McGill v. Lester

700 P.2d 964, 108 Idaho 561, 1985 Ida. App. LEXIS 636
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 30, 1985
Docket14686
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 700 P.2d 964 (McGill v. Lester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGill v. Lester, 700 P.2d 964, 108 Idaho 561, 1985 Ida. App. LEXIS 636 (Idaho Ct. App. 1985).

Opinions

BURNETT, Judge.

We are asked to decide whether an “option” to purchase real property should be treated, under the circumstances presented here, as a lien rather than as a contract of conveyance. This question arises from a dispute among several would-be purchasers of the subject property. The trial judge resolved the dispute against those who claimed under the “option,” holding that they had acquired nothing more than a lien to secure a debt. For reasons explained below, we uphold that determination. However, we also remand the case for reconsideration of costs and for an award of prejudgment interest on the secured debt.

[563]*563i

The facts are extraordinarily complex. We will simplify and summarize the facts pertinent to our decision, as found by the trial judge. In 1968 Chester and Lucille Skidmore, record owners of property in Nampa known as the Twi-Lite Lounge, entered into an installment sale contract with buyers named Miller and Anderson. In 1970 Miller-Anderson entered into another installment sale contract, transferring their interest in the Twi-Lite Lounge to Donald Fretwell. While Fretwell was in possession, the property was heavily damaged by fire. In addition, Fretwell became indebted to a group of creditors comprised of Elmer Lester, John Hibnes, Sr., John Hibnes, Jr., and their spouses. The Lester-Hibnes group sued Fretwell to collect the debt and caused a writ of attachment to be issued against Fretwell’s interest in the property. Lester-Hibnes also obtained from Fretwell an assignment of his interest, promising to reconvey it if he paid the money he owed them. Ultimately the suit was dismissed, and the writ became ineffective, without payment of the debt. Fretwell also eventually defaulted on his contract with Miller-Anderson, resulting in a forfeiture.

After the forfeiture, but while the debt collection suit was still pending, LesterHibnes contacted Miller-Anderson directly. They stated that they had a lien on the property, securing the debt owed them by Fretwell, and they negotiated an “option” to purchase the property from Miller-Anderson. The “option” provided that if Lester-Hibnes made the payments past due under the Fretwell contract, Miller-Anderson would sell their interest to LesterHibnes on the same terms previously extended to Fretwell. The “option” agreement also contained a secondary provision that if a third party, Neoma Aurey, paid Lester-Hibnes what Fretwell owed them, she — not they — would be entitled to purchase Miller-Anderson’s interest. Aurey failed to perform. Consequently, LesterHibnes exercised the “option” by making the payments past due on the Fretwell contract. But having done so, LesterHibnes thereafter made no further payments nor did they take possession of the property.

In May, 1972, Miller-Anderson sold their interest to Earl F. McGill. Miller-Anderson informed McGill that Lester-Hibnes had some claim against the property and McGill responded, according to the trial judge, that he would “cross that bridge when [he] came to it.” McGill made a cash payment to Miller-Anderson and he received a deed which he recorded. He also made payments on the original contract between Miller-Anderson and the Skidmores. He took possession of the Twi-Lite Lounge, removed encumbrances against it, repaired the fire damage and eventually leased the property to a tenant who operated á night club.

As part of his effort to redevelop the property, McGill filed this quiet-title action against numerous defendants, including Lester-Hibnes, Miller-Anderson and Fret-well. During several years of litigation and settlement, competing claims to the property were narrowed to those asserted by McGill and Lester-Hibnes. The trial judge declared McGill to be the owner of the property, subject to the record title reserved by the Skidmores until their contract was fully performed. The judge held that Lester-Hibnes were entitled to a lien securing the Fretwell debt together with the payment they made when exercising the “option.” Not satisfied with this result, Lester-Hibnes appealed.

The appellants’ brief contains fourteen “assignments of error.” But the dispositive question, generally stated, is whether the trial judge made findings supported by the evidence, and correctly applied the law, in determining that Lester-Hibnes did not receive an ownership interest in the property. The “assignments of error” also raise secondary questions regarding prejudgment interest and costs, to which we will turn after discussing the ownership issue.

H

Lester-Hibnes’ claim of an ownership interest necessarily rests either upon [564]*564the assignment they received from Fret-well or upon the “option” they received from Miller-Anderson. However, it will be recalled that Fretwell’s interest was forfeited. Although the validity of the forfeiture initially was contested below, we find no basis in the record to disturb the trial judge’s determination that a forfeiture occurred. The assignment received from Fretwell was extinguished by the forfeiture of Fretwell’s interest. See Rush v. Anestos, 104 Idaho 630, 661 P.2d 1229 (1983). Consequently, the focus of the ownership issue shifts to the “option” received from Miller-Anderson.

An option, when exercised, is a contract for the conveyance of property. However, a conveyance which appears absolute in form may be shown by extrinsic evidence actually to be security for a debt.1 Idaho Code § 45-905 provides as follows:

The fact that a transfer was made subject to defeasance on a condition may, for the purpose of showing such transfer to be a mortgage, be proved (except as against a trustee under any trust deed or transfer in trust, or a subsequent purchaser or encumbrancer for value and without notice), though the fact does not . appear by the terms of the instrument.

This statute embodies the familiar maxim that “equity considers that as done which ought to be done.” Thus, a deed may be shown actually to be a mortgage, Credit Bureau of Preston v. Sleight, 92 Idaho 210, 440 P.2d 143 (1968), and the apparent conveyance of an ownership interest under an installment sale contract may be shown actually to be the creation of a security interest. Rush v. Anestos, supra. Upon a proper showing, the form of an instrument yields to its underlying purpose. See generally Kendrick v. Davis, 75 Wash.2d 456, 452 P.2d 222 (1969). In our view, this principle logically would extend to a purported “option” if the underlying purpose were merely to secure a debt.

The criteria for evaluating such a purpose are (a) the existence of a debt to be secured; (b) survival of the debt after execution of the instrument in question; (c) any previous negotiations of parties; (d) the inadequacy of consideration for an outright conveyance; (e) the financial condition of the purported grantor; and (f) the intention of the parties. See Dickens v. Heston, 53 Idaho 91, 100-05, 21 P.2d 905, 908-10 (1933). We will examine these factors in turn.

The threshold, and dominant, criteria are whether a debt existed and whether it survived the execution of the instrument. See Credit Bureau of Preston v.

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Bluebook (online)
700 P.2d 964, 108 Idaho 561, 1985 Ida. App. LEXIS 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgill-v-lester-idahoctapp-1985.