Bender v. Beverly Anne, Inc.

2002 ND 146, 651 N.W.2d 642, 2002 N.D. LEXIS 189, 2002 WL 1987659
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 2002
Docket20010280
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2002 ND 146 (Bender v. Beverly Anne, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bender v. Beverly Anne, Inc., 2002 ND 146, 651 N.W.2d 642, 2002 N.D. LEXIS 189, 2002 WL 1987659 (N.D. 2002).

Opinion

NEUMANN, Justice.

[¶ 1] William Bender and Larry Young appealed a judgment and two amended judgments in their action against Torkild-son Properties, Inc.; Beverly Anne, Inc.; and David L. Torkildson. We conclude Bender was not entitled to a mechanic’s lien and we affirm the original judgment. Except for a cost award, we conclude Beverly Anne, Inc., was not entitled to the affirmative relief granted in the amended judgments, and we reverse the amended judgments in part and affirm them in part.

I

[¶ 2] In 1995, Torkildson Properties, Inc., and its president, David Torkildson, contracted with Basic Concrete, Inc., and its president, Kevin Sehrenk, for a concrete project at the Beverly Anne assisted *644 living facility in Lisbon. Schrenk and Basic Concrete, Inc., left the project, filed a mechanic’s lien on the property, and sued David Torkildson and Torkildson Properties, Inc., in Ransom County (“Civil No. 96-027”). The mechanic’s lien was released by stipulation of the parties and the action was later dismissed by stipulation of the parties.

[¶ 3] Bender filed a mechanic’s lien on the project property. On March 8, 2001, Bender and Young filed in district court a complaint against Torkildson Properties, Inc.; Beverly Anne, Inc.; and David L. Torkildson, alleging, among other things, that from September 26, 1995, through October 31, 1995, Bender furnished “labor, materials, and supplies ... used in the improvement of certain real estate owned by the named defendant, Torkildson Properties, Inc., and allegedly in the possession of the named defendant, Beverly Anne, Inc.,” and that he was due $8,517.96. The complaint alleges “William Bender has made a limited assignment of the above referenced claim to Larry Young.” For the sake of convenient reference, we will refer to Bender and Young, collectively, as “Bender.” The complaint alleged “Bender was entitled to the mechanic’s lien against the entire described real estate upon which the improvement is situated,” and was “entitled to commence an action to enforce the mechanic’s lien.”

[¶ 4] Beverly Anne, Inc., filed a motion for dismissal or summary judgment, asserting, in part:

For its motion, Beverly Anne relies upon this motion and notice, its brief filed in support of its motion, the deposition testimony of Kevin Schrenk and William Bender, and all the pleadings and files in this case and the companion case of Schrenk and Basic Concrete v. David Torkildson and Torkildson Property, Inc., Civil No. 96-027 (District Court, Ransom County 1996).

With its notice, motion, and supporting brief, Beverly Anne, Inc., filed copies of (1) a contract between Torkildson Properties and Basic Concrete for work at Beverly Anne assisted living facility; (2) a July 5, 1996, stipulation for dismissal with prejudice of Civil No. 96-027; (3) an order for judgment of dismissal in Civil No. 96-027; (4) a judgment of dismissal in Civil No. 96-027; and (5) a release of mechanic’s lien on the project property by Kevin Schrenk and Basic Concrete, Inc. In its brief, Beverly Anne, Inc., summarized deposition testimony of Kevin Schrenk and William Bender in Civil No. 96-027, including that Bender testified he was an employee of Basic Concrete.

[¶ 5] At a hearing on May 17, 2001, the trial court took judicial notice of the file in Civil No. 96-027. “Courts have the power to judicially recognize their own records of prior litigation closely related to the present case.” 1 Weinstein’s Fed. Evid., § 201.12[3], p. 201-29 (2d ed.2002). “Generally, the party challenging the propriety of taking judicial notice has the burden to request the opportunity to be heard.” Id., § 201.31[2], The trial court informed the parties it was taking judicial notice of the file in No. 96-027. Bender did not object to the court’s authority or procedure in taking judicial notice. The court ruled it was “going to dismiss the summons and complaint with prejudice,” as well as the mechanic’s hen and lis pen-dens filed by Bender. The court explained:

THE COURT: The rationale, as I’ve indicated, I’m taking complete judicial notice of 96-027. This matter is res judicata. It was dismissed on the merits by Stipulation of the parties. Mr. Bender is in privity with Basic Concrete, one of the parties in that matter. It cannot *645 be brought up again. As to the right of Mr. Bender to have a Mechanic’s Lien, he simply under the statutes involved is not a subcontractor. The right to a Mechanic’s Lien under Title 35-27 belong[s] to Basic Concrete. It did not belong to an employee of a North Dakota Corporation who was not an independent contractor and not an independent operator here.

On June 6, 2001, the court issued the following order for judgment:

Plaintiffs William Bender’s and Larry Young’s Complaint concerning the above-entitled matter is hereby DISMISSED with prejudice and all costs and disbursements allowed by law being hereby awarded to Defendant Beverly Anne, Inc. in the manner provided by law. Based on this dismissal, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the mechanic’s hen filed by William Bender and Larry Young on about January 30, 2001 ... is hereby stricken, released and satisfied, as well as any Lis Pendens previously filed by Plaintiffs ... as to the ... real estate.

The court found “this action is frivolous but has not been brought in bad faith by Plaintiffs but was instead brought by Plaintiffs based on a fundamental misunderstanding of the law” and “denie[d] Defendant’s request for attorney’s fees and costs.” Judgment was entered accordingly on June 8, 2001.

[¶ 6] On June 25, 2001, Beverly Anne, Inc., filed a motion under N.D.R.Civ.P. 60 for relief from judgment or an amended judgment, seeking costs of $678 for depositions of Kevin Schrenk and Bender, an order striking a quitclaim deed to the subject property and declaring it “null and void and of no effect,” and an order that any future documents filed by Young, Bender or Torkildson Properties, Inc., “against the real estate ... are also deemed stricken, null and void and have no future effect.”

[¶ 7] The motion was accompanied by a copy of a May 31, 2001, quitclaim deed executed by “Larry Young, Vice President, Torkildson Properties, Inc.,” purportedly conveying to William Bender the Beverly Anne assisted living facility property. The deed allegedly had been filed June 4, 2001. The motion was supported by a brief, copies of documents, and affidavits showing or averring, among other things, (1) Beverly Torkildson received all the stock in Tork-ildson Properties, Inc., which owned the Beverly Anne assisted living facility in Lisbon, in a 1997 divorce judgment; (2) Beverly Mikesh, formerly known as Beverly Torkildson and Beverly Froemke, had changed the corporate name of Torkildson Properties, Inc., to Beverly Anne, Inc., in 1998, but, “through an oversight, failed to convey the real estate that is the subject matter of the present litigation from Tork-ildson Properties, Inc., to Beverly Anne, Inc.;” and (3) that Beverly Mikesh owns the real estate and ‘William Bender and Larry Young have no interest in the real estate.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2002 ND 146, 651 N.W.2d 642, 2002 N.D. LEXIS 189, 2002 WL 1987659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bender-v-beverly-anne-inc-nd-2002.