Peters v. Great Western Bank, Inc. , 2015 S.D. LEXIS 5 ( 2015 )


Menu:
  • #27145-a-DG
    
    2015 S.D. 4
    IN THE SUPREME COURT
    OF THE
    STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
    ****
    LAURA PETERS,                               Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.
    GREAT WESTERN BANK, INC.,                   Defendant and Appellee.
    ****
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
    THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
    PENNINGTON COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA
    ****
    THE HONORABLE ROBERT GUSINSKY
    Judge
    ****
    TODD A. SCHWEIGER
    Rapid City, South Dakota                    Attorney for plaintiff
    and appellant.
    MICHAEL V. WHEELER
    DeMersseman Jensen Tellinghuisen
    Stanton & Huffman, LLP
    Rapid City, South Dakota                    Attorneys for defendant and
    appellee.
    ****
    CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS ON
    JANUARY 12, 2015
    OPINION FILED 01/28/15
    #27145
    GILBERTSON, Chief Justice
    [¶1.]         Laura Peters appeals the circuit court’s denial of her motion to compel
    discovery on Great Western Bank (the Bank), as well as the court’s granting of
    summary judgment in favor of the Bank. She asserts that the Bank was required to
    join her as a defendant in two foreclosure actions and that additional time for
    discovery was necessary for her to answer the Bank’s motion for summary
    judgment. We affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [¶2.]         In March 2003, Peters obtained a default judgment against Barker &
    Little, Inc. (BLI)—a South Dakota corporation. 1 BLI was a general partner in
    Barker & Little Limited Partnership III (BLLP). Doug Hamilton owned or operated
    BLI and BLLP, as well as a number of other entities including Barker & Little
    Manufactured Homes, Inc. (BLMHI). BLI was the operating entity for the
    management of rental properties, including property titled to BLLP. The Bank
    extended a line of credit to BLI secured, in part, by mobile homes and rent-to-own
    contracts owned by BLMHI.
    [¶3.]         In 2008, the Bank initiated foreclosure proceedings against BLLP and
    BLMHI. In its action against BLLP, the Bank sought to foreclose on a real estate
    mortgage; against BLMHI, the Bank sought to recover the mobile homes and rent-
    to-own contracts used as collateral on the line of credit extended to BLI. Because of
    BLI’s relationship with both entities, the Bank named BLI as a codefendant in each
    1.      We affirmed the circuit court’s refusal to set aside this judgment in Peters v.
    Barker & Little, Inc., 
    2009 S.D. 82
    , 
    772 N.W.2d 657
    .
    -1-
    #27145
    action. The Bank and Hamilton privately negotiated a settlement agreement.
    Pursuant to that agreement, the various Hamilton-owned entities transferred real
    and personal property to the Bank. The Bank did not join Peters as a defendant or
    otherwise notify her of these foreclosure actions.
    [¶4.]        Upon learning of the Bank’s foreclosure actions involving BLI, Peters
    initiated this action against the Bank, alleging fraud, conversion, deceit, and unjust
    enrichment. Peters made a motion to compel discovery, and the Bank responded
    with a motion for summary judgment. The circuit court granted the Bank’s motion
    and denied Peters’s motion as moot. Peters appeals, raising two issues:
    1.     Whether the Bank was required to join Peters as a defendant in
    its foreclosure actions against BLI, BLLP, and BLMHI.
    2.     Whether the circuit court should have granted Peters additional
    time for discovery prior to ruling on the Bank’s motion for
    summary judgment.
    Standard of Review
    [¶5.]        Our standard of review on summary judgment is as follows:
    In reviewing a grant or a denial of summary judgment under
    SDCL 15-6-56(c), we must determine whether the moving party
    demonstrated the absence of any genuine issue of material fact
    and showed entitlement to judgment on the merits as a matter
    of law. The evidence must be viewed most favorably to the
    nonmoving party and reasonable doubts should be resolved
    against the moving party. The nonmoving party, however, must
    present specific facts showing that a genuine, material issue for
    trial exists. Our task on appeal is to determine only whether a
    genuine issue of material fact exists and whether the law was
    correctly applied. If there exists any basis which supports the
    ruling of the trial court, affirmance of a summary judgment is
    proper.
    Saathoff v. Kuhlman, 
    2009 S.D. 17
    , ¶ 11, 
    763 N.W.2d 800
    , 804 (quoting Pellegrino v.
    Loen, 
    2007 S.D. 129
    , ¶ 13, 
    743 N.W.2d 140
    , 143). We review “[a] circuit court’s
    -2-
    #27145
    refusal to grant additional discovery prior to awarding summary judgment . . . for
    abuse of discretion.” Stern Oil Co. v. Border States Paving, Inc., 
    2014 S.D. 28
    , ¶ 24,
    
    848 N.W.2d 273
    , 281.
    Analysis and Decision
    [¶6.]        Peters alleges the Bank committed conversion and was unjustly
    enriched by obtaining property to which she had a superior claim. She also alleges
    that the Bank committed fraud and deceit by failing to name her as a defendant.
    However, the only persons that a foreclosure plaintiff must join as a defendant,
    under South Dakota law, are those who have “an interest in, or lien on, the
    mortgaged property as of the date of filing the action[.]” SDCL 21-49-15. Thus, all
    of Peters’s causes of action are premised on the assertion that Peters had a claim to
    the foreclosure property; consequently, all of Peters’s causes of action turn on the
    same question: Whether Peters had an interest in, or lien on, property included in
    the Bank’s foreclosure actions against BLI, BLLP, and BLMHI as of the date the
    Bank filed those actions.
    [¶7.]        Peters argues that her status as a judgment creditor of BLI gave her
    an “interest”—within the meaning of SDCL 21-49-15—in the foreclosure property
    because that property could have been sold to satisfy her judgment. As noted above,
    South Dakota law requires “[a]ll persons having an interest in, or lien on, the
    mortgaged property as of the date of filing the action . . . be named as defendants in
    the action.” SDCL 21-49-15. We have not previously construed the meaning of
    “interest” as it appears in SDCL 21-49-15. Therefore we apply our usual approach
    to statutory construction.
    -3-
    #27145
    The purpose of statutory construction is to discover the true
    intention of the law, which is to be ascertained primarily from
    the language expressed in the statute. The intent of a statute is
    determined from what the Legislature said, rather than what
    the courts think it should have said, and the court must confine
    itself to the language used. Words and phrases in a statute
    must be given their plain meaning and effect.
    City of Rapid City v. Estes, 
    2011 S.D. 75
    , ¶ 12, 
    805 N.W.2d 714
    , 718 (quoting State
    ex rel. Dep’t of Transp. v. Clark, 
    2011 S.D. 20
    , ¶ 5, 
    798 N.W.2d 160
    , 162). Further,
    the Legislature has commanded that “[w]ords used [in the South Dakota Codified
    Laws] are to be understood in their ordinary sense[.]” SDCL 2-14-1.
    [¶8.]        The meaning of the word “interest,” as used in SDCL 21-49-15, is more
    restrictive than Peters suggests. Dictionaries seem to offer two types of definitions
    for the word “interest.” The first definition broadly describes “[t]he object of any
    human desire”; the second, “all or part of a legal or equitable claim to or right in
    property[.]” Black’s Law Dictionary 934 (10th ed. 2014). There is no doubt that
    Peters desired access to the foreclosure property in order to satisfy her judgment.
    However, it is difficult to imagine that an actual lienholder would have had any less
    of a desire to obtain that property. Thus, a definition of “interest” broad enough to
    include a general judgment creditor would also include lienholders. However, the
    inclusion of the phrase “or lien on” in SDCL 21-49-15 clearly indicates that two sets
    of persons must be joined as defendants: (1) those with an interest in the mortgaged
    property; and (2) those with a lien on the mortgaged property. If the second set is
    defined as a subset of the first—i.e., if the word “interests” is defined in such a way
    that includes lienholders—then the phrase “or lien on” is redundant. Because “[w]e
    assume that the Legislature intended that no part of its statutory scheme be
    -4-
    #27145
    rendered mere surplusage[,]” Faircloth v. Raven Indus., Inc., 
    2000 S.D. 158
    , ¶ 6, 
    620 N.W.2d 198
    , 201, we reject Peters’s broad interpretation of the word “interest.” We
    think it clear that the Legislature intended SDCL 21-49-15 to require the joining of
    persons who have a legal claim to, or lien on, the property subject to foreclosure
    itself, rather than merely a money judgment that might be satisfied by the sale of
    that property.
    [¶9.]         Peters does not have an interest in the foreclosure property. Peters
    has not asserted any legal claim to, or right in, the property itself—e.g., she does
    not purport to hold any present or future estate in, or option to purchase, the
    foreclosure property. Instead, Peters simply obtained a default money judgment
    against BLI entitling her to the payment of $24,230.90. Such a judgment does not,
    in itself, give Peters a right to BLI’s property. We decided a similar issue well over
    a century ago in Yetzer v. Young, 
    3 S.D. 263
    , 
    52 N.W. 1054
     (1892). In that case, a
    judgment creditor sought to intervene in a foreclosure action brought by a third
    party against her judgment debtor. At the time, section 4886 of the Dakota
    Compiled Laws permitted a person to intervene in a lawsuit if that person had “an
    interest in the matter in litigation[.]” Id. at 267, 52 N.W. at 1055. 2 The plaintiff
    asserted “that as a simple judgment creditor she had such ‘an interest in the matter
    in litigation’ as entitled her to intervene[.]” Id. She argued that “the object of [the
    third party’s] action was to get possession of the goods, to appropriate them to the
    payment of their alleged mortgage, and thus reduce and divert the fund out of
    which she might otherwise collect her judgment, and that she was directly
    2.      The current intervention statutes are found at SDCL 15-6-24(a) to -24(c).
    -5-
    #27145
    interested in preventing this.” Id. We rejected the plaintiff’s argument, noting that
    “[t]he subject-matter of the litigation was [the third party’s] right to take the goods
    under their mortgage. It went only to the possession. In this question [plaintiff]
    could not be concerned, unless she had some interest in the goods that might be
    affected by such change of possession.” Id. Here, like in Yetzer, Peters’s interest in
    the foreclosure property is not a direct claim of right to the property itself; rather,
    the property merely constitutes a “fund out of which she might otherwise collect her
    judgment[.]” Id. Similarly, we hold that Peters did not have an interest in the
    foreclosure property at issue here within the meaning of SDCL 21-49-15.
    [¶10.]       Yetzer notwithstanding, Peters argues that our decision in First Nat’l
    Bank of Eden v. Meyer, 
    476 N.W.2d 267
     (S.D. 1991), supports the proposition that
    she had a constitutionally and statutorily protected right to notice in these
    foreclosure actions. In Meyer, a bank “sought to quiet title to real property it
    acquired as a result of a tax deed proceeding.” 476 N.W.2d at 268. At the time,
    applicable South Dakota law did not entitle lienholders to notice of intent to take a
    tax deed. Id. at 270. Based on this, the bank moved for summary judgment. The
    circuit court denied the motion and “held that South Dakota’s statutory scheme for
    taking tax deeds was constitutionally deficient because it failed to provide notice to
    judgment lienholders.” Id. at 269. We affirmed the circuit court and explicitly held
    “that known or readily ascertainable judgment lienholders are entitled to the same
    notice as a mortgagee.” Id. at 270 (emphasis added). This holding was based on the
    United States Supreme Court’s decision in Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust
    Co., which states: “An elementary and fundamental requirement of due process in
    -6-
    #27145
    any proceeding which is to be accorded finality is notice reasonably calculated,
    under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the
    action and afford them an opportunity to present their objections.” 
    339 U.S. 306
    ,
    314, 
    70 S. Ct. 652
    , 657, 
    94 L. Ed. 865
     (1950) (emphasis added). As we discussed
    above, while Peters has a property interest in her money judgment against BLI, she
    did not have an interest in the foreclosure property itself. Thus, although the
    settlement agreement may have reduced the fund out of which Peters’s judgment
    might have been paid, it did nothing to deprive Peters of her actual property
    interest.
    [¶11.]       Because Peters did not have an interest in the foreclosure property,
    SDCL 21-49-15 would have required the Bank to join her as a defendant only if she
    had a lien on that property. As we said in Yetzer:
    A general creditor, either contract or judgment, may not [attack
    a conveyance as fraudulent]. He must first become interested in
    the particular property he desires to reach, by attaching his
    claim to it. In case of real estate, this may be done in this state
    by docketing a judgment in the proper county, or, in case of
    personal property, by levying an execution or attachment.
    3 S.D. at 268, 52 N.W. at 1055. The procedure for acquiring a judgment lien on real
    property is essentially the same today as it was in 1892.
    When a judgment has been docketed with a clerk of the circuit
    court, it shall be a lien on all the real property, except the
    homestead, in the county where the same is so docketed, of
    every person against whom any such judgment shall be
    rendered, . . . and no judgment shall become a lien on real
    property as herein provided unless it be docketed in the county
    where the land is situated.
    SDCL 15-16-7. Because SDCL 15-16-5 requires the docketing of a money judgment
    with the clerk of the circuit court issuing the judgment, such a lien is automatically
    -7-
    #27145
    created for any of the judgment debtor’s real property located in the county in which
    the judgment was obtained. As we indicated in Yetzer, however, such is not the case
    in regard to personal property. 3 S.D. at 268, 52 N.W. at 1055. This remains true
    today.
    When the officer has made a levy upon any personal property
    pursuant to the provisions of this code, he shall have a lien
    thereon for all purposes essential to carrying out the execution,
    but no execution shall constitute any lien upon personal
    property until an actual levy upon such property has been made
    thereunder.
    SDCL 15-18-30. Therefore we must determine whether there is any genuine issue
    of material fact as to whether any of the foreclosure property was: (1) real property
    owned by BLI and located in Pennington County—the county in which Peters
    obtained her default judgment 3—or (2) personal property of BLI that Peters levied.
    [¶12.]         There does not appear to be any genuine dispute as to whether or not
    BLI held title to any real property. In its motion for summary judgment and
    accompanying submissions, the Bank plainly stated that BLI did not own any real
    estate involved in the foreclosure actions. Peters seems to agree with this
    statement, stating in her reply that she did “not dispute that [the] real estate
    [involved in the foreclosure actions] was titled to Barker & Little Limited
    Partnership III.” Additionally, the following colloquy occurred at the summary
    judgment hearing:
    3.       Peters does not assert that she docketed her money judgment against BLI in
    any other county. Therefore she could not have had a lien against real
    property outside of Pennington County, and any information regarding BLI-
    owned real estate outside of Pennington County is irrelevant to this case.
    -8-
    #27145
    [The Court]: Now, it appears that there’s no dispute that the
    property that was foreclosed on by the bank was owned only by
    Barker & Little Limited Partnership III, but you are disputing
    that, though. I mean, it seems to me that in your response to
    the statement of undisputed material facts you are agreeing that
    the only property involved was titled to the limited partnership,
    not Barker & Little, Inc., the parent company, so to speak.
    Help me out here.
    [Peters’s Attorney]: Your Honor, I agree that after the door
    opened on these private negotiations that resolved these two
    foreclosure actions there were two properties that were
    transferred. One was the property of Barker & Little Limited
    Partnership III that was subject to foreclosure. Another
    property was transferred that was not subject to foreclosure.
    ....
    [The Court]: Was the property that was not subject to
    foreclosure owned by Barker & Little, Inc.?
    [Peters’s Attorney]: No . . . .
    [¶13.]       Despite these admissions, Peters maintains, in her briefs to this Court,
    “that what property was transferred in the foreclosures remain[s] unknown, and
    that Peters therefore dispute[s] Bank’s claim that no [BLI] real property had been
    transferred.” We have said that “proof of a mere possibility is never sufficient to
    establish a fact.” Estate of Elliott ex rel. Elliott v. A&B Welding Supply Co., 
    1999 S.D. 57
    , ¶ 16, 
    594 N.W.2d 707
    , 710. Instead, “[w]hen challenging a summary
    judgment, the nonmoving party must substantiate his allegations with sufficient
    probative evidence that would permit a finding in his favor on more than mere
    speculation, conjecture, or fantasy.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Himrich v. Carpenter, 
    1997 S.D. 116
    , ¶ 18, 
    569 N.W.2d 568
    , 573) (internal quotation marks omitted). Peters’s
    speculation that there might have been BLI-owned real estate transferred to the
    Bank, coupled with her admission that the only real estate known—or hinted—to
    -9-
    #27145
    have been transferred was not titled to BLI, is not a presentation of specific facts.
    Peters’s dispute, therefore, is not genuine.
    [¶14.]       Although Peters does not genuinely dispute that BLI did not hold title
    to the property transferred to the Bank in the settlement agreement, she claims
    that BLI still “owned” the property because BLI was the only general partner in
    BLLP. According to Peters, BLI “had a 100% partnership interest in the shell
    entity, [BLLP], to which involved real estate was titled. Moreover, [BLI] and
    [BLLP] were both shell entities and mere alter-egos of Douglas Hamilton, so that
    those corporate and partnership veils can be pierced, if necessary, in the instant
    action.” We do not address Peters’s assertion that she could pierce “those corporate
    and partnership veils.” However, even if Peters established that BLLP should be
    held liable for the actions of its general partner, such would only extend liability for
    Peters’s money judgment against BLI to BLLP; the title status of partnership
    property would not be directly affected. SDCL 48-7A-203 (“Property acquired by a
    partnership is property of the partnership and not of the partners individually.”);
    SDCL 48-7A-501 (“A partner is not a co-owner of partnership property and has no
    interest in partnership property which can be transferred, either voluntarily or
    involuntarily.”). More importantly, SDCL 21-49-15 applies only to “persons having
    an interest in, or lien on, the mortgaged property as of the date of filing the
    action . . . .” (Emphasis added.) Even if Peters had a theory for imputing liability to
    BLLR that would succeed at trial, she has offered no authority to support the
    retroactive imposition of a lien in contravention of the clear timing requirements of
    SDCL 21-49-15. Therefore there is no genuine issue of material fact that Peters did
    -10-
    #27145
    not have a lien on real property transferred to the Bank in the settlement
    agreement on the date the Bank filed the foreclosure actions.
    [¶15.]       Finally, we must determine whether there is a genuine issue of
    material fact as to whether Peters had an established lien on any personal property
    involved in the settlement agreement. Peters’s attorney argued at the summary
    judgment hearing that “Ms. Peters could have, if she had notice of this action,
    obtained a charging order so that any property that was left over after the
    satisfaction of the bank . . . could have been claimed . . . due to her judgment.” As
    noted above, a general partner does not “own” partnership property. The only
    property that could have been the subject of a charging order would have been BLI’s
    transferrable interest in BLLP, SDCL 48-7A-504—i.e., BLI’s share of the profits
    and losses of the partnership and BLI’s right to receive distributions, SDCL 48-7A-
    502. Once again, however, Peters does not claim to have ever previously
    undertaken the steps required to obtain a charging order or lien against any
    personal property. Therefore BLLP’s liability for Peters’s money judgment against
    BLI, even if established in the future, is immaterial to the question of whether or
    not Peters had a lien on personal property transferred to the Bank in the settlement
    agreement on the date the Bank filed the foreclosure actions.
    [¶16.]       Nevertheless, Peters asserts that a full accounting of all personal
    property involved in the settlement agreement is necessary in order to determine
    whether or not any of BLI’s personal property was transferred to another party.
    Peters argues that “since Bank’s entire case, and the trial court’s grant of summary
    judgment, rest upon unproven assertions about what property was not involved in
    -11-
    #27145
    the foreclosures, discovery of the totality of what property was involved should have
    been permitted, prior to any summary judgment.” Peters misperceives the basis of
    the circuit court’s ruling. As we noted above, a judgment lien arises on personal
    property after “an actual levy upon such property has been made[.]” SDCL 15-18-
    30. Whether or not personal property was involved in the settlement agreement is
    immaterial unless Peters can show that she had an established lien on any personal
    property. In her statement regarding undisputed material facts, Peters plainly
    states, “Certainly no property of any kinds [sic] was successfully levied on. The
    return of execution does not ‘specifically note’ that no personal property was levied
    on, there is merely a blank space in which the Sheriff did not positively indicate
    levy on personal property.” The Bank does not have the burden of proving Peters
    failed to levy; rather, Peters has the burden of proving that she levied on personal
    property. Because Peters did not provide any evidence that she had levied any
    personal property—and, in fact, admitted the contrary—a full accounting of the
    personal property involved in the settlement agreement is necessarily immaterial to
    her action. Therefore there is no genuine issue of material fact on this issue.
    [¶17.]       Finally, Peters asserts the circuit court erred in denying her motion to
    compel discovery prior to granting the Bank’s motion for summary judgment.
    “SDCL 15-6-56(f) . . . provides that a party opposing a motion for summary
    judgment is entitled to conduct discovery when necessary to oppose the motion.
    Under that rule, the facts sought through discovery must be ‘essential’ to opposing
    summary judgment . . . .” Dakota Indus., Inc. v. Cabela’s.Com, Inc., 
    2009 S.D. 39
    , ¶
    6, 
    766 N.W.2d 510
    , 512. Such facts are only essential if
    -12-
    #27145
    the Rule 56(f) affidavit . . . include[s] identification of “the
    probable facts not available and what steps have been taken to
    obtain” those facts, “how additional time will enable the
    nonmovant to rebut the movant’s allegations of no genuine issue
    of material fact,” and “why facts precluding summary judgment
    cannot be presented” at the time of the affidavit.
    Stern Oil Co., 
    2014 S.D. 28
    , ¶ 26, 848 N.W.2d at 281-82 (quoting Anderson v. Keller,
    
    2007 S.D. 89
    , ¶ 32, 
    739 N.W.2d 35
    , 43 (Zinter, J., concurring)). Even if Peters
    genuinely disputed whether BLI owned real property in Pennington County, such
    information would have been publicly available. Her “[m]ere speculation that there
    is some relevant evidence not yet discovered [does not] suffice” to extend the time
    for discovery. Id. ¶ 28, 848 N.W.2d at 282 (quoting 11 James W. Moore et al.,
    Moore’s Federal Practice § 56.102[2] (3d ed. 2013)). Further, Peters did not allege
    that she docketed her judgment in any other county. Finally, Peters did not allege
    that she took the necessary steps to create a lien or interest in the personal property
    of any of the Hamilton entities. Because Peters “did not articulate probable facts
    relevant to [the existence of a lien on BLI’s real or personal property] that could
    have been developed with additional discovery[,]” id., the circuit court did not abuse
    its discretion in denying Peters’s motion as moot.
    Conclusion
    [¶18.]       Peters does not have an interest in the foreclosure property at issue.
    Because there is no evidence that BLI owned real property located in Pennington
    County, that Peters docketed her judgment in any other county, or that Peters ever
    levied any personal property, Peters did not present any evidence to the circuit
    court that would prove the existence of a judgment lien against any property.
    Consequently, Peters did not have an interest in, or lien on, the foreclosure property
    -13-
    #27145
    on the date the Bank filed its foreclosure actions. Therefore there are no genuine
    issues of material fact, the Bank was entitled to judgment as a matter of law, and
    the circuit court did not abuse its discretion in denying Peters additional time for
    discovery. We affirm.
    [¶19.]       ZINTER, SEVERSON, WILBUR, Justices and KONENKAMP, Retired
    Justice, concur.
    [¶20.]       KERN, Justice, not having been a member of the Court at the time this
    action was assigned to the Court, did not participate.
    -14-