McWilliams v. Clem

743 P.2d 577, 228 Mont. 297, 44 State Rptr. 1536, 1987 Mont. LEXIS 997
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1987
Docket87-080
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 743 P.2d 577 (McWilliams v. Clem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McWilliams v. Clem, 743 P.2d 577, 228 Mont. 297, 44 State Rptr. 1536, 1987 Mont. LEXIS 997 (Mo. 1987).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

We have here a case where a notary public, at the behest of a husband, took the acknowledgment of a deed transferring real property without the notary knowing or having satisfactory evidence that the wife, whose name appeared on the deed as a signator-grantor, was the individual described in and who executed the deed. The wife was not present before the notary public at the time of the acknowledgment, nor was contact made with the wife by the notary public. Nevertheless, the notary public signed the certificate of acknowledgment contained in the deed instrument as if the wife had personally appeared before the notary public and made the acknowledgment. We determine principally that the notary public was negligent in the performance of official duty, and is liable for such damages as are proximately caused by such negligence.

*300 This appeal comes to us from the District Court, Eighteenth Judicial District, Gallatin County, Montana. Judgment was entered by the court, sitting without a jury, in favor of the wife, Joan McWilliams, holding that the deed was void as to Joan; that Joan should recover $19,950 from the notary public for loss of use, and $17,000 in attorney fees; and that Dee Ann Langel, the grantee in the deed, was jointly and severally liable with the notary public for Joan’s loss of use in the sum of $19,950. Jean Clem, Clem’s Word Processing Center, Clem’s Placement Service, Dee Ann Langel and Stan Tenney, all appeal from the judgment, some from different facets of the judgment, which will be explained as we go along.

In the issues presented on appeal, no attack is made by the appellants on the findings of fact of the District Court. We utilize those findings therefore as background for this case.

George and Joan McWilliams were married in 1955. Eight children were born to their marriage. They constructed a residence in 1975 large enough to accommodate their family on the real property here involved. The residence was subject to a trust indenture in the principal amount of $70,000, for a loan in 1976 by Home Federal Savings and Loan Association.

During the course of their marriage, George McWilliams handled all of the business transactions of the family, and Joan relied on him for all business decisions. Joan is not knowledgeable in the ways of business or law. She denied ever knowingly signing blank documents and claimed that she tried to understand what she was signing. She admitted sometimes that her husband pressured her to sign documents without explanation. She never knew the extent of her husband’s business or personal dealings.

In 1980, the McWilliams’ subdivided their real property into building lots called Tracts A and B with the residence located on Tract A.

Joan McWilliams left the residence in June, 1980. At the time, the property was in good condition and had a rental value of $700 to $800 per month and a fair market value of $165,000. Tract B was valued at $30,000. Joan McWilliams knew the property had been listed for sale, and from her husband’s statements, she believed that the property was rented.

In 1981, Joan McWilliams moved to Ft. Collins, Colorado. The parties separated in June, 1981, and thereafter, the contacts were very limited because there had been a violent encounter at the time of the separation. At times, George would return without his wife’s consent to her apartment and stay overnight. Their feelings after *301 the date of separation were not amicable, and there were no business dealings after the separation date.

From June, 1980, to June, 1981, the residence was vacated and had fallen into disrepair. Thomas and Dee Ann Langel moved to the property on June 14, 1981, as a rental and later purported to purchase the residence. After they moved in, they did considerable work on the residence in the form of repair and replacement. By warranty deed dated August 26, 1981, George McWilliams and Joan McWilliams purported to sell their interest in both Tracts A and B to Dee Ann Langel. The court found, however, that the evidence established that Joan C. McWilliams did not sign the deed, although her signature on the deed is legitimate. The court stated, “George McWilliams somehow obtained her signature prior to that time, and, thereafter, filled in the information to convey Tracts A and B to Dee Ann Langel. The deed was then presented to Jean Clem for completion of the acknowledgment, and notarization of the deed.”

The court found that Jean Clem, as a notary public, did not make the necessary verification that Joan C. McWilliams had signed the deed, nor did she require that Joan C. McWilliams appear before her and make the acknowledgment. When Home Federal Savings and Loan Association found out about the deed, it declared the unpaid balance on the trust indenture of $66,012.31 accelerated and demanded payment. On January 28, 1982, an agreement was made with Home Federal Savings and Loan Association whereby Thomas and Dee Ann Langel agreed to assume the loan at an increased interest. The modification agreement contained a forgery of Joan C. McWilliams’ signature.

At the time of the acknowledgment, Joan McWilliams was living in Colorado. In September, 1982, she heard from an acquaintance that the house had been sold. She expressed surprise and shock at this information and investigated the matter in December, 1982, in Bozeman, Montana. She obtained a copy of the Langel deed at the courthouse and confronted Jean Clem about the improper acknowledgment. Jean Clem admitted that she assumed Joan McWilliams’ signature was legitimate and stated she had similarly completed acknowledgments of existing signatures for George McWilliams at other times. Joan McWilliams also confronted Thomas Langel and was then shown documents of sale.

The District Court outlined other questionable transactions that had occurred at and following the time of the purported transfer of the real property from the McWilliams’ to Dee Ann Langel. George *302 McWilliams obtained a $30,000 loan from Western Federal on August 26, 1981, forging his wife’s signature on the loan documents. Of this borrowed amount, $25,000 was said to be credited to Thomas Langel as a downpayment on the residence, with McWilliams also receiving a lot in a subdivision known as Hyalite Foothills. Langel was a business associate at times with McWilliams. The court found that Thomas Langel was “also prone to questionable business transactions.” As an example, on August 27, 1981, one day after the purported purchase of the residence, he caused a contract for deed to be prepared for Tract B. A friend, Stan Tenney, a Bozeman police officer, was said to be the purchaser, and the purchase price was listed at $37,500, although no consideration was ever paid. Langel caused the contract to be sold to Gallatin Dairy pension plan and agreed privately with Tenney to make the Tenney payments to the pension plan. This fictitious transaction Apparently was for the purpose of raising money for Langel.

No title insurance was obtained concerning the purported transfer from the McWilliams to Dee Ann Langel in August, 1981. In September, 1982, Joan McWilliams found unsigned deeds dated November, 1981, with the McWilliams as grantors and Thomas and Dee Ann Langel as grantees of Tract A and B respectively.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
743 P.2d 577, 228 Mont. 297, 44 State Rptr. 1536, 1987 Mont. LEXIS 997, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcwilliams-v-clem-mont-1987.