Gottstein v. Kraft

274 P.3d 469, 2012 WL 1232600, 2012 Alas. LEXIS 58
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 2012
DocketS-14106
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 274 P.3d 469 (Gottstein v. Kraft) 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
Gottstein v. Kraft, 274 P.3d 469, 2012 WL 1232600, 2012 Alas. LEXIS 58 (Ala. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

This case concerns the ownership of James "Jim" and Terrie Gottstein's former marital home. Jim paid for the property, but Terrie's name alone was on the deed. The Gott-steins lived in the home for 15 years before moving out; they later separated. Terrie entered into a deal to sell the property to another couple, the Krafts, for significantly less than its appraised value, and Jim objected. One month before closing, Jim recorded a notice of interest under AS 34.15.010, which forbids a spouse from selling "the family home or homestead" without the consent of the other spouse. Neither the Krafts nor Terrie knew about the notice of interest, and the sale went ahead as planned.

Following the sale, Jim filed suit against the Krafts, requesting that the superior court recognize his ownership interest in the property. The superior court granted summary judgment in favor of the Krafts. It was undisputed that the property was not the Gottsteinsg' residence at the time of the sale and thus the superior court concluded that it was not "the family home or homestead," rendering Jim's notice of interest under AS 34.15.010 ineffectual. Jim appeals, arguing: (1) that the statute protected his interest in the property; (2) that the Krafts had constructive notice of his interest and therefore were not bona fide purchasers; and (8) that Jim has an equitable interest in the property and the superior court was mistaken in not granting his request for an equitable remedy.

We conclude that the phrase "the family home or homestead" in AS 34.15.010 refers to a family's residence. Because the disputed property was vacant, and the couple had moved to another home at the time of sale, it did not fall under the spousal consent requirement of AS 34.15.010(b). Jim thus did not put the Krafts on notice of any legally valid claim to the property. The superior court was correct in its assessment that Jim's equitable claims would be more appropriately raised in the context of the couple's divorce proceeding. We therefore affirm the superi- or court's grant of summary judgment to the Krafts, Terrie Gottstein, and Wells Fargo Bank.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Jim and Terrie Gottstein were married on October 10, 1982. Eight years later, in 1990, Jim used his separate funds to buy a large home on Lot 4 of the Alpine Woods subdivision in Anchorage. Terrie asked to be the sole grantee out of concern that Jim's involvement as an attorney representing clients in high-profile litigation might put the property at risk of potential lawsuits against Jim personally. Terrie was accordingly named as sole grantee. A few months after Jim and Terrie moved into the house on Lot *472 4, they acquired the neighboring Lot 5 in exchange for property owned by Jim.

Jim and Terrie set up reciprocal revocable trusts in 1995 as part of their estate planning process. The couple decided that in order for both trusts to contain a substantial amount of assets, the Alpine Woods property would be placed in Terrie's trust. Therefore, in 1999, Terrie conveyed Lot 4 to the Terrie G. Gottstein Revocable Trust. Jim conveyed his interests in Lot 5 to Terrie through a warranty deed, and Terrie conveyed Lot 5 to her trust. According to Terrie, each spouse maintained control of the property in their respective trusts. The terms of both trusts specified that the controlling spouse would have the power to "sell ... any and all real or personal property or interest therein ... in any manner ... for any purpose, upon any terms, credits and conditions, the trustee may deem desirable." The trust terms also stated that the trustee could "freely act under all or any of the powers by [the] agreement given to the trustee[ ] ... without the necessity of obtaining the consent or permission of any person interested therein." In 2007 Terric amended her trust to change the successor trustee from Jim to a friend. Her amendment states that she did so because she wanted to ensure that the trust assets were preserved.

Terrie's trust bought a new family home on P Street in Anchorage in 2006. Jim, Terrie, and their children moved out of the Alpine Woods property and into the P Street home. In order to finance the purchase and remodel of the P Street residence, Terric's trust took out a line of credit from Wells Fargo Bank secured by a deed of trust on the Alpine Woods property. Jim maintains that he verbally objected to Terrie using the Alpine Woods property as collateral, although Terrie disputes this. According to Jim, he wanted her to take out a traditional mortgage on the new home instead.

In order to pay off the loan, Terrie put the Alpine Woods property on the market in 2006. For the next two years, according to her affidavit, Terrie made efforts to sell the property. She met with ten real estate agents before settling on one, performed repairs and maintenance, hired a professional stager, and held open houses. The property was the subject of a feature article in the Anchorage Daily News. Nonetheless, despite reducing the price several times from its starting point of $1,399,000, Terrie received no offers for almost two years. Jim did not participate in the marketing process, and during this time Jim and Terrie separated. Jim moved to a triplex, Terrie stayed in the P Street home, and the Alpine Woods property remained vacant.

In July 2008 Terric received an $800,000 offer from Brian and Serena Kraft, a married couple looking for a family home. A 2008 assessment valued Lot 4 at $1,000,000 and Lot 5 at $95,100. Needing to make payments to the bank on her loan, Terrie decided to accept the Krafts' offer. Jim's complaint states that he told Terrie the price was too low, that he owned "at least half" of the property, that he was "entitled to at least half" of the proceeds, and that he "would not join in a deed to convey the property for such a price."

On July 24, 2008, Jim signed and recorded a document entitled "Notice of Interest (AS 34.15.010(d)(2))." Alaska Statute 34.15.010 provides generally that a titleholder may convey land to another by deed, but if a titled spouse conveys "the family home or homestead," the other spouse must join in the deed. Alaska Statute 34.15.010(d)(2) requires that to preserve an interest in the family home or homestead, the untitled spouse must "record, within one year [of the conveyance] ... a notice of an interest in the property." Jim's notice of interest read (aside from a brief description of the property): "Pursuant to AS $4.15.010(d)(2), the undersigned ... hereby provides notice that he has an interest in [the Alpine Woods property]." Terrie's title company, Stewart Title, admitted during discovery that it did not disclose Jim's notice of interest to Terrie or to the Krafts.

Terrie emailed Jim two days later-without knowing of the notice of interest-to tell him that she was going to place the sale proceeds in a separate interest-bearing account and that Jim would not have to waive any claims regarding the sale. Jim did not respond. The sale closed on August 18 and *473 was recorded two days later. Terrie emailed Jim with the news on the day the sale closed and confirmed that she had placed the proceeds in a separate interest-bearing account. Jim responded in part:

Congratulations on the house. I know it is a weight off of you....

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 P.3d 469, 2012 WL 1232600, 2012 Alas. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gottstein-v-kraft-alaska-2012.