Mark Properties, Inc. v. National Title Co.

34 P.3d 587, 117 Nev. 941, 117 Nev. Adv. Rep. 77, 2001 Nev. LEXIS 81
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 2001
DocketNo. 32954
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 P.3d 587 (Mark Properties, Inc. v. National Title Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mark Properties, Inc. v. National Title Co., 34 P.3d 587, 117 Nev. 941, 117 Nev. Adv. Rep. 77, 2001 Nev. LEXIS 81 (Neb. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION ON REHEARING

By the Court,

Rose, J.:

On December 14, 2000, we issued an opinion affirming in part and reversing in part the district court’s summary judgment, and remanding this case to the district court.1 Subsequently, respondent National Title Company filed a petition for rehearing, to which Mark Properties, Inc., responded. We have reviewed the parties’ submissions, as well as the briefs and appendix, and we conclude that rehearing is warranted. Additionally, our prior opinion must be withdrawn. We now issue this opinion in place of our prior opinion.

At issue in this appeal is whether an escrow agent has a duty beyond that set forth in the escrow instructions to apprise a party to the escrow, and an alleged principal who is not a party to the escrow, of fraud in a “double escrow” transaction. We conclude that an escrow agent must inform a party to the escrow that fraud has been committed if the facts actually known to the escrow agent present substantial evidence of fraud.

FACTS

In early 1995, Mark Snop and Mark Raiter, real estate investors from Israel, were introduced to Sam Ventura, an individual described as a successful real estate developer in Las Vegas, Nevada. Snop and Raiter later telephoned Ventura, inquiring about real estate development in the Las Vegas market. Ventura sent Snop and Raiter a letter soliciting their investment, and provided Snop and Raiter with a 1994 appraisal of a forty-acre parcel located in North Las Vegas that was available for acquisition and development.

[943]*943Snop and Raiter informed Ventura that they would be willing to consider a joint venture in which Snop, Raiter, and Ventura would each contribute cash to develop the forty-acre parcel. Ventura, Snop, Raiter, and Ventura’s associate, Michael Bash, agreed that Snop and Raiter would form a corporation, Mark Properties, Inc., that would provide sixty percent of the cash required for the forty-acre parcel, and Ventura and Bash, through Terra Vegas Corporation, an entity they controlled, would provide forty percent. Everyone further agreed that despite Terra Vegas’ contribution of only forty percent of the down payment, Terra Vegas would receive a full fifty percent ownership interest in the parcel in return for locating the property and representing the partnership in Las Vegas.

In June 1995, Terra Vegas sent Mark Properties a proposed joint venture agreement, escrow instructions, and an installment note for the forty-acre parcel. The purchase price of the parcel was $2,400,000, with the parties providing $1,475,000 in cash and a note for the remainder. In order to close escrow, Mark Properties was to deposit $885,000 in cash and Terra Vegas was to deposit $590,000. Mark Properties gave its cash deposit to the escrow handler, National Title Company.

On the day escrow was to close, Snop and Raiter allegedly discovered that the seller of the forty-acre parcel was not an unrelated third party, as Ventura and Bash had represented, but instead was Rowe Land, a corporation controlled by Bash. When Snop and Raiter confronted Ventura and Bash about Rowe Land being the seller, Ventura explained that Rowe Land had purchased the parcel from the original seller merely to facilitate its acquisition by Mark Properties and Terra Vegas, and that there was no difference between the price Rowe Land had paid for the land and the price of the sale to Mark Properties and Terra Vegas. Relying on this information, Mark Properties concluded the transaction by releasing its $885,000 cash deposit to Rowe Land.

Mark Properties purportedly realized later that by establishing a double escrow, Rowe Land had purchased the parcel for a lower price, and then used the down payment tendered by Mark Properties to satisfy Rowe Land’s down payment obligation to the original owner. According to Mark Properties, as a result of this double escrow, Bash — and ultimately Terra Vegas — fraudulently profited, with Bash violating his fiduciary duty to Mark Properties. Mark Properties insists that at the time of the transaction, it did not know Bash was profiting from the double escrow.

Mark Properties also asserts that National Title knew the details of the double escrow. But the facts concerning who knew what, and when any knowledge of the details of the double escrow was acquired, are unclear and highly contested. For instance, regard[944]*944ing the knowledge of both National Title and Mark Properties, Nancy Wilder, a National Title escrow agent, testified at deposition that (1) she was aware the land was being sold through a “double escrow” and there was a price difference between the two transactions; (2) Snop, Raiter, and their attorney were also aware of the double escrow and the price difference because she had overheard them discussing it at the escrow closing; and (3) Snop and Raiter had no problem with the double escrow and decided to proceed with the transaction. But Wilder also conceded that she could not understand much of the discussions she overheard because Snop and Raiter were speaking Hebrew or Russian; that “there’s a lot of things in the conversation [she] probably missed” because she often does other work “during these kind of meetings”; and that she could not remember whether “the subject of profit to either Mr. Bash or Mr. Ventura . . . was ever discussed.”

Before Snop and Raiter discovered this alleged fraud, other real property transactions were consummated. Terra Vegas .and Mark Properties formed Ann-Alien, L.L.C., a limited liability company created for the acquisition and development of real property. In September 1995, Ann-Alien acquired for $700,000 a twenty-acre parcel that was attached to the forty-acre parcel originally purchased by Mark Properties and Terra Vegas.

Furthering the purchase of the twenty-acre parcel, the parties opened another escrow account at National Title. This transaction required a down payment of $400,000 — $240,000 in cash from Mark Properties and $160,000 in cash from Terra Vegas. Mark Properties and Terra Vegas each had a fifty-percent ownership interest in the twenty-acre parcel, but Ann-Alien held title to the parcel. Again, Ventura and Bash had arranged a double escrow, as Rowe Land had contemporaneously entered into an escrow at Old Republic Title to purchase the property for a lower price. Snop and Raiter contend that they were unaware Rowe Land had purchased this land for a lower price, as they were told by Bash that Rowe Land had only purchased the land to facilitate the sale to Ann-Alien.

Next, in early 1996, Mark Properties and Bash agreed to form Moscow Strip Development Corporation to buy the Sunbird Inn Motel. Bash told Mark Properties that the sale price of the Sunbird Inn was $4,000,000, and that a deposit of $75,000 was required to open the escrow, of which Mark Properties was to contribute $50,000 and Bash was to contribute $25,000. As with the two prior transactions, Bash’s company, Rowe Land, had contemporaneously entered into an agreement to purchase the Sunbird Inn for a lower price from a third party, Robert and Georgina Chapman.

[945]*945After Rowe Land had deposited $50,000 into escrow at Lawyers’ Title, the transaction fell through because Bash failed to obtain the proper licenses. Thereafter, Mark Properties learned Bash was profiting from the double escrows.'

Raiter met with a Lawyers’ Title escrow agent and requested that she hold the $50,000 pending Mark Properties’ litigation against Ventura and Bash.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 P.3d 587, 117 Nev. 941, 117 Nev. Adv. Rep. 77, 2001 Nev. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mark-properties-inc-v-national-title-co-nev-2001.