(dissenting):
I respectfully dissent. As a general proposition, I do not have great difficulty in applying the doctrine of equitable conversion to the buyer’s interest under a installment land sale contract. I do, however, have insurmountable difficulty in applying it to the seller’s interest to the extent that the purchase price is unpaid, which is the result under the majority opinion. I would, therefore, hold precisely opposite to my esteemed colleagues and affirm the district court.
This case was heard in the district court on stipulated facts and dismissed on a motion for summary judgment. From the limited scope of those proceedings, the single issue before the district court and on appeal is whether a contract seller’s retained title is real property to which judgment creditors’ liens can attach pursuant to section 78-22-1 to the extent of the unpaid price, or whether that title is personalty by reason of the doctrine of equitable conversion, to which judgment creditors’ liens cannot attach. The majority’s conclusion that the seller’s retained title is personalty appears to me to be contrary to the case law generally, to run counter to public policy, to presume facts not in evidence, and is based upon grounds never argued here or below. I respectfully opine that the majority misinterprets the applicable case law in Utah and most other jurisdictions and reaches a result that has nothing to recommend it in terms of public policy, other than the pursuit of purely theoretical symmetry, that is to say, that if the buyer’s interest might be regarded as personal property, then it invariably must follow for reasons of symmetry that the seller’s interest is personal property, even though the seller has not been fully paid and has not parted with title. I explain first how the majority’s opinion conflicts with the relevant Utah cases, and then turn to considerations of public policy.
Utah Case Law on Equitable Conversion
A Utah appellate court has never squarely held, until this case, that a judgment *1384against the seller and duly docketed as section 78-22-1 provides does not create a lien against the seller’s legal title to land agreed to be sold under an executory installment contract because the seller’s retained title was not real property. There are cases in which the Supreme Court has relied on the doctrine of equitable conversion in very different contexts; for example, in holding that the seller of property later condemned was entitled only to the contract amount1 or in holding that the seller’s interest was taxable as personal property.2 However, the interests at stake in estate taxation and eminent domain are very different from those at stake in debt- or-creditor relations, and the majority’s references to dicta restating the notion of equitable conversion in such cases provide no compelling reason for applying equitable conversion to preclude a judgment lien. The purely obiter recitations of the general concept of equitable conversion are no authority for applying it here. Mere definition of a concept does not justify its application; we could as well define a judgment lien and thereupon insist on vindicating the lien in this case.
The most thorough elucidation to date by the Utah Supreme Court of the scope and limits of equitable conversion is found in Butler v. Wilkinson, 740 P.2d 1244 (Utah 1987). A footnote in Butler at page 1255, quoted in the majority opinion, defines the concept of equitable conversion, and it is upon that definition that the majority principally relies. However, Butler stops far short of requiring equitable conversion in every conceivable instance, and, in my analysis of it, concludes contrary to the majority opinion in this case.3 Butler clearly holds that the buyer’s interest is real property to which a judgment lien attaches subject to the seller’s retained legal title,4 but it is not all-encompassing in forcing universal adoption and application of the “parity of reasoning” for which the majority contends. The main point of the majority opinion seems to be that, because the buyer’s interest is real property, the seller’s interest must “logically” be personal property. However, Butler’s description of the “parity of reasoning,” the logical symmetry that underlies equitable conversion, is not an unqualified, universal endorsement of it.
Butler’s general, introductory restatement of the concept of equitable conversion is, according to Butler itself, not a universal verity that must be applied slavishly in every conceivable instance, without regard to the merits of such an application. Butler recognizes that equitable conversion results in a characterization of the buyer that “is not wholly accurate,”5 and further notes that equitable conversion does not prevent a judgment docketed against the seller from becoming a lien on the seller’s title to the land.6
After stating that judgment creditors’ liens against a buyer’s equitable contractual interest are not extinguished by an “assignment, sale, or rescission,” the Butler *1385opinion continues: “Nor for that matter, is a judgment lien against the vendor’s interest extinguished by the vendor’s sale of that interest to a third person.”7 The Clements argue, and I agree, that this statement clearly shows that the Supreme Court considers the seller’s retained title to be real property, since judgment liens attach only to real property, not to personal property, pursuant to section 78-22-1.
The majority views the seller’s interest as, at most, a lien. In this regard, it is true that Butler analogizes the seller’s interest to a purchase money mortgage, but Butler is careful to point out it is really no mere lien; rather, it is legal title to the land, albeit subject to a conditional promise to convey at a future date.8 Legal title to land is not only within the definition and plain meaning of “real property” in section 78-22-1, but also it is the very archetype of what real property is.9
Butler clearly recognizes that the seller retains legal title, and that is where the analytical usefulness of the analogy to a lien ends. The seller’s retained legal title is indeed similar to a lien or mortgage, in that it permits the seller to regain the land if the buyer defaults. However, the fact that the retained title may function like a lien in certain circumstances is far from saying that it is identical or equivalent to a lien for all purposes.10 We do not have a case here in which a seller recovers property from a delinquent buyer, and therefore, the lien analogy has little utility in this particular situation. Rather, this is a case in which a third party seeks to realize a judgment out of the seller’s asset, and the legal nature of that asset is the object of our inquiry. In this context, it is quite immaterial that the buyer could lose his interest in a forfeiture that in some ways operates as a lien foreclosure. What is important for present purposes is that the Barkers held legal title, and, although they had agreed to part with it at a later date if Hodge performed her obligations, they still held legal title when the Clements docketed their judgment. Consistent with Butler, a judgment lien would therefore attach to that title to the extent of the unpaid balance of the contract price.
In respectful contrast to Judge Jackson’s concurring opinion, I am convinced that stare decisis does not compel the result reached by the majority. Dicta in Lack v. Deseret Bank11 may have expressed a view on the subject, but dicta are not holding, and only a holding of the court need be followed under the principle of stare deci-sis.12 The precise question that is squarely presented in this case was an open question in Utah case law until this case. The prior adoption in our case law of the general notion of equitable conversion does not mean that it must apply in this ease; whenever a doctrine of such broad scope is embraced, it must be fine-tuned and exceptions must be carved out to prevent injustice in the many varied applications of the doctrine. Some of the limitations on equitable conversion were explained in the Butler case, and in the case before us now, Butler clearly indicates that equitable conversion should not be applied here.
Deficiencies in Rationale
This is the first time a Utah appellate court has squarely held that a docketed *1386judgment does not create a lien against the seller’s retained title to real property under a contract of sale. Since we here lay down a precedent, I think it is important to examine the rationale and public-policy impacts of that holding.
The doctrine of equitable conversion is the notion that the seller of a specifically enforceable contract to convey land is deemed to own primarily13 an interest in personal property, and the buyer’s interest under the contract is characterized as real property.14 However, while that notion leads to a sensible result in some situations, it is important not to lose sight of the fact that such a characterization of the parties’ interests is not generally what they have in mind. The more straightforward notion of such a contract envisions the land as changing hands only after the price is paid; until then, the seller still owns the land and the buyer is in the unfulfilled process of acquiring it.15 In order to understand why a legal doctrine such as equitable conversion could be acknowledged at all, when its effect is to transform realty into personalty, automatically and in disregard of the intention of the parties, a brief excursus into our legal history may be helpful.
The English common law developed along the lines of certain specific “writs” issued by the king’s courts to address certain specific wrongs. Pursuant to an early statute, problems that did not fit within the scope of an existing writ could not be remedied by the king’s courts, although the courts in time became somewhat adept at stretching the scope of the prescribed writs by analogy.16 Still, many grievances, such as a simple breach of a contract, for example, were for centuries not effectively resolved by the rigid, stultified rules of the common law.17
When relief was not available at common law for a perceived wrong, the aggrieved person at first petitioned the king directly to intervene and do justice. The kings came to refer such petitions to their chancellors to be decided according to conscience and equity, rather than by the rigid rules of the common law. The chancellors eventually developed a system of courts, procedure, and substantive law separate from the common law, which came to be known by the word “equity.”
One of the remedies commonly employed by the courts of equity was specific performance, an order directing the defendant to perform a specific act in furtherance of a contractual obligation. In a contract for the sale of land, a recalcitrant seller could be ordered in equity to specifically perform the contract, that is, to actually convey the land. If he failed to do so, he could be penalized for contempt.18
*1387One of the time-honored maxims of equity was that it “regards as done that which ought to be done.” Applying this maxim to land sale contracts came to mean that if specific performance could be granted on the contract, the contract could be considered as if it had been fully performed. The seller could therefore be treated as having conveyed the property and received the price, and the buyer as having received the property. The seller was therefore deemed in equity to hold personal property, and the buyer, real property. This deeming was, of course, a legal fiction; the contract was fully performed only in the chancellor’s imagination. The reality was that a deed would be delivered and the seller would consider himself no longer the owner when the sale had been consummated by receipt of the full price.19
When the English legal tradition was transplanted to America, the doctrine of equitable conversion came along with it. In 1905, the American legal scholar Christopher Columbus Langdell systematized it elaborately, and it almost seems as if Lang-dell placed his philosophical mark upon the doctrine, making it into a “legal geometry” or a “heaven of juristic conceptions.”20 For Langdell, law was a science, whose data in the English tradition were the prior decisions of courts.21 To the legal scientist, cloistered in the library that was his laboratory, it was irrelevant whether the rule extracted from the cases produced a result that was in reality unjust or at odds with common sense. What mattered was not whether the rule was a good one but rather whether it was the rule.22
This rather mechanistic, wholly abstract view of the law has fallen upon evil days in recent decades. Sociological jurisprudence and legal realism waged a war of commentary on the application of fixed rules without regard to fairness in an individual case or to social policy. In particular, equitable conversion came to be explained as a “name given to results reached on other grounds.”23 No longer was it a set of substantive rules describable in clauses beginning with “if” and “then”; rather, it was simply a shorthand method of describing what came after the “then.” There was still little thought of adding an express “because ...,” or of explaining the reasons for either the substantive rule or the result in a specific case.
This inattention to the reasons for equitable conversion led to some roundhouse critiques of the doctrine. Harlan Stone debunked it in a 1913 article.24 Several other writers also denounced, and uniform legislation was proposed to counteract, its effect of placing the risk of casualty loss on the buyer during the executory period.25 Some cases hedged in relying on the eq*1388uitable conversion doctrine, declaring that it would be invoked only when it led to a fair result.26 Contrary to the majority’s claim, my thorough reading of the modern commentary on equitable conversion generally reveals little enthusiasm for universal application of the doctrine and no persuasive reasoning to support its application in this case.
The scholarly criticism of the blind application of the doctrine of equitable conversion has, however, been only partially successful in preventing its misuse in the courts. Leading commentators have recently noted that “decisions [on equitable conversion] often seem adamant in their unwillingness to discuss the underlying policy issues; equitable conversion almost becomes a substitute for thinking about the real questions in the case.”27 There is no justification for ignoring what is actually happening in a case and what the parties’ clash of interests is really all about. Invoking a talisman such as “equitable conversion” to give a name and ostensible legitimacy to a rule without a rationale is a jurisprudential cop-out, and exposes society to potential danger from rules that have drifted from their public policy moorings. In my opinion, courts have a responsibility to continually scrutinize the law we apply, particularly judicially-created law such as equitable conversion, in order to weed out defects in the law as it has been handed down to us and to keep it consistent with evolving social policy and conditions.28
Viewing the policies and practical reasons for equitable conversion, I firmly believe that it is not a rule that should be applied as a matter of course in every instance. Rather, it describes a result in which the seller’s interest is deemed to be essentially personalty and the buyer’s interest to be realty. In reaching that result, the court should endeavor, as with any contract, to give effect to the reasonable expectations of the parties.29 While applying equitable conversion automatically for every question involving a land sale contract may foster easy predictability, it would nevertheless in many instances disregard or frustrate what the parties intended their contract to accomplish, which is a transfer of property when it is paid for, but not before. The contract in this case, for example, clearly contemplates a transfer of' ownership by deed after all installments have been paid.
One involuntary consequence30 of the seller’s retention of title to the property is that his creditors may reach it in satisfac*1389tion of their claims against him. Enabling creditors to have access to the seller’s title to the property is thought by the majority to lessen the predictability of real estate transactions. However, a prudent buyer can still assure his title by checking the judgment docket to determine if creditors’ claims exist. In this and most sales, the buyer has recourse against the seller if title is encumbered, and, if the encumbrance is serious, may rescind the sale.31 If, however, the buyer ignores the encumbrance, he proceeds at his peril, unless he can prove himself to be a bona fide purchaser or invoke statutory protection such as the recording act.32 Neither Hodge nor the Cannefaxes attempted to rescind, or asserted that they are bona fide purchasers or protected under the recording act. In these circumstances, there is nothing wrong with leaving the loss to fall upon the buyer, who is able to discover in advance the faults in the title and take corrective action.
In determining the legal effect of a contract, therefore, the intent of the parties33 should carry far more weight than a legal fiction, however deep in tradition the fiction’s roots. People have a right to make contracts and to have their lawful contractual intentions fulfilled, and they cannot fairly be expected to make contracts with a thorough knowledge of the oblique way in which nine centuries of equitable jurisprudence may twist and “convert” the meaning of their intentions.34 In holding that the buyer’s and seller’s interests are equitably converted, the majority is oblivious to the face of the contract itself, which provides that the seller will convey the real property when the price is received, and not before. It was undisputed that the price was not received when the Clements’ judgment was docketed.
In my view, the majority also places insufficient value in the need to efficiently enforce judgments. They intimate that the Clements could have executed on their judgment, but ignore the fact that their execution was judicially restrained in this case. It is also unclear in Utah law that the Clements have anything on which they could execute, without a judgment lien. At common law, execution cannot be levied on a chose in action,35 and, although that common law rule has been changed by statute in many jurisdictions, there is no applicable Utah statute. Thus, by reducing the seller’s interest to a mere contract receivable, the majority leaves the judgment creditor without a clear, sure means of reaching the seller’s contract interest under our law, other than by garnishing each payment as it accrues. Enforcing a duly entered judgment thus becomes a cumbersome process of having a writ issued and served before each installment is paid.
Most jurisdictions that have considered this question have weighed the policy considerations as I do. Contrary to the assertion of the majority, the scholars studying this question all conclude that the majority of jurisdictions hold that a judgment lien attaches to the seller’s interest in a contract for the sale of real property.36
More persuasive, however, than the results of any interstate judicial poll are the *1390compelling needs to recognize the parties’ contractual intent and to provide an effective means of enforcing judgments. Conversely, there is no real reason favoring equitable conversion in this setting, other than perhaps a wish for abstract symmetry or elegantia juris, which could incline one to the notion that, since the buyer has real property under equitable conversion principles, the seller must conversely have personal property for all purposes, including the attachment of judgment liens.37 However, to give way to such a wish in disregard of the parties’ intent and of the need to enforce lawful judgments is sheer formalism, a glorification of abstraction for abstraction’s sake.
Potential Defenses Not Raised
The Cannefaxes’ position here and in the district court has consisted only of an attempt to invoke equitable conversion to prevent the Clements’ judgment lien from attaching. The Cannefaxes have not asserted any defenses against the enforcement of the Clements’ lien, once it attached. Ordinarily, there would be little need to mention defenses never raised by the parties, but in this case, I believe the majority has, in effect, given some weight to those potential defenses. They presume, for example, that the Cannefaxes are bona fide purchasers, and they also view the Clements as having failed to perform a duty to give actual notice to the Cannefaxes, in order to “perfect,” in a sense, their lien against the Cannefaxes. However, the Cannefaxes’ bona fides and lack of actual notice are unproven facts that might have been material to defensive arguments that were never raised. Since the Cannefaxes had the burden of avoiding the lien in order to quiet title,38 judgment against them is correct, even though there was no apparent inquiry into either actual notice, the Cannefaxes’ knowledge of the judgment or lack of it, or into their bona fides in any respect.
As the majority also points out, several jurisdictions have held that the judgment lienor cannot recover from the buyer any installment payments made in the ordinary course of contract performance without actual notice of the existence of the judgment lien.39 These holdings are rooted in concern that the buyer not be required to check the judgment docket every time an installment payment is made; such would be an “intolerable inconvenience.”40 Instead, the buyer is permitted to continue paying installments, which are credited against the price, until the buyer is given *1391actual, not merely constructive, notice of the lien. I have no quarrel with such a conclusion, but there is absolutely no occasion to reach it in this case, since there is no indication in the stipulated facts whether or not the Cannefaxes had actual notice of the lien at a time when they could have averted consummation of the sale. The Cannefaxes, in seeking to quiet title against the Clements, had the burden of going forward with evidence showing that the lien was unenforceable.41 All section 78-22-1 requires for a lien to attach is entry of the judgment and docketing in the proper county. The judgment creditor is not required to do anything more, such as give actual notice to a contract buyer, and to require more would run contrary to section 78-22-1.42
Conclusion
In conclusion, I believe there is no question but that the buyer’s interest in an executory land sale contract may be characterized as real property under the fiction of equitable conversion for the purpose of the attachment of the buyer’s judgment creditors’ liens. However, the cases, including Butler, do not hold that because the buyer’s interest may be considered real property for that purpose, it must then necessarily follow that the seller’s retained title is personalty to which the liens of the seller’s judgment creditors cannot attach.
In my opinion, the rule to be deduced from Butler and the cases cited therein is that the seller’s retained title in an installment land sale contract was, is, and remains real property to the extent of the unpaid balance of the purchase price for the purposes of the attachment of liens of the seller’s judgment creditors. Further, by reason of the fiction of equitable conversion, the buyer’s interest may also be characterized as real property, limited only by the right of the seller to receive the purchase price and the performance of other terms of the contract.
I recognize that the recording statutes and bona fide purchaser considerations are significant and may be overriding in a given case.43 However, no such matters appear from the stipulated facts in this case and none were raised or argued in the district court or here on appeal.
From the cases, as well as an examination of the historical underpinnings of the equitable conversion fiction, which is not a doctrine of universal application, I am regrettably compelled to respectfully disagree with the majority’s opinion, and I would affirm the trial court.
. Jelco, Inc. v. Third Judicial District Court, 29 Utah 2d 472, 511 P.2d 739 (1973).
. Willson v. State Tax Commission, 28 Utah 2d 197, 499 P.2d 1298 (1972).
. Butler accordingly squares with the law of most jurisdictions that have considered the question. See, e.g., First Security Bank v. Rogers, 91 Idaho 654, 429 P.2d 386 (1967) ("The majority rule is that a judgment lien against a vendor after the making of the contract of sale extends to all of the vendor’s interest remaining in the land and binds the land to the extent of the unpaid purchase price.); Heider v. Deitz, 234 Or. 105, 380 P.2d 619 (1963). This majority rule is further discussed later in this opinion.
. 740 P.2d at 1255-56.
. 740 P.2d at 1255. Butler further notes that equitable conversion operates to treat the buyer as owner of the land only "as a general proposition.” I recognize that in many situations, it makes good sense to regard the prospective, conditional performance of the contract as if it were an accomplished fact; however, this case does not present such a situation.
. "[A] judgment lien against the vendor's interest [is not] extinguished by the vendor’s sale of that interest to a third person.” 740 P.2d at 1258.
. Butler, 740 P.2d at 1258 (emphasis added).
. See 740 P.2d at 1256 n. 6.
. See Restatement of Property § 10 comment c (1936).
. Justice Stewart clearly recognized the limitations of the lien analógy in the Butler opinion when he wrote: "The term ‘vendor’s lien’ seems to have stuck even though it is inaccurately used before the vendor parts with the title. Until then, it is not, in fact, a lien at all, but rather a retained interest in the land that is derived from the vendor’s retention of the fee title.” 740,P.2d at 1256 n. 6.
. 746 P.2d 802 (Utah 1988).
. Spring Canyon Coal Co. v. Industrial Comm'n, 74 Utah 103, 277 P. 206, 210 (1929); Salt Lake City v. Sutter, 61 Utah 533, 216 P. 234, 236-37 (1923).
. The “bare legal title” retained by the seller is sometimes said to be held in trust for the buyer, see, e.g., In re Highberger's Estate, 468 Pa. 120, 360 A.2d 580 (1976); In re Krotzsch’s Estate, 60 Ill.2d 342, 326 N.E.2d 758 (1975); Smith v. Tang, 100 Ariz. 196, 412 P.2d 697 (1966), or to be a constructive lien to secure payment of the price, see Oaks v. Kendall, 23 Cal.App.2d 715, 73 P.2d 1255, 1258-59 (1937). The term "lien," however, is actually something of a misnomer, as the Utah Supreme Court explained in Butler, 740 P.2d at 1256 n. 6:
The term "vendor’s lien" ... is inaccurately used before the vendor parts with the title. Until then, it is not, in fact, a lien at all, but rather a retained interest in the land that is derived from the vendor’s retention of the fee title.
. See generally 3 American Law of Property 62-64 (Casner, ed., 1952); R. Cunningham, W. Stoebuck & D. Whitman, The Law of Property 698-701 (1984); H. McClintock, McClintock on Equity 284-88 (1948); 4 J. Pomeroy & S. Sym-ons, A Treatise on Equity Jurisprudence 472-80 (1941); 2 J. Story, Commentaries on Equity Jurisprudence 485-92 (1918).
. 3A A. Corbin, Corbin on Contracts 193-94 (1960).
. D. Dobbs, Remedies 28-35 (1978).
. Id.; L. Fuller & M. Eisenberg, Basic Contract Law 63-66 (1972).
. The earliest origins of equitable conversion have been traced to trust concepts, independent of specific performance. Davis, The Origin of the Doctrine of Equitable Conversion by Contract 25 Ky.L.J. 58 (1936); Simpson, Legislative Changes in the Law of Equitable Conversion by Contract, 44 Yale L.J. 559 n. 3 (1935). The *1387current formulation of the doctrine, however, is firmly linked to the specific enforceability of the contract, perhaps due to the oft-cited formulation by Lord Eldon in a case seeking specific performance, Seton v. Slade, 7 Ves.Jun. 265 (1802).
. The fictional character of the rule is apparent in the fact that equity would not invoke it to give the purchaser any real incidents of ownership before the time set for performance. H. McClintock, McClintock on Equity 295 (1948).
. 3 American Law of Property 64 (Casner, ed., 1952).
. Address by C.C. Langdell delivered November 5, 1886, reprinted in Law Quarterly Review 123, 124 (1887).
. For example, Langdell noted in his casebook on contracts that the "mailbox rule” holding that acceptance is effective on dispatch, regardless of whether it is received, had been criticized as leading to unjust and absurd results. "The true answer” to that criticism was, according to Langdell, "that it is irrelevant.” C.C. Langdell, A Selection of Cases on the Law of Contracts 995-96 (2d ed. 1879).
. Pound, The Progress of the Law, 33 Harv.L. Rev. 813, 832 (1920); see also Stone, Equitable Conversion by Contract, 13 Colum.L.Rev. 369 (1913).
. Stone, Equitable Conversion by Contract, 13 Colum.L.Rev. 369 (1913).
. E.g., Vannemann, Risk of Loss in Equity between the Date of Contract to Sell Real Estate and Transfer of Title, 8 Minn.L.Rev. (1924); Williston, The Risk of Loss After an Executory Contract of Sale in the Common Law, 9 Harv.L. Rev. 106 (1895).
. Eg., Clay v. Landreth, 187 Va. 169, 45 S.E.2d 875 (1948); In re Seifert's Estate, 109 N.H. 62, 242 A.2d 64, 33 A.L.R.3d 1276 (1967); National Bank of Topeka v. Saia, 154 Kan. 740, 121 P.2d 251 (1942).
. R. Cunningham, W. Stoebuck & D. Whitman, The Law of Property 699 (1984).
. See Hackford v. Utah Power & Light Co., 740 P.2d 1281, 1285-86 (Utah 1987); B. Cardozo, The Nature of the Judicial Process 98-142 (1921). Holmes expressed both the compunctions and the necessity felt by a person who must discharge this responsibility in saying that he "hesitate[s] to affirm universal validity for his social ideals" and "may be ready to admit that he knows nothing about an absolute best in the cosmos, and even that he knows next to nothing about a permanent best for men. Still it is true that a body of law is more rational and more civilized when every rule it contains is referred articulately and definitely to an end which it subserves, and when the grounds for desiring that end are stated or are ready to be stated in words.” Holmes, The Path of the Law, 10 Harv. L.Rev. 457, 468-69 (1897).
. 1 A. Corbin, Corbin on Contracts 1-3 (1963); see also John Call Engineering, Inc. v. Manti City Corp., 743 P.2d 1205, 1207 (Utah 1987); Lundstrom v. Radio Corp. of Am., 17 Utah 2d 114, 405 P.2d 339 (1965); Carlson v. Hamilton, 8 Utah 2d 272, 332 P.2d 989 (1958).
. We recognize that the buyer and seller in this case, like most, probably did not intend for a judgment lien to attach to the seller’s interest shortly before the seller conveyed to the buyer, and they would have precluded the lien, if that were possible. However, the law also recognizes the rights of a party's creditors to reach assets in satisfaction of their judgments, without regard to the debtor’s preferences in the matter. Therefore, once it is clear that they have, by their intent, retained a property interest, the rights of creditors to reach that interest operate without regard to what the debtor-promisor and his promisee may have intended.
. Bergstrom v. Moore, 677 P.2d 1123 (Utah 1984); Callister v. Millstream Assocs., Inc., 738 P.2d 662 (Utah App.1987).
. See Gregerson v. Jensen, 669 P.2d 396, 398-99 (Utah 1983).
. Contrary to the majority’s view, the intent of the parties is clear from the face of their contract, and, under the parol evidence rule, extrinsic evidence is unnecessary and inadmissible. Ron Case Roofing and Asphalt Paving, Inc. v. Blomquist, 773 P.2d 1382, 1385 (Utah 1989).
. Other equitable doctrines, such as estoppel, laches, unclean hands, etc. are not subject to this same criticism. Rather, they serve to carry into effect the fair and reasonable intentions of the parties.
. 33 C.J.S. Executions § 28 at 158-59 (1942).
. E.g., Monroe v. Lincoln City Employees Credit Union, 203 Neb. 702, 279 N.W.2d 866 (1979); First Security Bank v. Rogers, 91 Idaho 654, 429 P.2d 386 (1967); Heider v. Deitz, 234 Or. 105, 380 P.2d 619 (1963). Surveys of case law on point include R. Cunningham, W. Stoebuck & D. Whitman, The Law of Property 701 (1984); Lacy, Creditors of Land Contract Vendors, 24 Case W.Res.L.Rev. 645, 646 (1973); 3 Am. Law of Property 11.29 at 85 (1952).
. It is perhaps ironic that equity, which began as an effort to overcome the constricting formalism of the common law writ system, came to have such a penchant for wholly abstract logical symmetry. Some of this devotion to abstract symmetry has already been discarded; the old equitable doctrine of mutuality of remedy, for example, which held that an equitable remedy could be granted to the plaintiff only if the defendant, under like, hypothetical circumstances, could obtain the same remedy, has been totally discarded. Utah Mercur Gold Mining Co. v. Herschel Gold Mining Co., 103 Utah 249, 134 P.2d 1094, 1097 (1943) ("The remedy of one should not depend upon the hypothetical case of what another could demand if the situation were different.”); Genola Town v. Santaquin City, 96 Utah 88, 80 P.2d 930, 934 (1938).
. Olsen v. Park Daughters Inv. Co., 29 Utah 2d 421, 511 P.2d 145 (1973).
. May v. Emerson, 52 Or. 262, 96 P. 454 (1908); Wehn v. Fall, 55 Neb. 547, 76 N.W. 13 (1898); see R. Cunningham, W. Stoebuck & D. Whitman, The Law of Property 702 (1982); Lacy, Creditors of Land Contract Vendors, 24 Case W.Res.L.Rev. at 646-47; A. Freeman & E. Tuttle, A Treatise on the Law of Judgments 965 (5th ed. 1905).
. Moyer v. Hinman, 13 N.Y. 180 (1855). Such concern certainly has its place in adjudication, and Utah case law has recognized that simple fairness and "the equities” may properly be considered in reaching a decision. Jacobson v. Jacobson, 557 P.2d 156, 158 (Utah 1976); but see Briggs v. Liddell, 699 P.2d 770, 772 (Utah 1985) (“equitable powers are narrowly bounded"). However, an unstructured, unguided inquiry into “whatever’s fair” invites subjectivity and inconsistent, uncertain results, and the often elusive and ethereal nature of "fairness” would leave little effective means, other than litigation, for resolving disputes. I would therefore prefer to see such equitable concern take a more structured form, such as laches. Under that doctrine, a lienor would be barred from enforcing the lien if the lienor delayed in asserting his rights while his adversary performed reasonably and innocently to his detriment. See Borland v. Chandler, 733 P.2d 144 (Utah 1987).
. Olsen v. Park Daughters Inv. Co., 511 P.2d at 146. There are several other potential arguments which, in an appropriate factual setting, the buyer could have asserted against the lien. However, we have neither facts nor argument to enable us to determine, for example, whether the title company handling the closing was negligent and could have reversed the transaction by returning escrowed deeds and money when it learned of the lien, or whether the Clements’ lien is inferior in priority to the interests of Hodge and the Cannefaxes.
. Taylor Nat'l, Inc. v. Jensen Bros. Constr. Co., 641 P.2d 150, 154-55 (Utah 1982).
. Butler, 740 P.2d 1259-60.