Grazer v. Jones

2011 UT App 51, 249 P.3d 1000, 676 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 2011 Utah App. LEXIS 51, 2011 WL 542524
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedFebruary 17, 2011
Docket20090983-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2011 UT App 51 (Grazer v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grazer v. Jones, 2011 UT App 51, 249 P.3d 1000, 676 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 2011 Utah App. LEXIS 51, 2011 WL 542524 (Utah Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

THORNE, Judge:

{1 Allen F. Grazer appeals the district court's order denying his motion for partial summary judgment and granting Ludvig D. and Jackie M. Olsen, Trustees of the Ludvig D. and Jackie M. Olsen Trust's (the Olsen Trust) eross-motion for partial summary judgment. 1 We affirm.

BACKGROUND

T2 Pursuant to a writ of execution, the Davis County Sheriff sold the interests of Gordon A. and Linda G. Jones and Richard H. and Renae Carnon Barney (collectively, the debtors) in certain real property located in Davis County (the Property) on January 17, 2008. At the sheriff's sale, Lincoln W. Hobbs, attorney for Grazer, purchased the property with a eredit bid of $191 on behalf of Grazer.

T3 Thereafter, the debtors executed a written assignment of redemption rights, assigning their rights to redeem the Property to the Olsen Trust. 2 On July 8, 2008, the Olsen Trust, through the Joneses' counsel, attempted to redeem the Property by delivering to Hobbs (1) a copy of the assignment, (2) a check made payable to Hobbs for $210, and (8) a certificate of redemption (the First Redemption Attempt). That same day, Hobbs, in a letter to the Joneses' counsel, rejected and returned the check and documents for the following reasons:

First of all, my client now resides in Colorado and you did not ask if I could accept service on his behalf and I am not authorized to do so. I have not yet had an opportunity to talk to him, although I will attempt to do so; if I can accept service of similar documents on his behalf, I will let you know.
Also, I am rejecting the tender of the check payable to me, for the redemption of property owned by my client. This is clearly not appropriate and I intend to insist upon strict compliance in your clients' attempted transfer of the redemption rights.

T4 On July 9, Hobbs recorded a notice of amounts paid and owed with the Davis County Recorder's Office claiming Grazer had incurred and paid $2178 in conjunction with the sale along with an additional $2750 due for fair rental value attributable to the use of the Property after the sheriff's sale.

T5 On July 10, after being informed by Hobbs that he was now authorized to accept service, the Olsen Trust again attempted to redeem the Property delivering to Hobbs (1) a copy of the assignment, (2) a check made payable to Grazer in the amount of $210, and (8) a proposed certificate of redemption (the Second Redemption Attempt). Hobbs, in a letter to the Olsen Trust, rejected the second request based on his belief that the Olsen Trust's "assignment of the redemption right was not a bona fide transfer for value and [was] thus ... a fraudulent transfer," that the attempted redemption "failed to pay the amounts" Grazer claimed owed in his notice of amounts paid and owed recorded on July 9, and his belief that the Joneses had used the Property for storage and dumping of construction materials since the sheriff's sale. The Olsen Trust's check and documents were subsequently returned.

I 6 On July 15, counsel for the Joneses and the Olsen Trust submitted to the district court a request for an accounting of rents and profits with respect to the Property. On August 15, counsel for the Joneses and the Olsen Trust also filed with the court a petition for establishment of redemption price on the Property with a check in the amount of $2465 purporting to encompass the entire undisputed and correct amount of the redemption price for the Property. Grazer *1002 filed a motion to strike the parties' petition for establishment of redemption, claiming the petition was untimely. The district court, in a written ruling, found that the Olsen Trust had failed to strictly comply with rule 69C(F) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure pertaining to the twenty-day deadline for filing a petition to determine a disputed redemption price. See generally Utah R. Civ. P. 69C(P). The court also noted that the ruling was limited in seope and did not foreclose the parties from later moving the court for a determination that redemption had occurred as a result of the First or Second Redemption Attempt.

T7 Thereafter, Grazer filed a motion for partial summary judgment, requesting the court to establish as a matter of law that the Olsen Trust's First Redemption Attempt was invalid for failure to tender the check to the correct party and that the Second Redemption Attempt was invalid for failure to tender the correct redemption amount, and enter an order requiring the Davis County Sheriff to complete the sheriffs deed and finalize the sale. A month later, the Olsen Trust filed a cross-motion for partial summary judgment on the same issue requesting the court to establish as a matter of law that the Olsen Trust's redemption efforts substantially complied with rule 69C and enter a judgment in favor of the Olsen Trust. The district court conducted a hearing on the various partial summary judgment motions, after which the court denied Grazer's motion based upon the holdings and analyses of United States v. Loosley, 551 P.2d 506 (Utah 1976), and Tech-Fluid Services, Inc. v. Gavilan Operating, Inc., 787 P.2d 1328 (Utah Ct.App.1990). The district court found,

[The Olsen Trust need only substantially comply with the procedures of Rule 69C(c) for their redemption attempts to succeed.
In the [First Redemption Attempt] the Olsen Trust provided Grazer's counsel with: (1) a copy of the Assignment; (2) a check made payable to Grazer's counsel in the amount of $210.00, purporting to cover the $191.00 purchase price plus six percent (6%) annual interest aceruing from the date of the sheriff's sale; and (8) a certificate of redemption. While the Olsen Trust failed to provide Grazer with a certified copy of the judgment/lien and an affidavit regarding the amount due, the Court finds that the Olsen Trust nevertheless substantially complied with the procedural requirements of Rule 69C(c). In so ruling, the Court finds that Grazer's argument that his counsel did not have authority to accept the [First Redemption Attempt], is unpersuasive and without merit. As argued by the Olsen Trust, Grazer's counsel was involved from the beginning of this litigation and had the authority to accept documents filed therein throughout the proceedings.... Accordingly, the Court must DENY Grazer's motion for partial summary judgment regarding invalidity of [the] attempted redemptions.

The district court then considered and granted the Olsen Trust's cross-motion for partial summary judgment based on the court's earlier ruling that the Olsen Trust's First Redemption Attempt substantially complied with rule 69C0(c). Grazer now appeals.

ISSUE AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

18 Grazer argues that the district court erred in denying his motion for partial summary judgment and granting the Olsen Trust's eross-motion for partial summary judgment. "This court review[s] a summary judgment determination for correctness, granting no deference to the [district] court's legal conclusions." Andrus v. Northwestern Mut. Life Ins.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 UT App 51, 249 P.3d 1000, 676 Utah Adv. Rep. 4, 2011 Utah App. LEXIS 51, 2011 WL 542524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grazer-v-jones-utahctapp-2011.