ALH Holding Co. v. Bank of Telluride

18 P.3d 742, 2000 Colo. J. C.A.R. 6392, 2000 Colo. LEXIS 1371, 2000 WL 1770035
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 4, 2000
Docket99SC375
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 18 P.3d 742 (ALH Holding Co. v. Bank of Telluride) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ALH Holding Co. v. Bank of Telluride, 18 P.3d 742, 2000 Colo. J. C.A.R. 6392, 2000 Colo. LEXIS 1371, 2000 WL 1770035 (Colo. 2000).

Opinion

Justice COATS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

ALH Holding Company petitioned for a writ of certiorari to review the court of appeals decision in ALH Holding Co. v. Bank of Telluride, 988 P.2d 181, 183 (Colo.App.1999). The court of appeals reversed the district court's judgment in favor of ALH in an action brought by ALH against the Bank of Telluride and held that the Bank's deed of trust was entitled to priority over the deed of trust of ALH concerning the same property. Because Colorado's recording statute does not resolve the question of priority under the circumstances of this case, and because the law of the state apart from the recording statute recognizes the priority of ALH's deed of trust executed contemporaneously with its sale of the property, the judgment of the court of appeals is reversed.

I.

The essential facts were undisputed by the parties. The Petitioner, ALH Holding Company, sold real property to Linda Crocker and Robert Hackley (the "buyers") for $165,000. In connection with the sale, the buyers borrowed $110,000 from ALH in exchange for a promissory note secured with a vendor's purchase money deed of trust in favor of ALH. The buyers also borrowed $55,000 from the Respondent, the Bank of Telluride, and similarly signed a promissory note secured with a purchase money deed of trust in favor of the Bank. Both ALH and the Bank knew, before the closing, that the other would be loaning money to the purchaser and that both loans would be secured by deeds of trust conveying interests in the same property. Telluride Mountain Title Company closed the transaction for both parties on June 29, 1993, and on the following day recorded the deeds of trust. The deed of trust in favor of the Bank was recorded before that of ALH.

*744 After the buyers defaulted on both notes, the Bank initiated a public trustee's foreclosure sale of its interest in the property, characterizing its own deed of trust as a superior lien to that of ALH. ALH brought an action against the Bank, seeking a preliminary injunction and a declaratory judgment resolving the respective priorities of the two deeds of trust. The parties stipulated to certain facts and moved for a determination of the question of priority as between the two deeds of trust pursuant to C.R.C.P. 56(b). The district court concluded that as a matter of Colorado law, a vendor's purchase money deed of trust takes priority over a third-party's purchase money deed of trust, and it entered judgment in favor of ALH.

With one member dissenting, a panel of the court of appeals reversed, holding that because the Bank's deed of trust was recorded first, it was entitled to priority, absent an agreement to the contrary. The disagreement between the majority and the dissent centered primarily on the effect of this court's holding in Bray v. Trower, 87 Colo. 240, 286 P. 275 (1930), and the relative priorities of purchase money mortgages on the same property. Unlike the majority, the dissent did not believe the holding of Bray dictated the priority of the first recorded purchase money deed of trust and instead concluded that the case law of this jurisdiction is in accord with the reasoning of the Restatement (Third) of Property § 7.2 (1997), affording priority among purchase money mortgages on real property to those given to vendors.

This court granted ALH's petition for a writ of certiorari to consider whether the court of appeals properly applied the state's recording statute and if not to indicate the principles upon which the priority of interests should be determined. 1

IL

Recording statutes in this country have long operated to alter the priority of various property rights on the basis of notice, recording, or some combination of the two. Colorado has had a recording statute since 1861. See § 9, Colo. G.L., p. 65 (1861). The statute has undergone numerous revisions from its original form and is currently codified at section 38-35-109(1) of the Colorado Revised Statutes. At the time applicable to the events in this case, the recording statute included the following language:

All deeds, powers of attorney, agreements, or other instruments in writing conveying, encumbering, or affecting the title to real property, certificates, and certified copies of orders, judgments, and decrees of courts of record may be recorded in the office of the county clerk and recorder of the county where such real property is situated. No such unrecorded instrument or document shall be valid as against any class of persons with any kind of rights who first records, except between the parties thereto and such as have notice thereof. This is a race-notice recording statute.

§ 38-35-109(1), 16A C.R.S. (Gupp.1989) 2

The statute protects a later grantee with rights in real property against a prior executed but unrecorded instrument to which it is not a party, if the later grantee lacks notice of the prior unrecorded instrument and records first. According to the plain language of the statute, even though the later grantee's instrument was recorded first, it still cannot benefit from the recording statute if it had notice of the earlier unrecorded instrument. Until 1996 the statute did not make clear that the class of later grantees excluded from the benefits of the statute because of *745 notice was limited to those with notice of the unrecorded instrument before acquisition of the later grantee's rights. 3 However, later grantees with notice even before they acquired rights were clearly included in the less precise language of the earlier statutes. Therefore, although the Bank's deed of trust was recorded first, the recording statute would confer no priority upon it if it were aware of ALH's unrecorded deed of trust before acquiring its own rights in the property.

Where a security agreement, or mortgage, is executed between a purchaser and a vendor as part of the same transaction in which the purchaser acquires title to the property, the execution of the deed and the mortgage are considered simultaneous acts. Chambers v. Nation, 178 Colo. 124, 129, 497 P.2d 5, 7 (1972), Bank of Denver v. Legler, 142 Colo. 333, 336, 350 P.2d 1059, 1061 (1960). As a matter of law, such a purchaser never has an unencumbered title to property in which he can assign further rights. See Chambers, 178 Colo. at 129, 497 P.2d at 7; Legler, 142 Colo. at 336, 350 P.2d at 1061. Therefore, even a third party who loans money to the purchaser that is applied to the purchase, and who takes back a mortgage on the purchased property, cannot acquire rights to the property from the purchaser unencumbered by the vendor's mortgage, regardless of the order in which the documents are signed. Legler, 142 Colo. at 336, 350 P.2d at 1061.

By acquiring its rights to the property in the same transaction, with full knowledge that the loan of the vendor, ALH, would be secured by a deed of trust, the Bank necessarily had notice of ALH's unrecorded instrument within the meaning of the recording statute.

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Bluebook (online)
18 P.3d 742, 2000 Colo. J. C.A.R. 6392, 2000 Colo. LEXIS 1371, 2000 WL 1770035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alh-holding-co-v-bank-of-telluride-colo-2000.