Schmierer v. The Tribal Trust

427 P.3d 143
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 19, 2018
DocketNO. A-1-CA-35285
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 427 P.3d 143 (Schmierer v. The Tribal Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmierer v. The Tribal Trust, 427 P.3d 143 (N.M. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

BOHNHOFF, Judge.

{1} Plaintiff Maura Schmierer (Schmierer) appeals from the district court's dismissal of her 2004 petition 1 seeking domestication and enforcement of a California state court judgment that she obtained in 1989. Notwithstanding the fact that Schmierer had revived the California judgment in 1999, the district court determined that enforcement of the judgment was time-barred pursuant to NMSA 1978, § 37-1-2 (1983), New Mexico's fourteen-year statute of limitations for enforcing judgments. For the reasons discussed below, we hold that the California judgment was not time-barred. We therefore reverse and remand to the district court for further proceedings.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

{2} This dispute has a lengthy history. According to Schmierer, she and her then-husband, Defendant Steven Schmierer, a/k/a Philip Jordan, became members of Defendant Free Love Ministries, a/k/a Aggressive Christianity Mission Training Corps, sometime in the 1980s. Defendants Jim and Lila Green (the Greens), who are married and are both referred to as "Brigadier Generals," control Free Love Ministries, which Schmierer characterizes as a cult. At some point before 1989, Schmierer fell out of favor with the Greens. Lila Green accused Schmierer of "spiritual adultery," "excommunicated" her, and confined her and two other women to a shed on property the Greens owned in Sacramento, California.

{3} Schmierer claims that, after three months of confinement in the shed, she escaped. She subsequently filed suit in the Sacramento County Superior Court in California, claiming false imprisonment. She named as defendants Free Love Ministries, the Greens, Steven Schmierer, and two other Free Love Ministries members, Bernard Bandaras a/k/a Andrew Edwards, and Dave Gane (collectively, the California Defendants). On March 10, 1989, the California court entered a default judgment against the California Defendants in the amount of $1,020,046.

{4} Schmierer claims that, following entry of the California judgment, the California Defendants undertook a series of actions to obstruct her efforts to satisfy the judgment. They first deliberately damaged, to the point of unhabitability, the Greens' Sacramento property. They then fled to Gridley, California, where the Greens purchased more property. After Schmierer located the California Defendants in Gridley, they fled to Oregon and purchased property under the names of other people and paid for all of the property in cash. Although Schmierer was able to seize the Greens' property in Sacramento and Gridley, the proceeds were not sufficient to satisfy the judgment.

{5} Schmierer claims that in 1993, the California Defendants moved to New Mexico, again to frustrate her efforts to satisfy her judgment. In June 1995 they acquired a parcel of property in the vicinity of Fence Lake in Cibola County and titled the parcel in the name of "Confianza Trust." They acquired another, larger parcel in the same vicinity in July 1997 and titled that parcel in the name of "the Tribal Trust," an entity that they had created earlier that month. On March 22, 2004, after Schmierer had tracked the California Defendants to New Mexico and discovered the Fence Lake real estate transactions, she filed the present suit in the Thirteenth Judicial District Court in Cibola County, naming as defendants the California Defendants as well as the Tribal Trust. The following month, Cassandra M. Cuaron, as trustee of the Confianza Trust, conveyed the first parcel to "River of Life Trust," and the Greens, as trustees of the Tribal Trust, conveyed the second parcel to "Cheptsi-Bah Trust."

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

{6} A California statute, Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 683.020 (West 1982), establishes a ten-year limit for enforcing judgments. However, Cal. Civ. Proc. Code §§ 683.110 to .150 (West 1982, as amended through 2013) permit and establish a procedure for "extend[ing] by renewal" a judgment for another ten years. Under California law, the renewal "does not create a new judgment or modify the present judgment, but merely extends the enforceability of the judgment-in effect, it resets the [ten]-year enforcement clock." OCM Principal Opportunities Fund v. CIBC World Mkts. Corp. , 168 Cal.App.4th 185 , 85 Cal.Rptr.3d 350 , 353 (2008) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

{7} Schmierer had renewed her California judgment on March 9, 1999, extending its enforceability for ten years. As renewed, and after accounting for the amounts recovered in partial satisfaction of the judgment as well as accrued interest, the amount of the judgment was $1,580,198.26. Thus, Schmierer could have enforced her judgment in California at any time through March 9, 2009.

{8} Schmierer's 2004 New Mexico petition contained two counts. In Count I, she sought to domesticate the 1989 California judgment, that is, she requested that "full faith and credit [be given] to the judgment pursuant to the laws of the United States of America." In Count II, Schmierer sought to enforce the judgment. She alleged that the California Defendants had fraudulently transferred their assets in violation of the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, n/k/a the Uniform Voidable Transactions Act (UVTA), NMSA 1978, §§ 56-10-14 to -29 (1989, as amended through 2015), and that the assets had been transferred to entities, including the Tribal Trust, that were the California Defendants' alter egos. She asked that the district court impose a constructive trust on those assets, among other relief.

{9} Following service of process on Defendants, Lila Green filed a pro se response to summons that asserted, among other points, that the California judgment was stale under New Mexico law. None of the other Defendants filed any documents that might be characterized as an answer to Schmierer's petition. However, between 2004 and 2007, the Greens, Edwards, and the Tribal Trust filed several motions to dismiss, generally arguing that enforcement of Schmierer's judgment was barred by Section 37-1-2. Schmierer, in turn, moved for judgment on the pleadings, arguing that her renewed judgment was not untimely and was entitled to be given full faith and credit; Schmierer sought judgment on both counts of her petition. By orders entered on July 28, 2004, and April 17, 2007, the district court denied Defendants' motions, granted judgment on Count I of Schmierer's petition, but denied her motion as it related to Count II.

{10} Beginning in 2004, Schmierer also sought to take the depositions of the Greens and inspect the Fence Lake properties. Following the Greens' failure to appear for their depositions and Defendants' refusal to permit the inspection of the properties, on December 6, 2006, the district court granted Schmierer's motion to compel the requested discovery.

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427 P.3d 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmierer-v-the-tribal-trust-nmctapp-2018.