James Marr, Jr. v. Commonwealth Land Title Insura

307 F. App'x 952
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 29, 2009
Docket08-5464
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 307 F. App'x 952 (James Marr, Jr. v. Commonwealth Land Title Insura) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James Marr, Jr. v. Commonwealth Land Title Insura, 307 F. App'x 952 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

MERRITT, Circuit Judge.

This is a “collateral estoppel” case arising from diversity of citizenship, a case in which the claims and defenses of both parties were difficult for the District Court to follow and for us to adjudicate on appeal. We will do our best to clarify the situation. In an action on a title insurance policy, Thomas Marr, the plaintiff-insured, sued the Commonwealth Land Title Insurance Company in the District Court. Marr alleged that Commonwealth (1) breached his title insurance contract by not covering his losses sustained in paying off lienholders on the subject property, (2) breached its duty to defend him in a Kentucky state court foreclosure action, and (3) acted in bad faith by denying his claim for losses and refusing to defend him in court.

In its defense, Commonwealth asserted that Marr failed to comply with a clause in the policy excluding losses from “liens” known to the insured but “not disclosed in writing to the company” prior to the date of the policy. The specific issue appears to be whether Marr’s conduct vitiated coverage under the 3(a) and (b) “exclusion.” 1 This defense, and Commonwealth’s collat *953 eral estoppel argument, were based on a prior state court finding in a Kentucky foreclosure action in which Commonwealth was not a party. The prior opinion had found that Marr had knowledge of unsatisfied liens because he knew that the person from whom he bought the house had acquired its title through a so-called “sham” sale-and-leaseback transaction designed to shield the original homeowner from his would-be creditors while allowing him to continue residing there.

Applying rules of issue preclusion embraced in the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel, the District Court held that Marr was pi’ecluded from relitigating the state court’s findings in federal court. Then, relying entirely on Marr’s judicial admission that “Commonwealth would not be liable ... if he is collaterally estopped from denying the findings,” Mem. Op. at 6, J.A. at 24, the District Court held that Man’ “cannot establish that Commonwealth breached the contract” and accordingly granted summary judgment in its favor. Id. at 10, J.A. at 28.

The primary question on appeal is whether the District Court was correct in its application of the law of judicial admissions and issue preclusion, and whether the facts so established justified summary judgment. We conclude that the District Court read the doctrine of judicial admissions too broadly, and we believe that the previous state court opinion did not find all the facts necessary to satisfy exclusion 8(a) and (b). Given the over-broad interpretation of the judicial admission and the lack of concordance between the state court findings and the facts necessary to satisfy the exclusion, we hold that summary judgment was improper and remand for further proceedings.

I. Facts

A. Property Transactions Prior to Title Insurance

In July 1980, Norman Culbertson acquired legal title to the subject property, a home in Louisville, Kentucky. Beginning in 1991, creditors National City Bank-Kentucky, National City Bank-Indiana, and Thomas Grote brought legal actions against Culbertson. In July 1994, before any judgments were filed in those actions, Culbertson conveyed his formal interest in the home to a business partner, Layne Smith, through a sale-and-leaseback. Under the terms of the agreement, Culbertson gave Smith fee simple title to the home, Smith satisfied all existing liens on the property, Culbertson maintained an option to repurchase the home at the purchase price (plus interest), and Culbertson made periodic interest payments to Smith in exchange for continuing to live in the home. In 1995, the creditors obtained and recorded judgment liens against Culbertson. In 1996, Culbertson filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection, receiving a discharge the following year; but the judgment liens remained as a cloud on the title to the property.

Later Culbertson approached plaintiff Marr for a loan to finance a business venture, offering his home as collateral. Marr was in the mortgage lending business. Marr discovered that Culbertson had al *954 ready conveyed his interest in the home to Smith. To secure the loan to Culbertson, Marr had Culbertson assign to him his right to repurchase and bought the home from Smith. Marr made a mortgage loan on the property from Bedford Bank. He then executed a so-called “contract for deed” with Culbertson which conveyed equitable title to Culbertson and allowed him to remain on the property in exchange for regular installment payments toward the title and incremental repayment of the loan.

B. The Title Insurance

Incident to the mortgage, Marr and Bedford Bank purchased title insurance policies, insuring their respective interests, issued by Commonwealth dated January 12, 1998. In “Schedule B. Exceptions From Coverage,” the title insurance policy did not exclude the creditor liens against the property obtained and recorded in 1995. 2 345The record does not explain the reason the title insurance company failed to exclude these liens from coverage. But it is clear that Commonwealth was aware of these liens because on December 18, 1998 (three weeks before the date of the policy), Commonwealth had issued a contractual “Commitment for Title Insurance.” The “Commitment” contained the following language reciting the existence of creditor liens on the property, and the book and page of the records where they were recorded: “7. Pay and have released the liens filed in Miscellaneous Liens and Encumbrance Book 416, Page 39, Book 441, Page 506, Book 433, Page 474, Book 433, Page 475, Book 454, Page 572, and Book 454, Page 89, all in the office aforesaid.” J.A. at 438. The record discloses that the liens were not paid off and remained as clouds on the title to the property. Since Commonwealth was apparently aware of the recorded liens, it is unclear why Commonwealth contends that exclusion 3(b) is satisfied, a defense that requires on its face that the “liens” should be “not known to the company” and “not recorded.”'

C. The Kentucky State Court Foreclosure Action

Eventually, Culbertson defaulted on his payments to Marr. On May 23, 2003, Marr filed a foreclosure action in Jefferson County Circuit Court to extinguish Cul *955 bertson’s equitable contractfor-deed interest. In addition to Culbertson, Marr’s foreclosure action named Bedford Bank and Culbertson’s preexisting creditors as defendants. The Circuit Court referred the foreclosure action to a so-called “Master Commissioner” to determine the priority of the competing claims to the property. The Master Commissioner held four hearings on the subject. By the close of the hearings, the “parties ha[d] briefed th[e] matter and all agree[d] that the matter is ripe for Judgment.” Master Commissioner’s Report [hereinafter Report], J.A. at 64. On October 7, 2004, the Master Commissioner issued a detailed report.

The Report concluded that Smith, a business partner of Culbertson, had “at least some knowledge of Culbertson’s financial and legal entanglements.” Id.

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307 F. App'x 952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-marr-jr-v-commonwealth-land-title-insura-ca6-2009.