Ruth Dedeaux v. Coastal Developments Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedSeptember 3, 2019
Docket2018-CA-00569-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Ruth Dedeaux v. Coastal Developments Inc. (Ruth Dedeaux v. Coastal Developments Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruth Dedeaux v. Coastal Developments Inc., (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2018-CA-00569-COA

RUTH DEDEAUX APPELLANT

v.

COASTAL DEVELOPMENTS INC. APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/10/2018 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. CARTER O. BISE COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HARRISON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT, FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: MICHAEL JOSEPH YENTZEN ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: WILLIAM W. DREHER JR. NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - REAL PROPERTY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND RENDERED IN PART - 09/03/2019 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE BARNES, C.J., TINDELL AND McCARTY, JJ.

TINDELL, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. The Harrison County Circuit Court, First Judicial District, awarded Ruth Dedeaux a

judgment against Coastal Developments Inc. (Coastal) for $33,419.76 plus 8% annual

interest and costs. After almost four years of accrued interest, Dedeaux’s judgment against

Coastal amounted to $44,113.84. To satisfy the judgment, Dedeaux obtained a writ of

execution directing the sheriff to conduct a sale of four parcels of Coastal’s land. Dedeaux

purchased the four parcels at the sheriff’s sale for $20,000. She later sold three of the parcels

to third parties for $76,500.

¶2. Coastal filed a complaint to set aside the conveyances. The Harrison County Chancery Court, First Judicial District, found that Dedeaux’s winning bid of $20,000 was

unconscionably low compared to the parcels’ fair market value. The chancellor therefore

ordered Dedeaux to pay Coastal $32,386.16 as reimbursement for the overage amount she

received in selling the three parcels for $76,500 and to convey the fourth unsold parcel back

to Coastal. Dedeaux appeals the chancellor’s judgment on the grounds that (1) Coastal came

before the chancellor with unclean hands; (2) the judgment was unsupported by Mississippi

caselaw; (3) the judgment improperly awarded Coastal multiple inconsistent remedies; and

(4) the judgment improperly punished Dedeaux.

¶3. Upon review, we affirm the portion of the chancellor’s judgment ordering Dedeaux

to convey the unsold parcel to Coastal and to reimburse Coastal for any surplus resulting

from the sales contracts. We find, however, that the chancellor erred in calculating the

reimbursement amount that Dedeaux owed Coastal. In determining the parcels’ fair market

value, the chancellor relied only on the total sales price of $76,500 for the three parcels that

Dedeaux sold to third parties. The chancellor’s valuation failed to take into account,

however, the $9,458.63 in expenses that Dedeaux paid during the real-estate closings. After

subtracting from $76,500 both Dedeaux’s $9,458.63 in real-estate expenses and her

$44,113.84 prior judgment against Coastal, we find that her surplus only amounted to

$22,927.53. We therefore reverse the portion of the chancellor’s judgment determining the

reimbursement amount that Dedeaux owed Coastal and render a new monetary judgment in

Coastal’s favor for $22,927.53.

2 FACTS

¶4. On December 15, 2011, the circuit court awarded Dedeaux a judgment against Coastal

for $33,419.76 plus 8% annual interest and costs. To satisfy the judgment, Dedeaux sought

a sheriff’s sale of four parcels of real property owned by Coastal. As the highest bidder at

the October 9, 2015 sheriff’s sale, Dedeaux obtained the four parcels for $20,000. Coastal

claimed, however, that Dedeaux’s winning bid amount “was less than the fair market value

of even any one of the four parcels sold, and by caselaw was so inadequate so as to shock the

conscience of the court.”

¶5. On October 23, 2015, Dedeaux conveyed one of the parcels to Lester Ray and

Danielle Mae McKelvin (the McKelvins) by warranty deed. On the same day, the McKelvins

entered into a purchase-money mortgage with Dedeaux for $55,196.03, as evidenced by a

deed of trust executed to Dedeaux. Dedeaux conveyed a second parcel of land to Austin

Alexander by warranty deed dated January 22, 2016, and a third parcel to John Neideffer by

warranty deed dated March 16, 2016. The parties presented no evidence to show that

Dedeaux ever sold the fourth parcel.

¶6. Coastal filed a complaint against Dedeaux, the McKelvins, Alexander, and Neideffer

to set aside the warranty deeds. According to Coastal’s complaint, the fact that the

McKelvins entered into a purchase-money mortgage for more than twice the winning bid

amount for all four of the parcels “clearly show[ed] the inadequacy of the original bid price

and that . . . Dedeaux knew it was inadequate . . . .” Coastal also took issue with Dedeaux’s

3 failure to seek judicial confirmation of the sheriff’s sale before she conveyed three of the

parcels to third parties. Coastal therefore asked the chancellor to perform an audit of the sale

and to (1) set aside some or all of the deeds; (2) award Coastal any sales proceeds over and

above Dedeaux’s judgment amount; or (3) declare that the judgment against Coastal had been

satisfied.

¶7. Dedeaux moved for summary judgment. The McKelvins, Alexander, and Neideffer

also collectively filed a motion for summary judgment. Coastal responded and filed its own

summary-judgment motion. Following a hearing, the chancellor determined that $10,694.08

(or about four years of interest) should be added to the prior judgment the circuit court had

awarded Dedeaux. With the accrued interest factored in, Dedeaux’s total judgment against

Coastal now amounted to $44,113.84. The chancellor denied the parties’ various summary-

judgment motions after finding that genuine issues of material fact remained due to the

following: (1) no party had offered any coherent itemization of undisputed facts or time line

of events; (2) the court had to engage in its own calculation as to the total amount Coastal

owed Dedeaux; (3) the parties had failed to provide sales prices on the parcels conveyed to

Alexander and Neideffer, which prevented a determination of the reasonableness of those

sales; (4) a substantial dispute existed as to the fair market value of the properties at issue;

(5) allegations existed as to whether the McKelvins, Alexander, and Neideffer were bona fide

purchasers of the land for value without notice; and (6) no evidence had been provided as to

Coastal’s location on the date of the sheriff’s sale.

4 ¶8. On March 2, 2017, the chancellor entered a final judgment to dismiss the McKelvins,

Alexander, and Neideffer from the litigation. The chancellor noted that Coastal had moved

for the dismissal and that the parties had advised the court of their agreement to the dismissal.

As a result, the chancellor dismissed with prejudice Coastal’s claims against the McKelvins,

Alexander, and Neideffer, which included any claims related to the parcels conveyed to those

parties. Coastal reserved all its claims against Dedeaux, which the chancellor heard on

March 13, 2017.

¶9. Following the March 13, 2017 hearing, the chancellor entered an order regarding

Coastal’s remaining claims against Dedeaux. The chancellor found that the agreed judgment

to dismiss the McKelvins, Alexander, Neideffer, and any claims to the parcels they had

purchased from Dedeaux rendered moot the issue of whether the foreclosure sale should be

set aside. The chancellor further found, however, that issues remained as to the parcels’ fair

market value, whether the judgment against Coastal had been satisfied, and whether Dedeaux

had realized a profit beyond what she was owed.

¶10.

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Ruth Dedeaux v. Coastal Developments Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruth-dedeaux-v-coastal-developments-inc-missctapp-2019.