Court Opinion

ID: 4510991
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-02-27 18:06:40.563673+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:15:07.721656
License: Public Domain

Filed 02/27/2020 by Clerk of Supreme Court

                  IN THE SUPREME COURT
                  STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA

                                 2020 ND 49

Janice Rieger and Robert Rieger, Plaintiffs, Appellants, and Cross-Appellees
      v.
Lyle Ackerman and Kathleen
Rub,                             Defendants, Appellees, and Cross-Appellants
      and
all Persons Unknown who have
or claim any interest in the property,                           Defendants

                                No. 20190197

Appeal from the District Court of Grant County, South Central Judicial
District, the Honorable David E. Reich, Judge.

AFFIRMED IN PART AND REMANDED.

Opinion of the Court by VandeWalle, Justice.

Robert J. Pathroff, Bismarck, ND, for plaintiffs, appellants, and cross-
appellees.

Malcolm H. Brown, Bismarck, ND, for defendants, appellees, and cross-
appellants.
                            Rieger v. Ackerman
                               No. 20190197

VandeWalle, Justice.

[¶1] In this partition action, Janice and Robert Rieger appealed, and Lyle
Ackerman and Kathleen Rub cross-appealed, from a district court order
directing the sale of real property owned by the Riegers, Ackerman, and Rub.
The court also denied the Riegers’ motion for attorney’s fees. We affirm in part
and remand.

                                       I

[¶2] Janice Rieger, Ackerman, and Rub own a 473-acre parcel of agricultural
property in Grant County. The property consists of three contiguous quarter
sections. The west half of the property was purchased by the parties’
grandfather in 1910, and the parties’ father purchased the southeast quarter
in 1956.

[¶3] In May 2017, Janice Rieger sued Ackerman and Rub for partition of the
property. Rieger proposed a partition of the property into thirds. Under the
proposal, Rieger would receive the southern third of the property and
Ackerman and Rub would split the remaining two-thirds of the property.
Ackerman and Rub opposed Rieger’s proposal and requested a sale of the
property.

[¶4] The parties stipulated to the appointment of two referees to analyze the
property. The referees submitted a report in April 2018, concluding that
partition of the property as proposed by Rieger would be inequitable. The
referees proposed that the whole property be sold at auction.

[¶5] The district court ordered the referees to supplement their report by
valuing the three separate parcels of property if partitioned as requested by
Rieger. The court also requested an estimate of the value of the two parcels
proposed to be awarded to Ackerman and Rub if they were sold as one parcel.
The referees submitted a supplemental report in November, 2018. The
supplemental report valued Rieger’s proposed parcel at $200,000, the middle

                                       1
one-third parcel at $138,400, and the northern one-third parcel at $153,000.
The referees valued the middle and northern one-third parcels at $417,500 if
sold together. The supplemental report reaffirmed the referees’
recommendation that the entire property be sold with the proceeds divided
among the parties.

[¶6] After a February 2019 trial, the district court ordered that the Riegers 1
could have their proposed third of the property if the remainder could be “sold
for 2/3 of the $917,000 amount indicated in a 2016 appraisal, or such other
amount as may be agreed upon by the parties” within six months. If two-thirds
of the property could not be sold for a satisfactory amount within six months,
the court ordered the entire property be sold.

[¶7] In May 2019, the Riegers moved for attorney’s fees and costs, requesting
the district court to divide the costs of the action equally among the parties.
The court denied the Riegers’ motion.

                                        II

[¶8] The Riegers argue the district court erred in ordering a sale of the whole
property if two-thirds of the property could not be sold within six months. The
Riegers argue the court should have ordered a partition of the property.

[¶9] We review a district court’s decision in a partition action as follows:

              A district court’s decision on the proper division of property
      or proceeds between the parties and the form of relief granted will
      not be disturbed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion. A court’s
      findings in a partition action will not be reversed on appeal unless
      they are clearly erroneous. A finding of fact is clearly erroneous if
      it is induced by an erroneous view of the law, if there is no evidence
      to support it, or if, after reviewing all the evidence, we are left with

1In January 2019, Janice Rieger conveyed her interest to herself and Robert
Rieger as joint tenants. Robert Rieger was subsequently added as a plaintiff to
the action.

                                         2
      a definite and firm conviction a mistake has been made. Questions
      of law, however, are fully reviewable on appeal.

Beach Railport, LLC v. Michels, 2017 ND 240, ¶ 11, 903 N.W.2d 88 (citations
omitted).

[¶10] “Partition is a matter of right between cotenants.” Estate of Loomer, 2010
ND 93, ¶ 17, 782 N.W.2d 648; N.D.C.C. § 32-16-01. Partition is an equitable
remedy. Beach Railport, 2017 ND 240, ¶ 10, 903 N.W.2d 88. District courts
have broad discretion in partition actions to do equity and make a fair and just
division of the property or proceeds between the parties and have wide
flexibility in fashioning proper relief for the parties. Id. “The law favors
partition in kind, and there is a presumption that partition in kind should be
made unless great prejudice is shown.” Id. All property owners deserve equal
consideration for partition in kind, including consideration of the location and
character of the property, sentimental attachment, and the situation of the
owners. Id.

[¶11] In Schnell v. Schnell, 346 N.W.2d 713, 716 (N.D. 1984) (citations and
quotations omitted), this Court discussed great prejudice as it relates to
partition:

            In determining if great prejudice would result from a
      partition, the question is not which alternative would provide
      optimal economic value or maximum functional use. The resultant
      parcels need not be the economic, functional or aesthetic
      equivalent of the original parcel. Rather, great prejudice exists
      when the value of the share of each in case of a partition would be
      materially less than his share of the money equivalent that could
      probably be obtained from the whole. Thus, sale of land in partition
      should not be ordered unless it is necessary to protect the parties
      from serious pecuniary injury.

[¶12] The Riegers contend the district court failed to find whether a physical
partition would cause great prejudice to Ackerman and Rub. They also assert
the court erred because the evidence does not establish that partition would
cause great prejudice to Ackerman and Rub.

                                       3
[¶13] The district court’s decision discussed the property’s value as a whole
and the value if partitioned:

           In this case, the 2016 appraisal placed a value of $917,000.00
     on the 473 acres at issue . . . . That amount divided three ways
     would yield a return of $305,667.00 for each of the three siblings.
     Mr. Ibach testified that the land is currently being farmed as a
     unit and that the value of the land as a whole is “far greater” than
     the value of the land if partitioned into three units. He testified
     that partitioning the land would “greatly reduce” the value of the
     pasture land and that the small tracts of crop land could not
     support large equipment. Mr. Ibach concluded that no feasible
     equal partition could be made to equalize value and retain
     economic value and recommended that the land be sold at a public
     sale.

            In the Referees supplemental report . . . , the referees
     attempted to place a value on the three separate parcels of land if
     partitioned as requested by [Rieger]. The court also requested the
     referees to attempt to place a value on the NW¼ and the N½ of the
     S½ of Section 1 if sold together as one unit. (The respondents
     submit that if the land is partitioned, it must be partitioned into
     three separate parcels and not two. However, both [Ackerman] and
     [Rub] testified that they are not interested in being co-tenants and
     want to have the property sold.) In doing so, the referees came up
     with a value for the NW¼ and the N½ of the S½ of $417,500. This
     total valued the 146 acres of pastureland at $0 due to the lack of a
     water supply. If a water supply is added by installing a well at the
     estimated cost of $19,189.74, it appears the pasture could then be
     valued at $950 an acre which is the value attributed to the pasture
     in the S½ of the S½ of Section 1 in the referees report. Adding 146
     acres at $950 per acre to the $417,500 estimate would increase the
     value of the NW¼ and the N½ of the S½ to $529,500. While this is
     a significant increase from the $417,500 amount, it is also
     significantly less than the approximately $611,000 that
     [Ackerman] and [Rub] would divide as 2/3 of the $917,000 value
     indicated in the 2016 appraisal.

           Considering the law favoring partition in kind, [Rieger’s]
     desire to retain a parcel of the property and her emotional
     attachment to the property, the preference of [Ackerman] and

                                      4
      [Rub] to sell the property, the appraised value of the property and
      the difference between that value and the referees estimates of the
      values of the properties if divided, the referees opinion that the
      property cannot be divided in a manner which would equalize
      value and retain economic value and the recommendation that it
      be sold, and the court’s ‘wide judicial discretion in partition actions
      to “do equity” and to make a fair and just division of the property
      or proceeds between the parties,’ and ‘great flexibility in fashioning
      appropriate relief for the parties,’ the court orders the following:

             1. The parties shall have six months from the date of this
      order to attempt to sell the NW¼ and the N½ of the S½ of Section
      1. If the NW¼ and the N½ of the S½ can be sold for 2/3 of the
      $917,000 amount indicated in the 2016 appraisal, or such other
      amount as may be agreed upon by the parties, the proceeds of the
      sale shall be divided equally between [Ackerman] and [Rub], and
      [Ackerman] and [Rub] shall deed their interest in the S½ of the S½
      of Section 1 to [Rieger]; but,

            2. If the NW¼ and the N½ of the S½ cannot be sold for a
      satisfactory amount, and there is no sale pending, at the end of the
      six month period, then the entire 473 acre parcel shall be sold and
      the proceeds divided equally among the three siblings.

[¶14] The district court discussed the referee’s testimony relating to the
property’s value as a whole and its value if partitioned. A 2016 appraisal
valued the property at $917,000. The referees’ supplemental report valued
each parcel as proposed by the Riegers. The report valued the Riegers’ proposed
southern one-third at $200,000, the middle one-third at $138,400, and the
northern one-third at $153,000. The referees also combined the middle and
northern one-third parcels and valued them at $417,500 if sold together as one
parcel. The referees placed a lower value on the middle and northern thirds of
the property in part because there was no water source. The court found that
if a well were installed in the northern two-thirds of the property, the value
would increase to approximately $529,500. The court found this amount was
“significantly less than the approximately $611,000 that [Ackerman] and [Rub]
would divide as 2/3 of the $917,000 value indicated in the 2016 appraisal.”

                                        5
[¶15] The district court also considered the sentimental attachment and the
situation of the owners relating to the property. Janice Rieger lives in
Minneapolis and testified about her emotional attachment to the property. She
testified she enjoys visiting the property and wants to keep a portion of the
property in her family for the enjoyment of her children and grandchildren.
Ackerman lives in Kansas, Rub lives in Colorado, and they both testified they
wanted the property sold.

[¶16] The district court’s decision does not make a specific finding of great
prejudice. However, the court’s order discusses the great-prejudice legal
standard immediately before making its decision. The court found the amount
Ackerman and Rub would receive from a sale of the northern two-thirds of the
property would be “significantly less” than the amount they would each receive
from a sale of the whole property. We conclude the court’s findings are
consistent with the legal standard, and it found partition would cause great
prejudice to Ackerman and Rub.

[¶17] The Riegers claim the district court clearly erred in finding that
Ackerman’s and Rub’s share from a sale of two-thirds of the property would be
significantly less than their share from a sale of the whole property. They argue
partition would not cause great prejudice to Ackerman and Rub. According to
the court’s findings, $529,500 is approximately fifteen percent less than
$611,000. We decline to adopt a bright-line rule declaring a decrease in value
by a certain percentage constitutes a “serious pecuniary injury.” Schnell, 346
N.W.2d at 716. In some cases, a fifteen percent decrease may be a serious
pecuniary injury, and in other cases it may not. The evidence in the record
supports the court’s findings. We conclude the court’s findings are not clearly
erroneous, and we are not left with a definite and firm conviction a mistake
has been made.

[¶18] The district court used its wide discretion in determining an equitable
remedy for the parties. The court allowed the Riegers to keep their proposed
one-third of the property if the remainder could be sold for a reasonable
amount within six months. If the northern two-thirds of the property did not
sell within six months, the court ordered the sale of the whole property. The

                                       6
Riegers’ appeal did not stay the six-month period to sell a portion of the
property, and they did not move for a stay of the order pending appeal. See
N.D.R.Civ.P. 62; N.D.R.App.P. 8. We conclude the court’s determination on
partition was not an abuse of discretion.

                                      III

[¶19] The Riegers further argue the district court erred in denying their post-
judgment motion for attorney’s fees and costs. They assert the costs of the
action should be divided equally among the parties.

[¶20] The costs of a partition action are governed under N.D.C.C. § 32-16-45:

      The costs of a partition, including reasonable counsel fees,
      expended by the plaintiff or any of the defendants, for the common
      benefit, fees of referees, and other disbursements, must be paid by
      the parties respectively entitled to share in the lands divided in
      proportion to their respective interests therein and may be
      included and specified in the judgment.

[¶21] The district court explained its decision to deny the Riegers’ motion:

             The motion for attorney fees in this case is premature due to
      the language in the court’s order and the fact that the court’s order
      has been appealed. The court’s order did not divide the property
      equally among the parties, rather it ordered that the parties
      attempt to sell two-thirds of the property. There was a dispute at
      trial as to whether the two-thirds of the property to be offered for
      sale could be sold for two-thirds of the appraised value of the entire
      parcel, or whether any division of the property would result in a
      substantial reduction in value of the divided parcels. The court’s
      order provided for a six month period of time for the parties to
      attempt to establish which, if any, of the parties’ theories on
      valuation of the divided property was correct. If two-thirds of the
      property can be sold for an agreeable amount and the remaining
      one third awarded to [the Riegers], then the resulting division does
      not seem to fit the definition of a partition under [N.D.C.C.]
      Chapter 32-16. The court also questions whether Plaintiffs have
      established that the attorney fees requested were expended “for

                                        7
      the common benefit” of the parties as required by N.D.C.C. § 32-
      16-45.

          For these reasons, Plaintiffs’ motion for attorney fees is
      DENIED.

[¶22] The district court noted the Riegers’ motion for attorney’s fees was
premature because they brought it within the six-month period to sell two-
thirds of the property. The court also questioned whether the attorney’s fees
were expended for the common benefit of the parties under N.D.C.C. § 32-16-
45; however, the court did not deny the Riegers’ motion under N.D.C.C. § 32-
16-45. Because the court stated the motion was premature and did not base its
decision on N.D.C.C. § 32-16-45, we remand the order to the court to decide the
Riegers’ motion under N.D.C.C. § 32-16-45.

                                      IV

[¶23] The partition order is affirmed. The order on costs and attorney’s fees is
remanded.

[¶24] Gerald W. VandeWalle
      Daniel J. Crothers
      Lisa Fair McEvers
      Jerod E. Tufte
      Jon J. Jensen, C.J.

                                       8