    Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the P ACIFIC R EPORTER .
    Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,
    303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email
    corrections@appellate.courts.state.ak.us.



             THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

ALASKAN ADVENTURE TOURS,                     )

INC., KIMBERLY RIEDEL-BYLER,                 )        Supreme Court No. S-14483

aka KIMBERLY C. RIEDEL,                      )

K. CHRISTINA RIEDEL, and/or                  )        Superior Court No. 1JU-08-00434 CI
KIMBERLY BYLER, and ABC                      )
LEASING, LLC,                                )        OPINION
                                             )
                    Appellants,              )        No. 6814 - August 23, 2013
                                             )
    v.                                       )
                                             )
THE CITY AND BOROUGH OF                      )

YAKUTAT,                                     )

                                             )

                    Appellee.                )

                                             )


            Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, First
            Judicial District, Juneau, Patricia A. Collins, Judge and
            Niesje J. Steinkruger, Judge pro tem.

            Appearances: John E. Casperson, Holmes Weddle & Barcott,
            Seattle, Washington, for A ppellants. James T. Brennan,
            Hedland, Brennan and Heideman, Anchorage, for Appellee.

            Before: Fabe, Chief Justice, Carpeneti, Winfree, and
            Stowers, Justices. [Maassen, Justice, not participating.]

            CARPENETI, Justice.
I.     INTRODUCTION
              This appeal concerns a company’s efforts to vacate a fraudulent conveyance
judgment. The company sought relief under Alaska Civil Rule 60(b)(3), claiming fraud
and misconduct on the part of a borough in the course of a fraudulent conveyance trial
concerning liability for property taxes. Specifically, the company argued that a police
officer falsely testified at trial concerning a conversation he allegedly had with the
company president regarding the company’s obligation to pay borough taxes. The
superior court denied relief under Rule 60(b)(3), finding that the company had failed to
establish clear and convincing evidence of fraud. The company appeals, arguing that the
superior court applied the incorrect legal standard and that the company presented clear
and convincing evidence of fraud. The company also appeals various orders relating to
discovery and the award of attorney’s fees. Because the superior court applied the
correct legal standard and did not abuse its discretion in finding that there was not clear
and convincing evidence of fraud, we affirm its denial of the Rule 60(b) motion.
Because the superior court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to reopen discovery
or awarding attorney’s fees, we affirm those rulings as well.
II.    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
       A.     General Background
              The City and Borough of Yakutat (Yakutat) instituted an action to collect
taxes from Alaskan Adventure Tours, Inc. (Adventure Tours).             Adventure Tours
operated a commercial hunting and guide business in 2007; Kimberly Byler1 was the
owner and president of the company, and her husband Darren Byler was the general
manager. In 2008 Yakutat filed an action in state district court against Adventure Tours


      1
            In the record, Kimberly is variously referred to as Kimberly Byler,
Kimberly C. Riedel, Kimberly Riedel-Byler, and K. Christina Riedel. We refer to her
as “Kimberly Byler” in this opinion.

                                            -2-                                      6814
related to unpaid sales and transient accommodation taxes and obtained a final judgment
in the amount of $95,808.46 for unpaid taxes, penalties, interest, and other costs. In
April 2009 Yakutat filed a supplemental complaint alleging that Adventure Tours and
Kimberly had (in late 2007 and early 2008) engaged in fraudulent conveyance to avoid
payment of the taxes by transferring all of Adventure Tours’ assets to Kimberly
personally and then to ABC Leasing, LLC, another company solely owned by Kimberly.
              The fraudulent conveyance claim was transferred from the district court to
the superior court, and Superior Court Judge Patricia A. Collins presided over a jury trial
in February 2010. At trial, Adventure Tours and co-defendant Kimberly defended on
grounds that they had no notice of Yakutat’s tax claim at the time of the asset transfers.
John Nichols, the Yakutat chief of police, testified that he had a conversation with
Kimberly in 2007 during which she demonstrated awareness of Yakutat’s tax claim
against Adventure Tours. He stated that this conversation took place as he drove
Kimberly to the airport after interviewing her in May 2007 about an unrelated matter at
the Yakutat police station. Kimberly testified that this conversation never occurred and
that Chief Nichols did not drive her to the airport. Apart from Chief Nichols’s testimony,
Yakutat offered substantial additional evidence of notice at trial. This evidence included
the following: (1) several letters from Yakutat to Adventure Tours, sent in 2004, 2005,
and 2007, advising Adventure Tours of the obligation to pay Yakutat taxes when doing
business in the area; (2) Yakutat attorney Sara Heideman’s testimony that Darren Byler
had called her in May 2007 to dispute Adventure Tours’ liability for the taxes and
evidence in support of this testimony, including Heideman’s contemporaneous notes, her
time sheet, and Adventure Tours’ phone records; and (3) Yakutat tax and license clerk
Ladonna James’s testimony that Kimberly called James in response to a February 2007
letter from James to discuss Adventure Tours’ obligations to pay Yakutat taxes.



                                           -3-                                       6814

             The jury found that Adventure Tours and Kimberly had fraudulently
conveyed assets to ABC Leasing. It also found that Kimberly had intentionally testified
untruthfully at her judgment debtor examination regarding the existence or value of
Adventure Tours’ assets and as to the availability of Adventure Tours’ business records.
On the basis of these verdicts, Judge Collins entered judgment in favor of Yakutat on
March 18, 2010.2
             One year later, Adventure Tours moved for relief from the fraudulent
conveyance judgment under Alaska Civil Rule 60(b)(3) on the basis of fraud and
misconduct on the part of Yakutat. Alternatively, Adventure Tours requested that the
court hold the motion in abeyance and permit Adventure Tours additional time to
conduct new discovery. Judge Collins denied the motion and awarded Yakutat enhanced
attorney’s fees of 50% for opposing Adventure Tours’ Rule 60(b) motion. Adventure
Tours then brought a motion for reconsideration, which was denied by Superior Court
Judge Niesje J. Steinkruger.3 Adventure Tours now appeals the denial of its Rule
60(b)(3) motion and its motion for reconsideration. It also appeals the superior court’s
denial of its request to reopen discovery and the court’s order awarding Yakutat
enhanced attorney’s fees.
      B.     Facts And Proceedings Directly Related To The Issues On Appeal
             A key issue at the fraudulent conveyance trial was whether Adventure
Tours had notice of Yakutat’s tax claims at the time of the asset transfer from Adventure
Tours to Kimberly Byler to ABC Leasing. The central claim in Adventure Tours’ Rule


      2
              For various reasons the judgment was amended several times; ultimately
the court entered a Third Amended Judgment on Fraudulent Conveyance on January 29,
2011, dated nunc pro tunc March 18, 2010.
      3
              The case was reassigned to Judge Steinkruger on June 7, 2011, due to Judge
Collins’s retirement from the bench.

                                           -4-                                     6814

60(b) motion was that Chief Nichols falsely testified at trial that he had discussed
Yakutat’s tax claim with Kimberly when he drove her to the airport on May 15, 2007.
             1.     Summary of factual disputes
             The parties dispute whether Chief Nichols drove Kimberly Byler to the
airport on May 15, 2007 and, consequently, whether they discussed Adventure Tours’
tax obligations to Yakutat at that time. Adventure Tours asserts that Chief Nichols
falsely testified that he gave Kimberly a ride to the airport. Adventure Tours supports
this assertion with two allegations. First, Adventure Tours alleges that Chief Nichols’s
testimony regarding the order of the interviews of Kimberly and an Adventure Tours
employee is false. Chief Nichols testified that he interviewed Kimberly before the
employee, but Adventure Tours asserts that Kimberly was interviewed after the
employee. Second, Adventure Tours argues that the computer and audio evidence
confirming Chief Nichols’s testimony regarding the time and order of the interviews was
altered in order to support his false version of the events of May 15, 2007. Yakutat
disputes these accusations, contending that Chief Nichols testified truthfully regarding
the order and time of the interviews, and that there is no evidence to support Adventure
Tours’ allegations of evidence tampering.
             2.     Chronology of events on May 15, 2007
             Although the fraudulent conveyance trial took place in 2010, the disputed
events relate to a May 2007 investigation of an unrelated matter, the drowning death of
a crew member on an Adventure Tours boat. On May 15, Kimberly and Adventure
Tours employee Brian Barton arrived in Yakutat by an air taxi flight from Icy Bay.
Chief Nichols and a deputy transported Kimberly and Barton to the Yakutat police
station, where Kimberly and Barton were interviewed by Chief Nichols. Both of these
interviews were recorded.



                                            -5-                                   6814

              The order of the interviews is disputed. Chief Nichols testified that his
interview with Kimberly ended at 11:10 a.m. and was about 19 minutes long. He stated
that he next interviewed Barton from 11:15 a.m. to 11:26 a.m. This timeline accords
with Chief Nichols’s contemporaneous statements made on the audio recordings of the
interviews, the computer date-time stamp on Chief Nichols’s computer indicating the
original download time of the audio recordings, and the record start and stop times as
written into the file by the Olympus recorder used to make the audio recordings. It is
sometime after the conclusion of these interviews that Yakutat asserts the disputed ride
to the airport took place.
              3.     The superior court’s rulings
              Judge Collins denied Adventure Tours’ Rule 60(b) motion, finding that
Adventure Tours’ claims were “not supported by significant evidence beyond [the
Bylers’] own testimony — which was clearly rejected by the jury in reaching its verdict
and found to be untruthful by the jury and this court.” The court concluded that there
was not clear and convincing evidence of fraud. Moreover, the court found that “[t]here
is absolutely no reason to believe that the verdict would have been different had Chief
Nichol[s]’s testimony not been presented” and stated that “[a]t best, the instant attack on
the jury verdict involves claims of an imperfect recollection about a largely
inconsequential event.” The court did not address Adventure Tours’ claims of evidence
tampering in its order.
              Judge Steinkruger denied Adventure Tours’ motion for reconsideration of
the denial of its Rule 60(b) motion. Judge Steinkruger denied the motion on two bases
— on procedural grounds because the motion sought to augment arguments related to
the 60(b) motion, and on the merits because the court found that even if Adventure
Tours’ “new evidence” was considered, it still failed to establish by clear and convincing
evidence that the verdict was obtained by fraud.

                                            -6-                                      6814

III.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
              Motions for relief from judgment brought under Civil Rule 60(b) are
reviewed on appeal only for an abuse of discretion.4 However, whether the trial court
applied the correct legal standard is a question of law that is reviewed de novo.5 We
review the denial of a motion for reconsideration for abuse of discretion.6 An abuse of
discretion exists if we are “left with a definite and firm conviction on the whole record
that the trial judge has made a mistake.”7
              We review discovery orders, including motions to reopen discovery, for
abuse of discretion.8 We also review awards of attorney’s fees for an abuse of discretion
and will reverse only if the award is “arbitrary, capricious, manifestly unreasonable, or




       4
              Williams v. Williams, 252 P.3d 998, 1004 (Alaska 2011) (“A trial court’s
ruling on an Alaska Civil Rule 60(b) motion is reviewed for abuse of discretion; it will
not be disturbed unless we are left with ‘the definite and firm conviction on the whole
record that the judge ha[s] made a mistake.’ ” (alteration in original) (quoting Thomas
v. Thomas, 581 P.2d 678, 679 (Alaska 1978))).
       5
              Rego v. Rego, 259 P.3d 447, 452 (Alaska 2011).
       6
              Smith v. Groleske, 196 P.3d 1102, 1105 (Alaska 2008) (citing Manelick v.
Manelick, 59 P.3d 259, 262 (Alaska 2002)). Such review does not focus on the merits
of the underlying decision, but only on the propriety of the denial of reconsideration. Id.
at 1106.
       7
             Babinec v. Yabuki, 799 P.2d 1325, 1332 (Alaska 1990) (citing Alaska
Placer Co. v. Lee, 502 P.2d 128, 132 (Alaska 1972)).
       8
             See Prentzel v. State, Dep’t of Pub. Safety, 169 P.3d 573, 594 (Alaska
2007); Hallam v. Alaska Airlines, Inc., 91 P.3d 279, 283 (Alaska 2004) (citing Taylor
v. Johnston, 985 P.2d 460, 463 (Alaska 1999)).

                                             -7-                                     6814

stemmed from improper motive.”9 We review the superior court’s interpretation of the
civil rules de novo.10
IV.    DISCUSSION
       A.     The Alaska Civil Rule 60(b)(3) Motion
              Civil Rule 60(b)(3) provides that a party may be relieved from a judgment
for the fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct of an adverse party. The party who
asserts fraud, misrepresentation, or misconduct has the burden of proving those
assertions by clear and convincing evidence.11 “The conduct complained of must be
material in the sense that it prevented the losing party from fully and fairly presenting his
case or defense.”12 Therefore, in order to prevail on its Rule 60(b)(3) motion, the moving
party must prove not only that there was misconduct but also that such conduct prevented
it from fully and fairly presenting its case at trial.13
              Adventure Tours argues that the superior court applied the wrong legal
standard in its Rule 60(b) ruling. In addition, Adventure Tours contends that the superior
court abused its discretion in denying the Rule 60(b) motion because, taken together, the
facts presented by Adventure Tours constitute clear and convincing evidence of

       9
             Wagner v. Wagner, 183 P.3d 1265, 1266-67 (Alaska 2008) (quoting Ware
v. Ware, 161 P.3d 1188, 1192 (Alaska 2007)).
       10
            Wolff v. Cunningham, 187 P.3d 479, 482 (Alaska 2008) (citing Miller v.
Clough, 165 P.3d 594, 599 n.8 (Alaska 2007)).
       11
            Babinec, 799 P.2d at 1333 (citing McCall v. Coats, 777 P.2d 655, 658
(Alaska 1989)).
       12
              Id.
       13
              See 12 JAMES W M . M OORE ET AL ., M OORE ’S FEDERAL PRACTICE ¶ 60.43
[1][c] (3d ed. 2012) (“Courts determining Rule 60(b)(3) motions always require proof
that the alleged fraud or other misconduct prevented the moving party from fully and
fairly presenting his or her case at trial.”).

                                              -8-                                      6814

fraudulent conduct on the part of Yakutat sufficient to warrant relief from judgment.
Yakutat responds that the superior court applied the correct legal standard and that its
denial of Adventure Tours’ Rule 60(b) motion was not an abuse of discretion because
Adventure Tours failed to present clear and convincing evidence of fraud or misconduct.
              1.     The superior court applied the correct legal standard.
              Adventure Tours also contends that — rather than simply applying the clear
and convincing evidentiary standard — the superior court erroneously required it to meet
two additional tests. That is, the superior court mistakenly required (1) proof that the
fraud could not have been timely discovered by due diligence and (2) proof that the jury
verdict would have been different but for the alleged fraud. We disagree. The superior
court correctly applied the clear and convincing standard14 and, as explained below, did
not erroneously impose any additional requirements on Adventure Tours.
              Adventure Tours argues that the superior court incorrectly applied the due
diligence standard required under Alaska Civil Rule 60(b)(2) to its Rule 60(b)(3)
motion,15 effectively requiring proof that Chief Nichols’s alleged fraud could not have
been discovered by due diligence. To support this argument, Adventure Tours seizes on
the court’s statement that Adventure Tours was aware of Chief Nichols’s statement many
months before trial and that it “could have examined these issues at or long before trial.”
But this argument is unavailing. The court’s observation regarding Adventure Tours’
failure to examine these issues at trial is not an application of the due diligence

       14
              Babinec, 799 P.2d at 1333 (“One who asserts fraud, misrepresentation or
misconduct as a ground for relief under Civil Rule 60(b)(3) has the burden of proving
those assertions by clear and convincing evidence.” (citing McCall, 777 P.2d at 658)).
       15
              Compare Alaska R. Civ. P. 60(b)(2) (basing relief upon “newly discovered
evidence which by due diligence could not have been discovered in time to move for a
new trial”), with Alaska R. Civ. P. 60(b)(3) (basing relief upon fraud, misrepresentation,
or misconduct, with no mention of due diligence).

                                            -9-                                      6814

standard.16 Rather, in finding Adventure Tours was aware of Chief Nichols’s statement
before trial, the superior court implicitly found that Adventure Tours was not prevented
from fully and fairly litigating its case at trial.17
              Adventure Tours had notice more than ten months before trial that Chief
Nichols claimed he had driven Kimberly to the airport on the day in question. It could
have conducted discovery on the matter at that time, and offered any relevant evidence
at trial. But, as Adventure Tours conceded at oral argument, it conducted no discovery
on this matter prior to trial. Rule 60(b)(3) was not intended to reward litigants who have
failed to adequately investigate their case or vigorously cross-examine a witness;
therefore, relief should be denied when “the moving party had ample opportunity to
uncover the alleged fraud or perjury at trial through cross-examination.”18 Adventure
Tours’ earlier failure to pursue discovery regarding Chief Nichols’s statement does not
entitle it to relief from judgment now.
              Adventure Tours also takes issue with the superior court’s statement that
“[t]here is absolutely no reason to believe that the verdict would have been different had
Chief Nichol[s]’s testimony not been presented,” claiming this statement shows that the
court improperly held Adventure Tours to a “but for” standard. Adventure Tours is
correct that a Rule 60(b)(3) movant need not prove that it would have prevailed but for
       16
              Moreover, to the extent that Adventure Tours’ 60(b) motion relied on new
evidence, we note that it would have been more properly brought under Rule 60(b)(2)
and application of the due diligence standard would have been appropriate. See Alaska
R. Civ. P. 60(b)(2). At oral argument before us, Adventure Tours admitted that this case
was about new evidence.
       17
              See Babinec, 799 P.2d at 1334 & n.10 (interpreting trial court’s statement
that a party had failed to pursue discovery despite sufficient knowledge of the issue as
an implicit determination that the defense was not deprived of a full and fair litigation
opportunity, and upholding the trial court’s denial of relief under Rule 60(b)(3)).
       18
              M OORE , ET AL., supra note 13, ¶ 60.43[1][c].

                                              -10-                                  6814

the alleged fraud or misconduct.19 But we held in McCall v. Coats that a litigant is not
prevented from fully and fairly presenting his or her case where misconduct “had little
bearing on the merits of the case” and “would not have probably changed the result on
a new trial.”20 We interpret the superior court’s comments concerning the likelihood of
a different outcome as part of its determination that Adventure Tours was not prevented
from fully and fairly litigating its case. Indeed, as Adventure Tours conceded at oral
argument before us, there is little difference between the superior court’s comments here
and our analysis in McCall.
             Finally, Adventure Tours argues that in order to prevail on its Rule 60(b)(3)
motion, it only needed to show that Chief Nichols’s allegedly fraudulent testimony and
conduct was intentional. Adventure Tours argues that it has made such a showing and
is therefore entitled to a presumption that the fraud prevented it from fully and fairly
litigating its case. This argument ignores the requirement under Rule 60(b)(3) to first
establish by clear and convincing evidence that any fraud or misconduct actually
occurred.21 And, as discussed in the following section, Adventure Tours has failed to
meet the preliminary burden of demonstrating fraud or misconduct.



      19
                See id. ¶ 60.43[1][d] (“[T]he moving party does not have to prove that he
or she would prevail in a retrial in order to secure relief from judgment on the basis of
fraud of an adverse party.”); see also McCall, 777 P.2d at 658 (applying Rule 60(b)(3)
in the context of misconduct in withholding information called for by discovery, and
noting that the Rule “does not require that the information withheld be of such a nature
as to alter the result in the case” (quoting Rozier v. Ford Motor Co., 573 F.2d 1332, 1339
(5th Cir. 1978))).
      20
             777 P.2d at 658.
      21
              The case Adventure Tours primarily relies upon is inapposite — there the
court had already determined that the misconduct had occurred. Anderson v. Cryovac,
Inc., 862 F.2d 910, 922 (1st Cir. 1988).

                                          -11-                                      6814

             We conclude that the superior court applied the correct legal standard in its
evaluation of Adventure Tours’ Rule 60(b)(3) motion.
             2.	    The superior court did not abuse its discretion in denying the
                    Rule 60(b)(3) motion.
             Adventure Tours contends that taken together, the evidence offered in its
Rule 60(b) motion constitutes clear and convincing evidence of fraud. Yakutat responds
that the proffered evidence does not remotely approach clear and convincing evidence
of fraud; thus, it was not an abuse of discretion for the superior court to deny Adventure
Tours’ motion for relief from judgment. We agree with Yakutat.
             Adventure Tours cobbles together a succession of imprecise testimonies
and slight contradictions between the recollections of several different individuals
regarding relatively inconsequential matters occurring almost three years earlier in an
attempt to prove that Chief Nichols lied when he testified that he gave Kimberly a ride
to the airport on May 15, 2007; but Adventure Tours falls far short of meeting the clear
and convincing evidentiary standard. For example, Chief Nichols testified that he
transported Kimberly to the airport after he concluded the interview with Barton at
11:26 a.m. — “somewhere around that time, after 11:30.” Adventure Tours seizes on
this testimony and argues that phone records showing that Kimberly did not leave the
police station until sometime after 12:00 p.m. establish that Chief Nichols’s testimony
regarding the ride to the airport is false.       But as Yakutat points out, far from
demonstrating an irreconcilable conflict between Chief Nichols’s testimony and the
phone records, Adventure Tours merely establishes that any trip to the airport could not
have taken place until after the last phone call concluded, sometime after 12:00 p.m.
             The remainder of Adventure Tours’ evidence similarly fails to rise to the
level of clear and convincing evidence of fraud. An example is instructive. To support
its contention that Chief Nichols did not give Kimberly a ride to the airport on


                                          -12-	                                     6814

May 15, 2007, Adventure Tours alleges that the Yakutat police tampered with evidence
— specifically, the recordings of the interviews of Barton and Kimberly — in order to
cover up the fact that Barton was actually interviewed before Kimberly. According to
Adventure Tours, the “true” order of the interviews is relevant to show that evidence was
altered “to support Chief Nichols’s version of events of May 15.” In its argument before
the superior court, Adventure Tours reasoned as follows: “[If] the Barton interview
preceded the Byler interview, then the recordings have been altered. . . . If the recordings
have been altered, then [Yakutat]’s evidence is false. There was no ride to the airport
. . . .”
                In order for Adventure Tours’ claims regarding the timing of the interviews
and evidence tampering to be plausible, Yakutat would have needed to alter the evidence
in three places: (1) the contemporaneous statements made in the audio recording of the
interviews; (2) the recording start and end times, as written into the file by the Olympus
recorder used to make the recordings; and (3) the data stored on the Yakutat servers
showing the download times of the interviews from the recorder to the computer. All
three categories of evidence corroborate Chief Nichols’s testimony.22
           22
              Although there is a difference of two to three minutes between the times
indicated in Chief Nichols’s testimony and the electronic time stamps, this is negligible.
According to Chief Nichols’s testimony and the contemporaneous statement on the audio
recording, the Kimberly Byler interview concluded at 11:10 a.m. The date-time stamp
on Chief Nichols’s computer, transferred to the police department’s server, indicated that
the audio recording of the Kimberly Byler interview was downloaded at 11:07 a.m. on
May 15, 2007. The record start time, end time, and duration for the Kimberly Byler
interview — as written into the file by the Olympus recorder used to make the audio
recordings — are as follows: Start: 10:48:39 a.m.; End: 11:07:33 a.m.; Duration: 18:54
(minutes:seconds).
              Chief Nichols’s testimony regarding the Barton interview timeline is
likewise supported by the evidence. The Barton interview began at 11:15 a.m. and ended
at 11:26 a.m., according to a statement contemporaneously made on the audio recording
                                                                         (continued...)

                                            -13-                                      6814

             Adventure Tours fails to address the third point at all, and offers only a
modicum of evidence on the other two points. Adventure Tours engaged two experts to
look at the data from Yakutat’s servers; and Yakutat retained an expert to respond to the
allegations in the first expert’s report. Adventure Tours’ first expert, Douglas Lacey,
posited that Kimberly’s interview was not downloaded to Chief Nichols’s computer until
May 2009, two years after the interview took place. Lacey concluded that “something
occurred” to the file on that date and that the possibility that the recording was altered
or edited “[could not] be ruled out” without further information.
             Matthew Joy, Yakutat’s information technology contractor, performed an
analysis on the data stored on the Yakutat servers and refuted Lacey’s conclusions. Joy’s
analysis showed that Kimberly’s interview was first downloaded on May 15, 2007, and
Joy concluded that there had been “no modification whatsoever” to the Kimberly Byler
interview file since it was first downloaded to Chief Nichols’s computer. This analysis
included a comparison of both the quantity and the content of the data. Adventure
Tours’ second expert, Alfred L. Johnson, challenged Joy’s conclusions by critiquing his
methods:    Johnson stated that Joy’s analysis should have included “a review of
unallocated or deleted space on the hard drives” and that software used by Joy “is not
customarily relied on by forensic examiners for this type of work.” But Lacey’s and
Johnson’s reports did not demonstrate clear and convincing evidence of evidence
spoliation or fraud.



      22
               (...continued)
by Chief Nichols. The date-time stamp on Chief Nichols’s computer, transferred to the
police department’s server, indicated that the Barton interview ended at 11:24 a.m. The
record start time, end time, and duration for the Barton interview — as written into the
file by the Olympus recorder used to make the audio recordings — are as follows: Start:
11:12:29 a.m.; End: 11:24:25 a.m.; Duration: 11:55 (minutes:seconds).

                                          -14-                                      6814

             Having reviewed the record, we are satisfied that the superior court did not
abuse its discretion in concluding that Adventure Tours failed to meet its burden of
demonstrating clear and convincing evidence of fraud.23 We therefore affirm the
superior court’s ruling.
      B.	    The Superior Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion In Refusing To
             Reopen Discovery.
             Adventure Tours argues that the superior court abused its discretion by
denying its request to reopen discovery, which was made as part of Adventure Tours’
Rule 60(b) motion. We disagree.
             The fraudulent conveyance trial took place in February 2010, and judgment
was initially entered in March 2010. In March 2011, over a year after trial and exactly
one year after the initial entry of judgment, Adventure Tours filed its motion for relief
from judgment. As a form of alternative relief (in the event the court did not grant its
motion to vacate judgment) Adventure Tours requested that the court hold the motion
in abeyance and permit Adventure Tours additional time to conduct new discovery.
Adventure Tours asserted that it expected additional discovery to uncover further
information about the timing of Chief Nichols’s interviews of Kimberly and Barton and
other details that would support or disprove Chief Nichols’s testimony about driving
Kimberly to the airport.


      23
              For the same reasons, we conclude that the superior court did not abuse its
discretion in denying Adventure Tours’ motion for reconsideration. Under Alaska Civil
Rule 77(k)(1)(ii), a party may ask the court to reconsider a ruling previously decided if,
in reaching its decision, the court has overlooked or misconceived some material fact or
proposition of law. Adventure Tours claimed that the superior court had “overlooked
or misconceived some material facts in the case,” but failed to point with any specificity
to what facts the court overlooked. Instead, Adventure Tours merely repeated the
arguments made in its original Rule 60(b) motion, and attempted to bolster those
arguments with new evidence not included in the original Rule 60(b) motion. Thus, the
superior court did not err when it denied Adventure Tours’ motion.
                                            -15-	                                   6814
                The superior court denied Adventure Tours’ request for additional
discovery, stating that “[d]iscovery could have and should have occurred before trial in
this case.” The superior court noted that the Bylers were aware of Chief Nichols’s
statements several months before trial and could have examined these issues before or
at trial. The superior court is correct. Chief Nichols’s March 27, 2009 affidavit was
received by Adventure Tours on April 6, 2009 — 10 months before trial. This put
Adventure Tours on notice that Chief Nichols claimed to have had a conversation with
Kimberly Byler about Yakutat’s tax claims while he drove her from the police station to
the airport.24 Thus, Adventure Tours could have conducted discovery on this point
before trial.
                As a general matter, a trial court has broad discretion to limit discovery.25
We have held that a trial court does not abuse this discretion in refusing to reopen
discovery where the parties had sufficient opportunity to engage in discovery prior to
trial.26 As such, the superior court did not abuse its discretion here.


       24
                In relevant part, Chief Nichols’s affidavit states:
                While I was transporting Ms. Riedel-Byler back from the
                police station to the airport, she stated that she felt that
                everybody in Yakutat was against her and her business, or
                words to that effect. In this context, I brought up the pending
                issue as to the non-payment by her business, Adventure
                Tours, of the Borough sales and “bed” taxes. Ms. Riedel-
                Byler stated that they were not obligated or responsible for
                payment of these taxes. Her response demonstrated to me
                that she was already aware of the Borough’s effort to seek
                payment of the tax by her business.
       25
                Glover v. W. Air Lines, Inc., 745 P.2d 1365, 1370 (Alaska 1987).
       26
             Walden v. Dep’t of Transp., 27 P.3d 297, 305 (Alaska 2001) (finding no
abuse of discretion where “parties had ample opportunity to engage in discovery prior
to trial”).
                                        -16-                                    6814
       C.      The Attorney’s Fees Award Was Not An Abuse Of Discretion.
               Finally, Adventure Tours argues that the superior court abused its discretion
when it awarded Yakutat an enhanced attorney’s fee award of 50% of the amount
incurred. Alaska Civil Rule 82(b)(3) permits a court to vary an attorney’s fee award if
the court determines that a variation is warranted. Relevant factors under the rule include
“the complexity of the litigation,”27 “the reasonableness of the claims,”28 and “vexatious
or bad faith conduct.”29 Here, the court based its decision to award enhanced fees on its
finding that Adventure Tours’ Rule 60 claims were both “complex” and “not
reasonable.”
               Adventure Tours challenges the superior court’s finding that its Rule 60(b)
claims were unreasonable. It contends that it should not be “punished” for its good faith
attempt to bring additional evidence to the trial court’s attention. But the superior court
did not act to punish Adventure Tours; it merely awarded attorney’s fees under the
relevant rule. Adventure Tours also suggests that the superior court abused its discretion
because it found no evidence of vexatious or bad faith conduct. But a court is not
required to find vexatious or bad faith conduct in order to award enhanced attorney’s
fees.30 Furthermore, we are not persuaded that the superior court abused its discretion
when it concluded that Adventure Tours’ claims were complex and unreasonable. The
court found that Adventure Tours’ Rule 60(b) motion “was complex in that it contained
numerous assertions . . . regarding the evidence” and that it was “not reasonable” given


       27
               Alaska R. Civ. P. 82(b)(3)(A).
       28
               Alaska R. Civ. P. 82(b)(3)(F).
       29
               Alaska R. Civ. P. 82(b)(3)(G).
      30
             See id. (listing “the complexity of the litigation” and “the reasonableness
of the claims and defenses pursued by each side” as factors for the court to consider
when varying an attorney’s fee award).
                                         -17-                                      6814
the high standard litigants must meet to successfully prove fraud. These findings are not
clearly erroneous. We therefore affirm the award of attorney’s fees.
V.    CONCLUSION
             We AFFIRM the decision of the superior court.




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