By the Court, CHEERY, J.:
This appeal arises from punitive damages proceedings on remand after we issued our decision in Betsinger v. D.R. Horton, Inc. (Betsinger I), 126 Nev. 162, 232 P.3d 433 (2010), a case that involved fraud and deceptive trade practices in the context of a real estate purchase and loan arrangement. On appeal, we consider whether the proceedings on remand violated NRS 42.005(3), which requires any trier of fact who determines that punitive damages are warranted to also determine the amount of damages to award. Specifically, we consider whether NRS 42.005(3) applies in a remand situation so as to require the second jury on remand to reassess whether punitive damages are warranted before that jury may determine the amount of punitive damages to be awarded. We conclude that NRS 42.005(3) is unambiguous in imposing this requirement. Thus, when the fact-finder is limited to solely making a determination regarding punitive damages, NRS 42.005(3) requires that fact-finder to first determine whether punitive damages are justified — i.e., whether there is clear and convincing evidence of a defendant's oppression, fraud, or malice — and then to determine the amount of damages to award. Because the jury on remand in this case was prevented from determining whether punitive damages were justified, we reverse the district court's punitive damages award and remand for a new trial. We also affirm the denial of attorney fees to D.R. Horton.
This case arose from a failed attempt to purchase a home in Las Vegas, the details of which are more fully set forth in Betsinger I, 126 Nev. 162, 232 P.3d 433 (2010). Briefly, respondent/cross-appellant Steven Betsinger contracted to purchase a house from appellant/cross-respondent D.R. Horton, Inc., and applied for a loan to fund that purchase with D.R. Horton's financing division, appellant/cross-respondent DHI Mortgage, Ltd. Id. at 163, 232 P.3d at 434. After DHI Mortgage refused to fund the loan at the interest rate originally offered, Betsinger canceled the purchase contract. When D.R. Horton failed to return Betsinger's earnest-money deposit, he sued, asserting claims for fraud and deceptive trade practices based on allegations that D.R. Horton caused him to cancel the purchase agreement with false assurances that his deposit would be returned and that it and DHI Mortgage used a "bait and switch" tactic to lure him into making the deposit in the first place. After a trial, the jury found in favor of Betsinger and awarded him compensatory damages against D.R. Horton and DHI Mortgage consisting of actual damages and emotional distress damages, as well as punitive damages against DHI Mortgage.
All parties appealed, and we reversed the judgment as to consequential damages because of Betsinger's failure to present evidence of any physical manifestation of emotional distress. Id. at 166, 232 P.3d at 436. We accordingly reduced the compensatory damages award to the amount of Betsinger's actual damages, $10,727 ($5,190 from D.R. Horton and $5,537 from DHI Mortgage). Id. at 164, 167, 232 P.3d at 434, 436. Because it was impossible to determine what the jury would have awarded Betsinger in punitive damages against DHI Mortgage given the reduction in the compensatory damages award, we declined to arbitrarily reduce the punitive damages amount. Instead, we concluded that "the punitive damages award must be remanded for further proceedings because we cannot be sure what the jury would have awarded in punitive damages as a result of the substantially reduced compensatory award." Id. at 167, 232 P.3d at 437.
Although the parties raise numerous arguments on appeal and cross-appeal, this opinion need analyze only two of those arguments. We first address DHI Mortgage's argument that the district court's jury instruction regarding punitive damages violated NRS 42.005(3)'s "same trier of fact" requirement. We then turn to whether the district court should have awarded D.R. Horton attorney fees.
NRS 42.005 governs when punitive damages are authorized and the process by which those damages are to be awarded. In particular, subsection 1 authorizes punitive damages when "it is proven by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant has been guilty of oppression, fraud or malice." NRS 42.005(1). Subsection 3, in turn, sets forth the process by which those damages are to be awarded:
NRS 42.005(3) (emphases added). On appeal, DHI Mortgage asserts that NRS 42.005(3) unambiguously provides that a single jury must determine both a defendant's liability for punitive damages — i.e., whether clear and convincing evidence demonstrates that the defendant is guilty of oppression, fraud, or malice — and the amount of any award. Thus, according to DHI Mortgage, the district court erred as a matter of law by permitting the second jury to consider only the amount of damages to be awarded. In response, Betsinger contends that NRS 42.005(3)'s "same trier of fact" requirement should not apply when a case has been remanded. In particular, Betsinger contends that DHI Mortgage's reading of NRS 42.005(3) is untenable, as it would essentially entitle DHI Mortgage to a new trial on its underlying liability for fraud, since the jury considering whether punitive damages are warranted would necessarily need to find that DHI Mortgage was guilty of oppression, fraud, or malice.
In interpreting this statute de novo, we will not look beyond the plain language
But where, as in this case's second trial, the fact-finder is tasked only with making a determination regarding punitive damages, NRS 42.005(3) unambiguously requires that fact-finder to first determine whether punitive damages are warranted — i.e., whether there is clear and convincing evidence of a defendant's oppression, fraud, or malice — before determining the amount of punitive damages to award. Thus, we agree with DHI Mortgage that the district court's interpretation and application of our remand instruction in Betsinger I deprived it of its right under NRS 42.005(3) to have the jury determine whether punitive damages were warranted. Even if the district court's instruction that the jury was to determine "what amount, if any, Mr. Betsinger is entitled to for punitive damages" may have permitted the jury to determine that $0 was an appropriate award, this instruction did not require the jury to make the threshold determination of whether punitive damages could be awarded. We emphasize that, under NRS 42.005(3), the trier of fact who determines the amount of punitive damages to be awarded must also make the initial determination of whether punitive damages are warranted.
Finally, we consider D.R. Horton's separate appeal of the district court's order denying its post-remittitur motion for attorney fees as untimely. We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in declining to award attorney fees under the offer of judgment rule. Certified Fire Prot., Inc. v. Precision Constr., Inc., 128 Nev. ___, ___, 283 P.3d 250, 258 (2012); Farmers Ins. Exch. v. Pickering, 104 Nev. 660, 662, 765 P.2d 181, 182 (1988). In addition to reversing and remanding for determination of punitive damages as to DHI Mortgage, Betsinger
Under NRS 42.005(3), a defendant is entitled to have the same finder of fact who determines the amount of punitive damages to be awarded also make the threshold determination of whether punitive damages are warranted. Because that did not happen here, we reverse and remand for a new trial on punitive damages.
We concur: GIBBONS, C.J., and PICKERING, HARDESTY, DOUGLAS, and SAITTA, JJ.