Dillon v. Southern Management Corp. Retirement Trust

2014 UT 14, 326 P.3d 656, 2014 Utah LEXIS 54, 2014 WL 2048652
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 2014
Docket20120145
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 2014 UT 14 (Dillon v. Southern Management Corp. Retirement Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillon v. Southern Management Corp. Retirement Trust, 2014 UT 14, 326 P.3d 656, 2014 Utah LEXIS 54, 2014 WL 2048652 (Utah 2014).

Opinion

*660 'AMENDED OPINION *

Associate Chief Justice NEHRING,

opinion of the Court:

INTRODUCTION

1 Southern Management Corporation Retirement Trust (SMCRT) seeks review of the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Douglas C. and Molly R. Dillon. The district court determined that the trust deed encumbering the Dillons' property in Park City was invalid, that SMCRT had slandered the Dillong' title, and that SMCRT was therefore liable for damages under (a) seetion 57-1-38(8) of the Utah Code and (b) the trust deed itself. The district court determined that the Dillons were entitled to recover their attorney fees and that a portion of those fees should be trebled pursuant to section 57-1-38 of the Utah Code. SMCRT argues that each of these conclusions was erroneous. We affirm the district court's grant of summary judgment and the majority of its award of damages, but reverse its grant of treble attorney fees under Utah Code section 57-1-88(8).

BACKGROUND

12 SMCRT owns approximately twenty-five thousand properties, including apartments, office buildings, resort properties, and garages. SMCRT also funds loans secured by real estate. In 2005 and 2006, SMCRT agreed to use Robert Rood and his companies, Level One Capital Partners, LLC (Level One) and Blue Horseshoe Portfolio Services (Blue Horseshoe), to originate loans that would be funded by SMCRT. Under the agreement, Level One and Blue Horseshoe would find borrowers, prepare loan documents, and choose a title company to close the transactions. SMCRT funded approximately thirty-two loans through Mr. Rood and his companies.

13 In June 2006, Level One originated a $500,000 loan to Thomas Gramuglia (loan or note). To secure the loan, Mr. Gramuglia signed a trust deed (trust deed) for properties he owned in New York (New York Property) and Park City (Park City Property), under which Level One was named the beneficiary. Later in June 2006, Level One assigned the trust deed and note to SMCRT, but SMCRT did not record the assignment of the trust deed until August 2008.

T 4 Initially, Mr. Gramuglia made loan payments to Level One, and Level One in turn made monthly interest payments to SMCRT. But despite the fact that he was making payments directly to Level One, Mr. Gra-muglia soon discovered that SMCRT was involved with the loan. On August 1, 2006, SMCRT sent Mr. Gramuglia a letter stating that the "servicing of the [loan] had been transferred to [SMCRT], effective with the August 1, 2006 loan payment." In December 2006, SMCRT sent Mr. Gramuglia a similar letter. - Upon Mr. Gramuglia's inquiry, SMCRT informed him to disregard the notices and continue making loan payments directly to Level One. A similar situation arose again in July 2007 when SMCRT informed Mr. Gramuglia that his loan, which "originated ... with Level One ... and [was] purchased by [SMCRT]," had matured and was immediately due and payable in full to SMCRT. Mr. Gramuglia's attorney sent a reply letter to SMCRT explaining that Mr. Gramuglia had extended the maturity date of the loan by exercising his option with Level One over three months prior. The letter invited questions from SMCRT. SMCRT did not respond. ‘

T5 Shortly thereafter, Mr. Gramuglia and Mr. Rood, who was acting on behalf of Level One, discussed the possibility of Mr. Gra-muglia selling the Park City Property and using the proceeds to pay down the balance of his loan. Mr. Gramuglia proposed that in return for the partial prepayment, SMCRT would agree to release the Park City Property from the trust deed, and the remaining balance of the loan would then be secured solely by the New York Property.

T 6 On August 15, 2007, Mr. Rood met with SMCRT's investment committee to discuss *661 the modification of Mr. Gramuglia's loan and corresponding release of the Park City Property. What happened in the meeting is a central source of dispute between the Dillons and SMCRT. Three of the four investment committee members could not recall what transpired in that meeting. One member remembered that they had discussed Mr. Gramuglia paying down part of the loan. The handwritten notes of Michael McKinley, an investment committee member, are the only significant written evidence of what happened in the meeting. His notes read, in pertinent part:

Will pay down $250,000 on Park City UT 9/15
Refi pending for N.Y. Property
Escrowed thru 10/1
Will extend until 12/31/07
@ 250,000 Rood will prepare modification

17 Based on this evidence, the Dillons contend that during the meeting SMCRT "agreed in return for $250,000 payment from the sale of the [Park City Property] to release the [Park City Property]." In contrast, SMCRT's position is that Mr. Rood was there to ask for authority to modify the loan and that permission was granted only if three conditions were met: (1) SMCRT's receipt of a $20,000 loan extension fee, (2) SMCRT's receipt of $250,000, and (8) the preparation and execution of "a loan extension and modification agreement."

T8 After Mr. Rood's meeting with SMCRT's investment committee, Mr. Gra-muglia listed the Park City Property and sold it to the Dillons in September 2007. First American Title Insurance Company (FATCO) handled the closing of the sale. FATCO requested that Level One, as the record owner of the trust deed, issue a written payoff letter listing the amount necessary to pay off the note and release the trust deed on the Park City Property. Level One provided the payoff letter to FATCO, dated August 29, 2007, and in it stated that the payoff amount was $250,000. FATCO disbursed $250,000 to Level One on September 7, 2007. On the same date, Mr. Gramuglia delivered a warranty deed to the Dillons and they recorded it. 1 At the time of the purchase, neither FATCO nor the Dillons knew that the beneficial interest under the trust deed had been assigned to SMCRT because SMCRT had not recorded the assignment.

T9 Sometime after the Dillon closing in late 2007, SMCRT initiated an investigation into Mr. Rood and Level One. Based on that investigation, SMCRT concluded that Mr. Rood and his entities had misappropriated money belonging to SMCRT.

T 10 On May 9, 2008, SMCRT filed a lawsuit in Montgomery County, Maryland, against Mr. Rood and his entities seeking to recover the allegedly misappropriated funds, including the $250,000 paid by the Dillons at the Park City Property closing (Rood Action). In the Rood Action, SMCRT asserted that "SMCRT entered into a business relationship with Rood" whereby, "acting in his individual capacity and/or through [his companies] and pursuant to the agreements between the parties, Rood would originate, process, underwrite, close and fund these private loans." SMCRT also stated that Mr. Rood and his companies would "service the loan for [SMCRT] during the life of each loan," and that SMCRT did not have "any direct contact with the borrowers either when the original loan was made or during the term of the loans."

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 UT 14, 326 P.3d 656, 2014 Utah LEXIS 54, 2014 WL 2048652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillon-v-southern-management-corp-retirement-trust-utah-2014.