Projects Unlimited, Inc. v. Copper State Thrift & Loan Co.

798 P.2d 738, 142 Utah Adv. Rep. 7, 1990 Utah LEXIS 68, 1990 WL 129110
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1990
Docket860340
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 798 P.2d 738 (Projects Unlimited, Inc. v. Copper State Thrift & Loan Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Projects Unlimited, Inc. v. Copper State Thrift & Loan Co., 798 P.2d 738, 142 Utah Adv. Rep. 7, 1990 Utah LEXIS 68, 1990 WL 129110 (Utah 1990).

Opinion

GREGORY K. ORME, Court of Appeals Judge:

Projects Unlimited, Inc., appeals from a summary judgment invalidating its mechanic’s lien against the interests-of Copper State Thrift & Loan Company, Valley Bank & Trust Company, and Cottonwood Thrift & Loan Company, Inc. We affirm the summary judgment as to Cottonwood Thrift, but reverse as to Copper State and Valley Bank.

I. FACTS

Bradshaw Development Company, Inc. (“Bradshaw”), owned a parcel of land, the Highland Orchards property, which it planned to develop into the Highland Orchards Condominium project. The property was divided into two parcels with the objective of constructing condominiums in two phases — phase I and phase II. Phase I, when completed, would consist of eighteen condominium units. Bradshaw engaged Projects Unlimited, Inc. (“Projects”) to construct some of the phase I units. In September 1982, Bradshaw and Projects entered into a contract for the construction of two units — FF-6-A1 and FF-6-B1, hereinafter referred to as units 1 and 2. Those parties entered into a second contract in April 1983 concerning the contraction of six additional units — FF-5-A1, FF-5-B1, FF-11-A1, FF-11-A2, FF-11-B1, and FF-11-B2, hereinafter referred to as units 3 through 8, respectively. The contracts allocated prices on a per-unit basis.

Copper State Thrift & Loan Company financed construction of the eight units. The Copper State loan to Bradshaw was secured by two trust deeds. The first deed was recorded in December 1982 and covered units 1 and 2. The second deed was recorded in June 1983 and covered units 3 through 8.

Relying on the terms of its loan agreement with Bradshaw, Copper State refused to advance additional funds to Bradshaw in June 1983. Sometime thereafter, Bradshaw stopped making payments to Projects. On October 7, 1983, Projects ceased construction with a substantial balance still owing to Projects. Bradshaw did *742 not record its condominium declaration until August 1983.

During construction, units 1, 2, and 3 were sold. The sales of units 1 and 2 were financed by Valley Bank & Trust Company, which recorded trust deeds on those units in May 1983. Copper State subordinated its December 1982 trust deed to the May 1983 trust deeds of Valley Bank. The sale of unit 3 was financed by Western Savings & Loan Company, which is not a party to this appeal. After construction was halted, units 4 and 5 were sold. The sales of these units were financed by Cottonwood Thrift & Loan Company and secured by trust deeds recorded in December 1983.

In November 1983, Projects recorded a notice of mechanic’s lien against the Highland Orchards property. The notice described Bradshaw as the owner of the subject property. The lien notice described the property by a metes and bounds description including all of the phase I and phase II property. 1 The notice did not describe the eight constructed units, by employing their descriptions as used in the condominium declaration or otherwise, nor did it allocate unpaid amounts attributable to each unit. The notice did not distinguish between work performed under the September 1982 and April 1983 contracts. The notice of lien cited the construction starting date as October 10, 1982, and the ending date as October 7, 1983. Although the notice of lien contained the signature and seal of a notary and the date of notarization, it did not give the notary’s address or commission expiration date.

Bradshaw and Projects negotiated to release from the lien units 4 and 5, financed by Cottonwood Thrift. The lien release specifically stated that units 4 and 5 were released from the scope of the lien in exchange for the payment of $90,000. Thereafter, Projects filed an amended notice of lien. The amended notice was essentially identical to the initial notice except that $85,000 was added to the “credits and offsets” figure and subtracted from the “balance owing” figure. The same metes and bounds description was used to describe the property. The amended notice did not exempt units 4 and 5 from the property description, but attached to it were a map of the entire condominium project and a copy of the partial release.

Projects commenced an action to foreclose the lien and recorded a lis pendens in March 1984. The complaint alleged that Bradshaw had breached its contracts with Projects. The complaint also called for a determination of priorities among the various claimants. Valley Bank was not named as a defendant in the complaint but had actual knowledge of the action at least by August 1984, when it reviewed a title report showing Projects’ lis pendens and initiated relevant correspondence with Projects. On May 24, 1985, almost twenty months after it ceased construction, Projects filed an amended complaint which joined Valley Bank and others as defendants. Bradshaw failed to answer either complaint, and a default judgment was entered against it in December 1985.

Copper State, Cottonwood Thrift, Valley Bank, and Western Savings (“the Banks”) moved for summary judgment on the remaining claims. They collectively argued that Projects’ lien was invalid under the mechanic’s lien statute and under the Condominium Ownership Act. Essentially, their arguments under the mechanic’s lien statute were that (1) the jurat lacked the notary’s address and the date her commission expired, (2) the notice describes more property than was actually subject to the lien, (3) the notice describes property which Bradshaw initially did not own, and (4) the lien did not distinguish between work performed under the September 1982 and April 1983 contracts. The Banks also argued that the Condominium Ownership Act required Projects to file a separate lien on each condominium unit as described in the condominium declaration.

*743 Valley Bank also argued that Projects had failed to join it as a defendant within the statutorily prescribed time and was therefore barred from later amending its complaint to add that bank as a defendant. Moreover, Cottonwood Thrift argued that it was not a proper party to the suit because Projects had released the units it financed from the scope of the lien. Projects filed a cross-motion for partial summary judgment on its claim against Copper State, its construction lender.

The trial court granted the Banks’ summary judgment motions and denied Projects’ motion. The court concluded that (1) Projects had unequivocally released from the lien’s coverage the units financed by Cottonwood Thrift, (2) Projects failed to join Valley Bank as a party within the required time, and (3) the lien was invalid due to improper notarization “and on grounds otherwise set forth in the moving defendants’ memoranda on file.”

On appeal, Projects challenges each of the trial court’s conclusions. Primarily, it argues that Utah does not require a lien notarization to contain the notary’s address and/or commission expiration date.

The Banks assert the same arguments on appeal that they asserted in the trial court. In particular, they argue that we should affirm the trial court’s decision on the notarization issue. Moreover, the Banks assert that, even assuming we were to agree with Projects on the notarization issue, we can and should affirm the summary judgment due to other failures in the lien notice.

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Bluebook (online)
798 P.2d 738, 142 Utah Adv. Rep. 7, 1990 Utah LEXIS 68, 1990 WL 129110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/projects-unlimited-inc-v-copper-state-thrift-loan-co-utah-1990.