WELLS FARGO BANK, NA., ASSOC. v. Kopfman

205 P.3d 437, 2008 Colo. App. LEXIS 1413, 2008 WL 3877222
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 21, 2008
Docket07CA1059
StatusPublished

This text of 205 P.3d 437 (WELLS FARGO BANK, NA., ASSOC. v. Kopfman) 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
WELLS FARGO BANK, NA., ASSOC. v. Kopfman, 205 P.3d 437, 2008 Colo. App. LEXIS 1413, 2008 WL 3877222 (Colo. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

*438 Opinion by

Judge CONNELLY.

This appeal raises a choice of law issue regarding the procedures required to extend a Colorado judgment lien enforcing an out-of-state judgment domesticated here. The issue arises under Colorado’s judgment lien statute (the Act), section 13-52-102, C.R.S. 2007, and the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act (UEFJA), sections 13-53-101 to -108, C.R.S.2007. We hold a judgment creditor seeking to extend a judgment lien beyond the six-year expiration period must follow Colorado procedures by reviving the judgment under Colorado law and then filing a transcript of revived judgment. Because the creditor here did not follow Colorado procedures, the judgment lien has expired. Accordingly, we reverse the district court judgment holding the lien enforceable.

I. Background

This dispute affects ownership of a golf course in Rio Grande County. Four tenants in common hold equal interests in the property: William Lynn Kopfman (son of the late “Bill” Kopfman), Christine E. Kopfman (William’s mother and Bill’s first wife); Ann W. Kopfman (Bill’s second wife); and the estate of Bill Kopfman.

In October 2006, Plaintiff, Ann Kopfman, paid Wells Fargo Bank $160,000 to acquire a seven-year-old $6.5 million judgment and judgment lien against her late husband’s ex-wife and son (the Kopfman defendants). Wells Fargo had obtained this judgment in 1999 from an Arizona state court against a company and four individuals including the Kopfman defendants. Wells Fargo obtained a judgment lien against the Kopfman defendants’ Rio Grande County property by domesticating its Arizona judgment in Sa-guache County District Court and then recording a transcript of judgment in Rio Grande County.

The Kopfman defendants filed for bankruptcy in 1999 after Wells Fargo domesticated its judgment and obtained a judgment lien here. The parties agree this bankruptcy prevents personal recovery against the Kopf-man defendants on the Wells Fargo debt but does not discharge the judgment lien on their Rio Grande property.

Unless extended, the Wells Fargo judgment lien would have expired in January 2005, six years after entry of the Arizona judgment. § 13-52-102(1), C.R.S.2007; Baum v. Baum, 820 P.2d 1122, 1123 (Colo.App.1991). The six-year life of a Colorado judgment lien may be extended another six years if:

prior to the expiration of [the original] six-year period, [the] judgment is revived as provided by law and a transcript of the judgment record of such revived judgment, certified by the clerk of the court in which such revived judgment was entered, is recorded in the same county in which the transcript of the original judgment was recorded.

§ 13-52-102(1).

In January 2004, one year before the Colorado judgment lien was to expire, Wells Fargo filed a “Judgment Renewal Affidavit” in an Arizona Superior Court. Under Arizona law, this filing renewed the Arizona judgment for another five years. See Ariz.Rev. Stat. §§ 12-1612, -1613. Later that same month, Wells Fargo filed the Arizona affidavit in Colorado with the Rio Grande County Recorder. Wells Fargo did not file another transcript of judgment naming the Kopfmans with the Rio Grande County Recorder.

The district court ruled the 1999 judgment lien was properly extended and could be used to execute on the Kopfman defendants’ golf course interests. It concluded the filing of a judgment renewal affidavit with the Arizona court and then with the Rio Grande County Recorder satisfied both Colorado requirements for extending a judgment lien. The first filing, the court stated, properly “revived” the judgment “as provided by law” because it fulfilled Arizona’s renewal requirements. The second filing, the court wrote, satisfied the requirement that a transcript of the revived judgment be filed in Colorado because it provided more information than “our stripped-down [Colorado] transcript of record.”

The court’s conclusion that Wells Fargo properly extended the judgment lien resolved the case. It added, however, that even if the original lien had expired, Plaintiff could re *439 vive the judgment in Colorado and then file a revised transcript of judgment with the Rio Grande County Recorder. Doing so, it opined, would create a valid judgment lien under Colorado law enforceable despite the bankruptcy discharge granted to the Kopf-man defendants in 1999. •-

II. Discussion

A. The judgment lien was not properly revived under Colorado procedural law.

The first prerequisite to extending a judgment lien is that it be “revived as provided by law.” § 13-52-102(1). We hold a domesticated out-of-state judgment must be revived under Colorado procedural law for a Colorado judgment lien to be extended.

The UEFJA provides an out-of-state judgment domesticated in Colorado “has the same effect and is subject to the same procedures ... as a judgment of the court of this state in which filed and may be enforced or satisfied in like manner.” § 13-58-103, C.R.S.2007 (emphases added). A judgment lien is a procedure by which a judgment creditor may “enforce payment” of the judgment. Mortgage Investments Corp. v. Battle Mountain Corp., 70 P.3d 1176, 1181 (Colo.2003). Accordingly, these provisions subjecting domesticated out-of-state judgments to the “same procedures” as Colorado judgments and allowing them to be “enforced” in a like manner cover judgment liens.

Colorado procedural law should determine the duration of a Colorado lien affecting real property in this state. See Restatement (Second) Conflict of Laws § 230(l)-(2) (1971) (law of state in which property is situated usually governs “[wjhether a lien creates an interest in land and the nature of the interest created”). Indeed, Colorado law requires creditors seeking to extend liens beyond six years to “revive” judgments that otherwise would last twenty years. See Stephen W. Seifert, 10 Colo. Brae., Creditors’ Remedies—Debtors’ Relief § 7.130, at 76 (2007 Supp.). Requiring a Colorado judgment lien holder to revive an unexpired judgment removes encumbrances unnecessarily hindering transferability of Colorado property. See Stephen A. Hess, 5A Colo. Prac., Colorado Handbook on Civil Litigation § 11.3(H), at 535 (2007). This interest is one of Colorado law rather than the law of the state in which the original judgment entered.

Colorado Rule of Civil Procedure 54(h) establishes the procedures for reviving a judgment and continuing a judgment lien. See generally Robbins v. Goldberg, 185 P.3d 794, 796 (Colo.2008). A motion seeking to revive a judgment must “alleg[e] the date of the judgment and the amount thereof which remains unsatisfied.” C.R.C.P. 54(h).

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Bluebook (online)
205 P.3d 437, 2008 Colo. App. LEXIS 1413, 2008 WL 3877222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-fargo-bank-na-assoc-v-kopfman-coloctapp-2008.