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Appeals court hears Litt’s claim that fiduciary concealment precluded summary judgment
Summary
In Litt v. Haney & Co., the appellant argues a longstanding fiduciary‑duty claim and alleged fraudulent concealment prevented summary judgment; defendants countered that the economic‑loss rule and statutory discovery deadlines bar the claims.
The Utah Court of Appeals heard argument in Litt v. Haney & Company, a civil appeal centered on whether the district court properly granted summary judgment on fiduciary‑duty and related claims arising from a real‑estate transaction.
Counsel for the appellant, John Mackey, told the panel the case rests on a fiduciary relationship and disputed factual issues that preclude summary judgment. "This case presents to us a duty in the law, a relationship in the law that is one of the most…
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