Kenneth Fairfax And Geraldine Watson Vs. Oaks Development Company ( 2006 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 140 / 04-1729
    Filed May 5, 2006
    KENNETH FAIRFAX and GERALDINE WATSON,
    Appellants,
    vs.
    OAKS DEVELOPMENT COMPANY,
    Appellee.
    On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Robert Blink,
    Judge.
    Vendees under contract for sale of real estate appeal from judgment
    confirming the forfeiture of their interest. The court of appeals affirmed.
    DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS VACATED; DISTRICT COURT
    JUDGMENT REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    Phil Watson and David M. Coco of Phil Watson P.C., Des Moines, and
    Patrick W. O'Bryan of O'Bryan Law Firm, Des Moines, for appellants.
    Dustin D. Smith of Brown, Winick, Graves, Gross, Baskerville &
    Schoenebaum, PLC, West Des Moines, for appellee.
    2
    CARTER, Justice.
    Geraldine Watson and Ken Fairfax, vendees under a contract for the
    sale of real estate, appeal from a judgment confirming the forfeiture of their
    interest. Watson and Fairfax were plaintiffs in the district court who had
    sued in equity to enjoin the forfeiture.       The appellee, which was the
    defendant in the district court, is Oaks Development Company. The issue
    involving the purported forfeiture of the vendees’ interest in a real estate
    contract arose in connection with the trial of several other issues in
    consolidated cases before the district court. In connection with the validity
    of the forfeiture, the vendees urged that the service of the statutory notice of
    forfeiture required by Iowa Code section 656.3 (2003) had not been properly
    completed as to both vendees and that this circumstance rendered the
    attempted forfeiture under Iowa Code section 656.2 ineffective and invalid.
    The court of appeals found that the forfeiture had been properly
    completed by service of proper legal notice. Upon reviewing the record and
    considering the arguments presented, we disagree with that conclusion and
    find that notice of forfeiture was not completed as required by law. We
    vacate the decision of the court of appeals and reverse that portion of the
    district court’s ruling upholding the forfeiture. Because this ruling may
    affect other issues that were decided in the district court, we remand the
    case to that court for such further proceedings as may be necessary.
    The contract vendees entered into an agreement to purchase a
    residence property that was new construction financed by the appellee,
    Oaks Development Company. Oaks Development Company, at the time of
    the agreement, had become the legal owner of the property and was the
    vendor under the contract. The contract provided for a $12,000 down
    payment and monthly installments beginning February 15, 2003, in the
    amount of $977.23 continuing monthly until a balloon payment due on
    3
    January 5, 2005.     The remedies paragraph of the contract allowed for
    forfeiture of the vendees’ interest in accordance with chapter 656 of the
    Iowa Code.
    The vendees made the required down payment and paid the monthly
    payments that had become due prior to the June 2004 installment,
    although many payments were late. When the June 2004 installment was
    not paid on time, the vendor attempted to serve the vendees with a notice of
    forfeiture. The return on the attempted service by a process server was as
    follows:
    I did personally serve a copy of Notice of Forfeiture of Real
    Estate Contract
    By delivering a true and correct copy thereof as follows:
    Name: Geraldine Watson Address: 
    5401 S.E. 28th
    Court
    Name: Kenneth Fairfax  Address:   "   "    "     "
    By delivering a true and correct copy to:
    Geraldine Watson, a person identified as being at least eighteen
    years old residing therein.
    The process server’s return of service was attached to the affidavit filed with
    the county recorder in support of forfeiture of the vendees’ interest.
    At the trial, vendee Watson, who accepted the notice of forfeiture from
    the process server, testified that only one copy of the notice had been
    delivered to her. The vendees then called the process server as a witness,
    who confirmed the fact that only one copy of the notice of forfeiture had
    been served on the vendees. The vendees contended in the district court,
    and continue to urge on appeal, that it was necessary to serve a separate
    copy of the notice of forfeiture on each contract vendee in order for the
    forfeiture to be valid under Iowa Code sections 656.2 and 656.3. The
    district court rejected that conclusion, as did a majority of the court of
    appeals.
    4
    I. Scope of Review.
    Because the proceeding in the district court was tried by equitable
    proceedings, our review of both the facts and the law is de novo. Goodale v.
    Bray, 
    546 N.W.2d 212
    , 214 (Iowa 1996); Lett v. Grummer, 
    300 N.W.2d 147
    ,
    148 (Iowa 1981); Iowa R. App. P. 6.4.
    II. The Statutory Notice Requirements.
    Iowa Code section 656.2 provides, in part:
    1. The forfeiture shall be initiated by the vendor by
    serving on the vendee a written notice . . . .
    2. The vendor shall also serve a copy of the notice
    required in subsection 1 on the person in possession of the real
    estate, if different than the vendee; on all the vendee’s
    mortgagees of record; and on a person who asserts a claim
    against the vendee’s interest . . . .
    Iowa Code section 656.3 provides, in part:
    Said notice may be served personally or by publication,
    on the same conditions, and in the same manner as is provided
    for the service of original notices . . . .
    Lastly, Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.305(1) provides:
    Personal service may be made as follows:
    1.305(1) Upon any individual who has attained majority
    and who has not been adjudged incompetent, either by taking
    the individual’s signed, dated acknowledgement of service
    endorsed on the notice, or by serving the individual personally;
    or by serving, at the individual’s dwelling house or usual place
    of abode, any person residing therein who is at least 18 years
    old . . . .
    It is undisputed that a process server served one copy of a facially valid
    notice of forfeiture addressed to both vendees by delivering that copy to
    vendee Watson. The process server then completed a return of service,
    indicating personal service on Watson and substituted service on Fairfax.
    At the time the notice was served, Watson and Fairfax were husband and
    5
    wife who resided together at the property that is the subject of the
    attempted forfeiture.
    The issue presented is whether a single copy of a forfeiture notice that
    has been personally served on one of two contract vendees with the intent
    to serve both is sufficient service of notice to sustain a forfeiture of the
    interests of both vendees. The district court and a majority of the court of
    appeals held that it is.   The dissenting judge on the court of appeals
    believed otherwise and stated the proposition as follows:
    The process server could achieve proper service on
    Geraldine Watson by handing her a copy of the notice. And as
    the majority [of the court of appeals] has correctly noted the
    process server could achieve proper service on Ken Fairfax by
    handing Geraldine Watson a copy of the notice for Fairfax.
    However, here there was only one notice and because the
    process server indicated both parties were served by the
    delivery of a single copy it is unclear which party actually was
    served and at most only one party was served.
    We agree with the dissenting judge’s views.
    In speaking to a similar situation, the text in 62B Am. Jur. 2d
    Process, suggests by way of a practice guide:
    In making substituted service against two or more defendants
    having the same place of residence or abode, a copy of the
    summons must be left for each defendant.
    62B Am. Jur. 2d Process § 191, at 765 (2005) (footnote omitted). Although
    we have rendered no decisions involving this issue, support for that
    conclusion is contained in decisions from other jurisdictions. In Chaney v.
    Reddin, 
    205 P.2d 310
    (Okla. 1949), an attempt was made to serve two
    defendants who were members of the same family residing at the same
    address by leaving one copy of the process with a third member of the
    family at that address. In determining that the service was invalid, the
    Oklahoma court stated:
    6
    Each defendant, whether there be one or many, and whether
    they be members of the same family or strangers, must be
    served as required by the statute. . . . Where several copies of
    the summons are left with a member of a family, one copy
    being left for each defendant, the law presumes that the
    member with whom they are left will deliver a copy to each
    defendant sued. But such presumption cannot be indulged
    where only one copy is left for several defendants.
    
    Chaney, 205 P.2d at 313
    (citations omitted).
    Although the situation in Chaney involved substituted service on each
    of several parties, we are satisfied that the requirement that there be a copy
    of the notice for each party required to be served is equally applicable in
    situations like the present in which one party to the proceeding is
    personally served, but substituted service is provided for other parties.
    That was the situation in Idlewine v. Madison County Bank & Trust Co., 
    439 N.E.2d 1198
    (Ind. Ct. App. 1982). In that case, there was an attempt to
    serve a husband (Ronald) and wife (Roberta) with a single copy of a
    summons directed to both. The husband received personal service of the
    summons at his residence and neglected to inform the wife that this had
    occurred. A default judgment was entered against both defendants. The
    court set aside the judgment against the wife, stating “one copy of a joint
    summons delivered to a residence where two parties to the suit reside does
    not constitute proper service.” 
    Id. at 1201.
    In support of this conclusion,
    the Indiana court cited the Oklahoma court’s ruling in Chaney and a similar
    ruling of the Nevada Supreme Court in Doyle v. Jorgensen, 
    414 P.2d 707
    ,
    710 (Nev. 1966). The same court that decided Idlewine later made it clear
    that this decision did not turn on the fact that Roberta’s husband had
    concealed the service of process from her. In Allburn v. Indiana ex rel.
    Warrick County Sheriff’s Department, 
    826 N.E.2d 682
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2005),
    the court stated:
    [W]e do not discern that such fact [that the service of summons
    had been concealed] affected the court’s holding. To be sure,
    7
    in addressing whether Ronald acted as Roberta’s agent for
    purposes of accepting service, the Idlewine court concluded
    that even assuming such, “there remains the insurmountable
    problem” that only one summons was served upon both Ronald
    and Roberta. From this, we think it is clear that even had
    Roberta’s husband not concealed the summons from her, the
    court’s holding would have been the same. Roberta would
    have still been entitled to relief because the “insurmountable
    problem” still existed—only one summons was served at the
    residence where two parties to the suit 
    resided. 826 N.E.2d at 684
    (citations omitted).
    We have recognized that “forfeiture statutes are to be construed
    strictly against a forfeiture, with the burden to show full and strict
    compliance with the statutory procedures upon the party seeking
    forfeiture.” Jamison v. Knosby, 
    423 N.W.2d 2
    , 5 (Iowa 1988); 
    Lett, 300 N.W.2d at 149
    . In keeping with that admonition, we are satisfied that,
    because our forfeiture statutes have incorporated by reference the lawful
    method of serving original notices as the standard for serving notices of
    forfeiture, the decisions we have discussed concerning the service of notice
    to initiate actions in court are proper guides for determining the sufficiency
    of the method of service of a notice of forfeiture under section 656.2.
    The vendors contend that substituted service is always dependent on
    the good-faith conduct of the party receiving a legal notice intended for
    another. As a result, the vendors urge, it was sufficient to rely on Watson to
    apprise Fairfax of the notice of forfeiture. We disagree. Although provisions
    authorizing substituted service do assume the good-faith of the person on
    whom the notice is served, we think the probability that the notice will be
    passed on to the party for whom it is intended is substantially reduced if a
    separate notice is not left for each of the parties upon whom service is
    attempted. It is not unreasonable and is indeed prudent to require that this
    be done.
    8
    In civil actions in which some defendants are legally served and
    others are not, and the parties not receiving proper service are not
    indispensable to the proceedings, the action may proceed against those
    parties who have been properly served.        We are unable to apply that
    principle in the present controversy for two reasons. First, as noted by the
    dissenting judge in the court of appeals, it is unclear which party was
    properly served. Consequently, we cannot declare that either party was
    properly served. This point was stated as follows by the Oklahoma court in
    Chaney:
    “[W]here there are two . . . defendants, a copy of the petition
    and publication notice addressed to them jointly at their place
    of residence is an insufficient compliance with the statute, as
    the same, at best, shows service only upon one of the
    defendants and the uncertainty upon which of them service is
    had renders the . . . service prima facie void as to both . . . 
    .” 205 P.2d at 312
    (quoting Stumpff v. Price, 
    177 P. 109
    , 109 (Okla. 1918)).
    A second reason why an attempt to uphold the forfeiture against one
    of the two contract vendees is untenable is the manifest impracticability of
    that course of action. What would be the rights of the vendor against the
    remaining vendee if the other vendee’s interest was held to have been
    forfeited? Certainly the vendor would claim continued entitlement to the
    full contract payments, but it would be totally impractical to expect the
    vendee whose interest had not been forfeited to make full payment for half
    of the property. In addition, attempting to approach the problem in this
    manner would necessitate a partition action between the remaining vendee
    and the vendor. For these reasons, we hold that the interest of neither
    Watson nor Fairfax was validly forfeited by the vendor.
    The vendor argues that, if the forfeiture is found to be invalid, the
    ruling of the court of appeals with respect to its claim for money damages
    must be overturned. Because we vacate the decision of the court of appeals
    9
    in all respects, the effect of our ruling on the claim for money damages can
    be resolved by the district court. We remand the case to that court for
    consideration of that issue and any other issues that may have been
    precipitated in the consolidated cases by our ruling on the validity of the
    forfeiture.
    DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS VACATED; DISTRICT COURT
    JUDGMENT REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    All justices concur except Streit, J., who takes no part.