Cottonwood Acres v. First American Title Insurance

CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedJanuary 23, 2025
Docket2:22-cv-00680
StatusUnknown

This text of Cottonwood Acres v. First American Title Insurance (Cottonwood Acres v. First American Title Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cottonwood Acres v. First American Title Insurance, (D. Utah 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH, CENTRAL DIVISION

COTTONWOOD ACRES, LLC, a limited ORDER AND MEMORANDUM liability company, DECISION DENYING PARTIAL MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT Plaintiff, Case No.: 2:22-cv-00680-TC-DBP v.

FIRST AMERICAN TITLE Judge Tena Campbell INSURANCE COMPANY, a Nebraska corporation, Magistrate Judge Dustin B. Pead Defendant.

Plaintiff Cottonwood Acres, LLC (Cottonwood Acres) has filed a motion for partial summary judgment (ECF No. 73), in which it asks the court to grant summary judgment on the Fifteenth Affirmative Defense raised by Defendant First American Title Insurance Company (First American). In that defense, First American asserts that its contractual obligation to insure and indemnify Cottonwood Acres for the loss of a disputed property title was excused because Cottonwood Acres made misrepresentations when obtaining the title insurance policy at issue. (Def’s. Answer to Am. Compl., ECF No. 43 at 13.) Cottonwood Acres maintains that because the title insurance company had full knowledge of the facts surrounding the property title, First American has failed to establish the necessary elements of this affirmative defense. The court is not persuaded and, for the following reasons, denies the motion for partial summary judgment. BACKGROUND I. The Underlying Lawsuit Before December 1, 2021, the real property at issue here (the Property) was co-owned by Capital Dynamics, LLC (Capital Dynamics), the 10% owner, and the Church of the Will of God (the Church), the 90% owner. (See ECF No. 73 at 3; Dep. P. Robert Augason, 116:11–18, 19:16– 19, ECF No. 31-1.) The Property was originally made up of five parcels, three of which were owned by the Church and two by Capital Dynamics. (Am. Compl., Augason v. Church of the Will of God, et al., No. 210901557 (Third Judicial District Court Litigation), ECF No. 2-1 at ¶ 6.) Robert Augason was, at all relevant times, the sole member of and doing business as

Capital Dynamics. (Utah Business Search Results, ECF No. 73-2.) Due to its heavily trafficked location at the mouth of Big Cottonwood Canyon, the Property has been the subject of vandalism, litter, and trespass. (Factual and Legal Findings in Support of Default J., Third Judicial District Court Litigation, ECF No. 31-2 at 2–3.) As a result, Capital Dynamics has faced threats of eminent domain from the City of Cottonwood Heights. Unable to get in touch with the Church for financial assistance to deal with the trespassing and eminent domain issues, Mr. Augason sought declaratory relief naming him a Trustee of the Church so that he could manage the Property unilaterally. On March 22, 2021, Mr. Augason filed suit in his personal capacity against the Church in the Third Judicial District

Court for Salt Lake County, alleging that the Church had failed to protect the land against trespassers and pay its share of property taxes and other expenses. (Compl., Third Judicial District Court Litigation, ECF No. 73-5.) The Church did not answer Mr. Augason’s complaint or otherwise appear in the Third Judicial District Court Litigation at that juncture. (ECF No. 38 at ¶ 9.) Indeed, Mr. Augason repeatedly tried and failed to serve the Church’s registered agents and Trustees through certified mail. (Id.) Following service of the summons and complaint on the Church via a court-authorized publication (ECF Nos. 73-5 to 73-8), Mr. Augason filed a Motion for Default Judgment on September 3, 2021. (ECF No. 73-8.) On September 22, 2023, the Third Judicial District Court entered Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law in Support of Default Judgment. (ECF No. 31- 2.) The Third Judicial District Court granted Mr. Augason’s motion and issued its Default Judgment and Order on September 23, 2021, vesting Mr. Augason with authority as Trustee to conduct four activities regarding the Property:

Specifically, the Court finds and concludes that Plaintiff P. Robert Augason should be named Trustee of Defendant Church of the Will of God in order to: Name a new Registered Agent and satisfy all other corporate formalities to shield Defendant against being administratively dissolved by the Division of Corporations; Provide an accurate, active Utah Resident Agent address at which Defendant may be served notice of any eminent domain, adverse possession or other proceedings involving the Property; Protect their shared Property against the individuals and entities seeking to physically and legally encroach upon them; and Provide an effective, joint response to the litigation regarding the Property which may be on the horizon. (Id.) II. The First American Title Insurance Policy Once he was appointed as the Trustee of the Church, Mr. Augason sought to consolidate the five parcels and transfer the Property from the Church and Capital Dynamics, the previous owners, to a newly formed entity which he owned in full, Cottonwood Acres. (ECF No. 38 at ¶ 13.) After Mr. Augason discussed the consolidation and transfer with Mr. Boggess, his counsel in the Third Judicial District Court action, Cottonwood Acres applied for a title insurance policy with First American, a title company, and sought their assistance in combining the parcels into one and transferring the deeds. (Decl. P. Robert Augason ¶ 8, ECF No. 25-1.) Throughout the title insurance application process, Cottonwood Acres worked with two First American escrow agents: Greg Smalley and Catherine Augason, who is Mr. Augason’s sister. First American was aware at the time it issued the Policy that Catherine Augason was Mr. Augason’s sister. (Def’s. Opp. Mot. Sum. J., ECF No. 76 at 8.) In the process of obtaining the Policy from First American, Cottonwood Acres made clear to Mr. Smalley that Mr. Augason was the principal behind both Church of the Will of God and Capital Dynamics, and that Mr. Augason sought to transfer deed (and, in the process, combine the land parcels) to his new entity, Cottonwood Acres, which he owned in full. (Email, Nov. 15,

2021, ECF No. 73-10.) Cottonwood Acres also sent First American some relevant information about the property, including a copy of the Third Judicial District Court’s Default Judgment, making First American aware of the action, the scope of Mr. Augason’s interest in the Property, and how he had gained the position of Trustee for the Church. (Def’s. Interrogatory Resp., ECF No. 73-9.) Before issuing the Policy and facilitating the transfer, First American reviewed these materials and “conducted a public records search to identify and remedy, if possible, any issues or ‘clouds’ that could affect the policy.” (Id. at 9.) After conducting its review, First American issued Cottonwood Acres a “title commitment” on the Property on September 29, 2021, a document typically created before title insurance is issued as a part of the due diligence process, outlining First American’s standard

conditions for issuing title insurance on the Property. (ECF No. 73-1.) On November 18, 2021, after the title commitment had been signed but before First American had issued the Policy, the Church emailed counsel for Mr. Augason, informing him that the Church intended to file a motion to set aside the Third Judicial District Court’s Default Judgment. (Church’s Answer & Countercl., ECF No. 73-26 at 8.) Neither Mr. Augason nor his counsel responded, nor did they inform First American that Mr. Augason had received a threat of litigation regarding Mr. Augason’s status and conduct as Trustee of the Property. (Id.) Notwithstanding the cloud of litigation risk, on December 1, 2021, Cottonwood Acres officially obtained the Policy, paying First American $6,194. (Policy, ECF No. 73-18 at 1.) The Policy provides that First American: is obligated to indemnify Cottonwood for loss or damage “sustained or incurred [by Cottonwood] by reason of ...

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Cottonwood Acres v. First American Title Insurance, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cottonwood-acres-v-first-american-title-insurance-utd-2025.