Montoya-Marlow v. Montoya ( 2011 )


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    2   see Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished memorandum opinions.
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    6        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    7 JILL MONTOYA-MARLOW, f/k/a
    8 JOSEPHINE MONTOYA MARLOW,
    9          Plaintiff-Appellant,
    10 and
    11 ELIZABETH MONTOYA GARCIA
    12 and ANDREA MONTOYA GURULE,
    13          Plaintiffs,
    14 v.                                                                                     No. 29,928
    15   EDWARDO MONTOYA, JR., ANTONIO
    16   MONTOYA, ESTEVAN MONTOYA,
    17   CARLOS MONTOYA, RICARDO MONTOYA,
    18   DANIEL MONTOYA, ANNETTE MONTOYA-
    19   LUX, TOMAS GONZALES, and LEOPOLDO P.
    20   GONZALES,
    21          Defendants-Appellees.
    22 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SAN MIGUEL COUNTY
    23 Abigail Aragon, District Judge
    24 Pedro G. Rael
    25 Los Lunas, NM
    26 for Appellant
    27 Domenici Law Firm, P.C.
    1 Charles N. Lakins
    2 Albuquerque, NM
    3 for Appellees
    4                             MEMORANDUM OPINION
    5 SUTIN, Judge.
    6        Plaintiff Jill Montoya Marlow, f/k/a Josephine Montoya Marlow, appeals the
    7 district court’s order setting out and enforcing the parties’ verbal settlement agreement
    8 placed in the record. We hold that, except for the grant of attorney fees, discrepancies
    9 between the verbal agreement and the order do not materially change the verbal
    10 agreement. With the exception of the grant of attorney fees, which we hold to be
    11 erroneous and unenforceable, we affirm.
    12 Background
    13        Plaintiffs sued Defendants to quiet title to the Andrea tract and the Camila tract
    14 (the tracts) located in lands known as the Montoya Ranch located in the Tecolote Land
    15 Grant, in San Miguel County, New Mexico. Defendants counterclaimed for damages
    16 for unjust enrichment. This lawsuit, which we refer to as the present action, filed in
    17 September 2003, came after an earlier lawsuit filed in 1999, in which Defendants sued
    18 the Tecolote Land Grant (the Tecolote action). In the Tecolote action, the district
    19 court determined that Defendants had title as against the Tecolote Land Grant
    20 (Tecolote) to the Montoya Ranch, except for particular designated land that is not at
    2
    1 issue in the present action. In the appeal in the Tecolote action, this Court, in
    2 November 2007, reversed the district court and remanded with instructions to dismiss
    3 Defendants’ complaint. See Montoya v. Tecolote Land Grant ex rel. Tecolote Bd. of
    4 Trs., 
    2008-NMCA-014
    , ¶ 33, 
    143 N.M. 413
    , 
    176 P.3d 1145
    . We determined that title
    5 was improperly placed in Defendants because they were not entitled to go behind a
    6 United States patent to argue that Tecolote was divested of property prior to the
    7 patent. Id. ¶ 32. The New Mexico Supreme Court granted certiorari in the Tecolote
    8 action in January 2008 and then quashed certiorari in October 2008. See Montoya,
    9 
    2008-NMCERT-010
    , 
    145 N.M. 525
    , 
    201 P.3d 856
    . Defendants then unsuccessfully
    10 sought certiorari in the United States Supreme Court. See Montoya, 
    129 S. Ct. 1622
    11 (2009).
    12        While the Tecolote action was taking place, the district court in the present
    13 action entered an order and judgment in November 2005 adjudicating interests in the
    14 Tracts. The court specifically “reserve[d] ruling on imposing an equitable lien in
    15 favor of . . . Defendants on . . . Plaintiffs’ interest in the [tracts].” In August 2006 in
    16 the present action, Defendants filed a motion to establish an equitable lien against the
    17 tracts. Defendants sought to establish the lien to recover from Plaintiffs a share of the
    18 costs and attorney fees that Defendants had paid to obtain title to the Montoya Ranch
    19 property in the Tecolote action, because the relief that Defendants gained in the
    3
    1 Tecolote action benefited Plaintiffs.1 On November 10, 2008, the day that the district
    2 court was to hear the merits of the equitable lien issue, the parties announced that they
    3 had settled the matter and the attorneys recited the terms of the settlement. After
    4 Plaintiffs offered a proposed stipulated agreement and lien for Defendants’
    5 consideration that was not acceptable to Defendants, followed by the parties not being
    6 able to agree on the terms to be contained in an agreement or order, Defendants moved
    7 in July 2009 for presentment of a proposed order for entry by the court, and Plaintiff
    8 Jill Montoya Marlow in August 2009 filed a response to the motion. In August 2009,
    9 the court entered an order stating that the parties in open court in October 2008
    10 “entered into a formal settlement agreement concerning all pending matters between
    11 them in this action, in general and specifically with regard to . . . Defendants[’] request
    12 for an equitable lien.” The court granted equitable liens against the tracts with
    13 accompanying terms that Plaintiff Jill Montoya Marlow, in this appeal, argues
    14 constituted error and requires the present action to be reversed.
    1
    15          Plaintiff contends that based on the ultimate result in the Tecolote action she
    16 received no benefit. Defendants contend that the benefit was not lost or altered. The
    17 question of benefit was not litigated in the district court and is not raised as an issue
    18 for reversal on appeal in the present case. We therefore do not address the question.
    4
    1 Arguments on Appeal
    2        On appeal, Plaintiff asks us to declare that there was no settlement agreement
    3 entered into between the parties, and Plaintiff seeks return of the amount paid in
    4 satisfaction of judgment “to avoid foreclosure.” Plaintiff argues that the order was
    5 erroneously entered because the terms of the settlement were to be placed in a signed
    6 agreement; no written agreement was signed because the parties disagreed on what
    7 should be in the agreement and any order; the order declaring that the parties settled
    8 and enforcing equitable liens did not incorporate any written agreement signed by the
    9 parties; the order improperly granted relief beyond that which was discussed when the
    10 settlement was placed on the record; and there was no meeting of the minds in regard
    11 to what the order stated.
    12        In particular, in addition to her contention that the parties’ discussion at the
    13 hearing indicated an intent that a settlement agreement be prepared and that no
    14 settlement agreement was ever signed, Plaintiff complains that the order improperly
    15 contained the following terms that were not discussed at the hearing or agreed upon
    16 in a signed agreement: An award of attorney fees to the prevailing party if any action
    17 is brought to enforce the order; foreclosure of the lien if payment were not made; the
    18 date on which interest began to run on the Camila tract; and the right of Defendants
    19 to receive payment in land if the Andrea tract was partitioned.
    5
    1        Defendants on the other hand argue that the parties agreed to the essential terms
    2 of the settlement at the hearing and that those essential terms of the settlement were
    3 placed in the record. They point out that Plaintiffs agreed, among other things, to
    4 equitable liens on the tracts, to the amounts of the liens, and to six percent interest to
    5 begin to run thirty days from the date of the hearing. Defendants acknowledge that
    6 counsel for Plaintiff Jill Montoya Marlow was to prepare a settlement agreement and
    7 that one can infer that details of the settlement agreement and order would have to be
    8 worked out; however, they argue that the court approved the settlement at the hearing
    9 and that the details in question of which Plaintiff complains were not essential terms
    10 and the district court could enter an order without a signed settlement agreement.
    11        Defendants address each of the four specific provisions that are attacked by
    12 Plaintiff. Defendants argue that Plaintiff cannot complain about the attorney fee
    13 provision because it was taken from Plaintiff’s proposed stipulated agreement.
    14 Defendants argue that the right to foreclose an equitable lien “is merely a recitation
    15 of law” and nothing indicates that Defendants waived any right to collect on the liens.
    16 They concede that the date about which Plaintiff complains for the start of interest was
    17 incorrect and state that the error was typographical. Defendants further argue, as to
    18 the partition provision, that it was included in their proposed form of order presented
    19 to the court with their motion for presentment, that Plaintiff’s response to the
    6
    1 presentment motion objected only to jurisdiction and not to specific provisions set out
    2 in the proposed order, and that Plaintiff presented no form of order. Plaintiff did not
    3 file a reply brief in this Court.
    4 Standard of Review
    5        Plaintiff offers no standard of review, in violation of Rule 12-213(A)(4)
    6 NMRA. Whether the new terms in the order materially changed the verbal settlement
    7 agreement is a legal question, and we review legal questions de novo. See Self v.
    8 United Parcel Serv. Inc., 
    1998-NMSC-046
    , ¶ 6, 
    126 N.M. 396
    , 
    970 P.2d 582
    .
    9 Decision
    10        We determine that the district court erroneously granted attorney fees. There
    11 exists no basis on which to hold that the parties agreed to that award. As to the
    12 remaining issues, we cannot say that the district court erred. A verbal settlement was
    13 placed on the record before the court. The court congratulated the parties for
    14 resolving the case, said “it’s a good thing[,]” and indicated it would “wait for the
    15 [o]rder.” The court implicitly, if not expressly, verbally approved the settlement and
    16 vacated the proceeding. The discrepancies at issue between the essential terms
    17 constituting the verbal agreement and the terms stated in the district court’s order
    18 documenting that agreement are not sufficient to nullify the verbal agreement stated
    19 on the record in court. The court could determine from the record of the verbal
    7
    1 settlement agreement that a signed agreement was not a condition precedent to entry
    2 of an order determining that a settlement occurred and stating the terms of settlement.
    3 As stated in Esquibel v. Brown Constr. Co., 
    85 N.M. 487
    , 490, 
    513 P.2d 1269
    , 1272
    4 (Ct. App. 1973):
    5        The record shows the parties contemplated putting the terms of the
    6        settlement in a written agreement to be signed by the parties, but there
    7        is nothing showing the settlement was not to be effective until this was
    8        done. An oral stipulation for the compromise and settlement of claims
    9        . . . made in open court in the presence of the parties and preserved in the
    10        record of the court is as binding as a written agreement. . . . [The
    11        p]laintiff’s claim that the settlement was not effective until placed in
    12        writing and signed is without merit.
    13 (Second omission in original) (internal quotations marks and citations omitted). The
    14 parties here were unable to agree on a written agreement, principally because the
    15 terms in Plaintiff’s proposed written stipulated agreement went significantly beyond
    16 what was in the agreement placed of record and materially changed and added to the
    17 terms of that on-the-record agreement. We are unable to see why the district court
    18 could not rule as to whether a settlement occurred and enter an order stating the
    19 settlement terms as long as the terms stated in the order fairly reflected the parties’
    20 agreement, were reasonably certain, and did not materially change the verbal
    21 agreement. See Padilla v. RRA, Inc., 
    1997-NMCA-104
    , ¶ 8, 
    124 N.M. 111
    , 
    946 P.2d 22
     1122 (recognizing the test of reasonable certainty as to the terms of a contract); see
    23 also Jones v. United Minerals Corp., 
    93 N.M. 706
    , 708, 
    604 P.2d 1240
    , 1242 (1979)
    8
    1 (“[A] party can be considered bound by a settlement even if certain details are not
    2 worked out, if such details are not essential to the proposal or cause a change in the
    3 terms or purpose to be accomplished by the settlement.”).
    4        Plaintiff’s proposed stipulated agreement and Defendants’ proposed order were
    5 before the court at the presentment hearing. In the same vein, Plaintiff knew from
    6 Defendants’ proposed order that Defendants sought the partition provision, and we see
    7 nothing in the record to indicate that Plaintiff objected to that provision or objected
    8 to the court inserting that provision in the order.
    9        Finally, we cannot categorically say that, when a party agrees to the
    10 establishment of an equitable lien against his or her real property, general language
    11 in a court order declaring the existence of the lien to the effect that the order did not
    12 waive any lienor rights that could be enforced through partition or foreclosure is
    13 necessarily a basis on which to vitiate the verbal settlement agreement. Implicit in
    14 imposition of an equitable lien is the right to enforce the lien against the property for
    15 the amount owed. We read the court’s language to say only that, by entry of the order,
    16 Defendants did not waive enforcement remedies that they may lawfully have.
    17 Furthermore, the court found absurd Plaintiff’s argument at the presentment hearing
    18 describing an undisclosed, subjective intent on the part of Plaintiff “that [she] would
    19 never be expected to pay out on [the] equitable lien[.]”
    9
    1        Except for the grant of attorney fees, we cannot fault the court for determining
    2 that the verbal settlement of record in the present case was effective notwithstanding
    3 that the parties were unable to reduce the settlement agreement to writing. Nor can
    4 we fault the court for placing in the order terms that were placed before the court at
    5 the presentment hearing that the court could, absent effective objection, or unless
    6 appropriately informed otherwise, assume were provisions that the court could
    7 consider in framing a workable order containing the settlement terms.
    8 CONCLUSION
    9        We hold that the grant of attorney fees was error and is unenforceable. We
    10 otherwise affirm.
    11        IT IS SO ORDERED.
    12                                         __________________________________
    13                                         JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
    14 WE CONCUR:
    15 _________________________________
    16 MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge
    17 _________________________________
    18 CYNTHIA A. FRY, Judge
    10