James Gagan, Lajunta Monroe, Intervenor-Appellant v. Victor Sharar James A. Monroe

376 F.3d 987, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 15181, 2004 WL 1631582
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 2004
Docket02-15449
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 376 F.3d 987 (James Gagan, Lajunta Monroe, Intervenor-Appellant v. Victor Sharar James A. Monroe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James Gagan, Lajunta Monroe, Intervenor-Appellant v. Victor Sharar James A. Monroe, 376 F.3d 987, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 15181, 2004 WL 1631582 (9th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge.

This case concerns execution in a community property state of a judgment obtained in a common law state.

Facts

The dispute underlying this case has already been the subject of two published decisions by the Seventh Circuit, so we take our facts from those decisions. James Gagan invested substantial funds in a limited partnership to fund, build, and operate cable television systems. James Monroe was the general partner. Monroe and his associates siphoned off money that Gagan was entitled to, so Gagan sued them in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana on RICO and other state and federal theories. The court directed a verdict for Gagan on some claims and sent the rest of the claims to a jury. After two trials, Gagan eventually won a $1.7 million judgment against Monroe. The judgment was affirmed on appeal. 1

Monroe did not pay Gagan, and Gagan was frustrated in his attempts to execute on the judgment. After trying unsuecess- *989 fully to collect, Gagan obtained an order from the district court in Indiana ordering Monroe to turn over to Gagan his interest in Apache Cablevision, a cable television company in Arizona, up to the amount of the judgment. On the eve of the second trial in Indiana, Monroe transferred his interest in Apache Cablevision in large part to his wife LaJunta, but the district court held the transfer void as fraudulent. The district court held that the turnover order was a proper exercise of its jurisdiction over the judgment debtors through use of its contempt powers, and that Arizona community property law did not bar Gagan from collecting the Monroes’ property. Monroe appealed this equitable order in aid of execution, and the Seventh Circuit again affirmed. 2

Still Monroe did not pay. Gagan then registered his federal judgment from the District Court for the Northern District of Indiana in the District Court for the District of Arizona. 3

Gagan moved in the Arizona district court for expansion of the equitable order in aid of execution from the Indiana district court, to reach the interests of the Monroes in more of their complex Arizona property holdings. Monroe’s wife, LaJun-ta, moved to intervene. Arizona, unlike Indiana, is a community property state. LaJunta has been Monroe’s wife, and they have lived in Arizona, at all relevant times. LaJunta claimed in moving to intervene that the property on which Gagan sought to execute is community property in which she has an interest, and that Gagan could not collect on such property under Arizona law. The Arizona district court denied LaJunta’s motion to intervene at the same time it granted Gagan’s motion to expand the equitable order to reach more of the Monroes’ community property. The court ordered the clerk to issue a writ directing the U.S. Marshal to levy on and sell “the interests of Defendant Monroe and his wife LaJunta Monroe” in several Arizona companies.

LaJunta did not file a notice of appeal at any time from the order denying her motion to intervene. Instead, she moved in the district court for relief from the judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). Her theory was that the judgment was void for want of jurisdiction, because she was not joined in the Indiana action against her husband, and that Ga-gan could not execute against any property in which she had a community interest. The district court denied this motion, and LaJunta appeals.

Analysis

LaJunta argues, first, that the trial court never acquired jurisdiction over her, so Gagan’s judgment is void as to both of the Monroes for lack of due process. By trial court, she apparently means the District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, which is the only court that tried anything in this case. She is plainly correct that the Indiana federal court had no personal jurisdiction over her, because she *990 was not named or served in the Indiana suit. And she is plainly wrong as to her husband, James Monroe. He was sued and served, the Indiana federal court had and exercised jurisdiction, and he lost.

LaJunta next argues that Gagan cannot execute on the Monroes’ community property in Arizona, because Arizona Statute § 25 — 215(D) requires that where a spouse has acted for the benefit of the community and thereby incurred a debt or obligation, “the spouses shall be sued jointly,” and the debt shall be satisfied out of the community property. 4 This argument, if successful, would create a “Catch-22” for Gagan. Without some basis for accusing LaJunta of the racketeering and other wrongs for which Gagan sued her husband, all Gagan could get from naming her in the Indiana ease would be a Rule 11 sanction. But if he failed to join her, then, under her theory, when Gagan registered his judgment in federal court in Arizona, he would be barred from collecting on the wealth James had wrongfully appropriated and enriched the community with, because he had not named LaJunta in the Indiana suit.

The Arizona Supreme Court has not spoken on how to resolve this issue, but Arizona’s Courts of Appeals have. Two earlier cases favor LaJunta; three later cases favor Gagan. We think the Arizona Supreme Court would likely adopt the view of the later cases.

Vikse v. Johnson, 5 decided in 1983, supports LaJunta’s view of the law. It held that a lawsuit in a foreign state had to name both spouses in order to subject community property to the judgment. 6 C & J Travel, Inc. v. Shumway, six years later, went the same way. 7 The Shumway court held that Arizona law required join-der of the defendant’s spouse in the original action in New Hampshire, even though it was not required under New Hampshire law, where no procedural impediment prevented such joinder. 8

Three subsequent Arizona Court of Appeals decisions decided since 1993 have gone the other way, undercutting LaJun-ta’s position. Oyakawa v. Gillett distinguished and limited Vikse, holding that a California judgment could be enforced against community property in Arizona despite one spouse not being named in the California action. 9 Although Oyakawa is distinguishable because it dealt with a judgment from California, another community property state, and the court held that the California procedures were sufficient to protect the interest in the community, 10 Oyakawa is important because it began a line of cases in which the Arizona courts have moved away from compliance with § 25-215(D) as a condition of enforcing foreign judgments.

The Arizona case most on point is National Union Fire Insurance Co. v. Greene,

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Bluebook (online)
376 F.3d 987, 2004 U.S. App. LEXIS 15181, 2004 WL 1631582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-gagan-lajunta-monroe-intervenor-appellant-v-victor-sharar-james-a-ca9-2004.