Reynolds v. Sisco Group, Inc.

70 P.3d 388, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 39, 2003 WL 21040210
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 2003
DocketNo. S-10266
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 70 P.3d 388 (Reynolds v. Sisco Group, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. Sisco Group, Inc., 70 P.3d 388, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 39, 2003 WL 21040210 (Ala. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Reynolds tried to execute on a money judgment against Sisson by seizing one of three vans Sisson had fraudulently transferred to a friend, Erickson, and by attaching funds owed by a third person, Frye, to whom Erickson had sold the other two vans after receiving them from Sisson. As Reynolds prepared to sell the seized van and either shortly before or after he attached the funds from the other vansg' sale, Sisson died. Alaska's probate code bans judgment creditors from attempting new executions or levies against any property of a deceased judgment debtor's estate. Relying on this prohibition, the superior court ordered the seized van and attached funds to be restored to Sisson's estate. We reverse as to the seized van, finding the probate code's ban inapplicable, since Reynolds perfected his security interest in the van by seizing it before Sisson died. As to the estate's right to the sale funds, we hold that the issue turns on whether Reynolds perfected his security interest by serv[389]*389ing the writ of attachment on Frye before Sisson died. Because the record does not disclose the writ's date of service, we vacate the summary judgment as to the funds and remand for further proceedings.

II FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In April 1999 the superior court entered a default judgment against Eldridge Sisson and his company, Sisco Group, Inc. (Sisson), awarding Donnald and Parris Reynolds (Reynolds) over $400,000 in tort damages. Reynolds recorded the judgment a week later and began collecting the judgment by obtaining writs of execution and attempting to seize various items of Sisson's property, including three Ford vans. In July Reynolds managed to seize one of the vans.

Meanwhile, however, attempting to avoid execution, Sisson had transferred title to all three vans to a friend named Virginia Erickson; in early June Sisson had also arranged for Erickson to sell two of the vans to a third party, Cameron Frye, for $47,500. The sale contract between Erickson and Frye, an arm's-length transaction, required Frye to pay Erickson a down payment of $5,000, forty-eight monthly installments of $1,027.50, and four $5,000 balloon payments.

Upon learning of this sale, Reynolds asked the court to issue an order enjoining any further transfer of Sisson's property and directing any persons owing money to Sisson to pay directly to the court,. The superior court granted the request and issued the writ of attachment so ordering on July 7, 1999. On July 23 Reynolds filed a supplemental action against Sisson and Erickson, seeking an order nullifying Sisson's fraudulent transfers to Erickson and requiring Frye to pay his monthly installments directly to the court. After consolidating the supplemental action with the original case, the superior court issued a prejudgment writ of attachment on July 29, 1999, ordering Frye to make all further payments to the court. The record does not disclose the exact date that Frye received this order, but he evidently started sending his monthly payments to the court in August or September.

On August 8, 1999, Sisson died in an accident.

Several months later, Reynolds moved for summary judgment on his fraudulent conveyance complaint, asking the court for title to the van he had seized in July so that he could sell it in partial satisfaction of his judgment; he also asked the court to award him the right to collect Frye's installments on the other two vans. The personal representative for Sisson's estate intervened and responded. While acknowledging that Sisson's conveyances had been fraudulent, the estate opposed Reynolds's request for the property, arguing that the sale proceeds from Frye and the title to the unsold van should instead be restored to the personal representative for distribution as part of Sisson's estate.

Superior Court Judge Brian C. Shortell agreed with the estate and issued a summary judgment ordering that the van and the funds be held in the court registry for distribution as part of Sisson's estate. After the parties stipulated that Judge Shortell's order disposed of all triable issues, Superior Court Judge Stephanie E. Joannides, who had replaced Judge Shortell on the case, entered a final judgment incorporating the substance of the summary judgment order.

Reynolds appeals, arguing that the superi- or court erred in awarding the disputed property to the estate.

III. DISCUSSION

The controversy in this appeal centers on AS 18.16.505, which prohibits judgment creditors from executing or levying on property of a deceased debtor's estate but nonetheless permits the continued enforcement of liens:

No execution may issue upon nor may any levy be made against any property of the estate under any judgment against a decedent or a personal representative, but this section shall not be construed to prevent the enforcement of mortgages, pledges, or liens upon real or personal property in an appropriate proceeding.

Alaska drew this statute from $ 3-812 of the Uniform Probate Code, a law we described in Lundgren v. Gaudiane as establishing that the "death of the judgment debtor termi[390]*390nates the possibility of issuing a valid writ of execution upon a money judgment." 1

In Sheehan v. Estate of Gamberg, we declared that "the purpose of AS 18.16.505 is to freeze the status of all claims at the death of the debtor in order to provide for the orderly administration of the estate.2" We observed that this purpose harmonizes with the purpose of Alaska's devolution statute,3 which passes a decedent's property "to his heirs or devisees immediately upon [ ] death, subject to the rights of creditors." 4 Given this immediate transfer of property rights, we explained, "a judgment creditor of a decedent cannot create a new property interest, such as a judgment lien, in the decedent's estate since title is in the heirs or devisees." 5

In the present case, Reynolds insists that AS 18.16.5053 prohibition against new executions and levies does not prevent him from using Sisson's vans as a source for satisfying his judgment. Before Sisson died, Reynolds points out, one of the vans had already been seized under a writ of execution; and a prejudgment writ of attachment had already issued directing Frye to pay to the court all future installments falling due on the other two vans. Because seizing the first van completed its execution and the prejudgment writ of attachment acted as a lien on the remaining funds owed by Frye, Reynolds maintains, his interest in using this property to secure his judgment was already perfected by the time Sisson died. And because AS 18.16.505 only prohibits new executions or levies and expressly allows continued enforcement of existing liens after a judgment debtor dies, Reynolds reasons, nothing in the statute or in our cases interpreting it precludes him from satisfying his judgment by enforcing his established interests in the van and Frye's installments.

In response, the estate cites Sheehan and Lundgren and insists that, as interpreted by these cases, AS 18.16.505 effectively froze the status of all claims pending against Sisson at the time of his death, thereby requiring his interest in the vans to be treated as the estate's property:

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Bluebook (online)
70 P.3d 388, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 39, 2003 WL 21040210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-sisco-group-inc-alaska-2003.