Court Opinion

ID: 5138888
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-12-21 15:21:39.827463+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:24:12.569091
License: Public Domain

2019 UT App 125

               THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

               LAMAR DREW AND LARENE DREW,
                          Appellants,
                               v.
               PACIFIC LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY,
                            Appellee.

                           Opinion
                      No. 20160314-CA
                      Filed July 18, 2019

           Fourth District Court, Provo Department
              The Honorable Darold J. McDade
                        No. 120402017

        Steven G. Loosle, Paula W. Faerber, and Platte S.
               Nielson, Attorneys for Appellants
        Scott M. Petersen and David N. Kelley, Attorneys
                           for Appellee

   JUDGE GREGORY K. ORME authored this Opinion, in which
     JUDGE MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER concurred.
       JUDGE JILL M. POHLMAN dissented, with opinion.

ORME, Judge:

¶1     LaMar and LaRene Drew appeal the district court’s grant
of summary judgment in favor of Pacific Life Insurance
Company (Pacific) and the court’s denial of the Drews’
cross­motion for partial summary judgment on the issue of
vicarious liability. The Drews contend that the district court
erroneously determined that Pacific was not vicariously liable
for the unlawful misrepresentations made by one of its
appointed insurance producers, R. Scott National, Inc. (RSN).
We reverse the summary judgment in favor of Pacific, and we
remand for the entry of partial summary judgment in favor of
the Drews.
              Drew v. Pacific Life Insurance Company

                         JURISDICTION

¶2      Before turning to the merits, we pause briefly to consider
our jurisdiction. The order appealed from was interlocutory
in nature but was certified as final in contemplation of rule 54(b)
of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure. The certification does
not meet the requirements laid out in a recent line of opinions
from the Utah Supreme Court. See EnerVest, Ltd. v. Utah State
Eng'r, 2019 UT 2, ¶¶ 16–20, 435 P.3d 209 (amended opinion);
Copper Hills Custom Homes, LLC v. Countrywide Bank, FSB, 2018
UT 56, ¶¶ 15–17, 23–28, 428 P.3d 1133 (amended opinion); First
Nat'l Bank v. Palmer, 2018 UT 43, ¶¶ 13–14, 427 P.3d 1169.
Ordinarily in such a case, we dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. See,
e.g., Hayes v. Intermountain GeoEnvironmental Services Inc., 2018
UT App 223, ¶ 1, 437 P.3d 650. But these cases all recognize
that we “have the discretion to treat an improper rule 54(b)
certification as a request for leave to take an interlocutory appeal
under rule 5(a) of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure.” Id. ¶ 5
n.2. Accord EnerVest, 2019 UT 2, ¶ 20; Copper Hills, 2018 UT 56,
¶ 29 n.15; Palmer, 2018 UT 43, ¶ 14 n.4. This discretion to treat
an appeal taken from a non-final order as though it were
an authorized interlocutory appeal is exercised “judiciously
and sparingly.” Copper Hills, 2018 UT 56, ¶ 29 n.15. But it is
exercised from time to time. See, e.g., Hawkins ex rel. Hawkins v.
Peart, 2001 UT 94, ¶ 3 n.2, 37 P.3d 1062 (flawed rule 54(b)
certification); Chaparro v. Torero, 2018 UT App 181, ¶¶ 28–31, 436
P.3d 339 (non-final order due to an outstanding attorney fee
issue). Cf. EnerVest, 2019 UT 2, ¶ 20 (suggesting that discretion to
treat a flawed rule 54(b) certification as an authorized
interlocutory appeal might have been exercised if appellant had
standing on appeal).

¶3     We believe that the considerations that have prompted
Utah’s appellate courts in prior cases to exercise their discretion
to treat a flawed rule 54(b) certification as, instead, a granted
petition for interlocutory appeal, or to decline to exercise

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               Drew v. Pacific Life Insurance Company

that discretion, are of only limited relevance in a subsequent
case. Our resistance to a formulaic approach is inherent in
the very concept of discretion. See Warren v. United States Parole
Comm’n, 659 F.2d 183, 196 (D.C. Cir. 1981) (“[T]he essence of
discretion is the absence of fixed rules.”). See also United States v.
Richards, 659 F.3d 527, 551 (6th Cir. 2011) (“It is the essence
of discretion that it may properly be exercised in different
ways and likewise appear differently to different eyes.”)
(quotation simplified); Walen v. United States, 246 F. Supp. 3d
449, 462 (D.D.C. 2017) (“Flexibility in the face of competing
priorities . . . is the essence of discretion.”) (quotation simplified).

¶4     We determine that this case is appropriate for the exercise
of our discretion to treat the flawed rule 54(b) certification as an
interlocutory appeal pursuant to rule 5(a) of our appellate rules.
Having done so, we now turn to a resolution of the appeal on its
merits.

                          BACKGROUND 1

¶5     In 2009, Pacific appointed RSN as its insurance producer
and authorized it to “solicit and procure applications for
[Pacific’s] life insurance and annuity products.” The agreement,
however, prohibited RSN from soliciting insurance products that
did not meet the “customer’s insurance needs and financial
objectives.” At the time the parties executed the agreement,
Pacific had appointed other companies and individuals to sell its

1. When reviewing a district court’s grant of summary judgment,
“we review the facts in a light most favorable to the losing
party” and “recite the facts accordingly.” Bodell Constr. Co. v.
Stewart Title Guar. Co., 945 P.2d 119, 121 (Utah Ct. App. 1997)
(quotation simplified).

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               Drew v. Pacific Life Insurance Company

insurance products, 2 and RSN sold annuities and insurance
policies on behalf of numerous companies and individuals.

¶6      LaMar and LaRene Drew are retired senior citizens who,
after seeing an advertisement, sought out one of RSN’s
employees as a financial advisor. At the outset, the employee
assisted the Drews in the acquisition and sale of multiple
annuities. Later on, and with the assistance of another RSN
employee, the initial employee informed the Drews that, even
though they were approaching eighty, they could purchase a life
insurance policy with a high death benefit and resell it on the
secondary market for a large profit. 3 Based on this information,
the Drews purchased two $1.5 million life insurance policies, the
first from PHL Variable Insurance Company (PHL) and the
second from Pacific. 4 To fund the premiums on the policies, the

2. Pacific sells its insurance products in all fifty states, and as of
December 2014, it had appointed 358 companies and 2,182
individuals to sell its insurance products on its behalf.

3. At the time of the transaction, Utah law clearly prohibited this
sales tactic. See Utah Code Ann. § 31A-36-111(5) (LexisNexis
2010) (“A person may not issue, solicit, or market the purchase
of a policy for the primary purpose of or with a primary
emphasis on settling the policy.”); id. § 31A-36-102(8) (defining
life settlement as “assigning, selling, transferring, devising,
releasing, or bequeathing” the death benefit of a policy).

4. One might ask how Pacific could possibly justify issuing
such a policy in addition to the $1.5 million life insurance policy
the Drews had with PHL. The record makes clear that
the Drews’ application to Pacific indicated that Pacific’s
policy was intended to replace the PHL policy rather than
supplement it. Additionally, the application queried whether the
Drews planned to transfer the policy “as a repayment of any
                                                      (continued…)

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              Drew v. Pacific Life Insurance Company

RSN employees advised the Drews to obtain a reverse mortgage
on their home. The Drews followed this advice.

¶7     RSN was unable to sell the policies on the secondary
market. After the Drews paid more than $300,000 in premiums
and lost much of the equity in their home, the policies lapsed
when the Drews could no longer afford the premiums. In total,
they lost three-fourths of their life savings, and interest on their
reverse mortgage is accruing at a rate of approximately $1,000
per month.

¶8      The Drews sued Pacific, claiming that it was vicariously
liable for the tortious conduct of RSN’s employees, whom the
Drews contended were acting as Pacific’s agents. Pacific and the
Drews submitted cross-motions for summary judgment, and the
district court granted summary judgment to Pacific. Although
the court did not address whether an agency relationship existed
between Pacific and RSN, it concluded that, even assuming such
a relationship existed, RSN’s employees were not acting within
the scope of their authority as agents of Pacific. The Drews
appeal.

             ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶9      The Drews contend that the district court erroneously
granted summary judgment in favor of Pacific and that
judgment should have been entered in their favor. “We review a
district court’s decision to grant summary judgment for

(…continued)
premium financing debt,” to which an RSN employee answered
“no.” Thus, on paper, Pacific had no way of knowing that the
Drews acquired the policy solely for investment purposes,
although their ages would appear to suggest that possibility.

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              Drew v. Pacific Life Insurance Company

correctness.” Bodell Constr. Co. v. Robbins, 2009 UT 52, ¶ 16, 215
P.3d 933.

                           ANALYSIS

¶10 On appeal, the Drews argue that the district court
misapplied agency law when it concluded that Pacific was not
vicariously liable for the misrepresentations made by RSN’s
employees. “Under principles of vicarious liability, a principal is
held responsible for the tortious acts of an agent acting within
the scope of the agent’s authority.” Wardley Better Homes
& Gardens v. Cannon, 2002 UT 99, ¶ 19, 61 P.3d 1009. Thus, in
order to determine whether Pacific is vicariously liable for the
misrepresentations of RSN’s employees, we must answer two
questions. First, we must decide whether an agency relationship
existed between Pacific and RSN. If we conclude that an agency
relationship did exist, we must then determine whether RSN’s
employees acted within the scope of their authority in their
dealings with the Drews.

                     I. Agency Relationship

¶11 Given its conclusion on the scope of RSN’s authority, the
district court deemed it unnecessary to determine whether an
agency relationship existed between Pacific and RSN. The
parties disagree about whether such a relationship existed.

¶12 The Insurance Code suggests that the existence of an
agency relationship turns on whether an insurance salesperson
is a “producer for the insurer” or a “producer for the insured.”
See Utah Code Ann. § 31A-1-301(88) (LexisNexis 2010). 5 If a

5. We cite the provision in effect when the Drews were solicited
and bought their policies. But this provision, with minimal
variations in numbering and phraseology, has been in effect
                                                  (continued…)

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               Drew v. Pacific Life Insurance Company

producer is “compensated directly or indirectly by an insurer
for selling, soliciting, or negotiating an insurance product of
that insurer,” that producer is a producer for the insurer and
is therefore its agent. See id. § 31A-1-301(88)(b)(i). In contrast, if
a producer is “compensated directly and only by an insurance
customer,” that producer is a producer for the insured and is
not an agent of the insurance company. See id.
§ 31A­1­301(88)(b)(ii)(A).

¶13 It is clear from the record that the RSN employees
received compensation directly from Pacific. Thus, under the
plain terms of the Insurance Code, RSN’s employees were
producers for Pacific and were therefore acting as its agents.

¶14 Nevertheless, Pacific argues that RSN’s employees were
independent insurance brokers rather than its agents. In support
of this argument, Pacific relies on Vina v. Jefferson Insurance Co.,
761 P.2d 581 (Utah Ct. App. 1988), in which this court analyzed
whether an insurance salesperson was an agent or a broker. See
id. at 584–86. In Vina, we articulated some relevant
considerations, including the discretion of the salesperson, the
salesperson’s role as an intermediary between the insurance
company and the prospective insured, and the salesperson’s
ability to bind the insurance company. Id.

¶15 Importantly, Vina predates the current statutory regime,
see supra ¶ 12 n.5, and we qualified our decision in that case by
stating that it was made “under the controlling statutes” in effect

(…continued)
continuously since April 30, 2001. See Utah Code Ann.
§ 31A­1­301 (LexisNexis 2003) (amendment notes). See also id.
§ 31A­1­301(83); id. § 31A­1­301(85) (2005); id. § 31A­1­301(88)
(2010); id. § 31A­1­301(94) (2017); id. § 31A­1­301(95) (Supp.
2018).

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              Drew v. Pacific Life Insurance Company

at the time, 761 P.2d at 585. The Insurance Code has since
streamlined the agency determination in the insurance context,
allowing courts to focus on how the insurance salesperson is
compensated. See Utah Code Ann. § 31A­1­301(88). Thus, given
Vina’s reliance on an outdated statute and the plain language of
the now-controlling statute, the analysis in our previous decision
is of limited utility at best. In any event, Vina is readily
distinguishable from the case before us because the salesperson
in Vina “was not specifically authorized to solicit insurance or
otherwise act on behalf of” the insurance company. Vina, 761
P.2d at 584. Here, Pacific specifically appointed RSN as its
producer and authorized RSN to solicit and procure insurance
applications on its behalf.

¶16 Pacific contends that this interpretation of the Insurance
Code will create a “per se agency relationship . . . , thereby
imposing strict liability on the insurer.” We disagree. While we
recognize that the Insurance Code “does not supplant ordinary
legal principles of agency,” see id. at 585, we do not read the
pertinent provisions as inconsistent with general agency law.

¶17   The Insurance Code provides as follows:

      There is a rebuttable presumption that every
      insurer is bound by any act of its appointed
      licensee performed in this state that is within the
      scope of the appointed licensee’s actual (express or
      implied) or apparent authority, until the insurer has
      canceled the appointed licensee’s appointment and
      has made reasonable efforts to recover from the
      appointed licensee its policy forms and other
      indicia of agency.

Utah Code Ann. § 31A-23a-405(2) (emphasis added). The
Insurance Code simplified but did not alter the standard of
liability applicable to agency relationships in the insurance
context. See Zions Gate R.V. Resort, LLC v. Oliphant, 2014 UT App

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               Drew v. Pacific Life Insurance Company

98, ¶ 6, 326 P.3d 118 (stating that a principal is liable if its agent
acts pursuant to its actual or apparent authority). Under both the
common law and the revised statute, principals are liable for the
tortious acts of their agents when the agents act within the scope
of their authority. Thus, the Insurance Code’s outline of agency
relationships in the context of insurance producers does not, as
Pacific suggests, impose “strict liability on the insurer for all of
the acts of the appointed individual or entity.”

                       II. Scope of Authority

¶18 Having concluded that RSN and its employees were
agents of Pacific, we must now analyze the scope of RSN’s
authority and whether it acted within that authority in
misrepresenting the advisability of certain Pacific life insurance
policies for the Drews. “Under principles of vicarious liability, a
principal is held responsible for the tortious acts of an agent
acting within the scope of the agent’s authority.” Wardley Better
Homes & Gardens v. Cannon, 2002 UT 99, ¶ 19, 61 P.3d 1009.

¶19 Pacific first argues that RSN’s employees acted outside
the scope of their authority because the contract limited RSN
to soliciting and procuring applications; the contract
did not authorize RSN to bind Pacific to any contractual
agreement. In so arguing, Pacific misapprehends the extent of
agency liability. Agents are entitled to “do those acts which
are incidental to, or are necessary, usual, and proper
to accomplish or perform, the main authority expressly
delegated to the agent.” Zions First Nat’l Bank v. Clark Clinic
Corp., 762 P.2d 1090, 1094 (Utah 1988). Although RSN’s
employees may have lacked the authority to create a binding
contract on behalf of Pacific, they could, in the course of
solicitation, “induce the purchase of a policy . . . by
misrepresenting the nature of a product or policy term.” See Dias
v. Nationwide Life Ins. Co., 700 F. Supp. 2d 1204, 1221 (E.D. Cal.
2010). Thus, the proper inquiry is not limited to whether RSN

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              Drew v. Pacific Life Insurance Company

could legally bind Pacific but is more appropriately
characterized as the broader question of whether RSN’s
employees were acting within the scope of their authority when
they misrepresented to the Drews the advisability of their
acquiring Pacific’s life insurance policies.

¶20 Pacific also directs our attention to another provision in
its contract with RSN that expressly prohibited RSN from
soliciting and procuring insurance applications for products that
did not “meet the customer’s insurance needs and financial
objectives.” 6 Thus, citing Bodell Construction Co. v. Stewart Title
Guaranty Co., 945 P.2d 119 (Utah Ct. App. 1997), Pacific argues
that it should not be held liable for RSN’s solicitations in this
case because, as Pacific sees it, an agent acts outside of his or her
authority “where the authority to perform the specific task has
been expressly limited.” In Bodell, a principal limited its agent to
issuing title insurance. Id. at 122. The agent, however, also took it
upon itself to provide escrow services, despite having signed a
contract prohibiting it from engaging in “escrow business.” Id.
Thus, because we concluded that the issuance of title insurance
did not necessarily require the agent to perform escrow
functions, and the insurer expressly prohibited it from acting as
its agent in “escrow business,” we held that the agent acted
outside the scope of its authority in providing escrow services.
Id. at 124–25.

6. Pacific notes that RSN’s employees knew that the Drews did
not require another $1.5 million life insurance policy in addition
to the $1.5 million policy they already had with PHL. Indeed,
from the standpoint of the typical reason for acquiring life
insurance—providing for dependents upon the unexpected
death of the insured—the Drews’ need for life insurance in any
amount is at least questionable. Of course, this would have been
as obvious to Pacific, who wrote the policy, as it was to RSN,
who solicited the policy.

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               Drew v. Pacific Life Insurance Company

¶21 Bodell is factually distinguishable from this case. In Bodell,
the agent was performing a collateral function distinct from the
activities it was authorized to perform, namely, the performance
of escrow services. Id. Here, RSN’s employees were authorized
to solicit life insurance policies, and that is precisely what they
did—albeit in an unprofessional, if not tortious, manner. See
Restatement (Second) of Agency § 230 (Am. Law Inst. 1958) (“An
act, although forbidden, or done in a forbidden manner, may be
within the scope of employment.”). Indeed, a contrary rule to
that stated in the Restatement section just quoted would
essentially enable principals to eliminate vicarious liability
through adroitly crafted contractual provisions. 7

¶22 The United States Supreme Court has stated that “when
a salesperson lies to a customer to make a sale, the tortious
conduct is within the scope of employment because it benefits
the employer by increasing sales, even though it may violate
the employer’s policies.” Burlington Indus., Inc. v. Ellerth, 524 U.S.
742, 756 (1998). See also Restatement (Third) of Agency § 7.07

7. For example, in Carter v. Bessey, 93 P.2d 490 (Utah 1939), a
company prohibited its deliverymen from using the delivery
truck for personal reasons. Id. at 491. One of the company’s
agents completed his delivery route, drove the truck to purchase
a Christmas tree for his family, and struck a pedestrian. Id. The
Utah Supreme Court held that the company’s prohibition did
not excuse the company from liability. Id. at 493. The court noted
that the “doctrine of respondeat superior exists irrespective of
contract” and that principals may still be liable even when
agents act “contrary to the express instructions of the
[principal].” Id. And rightly so. If we followed Pacific’s argument
to its logical conclusion, trucking companies that expressly
forbid drunk, drowsy, or negligent driving could avoid liability
for the torts of their agents by contractually prohibiting driving
in such a manner.

20160314-CA                      11               2019 UT App 125
              Drew v. Pacific Life Insurance Company

cmt. d (Am. Law Inst. 2006) (“[W]hen an employee’s job
duties include making statements to prospective customers
to induce them to buy from the employer, intentional
misrepresentations made by the employee are within the
scope of employment unless circumstances establish that the
employee has departed from it.”). Courts that have considered
the issue in the context of the sale of insurance products have
routinely held insurance companies vicariously liable for the
fraudulent misrepresentations made by their agents. See, e.g.,
Weyand v. Union Central Life Ins. Co., No. 30­2013-00633423, 2016
WL 750433, at *7 (Cal. Ct. App. Feb. 26, 2016); Pan­American Life
Ins. Co. v. Roethke, 30 S.W.3d 128, 132–33 (Ky. 2000); Chicago Title
Ins. Co. v. Washington State Office of Ins. Comm’r, 309 P.3d 372,
381–83 (Wash. 2013). See also Cook v. John Hancock Life Ins. Co.,
No. 7:12–cv–00455, 2015 WL 178108, at *9 (W.D. Va. Jan. 14, 2015)
(denying a motion to dismiss because the misrepresentations
about a life insurance policy “were arguably within the scope of
[the agent’s] actual or apparent authority”).

¶23 Weyand bears a strong resemblance to the facts of this
case. In Weyand, an insurance agent convinced a plaintiff to
purchase $10 million worth of life insurance policies for resale on
the secondary market, claiming that such a tactic was a “no-risk
investment opportunity.” 2016 WL 750433, at *1. As was the case
with the Drews, the plaintiff in Weyand was unable to resell the
policies and they lapsed after the plaintiff could no longer afford
to pay the steep premiums. Id. The insurance company
contended that it could not be held liable because it expressly
prohibited its agent from selling policies to insureds who
intended to resell them on the secondary market. Id. at *4. The
California Court of Appeal disagreed, reasoning that the
“ordinary scope” of the acts entrusted to the agent “included not
only selling policies, but also describing the policies and making
representations to potential purchasers about the policies’
coverage, costs, and other characteristics.” Id. at *5. The court
then noted that the ability to resell a policy on the secondary

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              Drew v. Pacific Life Insurance Company

market “is a characteristic of the policy an insurer reasonably
could expect an agent to discuss with a potential purchaser.” Id.

¶24 We agree that making representations about a policy,
including the ability to resell it, is consistent with the general
work with which RSN was entrusted, that is, solicitation of life
insurance policies. 8 Further, RSN’s actions inarguably served
Pacific’s interest. RSN’s representations resulted in the issuance
of a Pacific policy and in the Drews making premium payments
directly to Pacific. Accordingly, RSN’s employees were acting
within the scope of their authority. See M.J. v. Wisan, 2016 UT 13,
¶ 54, 371 P.3d 21.

¶25 We believe our conclusion is fully in accord with
well­established principles of agency law. Insurance and its
corresponding markets are extremely complicated, and
insurance producers are often the only person or entity that
consumers deal with when making decisions about their
insurance needs. It makes little sense to allow insurance
companies to grant broad solicitation authority to their agents—
who inevitably make many representations to prospective
insureds in hopes of closing a deal—and accept the benefits
therefrom without holding them accountable for the damages
resulting from those very same representations. See Restatement
(Second) of Agency § 8A cmt. a (Am. Law Inst. 1958) (“It would
be unfair for an enterprise to have the benefit of the work of its
agents without making it responsible to some extent for their
excesses and failures to act carefully.”).

8. The Insurance Code defines soliciting as “attempting to sell
insurance” or “asking or urging a person to apply for . . . a
particular kind of insurance . . . from a particular insurance
company.” Utah Code Ann. § 31A-23a-102(13) (LexisNexis 2010).
The representations made by RSN’s employees fall within the
ambit of this definition.

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               Drew v. Pacific Life Insurance Company

                          CONCLUSION

¶26 The district court erroneously granted summary
judgment in favor of Pacific. An agency relationship existed
between Pacific and RSN, and RSN’s employees were acting
within the scope of their authority when they made
misrepresentations regarding life insurance policies to the
Drews. We therefore reverse the decision of the district court
and remand so that it may enter partial summary judgment in
favor of the Drews on the issue of vicarious liability 9 and then
proceed with trial or such other proceedings as may now be
appropriate.

POHLMAN, Judge (dissenting):

¶27 I respectfully dissent from this decision because I
regrettably conclude that we lack jurisdiction to consider this
appeal.

¶28 As the majority correctly notes, the rule 54(b) certification
entered in this case is flawed and thus does not properly invoke
our jurisdiction. And while I agree that we have discretion to
treat certain rule 54(b) certifications as petitions for interlocutory
appeal, Utah R. App. P. 5(a), I do not agree that this case
warrants this particular treatment. Converting a rule 54(b)

9. In doing so, we recognize that the scope of an agent’s
authority is ordinarily a question of fact. See Christensen v.
Swenson, 874 P.2d 125, 127 (Utah 1994). But because RSN’s
employees were clearly acting within the scope of their
authority, given the record before us and the concession of both
sides that the material facts are not in dispute, we decide the
issue as a matter of law. See id.; Birkner v. Salt Lake County, 771
P.2d 1053, 1057 (Utah 1989).

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certification into an interlocutory appeal “is an allowance that
we should wield judiciously and sparingly,” and I think the
better course of action would be to remand the case to the
district court where the parties would have the opportunity to
seek a compliant certification of the relevant orders. See Copper
Hills Custom Homes, LLC v. Countrywide Bank, FSB, 2018 UT 56,
¶ 29 n.15, 428 P.3d 1133.

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