Hill v. Allred

2001 UT 16, 28 P.3d 1271, 415 Utah Adv. Rep. 13, 2001 Utah LEXIS 28, 2001 WL 174632
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 2001
Docket981562
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 2001 UT 16 (Hill v. Allred) 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
Hill v. Allred, 2001 UT 16, 28 P.3d 1271, 415 Utah Adv. Rep. 13, 2001 Utah LEXIS 28, 2001 WL 174632 (Utah 2001).

Opinion

DURHAM, Justice:

11 Plaintiff Virginia Hill appeals the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of all defendants, with the exception of defendant John Putvin, on her claims of fraud in the purchase of a ranch, based on the expiration of the statute of limitations. This action was filed in August 1997; the underlying events took place in 1989 and 1990. Hill argues that the statute of limitations was tolled under the discovery rule because she could not reasonably have discovered the facts regarding the fraud until after November 1994. We reverse and remand.

BACKGROUND

1 2 The facts alleged in this case present a complicated, convoluted, and contested sce *1273 nario involving many defendants over a period of time. From August 1989 to February 1990, Virginia Hill gave control of a substantial sum in cash to her uncle Daniel Jackson. At about this time, John Shugart and Jackson agreed "to hold" Hill's money for her for future investments, with Shugart acting as Hill's agent.

13 In November 1989, Shugart allegedly entered into an implied contract with Dennis Matthews and John C. Putvin. The contract provided that Matthews and Putvin would purchase the Desert Inn Ranch, located in southwestern Utah, on Hill's behalf, for $1,000,000, plus a $40,000 negotiation fee. On December 7, 1989, Shugart gave Matthews another $500,000 of Hill's money for the purchase. Hill alleges that all the defendants, including Matthews, Jeffery Norman, 1 and Putvin, conspired to convert, conceal, misrepresent, and commit fraud with this money.

14 Hill claims that Putvin, Matthews, Donna Sandmire, and Owen Allred, "Presiding Elder" of the Corporation of the Presiding Elder of the Apostolic United Brethren, held a meeting on November 13, 1989, individually and as agents of defendant Apostolic United Brethren, and during that meeting planned and conspired to fraudulently convert her money. A tape recording of this meeting was later given to one of Hill's investigators, Rod Williams, on December 21, 1994. 2 Sometime between November and December 1994, another one of Hill's investigators, John Llewellyn, secured possession of the tape. Hill alleges that she first discovered the identities of the people involved in the alleged conspiracy, including the defendants, when the tape was played for her in July 1995.

T5 Hill alleges that defendants laundered her money through various conversions and acquisitions of property from November 1989 to December 1990, as follows: Glen Allred acquired Granite Ranch through the Red Cedar Corporation; Marvin Allred acquired the Rocky Ridge Subdivision; Matthews bought a 1989 Honda Acura for $21,000; James Sandmire established businesses named Automotive Specialties, Diamond Auto Sales, and Diamond Recreational Rental, and purchased real property for $110,000; James Sandmire executed two trust deeds worth $425,000 to Last Resort Enterprises, an alleged alter ego of Putvin; Matthews and Putvin delivered $30,000 to Lamoine Jensen, who in turn deposited the money into a Jensen Lumber Company bank account and later wrote a check for the same amount to "John Galt," an alias for Putvin; Putvin gave $20,000 or $30,000 in "tithing" to Owen All-red, who, after holding the money for an unknown period, wrote a check for $30,000 to "John Galt."

1 6 Hill maintains that she did not discover Shugart's transfer of $1.54 million in cash to Putvin and Matthews until February 1990, after most of the money had been allegedly laundered. Realizing that she did not have title to the ranch, Hill met first with Matthews, who informed her that "Mr. Putvin had absconded with all her money, 'every cent.'" Later, in early March 1990, Hill had another meeting, this time including Owen Allred, to find out where her money was located. This meeting was arranged by Ogden Kraut, acquainted with both Hill and Allred. At both meetings, Allred and Matthews swore that they did not have any of Hill's money. Thus, Hill claims she was misled regarding the whereabouts of her money on both occasions, saying that she relied on Allred's statements because of his position as a "prominent religious leader."

T7 In April 1990, Royston Potter was retained by Shugart, as an agent of Hill, to *1274 investigate and find the $1.54 million. After conducting surveillance and interviewing Matthews, Owen Allred, and James Sand-mire, Potter reported back to Shugart in June 1990 that he was unable to track down Putvin or locate the money. Hill, accompanied by an attorney, went to the Washington County Sheriffs Office seeking assistance in finding Putvin and her money. Also in 1990, Internal Revenue Service investigators contacted Hill, informing her that they were investigating the whereabouts of her money and whether it had been obtained as "ill-gotten gain." Hill alleges that she got the "impression" that they were trying to locate her money and the persons who stole it. Later, both Hill and Shugart were called before a grand jury investigating the laundering involving Hill's money. At this time, Hill alleges, she learned that Putvin had left the country. Hill alleges that she again believed that the grand jury investigation was part of an attempt to recover her money.

18 Almost four years later, in November 1994, Hill retained two private investigators, Llewellyn and Williams, to find the missing money. Between the period of November and December 1994, Llewellyn interviewed Owen Allred three times. On the first occasion, Alired denied any knowledge pertaining to Hill's money. During the second interview, Allred allegedly admitted to having possession of Hill's money at one point in time, saying that "two men ... placed ... 'gobs and gobs' of money" in his wife's clothes closet, and that he later told somebody to remove the money. Allred could not remember the identity of any of these people. However, in Allred's affidavit, withdrawn approximately two months after it was initially filed with the court in this action (with no explanation for the withdrawal), he claims that he never had possession of Hill's money and was only led to believe that he did. During the third session, on approximately December 7, 1994, Llewellyn played a tape of the "conspiracy meeting" of November 18, 1989, for both Matthews and Allred. According to Llewellyn, during the interview, Allred agreed that the tape was accurate. Matthews denied nothing that he heard on the recording, and told Llewellyn that "when he and John Putvin were on the way back from St. George after obtaining the first million dollars, Putvin told him they were not going to give the money back." 3

T 9 In December 1995, Williams, the other Hill investigator, had a telephone conversation with Jensen. Williams's affidavit states that during the conversation, Jensen admitted that he received $30,000 from Putvin and Matthews, He subsequently felt uncomfortable about holding the money and returned it, before Putvin's departure for New Zealand, by means of a check that Putvin requested be made out to "John Galt." Llewellyn also had several conversations with Jensen, but the dates of these meetings are not specified in his affidavit. The contents of the interviews were similar in nature to Williams's interview regarding the trail of the $30,000 Jensen had in his possession.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2001 UT 16, 28 P.3d 1271, 415 Utah Adv. Rep. 13, 2001 Utah LEXIS 28, 2001 WL 174632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-allred-utah-2001.