Chicago Title Of Nev., Inc. Vs. Chtd. Holdings, Inc. C/W 80116

CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 2021
Docket79180
StatusPublished

This text of Chicago Title Of Nev., Inc. Vs. Chtd. Holdings, Inc. C/W 80116 (Chicago Title Of Nev., Inc. Vs. Chtd. Holdings, Inc. C/W 80116) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago Title Of Nev., Inc. Vs. Chtd. Holdings, Inc. C/W 80116, (Neb. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

CHICAGO TITLE OF NEVADA, INC., A No. 79180 NEVADA CORPORATION; AND UNITED TITLE OF NEVADA, INC., A NEVADA CORPORATION, Appellants, vs. FILED CHARTERED HOLDINGS, INC. PROFIT SHARING PLAN FOR THE MAY 2 4 2021 BENEFIT OF CAROL RITTER; CAROL RFI'TER AS TRUSTEE; AND CHARTERED REALTY PARTNERS IV, o EBp Eu(z# B ER' eT - L.P., A NEVADA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, Res • ondents. CHICAGO TITLE OF NEVADA, INC A No. 80116 NEVADA CORPORATION; AND UNITED TITLE OF NEVADA, INC., A NEVADA CORPORATION, Appellants, vs. CHARTERED HOLDINGS, INC. PROFIT SHARING PLAN FOR THE BENEFIT OF CAROL RITTER; CAROL RITTER AS TRUSTEE; AND CHARTERED REALTY PARTNERS IV, L.P., A NEVADA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, Res ondents.

ORDER AFFIRMING IN PART, REVERSING IN PART AND REMANDING

These are consolidated appeals from district court orders in a third-party contract action that arose from a quiet-title action. Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County; Elizabeth Goff Gonzalez, Judge.

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA

(01 1947A leo of 19 7 gto Appellants argue that the district court erred by concluding that (1) they violated NRS 107.078(3); (2) respondents proved special damages for their breach-of-contract claim; (3) respondents claims were timely; and (4) respondents were entitled to equitable indemnity.1 We agree at least in part with each of appellants' arguments, so we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand to the district court. The district court erred by concluding that appellants violated NRS 107.078(3) Appellants argue that the district court erred by concluding that they violated NRS 107.078(3).2 They argue that a trustee has no duty to record a reconveyance under NRS 107.078(2) until the beneficiary requests reconveyance, and the district court found that Chartered Pension (beneficiary) never requested reconveyance under NRS 107.078(1). They argue that the district court's conclusion that Chartered Pension was nonetheless excused from requesting reconveyance erroneously "nullif[ied] NRS 107.078(1)s express requirement that the beneficiary request reconveyance. Respondents answer that the district court correctly interpreted NRS 107.078 with respect to the additional step in the parties' agreement that United Title (trustee) would request payoff, whereupon

1We do not address other issues that appellants raise because doing so is unnecessary to resolve this appeal.

As respondents did in their third-party complaint, the district court cited NRS 107.077, which addresses full discharges and reconveyances, instead of NRS 107.078, which is substantively identical but addresses partial discharges and reconveyances. But the loan here was for Chartered Realty's development of 55 lots, and Chartered Realty was to partially repay the loan with each sale, so NRS 107.078 was the applicable statute.

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 2 10) tga7A cdSPla Chartered Realty (grantor) would provide the payoff amount and Chartered Pension would request reconveyance.3 We review a district court's legal conclusions following a bench trial de novo. Vegas United Inv. Series 105, Inc. v. Celtic Bank Corp., 135 Nev. 456, 458, 453 P.3d 1229, 1231 (2019). NRS 107.078(1) provides that "within 21 calendar days after receiving [written] notice that the debt" has been paid off, "the beneficiary shall, . . . deliver to the trustee a properly executed request . . . [to] reconvey[ ]." NRS 107.078(2) provides that "[w]ithin 45 calendar days aftee the debt has been paid off "and a properly executed request . . . [to] reconvey[ ] is received by the trustee, the trustee shall cause to be recorded a . . . reconveyance of the deed of trust." Finally, NRS 107.078(3) provides that the deed of trust's beneficiary is liable to the grantor "[i]f the beneficiary fails to deliver to the trustee a properly executed request for a partial reconveyance pursuant to subsection 1," and that the trustee is liable to the grantor "if the trustee fails to cause to be recorded a partial reconveyance of the deed of trust pursuant to subsection 2."

3Respondents offer several other arguments that are significantly less persuasive. First, they argue that the district court found that they did request reconveyance, but they quote the district court's finding about the parties intended course of performance under their agreement and omit the district court's finding about what actually happened: "Chartered [Pension] fail[ed] to make a formal reconveyance request." Second, they argue that NRS Chapter 107 permits alternative procedures, but they cite NRS 107.079(7), which indeed allows alternative procedures but only in limited circumstances, none of which apply here. As we discuss below, the dissent addresses both of these arguments at face value, but closer inspection reveals that both are flawed and do not accurately represent the district court's findings or the law. And third, respondents argue that United Title could have recorded a reconveyance without a request, but they cite NRS 107.077(4), which provides that a title insurer (which United Title was not) may do so after payoff. SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 3 10) 1 947A agSP:. The district court concluded that United Title violated NRS 107.078(3) "by failing to properly rnake a payoff request and assure reconveyance of the 1717 DoT for each of the Encumbered Lots," and "by failing to cause to be recorded a partial reconveyance of the 1717 DoT for each of the Encumbered Lots." Although NRS 107.078(2) does not require a trustee to reconvey until the beneficiary has requested reconveyance under NRS 107.078(1), the district court reasoned that Chartered Pension was excused from fulfilling this express, statutory requirement "[Oven the procedure utilized by [United Title's] escrow department to identify liens and make pay off requests." It explained that United Title's escrow department "would . . .

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Bluebook (online)
Chicago Title Of Nev., Inc. Vs. Chtd. Holdings, Inc. C/W 80116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-title-of-nev-inc-vs-chtd-holdings-inc-cw-80116-nev-2021.