TPM Holdings, Inc. v. Intra Gold

USCA1 Opinion









UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
____________________

No. 95-1786

TPM HOLDINGS, INC.,

Plaintiff, Appellee,

v.

INTRA-GOLD INDUSTRIES, INC.
and JASPER C. ROWE,

Defendants, Appellants.

____________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

[Hon. Paul J. Barbadoro, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

____________________

Before

Selya, Cyr and Boudin,

Circuit Judges. ______________

____________________

Jasper C. Rowe with whom Law Offices of Jasper C. Rowe was on _______________ _______________________________
briefs for appellants.
Daniel P. Schwarz with whom Christopher Cole and Sheehan, ___________________ _________________ ________
Phinney, Bass & Green, P.C. were on briefs for appellee. _______ __________________


____________________

July 30, 1996
____________________






















Per Curiam. Intra-Gold Industries, Inc. ("Intra-Gold"), __________

a Texas corporation, appeals from the New Hampshire district

court's grant of summary judgment in favor of TPM Holdings,

Inc. ("TPM"), in TPM's action to remove a notice of lis ___

pendens from the title of property it owns in New Hampshire. _______

The lis pendens relates to a Texas federal-court action ____________

brought by Intra-Gold against TPM and another party, New

England Aggregate Trust, Inc. ("Aggregate Trust"), in which

Intra-Gold sought enforcement of an alleged agreement with

Aggregate Trust to transfer to Intra-Gold certain mineral

rights in the New Hampshire property.

The background facts are complex but largely undisputed,

and we limit our description to the transactions directly

pertinent to this appeal. In June 1992, TPM bought a

promissory note and mortgage interest in 3,500 acres of

property located in both Freedom and Madison, New Hampshire.

One of the mortgagors was Freedom Properties Realty Trust

("Freedom Properties"), a New Hampshire general partnership

with Aggregate Trust as its general partner. By late 1992,

the mortgagors were in default, and TPM had initiated

foreclosure proceedings.

Intra-Gold claims that in January 1993, Aggregate Trust

agreed on behalf of Freedom Properties to assign the latter's

mineral rights in the New Hampshire property to Intra-Gold.

According to Intra-Gold this was part of a plan to avoid the



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foreclosure; in return for the mineral rights, Intra-Gold

would try to arrange financing that would permit Aggregate

Trust to retire its debt to TPM and would pay royalties to

Aggregate Trust for the minerals removed.

But in February 1993, the mortgagors of the New

Hampshire property--including Freedom Properties--agreed to

deed the property to TPM in lieu of foreclosure proceedings.

The agreement reserved in the mortgagors the right to exploit

the minerals for one year and gave them an option to purchase

the property within one year for approximately $4 million.

Intra-Gold took the position that by entering into this

settlement, Aggregate Trust had breached its January 1993

agreement with Intra-Gold.

In July 1994, Intra-Gold filed suit in Texas state court

against Aggregate Trust and TPM, seeking damages and

rescission of the deed transferring the property to TPM.

The defendants removed the case to the federal district court

for the Eastern District of Texas. The day after bringing

the suit, Intra-Gold placed--without notice to TPM or

application to any court--a notice of lis pendens on the deed ___________

for the New Hampshire property. It was the filing of this

lis pendens in the Registry of Deeds in Carroll County, New ___________

Hampshire that prompted the litigation at issue here.

On November 1, 1994, TPM filed a complaint in the

federal district court in New Hampshire, based on diversity



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jurisdiction, seeking a declaration that the notice of lis ___

pendens was not valid under the New Hampshire statute. N.H. _______

Rev. Stat. Ann. 511-A:8 permits filing a lis pendens ____________

without prior application to the court or notice to the

adverse party, in "equity cases for specific performance of

an agreement to transfer land or a unique chattel." TPM

pointed out that Intra-Gold's Texas complaint sought only

money damages and rescission of the deed from Aggregate Trust

(and the other mortgagors) granting the New Hampshire

property to TPM.

While pre-trial motions were pending in the New

Hampshire action, the Texas district court on April 7, 1995,

dismissed with prejudice all of Intra-Gold's claims against

TPM for failure to state a claim. Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).

On motion by TPM, the court followed with an order on May 17,

1995, cancelling the notice of lis pendens filed in the New ___________

Hampshire Registry of Deeds. Intra-Gold proceeded with its

claims against Aggregate Trust, but after a bench trial in

the summer of 1995, the court found in Aggregate Trust's

favor on all claims.

One might think that resolution of the underlying claims

against TPM in Texas would moot the New Hampshire action by

removing the basis for the lis pendens, but Intra-Gold ____________

appealed the Texas decision to the Fifth Circuit, and some

cases suggest that a lis pendens remains in effect pending ___________



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appeal. See 54 C.J.S. Lis Pendens 26 (1987). In all ___ ____________

events, neither party asserts mootness, and there are obvious

practical reasons why--with the Fifth Circuit appeal pending-

-it is important for TPM to maintain in force the district

court's declaration that the lis pendens is invalid. We thus ___________

resume the chronology.

In the New Hampshire district court, Intra-Gold argued

by motion that the court should refuse to entertain TPM's

claim because similar issues were then before the Texas

district court. Intra-Gold contended this result was

required both by 28 U.S.C. 1450--a claim now abandoned--and

for reasons of "fairness and judicial economy." In the

alternative, Intra-Gold argued that Texas law should govern

the validity of the lis pendens. The district court denied ___________

this motion in June 1995.

During the June 1995 hearing, the New Hampshire district

court also proposed sua sponte to grant summary judgment on ___ ______

the merits in favor of TPM, because the lis pendens was not ___________

authorized by the New Hampshire statute because the

underlying Texas action was not an equity case for specific

performance of an agreement to transfer land or a unique

chattel. In opposition, Intra-Gold conceded this defect, but

argued that it had filed an amended complaint in the Texas

suit on December 7, 1994--over a month after TPM had

initiated the New Hampshire declaratory action--which asked



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for "an injunction preventing transfer of the property to TPM

or any third party and granting title to the property to

[Intra-Gold]."

Unpersuaded, the district court granted summary judgment

in TPM's favor, explaining simply that the lis pendens "was ___________

not filed in compliance with N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. 511-A."

Intra-Gold now appeals, renewing its earlier claim that, for

prudential reasons of fairness and economy, the New Hampshire

district court should have declined to hear TPM's action to

remove the lis pendens. Alternatively, Intra-Gold contends ___________

that the amended complaint in the Texas suit falls within the

"specific performance" exception of the New Hampshire lis ___

pendens statute. We discuss the claims in order. _______

Obvious concerns arise when actions involving the same

parties and similar subject matter are pending in different

federal district courts: wasted resources because of

piecemeal litigation, the possibility of conflicting

judgments, and a general concern that the courts may unduly

interfere with each other's affairs. To resolve such

tensions, courts rely primarily on common sense and

historical practice. See, e.g., Colorado River Water ___ ____ ______________________

Conservation Dist. v. United States, 424 U.S. 800, 817 ___________________ ______________

(1976); 28 U.S.C. 1404.

Where the overlap between the two suits is nearly

complete, the usual practice is for the court that first had



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jurisdiction to resolve the issues and the other court to

defer. West Gulf Maritime Ass'n v. ILA Deep Sea Local 24, _________________________ _______________________

751 F.2d 721, 729 (5th Cir. 1985). But where the overlap

between two suits is less than complete, the judgment is made

case by case, see Colorado River Water Conservation Dist., ___ ________________________________________

424 U.S. at 817, based on such factors as the extent of

overlap, the likelihood of conflict, the comparative

advantage and the interest of each forum in resolving the

dispute.

Here, the heart of the Texas action was Intra-Gold's

breach of contract claim against Aggregate Trust. If

determining the validity of the lis pendens required the New ___________

Hampshire district court to assess the merits of this claim,

there might be a good case for deferring to the Texas suit.

But the New Hampshire court was asked only to decide whether

Intra-Gold's Texas suit constituted an "equity case for

specific performance of an agreement to transfer land or a

unique chattel" under N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. 511-A:8. This

required an assessment of the nature of the claims being ______

made, not their merit, and could not realistically be said to

interfere with the Texas court's authority or conduct of its

case.

Only slightly more troublesome is the argument that the

validity of the lis pendens was being litigated in the Texas ___________

suit. Formally this was true, since a few days after filing



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the New Hampshire suit, TPM also brought a motion in the

Texas district court seeking cancellation of the lis pendens. ___________

And indeed, after the Texas court dismissed Intra-Gold's

claims against TPM, that court did issue an order to cancel

the lis pendens. But beneath this surface resemblance the ____________

two courts were addressing very different issues.

Neither party has shown that the Texas district court

ever had before it a claim that the lis pendens did not ____________

comply with the New Hampshire statute. Instead it appears

that TPM simply requested that, if the Texas court dismissed

Intra-Gold's claims, it also cancel the lis pendens since ___________

there would no longer be any litigation pending. If so,

there was little risk of conflict posed by the New Hampshire

court's resolution of the independent issue of whether the

lis pendens complied with New Hampshire state law. ___________

We turn now to the merits of the New Hampshire district

court's decision on summary judgment that the lis pendens was ___________

invalid. The district court said that the notice of lis ___

pendens was not filed in compliance with the New Hampshire _______

statute, a point that Intra-Gold has effectively conceded.

But, as already noted, Intra-Gold argues that its amended

complaint did seek such specific performance. While this is

itself an issue open to dispute, for us the anterior question

is whether an amended complaint--even within N.H. Rev. Stat.





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511-A--can revive and salvage an earlier, invalid lis ___

pendens. _______

It does not appear the New Hampshire state courts have

ever decided this issue, but cases from elsewhere suggest

that the answer is no. E.g., 5303 Realty Corp. v. O & Y ____ __________________ _____

Equity Corp., 476 N.E.2d 276 (N.Y. 1984). This result may ____________

appear severe or formalistic. But it may also be viewed as a

counterweight to the obvious dangers inherent in a lis ___

pendens scheme that allows a party to wield this considerable _______

power without prior application to any court, and with no

judicial assessment of the merits of the underlying suit.

The purpose of a lis pendens is to notify potential ____________

purchasers that there is pending litigation that may affect

title to real property and that the purchaser will take

subject to the judgment. This cloud on title can impair the

marketability of the property. Under the New Hampshire

statute, as in many states, this can be done without resort

to a court, under specified circumstances. The resulting

danger of abuse has led courts to require strict compliance

with lis pendens statutes. E.g., S. Utsunomiya Enters., Inc. ___________ ____ ___________________________

v. Moomuku Country Club, 866 P.2d 951, 963 (Haw. 1994); E & E ____________________ _____

Hauling, Inc. v. County of DuPage, 396 N.E.2d 1260, 1266 ______________ _________________

(Ill. App. Ct. 1979).

Consistent with this strict-compliance approach, we see

no reason why an invalid lis pendens should be made valid by ___________



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a later amendment to a complaint. Where the original _____

complaint does not support the lis pendens, it is easy enough ___________

for the plaintiff who files an amended complaint to file a

new lis pendens based upon that new complaint. Allowing an ___________

amended complaint alone to breathe life into an earlier,

previously invalid lis pendens could easily cause confusion ___________

and unfair prejudice. Since the plaintiff is responsible for

the original error and is free to file a new lis pendens ___________

along with the amended complaint, this outcome appears well

warranted.

Of course, lacking precedent from a New Hampshire court,

we can only make our best assessment as to how the state

court would resolve the issue. And there are other contexts

in which a later act can revive an earlier, otherwise defunct

claim. See, e.g., Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(c). But in the present ___ ____

context, we think that the practical considerations already

mentioned, and the general instance that a lis pendens ____________

applicant turn square corners, carries the day for TPM.

Affirmed. _________















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