O'NEAL STEEL, INC.
v.
Terrence John MILLETTE and Theodore J. Millette.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*870 Nicholas Van Wiser, Biloxi, for Appellant.
Stephen Walker Burrow, Ashley Hutchings Hendren, Pascagoula, for Appellees.
Before BANKS, P.J., SMITH and MILLS, JJ.
SMITH, Justice, for the Court:
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
¶ 1. On May 29, 1998, O'Neal Steel, Inc. (hereinafter "O'Neal") filed the instant action *871 against Terrence John Millette (hereinafter "Terry Millette") and Theodore J. Millette ("Ted Millette") in the Chancery Court of Jackson County. The complaint alleged that after O'Neal obtained a judgment in Alabama against Ted Millette, he then conveyed certain real property to his son, Terry. The complaint asserts, "[t]hat said conveyance was fraudulent as being an attempt to place assets beyond the reach of creditors and to defraud creditors by conveying property for less than adequate consideration." The Millettes answered the complaint, separately, and asserted the applicable statute of limitations as an affirmative defense.
¶ 2. On May 4, 1999, the Millettes filed a Joint Motion for Summary Judgment. The sole grounds for their motion was that O'Neal's claims were time-barred pursuant to Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-49 (1995), the "catch-all" statute of limitations. After a hearing upon said motion, Chancellor Barlow granted same by written opinion dated June 16, 1999. The court entered a judgment on June 29, 1999.
¶ 3. Nine days later on July 8, 1999, the Millettes jointly moved to amend the judgment, asserting, inter alia, that O'Neal's claim was alternatively time-barred pursuant to Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-45 (1995). They contended that since O'Neal's complaint was based upon a foreign judgment against a Mississippi resident, it failed to file any action to enforce said judgment within three years after its rendition, as required by § 15-1-45. The chancery court amended it judgment, by order dated September 7, 1999, to reflect that the Millettes were entitled to summary judgment since O'Neal's claims were alternatively barred by the three year limitations found in § 15-1-45. O'Neal now appeals to this Court, arguing that the chancellor applied the incorrect statute of limitations and that the applicable limitations period was tolled due to concealed fraud.
STATEMENT OF THE FACTS
¶ 4. O'Neal Steel, Inc. is an Alabama corporation which specializes in the fabrication and sale of steel.[1] Thomas Millette, William Millette, and Theodore Millette owned a company in Pascagoula, Mississippi named "Fabricators, Inc." which purchased steel from O'Neal. As a condition for extending a line of credit to Fabricators, O'Neal required the Millettes to execute an agreement guaranteeing the payment of the debt of Fabricators to O'Neal.
¶ 5. In 1990 suit was filed in the state of Alabama on the personal guaranties. Following a trial, judgment was rendered in favor of O'Neal. The Millettes appealed this judgment to the Alabama Supreme Court where the jury verdict was reversed on a procedural defect, and the case was remanded to circuit court. On remand, the circuit court entered summary judgment in favor of O'Neal and against the Millettes in the amount of $164,335.89.
¶ 6. Via warranty deed dated December 20, 1993, Ted Millette conveyed certain real property located in Jackson County to his son, Terry Millette. O'Neal Steel enrolled its Alabama judgment with the Circuit Clerk of Jackson County, Mississippi, on January 20, 1994. On May 18, 1994, the December 20, 1993 warranty deed was filed and recorded in the land deed records of the Chancery Clerk of Jackson County. Over four years later on May 29, 1998, O'Neal filed a complaint with the Chancery Court of Jackson County to set aside the December 20, 1993, warranty deed as a fraudulent conveyance. The chancellor *872 granted defendants' request for summary judgment.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 7. Rule 56(c) of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure allows summary judgment where there are no genuine issues of material fact such that the moving part[y] is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. To prevent summary judgment, the nonmoving party must establish a genuine issue of material fact by means allowable under the rule. Richmond v. Benchmark Constr. Corp.,
¶ 8. This Court employs a de novo standard in reviewing a trial court's grant of summary judgment. Mississippi Ethics Comm'n v. Aseme,
DISCUSSION
I. WHETHER O'NEAL STEEL FAILED TO FILE SUIT TO SET ASIDE AN ALLEGED FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE WITHIN THE APPLICABLE LIMITATION PERIOD?
¶ 9. The primary issue presented by this appeal is straight-forward: Which statute of limitations applies to an action to set aside an alleged fraudulent conveyance? O'Neal contends that the ten-year limitation period found in Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-7 (1995) controls. The appellees assert that the three year limitation period found in Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-49 (1995) controls in this action. Alternatively, they also argue that the three-year limitation period applicable to foreign judgments in Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-45 (1995) bars O'Neal's action.
¶ 10. O'Neal asserts that Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-7[2] and its ten-year limitations period govern its claim in chancery court to set aside this alleged fraudulent conveyance. That section reads in pertinent part:
A person may not make an entry or commence an action to recover land except within ten years next after the time at which the right to make the entry or to bring the action shall have first accrued to some person through whom he claims, or, if the right shall not have accrued to any person through whom he claims, then except within ten years next after the time at which the right to make the entry or bring the action shall have first accrued to the person making or bringing the same.
Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-7 (1995) (emphasis added).
¶ 11. "An action to recover land" under both § 15-1-7 and § 15-1-9 presumes that the O'Neal has some ownership or possessory interest in the land. This Court has written:
It would be meaningless to talk about suits to "recover the land" and "making *873 an entry on the land," if the contemplation of the statute were not that possession of the land is an essential feature in the very nature of things.
Kennedy v. Sanders,
¶ 12. In the case at bar, O'Neal seeks to enforce a judgment lien. That judgment lien does not create in O'Neal a possessory interest in the real property. This Court described in detail the scope and effect of a judgment lien in First Nat'l Bank of Commerce v. Donald,
But a judgement creditor of the owner has no estate or proprietary interest in the land. He stands wholly upon the law, which gives him a remedy for he collection of his debt by a sale of the land under execution, in case sufficient personal property of the debtor should not be found.
Donald,
The lien, being a general lien, before levy of execution, is merely a charge upon the property; it is not a right in it nor to it; it is only a right of satisfaction to be had out of it.
Donald,
¶ 13. Although cases with similar facts are scarce, it is clear that absent any possessory interest in the subject property, O'Neal cannot claim that this litigation is "an action to recover land...." This Court has clearly written in Donald that a judgment creditor does not have a possessory interest in the land. Id. at 689,
¶ 14. O'Neal argues that § 15-1-7 applies to this action to set aside a fraudulent conveyance, based upon Gordon v. Anderson,
¶ 15. Likewise, the other cases cite by O'Neal are also easily distinguishable from the case sub judice. In McMahon v. McMahon,
¶ 16. At least one court has addressed the issue of which statute of frauds is applicable to an action to set aside a conveyance induced by fraud. In Suthoff v. Yazoo County Indus. Dev. Corp.,
¶ 17. In dismissing the claim to rescind the plaintiff's deed of the property the Fifth Circuit, addressed the plaintiffs' argument that their claim was governed by § 15-1-7 and § 15-1-9, instead of the catch-all limitations period of § 15-1-49.[3] Although the Fifth Circuit determined that no Mississippi case had addressed the precise issue of whether an action to set aside a conveyance induced by fraud was governed by the statute of frauds or the statute relating to actions to recover land, the court held that § 15-1-49 applied and barred the plaintiffs' claim. Id. at 137. In so holding, the Fifth Circuit relied upon the following:
This issue was the subject of an Annotation in118 A.L.R. 196 (1939), which concluded that the majority of jurisdictions deciding the issue have held that "a suit brought by one not in possession of land to obtain a decree setting a side a deed thereof as having been procured by fraud is one for relief on the ground of fraud, rather than action for the recovery of real property."
Id. at 137.
¶ 18. From a careful reading of Suthoff, it is clear that the ten-year statute of limitations relating to actions to recover land does not apply to the facts of the present case. The relief sought in this action to set aside this alleged fraudulent conveyance is to return possession of the subject property to Ted Millette, so that O'Neal's judgment lien may attach thereto in order to execute upon it. Therefore, we agree with the reasoning in Suthoff and employ the catch-all statute of limitations provision in the case at bar.
¶ 19. Although the chancellor granted summary judgment since the O'Neal's claims were alternatively barred by the three-year statute of limitations found in § 15-1-45, such a limitation period applicable to foreign judgments is not pertinent in the case at bar. It is undeniable that a judgment was issued in Alabama against Mississippi residents. The issue, however, is not whether O'Neal timely and properly filed its Alabama judgment in a Mississippi court; rather, the issue is whether O'Neal timely filed its complaint against the Millettes concerning the allegation of concealed fraud. Therefore, since no other statute is pertinent, § 15-1-49 is applicable in this case.
*875 ¶ 20. Accordingly, under Miss. Code Ann. § 15-1-49, O'Neal's claim is barred. Section 15-1-49 states, in pertinent, the following: "All actions for which no other period of limitation is prescribed shall be commenced within three (3) years next after the cause of such action accrued, and not after." Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-49 (1995). The general rule is that statutes of limitation begin to run as soon as there is a cause of action. Aultman v. Kelly,
II. WHETHER THE APPLICABLE LIMITATIONS PERIOD WAS TOLLED DUE TO CONCEALED FRAUD?
¶ 21. In response to the Millettes' plea of statute of limitations, O'Neal claims that an applicable limitations period was tolled by the concealed fraud of Ted Millette.
¶ 22. The rule of concealed fraud is an exception to the applicable statute of limitations. McMahon,
¶ 23. Further, the law of this state requires that a creditor seeking to assert the tolling of the statute of limitations on the grounds of concealed fraud show that he or she has been diligent in his or her search in such matters. See McMahon,
¶ 24. O'Neal argues that Ted Millette committed perjury and that perjury tolls the statute of limitations. Such a contention lacks merit in this case. O'Neal cites no authority for this position. Additionally, even presuming that perjury did occur, it did not rise to the level of concealed fraud because at the time of the judgment debtor examination, Ted Millette had already duly filed and properly recorded the subject deed. Had O'Neal exercised the required diligence, it would have discovered the transferred property.
CONCLUSION
¶ 25. O'Neal's action to set aside the alleged fraudulent conveyance by Ted Millette is governed by the catch-all statute of limitations set out in Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-49. O'Neal's claim that this action is governed by the ten year limitations period found in § 15-1-7 is groundless since this suit is not "an action to recover land" as contemplated by that statute. Since O'Neal did not file this action for four years, rather than three years required by statute, after Ted Millette recorded his deed conveying the property, O'Neal's action to set aside the same is time barred.
*876 ¶ 26. Further, O'Neal's claim that the concealed fraud in this case tolls the applicable statute of limitations in this case is also meritless. This Court has clearly held that where an alleged fraudulent conveyance of real property is recorded and available to the public, there can be no concealed fraud preventing the running of statute of limitations. Additionally, there is no evidence that O'Neal even bothered to search the land deed records of Jackson County within three years after its enrollment.
¶ 27. O'Neal did not timely pursue his rights. This Court had clearly stated:
"The primary purpose of statutory time limitations is to compel the exercise the right of action within a reasonable time. These statutes are founded upon the general experience of society that valid claims will be promptly pursued and not allowed to remain neglected ... Accordingly, the fact that a barred a claim is a just one or has the sanction of a moral obligation does not exempt it from the limitations period. These statutes of repose apply with full force to all claims and courts cannot refuse to give the statute effect because it seems to operate harshly in a given case."
Cole v. State,
¶ 28. AFFIRMED.
PITTMAN, C.J., BANKS, P.J., MILLS, WALLER, COBB, DIAZ and EASLEY, JJ., concur.
McRAE, P.J., not participating.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Much of the background does not appear in the record of the proceedings below. Therefore, the general background information of the Alabama litigation came from Millette v. O'Neal Steel, Inc.,
[2] Technically, the limitations period found in § 15-1-7 applies to suits at law to recover land, while Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-9 is its counterpart for suits in equity, such as the action in the case sub judice. Since § 15-1-9 incorporates § 15-1-7 by reference, the Court reads these two statutes together. Neal v. Teat,
[3] When Suthoff was written, Miss.Code Ann. § 15-1-49 had a six-year limitation period, rather than its present three years.
