Forsythe v. Elkins

700 P.2d 596, 216 Mont. 108, 1985 Mont. LEXIS 772
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1985
Docket84-495
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 700 P.2d 596 (Forsythe v. Elkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Forsythe v. Elkins, 700 P.2d 596, 216 Mont. 108, 1985 Mont. LEXIS 772 (Mo. 1985).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Appeal by John Forsythe and Beth Tinney (Forsythe-Tinney) from an order and judgment of the District Court, Fourth Judicial District, Ravalli County, denying Forsythe-Tinney rescission of an agreement to purchase an interest in real property, and further denying their petition to quiet title in them as owners of an equitable interest in certain real property in Ravalli County and from that portion of the judgment determining money damages between the parties.

Dan Elkins cross-appeals from the judgment of the District Court, awarding to Forsythe-Tinney punitive damages in the sum of $1,000 and attorney fees.

On September 8, 1980, Dan Elkins and Diane Elkins, husband and wife (Elkins), entered into a written contract for deed with Gerald Raley and Debra L. Raley, of Victor, Montana, for the purchase by Elkins from Raley of certain real estate located in Ravalli County, Montana, for a total purchase price of $53,000. The purchase price was to be paid in installments, $14,000 on the execution of the contract, $11,900 due September 5, 1982, with interest at 10 percent per annum, and $27,100 at the rate of $250 per month until the *111 purchase price and accrued interest was fully paid but in any event the entire balance to be paid in full on January 20, 1989.

Prior to the execution of the written contract with Raleys, Elkins had entered into an oral contract with Forsythe-Tinney respecting the purchase. Under their oral agreement, the written contract for the purchase of the real estate would be executed in the names of Elkins as the purchasers. Elkins would make the first payment of $14,000 and the second payment of $11,900 plus interest due on September 5, 1982. Forsythe-Tinney would make the monthly payments of $250, and the final payment due on January 20, 1989. When Forsythe-Tinney had paid one-half of the purchase price, their names would be entered on the records of Ravalli County as co-purchasers of the Raley property. Both Forsythe-Tinney and Elkins would have the right to occupy trailer residences on the premises.

In November 1981, the son-in-law and daughter of the Elkins, Clarence Hendon and Michael Lou Hendon (Hendon) moved a trailer home onto the real property that was being purchased. Their residency on the property was apparently with the consent of all the parties.

When the payment of September 5, 1982, came due, Elkins were unable to make the payment. With accrued interest, the needed sum was approximately $15,000. Some conversation had occurred between Elkins and Forsythe-Tinney as to whether Forsythe-Tinney would contribute one-half of the $15,000 payment. Forsythe-Tinney approached a Ravalli County bank and apparently obtained authorization for a $7,500 loan, but the loan was never completed. It appears that at the same time, the Hendons were going to contribute the other $7,500, but the condition of the bank in lending the money to Forsythe-Tinney was that Forsythe-Tinney’s name would have to be placed on record as a contract purchaser; apparently no offer was made by Forsythe-Tinney to place the Hendon name on the record as a contract purchaser. Nothing came of that possible arrangement.

It developed therefore that Hendons made the approximately $15,000 payment due in September 1982. They made the payment after receiving from Elkins a written assignment for contract for deed from Elkins to Hendons covering all of Elkins’ record interest in the contract of purchase with the Raleys. However, in making the written assignment to Hendons, Elkins reserved a life estate to themselves and to the survivor of them. There is no record of con *112 sent by Forsythe-Tinney to the assignment by Elkins to Hendons, nor to the reservation by Elkins of a life estate in themselves.

In addition to recording the assignment of the contract interest, Elkins and Hendons sent copies of the assignment to the escrow holder under the Raley contract for deed and a warranty deed for delivery by the escrow holder to Hendons when the Raley contract was fully paid.

At the time of the written assignment by Elkins to Hendons, Forsythe-Tinney had made the monthly payments of $250 in due time, and in fact had prepaid those payments through November 1982. After the written assignment to Hendons, Forsythe-Tinney refused to make further payments under the contract for deed although they continued in possession of their residence trailer on the property. At the time of the refusal, Forsythe-Tinney requested Hendons to refund to Forsythe-Tinney all amounts they had previously paid on the contract.

On February 8, 1983, Hendons caused a notice of eviction to be served upon Forsythe-Tinney. The notice of eviction precipitated a complaint in District Court filed by Forsythe-Tinney against the Elkins and the Hendons in which Forsythe-Tinney prayed for judgment returning to them the $6,377 they had paid on the contract, for title to the property to be quieted to include their names as owners of record, for exemplary damages from the defendant, and for other relief not important here.

After the complaint was filed and while the litigation was pending, Forsythe-Tinney determined that Elkins mistakenly had cut off the water from the well to the Forsythe-Tinney trailer. In November 1983, Elkins did disconnect the sewer septic system servicing the Forsythe-Tinney trailer.

The District Court in its judgment in the case determined that Forsythe-Tinney were not entitled to rescission of their agreement with Elkins because they had not tendered their return of the claimed interest in the real property and had remained in occupancy on the property; that they were not entitled to specific performance because they did not offer to pay one-half of the amounts owed by Elkins on the Raley contract; that the assignment by Elkins to Hendons was not a fraudulent conveyance; that no false statements were made to Forsythe-Tinney by any of the defendants; that Forsythe-Tinney were not entitled to recover any damages on the theory of unjust enrichment; that Forsythe-Tinney owed Elkins $945.96; that the equity of Forsythe-Tinney in the contract of *113 purchase should be equal to the amount of principal paid by the plaintiffs and not the interest paid thereon and the value of any improvements placed on the real property by the plaintiffs; and that the defendants be entitled to set off against those damages a reasonable rental for plaintiffs’ use of the property from the inception of the oral agreement in the amount of $6,377. The District Court also found that Forsythe-Tinney were entitled to recover $1,000 punitive damages, and attorney fees (claimed to be $4,900) from Dan Elkins.

Forsythe-Tinney has appealed from the judgment of the District Court as aforesaid, and Dan Elkins has cross-appealed from the award of punitive damages and attorney fees.

Forsythe-Tinney raise issues that the District Court’s findings of fact contradict the evidence, that plaintiffs should have been awarded rescission of their contract with Elkins, that the court should have imposed a constructive or resulting trust on the defendant Elkins and upon the defendant Hendons, and that the court erred in offsetting a rental value against the plaintiffs’ payments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
700 P.2d 596, 216 Mont. 108, 1985 Mont. LEXIS 772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forsythe-v-elkins-mont-1985.