Ralfs v. Mowry

586 N.W.2d 369, 1998 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 279, 1998 WL 820339
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 25, 1998
Docket97-458
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 586 N.W.2d 369 (Ralfs v. Mowry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ralfs v. Mowry, 586 N.W.2d 369, 1998 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 279, 1998 WL 820339 (iowa 1998).

Opinion

NEUMAN, Justice.

This appeal steins from decisions rendered in two actions consolidated for trial. In the first action, plaintiff Wayne Ralfs sought to set aside farm leases held by defendants Reynold and Gary Mowry on property owned by LoAn King. Ralfs’ second cause of action sought an accounting of the sum required to satisfy Mowrys’ mortgage on the King property. The record reveals that subsequent to the execution of the leases between Mowrys and King, Ralfs secured title to the property through assignment of a sheriffs deed procured by another of King’s creditors, Eddy Matsui. 1

The district court found Ralfs failed to prove his claim that the Mowry/King transactions amounted to fraudulent conveyances. The court also determined that Ralfs must pay an additional $29,006.55, plus accrued interest, to satisfy Mowrys’ outstanding mortgage on the property. Ralfs appealed.

We transferred the case to the court of appeals. That court affirmed in part and reversed in part, concluding the transactions between Mowrys and King should be set aside as fraudulent, and adjusting downwards the amount needed to satisfy Mowrys’ mortgage. We granted further review and now vacate the judgment of the court of appeals and affirm the judgment of the district court with some modification of the accounting.

I. Scope of Review.

At the outset the parties disagree over the appropriate standard of review on appeal. The court of appeals applied a de novo standard. Mowrys argue for an at-law standard on further review, claiming the ease turns on possession of real property and damages. See Christian Church at Pella v. Scholte, 2 Iowa 27, 2 Clarke 27, 29 (Iowa 1855) (claim to ownership of property in fee simple and damages for retention thereof triable at law).

Our review is governed by how the case was tried in district court. Howard v. Schildberg Constr. Co., 528 N.W.2d 550, 552 (Iowa 1995). Both of Ralfs’ actions were filed in equity. He seeks relief based on a theory of fraudulent conveyance, a doctrine permitting transactions — including leases — to be set aside on equitable grounds when certain indicia of fraud have been proven. See Graham, v. Henry, 456 N.W.2d 364, 366 (Iowa 1990); Textron Fin. Corp. v. Kruger, 545 N.W.2d 880, 883 (Iowa App.1996). His claims are predominately equitable in nature.

The case was tried to the court without a jury. Mowrys emphasize that the district court ruled on objections (four), a practice we have disapproved in equity cases. See Hoiv-ard, 528 N.W.2d at 552. Yet neither party claims evidence was improperly excluded. Thus we are not prevented from exercising de novo review of the record, a matter to which we now turn.

II. Facts.

Since the early 1980s, Reynold and Gary Mowry d/b/a Mowry Brothers, have leased 120 acres of farm ground near Bennett, Iowa, from LoAn King. In 1990, King — then a widow — desired to pay off a prior mortgage on the property. The Mowrys agreed to loan her $125,000 at twelve percent interest, secured by a first mortgage on the farm. The parties also negotiated a two-year lease for 116 acres of tillable ground at $15,000 per year, a sum corresponding to annual interest due on the loan.

Meanwhile, LoAn King became embroiled in a controversy with Eddy Matsui, a man with whom she lived for a time following the death of her husband. In September 1991, Matsui secured a default judgment against her in federal district court in California. King, who believed the suit was meritless, attempted unsuccessfully to set aside the default. The judgment, for $133,935.23 plus interest and attorney fees, was not properly registered in Iowa until February 1994. Significantly, the court rendering the judgment specifically rejected Matsui’s request for special execution on the land which is the subject of this appeal.

*372 In the meantime, Mowrys and King negotiated extensions of their lease agreement for the period March 1, 1993, to February 28, 1994, with two, one-year lease options. Before the options could be exercised, they renegotiated their agreement to extend the 1993-94 lease under the same terms through February 1996, with three one-year extension options. At the same time, Mowrys and King executed an extension of their original mortgage, reducing the interest rate to 9.5%, and securing an advance for $8962.13 in unpaid taxes. The indebtedness was also enlarged to include a $15,000 payment that was applied, not to interest on Mowrys’ mortgage, but to expenses related to the King/Matsui litigation. Neither the mortgage extension nor the new lease were recorded.

Wayne Ralfs, meanwhile, kept abreast of these events because he was an adjoining landowner who was interested in buying King’s farm. The record reveals that he lent money to another corporation, Circle J, to help finance King’s effort to set aside the Matsui judgment in California. When that proved unsuccessful, he switched sides, contracting with Matsui to purchase whatever rights Matsui gained by execution on the judgment. When the King farm was eventually purchased at sheriffs sale by Matsui in February 1995, Ralfs had to sue Matsui to enforce their agreement. They settled their differences in March 1996, when Matsui gave Ralfs a quit claim deed and assignment of his sheriffs certificate of sale. In April 1996, Ralfs received a sheriffs deed to the King farm, and has been the legal titleholder ever since.

That brings us to the current controversy. In July 1996, Ralfs tendered a check to Mow-rys in the sum of $132,000 to satisfy their first mortgage on the property. An accompanying letter acknowledged that the precise payoff amount was undetermined. Mowrys’ unwillingness to file a release of the mortgage lien led Ralfs to bring an action for an accounting of the balance due. Ralfs also claimed superior possessory rights to the farm, alleging the lease extensions were fraudulent conveyances designed to keep the property out of Matsui’s — and, hence, Ralfs’ — hands. The suits were consolidated for trial.

The district court found no merit in Ralfs’ fraudulent conveyance theory, and found Mowrys’ accounting of the balance due on the mortgage more credible than Ralfs’. This appeal by Ralfs followed.

III. Issues on Appeal.

A. Fraudulent conveyance. Ralfs argues the lease extension negotiated by Mowrys and King in January 1994 should have been set aside by the district court on the ground of fraud. The transaction undis-putedly came on the heels of Matsui’s second unsuccessful attempt to execute on the property. 2 Ralfs claims Mowrys and King used this hiatus in the legal proceedings to wrongfully withhold possession .of the King farm from Matsui and him.

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586 N.W.2d 369, 1998 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 279, 1998 WL 820339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ralfs-v-mowry-iowa-1998.