Granite Ridge Condominium Association v. Shirley Wood
Opinion text
THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
SUPREME COURT
In Case No. 2018-0660, Granite Ridge Condominium
Association v. Shirley Wood, the court on July 12, 2019, issued
the following order:
Having considered the defendant’s brief and reply brief, the plaintiff’s
memorandum of law, and the record submitted on appeal, we conclude that
oral argument is unnecessary in this case. See Sup. Ct. R. 18(1). We affirm.
The defendant, Shirley Wood, appeals an order of the Circuit Court
(Carroll, R., approved by Garner, J.) granting a motion of the plaintiff, Granite
Ridge Condominium Association, for a writ of execution upon scire facias
relative to a 2014 judgment. See RSA 527:7 (2007). She argues that, because
the plaintiff intends to levy upon her condominium unit, the case involves title
to real estate and, thus, that the circuit court lacked jurisdiction. See RSA
502-A:14, I-III (2010) (limiting civil jurisdiction of district courts to cases in
which title to real estate is not involved); RSA 490-F:3 (Supp.2018) (granting
circuit court jurisdiction conferred upon former district courts). She further
argues that she was entitled to relief because the plaintiff allegedly failed to: (1)
diligently pursue available remedies prior to seeking a writ of execution; (2)
establish that she has the ability to pay the judgment; (3) properly plead its
request for a writ of execution upon scire facias; (4) establish that each of its
members has an interest in the judgment; and (5) present a prima facie case.
A judgment creditor may obtain a writ of execution to be levied against
nonattached property within two years after a judgment is rendered or, if a
prior writ of execution has issued, within two years of the return day of the
prior writ. RSA 527:6 (2007); McBurney v. Shaw, 148 N.H. 248, 251 (2002).
Upon the expiration of the two-year limitations period, the trial court may grant
a writ of execution only “upon scire facias for the amount then due.” RSA
527:7. “Scire facias is a judicial writ directing a judgment debtor to appear and
show cause why, after the lapse of the limitation period, execution against [the
judgment debtor] should not be revived.” McBurney, 148 N.H. at 251. This
process provides the judgment debtor with notice that the judgment remains
unsatisfied, and requires the judgment debtor to disclose the location of
property from which the judgment may be satisfied. Id.
The record reflects that in 2014, the plaintiff obtained a final judgment
against the defendant in the circuit court for nonpayment of condominium
assessments plus attorney’s fees, costs, and interest. Prior to the 2014
judgment, the plaintiff obtained a separate judgment against the defendant in
litigation brought by the defendant against it in superior court. The superior
court entered a periodic payment order relative to its judgment, see RSA
524:6-a (Supp. 2018), and the defendant made payments pursuant to the order
through November 2017, when she stopped making payments to the plaintiff
altogether. At that point, there was a balance still owing on the superior court
judgment, and the circuit court judgment remained unpaid in its entirety.
According to the plaintiff, the defendant additionally failed to pay any ongoing
monthly condominium assessments “during any of that time period.”
The plaintiff filed the present motion for a writ of execution on scire
facias in September 2018, seeking a writ of execution relative to the circuit
court judgment. At the hearing on the motion, the plaintiff asserted that the
unpaid condominium assessments owed by the defendant, including unpaid
assessments incorporated into the two judgments and assessments that had
not been reduced to judgment, amounted to $29,050. The plaintiff further
asserted “that the only asset that’s available out there to collect on [the circuit
court] judgment is the condominium unit.” In response, the defendant
asserted that scire facias has been abolished in federal court, that she had paid
almost $14,000 on the superior court judgment, that the plaintiff had not
sought to attach her property in the amount of the circuit court judgment, and
that the plaintiff had not shown that it “ha[s] the legal right to receive condo
association fees or any other funds on behalf of condo owners.” She did not
contest, however, that she had stopped making any payments to the plaintiff,
and affirmatively represented that she is unable to make any more payments.
Nor did she dispute that the circuit court judgment remained unsatisfied. The
trial court granted the motion, and this appeal followed.
We reject the defendant’s contention that the circuit court lacked
jurisdiction. The legislature has expressly granted the circuit court jurisdiction
to grant “[a]ttachments and levies of execution on personal property and real
estate . . . in civil causes . . . as provided in RSA 511, 528 and 529.” RSA 502-
A:17 (2010); see RSA 490-F:3 (granting circuit court jurisdiction conferred
upon former district courts). The mere fact that the plaintiff intends to levy
upon the defendant’s condominium unit does not deprive the circuit court of
jurisdiction under RSA 502-A:14. See James Drywall, Inc. v. Europa Dev.
Corp., 116 N.H. 619, 621-22 (1976) (holding that a suit to enforce a mechanic’s
lien against real property does not involve title to real property for purposes of
RSA 502-A:14, even if the defendant asserts title to the property as a defense).
As the appealing party, the defendant has the burden of demonstrating
reversible error. Gallo v. Traina, 166 N.H. 737, 740 (2014). Based upon our
review of the trial court’s order, the defendant’s remaining challenges to it, the
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relevant law, and the record submitted on appeal, we conclude that the
defendant has not demonstrated reversible error. See id.
Affirmed.
Lynn, C.J., and Hicks, Bassett, Hantz Marconi, and Donovan, JJ.,
concurred.
Eileen Fox,
Clerk
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