Robinson v. First Wyoming Bank, NA

                                   NO.     95-175

              IN THE SUPREMECOURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
                                          1995


LEWIS S. ROBINSON, III,         et al.,
              Plaintiffs   and Appellants,
         v.
FIRST WYOMINGBANK, N.A. JACKSON HOLE,                            * .i .%,Li~~
                                                                 \.A
a Wyoming corporation, and FIRST WYOMING                    """~~~~~s~~~~~~~~~~~"'
BANCORPORATION, a Wyoming corporation,
              Defendants   and Respondents.



APPEAL FROM:         District  Court of the Eighteenth  Judicial District,
                     In and for the County of Gallatin,
                     The Honorable Thomas A. Olson, Judge presiding.


COUNSEL OF RECORD:
              For Appellants:
                     Michael J. Lilly,   Berg, Lilly,            Andriolo
                     & Tollefsen,   Bozeman, Montana
              For Respondents:
                     Malcolm H. Goodrich,     Crowley, Haughey,             Hanson,
                     Toole & Dietrich,   Billings,    Montana


                                    Submitted       on Briefs:       November 9, 1995
                                                      Decided:        December 19, 1995
Filed:
Justice          Charles             E. Erdmann delivered                      the opinion           of the Court.
           This         is     an appeal           of     an order              of     the    Eighteenth           Judicial
District           Court,            Gallatin           County,         denying           Lewis      S.   and Linda            T.
Robinsons'              motion         to quash a writ                 of execution             issued       on a Wyoming
judgment           in        favor     of Key Bank of Wyoming,                            formerly        First     Wyoming
Bank (the bank),                      and a subsequent                  order        granting        summary judgment
in favor          of the bank on the Robinsons'                                declaratory           judgment       action.
We reverse               in part        and affirm           in part.
         We restate                  the issues          as follows:
           1.          Are      the     Robinsons          barred              from     appealing         the      District
Court's          April          14,     1994,      order         denying          their      motion       to quash            the
bank's          writ         of execution?
           2.          Did     the      District          Court          err      in      ruling      that        28 U.S.C.
5 1963 created                  a new judgment               for        purposes          of the six         year     period
during          which         a writ     of execution                  can be issued?
           3.          Did the District                  Court      err        in failing          to determine          that
the    bank            should         have      complied           with         the     Uniform       Enforcement              of
Foreign           Judgments             Act      when       it         registered            the     Wyoming        consent
judgment           in Montana state                 court?
           4.          Did the District                  Court         err     in granting           summary judgment
in favor          of the bank on the Robinsons'                                declaratory           judgment       action?
                                                             FACTS
           The Robinsons                executed          a promissory                note    in favor        of the bank
on March 22, 1985,                      in the amount of $353,161.                              On August         30, 1985,
the Robinsons                  gave the bank a mortgage                         on property           in the Gallatin



                                                                   2
Valley       (the        property)          as security                 for     the promissory                  note.          The
mortgage        had an effective                    date        of March 22, 1985.
         1n the mid-1980s,                   the Robinsons                   and the bank became involved
in litigation              in Wyoming over a variety                            of issues            arising          from the
bank's     treatment           of the Robinsons.                        The Robinsons                sued the bank for
fraud,        breach         of       contract,                breach          of        fiduciary            duty,       RICO,
negligence,              and punitive             damages.             The bank counterclaimed                         against
the      Robinsons          for     payment              of     the     promissory            note       together             with
other     outstanding              obligations.                  The bank and the Robinsons                            entered
into     a judgment          by stipulated                    consent     in which the Robinsons                        agreed
to pay the bank $175,000.                           This payment was intended                             to completely
replace       the amount previously                           owed under the promissory                         note.          The
judgment       on this        amount was entered                        in the Wyoming Federal                        Court     on
December 3, 1987.                    It     was not appealed                    by the Robinsons.
         The Wyoming consent                        judgment            was registered                   in     the     United
States       District         Court         for     Montana on August                       1, 1989,           pursuant         to
28 U.S.C.            5     1963.            On November                 27,         1991,      the       bank         filed          a
transcript           of the Montana federal                           court      judgment         with        the Gallatin
County Clerk              of Court.          The bank caused the clerk                            of court            to issue
four     different          writs         of execution            but the first                three      were returned
unsatisfied.               The fourth             writ        was issued            on December 16, 1993, and
was served           on the         Robinsons                 on January            3,    1994.        On February              4,
1994,      the Robinsons                  moved to dismiss                    the verified            application              for
sale     of the property                   and to quash the writ.
         On February              2, 1994, the Robinsons                        filed       a completely              separate
action        against         the          bank      seeking            to      have        the      bank's           mortgage

                                                                 3
declared           null        and void.          The bank filed               a motion       with      the District
Court       to        dismiss      this       action.         Later,           the bank moved to                convert
their       motion            to dismiss         to a motion            for     summary judgment,
          On April             7, 1994,       the Robinsons                 moved to consolidate                the two
actions,              which      the     court     did     on May 6.                 On April        14,      1994,    the
court       denied         the Robinsons'             motion       to quash the writ                 and ruled        that
the       filing          of    the     December 3,              1987,        Wyoming judgment                with     the
Montana            Federal        Court       on August           1,        1989,     was the         equivalent         of
filing           a new judgment.                  In its       conclusion,              the     court      determined
that      the six         years        for   issuing       a writ           of execution        on that        judgment
ran      from August             1, 1989.
          On May 2, 1994,                    the Robinsons             moved the court                to reconsider
its      April        14 order.           On May 6, 1994, when the court                         had entered           the
order       consolidating                 the two cases,               it     also    noted      that      the bank's
motion           to     dismiss         would      be converted                to     a motion          for     summary
judgment.              On June 17, 1994, the court                           denied Robinsons'             motion      for
reconsideration                  of its       April      14 order.
          The court             entered       an order       granting           summary judgment               in favor
of      the bank and against                      the Robinsons               on February         2, 1995.            From
both       the        April      14,      1994,       and the       February           2,     1995,     orders,        the
Robinsons              appeal.
                                                         ISSUE 1
          Are the Robinsons                   barred       from appealing               the District            Court's
April       14, 1994, order                  denying     their      motion           to quash the bank's              writ
of execution?
          The      bank      contends           that         the      April      14,         1994,       order      was a
post-judgment              order       and a "special"                 order      capable          of appeal            under
Rule l(b)         (2),     M.R.App.P.            Thus,        the time          for    its     appeal          expired          on
May 14, 1994,              and the Robinsons'                  February          23, 1995, appeal                  of this
order      should         be dismissed.                 The Robinsons                 counter           that     once the
cases were consolidated                       on May 6, the order                 became an interlocutory
order       in     the     consolidated              appeals.              As a result,                 the     Robinsons
contend          the April          14 order         was not subject              to appeal              at that        time.

&      Rule 1, M.R.App.P.;                    Matter         of Sage Creek Drainage                       Area     (1988),
234 Mont.          243,      763 P.2d 644.
          The bank          asserts           that     the         order      was entered               prior      to       the
consolidation                of       the      actions             and        cannot         be        viewed       as          an
interlocutory              order       in the consolidated                    proceedings.               Other     supreme
courts,          however,          have held          that     once cases              are     consolidated               they
are     one       for      all       appellate          purposes.                Mallin           v.     Farmers          Ins.
Exchange          (Nev. 19901,              797 P.2d 978, 980; State                     v. District              Court         of
Second Judicial                  District       (Wyo. 19631,               387 P.2d 550.                 In concurring
with      this     principle,               the Ninth        Circuit          Court     said:
                   In   our view,    the best approach is to permit             the
          zyyeal      only when there is a final        judgment that resolves
                   of     the   consolidated      actions      unless      a 54(b)
          certification        is entered by the district           court.    This
          leaves the discretion          with the court which is best able
          to evaluate the affect           [sic] of an interim      appeal on the
          parties      and on the expeditious       resolution      of the entire
          action.
Huene       v.      United           States          (9th      Cir.        1984),         743          F.2d      703,           705

(alteration              in original).
          In        the      present          case,         the     order        in      question             was issued            on
April      14,        1994,         which        gave the Robinsons                      until         May 14,           1994,      in
which          to     file          an     appeal          with      this        Court.               The       actions          were
consolidated                 on May 6, 1994.                     Thus, the consolidation                       postponed          the
time     for        appeal          of the order             to that          of the court's                  final      judgment
in the consolidated                         actions.             We therefore            hold that             the substance
of the April                 14, 1994,             order         is properly           before          this      Court.
                                                                 ISSUE 2
         Did        the District                 Court       err        in    ruling          that     28 U.S.C.            § 1963
created         a new judgment                     for     purposes           of the six             year      period       during
which      a writ            of execution                 can be issued?
         The Wyoming federal                             court     judgment           was registered                   in Montana
federal         court        pursuant          to 28 U.S.C.                  § 1963.          That section              provides:
"A judgment               so registered                  shall      have the           same     effect         as a judgment
of the district                     court      of the district                  where registered                      and may be
enforced             in      like        manner."                 The District                Court         concluded            that
registration                 under this            statute          created       a new judgment                      so that     the
date of the Wyoming judgment                                 for    purposes           of the issuance                  of a writ
of      execution             is      the      date         that        the     judgment             was registered                 in
Montana federal                    court.          The Robinsons              disagree,              contending          that     the
plain      language            of § 1963 requires                       the six         year period              during         which
a writ          of        execution            can be issued                   under          § 25-13-101,                MCA, to
commence upon                  the        date       the         judgment        was docketed                   in      Wyoming--
December 3, 1987.
         The District                    Court's         conclusion           was in response                  to a question
of law.             Accordingly,              we will            review       questions              of law to determine

                                                                    6
if     the district               court's      interpretation                      is     correct.             Farmers         Plant
Aid,      Inc.      v.     Huggins           (1994),           266 Mont.                249,     252,        879 P.2d          1173,
1175.            Federal          courts      have ruled                   inconsistently                    on whether              the
registration              of a judgment              pursuant               to 28 U.S.C.                § 1963 creates                 a
new judgment               date.        Comoare Juneau Spruce                              Corp.        v.     International
Longshoremen's                and Warehousemen's                       Union            (U.S.D.C.        Haw. 1955),                 128
F. Supp. 697, with                   Stanford            v. Utley           (8th Cir.             1965),       341 F.2d 265,
a&      United       States         v. Kellum             (5th Cir.               1975),         523 F.2d         1284.
          The      Ninth          Circuit          Court,             in     Marx         v.       Go Publishing                     Co.
(9th      Cir.      1983),          721 F.2d         1272,          ruled          that         § 1963 created               a new
judgment           when it          was filed             in     federal            court.              In     that     opinion,
however,           the     court       looked        to California                      state      law and determined
that      "[u]nder          analogous          California                  law,     the ten year                period         for     a
valid      and enforceable                  judgment            of a sister              state       runs anew from the
time      of its         filing       in the state               superior               court      . . . .l(          Marx
                                                                                                                      -,             721
F.2d      at     1273.        The court            then         stated        "[wle            discern         no reason             why
the      statute         of limitations                  rule     of the            state         should        not     apply         to
the federal              proceedings."               Marx
                                                     -,               721 F.2d at 1273.
          When the           Wyoming judgment                    was registered                     in Montana            federal
court,         Montana            had not          yet     adopted            the         Uniform            Enforcement              of
Foreign          Judgments           Act.          Section            25-g-303,             MCA, provided                for         the
registration              of a federal              judgment               in state            court,        however,      it        was
limited          to judgments               rendered            in the Circuit                   or District            Court         of
the      United          States,           Ninth         Circuit,            District              of        Montana.           This
statute          does not address                  the registration                      of judgments             of a sister
state,         as did       the California                 statute            in -.
                                                                                 Marx               Therefore,            we have

                                                                  7
no analogous              state         authority         upon which               to    rely      at     the    time     the
judgment          was registered              and Marx is inapplicable.
          While     the Eighth            Circuit,            in Stanford,              held that         registration
under        5 1963 provided                 the       equivalent             of       a new judgment               in    the
registration             court,        the issue presented                    in Stanford              is distinguish-
able      from     the     issue        presented             in this         case.        In Stanford,             a 1956
Mississippi            federal          judgment         was registered                 that      year        in Missouri
federal        court       pursuant          to     § 1963.             Mississippi              had a seven year
period       of     limitations,             while            Missouri         had a ten               year     period      of
limitations.               The judgment                 creditor         sought          to     discover         Missouri
assets       more than            seven but            less     than     ten years             after      registration
of     the     judgment           in     Missouri.               The district                  court       quashed        the
action,        reasoning          that      the judgment               was dead under the Mississippi
seven year          period         of     limitations.                 The Eighth              Circuit         found     that
the      Missouri          registration                 equated          to        a    new Missouri               federal
judgment          and went on to hold                    that:
          It follows    from this that the Missouri ten year period of
          limitations,      provide by V.A.M.S.     § 516.350, and not the
          Mississippi       seven year      period,   applies   so far   as
          enforcement     is concerned, and that execution proceedings
          by the plaintiff           within   the Missouri     period, and
          otherwise    proper,     are not subject to dismissal.
Stanford,          341 F.2d at 268.
          In Stanford,            the Court applied                  the Missouri               ten year period             of
limitations            which allowed              the enforcement                  of the judgment                not only
from the date             of registration,                    but also         from the date              the judgment

was originally               docketed             in     Mississippi.                   After          discussing         the




                                                                 8
    number          of questions                         that        their         decision               would         leave         unanswered,                 the

    Court          in     Stanford                     limited          their          holding:

              The     presence         of      these      and undoubtedly         many    other
              questions       prompts        us to emphasize        that the conclusion        we
              reach       here     is      one having         application      to   the     fact
              situation        of this        case.      We do not now go so far as to
              say that         registration           effects    a new judgment         in the
              registration         court for every conceivable             purpose;    neither
              do we say that              it    fails     to do so for       any particular
              purpose.

I   Stanford,              341 F.Zd                     at      271.

              The Fifth                     Circuit              recognized                   in     Kellum            that       Stanford               did      not
    hold      that         registration                          created            a brand               new judgment                  to be enforced

    as if          there        had never                       been        a prior               judgment             in      the      case.            Kellum,

    523 F.2d              at      1289.                  The Ninth                 Circuit,               in     Matanuska                 Valley         Lines,

    Inc.      v.        Molitor                  (1966),             365 F.2d                358,     also         found          that          the      rule      in

    Stanford              was limited                        and stated               "the          holding             of     the      Eighth           Circuit

    court          relates             to        the         effect           of valid               registration                     upon        subsequent

    enforcement                 proceedings."                                Matanuska,                   365      F.2d          at      360.            In     this

    case,          there          is        no          issue          as     to      valid           registration                    of        the      Wyoming

    federal             judgment                 in      the         Montana          federal              court            because          the       judgment

    was still              a "live"                     judgment              under           the     laws         of        Wyoming            at     the      time

    it     was registered.                               See Wyo.               Stat.             § l-17-307.

              Regardless                     of whether                 Stanford                  stands         for         the proposition                    that

    §      1963         creates                  a      new          judgment                in     the         registering                     state,          that

    interpretation                          of         § 1963 has               the          deleterious                 effect            of     nullifying

    the     limitation                      period              in     both        the        issuing            state          and the               registra-

    tion      state.                   In        Wyoming,              for         example,               a judgment                  becomes            dormant

    after          five        years              if      an execution                       is     not        issued          within           that         period


                                                                                         9
although            it      may be       revived          under              certain      circumstances.                      See
Wyo. Stat.               55 l-16-502          and l-17-307.                    Under the bank's                  theory,       if
a judgment               creditor      registered          the judgment                 in Montana pursuant                    to
§ 1963 within                 five     years      after      it        was docketed              in Wyoming,                they
would have an additional                       six years              to obtain         a writ        of execution             in
Montana without                 leave     of court         and four             additional         years           to obtain
a writ       with          leave      of court.           This        extends          the period            in which          to
execute          the judgment           to fourteen          years,             which     is beyond either                    the
Montana or Wyoming limitation.                               Such a result                   is repugnant             to the
laws of both               states.       See Powles v. Kandrasiewicz                              (w.D.N.c.           1995),
886 F. Supp.                1261.
         We therefore                adopt the analysis                      of the United         States          District
Court       in       Juneau          which     reviewed            the         legislative            intent         of       the
enactment            of     28 U.S.C.          5 1963 and concluded                       that        "the       plain        and
simple       purpose            of     the     statute           is      enforcement             of        the     original
judgment."                Juneau,       128 F. Supp. at 700 (citing                              1954 U.S.C.C.A.N.
3142,      where           Congress       stated      the         original             purpose        of     the     statute
while      discussing               an amendment which extended                         the scope of § 1963 to
the      district             court      of    Alaska).                  The      Juneau         court           determined
"[rlegistration                 is purely         a ministerial                  act     in the enforcement                    of
a foreign           judgment           [by reason         that         i]t      confers      upon this              court      no
power to alter                 the judgment          itself."                   In contrast,           a suit         upon a
judgment          differs           from a registration                      in that      a suit           "is    a new and
independent               action,      not ancillary              to the original                action."            Juneau,
128 F. Supp. at 699.



                                                            10
         Clearly         there      is an intended            difference                 in bringing            a separate
action      for       the enforcement               of a judgment                 and in merely               registering
a judgment            where both            creditors         and debtors                   are    relieved            of     the
additional            cost        and harassment             of     further              litigation.                See 1954
U.S.C.C.A.N.             3142.       This difference                reflects             the ministerial                effect
of registration               under 28 U.S.C.               § 1963 and that                  registration               should
not cause a new judgment                       date.
         We hold           that      the     six     year         period           during         which        a writ            of
execution          can be issued              under         5 25-13-101,                 MCA, commences on the
date      the      judgment           was docketed                 in     the       original                forum     when          a
judgment          is filed          in Montana federal                   court      pursuant            to § 1963.              We
therefore          conclude           the     District            Court           erred       when it           held         that
28 U.S.C.          5 1963 created               a new judgment                     for      purposes           of     the     six
year     period         during       which     a writ        of execution                  can be issued               and we
reverse         the      District         Court      on that             issue.            As a result                of     this
holding,         the period           during        which the bank could                       cause a writ                 to be
issued         began         to     run     from      the      date         of       the       Wyoming              judgment,
December 3, 1987.                    The six        year     period          referenced                in    § 25-13-101,
MCA, expired             on December 3, 1993,                      thus      barring           the writ             issued      on

December 16, 1993.
                                                          ISSUE 3
         Did      the District              Court     err     in        failing          to determine                that     the
bank should             have complied              with     the Uniform              Enforcement               of Foreign
Judgments          Act     when it          registered            the Wyoming consent                         judgment           in
Montana         state      court?



                                                             11
           The        Robinsons                  claim            that              the         bank        did         not         comply          with          the
procedures                  set       forth          in     the         Montana              Uniform               Enforcement                 of        Foreign

Judgments              Act,             §§ 25-g-501                     to      -508,            MCA.             The District                     Court,              in
its      April             14,      1994,           order,              noted             that        the        Uniform              Act     was not                  in
effect           at    the         time        the         Wyoming                 judgment             was registered                         in        Montana

federal           court.                The court                went          on to find                   that           there      was nothing                      in

the        record            to         indicate                 that          the         bank         did           not          comply           with          the

procedures                 set      forth           in      28 U.S.C.                    5 1963.             The court                concluded                 that
the      Uniform             Act        did         not      apply             retroactively                          to     the      bank         under          the

facts        of       this         case.

           We will                review            a district                      court's            conclusion                    of      law         for      its

correctness.                       Farmers                Plant          Aid,             879 P.2d               at        1175.            The      District

Court        was           correct             in         that         the          Uniform            Act            did      not        apply           to      the

registration                       of      the            Wyoming                  judgment                 in        the          Montana               federal

district              court.                However,                   the          judgment                was         then         filed          in         state

district              court         subsequent                   to Montana's                      adoption                 of the Uniform                      Act.

The Robinsons                     assert            that         the Uniform                     Act        should            have been              followed

by the        bank when it                     filed             the         Montana             federal              court          judgment              in the

Montana           district               court.              Contrarily,                        the     bank          argues          that          a foreign

judgment              under             the         Uniform                  Act          should            be        construed                to        mean           a

judgment              of         any      non-Montana                         federal             or        state            court.               Under           the

bank's           reasoning,                 the       bank         should                 not     be obliged                   to     follow             the      Act

where        the           federal            court          and the                 state            court            in     which          the         federal

judgment              is      filed           are         located              in     the        same state.

           Section                25-g-502,                MCA,          in        the      Uniform               Act        defines           a "foreign

judgment"              to         mean        "a judgment,                         decree,             or        order         of     a court             of      the

                                                                                    12
United       States          or of any other                court        which is entitled                       to full          faith
and credit             in     this          state."          Where the             language               of     a statute            is
clear     and unambiguous,                     we look no further                   than to the plain                       meaning
of the statute                for     its      interpretation.                Howell            v. State             (19941,         263
Mont.     275, 284, 868 P.2d 568, 573.                                   The Uniform             Act clearly                applies
to   federal           court          judgments             registered             in        state        district             courts
regardless             of     whether           the    federal            court         is     located            in     the       same
state     as the state                  court
         Our holding                 that      the Uniform           Act     applied            to the registration
of Montana             as well          as non-Montana                   federal         court        judgments              is      not
dispositive            of this           issue.        We earlier            cited           § 25-g-303,               MCA, which
provides         for        the filing           of a transcript                  of a Montana federal                            court
judgment         in     state          court.          This     statute,                enacted           in     1927,       is      not

referenced             in the Uniform                 Act     and provides,                   in part,            as follows:
         25-g-303.                   Filing      of transcript                 of        docket           of      federal
         court         --     lien        --           (1) A transcript
                                                expiration.               of the
         original      docket of a judgment that is rendered              in the
         circuit      or district          court of the United States,      ninth
         circuit,      district        of Montana, and that is certified         by
         the clerk of court may be filed                with the district   court
         clerk      of any county.          From the time of the filing,       the
         judgment becomes a lien upon all real property                   of the
         judgment debtor that is not exempt from execution                 in the
         county and that is either owned by the judgment debtor at
         the time or afterward                acquired   by the judgment debtor
         before the lien expires.              Except as provided in subsection
          (2),    the lien continues           for 6 years unless the judgment
         is previously          satisfied.
         Given          the          continued          vitality             of         that         statute             and         the
oft-stated             rules          that      a repeal            of     a statute                 by        implication            is
disfavored,             § 25-9-303(l),                 MCA, provides                an alternative                     method for
filing       a judgment              of a Montana federal                    court           in Montana state                     court


                                                                13
in addition              to the procedure                  under        the Uniform              Act.       The bank,           in
filing      a "Transcript                  of Judgment"               from the Montana federal                      court       in
the Montana              state          court,      complied          with      5 25-9-303(l),               MCA.
          We hold              that       the      bank        was not          required            to     register            the
judgment          in Montana state                   court       under        the Uniform               Act because            the
bank       had          the           option       of       filing           the        judgment            pursuant            to
§ 25-9-303(l),                  MCA.        Our holding               in Issue          2 that      the December 16,
1994,      writ         of     execution           was defective               does not           render         this      point
moot since              the transcript               of judgment              was properly               filed      pursuant
to § 25-9-303(l),                      MCA, and the bank could                       request        leave        of court       to
have the clerk                  of court          issue     a writ          pursuant        to § 25-13-102,                 MCA.
                                                           ISSUE 4
          Did     the         District           Court     err        in granting              summary judgment                 in
favor      of the bank on the Robinsons'                                    declaratory           action?
          The Robinsons                   brought          an action               in    District           Court        for         a
declaratory              judgment           ordering           that     the mortgage                the bank held               on
the Robinsons'                  Montana property                 be declared            null      and void.             In that

action,         the Robinsons                  claimed         the bank's            mortgage           was invalid            for
two reasons--there                       was a failure             of consideration                  for    the mortgage
and the           eight-year              statute         of     limitations              for       foreclosing            on a
mortgage,          5 27-2-202(l),                  MCA, had expired.
          The Robinsons                  also      claimed           that      the      mortgage           slandered           the

title      to      their             property.            They did           not,       however,           set     forth        an
argument          for        their      claim     of slander            in either          the District             Court       or
this      Court,         and therefore,                  we will        not address              the merits             of that



                                                                 14
claim.           See Alamaras              v.    Yellowstone               Basin        Properties                    (1991),       248
Mont.      477,     483,       812 P.2d 770, 773.
          In considering                  the Robinsons'              first        two claims,                      the District
Court      granted         summary judgment                     in    favor        of    the            bank.             The court
determined          that       there        were no questions                   of fact                 and the bank was
entitled         to judgment              as a matter           of law.         The standard                        we employ in
reviewing          a district              court's        summary judgment                        is the same as that
employed          by the district                  court.            Summary judgment                         is     proper        only
when there          are      no genuine              issues          of material              fact            and the moving
party      is     entitled           to     judgment         as a matter                of        law.             Klawitter         v.
Dettmann          (Mont.       1995),           51 St.      Rep. 1296.
          The Robinsons               claim       a question              of   fact       exists               as to whether
consideration              was given              for     the     mortgage.               The court                      determined
that      the Wyoming judgment                       resolved         the issue              of whether                   there     was
consideration                for      both        the       promissory             note            and             the     mortgage
executed          by     the       Robinsons.                The court             concluded                   there         was no
question         of fact        and principles               of res judicata                      barred            relitigation
of this          claim     as a matter               of law.              The Robinsons                  assert            that     the
Wyoming consent                judgment          was based solely                  on consideration                         for     the
promissory          note,          while        the mortgage              is   the subject                    of the present
action.
          The Wyoming consent                        judgment,             however,               stated            that       " [al11
mortgages          and security                  interests            .    .       shall            .     .        . secure         the
payment of this                judgment."               By this       statement,              the Robinsons                   agreed
that       the      consideration                  for      the       mortgage               is         security            of      the
judgment.           The Robinsons                 did     not appeal            the consent                        judgment.

                                                                15
           In HKM Assoc.                   v.      Northwest                Pipe     Fittings         (Mont.       1995),      900
P.2d 302,                305,      52 St.          Rep. 692,            694, we set out a three-part                          test
for     collateral                 estoppel.
           Collateral       estoppel   bars an action     . . . when:    (I) the
           issue presented         in a later  action has been decided in a
           prior     adjudication;      (2) a final   judgment in the action
           was issued;        and (3) the party against        whom collateral
           estoppel       is asserted       was a party      to the previous
           litigation.
HKM Assoc.,                900 P.2d at 305 (citing                            Berlin        v. Boedecker           (19941,     268
Mont.         444, 453, 887 P.2d 1180, 1185; Farmers Plant                                                Aid,     879 P.2d at
1176.               In     the      instant           case,           the      Robinsons          raise      the      issue      of
whether             there          was consideration                        for     the     mortgage.            The Wyoming
consent         judgment              recognized             that       the mortgage             was valid       and secured
payment             of the judgment                  thereby            resolving           the identical           issue      now
presented.                 Additionally,                  there        was a final             judgment      that     held     the
mortgage             was     valid,        and finally,                 the Robinsons             were a party          to both

the     Wyoming judgment                           and the            declaratory            action       before      us.       We
therefore                conclude          that       the Robinsons                   are    estopped        from     claiming
there         was no consideration                          for        the mortgage.
           Although              our conclusion                 is based on collateral                     estoppel      rather
than          res        judicata,            we will                 uphold        the     result        reached       by     the
District             Court         since      it     iS    Correct,               regardless         of the reason          given

for     it.          See Lindey's                  v. Goodover               (19941,        264 Mont.        449,     453,     872
P.2d 764,                766.       We therefore                  hold       that      the District          Court     did     not
err        in       finding           there          was no              question           of    fact       and     that      the

Robinsons'                 first      claim         should            be dismissed.




                                                                       16
           The Robinsons                        argued           in their           motion             to the           District              Court         for
summary             judgment              that        they        were       entitled                 to     an order               declaring              the

mortgage                 invalid             since           eight           years             had           passed               from        when         the

mortgage             became           due and               its      foreclosure                     was barred                   by the         statute

of      limitations                  in      § 27-2-202(l),                        MCA.              The District                    Court,             while

noting         that         the       Wyoming               judgment               ordered             that            the    mortgage             secure

the      payment            of the          promissory                    note,         went         on to         analyze              the    issue            in

the      context             of      a judgment                    lien.            In        ultimately                     holding          that         the
statute             of     limitations                     had not          run         on the              execution              of      a judgment

lien,         the        court       denied            the        Robinsons'              motion              and granted                  the     bank's

motion         for         summary              judgment             instead.

           The Robinsons                     argued              on appeal              that         the      issue          was the          validity

of      the     mortgage                  and        again          urged          that         the          eight           year         statute               of

limitations                 had expired                     and the           mortgage                 is     therefore                  invalid           and

unenforceable.                       As we have                    noted,           in        the      Wyoming               consent           judgment

the      parties             agreed             to     the        order           which         provided                 that        the      mortgage

"shall         continue               in        effect            and secure                  the      payment               of    this        judgment

until         such         time       this           judgment              has      been            fully         paid        and satisfied."

According                to the           order,           the     Robinsons                  and the             bank        agreed          to extend

the      mortgage            until           the       judgment             was paid.                   This           Court        has held             that

parties         may agree                  to extend                the     life         of     a mortgage.                       Aitken         v.      Lane

(1939),             108 Mont.              368,        375,         92 P.2d             628,         630.          We conclude                 that        the

Wyoming             consent           judgment                   tolled           the     statute                 of     limitations                    until

the      underlying                obligation                     was paid,              and therefore,                           the      statute              of

limitations                  had          not        yet     begun           to         run     on          the        enforcement                 of      the

bank's         mortgage.

                                                                             17
           Since the Robinsons                   agreed to toll                 the statute            of limitations
in      the     Wyoming consent                 judgment,             they      cannot      now argue              that         the
eight           year      statute          under        § 27-2-202(l),                   MCA, has            run         on     the
mortgage.                This      Court       however          makes no determination                         as to            the
effect           of     the      tolled       statute           of     limitations             in     regard             to     the
mortgage.
           Although            we do not         follow         its      reasoning,            we agree            with         the
District              Court's       result       on the          issue         of    whether         the      statute            of
limitations              has expired.              See Lindev's,               872 P.2d at 766. Therefore,
we conclude              that     the District            Court did not err                 in holding              that        the
statute          of limitations               had not run on the execution                                 of a judgment
lien.
           In     summary,          the      District         Court's           April       14,      1994,         order          is
properly              before      this       court      due to          the     consolidations                of     the        two
district              court      actions.            We reverse              the    District          Court's            ruling
that       28 U.S.C.             Ii 1963 created           a new judgment                  for      purposes             of the
six        year         period       for       issuing           a      writ        of     execution               found          in
5 25-13-101,                  MCA, and conclude                  that         the   bank's          writ      is     quashed
because of the expiration                           of that      period.            We further             conclude            that
the bank properly                   filed       a transcript              of the Montana federal                              court
judgment              in state      court       pursuant             to § 25-9-303(l),                MCA.         Although
we rely           on other         grounds,          we affirm           the District               Court's         grant        of
summary judgment                  in the declaratory                   judgment          action       in favor            of the
bank on the Robinsons'                        claim      that        the mortgage           is invalid              due to a
lack       of consideration.                   Finally,          we again           rely    on other          grounds             to

affirm          the District              Court's       granting          of summary judgment                       in        favor

                                                                18
of      the     bank          in     the        declaratory       judgment       action   on the      Robinsons'

statute              of      limitations              argument.          The   parties    clearly      agreed      to

toll          the         statute          of     limitations      for     foreclosing       on the     mortgage

until          the        judgment              was satisfied.




                                                                                Justice


We concur:



          Chief             Justice




                          Justices




                                                                  19
Justice         James C. Nelson                        concurs    and dissents.


          I agree          with         our        analysis       of       Issues         I,     3 and 4 and dissent
from our decision                      on Issue           2.
          On     Issue            2,        I       disagree           with        our          conclusion             that         on
registration               of      the          Wyoming federal                  court          judgment          in    Montana
federal         district           court,              a new judgment               was not             created        under        28
U.S.C.         5 1963.             In my view,                   we should           interpret             the     effect           of
registration               under            this        federal        statute         as the            federal        circuit
courts         have.
          In    Stanford               v.       Utley      (8th      Cir.        1965),          341 F.2d          265,        then
Circuit         Judge Blackmun,                     wrote what is probably                       the seminal           decision
interpreting               § 1963.                 Contrary       to our decision                   here,        the    federal
court      stated:
          We have concluded that § 1963 is more than "ministerial"
          and is more than a mere procedural           device   for   the
          collection   of the foreign        judgment.   We feel    that
          registration    provides,     so far      as enforcement      is
          concerned,   the equivalent      of a new judgment      of the
          registration   court.     [Emphasis added.]
Stanford,            341 F.2d at 268.
          The court              based           its      conclusion            on several               considerations.
First,         the     court       found            the    statute          to be more comprehensive                           than
the limited             execution                type      of statute            exemplified              by 28 U.S.C.               5
2413.          Moreover          the clear,               unambiguous             and purposeful                  language          of
§     1963      requires               registration               to        "have         the      same effect                as     a
judgment,"           rather            than        something         far      inferior.            Second,         giving          the
transferred             judgment                "lesser        status"         would           thwart     some or all               of
the      purposes           of         § 1963,            which        include         the        simplification                   and
                                                                  20
facilitation           of enforcement              of federal                judgments;             the elimination
of the necessity              and expense of a second lawsuit;                                    and the avoidance
of     impediments           such      as diversity                  of     citizenship                 which         new and
distinct        federal       litigation           might     otherwise                 encounter.               Third,       the
authorities           (Moore's         Federal       Practice;               Barron            & Holtzoff,             Federal
Practice        and Procedure;                and the Restatement                         of     Conflict          of Laws;
for     example)       do not          narrow      the      language              of    the       statute          in    their
comments and applications.                        Fourth,        § 1963 appears                    to be broader              in
its    language       and scope than a mere "ministerial"                                       or enforcement               aid
and has some substantive                         aspect      as opposed                 to       being         exclusively
procedural          in character.             Stanford,              341 F.2d at 270-71.
         Moreover,           without       attempting                to      reconcile             the         conflicting
language        used by the two federal                     district               courts          in Juneau Spruce
Corp.      v.       International              Longshoremen's                     & Warehousemen's                       Union
(N.D.Cal.           1955),         128 F.Supp.            715;            and Juneau              Spruce          Corp.       v.
International              Longshoremen's             & Warehousemen's                           Union          (D.     Hawaii
19551,       128 F.Supp             697,      Judge Blackmun,                     nevertheless,                  found       the
actual     holdings          of those         two cases--that                    timely         registration             opens
the     way to enforcement                 procedure            in        the registration                     court--were
consistent          with      the      court's      decision                in    Stanford.               Stanford           341
F.2d     at 268-69.
         Finally,         Marx v. Go Pub. Co.,                       Inc.        (9th Cir.          19831,            721 F.2d
1272,      is    consistent            with      Stanford             in     holding             that      registration
under      § 1963 creates              a new judgment.                      As the majority                    points     out,
Montana         had not       in     1987 yet        adopted               the     registration                 procedures
under      the Uniform          Enforcement           of Foreign                  Judgments             Act.          The only

                                                           21
conclusion          that         I can draw from that                     statement         in reference             to this
issue      is     that     if     the Uniform              Act had been in effect                        in 1987,        then
a federal         court         looking         to Montana law (i.e.                      the Uniform         Act)     would
have concluded                  that     registration               of a foreign             judgment         in Montana
under      that      Act        would         have created               a "new" Montana               judgment.           In
that     I agree.
        Moreover,               that     conclusion           is consistent                with      the Montana law
that    was in effect                  in 1987. Specifically,                       5 27-2-201,          MCA, did        (and
still     does) permit                 actions        on judgments            of federal            and state         courts
of record          to be commenced in Montana within                                      10 years       from the date
of entry          of the         judgment.             Section            27-2-201(l),            MCA.       Nothing       in
that     section           or      in        our    case          law     indicates          that      in     Montana          a
judgment          obtained              by     suing       out          federal      or     sister          state      court
judgment         would not be a "new" judgment                                for    all     purposes.              In fact,
our current          case law compels the opposite                                  conclusion.           See Welch v.
Huber      (1993),         262 Mont.               114,      862 P.2d             1180;     and Jones v.              Arnold
(Mont.          1995),          900      P.2d      917,       924,         52 St.Rep.             779,       783,      which
indicate          that,          as      to     domestic            judgments,             a judgment           obtained
through         an action              on a judgment              is a "new" judgment.
         Furthermore,                  § 25-g-303,           MCA, discussed                 in our       opinion         also
lends      support         to the conclusion                      that      registration             creates         a "new"
judgment           for      execution              purposes.                  Section         25-9-303(l),               MCA,
provides,          in pertinent                part       that:
         From the time     of the filing       [of the federal        court
         judgment with the clerk of the state district      court],     the
         judgment becomes a lien upon all real property             of the
         judgment debtor that is not exempt from execution          in the
         county and . . . the lien continues       for 6 years unless
          the judgment is previously  satisfied.      [Emphasis added.]
                                                                  22
I    suggest           that         it     is        more than              mere coincidence                             that      the     time

period      during            which the judgment                          lien           is in effect           on filing                of the
federal          court          judgment                in     state            court           under         this          statute,            is
exactly              the     same time                 period             as        the        judgment          lien            for      "new"
judgments              docketed            with         the     clerk            of        court.           See 5 25-g-301(2),
MCA.       If        the filing              of the           federal               court           judgment         in     state         court
did not create                 a "new" judgment,                          then the statute                    could             not provide
unequivocally                 for        a full         6-year            judgment             lien.        Rather,              the length
of the lien                from the state                 court           filing           would be dependent                         upon the
running          of some other                   time period                which             commenced when the federal
judgment             was originally                    issued.
         Accordingly,                    until        our decision                   here,          I suggest            that     a federal
court      that            looked        to Montana law in general                                     and to §§ 27-2-201(l)
and       25-g-303            (11,         MCA,          in      particular,                         to     determine                  whether
registration                 under         § 1963 created                        a new judgment                      in     this         state,
would      likely            have come to the same conclusion                                              as did          the court              in
Marx.
         At least             until         this        case,        it     appears             that       the registration                     of
or     suing          out      of        a foreign              federal                  or     state        court          judgment              in
Montana would                 create             a "new" judgment                          in this         state.               The    same       is

true      of a Montana                   federal             court        judgment              transferred                by filing              of
a transcript                 of judgment                in the state                     district          court.           The mischief
in our decision                     here is that,                now, execution                           in Montana on a whole
class           of         judgments                 originating                    in        other        jurisdictions                      must
henceforth                 be accomplished,                      not           in        accordance           with          time         limits
clearly          established                    in     Montana            law,           but     rather,            in     reference              to

                                                                          23
time      limitations           established              in   the     originating      states.
Accordingly,       I would           hold    that   under     § 1963,     a new judgment    was
created    when the Wyoming federal                  court     judgment    was registered        in
Montana     federal       district          court   on August       1, 1989,    and I dissent
from our conclusion             to the contrary.




Justice  Karla          M. Gray joins           i
and dissent.




                                                    24
Justice        W. William                Leaphart,                  dissenting.

           I concur         with         the Court's                      holding         in issues                one and two,                and
specially           concur              in        issue          four.             However,             I         dissent            from      our
holding        in issue           number three                       that        § 25-9-303(l),                    MCA, provides                 an
alternative               method             for        filing             a judgment             of             a Montana             Federal
District           Court          in         a Montana                    State          Court         in          addition             to     the
procedure            provided                for         in         the     Uniform            Enforcement                      of     Foreign
Judgments Act,               §§ 25-9-501through                                  -508,    MCA. Section                        25-9-303(l),
MCA, predates               the Uniform                  Act.             It provides            that            a foreign            judgment
may be filed              in Montana State                           Court        by the filing                    of a "transcript
of the original                  docket            of a judgment."                        The Uniform                    Act,        passed      in
1989,       provides             that        a foreign                judgment            is     filed             in Montana                State
Court       by      the      filing                of     an         authenticated                   copy           of        the       foreign
judgment           with     the clerk                   of the district                     court.                Section            25-g-503,
MCA.         Thus,         § 25-9-303(l),                           MCA, conflicts                 with             the        Uniform         Act
requirement               that      an authenticated                             copy of the                     judgment            be filed.
I      would        hold          that             the         Uniform              Act        impliedly                      repeals          the
inconsistent               provisions                   of the prior                 law.
           Generally,             repeal            by implication                        is     not         favored            unless         the
statutes           in      question                are        irreconcilable.                        W.R.           Grace            & Co.       v.
Department              of Revenue                  (1989),               238 Mont.            439,          450,            779 P.2d         470,
476,       cert.        denied,              493        U.S.         1094,          (1990);        Montana                   Power Co. v.
Public       Serv.        Comm'n (1984),                       214 Mont.             82, 93, 692 P.2d 432, 437-38;
State       ex rel.          Sol v.               Bakker            (1982),         199 Mont.                    385,        392,     649 P.2d
456,       460.         However,              such repeal                   is     necessary                if     the        statutes         are
irreconcilable                   and         if         repeal            will       give        effect                 to     the      obvious
legislative                intent             expressed                    in      passing             the          newer            and      more
comprehensive                act.             State            v.     Carisch            Theatres,                 Inc.         (1977),        172


                                                                           25
Mont.      453,        458,        564 P.2d 1316,              1319
          In many instances,                      this        Court      has held          that        the passage                of
comprehensive             uniform          legislation             repeals        conflicting              provisions             of
earlier         law.      a,          e.q.,       In re Holmes               (19791,       183 Mont.              290,       298,
599 P.2d 344, 348 (holding                            that       the Uniform         Probate             Code impliedly
repealed         the Mortmain                Statute);           Carisch       Theatres,           564 P.2d at 1319
(holding        that      a comprehensive                 movie theater             licensing              act impliedly
repealed         an earlier            conflicting               licensing        scheme);             State      v. Langan
(1968),         151 Mont.            558,      564,       445 P.2d 565,               569        (holding            that     the
Uniform      Drug Act               superseded           prior        search      and seizure               statutes).
           Montana            is    not      alone       in      following          this        rule       of     statutory
construction.                  &       Peter       v.     State         (Alaska       1975),           531 P.2d             1263;
Dairyland         Ins.         Co. v. Rose (N.M.                  19791,         591 P.2d 281,               284;       Rivera
v.   District           Court        (Okla.        1993),         851 P.2d 524,             527.         In Peter,            the
Supreme         Court          of    Alaska          held        that      the      Uniform            Alcoholism             and
Intoxication             Treatment              Act       repealed          by      implication                 an    earlier
statute      prohibiting                  a person        from being             intoxicated             while        upon or
along a highway.                    Peter,      531 P.2d 1263.                 The Peter          court         recognized
two categories                 of repeal          by implication:
          There are two well-settled             categories     of repeals   by
          implication:       (1) where provisions     in the two acts are in
          irreconcilable        conflict,  the later    act to the extent of
          the conflict      constitutes   an implied repeal of the earlier
          one;     and (2) if the later       act covers the whole subject
          of the earlier           one and is clearly          intended    as a
          substitute,      it will operate similarly        as a repeal of the
          earlier     act.
Peter,      531 P.2d at 1267 (citations                                 omitted).
          Both rationales                 apply       to the instant              case.         First,          § 25-g-503,
MCA, establishes                    a new and different                     method         of     filing         a foreign
judgment;         an authenticated                       copy of         the     judgment          as opposed                to    a

                                                                  26
transcript          of the original                docket        pursuant         to § 25-9-303(i),                   MCA.
It   only makes sense that                   there        should be just              one acceptable            method
of filing          foreign       judgments,              otherwise         there        was no point            to the
passage       of     the Uniform            Act.          The Uniform            Act       and § 25-9-303(I),
MCA, are           irreconcilable,                 therefore          § 25-g-503,              MCA, impliedly
repeals       § 25-9-303(l),                MCA.
         Second,         as a Uniform             Act,     the Uniform            Enforcement           of Foreign
Judgments          Act       covers         the     whole        subject          area       and      was      clearly
intended        as a substitute.                    Repeal        by implication              is     particularly
compelling          in the case of a subsequent                          Uniform           Act because          one of
the primary            purposes       in adopting              a Uniform         Act is to bring               the law
of the State            of Montana into              conformity           with        the laws of the other
states      adopting         the same Uniform                  Act.      &,       e.s.,      §§ 25-g-508,              25-
9-609,       25-9-715,        MCA.
         The Uniform          Enforcement                of Judgments           Act does provide                for      an
"optional          procedure"         whereby            a judgment           creditor's       right        to bring
an action          to enforce         his     judgment           instead        of proceeding            under        the
Uniform          Act       "remains           unimpaired."                    Section         25-g-507,             MCA.
Significantly,             the      Uniform         Act        does not         provide        that      the       prior
provision          allowing         the filing            of a transcript               pursuant       to § 25-9-
303(1),       MCA, remains              unimpaired               as an option.                 The Court,                in
allowing        the bank to pick                  and choose between                    compliance          with      the
Uniform      Act       and the conflicting                  provisions            of § 25-9-303(l),                 MCA,
has defeated             the whole goal             of uniformity               as set       forth     in      5 25-9-
508,     MCA.
         I conclude          that     the District               Court        erred     in   finding        that      the
Bank was not required                  to follow           the Uniform            Act in registering                  the

                                                          27
judgment    in Montana State     District      Court.




Justice    Terry N.     Trieweiler     joins    in      the   foregoing   dissent   of
Justice    W. William    Leaphart.




                                      28