Zamarello v. Yale

514 P.2d 228, 1973 Alas. LEXIS 278
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 1973
Docket1731
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 514 P.2d 228 (Zamarello v. Yale) 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
Zamarello v. Yale, 514 P.2d 228, 1973 Alas. LEXIS 278 (Ala. 1973).

Opinion

OPINION

BOOCHEVER, Justice.

This appeal involves questions pertaining to a slander of title action. To clearly chronicle all the events would tax the talents of Euripides, but the following truncated accounts set forth the more salient facts.

In 1965, Nick Yale and Jerry Mulenos jointly purchased a 10-acre parcel of real estate on Dimond Boulevard in the Greater Anchorage Area Borough, Alaska. 1 Subsequently, Yale obtained a default judgment against Mulenos on an unrelated claim and purchased his one-half interest in the property at an execution sale. Following expiration of the one-year redemption period, Yale was issued a deed to the property in April 1969.

Subsequently, Peter G. Zamarello, on behalf of Mulenos, retained an attorney to investigate the possibility of Mulenos’ recovering his interest in the property. As a result, on May 23, 1969, a complaint was filed on Mulenos’ behalf seeking to set aside the default and sale based upon certain alleged irregularities in the proceedings.

On May 25, 1970, a deed was recorded from Mulenos to Andrew Gialopsos, Nick Yale’s brother; and on the following day, Zamarello’s attorney recorded an earlier deed dated June 5, 1967, by which Mulenos had quitclaimed the property to Zamarello.

The next thread in this tangled skein was the filing of a complaint in intervention by Zamarello alleging an agreement with Mulenos whereby Zamarello would- *229 undertake to save Mulenos’ interest in the property from Yale in exchange for a two-thirds share of that interest. The complaint alleged that the Mulenos quitclaim deed was delivered to Zamarello pursuant to that agreement. Zamarello alleged that the other quitclaim deed subsequently executed by Mulenos to Nick Yale’s brother was the result of fraud and collusion. He requested the court to set the Gialopsos deed aside, to impose a constructive trust upon the property in favor of Zamarello for two-thirds of a one-half interest, and to award damages.

Yale answered the complaint in intervention and counterclaimed contending that by filing his quitclaim deed and a Us pendens, Zamarello had slandered Yale’s title and deprived him of his right to transfer or convey the property, damaging him in a sum in excess of $3,000.

On March 24, 1972, 10 days before the case was tried, the Greater Anchorage Area Borough rezoned the property from an “unrestricted” to a “R-1A” designation. At the trial, testimony was offered to show that the rezoning together with the adoption of more stringent water and sewer regulations had restricted the use of the property and decreased its value to the extent of $5,000 per lot. Evidence was also introduced concerning various expenses incurred as a result of not being able to develop the lots as originally planned. Appellant objected to the introduction of evidence on the issue of damages when such damages had not been specially pleaded.

The case was tried to a jury with all parties present, including Mulenos. The case was submitted to the jury with written instructions and a special verdict. The jury found the following: that no agreement existed between Zamarello and Mu-lenos whereby they were to share in whatever was recovered; that Zamarello recorded or caused to be recorded a quitclaim deed purportedly from Mulenos to Zamarello at a time when Gialopsos and Yale were the sole owners of the property; that Zamarello knew at the time he recorded or caused to be recorded the quitclaim deed that he did not have an interest in the property; and that the ' recording of the quitclaim deed did cause damage to Yale and Gialopsos. The jury then awarded compensatory damages in the amount of $36,557 to Yale.

Before submission of the case to the jury, Zamarello moved for a directed verdict on the grounds that Yale had failed to plead special damages and that the recording of the deed and the Us pendens were privileged publications. Following the verdict, Zamarello moved for judgment N.O. V. He is appealing from the judgment on the counterclaim.

After the return of the verdict, the court granted Yale’s motion for summary judgment upholding his title acquired as a result of the execution sale. No appeal has been taken from that judgment.

With reference to the award of damages on Yale’s counterclaim, Zamarello contends that:

(1) the recording of the quitclaim deed and Us pendens were privileged, and thus could not be the basis for an action for damages;
(2) the recording of the quitclaim deed was not the proximate cause of the damages;
(3) Yale failed to plead and prove special damages, an essential requirement for recovery in an action for slander of title; and
(4) prejudgment interest should not have been awarded.

We find that the first issue is dispositive of this appeal.

An action for “slander of title” in essence arises out of an injurious falsehood. 2 It is based on an intentional interference *230 with another’s economic relations. 3 In this case, it is alleged that Zamarello filed his quitclaim deed and lis pendens in order to prevent Yale from transferring or conveying his property, thus causing him damage.

The jury was required to answer specific interrogatories and found among other things that at the time that Zamarello recorded the quitclaim deed, he did not have an interest in the property and that it was recorded “with the intent to cause the defendants Andrew Gialopsos and Nick Yale harm, or to interfere with their title and use of the land.”

Although by his counterclaim Yale contended that both the quitclaim deed and lis pendens created the cloud on his ti-’ tie and caused him damage, in his brief on appeal he concedes that there was an absolute privilege to file the lis pendens. He apparently was under the erroneous impression that the only lis pendens filed pertained to the original Mulenos complaint. Actually, a second lis pendens setting forth Zamarello’s claim to the property was filed on May 29, 1970, three days after the filing of the Mulenos-Zamarello quitclaim deed.

We agree that the filing of the lis pen-dens was absolutely privileged and could not be made the basis of a claim for slander or disparagement of title. In a closely analogous case, Justice Traynor held for the California Supreme Court:

Thus, subdivision 2 of section 47 states the long-established rule that publications made in the course of a judicial proceeding are absolutely privileged, Gosewisch v. Doran, 161 Cal. 511, 513-515, 119 P. 656; Donnell v. Linforth, 11 Cal.App.2d 25, 28-29, 52 P.2d 937; Moore v. United States Fid. & Guaranty Co., 122 Cal.App. 205, 210, 9 P.2d 562

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Bluebook (online)
514 P.2d 228, 1973 Alas. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zamarello-v-yale-alaska-1973.