This is an appeal from the district court’s refusal to quash the “sale” of a suit for specific performance. We reverse.
The facts in this consolidated appeal are not disputed. Both suits concern a 340-acre parcel of Dallas County farmland formerly owned by appellant Hansen-Friedri-chsen, Inc. The land served as partial security for over $2 million in promissory notes executed by Hansen-Friedrichsen and its guarantor, appellant Jerry F. Hansen, in favor of appellee Citizens State Bank of Des Moines. 1
Upon default by the appellants, the bank brought separate suits to foreclose its mortgages and collect on the notes. Hansen-Friedrichsen deeded the property to the bank in lieu of foreclosure and eventually agreed to the entry of a $380,000 judgment representing its share of the remaining debt. For purposes of this appeal, we shall refer to this action on the notes, and the judgment rendered thereunder, as “suit I." .
In May 1988, the bank sold the Dallas County property in accordance with its obligation as a state bank to sell real property conveyed to it in satisfaction of debts within five years after title vests.
See
Iowa
The controversy before us stems from the bank’s proverbial attempt to “kill two birds with one stone.” As the judgment creditor in suit I, and the defendant in suit II, the bank directed the sheriff to levy on “[a]ny and all right, claim, thing in action or cause of action which Hansen-Friedri-chsen, Inc. or their successors or assigns have against the Citizens State Bank ... as stated and pleaded in the action now pending before the district court of Iowa in and for Dallas County....” See Iowa Code § 626.21 (authorizing the satisfaction of judgments by levy and sale of “things in action”). Two Dallas County attorneys were appointed to appraise the Hansen-Friedrichsen lawsuit for purpose of sale. See Iowa Code § 626.93. A sheriffs sale was scheduled for October 11, 1988.
Hansen-Friedrichsen responded by moving to quash the levy and proposed sale. 2 The district court denied the motion and Hansen-Friedrichsen’s suit was purchased by the bank for the appraised value of $4000. It is from the court’s ruling on the motion to quash that Hansen-Friedrichsen has appealed.
The issue is whether Iowa’s execution statute, section 626.21, may be used by a judgment creditor to effectively defeat the enforcement of a debtor’s statutory right of first refusal under Iowa Code section 524.910(2). Recently, we interpreted section 524.910(2) as granting the prior owner “a preemption with respect to the bank’s disposition of the land.”
Black v. First Interstate Bank,
The bank’s argument finds considerable support in
Brenton Brothers v. Dorr,
In answer to the first question, this court held in
Brenton
that a claim for breach of contract was a “thing in action,” that is, “a right to receive or recover a debt or money or damages or for a tort connected with contract but which cannot be enforced without action.”
Id.
at 732-33,
As for the question whether a creditor should be permitted to levy upon that which the creditor itself owes to the judgment debtor, this court answered with a quote from the Washington Supreme Court:
But why not? It is property, it is capable of being transferred. It is capable of being converted into a judgment which is subject to execution. It is an asset ofthe judgment debtor, and why should not his assets, whatever their nature, be taken to satisfy a judgment? We cannot see any logical reason why such property should not be levied on.
Brenton,
Without departing from the rationale of Brenton, we must highlight a factor that readily distinguishes it from the case before us: the nature of the cause of action sought to be levied upon. Brenton involved a claim for unpaid rent countered by a claim for breach of contract. The creditor’s levy upon the latter claim could be reasonably viewed as no more than a means of offsetting a debt due. By contrast, Hansen-Friedrichsen’s claim against the bank is not for money damages but for specific performance. It seeks to enforce its opportunity under section 524.910(2) to purchase farm property previously owned and to set aside the bank’s allegedly unlawful conveyance of the property to a third party. We think the distinction between the two cases is significant in the degree of injustice that would be visited upon debtors like Hansen-Fredrichsen were section 626.-21 applied without exception.
In
Black v. First Interstate Bank,
We think the protection from levy and execution accorded mortgagors in the redemption context is, by analogy, fully applicable to the prior owner’s statutory privilege to repurchase under section 524.910(2). In both situations, the right sought to be levied upon could be characterized as a “chose in action,” ordinarily subject to execution under section 626.21. But because the very purpose for which the privilege has been granted would be defeated by permitting execution upon it, the applicability of section 626.21 must be limited.
See City of Mason City v. PERB,
We recognize that in the present case the bank’s execution issued, not on the section 524.910(2) privilege itself, but on a suit brought to enforce that privilege. However, we find the distinction insignificant. Recognizing such a distinction would be tantamount to permitting a mortgagee to violate the farmer’s rights and then, in an expedient legal maneuver, eliminate the farmer’s right to redress the violation in court.
In summary, we conclude that the levy and execution provisions of section 626.21 may not be used to defeat an action brought to enforce the opportunity to repurchase embodied in section 524.910(2). The bank’s attempt to do so should have been quashed by the court upon motion by the appellant. Accordingly, we reverse the district court and remand this case for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. It appears from the record that the Citizens State Bank of Des Moines is the successor in interest to Citizens State Bank of Donnellson.
. The motion to quash was filed in the action in which the judgment originated (suit I) and in the suit to enforce the right of repurchase (suit II); hence, the consolidated appeal.
