Gannaway v. Torres

2017 ND 287, 904 N.W.2d 317
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 2017
Docket20170092
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2017 ND 287 (Gannaway v. Torres) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gannaway v. Torres, 2017 ND 287, 904 N.W.2d 317 (N.D. 2017).

Opinion

Jensen, Justice.

[¶ 1] William and Karen Schneider appeal from a judgment entered by the district court, determining Robert and; Teryl Gannaway were entitled to quiet title, free and clear of the Schneiders’ mortgage. We affirm the district court’s judgment quieting title in the Gannaways and determining the Schneiders were not goo'd-faith purchasers for value without notice.

I

[¶ 2] Robert and Teryl Gannaway filed a complaint on June 3, 2015 against Nadir Torres, Terra Nova Developments, LLC (“Terra Nova”), William and Karen Schneider, and any other encumbrancers of their property. The Gannaways sought to quiet title to the property after it was fraudulently conveyed, and the Schneiders secured a mortgage on'the property.

[¶3] -In May 2014, the Gannaways signed a real estate purchase . and sale contract, which provided for a conveyance of their property to Terra Nova for a purchase price of $15,360,000. The Ganna-ways also signed a document’Torres represented- to be a “notary page to the purchase agreement” at the Farm Credit Services office. Nadir Torres told the Gannaways “he needed it notarized for whoever the people were that he was working with, to show them that—you know, that [Robert Gannaway] had actually signed it.” After the Gannaways had the additional page, notarized, Torres and the Gannaways went to the courthouse to record the sale contract. Torres went into the recorder’s office alone, told Robert Gannaway the filing was completed, and they left the courthouse.

[¶ 4] Robert Gannaway noted that after they had the separate document notarized, Torres was looking at the documents and said he believed he could make them work. Robert Gannaway thought it was an odd statement to make about the'sale contract, but did not inquire further. When Robert Gannaway requested a copy of the signed documents, Torres sent the signed page to the sale contract in a text message to Robert. Gannaway and the notarized page to a third party. At trial, an additional signed two-page land agreement providing for. the conveyance of a portion of the Gannaways’ property to Nadir Torres was admitted as evidence. However, Robert Gannaway testified he never signed that document and believed the signatures were cut and pasted onto the two-page land agreement.

[¶ 5] On August 18, 2014, Torres recorded the quitclaim. deed conveying the property to himself from the Gannaways, On October 23, 2014, Torres recorded a separate quitclaim deed conveying the property from himself individually, to Terra Nova. In connection with the quitclaim deed to Terra, Nova, Torres also signed and recorded an affidavit of the Gannaways’ marital status.

[¶6] Robert Gannaway testified he.believed Torres removed a-portion of a signature page from a different document and pasted it onto the quitclaim deed. When the Gannaways signed the sale contract on May 22, 2014, Torres did not mention anything about a quitclaim deed to the Ganna-ways. Robert Gannaway said the front page to the quitclaim deed was not attached to the notarized page when he signed it. He also testified that he never signed .a deed .in connection with the transaction. Teryl Gannaway, Robert Ganna-way’s wife, testified that when she signed the notarized signature page, it was not attached to a quitclaim deed. Additionally, the sale contract provided for a conveyance from the Gannaways to Terra Nova, not to Torres. The Gannaways became aware of this quitclaim deed only after their son discovered the deed by chance while doing other title work at the end of 2014 or early 2015.

[¶ 7] After signing the sale contract, Robert Gannaway met with Torres and gave him the abstracts for the property so they would be updated for closing, but the closing date was never set and the Ganna-ways were never contacted by a title company. Additionally, the Gannaways never received the $250,000 earnest money from Terra' Nova or Torres specified in the-sale contract. The Gannaways believed the deal with Terra Nova and Torres was no longer moving forward.

[¶ 8] Paul Heinle, of Bismarck Title Company, testified Torres wanted him to handle the title work and closing on the disputed property in the summer of 2014. Heinle noted the following details of the transaction with Torres seemed peculiar: (1) Terra Nova was the named purchaser in the sale contract, but the quitclaim deed showed the grant was to Torres personally; (2) the quitclaim déed included a notation that it was prepared by Bismarck Title Company, but no one in that office prepared the deed; (3) the lender was to be determined; (4) the affidavit of marital status was self-serving on Torres’ part; (5) the transaction was abnormal because this was a fifteen million dollar deal with a pre-signed quitclaim deed; and (6) Torres represented the transaction was exempt from filing a consideration statement under N.D.C.C. § ll-18-02.2(6)(c), now codified at N.D'.C.C.§ ll~18-02.2(7)(c), which is for transferring property between family or corporate affiliates. Heinle noted that a deal of this size would normally be handled through a warranty deed executed at the time of closing.

[¶ 9] When Heinle asked Torres about the quitclaim deed, Torres said he wanted Heinle to change the title work:

to reflect him as being an owner and showing that more or less it would have been free and clear title.... [T]here were some mortgages on the property with Farm Credit Services. He wanted them removed and he wanted the ownership changed to reflect him as an owner after he emailed me this deed.

After, Heinle told Torres he could not give him a letter saying he was the owner with free and clear title, Torres cancelled the transaction with Bismarck Title Company and went to work with Quality Title. Heinle testified he discovered two mortgages with Farm Credit Services that included the disputed property when he completed a title search on the property. Robert Gannaway testified he paid off one mortgage from Farm Credit Services on July 22, 2014, and the release was recorded on October 17, 2014.

[¶ 10] The Schneiders executed a loan agreement and promissory note secured by the disputed property to Torres on August 28, 2014. The Schneiders loaned Torres $400,000 and transferred the money via wire transfer. Before executing the loan agreement, Torres confirmed to the Schneiders that-he owned the land personally, free and clear of any encumbrances. The Schneiders were told they had the first lien on the property with no other encumbrances by Quality Title on August 20, 2014, North Dakota Guaranty and Title Company on August 29, 2014, and through a title opinion from a Bismarck lawyer on September 23, 2014. The first time the Schneiders learned about the problems with the property was when they were served in this action. The Schneiders did not recall an explanation as to why the loan was to Torres individually when the project was in Terra Nova’s name. Additionally, the Schneiders wired the loan money to an account registered to Terra Nova, hot Torres, which the Schneiders' did not inquire further about. The Schneid-ers relied on Quality Title and their attorney to advise them of any encumbrances on the property. At the time of trial, the Schneiders had not received any payment from Torres on the loan agreement or promissory note.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 ND 287, 904 N.W.2d 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gannaway-v-torres-nd-2017.