By the Court, HARDESTY, C.J.:
NRS 116.3105(2) permits a homeowners' association that provides at least 90 days' notice to terminate "any contract ... that is not in good faith or was unconscionable to the units' owners at the time entered into." In this writ petition, we address whether the 90 days' notice operates as a statute of limitations or a notice for the recipient to commence litigation. We conclude that NRS 116.3105(2) does not act as a statute of limitations, and a recipient of an association's notice of termination of a contract is not required to take legal action within the 90-day time frame. Accordingly, we deny this petition.
In 1996, Kreg Rowe, the developer of petitioner Double Diamond Ranch Master Association (the Association) entered into a Maintenance and Operation Agreement (Maintenance Agreement) with the City of Reno. Because the property was in a flood zone, the Federal Emergency Management Agency required the developer to obtain a Letter of Map Revision and enter into the Maintenance Agreement prior to developing the South Meadows and Double Diamond Ranch homes in Reno, Nevada. The Maintenance Agreement requires, among other obligations, that the Association maintain certain flood control channels, provide rock rip-rap protection in the Double Diamond/South Meadows area, and file an annual report.
In February 2012, the Association gave notice to the City that it was terminating the contract pursuant to NRS 116.3105(2). This statute permits homeowners' associations to terminate at any time a contract that was entered into by a declarant
At the hearing on the motion, the Association argued that the statute required the recipient of the notice of contract termination to file suit within 90 days. More specifically, the Association argued that the burden shifted to the recipient to bring a cause of action within that time if it questioned an association's claim of unconscionability or lack of good faith. The district court ultimately denied the Association's motion to dismiss. The court determined that there were several genuine issues of material fact; for example, whether the Association, including the property owners, benefited from the Maintenance Agreement and whether the parties' agreement was unconscionable. Further, the court stated that the statute provided no guidance as to when a recipient must pursue legal action, and instead, the City's letter rejecting the Association's notice of termination provided enough notice to the Association "that a justiciable controversy may exist as a result." Thereafter, the Association petitioned this court for a writ of mandamus or prohibition directing the district court to vacate its order denying the Association's motion to dismiss and to order dismissal instead.
The Association petitions this court for a writ of mandamus compelling the district court to vacate the court's order denying its motion to dismiss.
While the Association has an adequate legal remedy, whether the 90-day notice period within NRS 116.3105(2) operates as a statute of limitations is an important issue of law in need of clarification, and resolving this issue at this stage of the proceedings would promote judicial economy. Accordingly, we exercise our discretion to consider the Association's petition.
The Association argues that the statute requires the recipient of a notice of contract termination under NRS 116.3105(2) to take legal action within 90 days, otherwise the 90-day language is superfluous. The Association further argues that the 90-day notice shifts the burden to the recipient to commence an action. We disagree.
Pursuant to NRS 116.3105, a homeowners' association may terminate contracts or leases
This court has concluded that when a statute is facially clear, it will give effect to the statute's plain meaning. D.R. Horton, Inc. v. Eighth Judicial Dist. Court, 123 Nev. 468, 476, 168 P.3d 731, 737 (2007). Where a statute is ambiguous, because it is susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation, this court will consider reason and public policy to determine legislative intent. Cable v. State ex rel. Emp'rs Ins. Co. of Nev., 122 Nev. 120, 124-25, 127 P.3d 528, 531 (2006). In addition, this court assumes that when enacting a statute, the Legislature is aware of related, statutes. Id. at 125, 127 P.3d at 531.
NRS 116.3105(2) states in full as follows:
The statute does not expressly indicate what rights and obligations a recipient has when it receives an association's notice of termination of a contract. On the one hand, the 90 days' notice could indicate the time frame a party has to pursue legal action; on the other hand, the 90 days' notice could merely indicate the period the association must continue to perform under the contract before termination. Accordingly, we conclude that NRS 116.3105(2) is ambiguous, and we therefore look to the intent of the Legislature and to related statutes.
When interpreting an ambiguous statute to determine the Legislature's intent, this court will look to the legislative history of the statute in light of the overall statutory scheme. See We the People Nev. v. Miller, 124 Nev. 874, 881, 192 P.3d 1166, 1171 (2008). In addition, "`[t]he [L]egislature is presumed to have intended a logical result, rather than an absurd or unreasonable one.'" Clark Cnty. Sch. Dist. v. Clark Cnty. Classroom Teachers Ass'n, 115 Nev. 98, 103, 977 P.2d 1008, 1011 (1999) (quoting Angoff v. M & M Mgmt. Corp., 897 S.W.2d 649, 654 (Mo.Ct. App.1995)).
When the Legislature codified NRS Chapter 116, it modeled the chapter on the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act (UCIOA). See, e.g., Hearing on A.B. 221 Before the Assembly Judiciary Comm., 66th Leg. (Nev., March 20, 1991); Hearing on A.B. 221 Before the Senate Judiciary Comm., 66th Leg. (Nev., May 23, 1991). Nevada did not amend any of the UCIOA language in the section of the bill that became NRS 116.3105(2), and thus, the statute mirrors section 3-105 of the UCIOA. See Hearing on A.B. 221 Before the Assembly Judiciary Comm., 66th Leg., Exhibit C (Nev., April 17, 1991) (indicating no changes to the section of the bill that became NRS 116.3105(2)). Compare NRS 116.3105(2), with Unif. Common Interest Ownership Act § 3-105(b) (2008), 7 U.L.A. 349 (2009). Testimony from one of the committee hearings on Assembly Bill 221 indicated that "association management and consumer protection were the two most common threads throughout the bill." Hearing on A.B. 221 Before the Assembly Judiciary Comm., 66th Leg. (Nev., February 20, 1991) (testimony of Stephen Hartman).
Similarly, commentary to the UCIOA reflects that the purpose behind this law was to address the "common problem in the development of ... planned community ... projects: the temptation on the part of the developer, while in control of the association" to engage in self-dealing contracts. Unif. Common Interest Ownership Act § 3-105 cmt. 1, 7 U.L.A. 349. Thus, this law allows an association to terminate any contract that is not bona fide or is unconscionable: "certain contracts ... [are] so critical to the operation of the common interest community and to the unit owners' full enjoyment of their rights of ownership that they ... should be voidable by the unit owners." Id. at § 3-105 cmt. 2, 7 U.L.A. 349.
The Restatement (Third) of Property also permits a similar termination of a contract entered into by a developer that is not bona fide or is unconscionable to the members, and also recognizes the conflicting interests of the declarant and the association.
Thus, interpreting the statute as a statute of limitations as the Association suggests would require us to read additional language into the statute, which we decline to do.
Moreover, this court has identified three purposes for which statutes of limitations are intended to operate:
State Indus. Ins. Sys. v. Jesch, 101 Nev. 690, 694, 709 P.2d 172, 175 (1985).
Considering these purposes here, the evidentiary purpose is moot since the statute permits an association to terminate contracts "at any time." NRS 116.3105(2). Because an association can terminate a contract at any time, time passage, fading memories, disappearing witnesses, and lost evidence are seemingly less important than preserving an association's right to terminate.
The second and third purposes would be incongruent with the customary statute of limitations for contracts (either four or six years depending on if the contract is in writing).
Thus, we conclude that neither the statute's plain language nor legislative history shows that the Legislature intended for the 90 days' notice requirement in NRS 116.3105(2) to act as a statute of limitations for a notice recipient to commence litigation. Rather, upon notice from an association, the notice recipient would then have the customary period of limitations for contracts under NRS 11.190 in which to commence an action.
Because we conclude that the 90-day notice period in NRS 116.3105(2) does not operate as a statute of limitations or shift the burden to a notice recipient to file an action, we conclude that the district court did not err in denying the Associations motion to dismiss, and we deny this petition.
We concur: PARRAGUIRRE, DOUGLAS, SAITTA and GIBBONS, JJ.
PICKERING, J., with whom CHERRY, J., agrees, concurring:
I agree with the majority's decision to deny the petition for a writ of mandamus or prohibition but would do so on the basis that this challenge to the district court's order denying the petitioner's motion to dismiss does not qualify for extraordinary writ relief. At best, the petition asserts legal error by the district court in not crediting the petitioner's argument that, under NRS 116.3105, the City of Reno had 90 days to sue, once the Double Diamond Ranch Master Association (HOA) gave notice it was terminating the parties' contract as "not bona fide" or "unconscionable." This termination provision, or one like it, has been part of the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act (UCIOA) since 1982. Compare UCIOA § 3-105(b) (2008), 7 U.L.A., part 1B 349 (2009), with UCIOA § 3-105 (1982), 7 U.L.A., part 2 107 (2009). Yet, as the majority acknowledges, no court, including our Nevada district courts, has read this termination provision as petitioner does. It is more natural to read the provision as the district court did: after a notice of termination under NRS 116.3105, an HOA-terminable contract remains in force for at least 90 days. Such a contract is prospectively voidable but not void, in other words.
Mandamus does not lie to correct a district court's legal error in denying a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. State ex rel. Dep't of Transp. v. Thompson, 99 Nev. 358, 361-62, 662 P.2d 1338, 1340 (1983); see Int'l Union, United Auto., Aerospace & Agric. Implement Workers of Am. (UAW) v. Nat'l Caucus of Labor Comms., 525 F.2d 323, 326 (2d Cir.1975) ("It is not the function of mandamus to allow ad hoc appellate review of interlocutory orders when only error is alleged."). Such an error, if one occurs, is correctable by the district court as the case proceeds and by this court on direct appeal from the eventual final judgment. See Reno Hilton Resort Corp. v. Verderber, 121 Nev. 1, 5-6, 106 P.3d 134, 136-37 (2005) (emphasizing that the final judgment rule, which withholds appellate review until final judgment is
This petition, as filed, met none of the conventional criteria for extraordinary writ relief. It asserts legal error in the denial of a motion to dismiss. But the error not only was not "clear," as mandamus relief requires; it was, as the majority concludes, nonexistent. Nor did the petitioner establish that an eventual appeal would not afford an adequate legal remedy. The only harm alleged was the expense associated with the HOA having to defend itself in district court. But this harm inheres in any order denying a motion to dismiss and, by itself, is not enough to justify writ relief. "Postponing appeal to the end of a litigation, rather than interrupting it in medias res with a mandamus proceeding that would require this court to conduct interlocutory appellate review, is as likely to reduce as to increase the total expense of the litigation." In re Linee Aeree Italiane, 469 F.3d at 640.
I recognize that, in International Game Technology, we deemed advisory or supervisory mandamus permissible when needed to resolve "an important issue of law [that] needs clarification and considerations of sound judicial economy and administration militate in favor of granting the petition." 124 Nev. at 197-98, 179 P.3d at 559. Such use of extraordinary writ review provides a needed "escape hatch" from the finality rule, which ordinarily defers appellate review until final judgment is reached in the district court, and the strict limitations conventionally imposed on extraordinary writ relief. Cf. Am. Express Warehousing, Ltd. v. Transamerica Ins. Co., 380 F.2d 277, 282 (2d Cir. 1967). "Even so, proper occasions for employing advisory mandamus are hen's-teeth rare: it is reserved for blockbuster issues, not merely interesting ones." In re Bushkin Assocs., Inc., 864 F.2d 241, 247 (1st Cir.1989). These limitations need to be observed, or the narrow exception to the rules governing extraordinary writ relief set forth in International Game Technology will overrun the final judgment rule.
I respectfully disagree with my colleagues in the majority that petitioner's argument with respect to the UCIOA termination provision codified as NRS 116.3105 presents the kind of "important issue of law need[ing] clarification" that would qualify a case for advisory mandamus. To me, the fact that the provision has existed for more than 30 years without any court or commentator reading it as the petitioner presses us to do should have led us to summarily deny the petition so the case could proceed in district court. Instead, once this court ordered an answer and full briefing, the parties voluntarily suspended all proceedings in the district court, halting its forward progress. I submit that we should have denied the petition as procedurally insufficient, without reaching the merits. I therefore concur, but only in the result.
I concur: CHERRY, J.