Research Loan & Investment Corp. v. Lawyers Title Insurance

225 F. Supp. 287, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8388
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedJanuary 14, 1964
DocketNo. 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 225 F. Supp. 287 (Research Loan & Investment Corp. v. Lawyers Title Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Research Loan & Investment Corp. v. Lawyers Title Insurance, 225 F. Supp. 287, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8388 (W.D. Mo. 1964).

Opinion

JOHN W. OLIVER, District Judge.

Pursuant to various pre-trial orders the parties have filed a stipulation of facts and legal briefs in order that the Court may indicate its intended trial ruling on several of the legal questions that will be presented in this not uncomplicated litigation.

The parties have agreed that none of the five deeds of trust were excepted from the coverage of the policy; that each were matters of record at the time the policy was issued; that plaintiff had actual notice of the existence of the $70,000 deed of trust in favor of Inglis Mortgage Company (although plaintiff believed that the pay-off figure for that mortgage was only $56,000, rather than .$61,000, plus interest, which in fact it was); and that there is a dispute of fact as to whether plaintiff had actual notice of the deeds of trust other than the $70,000 Inglis deed of trust.

The parties also stipulated in paragraph XIV that:

“Defendant concedes that, so far as it now knows, plaintiff made no affirmative misrepresentations in obtaining the policy of title insurance. So far as defendant now knows, the element of misrepresentation is tied to the matter of plaintiff’s actual notice of the deeds of trust, if so, and to its silence in failing to disclose them.”

The incorporation of paragraphs 3, 9, and 10 of the policy into paragraph 8 of defendant’s answer and defendant’s reiteration of paragraph 10 of the policy in paragraph (2) of Count I of the counterclaim supports the stipulated conclusion that “the element of misrepresentation is tied to the matter of plaintiff’s actual notice of the deeds of trust, if so, and to its silence in failing to disclose them”.

Count II, predicated on a theory of unilateral mistake, may also be broadly said to be tied into defendant’s general theory of defense. This memorandum will indicate how the questions raised by defendant’s broad theory of defense will be ruled at trial.

The particular paragraphs of the title insurance incorporated into the pleadings are as follows:

“3. Nothing contained in this Policy shall be construed as insuring against loss or damage by reason of fraud on the part of the Insured; or by reason of claims arising under any act, thing, or trust relationship done, created, suffered or permitted by the Insured; or by reason of the fact that the Insured was not a bona fide purchaser for value without notice, or that the acquisition of the estate or interest hereby insured contravened the laws of the United States establishing an uniform system of bankruptcy; or against the rights of dower, curtesy, or homestead, if any, of the spouse of the Insured; nor will the Company be liable in any event for any loss or damage arising from the refusal of any party to carry out any contract to purchase; lease or loan money on the estate or interest insured.”
* * *
“9. Defects and encumbrances arising after the effective date of this Policy, or created, suffered, assumed or agreed to by the Insured, [289]*289and taxes and assessments which have not become liens up to the effective date of this Policy, or which, although they have become liens, are not payable until some future date, or in future installments, are not to be deemed covered by this Policy; and no approval of any transfer of this Policy shall be deemed to make it cover any such defect, encumbrance, taxes or assessments.
“10. Any untrue statement made by the Insured, or the agent'of the Insured, with respect to any material fact; any suppression of or failure to disclose any material fact, any untrue answer by the Insured, or the agent of the Insured, to material inquiries before the issuing of this Policy, shall void this Policy.”

We must paint with a relatively wide brush because the stipulation is not definitive concerning all of the facts of this case. It is apparent from the reservation of defendant in the stipulation, couched in the language of “so far is it now knows”, that additional facts not now known may be developed at trial.

We may and shall, however, determine whether the admitted actual knowledge of the plaintiff in regard to the $70,000 Inglis deed of trust (and alleged actual or constructive knowledge of the other deeds of trust) placed any duty on the plaintiff to speak, as defendant argues, and whether or not plaintiff’s silence affords any legal defense under one or all of the pleaded paragraphs of the policy. We shall also discuss whether, on the presently stipulated facts, defendant is entitled to have the policy reformed to correct its unilateral mistake.

It is our present opinion that unless defendant is able at trial to adduce facts in addition to those stipulated, defendant can not legally sustain any of its pleaded defenses.

This memorandum does not discuss or determine the obvious additional questions that relate to the measure or the amount of plaintiff’s damages, whether those questions might be legally affected by the amount of consideration involved in the various transfers of the property, or whether the determination of those questions might be affected by possible equitable considerations.

On the general question of damages, we do no more than indicate that regardless of how grossly and culpably negligent defendant may have been to have permitted what evidently happened to have happened, we do not believe that defendant should be punished and that plaintiff’s recovery must be based on its actual damages, whatever they may be.

In spite of the somewhat narrow scope and tentative nature of this memorandum, we nevertheless believe it will serve a useful purpose in that the parties will be advised of our analysis of their broad theories and of our view of the cases upon which each intend to rely at trial.

Neither party has intimated that the controlling law of Missouri is peculiarly different from that stated in the cases generally. V7hat little authority exists in Missouri is consistent with the rules of decision announced elsewhere. In fact, the early case of Purcell v. Land Title Guarantee Co., (1902) 94 Mo.App. 5, 67 S.W. 726, and the still earlier case of Minnesota Title Ins. & Trust Co. v. Drex-el, (8th Cir.1895), 70 F. 194, decided by a strong panel of the Eighth Circuit, are relied upon by the Court of Appeals of New York in Empire Development Co. v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co., (1918) 225 N.Y. 53, 121 N.E. 468. The last case is one of the leading cases in the country.

Empire Development Co. establishes that “mere knowledge of a defect by the insuring owner would not constitute a defense” to an action on a title insurance policy. That comparatively early case examined the purpose and object of a title insurance policy. It first noted that “[t]o a layman a [title] search is a mystery, and the various pitfalls that may beset his title are dreaded, but unknown”. It then held that:

“To avoid a possible claim against him, to obviate the need and expense of professional advice, and the un[290]*290certainty that sometimes results even after it has been obtained, is the very purpose for which the owner seeks insurance”.
That case continued:
“A title insurance policy is much in the nature of a covenant of warranty or a covenant against incum-brances. Here we have held that knowledge is immaterial.

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Bluebook (online)
225 F. Supp. 287, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/research-loan-investment-corp-v-lawyers-title-insurance-mowd-1964.