James S. Jackson Co. v. Horseshoe Creek Ltd.

650 P.2d 281, 1982 Wyo. LEXIS 378
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 2, 1982
Docket5677
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 650 P.2d 281 (James S. Jackson Co. v. Horseshoe Creek Ltd.) 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
James S. Jackson Co. v. Horseshoe Creek Ltd., 650 P.2d 281, 1982 Wyo. LEXIS 378 (Wyo. 1982).

Opinion

ROONEY, Justice.

James S. Jackson Company, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as “Jackson”) sought to intervene as of right pursuant to Rule 24(a)(2), W.R.C.P., 1 in an action filed by *283 Horseshoe Creek Limited (hereinafter referred to as “Horseshoe”) against James A. Ludvik (hereinafter referred to as “Lud-vik”). The purpose of the action was to rescind an assignment of a contract for deed made by Horseshoe to Ludvik. In its motion to intervene Jackson asserted that it was a judgment creditor of Horseshoe and that Horseshoe had promised to assign it a security interest in the contract for deed. After a hearing, the district court denied Jackson’s motion to intervene as of right.

On appeal the parties raise the following issues:

1. Is the denial of a motion to intervene as of right an appealable final order? Jackson contends that it was.

2. Are the issues raised by this appeal rendered moot by the dismissal without prejudice of the underlying action subsequent to the denial of Jackson’s motion to intervene? Jackson contends that they were not.

3. Is Jackson entitled to intervention as of right pursuant to Rule 24(a)(2), W.R. C.P.? Jackson contends that it is so entitled.

4. Was the error, if any, harmless error and not prejudicial to Jackson? Jackson contends that it was not harmless and was prejudicial.

Because we find that Jackson is not entitled to intervention as of right, we affirm.

FACTS

On November 9, 1976, Horseshoe entered into a contract to purchase a large parcel of land located in Platte County from James F. K. Centlivre. Subsequently two assignments of this contract for deed were made. One assignment was made by Horseshoe to Ludvik and the other was made to Jackson by the United States Marshal for the Northern District of Indiana pursuant to an order of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana.

The question of the priority between these assignments was before us in an earlier case. Ludvik v. James S. Jackson Co., Inc., Wyo., 635 P.2d 1135 (1981). The majority of the court there held “that Ludvik’s interest should be recognized as superior to that of Jackson. It further is free from any claim of lien by Jackson.” Id. at 1144.

In the present action, Horseshoe alleged that Ludvik had failed to meet his obligations under the assignment of the contract for deed. Specifically, Horseshoe alleged that Ludvik failed to make payments due Centlivre under the contract for deed, failed to assume an indebtedness owed by Meyers in the amount of $121,000 and make payments thereon, failed to execute a promissory note for $25,000 to Horseshoe and secure it with a mortgage on the property, and failed to pay any of the $25,000 owed Horseshoe. Horseshoe requested the district court to rescind the assignment between Horseshoe and Ludvik and award it the monetary benefits derived from the property by Ludvik.

In his answer, Ludvik denied that he had failed to meet his obligations under the assignment. He asserted that he had acquired Centlivre’s interest in the contract for deed and therefore was not required to make any payments, that Horseshoe lacked standing and authority to require payment of any indebtedness due Meyers, and that Horseshoe has failed to present Ludvik with a warranty deed as required thereby relieving Ludvik of his obligation to execute the promissory note.

Ludvik asserted three affirmative defenses and a counterclaim. The affirmative defenses were: (1) that although Horseshoe was to convey the property free of all liens except those expressly assumed by Ludvik, there are still liens on the property (one for taxes and a potential one based on Jackson’s claim); (2) that the failure of Horseshoe to notify Ludvik of its intention to rescind and its failure to recognize Ludvik’s rights under the assignment constituted a *284 waiver or estoppel of the right to rescind; and (3) laches. The counterclaim (1) sought to quiet title to the property as against Horseshoe; (2) prayed for an order compelling Horseshoe to convey the property to Ludvik subject only to a mortgage in favor of Meyers; and (3) requested damages for breach of the contract of assignment by Horseshoe.

Horseshoe filed its answer to Ludvik’s counterclaim on December 4, 1981; and on December 7, 1981, Jackson filed its motion to intervene as of right, indicating that it would make the following claims for relief in its complaint:

1. Reassertion of Horseshoe’s claim that Ludvik is in default on the assignment between Horseshoe and Ludvik;

2. Enforcement of its Indiana judgment against Horseshoe;

3. Invalidity of the assignment of the contract for deed between Horseshoe and Ludvik under the Uniform Fraudulent Conveyence Act;

4. Interference by Ludvik with Jackson’s contract rights in that Ludvik’s actions were taken with knowledge of Horseshoe’s agreement to assign the contract for deed to Jackson as security; and

5. Perpetration of a fraud by Horseshoe and Ludvik against Jackson.

In denying Jackson’s motion to intervene as of right, the district court stated in its decision letter:

“The Motion to Intervene, with the proposed Complaint attached, of James S. Jackson Company, Inc., should be and the same is hereby denied. It appears to the Court that James S. Jackson Company, Inc., is a creditor of Horseshoe Creek Limited, Plaintiff in this action, but this alone is not sufficient grounds to permit it to intervene. The issues raised in the proposed Complaint of James S. Jackson Company, Inc., were actually litigated and determined in the first proceeding which was finally determined by the Supreme Court of the State of Wyoming, and the prayer of the proposed Complaint is substantially the same as in the case of James S. Jackson Company v. James Lud-vik, the Defendant, which has been decided by the Wyoming Supreme Court. As far as James S. Jackson Company, Inc., is concerned, if it were permitted to intervene it would constitute a repetition of the suit involving the same cause of action, and the doctrine of res judicata applies.
“The Court recognizes that the Judgment in the prior action operates as an estoppel not as to matters which might have been liquidated [sic] and determined but only as to those matters in issue or points controverted; but in this instance, it is the Court’s opinion that the matters raised in the proposed Complaint attached to the Motion to Intervene were actually litigated and determined in the first proceeding and cannot now be re-litigated.”

FINAL ORDER

Horseshoe argues that the denial of Jackson’s motion to intervene as of right is not a final order as defined by Rule 1.05, W.R. A.P., 2 and, therefore, it is not appealable. In support thereof, Horseshoe relies on an early Wyoming case, Greenawalt v. Natrona Improvement Co., 16 Wyo. 226, 92 P. 1008 (1907), and cases from three other states.

In

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Bluebook (online)
650 P.2d 281, 1982 Wyo. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-s-jackson-co-v-horseshoe-creek-ltd-wyo-1982.