000 to $190,000.
    ¶43 Pointing to all of this information, taken together, Butler
    asserts that Mediaport had a sufficient understanding of his
    damages claims to be able to adequately deploy resources and
    make decisions about defending the case. In particular, Butler
    points out that Mediaport always understood this case to be a
    Tier 3 case, and that it therefore understood the scope and size of
    the litigation he was pursuing. We acknowledge Butler’s point,
    and agree that Mediaport, as Butler’s employer, had access to a
    lot of information about potential damages that Butler might
    claim. But having access to information that may potentially
    help form the basis for a plaintiff’s damages claims is not the
    same thing as possessing a concrete disclosure from the plaintiff
    regarding its claimed damages. We agree with the sentiments of
    the district court when it mused that, if possession of this sort of
    information were sufficient to render inadequate disclosures
    harmless, then harmlessness would be present in “most every
    commercial case.” Certainly, Mediaport was in possession of
    information that allowed it to make some solid educated guesses
    about the types and amounts of damages Butler may have
    intended to claim. But that alone is not enough: “any ability on
    the part of [the defendant] to guess at potential damages does
    not free [the plaintiff] from its obligation to disclose a
    computation of damages.” See Keystone, 
    2019 UT 20
    , ¶ 20; see also
    Vanlaningham, 
    2021 UT App 95
    , ¶¶ 19, 21 (rejecting the plaintiff’s
    harmlessness argument because her failure to properly disclose
    20200465-CA                     23                
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    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    her damages left the defendants to “guess at the components of
    and how [she] calculated her . . . damages claim”).
    ¶44 Our decision is driven, to some degree, by the relative
    complexity of Butler’s damages theories, especially when
    compared to the damages theories at issue in Williams, Chard,
    and Bad Ass Coffee. See Bad Ass Coffee, 
    2020 UT App 122
    , ¶¶ 31–37
    (stating a simple and partially stipulated theory that its damages
    were $500,000 because that was the agreed-upon value of certain
    in-kind services); Chard, 
    2019 UT App 209
    , ¶¶ 40, 43–46 (stating a
    simple theory of unjust enrichment damages: $120,000 as
    described clearly in pleadings and supported by two invoices);
    Williams, 
    2017 UT App 91
    , ¶ 3 (stating a simple compensatory
    damages theory: entitlement to 30% of the purchase price one
    company paid for another). In this case, Butler’s damages
    theories are not as simple as he claims. For instance, much of the
    information Butler identifies lumped some or all of Butler’s
    various—and very different—damages claims together, rather
    than clearly identifying a damages computation for each
    individual claim. Butler’s initial disclosures, such as they were,
    asserted that he had suffered $900,000 worth of damages on his
    contract and conversion claims combined. Similarly, and
    somewhat contradictorily, Butler’s amended counterclaim and
    interrogatory response indicated that his total damages on the
    contract claim alone were in excess of $1 million—an amount
    intended to include both the claimed severance payment (three
    times salary) and also deferred compensation and benefits. A
    plaintiff who combines several components of damages into one
    composite figure has, by doing so, taken action to make the
    situation more—not less—complex. See Vanlaningham, 
    2021 UT App 95
    , ¶ 18 (noting, in determining that disclosures were
    inadequate, that the proffered damages figure “does not
    represent a single item”).
    ¶45 Moreover, Butler’s reliance on the Hubbard Letter is, as
    the district court correctly perceived, foreclosed by Keystone, the
    20200465-CA                    24                
    2022 UT App 37
    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    case in which our supreme court rejected a plaintiff’s attempt to
    rely on a spreadsheet in the defendant’s possession as
    emblematic of the adequacy of its disclosures. See 
    2019 UT 20
    ,
    ¶ 23. Like the spreadsheet in Keystone, the Hubbard Letter is “not
    a dispositive and clear recitation of what damages [Butler] was
    after.” See 
    id.
     (emphasis omitted). Rather, the Hubbard Letter
    was “a mere tool that could aid in the calculation of” Butler’s
    damages, and left Mediaport guessing as to exactly how Butler
    intended to interpret the document and how much weight he
    intended to give it. See 
    id.
     (stating that the spreadsheet still left
    the defendant guessing as to how it “might inform [the
    plaintiff’s] theory of the case”).
    ¶46 Finally, even Butler’s simplest component of damages—
    the part of his contract claim in which he claimed entitlement to
    payment of three times his salary—is not quite as simple as
    Butler asserts. As noted, Butler often combined this claim with
    other components of claimed contract damages, leaving
    Mediaport to wonder how big a role the severance claim played
    in the context of Butler’s overall contract claim. But even
    assessing this component of damages separately, we agree with
    Mediaport that this claim is more complex than the “30% of an
    unspecified purchase price” claim at issue in Williams. First of
    all, the information at issue in Williams came in an actual initial
    disclosure, and not in a cobbled-together amalgam of later-
    produced documents. See Williams, 
    2017 UT App 91
    , ¶ 5.
    Furthermore, the information to which Butler points requires
    Mediaport to follow a series of cross-references from one
    document to the next, from the amended counterclaim to two
    specific (and lengthy) paragraphs in the body of the Agreement
    to a schedule appended to the Agreement. Finally, and perhaps
    most importantly, there remained a fair bit of confusion about
    the relevant “salary” figure that was supposed to be trebled.
    Was it the “Base Salary” identified in the original Agreement
    ($130,000)? Was it an increased “Base Salary” to which Butler
    apparently claimed entitlement later in his employment
    20200465-CA                     25                 
    2022 UT App 37
    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    ($190,000)? Or was it his “annual salary,” a phrase Butler used in
    his interrogatory response, which could conceivably mean either
    the salary to which he thought he was entitled, including unpaid
    deferred compensation, or the salary that he had actually been
    paid? As noted above, when asked how much he had actually
    been paid, Butler had a hard time providing specific figures.
    ¶47 Butler protests that, based on all this information, it
    should have been clear to Mediaport that he was seeking three
    times his Base Salary (rather than his annual salary), and that by
    “Base Salary” he intended the higher figure referred to in the
    Hubbard Letter. At a minimum, he asserts that these relatively
    minor factual distinctions should have been left for a factfinder
    to sort out. But Butler—like the plaintiff in Keystone—
    “misunderstands the burden placed on the plaintiff by rule 26.”
    See Keystone, 
    2019 UT 20
    , ¶ 23. It is not Mediaport’s responsibility
    to cull through the documents and attempt to divine what
    Butler’s damages computations might be; it is Butler’s
    responsibility to tell Mediaport what those computations are. It
    is only in those cases where the damages theories and
    computations are clean and simple, and in which the
    illuminating information is produced or obtained well in
    advance of the end of the fact discovery period, where we can
    say that a district court abused its discretion in concluding that
    an inadequate disclosure was not harmless. See, e.g., Chard, 
    2019 UT App 209
    , ¶¶ 43–46.
    ¶48 Our mention of the district court’s discretion brings us,
    appropriately, back to the standard of review. We recognize that
    assessment of harm in this context is a nuanced matter, and that
    it is sometimes difficult to tell if a defendant has really been
    harmed or is just feigning harm for the purposes of trying to get
    the plaintiff’s damages claims dismissed on non-merits grounds
    prior to trial. In this context, we recognize that a district court
    will almost always have a better vantage point than we do to
    make such a call; partly for this reason, we review a district
    20200465-CA                     26                
    2022 UT App 37
    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    court’s harmlessness determination for abuse of discretion. See
    Keystone, 
    2019 UT 20
    , ¶ 18. On this record, the district court
    determined that Butler had not borne his burden of
    demonstrating that his inadequate disclosures were harmless. In
    particular, the court concluded that Butler’s faulty disclosures
    negatively impacted Mediaport’s ability to defend the lawsuit,
    including its decisions about “allocating resources” during the
    discovery phase of the case. This decision, while perhaps not the
    only possible permissible decision under the circumstances, was
    not outside the bounds of the court’s discretion.
    ¶49 We therefore affirm the district court’s decision to grant
    Mediaport’s motion in limine and consequently strike all of the
    evidence Butler planned to use to support his damages
    counterclaims. And given that Butler therefore had no evidence
    to support those counterclaims, we perceive no error in the
    court’s decision to dismiss them summarily.
    II. Mediaport’s Cross-Appeal
    ¶50 In its cross-appeal, Mediaport challenges the district
    court’s determination that Mediaport was not entitled to recover
    the attorney fees it incurred in this litigation. The court
    determined that the Agreement, even assuming its validity,
    simply did not provide for recovery of attorney fees outside the
    arbitration context. We agree with the district court’s
    assessment.
    ¶51 “In general, a party may recover attorney fees only when
    provided for by statute or contract—the so-called American
    Rule.” USA Power, LLC v. PacifiCorp, 
    2016 UT 20
    , ¶ 93, 
    372 P.3d 629
    . Here, although Mediaport does make mention of Utah’s
    reciprocal attorney fees statute, see Utah Code Ann. § 78B-5-826,
    its attorney fees claims are grounded in the Agreement. We must
    therefore carefully examine the language of that document; after
    all, under the American rule, attorney fees “provided for by
    contract . . . are allowed only in strict accordance with the terms of
    20200465-CA                      27                
    2022 UT App 37
    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    the contract.” Giusti v. Sterling Wentworth Corp., 
    2009 UT 2
    , ¶ 73,
    
    201 P.3d 966
     (emphasis added) (quotation simplified).
    ¶52 Here, there are only two sentences in the Agreement that
    deal with attorney fees, both of which appear in a paragraph
    captioned “Governing Law; Arbitration.” The first such sentence
    states that “[a]ny dispute, controversy or questions arising
    under, out of, or relating to this Agreement . . . shall be referred
    for arbitration,” which “shall be the exclusive and sole means of
    resolving any such dispute.” The next relevant sentence states as
    follows: “In connection with any arbitration, the prevailing party
    shall be entitled to recover its costs and reasonable attorneys’
    fees in addition to other relief granted.” (Emphasis added.)
    ¶53 Butler—at least now5—asserts that these provisions entitle
    the prevailing party to recover attorney fees only in an
    arbitration setting, and not in connection with litigation pursued
    in court. We agree that the plain language of the Agreement
    bears no other reasonable interpretation. The parties to the
    Agreement—assuming, as noted, but without deciding, that the
    Agreement is valid—chose language indicating that recovery of
    attorney fees would be available to the prevailing party in any
    dispute between them, but only if that dispute was resolved in an
    5. Perhaps hedging his bet, Butler in his counterclaim asserted an
    entitlement to recover attorney fees pursuant to the Agreement,
    even though he filed that counterclaim in court and not before
    an arbitrator. Now, however, Butler reads the Agreement as the
    district court did, namely, providing for recovery of only those
    attorney fees incurred in arbitration. But we do not hold Butler’s
    change of heart against him; indeed, had Butler prevailed before
    the district court, we suspect Mediaport would not be very eager
    to pay attorney fees incurred during the litigation and may well
    have taken a different position than it is taking now regarding
    the interpretation of the Agreement’s attorney fees provision.
    20200465-CA                     28                
    2022 UT App 37
    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    arbitration proceeding. The Agreement states that attorney fees
    are recoverable only “[i]n connection with any arbitration.”
    Indeed, there is no mention of entitlement to recover attorney
    fees outside of the paragraph captioned “Arbitration.”
    ¶54 Mediaport resists this conclusion by pointing out that
    Butler, by filing his counterclaim in court and proceeding in
    litigation, waived his right to arbitration. But even assuming the
    truth of that assertion, it is irrelevant to the question at hand; the
    Agreement still does not provide for recovery of fees in court-
    based litigation. Had either side filed this litigation in arbitration
    rather than in court, the prevailing party might very well have
    been entitled to recover fees, pursuant to either the terms of the
    Agreement or Utah’s reciprocal attorney fees statute. See Utah
    Code Ann. § 78B-5-826; see also Hooban v. Unicity Int’l, Inc., 
    2009 UT App 287
    , ¶ 10, 
    220 P.3d 485
    , aff’d, 
    2012 UT 40
    , 
    285 P.3d 766
    .
    But because neither side opted for arbitration, the Agreement
    simply does not provide for any party to recover attorney fees.
    ¶55 Mediaport further protests that, because it took the
    position that the Agreement was invalid, it could not have
    availed itself of an arbitration forum—and thereby invoked the
    attorney fees provision—without harming its position regarding
    the validity of the Agreement. Maybe so. But even assuming that
    Mediaport could not have elected arbitration on a provisional
    basis, the fact that Butler retained control of the operation of the
    attorney fees provision—by being able to choose litigation or
    arbitration—is not necessarily unfair and is merely a function of
    a plaintiff being able to play a significant role in defining the
    scope of litigation. See Ramon v. Nebo School Dist., 
    2021 UT 30
    ,
    ¶ 16, 
    493 P.3d 613
     (referring to the claimant as “master of the
    complaint,” and stating that our adversarial system of justice
    allows a plaintiff “the prerogative of identifying the claims or
    causes of action she seeks to sustain in court” (quotation
    simplified)).
    20200465-CA                      29                
    2022 UT App 37
    Butler v. Mediaport Entertainment
    ¶56 Thus, because the plain language of the Agreement limits
    any recovery of attorney fees to those incurred in arbitration, the
    district court did not err in denying Mediaport’s motion for
    attorney fees.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶57 The district court correctly determined that Butler’s
    damages disclosures were insufficient, and did not abuse its
    discretion in determining that Butler had failed to demonstrate
    that his inadequate disclosures were harmless. Accordingly, the
    court did not err by entering summary judgment, for lack of
    evidence of damages, on all of Butler’s damages counterclaims.
    And finally, the court correctly denied Mediaport’s motion for
    recovery of attorney fees.
    ¶58   Affirmed.
    20200465-CA                    30                
    2022 UT App 37