Paulson v. Kustom Enterprises, Inc.

483 P.2d 708, 157 Mont. 188, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 409
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1971
Docket11864
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 483 P.2d 708 (Paulson v. Kustom Enterprises, Inc.) 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
Paulson v. Kustom Enterprises, Inc., 483 P.2d 708, 157 Mont. 188, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 409 (Mo. 1971).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from summary judgments granted to defendants and against plaintiffs as will be set out hereinafter. Appellants will be referred to as plaintiffs, respondents as defendants or Prudential or Kustom.

Plaintiffs complained in three counts: (1) to rescind or cancel ■a contract of purchase from defendant Kustom and also to rescind or cancel an installment note-mortgage to defendant Kustom, which Kustom had transferred to defendant Prudential and which Prudential had recorded, (2) to quiet title to plain-biffs’ residence which was the property described in the note-mortgage, and (3) to recover actual and punitive damages for slander of title to plaintiffs’ residence.

Defendant Prudential counterclaimed for collection of the unpaid indebtedness on the note-mortgage and for a foreclosure of the mortgage.

Depositions of the officers and employees of Prudential and officers of Kustom were taken by plaintiffs. Written interrogatories directed to Prudential and Kustom were answered. Prudential and Kustom took the depositions of the plaintiffs.

Thereafter pretrial briefs were filed and a pretrial hearing *190 held. Before entry of a pretrial order, Prudential filed a motion for summary judgment on all counts of the complaint, and for summary judgment on its counterclaim, and based its motion upon the pleadings, depositions, exhibits and interrogatories.

Kustom subsequently filed a motion for summary judgment on the plaintiffs’ count 3 for slander of title.

The district court entered separate orders granting summary judgment as prayed for to Prudential and to Kustom.

Motions for rehearing and to set aside the summary judgments were denied.

The facts ascertainable and the issues presented on this appeal are somewhat complicated. From the respondents’ point of view, the facts are simple. Prudential claims to be bona fide purchaser for value without notice of a note and mortgage assigned to it.

However, from plaintiffs’ point of view the facts are indeed complicated.

The facts asserted by plaintiffs, partly agreed to but essentially denied in various particulars, are:

Plaintiffs are residents and citizens of Great Falls, Montana, residing at 2615 Fifth Avenue North. On March 12, 1968, Kustom Enterprises, Inc., was a Utah corporation, owned and operated by Thomas Roth, Sherry Roth, his wife, and Joseph Padilla, who were residents of the State of Utah, and Kustom Enterprises, Inc., maintained an office and place of business at 724 South Third Street East, Salt Lake City, Utah, under the fictitious name of Allied Carpets, and it conducted its business in the State of Montana.

At all relevant times, Prudential Federal Savings and Loan Association was a Federal Association chartered with its principal place of business at Salt Lake City, Utah, and doing business in Utah and in the State of Montana.

On or about March 12, 1968, Roth was the general manager of the Great Falls business affairs of Kustom and had full and complete charge of its business operations in Great Falls. On March 12, 1968, plaintiffs executed a printed contract with de *191 fendant, Kustom, which contract provided for the purchase of carpet at $1,400 to be paid in two installments, one installment of $700 due 60 days from the completion of the carpet laying, and the balance of $700 to be paid February 1, 1969 with no interest.

On the same day, and at the same place, plaintiffs affixed their signatures to a form which is the installment note-mortgage involved in this litigation

The legal description to the plaintiffs’ premises was inserted after the instrument had been signed by the plaintiffs.

The legal description to the plaintiffs’ premises which was inserted is as follows:

“Lot 11, Block 165, Great Falls, original townsite, Cascade County, Montana, according to the official plat thereof recorded in the office of the Recorder, of said county.”

The next day, on March 13, 1968, at Salt Lake City, Utah, Kustom assigned the installment note-mortgage bearing the signatures of the plaintiffs to Prudential.

Donna S. Coburn, an employee of Prudential is the person who caused the legal description of the property of the plaintiffs to be inserted in the installment note-mortgage and Prudential then caused the installment note-mortgage and assignment to be recorded in the office of the county clerk and recorder of Cascade County, Montana, on March 22, 1968.

The carpet which was installed on the plaintiffs’ premises by Kustom remained on plaintiffs’ premises and is still being used by them.

Prudential prepared or caused to be prepared and approved the printed form which is the installment note-mortgage herein, including the specific provisions thereof which authorized the holder of the note and mortgage “to insert in this promissory note and mortgage the legal description of said real property, subsequent to the signatures of the undersigned hereto. ’ ’

In support of its first count for rescission or cancellation, plaintiffs’ pretrial memo offered to prove the following ultimate facts extracted from their amended complaint.

*192 Kustom engaged in the business in Montana of gaining entrance for its salesmen into the private homes of Montana citizens by conducting telephonic pseudo-surveys and marketing and selling its floor carpet products in such homes.

On March 12, 1968, R. J. Driver gained admittance to the home of the plaintiffs at Great Falls as a result of the telephonic activities of other employees of defendant, Kustom, and with the intent to deceive and defraud plaintiffs, then and there falsely and fraudulently represented to plaintiffs that Allied Carpets were dyed by a dye process developed by Celanese Corporation, which so impregnated the material that the color could not fade, even after ten years of useage, that a new patch could be added to replace a worn piece of carpet even after as much as ten years of usage and would match perfectly, and that a mismatch of carpet was not possible at any time, that the carpet which was being offered was a commercial grade carpet used in heavy carpet areas of such places as the Flamingo in Las Vegas, Nevada, where Kustom Enterprises, Inc., had installed carpet of like quality, thac the carpet was a newly developed carpet which would not mat, even from furniture placement for an extended period of time.

Believing and relying on representations by R. J. Driver, the plaintiffs, on March 12, 1968 at their residence in Great Falls, entered into the printed contract which provides for the payment of the purchase price of $1,400 to be paid in two installments of $700 each, as therein provided.

Pursuant to the method of operation of defendant, Kustom Enterprises, Inc., and the plan and design of Thomas Roth, and after obtaining the signatures of plaintiffs to the original contract providing for payment in two $700 payments, R. J.

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Bluebook (online)
483 P.2d 708, 157 Mont. 188, 1971 Mont. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paulson-v-kustom-enterprises-inc-mont-1971.