Hart v. United Virginia Bank (In Re Hart)

24 B.R. 821, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 5421
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedNovember 26, 1982
Docket19-30359
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 24 B.R. 821 (Hart v. United Virginia Bank (In Re Hart)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hart v. United Virginia Bank (In Re Hart), 24 B.R. 821, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 5421 (Va. 1982).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

MARTIN V.B. BOSTETTER, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

The plaintiffs, Robert B. and Susan L. Hart, the debtors herein, are the president and secretary, respectively, of E-Z Cruz, Inc., a retail boat sales establishment with a showroom and marina facilities in Prince William County, Virginia 1 . In September 1979, E-Z Cruz, Inc. entered into a security agreement with United Virginia Bank (“the Bank”) to secure the payment of indebtedness incurred to finance the purchase of inventory. This debt to the Bank was personally guaranteed by the debtors.

In July 1980, the Bank discovered that E-Z Cruz, Inc. was selling certain of the inventory in which the Bank held a security interest without making payment to the Bank. Accordingly, the Bank filed petitions for attachment and motions for judgment against the debtors and others in the circuit courts of two Virginia counties in which the debtors owned property. In conjunction with the attachment proceedings, the Bank also recorded memoranda of lis pendens in the land records of such counties. The debtors moved to quash the attachments in Prince William County, and the same was heard by the Circuit Court on October 31, 1980. By order dated November 10, 1980, the Court found that “the grounds of attachment alleged ... have been duly proved,” and denied the motion to quash. (United Virginia Bank v. E-Z Cruz, Inc., et al., Law No. 11202, Order of November 10, 1980 (Circuit Court of Prince William County).) The court did, however, release the attachment of the debtors’ bank accounts as being excessive. (Id.)

On March 13, 1981, E-Z Cruz, Inc. and the debtors filed their respective petitions for relief in this Court under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code. On October 13,1981, the debtors filed a further motion in the Circuit Court of Prince William County seeking to vacate, dismiss, remove, release or otherwise modify the attachments and notice of lis pendens. Two days later the Bank removed to this Court the debtors’ motion and all subsequent proceedings thereon, including the motion for judgment originally filed one year earlier and later stayed by the filing of the debtors’ petitions in this Court.

The debtors subsequently filed this complaint for a declaratory judgment that the filing of the memoranda of lis pendens was “illegal as a matter of law” and further that said lis pendens is null and void.

The term lis pendens is defined as “A pending suit,” (see Black’s Law Dictionary (1979)), and the effect of filing a memorandum of lis pendens is to give notice of a pending law suit to third parties. The plaintiff debtors claim that the filing of the memoranda of lis pendens was “illegal as a matter of law” because the use of lis pen-dens is restricted to actions involving “issues relating to the right, title and interest in real property.”

This assertion appears to be based upon a statement in Michie’s Jurisprudence of Virginia and West Virginia that lis pendens “has no application to a case where the action is debt to recover a personal judgment against the defendant.” 12A Miehie’s Jurisprudence of Virginia and West Virginia, Lis Pendens § 11 (1978). The citation *824 offered for this rule is a 1967 case, Preston’s Drive Inn Restaurant, Inc. v. Convery, in which the Virginia Supreme Court made the following statement:

In Virginia, if the title to real property is involved in a pending action, Code § 8-142 [since amended and recodified as § 8.01-268] permits the filing of a lis pendens to give notice to anyone who might deal with the property in the pending litigation. The statute is not applicable, however, to an action to recover a personal judgment against the defendant. [Citations omitted.]

Preston’s Drive Inn Restaurant, Inc. v. Convery, 207 Va. 1013, 1016, 154 S.E.2d 160 (1967). As authority for this Rule, the court cited Michie’s Jurisprudence and both sources also cite Steinman v. Clinchfield Coal Corporation, a somewhat earlier Virginia ease which reviews the history of lis pendens in the Commonwealth. At one time, if title to real estate were at stake in litigation, the mere pendency of the suit was deemed sufficient to charge a purchaser with notice of the challenge to title and subject his interest in the property to the outcome of the suit. To correct the harshness of this rule, the legislature enacted a provision currently codified as Va.Code § 8.01-268, requiring any notice of pending litigation or lis pendens to be docketed in the Circuit Court Clerks’ Office for the jurisdiction in which the land is located before such notice will bind a bona fide purchaser. Steinman v. Clinchfield Coal Corporation, 121 Va. 611, 641, 93 S.E. 684 (1917).

Whatever the law may have been in the past, the statement made in Preston’s Drive Inn, supra, and perpetuated by Mi-chie’s, appears to be a misstatement, or at least a distortion, of current law. As indicated above, a memorandum of lis pendens is merely a notice to third parties that a claim has been asserted to the property described. 12A Michie’s Jurisprudence, Lis Pendens § 3 (1978). Virginia Code § 8.01-268 states that “[n]o lis pendens or attachment shall bind or affect a subsequent bona fide purchaser of real or personal estate ... until and except from the time a memorandum” is docketed in the appropriate Circuit Court Clerk’s Office. The memorandum must state “the title of the cause or attachment, the general object thereof, the court wherein it is pending, the amount of the claim asserted by the plaintiff, a description of the property, and the name of the person whose estate is intended to be affected thereby.” Va.Code § 8.01-268 (1977 Repl. vol.). The section speaks of “lis pendens or attachment,” so that even if “lis pendens” technically were available only for actions directly involving title to real property, the identical procedure, with identical effect, may be obtained by filing a notice of attachment. The difference is formal rather than substantive and does not render the Bank’s filing “illegal”.

Section 8.01-268 also provides for the filing of such memoranda against a defendant’s personal as well as his real property, which indicates an intent by the legislature that such filings not be restricted to suits directly involving title to real estate. The annotations to Section 8.01-268, moreover, do not mention the Preston’s Drive Inn case. This omission is a further suggestion that filing of a memorandum of lis pendens or attachment is not restricted to suits directly involving title to real property.

In addition, the provisions of Section 8.01-268 must be read in conjunction with Va.Code § 8.01-458 which states that “[e]very judgment for money rendered in this Commonwealth by any state or federal court ... shall be a lien on all the real estate of ... the defendant....” Va.Code § 8.01-458 (1977 Repl. vol.).

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24 B.R. 821, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 5421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-united-virginia-bank-in-re-hart-vaeb-1982.