This appeal comes from an order to deny intervention to [second] third-party defendants Zwonitzer, the remote warrantors in a chain of title to certain rеal estate.
The plaintiffs Toombs sued one Riley for an adverse claim of title and occupancy of a portion of their land. Count I sought to quiet title to the land in the plaintiffs. Count II was for damages for trespass. Count III sought ejectment and damages. The defendant Riley answered that he held title to the land under warranty deеd, and by third-party petition, made claim against
Thе [second] third-party defendants Zwonitzer assert intervention as of right to the original action. In the absence of a statute which confers unconditional intervention, to maintain such a right the applicant must show [Rule 52.12(a)(2)]: (1) an interest in the subject matter in which intervention is sought, (2) that ability to protect the interest will be impaired as a practical matter, and (3) that the interest of the applicant is not adequately represented by the parties. As intervention Rule 52.12(a) stood prior to the yеar 1972 amendment,
The pleadings and exhibits amply prove an interest for intervention. They show that Toombs seeks to quiet title to a portion of lаnd encompassed in the Simpson grant to defendant Riley. The Simpson grant derives entirely from the Zwonitzers who, in turn, face liability for breach of their warranty of good title to Simpson from an adjudication for the plaintiffs Toombs. The intervention of the Zwonit-zers relates to the essential issue between the Toombs and Riley and so doеs not encumber that primary action but rather avoids an additional suit. The interest of the [second] third-party defendants Zwonit-zer for intervention is shown.
The second element for intervention under Rule 52.12(a)(2) — the effect the disposition of the action between the Toombs and Riley may have on the ability of the Zwon-itzers to protect their intеrest — is cognate to the first: the nature of their interest. 7A Wright & Miller, supra, l.c. § 1908, p. 495. A judgment for the Toombs against Riley does not bind the Zwonitzers on strict principles of res judicatа, but such an adjudication effectively prevents them from the full impact of their proof that the title they conveyed was free from defect. In practicаl terms [which the rule enjoins be applied], exclusion from that primary action enfeebles the effect of evidence available only to the Zwonitzers.
The third element for intervention as of right remains — whether the Zwonitzer interest in the validity of the Riley title will be adequately represented by Riley. A “serious possibility” that the interest of the applicant may not be adequately represented suffices this rеquirement. Nuesse v. Camp, supra, l.c.
The third element of Rule 52.12(a)(2) allows intervention of right when the first two requisites are met — an interest shown and an impaired ability to protect that interest in the absence of interventiоn — “unless the applicant’s interest is adequately represented by existing parties.” The federal precedents hold that, where the first two requisites for mandatory intervention are met, the third element requires only the “minimal showing” that the representation “may be” inadequate. Trbovich v. United Mine Workers of America,
[I]t seems entirely clear that the effect of this change is to shift the burden of persuasion. Before the amendmеnt the in-tervenor had to satisfy the court that the representation of him was or might be inadequate. Now he is' to be allowed in, if the other conditions of the rule are satisfied, unless the court is persuaded that the representation of him is in fact adequate.
See, also, Nuesse v. Camp, supra, l.c.
The intervention Rule 52.12(a)(2) sub-serves the purpose that the Rules of Civil Procedure “shall be construed to secure the just, speedy and inexpensive determination
The judgment is reversed with directions that the trial court enter an order for intervention.
All concur.
Notes
. Rule 52.12(a)(2) prior to amendment:
“(a) Intervention of Right. Upon timely application anyone shall be permitted to intervene in an action: ... (2) when the representation of the applicant’s interеst by existing parties is or may be inadequate and the applicant is or may be bound by a judgment in the action
. The intervention motion was ruled on the arguments of counsel. The record does not preserve these presentations, so there is no intimation what actual evidence the Zwonitzers propose.
