Shaffer v. Bellows

260 P.3d 1064, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 99, 2011 WL 4435848
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 2011
DocketS-13894
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 260 P.3d 1064 (Shaffer v. Bellows) 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
Shaffer v. Bellows, 260 P.3d 1064, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 99, 2011 WL 4435848 (Ala. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCHION

Two men bought an island. After a dispute, they agreed that one would keep the island, while the other would receive a onetime payment and an option to buy the island at a fixed price, adjusted for inflation, if the owner ever chose to sell it. Years passed. The value of the island rose, far outpacing inflation. But the owner never elected to sell. Instead, he eventually conveyed the island to his sister, ostensibly as a gift. The option holder sued. The superior court held on summary judgment that the option remained viable, but that the gift was not improper. The option holder appeals. We affirm the superior court's interpretation of the option agreement, but because material facts are in dispute concerning contractual claims and allegations that the option holder's conveyance was fraudulent, we reverse and remand the superior court's grant of summary judgment on those claims.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts.

In 1981, Bradley Shaffer and Kenneth Bellows purchased Ring Island, a 4.6-acere property in Sitka. Shaffer and Bellows each contributed $25,000 as a down payment. As part of their purchase contract, Shaffer and Bellows were required to pay the previous owners $644 per month over approximately eight years. During the first nine months, Shaffer paid the entirety of each monthly payment. According to Shaffer, he and Bellows began arguing in early 1982 about how the property should ultimately be used.

On July 15, 1982, Shaffer quitelaimed his interest in the property to Bellows. Shaffer stated to the superior court that he received, in exchange for his quitclaim, repayment from Bellows of the money he had already spent, and "an option ... for purchase of the property." The nature and effect of this option (the Option Agreement) is the subject of the current dispute.

The Option Agreement reads in relevant part as follows:

The Grantor, KENNETH BELLOWS ... hereby grants to BRADLEY SHAFFER ... the [first] option to purchase the [Ring Island property.]
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This option shall take effect only in [the] event that Grantor elects to sell the above-described property. In this event he shall first provide BRADLEY SHAFFER with forty (40) days in which to purchase the property for a sales price to be determined as follows:
The base sales price shall be $123,200. This amount shall be increased or decreased by the same percentage that the cost of living, according to the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics evaluation of the State of Alaska, increases or decreases between the date of this Agreement; and the date Grantor notifies Bradley Shaffer of his intent to sell the property. The base sales price, adjust *1067 ed in this manner, shall be the actual sales price, if Bradley Shaffer elects to exercise this option.

On May 1, 2008, Bellows's attorney communicated to Shaffer's attorney that Bellows might be interested in negotiating a termination of the Option Agreement. In a videotaped deposition in August 2009, Bellows explained that he was seeking to have Shaffer's option terminated because it was "a block to financing." On May 12, 2003, Shaffer's attorney responded that Shaffer was not interested in discussing termination of the Option Agreement.

On January 30, 2006, Bellows quitelaimed the Ring Island property to his sister, Mar-lys Dee Hanson. According to the quitclaim deed, he did so as a gift. Bellows testified that Hanson gave him no consideration at the time, and that he could not remember receiving anything of great value in the years afterward, though he also noted elsewhere that "we share a lot of things mutually." In his August 2009 videotaped deposition, Bellows stated that he was still "not sure" whether Shaffer's option would be triggered if Hanson sold the land. When asked directly-"Do you believe that ... gifting the property to your sister negated the option agreement with Mr. Shaffer?" responded: "Good question. I don't know. It was never going to be for sale. It was always going to be in the family."

Shaffer has also asserted in the course of litigation that Bellows's gift of the property made Bellows insolvent, that neither Bellows nor Hanson noted the conveyance of the property to the IRS on their tax returns, and that Hanson had already been in possession of the property for years, "with substantial continuing use" by Bellows, such that the conveyance did not alter "the status quo of such use and possession." Shaffer submitted various documents that could provide a basis for inferring that Bellows had taken on excessive debt. During the August 2009 videotaped deposition, Bellows testified that his use of the property did not change after the gift, and he did not deny that he did not record the gift of the property on his tax returns. - Hanson testified that she had visited the property every two to three months in the wake of the 2006 gift, but started visiting the property more often from the spring of 2009.

In November 2007, after Shaffer learned of Bellows's 2006 quitclaim to Hanson, Shaffer's attorney sent Bellows a letter, asking Bellows to clarify "what your position is with regard to [ShafferT's rights pursuant to the Option Agreement." - Bellows did not respond.

Meanwhile, the Ring Island property rose in value. At the time the Option Agreement was signed, the parties assigned it a fair market value of $128,200. According to Shaffer, by 2001 the property was worth approximately $800,000, and by late 2009, the property was worth approximately $890,000. 1 Shaffer later asserted, in 2009, that if he were allowed to exercise his option, he would be entitled to purchase the property for approximately $240,363.20.

B. Proceedings.

In August 2008, several months after Bellows failed to respond to Shaffer's query regarding the effect of Bellows's 2006 quitclaim, Shaffer filed a complaint against Bellows, Hanson, Bellows's brother Ronald Bellows, ALPS Federal Credit Union, and "all other persons or parties unknown claiming a right, title, estate, lien, or interest" in the Ring Island property. The complaint contained five counts: (1) an action against all defendants for declaratory judgment; (2) an action against Bellows for breach of contract; (8) an action against Bellows for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing; (4) an action against all defendants for violation of Alaska's prohibition against fraudulent conveyances under AS 34.40.010 and subsequent subsections; and (5) an action against all defendants for conspiracy to fraudulently convey property. 2

*1068 Defendants Bellows, Hanson, and Ronald Bellows then filed a motion for summary judgment. With regard to Shaffer's action for declaratory judgment, defendants conceded that Shaffer's option "[rluns with the land," and thus that "the Option Agreement is still viable-and will be triggered if the property is ever sold."

In a written decision in April 2010, Superi- or Court Judge David V.

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Bluebook (online)
260 P.3d 1064, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 99, 2011 WL 4435848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaffer-v-bellows-alaska-2011.