COX CORPORATION, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. Ronald L. VERTIN and Joyce Vertin dba Vertin Auto Center, Defendants and Respondents.
No. 20393.
Supreme Court of Utah.
May 13, 1988.
754 P.2d 938
Ray S. Stoddard and Bryan Robinson, Salt Lake City, for defendants and respondents.
OPINION
HOWE, Associate Chief Justice:
Appellant Cox Corporation appeals the dismissal of its complaint to renew a judgment and judgment lien.
Appellant obtained a judgment against respondents Ronald and Joyce Vertin on
On December 11, 1981, appellant commenced the instant action to renew its judgment and judgment lien. Respondents answered the complaint, raising the defense that the judgment had been discharged in bankruptcy. In a memorandum decision, the trial court held that the judgment lien was not extinguished by the bankruptcy and during its statutory eight-year life could have been foreclosed on any real property owned by respondents at the time they filed bankruptcy. However, since the bankruptcy discharged respondents’ personal liability on the judgment, the court held that neither the judgment nor the judgment lien could be renewed and dismissed appellant‘s action.
Appellant contends that since the judgment lien was not avoided in the bankruptcy proceeding, it was renewable and the judgment should be renewed in some limited form to support the lien without reviving respondents’ personal liability. This theory finds no support in our statutory scheme. A judgment lien is purely a creation of statute. It does not exist in common law; therefore, the rights of the parties must be determined within the statutory framework. Messenger v. Burns, 86 Idaho 26, 382 P.2d 913 (1963).
The creation, legal effect, and extent of a judgment are set out in
The lien of a renewal judgment attaches only from the date of entry of the new judgment and does not relate back to the date of the original judgment or extend the prior lien. Free v. Farnworth, 112 Utah 410, 188 P.2d 731 (1948). A renewal of a judgment results in a new judgment which, when docketed, creates a new lien “upon all the real property of the judgment debtor, ... owned by him at the time or by him thereafter acquired during the existence of said lien.”
The trial court did not err in allowing respondents to interpose their discharge in bankruptcy as a defense to the granting of a new judgment. There being a valid defense to the granting of a new judgment and no basis in law to otherwise renew or extend the lien, the trial court‘s ruling must be affirmed.
HALL, C.J., and DURHAM, J., concur.
STEWART, J., concurs in the result.
ZIMMERMAN, Justice, concurring:
I join the majority, albeit somewhat reluctantly. Under federal law, a discharge in bankruptcy frees the debtor from the underlying liability that supports a lien on the debtor‘s property.
Under Utah law, once the lien was in place, it continued through the bankruptcy proceeding and could have been executed upon at any time until the end of its statutory eight-year life. However, once the eight-year period passed, the lien could not be renewed, as the majority observes, because under the Utah statute, a lien can be renewed only by the fictional renewing of the underlying debt. Because the bankruptcy court had discharged the underlying personal liability, it was impossible to renew the lien under the Utah statute.
Although I agree with the majority that
