April 9 2013
DA 12-0117
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2013 MT 89
MARY MCCULLEY,
Plaintiff and Appellant,
v.
AMERICAN LAND TITLE COMPANY
and U.S. BANK OF MONTANA,
Defendants and Appellees.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Eighteenth Judicial District,
In and For the County of Gallatin, Cause No. DV-09-562C
Honorable John C. Brown, Presiding Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
Mary McCulley (Self-Represented), Bozeman, Montana
For Appellee American Land Title Company:
Steven Reida, Alex Roots, Landoe, Brown, Planalp & Reida, P.C.,
Bozeman, Montana
For Appellee U.S. Bank of Montana:
Mark C. Sherer, Mackoff Kellogg Law Firm, Dickinson, North Dakota
Submitted on Briefs: January 31, 2013
Decided: April 9, 2013
Filed:
__________________________________________
Clerk
Justice Patricia O. Cotter delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 In 2006, Mary McCulley purchased a condominium (Condo) in downtown
Bozeman, Montana, for $395,000. She sought a residential loan from Heritage Bank,
predecessor to defendant U.S. Bank of Montana (hereinafter U.S. Bank or the Bank) for
$300,000. American Land Title Company (ALTC) provided a Commitment for Title
Insurance. McCulley signed a Promissory Note (Note) and signed a Deed of Trust
(Deed) as collateral. The Deed indicated that the Condo was for “residential purposes
only.” Subsequently, however, and purportedly without McCulley’s knowledge, ALTC
changed the designated use of the Condo in the Deed from residential to commercial.
¶2 After closing in June 2006, McCulley asserts she discovered the Bank had issued
her an 18-month, $300,000 commercial property loan rather than the 30-year residential
property loan for which she applied. When she was unable to obtain long-term
refinancing on the property, McCulley signed a Warranty Deed transferring ownership of
the Condo to the Central Asia Institute. She used the proceeds to pay off the loan. She
then sued ALTC and U.S. Bank for negligence, breach of contract, fraud, slander of title,
intentional infliction of emotional distress, and malice. All parties filed motions for
summary judgment. The District Court granted ALTC’s and U.S. Bank’s motions for
summary judgment and denied McCulley’s. McCulley appeals. We affirm in part and
reverse and remand in part.
ISSUE
¶3 A restatement of the issue on appeal is:
2
¶4 Did the District Court err in granting summary judgment to American Land Title
Company and U.S. Bank?
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶5 In May 2006, Mary McCulley agreed to purchase a condominium on East Main
Street in downtown Bozeman, Montana. The Condo was located on the top floor of a
commercial building and was priced at $395,000. McCulley approached Heritage Bank
(later purchased by U.S. Bank) on May 25, 2006, and applied for a 30-year (360 month)
residential loan for $300,000, later revised to $200,000. On that same day, Heritage
Bank generated a Federal Truth-In-Lending Disclosure Statement indicating the
estimated monthly payment for the first 60 months, the estimated payment for the next
299 months, and the final payment due on July 1, 2036. It also issued a Good Faith
Estimate that expressly referenced 360 payments for McCulley’s proposed loan.
¶6 On the following day, the Bank ostensibly prepared an informational document
(“the letter”) utilizing a format typically used for internal interoffice correspondence or
documentation. There was no salutation, introductory paragraph, or signature line. The
document favorably analyzed McCulley’s credit-worthiness for a $300,000 loan, but
noted that while the Condo was “residential,” the lot upon which it was built was zoned
commercial B2. The Bank stated in the document that such commercial zoning
precluded “the use of standard secondary market sources for financing a residential
condominium.” Consequently, the Bank categorized the proposed loan as an 18-month
“consumer bridge” loan. The Bank professes this “letter” was sent to McCulley at the
time it was generated and that she agreed to the new terms, including a loan maturity date
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of December 16, 2007. McCulley strongly denies ever receiving this document or
agreeing to an 18-month finance term.
¶7 The loan closing was conducted less than three weeks later, on June 16, 2006. The
Promissory Note and the Disclosure Statement signed by McCulley at closing stated that
the $300,000 loan matured on December 16, 2007. Additionally, the Deed of Trust
signed by McCulley at closing indicated that the Condo was to be used for residential
purposes only. It is undisputed, however, that without McCulley’s knowledge, ALTC
subsequently changed the Deed prior to recording it to reflect that the Condo was to be
used for commercial purposes only.
¶8 McCulley made monthly payments to the Bank throughout 2006 and 2007. She
claims she thought she was making normal mortgage payments. The Bank claims she
was making the required monthly interest payments. In the fall of 2007, McCulley
received notice that a balloon payment on her 18-month loan was due in December 2007.
McCulley claims not to have known until that time that she did not have the 30-year
residential mortgage for which she had applied. While trying to resolve the issue with the
Bank, McCulley renegotiated the loan to extend the maturity date to June 16, 2008. She
did so again in June 2008, extending the maturity date to October 16, 2008. Ultimately,
unable to find suitable long-term residential financing, McCulley signed a Warranty Deed
transferring the Condo to the Central Asia Institute in June 2009, and paid off the note.
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¶9 In June 2009, McCulley, represented by counsel,1 filed her first complaint against
ALTC and U.S. Bank. She filed and served a first amended complaint in October 2009.
She claimed the defendants: (1) were negligent in their loan dealing with her; (2)
breached the executed contracts; (3) committed fraud by misrepresenting the nature of the
loan; (4) slandered the title on the property by recording a Deed showing the Condo was
commercial property when she believed she had purchased residential property; and (5)
intentionally inflicted emotional distress upon her. She moved to amend the complaint
again in October 2010 to correct alleged errors former counsel had made in the first
amended complaint and to add a claim for actual malice. This motion was granted on
November 16, 2010.
¶10 McCulley moved for summary judgment. ALTC and the Bank also filed motions
for summary judgment. The District Court conducted a summary judgment hearing on
September 9, 2011. On January 12, 2012, the District Court issued its Order denying
McCulley’s motion for summary judgment and granting ALTC’s and U.S. Bank’s
motions. It subsequently entered judgment in favor of U.S. Bank and ALTC. McCulley
filed a timely appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶11 We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the
same criteria as the district court. A district court properly grants summary judgment
only when no genuine issues of material fact exist and the moving party is entitled to
1
Counsel for McCulley withdrew in February 2010. McCulley represented herself for the
duration of the proceeding.
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judgment as a matter of law. Siebken v. Voderberg, 2012 MT 291, ¶ 16, 367 Mont. 344,
291 P.3d 572. If, however, genuine issues of material fact do exist in a case, it is not the
function of the district court to enter summary judgment; in fact, summary judgment is
precluded. Schmidt v. Washington Contrs. Group, Inc., 1998 MT 194, ¶ 26, 290 Mont.
276, 964 P.2d 34.
DISCUSSION
¶12 Did the District Court err in granting summary judgment to American Land Title
Company and U.S. Bank?
¶13 McCulley appeals the District Court’s ruling in favor of the Bank as it applies to
her claims that the Bank breached its contract and the covenant of good faith and fair
dealing, acted negligently, and committed fraud. She appeals the District Court’s ruling
in favor of ALTC as it applies to her claim that ALTC acted negligently and committed
fraud. She asserts the District Court erred in granting summary judgment to ALTC and
the Bank because genuine issues of material fact exist as to each of these claims. We
affirm the District Court’s rulings as to McCulley’s claims of breach of contract and
negligence against the Bank and her claims of negligence and fraud against ALTC. We
reverse the court’s ruling vis-à-vis McCulley’s claim that the Bank committed fraud in its
dealings with her.
Claims Against ALTC
¶14 We first address the court’s rulings pertaining to ALTC. It is undisputed that after
McCulley signed the original Deed stating the Condo could be used for residential
purposes only, ALTC changed the Deed to reflect that the Condo was to be used for
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commercial purposes only. ALTC then recorded the revised Deed. McCulley argued
that this change, unbeknownst to her, later caused her to be unable to obtain refinancing
through a conventional long-term residential loan. However, it is also undisputed that the
Bank and McCulley executed two subsequent modifications of the Deed of Trust, both of
which expressly reflected in the legal description of the property that the Condo was to be
used for residential purposes only.
¶15 The District Court determined that the legal description in the Deed of Trust and
any subsequent changes thereto did not diminish McCulley’s legal title to the Condo nor
did it change the use of the property or the zoning classification of the property. Noting
that the property on which the Condo was built was zoned commercial before McCulley
purchased the Condo, the court concluded that the change to the original Deed of Trust
did not prevent McCulley from obtaining conventional financing; rather, the property’s
zoning classification did. As such, the revised legal description was not the cause of her
inability to refinance her loan. The court further concluded that the Condo By-Laws
would control the use of the Condo, not the Deed of Trust. And lastly, the District Court
ruled that terms of the Promissory Note dictated whether the loan was residential,
commercial or construction, and McCulley had made no allegation that ALTC was
involved in the negotiation or creation of the Promissory Note.
¶16 Premised on the foregoing findings, the District Court determined that McCulley
failed to establish that ALTC’s change to the Deed proximately caused McCulley’s
damages. Consequently, her negligence claim must fail. As for her fraud claim against
ALTC, the District Court concluded there was no evidence to indicate that ALTC
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intended to misrepresent the legal description of the property, which is one of the nine
mandatory elements of fraud; therefore, McCulley was unable to establish fraud. For
these reasons, the District Court granted ALTC’s motion for summary judgment.
¶17 As noted by the District Court, while a Deed of Trust contains a legal description
of property subject to transfer, such description does not alter the use, nature, or zoning of
the property. Zoning in the City of Bozeman and in Gallatin County is controlled by
specific ordinances and regulations. Moreover, the Deed was subsequently revised—
twice—to correctly reflect the use of the Condo as residential. Therefore, the original
Deed was no longer controlling. Under these circumstances, McCulley failed to establish
that ALTC’s change to the original Deed breached a duty owed to her or that such breach
caused her injuries warranting damages. Consequently, the District Court did not err in
granting summary judgment to ALTC on this issue.
¶18 Addressing McCulley’s claim on appeal that ALTC committed fraud when it
revised the original Deed, we note that McCulley presents no legal argument or authority
to support her contention. McCulley’s entire argument before this Court vis-à-vis her
claim that ALTC committed fraud when it altered the original Deed is as follows:
The record is clear as to ALTC’s admission with regard to altering
the Deed of Trust after the execution and without having the relevant
parties initial such change. Fraud seems clear. It should be an issue
determined by a jury, not Judge Brown, as to if this change is a “scrivener’s
error” or if it is fraud as well as to what extent [McCulley] was damaged by
the same.
¶19 To establish a prima facie claim for fraud, a party asserting the claim must set
forth specific facts to satisfy the nine mandatory elements of actual fraud. See In re
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Estate of Kindsfather, 2005 MT 51, ¶ 17, 326 Mont. 192, 108 P.3d 487. Actual fraud is a
question of fact and a “mere suspicion of fraud” is insufficient. Franks, ¶ 18. While
certainly in many cases a jury sits in the role as “fact-finder,” in many cases, as in this
one, the trial judge assumes this role. H-D Irrigating, Inc. v. Kimble Props., Inc., 2000
MT 212, ¶ 55, 301 Mont. 34, 8 P.3d 95. McCulley failed to set forth the necessary facts
to establish the nine elements before the District Court and has not even attempted to
establish the elements on appeal. McCulley’s conclusory statement that “[f]raud seems
clear” is insufficient to sustain her claim.
¶20 As we have stated on numerous occasions, under M. R. App. P. 23 we are not
obligated to develop arguments on behalf of parties to an appeal, nor are we to guess a
party’s precise position, or develop legal analysis that may lend support to his position.
Botz v. Bridger Canyon Planning & Zoning Comm’n, 2012 MT 262, ¶ 46, 367 Mont. 47,
289 P.3d 180 (citing In re Estate of Bayers, 1999 MT 154, ¶ 19, 295 Mont. 89, 983 P.2d
339). Because McCulley has failed to develop any legal argument, authority or analysis
for her claim of fraud, we do not address the argument further. We therefore affirm the
District Court order of summary judgment in favor of ALTC on the issue of fraud.
Claims Against U.S. Bank
¶21 We now turn to McCulley’s various claims against U.S. Bank. McCulley alleges
the Bank engaged in negligence, fraud, breach of contract, breach of the covenant of
good faith and fair dealing, and infliction of emotional distress. To a significant extent,
McCulley attempts throughout her arguments to blame the Bank for the actions of ALTC.
The District Court rejected this proposition, as do we. McCulley appeals only the District
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Court’s rulings pertaining to breach of contract and the covenant of good faith and fair
dealing, negligence, and fraud. We address her claims against the Bank in turn.
¶22 Turning first to McCulley’s allegation of breach of contract, McCulley’s sole
argument in her Motion for Summary Judgment was that defendants ALTC and the Bank
breached the contracts “by failing to abide by the terms asserted therein, and rendered the
contract void by substantial alterations of the deed.” She opined that ALTC and the Bank
had “significantly altered” enforceable contracts rendering them unusable. The District
Court concluded that the Bank had “nothing to do with ALTC’s alteration of the usage
restriction change on the Deed of Trust.” As a result, the District Court ruled that
“[b]ecause US Bank did not alter the usage restriction on the Deed of Trust, US Bank did
not breach its contract with McCulley.” We agree with the District Court. Further, we
observe that the actual loan contracts were not breached. McCulley signed multiple
documents at the closing, comprised of close to 100 pages of fine print. In the three
places in the documents where the term of the loan was actually set forth, a maturity date
of “12-16-07” is reflected. Therefore, notwithstanding the potential viability of other
claims against the Bank, the Bank cannot be said to have breached the written contracts.
¶23 McCulley also argues on appeal that the Bank breached “the implied covenant of
good faith and fair dealing as well as its duty of ‘honesty in fact and the observance of
reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing in the trade.’ ” We reject this argument
because it was not presented in the District Court. While McCulley mentioned “implied
good faith and fair dealing” in passing, her argument in the District Court focused on her
contention that the Bank participated with ALTC in revising the Deed of Trust, a theory
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for which there is no factual support whatsoever. This Court generally refuses to address
a changed legal theory on appeal because it would be “fundamentally unfair to fault the
trial court for failing to rule correctly on an issue it was never given the opportunity to
consider.” Mt. W. Bank, N.A. v. Glacier Kitchens, Inc., 2012 MT 132, ¶ 13, 365 Mont.
276, 281 P.3d 600. As the District Court correctly ruled based upon the legal theory
presented by McCulley, we affirm the court on the issue of the Bank’s breach of contract.
¶24 As to McCulley’s claim of negligence against the Bank, McCulley argued to the
District Court that the defendants owed her a duty of care when preparing her loan
documents and in assuring the accuracy of the documents, and that both ALTC and the
Bank breached their duty by failing to assure the accuracy of the documents and in
performing their duties in good faith. Again, as noted by the District Court, the Bank
owed a duty to draw up the loan documents but there was no evidence that the Bank had
anything to do with the alteration of the Deed of Trust. The District Court therefore held
that McCulley’s negligence claim against the Bank failed.
¶25 On appeal, McCulley argues that a fiduciary duty arose between her and the Bank
when the Bank “became an advisor to [her] by substituting a short-term . . . loan for the
mortgage for which she applied.” She claims the Bank “owed her a fiduciary duty to
disclose to her the full terms of the loan that it unilaterally designed to get her business
and the short-term in which she would need to pay off the total principal.” She further
asserts that the Bank breached its fiduciary duty in providing her with a loan “designed
for her to fail in the first place.”
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¶26 McCulley did not argue in the summary judgment proceedings that the Bank
became an “advisor” to her and that this caused a fiduciary duty to arise. For the reason
explained above, we decline to address this legal theory for the first time on appeal. Mt.
W. Bank, ¶ 13. We therefore affirm the District Court’s ruling that there existed no
genuine issues of material fact as to McCulley’s claim that the Bank was negligent in its
dealings with her.
¶27 Finally, we address McCulley’s claim that the Bank committed fraud by engaging
in “bait and switch” tactics to change her approved 30-year residential mortgage to an
18-month balloon construction loan without her knowledge. She argued to the District
Court that the defendants initially represented to her that she was getting a residential
loan on a residential property. She further asserted that ALTC and the Bank “knowingly
made false representation as to the use and description of the property,” and that the Bank
referred to the loan “as a tradition [sic] mortgage in every document received by them.”
¶28 The District Court found that McCulley failed to state facts supporting each of the
nine elements of fraud. It reasoned that there was no admissible evidence in the record to
support a fraud claim against the Bank in that the Bank made no changes to the legal
description or use description of the Condo in the Deed of Trust.
¶29 On appeal, the Bank argues that McCulley predicates her fraud claim on her belief
that the Bank altered the Deed of Trust after she signed it, and because it did not,
McCulley’s claim fails. It further asserts that McCulley “has not and cannot offer facts to
support all nine elements of fraud,” and therefore the District Court’s decision should
stand.
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¶30 McCulley argues that the Bank was in possession of the Buy-Sell Agreement
wherein McCulley indicated that the zoning determination was a condition of purchase;
therefore, the Bank should have informed her from the beginning that the commercial
zoning of the property would preclude her from obtaining the residential 30-year
mortgage for which she applied. She asserts that had she been provided this information,
she would not have proceeded with the purchase transaction.
¶31 McCulley further argues that the Bank untruthfully claimed to have sent her the
“letter” dated May 26, 2006, “outlining the terms of her loan” and explaining that she
was getting an 18-month consumer bridge loan in the amount of $300,000. McCulley
adamantly denies ever having received such a document. She correctly notes that this
ostensible “letter” is formatted not as personal correspondence to her, but rather as an
interoffice memorandum. She further points out that the terms of this ostensible letter are
wholly contrary to the terms of the Truth in Lending Statement and Good Faith Estimate
documents sent to her by the Bank the day before, setting forth the terms and conditions
of a 30-year residential mortgage.
¶32 To establish a prima facie case for fraud, McCulley must establish: (1) a
representation; (2) the falsity of that representation; (3) the materiality of the
representation; (4) the speaker’s knowledge that the representation is false; (5) the
speaker’s intent that the representation will be relied upon by the hearer to his or her
detriment; (6) the hearer’s ignorance of the representation’s falsity; (7) the hearer’s
reliance upon the truth of the representation; (8) the hearer’s right to rely upon the
representation; and (9) the hearer’s consequent and proximate injury or damages caused
13
by their reliance on the representation. In re Adoption of S.R.T., 2011 MT 219, ¶ 16, 362
Mont. 39, 260 P.3d 177.
¶33 Generally speaking, once an agreement is reduced to writing, it is considered to
contain all terms of the agreement and extrinsic evidence concerning the intentions of the
parties is not admissible. Section 28-2-905(1), MCA. As noted herein, the documents
prepared by the Bank and signed by McCulley did in three locations reference an
18-month loan as opposed to a 30-year loan. However, this factor does not necessarily
preclude McCulley from presenting her fraud claims, as § 28-2-905(2), MCA, provides
that the statute “does not exclude other evidence of the circumstances under which the
agreement was made or to which it relates . . . or other evidence to explain an extrinsic
ambiguity or to establish illegality or fraud.”
¶34 McCulley testified that she had no idea that the Bank was extending only an
18-month commercial loan instead of a 30-year residential loan. Along with her realtor,
she attended the closing just three weeks after applying for her loan and receiving
documents from the Bank outlining the terms of the 30-year mortgage. Both McCulley
and her realtor swore under oath that no mention was made at the closing of the fact that
she was receiving an 18-month commercial loan, and that they both assumed that she was
closing on the 30-year residential loan as previously contemplated. In fact, she asserts
that she was unaware that she had received an 18-month loan until the Bank notified her
that her balloon payment was coming due in December 2007.
¶35 In light of the foregoing chronology of events, and in particular noting McCulley’s
arguably legitimate contention that the May 26 “letter” was not a letter to her at all, we
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cannot conclude that there is no genuine issue of material fact relative to McCulley’s
claim of fraud on the part of the Bank. McCulley maintains that the Bank sent her
documents outlining the terms of a 30-year residential mortgage and that it closed on the
loan not three weeks later without a mention that the terms of the loan were radically
different than those initially agreed to between the parties.2 Although inartfully,
McCulley has set forth sufficient facts to raise a genuine issue of whether a false and
material representation may have been made to her, that she acted upon it in ignorance of
the true facts, and that the Bank intended her to do so, resulting in damages. She
supported these claims with testimony in her deposition that she never received the
“letter” and that the Bank did not explain to her the change in the terms of her loan. It
bears repeating that summary judgment is precluded in cases in which genuine issues of
material fact exist. Schmidt, ¶ 26.
¶36 For these reasons, we reverse the District Court’s order of summary judgment in
favor of the Bank on the issue of fraud and remand the matter to the District Court for
further proceedings.
¶37 Finally, we note that McCulley claims she sustained damages as a result of the
Bank’s alleged fraud, including damages for emotional distress. The District Court can
address these claims on remand.
CONCLUSION
2
U.S. Bank Vice President Steve Fuert provided an affidavit in which he stated it is the Bank’s
procedure to explain the terms of the loan documents before they are executed, and that there is
nothing in the file to indicate these procedures were not followed.
15
¶38 We affirm the District Court’s grant of summary judgment to ALTC and the
court’s grant of summary judgment to U.S. Bank as it pertains to the issues of breach of
contract and negligence. We reverse the court’s summary judgment ruling in favor of the
Bank as it pertains to McCulley’s allegation of fraud and remand this issue and the issue
of damages to the District Court for further proceedings.
/S/ PATRICIA COTTER
We concur:
/S/ MICHAEL E WHEAT
/S/ BRIAN MORRIS
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
/S/ BETH BAKER
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