Robert Glenn v. January George Hamilton

423 F. App'x 249
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 18, 2011
Docket09-2167
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 423 F. App'x 249 (Robert Glenn v. January George Hamilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Glenn v. January George Hamilton, 423 F. App'x 249 (3d Cir. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

RENDELL, Circuit Judge.

This appeal arises out of a dispute over the ownership of a parcel of approximately 3.6 acres of land on St. John in the U.S. Virgin Islands (the “Property”). Plain-tiffi'appellant Robert E. Glenn is the trustee of the T.A. Carter, Jr. and Jeannette W. Carter Joint Revocable Trust, which acquired the Property in the late 1990s. Defendant/appellee Oswainio Dunlop, a descendant of the Property’s former owner, asserts that the conveyance of the Property to the Trust was invalid and has recorded a number of documents against the Property with the St. John Office of the Recorder of Deeds, effectively blocking any further sale.

In September 2005, Glenn filed this suit on behalf of the Trust against Dunlop, asserting claims for slander of title, defamation, civil extortion, abuse of process, intentional harm to property interest, declaratory judgment, and an injunction, all arising out of Dunlop’s actions with respect to the Property. In a written memorandum opinion following a bench trial, the District Court denied the Trust relief on *251 all of its tort claims. At the same time, it held that the Trust owns the Property in fee simple absolute and that Dunlop has no ownership interest in the Property, that the Trust was entitled to a declaratory judgment to that effect, and that the Trust was entitled to an injunction compelling Dunlop to remove the documents he has recorded against the Property and prohibiting Dunlop from recording additional documents against the Property. The District Court’s judgment enjoined Dunlop from prospectively recording additional documents, but it did not order him to remove the previously recorded documents.

Glenn subsequently moved the District Court to alter or amend the judgment to reflect the portion of its opinion related to the removal of the recorded documents and for attorneys’ fees and costs. The District Court denied both motions.

On appeal, Glenn (1) argues that the District Court erred by omitting from the judgment an order requiring Dunlop to remove documents recorded against the Property and in denying Glenn’s request to alter or amend the judgment; (2) challenges the District Court’s substantive conclusions with respect to the slander-of-title, defamation, and intentional-harm-to-property-interest claims; and (3) contends that the District Court abused its discretion in denying his motion for attorneys’ fees and costs. Dunlop has not filed a brief responding to Glenn’s arguments. 1 We will vacate the judgment in part and remand for the District Court to (1) revise the judgment to reflect its conclusion regarding the scope of injunctive relief; (2) reconsider its analyses of Glenn’s slander-of-title and intentional-harm-to-property-interest claims; and (3) revisit Glenn’s motion for attorneys’ fees and costs. We will affirm the District Court’s judgment with respect to the defamation claim. 2

I.

John J. Henry acquired the Property in 1907. Henry died intestate and his interest in the Property was never probated; as a result, the Property passed to his children and grandchildren by intestate succession. During the 1990s, Guy Henry Benjamin, a descendant of Henry’s, arranged to sell the Property to the Trust through a series of transactions. Benjamin collected powers of attorney from several Henry family members, including Dunlop’s mother, and conveyed their combined interests to the Trustees of Roanoke College by deed of gift. The remaining Henry family members conveyed their interests to the College by quitclaim deed. After the College obtained a judgment quieting title to the Property from the former Virgin Islands Territorial Court (now known as the Superior Court) in 2002, the Trust purchased the Property from the College.

The Trust subsequently contracted to sell all of its holdings on St. John, including the Property, for $10.6 million. After Dunlop learned of the sale contract, he contacted the Trust and its representatives, alleging that Benjamin had procured consents to sell the Property from Dun-lop’s mother and another Henry family member by fraud. In August 2005, Dun- *252 lop recorded affidavits related to the alleged fraud and other documents against the Property. In September 2005, Glenn responded by filing this case. Dunlop subsequently recorded additional documents, including a notice of lis pendens related to this case, against the Property. The District Court found that the documents Dun-lop recorded prevented the Trust from closing the sale of its St. John holdings by clouding the Trust’s title to the Property.

In January 2006, Dunlop petitioned the Virgin Islands Superior Court for control over Henry’s estate as a means of reasserting the Henry family’s interest in the Property. After Roanoke College filed a motion informing the Superior Court that it had quieted title to the Property, the Superior Court revoked Dunlop’s status as special administrator of the estate. It ordered that the matter would remain open for thirty days to allow any of Henry’s heirs to establish an interest in the Property, after which Dunlop’s petition would be dismissed. The record does not reflect any further attempt by any Henry family member other than Dunlop to assert an interest in the Property.

II.

A. The Scope of Injunctive Relief

Glenn first argues that the District Court erred in issuing a judgment that was inconsistent with its written memorandum opinion and in subsequently denying Glenn’s motion to alter or amend the judgment to reflect the District Court’s opinion. 3 We agree.

The District Court’s memorandum opinion recognized that Glenn sought a two-part injunction “to compel Dunlop to discharge and remove the documents Dun-lop has recorded against the Property and to prohibit Dunlop from recording documents against the Property in the future,” Glenn v. Dunlop, No.2005-145, 2009 WL 482481, at *8 (D.Vi. Feb.23, 2009) (emphasis added). It held that Glenn had satisfied each of the required elements for such an injunction, id. at *8-9, and its reasoning, which turned on the actual harm the Trust has sustained as a result of the previously recorded documents and on the public’s interest in “discouraging individuals from recording baseless documents against property,” id. at *9, applies equally to existing and future recorded documents. After conducting a thorough analysis, the District Court concluded that it would both “issue an injunction to prohibit Dunlop from recording documents against the Property,” id. at *9, and “issue an injunction to compel Dunlop to remove any and all documents he has recorded against the Property,” id. at *10.

Despite the clarity of the District Court’s opinion regarding the scope of the injunction, its judgment enjoined Dunlop only “from recording any documents against the Property with the Recorder of Deeds,” id. at *10; it did not mention that the documents Dunlop recorded in 2005, which remain in the Property’s chain of title, have already prevented the Trust from completing one sale of its St.

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423 F. App'x 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-glenn-v-january-george-hamilton-ca3-2011.