Legal Research AI

LeFeber v. Johnson

Court: Montana Supreme Court
Date filed: 2009-05-27
Citations: 2009 MT 188, 209 P.3d 254, 351 Mont. 75
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14 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                                                                                              May 27 2009


                                           DA 08-0374

                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

                                          2009 MT 188



JAMES A. LeFEBER,

              Petitioner and Appellant,

         v.

MAGGIE R. JOHNSON, a/k/a MARGARET ROSE JOHNSON,

              Respondent, Appellee, and Cross-Appellant.




APPEAL FROM:            District Court of the Twenty-First Judicial District,
                        In and For the County of Ravalli, Cause No. DV 05-454
                        Honorable James A. Haynes, Presiding Judge



COUNSEL OF RECORD:

                For Appellant:

                        Torrance L. Coburn and Raymond P. Tipp, Tipp & Buley, Missoula,
                        Montana

                For Appellee:

                        Ronald A. Thuesen and P. Mars Scott, P. Mars Scott Law Offices, Missoula,
                        Montana



                                                     Submitted on Briefs: April 22, 2009

                                                                Decided: May 27, 2009


Filed:

                        __________________________________________
                                          Clerk
Justice Brian Morris delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1    James A. LeFeber (LeFeber) appeals the judgment and order of the Twenty-first

Judicial District Court, Ravalli County. The District Court applied equitable principles to

settle the unmarried couple’s interests in real property. Margaret Rose Johnson (Johnson)

cross-appeals.

¶2    We review the following issues on appeal:

¶3    Did the District Court properly apply equitable doctrines to the division of property

held by LeFeber and Johnson?

¶4    Did the District Court correctly determine that LeFeber and Johnson owned the St.

Joseph property as tenants in common?

¶5    Did the District Court correctly partition the St. Joseph property by granting LeFeber

and Johnson each an undivided one-half interest in the property?

                 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶6    LeFeber and Johnson dispute the ownership of property located at 297 St. Joseph

Lane (St. Joseph property) in Stevensville, Montana. LeFeber and Johnson began living

together in October of 1984 in Sandpoint, Idaho. LeFeber and Johnson maintained an

intimate and exclusive relationship for over twenty years until their relationship ended in

2005. Neither party asserts common-law marriage. LeFeber and Johnson moved to

Richland, Washington, in 1987, and to Walla Walla, Washington, in 1991. They jointly

rented houses in each location, but did not purchase a house.



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¶7     LeFeber and Johnson initialed a Full Durable Power of Attorney (POA) on December

1, 1991. LeFeber drafted the POA using a form that he had received from a friend. The

POA provided that Johnson, as attorney-in-fact for LeFeber in his stead, could do any and all

acts that he could do if personally present. The POA enumerated several of Johnson’s

powers, including the right to act as a personal nominee, to manage real estate, and to

manage hydrocarbon interests. The POA provided that the enumeration of powers did not

limit or reduce Johnson’s powers as attorney-in-fact. The POA did not specifically address

future acquired, assigned, or conveyed property. The POA provided that LeFeber could

revoke the POA by a writing to Johnson. The POA also provided that by signing the

document Johnson accepted the attorney-in-fact appointment and agreed to return any and all

possessions to LeFeber’s name if he revoked Johnson’s powers.

¶8     LeFeber conveyed and assigned to Johnson interests in several of his hydrocarbon/oil

and gas properties four days after he signed the POA. Johnson understood that she took title

of the properties pursuant to the POA. The oil and gas companies then issued production

checks to Johnson in her name. Johnson deposited the checks in a joint bank account

accessible to both parties. Interest from the account provided Johnson with her spending

money. Johnson later would transfer to LeFeber the principal amounts that the companies

paid to her. Johnson also would issue, under the advice of LeFeber’s accountant, a federal

tax form 1099 to LeFeber at the end of the year for the miscellaneous income paid by the oil

and gas companies. The parties followed this procedure until they separated in September of

2005. Johnson then reconveyed and reassigned the hydrocarbon properties to LeFeber as she
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understood the POA required her to do because LeFeber owned the properties outright

before the 1991 assignment to Johnson.

¶9    LeFeber had the POA witnessed in Montana in the fall of 1994 after the IRS

questioned pass-throughs of oil and gas interests from Johnson to LeFeber. LeFeber’s

accountant believed that the IRS more likely would accept as legitimate a witnessed POA.

LeFeber never filed the POA in the public record. LeFeber testified that he prepared the

POA primarily to boost Johnson’s self-esteem by providing her with her own source of

income.

¶10   LeFeber and Johnson began to search for a house to buy in 1992. They looked in

Washington, Idaho, and Montana. LeFeber did not particularly want to move to Montana,

but he told Johnson that she could pick out the house that she wanted and he would “buy her

a home.” LeFeber testified that he meant that he would provide the funds for the purchase.

Johnson understood LeFeber to mean that he would gift and convey to her a house and real

property.

¶11   Johnson found the house that she wanted in the summer of 1994 in Stevensville,

Montana. LeFeber and Johnson both signed the Final Agreement to Buy and Purchase the

St. Joseph property for a purchase price of $111,750. The agreement contemplated that the

“TITLE HOLDER MAY BE FINALIZED IN TRUST, CORPORATION, TRUSTEE OR

NOMINEE, CLOSING AGENT WILL BE NOTIFIED PRIOR TO CLOSING.” The

District Court determined that “no other intention is or was expressed.”



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¶12    The title company issued its title insurance policy upon the St. Joseph property in the

name of “MAGGIE JOHNSON, a single woman as nominee.” The Warranty Deed also

granted the St. Joseph property to “Maggie R. Johnson, a single woman as nominee.”

LeFeber had inserted the “single woman as nominee” language before the closing. Johnson

testified that LeFeber had inserted the “as nominee” language without her knowledge.

Johnson testified that she asked LeFeber several times after the closing about the meaning of

the language. LeFeber refused to explain his interpretation of the words “as nominee.”

LeFeber also would not agree to change the deed to eliminate the words “as nominee.”

LeFeber testified that he interpreted the terms “nominee” and “agent” as “essentially one and

the same.” The District Court found that Johnson never had agreed to act as LeFeber’s

nominee related to the property.

¶13    LeFeber paid for the purchase and all the costs of purchase of the St. Joseph property

by a lump sum with a cashier’s check. The check identified Johnson as the purchaser of the

property. Neither LeFeber nor Johnson ever filed a Gift Tax Return with the IRS.

¶14    LeFeber and Johnson moved into the newly constructed house on the St. Joseph

property. The house had an unfinished basement and very little landscaping. Johnson

helped with many of the improvements to the house, including finishing the basement,

building a deck and a roof on the deck, installing tile flooring, constructing a greenhouse,

installing a stove pipe outside and on the roof, and fencing the yard. Johnson also purchased

and laid railroad ties, installed a fountain and a pond, and installed and maintained almost all

of the landscaping on the property. Johnson planted approximately 50 trees, 200 shrubs, and
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over 1,000 perennial bulbs and plants. The District Court determined that Johnson’s efforts

had increased the value of the St. Joseph property. A September 2005 Competitive Market

Analysis estimated the sale price of the St. Joseph property as between $214,900 and

$219,900.

¶15    LeFeber paid all of the property taxes on the St. Joseph property from 1994 to 2006.

LeFeber insisted that Johnson apply for property tax assistance from 1998 to 2005 pursuant

to § 15-6-134, MCA. LeFeber obtained the applications from Ravalli County. LeFeber then

prepared the applications and had Johnson sign them. LeFeber signed Johnson’s name on

the application on at least one occasion. Each signed application represented that Johnson

was the sole legal owner of the St. Joseph property. Johnson’s acceptance for property tax

assistance lowered the property taxes considerably. LeFeber claimed real estate deductions

of $1,487 and $1,396 in 2004 and 2005, despite the fact that the property tax bills for those

years were $698 and $694 respectively. LeFeber signed a letter to Johnson on December 28,

1999, stating that “[Johnson] has rights to stay at 297 St. Joseph Lane.” The letter followed

one of the couple’s separations.

¶16    LeFeber revoked the POA in 2005 after the relationship ended. Johnson refused

LeFeber’s request that she sign a quitclaim deed for the St. Joseph property because she

believed that LeFeber had gifted her the property. LeFeber filed a petition for a constructive

trust pursuant to § 72-33-219, MCA. LeFeber requested that the court declare a constructive

trust in favor of LeFeber and order Johnson to convey the St. Joseph property to LeFeber.



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Johnson filed a verified response alleging, among other defenses, failure of constructive trust

and completed gift.

¶17    The District Court denied LeFeber’s claims for a constructive trust and resulting trust.

The court also denied Johnson’s claim that LeFeber had gifted her the entire St. Joseph

property. The court determined that LeFeber and Johnson each had an equitable right as

tenants in common to the St. Joseph property and ordered the deed to the property amended

accordingly. The court ordered the St. Joseph property partitioned by sale and granted each

party an undivided one-half interest as tenants in common. LeFeber appeals and Johnson

cross-appeals.

                                 STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶18    We review a district court’s findings of fact in an equitable action to determine

whether the findings are clearly erroneous. In re Estate of McDermott, 2002 MT 164, ¶ 22,

310 Mont. 435, 51 P.3d 486 (citing § 3-2-204(5), MCA); see also M. R. Civ. P. 52(a). A

finding is clearly erroneous if it is not supported by substantial credible evidence, if the trial

court misapprehended the effect of the evidence, or if our review of the record convinces us

that a mistake has been committed. In re McDermott, ¶ 22. Substantial credible evidence is

that which a reasonable mind could accept as adequate to support a conclusion. We may

consider evidence to be substantial even if it is “inherently weak and conflicting.” Baltrusch

v. Baltrusch, 2003 MT 357, ¶ 32, 319 Mont. 23, 83 P.3d 256.

¶19    We do not consider whether evidence would support findings different from those

made by the District Court. In re Estate of Bradshaw, 2001 MT 92, ¶ 11, 305 Mont. 178, 24
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P.3d 211. We confine our review to the determination of whether substantial credible

evidence supports the findings actually made by the District Court. In re Bradshaw, ¶ 11.

We review a district court’s conclusions of law to determine whether those conclusions are

correct. In re McDermott, ¶ 22.

                                      DISCUSSION

¶20    Did the District Court properly apply equitable doctrines to the division of property

held by LeFeber and Johnson?

¶21    The District Court concluded that equity should govern the division of the St. Joseph

property as the unique facts of the case were not unlike a marital estate. We recently

approved a district court’s application of equitable doctrines in dividing the property of

unmarried cohabitants in Anderson v. Woodward, 2009 MT 144, 350 Mont. 343, ___ P.3d

___. We determined that the district court correctly had applied equitable principles to

distribute two real estate properties that the parties had accumulated during their eight-year

relationship. Anderson, ¶ 16. The district court had the power to make compensatory

adjustments between the respective parties “according to the ordinary principles of equity.”

Anderson, ¶ 16.

¶22    An unmarried couple likewise disputed the distribution of property that they had

acquired during their relationship in Flood v. Kalinyaprak, 2004 MT 15, ¶¶ 5, 10, 15, 319

Mont. 280, 84 P.3d 27. Flood instituted a partition action after the relationship had ended

and brought additional claims, including unjust enrichment and constructive trust. Flood,

¶ 11. The district court correctly applied equitable doctrines in dividing the assets of the
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unmarried couple. Flood, ¶¶ 17, 21. We described the approach used to divide the property

as being “similar to that used to divide a marital estate in a dissolution action.” Flood, ¶ 20.

We also noted that the court “has great flexibility in fashioning appropriate relief for the

parties.” Flood, ¶ 17.

¶23    LeFeber and Johnson acquired the St. Joseph property during their lengthy

relationship as unmarried cohabitants. The District Court properly used equitable doctrines

to divide the St. Joseph property. Anderson, ¶ 16; Flood, ¶¶ 17, 21. The District Court had

“great flexibility” in fashioning appropriate relief for LeFeber and Johnson using the

ordinary principles of equity. Anderson, ¶ 16; Flood, ¶ 17.

¶24    Did the District Court correctly determine that LeFeber and Johnson owned the St.

Joseph property as tenants in common?

¶25    LeFeber argues that the District Court should have awarded him sole ownership of the

St. Joseph property. LeFeber contends that either a constructive or a resulting trust arose as a

matter of law from the 1994 deeded conveyance to Johnson “a single woman as nominee.”

LeFeber claims that allowing Johnson to retain an ownership interest in the property will

cause Johnson to be unjustly enriched. Johnson responds that the District Court should have

awarded her sole ownership of the St. Joseph property. Johnson argues that LeFeber had

gifted her the St. Joseph property in its entirety.

¶26    A constructive trust arises when an equitable duty requires a person holding title to

property to convey it to another on the ground that the person holding title would be unjustly

enriched if the person were permitted to retain it. Monroe v. Marsden, 2009 MT 137, ¶ 28,
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350 Mont. 327, ___ P.3d ___ (citing § 72-33-219, MCA). Establishment of a constructive

trust depends only upon a showing that the title holder would be unjustly enriched if

permitted to retain title. Monroe, ¶ 28 (citing In re Marriage of Moss, 1999 MT 62, ¶ 29,

299 Mont. 500, 977 P.2d 322). The doctrine of unjust enrichment represents an equitable

means of preventing one party from benefitting from his or her wrongful acts and requires a

showing of misconduct or fault to recover. Albinger v. Harris, 2002 MT 118, ¶ 21, 310

Mont. 27, 48 P.3d 711.

¶27    The party alleging the existence of any trust must establish the trust’s validity “by

evidence that is clear, convincing and practically free from doubt.” Hilliard v. Hilliard, 255

Mont. 487, 492, 844 P.2d 54, 57 (1992). The District Court determined that LeFeber had

failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the 1994 deed created a trust in his

favor. The District Court pointed to “the contradictory ownership intentions” manifested by

LeFeber. LeFeber vaguely had stated to Johnson before the 1994 purchase that “I’ll buy you

a home.” LeFeber also repeatedly provided vague and misleading explanations to Johnson

regarding his use of the words “as nominee” in the 1994 deed. The District Court

determined that although the 1991 power of attorney authorized Johnson to act as LeFeber’s

nominee, neither party had discussed or agreed that Johnson was acting as LeFeber’s

nominee related to the purchase of the St. Joseph property in 1994.

¶28    The District Court determined that after 1994, LeFeber “overtly engaged in act[s]

wholly inconsistent with [Johnson’s] role as an agent or nominee holding bare legal title to

the St. Joseph property.” LeFeber had represented to the Montana Department of Revenue
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“for seven years running” that Johnson was the sole legal owner of the property. LeFeber

had assured Johnson in his 1999 letter that she had “rights” to the property. LeFeber had

testified that he was a certified public accountant, currently considered himself a financier,

and formerly had served as chief accountant of the Elgin National Watch Company. The

court concluded that LeFeber had been “well aware of the difference between a right and a

privilege.”

¶29    The District Court further concluded that LeFeber had failed to prove unjust

enrichment by showing any misconduct or fault on Johnson’s part. The District Court noted

that the only allegedly wrongful act on Johnson’s part was her failure to sign the Quitclaim

deed to the St. Joseph property entirely to LeFeber. Johnson had committed no wrongful act

in refusing to quitclaim deed the property entirely over to LeFeber, however, due to

LeFeber’s failure to prove that a trust existed solely in his favor. The District Court

emphasized Johnson’s extensive labor over the course of eleven years to improve the

property as additional evidence that Johnson would not be unjustly enriched by receiving a

share of the property.

¶30    Conversely, the District Court determined that Johnson had failed to present sufficient

evidence to establish that LeFeber gifted the entirety of the property to her in 1994. LeFeber

had inserted the words “as nominee” into the deed rather than placing the deed solely into

Johnson’s name. LeFeber had refused to answer Johnson’s questions about the “as nominee”

language. Johnson should have been aware that through the “as nominee” language LeFeber



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had placed some limitation on her ownership interest. This limitation represented less than a

full donative intent on LeFeber’s part regarding Johnson’s sole ownership of the property.

¶31    The District Court concluded that clear and convincing evidence did establish,

however, that LeFeber had gifted to Johnson an undivided interest in the property. The

District Court pointed to LeFeber’s statement that he would buy Johnson a home, the fact

that he had refused to clarify any limitations he placed on the words “as nominee,” and his

statement to Johnson that she had “rights” to the property. The court also emphasized the

fact that LeFeber effectively had “represented to the rest of the world that [Johnson] was the

sole legal and equitable owner” of the St. Joseph property. The District Court concluded that

LeFeber’s actions were most consistent with an objective view that he had placed the words

“Maggie R. Johnson, a single woman” on the deed to assure Johnson that she had rights in

the property, and that he had included the words “as nominee” in the deed to reserve some

rights to himself.

¶32    The District Court entered detailed and specific findings regarding LeFeber’s and

Johnson’s actions as they related to the St. Joseph property. The court correctly applied

equitable principles based on those findings. Anderson, ¶ 16; Flood, ¶¶ 17, 21. Substantial

credible evidence supports the District Court’s determination that neither LeFeber nor

Johnson owned the St. Joseph property in its entirety. In re McDermott, ¶ 22. The District

Court correctly determined that LeFeber and Johnson each had an equitable right as tenants

in common to the St. Joseph property.



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¶33    Did the District Court correctly partition the St. Joseph property by granting LeFeber

and Johnson each an undivided one-half interest in the property?

¶34    LeFeber argues that the law of partition and the relevant evidence entitle Johnson to

“at best, a minimal interest in the property.” LeFeber contends that a clear preponderance of

the evidence establishes that he “contributed vastly more to the value of the property,

arguably over 90 percent.” LeFeber points to his payment of the entire purchase price of the

St. Joseph property, his payment of the monetary costs of improving the property, and his

payment of all the property taxes associated with the property.

¶35    The district court possesses “great flexibility” in fashioning appropriate relief for the

parties in a partition action. Anderson, ¶ 16; Flood, ¶ 17. The district court has the power to

make compensatory adjustments between the respective parties according to the ordinary

principles of equity. Anderson, ¶ 16; Flood, ¶ 21 (citing § 70-29-209(2), MCA). Partition

actions should be fashioned to cause the least degree of harm to the cotenants and to confer

no unfair advantage on any one cotenant. Anderson, ¶ 16; Flood, ¶ 21.

¶36    A rebuttable presumption exists that joint tenants own equal shares of the property.

Anderson, ¶ 17; Flood, ¶ 28; Rausch v. Hogan, 2001 MT 123, ¶ 24, 305 Mont. 382, 28 P.3d

460 (citing Matter of Estate of Dern Family Trust, 279 Mont. 138, 151-52, 928 P.2d 123,

131 (1996). The District Court considered extensive evidence and testimony from LeFeber

and Johnson regarding the parties’ relationship, their conduct over the years, their labor

toward improving the property, payment of taxes, correspondence between the parties, and

LeFeber’s representations to governmental agencies and other third parties. See Anderson,
                                              13
¶ 25; Flood, ¶¶ 23-28. The District Court rejected LeFeber’s contribution argument as

LeFeber had “delivered a portion of his contribution to [Johnson] as a gift.”

¶37    The District Court concluded that the evidence clearly established that LeFeber and

Johnson owned the St. Joseph property equally. The District Court properly considered “all

relevant evidence” in considering whether LeFeber had gifted a portion of the property to

Johnson. Flood, ¶ 23. Our review of the record convinces us that substantial credible

evidence supports the District Court’s partition of the property. We do not believe that the

District Court misapprehended the effect of the evidence. In re McDermott, ¶ 22. The

District Court fashioned its partition of the St. Joseph property “to cause the least degree of

harm to the cotenants and to confer no unfair advantage on any one cotenant.” Flood, ¶ 21.

The District Court properly exercised its power to make compensatory adjustments and

fashion appropriate relief for LeFeber and Johnson according to the ordinary principles of

equity. Anderson, ¶ 16; Flood, ¶¶ 17, 21; § 70-29-209(2), MCA.

¶38    Affirmed.


                                           /S/ BRIAN MORRIS



We Concur:


/S/ MIKE McGRATH
/S/ W. WILLIAM LEAPHART
/S/ PATRICIA COTTER
/S/ JIM RICE


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