Ruth Dedeaux v. Coastal Developments Inc. ( 2019 )


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  •          IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2018-CA-00569-COA
    RUTH DEDEAUX                                                                   APPELLANT
    v.
    COASTAL DEVELOPMENTS INC.                                                        APPELLEE
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                            04/10/2018
    TRIAL JUDGE:                                 HON. CARTER O. BISE
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                   HARRISON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT,
    FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                      MICHAEL JOSEPH YENTZEN
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                       WILLIAM W. DREHER JR.
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                          CIVIL - REAL PROPERTY
    DISPOSITION:                                 AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND
    RENDERED IN PART - 09/03/2019
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE BARNES, C.J., TINDELL AND McCARTY, JJ.
    TINDELL, J., FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    The Harrison County Circuit Court, First Judicial District, awarded Ruth Dedeaux a
    judgment against Coastal Developments Inc. (Coastal) for $33,419.76 plus 8% annual
    interest and costs. After almost four years of accrued interest, Dedeaux’s judgment against
    Coastal amounted to $44,113.84. To satisfy the judgment, Dedeaux obtained a writ of
    execution directing the sheriff to conduct a sale of four parcels of Coastal’s land. Dedeaux
    purchased the four parcels at the sheriff’s sale for $20,000. She later sold three of the parcels
    to third parties for $76,500.
    ¶2.    Coastal filed a complaint to set aside the conveyances. The Harrison County
    Chancery Court, First Judicial District, found that Dedeaux’s winning bid of $20,000 was
    unconscionably low compared to the parcels’ fair market value. The chancellor therefore
    ordered Dedeaux to pay Coastal $32,386.16 as reimbursement for the overage amount she
    received in selling the three parcels for $76,500 and to convey the fourth unsold parcel back
    to Coastal. Dedeaux appeals the chancellor’s judgment on the grounds that (1) Coastal came
    before the chancellor with unclean hands; (2) the judgment was unsupported by Mississippi
    caselaw; (3) the judgment improperly awarded Coastal multiple inconsistent remedies; and
    (4) the judgment improperly punished Dedeaux.
    ¶3.    Upon review, we affirm the portion of the chancellor’s judgment ordering Dedeaux
    to convey the unsold parcel to Coastal and to reimburse Coastal for any surplus resulting
    from the sales contracts. We find, however, that the chancellor erred in calculating the
    reimbursement amount that Dedeaux owed Coastal. In determining the parcels’ fair market
    value, the chancellor relied only on the total sales price of $76,500 for the three parcels that
    Dedeaux sold to third parties. The chancellor’s valuation failed to take into account,
    however, the $9,458.63 in expenses that Dedeaux paid during the real-estate closings. After
    subtracting from $76,500 both Dedeaux’s $9,458.63 in real-estate expenses and her
    $44,113.84 prior judgment against Coastal, we find that her surplus only amounted to
    $22,927.53. We therefore reverse the portion of the chancellor’s judgment determining the
    reimbursement amount that Dedeaux owed Coastal and render a new monetary judgment in
    Coastal’s favor for $22,927.53.
    2
    FACTS
    ¶4.    On December 15, 2011, the circuit court awarded Dedeaux a judgment against Coastal
    for $33,419.76 plus 8% annual interest and costs. To satisfy the judgment, Dedeaux sought
    a sheriff’s sale of four parcels of real property owned by Coastal. As the highest bidder at
    the October 9, 2015 sheriff’s sale, Dedeaux obtained the four parcels for $20,000. Coastal
    claimed, however, that Dedeaux’s winning bid amount “was less than the fair market value
    of even any one of the four parcels sold, and by caselaw was so inadequate so as to shock the
    conscience of the court.”
    ¶5.    On October 23, 2015, Dedeaux conveyed one of the parcels to Lester Ray and
    Danielle Mae McKelvin (the McKelvins) by warranty deed. On the same day, the McKelvins
    entered into a purchase-money mortgage with Dedeaux for $55,196.03, as evidenced by a
    deed of trust executed to Dedeaux. Dedeaux conveyed a second parcel of land to Austin
    Alexander by warranty deed dated January 22, 2016, and a third parcel to John Neideffer by
    warranty deed dated March 16, 2016. The parties presented no evidence to show that
    Dedeaux ever sold the fourth parcel.
    ¶6.    Coastal filed a complaint against Dedeaux, the McKelvins, Alexander, and Neideffer
    to set aside the warranty deeds. According to Coastal’s complaint, the fact that the
    McKelvins entered into a purchase-money mortgage for more than twice the winning bid
    amount for all four of the parcels “clearly show[ed] the inadequacy of the original bid price
    and that . . . Dedeaux knew it was inadequate . . . .” Coastal also took issue with Dedeaux’s
    3
    failure to seek judicial confirmation of the sheriff’s sale before she conveyed three of the
    parcels to third parties. Coastal therefore asked the chancellor to perform an audit of the sale
    and to (1) set aside some or all of the deeds; (2) award Coastal any sales proceeds over and
    above Dedeaux’s judgment amount; or (3) declare that the judgment against Coastal had been
    satisfied.
    ¶7.    Dedeaux moved for summary judgment. The McKelvins, Alexander, and Neideffer
    also collectively filed a motion for summary judgment. Coastal responded and filed its own
    summary-judgment motion. Following a hearing, the chancellor determined that $10,694.08
    (or about four years of interest) should be added to the prior judgment the circuit court had
    awarded Dedeaux. With the accrued interest factored in, Dedeaux’s total judgment against
    Coastal now amounted to $44,113.84. The chancellor denied the parties’ various summary-
    judgment motions after finding that genuine issues of material fact remained due to the
    following: (1) no party had offered any coherent itemization of undisputed facts or time line
    of events; (2) the court had to engage in its own calculation as to the total amount Coastal
    owed Dedeaux; (3) the parties had failed to provide sales prices on the parcels conveyed to
    Alexander and Neideffer, which prevented a determination of the reasonableness of those
    sales; (4) a substantial dispute existed as to the fair market value of the properties at issue;
    (5) allegations existed as to whether the McKelvins, Alexander, and Neideffer were bona fide
    purchasers of the land for value without notice; and (6) no evidence had been provided as to
    Coastal’s location on the date of the sheriff’s sale.
    4
    ¶8.    On March 2, 2017, the chancellor entered a final judgment to dismiss the McKelvins,
    Alexander, and Neideffer from the litigation. The chancellor noted that Coastal had moved
    for the dismissal and that the parties had advised the court of their agreement to the dismissal.
    As a result, the chancellor dismissed with prejudice Coastal’s claims against the McKelvins,
    Alexander, and Neideffer, which included any claims related to the parcels conveyed to those
    parties. Coastal reserved all its claims against Dedeaux, which the chancellor heard on
    March 13, 2017.
    ¶9.    Following the March 13, 2017 hearing, the chancellor entered an order regarding
    Coastal’s remaining claims against Dedeaux. The chancellor found that the agreed judgment
    to dismiss the McKelvins, Alexander, Neideffer, and any claims to the parcels they had
    purchased from Dedeaux rendered moot the issue of whether the foreclosure sale should be
    set aside. The chancellor further found, however, that issues remained as to the parcels’ fair
    market value, whether the judgment against Coastal had been satisfied, and whether Dedeaux
    had realized a profit beyond what she was owed.
    ¶10.   Dedeaux submitted to the chancellor the affidavit of Michael Madden, a real-estate
    broker and investor. Madden’s affidavit discussed the 5.3-acre parcel of land that Dedeaux
    had sold to the McKelvins. According to Madden, in August or September 2015, he had
    clients interested in purchasing the parcel for $18,000 to $22,000. The chancellor found,
    however, that while Madden provided the amount his clients would have been willing to pay
    for the 5.3-acre parcel, he never provided an estimate as to the parcel’s fair market value.
    5
    The chancellor also noted that Coastal had submitted an affidavit from Milburn Mallette,
    who stated that he sold the 5.3-acre parcel to two individuals for $120,000 and that the
    McKelvins had agreed to purchase the property from those individuals for $140,000. Coastal
    provided the purported contract for the sale and purchase of the property. Although the
    document was dated June 6, 2013, and referenced the McKelvins, the document was neither
    signed nor notarized and failed to include a description of the subject property.
    ¶11.   With regard to the other three parcels at issue, the chancellor found that Dedeaux had
    submitted an affidavit from Denise Fell, who valued two of the parcels at $7,500 each and
    the third parcel at $10,000. Fell made these valuations in August or September 2015, which
    was four to six months before the conveyances to Alexander and Neideffer. The chancellor
    found the parties had failed to provide any information on the actual amounts that Alexander
    and Neideffer had paid for their parcels.
    ¶12.   The chancellor determined that the sale of the 5.3-acre parcel to the McKelvins “more
    than satisfied the outstanding judgment” against Coastal. The chancellor then stated:
    It is therefore unclear to this [c]ourt how Ruth Dedeaux was able to obtain a
    [s]heriff’s [d]eed to three additional parcels of . . . [Coastal’s] property to
    satisfy the December 15, 2011[ d]ecree of [j]udgment the [c]ircuit [c]ourt
    entered in her favor.
    In addition[,] this [c]ourt is unable to determine the fair market value
    of the 5.3[-]acre parcel from the evidence presented by the parties. If the
    [c]ourt simply averages Mr. Madden’s $22,000 proposed sale price with the
    $120,000 contract for sale, the fair market value is $71,000.00. Ruth Dedeaux
    sold the 5.3[-]acre parcel to the McKelvins for $55,196.03.
    The testimonial evidence and exhibits presented by both parties at the
    6
    hearing on March 13, 2017, is incomprehensible. The parties have failed to
    offer proof sufficient for this [c]ourt to establish a fair market value for the
    properties in question. The only fact that is clear to this [c]ourt is that with the
    sale of the 5.3[-]acre parcel, the debt owed by Coastal . . . to Ruth Dedeaux
    was satisfied. . . . The [c]ourt must determine the fair market value of the
    5.3[-]acre parcel, the . . . [parcel sold to Alexander, and the parcel sold to
    Neideffer]; and . . . [o]nce the fair market value is determined, the [c]ourt must
    determine if Ruth Dedeaux received funds over and above the amount owed
    to her.
    ¶13.   After once again stating that the sale of the 5.3-acre parcel to the McKelvins had
    satisfied Dedeaux’s judgment against Coastal, the chancellor ordered Dedeaux to convey the
    unsold parcel to Coastal within thirty days. The chancellor also ordered the parties to set a
    hearing date within sixty days so he could determine the fair market value of the three parcels
    conveyed to the McKelvins, Alexander, and Neideffer. In addition, the chancellor ordered
    each party to provide (1) a valuation of the three conveyed parcels and how that valuation
    was reached; (2) any related exhibits; (3) a witness list; (4) “the sales price for each of the
    three parcels for any sale that occurred within the past seven (7) years”; and (5) a copy of the
    HUD, any sales contract related to each transaction, and a copy of the tax assessor’s
    valuation of the parcels for the past seven years.
    ¶14.   Dedeaux filed a motion to reconsider or to amend the chancellor’s judgment. After
    finding that he had been unable to adjudicate all the issues between the parties in his May 15,
    2017 order, the chancellor found that the prior order failed to constitute a final appealable
    judgment. As a result, the chancellor denied Dedeaux’s motion as untimely.
    ¶15.   Following a September 18, 2017 hearing on his request for additional information, the
    7
    chancellor entered his order on November 1, 2017. Based on the parties’ submissions, the
    chancellor found the following: (1) in 2015, the tax assessor’s total valuation of the four
    parcels amounted to $79,706; (2) a certified residential appraiser had testified that at the time
    of the sheriff’s sale on October 9, 2015, the fair market value of the four parcels was
    $85,100; (3) Dedeaux sold three of the parcels to the McKelvins, Alexander, and Neideffer
    for $76,500; (4) Dedeaux’s winning bid of $20,000 amounted to 25% of the 2015 tax
    assessor’s valuation for all four parcels, 24% of the appraised fair market value for the four
    parcels, and 26% of the total contract sales prices she received for the three parcels she sold.
    Based on this information, the chancellor concluded that, regardless of which of the three
    values he applied—the appraiser’s valuation, the contract sales prices, or the tax assessor’s
    valuations—Dedeaux’s winning bid amount of $20,000 was unconscionably low.
    ¶16.   The chancellor adopted the actual contract sales prices of the three parcels Dedeaux
    sold as the fair market value of those three parcels. Using that amount of $76,500, the
    chancellor subtracted $44,113.84 (the amount of the prior judgment plus the 8% annual
    interest and costs) and $20,000 (the amount of Dedeaux’s winning bid). Based on these
    calculations, the chancellor concluded that “the overage amount . . . [Dedeaux] realized by
    purchasing these three properties at the foreclosure sale for an unconscionably low bid[] is
    $12,386.16.” After making these findings, the chancellor reaffirmed his prior ruling that
    required Dedeaux to convey the unsold parcel to Coastal. The chancellor also ordered
    Dedeaux to pay Coastal $12,386.16 “as reimbursement of the overage amount . . . [she]
    8
    realized as a result of her unconscionably low bid.”
    ¶17.   Coastal filed a motion to correct the judgment, and Dedeaux filed a motion to alter or
    amend the judgment. The chancellor denied Dedeaux’s motion but found that Coastal
    correctly argued that Dedeaux’s $20,000 bid was not paid to anyone and should not have
    been deducted from the overage amount Dedeaux realized. The chancellor therefore changed
    his prior judgment to reflect that Dedeaux owed Coastal $32,386.16. Aggrieved, Dedeaux
    appeals.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶18.   “We will not disturb a chancellor’s findings unless they are manifestly wrong, clearly
    erroneous, or apply the wrong legal standard. We review questions of law de novo.”
    Campbell Props. Inc. v. Cook, 
    258 So. 3d 273
    , 275 (¶9) (Miss. 2018) (citation omitted).
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Unclean Hands
    ¶19.   Dedeaux first asserts that the chancellor erroneously awarded Coastal an equitable
    remedy because Coastal came before the chancellor with unclean hands. In his November
    1, 2017 order, the chancellor found that Coastal had unclean hands because its four-year
    delay in paying the prior monetary judgment forced Dedeaux to pursue a foreclosure sale.
    The chancellor also found, however, that Dedeaux came before him with unclean hands
    because she purchased Coastal’s four land parcels with an unconscionably low bid.
    ¶20.   “The doctrine of unclean hands provides that he who comes into equity must come
    9
    with clean hands.” Vincent v. Rickman, 
    167 So. 3d 245
    , 249 (¶11) (Miss. Ct. App. 2015)
    (internal quotation mark omitted). As our caselaw explains, “the clean-hands doctrine
    prevents a complaining party from obtaining equitable relief in court when he is guilty of
    willful misconduct in the transaction at issue.” 
    Id. In the
    context of domestic-relations
    matters, however, we have held that “the entry of a judgment for arrearages cleanses the
    payor’s hands and allows the chancellor to review the merits of the payor’s request for . . .
    [relief].” Dixon v. Dixon, 
    238 So. 3d 1191
    , 1198 (¶25) (Miss. Ct. App. 2018) (internal
    quotation mark omitted).
    ¶21.   Here, the chancellor found that the sale of the 5.3-acre parcel to the McKelvins
    essentially cleansed Coastal’s hands by satisfying its past-due monetary judgment to
    Dedeaux. Having so found, the chancellor was free to proceed to a review of the merits of
    Coastal’s claim against Dedeaux. We therefore find no merit to Dedeaux’s argument that
    the “clean-hands doctrine” continued to bar Coastal’s request for equitable relief.
    II.    Remaining Issues
    ¶22.   Dedeaux’s three remaining assignments of error contend that the chancellor’s
    judgment was unsupported by legal precedent and awarded Coastal multiple inconsistent
    remedies while simultaneously punishing Dedeaux. For the sake of brevity, we address these
    arguments together.
    ¶23.   In ordering Dedeaux to convey the unsold parcel back to Coastal and to reimburse
    Coastal for the overage she received from the sale of the three other parcels, the chancellor
    10
    relied on Allied Steel Corp. v. Cooper, 
    607 So. 2d 113
    (Miss. 1992). In Allied Steel the
    Mississippi Supreme Court held that “absent any irregularity in the conduct of a foreclosure
    sale, it may not be set aside unless the sales price is so inadequate as to shock the conscience
    of the Court or to amount to fraud.” 
    Id. at 118
    (internal quotation mark omitted). “A legal
    determination of the adequacy of the purchase price is predicated upon the establishment of
    the fair market value of the property. The determination of the fair market value is a question
    for the trier of fact.” 
    Id. at 118
    -19 (citations omitted). In determining the adequacy of a bid
    price, the Allied court further recognized that “[a] survey of Mississippi cases concluded that
    the threshold of unconscionability [for a bid price] lies around forty percent of fair market
    value.” 
    Id. at 120.
    ¶24.   Here, the chancellor adopted as the fair market value the total contract sales prices for
    the three parcels that Dedeaux sold. Based on the overall sales price of $76,500, the
    chancellor concluded that Dedeaux’s bid of $20,000 amounted to 26% of the parcels’ fair
    market value. Because this fell well below the generally accepted threshold of 40%, the
    chancellor determined that Dedeaux’s bid price was unconscionable. See 
    id. As the
    trier of
    fact, the chancellor possessed the authority to determine the parcels’ fair market value, and
    we “will respect the trial court’s findings of fact when they are supported by reasonable
    evidence in the record and are not manifestly wrong.” Hartman v. McInnis, 
    996 So. 2d 704
    ,
    711 (¶23) (Miss. 2007) (citing Allied 
    Steel, 607 So. 2d at 118-19
    ). Neither party raises any
    11
    dispute as to the chancellor’s conclusion of the parcels’ fair market value,1 and upon review,
    we find that substantial credible evidence supports the chancellor’s determination on this
    point.
    ¶25.     Although the chancellor found Dedeaux’s bid price to be unconscionably low, he
    expressed reluctance to set aside the land sales to the McKelvins, Alexander, and Neideffer
    because doing so would “affect the property rights of innocent bystanders to the parties’
    wrongdoing” and because Coastal had agreed to dismiss those individuals from the litigation.
    The chancellor did, however, reaffirm his prior ruling for Dedeaux to convey the unsold
    parcel of land to Coastal, which he found still had the basic effect of setting aside the
    foreclosure sale. See Allied 
    Steel, 607 So. 2d at 118
    (holding that a foreclosure sale may be
    set aside where “the sales price is so inadequate as to shock the conscience of the Court or
    to amount to fraud”) (internal quotation mark omitted).
    ¶26.     The chancellor also found that Dedeaux’s sale of the three properties for $76,500 fully
    satisfied, and thereby extinguished, her prior monetary judgment plus interest against Coastal
    1
    In her appellate brief, Dedeaux states the following:
    [Dedeaux] readily admits that, according to her appraisal entered into
    evidence at the final hearing on this matter on March 13, 2017[,] . . . her bid
    at the . . . sheriff’s sale did not meet the 36% to 40% unconscionability
    standard . . . as the $20,000.00 bid was approximately 24% of either the
    $85,100.00 appraisal or the $85,000 fair market value as determined by the
    chancery court. Accordingly, . . . [Dedeaux] does not dispute the court’s
    determination of said fair market value, exclusive of . . . [the unsold parcel],
    as $76,500.00 . . . .
    12
    for $44,113.84. As a result, the chancellor next considered whether Dedeaux had received
    any overage amount from the land sales that should be returned to Coastal. As this Court has
    previously recognized, where a foreclosure sale results in funds over the amount owed on the
    land and the foreclosure costs, the judgment debtor is entitled to the surplus. Estate of
    Walters v. Freeman, 
    904 So. 2d 1140
    , 1142 (¶10) (Miss. Ct. App. 2004). See also Hinton
    v. Rolison, 
    175 So. 3d 1281
    , 1285 (¶11) (Miss. 2015); O’Neal v. Ketchum, 
    141 So. 3d 45
    , 51
    (¶31) (Miss. Ct. App. 2014) (James, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
    ¶27.   Here, the foreclosure sale itself did not result in a surplus to Dedeaux. The chancellor
    concluded, however, that Dedeaux’s subsequent contracts to sell the three properties for
    $76,500 not only extinguished the judgment against Coastal but also resulted in a surplus.
    In Central Financial Services Inc. v. Spears, 
    425 So. 2d 403
    , 403 (Miss. 1983), the Supreme
    Court considered a similar question regarding “whether a mortgagee, who purchases the
    mortgaged property at a foreclosure sale[,] must account to the mortgagor for the surplus
    arising from a sale of the property by the mortgagee within two weeks for two and one-half
    times the amount bid by the mortgagee at the foreclosure sale.” The Supreme Court
    concluded that the bid amount was inadequate but that the inadequacy did not require
    overturning the foreclosure sale. 
    Id. at 405.
    Instead, the Supreme Court held that the
    mortgagee was required to account to the mortgagor for the surplus. 
    Id. ¶28. In
    the present case, Dedeaux raises no dispute as to the chancellor’s findings on the
    parcels’ fair market value. Based on this fact and the holding of Central Financial Services,
    13
    we find no error in the chancellor’s determination that Dedeaux was required to return to
    Coastal any overage resulting from the sale of the three properties. We therefore affirm the
    portion of the chancellor’s judgment requiring Dedeaux to return the unsold parcel to Coastal
    and to reimburse Coastal for any surplus resulting from the sale of the other three properties.
    ¶29.   We must, however, reverse and render the portion of the chancellor’s judgment
    calculating the exact amount of the reimbursement. In determining the amount of the surplus
    that Dedeaux owed Coastal, the chancellor looked only at the total sales prices Dedeaux
    received for the three sold parcels. Although Dedeaux contracted to sell the three parcels for
    $76,500, the record reflects that she also incurred $9,458.63 in related expenses (closing
    costs and fees). After deducting from $76,500 these related expenses and Dedeaux’s prior
    judgment plus interest, we find that the surplus amounted to $22,927.53 rather than the
    $32,386.16 the chancellor calculated. We therefore reverse the chancellor’s judgment as to
    the amount of Coastal’s monetary award and render a new judgment in Coastal’s favor for
    $22,927.53.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶30.   We affirm the portion of the chancellor’s judgment ordering Dedeaux to convey the
    unsold parcel of land to Coastal and to reimburse Coastal for any surplus resulting from the
    sales of the other three parcels. However, we reverse the amount of the monetary judgment
    to Coastal and render a new monetary judgment in Coastal’s favor for $22,927.53.
    ¶31.   AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED AND RENDERED IN PART.
    14
    BARNES, C.J., CARLTON AND J. WILSON, P.JJ., GREENLEE,
    WESTBROOKS, McDONALD, LAWRENCE, McCARTY AND C. WILSON, JJ.,
    CONCUR.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2018-CA-00569-COA

Filed Date: 9/3/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/3/2019