Montgomery v. Goettlich

CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1992
Docket91-395
StatusPublished

This text of Montgomery v. Goettlich (Montgomery v. Goettlich) 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
Montgomery v. Goettlich, (Mo. 1992).

Opinion

No. 91-395 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA 1992

C. JOHN MONTGOMERY and MARCELYN MONTGOMERY, Plaintiffs and Appellants, 4 -vs- ERNEST F. GOETTLICH, FLORENCE L. GOETTLICH, k'ov g " and TRENT D. GOETTLICH, Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Tenth Judicial District, In and for the County of Fergus, The Honorable Peter L. Rapkoch, Judge presiding.

COUNSEL OF RECORD: For Appellant: Jon A. Oldenburg, Attorney at Law, Lewistown, Montana For Respondent: John L. Pratt, Ask & Pratt, Roundup, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: April 15, 1992 Decided: November 9, 1992 Filed: Justice Terry N. Trieweiler delivered the opinion of the Court. plaintiffs appeal from the summary judgment of the District Court of the Tenth ~udicial ~istrict, Fergus County, which dismissed their claim for expenses incurred by them after foreclosure and prior to the statutory redemption of certain real estate. We reverse the District Court. The issues for our determination are: 1. Whether a purchaser at a sheriff's sale is entitled to recover expenses incurred to maintain and prevent waste upon real property from a subsequent redemptioner. 2. Whether a purchaser is entitled to recover rents from the subsequent redemptioner for storage of personal goods and the pasturing of cattle prior to redemption. In 1988, an action to foreclose the property in question was commenced. At that time, defendants were leasing the property from the owner. A sheriff's sale was conducted on February 24, 1989, and the plaintiffs were the successful purchasers. At that same time, the original owner quit-claimed his statutory right of redemption to the defendants. The plaintiffs took possession of the property immediately following the sale and discovered that defendant Trent Goettlich had left cattle and personal effects on the premises. This property remained on the premises until defendants redeemed the property on May 25, 1989. During the period when plaintiffs resided on the property, they performed a number of services, including dam repair, fertilization, and general maintenance. During that period, defendants refused to vacate the premises, and their herd of approximately 140 head of cattle continued to pasture on the property. Plaintiffs filedtheir complaint on November 22, 1989, seeking compensation for their services, pasturing of cattle, lost rental value, and interest. Defendants moved for summary judgment, contending that since plaintiffs were not statutorily entitled to possession of the property during the one year period of redemption, no action for loss of rents and profits, nor recovery for improvements was available to them. The District Court concluded that plaintiffs were precluded from recovering the value of improvements because they had full knowledge of defendants' redemptive rights. Also, since all rents and profits received by a purchaser are a credit against money paid to redeem the property under 25-13-822, MCA, plaintiffs could not claim any losses because no rents or profits were deducted from the redemption price. From this judgment, plaintiffs appeal. Section 25-13-821, MCA, states that a purchaser of land at execution sale is not entitled to the possession of that land against the execution debtor if the debtor resides on the property during the period of redemption. Plaintiffs correctly point out that defendants were not the execution debtors, and did not use the property for their home. Nonetheless, defendants continued in their possession of the land by the pasturing of cattle and storing personal property on the land. Plaintiffs were clearly entitled to rents and profits during that period. However, any rents or profits would have been a credit against the amount paid to redeem the property. The District Court was correct in its determination that plaintiffs could not claim lost rents and profits. This conclusion also pertains to the pasturing of cattle, even though defendants had no statutory right to continue to do so. Any rents plaintiffs might have received for grazing would have been credited to defendants' redemption price. Since no rents were credited against the redemption price, plaintiffs were not damaged by defendants' failure to pay them. We do, however, find merit in plaintiffs' argument of unjust enrichment. The theory of unjust enrichment requires that a person who has been unjustly enriched at the expense of another must make restitution to the other. Robertus v Candee (1983) 205 Mont. 403, 670 .

P.2d 540. Nothing in Montana's statutory redemption laws precludes a purchaser from receiving the fair value of services rendered or expenses reasonably incurred to maintain property prior to redemption. The measure of equitable restitution is either the quantum meruit value of a plaintiff's labor, or the value of the

enhancement of a defendant's property. Restatement (Second) of Contracts 5 371 (1981): Williston, Contracts 5 1480 (1970). We hold that plaintiffs are entitled to recover expenses incurred to maintain and prevent waste upon real property under the theory of unjust enrichment, and that summary judgment on that issue was improper. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the District Court, dismissing Count I1 of plaintiffs' complaint, and we reverse the judgment of the District Court which dismissed Count I This case . is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court 1988 Internal Operating Rules, this decision shall not be cited as

precedent and shall be published by its filing as a public document with the Clerk of the Supreme Court and by a report of its result to Montana Law Week, State Reporter and West Publishing Company.

We concur:

Chief Justice Chief Justice Turnage concurring in part and dissenting in part: I agree with the majority that a purchaser of land at execu- tion sale is not entitled to claim lost rents and profits because those would be a credit against the amount paid to redeem the property pursuant to 5 5 25-13-802 and -822, MCA. However, I respectfully disagree with the majority's reversal of summary judgment and its remand of this case for determination of whether the Montgomerys are entitled to recover expenses incurred to maintain and prevent waste upon the property under a theory of unjust enrichment. Unjust enrichment is an equitable theory which has been recognized in Montana since at least 1922. See Butler v. Peters (l922), 62 Mont. 381, 205 P. 247. This Court has, in the past, recognized restrictions on application of the theory. In Butler, this Court held that unjust enrichment did not apply to entitle a corporation to recover against its director for incurring a debt on behalf of the corporation and failing to file a required annual report. The Court noted that the director gained nothing by failing to file the report and that the statute which required the report to be filed did not require proof that the director misled, imposed upon, or injured the corporation. Butler, 205 P. at 249. In Brown v. Thornton (1967), 150 Mont. 150, 156, 432 P.2d 386, 390, this Court held that the mere fact that defendants benefitted by plaintiff's acts was not of itself sufficient to require defendants to make restitution therefor under a theory of unjust enrichment, absent some element of misconduct or fault of some sort on the part of defendant. In Ruegsegger v. Welborn (1989), 237 Mont. 317, 773 P.2d 305, this Court held that holdover tenants were not entitled, under a theory of unjust enrichment, to the value of planting and harvesting crops which they lost when the owners reentered the property.

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Related

Robertus v. Candee
670 P.2d 540 (Montana Supreme Court, 1983)
Randolph v. Peterson, Inc. v. J.R. Simplot Co.
778 P.2d 879 (Montana Supreme Court, 1989)
Ruegsegger v. Welborn
773 P.2d 305 (Montana Supreme Court, 1989)
Brown v. Thornton
432 P.2d 386 (Montana Supreme Court, 1967)
Butler v. Peters
205 P. 247 (Montana Supreme Court, 1922)

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Montgomery v. Goettlich, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-goettlich-mont-1992.