Kenneth Walker and Josephine Walker v. Fairbanks Investment Company

268 F.2d 48, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3772
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 29, 1959
Docket16082
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 268 F.2d 48 (Kenneth Walker and Josephine Walker v. Fairbanks Investment Company) 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
Kenneth Walker and Josephine Walker v. Fairbanks Investment Company, 268 F.2d 48, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3772 (9th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

HAMLEY, Circuit Judge.

Kenneth and Josephine Walker, as judgment creditors, brought this action to have certain asserted conveyances of real property or interests therein declared void as to the lien of their judgment. The action arose in Alaska and involves an Alaska judgment and Alaska property. The claim that the asserted conveyances are void as to their judgment lien rests on the fact that such conveyances were not of record at the time the judgment was docketed.

Named as defendants were James B. and Mary Fern Ing, the judgment debtors; Chester W. and Martha L. Jackson, vendees of a real estate contract covering the property in question; and Fairbanks Investment Company, Inc. (Fairbanks), assignee of the vendors’ interest in the contract and recipient of a quitclaim deed to such property from the vendors. Before any answer had been filed, but more than twenty days after the commencement of the action, plaintiffs moved for summary judgment against Fairbanks. 1 Defendants Fairbanks and Mr. and Mrs. Jackson moved in the alternative for dismissal of the action or for summary judgment in their favor.

After a hearing on these motions, an order was entered denying plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment against Fairbanks and granting Fairbanks’ motion to dismiss the action as to it. At the same time a summary judgment was entered in favor of Mr. and Mrs. Jackson, in which it was declared that plaintiffs’ judgment lien did not attach to the property being purchased by the Jacksons.

Plaintiffs appeal from the order and a summary judgment in favor of Fairbanks. They do not appeal from the summary judgment entered in favor of the Jacksons. 2

The questions presented on appeal involve the application, under the facts of this case, of § 55-9-63 A.C.L.A.1949, which reads as follows:

“A conveyance of real property or any portion thereof or interest therein shall be void against the lien of a judgment unless such conveyance be recorded at the time of docketing such judgment or the transcript thereof, as the case may be.”

The essential facts are not in dispute, By virtue of a deed executed on October 23, 1953, and recorded on October 28, 1953, James B. Ing became vested with fee simple title to lot 4, block 52, of the Townsite of Fairbanks, Alaska. On October 31, 1956, Mr. and Mrs. Ing sold this property to&the Jacksons for $31,-280.38. After the stipulated down payment and the vendees’ assumption of an outstanding mortgage, the Ings held a sellers’ equity in the amount of $7,-483.26.

Under the contract the Jacksons agreed to pay $250 a month on the unpaid purchase price, such payments to be applied first on sums due on the mortgage with the balance being applied in reduction of the sellers’ equity. This real estate contract was not recorded at that time. However, the Jacksons went into immediate and open possession of the property.

In October 1957 an action by the Walkers against the Ings (civil action No. 7807) came on for trial in the district court at Fairbanks, Alaska. On October 25, 1957, upon the termination of the trial, the court announced that judgment would be awarded for the Walkers in the sum of at least $20,000. The award of a possible additional $24,226.43 was with *50 held pending the submission of briefs. No judgment was actually entered at that time.

On November 4, 1957, Mr. and Mrs. Ing assigned their vendors’ interest in this property to Fairbanks, giving the latter at the same time a quitclaim deed to such property. There was then an outstanding balance of $6,905.23 on the real estate contract. Fairbanks paid Mr. and Mrs. Ing $5,000 for the assignment and quitclaim deed. Neither the assignment nor the quitclaim deed was recorded at that time.

On November 9, 1957, judgment in favor of the Walkers and against the Ings in the sum of $44,226.43 was entered and docketed in civil action No. 7807. On November 29, 1957, a final amended judgment in the amount of $37,673.10 was entered and docketed.

On December 18, 1957, the assignment of the real estate contract from Mr. and Mrs. Ing to Fairbanks was recorded. While the assignment*makes reference to a quitclaim deed, the transcript before us does not indicate that the latter was ever independently recorded. On December 20, 1957, the real estate contract between the Ings and the Jacksons was recorded. There is no claim or indication that appellants or the vendees had actual knowledge of the assignment and quitclaim deed prior to the docketing of the judgment.

Execution for the enforcement of the judgment in civil action No. 7807 was thereafter returned wholly unsatisfied.

It would seem that under these facts § 55-9-63 A.C.L.A.1949, quoted above, would compel the conclusion that the assignment and quitclaim deed from Mr. and Mrs. Ing to Fairbanks, unrecorded at the time appellants’ judgment against the Ings was docketed, were void as against the lien of that judgment.

The district court held, however, that by reason of the fact that the Jacksons were in open possession of the property, appellants had constructive knowledge of the assignment and quitclaim deed from their vendors, Mr. and Mrs. Ing, to Fairbanks. Existence of such constructive knowledge, the court held, prevented application of § 55-9-63 A.C.L.A.1949. The court cited Frank Lynch Co. v. National City Bank of Chicago, 8 Cir., 261 F. 480, 483, as authority for the conclusion reached.

In Lynch the court was dealing with a vendor which had endorsed and assigned to a third person the negotiable promissory notes issued by the vendee in possession in payment for North Dakota property. At the same time the vendor assigned to the third person, without rec-ordation, its interest in the real estate contract. The court held that the vendee’s possession of the property gave a subsequent judgment creditor constructive notice that the vendor’s title to the property was subject to the real estate contract and “that Kresse [the vendee] had given his negotiable promissory notes for the unpaid purchase price, that they were negotiable, and that they might have been discounted or sold, or assigned to some third person.”

The court then came to the question of whether the judgment creditor also had constructive notice of the actual negotiation of the vendee’s notes to the particular third person involved in that case. As to this, the court said, the supreme courts of Minnesota and Georgia had reached opposite conclusions. 3 The court held, however, that this was a question of local (North Dakota) real estate law, and that in a diversity action a federal court must be guided by the decisions of the highest tribunal of the state in which the land is situated.

The court, in Lynch, found what it regarded as a conclusive answer in the North Dakota Supreme Court case of Quaschneck v. Blodgett, 32 N.D. 603, 156 *51 N.W. 216. On the basis of the latter decision, which was regarded as controlling, the Eighth Circuit held that a judgment creditor has constructive notice of such transactions by a vendor. 4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 F.2d 48, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenneth-walker-and-josephine-walker-v-fairbanks-investment-company-ca9-1959.