Aetna Finance Co. v. Gaither

880 P.2d 857, 118 N.M. 246
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 3, 1994
Docket20927, 20994 and 21059
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 880 P.2d 857 (Aetna Finance Co. v. Gaither) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aetna Finance Co. v. Gaither, 880 P.2d 857, 118 N.M. 246 (N.M. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

FRANCHINI, Justice.

Aetna Finance Company, doing business as ITT Financial Services, appeals from a judgment awarding $26,067.38 in damages and $13,258.77 in costs and attorney’s fees to Frank A. and Velma Murray. A jury found that ITT had violated the Unfair Practices Act, NMSA 1978, §§ 57-12-1 to -21 (Repl.Pamp.1987), by knowingly making a statement that was false or misleading to Robert and Neecie Gaither, and that this deception caused the Murrays to lose their interest in a second mortgage they had subordinated to the mortgage ITT held on property the Gaithers were purchasing from the Murrays.

The Murrays cross-appeal from the trial court’s refusal to treble the damages award for willful violation of the Act, as provided under Section 57-12-10(B). They also cross-appeal from the court’s refusal to award the total amount of attorney’s fees requested; and, if this Court reverses the judgment based on the Act, they appeal from the court’s dismissal of their causes of action based on prima facie tort and intentional interference with contract, as well as the court’s failure to find as a matter of law that ITT’s mortgage was inferior to theirs.

Because the evidence does not support a finding that the damages were proximately caused by any deceptive practice or tortious act of ITT and we find that none of the Murrays’ arguments on cross-appeal are persuasive, we reverse the judgment.

Facts and proceedings. In July 1988, the Gaithers decided to purchase a home from the Murrays for $69,000. The Murrays verbally agreed to accept a down payment of $2000 and carry the balance on a purchase-money mortgage at ten percent interest. The Gaithers went to ITT to borrow the down payment, but ITT refused to lend the $2000. ITT did, however, offer to finance eighty percent of the value of the house at almost eighteen percent interest on a first mortgage. The house was appraised at $68,-900. Eighty percent of $68,900 is $55,120.

The Gaithers and the Murrays executed a purchase agreement under which the Gaithers agreed to make a down payment of $51,-000 (by obtaining a first mortgage) and to give the Murrays a second mortgage for $18,000 to secure the balance due. In the contract, the Gaithers agreed to pay all costs associated with mortgage financing. Robert Gaither then obtained what he hoped to be a short-term loan from ITT, planning to seek VA financing on the total value of the house as soon as he and his wife cleared up some credit difficulties. Robert Gaither signed the note and mortgage agreement with ITT; Neecie Gaither signed the note as a witness and did not sign the mortgage. The Gaithers’ monthly income was $2135, and the total of the monthly payments under the two mortgages came to $1122.

As a condition to making the loan, ITT required Gaither to pay off an existing ITT loan of over $3700 with the new loan proceeds. Gaither executed a promissory note, secured by a mortgage on the house, for $58,788.11, which amount included monies due the Murrays, prepaid finance charges, the amount due on the outstanding ITT loan, and monies paid to an appraiser. The Gaithers testified, and the jury apparently believed, that ITT assured the Gaithers that it had obtained approval from the Murrays for the additional sums when, in fact, no one at ITT ever discussed the amount of Gaither’s obligation to ITT with the Murrays. The Murrays believed that their mortgage was subordinate only to the $51,000 down payment amount they had agreed to in the purchase agreement and were not actually aware of the other amounts added to the loan, even though the mortgage for the greater amount was recorded.

When the Gaithers tried to refinance the house with the VA, they discovered that the VA would not finance an amount that exceeded the value of the house. Unable to make the house payments, the Gaithers defaulted on the promissory notes. In June 1990, ITT filed a complaint to foreclose the mortgages on the property. The Gaithers and the Murrays counterclaimed for unfair trade practices, the Murrays also stating their complaint on alternative grounds of negligence, gross negligence, and prima facie tort. The trial court dismissed all causes of action except those based upon unfair trade practices. The jury returned a verdict finding that ITT had willfully engaged in unfair trade practices against the Gaithers and the Murrays. The jury did not award any damages to the Gaithers, but did award $18,000 on the Murrays’ claim. The court added interest to that amount and also awarded costs and attorney’s fees, for a total award of $39,326.15 to the Murrays.

After the trial on the legal issue of whether ITT had engaged in unfair trade practices, the court tried the equitable issue of foreclosure and found the Gaithers liable in the principal amount of $57,999.72 plus interest of $28,500.11. At the foreclosure sale, ITT successfully bid $58,000 for the property, which had been appraised in 1990 at $59,350.

The Murrays failed to provide substantial evidence of proximate cause. Neither ITT nor Gaither had a duty to limit Gaither’s loan to $51,000. The Murrays argue they lost the value of their second mortgage because ITT lent the Gaithers almost $8000 more than the amount specified as the down payment in the purchase agreement. They claim that ITT had a duty not to attach its mortgage to more than the amount in the purchase agreement, i.e., more than the value of the house, because it knew that the Murrays had used that amount in agreeing to subordinate their mortgage to ITT’s.

Obviously, the Murrays agreed to subordinate their mortgage to at least $51,000 of ITT’s first mortgage. The Murrays failed to introduce any evidence, however, to show that had the ITT mortgage been limited to a first priority of $51,000, the Gaithers would have been able either to continue making the payments or to refinance the house. There also was no evidence that the Murrays were willing to buy out the first mortgage after default, to purchase the property at the foreclosure sale, or to exercise their right of redemption. ITT showed that even if the mortgage had been limited to $51,000, the amount of payoff at trial would have been $70,441.54, which was more than the house’s value. Thus, even if ITT had not misrepresented the Murrays’ approval, the Murrays still would have lost their mortgage interest. There was no testimony that the Murrays would have been willing or able to tender that amount to regain possession of the house. Because they failed to meet their burden, the verdict and judgment in the Murrays’ favor, along with judgment for costs and attorney’s fees, must be reversed.

Court properly dismissed the cause of action based on prima facie tort. Courts are often faced with a suit pleaded under alternative theories of intentional tort, negligence, and prima facie tort. See, e.g., Schmitz v. Smentowski, 109 N.M. 386, 391, 785 P.2d 726, 731 (1990) (pleading fraud, negligence, and prima facie tort). The Murrays claim that the trial court erroneously dismissed their claim of prima facie tort against ITT. ITT argues that the trial court properly refused to allow the Murrays to proceed under the theory, citing Schmitz.

This Court in Schmitz relied on two cases, Bandag of Springfield, Inc. v.

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Bluebook (online)
880 P.2d 857, 118 N.M. 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aetna-finance-co-v-gaither-nm-1994.