“Material Amendments Reset the Clock” – The Tenth Circuit’s Clarification that a Materially-Amended Judgment, not the Initial Judgment, Triggers Utah’s Eight-Year Enforcement Period, and that Statutory Stays Toll that Period (EarthGrains Baking Companies v. Sycamore Family Bakery, 10th Cir. 2025)

“Material Amendments Reset the Clock” – The Tenth Circuit’s Clarification that a Materially-Amended Judgment, not the Initial Judgment, Triggers Utah’s Eight-Year Enforcement Period, and that Statutory Stays Toll that Period

1. Introduction

EarthGrains Baking Companies, Inc. (“EarthGrains”) has been trying to collect a multi-million-dollar trademark and contract judgment it obtained in 2012 against Leland Sycamore and Sycamore Family Bakery, Inc. In this latest skirmish, non-party Sycamore Family LLC (“the LLC”) and Tyler Sycamore (Leland’s son) sought to terminate a charging order and receivership on the theory that the judgment had expired under Utah’s eight-year statute of limitations for judgments. The district court rejected the argument, and the Tenth Circuit largely affirmed, producing two key holdings:

  1. Standing and Non-Party Appeal: The LLC had standing and a “unique interest” that allowed it to appeal, but Tyler lacked standing and was dismissed.
  2. Limitations & Tolling: For purposes of Utah Code § 78B-5-202 and § 78B-6-1802, the eight-year enforcement period begins on the date of a materially amended judgment, not the original 2012 judgment, and statutory stays totaling 688 days tolled that period. Consequently, the judgment had not expired when the LLC moved to terminate the charging order and receivership.

2. Summary of the Judgment

The appellate panel (Judges Tymkovich, Bacharach, and Phillips) issued an unpublished but persuasive order and judgment that:

  • Dismissed Tyler Sycamore for lack of Article III standing.
  • Recognised the LLC’s right to appeal as a non-party because the district court’s charging order and receivership “directly and adversely” affected its property.
  • Held that the phrase “original judgment” in Utah’s Renewal of Judgment Act refers to the operative money judgment in the case. Where an amended judgment materially alters rights, the enforcement period runs from the amended judgment (1 Sept 2015), not from the superseded 2012 judgment.
  • Tolled the enforcement period for 688 days under the statute’s express language covering periods in which “enforcement of the judgment is stayed in accordance with law.”
  • Declined to reach equitable-tolling arguments, finding statutory tolling dispositive.

3. Analysis

3.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence

  • Marion Energy, Inc. v. KFJ Ranch Partnership, 267 P.3d 863 (Utah 2011).
    Confirmed the textualist approach to Utah statutory interpretation—words are read in context, presuming careful legislative choice.
  • State v. Garner, 106 P.3d 729 (Utah 2005).
    Governs relation-back of amended judgments; where an amendment is “material,” a new operative judgment emerges. The panel relied heavily on this case to conclude the 2015 amendment was material because it restored Leland’s trademark rights in two states.
  • Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 18 cmt. j.
    Explained historical practice of obtaining a separate “renewal” judgment in a new enforcement action—the context that gave rise to Utah’s 2011 Renewal of Judgment Act. The panel used this background to interpret “original judgment” as the operative judgment within the original action.
  • Standing / Appellate Authority Cases:
    • Summers v. Earth Island Institute, 555 U.S. 488 (2009);
    • FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, 602 U.S. 367 (2024);
    • Abeyta v. City of Albuquerque, 664 F.3d 792 (10th Cir. 2011);
    • Frank v. Crawley Petroleum Corp., 992 F.3d 987 (10th Cir. 2021).
    These decisions supplied the analytical framework for evaluating injury-in-fact, causation, redressability, and the “unique interest” exception permitting non-party appeals.

3.2 Legal Reasoning

3.2.1 Interpretation of “Original Judgment”

The Court read § 78B-6-1802(2) in harmony with § 78B-6-1802(1) and Utah’s pre-Act practice. “Original judgment” distinguishes the judgment rendered in the original civil action from any judgment created in a separate renewal/enforcement action. Because the 2015 amendment materially altered substantive trademark rights, it produced a new operative judgment. Thus, the eight-year period began on 1 Sept 2015.

3.2.2 Tolling Under § 78B-5-202(1)

Utah automatically tolls the enforcement period when “enforcement of the judgment is stayed in accordance with law.” Two lawful stays—the appellate stay (667 days) plus a 21-day change-of-counsel stay—totaled 688 days. Adding those days placed the expiration date in July 2025, well after the March 2024 motion to terminate. Because statutory tolling alone kept the judgment alive, the panel did not decide whether equitable tolling would also apply.

3.2.3 Standing & Non-Party Appellate Status

Tyler lacked any personal injury traceable to the judgment enforcement mechanisms, whereas the LLC faced direct compulsory transfer of its assets. That concrete financial injury, coupled with its active participation below, satisfied the “unique interest” test, allowing the LLC—although a non-party—to appeal.

3.3 Impact on Future Cases

  • Limitations Period Reset: Litigants must now treat a substantively amended judgment as a new starting point for Utah’s eight-year enforcement period. Creditors who obtain a material post-trial amendment gain additional time before renewal is required.
  • Statutory Tolling Confirmed: Any court-ordered stay, even a partial stay that still allows limited collections, tolls the statute under § 78B-5-202(1), unless the party opposing tolling can show the stay did not “stay enforcement.”
  • Risk Management for Debtors: Debtor entities cannot assume that delays, appeals, or partial stays will allow the judgment to lapse; those very delays may extend the judgment’s life.
  • Non-Party Appeals: The decision reiterates that entities subjected to charging orders and receiverships can appeal without formal intervention so long as they are directly affected and participated actively below.
  • Uniform Persuasive Authority: Although designated “non-precedential,” the analysis fills a gap in Utah jurisprudence and will likely guide both Utah state courts and federal courts applying Utah law.

4. Complex Concepts Simplified

  • Charging Order: A court directive placing a lien on an LLC member’s economic interest, diverting distributions to satisfy a creditor’s judgment.
  • Receivership: Appointment of a neutral (receiver) to take control of property, collect income, and liquidate assets to satisfy a judgment.
  • Statute of Limitations for Judgments (Utah): Eight years from entry of the operative money judgment, subject to tolling and renewal.
  • Tolling: Suspension of the running of a limitations period. “Statutory tolling” is mandated by a statute; “equitable tolling” is discretionary, applied in fairness.
  • Material Amendment: An amendment that changes substantive rights or obligations — here, restoring trademark rights in two states, altering enforcement scope and value.
  • Standing: The constitutional requirement that a party show a concrete, particularized injury caused by the challenged action and redressable by a favorable decision.
  • Unique-Interest Exception: A narrow appellate doctrine allowing a non-party directly bound by a judgment to appeal when its interests are not adequately protected by existing parties.

5. Conclusion

EarthGrains v. Sycamore Family Bakery clarifies two previously unsettled points of Utah enforcement law: (1) a materially amended judgment restarts the eight-year enforcement period, and (2) statutory stays automatically toll that period. The decision also reinforces the doctrinal boundaries of standing and the “unique interest” route for non-party appeals. Practitioners should reassess collection strategies and calendaring practices in light of the Court’s reasoning; debtors cannot rely on aged original judgments if subsequent amendments affect substantive rights, and creditors enjoy a clearer, extended runway for enforcement when appellate or procedural stays intervene.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit

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