Jaramillo v. McLoy

263 F. Supp. 870, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11011
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedFebruary 8, 1967
DocketCiv. A. No. 66-C-15
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 263 F. Supp. 870 (Jaramillo v. McLoy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jaramillo v. McLoy, 263 F. Supp. 870, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11011 (D. Colo. 1967).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

WILLIAM E. DOYLE, District Judge.

This case was tried to the Court. It is an effort on the part of the plaintiffs to remove a cloud on the title to certain real estate located in Conejos County, Colorado. The demand is for cancellation of a deed of trust which has already been foreclosed in Public Trustee proceedings. Plaintiffs also demand damages in the amount of $5,000.00 on the theory of slander of title involving the same real estate.

The plaintiffs are the owners of approximately 1,600 acres of unencumbered land in Conejos County, Colorado. This land has been used to pasture sheep and has not been cleared and does not have timber. It is grass land on which pinon trees and sagebrush grow. On the dates in question the property was subject to a mortgage to the Federal Land Bank.

In essence, the controversy centers around conveyances by the plaintiffs to Don McLoy and Charles Kilgore, Jr., which conveyances were made as part of a promotion development and a subdivision scheme. An undivided one-third interest was conveyed to Kilgore and McLoy. No money passed to the plaintiffs in connection with these conveyances; however, there were conditions which accompanied the conveyances — the defendants McLoy and Kilgore undertook to make certain improvements and to subdivide and to sell five-acre tracts. The difficulty arose when Kilgore, without authority from plaintiffs, conveyed his one-third interest to the defendant Louis Given as security for an undertaking by Given on Kilgore’s behalf. When plaintiffs learned of this the land promotion scheme came to an abrupt halt and Kilgore and McLoy, who had held executed quit claim deeds to the plaintiffs, delivered them. Meanwhile, however, the mortgage of Given was recorded and later it was foreclosed.

Prior to September 20, 1962, Kilgore and McLoy approached the plaintiffs and presented to them a plan calling for the subdividing of their 1,600 acres of pasture land into small five-acre tracts for building sites. The parties entered into a joint venture contract which provided that the land would be subdivided into five-acre tracts and sold to purchasers. Plaintiffs were to furnish the land and McLoy and Kilgore were to build the road, improve and develop the land, and promote the sale of the five-acre tracts to the public. The conveyances to Kilgore and McLoy were in connection with and subject to the carrying out of the promotion plan. Contemporaneous with the recording of the one-third interest and the execution of the deeds to Kilgore and McLoy, the latter executed quit claim deeds to the plaintiffs. The agreement provided for the re-conveyance of the same one-third interest in the lands conveyed. The understanding was that these latter deeds were to be placed in escrow and were to be delivered to the plaintiffs in the event that the land promotion scheme was not carried out. It turned out, however, that these deeds were not placed in escrow because the bank would not accept them. Kilgore and McLoy undertook to sell fifty five-acre tracts within one year after September 20, 1962. If they failed to sell this number of tracts the quit claim deeds to the plaintiffs were to be delivered.

The promotion plans did not work out. Only twelve installment contracts were sold to purchasers, but meanwhile Kilgore gave the mortgage which is here in question, to Louis Given. This mortgage was the result of the following circumstances :

Both Kilgore and McLoy were residents of El Paso, Texas. Prior to the [873]*873described transaction Kilgore had undertaken to perform a contract on the airfield at El Paso, Texas. As part of that he was required to furnish a Bid and Performance Bond. In order to obtain this bond the surety company required that he obtain a guarantor. Louis Given, a retired El Paso, Texas, businessman, agreed to so act. Kilgore in turn offered to pay him twenty-five per cent of the profits on the airport job for signing the bond as a guarantor. Kilgore came out short on the performance of his contract and there were outstanding debts amounting to some $11,-000.00 which were owed on the completion of the contract to his suppliers and materialmen. In view of their liability to the bonding company, Kilgore and Given borrowed the necessary funds, the sum of $11,225.00 from the Coronado State Bank of El Paso, Texas. Kilgore signed this note as the maker and Given endorsed the note. The date of this transaction was March 5, 1953. The money obtained from the bank was used to pay off the subcontractors and the materialmen. On the same dates Kilgore executed his note to Given in the same amount. To secure this he gave his deed of trust to Given conveying the one-third undivided interest in the 1,600 acres of Conejos County land here in question. Kilgore did not of course notify the plaintiffs or McLoy as to what he had done. They, however, became aware of it in due course. The note to the El Paso bank was not paid by Kilgore; indeed, it has not been paid even now. It has been renewed from time to time and interest payments have been made by either Kilgore or Given. In September, 1965, Given instituted foreclosure proceedings in Conejos County. On October 25, 1965, a sale was held and the property was bid in by Louis Given in the sum of $13,832.00.

There is considerable testimony as to whether Given was aware of the infirmities in Kilgore’s title at the time that the deed of trust was given. In the deposition of Given he denied that he had any such knowledge. Given understood, however, that Kilgore was engaged in a land development scheme which involved this land (he did not appear at the trial). Given testified in his deposition that Kilgore had approached him in an effort to persuade him to participate in the land promotion. He stated that he turned Kilgore down. At the time Given said that there was no discussion of the state of Kilgore’s title or the character of his ownership. At the trial Kilgore was asked whether he told Mr. Given how he had acquired this one-third interest in the tract of land. Kilgore stated: “I believe so. More or less, yes.” The next day, however, he was asked by his attorney: “And I presume you did not tell him that under certain circumstances you had a duty to reconvey this land to Mr. Jaramillo?”

Answer: “I said yesterday that I didn’t think I did, and I still feel that way. I don’t think I did.”

However, on re-cross examination Kilgore stated:

“BY MR. GREEN:

“Q Now, you requested Mr. Louis Given to advance money to replace Mr. Don McLoy in this transaction?

“A I asked Lou to advance that money and further monies as required to develop this property and sell it.

“Q Then you explained to him the nature of the property and that Mr. Mc-Loy had some interest in it, then, didn’t you?

“A Yes, I did.

“Q Did you tell him the details of how Mr. McLoy was interested, whenever you asked him to take over McLoy’s interest?

“A What details do you mean? I just told him that Don had an interest and he wanted to get out.

“Q How much money did you ask Mr. Given for, for McLoy’s interest?

“A I didn’t specify an amount.”

Kilgore also testified that he used “poetic license” in advising Given of his interest in the land. It would seem, [874]*874therefore, that Given understood that this land was held by Kilgore in connection with a land development deal and there is at least some evidence that Kilgore actually advised him of the details.

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Bluebook (online)
263 F. Supp. 870, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jaramillo-v-mcloy-cod-1967.