Stewart Title Guaranty Co. v. Roberts-Dude (In re Roberts-Dude)

484 B.R. 891
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida.
DecidedDecember 28, 2012
DocketBankruptcy No. 11-26900-EPK; Adversary No. 11-02334-EPK
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 484 B.R. 891 (Stewart Title Guaranty Co. v. Roberts-Dude (In re Roberts-Dude)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart Title Guaranty Co. v. Roberts-Dude (In re Roberts-Dude), 484 B.R. 891 (Fla. 2012).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

ERIK P. KIMBALL, Bankruptcy Judge.

THIS MATTER came before the Court for trial on July 9 and July 10, 2012 upon the Second Amended Complaint for: (1) Allowance of Claims, and (2) Determination of Non-Dischargeability of Debt [ECF No. 49] (the “Complaint”) filed by Stewart Title Guaranty Company (the “Plaintiff’) against Denise Roberts-Dude (the “Defendant”) and the Defendant’s Answer and Affirmative Defenses to Plaintiff’s Second Amended Complaint and Counterclaim [ECF No. 50] (the “Counterclaim”) filed by the Defendant against the Plaintiff. This Memorandum Opinion presents the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Fed. R. Bankr.P. 7052.

The Complaint presents five counts: Count I for establishment, liquidation, and allowance of a claim under § 5021 based on fraud; Count II for establishment, liquidation, and allowance of a claim under § 502 based on concealment; Count III [898]*898for establishment, liquidation, and allowance of a claim under § 502 based on breach of contract; Count IV for establishment, liquidation, and allowance of a claim under § 502 based on unjust enrichment; and Count V for exception from discharge under § 523(a)(2)(A). The Complaint includes a request for attorneys’ fees, costs, interest, and exemplary (i.e., punitive) damages. The Counterclaim presents two counts: Count I for breach of contract; and Count II for fraud. The Counterclaim includes a request for attorneys’ fees and costs.

The Court considered the testimony of witnesses and the documentary evidence admitted at trial, the Joint Pretrial Stipulation [ECF No. 96] filed by the parties, the subsequent Joint Pretrial Stipulation [ECF No. 101] filed by the parties, as supplemented by the Agreed Order Granting Plaintiffs Motion to Add Stipulated Facts to Pretrial Stipulations [ECF No. 135], and the post-trial briefs filed by the parties [ECF Nos. 186 and 189].

This case presents a vexing problem for the Court. There is no doubt that the Defendant is liable to the Plaintiff. She signed an affidavit stating that there were no liens on a parcel of real property other than those already identified by the Plaintiff, a title insurer. Yet she knew that there was a substantial deed of trust on the property that the Plaintiff failed to discover. The Plaintiff issued a title insurance policy that did not except the deed of trust from coverage and was later required to pay nearly $2 million to resolve the matter. The Defendant personally received more than $1.8 million in cash as a result of her deception. In spite of a landslide of evidence to the contrary, the Defendant continues to claim that she had no knowledge of any of the material facts and no intention to deceive the Plaintiff. The Defendant’s protestations are completely incredible. The Defendant may be an unfortunate debtor before this Court, but she is certainly not honest.

However, the Plaintiff has the burden of proving every aspect of its case by a preponderance of the evidence. A central element in this adversary proceeding—the crux of this Court’s decision that the Defendant’s debt to the Plaintiff will not be excepted from discharge—is that the Plaintiff must show not only that it actually relied on the Defendant’s deception but that its reliance was justified. The Plaintiff need not go so far as to prove that a reasonable person in the same circumstances would have relied on the Defendant’s misrepresentation. The deed of trust in question lacked a property description but was nonetheless indexed in a manner such that a reasonable person surely would have found it. If reasonable reliance was the applicable standard, the Plaintiff would most certainly fail. There is no doubt that the Plaintiff actually relied on the Defendant’s lie to its detriment, but actual reliance is just one component of the claim. The Plaintiff must go one step further. Taking into account the Plaintiffs own skill, knowledge, and experience, the Plaintiff must convince the Court that its reliance was justified. Yet the Plaintiff is a national insurer with extensive experience in review of title matters. The evidence shows that the Plaintiff always conducts title searches in such a manner that it should have found the deed of trust in question. In particular, the evidence supports the conclusion that the Plaintiffs agent actually conducted the search which would have disclosed a particular deed that, by the Plaintiffs own admission, would have caused it to conduct an additional search and thereby locate the subject deed of trust. But somehow this did not happen. Is this simply the negligence of the Plaintiff in the face of the Defendant’s intentional tort, and so should be [899]*899discounted? The answer is that it is more than negligence. In light of the Plaintiffs relevant skill, knowledge, and experience, the level of title review that would have revealed the deed of trust was the slightest inspection, a cursory glance. It is not that the Plaintiff did not look. Here the Plaintiff looked but did not see. The Plaintiff cannot now complain that its injury was brought about by the Defendant’s misrepresentation. And so the Plaintiffs rebanee on the Defendant’s misrepresentation was not justified and the resulting debt will be subject to discharge in this case.

For the reasons stated more fully below, the Plaintiff will have an allowed unsecured claim against the estate in the amount of $2,925,000.00, and such claim may be subject to discharge in this ease.

I. FINDINGS OF FACT

The Defendant sometimes goes by the nickname “Dee”. The Defendant is married to Harald Dude (“Mr. Dude”). Mr. Dude is not currently a debtor in a bankruptcy proceeding. The Defendant and Mr. Dude are residents of West Palm Beach, Florida.

At all relevant times, the Defendant was a general partner of Dee Investments Limited Partnership, a Nevada bmited partnership (“Dee Investments”). At all relevant times, Dee Holdings, Inc., a Nevada corporation (“Dee Holdings”), was a general partner of Dee Investments. At all relevant times, the Defendant was the president, treasurer, secretary, and director of Dee Holdings.

The Plaintiff is a Texas corporation in the business of underwriting title insurance policies. At all relevant times, Stewart Title of Colorado, Inc. (“Stewart Colorado”), a Colorado corporation, served as the Plaintiffs agent by performing title examinations, handling real estate closings, and issuing title insurance policies underwritten by the Plaintiff.

David William Lester (“Mr. Lester”) is a resident of Bab, Indonesia. At all relevant times, Mr. Lester was a real estate broker and real estate investor/developer in Aspen, Colorado.

As of March 27, 2000, Mr. Dude owned, in his own name, real property located at 600 N. Third Street, Aspen, Pitkin County, Colorado 81611 (the “Property”). On March 27, 2000, Mr. Dude conveyed the Property to Dee Investments via a general warranty deed, which was recorded the following day with the Pitkin County, Colorado Clerk and Recorder (the “Clerk”).

In the spring of 2003, Mr. Dude personally applied to Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. (‘Wells Fargo”) for a $500,000.00 home equity line of credit, to be secured by the Property. Wells Fargo then sought to obtain a title insurance pobey underwritten by the Plaintiff to protect Wells Fargo’s proposed security interest in the Property.

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Bluebook (online)
484 B.R. 891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-title-guaranty-co-v-roberts-dude-in-re-roberts-dude-flsb-2012.