TPM Holdings, Inc. v. Intra-Gold Industries, Inc.

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

No. 95-1786

                     TPM HOLDINGS, INC.,

                     Plaintiff, Appellee,

                              v.

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

                   Defendants, Appellants.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

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

                                         

                            Before

                    Selya, Cyr and Boudin,

                       Circuit Judges.
                                                 

                                         

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

                                         

                        July 30, 1996
                                         


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

a  Texas corporation, appeals from the New Hampshire district

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

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

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

The  lis  pendens  relates to  a  Texas  federal-court action
                             

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

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

Intra-Gold sought enforcement  of an  alleged agreement  with

Aggregate Trust  to  transfer to  Intra-Gold certain  mineral

rights in the New Hampshire property.

     The background facts are complex but largely undisputed,

and we  limit our  description to  the transactions  directly

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

promissory  note  and  mortgage interest  in  3,500  acres of

property  located in both Freedom and Madison, New Hampshire.

One of  the mortgagors  was Freedom  Properties Realty  Trust

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

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

the  mortgagors  were  in  default,  and  TPM  had  initiated

foreclosure proceedings.

     Intra-Gold claims that in  January 1993, Aggregate Trust

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

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

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

                             -2-
                                         -2-


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

would  try to arrange  financing that would  permit Aggregate

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

Aggregate Trust for the minerals removed. 

     But   in  February  1993,  the  mortgagors  of  the  New

Hampshire property--including  Freedom Properties--agreed  to

deed the property to TPM in lieu  of foreclosure proceedings.

The agreement reserved in the mortgagors the right to exploit

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

the  property within one  year for approximately  $4 million.

Intra-Gold  took  the  position that  by  entering  into this

settlement, Aggregate  Trust had  breached  its January  1993

agreement with Intra-Gold.

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

against  Aggregate   Trust  and  TPM,  seeking   damages  and

rescission  of the deed  transferring the  property to  TPM. 

The defendants removed the case to the federal district court

for the  Eastern District of  Texas.  The day  after bringing

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

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

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

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

Hampshire that prompted the litigation at issue here. 

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

federal district court  in New Hampshire, based  on diversity

                             -3-
                                         -3-


jurisdiction,  seeking a declaration  that the notice  of lis
                                                                         

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

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

without  prior application  to  the court  or  notice to  the

adverse party, in  "equity cases for specific  performance of

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

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

money damages and rescission of the deed from Aggregate Trust

(and  the  other  mortgagors)  granting   the  New  Hampshire

property to TPM.  

     While  pre-trial   motions  were  pending   in  the  New

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

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

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

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

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

Hampshire Registry of  Deeds.  Intra-Gold proceeded  with its

claims against Aggregate  Trust, but after  a bench trial  in

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

favor on all claims.

     One might think that resolution of the underlying claims

against TPM in  Texas would moot the New  Hampshire action by

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

appealed the Texas  decision to the  Fifth Circuit, and  some

cases  suggest that a  lis pendens remains  in effect pending
                                              

                             -4-
                                         -4-


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

events, neither party asserts mootness, and there are obvious

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

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

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

resume the chronology.

     In the  New Hampshire district court,  Intra-Gold argued

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

claim  because  similar  issues were  then  before  the Texas

district  court.    Intra-Gold  contended  this   result  was

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

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

alternative, Intra-Gold argued that  Texas law should  govern

the validity of  the lis pendens.  The  district court denied
                                            

this motion in June 1995.

     During the June 1995 hearing, the New Hampshire district

court also proposed sua  sponte to grant summary judgment  on
                                           

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

authorized   by  the   New  Hampshire  statute   because  the

underlying Texas action  was not an equity  case for specific

performance of  an agreement  to  transfer land  or a  unique

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

argued that  it had filed  an amended complaint in  the Texas

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

initiated the  New Hampshire declaratory  action--which asked

                             -5-
                                         -5-


for "an injunction preventing transfer of the property to TPM

or  any third  party and  granting title  to the  property to

[Intra-Gold]." 

     Unpersuaded, the district court granted summary judgment

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

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

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

prudential reasons of fairness and economy, the New Hampshire

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

remove  the lis pendens.   Alternatively, Intra-Gold contends
                                   

that the amended complaint in the Texas suit falls within the

"specific performance"  exception of  the  New Hampshire  lis
                                                                         

pendens statute.  We discuss the claims in order. 
                   

     Obvious concerns  arise when actions involving  the same

parties and similar  subject matter are pending  in different

federal  district  courts:    wasted   resources  because  of

piecemeal   litigation,   the  possibility   of   conflicting

judgments, and a general  concern that the courts  may unduly

interfere  with  each  other's  affairs.    To  resolve  such

tensions,  courts   rely  primarily   on  common  sense   and

historical  practice.    See,   e.g.,  Colorado  River  Water
                                                                         

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

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

     Where  the overlap  between  the  two  suits  is  nearly

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

                             -6-
                                         -6-


jurisdiction to  resolve the  issues and the  other court  to

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

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

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

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

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

overlap,   the  likelihood   of  conflict,   the  comparative

advantage  and the  interest of  each forum in  resolving the

dispute.

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

breach  of  contract  claim  against  Aggregate  Trust.    If

determining the validity of the lis pendens required the  New
                                                       

Hampshire district court to assess  the merits of this claim,

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

But the New Hampshire court  was asked only to decide whether

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

specific performance  of an agreement  to transfer land  or a

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

required  an assessment  of the  nature  of the  claims being
                                                   

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

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

case.

     Only  slightly more troublesome is the argument that the

validity of the lis pendens  was being litigated in the Texas
                                       

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

                             -7-
                                         -7-


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

Texas district court seeking cancellation of the lis pendens.
                                                                        

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

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

the lis  pendens.  But  beneath this surface  resemblance the
                            

two courts were addressing very different issues.

     Neither  party has shown  that the Texas  district court

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

comply with the  New Hampshire statute.   Instead it  appears

that  TPM simply requested that, if the Texas court dismissed

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

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

there was little risk of  conflict posed by the New Hampshire

court's  resolution of the  independent issue of  whether the

lis pendens complied with New Hampshire state law.
                       

     We turn now to the  merits of the New Hampshire district

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

invalid.   The  district court  said that  the notice  of lis
                                                                         

pendens  was not filed  in compliance with  the New Hampshire
                   

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

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

complaint did seek such specific  performance.  While this is

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

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

                             -8-
                                         -8-


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

pendens.
                   

     It does  not appear the New Hampshire  state courts have

ever decided  this issue,  but cases  from elsewhere  suggest

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

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

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

counterweight  to the  obvious  dangers  inherent  in  a  lis
                                                                         

pendens scheme that allows a party to wield this considerable
                   

power without  prior application  to any court,  and with  no

judicial assessment of the merits of the underlying suit.

     The purpose  of a  lis  pendens is  to notify  potential
                                                

purchasers that there  is pending litigation that  may affect

title  to real  property  and that  the  purchaser will  take

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

marketability  of  the  property.   Under  the  New Hampshire

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

to a  court, under  specified circumstances.   The  resulting

danger of abuse  has led courts to require  strict compliance

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

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

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

(Ill. App. Ct. 1979).

     Consistent with this strict-compliance  approach, we see

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

                             -9-
                                         -9-


a later  amendment  to  a  complaint.    Where  the  original
                   

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

for the  plaintiff who files  an amended complaint to  file a

new lis pendens  based upon that new complaint.   Allowing an
                           

amended  complaint alone  to breathe  life  into an  earlier,

previously invalid lis pendens  could easily cause  confusion
                                          

and unfair prejudice.  Since the plaintiff is responsible for

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

along with the  amended complaint, this outcome  appears well

warranted.

     Of course, lacking precedent from a New Hampshire court,

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

court would resolve the issue.   And there are other contexts

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

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

context, we think  that the practical considerations  already

mentioned,  and the  general  instance  that  a  lis  pendens
                                                                         

applicant turn square corners, carries the day for TPM. 

     Affirmed.
                          

                             -10-
                                         -10-