Tolotti v. Equitable Real Estate and Investment Co.

260 P. 415, 70 Utah 385, 1927 Utah LEXIS 46
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 1927
DocketNo. 4454.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 260 P. 415 (Tolotti v. Equitable Real Estate and Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tolotti v. Equitable Real Estate and Investment Co., 260 P. 415, 70 Utah 385, 1927 Utah LEXIS 46 (Utah 1927).

Opinion

STRAUP, J.

This case was tried to the court and a jury, and resulted in a verdict in favor of the defendants. The plaintiff appeals. The assignments of error relate to portions of the court’s charge to the jury and to the court’s refusal to charge as requested by the plaintiff.

In the complaint it is alleged that the plaintiff, who was about to purchase real estate from one, Wood, employed the defendants to examine the records of the county recorder to ascertain and advise the plaintiff if the property was clear and free of liens and incumbrances and agreed to pay and paid the defendants a fee therefor; that the defendants examined, or pretended to examine, such records, and advised the plaintiff that Wood owned and had the right to sell the property, and that it was free and clear of all liens and incumbrances, and that, in reliance on such statements, the plaintiff paid the .purchase price for the property amounting to $1,675, and took a warranty deed from Wood; that in truth and in fact there was of record a lis pendens of which plaintiff had no knowledge showing a pending action involving Wood’s title to the property and a claim that his immediate grantor was not, but that another was the owner *387 and. entitled to the possession of the property. It further is alleged that the defendants at the time of the examination of the records well knew, or by the exercise of reasonable care should have known, of the lis pendens on record, and that it constituted a cloud on the title, and either carelessly and negligently failed and omitted to properly examine the records, or wilfully and wrongfully concealed from the plaintiff all knowledge of such lis pendens, and that the title was not free and clear of all incumbrances; that in the pending action a judgment was had in this court (Law-ley v. Hickenlooper, 61 Utah 298, 212 P. 526), whereby it it was adjudged that one, Lawley, and not the grantor of Wood was the owner of the property and entitled to the possession of it, by reason of which plaintiff’s deed from Wood was worthless and the plaintiff evicted from the premises, and that, because of the wrongful and negligent conduct of the defendants, the plaintiff was damaged in the sum of $1,675, the purchase price paid by her, and in the further sum of $568 expended by her on the property, none of which could be recovered back from Wood because of his insolvency. All of the material allegations of the complaint were denied by the defendants.

On the record it is undisputed that the lis pendens was of record at the time of and prior to plaintiff’s purchase of the property, and that she was evicted from the premises because Wood, her grantor, was not the owner of the property, and that the purchase price paid and the costs of the improvements made by her were wholly lost. Plaintiff testified, as did also her husband and Wood, that she requested the defendants to examine the records to see whether Wood was the owner of the property and had the right to sell and convey it, and whether it was free and clear of liens and incumbrances, and that the defendant Lee, the president ■of the other defendant, stated that he would do so; that in pursuance thereof he left the parties and went to the courthouse to examine the records, and on his return reported to plaintiff that Wood was the owner, that he had good right *388 to sell and convey it, that the .property was clear and free of all liens and incumbrances, and that he did not say anything about the lis pendens on record nor as to any action pending or proceeding in any way involving the property; that, in reliance of what Lee had reported and stated, and having no knowledge of the lis pendens, or that the property in any way was involved in litigation, the plaintiff paid the purchase price and took a deed from Wood, believing that he had a good title and that the property in every way was clear and free of all incumbrances, and that she would not have purchased the property had she known of the pending action or that there was any question as to Wood’s title or right to sell and convey the property free and clear of all liens and incumbrances.

Lee, the president of the company, testified that the plaintiff, her husband, and Wood came to his office, and that Wood stated that the Tolottis were the persons who had agreed to buy the property, and asked that the witness make a deed; that the plaintiff told the witness to make “the papers right,” and that the witness replied that he would try to do so, and stated that there was some discrepancy in the description, and that he would go to the courthouse and check it up on the ownership plat book; that he went to the courthouse, got the description, was gone about 15 minutes, and when he returned he stated what the correct description was, and that, upon being asked whether there was a mortgage against the property, he stated that there was a mortgage, but that Wood had paid it off. He further testified that he had such knowledge, not from the records, but from the fact that the transaction of payment was had in his office; that he told the plaintiff “this land had been involved in a lawsuit and has been tried in the district court and Sheya (Wood’s grantor) has been given a ‘verdict; it is not clear in my mind whether I said the case would be appealed or not, but I did tell them that the case had been decided in favor of Sheya; then Wood spoke up, and said, ‘Yes;’ ” and that Wood further stated that, after *389 the case was decided, he finished paying’ the contract and took a deed to the property from Sheya. Lee further testified that the plaintiff at no time had asked him to look up- the record or to give an opinion as to the title, and that he at no time was employed, and received no compensation for such purpose. His son testified that his father told Wood that there was some kind of a suit on the property, and that Wood became frightened owing to the fact that he had purchased property that had a cloud on the title; that Wood later came in the office with the Tolottis and said that they were the persons he had referred to and wanted a deed made out; that “I am not sure whether father started to prepare the deed or went to the courthouse first; father told them there had been some lawsuit and it had been decided in favor of the defendants [one of them Wood’s grantor], and that he didn’t think it was of enough consequence for anything to come out of it; he really didn’t think he had a good enough case to appeal; if he had, don’t suppose he would have let it go on;” and that the Tolottis at no time during the conversation had asked his father to examine the title.

However, the plaintiff, her husband, and Wood testified that Lee went to the courthouse, not to check up the description, but at the instance and request of plaintiff to examine the records and see whether Wood had a good title and right to sell and convey the property free and clear of all incum-grances, and that Lee returned and said that Wood was the owner of the property and had a good title and right to convey free and clear of all liens and incumbrances, that there was not anything against it, and that he stated nothing as to any lis pendens on record, or as to any pending suit, or that the property was or had been in litigation. Thus as to such matters the evidence is in direct conflict.

The court, after stating the issues as presented by the pleadings, charged:

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Related

Holmes Development, LLC v. Cook
2002 UT 38 (Utah Supreme Court, 2002)
Tolotti v. Equitable Real Estate & Investment Co.
260 P. 419 (Utah Supreme Court, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 P. 415, 70 Utah 385, 1927 Utah LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tolotti-v-equitable-real-estate-and-investment-co-utah-1927.