Clients' Security Fund of Bar of New Jersey v. Security Title

634 A.2d 90, 134 N.J. 358, 1993 N.J. LEXIS 737
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 29, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 634 A.2d 90 (Clients' Security Fund of Bar of New Jersey v. Security Title) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clients' Security Fund of Bar of New Jersey v. Security Title, 634 A.2d 90, 134 N.J. 358, 1993 N.J. LEXIS 737 (N.J. 1993).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

HANDLER, J.

In the companion case, Sears Mortgage Corporation v. Rose and Kaiser, 134 N.J. 326, 634 A.2d 74 (1993), decided today, we considered the issue of which party participating in the closing of a real estate title must ultimately absorb the loss caused by the closing attorney’s theft of moneys earmarked for the payment of an existing first mortgage on the property. In that case, aside from the seller, the only parties involved in the real-estate closing were the purchaser and the title-insurance carrier. We held that under the circumstances the closing attorney, although retained by the buyer, was the agent of the title-insurance carrier, and therefore the carrier, not the purchaser, was liable for the loss occasioned by the attorney’s embezzlement. We also held the carrier liable for the loss because protection against the risk of [364]*364attorney defalcation was implicit in the duty of good faith and fair dealing owed by the insurer to the purchaser and was an incident of the title insurance provided to the purchaser.

In this case, the real-estate closing involved the refinancing and replacement of a first mortgage on property. The funds were furnished by a third-party lender to be secured by a first mortgage. The attorney who embezzled those funds was retained by the owner of the property (referred to throughout as the “purchaser” or “buyer”). As a result of that theft, the existing mortgage, was not paid. Hence, we must directly address the status of the lender-mortgagee in determining which party — the purchaser, the title insurer, or the third-party lender — should bear the loss of the closing attorney’s embezzlement. Further, we must also determine whether attorneys’ fees may be awarded if the title-insurance carrier is found to be responsible for the loss.

In addition, the purchaser in this case, confronted with the loss caused by his attorney’s theft, filed a claim with the Clients’ Security Fund. The Fund paid the purchaser only a portion of the loss attributable to his attorney’s misappropriation. We therefore consider the responsibility of the Fund in dealing with claims based on such losses.

I

In 1985, Douglas Hart purchased a condominium in Eatontown from its builder for $95,000. He financed the purchase with a $90,000 mortgage to Center Savings and Loan (“Center”). Hart retained Joseph Witkowski, a Rahway lawyer referred to him by a colleague, to represent him in the purchase.

Witkowski ordered and received a title report on the Eatontown property from Alliance Title Agency (“Alliance”), the local agent for Security Title and Guaranty Company (“Security”). At the closing, Hart gave Witkowski $526 to cover the title-insurance premium. Witkowski explained to Hart that title insurance would protect him against any claims made against the property. Witkowski, however, never sent the $526 to Alliance, and a title policy [365]*365never issued. Alliance did not communicate with Hart to ask why the premium had not been paid or to ask him if he wanted to cancel the policy. Hart received copies of his recorded deed and the loan documents and began making his monthly mortgage payments to Center.

In 1986, when interest ratés fell, Hart decided to refinance his Center mortgage. He applied to Southern Mortgage Associates (“SMA”) and was approved for a $91,000 loan. Hart retained Witkowski to represent him in closing the SMA mortgage. The SMA commitment for a $91,000 loan to Hart, which issued in May 1986, provided that Witkowski would close the loan for SMA in compliance with SMA’s closing instructions. SMA required as a condition of the loan that Witkowski obtain title insurance and that the Center mortgage loan be paid off at the closing and cancelled.

Witkowski ordered a title report and commitment from Alliance. Alliance’s May 15, 1986, commitment to issue a loan policy for $91,000 required that Hart pay off and cancel the Center mortgage. The title commitment listed SMA as the proposed insured. On May 27, 1986, Alliance sent Witkowski a bill for $522 to cover the policy premium.

As was its custom, SMA also required a “closing-protection letter” from the title-insurance company. The letter protected SMA against the risk of loss resulting from the fraud or theft of the buyer’s closing attorney, who was designated as the title company’s “approved attorney” for the purposes of the closing. Alliance did not charge SMA for the protection afforded through the letter; rather, the cost of that protection was built into the insurance premium charged and paid for by Hart. Security issued the letter.

Shortly before the closing date, June 13, 1986, SMA sent Witkowski the closing package, which included a note, the mortgage, the net check for the refinancing, and SMA’s closing instructions. The check for $91,000 was made payable to Witkowski and [366]*366Hart jointly. The closing instructions, which were directed to Witkowski, began:

The following are closing instructions which you, as our closing agent, must comply with as checked. Do not disburse any loan proceeds without full compliance with these instructions.

The instructions required, among other things, that Witkowski pay off the Center mortgage.

At the closing, Witkowski had Hart endorse the check. Witkowski signed a copy of the closing instructions and returned it to SMA along with copies of all the documents executed at the closing. Included was his signed “Attorney’s Certification,” on a form furnished by SMA, in which he certified that SMA’s $91,000 loan was secured by a first mortgage on Hart’s property. The SMA mortgage was recorded.

The closing statement reflects a $547 charge to Hart for title insurance. On Juné 18, 1986, Witkowski sent a check for $522 to Security to cover the title-insurance premium. (Although the trial court concluded that Witkowski must have pocketed the $25 difference, in fact the $25 was a cancellation charge billed by Security to Witkowski directly and unbeknownst to Hart.) A year and a half after Witkowski’s application to Security for title insurance, when Security was beginning to prepare a title binder for the refinancing, it noticed that no premium had been received for the original purchase and that no policy had been issued to either Center or Hart. Security billed Hart, through Witkowski, for cancelling the original policy without checking with Hart on whether he wanted to cancel the policy, and then issued a new commitment for a loan policy, with SMA as the proposed insured. Security deposited Hart’s check for the premium on the loan policy but did not issue a policy because it was never informed that the Center mortgage had been paid off and cancelled. It was never so informed because instead of paying off the Center mortgage, Witkowski stole the $91,000.

Hart began making regular monthly payments on the SMA mortgage and stopped making payments to Center, because he [367]*367assumed that the loan had been repaid in full. When Hart received delinquency notices from Center, investigation revealed Witkowski’s theft. Witkowski was prosecuted, convicted, sentenced, and disbarred for this and other similar defalcations.

SMA called on Security to fulfill its obligation under the closing-protection letter.

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Clients' Security Fund of Bar of New Jersey v. Security Title
634 A.2d 90 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
634 A.2d 90, 134 N.J. 358, 1993 N.J. LEXIS 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clients-security-fund-of-bar-of-new-jersey-v-security-title-nj-1993.