Curt N. Daniels and Indian Creek Corporation v. John Holtz, personally and John Holtz, d/b/a WSH Properties, LLC, Hunters Retreat, LLC and Navajo Associates, LLC ( 2021 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 19–1674
    Submitted February 17, 2021—Filed March 26, 2021
    CURT N. DANIELS and INDIAN CREEK CORPORATION,
    Appellants,
    vs.
    JOHN HOLTZ, personally and JOHN HOLTZ d/b/a WSH PROPERTIES,
    LLC, HUNTERS RETREAT, LLC, and NAVAJO ASSOCIATES, LLC,
    Appellees.
    On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Lucas County, John D.
    Lloyd, Senior Judge.
    The defendant seeks further review of a court of appeals decision
    reversing a district court dismissal of an action based on claim preclusion.
    COURT     OF   APPEALS     DECISION      VACATED;     DISTRICT      COURT
    JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
    Per curiam.
    Curtis Daniels, Chariton, for appellants.
    John B. Holtz, pro se, Phoenix, Arizona, appellee.
    2
    PER CURIAM.
    On July 26, 2006, a sheriff’s sale was held in Lucas County for the
    stock of Curtis Daniels’s farm business Indian Creek Corporation. Indian
    Creek owned an approximately 1220-acre cattle property in Lucas County.
    The property was subject to various prior mortgages and liens. John Holtz
    was the winning bidder at $110,000.1                Holtz is the principal of WSH
    Properties, LLC, which had previously obtained a judgment against
    Daniels and Indian Creek for approximately $246,000.                             See WSH
    Properties, L.L.C. v. Daniels, 
    761 N.W.2d 45
    , 47–48 (Iowa 2008).
    Daniels filed an action in February 2007 seeking to set aside the
    sheriff’s sale. We found an issue of fact whether Holtz had improperly
    discouraged the other bidder at the sale, see Daniels v. Holtz, 
    794 N.W.2d 813
    , 823–24 (Iowa 2010), and ultimately the sale was invalidated by the
    district court on remand, see Daniels v. Holtz, No. 12–1522, 
    2013 WL 5743640
    , at *2 (Iowa Ct. App. Oct. 23, 2013) (affirming the decision to set
    aside the sale). This necessitated a second sheriff’s sale.
    In December 2013, Daniels filed a motion seeking a constructive
    trust and other remedies for “the monies he would have received had he
    held and received the benefit of the property at issue . . . between the time
    of the first sheriff's sale and the second sheriff's sale.” In July 2014, the
    district court concluded that Daniels’s claims were untimely or barred by
    claim preclusion (or both). The court of appeals affirmed. Daniels v. Holtz,
    No. 14–1290, 
    2016 WL 1366760
    , at *2 (Iowa Ct. App. Apr. 6, 2016). The
    court of appeals concluded, “[T]he district court did not err in denying
    [Daniels’s] motion/action on res judicata grounds.” 
    Id.
    1Prior   to the sheriff’s sale, the stock had been appraised at $29,500.
    3
    “Daniels was not dissuaded.”2 His current petition recites that he
    filed two subsequent actions in Lucas County in October 2016 and
    October 2017. Both actions sought constructive trusts, and both were
    dismissed. Daniels also brought an action in federal district court in May
    2018, which was likewise dismissed under the rarely invoked Rooker-
    Feldman doctrine.3
    Additionally, in its November 2018 order dismissing the October
    2017 Lucas County lawsuit, the district court directed,
    Curt N. Daniels is enjoined from filing any new actions or
    filings, other than a notice of appeal from this ruling, arising
    out of or related to the facts or subject matter of this case or
    previous litigation between the parties to this action.
    This brings us to the present action, which Daniels filed on July 15,
    2019, in apparent disregard of the foregoing order. The present action
    again complains about Daniels’s dispossession from the cattle farm since
    2008 and his associated loss of rents and other income since 2009.4
    Daniels claims that once the sheriff’s sale was set aside, he was legally
    entitled to restoration of all the property. Accompanying the petition are
    nine exhibits, including a number of the rulings referenced above. The
    petition, with some degree of candor, acknowledges that it is trying out
    new legal theories to obtain relief for the same set of facts, this time under
    Iowa Code chapters 646 and 649.
    2This   is a quotation from Daniels’s current petition.
    3The   Rooker-Feldman doctrine is named for two United States Supreme Court
    decisions, Rooker v. Fidelity Trust Co., 
    263 U.S. 413
    , 
    44 S. Ct. 149
     (1923), and District of
    Columbia Court of Appeals v. Feldman, 
    460 U.S. 462
    , 
    103 S. Ct. 1303
     (1983). It bars
    “cases brought by state-court losers complaining of injuries caused by state-court
    judgments rendered before the [federal] district court proceedings commenced and
    inviting [federal] district court review and rejection of those judgments.” Exxon Mobil
    Corp. v. Saudi Basic Indus. Corp., 
    544 U.S. 280
    , 284, 
    125 S. Ct. 1517
    , 1521–22 (2005).
    4Daniels  also claims he was dispossessed of an eleven-acre property in which he
    resided as a result of the sheriff’s sale.
    4
    Holtz moved to dismiss this action, arguing that it was repetitive of
    the prior unsuccessful lawsuits. Holtz also raised the November 2018
    order precluding Daniels from filing any new actions on the subject matter
    of the sheriff’s sale. The district court agreed and granted dismissal of the
    entire case. In its dismissal order, the district court not only adopted
    Holtz’s arguments, it added that the petition was barred by the statute of
    limitations in that “the actions complained of are over 9 years old.” The
    district court cited the statute of limitations for actions on unwritten
    contracts and for fraud—Iowa Code section 614.1(4)—not the statute of
    limitations for actions to recover real property—section 614.1(5). Daniels
    responded with a rule 1.904(a) motion, in which he asserted that his action
    was timely because less than twenty years had elapsed since the judgment
    setting aside the sheriff’s sale. See 
    Iowa Code § 614.1
    (6). The district
    court denied Daniels’s motion.
    Daniels appealed, and we transferred the case to the court of
    appeals. That court reversed and remanded, reasoning that it was not
    clear from the petition that the present action was barred by claim
    preclusion, and that the district court committed error in raising the
    statute of limitations sua sponte. The court of appeals did not address the
    effect of the November 2018 order barring future lawsuits by Daniels.
    We granted further review, and we now vacate the decision of the
    court of appeals and affirm the judgment of the district court.
    In ruling on Holtz’s motion to dismiss, the district court was entitled
    to consider the attachments to Daniels’s petition. These included the July
    2014 district court ruling and the April 2016 court of appeals decision.
    Moreover, the district court was also entitled to consider the dismissal
    orders specifically referenced by case number and date in Daniels’s
    petition, even if they had not been attached. See King v. State, 
    818 N.W.2d
               5
    1, 6 n.1 (Iowa 2012) (holding that in ruling on a motion to dismiss for
    failure to state a claim, the court may consider documents referenced in
    the petition regardless of whether they have been attached); see also
    Homan v. Branstad, 
    864 N.W.2d 321
    , 323 n.1 (Iowa 2015). Thus, the
    dismissal orders for the October 2016 and October 2017 actions, which
    were provided by Holtz with his motion to dismiss, were likewise fair game.
    These documents make clear that this is at least the fourth bite at
    the same apple by Daniels. The gist of this claim, like the prior claims, is
    that because the original sheriff’s sale was set aside and had to be redone,
    Daniels should recover the cattle property and income related to that
    property. This involves the same nucleus of operative fact as the prior
    litigation, and the district court correctly found that claim preclusion
    applies. See Pavone v. Kirke, 
    807 N.W.2d 828
    , 837 (Iowa 2011).5
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district
    court and vacate the decision of the court of appeals.
    COURT OF APPEALS DECISION VACATED; DISTRICT COURT
    JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
    This opinion shall not be published.
    5We do not find it necessary to address whether dismissal was properly granted
    on the other grounds noted by the district court.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 19-1674

Filed Date: 3/26/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/26/2021