JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A,. v. Claybridge Homeowners Associationi, Inc. v. Deborah M. Walton , 19 N.E.3d 324 ( 2014 )


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  • FOR PUBLICATION                                          Oct 22 2014, 10:22 am
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                         ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
    J. DUSTIN SMITH                                 WHITNEY L. MOSBY
    Plunkett Cooney, P.C.                           KARL L. MULVANEY
    Indianapolis, Indiana                           Bingham Greenebaum Doll LLP
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A.,                      )
    )
    Appellant-Intervenor,                    )
    )
    vs.                               )       No. 29A02-1402-MF-65
    )
    CLAYBRIDGE HOMEOWNERS                           )
    ASSOCIATION, INC.,                              )
    )
    Appellee-Plaintiff.                      )
    )
    vs.                               )
    )
    DEBORAH M. WALTON, et al.,                      )
    )
    Appellees-Defendants.                    )
    APPEAL FROM THE HAMILTON SUPERIOR COURT
    The Honorable J. Richard Campbell, Judge
    Cause No. 29D04-0801-MF-31
    October 22, 2014
    OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION
    BROWN, Judge
    JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., (“JPMorgan”) appeals the trial court’s order of
    January 16, 2014, denying its December 19, 2013 “Combined Motion to Intervene, to Stay
    January 9, 2014 Sheriff Sale, to Vacate Order of Sale, to Vacate the May 27, 2010
    Summary Judgment and Decree of Foreclosure, and Request for Expedited Hearing on
    Motion.” Appellant’s Appendix at 1. JPMorgan raises three issues, which we consolidate
    and restate as whether the court erred in denying its motion. We reverse and remand.1
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    In October 2001, Claybridge Homeowners Association, Inc., (“Claybridge”) filed a
    complaint against Deborah Walton, who lived in a house located on certain real property
    (the “Real Estate”) in the Claybridge subdivision in Hamilton County.                    Walton v.
    Claybridge Homeowners Ass’n, Inc., No. 29A05-1006-MF-399, slip op. at 1 (Ind. Ct. App.
    Jan. 20, 2011) (the “2011 Opinion”), trans. denied. Deborah later filed a counterclaim
    against Claybridge. 
    Id. In 2002,
    Claybridge obtained an injunction against Deborah to
    prevent her from interfering with Claybridge’s performance of duties under the
    subdivision’s covenants.2 
    Id. On July
    15, 2004, the trial court entered an order awarding damages to Claybridge
    in the amount of $248 for damages, $64,600 for attorney fees, and the cost of suit in the
    action against Deborah.3 
    Id. The court
    declined to enter a final judgment because
    1
    We issue a decision today in the related cause of Margaret Walton v. Claybridge Homeowners
    Ass’n, Inc., No. 29A04-1402-MF-87 (Ind. Ct. App. Oct. 22, 2014). As referenced below, there have been
    a number of previous appeals in the litigation involving the property at issue in this case.
    2
    This court affirmed the issuance of the injunction. 2011 Opinion at 1 n.2 (citing Walton v.
    Claybridge Homeowners Ass’n, No. 29A04-0207-CV-348 (Ind. Ct. App. July 15, 2003), trans. denied).
    3
    This court affirmed the attorney fees award. 2011 Opinion at 1 n.3 (citing Walton v. Claybridge
    Homeowners Ass’n, 
    825 N.E.2d 818
    , 826 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005)).
    2
    Deborah’s counterclaim was pending. 
    Id. On December
    4, 2006, the court entered
    judgment in favor of Claybridge on Deborah’s counterclaim.4 
    Id. On January
    16, 2007, the trial court entered an order (the “January 2007 Order”)
    entitled “Order Vacating Hearing on Additional Attorneys Fees and Certification of Final
    Judgment,” which stated as follows:
    Comes now the Court upon the Motion of Claybridge [] to vacate the
    hearing on its request for additional attorneys fees and to designated [sic] this
    matter as a final judgment.
    The Court, having considered said motion and being duly advised in
    the premises, now finds that such motion should be and hereby is
    GRANTED.
    IT IS, THEREFORE, ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED
    that the hearing set for January 17, 2007, is VACATED. This Order shall
    not affect the prior award of damages, trial court and appellate attorney fees,
    nor shall this Order prevent Claybridge [] from seeking additional collection
    costs in enforcing the prior award of attorney fees or pre and post judgment
    interest. This Court further certifies this matter as a final judgment pursuant
    to Ind. T.R. 58.
    Appellee’s Appendix at 70-71. This Order was not entered in the trial court’s judgment
    docket. 2011 Opinion at 3. At the time, the recorded deed reflecting the owner of the Real
    Estate was a quitclaim deed (the “2001 Quitclaim Deed”) dated June 27, 2001, and
    recorded with the Hamilton County Recorder on July 10, 2001, conveying the Real Estate
    to Deborah. A quitclaim deed (the “2007 Quitclaim Deed”) dated June 28, 2001, was
    recorded with the Hamilton County Recorder on April 12, 2007. Deborah conveyed the
    4
    This court affirmed that judgment. See 2011 Opinion at 1 n.4 (citing Walton v. Claybridge
    Homeowners Ass’n., No. 29A04-0701-CV-44 (Ind. Ct. App. Oct. 19, 2007), trans. denied). There was
    another appeal, between Deborah and her title insurer, also related to this litigation. 
    Id. at 1
    n.1 (citing
    Walton v. First Am. Title Ins. Co., 
    844 N.E.2d 143
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2006), trans. denied).
    3
    Real Estate by the 2007 Quitclaim Deed to herself and her mother Margaret as joint tenants
    with rights of survivorship.
    On October 30, 2007, Claybridge filed a Complaint to Foreclose Judicial Lien (the
    “Foreclosure Complaint”) alleging that the court’s July 15, 2004 order was a valid lien
    against the Real Estate and that it was entitled to enforce its terms. 
    Id. The Foreclosure
    Complaint named a number of defendants, including Margaret, Fifth Third Mortgage
    Company (“Fifth Third”), which had recorded a mortgage on the Real Estate on April 11,
    2006 (the “Fifth Third Mortgage”), and First Indiana Bank, N.A. (“First Indiana”), which
    had recorded a mortgage on the Real Estate on June 16, 2006 (the “First Indiana
    Mortgage”).5 
    Id. The Foreclosure
    Complaint alleged in part:
    9.      Margaret is named as a defendant in this proceeding to answer as to
    any interest which she may have in the Real Estate as a result of the
    [2007 Quitclaim Deed] dated June 28, 2001, and recorded on or about
    April 12, 2007, as Instrument No. 2007-020527 in the Office of
    Hamilton County, Indiana. The interest of Margaret, if any, is inferior
    and subordinate to that of Claybridge.
    10.     [Fifth Third] is named as a defendant to answer as to any interest it
    may claim in the Real Estate as the result of a Mortgage dated March
    22, 2006, and recorded April 11, 2006, by and between Deborah and
    American Fidelity Mortgage, Inc. which Mortgage [(the “Fifth Third
    Mortgage”)] was assigned to [Fifth Third] by way of an Assignment
    recorded on or about April 11, 2006, as Instrument No. 2006-19263.
    The interest of [Fifth Third], if any, is inferior and subordinate to that
    of Claybridge.
    Appellee’s Appendix at 2-3. Claybridge requested that its judgment be declared a valid
    lien against the Real Estate, a judgment of foreclosure of the lien, and an order directing
    the sale of the Real Estate.
    5
    The Foreclosure Complaint also named as defendants CitiBank (South Dakota), N.A., American
    Express Company, Affordable Home Renovations Inc., and Stewart Irwin, P.C.
    4
    Also on October 30, 2007, Claybridge filed a Lis Pendens Notice stating that it had
    filed a Foreclosure Complaint for foreclosure of a judicial lien in its favor which may result
    in a sale of the Real Estate. The Lis Pendens Notice, dated and file-stamped October 30,
    2007, in the record includes a handwritten notation on the second page stating “Lp 10 pg
    84.” Appellant’s Appendix at 79. The chronological case summary (the “CCS”) indicates
    Deborah and Margaret were each personally served with the Foreclosure Complaint and a
    summons on November 7, 2007.
    On November 13, 2007, Deborah and Margaret executed a promissory note in the
    amount of $473,000 in favor of Washington Mutual Bank, and the note was secured by a
    mortgage on the Real Estate, executed by Deborah and Margaret and recorded on
    November 27, 2007 (the “JPMorgan Mortgage”).6 JPMorgan, according to its December
    19, 2013 motion to intervene discussed below, is the successor in interest to Washington
    Mutual Bank and the holder of the JPMorgan Mortgage.
    Deborah and Margaret, by counsel, filed an Answer on May 8, 2009, in which they
    admitted that, on or about July 15, 2004, Deborah was the owner of the Real Estate, that
    on that date the court entered a judgment in favor of Claybridge and against Deborah, that
    the judgment was a valid lien against the Real Estate, and that Claybridge was the holder
    of the judgment.7 On September 18, 2009, Claybridge filed a motion for summary
    6
    JPMorgan attached to its motion to intervene a signed copy of a settlement statement in connection
    with the closing of the loan from Washington Mutual Bank on November 13, 2007. The settlement
    statement shows that the loan amount was $473,000 and that there was or would be a disbursement for the
    payoff of the Fifth Third Mortgage in the amount of $468,982.20.
    7
    The Answer stated that Deborah and Margaret were without sufficient information to admit or
    deny the allegation in paragraph 9 of the Foreclosure Complaint.
    5
    judgment and a motion for default judgment and decree of foreclosure. Fifth Third did not
    appear or respond to the Foreclosure Complaint, the trial court issued an order of default
    judgment against Fifth Third with a file-stamped date of September 30, 2009, and the CCS
    does not indicate Fifth Third appealed the default judgment.8 In January 2010, counsel for
    Deborah withdrew from the case and Deborah, pro se, subsequently moved to dismiss the
    Foreclosure Complaint on the basis that there was no valid, final judgment by which a
    judgment lien could have been established. 2011 Opinion at 1. The trial court, while
    agreeing that the July 15, 2004 order did not constitute a final judgment, nonetheless denied
    the motion to dismiss, noting the January 2007 Order. 
    Id. On May
    19, 2010, the court signed an order, which was file-stamped on May 27,
    2010, titled Summary Judgment Entry and Decree of Foreclosure in Favor of Claybridge
    (the “Foreclosure Decree”). The court entered summary judgment in favor of Claybridge
    and against Deborah, Margaret, and First Indiana, ordered a foreclosure sale of the Real
    Estate, and gave priority to Claybridge’s judgment lien over the First Indiana Mortgage.
    
    Id. at 2.
    The Foreclosure Decree ordered in part:
    1.      That [Claybridge] be, and it hereby is, granted an in rem judgment
    against Deborah M. Walton, Margaret J. Walton, and First Indiana
    Bank, in the principal sum of $64,848.00, plus statutory interest from
    July 15, 2004 to and including the date of the entry of summary
    judgment, plus advances for real estate taxes, assessments, insurance
    premiums and any necessary expenses to preserve and protect the
    Real Estate [] incurred to date of Sheriff’s sale and including court
    costs, together with continuing post judgment interest at the statutory
    rate, all without relief from valuation and appraisement laws.
    2.      That the [J]udgment [L]ien of [Claybridge] be, and hereby is,
    foreclosed as the first and prior lien and the equity of redemption of
    8
    The court also entered default judgment against CitiBank, American Express, Affordable Home
    Renovations, and Stewart Irwin, P.C.
    6
    the defendants, Deborah M. Walton, Margaret J. Walton and First
    Indiana Bank, and all persons claiming under and through said
    defendant(s) is hereby foreclosed on the [Real Estate].
    3.     The Real Estate shall be sold by the Sheriff of this County to satisfy
    the sums found to be due [Claybridge] as soon as said sale can be had
    under the laws of this jurisdiction governing the sale of foreclosed
    property . . . .
    Appellee’s Appendix at 84-85.
    Deborah appealed from the Foreclosure Decree and argued that there was no final
    judgment upon which a lien could have been based, that the January 2007 Order did not
    give rise to a lien that Claybridge was entitled to act upon, and that the trial court erred in
    ordering foreclosure of the lien, and this court affirmed. See 2011 Opinion at 2-6.
    Specifically, in our 2011 Opinion, we determined that “the trial court’s final judgment of
    January 16, 2007 [the January 2007 Order], which . . . unmistakably incorporated the
    previous monetary award against [Deborah], clearly was sufficient to permit the
    establishment of a judgment lien against [her] interest in any real property in Hamilton
    County that could be foreclosed as to [her], or any other party who had actual notice of the
    judgment against her.” 
    Id. at 4.
    In August 2013, Claybridge requested a sale of the Real
    Estate, and it was scheduled to be sold by the Hamilton County Sheriff on January 9, 2014.
    On December 19, 2013, JPMorgan filed a “Combined Motion to Intervene, to Stay
    January 9, 2014 Sheriff Sale, to Vacate Order of Sale, to Vacate the May 27, 2010
    Summary Judgment and Decree of Foreclosure, and Request for Expedited Hearing on
    Motion.” Appellant’s Appendix at 1. JPMorgan argued it was entitled to intervene in the
    action in order to protect its interest in the Real Estate, that it received an interest in the
    Real Estate via the JPMorgan Mortgage which was assigned to it by Washington Mutual
    7
    Bank, that Claybridge failed to name JPMorgan or Washington Mutual Bank as a
    defendant, and that JPMorgan was at risk of having its interest in the Real Estate impaired
    because of the Foreclosure Decree and the fact the Real Estate was scheduled to be sold at
    a sheriff’s sale. JPMorgan further argued that no other party adequately represented its
    interest and that its motion to intervene was timely because any delay in the filing of the
    motion was attributable to Claybridge’s failure to name it in the action. JPMorgan asserted
    that the January 2007 Order never became a lien against the Real Estate because Claybridge
    failed to index the judgment on the Hamilton County judgment docket, as shown by an
    April 20, 2011 title commitment obtained by Claybridge, 9 and that Claybridge’s Lis
    Pendens Notice was invalid because Claybridge never acquired a lien against third persons
    without actual knowledge and cannot rely on the notice to create an in rem interest in the
    Real Estate. JPMorgan also argued that Claybridge could only assert an interest in half of
    the Real Estate because as a joint tenant Deborah had only a one-half interest in the Real
    Estate, and the January 2007 Order obtained by Claybridge could become a lien only
    against Deborah’s one-half interest.
    9
    JPMorgan attached the April 20, 2011 title commitment to its motion identifying Claybridge as
    the proposed insured. Schedule A of the commitment stated that the land covered by the commitment was
    vested in Deborah and Margaret as joint tenants with rights of survivorship. Schedule B of the commitment
    listed requirements to be satisfied prior to the issuance of the policy and identified the judgments of
    Claybridge, Affordable Home Renovations, Fifth Third Bank, American Express, Stewart & Irwin, P.C.,
    and Citibank. With respect to Claybridge, paragraph X of Schedule B provided: “Satisfaction and release
    of record of Judgment in Cause No. 29D04-0801-MF-000031, in the Hamilton, Superior Court, rendered
    May 27, 2010, against Deborah M. Walton, in favor of Claybridge Homeowners Association, Inc., in the
    amount of $64,848.00 and costs.” Appellant’s Appendix at 42-43. Schedule B also identified a federal tax
    lien against Deborah in the original amount of $53,574.71 together with penalty and interest.
    JPMorgan’s motion also attached a title commitment dated September 12, 2007, identifying
    Washington Mutual Bank as the proposed insured, and the commitment does not specifically list as an
    exception any judgment lien by Claybridge against the Real Estate.
    8
    On December 27, 2013, Claybridge filed a response to JPMorgan’s motion to
    intervene. Claybridge argued that, according to the 2011 Opinion, although the January
    2007 Order was never indexed in the Hamilton County judgment docket, it constituted a
    judgment lien on the Real Estate that could be foreclosed as to Deborah and any other party
    who had notice of the January 2007 Order. Claybridge asserted that JPMorgan was not
    entitled to intervene in the action because it had notice of the January 2007 Order and the
    foreclosure action and its motion was not timely. Specifically, Claybridge argued that it
    filed the Lis Pendens Notice on October 30, 2007, that the Lis Pendens Notice took effect
    two weeks before the JPMorgan Mortgage came into existence, and that therefore
    JPMorgan and its predecessors in interest took the JPMorgan Mortgage with notice of the
    January 2007 Order and the foreclosure action and were thus bound by the Foreclosure
    Decree. Claybridge also claimed the January 2007 Order applied to the entirety of the Real
    Estate. JPMorgan filed a reply on January 2, 2014. On January 8, 2014, the court stayed
    the scheduled sheriff’s sale.
    On January 10, 2014, the court held a hearing on JPMorgan’s motion to intervene
    at which counsel for JPMorgan and Claybridge presented arguments.10 Counsel for
    JPMorgan argued in part that, “[u]nfortunately, for what ever reason, that 2007 lis pendens
    doesn’t show up on the public records,” that the 2011 title commitment obtained by
    Claybridge “does not reflect a lis pendens against the property,” and thus that JPMorgan
    “never had notice of the foreclosure action.” January 10, 2014 Transcript at 7. Counsel
    for Claybridge argued that the evidence showed the Lis Pendens Notice “was filed and
    10
    Deborah and Margaret were not present at the hearing.
    9
    recorded on the 30th day of October, 2007, at 4:00 p.m. And at the bottom right hand
    portion it says LP for lis pendens, 10, which would be lis pendens book 10, page 84. So
    the lis pendens was properly noted in the clerk’s office.” 
    Id. at 1
    5. Claybridge’s counsel
    argued that, “[a]s to . . . the 2011 title work[,] I would respectfully submit it’s not there
    because the Claybridge foreclosure action of it’s [sic] judicial lien had already been
    reduced to judgment [so] there is no reason to have lis pendens anymore because the
    judgment has already been entered.” 
    Id. Claybridge’s counsel
    further argued “[a]nd if we
    look at the title work that is attached to the plaintiff’s motion we’ll see on an exception
    ‘X’, which is under schedule B, . . . satisfaction and release of record of judgment in cause
    number 29D04-0801-MF,” that “if the judgment has already been entered then the
    complaint and lis pendens, I respectfully submit, are subsumed into the judgment,” and that
    “there is no reason why it should be listed.”11 
    Id. at 1
    5-16. Claybridge’s counsel also
    argued the Foreclosure Decree foreclosed the interest of Margaret, Margaret did not appeal,
    and thus there is no issue that the January 2007 Order did not apply to her interest in the
    Real Estate. The trial court asked if it was correct that there was “nothing in any of these
    exhibits or documents about the title search that was done by Washington Mutual,” and the
    parties agreed that was correct. 
    Id. at 30.
    The court stated that “I think it comes down to
    The April 20, 2011 title commitment provided, under Schedule B, that “[t]he following are the
    11
    requirements to be complied with prior to the issuance of said policy or policies,” and paragraph X provided:
    Satisfaction and release of record of Judgment in Cause No. 29D04-0801-MF-000031, in
    the Hamilton, Superior Court, rendered May 27, 2010, against Deborah M. Walton, in favor
    of Claybridge Homeowners Association, Inc., in the amount of $64,848.00 and costs.
    Appellant’s Appendix at 42-43.
    10
    the notice, the lis pendens notice, which I think should have been picked up by Washington
    Mutual before they wrote or accepted the mortgage.” 
    Id. On January
    16, 2014, the court entered an order denying JPMorgan’s December 19,
    2013 motion to intervene. The court found that on October 30, 2007, Claybridge filed a
    Lis Pendens Notice with the Hamilton County Clerk providing notice of the January 2007
    Order and pending foreclosure action, that on November 13, 2007, Deborah and Margaret
    refinanced the Fifth Third Mortgage on the Real Estate and executed a new mortgage to
    Washington Mutual Bank, and that JPMorgan is the holder of that mortgage. The court
    found that “JPMorgan had notice of this foreclosure action by virtue of the properly filed
    and valid Lis Pendens Notice.” Appellant’s Appendix at 96. The court found that
    JPMorgan’s request to intervene six years after the filing of the Lis Pendens Notice was
    not timely. The court denied JPMorgan’s request to intervene, ordered that JPMorgan took
    its interest in the Real Estate subject to the first lien of Claybridge, denied JPMorgan’s
    request to vacate the Foreclosure Decree, and found that Claybridge had a judgment lien
    on the entirety of the Real Estate. JPMorgan filed a notice of appeal from the court’s
    January 16, 2014 order denying its December 19, 2013 motion to intervene.12
    DISCUSSION
    The issue is whether the trial court erred in denying JPMorgan’s December 19, 2013
    to intervene. In its motion, JPMorgan argued it was entitled to intervene in the action under
    Ind. Trial Rule 24(A). A trial court is required, as a matter of right, to grant a party’s timely
    12
    On January 31, 2014, Margaret, pro se, filed a motion for relief from the Foreclosure Decree,
    which the court denied. Margaret, pro se, filed a notice of appeal from the denial of her motion for relief
    from judgment. We issue a separate decision with respect to Margaret’s appeal.
    11
    motion to intervene if the party shows (1) an interest in property which is the subject of the
    action, (2) that disposition of the action may practically impair that interest, and (3) that no
    existing party is adequately representing the moving party’s interest. Citimortgage, Inc. v.
    Barabas, 
    975 N.E.2d 805
    , 812 (Ind. 2012) (citing Ind. Trial Rule 24(A)(2)), reh’g denied.
    The trial court has discretion to determine whether a prospective intervenor has met its
    burden. 
    Id. Thus, we
    review the trial court’s ruling on a motion to intervene for abuse of
    discretion and assume that all facts alleged in the motion are true. 
    Id. Because the
    concept of timeliness is flexible and its application depends upon the
    facts of each case, its determination must rest within the sound discretion of the trial court.
    Herdrich Petroleum Corp. v. Radford, 
    773 N.E.2d 319
    , 325 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002) (citing
    Bryant v. Lake Cnty. Trust Co., 
    166 Ind. App. 92
    , 101, 
    334 N.E.2d 730
    , 735 (1975)), reh’g
    denied, trans. denied. However, the requirement of timeliness should not be employed as
    a tool to sanction would-be intervenors who are tardy in making their application. 
    Id. Rather, it
    is intended to insure that the original parties should not be prejudiced by an
    intervenor’s failure to apply sooner, and that the orderly processes of the court are
    preserved. 
    Id. JPMorgan contends
    the court erred in denying its motion to intervene and argues
    that it has an interest in the Real Estate, that the foreclosure action may impair its interest,
    and that no other party is adequately representing its interest. It asserts that its motion was
    timely and that the January 2007 Order was not properly recorded on the judgment docket
    and therefore did not provide it with notice of Claybridge’s interest. JPMorgan states that
    it “did not have actual notice of the foreclosure action until late 2013 when the [Real Estate]
    12
    was listed for sale.” Appellant’s Brief at 13. With respect to the October 30, 2007 Lis
    Pendens Notice, JPMorgan contends that the notice was defective and that “[t]here is no
    known case law to support the use of a lis pendens notice as a substitute for complying
    with statutory requisites to create a judgment lien.” 
    Id. at 1
    2. It also argues that “not only
    did Claybridge not have a valid lien against the [Real Estate] at the time the lis pendens
    was filed, the lis pendens notice itself was incorrect” because it “indicates that it is
    attempting to foreclose a judicial lien, but there was no judicial lien to foreclose at the time
    the lis pendens was filed” and that a third party checking the public records “would not
    discover a judicial lien in favor of Claybridge.” 
    Id. at 1
    2-13. JPMorgan further argues the
    court erred in determining Claybridge had a lien on the entirety of the Real Estate.
    Claybridge contends JPMorgan’s interest was adequately protected as Deborah
    attempted to use JPMorgan’s interest as a means of attacking Claybridge’s right to enforce
    the January 2007 Order, that Fifth Third had an interest in the Real Estate and adequately
    represented JPMorgan’s interest, and that the fact Fifth Third did not defend the action
    does not change the analysis. Claybridge further posits that the court properly found that
    JPMorgan’s motion to intervene was untimely. Claybridge argues there is nothing in the
    record to support JPMorgan’s assertion that it did not have actual notice of the foreclosure
    action until it was listed for sale, and that Claybridge has a valid judgment lien on the Real
    Estate, pointing to the 2011 Opinion, and arguing the 2011 Opinion is the law of the case.
    In addition, Claybridge contends that the Lis Pendens Notice was properly filed and
    provided notice of the foreclosure action to JPMorgan, and that if a lis pendens notice is
    properly filed, a subsequent purchaser will take the property subject to a judgment in the
    13
    pending claim. Claybridge argues that the October 30, 2007 Lis Pendens Notice met all of
    the requirements because it was based upon a suit to foreclose Claybridge’s lien, it was
    filed with the Hamilton County Clerk, and it set forth the necessary information including
    the nature of its interest as a judgment lien. It further argues that, because the Lis Pendens
    Notice was filed two weeks before the JPMorgan Mortgage came into existence on
    November 13, 2007, the notice provided constructive notice to JPMorgan and its
    predecessors in interest that Claybridge was seeking to foreclose its judgment lien on the
    Real Estate. Claybridge also states, “[i]f the Hamilton County Clerk had properly indexed
    and recorded the Judgment Lien, Claybridge would have had no obligation to file the Lis
    Pendens Notice,” that “[i]n that circumstance, JPMorgan would have had constructive
    notice of the foreclosure action from the commencement of the action itself as a matter of
    law,” and that “[t]he fact that Claybridge filed the Lis Pendens Notice as a protective
    measure does not change its effectiveness and – in fact – was necessary to provide
    constructive notice to third parties due to the clerk’s failure to enter and index the Judgment
    Lien.” Appellee’s Brief at 23. Its position is that JPMorgan had notice of the pending
    foreclosure action for over six years and its motion to intervene was untimely. With respect
    to JPMorgan’s argument that “the Judgment Lien can only be asserted as to Deborah’s
    alleged half ownership interest,” Claybridge argues that JPMorgan does not have standing
    to assert the claims of Margaret and that, even if it did, Margaret’s claims are untimely
    because her motion for relief was untimely under Trial Rule 60(B) and she did not assert a
    meritorious defense. 
    Id. at 25.
    14
    In its reply brief, JPMorgan notes that it is undisputed that Claybridge obtained “a
    valid personal judgment against Deborah” but that “due to the personal judgment not
    having been indexed, Claybridge did not obtain a valid lien or interest in the Real Estate as
    against third parties without actual notice, such as JPMorgan.” Appellant’s Reply Brief at
    4. It argues that “Claybridge equates having a personal judgment against Deborah [] with
    having an in rem interest in the real estate . . . .” 
    Id. And, it
    maintains that “the lis pendens
    doctrine allows a person with an in rem interest in property that is not otherwise recorded
    to give notice to third parties.” 
    Id. (citing Nat’l
    City Bank Ind. v. Shortridge, 
    689 N.E.2d 1248
    , 1252 (Ind. 1997), supplemented sub nom., 
    691 N.E.2d 1210
    (Ind. 1998)). JPMorgan
    further argues that, “[i]n order to gain an in rem interest in the [R]eal [E]state, Claybridge
    was required to ensure that the personal judgment was properly indexed on the judgment
    docket.” 
    Id. at 5.
    ANALYSIS
    We note that, with respect to the requirements of Ind. Trial Rule 24(A), JPMorgan
    has a security interest in the Real Estate under the JPMorgan Mortgage which may be
    impaired by the foreclosure action and any sale of the Real Estate. In addition, no existing
    party to the action adequately represents the interest of JPMorgan as Fifth Third is not a
    party to the action13 and JPMorgan as a mortgagee has a security interest under the
    JPMorgan Mortgage with respect to any interest of Deborah as well as Margaret as a
    mortgagor in the Real Estate. See Ind. Trial Rule 24(A); 
    Citimortgage, 975 N.E.2d at 812
    -
    13
    The settlement statement attached to the motion to intervene indicates that proceeds from the
    loan from Washington Mutual Bank disbursed on November 13, 2007, were used in part to pay off a loan
    from Fifth Third, presumably secured by the Fifth Third Mortgage. Further, the trial court issued an order
    of default judgment against Fifth Third file-stamped on September 30, 2009.
    15
    813 (holding Citimortgage had a property interest at stake under a mortgage instrument,
    that disposition of the foreclosure case would impair that interest, and that no current party
    was representing Citimortgage’s interest).
    We now turn to whether JPMorgan’s motion to intervene was timely. The trial court
    found that JPMorgan did not timely intervene, that it had notice of the foreclosure action
    “by virtue of the properly filed and valid Lis Pendens Notice,” and that JPMorgan “took
    its interest in the Real Estate subject to the first lien of Claybridge.” Appellant’s Appendix
    at 96-97.
    Indiana adheres to the doctrine of lis pendens, which literally means “pending suit.”
    Mid-W. Fed. Sav. Bank v. Kerlin, 
    672 N.E.2d 82
    , 86 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996) (citing 19 I.L.E.
    Lis Pendens § 1 (1959)), reh’g denied, trans. denied. At common law, the doctrine of lis
    pendens provided that a person who acquired an interest in land during the pendency of an
    action concerning the title thereof took the property subject to any judgment later rendered
    in the action. Clarkson v. Neff, 
    878 N.E.2d 240
    , 243 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007) (citing 
    Kerlin, 672 N.E.2d at 86
    ), trans. denied. Commencement of the action itself was deemed to
    provide notice to the purchaser of the land. 
    Id. “In the
    latter part of the nineteenth century,
    the legislature enacted lis pendens statutes that modified the common law rule.” 
    Id. “Briefly stated,
    the statutes require that a separate written notice of a pending suit be filed
    with the clerk of the circuit court of the county where the land is located in order for the
    action to affect the interests of any persons acquiring an interest in the land while the action
    was pending.” 
    Id. The purpose
    of lis pendens notice is to provide machinery whereby a person
    with an in rem claim to property which is not otherwise recorded or perfected
    16
    may put his claim upon the public records, so that third persons dealing with
    the defendant . . . will have constructive notice of it.
    
    Id. (quoting Curry
    v. Orwig, 
    429 N.E.2d 268
    , 272-273 (Ind. Ct. App. 1981) (citation
    omitted), reh’g denied).
    If a lis pendens notice is properly filed on the public records, a subsequent purchaser
    will take the property subject to a judgment in the pending claim. 
    Id. at 244
    (citing MDM
    Inv. v. City of Carmel, 
    740 N.E.2d 929
    , 934 n.3 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000)). To protect an
    interest in the property, the subsequent purchaser may either ensure that the grantor does
    not harm his rights or intervene in the action. 
    Id. Ind. Code
    § 32-30-11-3 provides in part:
    (a)    This section applies to a person who commences a suit:
    (1)    in any court of Indiana or in a district court of the United
    States sitting in Indiana;
    (2)    by complaint as plaintiff or by cross-complaint as
    defendant; and
    (3)    to enforce any lien upon, right to, or interest in any real
    estate upon any claim not founded upon:
    (A)    an instrument executed by the party
    having the legal title to the real estate, as
    appears from the proper records of the
    county, and recorded as required by law;
    or
    (B)    a judgment of record in the county in
    which the real estate is located, against the
    party having the legal title to the real
    estate, as appears from the proper records.
    (b)    The person shall file, with the clerk of the circuit court in each county
    where the real estate sought to be affected is located, a written notice
    containing:
    17
    (1)      the title of the court;
    (2)      the names of all the parties to the suit;
    (3)      a description of the real estate to be affected; and
    (4)      the nature of the lien, right, or interest sought to be
    enforced against the real estate.
    Claybridge claims the Lis Pendens Notice was effective to provide notice of the
    foreclosure action to JPMorgan. JPMorgan claims that the January 2007 Order was not
    properly recorded, the January 2007 Order was a valid personal judgment against Deborah
    but not an in rem interest in the Real Estate, and thus that the January 2007 Order and the
    Lis Pendens Notice were ineffective at providing constructive notice.
    In Curry v. Orwig, this court addressed the question of what constitutes “an interest
    in real estate” under the lis pendens 
    statute.14 429 N.E.2d at 272
    . Curry provided:
    The statute is intended to apply to in rem interests in real estate as
    stated in 4 W. Harvey and R. B. Townsend, Indiana Practice s 63.1 B at 340
    (1971):
    The purpose of lis pendens notice is to provide machinery
    whereby a person with an in rem claim to property which is not
    14
    According to Curry, at the time Ind. Code § 34-1-4-2 provided in relevant part:
    When ever any person shall have commenced a suit in any of the courts of this state, or in
    a district court of the United States, sitting in the state of Indiana, whether by complaint as
    plaintiff, or by cross-complaint as defendant, to enforce any lien upon, right to, or interest
    in, any real estate, upon any claim not founded upon an instrument executed by the party
    having the legal title to such real estate, as appears from the proper records of such county,
    and recorded as by law required; or not founded upon a judgment of record in the county
    wherein such real estate is situated, against the party having the legal title to such real
    estate, as appears from such proper records, it shall be the duty of such person to file with
    the clerk of the circuit court in each county where the real estate sought to be affected is
    situated, a written notice containing the title of the court, the names of all the parties to
    such suit, a description of the real estate to be affected, and the nature of the lien, right, or
    interest sought to be enforced against the same . . . .
    
    Curry, 429 N.E.2d at 271
    .
    18
    otherwise recorded or perfected may put his claim upon the
    public records, so that third persons dealing with the defendant
    . . . will have constructive notice of it. []
    See generally, 54 C.J.S. Lis Pendens s 23 (1948).
    The most frequent examples, and the clearest examples, of a proper
    lis pendens notice occur in situations where the plaintiff is asserting a claim
    to the title of real estate under an unrecorded deed or attempting to foreclose
    an unrecorded mortgage. E.g. Fountain Trust Co., Rec. v. Rinker, (1932) 
    98 Ind. App. 249
    , 
    182 N.E. 709
    ; Pennington v. Martin, (1897) 
    146 Ind. 635
    , 
    45 N.E. 1111
    .
    The opposite end of the spectrum is reached when a plaintiff files a lis
    pendens notice while asserting a personal claim against a defendant. For
    example, other courts have been faced with cases where a party alleging
    breach of contract for services involving realty has filed a lis pendens notice
    against the property and held that the claim is personal against the defaulting
    party until a judgment lien is entered. Rehnberg v. Minnesota Homes, (1952)
    
    236 Minn. 230
    , 
    52 N.W.2d 454
    .
    
    Id. at 272-273.
    The court in Curry found that the case before it did not merely involve personal
    rights because, by conveying easement rights to purchasers of lots, the Currys would
    actually be conveying interests in the original easement that would conflict with those
    rights previously granted to Orwigs. See Trotter v. Ind. Waste Sys., Inc., 
    632 N.E.2d 1159
    ,
    1163 (Ind. Ct. App. 1994) (discussing Curry), reh’g denied. The Curry court stated that
    the only way in which prospective purchasers could be put on notice of the Orwigs’ rights
    was by the filing of a lis pendens notice. See 
    id. In Trotter,
    this court again addressed when a party had a sufficient interest in real
    estate pursuant to the lis pendens statute that would justify the filing of a notice under that
    statute. See 
    id. at 1162-1163.
    After discussing and reviewing the examples discussed in
    Curry, the court held:
    19
    The case before us involves a claim to the title of real estate under a
    contract for the real estate’s purchase. Such a claim is similar to the claim of
    an in rem interest in property through either an unrecorded deed or an
    unrecorded mortgage. 
    Curry, supra
    . Indiana Waste’s claim to the land’s title
    through a contract for its sale is the kind of interest that requires filing a lis
    pendens notice under the statute to protect third parties.
    
    Id. at 1
    163.
    “The doctrine of lis pendens may not be predicated on an action or suit seeking
    merely to recover a personal or money judgment unless and until a valid judgment has been
    secured and made a lien against the property.” 
    Shortridge, 689 N.E.2d at 1252
    (citing 54
    C.J.S. Lis Pendens § 11, at 399 (1987) (footnotes omitted)). “Even cases involving a
    contract for services on the realty in question have been found to be personal and improper
    for lis pendens notice, until a judgment lien is entered.” 
    Id. at 1
    252-1553 (citing 
    Curry, 429 N.E.2d at 273
    (citing Rehnberg, 
    52 N.W.2d 454
    )).
    In this case, we acknowledge that the Lis Pendens Notice was filed on October 30,
    2007, prior to the JPMorgan Mortgage, which was dated November 13, 2007, and recorded
    November 27, 2007. In our 2011 Opinion, we held:
    It is undisputed that here, the trial court’s final judgment of January
    16, 2007, was never entered in the Hamilton County judgment docket.
    *****
    Here, the trial court’s final judgment of January 16, 2007, which as
    we noted unmistakably incorporated the previous monetary award against
    [Deborah], clearly was sufficient to permit the establishment of a judgment
    lien against [Deborah’s] interest in any real property in Hamilton County
    that could be foreclosed as to [Deborah], or any other party who had actual
    notice of the judgment against her.
    2011 Opinion at 3-4 (emphasis added). Thus, while the January 2007 Order was sufficient
    to permit the establishment of a judgment lien against Deborah which could be foreclosed
    20
    as to her interest in the Real Estate, we noted the January 2007 Order was not entered in
    the judgment docket, and as such it was insufficient to permit the establishment of a
    judgment lien which could be foreclosed as to a party who did not have actual notice of the
    January 2007 Order. 
    Id. at 4
    (noting that “the failure to properly record a judgment does
    not defeat the existence of a judgment lien upon a judgment debtor’s property, at least as
    to the judgment debtor and any parties who have actual notice of an outstanding
    judgment”) (emphasis added).
    Claybridge’s claim and judgment against Deborah for attorney fees and damages
    related to the removal of a survey monument.15 Claybridge is not asserting a claim to the
    title of the Real Estate under an unrecorded deed or an unrecorded mortgage like the
    examples noted in Harvey and Townsend, easement rights such as in Curry, an unrecorded
    contract for the purchase of the Real Estate like in Trotter, or a similar interest in the Real
    Estate. Rather, the January 2007 Order in favor of Claybridge and against Deborah is
    personal as to Deborah. In terms of the spectrum mentioned in Harvey and Townsend, as
    noted in Curry and Trotter, Claybridge’s claim under the January 2007 Order is nearer to
    the end of the spectrum of a personal claim against a defendant than that of a claim to title
    of real estate. See 
    Curry, 429 N.E.2d at 273
    ; 
    Trotter, 632 N.E.2d at 1163
    .
    In short, as noted in Curry and Trotter, the lis pendens statute is intended to apply
    to in rem interests in real estate, and any interest Claybridge may have had by virtue of the
    January 2007 Order did not constitute such an interest. JPMorgan did not have actual
    15
    According to the 2011 Opinion, the trial court entered an order “awarding Claybridge $64,600
    in attorney fees associated with obtaining the injunction and defending it on appeal, and $248 in damages
    associated with [Deborah’s] removal of a survey monument.” 2011 Opinion at 1.
    21
    notice of the January 2007 Order as it was not entered in the Hamilton County judgment
    docket, and the Lis Pendens Notice in this case was ineffective for the purpose of providing
    notice to JPMorgan that its security interest in the Real Estate under the JPMorgan
    Mortgage may have been subject to or impaired by the January 2007 Order.
    Based upon the record and under the circumstances, and keeping in mind that the
    timeliness requirement should not be employed as a tool to sanction prospective
    intervenors but to insure the original parties are not prejudiced by an intervenor’s failure
    to apply sooner, we conclude that the JPMorgan as the prospective intervenor met its
    burden under Trial Rule 24(A) and that its motion was not untimely. Accordingly, we
    reverse the trial court’s denial of JPMorgan’s motion to intervene and remand for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.16
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the trial court’s January 16, 2014 order
    denying JPMorgan’s motion to intervene and remand for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion.
    Reversed and remanded.
    BARNES, J., and BRADFORD, J., concur.
    16
    Both Deborah and Margaret are identified as mortgagors in the JPMorgan Mortgage. We do not
    address whether Margaret took her interest in the Real Estate, if any, subject to the January 2007 Judgment,
    which, as noted in the 2011 Opinion and above, turns on whether Margaret had actual notice of the January
    2007 Judgment at the time of the 2007 Quitclaim Deed.
    22