Gafford v. Singleton ( 2010 )


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    6        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    7 MORGAN A. GAFFORD,
    8          Plaintiff-Appellant,
    9 v.                                                           NO. 29,937
    10 HENRY SINGLETON (deceased), et al.,
    11          Defendants-Appellees,
    12 consolidated with
    13 MORGAN A. GAFFORD,
    14          Plaintiff-Appellant,
    15 v.
    16 CHRISTINE GRISCOM, et al.,
    17          Defendants-Appellees,
    18 consolidated with
    19 PEIRCE A. CLAYTON,
    20          Plaintiff-Appellant,
    21   STATE OF NEW MEXICO, SANTA
    22   FE COUNTY, CAROLINE SINGLETON,
    23   AND ALL UNKNOWN CLAIMANTS OF
    24   INTEREST IN THE PREMISES ADVERSE
    25   TO PLAINTIFF,
    1         Defendants-Appellees.
    2 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SANTA FE COUNTY
    3 Daniel A. Sanchez, District Judge
    4 Morgan A. Gafford
    5 Galisteo, NM
    6 Pro Se Appellant
    7 Thomas Patrick Whelan, Jr.
    8 Santa Fe, NM
    9 Kristin L. Davidson
    10 Santa Fe, NM
    11 Scheuer, Yost & Patterson, P.C.
    12 Charlotte H. Hetherington
    13 Santa Fe, NM
    14 for Appellee Christine Griscom
    15 Peirce A. Clayton
    16 Santa Fe, NM
    17 Pro Se Appellant
    18   Stephen O. Ross, County Attorney
    19   Elizabeth J. Travis, Assistant County Attorney
    20   Sue Ann Herrmann, Assistant County Attorney
    21   Santa Fe, NM
    22 Sutin, Thayer & Browne, P.C.
    23 Benjamin Allison
    24 Santa Fe, NM
    25 for Appellee Carolyn W. Singleton
    2
    3
    1                             MEMORANDUM OPINION
    2 FRY, Chief Judge.
    3        In this quiet title lawsuit, Morgan A. Gafford and Pierce Clayton (Plaintiffs)
    4 appeal from the district court’s final judgment and order granting summary judgment.
    5 [RP 641] Plaintiffs raise the following issues on appeal: (1) Plaintiffs contend that
    6 they were wrongly denied hearings prior to entry of the final judgment and the motion
    7 to reconsider, and as such, they were not allowed the opportunity to once again show
    8 the district court that they are the only ones with deeds to the property in dispute [DS
    9 3-4]; and (2) Plaintiffs also contend that the district court erred in entering the final
    10 judgment by refusing to quiet title to the property in Plaintiffs pursuant to their deeds,
    11 which indicate that Plaintiffs have the best claim to the property. [DS 4]
    12        This Court’s calendar notice proposed summary affirmance. [CN1] Plaintiffs
    13 and Defendants have filed responses to the calendar notice. [Pls. MIO; Defs. MIO]
    14 We have duly considered the responses and we affirm the district court’s final
    15 judgment.
    16 DISCUSSION
    17 Finality of the Orders on Appeal
    18        As this Court has previously noted in connection with calendaring this case in
    19 2007 (Ct. App. No. 27,445), there are pending counterclaims in this case that remain
    4
    1 undecided. [RP 605, No. 4] On January 13, 2009, however, the district court entered
    2 an order that bifurcated the quiet title claims at issue here from the pending
    3 counterclaims. [RP 623] The final judgment expressly states that, “There is no just
    4 reason for delay of entry of final judgment on the quiet title claims.” [RP 632, No. 6]
    5 See Rule 1-054(B)(1) NMRA. Plaintiffs’ motion to reconsider does not dispute the
    6 finality of the district court’s judgment; rather, the motion requests that the district
    7 court reconsider the final judgment on the merits. [RP 647-657] Thus, although
    8 Plaintiffs contend that the district court’s final judgment and its order denying the
    9 motion to reconsider were erroneously entered on the merits [see, e.g., RP 651, No.
    10 6], there are no further issues as to the finality of these orders for purposes of
    11 Plaintiffs’ present appeal. We proceed therefore to the merits of the quiet title issues
    12 on appeal in this case.
    13 Issues on Appeal - Law of the Case Bars Plaintiffs from Relitigating Their
    14 Alleged Claims to the Properties
    15        Whether law of the case applies, as well as how it applies, are questions of law
    16 subject to de novo review. See Cordova v. Larsen, 2004-NMCA-087, ¶ 10, 
    136 N.M. 17
     87, 
    94 P.3d 830
    . We have long held that a decision by an appeals court on an issue
    18 of law made in one stage of a lawsuit becomes binding on subsequent trial courts as
    19 well as subsequent appeals courts during the course of that litigation. See Ute Park
    20 Summer Homes Ass’n v. Maxwell Land Grant Co., 
    83 N.M. 558
    , 560, 
    494 P.2d 971
    ,
    5
    1 973 (1972) (“The doctrine of law of the case has long been recognized in New
    2 Mexico, since before statehood[.]”); Varney v. Taylor, 
    79 N.M. 652
    , 654, 
    448 P.2d 3
     164, 166 (1968) (same). “If an appellate court has considered and passed upon a
    4 question of law and remanded the case for further proceedings, the legal question so
    5 resolved will not be determined in a different manner on a subsequent appeal.” Ute
    6 Park Summer Homes Ass’n, 83 N.M. at 560, 494 P.2d at 973.
    7        Defendants filed a memorandum in support of the proposed disposition. [Defs.
    8 MIO] While Plaintiffs’ response to the calendar notice states that they are in
    9 agreement with the proposed disposition, they continue to assert that they “maintain
    10 [sic] undeniable interest in all of our land in the form of a deed and as a matter of
    11 possession.” [Pls. MIO, 2] Contrary to Plaintiffs’ assertions in this regard, however,
    12 this Court’s calendar notice specifically proposed to hold that Plaintiffs have no valid
    13 claims whatsoever to the property in dispute. In their response, moreover, Plaintiffs
    14 have not provided any new facts or authority that would persuade us otherwise. “Our
    15 courts have repeatedly held that, in summary calendar cases, the burden is on the party
    16 opposing the proposed disposition to clearly point out errors in fact or law.” Hennessy
    17 v. Duryea, 1998-NMCA-036, ¶ 24, 
    124 N.M. 754
    , 
    955 P.2d 683
    . As discussed below,
    18 we remain persuaded that Plaintiffs have no valid claims to the property in dispute.
    19 In addition, in their response, Plaintiffs make assertions about the award of attorney
    6
    1 fees, which were not at issue in this appeal. [Id.] This Court specifically does not take
    2 any position on Plaintiffs’ assertions regarding the award of attorney fees, if any, in
    3 this matter.
    4         The record proper indicates that the district court and this Court have previously
    5 considered Plaintiffs’ claims of title to and interest in the properties that were disputed
    6 in this case in Ct. App. No. 27,445, and denied them. [RP 684-694] Ct. App. No.
    7 27,445 involves the same parties and the same properties. [Id.] The memorandum
    8 opinion of this Court issued on January 24, 2008, together with the second calendar
    9 notice that is incorporated into the opinion, [RP 687-92] fully discuss New Mexico
    10 quiet title law and point out that “Plaintiffs fail to explain the bases for their quiet title
    11 suits, . . . fail to set forth descriptions of how and why they claim their interests in the
    12 properties, and they fail to set forth the arguments Defendants asserted in opposition
    13 to their suits.” [RP 689-90] This Court further noted that Plaintiffs had acknowledged
    14 that neither one of them had valid title to the properties at any time during the
    15 consolidated actions. [RP 690]
    16         The opinion also discusses that Plaintiffs apparently “researched the ownership
    17 of property in Galisteo, and developed an impression that certain lands were
    18 unclaimed and/or vacant . . . [and] that Plaintiffs were acting under [the] belief that
    19 they could claim ownership of those lands by having them surveyed and by filing suits
    7
    1 in district court without any valid, legal interest in them.” [Id.] Since the grantors
    2 of the properties had no legal interest in the properties, they could not convey legal
    3 interests in them to Plaintiffs. [RP 691] As such, we concluded that “Plaintiffs could
    4 not succeed in acquiring title to property to which they have no valid, legal claim,
    5 even if the named Defendants in a quiet title suit have no interest in or claim to the
    6 property.” [RP 691] The opinion affirmed the dismissal of Plaintiffs’ claims to quiet
    7 title to the properties because Plaintiffs did not establish the existence of triable facts
    8 and they were “incorrect as a matter of law.” [RP 692]
    9         As we discussed in the calendar notice in this case, the only reason that the
    10 opinion issued in Ct. App. No. 27,445 did not apply to all Defendants was not a matter
    11 of any differences in the issues between Plaintiffs and some Defendants relating to the
    12 merits of Plaintiffs’ claims of title to the properties. Rather, it was a matter of the fact
    13 that this Court has jurisdiction over only orders that are final when appealed. [See RP
    14 604-06, for a full discussion of the finality problems relating to Ct. App. No. 27,445]
    15 At the time of the appeal in Ct. App. No. 27,445, some Defendants had pending
    16 counterclaims against Plaintiffs. [Id.] Since that time, however, as discussed above,
    17 the pending counterclaims have been bifurcated from the quiet title claims and the
    18 district court has certified the present final judgment as final and appealable pursuant
    19 to Rule 1-054(B)(1). In addition, we have determined that the pending counterclaims
    8
    1 for malicious abuse of process brought by some Defendants do not involve issues that
    2 relate to, are intertwined with, or are dependent upon the issues resolved in the final
    3 judgment. We affirm the district court’s final judgment.
    4        With regard to the district court’s order denying Plaintiffs’ motion to
    5 reconsider, we also affirm. We review the district court’s grant of Plaintiffs’ motion
    6 to reconsider for abuse of discretion.            Lewis ex rel. Lewis v. Samson,
    7 2001-NMSC-035, ¶ 22, 
    131 N.M. 317
    , 
    35 P.3d 972
    . An abuse of discretion “may be
    8 found only where the judge has acted arbitrarily or unreasonably under the particular
    9 circumstances.” United Salt Corp. v. McKee, 
    96 N.M. 65
    , 68, 
    628 P.2d 310
    , 313
    10 (1981).
    11        In this case, the district court denied the motion to reconsider because Plaintiffs’
    12 motion requested that the district court “retry” all the issues “previously considered
    13 and decided by it and by Judge James A. Hall.” [RP 708] In addition, the district
    14 court determined that Plaintiffs’ motion was untimely under Rule 1-059 NMRA, did
    15 not assert grounds that would entitle Plaintiffs to relief under Rule 1-060(B) NMRA,
    16 and the law of the case barred Plaintiffs’ requests for relief. [RP 708] Based on our
    17 review of the record proper with regard to the litigation, judgment, and this Court’s
    18 opinion in Ct. App. No. 27,445, we are unable to conclude that the district court
    19 judge’s decision was either arbitrary or unreasonable. Because we cannot say that
    9
    1 the district court abused its discretion, we affirm the order denying the motion for
    2 reconsideration.
    3         Finally, we are not persuaded that Plaintiffs were denied due process when the
    4 district court did not hold additional hearings prior to entering final judgment and the
    5 order denying the motion for reconsideration. The record indicates that Defendants
    6 served Plaintiffs with notice that they were requesting entry of final judgment and that
    7 Plaintiffs did not respond to the notice or request a hearing at that time. [RP 627, No.
    8 3] The record further indicates that Plaintiffs did not request a hearing on the motion
    9 for reconsideration. [RP 705-06] As discussed above, this case involves Plaintiffs’
    10 assertion of title to certain properties. The record proper indicates that all of the issues
    11 with regard to Plaintiffs’ assertion of title to and interest in the properties have been
    12 previously litigated in district court and they have been decided against Plaintiffs by
    13 this Court on appeal. The order bifurcating the pending counterclaims from the quiet
    14 title issues and the final judgment, which is certified pursuant to Rule 1-054(B)(1), as
    15 well as the order denying the motion for reconsideration, make this Court’s January
    16 24, 2008, opinion on Plaintiffs’ lack of title to the properties a final adjudication
    17 applicable to all Defendants in this case. We hold that since Plaintiffs have already
    18 had their day in district court and in this Court with regard to their alleged title to the
    19 properties, the law of the case doctrine applies and no further hearings were required
    10
    1 in order to finalize that as a matter of law Plaintiffs have no interest in and are not
    2 entitled to quiet title in the properties at issue in this case.
    3 CONCLUSION
    4        We affirm the district court’s final judgment and the order denying Plaintiffs’
    5 motion for reconsideration.
    6        IT IS SO ORDERED.
    7
    8                                            CYNTHIA A. FRY, Chief Judge
    9 WE CONCUR:
    10
    11 MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge
    12
    13 ROBERT E. ROBLES, Judge
    11