Advanced Property Tax v. Jorge Othon and Spouse ( 2023 )


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  •                                 IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
    ADVANCED PROPERTY TAX LIENS, INC.,
    AN ARIZONA CORPORATION,
    Plaintiff/Appellant,
    v.
    JORGE OTHON AND SPOUSE OF JORGE OTHON,
    IF ANY IN SEPTEMBER 2017,
    Defendants/Appellees.
    No. CV-21-0277-PR
    Filed April 19, 2023
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Santa Cruz County
    The Honorable Denneen L. Peterson, Judge Pro Tempore
    No. S1200CV201900192
    REVERSED
    Opinion of the Court of Appeals, Division Two
    
    252 Ariz. 206
     (App. 2021)
    VACATED
    COUNSEL:
    Barry Becker (argued), Barry Becker, P.C., Phoenix, Attorney for Advanced
    Property Tax Liens, Inc.
    Gregory L. Droeger (argued), Law Offices of Gregory L. Droeger, Nogales,
    Attorney for Jorge Othon
    Ari Ramras, Ramras Legal, PLC, Phoenix, Attorney for Amicus Curiae
    Land Title Association of Arizona
    1
    ADVANCED PROPERTY TAX LIENS, INC. V. JORGE OTHON ET UX.
    Opinion of the Court
    JUSTICE KING authored the Opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF
    JUSTICE BRUTINEL, VICE CHIEF JUSTICE TIMMER, and JUSTICES
    BOLICK, LOPEZ, BEENE, and MONTGOMERY joined.
    JUSTICE KING, Opinion of the Court:
    ¶1          Defendant Jorge Othon purchased property from Victalina
    Carreon but never recorded the deed with the county recorder. The
    property was encumbered by delinquent property taxes, and Plaintiff
    Advanced Property Tax Liens, Inc. (“APTL”) purchased a tax lien on the
    property. APTL then filed a tax lien foreclosure action against Carreon,
    and the trial court entered default judgment.
    ¶2         Now, in this quiet title action, we must determine whether
    Othon may collaterally challenge the default judgment entered in the
    separate tax lien foreclosure action. Based on the record before us, we
    conclude Othon may not.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    A. The Property
    ¶3          In late 2014 or early 2015, Othon entered into an oral agreement
    to purchase a commercial warehouse property (the “Property”) from
    Carreon.      Both Othon and Carreon knew the property taxes were
    delinquent. Understanding that payment of those taxes would eventually
    fall to Othon, they deducted the outstanding taxes from the purchase price.
    In purchasing the Property from Carreon, Othon did not sign a promissory
    note or execute a deed of trust to secure the debt. The only agreement
    between Carreon and Othon was oral; it was not memorialized in any
    document. Othon commenced making payments to Carreon in late 2014
    2
    ADVANCED PROPERTY TAX LIENS, INC. V. JORGE OTHON ET UX.
    Opinion of the Court
    or early 2015. Othon paid Carreon for the Property using money on which
    he had not paid income taxes. 1
    ¶4         In 2015, APTL purchased the tax lien on the Property at a Santa
    Cruz County tax lien auction, paying the unpaid property taxes and
    accrued interest. At some point thereafter, Othon attempted to purchase
    APTL’s tax lien, but APTL refused to sell. Othon intended to purchase the
    tax lien and then foreclose on his own property to hide his failure to pay
    taxes on the funds used to purchase the Property in the first place.
    ¶5         In 2017, Carreon executed a quitclaim deed conveying the
    Property to Othon, after Othon had paid Carreon the purchase price in full.
    Othon did not record the deed with the Santa Cruz County Recorder, notify
    the Santa Cruz County Treasurer or Assessor of his ownership of the
    Property, or provide a mailing address at which he could be reached.
    Othon also did not pay the delinquent property taxes.
    B.   The Tax Lien Foreclosure Action
    ¶6          In January 2018, APTL mailed a pre-litigation notice of intent to
    foreclose on the Property via certified mail to two addresses it identified as
    belonging to Carreon, who remained the Property’s owner of record: (1) her
    residential address of public record, and (2) the situs address for the
    Property. The notice indicated the Santa Cruz County Treasurer was sent
    a copy of the notice, stating “cc: Santa Cruz County Treasurer.” See A.R.S.
    § 42-18202(A) (requiring a tax lien purchaser, “[a]t least thirty days before
    filing an action to foreclose the right to redeem,” to “send notice of intent to
    file the foreclosure action” via at least one of two distinct methods); see also
    4QTKIDZ, LLC v. HNT Holdings, LLC, 
    253 Ariz. 382
    , 385 ¶ 7 (2022) (“By its
    terms, § 42-18202 delineates two distinct methods of satisfying the pre-
    litigation notice requirement.”); § 42-18202(C)(2) (“A court may not enter
    any judgment to foreclose the right to redeem under this article until the
    purchaser sends the notice required by this section.”). The Postal Service
    returned both envelopes, marking them as “Return to Sender, Unclaimed,
    1 The Property was vacant at the time of Othon’s purchase. But shortly
    thereafter, Othon rented the Property’s warehouse space to three
    companies—two owned by him and one owned by his brother.
    3
    ADVANCED PROPERTY TAX LIENS, INC. V. JORGE OTHON ET UX.
    Opinion of the Court
    Unable to Forward.” APTL purportedly made no further attempts to
    locate Carreon for purposes of effecting the statutory pre-litigation notice.
    ¶7         In May 2018, APTL filed a tax lien foreclosure action against
    Carreon. APTL attempted to serve Carreon with the summons and
    complaint at her residential address of public record, but was unsuccessful.
    The process server stated in his affidavit that Carreon no longer resided at
    that address, which was “a VACANT and EMPTY HOUSE.” The Postal
    Service indicated Carreon had moved without providing a forwarding
    address. APTL then effected service by publishing the summons and
    complaint in the Nogales International, a local newspaper. APTL filed an
    affidavit of publication, indicating to the trial court that it was “necessary
    to serve [Carreon] by publication.” The trial court ultimately determined
    Carreon was “served in compliance with Rule 4 of the Arizona Rules of
    Civil Procedure.” See Ariz. R. Civ. P. 4.1(l)(1) (allowing service by
    publication “[i]f a party shows that the service provided by Rule 4.1(c)
    through 4.1(k) . . . is impracticable”).
    ¶8         APTL asked the trial court to enter default judgment against
    Carreon, alleging she was properly served but failed to answer. The court
    entered default judgment. The Santa Cruz County Treasurer issued a
    treasurer’s deed conveying the Property to APTL, and APTL recorded the
    deed on March 12, 2019.
    ¶9         In April 2019, Carreon filed a motion to vacate the default
    judgment in the foreclosure action on the basis that “service of the
    summons and complaint was insufficient as a matter of law” and therefore
    the judgment is void. As part of that motion, Carreon attached an affidavit
    signed by Othon on April 29, 2019. In his affidavit, Othon falsely
    disavowed his ownership of the Property, stating that Carreon was the
    “landlord” of the Property and he was merely “her agent as to the
    warehouse, collecting rents and overseeing maintenance.” Othon further
    stated in his affidavit, “[a]t no time has either a process server appeared at
    the warehouse seeking Ms. Carreron [sic], nor has any inquiry been made
    by any person as to her whereabouts.”
    ¶10        Subsequently, Carreon moved to withdraw her motion to vacate
    the default judgment. The trial court granted the motion with prejudice.
    4
    ADVANCED PROPERTY TAX LIENS, INC. V. JORGE OTHON ET UX.
    Opinion of the Court
    C.   This Quiet Title Action
    ¶11        On August 21, 2019, APTL filed this quiet title action against
    Othon, seeking to establish APTL’s title to the Property. Othon filed an
    answer and counterclaim, alleging that he “is seeking quiet title.” Therein,
    Othon requested the trial court deny APTL’s claim for quiet title, determine
    that the default judgment in the foreclosure action was void due to invalid
    service on Carreon, and declare title to the Property vested in him.
    ¶12         APTL and Othon cross-moved for summary judgment. The
    trial court granted Othon’s motion and denied APTL’s motion. The court
    noted the general rule that service of process is personal to the person upon
    whom service was to be made (here, Carreon in the foreclosure action).
    But “an insurer has the well-recognized right to raise the issue of defective
    service of process as to its insured,” citing Koven v. Saberdyne Sys., Inc.,
    
    128 Ariz. 318
    , 321–22 (App. 1980), and “Othon’s position as to Carreon is
    similar.” The court determined Othon had standing to challenge the
    default judgment as void for lack of jurisdiction due to insufficient statutory
    pre-litigation notice and improper service of process on Carreon “because
    he was the owner of the property at the time of foreclosure pursuant to the
    deed from Carreon.”
    ¶13         The court also determined that APTL failed to comply with the
    pre-litigation notice requirements in § 42-18202 and did not properly serve
    Carreon in the foreclosure action. Thus, the default judgment in the
    foreclosure action “is void and did not operate to foreclose Othon’s rights.”
    ¶14         The court of appeals affirmed. Advanced Prop. Tax Liens v.
    Othon, 
    252 Ariz. 206
    , 210 ¶ 1 (App. 2021). The court held that, like the
    insurer in Koven, “Othon has ‘a definite and substantial interest’ in the
    outcome of the tax lien foreclosure action” because he has a valid
    unrecorded deed; therefore, he “has standing to defend himself and his
    right to redeem by collaterally attacking that judgment as void.” 
    Id.
     at 213
    ¶¶ 18–19. Further, the court held the default judgment in the foreclosure
    5
    ADVANCED PROPERTY TAX LIENS, INC. V. JORGE OTHON ET UX.
    Opinion of the Court
    action was void because APTL failed to comply with the pre-litigation
    notice requirements in § 42-18202. 2 Id. at 217 ¶ 35.
    ¶15        We have jurisdiction under article 6, section 5(3) of the Arizona
    Constitution.
    II.    DISCUSSION
    ¶16       “We review de novo a grant of summary judgment, viewing the
    evidence and reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the party
    opposing the motion.” Andrews v. Blake, 
    205 Ariz. 236
    , 240 ¶ 12 (2003).
    A. Standing
    ¶17          The trial court, court of appeals, and parties have addressed the
    issue here as one of standing—namely, whether Othon has standing in this
    quiet title action to challenge the default judgment entered in the separate
    foreclosure action.
    ¶18          On the issue of standing, we have previously stated that “[a]s a
    matter of sound judicial policy, . . . this [C]ourt has long required that
    persons seeking redress in Arizona courts must first establish standing to
    sue.    The Arizona requirement that plaintiffs establish standing is
    prudential and constitutes an exercise of judicial restraint.” Bennett v.
    Brownlow, 
    211 Ariz. 193
    , 195 ¶ 14 (2005) (internal citation omitted) (citing
    Bennett v. Napolitano, 
    206 Ariz. 520
    , 524 ¶ 16 (2003)); see also Sears v. Hull,
    
    192 Ariz. 65
    , 69 ¶ 16 (1998) (discussing “standing to bring an action”).
    “To establish standing, we require that petitioners show a particularized
    injury to themselves.” Brownlow, 
    211 Ariz. at
    196 ¶¶ 17–18 (concluding
    defendant’s conduct “cannot be said to have caused . . . damage to”
    plaintiff, and thus plaintiff “cannot establish standing to assert her claim”).
    ¶19        However, Othon’s answer and counterclaim for quiet title asks
    that “the Court find that Plaintiff, in Case No. CV-18-128 [the separate
    foreclosure action], perpetuated a fraud upon that Court, resulting in
    2 In light of this decision, the court of appeals stated that it need not decide
    whether the default judgment was also void on account of improper service
    of process. 
    Id.
     at 217 ¶ 35 n.13.
    6
    ADVANCED PROPERTY TAX LIENS, INC. V. JORGE OTHON ET UX.
    Opinion of the Court
    invalid service over the defendant in that case” and “the judgment in Case
    No. CV-18-128 be voided.” Consequently, in this quiet title action, Othon
    seeks to collaterally attack the default judgment entered against Carreon
    in the foreclosure action as void.
    ¶20         Thus, the relevant issue before us in this quiet title action is not
    whether Othon has standing to bring it. Instead, the more precise issue
    is whether Othon may use this action to collaterally attack the default
    judgment entered against Carreon in the foreclosure action as void. See
    Tube City Min. & Mill. Co. v. Otterson, 
    16 Ariz. 305
    , 310 (1914) (“The present
    action is a collateral attack on the judgment of the superior court
    foreclosing the lien; collateral at least in the sense that the judgment is
    attacked in a separate action, and not on appeal. It is . . . an effort to
    obtain another and independent judgment which will destroy the effect of
    the former judgment.”). On this issue, we recently addressed when a
    judgment or order is subject to attack in a collateral proceeding on the basis
    that the judgment or order is void—just as Othon seeks to do here. In
    Shinn v. Arizona Board of Executive Clemency, we stated:
    The test for whether an order or judgment is void—and
    subject to collateral attack—was established nearly a century
    ago in Arizona. . . . In Hughes, we reiterated that “a judgment
    or order is void upon its face and,” therefore, “subject to
    attack at any time,” if the court entering the order or judgment
    fails to satisfy “three elements.” “These elements are
    (1) jurisdiction of the subject matter of the case, (2) of the
    persons involved in the litigation, and (3) to render the
    particular judgment or order entered.” If a court fails to
    satisfy any one of these three elements, the order or judgment
    is void and subject to collateral attack.
    
    254 Ariz. 255
    , 262 ¶ 27 (2022) (internal citations omitted) (quoting Hughes
    v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    69 Ariz. 193
    , 197 (1949)).
    ¶21        In discussing the issue of standing, Othon relies on Koven. See
    128 Ariz. at 321. In Koven, after a default judgment was entered against
    the defendant in a personal injury action, the defendant’s liability insurer
    sought to intervene in that same action to set aside the default judgment
    against its insured. Id. at 320–21. The Koven court determined the
    7
    ADVANCED PROPERTY TAX LIENS, INC. V. JORGE OTHON ET UX.
    Opinion of the Court
    insurer had “a definite and substantial interest in the outcome of this
    litigation” and thus had a right to intervene and “raise the issue of
    defective service of process.” Id. at 321. Koven dealt with the right of a
    liability insurer to intervene in the same action in which default judgment
    was entered against its insured, because of its status as the insurer. Id.
    This differs from the scenario before us, where Othon seeks to collaterally
    attack a judgment entered in a separate proceeding. Thus, Koven does not
    demonstrate that standing is the applicable legal issue here, though it is
    useful in illustrating important distinctions in the relationship between
    Othon and Carreon for our analysis that follows.
    ¶22        Accordingly, we must now determine whether Othon may, in
    this quiet title action, collaterally attack the default judgment entered
    against Carreon in the foreclosure action as void.
    B. Improper Service of Process on Carreon
    ¶23        “Any person who is entitled to redeem” a tax lien under A.R.S.
    §§ 42-18151 to -18155 “may redeem at any time before judgment is
    entered.” A.R.S. § 42-18206. Othon did not redeem the Property’s tax
    lien before default judgment was entered in the foreclosure action.
    Instead, he now collaterally attacks the default judgment entered in the
    foreclosure action on the basis that Carreon was improperly served by
    publication.
    ¶24        “Regarding default judgments, the general rule is that if a court
    had no jurisdiction because of lack of proper service on the defendant, any
    judgment would be void.” Wells v. Valley Nat’l Bank of Ariz., 
    109 Ariz. 345
    ,
    346 (1973); see also Marquez v. Rapid Harvest Co., 
    99 Ariz. 363
    , 365 (1965) (“If
    the court had no jurisdiction because of lack of proper service on the
    defendant any judgment would be void . . . .”).
    ¶25         “In order to obtain a judgment In personam, personal service of
    the defendant is required.” Wells, 
    109 Ariz. at 347
    . Arizona Rule of Civil
    Procedure 4.1 sets forth the methods for a plaintiff to serve a summons and
    complaint upon a defendant, including personal service of an individual.
    See Ariz. R. Civ. P. 4.1(d). But service by publication is also permitted in
    certain instances. See Wells, 
    109 Ariz. at 347
    . Under Rule 4.1(l)(1), “[i]f a
    party shows that the service provided by Rule 4.1(c) through 4.1(k)—
    8
    ADVANCED PROPERTY TAX LIENS, INC. V. JORGE OTHON ET UX.
    Opinion of the Court
    including an alternative means of service—is impracticable, the court may,
    on motion and without notice to the person to be served, order that service
    be accomplished by publication.” As relevant here, “[t]he court may
    permit service by publication” if, among other things, “the serving party,
    despite reasonably diligent efforts, has been unable to determine the
    person’s current address” and “the motion is supported by affidavit that
    sets forth the serving party’s reasonably diligent efforts to serve the
    person.” Rule 4.1(l)(1).
    ¶26        Othon claims, though, that APTL’s affidavit in support of service
    by publication in the foreclosure action was improper because APTL did
    not make “even minimal inquiry” to determine whether it could serve
    Carreon at the Property. Further, the allegation in the affidavit “that
    examination of the [Property] revealed it to be ‘empty’ was patently false
    and was a material misrepresentation upon which the trial court . . . relied
    upon to allow service by publication.”
    ¶27         In the case of service by publication, we have stated that the
    serving party’s “diligence as a fact is prerequisite to the jurisdiction of the
    court.” Preston v. Denkins, 
    94 Ariz. 214
    , 222 (1963); see also Lown v.
    Miranda, 
    34 Ariz. 32
    , 36 (1928). “The jurisdiction of the court to enter any
    judgment must rest on the affidavit in support of service by publication.”
    Preston, 
    94 Ariz. at
    223–24 (“Since this affidavit is ineffective to secure
    jurisdiction by publication the court necessarily had no power to render
    judgment against anyone in reliance thereon. The court not only had the
    power but the duty to expunge from the record the judgment which clearly
    is void.”). Nevertheless, “the general rule is that questions regarding
    service of process are personal to the person upon whom service was made
    and cannot be urged by another.” Koven, 128 Ariz. at 321; see also 62 Am.
    Jur. 2d Process § 285 (2023) (“Questions of effective service of process may
    be raised only by the person upon whom service was attempted.”).
    ¶28        However, this Court has held that an “insurer has the right to set
    aside a default judgment against its insured, not only on behalf of the
    insured, but on its own behalf.” Union Oil Co. of Cal. v. Hudson Oil Co.,
    
    131 Ariz. 285
    , 288 (1982); see also Koven, 128 Ariz. at 321 (“The right of an
    insurer to move to set aside a default judgment against its insured, either
    on behalf of the insured or on its own behalf, is well recognized in
    Arizona.” (citing Camacho v. Gardner, 
    104 Ariz. 555
     (1969))). This rule is
    9
    ADVANCED PROPERTY TAX LIENS, INC. V. JORGE OTHON ET UX.
    Opinion of the Court
    in place because “the rendition of judgment against the insured . . . not
    only creates a judgment debt in favor of the injured party, but at the same
    time it creates a debt under the insurance contract between the judgment
    debtor and his insurer,” and thus “the insurer should have a right to
    defend against the default judgment.” Sandoval v. Chenoweth, 
    102 Ariz. 241
    , 245 (1967); see also Camacho, 
    104 Ariz. at 558
     (stating the insurance
    company’s “remedy is to mo[v]e to have the default judgment set aside”
    (quoting Sandoval, 
    102 Ariz. at 246
    )).
    ¶29        Accordingly, Othon contends that his relationship with
    Carreon—in the form of a buyer and seller of land—is similar to the
    relationship between an insurer and insured, citing Koven, 128 Ariz. at 321.
    APTL disputes this contention. We agree with APTL that Othon and
    Carreon’s relationship as a buyer and seller of land is not analogous to that
    of an insurer and insured.
    ¶30          The insurer-insured situation presents a “legal representative”
    relationship whereby the liability insurer has a contractual obligation to
    defend legal claims brought against its insured. See Koven, 128 Ariz.
    at 321; see also Teufel v. Am. Fam. Mut. Ins. Co., 
    244 Ariz. 383
    , 385–86 ¶ 11
    (2018) (discussing a “liability insurer’s duty to defend”). Further, a
    liability insurer has exposure in the face of a judgment against its insured.
    See Sandoval, 
    102 Ariz. at 245
     (“It seems to be settled that after recovering a
    judgment against an insured under a liability policy, the injured third
    person may collect such judgment by instituting garnishment proceedings
    against the liability insurer.”). This is the basis for the Koven court’s
    determination that the liability insurer had “a definite and substantial
    interest in the outcome of this litigation.” 128 Ariz. at 320; see also id. at
    320–21 (noting the insurer’s “potential liability” and “appellant’s
    threatened garnishment action” against the insurer “to garnish the funds
    due under the subject insurance policy”).
    ¶31        No such similar relationship involving intertwined interests
    exists between Othon and Carreon. The relationship between a buyer
    and seller of land is more properly characterized as one that is adversarial
    in nature, as it involves two parties on opposite sides of an arms-length
    transaction. See, e.g., Dewey v. Arnold, 
    159 Ariz. 65
    , 70 (App. 1988)
    (discussing reliance on “what the property would sell for between a
    willing buyer and a willing seller in an arms-length transaction” as the test
    10
    ADVANCED PROPERTY TAX LIENS, INC. V. JORGE OTHON ET UX.
    Opinion of the Court
    for determining fair market value of property (quoting Honeywell Info. Sys.,
    Inc. v. Maricopa County, 
    118 Ariz. 171
    , 174 (App. 1978))). As the buyer of
    the Property and recipient of a quitclaim deed, Othon has no legal duty to
    protect the interests of the seller from third party legal claims, as in the
    insurer-insured context.
    ¶32         Othon further claims that he and Carreon have a representative
    relationship similar to that of an insurer and insured on the basis of A.R.S.
    § 33-435, which addresses covenants that are implied when the words
    “grant” or “convey” are used in a conveyance. But Othon received a
    quitclaim deed that does not contain the words “grant” or “convey.” See
    A.R.S. § 33-402(1) (“To quit claim: For the consideration of …….….., I
    hereby quit claim to A.B. all my interest in the following real property
    (describing it).”). To the extent that an implied warranty of title to
    property, free and clear, can be considered analogous to an insurer’s duty
    to defend and indemnify, it is irrelevant here because no such implied
    warranty arises from a quitclaim deed. See SWC Baseline & Crismon Invs.,
    L.L.C. v. Augusta Ranch Ltd. P’ship, 
    228 Ariz. 271
    , 280–81 ¶ 29 (App. 2011)
    (“‘A quit claim deed conveys to the grantee no greater rights to the
    property conveyed than the grantor possessed . . . .’ Such a deed conveys
    any interest the grantor possesses in the property, but neither warrants nor
    claims that title is valid.” (citation omitted)). Therefore, § 33-435 does not
    establish here a relationship analogous to that of an insurer and its insured.
    ¶33        But even if Carreon’s quitclaim deed to Othon contained
    covenants or warranties with respect to the Property, this would only have
    required Carreon (as the grantor) to defend against claims from third
    parties, not vice-versa. See, e.g., 163 Am. Jur. Trials 1 General Warranty
    Deed § 8 (2023) (“In the typical wording of a covenant of warranty, the
    grantor covenants to warrant and defend the title conveyed by the deed
    against the lawful claims which may be asserted against it by third
    persons.”); Warranty, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (“A covenant
    by which the grantor in a deed promises to secure to the grantee the estate
    conveyed in the deed, and pledges to compensate the grantee if the grantee
    is evicted by someone having better title.”). Thus, in this scenario, it
    would be Carreon—not Othon—who would be equivalent to the insurer
    in Koven. Accordingly, Othon’s citation to Phoenix Title & Trust Co. v. Old
    Dominion Co., 
    31 Ariz. 324
     (1927) (discussing warranties from grantors to
    grantees), does not alter our conclusion.
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    ADVANCED PROPERTY TAX LIENS, INC. V. JORGE OTHON ET UX.
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶34         Finally, Othon cites Campbell v. Frazer Construction Co., 
    105 Ariz. 40
     (1969), and asks us to apply equitable principles in his favor. Campbell
    discussed, in the context of a motion to set aside a default judgment, that
    “two opposing principles of law . . . must be reconciled; on one hand, that
    the sanctity and finality of judgments be maintained, and on the other that
    controversies be decided on their merits.” 
    105 Ariz. at 41
    . This Court
    explained,
    In determining whether a defendant should be relieved of a
    default judgment the court must be guided by equitable
    principles. These principles require that a defendant be given
    a fair opportunity to litigate a disputed obligation and also
    require that a plaintiff, who has, according to regular and
    legal proceedings, secured a judgment be protected against a
    violation of the rule which requires the sanctity and security
    of a valid judgment. When the circumstances are such that it
    would be extremely unjust to enforce such a judgment, relief
    will be granted to the extent of allowing defendant a fair
    opportunity to present the matter on its merits.
    
    Id.
     (quoting Coconino Pulp & Paper Co. v. Marvin, 
    83 Ariz. 117
    , 120 (1957)).
    ¶35         We conclude that equitable principles do not weigh in favor of
    Othon. In the foreclosure action, Othon signed and submitted an
    affidavit containing false information, rather than seeking to intervene in
    that action under Rule 24 or substitute in as a party under Rule 25. See
    Ariz. R. Civ. P. 24; Ariz. R. Civ. P. 25. Further, Othon neither recorded
    the deed with the county recorder, notified the county treasurer or assessor
    of his ownership of the Property, nor provided a mailing address at which
    he could be reached. Moreover, Othon indicated he wanted to purchase
    APTL’s tax lien and then foreclose on his own property to hide his failure
    to pay taxes on the funds he used to acquire the Property. Accordingly,
    this case does not present circumstances where “it would be extremely
    unjust to enforce [the default] judgment” entered in the foreclosure action.
    Campbell, 
    105 Ariz. at 41
     (quoting Coconino Pulp & Paper Co., 
    83 Ariz. at 120
    ).
    12
    ADVANCED PROPERTY TAX LIENS, INC. V. JORGE OTHON ET UX.
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶36        We conclude, therefore, that Othon may not collaterally attack
    the default judgment entered in the foreclosure action. 3
    III.   CONCLUSION
    ¶37        For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Othon may not, in
    this quiet title action, collaterally attack the default judgment entered in
    the foreclosure action. We vacate the court of appeals’ opinion and
    reverse the trial court’s judgment.
    3 When APTL initiated this quiet title action in 2019, Othon argued the
    default judgment entered in the foreclosure action was void because of
    APTL’s failure to comply with the pre-litigation notice requirements in
    § 42-18202. But after we issued our decision in 4QTKIDZ, Othon conceded
    through counsel at oral argument that APTL complied with § 42-18202 and
    he was abandoning that issue.
    13