Cummings v. Stephens

336 P.3d 281, 157 Idaho 348, 2014 Ida. LEXIS 261
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 2014
DocketNo. 40793-2013
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 336 P.3d 281 (Cummings v. Stephens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cummings v. Stephens, 336 P.3d 281, 157 Idaho 348, 2014 Ida. LEXIS 261 (Idaho 2014).

Opinions

EISMANN, Justice.

This is an appeal out of Bear Lake County from a judgment denying the buyer of real property an award of damages against the seller and awarding the buyer a judgment against a title company that prepared an inaccurate legal description of the real property. We affirm the denial of damages against the seller and reverse the award of damages against the title company.

I.

Factual Background.

In 2007, Roger and Barbara Stephens owned a parcel of real property consisting of about 270 acres on the west side of the highway and another parcel consisting of about 83 acres on the east side of the highway. They held title to the property as trustees for the Roger L. and Barbara L. Stephens Family Trust. In early 2007, they engaged a realtor to sell the parcel on the west side of the highway. The realtor asked Northern Title Company of Idaho, Inc., (Northern Title) to begin the initial title work for a sale of the property, including preparing a legal description for the sale of the parcel on the west side of the highway.

While driving down the highway on July 22, 2007, Stephen B. Cummings noticed a “For Sale” sign on the Stephenses’ property. The sign included the realtor’s contact information, and, upon contacting the realtor, Mr. Cummings learned that the property was under contract to be sold.

The following day, Mr. Cummings was being shown other properties by another realtor, who also showed him the Stephenses’ property. He then learned that the contract purchaser was Three Bar Ranches, Inc., and that the purchase price was $800,000. Mr. Cummings had the realtor contact Three Bar Ranches, and it stated that it would assign the real estate contract to Mr. Cummings for [352]*352$50,000. On July 26, 2007, the realtor faxed Mr. Cummings a copy of the real estate contract and a copy of the commitment for title insurance issued in connection with the transaction. The legal description in both documents included the Stephenses’ property on both sides of the highway and two additional parcels they did not own. Based upon the legal description in those documents, Mr. Cummings believed that the property being sold included both parcels of the Stephenses’ property. He intended to develop the property on the east side of the highway into a recreational vehicle park, to later develop some of it into view lots, and to continue using the land on the west side of the property for agricultural purposes.

On July 30, 2007, Mr. Cummings signed an agreement to pay Three Bar Ranches the sum of $50,000 for an assignment of its interest under the real estate contract with the Stephenses. Three Bar Ranches executed the assignment agreement on August 1, 2007. In the interim, Northern Title discovered on July 31,2007, that the legal description it had prepared for use in the real estate contract signed by Three Bar Ranches and its title commitment for that transaction erroneously included the Stephenses’ real property located east of the highway and two parcels of land they did not own. The legal description consisted of five paragraphs, each describing a separate parcel of real property. In an effort to correct that error, Northern Title created a revised legal description by inserting between the first and second paragraphs the words, “Except all of that portion of the following described land lying easterly of U.S. Highway 30.” That change excluded the two parcels of property not owned by the Stephenses, but it did not exclude their land lying east of the highway because it was described in the first paragraph.

The real estate transaction between the Stephenses, as trustees of the Roger L. and Barbara L. Stevens Family Trust, and Mr. Cummings closed on August 3, 2007. On the same date, Northern Title recorded a warranty deed (Original Deed) granting to Mr. Cummings the real property described in the revised legal description, which was attached to the deed as Exhibit A. The legal description included the Stephenses’ property on the east side of the highway.

On November 8, 2007, Mr. Stephens went to the county courthouse to pay the real estate taxes on the 83 acres of land east of the highway. He was informed that he no longer owned that property. He called the manager of the Northern Title office from the courthouse and told her that the legal description on the Original Deed was incorrect and that it included his land east of the highway. He then went to the Northern Title office and reiterated the problem.

The manager called the title officer, who had made the mistake, and the president of the Idaho offices of Northern Title. Northern Title still had the Original Deed with the recording information stamped on it. After being stamped with the recording information, the county recorder’s office had scanned the deed for its records and returned the original to Northern Title. The title officer told the manager to correct the problem by altering the Deed and re-recording it. The manager then altered the Original Deed by typing “RE-RECORDED TO CORRECT LEGAL” on the face of the Deed and “THE FOLLOWING PARCELS ARE CONVEYED EXCEPTING THEREFROM ANY PORTION LYING EASTERLY OF U.S. HIGHWAY 30” above the legal descriptions on Exhibit A so that the exclusion applied to all five of the legal descriptions. She also crossed out the similar language that had been typed between the first and second paragraphs when it had ineffectually revised the legal description on July 31, 2007. She then re-recorded the deed (Correction Deed) on November 8, 2007. Before taking these actions, she attempted unsuccessfully to contact Mr. Cummings by telephone. Mr. Stephens did not participate in the modification of the Original Deed. On November 8, 2007, Northern Title sent Mr. Cummings a policy of title insurance that insured only the property lying on the west side of the highway.

On July 29, 2009, Mr. Cummings filed this action against Mr. Stephens. He answered, denying Mr. Cummings’s claims, and filed a third-party claim against Northern Title. He later dropped his third-party claim in [353]*353exchange for Northern Title agreeing to indemnify him from any losses.1

Mr. Stephens filed a motion for summary judgment, contending that there was a mutual mistake or a unilateral mistake in the legal description of the real property being sold. The district court held that there was a genuine issue of fact regarding mutual mistake, but it granted the motion on the ground that the undisputed evidence showed a unilateral mistake. One of the realtors had filed an affidavit stating that prior to the sale he had told Mr. Cummings that only the land west of the highway was being sold, and Mr. Cummings did not deny that fact. The court stated:

The undisputed facts, and reasonable inferences drawn from those facts, make it clear that Stephens intended to sale [sic] only land west of the highway, that Stephens did not know the warranty deed included land east of the highway, that Cummings knew that Stephens had no intent to include land east of the highway and that Cummings knew that the deed included land east of the highway. This is a unilateral mistake for which reformation is appropriate.

Mr. Cummings filed a motion for reconsideration that was supported by the affidavit of an officer of Three Bar Ranches. He stated that before Three Bar Ranches contracted to purchase the property, the same realtor had stated that the entire property on both sides of the highway was being sold.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Axelrod v. Reid Limited Partnership
Idaho Supreme Court, 2024
Scofield v. Guillard
D. Idaho, 2024
State v. Daniel Montgomery
Idaho Supreme Court, 2017
Taylor v. Riley
Idaho Supreme Court, 2017
Krinitt v. Idaho Department of Fish & Game
398 P.3d 158 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2017)
Idaho Independent Bank v. Marty D. Frantz
399 P.3d 836 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2017)
R. Gordon Schmidt v. Tim Huston
470 P.3d 1129 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2016)
Cummings v. No Title Co of Idaho
380 P.3d 168 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2016)
Morrison v. St. Luke's Regional Medical Center, Ltd.
377 P.3d 1062 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2016)
Christina J. Greenfield v. Eric J. Wurmlinger
349 P.3d 1182 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
336 P.3d 281, 157 Idaho 348, 2014 Ida. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cummings-v-stephens-idaho-2014.