Case Title: Benz v. D.L. Evans Bank

Citation: 

Docket Number: 37814

State: idaho

Court: Idaho Supreme Court (civil)

Date: 2012-01-25T00:00:00Z

Document:
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO 
 
Docket No. 37814 
 
LESLIE BENZ, 
 
       Plaintiff-Respondent, 
 
v. 
 
D. L. EVANS BANK, 
 
       Defendant-Appellant. 
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Boise,  January 2012 Term 
 
2012 Opinion No. 20  
 
Filed: January 25, 2012 
 
Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk 
 
 
 
Appeal from the District Court of the Fifth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, 
in and for Blaine County.  The Hon. Robert J. Elgee, District Judge. 
 
The judgment of the district court is reversed in part and affirmed in part. 
 
Randolph C. Stone; Parsons, Smith, Stone, Loveland & Shirley, LLP; Burley; 
argued for appellant. 
 
Janet C. Wygle; Loboviski, Wygle, Fallowfield & Ritzau, P.A.; Ketchum; argued 
for respondent. 
 
 
 
EISMANN, Justice. 
 
This is an appeal from a judgment holding that a vendee’s lien created in connection with 
a rescinded real estate contract had priority over a deed of trust that the vendor had granted to a 
bank to secure a loan to the vendor to construct a house on the property; awarding the vendee 
interest on her payments under the real estate contract; and awarding the vendee attorney fees 
pursuant to Rule 37(c) of the Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure.  We reverse the part of the 
judgment holding that the vendee’s lien secures accrued interest that the vendee is entitled to 
recover from the vendor and affirm the remainder of the judgment. 
 
 
 
 
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I. 
Factual Background 
 
On June 7, 2007, Leslie Benz (Buyer) entered into a contract to purchase for the sum of 
$2,743,500 a townhouse that was to be constructed in Ketchum.  The seller under the contract 
was designated as “Rutherford and/or Assigned to the development LLC ‘East Avenue Bluff, 
LLC,’ ” which was a limited liability company of which John Rutherford and Stacey (Belton) 
Rutherford, husband and wife, were the sole members.  Ms. Rutherford signed the contract, but it 
provided that the seller’s interest would be assigned to East Avenue Bluff, LLC (Seller) on June 
11, 2007, and it was so assigned.  Ms. Rutherford was a managing agent of the limited liability 
company.  She was also the listing agent for the real property, and the Rutherfords were part 
owners of the listing broker, Sun Valley Brokers, LLC. 
The contract required Buyer to make three, nonrefundable payments of earnest money, 
which were to be applied to the purchase price.  The first was $100,000 to be paid before June 8, 
2007, and the second was $400,000 to be paid on or before June 21, 2007.  Those payments were 
to be delivered to Sun Valley Brokers, LLC, and deposited into its trust account.  Buyer made the 
first payment when she signed the contract and the second payment on June 25, 2007.  The 
contract provided that the first two payments would be released to Seller “upon the simultaneous 
closing of the acquisition of the Property by Seller from a third party seller.”  On August 29, 
2007, Buyer and Seller signed an addendum stating that those payments are to be released to 
Seller “non refundable on or before 08/30/2007.”  The third earnest money payment was 
$250,000 to be paid to Seller on or before November 1, 2007. 
 
Seller sought a construction loan from the Ketchum branch of D. L. Evans Bank (Bank) 
in the sum of $2,650,000.  Bank’s internal documents show that it knew of the contract between 
Seller and Buyer; of Buyer’s payment of earnest money totaling $500,000; and of the third 
earnest money payment of $250,000 due by November 1, 2007.  On August 29, 2007, Seller 
obtained the construction loan from Bank in the sum of $2,650,000.  As security for the loan, 
Seller executed a deed of trust granting Bank a lien in the property upon which the townhouse 
was to be constructed and an adjoining lot upon which Seller was to construct another 
townhouse.  Bank recorded the deed of trust on August 30, 2007.  Bank also required that the 
Rutherfords guarantee the loan.  On November 13, 2007, Buyer made the final earnest money 
payment of $250,000. 
 
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The construction of Buyer’s townhouse was substantially completed and the sale was 
scheduled to close on February 6, 2009.  Just prior to closing, Buyer was informed that the 
Rutherfords had filed bankruptcy.  It was also discovered that Seller had failed to pay in excess 
of $213,000 in construction expenses.  As a result, the closing did not occur as scheduled.  
Between February 10, 2009, and May 7, 2009, numerous mechanics’ and materialmen’s liens 
were filed against the property.  Buyer conducted negotiations with Seller until June 2009 in an 
attempt to see if Buyer could obtain clear title and still purchase the townhouse, but those 
negotiations were unfruitful.  On July 7, 2009, Buyer gave Seller written notice that the contract 
was rescinded “for failure of consideration, failure to provide marketable and insurable title, and 
failure to timely close the transaction,” and Buyer demanded return of the $750,000 in earnest 
money that she had paid. 
 
The earnest money was not returned, and on August 12, 2009, Buyer commenced this 
action against Bank and various lienholders to foreclose her vendee’s lien.  Default judgments 
were entered against the holders of the mechanics’ and materialmen’s liens. 
 
Bank commenced nonjudicial foreclosure proceedings of its deed of trust.  Pursuant to 
the stipulation of the parties, the district court entered an order on February 10, 2010, providing, 
in part, that the trustee’s sale could proceed and that if Bank purchased the property at the sale, it 
would pay Buyer the amount, if any, that her vendee’s lien had priority over Bank’s deed of 
trust.  Bank then purchased the property at the sale. 
 
On April 5, 2010, Buyer moved for summary judgment against Bank.  The district court 
heard oral argument on the motion on May 3, 2010, and orally announced that it would grant the 
motion.  On May 18, 2010, Buyer filed a memorandum of costs seeking an award of court costs 
and an award of attorney fees in the sum of $34,980.00 pursuant to Idaho Code section 12-
120(3).  On May 27, 2010, Bank filed a motion to disallow the requested attorney fees on the 
ground that section 12-120(3) did not apply. 
 
On May 19, 2010, the district court entered a written order granting Buyer’s motion for 
summary judgment.  In the order, the court also stated that Buyer was entitled to prejudgment 
interest at the rate of 12% per annum from February 6, 2009, the date the sale transaction was 
scheduled to close.  On May 27, 2010, Bank filed a written objection to the prejudgment interest. 
 
On June 29, 2010, the district court heard the issue of court costs, attorney fees, and 
prejudgment interest.  In an order entered on July 12, 2010, it granted Bank’s motion to disallow 
 
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Buyer’s request for an award of attorney fees.  The court also held that Buyer’s vendee’s lien had 
priority over Bank’s deed of trust and that the amount of the vendee’s lien was the total of 
Buyer’s payments; interest on those payments from February 6, 2009, the date of Seller’s 
default; and court costs.  The court entered judgment in favor of Buyer on July 12, 2010. 
On July 12, 2010, Buyer filed a motion for an award of attorney fees in the sum of 
$16,920 pursuant to Rule 37(c) of the Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure.  The basis of the motion 
was that Bank had denied a request for admission asking it to “[a]dmit that D.L. Evans Bank 
knew, or should have known, the terms of the purchase and sale contract between East Avenue 
Bluff, LLC and Leslie Benz, including the payment release provisions and dates, prior to closing 
on its loan to East Avenue Bluff LLC.”  After the parties had briefed and argued the motion, the 
district court entered an order on October 4, 2010, holding that Buyer was entitled to an award of 
attorney fees for Bank’s failure to admit the request for admission and it awarded Buyer attorney 
fees in the sum of $9,915 as expenses incurred in proving the truth of the matter.  On February 8, 
2011, the court entered an amended judgment adding the attorney fee award to the prior 
judgment.  Bank timely appealed both judgments. 
 
II. 
Were There Genuine Issues of Material Fact that Precluded the Granting of 
Buyer’s Motion for Summary Judgment? 
Bank lists as an issue on appeal, “Were there factual questions appearing in the record or 
unsupported findings of fact, making entry of the summary judgment improper?”  Bank contends 
that there are material facts that were unsupported by evidence in the record.  Summary 
judgment is appropriate only if the evidence in the record and any admissions show that there is 
no genuine issue of any material fact regarding the issues raised in the pleadings and that the 
moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.  Infanger v. City of Salmon, 137 Idaho 
45, 47, 44 P.3d 1100, 1102 (2002).  In arguing that summary judgment was improper, Bank 
points to various statements of the district court that it contends were not supported by any 
evidence in the record. 
The first challenged statement is that the district court allegedly said, “$500,000.00 got 
paid and applied right to the bank’s deed of trust.”  Actually, the court never made that 
statement.  Apparently, Bank’s counsel is used to reading condensed transcripts that have the 
 
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pages arranged vertically, rather than horizontally.  Counsel combined the last five words on 
page 74 (“It [$500,000] got paid and applied”) with the first seven words on page right below it, 
which was page 76  (“right to the bank’s deed of trust.”), thus taking the first part of one 
sentence and the last part of another to create a quotation the district court never said.  The 
complete sentence that begins on page 74 is, “It [$500,000] got paid and applied just as 
plaintiff’s contract called for it to be paid and applied, which was to allow East Avenue Bluff to 
purchase the lot that the bank looked to for their security.”  The sentence that begins on page 75 
and ends at the top of page 76 is as follows, “I only have to determine that Ms. Benz’s lien is 
prior in time and right to the bank’s deed of trust.” 
Bank challenges several statements reflecting the district court’s belief that Seller used 
Buyer’s payments totaling $400,000 to purchase the real property upon which the townhouse 
was to be constructed.  When orally explaining its decision to grant Buyer’s motion for summary 
judgment, the district court made various challenged statements that are highlighted below in 
context. 
There was $400,000 used of the – of Ms. Benz’s money to purchase the lot.  
And I agree with Ms. Wygle that in order for East Avenue Bluff to borrow the 
money from the bank, the bank knew how this arrangement between East Avenue 
Bluff and Ms. Benz was going to work, and the bank knew that before East Avenue 
Bluff would have title to the property and before their deed of trust would attach 
to the property, East Avenue Bluff had to close the property – had to close on the 
sale from the party they were buying it from, and they used – that was known to 
the bank that they were – that East Avenue Bluff was using Ms. Benz’s money to 
do that.  That’s how and why the bank went along with this deal.  They knew 
where the money was coming from Ms. Benz and how it was being used and how 
East Avenue Bluff was using it.   
 
Bank also challenges the district court’s statement in its order granting summary judgment that 
“Plaintiff’s payments were used to acquire or improve the subject real property which fact was 
known and relied upon by the Bank.”   
The contract included a provision stating, “Buyer understands that Seller shall use deposit 
proceeds to secure the Property and to develop it with four townhomes,” but Bank is correct that 
there is nothing in the record indicating that Seller actually used Buyer’s earnest money 
payments to acquire and improve the land upon which the townhouse was to be constructed.  
However, immaterial issues of fact do not prevent the granting of summary judgment.  J.R. 
Simplot Co. v. Bosen, 144 Idaho 611, 615, 167 P.3d 748, 752 (2006).  What Seller did with the 
 
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funds paid by Buyer pursuant to the contract has nothing to do with whether Buyer has a 
vendee’s lien. 
The next challenged statement by the district court, highlighted in the following 
quotation, is, “Here the bank knew of and benefited and expected to benefit from Ms. Benz 
making that last contractual payment and had a provision in their loan agreement with East 
Avenue Bluff as to when and how that payment would be distributed.”  Bank asserts, “It was 
uncontroverted that no $250,000.00 payment was made to D.L. Evans Bank.”  Bank challenges 
the district court’s statement by mischaracterizing what the district court said.  The court did not 
state that Buyer made any payment to Bank, or that Bank ultimately received the entire payment 
of $250,000.  It said that Bank knew of, benefited from, and expected to benefit from that 
payment. 
In opposition to Buyer’s motion for summary judgment, Bank filed the affidavit of Bruce 
Hunsaker, a Bank vice president, who averred that he is custodian of Bank’s file, that at all times 
relevant he was a member of the senior loan committee, and that he had personal knowledge of 
the proceedings leading up to Bank’s approval of the loan.  Attached to his affidavit was an 
internal bank document stating that approval of Bank’s loan to Seller was contingent upon the 
requirement that “[w]hen the additional $250,000 earnest money is received, $182,000 will be 
applied to the loan.”  Thus, a portion of the $250,000 payment was to be applied by Seller to its 
loan from Bank. However, in his deposition Mr. Hunsaker stated that Seller did not make any 
payments to Bank.  Thus, although Bank knew of and expected to benefit from the $250,000 
payment, it apparently did not actually benefit from that payment.  Nonetheless, whether Seller 
actually paid the Bank the $182,000 is immaterial.  The vendee’s lien is not dependent upon any 
of vendee’s funds being paid to a subsequent encumbrancer, such as Bank. 
The final challenged statement made by the district court during the hearing was, “They 
had the contract between East Avenue Bluff, LLC and Ms. Benz.”  Bank asserts, “There was 
absolutely nothing in the record before the trial court relating to a copy of the contract being in 
the possession of D.L. Evans Bank at any time.”  This statement by Bank’s counsel would 
charitably be described as disingenuous.1 
                                                 
1 When asked during oral argument whether this statement was true, Bank’s counsel answered, “Kind of.”  He later 
stated that he was wrong in stating that the contract was considered by the loan committee in approving the loan. 
 
 
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In stating that Bank had the contract, the district court may simply have relied upon 
Bank’s memorandum in opposition to Buyer’s motion for summary judgment, wherein Bank’s 
counsel wrote:  “Early in the loan approval process, D. L. Evans Bank was made aware of the 
Benz contract to purchase the property.  They required a copy of the contract and the addendum, 
which was included in the loan file and considered by the senior loan committee in approving the 
loan.”  (Emphasis added.)  Now, Bank’s counsel contends that Bank never had a copy of the real 
estate contract.  Nevertheless, there was evidence in the record supporting the district court’s 
statement. 
An internal memorandum of Bank that was written by its loan officer and dated July 25, 
2007, states:  “The purchaser Leslie Benz will have contributed $500,000 non-refundable earnest 
money at closing of the land purchase.  Mrs. Benz will also deposit an additional $250,000 on or 
before November 1st, 2007 as indicated in the purchase agreement.” (Emphasis added.)  The 
loan officer would not have known what was shown by the purchase agreement unless he had a 
copy of it.2  During his deposition, Mr. Hunsaker was questioned about a statement in a 
memorandum dated July 31, 2007, prepared a Bank loan analyst who wrote that “[t]he home has 
been pre sold to Leslie Benz for $2.744MM, who has already committed $500M of non 
refundable earnest money to the project, with an additional $250M on or before November 1st.”  
Mr. Hunsaker was asked, “How would the loan officer know about the pre-sale?,” and he 
answered, “From the contract.”  In Mr. Hunsaker’s affidavit filed by Bank in opposition to the 
motion for summary judgment, he stated:  “Early in the loan approval process, D.L. Evans Bank 
was made aware of the Benz contract to purchase the property.  The Senior Loan Committee 
required a copy of the contract to be included.  It also required confirmation that Ms. Benz’s 
financial condition would allow her to complete the purchase.”  (Emphasis added.)  Thus, at 
some point prior to making the loan, the Bank’s records show that it reviewed the contract, and 
that fact was confirmed by Mr. Hunsaker. 
 
III. 
Did the District Court Err in Holding that Buyer’s Vendee’s Lien 
Had Priority Over Bank’s Deed of Trust? 
                                                 
2 When asked during oral argument how the loan officer could know what was “indicated in the purchase 
agreement” without seeing the purchase agreement, counsel answered, “I don’t know.” 
 
8 
 
Idaho has a statutory vendee’s lien set forth in Idaho Code sections 45-803 and 45-804, 
which provide as follows: 
 
[45-803] The liens of vendors and purchasers of real property are valid 
against every one claiming under the debtor, except a purchaser or encumbrancer 
in good faith and for value. 
 
[45-804] One who pays to the owner any part of the price of real property, 
under an agreement for the sale thereof, has a special lien upon the property, 
independent of possession, for such part of the amount paid as he may be entitled 
to recover back, in case of a failure of consideration. 
 
Bank raises several issues with respect to this statutory lien that we have not previously 
addressed. 
 
When is the lien created?  The interpretation of a statute is a question of law over which 
we exercise free review.  Gooding County v. Wybenga, 137 Idaho 201, 204, 46 P.3d 18, 21 
(2002).  It must begin with the literal words of the statute, Thomson v. City of Lewiston, 137 
Idaho 473, 478, 50 P.3d 488, 493 (2002); those words must be given their plain, usual, and 
ordinary meaning; and the statute must be construed as a whole.  State v. Hart, 135 Idaho 827, 
829, 25 P.3d 850, 852 (2001). 
 
Idaho Code section 45-804 begins, “One who pays to the owner any part of the price of 
real property, under an agreement for the sale thereof, has a special lien upon the property . . . .”  
The language indicates that it is the payment to the owner of any part of the purchase price of the 
real property under an agreement of sale that creates the lien. 
 
Bank argues that McMahon v. Cooper, 70 Idaho 139, 212 P.2d 657 (1949), held that a 
vendee’s lien does not come into existence until the vendee filed a lis pendens giving notice of 
the lien.  In that case, the vendee contracted to purchase real property upon which there was a 
partially constructed house and to pay the balance of the purchase price upon the vendors 
completing the construction of the home and the construction of a garage according to the 
specifications in the contract.  Before they had substantially completed the contract, the vendors 
gave notice that the improvements were complete, which under the contract obligated the vendee 
to promptly pay the balance of the purchase price.  The vendee chose instead to give notice he 
was rescinding the contract and to vacate the property.  He then filed an action to recover his 
payments, the value of improvements he had placed on the property, and to foreclose his 
vendee’s lien.  While that action was pending, the vendors listed the property for sale and sold it 
 
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to a third party, who financed the purchase by a loan from a savings and loan association that 
was secured by a mortgage. 
 
After holding that the vendee (appellant) was entitled to rescind the contract, this Court 
stated: 
Appellant is entitled to have the amount found due him declared a lien on 
the premises and to have such lien foreclosed.  Section 45-804, I.C.; 66 C.J. 1497; 
55 Am.Jur. 941.  The sale to the respondents, Eldredge, and the mortgage to the 
respondent, Provident Federal Savings and Loan Association, were made after the 
notice of pendency of suit was filed, and are inferior to appellant’s lien. 
 
Id. at 147-48, 212 P.2d at 661. 
 
This statement cannot reasonably be interpreted as holding that a vendee’s lien does not 
come into existence until the vendee files a lis pendens.  The purpose of a lis pendens is simply 
to give notice of the pendency of a lawsuit affecting the title or the right to possession of real 
property.  As Idaho Code section 5-505 states: 
In an action affecting the title or the right of possession of real property, 
the plaintiff at the time of filing the complaint, and the defendant at the time of 
filing his answer, when affirmative relief is claimed in such answer, or at any time 
afterward, may file for record with the recorder of the county in which the 
property or some part thereof is situated, a notice of the pendency of the action, 
containing the names of the parties, the object of the action or defense, and a 
description of the property in that county affected thereby.  From the time of 
filing such notice for record only shall a purchaser or incumbrancer of the 
property affected thereby be deemed to have constructive notice of the pendency 
of the action, and only of its pendency against parties designated by their real 
names. 
 
A lis pendens does not create a lien.  It gives notice of a pending lawsuit to subsequent 
purchasers or incumbrancers of real property.  In McMahon, the lis pendens simply gave notice 
to the subsequent purchaser and mortgagee of the vendee’s action to foreclose a vendee’s lien so 
that the purchaser who later bought the real property and the mortgagee who financed that 
purchase were not a purchaser and encumbrancer in good faith under Idaho Code section 45-803.  
The lis pendens was significant because there were no other facts indicating that the subsequent 
purchaser or the mortgagee had actual notice of the vendee’s lien.  The filing of a lis pendens “is 
necessary only for the purpose of giving record notice to subsequent purchasers or 
encumbrancers of the property who have not actual knowledge of the action or of the claim upon 
 
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which it is based.”  Smith v. Faris-Kesl Constr. Co., 27 Idaho 407, 427, 150 P. 25, 32 (1915).  In 
this case, Bank had actual notice of the facts creating Buyer’s vendee’s lien. 
 
Bank also argues that the vendee’s lien does not come into existence until there is a 
judicial determination as to the right to the lien and the amount of the lien.  It states: 
The lien is not for all amounts paid by the vendee, only that ‘part of the amount 
paid as he may be entitled to recover back’ and it is tied to ‘failure of 
consideration.’  This seems to indicate the lien comes into existence, and the 
priority runs from the date the amount owing is determined following a failure of 
consideration in a proceeding brought for that purpose. 
 
This Court’s opinion in McMahon shows that this argument is incorrect.  In that case, the 
trial court rejected the vendee’s claim of a vendee’s lien and entered a judgment in favor of the 
vendors for the vendee’s breach of contract.  It was this Court’s opinion on appeal that held that 
the vendee was entitled to a vendee’s lien.  We remanded the case for a determination of the 
amount of that lien, which we held would be a sum calculated by adding the total of the vendee’s 
payments plus the value of the permanent improvements he had made to the property and 
subtracting the reasonable value of his use of the property during his occupancy, with legal 
interest on the resulting sum.  McMahon, 70 Idaho at 148, 212 P.2d at 662. 
If the vendee’s lien did not come into existence until either the vendee was judicially 
determined to have the right to rescind the contract or the amount of the vendee’s lien was 
calculated, we could hardly have held that the vendee’s lien in McMahon had priority over the 
interests of the purchaser and mortgagee.  Those interests in the property were created before our 
opinion on appeal was issued.  It was that opinion which determined that the vendee had a right 
to rescind the contract and that the vendee had a vendee’s lien.  We also remanded the case for 
the district court to calculate the amount of the lien.  Thus, we held that the lien existed before 
any judicial determination of the right to a lien or the amount of the lien. 
 
Bank argues that there is nothing in the record indicating when Seller actually received 
the funds paid by Buyer.  It contends that there is therefore no evidence that Buyer’s vendee’s 
lien was created before Bank’s deed of trust attached to the property. 
 
The contract provided that Buyer was to make the first two payments of earnest money to 
Sun Valley Brokers, LLC, for deposit into its trust account and that such company was acting for 
 
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both parties as a limited dual agent without assigned agents.3  The contract provided that both 
payments were “in part payment of the purchase price”; that both payments were 
“nonrefundable”; and that Sun Valley Brokers, LLC, was to release the payments to Seller “upon 
the simultaneous closing of the acquisition of the Property by Seller from a third party seller.”  
“Payment of money to an agent authorized to receive the same is in effect payment to the 
principal and it is not incumbent upon the payer to trace the money into the hands of the 
principal in order to have credit for such payment.”  Fisher v. Farmers’ Co-op. Irrig. Co., 49 
Idaho 343, 350, 288 P. 164, 167 (1930).  Thus, as a matter of law, Buyer’s payment to Seller’s 
agent on June 7, 2007, of part of the purchase price of the real property when she signed the 
contract constituted payment to Seller of a part of the purchase price of the real property under 
Idaho Code section 45-804.4 
 
What is the meaning of “good faith”?  Idaho Code section 45-803 states that a vendee’s 
lien is “valid against every one claiming under the debtor, except a purchaser or encumbrancer in 
good faith and for value.”  Bank contends that “good faith” should be construed to mean honesty 
or the lack of any intention to take unconscientious advantage of another.  It also states that its 
senior loan committee was “unaware of the statutory vendee’s lien and its potential ramifications 
should the vendor default.”  It argues that there is no evidence that it “made any effort to take an 
inconscientious advantage of Ms. Benz” or that it had “any information which would lead to the 
conclusion there would be a failure of consideration.”  Bank is relying upon the incorrect 
definition of “good faith.” 
 
In 1887, the territorial legislature created statutory vendor’s and vendee’s liens, which are 
now codified as Idaho Code sections 45-801 and 45-804.  Section 45-801 states, 
One who sells real property has a vendor’s lien thereon, independent of 
possession, for so much of the price as remains unpaid and unsecured otherwise 
than by the personal obligation of the buyer. 
                                                 
3 The Agency Disclosure Brochure published by the Idaho Real Estate Commission defines a limited dual agent 
without assigned agents as follows: 
As a Limited Dual Agent, the brokerage and its licensees cannot advocate on behalf of 
one client over the other.  The licensees cannot disclose confidential client information regarding 
negotiations, terms or factors that motivate the buyer to buy, or the seller to sell, or advocate the 
interests of one party over those of the other.  The brokerage must otherwise promote the non-
conflicting interests of both parties, perform the terms of the agency agreements with skill and 
care, and perform other duties required by law. 
 
4 The vendee’s lien would not have attached to the real property until Seller purchased it. 
 
12 
 
Section 45-804 states,  
One who pays to the owner any part of the price of real property, under an 
agreement for the sale thereof, has a special lien upon the property, independent 
of possession, for such part of the amount paid as he may be entitled to recover 
back, in case of a failure of consideration. 
 
In 1887, the territorial legislature also enacted what is now codified as Idaho Code section 45-
803, which states: 
The liens of vendors and purchasers of real property are valid against 
every one claiming under the debtor, except a purchaser or encumbrancer in good 
faith and for value. 
 
 
Prior to the enactment of that statute, the territorial supreme court had addressed what 
was good faith with respect to a purchaser of real property.  In Kramer v. Settle, 1 Idaho 485 
(1873), there was a dispute over the ownership of a mining claim.  In addressing the assignments 
of error, the court held that under the mining statutes a mining claim would be abandoned if the 
owner of the claim did not perform the required amount of annual work on the claim.  The 
appellant argued that such a holding would be injurious to those who purchase mining claims 
because they would not be able to prove that their grantors had done the required work and 
therefore still owned the claims.  The court rejected that argument because the law permitted the 
owner of a mining claim to perpetuate testimony as to having done the required work by filing 
with the county recorder the affidavits of two disinterested persons who had knowledge of the 
work having been done.  A purchaser who failed to check the county records to see if such 
affidavits had been filed would not be a good faith purchaser.  The court stated, 
All purchasers, if they fear they cannot show by parol testimony that the 
necessary work has been done by their grantors, can go to the recorder’s office for 
such evidence, and if they fail to find it, and purchase, they cannot be considered 
bona fide purchasers, and must, as a matter of course, take all the risk of having 
their title defeated. 
 
 
Id. at 493-94. 
A bona fide purchaser was the same as a good-faith purchaser, as shown by Leland v. 
Isenbeck, 1 Idaho 469 (1873).  In Leland, the plaintiff brought an action to recover real property 
that Alexander & Co. had purchased at an execution sale under a void judgment and then 
conveyed to Isenbeck by a quitclaim deed.  The plaintiff lost in the trial court and appealed, and 
 
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the territorial supreme court reversed.  The court stated that “Isenbeck’s defense is made to 
depend entirely upon the question whether the title derived by Alexander & Co. under the sale on 
execution is good or not, and whether, if not good, he purchased in good faith, and without 
notice.”  Id. at 470.  The court held that Isenbeck was not a good faith purchaser because, as a 
matter of law, he had notice of the defect in Alexander & Co.’s title because he took title by a 
quitclaim deed.  The court stated:  “The defendant purchased with notice of the defects of 
Alexander & Co’s. title, because he took his title by quitclaim deed.  In such cases the law 
presumes that the purchaser had notice of the defects of his grantor’s title, and that he purchased 
at his own risk.”  Id. at 471.  The court held that because Isenbeck as a matter of law was not a 
bona fide purchaser, the trial court had therefore erred in submitting the issue of good faith to the 
jury.  The court stated:  “Isenbeck, deriving his title by such a conveyance from Alexander & 
Co., was not a bona fide purchaser without notice.  The court should have so instructed the jury, 
instead of leaving the question of good faith to be determined by them from the proofs in the 
case.”  Id. at 472. 
Neither the opinion in Kramer nor the opinion in Leland was based upon any statute 
using the words “good faith.”  These cases show that the concept of a good-faith purchaser was 
well understood to be one who acquired real property without actual or constructive notice of 
another’s claim or of any defect in title. 
For example, in Hunter v. Watson, 12 Cal. 363 (1859), the California Supreme Court 
addressed the provision in California’s Recordation Act of 1850 providing that an unrecorded 
conveyance of real property “shall be void as against any subsequent purchaser in good faith and 
for a valuable consideration.”  Id. at 373.  It stated that “the true construction is, that the failure 
of a grantee to record a deed, does not absolutely and without exception avoid the deed as to 
third persons; for, if it did, it is impossible to give effect to the words ‘bona fide purchaser for a 
valuable consideration.’ ”  Id.  It held that a grantee’s failure to record the deed only protects 
good faith purchasers for value.  Id. at 374.  It also noted that in England and in American states 
that had recording statutes without that limitation, “Courts of Equity engrafted this exception, 
and held, in numerous cases, that the purchaser of lands, knowing them to have been before sold 
by the vendor, though the deed was not recorded, was not within the protection of the statute.”  
Id.   
 
14 
 
In 1864, the Idaho territorial legislature enacted what is now codified as Idaho Code 
section 55-812, which provides: 
Every conveyance of real property other than a lease for a term not 
exceeding one (1) year, is void as against any subsequent purchaser or mortgagee 
of the same property, or any part thereof, in good faith and for a valuable 
consideration, whose conveyance is first duly recorded. 
 
We have construed the words “good faith” in that statute to mean actual or constructive 
knowledge of the prior interest or defect in title.  In Froman v. Madden, 13 Idaho 138, 88 P. 894 
(1907), the defendant purchased a parcel of real property and received a deed to it, but failed to 
record her deed.  About a month later, the plaintiff purchased the same parcel of real property 
and promptly recorded his deed.  A few months later, each party learned of the other’s deed.  
After the defendant had constructed a small house on the property, the plaintiff brought an action 
to eject her from the land.  The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, and the trial 
court granted the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.  The defendant then appealed. 
 
After quoting the statute now codified as section 55-812, this Court stated:  “[P]laintiff 
testifies that he had no knowledge whatever of the sale or conveyance to the defendant and did 
not have for some two months after his purchase.  This constitutes him clearly a purchaser ‘in 
good faith and for a valuable consideration,’ and, his conveyance having been first placed of 
record . . . .”  Id. at 142, 88 P. at 895.  We then explained that for the defendant to prove that the 
plaintiff was not a good faith purchaser, she must prove that he had either actual or constructive 
knowledge of her prior interest.  We stated:  
Of course, if the defendant should be able to show that the plaintiff had actual 
knowledge of the sale and conveyance to her prior to his receiving a deed and 
parting with the purchase price, she would be entitled to recover in this action, or 
if she could show that he had knowledge of such facts and circumstances as 
would have led to the discovery of her purchase and conveyance by a reasonably 
prudent man, she would be entitled to recover, but, in order to recover, she must 
show that he was not a purchaser in good faith within the meaning of the statute. 
 
Id. at 143, 88 P. at 895. 
In Blucher v. Shaw, 26 Idaho 497, 144 P. 342 (1914), we used the same meaning of good 
faith when applying the statute to a mortgagee who had no knowledge of a prior, unrecorded 
deed conveying the mortgaged property.  Mary J. (Grimmett) Shaw had homesteaded certain 
land pursuant to an agreement with her father, J. H. Grimmett, that she would deed it to him 
 
15 
upon her receiving title to the land from the government.  In compliance with that agreement, she 
deeded him the property in October 1904, but he did not record the deed until 1913.  In 
November 1904, the daughter married Guy Shaw.  About four years later, the plaintiff and her 
brother made a loan to father, daughter, and daughter’s husband secured by mortgages on the 
real property.  At that time, daughter was still the record owner of the property.  When the 
plaintiff brought an action to foreclose her mortgage, father’s wife raised as a defense that the 
land was community property, that she and father were residing on the land when the mortgages 
were executed, and that she had no knowledge of them.  We upheld the judgment foreclosing the 
mortgages, stating that it “appears that neither the plaintiff nor her agent had any information in 
regard to said conveyance [the deed from daughter to father], and the evidence clearly shows that 
the respondent is a mortgagee in good faith.”  Id. at 501, 144 P. at 343. 
 
In Smith v. Schultz, 23 Idaho 144, 129 P. 640 (1912), we also held that the validity of a 
vendor’s lien depended upon whether a subsequent purchaser from the vendee had actual or 
constructive knowledge of the lien.  In that case, Smith had given a deed to Schultz as security 
for a debt.  They later agreed that the deed given as security would become an absolute 
conveyance to Schultz in exchange for Schultz extinguishing Smith’s debt, assuming the 
obligation of an existing mortgage on the property, and giving Smith four promissory notes 
totaling $5,000.  Schultz and a business of which he was president and principal owner later 
became indebted to a bank, and he deeded the land to the bank, which then deeded it to Collins, 
the bank president.  Smith filed the action to foreclose his vendor’s lien against Schultz and 
Collins.  The trial court found that Collins had actual or constructive notice that Schultz still 
owed part of the purchase price to Smith, and entered judgment foreclosing Smith’s vendor’s 
lien.  Collins appealed.  This Court characterized one of the essential questions presented on 
appeal as being, “[I]s there sufficient evidence in the record to show that Collins had either 
actual or constructive notice of Smith’s lien at the time of his purchase from the bank, and had 
the bank either actual or constructive notice of the lien at the time of its purchase from Schultz?”  
Id. at 148, 129 P. at 641.  We held that there was sufficient evidence to support the trial court’s 
finding and upheld the foreclosure of the vendor’s lien.  We described such evidence as follows: 
Schultz testified positively that he notified Collins before the sale that he still 
owed $5,000.  Smith also testified that he told Collins prior to the latter’s 
purchase of the property that he had not been paid in full for the land.  Collins 
does not deny that Schultz advised him that he was still owing something on this 
 
16 
land, but says he passed it by lightly as a matter not concerning him.  There is also 
evidence in the record tending to show that Smith was living on the land 
immediately prior to Collins’ purchase of the same, and that when Collins went to 
look over the place he saw Smith on the land and talked with him. 
 
Id. at 151, 129 P. at 642.  Although the Court did not cite what is now codified as Idaho Code 
section 45-803, we presume that it was aware of that statute.  Otherwise, the issue of notice 
would not have been relevant.  Collins’s notice prevented him from being “a purchaser . . . in 
good faith” pursuant to Idaho Code section 45-803. 
 
Likewise, in McMahon v. Cooper, 70 Idaho 139, 212 P.2d 657 (1949), we held that a 
subsequent purchaser and mortgagee who had constructive notice of a vendee’s lien by reason of 
a recorded lis pendens took their interests in the real property subject to the vendee’s lien.  Id. at 
147-48, 212 P.2d at 661.  Constructive notice would have been relevant only if it prevented them 
from being “a purchaser or encumbrancer in good faith” under Idaho Code section 45-803.  
 
The words “good faith” in sections 45-803 and 55-812 have the same meaning.  Both 
statutes deal with the same subject matter — the circumstances in which a person who acquires 
an interest in real property takes such interest free of the unrecorded, preexisting interest of 
another.  There is no rational reason why the words “good faith” would not have the same 
meaning in both statutes.  Thus, good faith in section 45-803 means lack of actual or constructive 
knowledge of the applicable lien.5 
 
In this case, it is undisputed that before Bank made the loan to Seller, Bank had actual 
knowledge that Seller had contracted to sell the real property to Buyer and that she had paid a 
portion of the purchase price.  Mr. Hunsaker stated in his affidavit:  “The [Senior Loan] 
Committee mistakenly believed that the fact that the property had been pre-sold and that Ms. 
Benz had a substantial investment, significantly decreased the risk factor associated with the 
loan.  They were unaware of the vendee’s lien.”  Bank’s lack of awareness of Idaho Code section 
45-803 is not a defense to the lien.  It knew that Buyer had contracted to purchase the property 
and had paid Seller a portion of the purchase price.  That is sufficient notice that Buyer would 
have a vendee’s lien upon Seller becoming the owner of the property. 
                                                 
5 During oral argument, Bank’s counsel conceded that the words “good faith” in both statutes mean the same thing 
and that in both statutes they both refer to notice. 
 
17 
 
What amount paid is Buyer entitled to recover back?  Bank argues that although “it is 
clear the common law vendee’s lien does not apply in Idaho,” we should engraft aspects of the 
common law lien into Idaho Code sections 45-803 and 45-804.  In particular, it asks that we hold 
that “a vendee’s lien is not superior to the claim of the vendor’s subsequent creditor to the extent 
that the vendee continued to make payments to the vendor after learning of the subsequent 
creditor’s rights.”  Bank desires us to do so because it contends, “All payments to East Avenue 
Bluff, LLC were made after Ms. Benz had knowledge of D.L. Evans Bank loan.”  Actually, the 
first two payments totaling $500,000 could hardly have been made with knowledge of a loan that 
had not yet been made.6  Nevertheless, Bank does not point to any wording in either statute that 
could be interpreted as so limiting the vendee’s lien. 
Idaho Code section 45-804 creates “a special lien” upon the property if the purchaser has 
paid the owner “any part of the price of the real property,” and the amount of such lien is “such 
part of the amount paid as he may be entitled to recover back.”  (Emphasis added.)  The statute 
does not purport to create a separate lien for each payment of the purchase price.  Likewise, 
Bank has not presented any reason in law or equity why the statute should be so construed.  If 
Buyer did not make the third earnest money payment, she would likely forfeit the first two 
payments.  If she did make the payment and we adopted Bank’s proposal, she would likely 
forfeit the third payment upon Seller’s default because it would be subordinate to Bank’s 
interest. 
Bank had actual knowledge of the facts that would give rise to Buyer having a vendee’s 
lien upon Seller acquiring the real property.  If Bank desired to protect itself from a vendee’s 
lien, then it could have required that Buyer subordinate her lien as a condition of Bank making 
the loan, and Buyer could have decided whether to take that risk.  Bank did not do so.  The 
amount secured by Buyer’s vendee’s lien is the total of all of her payments plus interest. 
 
IV. 
Did the District Court Err in Including Prejudgment Interest in the Vendee’s Lien? 
                                                 
6 Assuming Buyer had notice of Bank’s intent to make a loan to Seller, Bank’s intent to make a loan would not give 
it any interest in the real property.  See Sun Valley Hot Springs Ranch, Inc. v. Kelsey, 131 Idaho 657, 661, 962 P.2d 
1041, 1045 (1998). 
 
18 
 
In Sorensen v. Larue, 47 Idaho 772, 278 P. 1016 (1929), we held that “[w]hen rescission 
is granted the vendee, he is entitled not only to a return of so much of the purchase money as he 
has paid, but to interest thereon from time of payment.”  Id. at 778, 278 P. at 1018.  We also held 
that the purchaser may recover “the amount of his necessary outlays, taxes, etc., incurred under 
the contract, with interest.”  Id. at 778-79, 278 P. at 1018.  In Brooks v. Jensen, 75 Idaho 201, 
270 P.2d 425 (1954), we held that upon rescission of a real estate contract, the purchasers were 
entitled to recover “the payments on the contract and mortgage, taxes paid, and water 
assessments. . . and the value of the improvements they made, less the reasonable rental value of 
the land.”  Id. at 218, 270 P.2d at 437 (citations omitted).  In this case, however, the issue is the 
amount secured by the vendee’s lien, not the amount that the vendee would be entitled to recover 
by from the vendor. 
 
Idaho Code section 45-804 states: 
One who pays to the owner any part of the price of real property, under an 
agreement for the sale thereof, has a special lien upon the property, independent 
of possession, for such part of the amount paid as he may be entitled to recover 
back, in case of a failure of consideration. 
 
The statute provides that a vendee who “pays to the owner any part of the price of real property” 
under a purchase contract has a lien independent of possession “for such part of the amount paid 
as he may be entitled to recover back” if there is a failure of consideration.  In context, the words 
“such part of the amount paid” can only refer to the “part of the price of real property” that the 
vendee had paid.  Thus, under the wording of the statute, the lien only secures repayment of such 
part of the purchase price paid that the vendee is entitled to recover back. 
 
This Court has previously stated and held that the vendee’s lien secures the payment of 
additional sums.  In Graves v. Cupic, 75 Idaho 451, 272 P.2d 1020 (1954), we held that the sum 
secured by the vendee’s lien included interest, id. at 460, 272 P.2d at 1026, but we did so without 
any analysis of the wording of the statute.  Likewise, in McMahon v. Cooper, 70 Idaho 139, 212 
P.2d 657 (1949), we held that the vendee’s lien included the amount found due to the vendee 
with interest, id. at 147, 212 P.2d at 662, but again without any analysis of the wording of the 
statute.  Buyer relied upon McMahon in arguing for prejudgment interest, and Bank argued that 
it may ask this Court to overrule that decision.  We agree with Bank that Graves v. Cupic, 75 
Idaho 451, 272 P.2d 1020 (1954), and McMahon v. Cooper, 70 Idaho 139, 212 P.2d 657 (1949), 
 
19 
must be overruled to the extent that they hold the vendee’s lien includes any sum other than the 
amount of the payments of purchase price the vendee is entitled to recover back. 
The wording of the statute simply cannot be construed to hold that the vendee’s lien 
includes anything other than the amount of the payments made under the contract that the vendee 
is entitled to recover back.  The amount that the vendee is entitled to recover back would be the 
total amount paid on the purchase price less any sum that the vendor is entitled to offset against 
that amount as damages that the vendor is entitled to recover as a result of the transaction, such 
as the reasonable rental value of the land while the vendee was in possession.  The amount of the 
vendor’s offset, if any, is to be calculated by deducting from the amount of the vendor’s damages 
any additional sums that the vendee is entitled to recover from the vendor as a result of the 
failure of consideration, such as payments made under the contract in addition to the purchase 
price, the value of any permanent improvements made by the vendee, and prejudgment interest.  
In this case, there is no contention that Seller was entitled to offset any sums against the total of 
the payments made by Buyer as part of the purchase price. 
 
V. 
Did the District Court Err in Awarding Attorney Fees Pursuant to Rule 37(c) 
for Bank’s Failure to Admit? 
 
In her complaint, Buyer alleged: 
Prior to lending the Defendant any money, D.L. Evans Bank required a 
copy of the Agreement and was informed that the Plaintiff had allowed or would 
be allowing the release of all of the earnest money totaling $750,000.00. 
Defendant D.L. Evans Bank has acknowledged in writing that the Plaintiff’s 
vendee’s lien is superior to its mortgage lien. 
 
Bank denied that allegation.  Therefore, Buyer served upon Bank a request for admission stating 
as follows: 
REQUEST FOR ADMISSION NO. 2:  Admit that D.L. Evans Bank 
knew, or should have known, the terms of the purchase and sale contract between 
East Avenue Bluff LLC and Leslie Benz, including the payment release 
provisions and dates, prior to closing on its loan to East Avenue Bluff LLC. 
 
Bank denied the requested admission. 
 
Buyer later filed a motion seeking an award of attorney fees pursuant to Rule 37(c) of the 
Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure, which provides: 
 
20 
If a party fails to admit . . . the truth of any matter as requested under Rule 
36, and if the party requesting the admissions thereafter proves . . . the truth of the 
matter, the requesting party may apply to the court for an order requiring the other 
party to pay the reasonable expenses incurred in making that proof, including 
reasonable attorney’s fees.  The court shall make the order unless it finds that (1) 
the request was held objectionable pursuant to Rule 36(a), or (2) the admission 
sought was of no substantial importance, or (3) the party failing to admit had 
reasonable ground to believe that the party might prevail on the matter, or (4) 
there was other good reason for the failure to admit. 
 
The district court found that the matter requested to be admitted was true, that Bank had no 
justification under the rule for its failure to admit, and that Buyer was entitled to an award of 
attorney fees in the sum of $9,915 as reasonable expenses incurred in proving the truth of the 
matter. 
 
On appeal, Bank first contends that its answer to an interrogatory should be considered as 
a qualified denial of the request for admission.  The interrogatory requested every fact, belief, or 
opinion upon which Bank failed to admit the request for admission, and Bank’s answer was as 
follows: 
Based upon D.L. Evans Bank’s current document review, there is no basis 
for admitting that D.L. Evans Bank knew or should have known the terms of the 
Purchase and Sale Contract between East Avenue Bluff, LLC and Leslie Benz, 
including the payment release provisions and dates prior to closing on its loan to 
East Avenue Bluff, LLC.  The senior loan committee was advised of the fact that 
a sale existed and some [of] its terms, but the contract itself was not presented to 
the senior loan committee and the Bank’s documentation, to this point of the 
review, has not established that the contract itself was received by the Bank prior 
to the closing of the loan.  In this regard, the loan officers in the loan are no longer 
employed by D.L. Evans Bank and D.L. Evans Bank has been attempting, without 
success, to obtain information from them relating to this transaction. 
 
 
The interrogatory answer does not constitute a qualified answer to the request for 
admission.7  Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure 36(a) provides that a party responding to a request 
for admission can state “that the party has made reasonable inquiry and that the information 
                                                 
7 An interrogatory answer is not a substitute for properly answering a request for admission.  “Any matter admitted 
under this rule [Rule 36] is conclusively established . . . .”  Idaho R. Civ. P. 36(b).  Although an interrogatory 
answer may be admissible in evidence, Theesen v. Continental Life & Accid. Co., 90 Idaho 58, 62, 408 P.2d 177, 
179 (1965), it does not conclusively establish the matter stated in the answer. 
 
21 
known or readily obtainable by the party is insufficient to enable the party to admit or deny.”  
Bank did not do that.  It simply denied the requested admission. 
 
Bank next questions whether affidavits submitted in connection with a motion for 
summary judgment are sufficient to prove a matter denied.  The rule does not limit the manner of 
proof, nor does it require that the matter be proved at a trial.  It only requires that the requesting 
party prove the truth of the matter.  That proof can come from affidavits and deposition 
testimony presented in support of or in opposition to a motion for summary judgment. 
Finally, Bank states on appeal that it “stands by its denial of Request for Admission No. 
2.”  It argues that there was insufficient evidence in the record in connection with the motion for 
summary judgment to prove the truth of the matter it denied.  According to Bank, “There was 
absolutely nothing in the record before the trial court for the summary judgment establishing 
D.L. Evans Bank knew all of the terms of the purchase and sale contract before it closed the 
loan.”  It asserts that the record only shows that it knew some of the terms of the contract, not all 
of them. 
Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure 36(a) provides that if the party responding denies the 
requested admission, “the party shall specify so much of it as is true and qualify or deny the 
remainder” when good faith so requires.  Bank did not qualify its answer to the request for 
admission.  It denied the request.  It is too late now to seek to evade responsibility for its denial 
by contending that it viewed the request as requiring it to admit that it knew every single term in 
the contract. 
The request for admission asked Bank to admit that it “knew, or should have known, the 
terms of the purchase and sale contract.”  The material presented in connection with Buyer’s 
motion for summary judgment included the following: 
(a) An internal memorandum of Bank dated July 25, 2007, which states:  “The 
purchaser Leslie Benz will have contributed $500,000 non-refundable earnest money at 
closing of the land purchase.  Mrs. Benz will also deposit an additional $250,000 on or 
before November 1st, 2007 as indicated in the purchase agreement.”  (Emphasis added.) 
(b) The deposition testimony of Mr. Hunsaker in which he was asked, “How 
would the loan officer [who authored a memorandum dated July 31, 2007,] know about 
the pre-sale?,” and he answered, “From the contract.” 
 
22 
(c) Mr. Hunsaker’s affidavit, in which he stated:  “Early in the loan approval 
process, D.L. Evans Bank was made aware of the Benz contract to purchase the property.  
The Senior Loan Committee required a copy of the contract to be included.  It also 
required confirmation that Ms. Benz’s financial condition would allow her to complete 
the purchase.”  (Emphasis added.)  As stated above, Mr. Hunsaker was a member of the 
senior loan committee and stated that he had “personal knowledge of the proceedings 
leading to approval of the loan to East Avenue Bluff, LLC.” 
The district court was entitled to draw reasonable inferences from the facts in the record, 
and was not required to adopt unreasonable ones.  Those facts, and the reasonable inferences 
drawn from them, provide sufficient proof of the truth of the matter denied by Bank.  The district 
court did not err in awarding Buyer attorney fees pursuant to Rule 37(c).  The court went through 
the requested fees and only awarded fees for services it determined were to prove the truth of the 
matter denied, and there is no challenge to the amount of fees awarded. 
 
VI. 
Is Buyer Entitled to an Award of Attorney Fees on Appeal 
Pursuant to Idaho Code Section 12-121? 
 
Buyer seeks an award of attorney fees pursuant to Idaho Code section 12-121.  “Attorney 
fees under § 12-121 will be awarded to the prevailing party on appeal when this Court is left with 
the abiding belief that the appeal was brought, pursued, or defended frivolously, unreasonably or 
without foundation.”  Rudd v. Merritt, 138 Idaho 526, 533, 66 P.3d 230, 237 (2003).  For fees to 
be awarded under that statute, the entire appeal must have been brought or pursued frivolously, 
unreasonably, or without foundation.  Id.  In this case, the entire appeal was not frivolous, 
unreasonable, or without foundation.  We agreed with Bank that McMahon and Graves should be 
overruled.  Therefore, we will not award attorney fees under that statute. 
 
VII. 
Conclusion 
 
23 
 
We reverse that portion of the judgment awarding prejudgment interest as part of the 
vendee’s lien.  We affirm the remainder of the judgment.8  Because both parties have prevailed 
in part, we do not award costs or attorney fees on appeal. 
 
 
Chief Justice BURDICK, Justices J. JONES, W. JONES, and HORTON CONCUR.   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
                                                 
8 Bank did not challenge the district court’s judgment including court costs and attorney fees awarded pursuant to 
Rule 37(c) as part of the lien, undoubtedly because Bank is liable for such sums.