Aetna Life Insurance v. McElvain

717 P.2d 1081, 221 Mont. 138
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1986
Docket85-008
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 717 P.2d 1081 (Aetna Life Insurance v. McElvain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aetna Life Insurance v. McElvain, 717 P.2d 1081, 221 Mont. 138 (Mo. 1986).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE GULBRANDSON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Aetna Life Insurance Company (Aetna) appeals the lower court’s order in this case originally brought by Aetna to foreclose on its first mortgage on certain Montana farmland. The Fallon County District Court ruled that Aetna could foreclose but held that Aetna had defrauded respondents Shepherds, the second mortgagees. The court [140]*140awarded Shepherds the first $149,821.19 (plus $40,000 for attorney’s fees) from the foreclosure sale of the ranch. This appeal raises issues of whether a South Dakota district court judgment collaterally es-tops Shepherds from successfully relitigating the issue of Aetna’s alleged fraud; whether Shepherds had actual or constructive notice of the fraudulent scheme, which precludes them from recovering for fraud; whether Western Farm Management Company (Western Farm), a loan broker, was the agent of Aetna and, if so, whether the fraudulent acts of Western Farm are imputable to Aetna. We conclude that Shepherds cannot successfully allege fraud on Aetna’s part because the South Dakota judgment collaterally estops then from relitigating this issue and because Shepherds had imputed knowledge of the fraudulent scheme. Thus, we reverse the District Court and remand this case for the entry of judgment in Aetna’s favor.

In 1979, Shepherds owned the Box Elder Ranch, which lies at the juncture of Montana, South Dakota and North Dakota and includes land in all three states. Shepherds, desiring to sell the ranch, listed it for sale with Ranch Mart, a realty agency, and employed Ranch Mart to find a buyer. In May 1979, McElvains agreed to buy the ranch and signed a buy/sell agreement. The agreement was contingent upon McElvains securing financing from Aetna for the purchase. The total sales price agreed upon was $1,385,000; $1,235,000 as payment for the ranch and $150,000 as payment for ranch machinery. Under the agreement, McElvains were to pay $1,100,000 in cash at the closing after securing a loan from Aetna in that amount. Shepherds agreed that Aetna would have the first mortgage (from McElvains) on the ranch with the understanding that Aetna’s loan to McElvains would be for $1,100,000 and would not exceed that amount. The balance of the purchase price was to be secured by a second mortgage on the ranch from McElvains to Shepherds. Shepherds would not have entered this transaction if they had known that Aetna’s loan to McElvains (and resulting mortgage) would be for an amount well in excess of $1,100,000.

R.J. McElvain, Jr., one of the prospective buyers of the ranch, worked for Western Farm. Western Farm was a loan broker, helping people to arrange loans. R.J. McElvain, Jr., sought the help of a fellow Western Farm employee in arranging financing for McElvains’ purchase of the ranch. Western Farm agents contacted Shepherds at the ranch to inspect and appraise the property. Western Farm, through its agents and McElvains, knew that the agreed upon sales [141]*141price was $1,385,000 and that the sale was contingent upon an Aetna loan to McElvains for $1,100,000.

The mortgage loan application to Aetna, submitted in McElvains’ name through Western Farm, stated that the total sales price for the ranch was $2,185,000. The application requested a loan from Aetna of $1,555,000. A forged buy/sell agreement was also submitted to Aetna through Western Farm. Shepherds’ signatures were forged on the agreement. The agreement stated that the total sales price was $2,185,000. R.J. McElvain, Jr., who had worked for Western Farm, stated at deposition that the forged buy/sell agreement was seen in the offices of Western Farm. Aetna approved a loan in the total amount of $1,555,000. The effect of the loan was that Aetna would have a first mortgage for $1,555,000 on a ranch valued at approximately $1,235,000. Thus, Shepherds’ second mortgage for $135,000 was rendered essentially worthless.

On July 6, 1979, McElvains and Shepherds closed the sale of the ranch. McElvains executed a promissory note to Shepherds for $135,000, secured by three separate second mortgages on ranch property in the three states. The documents were backdated to June 29, 1979. The closing took place after Ranch Mart, Shepherds’ agent, received notice that Aetna had approved the loan to McElvains. At his deposition, Wallace Mading, owner of Ranch Mart, produced a copy of a letter received by Ranch Mart. The letter, from Western Farm to R.J. McElvain, Jr., stated that the Aetna loan had been approved for $1,550,000. The letter was dated June 7, 1979. Mading stated at deposition that neither he, his secretary, nor the closing agent knew when the letter was received by Ranch Mart. Ranch Mart received the letter in response to its request to Western Farm to notify Ranch Mart of the approval of the loan. Mading agreed that, in terms of Ranch Mart’s normal practice, Ranch Mart had received the letter before the closing on July 6, 1979.

Mading testified at deposition:

“. . . I am sure that I was aware that Aetna Life Insurance Company was going to be in a million and a half dollar mortgage position, but I did not know what all on ... I knew that this property was certainly a part of it.
“Q. You did know then that they were going to have a mortgage in excess of a million and a half dollars, and that their mortgage would be superior to the second mortgage of the Shepherds?
“A. Yes, I am sure that I would have, I would have been aware of it just the way you said it.”

[142]*142Ranch Mart apparently did not tell Shepherds about the size of Aetna’s loan to McElvains.

On August 2, 1979, Aetna closed its loan to McElvains for $1,555,000. McElvains executed three promissory notes totaling that amount and three mortgages (to secure the notes) in Aetna’s favor. The transaction required three mortgages and three notes so that a mortgage could be recorded in each one of the three states in which the ranch is located. These first mortgages were recorded August 2, 1979, in the appropriate office of the respective counties and states.

Shepherds recorded the three second mortgages as follows: on November 29,1979, in Fallon County, Montana; on November 30,1979, in Bowman County, North Dakota; and on December 3, 1979, in Harding County, South Dakota. These mortgages explicitly recited that they were subordinate to Aetna’s first mortgages. On January 24, 1980, Shepherds filed a satisfaction of mortgage for each of the three mortgages given to Shepherds by McElvains, although the underlying debt had not been paid. Shepherds filed the satisfactions of mortgage on the request of their realtor, Wallace Mading. Ronald Shepherd testified that Mading’s reason for this was that Shepherds had mistakenly filed their mortgages ahead of Aetna and “they had to have it reversed.” This reasoning apparently reflects that (1) part of Aetna’s loan to McElvains was not to be disbursed until on or before February 28, 1980 (Shepherds’ mortgages having been recorded in November and December of 1979); and (2) Aetna sought to amend its mortgages to show this disbursement (although this was not shown at trial). In any event, Shepherds filed three satisfactions of mortgage and then, in March 1980, filed three new second mortgages (otherwise identical to their prior mortgages) on the ranch land in the three states. These new second mortgages also explicitly recited that they were junior and subordinate to Aetna’s first mortgage.

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Aetna Life Insurance v. McElvain
717 P.2d 1081 (Montana Supreme Court, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
717 P.2d 1081, 221 Mont. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aetna-life-insurance-v-mcelvain-mont-1986.