Smith v. Eisen

245 S.W.3d 160, 97 Ark. App. 130, 2006 Ark. App. LEXIS 858
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 13, 2006
DocketCA 05-1405
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 245 S.W.3d 160 (Smith v. Eisen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Eisen, 245 S.W.3d 160, 97 Ark. App. 130, 2006 Ark. App. LEXIS 858 (Ark. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Robert J. Gladwin, Judge.

This case is a dispute between a pawn-shop owner and his customer. It involves the question of whether a deed to a house was a true conveyance of the property, with an accompanying agreement between the purchasers (the pawn-shop owner and his wife) and the seller (the customer) that entitled the customer to repurchase the property for twice the amount of the “sale,” or whether it was an equitable mortgage securing a usurious loan. The trial court found that the transaction was a usurious loan secured by an equitable mortgage. We agree and affirm the trial court’s finding to that effect. We reverse the denial of attorney’s fees to the customer, appellee Karen Eisen, and remand for further proceedings.

Appellee purchased a house in Fort Smith on April 25, 1995, for $75,580.64. In 1996, she had financial difficulties and asked appellant John Smith if he would loan her $15,000 against her house. The parties disagree about the nature of the transaction that followed. According to appellee, John (and his wife, appellant Wanda Smith) agreed to take a deed to the house; put the deed in his safe without filing it; and, upon appellee’s satisfaction of the debt, return the deed to her. According to appellants, however, appellee sold her property to them for $15,000 and, in a separate contract, they agreed to reconvey it to her if she paid $250 monthly for ten years, for a total amount of $30,000. On December 4, 1996, appellee signed a warranty deed of her property to appellants and, that same day, all three parties signed the following document on stationery bearing the pawn shop’s letterhead:

I John A. Smith and wife Wanda L. Smith do hereby sell to Karen A. Eisen our property and house located at 3010 So. 34th street, Fort Smith, Ar.
Legal description; [sic] Lot 7 in Block 6 Revised Plat of Lakewood Addition
Under these following agreement [sic].
Karen A. Eisen will pay payments of $250.00 a month begining [sic] January 1st, 1997 and ending with payment of December 1st, 2006. (10 years) Karen A.Eisen will also maintain a [sic] Insurance Policy on the dwelling for at least 75,000.00 dollars, and she will also pay the yearly real estate taxes. She is allowed to make her payment between the 1st and 10th of each month. She may not get more than 2 months behind. She must pay the insurance payments on time and pay the real estate taxes when they are due before penalty time, October 10 of each year. Failure to abide by these obligations automatically makes this contract between seller and buyer terminated.
If Karen A. Eisen pays off loan in advance she must pay all remaining payments due. Also she must pay offloan in full before she can sell house or obtain another Mortgage.

The receipt signed by appellee, for $15,000, “for house and lot located a[t] 3010 So. 34th St. Fort Smith, Arkansas 72903 Lot 7 in Block 6 Lakewood Addition Fort Smith Ark 72903,” was dated September 4, 1996. According to appellee, she actually received the $15,000 at the same time that she gave the deed to the property and signed the contract (December 4, 1996). Appellants contend that she received the money on September 4, 1996, and stress that the time that elapsed between those dates supports their argument that these were two separate transactions. Appellants filed the deed on December 4, 1996.

Although appellee did purchase insurance on the property as agreed initially, she did not buy insurance after 1998. Appellee testified that she was unable to obtain a homeowner’s policy on a residence that was not in her name; that, when she informed appellant of this fact, he told her not to worry about it, because he had insurance on his other properties; and that he stated that would take care of it. In September 2003, when appellee was late making her payments, appellant told her that the agreement was terminated and that, if she wanted to stay in the house, she would have to pay monthly rent of $400. Appellants contend that they also terminated the agreement because appellee failed to continue homeowner’s insurance on the property. Appellee refused to agree to appellants’ new terms, and appellants refused to accept further payments of $250 per month.

On November 14, 2003, appellee filed a complaint against appellants, claiming that appellants had loaned her money on December 4, 1996, secured by a deed to her property. She alleged that appellants had “recently” refused her payments and claimed that they owned the property. She asked for revocation of the deed and restoration of title in her name with an accounting of the funds she had paid, all future interest voided, and attorney’s fees and costs on the grounds of fraud, conversion, and unjust enrichment. She also asked for damages for the money she had paid in interest plus attorney’s fees and costs under Arkansas’s usury laws and the Arkansas Deceptive Trade Practices Act.

Appellants filed a motion to dismiss on March 24, 2004, arguing that the statute of limitations for each claim in the complaint had run. They also argued that, under Ark. R. Civ. P. 8(a) and Ark. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), appellee had failed to properly plead her causes of action. They filed a counterclaim that same date, alleging that appellee’s failure to maintain insurance on the property and her missed payments amounted to a breach of the agreement; they asked for damages, including rental payments on the property in the amount of $400 per month, beginning October 1, 2003; reimbursement of the premiums for the insurance policy that appellants secured for the property; property taxes they had paid; costs; and attorney’s fees. In the alternative, they sought an order permitting them to evict appellee from the premises. The circuit court denied the motion to dismiss on April 20, 2004. Appellants filed their answer on May 4, 2004, denying that the parties had ever entered into a loan agreement and raising the defenses of statute of limitations, statute of frauds, the parol-evidence rule, unclean hands, laches, waiver, and first breach.

On December 6, 2004, appellants moved for summary judgment on the bases of the statute of limitations and appellee’s purported failure to establish the elements of her causes of action. In her response to the motion for summary judgment and brief, appellee conceded that the statute of limitations had run on the usurious interest paid more than five years prior to the lawsuit and stated that she had calculated her damages accordingly, requesting judgment for $15,231.26, with all future interest voided and the monthly payments reduced to the amount of principal due. The circuit court denied the motion for summary judgment on January 4, 2005.

On May 18, 2005, appellee filed an amended complaint alleging that she was entitled to a finding that the contract was an equitable mortgage and that she was entitled to revocation of the deed and restoration of record title in her name, along with an accounting, on the grounds of fraud, conversion, and unjust enrichment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 S.W.3d 160, 97 Ark. App. 130, 2006 Ark. App. LEXIS 858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-eisen-arkctapp-2006.