KENNETH L. BUETTNER, Judge.
¶ 1 Movants/Appellants Marvin Y. and Soohyun Jin (Jins) and Bank of Oklahoma (BOK) (collectively, Appellants) appeal from the trial court's order denying their Motion to Intervene in a foreclosure action.
¶ 2 The record shows the Jins signed a Real Estate Sales Contract February 12, 2009, in which they agreed to purchase Lot 18 of the Villas at Shangri-La Resort from Villas Development, L.L.C. In May 2009, BOC and RCB each filed actions to foreclose on mortgages covering Lots 12-18 of the Villas at Shangri-La Resort. RCB named the Jins as Defendants in its Petition. BOC did not name Appellants as Defendants in its Petition.
¶ 3 The Jins' purchase of Lot 18 closed June 4, 2009. BOK provided financing and the Jins executed two mortgages on Lot 18 in favor of BOK. The Jins' Special Warranty Deed and BOK's mortgages were recorded June 5, 2009.
¶ 4 BOC filed, in RCB's case, a Combined Answer, Counterclaim, and Cross-Claim July 7, 2009, in which it averred the Jins may claim some interest in the property and asked for judgment against them. BOC did not make a claim against BOK. BOC mailed a copy of this pleading to attorney Marcus N. Ratcliff, who had not entered an appearance on behalf of the Jins.
¶ 5 The district court consolidated the BOC and RCB cases November 4, 2009. Hearing on BOC's and RCB's summary judgment motions was held February 11, 2010, after which the trial court announced its finding that BOC's mortgage had priority over RCB's.
¶ 6 Before the court filed its Journal Entry, Appellants filed their Motion to Intervene April 7, 2010. Appellants asserted they were permitted to intervene of right under 12 O.S.2001 § 2024(A).
¶ 7 BOC filed its Response and Objection to the Motion to Intervene May 7, 2010. BOC argued Appellants were estopped from asserting any interest in the property because their purchase closed after the notice of lis pendens was recorded, and as a result, Appellants' interest was void as to the prevailing party's interest. BOC further contended that the trial court's summary judgment decision, which found BOC's mortgage had priority and which ordered the property sold to satisfy the judgment, had foreclosed any interest Appellants had in the property. BOC also argued that it served its Combined Answer and Cross-Petition on the Jins' counsel and that they failed to answer and were therefore barred from intervening nine months later, after summary judgment had been decided. Lastly, BOC contended that if Appellants were allowed to intervene at all, they should intervene in cases then pending against the title insurer.
¶ 8 Appellants filed a Reply May 21, 2010. The claimed that the lis pendens statute did not apply because the lis pendens was filed after they allegedly acquired an equitable interest in the property upon signing the purchase contract, in February 2009. Based on their contention that the lis pendens statute did not apply, Appellants claimed the summary judgment could not have foreclosed the Jins' interest in Lot 18. Next, they contended that because they have an interest in Lot 18, they were entitled to intervene as of right.
¶ 9 Following a June 2, 2010 hearing, the trial court issued its Order Denying Motion to Intervene June 30, 2010. Appellants sought a writ of mandamus from the Oklahoma Supreme Court which was denied June 28, 2010 in Case No. 108,396. Appellants then filed their Petition in Error. We review the denial of a motion to intervene as of right de novo. State ex rel. Oklahoma Corp. Comm. v. McPherson, 2010 OK 31, 232 P.3d 458, 466.
As noted by Appellants, Oklahoma cases have looked to the federal courts' four part test for intervention by right: (1) timeliness; (2) proof of a significant, protectable property interest in the subject of the action; (3) a showing that the disposition of the case may impair or impede the movant's ability to protect his interest; and (4) the existing parties may not adequately represent the movant's interest. Brown v. Patel 2007 OK 16, ¶ 17, 157 P.3d 117.
¶ 11 Appellants argue their Motion to Intervene was timely because they were not joined in BOC's case and they "were essentially ignored throughout that litigation." Appellants complain that they were not joined or served in BOC's case because BOC relied on its notice of lis pendens.
¶ 12 Oklahoma's lis pendens statute, 12 O.S.2001 § 2004.2, provides (emphasis added):
Appellants contend that the lis pendens in this case did not affect their interest, based on their claim that they had an equitable interest in Lot 18 from the time they signed the purchase contract.
¶ 13 The authority on which Appellants rely is not supportive of their argument. Appellants cite Alfrey v. Richardson, 1951 OK 133, 204 Okla. 473, 231 P.2d 363, for the
¶ 14 For similar reasons, we do not find support in Appellants' cited case involving a tax certificate. See Wells Fargo Credit Corp. v. Selby, 2001 OK CIV APP 78, 26 P.3d 774. In that case, a party had purchased a tax certificate, by paying the taxes due, but the party did not obtain a tax deed until after lis pendens was filed by the bank seeking foreclosure. This court explained that due to the unique statutory scheme for obtaining a tax deed, lis pendens did not apply to bar a tax certificate from ripening into a tax deed. Id. at ¶ 13. In addition to the essential distinction that this case does not involve a special statutory scheme, we also note that in Selby the party had paid for the tax deed and necessarily had acquired an economic interest in the property before the lis pendens.
¶ 15 Appellants further rely on First Mustang State Bank v. Garland Bloodworth, Inc., 1991 OK 65, 825 P.2d 254, 257, as support for their claim that by an "equitable conversion" the Jins became the equitable owners of Lot 18 at the time they signed the contract for sale. The facts of that case are complicated, but they also are distinguishable from this case. In First Mustang, after a property owner entered a contract to sell the property, the seller executed a mortgage on the property to an attorney to secure payment of fees. The buyer, and a bank seeking to foreclose on other property of the seller, claimed that the seller could not make a valid mortgage on the property after entering a contract to sell the property, contending that the buyer had equitable title to the property after entering the purchase contract. The Oklahoma Supreme Court explained the equitable doctrine on which the bank and buyer relied:
Id. at 257-258. (Citations omitted). The Oklahoma Supreme Court held that the bank was not in privity between the seller and buyer and could not benefit from an equitable conversion. The court held, however, that the buyer and seller were in privity and that the seller's mortgage to the attorney was effective subject to the buyer's rights, noting "(i)t is for this situation that the courts of equity developed the doctrine to prevent inequities from occurring between the parties of a land sale contract." Id.
¶ 16 In this case, the foreclosing banks were not in privity with Appellants. We find no support for Appellants' contention that the Jins had an equitable interest, simply from signing a purchase contract, which protected them from application of the plain language of the lis pendens statute. The purchase contract shows that it was executory: it includes the buyer's promise to purchase and the seller's promise to sell, in the future after certain conditions were met. The contract further provides that the risk of loss remained on the seller until closing.
¶ 17 Appellants have offered no explanation of why they elected to close on the purchase and mortgage after the lis pendens was filed. Appellants obtained their interests in Lot 18 from a party to the pending foreclosure action, and they are therefore bound by the judgment rendered against their grantor. Hart v. Pharaoh, 1961 OK 45, 359 P.2d 1074, 1079. Indeed, as noted by
As a result, Appellants are unable to prove the third element of the test for intervention of right: "a showing that the disposition of the case may impair or impede the movant's ability to protect his interest."
¶ 18 Additionally, because Appellants were held to be on notice of the foreclosure proceedings, from the time of the lis pendens filing, we find their Motion to Intervene, filed nearly a year later, was untimely as a matter of law.
¶ 19 On de novo review, we find the Jins had no arguable interest in the property until after the lis pendens notice was filed. They acquired their interest after notice of proceedings against the property was properly recorded and they were held to be on notice. As a result, their interest in the property is void as to the prevailing party in the foreclosure case and could not be protected therefrom by intervention. The order denying the Motion to Intervene is AFFIRMED.
MITCHELL, P.J., and JOPLIN, J., concur.
Id. at n. 11.