This is a companion case to
Chinchurreta v. Christensen,
As noted in the companion case, Chinchurreta loaned $110,000 to Evergreen Management, Inc., and to Evergreen’s controlling shareholder, Miles Taggart. Evergreen did business as the Homedale Care Center, a health care facility. Evergreen and Taggart had a health care provider contract with the Department of Health and Welfare. Consequently, their facility was partially funded by payments from the Department of Health and Welfare for services provided to Medicaid recipients. The facility was located on property rented from the Christensens. It was managed by a health care administrator, Keith Holloway.
Evergreen and Taggart ultimately defaulted on their debt to Chinchurreta. In July, 1987, Chinchurreta filed a complaint to recover the money owed. In November, the district court ordered that a writ of attachment be issued to the county sheriff requiring that all funds due and owing Evergreen be deposited with the district court. Chinchurreta obtained a default judgment in his favor on January 4, 1988.
During this time, Taggart and Evergreen evidently failed to pay rent to the Christen-sens. On December 8, 1987, the Christen-sens terminated their lease with Taggart. Taggart subsequently left the state. Although the Department of Health and Welfare continued to regard Taggart and Evergreen as the only contractually authorized health care providers at the facility, no patients were withdrawn. The facility stayed open until February 11, 1988, when a new provider, Rodney Roe, signed a contract with Health and Welfare. During the two-month hiatus, when Roe had yet to sign a contract and Taggart was nowhere to be found, the Christensens stepped in and kept the facility running. They paid
After a hearing, the district court decided that the health care provider during January, 1988, was Taggart and Evergreen, Inc., not the Christensens. However, the judge also concluded the Christen-sens had an equitable right to the funds, since they had operated the facility during January. Rather than releasing the attached funds to Chinchurreta, the district judge set up a constructive trust, recognizing legal title to the funds in Taggart but granting an equitable title to the Christen-sens. Chinchurreta has appealed.
Chinchurreta argues that the Christensens were mere volunteers. It is well settled that a person cannot — by way of set-off, counterclaim or direct action — recover money which he or she “has voluntarily paid with full knowledge of all the facts, and without any fraud, duress or extortion, although no obligation to make such payment existed.”
McEnroe v. Morgan,
Here, however, the persons directly benefited by the Christensens’ actions have not suffered the imposition of unwarranted or uninvited financial burdens. The owner and manager of the Homedale facility have not appeared to object to the Christensens’ services nor to challenge the Christensens’ request for the money. So far as the record shows, the patients at the Homedale facility have not suffered any financial burdens. If any burden has arisen from continued operation of the facility, it has been willingly borne by the Department of Health and Welfare, which disbursed the January payment. The person seeking to invoke the rule against mere volunteers or officious intermeddlers, Chinchurreta, has not been subjected to a financial burden. Although he claims to be disadvantaged by the Christensens’ claim to the January payment, the disadvantage is illusory because the payment could not have been made at all if the Christensens had not kept the facility in operation. Accordingly, we hold that this case falls outside the purpose of the officious intermeddler rule, and that the rule will not be applied for the benefit of Chinchurreta.
Chinchurreta also contends that the district court misapplied the doctrine of a constructive trust. Chinchurreta asserts that a constructive trust may be imposed only as a remedy for wrongdoing, such as obtaining property by fraud or misrepresentation. It is true, of course, that the constructive trust is available as a remedy in such cases. However, it is not invariably so limited.
A constructive trust is a remedial device created primarily to prevent unjust enrichment; equity compels the restoration to another of property to which the holder thereof is not justly entitled. (Citations omitted) ... [A] constructive trust may be imposed in practically any case where there is a wrongful acquisition or detention of property to which another is entitled.
Taylor v. Polackwich,
In this case, Chinchurreta has no claim to the January money except by way of attachment to collect a debt owed by Evergreen and Taggart. However, Evergreen and Taggart have no substantively
Chinchurreta further asserts that the constructive trust violates certain provisions of the Idaho statutes relating to trusts. However, those statutes regulate the operation of ordinary trusts in law; they do not purport to govern the use of constructive trusts as a broad remedial tool by courts in equity.
Accordingly, the order of the district court, directing that the attached funds be released to the Christensens, is affirmed. Costs to the respondents, Christensen. No attorney fees on appeal.
