Gaub v. Simpson

866 P.2d 765, 1993 Wyo. LEXIS 206, 1993 WL 540988
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1993
Docket93-23
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 866 P.2d 765 (Gaub v. Simpson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaub v. Simpson, 866 P.2d 765, 1993 Wyo. LEXIS 206, 1993 WL 540988 (Wyo. 1993).

Opinion

THOMAS, Justice.

The only question to be resolved in this ease is whether Elwood “Bill” J. Simpson (Simpson) discharged an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) hen against property he owned under circumstances that made him a volunteer and foreclosed him from legal subrogation. In a classic effort at obfuscation, Arnold A. Gaub (Gaub) presented the case as one involving the responsibility of a grantor under a warranty deed to defend the title to the property. It is clear the trial court focused upon the fact Simpson paid the amount of a tax hen against his property for taxes owed by Gaub. Through a straw man transfer, Simpson acquired the property from a grantee of Gaub to whom Gaub had conveyed the property prior to the attachment of the hen for federal taxes. When the IRS asserted the tax hen against his property, Simpson demanded Gaub obtain a release of the hen, paid the amount of the hen after Gaub failed to do so, and brought this action against Gaub to recover the amount paid. Gaub appeals from the judgment entered by the trial court in favor of Simpson, essentially contending that, for various reasons, he owed no duty to Simpson to defend the title to the property. We agree with the trial court that Simpson was not a volunteer when he paid the amount of the taxes to avoid foreclosure of a hen against his property, and he became entitled, as a matter of subrogation, to recover that amount from Gaub. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

Representing himself, Gaub sets forth the issues in his brief as follows:

1. After a warranty deed is executed and dehvered, and the grantee then neglects or refuses to record the deed for a number of years, must the grantor defend the title for the grantee against any intervening henholder filings between the time of delivery of the deed and the time of the recording of the deed.
2. After the IRS executes a hen release on a property, and that property deed has then been recorded in the name of the new owner free of all encumbrances, may the IRS thereafter levy and seize that property again in the name of the former deed holder. 1
*766 3. When a document signed by the IRS confirms that property of an individual and the seizure thereof shall not occur after an agreed date, may the trial court disregard that document in evidence and conclude that the plaintiffs payment to the IRS was compelled and not voluntary.
4. Must a trial court observe and modify an initial judgment when obvious errors and exclusions are timely filed by the defendant with the court in “objections” to the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law as presented by the prevailing counsel for the court’s approval.

Simpson, in his Brief of Appellee, does not agree with the issues set forth by Gaub, and he states the issues in this way:

I. Whether there is sufficient evidence to support the findings of fact and conclusions of law of the trial court.
II. Whether the trial court abused its discretion, as a matter of law, ruling in favor of appellee.
III. Whether the appellant has framed a cogent argument with pertinent authorities for the Supreme Court to review.

The essential material facts may be captured in a chronology of pertinent dates and events:

• October 18, 1982 — Gaub, as grantor, sold and conveyed by warranty deed Lot 28 (the property) in Alpine Villaige Subdivision in Lincoln County, Wyoming to Loren [Lome] Cook (Cook).
• Unspecified date in 1983 — Simpson came from Indianapolis and purchased Cook’s interest in the property by directly paying to Gaub the amount owed by Cook. At that time, Gaub agreed he would “take care of recording the deed.”
• November 5, 1984 — The IRS filed a hen for income taxes owed by Gaub in the amount of $8,945.63 against the property.
• May 24, 1985 — The IRS filed a second hen in the amount of $424.11 against the property. (Both hens were filed against this property because Gaub was the owner of record.)
• December 4, 1987 — The warranty deed from Gaub to Cook was recorded.
• January 13,1988 — A warranty deed from Cook to Dale and Linda Perry (Perrys) was recorded. The Perrys were employed by Simpson.
• September 21, 1988 — A warranty deed from the Perrys to Simpson was recorded.
• April 10,1992 — The IRS sent a notice of seizure of the property to satisfy the tax hen.
• April 10, 1992 — Under threat of dispossession, Simpson paid the asserted hen plus interest in the total amount of $12,425.
• November 9,1992 — Simpson filed a complaint against Gaub in the Third Judicial District Court in Lincoln County seeking reimbursement of the $12,425 paid to the IRS.
• January 13, 1993 — The district court ruled in favor of Simpson and entered a judgment for him in the amount of $12,425.

Gaub appeals from the judgment, contending he owed no duty to defend the title to the property because, at the time of the conveyance, there were no encumbrances, and the encumbrances attached only because Cook failed to record the deed. Simpson argues he is entitled to a judgment for $12,425 be *767 cause he paid the IRS on behalf of Gaub to prevent the seizure of his property. The issue Gaub seeks to debate is whether a grantor who has transferred real property by warranty deed has a duty to defend the title with respect to a remote purchaser. Simpson apparently is willing to maintain the judgment on any ground and essentially urges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the determination by the trial court.

The approach of the trial court is summarized in this statement taken from the judge’s remarks from the bench:

In this lawsuit, it seems like [counsel for Simpson] is proceeding more on the theory that, Mr. Gaub, Mr. Simpson paid off your obligation, so, therefore, you should pay Mr. Simpson. He seems to be relying on that more than on any basis that you warranted title to this property, not only to Mr. Cook but to all other people who were successors to Mr. Cook and who, in turn, conveyed by warranty deeds.

The district court did discuss warranty deeds with Gaub, but the essence of its ruling was that, confronted with the IRS lien and the threat to foreclose, Simpson chose to pay the taxes claimed due and then to seek to recoup the amount he had paid from Gaub. The trial court, furthermore, ruled that Simpson was not a volunteer because of the duress of the lien.

In light of the disposition by the trial court, while Gaub chooses to debate the effect of a warranty deed, we are satisfied the question that needs to be resolved is whether Simpson paid an obligation of Gaub to the IRS and, therefore, became subrogated to the IRS claim against Gaub. In order to answer that question, the court must determine whether Simpson acted as a volunteer in paying the IRS lien.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
866 P.2d 765, 1993 Wyo. LEXIS 206, 1993 WL 540988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaub-v-simpson-wyo-1993.