Lytle Vs. September Tr., Dated March 23, 1972 C/W 77007

CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 2020
Docket76198
StatusPublished

This text of Lytle Vs. September Tr., Dated March 23, 1972 C/W 77007 (Lytle Vs. September Tr., Dated March 23, 1972 C/W 77007) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lytle Vs. September Tr., Dated March 23, 1972 C/W 77007, (Neb. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

TRUDI LEE LYTLE; AND JOHN No. 76198 ALLEN LYTLE, AS TRUSTEES OF THE LYTLE TRUST, Appellants, vs. , SEPTEMBER TRUST, DATED MARCH 23, 1972; GERRY R. ZOBRIST; JOLIN G. ZOBRIST, AS TRUSTEES OF THE 17 GERRY R. ZOBRIST AND JOLIN G. CIE

ZOBRIST FAMILY TRUST; RAYNALDO BY DE Li G. SANDOVAL; JULIE MARIE SANDOVAL GEGEN, AS TRUSTEES OF THE RAYNALDO G. AND EVELYN A. SANDOVAL JOINT LIVING TRUST AND DEVOLUTION TRUST DATED MAY 27, 1992; DENNIS A. GEGEN; AND JULIE S. GEGEN, HUSBAND AND WIFE, AS JOINT TENANTS, Res • ondents. TRUDI LEE LYTLE; JOHN ALLEN No. 77007 LYTLE; AND LYTLE TRUST, Appellants, vs. SEPTEMBER TRUST, DATED MARCH 23, 1972; GERRY R. ZOBRIST; JOLIN G. ZOBRIST, AS TRUSTEES OF THE GERRY R. ZOBRIST AND JOLIN G. ZOBRIST FAMILY TRUST; RAYNALDO G. SANDOVAL; JULIE MARIE SANDOVAL GEGEN, AS TRUSTEES OF THE RAYNALDO G. AND EVELYN A. SANDOVAL JOINT LIVING TRUST AND DEVOLUTION TRUST DATED MAY 27, 1992; DENNIS A. GEGEN; AND JULIE S. GEGEN, HUSBAND AND WIFE, AS JOINT TENANTS, Res ondents.

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA o 5113 (0) 1947A .40ED ORDER OF AFFIRMANCE

These are consolidated appeals from district court orders granting summary judgment and awarding attorney fees in a real property action. Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County; Mark B. Bailus, Judge. Appellants Trudi and John Lytle and the Lytle Trust (the Lytles) own property in Rosemere Estates and appeal judgments in the latest of a long line of cases arising from disputes with their homeowners' association. As the parties are familiar with the complex litigation history underlying this case, we do not recount the whole of it here. As pertinent to this appeal, the Lytles litigated three cases against their homeowners' association, which the Lytles term NRED 1, NRED 2, and NRED 3. They ultimately prevailed against the association in each case, receiving awards of $361,238.59, $1,103.158.21, and $15,462.60, respectively. Importantly, the lower court in NRED 1 determined the association was a limited purpose association as defined by NRS 116.1201 and not a Chapter 116 unit-owners association, and that the amended CC&Rs, which would have substantially increased the scope and complexity of the governing CC&Rs, were void ab initio. We affirmed that decision. See Rosemere Estates Prop. Owners Ass'n v. Lytle, Docket Nos. 63942, 65294 & 65721 (Order Affirming (Docket No. 63942); Vacating and Remanding (Docket No. 65294); Affirming in Part, Reversing in Part, and Remanding (Docket No. 65294); and Vacating and Remanding (Docket No. 65721)). The district court order in NRED 2 likewise recognized that the amended CC&Rs were void ab initio and the association was not a Chapter 116 unit-owners association. Following the judgment in NRED 1, the Lytles recorded abstracts of judgment against the other eight properties in Rosemere to

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 2 (0) 1947A Apt. recover their $361,238.59 judgment. Two homeowners, Marjorie Boulden and Linda and Dr. Jacques Lamothe, filed a complaint seeking an injunction to restrain the Lytles from foreclosing on their properties and to strike the abstracts of judgment. The district court granted partial summary judgment, awarding the plaintiffs a permanent injunction against the Lytles and ordering the abstracts of judgment expunged and stricken from the Clark County records. The Lytles appealed that decision to this court and subsequently released the liens against the Boulden and Lamothe properties. While that appeal was pending, the respondents in this case learned of their neighbors success and contacted the Lytles to request that the Lytles likewise release the abstracts of judgment from their properties. The Lytles refused, and the respondents filed a complaint substantially similar to the Boulden/Lamothe complaint, requesting an order restraining the Lytles from foreclosing on their properties, canceling and expunging the abstracts of judgment, and declaring the Lytles had no right to or interest in the properties for any of the NRED judgments. Respondents' case was consolidated below with the remainder of the Boulden/Lamothe case. The district court thereafter granted summary judgment for respondents, and further granted their motion for attorney fees and costs. Subsequently, we affirmed the grant of partial summary judgment in favor of Boulden and Lamothe. Lytle v. Boulden, Docket No. 73039 (Order of Affirmance, December 4, 2018). We explained that under the plain language of Chapter 116, limited purpose associations are not subject to Chapter 116 outside of certain express statutory exceptions, and that NRS 116.3117 is not among those exceptions. Id.

Moreover, we were not persuaded by the Lytles' arguments that other Nevada law, notably equitable principles or the general principles of

SUPREPAE COURT OF NEVADA 3 (0) 1947A .40.

, 1 4". E .1 ; common-interest communities, would allow them to record abstracts of judgment against homeowners who were not parties in the litigation against Rosemere and whose properties were not the subject of any lawsuit. Id. In the present appeal, the Lytles argue the district court erred by granting summary judgment in favor of respondents and abused its discretion by awarding respondents attorney fees and costs, contending the district court improperly applied, as law of the case, its earlier Boulden/Lamothe summary judgment. We have carefully reviewed the record and conclude the district court did not err under the particular facts present here. We review a district court's order granting summary judgment de novo. Wood v. Safeway, Inc., 121 Nev. 724, 729, 121 P.3d 1026, 1029 (2005). Summary judgment is proper if the pleadings and all other evidence on file demonstrate that no genuine issue of material fact exists "and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." Id. We previously addressed in Docket No. 73039 whether the Lytles could rely on NRS 116.3117 to record abstracts of judgment against the individual properties in Rosemere. That decision constitutes law of the case here, where the respondents case has been consolidated with the Boulden/Lamothe case and the claims and legal issues in the two are substantially the same. See Dictor v. Creative Mgmt. Servs., LLC, 126 Nev. 41, 44, 223 P.3d 332, 334 (2010) (stating "that when an appellate court decides a principle or rule of law [either expressly or by necessary implication], that decision governs the same issues in subsequent proceedings in that case); LoBue v. State ex rel. Dep't of Highways, 92 Nev. 529, 532, 554 P.2d 258, 260 (1976) ("The law of the first appeal is the law of

&MIME COM OF NEvADA 4 (o) 190A ollitOir. the case on all subsequent appeals in which the facts are substantially the same." (internal quotations omitted)). The Lytles concede our decision in Docket No. 73039 resolves the summary judgment issues as related to NRED 1 and 3. However, the Lytles argue the order in Docket No. 73039 does not resolve the arguments as related to NRED 2, as in that case the Lytles and the association stipulated that the amended CC&Rs were valid and enforceable for purposes of the NRED 2 litigation, and under those amended CC&Rs the Lytles could rely on NRS 116.3117

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Bluebook (online)
Lytle Vs. September Tr., Dated March 23, 1972 C/W 77007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lytle-vs-september-tr-dated-march-23-1972-cw-77007-nev-2020.