Thomas v. Lynx United Group, LLC

159 P.3d 789, 2006 Colo. App. LEXIS 2130, 2006 WL 3803301
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 28, 2006
DocketNo. 05CA0809
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 159 P.3d 789 (Thomas v. Lynx United Group, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Lynx United Group, LLC, 159 P.3d 789, 2006 Colo. App. LEXIS 2130, 2006 WL 3803301 (Colo. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge J. JONES.

Plaintiffs, Nora Lee Winton Thomas, Adeola Sue Thomas, Fumilayo Thomas-Houston, Debra Lynn Thomas-Salsberry, and Kapre Chicken, Inc., appeal the district court's order granting summary judgment in favor of defendant, Lynx United Group, LLC (Lynx United), on the parties' respective claims and counterclaims pertaining to Lynx United's alleged entitlement to foreclose on a deed of trust on certain real property owned of record by Kapre Chicken in Denver, Colorado (the Property). The district court ruled that a notice of lis pendens filed by plaintiff Nora Thomas did not place Lynx United on notice of her purported superior interest in the Property because it did not name the record owner of the Property, Kapre Chicken, and therefore did not appear in the chain of title reflected in the grantor-grantee indi-ces of the Denver County Clerk and Recorder's Office. Accordingly, the district court permitted Lynx United to foreclose on the deed of trust. We affirm and remand with directions.

I. Background

At all relevant times, the shareholders of plaintiff Kapre Chicken were plaintiffs Nora Thomas, Fumilayo Thomas-Houston, and Debra Thomas-Salsberry, and defendants Ava Thomas-Walker and Wilford Thomas (Nora's former husband). In 1982, Wilford Thomas transferred the Property to Kapre Chicken. The deed reflecting that conveyance was duly recorded in the Denver County Clerk and Recorder's Office. It is undisputed that after 1982 Kapre Chicken was the sole holder of record title to the Property.

In 2001, Nora Thomas filed a petition for legal separation from Wilford Thomas in Denver District Court. On January 10, 2001, Nora Thomas's counsel filed a "Notice of Lis Pendens" with the Denver County Clerk and Recorder's Office which named only the parties to the separation action, Nora and Wilford Thomas, but included a legal description (and street address) of the Property. Apparently, Nora Thomas claimed some interest in the Property, though the source and nature of that interest are not disclosed by the record. Nor does the record disclose any resolution of Nora Thomas's claim of an interest in the Property.

On September 16, 2002, Ava Thomas-Walker, on behalf of herself individually and as "Secretary and Director" of Kapre Chicken, executed a promissory note in the original principal amount of $350,000 in favor of PC Financial, LLC. To secure the promissory note, Ava Thomas-Waiker, as Secretary and Director of Kapre Chicken, executed a deed of trust in favor of PC Financial, encumbering the Property. PC Financial assigned the promissory note and deed of trust to Lynx United on December 18, 2002, and Lynx United recorded the assignment of the deed of trust in the county records two days later.

Both Ava Thomas-Walker and Kapre Chicken defaulted on the promissory note by failing to make timely payments. Lynx United took action to foreclose on the deed of trust, and a foreclosure sale was set for May 6, 2008. On April 30, 2008, plaintiffs filed their complaint in this case which, as relevant to this appeal, sought a declaratory judgment as to the respective rights of plaintiffs and Lynx United in the Property and a preliminary and permanent injunction prohibiting the foreclosure sale from going forward. The sole basis of plaintiffs' claims against Lynx United was the 2001 notice of lis pen-dens filed by Nora Walker's counsel in the separation action.

Lynx United asserted counterclaims and cross-claims which, as relevant to this appeal, sought a money judgment on the promissory note and an order permitting it to foreclose on the deed of trust.

The district court entered a temporary injunction and, subsequently, a preliminary injunction prohibiting the foreclosure sale from proceeding pending a resolution of the merits of the parties' dispute.

Lynx United filed a motion for partial summary judgment, contending, among other things, that the notice of lis pendens did not provide record notice to Lynx United for a [792]*792variety of reasons. The district court granted Lynx United's motion.

The district court found that (1) the notice of lis pendens was not filed in Kapre Chicken's chain of title, as reflected in the statutorily mandated grantor-grantee indices, and therefore did not give Lynx United notice of Nora Thomas's claimed interest in the Property, and (2) because PC Financial did not acquire its interest in the Property "by, through, or under any party named in" the notice of lis pendens, the statute providing for constructive notice by lis pendens, § 38-35-110, C.R.9S.2006, was inapplicable by its own terms. Accordingly, the district court entered judgment in Lynx United's favor on all of plaintiffs' claims and on its counterclaims (including its counterclaim on the promissory note). (The district court had previously entered default judgment against Ava Thomas-Walker on Lynx United's promissory note cross-claim.)

On April 18, 2005, plaintiffs filed their notice of appeal. They did not, however, move for a stay of the district court's judgment or post a supersedeas bond, and consequently the foreclosure was completed. Lynx United was the successful bidder at the foreclosure sale. Plaintiffs did not redeem the Property within the statutory redemption period. The Property has since been transferred to another entity.

IIL Discussion

A. Mootness

Lynx United has moved to dismiss the appeal, contending that the appeal is moot because of the completion of the foreclosure. We disagree.

Lynx United relies on the decision by a division of this court in Mount Carbon Metropolitan District v. Lake George Co., 847 P.2d 254 (Colo.App.1993). In Mount Carbon, a creditor sought to foreclose a judgment lien, and the debtor sought injunctive relief to prevent a foreclosure sale. The trial court denied the request for injunctive relief. The debtor then filed a motion to stay the judgment, on which the court never ruled. The foreclosure sale was held, and the redemption period expired. The division dismissed the debtor's appeal as moot because its interest in the property had been lost through foreclosure. Mount Carbon, supra, 847 P.2d at 256-57.

Subsequently, however, in FCC Construction, Inc. v. Casino Creek Holdings, Ltd., 916 P.2d 1196 (Colo.App.1996), a different division of this court held that foreclosure of the appellant's interest in property did not render the appeal moot, despite the fact that the appellant did not seek a stay of the foreclosure sale or redeem the property. In so holding, the division reviewed Colorado case law addressing the doctrine of mootness generally and as applied to situations similar to that before it. The division concluded that "the test, under these cireumstances, is whether the action of [the appellant] was voluntary or, instead, was undertaken because of the actual or implied compulsion of a court's power," and that complying with a court's mandate allowing a foreclosure sale to proceed is not voluntary action. FCC Constr., supra, 916 P.2d at 1198.

With all due respect to the division in Mount Carbon, we are convinced that the division's analysis in FCC Construction is more in harmony with Colorado mootness jurisprudence. See, e.g., Reserve Life Ins. Co. v. Frankfather, 123 Colo.

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Bluebook (online)
159 P.3d 789, 2006 Colo. App. LEXIS 2130, 2006 WL 3803301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-lynx-united-group-llc-coloctapp-2006.