Mills v. Mather

890 P.2d 1277, 270 Mont. 188, 52 State Rptr. 139, 1995 Mont. LEXIS 30
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1995
Docket94-060
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 890 P.2d 1277 (Mills v. Mather) 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
Mills v. Mather, 890 P.2d 1277, 270 Mont. 188, 52 State Rptr. 139, 1995 Mont. LEXIS 30 (Mo. 1995).

Opinion

JUSTICE WEBER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal by Ida M. Mills (Mills) from an order of the Eighth Judicial District Court, Cascade County, granting summary judgment to defendant J. Brian Tierney (Tierney). The court granted *191 summary judgment to Tierney on Mills’ claim that he negligently represented her interests concerning a real estate transaction involving a contract for deed. Mills lost over $30,000 when the escrow agent embezzled money intended to pay off the contract. We reverse and remand.

The sole question on appeal is whether the District Court erred in granting defendant Tierneys motion for summary judgment.

The extensive deposition testimony of Mills and other witnesses in this case establishes the following factual background, which is undisputed unless otherwise noted throughout this opinion. Mills was a practical nurse in Great Falls, Montana, until 1980 when she retired and sold her home on a contract for deed. An escrow account with Guaranty Escrow was established and the purchaser began making payments of $305.90 per month to Guaranty Escrow. Mills planned to live on these payments and her Social Security income.

Mills purchased a home in Sheridan, Montana. Her testimony indicates that her former husband, with whom she had reconciled, cashed in his retirement benefits to make a down payment of $20,000 on the Sheridan home. Mills arranged for Guaranty Escrow to make payments directly to the Bank of Sheridan to cover the monthly mortgage payments of $304.17 on the Sheridan property.

E. Robert Brown (Brown) owned Guaranty Escrow. Mills testified that she contacted him as early as 1984 when payments she depended on to cover mortgage payments on the Sheridan home were late and she was forced to use her limited Social Security income to cover the mortgage payments. Mills testified that she tried to get information from Brown on more than one occasion and Brown either refused to talk with Mills or he “stonewalled” her. Although Mills did not keep records, she claimed that she was shorted two payments in 1984 and as many as four payments per year after 1984. This information is unverifiable because most of Brown’s records were shredded or otherwise destroyed.

Mills also contacted the purchasers and determined that they had been making monthly payments to Guaranty Escrow. Mills testified that she became convinced that Brown was a “crook.” However, she did not seek legal assistance to recover the payments she had not received; she testified that she could not afford an attorney. Instead, Mills turned the Sheridan property back to the bank, thinking that she had no other recourse because the house payments, if not paid from escrow, took nearly all of her monthly Social Security check. Mills testified that she checked herself in at Warm Springs State *192 Hospital and spent five weeks in treatment there after losing the house in Sheridan.

Attorney Tierney practiced law in Butte and also two days each week in Whitehall. In 1986, Mills was living in Whitehall and contacted Tierney about her problems with the late and missing payments from Guaranty Escrow which were now to be sent to Mills’ account at a Whitehall credit union. Mills testified that she had tried again unsuccessfully to get the problem straightened out with Brown at Guaranty Escrow.

Mills testified that she fell and injured herself outside her apartment on the day she was to meet with Tierney, and postponed her appointment until she was out of the hospital. Tierney represented her in a personal injury claim for that fall as well as the matter of the late payments from Guaranty Escrow.

Mills told Tierney about her problem with the late and missing payments. She testified that she told Tierney that she did not trust Brown and that she thought he was the root of the problem. She also told Tierney that she did not understand why Donald Ayers was now living in the house and making the payments and she asked Tierney to check this for her also. Tierney accepted a retainer of $100 and agreed to investigate the problems Mills was having with the escrow payments.

Tierney wrote to Guaranty Escrow, asking for a copy of escrow documents to explain transfers of the property to subsequent owners. He also asked for copies of the current insurance policy on the home, copies of receipts for tax statements for 1985 and ledger copies of payments made by Donald Ayers. He did not specifically ask for — nor did he receive in .response to the letter — copies of records to indicate whether Guaranty Escrow was making monthly payments to Mills. When he received a copy of Guaranty Escrow’s records showing all payments had been made by Donald Ayers and Dianne Ayers Mielke (Mielke) to Guaranty Escrow, Tierney explained to Mills that she must be wrong about missing payments. Although he did not further investigate the matter of the late and/or missing payments, he did handle a transfer of the contract from Jack May to Ayers and Mielke.

Still concerned about the late and missing payments, Mills testified that she went to Great Falls in 1987 and met with Donald Ayers. Ayers showed her his records indicating that he was making the monthly payments to Guaranty Escrow. Mills testified that she then contacted Brown in person and Brown again stonewalled her. Even more convinced that Brown was crooked, she testified that she told *193 Tierney again of her fear that Brown was dishonest and that he would steal her money unless something was done to prevent it. Mills testified that she was not pursuing a claim for previously missed payments and, at that point, wanted only to prevent Brown from taking any more of her money.

Tierney testified that he arranged for the transfer of the property from Jack May to Ayers and Mielke and collected a fee from Donald Ayers to complete the transfer. He testified that he then suggested to Mills that she try to get the contract paid off early. Tierney talked to Mielke concerning an early payoff of the contract and learned that she was trying to sell the house; Tierney and Mielke discussed the possibility of Mills’ accepting a discounted principal payment in return for early payoff of the contract. Mielke asked Tierney to see whether Mills would accept a $5,000 reduction of principal, which at that time was approximately $36,000.

Mills agreed to the discount. Mielke testified that she asked for written confirmation of the discount at the direction of her realtor. In response to this request, Tierney wrote a letter dated October 23, 1987 verifying that Mills had agreed to discount the principal by $5,000 in exchange for an early payoff. Tierney’s letter also indicated that he would prepare the necessary release for Mills’ signature at the time of a sale to authorize the escrow agent to release instruments of title to Mielke upon payment of the discounted principal amount. The deposition testimony of numerous witnesses provides that, over the next two months, Tierney was in contact numerous times with Mielke, with the realtor representing Mielke and with an agent of the title company handling the closing of the sale. Mills testified that she instructed Tierney to make sure that she got her money from the payoff of the contract for deed and to make sure that Brown did not get her money.

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Bluebook (online)
890 P.2d 1277, 270 Mont. 188, 52 State Rptr. 139, 1995 Mont. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-mather-mont-1995.