Bloom v. Hendricks

804 P.2d 1069, 111 N.M. 250
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1991
Docket18910
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 804 P.2d 1069 (Bloom v. Hendricks) 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
Bloom v. Hendricks, 804 P.2d 1069, 111 N.M. 250 (N.M. 1991).

Opinion

804 P.2d 1069 (1991)
111 N.M. 250

Mary Lou BLOOM and Kenneth D. Bloom, her husband, and Harry J. Schofield and Carol Schofield, his wife, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
James C. HENDRICKS and Constance Hendricks, his wife, James C. Hendricks, Jr. and Rebecca L. Hendricks, his wife, Debra Hendricks Larowe and Keith Larowe, her husband, and James Hendricks, Personal Representative of the Estate of P.B. Hendricks and Frances Hendricks, Defendants-Appellees.

No. 18910.

Supreme Court of New Mexico.

January 14, 1991.

*1070 Civerolo, Hansen & Wolf, Peter V. Domenici, Jr., Albuquerque, for plaintiffs-appellants.

S. Thomas Overstreet, Alamogordo, for defendants-appellees.

OPINION

RANSOM, Justice.

The grantees of a tract of land sued the grantors for breach of warranty covenants to appear and defend fee simple title against "the lawful claims and demands of all persons." Plaintiffs also claimed the grantors made collateral negligent misrepresentations that the use of a certain roadway by adjacent property owners was permissive and would cease upon request. As discussed below, we do not deem the misrepresentation claim to be an issue. We *1071 consider only the circumstances under which the grantors, under a general warranty deed, are responsible for the attorney fees expended by the grantee in a successful defense of the title conveyed.

On rationale we develop in this opinion that identifies the party who has assumed the risk of mounting or declining to mount a defense, we decide that when the grantor neither bears responsibility for the substance of an adverse claim nor had actual or constructive knowledge of a potential adverse claim when he made the conveyance, the grantee can recover the costs of a defense against that claim only when he first made a demand on the grantor to appear and defend and the grantee's own defense of the title was unsuccessful. Alternatively, when the grantor bears some responsibility for the substance of an adverse claim or had actual or constructive knowledge of a potential adverse claim when he warranted his title and agreed to defend it, the grantee can recover the costs of a defense, including reasonable attorney fees, except when the grantee made no demand on the grantor to appear and defend and the grantee's own defense of the tide was unsuccessful.

The complaint in this case was filed by Mary and Kenneth Bloom, purchasers of a forty-acre tract of land in Otero County, New Mexico. The Blooms purchased the property in 1981 and obtained from the sellers a warranty deed to the tract. The first group of defendants are P.B. and Constance Hendricks, who were the remote grantors of the tract. In 1976 they conveyed the tract by warranty deed to their children and their children's spouses. The children and their spouses are the second group of defendants and are the immediate grantors who gave the warranty deed to the Blooms in 1981.

At the time they purchased the property the Blooms were concerned over the neighbors' use of a portion of the tract. Apparently, P.B. Hendricks had an oral agreement with the neighbors, Rex and Gracie Lane, that they were free to use part of the tract for equipment storage and access to their home until such time as Hendricks might dispose of the property. The Blooms stated they received assurances from both the immediate and remote grantors that the neighbors' use was permissive and would cease upon request.

In 1985 the Blooms wrote to the Lanes revoking permission for their use of the tract. The Lanes responded through counsel and claimed fee title to a portion of the tract under several theories. The parties were unable to resolve the dispute, and the Lanes filed suit in September 1985 claiming fee title by virtue of a boundary by acquiescence and, alternatively, claiming a prescriptive easement.

The Lanes' claim to a boundary by acquiescence relied in large part upon an affidavit signed by P.B. Hendricks in August 1985. The affidavit stated:

At the time the Lanes purchased their property and for many years thereafter, I was unaware of the exact location of the North boundary of their property and South boundary of my property because I had never had my property surveyed. * * * In the vicinity of the northern boundary of the Lanes' property is an arroyo running roughly east and west. For many years, the Lanes and I recognized and treated this arroyo as the northern boundary of their tract and the southern boundary of the property which I owned.

From a point fifty to 100 feet north of the southwest corner, the arroyo referred to in the affidavit ran east by northeast in the area at issue and then due northeast to the far northeast corner of the forty-acre tract conveyed by warranty deed to the Blooms. Ken Bloom testified that when he learned of the affidavit he went directly to Jimmy Hendricks, one of the immediate grantors, to discuss the situation and to request that something be done about the affidavit his father had signed. Bloom stated that the general impression he received from Hendricks was that the matter was not his problem.

In a bench trial the court ruled in favor of the Lanes in their suit against Blooms. The court quieted title to 1.474 acres of the tract in the Lanes and evicted the Blooms *1072 from the property. The decision was appealed to the New Mexico Court of Appeals which, in Lane v. Bloom, Ct.App. No. 9266 (filed Oct. 16, 1987), reversed the trial court's decision. The court of appeals quieted title to the forty-acre tract in the Blooms except for a prescriptive easement across 0.302 acres used as a roadway and parking area by the Lanes.

Misrepresentations not an issue. In Lane v. Bloom the order of the court of appeals for the entry of a judgment on remand regarding the prescriptive easement was based on an unchallenged finding of the trial court concerning the purported easement that lay within the 1.474 acres. On appeal, the Blooms addressed only the boundary and title question. When the court of appeals reversed on the title question it stated that because "the parties do not dispute that plaintiff established a prescriptive easement over the 0.302 acre tract," the trial court would enter such a judgment in favor of the Lanes on remand. The complete trial court findings of fact have not been made available in this appeal.

In the instant case, at oral argument and their reply brief, the Blooms have maintained that the Lanes did not have a claim for a prescriptive easement in 1981. They concede that until 1981 the use by the Lanes was permissive and according to the terms of the acknowledged longstanding agreement with P.B. Hendricks. The statement about no claim existing in 1981 is made by the Blooms to rebut the charge that they should have been aware of the Lanes' adverse use of the property in 1981, and that for that reason the negligent misrepresentation claim is barred by the four-year statute of limitations. Counsel for the Hendricks states at several points that the Blooms "were advised of the Lanes' interest" in the tract shortly after the Blooms made the purchase.[1] In reply, the Blooms state they had no awareness whatsoever of any of the Lanes' claims until 1985 when they first saw the affidavit signed by P.B. Hendricks and, shortly thereafter, received a demand letter from the Lanes' attorney raising directly the various claims of the Lanes.

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Bluebook (online)
804 P.2d 1069, 111 N.M. 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloom-v-hendricks-nm-1991.