MEMORANDUM OPINION
ELLIS, District Judge.
At issue in this diversity action is whether a plaintiff who brings a fraud and breach of contract action in connection with a contract for the sale of a single condominium unit in the second phase of a five phase condominium project may file a memorandum of
lis pendens
burdening the property located in three other phases of the project. Put another way, the question presented is whether a claimant in a breach of contract and fraud action may file a memorandum of
lis pendens
burdening property in which he neither has nor asserts an interest.
For the reasons that follow, defendant’s motion to quash the
lis pendens
must be granted.
I.
Plaintiff Mustapha Meliani is a resident of Washington, D.C. who entered into a
contract to purchase the condominium unit at issue. Defendant Jade Dunn Loring Metro, LLC (Jade) is the Virginia limited liability corporation that originally purchased and commenced development of the five phase condominium project. Defendant Westbriar, LLC (Westbriar) is a Virginia limited liability corporation formed by the principals of Jade after Jade’s insolvency. Westbriar is the current owner of phases three, four, and five of the condominium project. Defendant Key Bank & Trust and its wholly owned subsidiary, Key Capital Corporation (collectively referred to as “Key”) are organized pursuant to the laws of Maryland and financed the project. Defendant Dunn Loring Resolution, LLC (DLR) is a Virginia limited liability corporation and the alter ego and wholly owned subsidiary of Key Capital. DLR and Key are the current owners of phases one and two of the project, having purchased these phases at foreclosure. Defendants Jon and Ellen Luria are principals of Jade and Westbriar and residents of Fairfax County, Virginia. Defendants Eric A. Anderson and Robert W. Haas are trustees and members of Jade and residents of Arlington, Virginia and Fairfax, Virginia, respectively.
The pertinent events began on November 30, 1998, when defendant Jade acquired title to a parcel of land in Vienna, Virginia with the intent to develop and sell condominium units. A little over a year later, Jade filed a Deed of Subdivision designating Parcel L, a portion of the original parcel, for initial condominium development. Over approximately the next two years, Jade secured financing from the Key defendants for the development of Parcel L. Jade intended to develop Parcel L into five condominium phases that included a total of 55 town homes and up to 116 units.
Plaintiff, on March 30, 2002, entered into a contract with Jade for the purchase of condominium unit 304 at 2665 Manhattan Place, Vienna, Virginia, 22180. Plaintiffs unit was located in phase two of the Parcel L development. The contract price was $279,900. In connection with this contract, plaintiff made a $5,000 deposit and arranged for financing to cover the full contract price at closing. Jade also entered into sales contracts with several other buyers for the purchase of other units located in phases one and two of the complex.
Shortly after Jade entered into the contract for sale with the plaintiff, the condominium market improved markedly and the value of each unit already sold increased by approximately $100,000 per unit. Thereafter, Jade alleges that it became insolvent, resulting first in its loss of phases one and two through foreclosure and thus its default on the existing phase two purchase contracts, including plaintiffs. In addition, as a consequence of its insolvency, Jade claims it was compelled to convey its interest in phases three, four, and five for no consideration to Westbriar, a new entity formed by Jade’s principals.
Plaintiff contends that Jade’s alleged insolvency was in fact part of a strategy developed by Jade and its financiers to enable Jade to avoid performing the contracts on the units already sold in phases one and two and to recapture the additional profit available on those units. This strategy included severing phases three, four, and five to place them beyond the reach of the owners of the already-purchased units and to enable Jade to obtain additional profits from the sale of the condominium units in these phases. As part of this fraud, plaintiff alleges that Jade authorized Eric A. Anderson, its Trustee, Board Member, and attorney, to set up a new corporation, Dunn Loring Resolution, LLC (DLR) to bid on the foreclosure of phases one and two that resulted from Jade’s insolvency. The foreclosure was intended to cut off plaintiffs and other
purchasers’ contract rights to any condominium units in phases one and two and to allow the new corporation, DLR, to re-sell the units at the now higher market price. Accordingly, on February 11, 2003, Anderson sold phases one and two at a foreclosure sale to DLR, a wholly owned subsidiary of Key. At present, therefore, Key and DLR own phases one and two of the complex and Westbriar owns phases three, four, and five.
On July 18, 2003, plaintiff filed a complaint alleging thirteen claims including claims for tortious interference with contract, conspiracy, voluntary and fraudulent conveyance, breach of contract, and conversion. Plaintiff also filed a memorandum of
lis pendens
in the land records of Fairfax County, Virginia on July 25, 2003 giving notice of his purported claim to the entire Parcel L. In response to plaintiffs filing of the memorandum of
lis pendens,
defendant Westbriar filed a motion for temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction requiring plaintiff to remove the
lis pendens
from phases three, four, and five of the property on the basis that the memorandum of
lis pendens
causes defendant irreparable harm by preventing defendant from closing on the sales of twelve units in phase three and drawing on the remainder of the financing needed to complete development, sale and delivery of the remaining condominium units. Westbriar later amended its motion to include a motion to quash the
lis pen-dens
as it applies to phases three, four, and five.
II.
The common law doctrine of
Us pendens
provides that an interest in property acquired during the pendency of a litigation regarding that property is subject to the outcome of the litigation, provided the transferee or purchaser of the property receives notice of the pending lawsuit.
See
51 Am. JuR. 2d
Lis Pendens
§ 1, 3 (1970); 12A M. J.,
Lis Pendens,
§ 3 (1989) (“The common-law rule of
lis pen-dens
is that a pendente lite purchaser from a party to the suit of the subject matter thereof takes it subject to any decree rendered against his vendor in that suit.”). The doctrine, and the statutes that now codify it, are designed to ensure that litigation regarding property ownership continue uninterrupted such that any relief granted in the litigation may be enforced against the property owner, even when there is a transfer or sale of the property while the litigation is pending.
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MEMORANDUM OPINION
ELLIS, District Judge.
At issue in this diversity action is whether a plaintiff who brings a fraud and breach of contract action in connection with a contract for the sale of a single condominium unit in the second phase of a five phase condominium project may file a memorandum of
lis pendens
burdening the property located in three other phases of the project. Put another way, the question presented is whether a claimant in a breach of contract and fraud action may file a memorandum of
lis pendens
burdening property in which he neither has nor asserts an interest.
For the reasons that follow, defendant’s motion to quash the
lis pendens
must be granted.
I.
Plaintiff Mustapha Meliani is a resident of Washington, D.C. who entered into a
contract to purchase the condominium unit at issue. Defendant Jade Dunn Loring Metro, LLC (Jade) is the Virginia limited liability corporation that originally purchased and commenced development of the five phase condominium project. Defendant Westbriar, LLC (Westbriar) is a Virginia limited liability corporation formed by the principals of Jade after Jade’s insolvency. Westbriar is the current owner of phases three, four, and five of the condominium project. Defendant Key Bank & Trust and its wholly owned subsidiary, Key Capital Corporation (collectively referred to as “Key”) are organized pursuant to the laws of Maryland and financed the project. Defendant Dunn Loring Resolution, LLC (DLR) is a Virginia limited liability corporation and the alter ego and wholly owned subsidiary of Key Capital. DLR and Key are the current owners of phases one and two of the project, having purchased these phases at foreclosure. Defendants Jon and Ellen Luria are principals of Jade and Westbriar and residents of Fairfax County, Virginia. Defendants Eric A. Anderson and Robert W. Haas are trustees and members of Jade and residents of Arlington, Virginia and Fairfax, Virginia, respectively.
The pertinent events began on November 30, 1998, when defendant Jade acquired title to a parcel of land in Vienna, Virginia with the intent to develop and sell condominium units. A little over a year later, Jade filed a Deed of Subdivision designating Parcel L, a portion of the original parcel, for initial condominium development. Over approximately the next two years, Jade secured financing from the Key defendants for the development of Parcel L. Jade intended to develop Parcel L into five condominium phases that included a total of 55 town homes and up to 116 units.
Plaintiff, on March 30, 2002, entered into a contract with Jade for the purchase of condominium unit 304 at 2665 Manhattan Place, Vienna, Virginia, 22180. Plaintiffs unit was located in phase two of the Parcel L development. The contract price was $279,900. In connection with this contract, plaintiff made a $5,000 deposit and arranged for financing to cover the full contract price at closing. Jade also entered into sales contracts with several other buyers for the purchase of other units located in phases one and two of the complex.
Shortly after Jade entered into the contract for sale with the plaintiff, the condominium market improved markedly and the value of each unit already sold increased by approximately $100,000 per unit. Thereafter, Jade alleges that it became insolvent, resulting first in its loss of phases one and two through foreclosure and thus its default on the existing phase two purchase contracts, including plaintiffs. In addition, as a consequence of its insolvency, Jade claims it was compelled to convey its interest in phases three, four, and five for no consideration to Westbriar, a new entity formed by Jade’s principals.
Plaintiff contends that Jade’s alleged insolvency was in fact part of a strategy developed by Jade and its financiers to enable Jade to avoid performing the contracts on the units already sold in phases one and two and to recapture the additional profit available on those units. This strategy included severing phases three, four, and five to place them beyond the reach of the owners of the already-purchased units and to enable Jade to obtain additional profits from the sale of the condominium units in these phases. As part of this fraud, plaintiff alleges that Jade authorized Eric A. Anderson, its Trustee, Board Member, and attorney, to set up a new corporation, Dunn Loring Resolution, LLC (DLR) to bid on the foreclosure of phases one and two that resulted from Jade’s insolvency. The foreclosure was intended to cut off plaintiffs and other
purchasers’ contract rights to any condominium units in phases one and two and to allow the new corporation, DLR, to re-sell the units at the now higher market price. Accordingly, on February 11, 2003, Anderson sold phases one and two at a foreclosure sale to DLR, a wholly owned subsidiary of Key. At present, therefore, Key and DLR own phases one and two of the complex and Westbriar owns phases three, four, and five.
On July 18, 2003, plaintiff filed a complaint alleging thirteen claims including claims for tortious interference with contract, conspiracy, voluntary and fraudulent conveyance, breach of contract, and conversion. Plaintiff also filed a memorandum of
lis pendens
in the land records of Fairfax County, Virginia on July 25, 2003 giving notice of his purported claim to the entire Parcel L. In response to plaintiffs filing of the memorandum of
lis pendens,
defendant Westbriar filed a motion for temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction requiring plaintiff to remove the
lis pendens
from phases three, four, and five of the property on the basis that the memorandum of
lis pendens
causes defendant irreparable harm by preventing defendant from closing on the sales of twelve units in phase three and drawing on the remainder of the financing needed to complete development, sale and delivery of the remaining condominium units. Westbriar later amended its motion to include a motion to quash the
lis pen-dens
as it applies to phases three, four, and five.
II.
The common law doctrine of
Us pendens
provides that an interest in property acquired during the pendency of a litigation regarding that property is subject to the outcome of the litigation, provided the transferee or purchaser of the property receives notice of the pending lawsuit.
See
51 Am. JuR. 2d
Lis Pendens
§ 1, 3 (1970); 12A M. J.,
Lis Pendens,
§ 3 (1989) (“The common-law rule of
lis pen-dens
is that a pendente lite purchaser from a party to the suit of the subject matter thereof takes it subject to any decree rendered against his vendor in that suit.”). The doctrine, and the statutes that now codify it, are designed to ensure that litigation regarding property ownership continue uninterrupted such that any relief granted in the litigation may be enforced against the property owner, even when there is a transfer or sale of the property while the litigation is pending.
Virginia Code §§ 8.01-268 and 8.01-269 codify this common law doctrine with some modifications. Virginia requires that an individual formally file a memorandum of
lis pendens
with the clerk of court in the county or city where the property is located. Once recorded, the
lis pendens
binds subsequent bona fide purchasers of the disputed property such that the subsequent purchaser, with or without actual notice of the
lis pendens,
takes subject to the outcome of the pending litigation.
See
Va.Code § 8.01-268(A) (Michie 2000) (“No
lis pendens
or attachment shall bind or affect a subsequent bona fide purchaser of real or personal estate for valuable consideration and without actual notice of such
lis pendens
or attachment, until and except from the time a memorandum ... shall be admitted to record in the clerk’s office.... ”);
see also
12A M. J.,
Lis Pendens,
§ 6 (1989) (“The filing of the notice of
lis pendens
prevents a subsequent deed of trust or purchase of the property from affecting the plaintiff in the pending suit in any way.”).
Importantly, Virginia Code § 8.01-268(B) provides that a plaintiff may not file a memorandum of
lis pendens
on property unless the plaintiff seeks to establish an interest in that property. Va.Code § 8.01-268(B) (“No memorandum of
lis pendens
shall be filed unless the action on which the
lis pendens
is based seeks to establish an interest by the filing party in the real property described in the memorandum.”);
see also
51 Am. JuR.2d § 10 (stating that the doctrine only applies to persons who have acquired an interest in the disputed property). Furthermore, the caselaw interpreting § 8.01-268(B) is uniformly to the effect that a
lis pendens
is improper, and should be quashed, if the plaintiff does not allege an interest in the property in his underlying cause of action.
Given this, a plaintiff in a breach of contract and fraud action regarding the transfer of one piece of property cannot
file a memorandum of
lis pendens
burdening other property owned by the defendant because the plaintiffs interest does not extend to that other property. To illustrate this point more vividly, consider, for example, a case in which a plaintiff sues a defendant for breach of contract and fraud in connection with a contract for the sale of a parcel of land in Fairfax County. While the filing of a memorandum of
lis pendens
in Fairfax County with respect to that parcel may be appropriate given that the plaintiff claims an interest in that parcel, it cannot seriously be argued that the law also authorizes plaintiff to file a memorandum of
lis pendens
burdening other parcels that defendant may own in the county or elsewhere in Virginia; the plaintiff in the hypothetical cannot allege any claim or interest in these other parcels; his contract is only for the single parcel and not for any others and he has no standing to claim breach of contract or fraud as to the other parcels even assuming the defendant committed breach of contract and fraud with respect to the other parcels. These latter claims belong not to that hypothetical plaintiff, but to others, namely to the victims of the fraud and the parties to the broken contracts. Similarly, plaintiff here cannot burden phases three, four, and five with a
lis pendens
because he has no valid claim to, or interest in, those phases.
His claim for breach of contract and fraud relate solely to his contract for the sale of one unit. Even assuming Westbriar and Jade committed fraud with respect to the transfer of phases three, four, and five, plaintiff is not a victim of that fraud and has no standing to complain of it. To conclude otherwise — to hold that plaintiff here can burden phases three, four, and five with a
lis pendens
merely because he wishes to be certain that assets will be available to answer a judgment in his favor should one ultimately issue — is to transform the Virginia
lis pendens
statutes
into attachment statutes, a result flatly contrary to the language and purpose of those statutes.
Moreover, such a distorted construction of the
lis pendens
statutes would render pointless Virginia’s existing attachment statutes, which require a party seeking an attachment to make certain showings and post a bond.
Accordingly, plaintiffs memorandum of
lis pendens
with respect to phases three, four, and five cannot stand and must be quashed.
Seeking to avoid this conclusion, plaintiff argues that Va.Code § 55-82
allows him
to file a memorandum of
lis pendens
burdening phases three, four, and five even though his breach of contract and fraud action applies only to a single unit in phase two. Specifically, plaintiff contends that because defendant fraudulently conveyed to Key the condominium unit plaintiff contracted for, § 55-82 operates to provide him with a hen on, and hence an interest in, all of Westbriar’s property, including phases three, four, and five, thereby permitting him to file a memorandum of
lis pendens
on those phases.
Plaintiffs argument is based on a misreading of § 55-82 and it is therefore not surprising that plaintiff cites no Virginia case, nor has any been found, that sanctions that argument. Plaintiff incorrectly reads § 55-82’s creation of “a hen from the time of bringing his suit on all the estate, real and personal, hereinbefore mentioned,” as extending the creditor’s hen to all the property of the debtor, whereas the statute’s use of the words “hereinbefore mentioned” makes clear that the creditor’s hen only extends to all of “the estate of his debtor declared void” in an action by the plaintiff, not on the entire estate of the debtor. Va.Code § 55-82. Therefore, because plaintiff cannot allege that Jade defrauded him when it conveyed phases three, four, and five to Westbriar, plaintiffs hen under § 55-82, if any, does not extend to phases three, four, and five, but at most, extends only to the unit he contracted for in phase two.
Plaintiff also misreads § 55-82 by failing to recognize that the statute explicitly states that it is “subject to,” and thus limited by, the
lis pendens
statutes.
Therefore, pursuant to § 55-82, as limited by § 801-268(B), a plaintiff in an action claiming fraudulent conveyance as to a specific property is not free to file a memorandum of
lis pendens
on property in which he does not assert or claim an interest.
Because plaintiff neither contracted to purchase a unit in phase three, four, or five, nor can he obtain a lien on these phases under § 55-82, it follows that plaintiff cannot establish an interest in, or file a memorandum of
lis pendens
on, those three phases. In seeking to do so, plaintiff attempts, inappropriately, to use § 55-82 as an attachment statute, which it is not. Instead, § 55-82 has a wholly different function and purpose; it permits parties claiming to be victims of fraud with respect to certain property to avoid the fraudulent transfer of that property before obtaining a judgment.
Of course, if plaintiff is concerned that any of Westbriar’s property, including phases three, four, and five, may be placed beyond the reach of any money judgment plaintiff may ultimately win against Westbriar in this case, then the plaintiff may seek to attach
that property under Virginia’s attachment statutes provided he satisfies the criteria and procedures of those statutes.
In sum, plaintiff has no interest in phases three, four, and five under either § 55-82 or his purchase contract, and thus Westbriar’s motion to quash the
lis pen-dens
with respect to these phases must be granted.
An appropriate order has issued.