Lawyers Title Insurance v. Doubletree Partners, L.P.

739 F.3d 848, 2014 WL 127131
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 14, 2014
Docket12-40692, 12-40702
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 739 F.3d 848 (Lawyers Title Insurance v. Doubletree Partners, L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawyers Title Insurance v. Doubletree Partners, L.P., 739 F.3d 848, 2014 WL 127131 (5th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

PRISCILLA R. OWEN, Circuit Judge:

These two consolidated appeals arise from a title insurance coverage dispute between the insured, Doubletree Partners, L.P. (Doubletree), and its insurance company, Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation (Lawyers Title). Doubletree appeals the magistrate judge’s grant of Lawyers Title’s motion for summary judgment and denial of its cross-motion for summary judgment on Doubletree’s breach of contract claims and extracontractual claims. Doubletree’s attorneys, Christopher A. Kalis and James Edwin Martin, appeal the magistrate judge’s award of attorneys’ fees to Lawyers Title under 28 U.S.C. § 1927. We affirm in part and reverse in part the magistrate judge’s order on the motions for summary judgment, and we reverse the magistrate judge’s award, of attprneys’ fees to Lawyers Title.

I

The facts are for the most part undisputed. Doubletree is a limited partnership formed by real estate developer Fred Placke. Doubletree purchased a thirty-six-acre tract in Highland Village, Texas, with the intent to develop it into a luxury retirement community for seniors. The plan for the development included approximately eighteen multi-story buildings, each with multiple units, a community center, and other amenities.

In April 2006, Doubletree closed on its purchase of the property with the seller, Duncan Duvall, for $3.45 million. Double-tree and Duvall escrowed the sales contracts for the property with Lawyers Title. 1 In connection with the purchase, Doubletree acquired a title insurance policy from Lawyers Title. In addition, Lawyers Title offered to provide Doubletree “a more complete title insurance policy” that would insure “against loss because of discrepancies or conflicts in boundary lines, encroachments or protrusions, or overlapping of improvements, excluding from the coverage specific matters disclosed by the survey,” if Doubletree obtained a survey of the property and paid an additional premium. Doubletree decided to purchase this more complete policy, and the parties have referred to the additional coverage Doubletree purchased as “survey coverage.”

Located on Lake Lewisville, the property at issue is encumbered by a number of easements and restrictions, including the flowage easement, which is at the heart of this dispute. Granted in 1955, the -flowage easement gives the United States the right to flood, overflow, and submerge areas of the property that lie below 537 feet in elevation. The easement also prohibits construction of any structures below that elevation without the written consent of the United States.

Lawyers Title issued several title commitments to Doubletree and its agents before issuing the title insurance policy itself. The final title commitment lists several encumbrances as exceptions! from coverage, including the flowage easement, and also reflects Doubletree’s purchase of survey coverage. The exceptions listed in the final title commitment are also referenced in the sales contract, the vesting deed, and the leaseback agreement Doubletree signed at the closing of the sale.

*854 Before closing, Doubletree retained a professional surveyor, Mark Paine, to conduct a pre-closing survey. This original March 2006 survey indicated the approximate location of the flowage easement held by the United States, showing that it covered a relatively small portion of the property’s southern edge. In conducting the survey, Paine relied on flood insurance rate maps. However, Paine did not measure elevations with respect to the flowage easement, and he did not consult a publicly available contour map from the City of Highland Village.

Based on the original survey, Lawyers Title issued Doubletree’s title insurance policy and provided the policy to Double-tree on April 18, 2006. Due to a software printing error, the original policy failed to include many of the encumbrances listed as exceptions, including the flowage easement. The original policy also failed to include the agreed-upon survey coverage. Several months later, in October 2006, Doubletree submitted a lost policy request. In response, Lawyers Title sent a copy of the policy that was identical to the original policy in all respects, including in its omission of the flowage easement exception and the survey coverage.

Meanwhile, Doubletree began its plans to develop the property. It retained an architectural firm to assist in the design and planning of the development on the property. Paine’s company, G & A Consultants, assisted the architectural firm with engineering work. Both companies relied on the original survey to conduct their work. In an effort to comply with the restrictions on building within the flowage easement, the development plan reserved the area shown on the original survey as being covered by the flowage easement for landscaping and other green space.

As part of the development planning process, Doubletree sought a zoning change to accommodate the senior retirement community by submitting a zoning change application to the City of Highland Village. Not long after submitting the application, however, Doubletree discovered a serious error in the survey that halted development of the property: The survey substantially underrepresented the area of the property that was subject to the flow-age easement. 2 The significantly larger no-building zone covered by the flowage easement meant Doubletree would be unable to proceed with its plan to build several of the residential structures it intended to build on the lakeside portion of the property. Because of the impact of the error on its development plans, Doubletree withdrew its zoning application.

Doubletree then filed a complaint against Paine with the Texas Board of Professional Land Surveying. The Board ultimately determined that Paine did not violate any professional standards while conducting the survey. However, the Board noted that the location of the flow-age easement to the United States was “substantially different from” the location of the easement shown on the documents on which Paine relied in drawing the survey map. The Board explained that the “best practice” is to identify the documents relied upon by the surveyor, which Paine did not do, and that the survey “could be considered confusing” for that reason. Despite this, the Board concluded the pro *855 cedure Paine used “appealed] to be adequate” and, “[i]n lieu of further actions” by the Board, offered Paine the opportunity to sign an assurance of voluntary compliance with the Board’s rules in the future.

In March 2008, Doubletree filed a title insurance claim with Lawyers Title. Doubletree alleged the existence of the flowage easement on the property caused $850,025 in damage from the diminution of the property’s value for its intended purpose. The claim did not rely on the error in the survey but instead relied on the original policy, which did not contain an exception for the flowage easement and did not include a provision for survey coverage. In response, Lawyers Title denied the claim, explaining that, based on the title commitments, the flowage easement was meant to come within an exclusion to coverage under the policy.

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739 F.3d 848, 2014 WL 127131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawyers-title-insurance-v-doubletree-partners-lp-ca5-2014.