Gildea v. Guardian Title Co. of Utah

970 P.2d 1265, 357 Utah Adv. Rep. 7, 1998 Utah LEXIS 85, 1998 WL 809608
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1998
Docket970500
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 970 P.2d 1265 (Gildea v. Guardian Title Co. of Utah) 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
Gildea v. Guardian Title Co. of Utah, 970 P.2d 1265, 357 Utah Adv. Rep. 7, 1998 Utah LEXIS 85, 1998 WL 809608 (Utah 1998).

Opinion

RUSSON, Justice:

INTRODUCTION

Bruce and Shirlynn Gildea appeal from a summary judgment dismissing their causes of action against the above-named defendants. The Gildeas sued John C. Sittner for filing, in bad faith, a lawsuit against them to foreclose a judgment lien against their real property when Sittner had already received a monetary award for the lien as his share of the distribution to creditors in Mr. Gil-dea’s bankruptcy. The Gildeas, in the same lawsuit, named the above additional defendants, alleging breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, conspiracy to defraud, and negligent misrepresentation. The district court granted summary judgment, dismissing all causes of action against all defendants with prejudice. We affirm.

FACTS

In November of 1985, John C. Sittner, represented by attorney L. Benson Mabey, obtained a judgment against Bruce Gildea and others in the amount of $30,598.35, which judgment constituted a lien against Mr. Gil-dea’s property. In January of 1986, Mr. Gildea filed for bankruptcy. Sittner, again through his attorney Mabey, filed a proof of claim based on his judgment with the bankruptcy court. Sittner filed as an unsecured creditor and later received payment of $4,032.99 as his share of the distribution to the unsecured creditors. In December of 1987, the bankruptcy court entered a discharge of debtor order releasing Mr. Gildea from all personal liability for debts existing on the date of the commencement of his bankruptcy. However, the judgment lien was not set aside by any order of the bankruptcy court and remained a matter of record. In June of 1993, despite having received $4,032.99 for the judgment, Sittner (again through Mabey) sued the Gildeas, seeking to foreclose on the judgment lien against the Gildeas’ real property.

The Gildeas had purchased that property in 1981 from Joy Hale pursuant to a uniform real estate contract. In 1992, Karen Schriever, Mrs. Gildea’s sister, purchased from Joy Hale her seller’s interest in the property and thus assumed the role of contract seller to the Gildeas. Thereafter, Mr. Gildea asked *1268 Randall Day at Guardian Title Company to prepare a title report on the property and to prepare a deed conveying record title from Hale to Schriever’s family trust. Guardian was paid $200, and it was understood that if Schriever purchased title insurance from Guardian the $200 would be applied toward that purchase. When Guardian issued its commitment for title insurance to Schriever, the records of the Salt Lake County Recorder showed Sittner’s judgment lien against the property. Guardian’s attorney, Stephen B. Mitchell, advised Guardian to exclude the judgment lien from its title insurance commitment. Guardian excluded the judgment lien as advised, and Schriever chose not to purchase title insurance from Guardian.

Sittner also included Schriever and Hale as defendants in his suit to foreclose on the judgment lien. Sittner alleged in the complaint that the deed from Hale to the Schriever family trust constituted a fraudulent transfer made with the purpose of hindering or defeating Sittner’s judgment lien claim. Sittner also alleged that Schriever was related to Mr. and Mrs. Gildea by either blood or marriage and that the conveyance was for the benefit of the Gildeas without any actual change in ownership or possession of the property. Sittner also recorded a lis pendens notice against the property.

In connection with the ensuing litigation, Mr. Gildea requested from Day at Guardian Title copies of any and all documents in Guardian’s possession pertaining to the transfer of the property from Hale to Schriever’s family trust. Day informed Mr. Gildea that the file had disappeared from company archives. Mr. Gildea was referred to Courtney Wrathall, Guardian’s vice president, who was likewise unable to locate the file. Wrathall, in the presence of Mr. Gildea, then telephoned L. Benson Mabey, who in addition to representing Sittner, had represented Guardian in the past as independent outside counsel. Mr. Gildea listened as Wrathall asked Mabey if he knew where the file was and then asked, “You couldn’t find it either?”

On March 25,1997, the court entered summary judgment against Sittner, ruling that Sittner “knew, or should have known, that his judgment lien and claim of a secured interest in Bruce Gildea’s estate was waived during the course of Bruce Gildea’s bankruptcy.” 1 The court held that Sittner’s claims were without merit and not asserted in good faith. The court dismissed the action with prejudice and, pursuant to Utah Code Ann. § 78-27-56, awarded reasonable attorney fees to the Gildeas, Schriever, and Hale. 2

The Gildeas, having prevailed in Sittner’s lawsuit, then sued Sittner, Mabey, Day, and Guardian Title, alleging breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, conspiracy to defraud, and negligent misrepresentation. The Gildeas claimed that a fiduciary relationship existed between the Gildeas and Guardian Title because Guardian was the Gildeas’ agent in preparing the title report and the deed from Hale to Schriever’s family trust. They claimed that Guardian breached its fiduciary *1269 duties of confidentiality and loyalty when it allegedly allowed Mabey access to the Gildea file. Because Mabey had done legal work in the past for Guardian, the Gildeas claimed that a fiduciary relationship also existed with Mabey. The Gildeas also claimed that Ma-bey, Sittner, and Guardian all conspired to defraud the Gildeas into paying for a judgment which had been previously discharged in bankruptcy. The Gildeas also claimed that Guardian and Day negligently misrepresented in the commitment for title insurance that the Sittner judgment constituted a valid lien against the Gildea property.

Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim for relief. The Gildeas moved to disqualify Mabey from acting as counsel for Sittner and Mitchell from acting as counsel for Guardian Title and Day on the basis that each would be a material witness at trial. Having heard the motions, the district court denied the Gildeas’ motions to disqualify Mabey and Mitchell as counsel, subject to the right to renew the motions closer to trial. The court dismissed the fraud cause of action for failure to plead sufficient facts. While acknowledging its “grave concerns” about the sufficiency of the remaining causes of action, the court declined to dismiss them at that time.

After discovery, defendants then moved for summary judgment and for sanctions, arguing that the causes of action were without evidentiary support and frivolous. The district court entered summary judgment against the Gildeas, dismissing their claims with prejudice. The court held that (1) there was no evidence of a fiduciary relationship nor any evidence that Mabey obtained any confidential information from Guardian; (2) there was no evidence of any conspiracy to defraud the Gildeas; and (3) even if it is assumed that there was an error in the commitment for title insurance, the Gildeas did not have a claim because they did not purchase a title policy and had not shown that they were damaged in any respect by the issuance of-the commitment for title insurance.

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Bluebook (online)
970 P.2d 1265, 357 Utah Adv. Rep. 7, 1998 Utah LEXIS 85, 1998 WL 809608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gildea-v-guardian-title-co-of-utah-utah-1998.