Sherrill and Dora Duncan instituted this action against the Farm Credit Bank of St. Louis (the Bank), seeking to enforce a provision of the Agricultural Credit Act of 1987 that grants a right of first refusal to repurchase foreclosed property. The district court dismissed the suit. The Dun-cans did not seek a stay of judgment, and the Bank sold the disputed property to a third party. The Duncans appeal the dismissal of their suit. For the following reasons, we conclude that this case is moot.
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BACKGROUND
The Duncans executed a promissory note in favor of the Bank for a loan secured by their farmland. In March 1987, the Dun-cans defaulted on the loan, and shortly thereafter the Bank instituted foreclosure proceedings. In 1989, the Bank elected to sell the property. As required by the Agricultural Credit Act of 1987 (ACA), the Bank offered the Duncans an opportunity to repurchase the property. 1 On August 22, 1989, the Duncans received a notice of right of first refusal for the property at an appraised value of $100,000. Believing that the appraisal was too high, they made a counter-offer for $70,000 and requested a reappraisal. Approximately three months later, the Bank informed the Duncans that the property was reappraised at $84,000. Shortly thereafter, the Bank entered into negotiations with the Cantrells, a third party interested in purchasing the property for $95,000. The Bank offered the Duncans an opportunity to match the Cantrells’ bid. The Duncans advised the Bank that they would purchase the property for $84,000. The Bank refused. On December 22, 1989, the Duncans instituted this action in Illinois state court and also filed a notice of lis pendens. The Bank removed the case to federal court. On April 25, 1990, the district court dismissed the case because there was not an implied cause of action in the ACA. The Duncans never sought to stay the judgment of the court, and on July 11, 1990, the Bank and the Cantrells closed the sale on the property. The Bank delivered a warranty deed to the Cantrells, who in turn properly recorded it.
II
ANALYSIS
Under the case-or-controversy requirement of Article III, a court can decide only cases in which a party has suffered an actual injury that can be redressed by a favorable judicial decision.
See Iron Arrow Honor Society v. Heckler,
The Bank argues that this case is moot because it transferred the property to the Cantrells after the district court dismissed the Duncans’ complaint and because the Duncans did not seek a stay of the district court’s judgment. The Duncans counter that the case is not moot because they filed a Us pendens, providing constructive notice of the disputed nature of the property to the Cantrells. Moreover, they allege that the Cantrells had actual notice of the dispute over the property. Thus, this case requires us to determine whether the transfer of the property from the Bank to the Cantrells prevents us from granting relief to the Duncans or at least returning the parties to the status quo. The answer to this query turns largely on the operation and scope of the lis pendens filed in this case.
State law governs the creation and cancellation of
lis pendens
in both federal and state courts.
See In re Texas Extrusion Corp.,
There is no doubt in this case that plaintiff sought title to the subject property by way of condemnation. Defendants, however, conveyed that title to a third-party purchaser during the pendency of this appeal_ Plaintiff offered no evidence to rebut the status of the third-party purchasers_ [T]he title in the subject property was conveyed to neither a party nor a nominee of a party to the litigation and, therefore, absent a stay under Rule 305, this appeal is moot.
Id.,
*1103
The vehicle in federal court for obtaining such a stay is Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 62(c), which provides, “When an appeal is taken from an interlocutory or final judgment granting, dissolving, or denying an injunction, the court in its discretion may suspend, modify, restore, or grant an injunction during the pendency of the appeal_” Fed.R.Civ.P. 62(c).
5
Unless Rule 62(c) is invoked, a final judgment in an action for injunction is not stayed during the pendency of an appeal.
See
Fed.R. Civ.P. 62(a). An appellant may elect to forego Rule 62 protection, but does so at his or her own peril.
“
‘[A] party who chooses to appeal but who fails to obtain a stay or injunction pending appeal, risks losing its ability to realize the benefits of the successful appeal.’ ”
In re Combined Metals Reduction Co.,
Such was the case in
Fink v. Continental Foundry & Machine Company,
Like the plaintiffs in Fink, after the case had been dismissed, the Duncans knew that *1104 the Bank had an agreement with the Can-trells to sell the property. Yet the Dun-cans failed to seek a stay of judgment to maintain the status quo pending appeal. Furthermore, like the plaintiffs in both Moran and Fink, the Duncans had a mechanism under Rule 62 to protect their interests during the course of appeal. Therefore, in light of Illinois law providing for termination of a lis pendens upon a court’s final judgment, the Duncans’ failure to seek a stay of that judgment pending appeal, and the Cantrells’ status as a non-party, we cannot grant any relief to the Dun-cans. Therefore, this case is moot. 7
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the case is dismissed for mootness.
Dismissed for Mootness.
Notes
. See 12 U.S.C. § 2219a.
. See generally Illinois Law & Practice, Lis Pen-dens, § 8 at 542 (When a final judgment or decree is entered concerning property upon which a lis pendens had been filed, "innocent persons purchasing the property involved in the action in reliance on the decree, before an appeal, are protected against all errors therein ... notwithstanding the decree is subsequently reversed or set aside.”) (citing cases) (footnotes omitted).
. This court also has determined that, if a court lacks jurisdiction over the party who purchased the property, the case is moot because the court lacks the power to "undo” the sale or return the parties to the status quo.
See, e.g., Paris v. United States Department of Housing & Urban Development,
. Unlike the plaintiff in
Moran,
the Duncans do challenge the status of the third-party purchaser. They argue that, even if Illinois law terminated the
lis pendens
when the district court rendered its judgment, the Cantrells had
actual
notice and therefore cannot claim protected third-party status. This contention is based on events occurring on November 7, 1989: the Can-trells offered $95,000 for the farm; on the same day, the Bank sent a notice to the Duncans apprising them of their right to match the offer.. The Duncans
presume
that the Cantrells had to have been informed of the Duncans' right to match the offer. Hence, they had actual knowledge. We note that, as a factual matter, it is impossible on this record to determine whether the Cantrells had actual notice. Moreover, arguably, once the Duncans failed to exercise their right to match the offer, the Cantrells were no longer on notice of a pending interest and could rely on the district court's dismissal of the case when they purchased the property.
See supra
note 2. Nevertheless, assuming
arguendo
that the Cantrells did have actual notice of the disputed nature of the property, the Duncans argument is not persuasive. The Duncans rely on
Paris v. United States Department of Housing & Urban Development,
. Cf. Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 110A, para. 305(b) (Illinois Supreme Court rule regarding stay of enforcement of judgments pending appeal).
.
Accord Heitmuller v. Stokes,
. The Bank also claims that, regardless of how we determine the mootness issue, the Agricultural Credit Act of 1987 was never intended to set aside a completed sale and it cites the Senate Report and case law for support. This argument addresses the merits of the case, and in light of our decision that the case is moot warrants no discussion.
