Brooks v. R & M CONSULTANTS, INC.

613 P.2d 268, 1980 Alas. LEXIS 694
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1980
Docket4922
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 613 P.2d 268 (Brooks v. R & M CONSULTANTS, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. R & M CONSULTANTS, INC., 613 P.2d 268, 1980 Alas. LEXIS 694 (Ala. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION

DIMOND, Senior Justice.

Presented here is this question: When real estate abandoned by the trustee in bankruptcy is sold for more than the value of the encumbrances on it, should the excess go to the bankrupts or to creditors claiming on the basis of unfiled material-men’s liens?

The bankrupts, Donald and Lois Brooks, owned property in Alaska, subject to a deed of trust executed by them to Title Insurance Agency, Inc., for the benefit of the state veterans’ affairs agency. In early 1977, R & M Consultants, Inc., (“R & M”) performed engineering services for the Brooks in connection with this property, for which the Brooks owed almost $7,000. Shortly thereafter, Valley Lumber Company, Inc., (“Valley”) furnished the Brooks with building supplies worth almost $17,000. R & M and Valley filed suit against the Brooks in August, 1977, after the Brooks had failed to pay their debts. R & M and Valley received court permission to serve the Brooks out of state, but both attempts at service failed. They filed notices of lis *269 pendens on the Brooks’ property, under AS 09.45.790. 1

On October 26, 1977, the Brooks filed a petition of bankruptcy in the United States District Court in Idaho, and the petition was granted in January, 1978. 2 R & M and Valley both filed claims with the bankruptcy court as general unsecured creditors. On February 10, 1978, that court ordered the property at issue here abandoned as an asset of the Brooks’ estate, because the court believed it was encumbered in excess of its value. R & M and Valley did not object to the report of the trustee in bankruptcy which recommended abandonment.

When the property was sold, in July, 1978, an amount of $25,992.70 in excess of the veterans’ affairs agency’s encumbrance was unexpectedly realized. Title Insurance Agency paid this sum into the superior court registry and brought an action in interpleader against all the claimants. After judgment was granted to the state on its tax liens and to other creditors with judgment liens on the property, $10,507.11 remained. This is the sum at issue now.

The parties are in agreement on most of the basic principles of law relevant here. Under 11 U.S.C. § 35, the law in effect at the time of this action, unsecured debts are discharged in bankruptcy, with exceptions not important here. 3 The trustee is empowered to abandon property which he or she perceives as burdensome to the bankrupt estate. See Brown v. O’Keefe, 300 U.S. 598, 602-03, 57 S.Ct. 543, 546, 81 L.Ed. 827, 832 (1937). After encumbrances on such property have been cleared, the debtor is entitled to “make what he can out of [the property], for himself, not for his creditors, if there is anything to be salvaged.” 2 H. Remington, Bankruptcy Law § 1147, at 629 (rev.ed.1956) (footnote omitted).

R & M and Valley claim that they, rather than the Brooks, are entitled to the $10,507 realized from the sale of the property. The basis for this contention is that R & M and Valley had liens on the Brooks’ property with respect to which R & M had performed engineering services and Valley had furnished building materials.

It is true that under AS 34.35.070, one in the position of R & M and Valley literally “has a lien” on the property with respect to which the services were rendered and the supplies furnished at the land owners’ request. But such a lien is not effective or valid until another provision of the lien statute has been complied with, e. g., that a written claim of lien has been filed for record with the recorder of the recording district in which the property is situated, within ninety days from completion of the service or delivery of supplies. 4

R & M and Valley argue that such recording requirements are relevant and required only if there are competing liens, and since other lienholders who perfected their liens have been paid, there is no necessity for recording formal claims of lien as required by law. Such an argument has no merit. First of all, AS 34.35.070 states that one in R & M’s and Valley’s position, if they *270 wish to make their lien effective, “shall” file a claim of lien within the designated period of ninety days. [Emphasis added.] Secondly, R & M’s and Valley’s position cannot be squared with our opinion in H.A. M.S. Co. v. Electrical Contractors of Alaska, Inc., 563 P.2d 258 (Alaska 1977). In that case we reversed a superior court order foreclosing mechanic’s and materialmen’s liens because of the lienholders’ failure to verify their lien claims by oath, as required by AS 34.35.070(c)(5). There, as here, the invalid liens were the only ones at issue; there was no competition with properly perfected liens.

The issue in H.A.M.S. was whether substantial compliance with subsection (c)(5) of AS 34.35.070 was sufficient to create a valid lien, 563 P.2d at 260, and neither the majority opinion nor the dissent suggested that the lien would be enforceable without compliance with that section. H.A.M.S. must govern here as well, where the noncompliance was more flagrant. Hence, we conclude that R & M and Valley did not have valid liens.

The requirement that one shall file for record his claim of lien before the lien becomes effective has reason to support it. Our discussion in H.A.M.S. reflects the need for this. There we said:

We think the requirement of verification is reflective of the legislature’s awareness that a claim of lien adversely affects the title to the property and its alienability; that the claim of lien can have an injurious impact on the credit of the owner of the property which is subjected to the lien; and that the claim of lien can be used as a vehicle to coerce settlement from the owner of the property. In light of these important policy considerations there exists a reasonable basis for the legislature’s determination that the significance of filing a lien claim be made clear to the lien claimant through the requirement of verification and the possibility of perjury prosecution for verifying a false lien claim. 5

Similarly, we believe that “the significance of filing of a lien [must] be made clear to the lien claimant” through the requirement that a written claim of lien be recorded within ninety days after rendition of the services or furnishing of the supplies for which the liens are claimed. We conclude that R & M and Valley did not have valid and effective liens on the Brooks’ property involved here.

We also find untenable R & M’s and Valley’s argument that their filing of actions against the Brooks and the filing of notices of lis pendens should be accorded the status of liens.

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613 P.2d 268, 1980 Alas. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-r-m-consultants-inc-alaska-1980.