Memorandum decisions of this court do not create legal precedent. A party wishing to cite such a decision in a brief or at oral argument should review Alaska Appellate Rule 214(d).
We previously remanded this matter for the superior court to make further findings regarding its decision to hold Gail Ackels jointly and severally liable with her husband, Delmer Ackels, and their jointly owned company, Gold Dust Mines, Inc., for damages and attorney's fees and costs arising out of two separate judgments.
Our earlier opinion presented a comprehensive discussion of the background of the dispute between Little Squaw Gold Mining Company and Gail, Delmer, and Gold Dust Mines, Inc.
Gail and Delmer are husband-and-wife gold miners. They operate as a business partnership called "Del and Gail Ackels, DBA Gold Dust Mines." In 1989 the Ackelses also incorporated Gold Dust Mines, Inc. and caused it to enter into a ten-year lease agreement with Little Squaw that required Gold Dust Mines, Inc. to mine certain claims owned by Little Squaw.
After the lease agreement expired in 1999, Delmer and Gail's mining equipment remained on Little Squaw's claims and Delmer began staking claims in his own name.
Little Squaw filed this suit several years later to quiet title to and eject the Ackelses from its claims. Following a lengthy trial, a jury returned a verdict generally in Little Squaw's favor. Based on that verdict, the superior court awarded the claims to Little Squaw, found that Little Squaw was the prevailing party, and awarded Little Squaw enhanced attorney's fees and costs. The superior court entered final judgment
Several months after the superior court issued the First Judgment, Little Squaw moved for an order to show cause arguing that Delmer was again mining on its claims. Although the superior court did not find Delmer in contempt, it ordered him to pay the reclamation costs Little Squaw would necessarily incur as a result of his actions. The superior court entered another judgment
Gail and Delmer appealed both judgments.
After we issued our decision, Gail argued to the superior court that we had reversed the judgments against her; she claimed Little Squaw had seized property in which she had an ownership interest; and she moved for a return of the value of her interest in the seized property. She submitted an affidavit in support of her motion, in addition to other exhibits.
In her affidavit, Gail asserted that she was the "half owner of Del and Gail Ackels, DBA Gold Dust Mines, founded in 1974" and that she and Delmer "ha[d] mined ground in different parts of Alaska for over thirty[-]five years." She noted that since she and Delmer "formed the DBA in 1974, [they] personally ha[d] owned all of [their] equipment." Gail stated that "[h]alf of the purchase price of each and every item of equipment [she and Delmer] owned was purchased one half with [her] funds, usually using a joint bank account of Del and Gail Ackels."
The parties submitted briefs and participated in oral argument regarding Gail's motion. Their discussions focused on whether the superior court should enter specific veil-piercing findings to support the First and Second Judgments as against Gail because she was a part owner of Gold Dust Mines, Inc. Following oral argument, the superior court issued an order supporting its decision to pierce Gold Dust Mines, Inc.'s corporate veil, but alternatively finding Gail liable because "[she] was jointly and severally liable for the debts and obligations of the partnership, which it [was] uncontested was the entity which was operating in the field after the expiration of the lease through 2003." Gail appeals both rulings.
Whether the superior court has decided an issue based on a legal theory not argued by one of the parties is a question we initially review under the abuse of discretion standard.
If the superior court has not abused its discretion, we then review the court's decision to determine if it has violated a party's right to due process.
Gail challenges the superior court's decision, in part, for lack of notice that it would consider holding her liable on the basis of partnership liability.
We have held that "[b]asic procedural fairness requires notice and an opportunity for a hearing that is appropriate in light of the nature of the case."
We conclude that the superior court did not abuse its discretion here. Gail is the one that affirmatively emphasized her partnership with Delmer during the proceedings on remand. She asserted that she was a half owner of a partnership with Delmer and that she and Delmer had been mining together for over thirty-five years. She stated that their mining license was held in the name of the partnership. She also asserted that she and Delmer have personally owned all of their equipment, tools, and personal property since 1974, when they formed their partnership.
Gail also admitted that she contributed half of the purchase price for every piece of equipment they have owned, and she co-signed a loan with Delmer to further their mining activities. Gail later signed an agreement — as part owner of the partnership business — to secure the release of any liens against their equipment.
On appeal to this court, Gail has failed to make a plausible showing that her evidentiary presentation would have been different had she been aware that the superior court might find her liable on the basis of partnership liability. In Frost v. Spencer we considered an argument similar to the one Gail makes.
Each of these points indicated specific categories of information to which Frost would have testified or sought to have admitted into the record.
Gail's allegations, by contrast, do not demonstrate that her evidentiary presentation would have been different. Instead, she states that certain types of evidence are not in the record without ever indicating that she could, and would, have introduced additional evidence on particular subjects. A party claiming she should have received notice and a hearing must make a plausible showing of what different, relevant evidence she would have adduced and how she was prejudiced by the lack of a hearing because she would have introduced or emphasized different evidence.
In Frost we applied the abuse of discretion standard as a way of avoiding the constitutional due process question.
Under our due process balancing test,
We recognize that the superior court's decision has the potential to negatively impact Gail's property rights and the burden on the government (here, the court system) — additional motion practice or evidentiary hearings — would not necessarily be substantial. But given Gail's affirmative representations regarding her partnership with Delmer and her failure to indicate what relevant evidence she might produce in a future hearing, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of her property interests is de minimis at best, and requiring additional proceedings has little, if any, probable value. Considering the facts and circumstances of this case, the superior court's procedure did not violate Gail's right to due process.
We AFFIRM the superior court's order regarding Gail's liability for the reasons stated above.