Palm Harbor Homes, Inc. v. Leader Funding, Inc.

70 Va. Cir. 31, 2005 Va. Cir. LEXIS 293
CourtBrunswick County Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 25, 2005
DocketCase No. CL04-30
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 70 Va. Cir. 31 (Palm Harbor Homes, Inc. v. Leader Funding, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Brunswick County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palm Harbor Homes, Inc. v. Leader Funding, Inc., 70 Va. Cir. 31, 2005 Va. Cir. LEXIS 293 (Va. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

BY JUDGE W. ALLAN SHARRETT

Question Presented

Should a lis pendens recorded by a home builder on one of its properties be quashed when it was brought in conjunction with a lawsuit for damages and injunctive relief against a defendant buyer, who contracted for the purchase of the property, entered into a financing agreement with a codefendant commercial lender, and then deeded the property to the lender in lieu of foreclosure, and where subsequently the lender has refused to pay the outstanding amount due on the property?

Facts

Plaintiff Palm Harbor Homes, Inc., doing business as Energy Efficient Housing (“Palm Harbor”), is a manufacturer of modular homes and a Virginia licensed Class A contractor that installs its homes and performs related [32]*32construction work. Palm Harbor entered into a contract with Defendant David R. Morris for the construction, installation, and other work related to a custom-built home located in Brunswick County in exchange for the purchase price of $99,425. To finance the purchase of this house, Morris entered into a Construction Loan Agreement with Leader Funding, Inc. (“Leader”), a Virginia mortgage lending corporation. No party denies that Palm Harbor completed work on the property or that Morris took possession of the property. Palm Harbor asserts that it issued a Certificate of Occupancy to Morris on July 3, 2003.

Morris was apparently unable to make payments to Leader as required in the loan agreement. Morris then deeded the home to Leader, presumably in lieu of foreclosure. Palm Harbor filed a motion for judgment against Morris and Leader on May 21,2004, alleging that the $26,3 73 remained unpaid from the purchase price and claiming breach of contract against both Defendants, unjust enrichment against Leader, and requesting that a constructive trust or equitable lien be placed on any funds allocated towards the purchase price or the proceeds of the sale of the property. On the same day or shortly thereafter, Palm Harbor filed a memorandum of lis pendens on the property with the Office of the Circuit Court Clerk of Brunswick County. On August 20,2004, Leader filed a motion to quash the lis pendens arguing that the filing of the lis pendens was improper under Virginia law. Palm Harbor now claims that Leader has in fact conveyed the property to a third party, an allegation that Leader has not denied.

Discussion

Under Virginia law, for a filing of a memorandum of lis pendens on a property to be proper, the memorandum must be filed in conjunction with litigation that asserts an interest in the property by the filing party. Relevant case law holds that a lis pendens is not proper if filed on unrelated property in conjunction with a lawsuit for personal monetary damages that has no connection to the property. Though it is clear that the requirement that the litigation assert an interest in the property does not require the filing party to explicitly seek to obtain title to the dispute property through the litigation, the extent of the interest required by statute is unclear. Decisions by Virginia circuit courts, taken alongside Palm Harbor’s assertion that it holds title to the property, that Morris and/or Leader have not paid the full purchase price of the property, and that Leader is attempting to resell the property to a third party, or [33]*33has already done so, lead the Court to believe that it should deny Leader’s Motion to Quash Palm Harbor’s lis pendens on the property.

Policy and Statutory Basis for Lis Pendens

The term lis pendens literally means “a pending suit,” and its legal effect is to give notice to third parties that a lawsuit is pending regarding the subject property. Hart v. United Va. Bank, 24 B.R. 821, 823 (Bankr. E.D. Va. 1982). The filing of a lis pendens neither creates nor enforces a lien, but rather “serves merely as 'notice of the pendency of the suit to anyone interested and a warning that he should examine the proceedings therein to ascertain whether the title to the property was affected or not by such proceedings’.” Green Hill Corp. v. Kim, 842 F.2d 742, 744 (4th Cir. 1988) (quoting Harris v. Lipson, 167 Va. 365, 189 S.E. 349 (1937)). The General Assembly first enacted the lis pendens statute (now codified as Va. Code § 8.01-268) due to the harshness of the prior rule that, “if title to real estate were at stake in litigation, the mere pendency of the suit was deemed sufficient to charge a purchaser with notice of the challenge to title and subject his interest in the property to the outcome of the suit.” Hart, 24 B.R. at 824. Therefore, the original purpose of a lis pendens was to protect a subsequent innocent purchaser from buying a property with a seemingly clean title but finding out later that ownership was in dispute. A second purpose was “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 if the property is transferred to a third party while the litigation is ongoing. Meliani v. Jade Dunn Loring Metro, L.L.C., 286 F. Supp. 2d 741, 744 (E.D. Va. 2003).

In Virginia, the procedure by which a party can place a lis pendens on a property is detailed in § 8.01-268 of the Virginia Code. Most pertinent to the case at bar is Subsection (B) of that Section, which reads, “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.” Va. Code § 8.01-268(B) (Michie 2000).

The Parties Dispute the Applicability of Virginia Code § 8.01-268(B)

Leader does not dispute that Palm Harbor followed the requirements for filing a valid lis pendens listed in Subsection (A). The only dispute in the case at bar relates to whether the suit “seeks to establish an interest” in the disputed [34]*34property as required under Subsection (B). Leader’s main contention in its Motion to Quash is that Palm Harbor’s Motion for Judgment asserts only an equitable lien on “funds” due to the payment dispute and, therefore, Palm Harbor is not seeking an interest in the property through the suit and there is no statutory basis for the lis pendens. (Def.’s Mot. to Quash Lis Pendens at 2.) Palm Harbor asserts that in its purchase contract with Morris, the parties agreed that Palm Harbor would retain title to the property until it was paid the full purchase price or until Morris signed a retail installment contract. Because neither of those conditions has occurred, Palm Harbor argues, it retains the title to the property, which gives it the necessary interest in the property under § 8.01-268(B). (Pl.’s Br. in Opp. to Mot. to Quash at 2-3.) Leader does claim that it is the “current owner” of the property, (Def.’s Grounds of Defense at ¶ 11), but does not otherwise address Palm Harbor’s claim to title.

Primary Case Law on § 8.01-268(B)

Several courts at the state and federal levels have attempted to determine how broadly or narrowly to read the requirement that the action accompanying the lis pendens seek to establish an interest in the property described in the memorandum of lis pendens, with contrary results.

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70 Va. Cir. 31, 2005 Va. Cir. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palm-harbor-homes-inc-v-leader-funding-inc-vaccbrunswick-2005.