delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Defendants William Bell and Bell Cattle Company, Inc., appeal from the judgment of the District Court. Plaintiffs cross-appeal from the judgment. We affirm the issue cross-appealed and dismiss the remaining issues because we determine Bell’s appeal to be moot.
¶2 We address the following issues on appeal:
¶3 1. Whether Bell’s appeal is moot because this Court cannot grant effective relief.
¶4 2. Whether the District Court erred in concluding the Pashas were liable for unlawful detainer and in trebling the jury’s damage award.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶5 Elvan and Nancy Pasha purchased Graveyard Creek Ranch in 1993. At the outset of this litigation, the couple were still living on the ranch, along with their daughter Amy Adler and son-in-law Brad *493 Adler. In 2000 the Pashas 1 were in default on their real estate loan and in danger of losing the ranch to U.S. Bank. In March 2000 the ranch was appraised and valued at $950,000. After some negotiations with the Pashas over the loan’s actual balance, U.S. Bank called the loan due at $500,000 and filed a foreclosure action.
¶6 Faced with the prospect of losing their ranch, the Pashas came into contact with Bell, an investor from California. With an impending date of foreclosure of September 15,2000, the Pashas agreed to sell the ranch to Bell. Bell agreed to pay-off the loan balance with U.S. Bank through a loan made to him by Zion Bank, pay a $50,000 finders fee to the party who put Bell into contact with the Pashas, and pay $150,000 to the Pashas, including $100,000 through a contract for deed to be paid over thirty years. The Pashas would then reinvest the $150,000 into a new company to be formed by Bell, making them minority owners of that new company and releasing Bell from his payment obligations on the contract for deed. Also purportedly a part of the deal was an oral agreement that the Pashas would continue to live and work on the ranch as employees of Bell. Attorney and Third-Party Defendant Albert Batterman represented the Pashas in these negotiations. Because we determine below that Bell’s appeal is moot, facts relevant to Batterman are irrelevant to this opinion.
¶7 In the actual agreement reached on September 15,2000, and later closed on December 22,2000, a mortgage for $100,000, due in only one year, was substituted for the contract for deed. Bell claims that he did not learn of this substitution until months after the closing, and that he would not have entered into the deal had he known. The Pashas claim that Bell suffered no harm from this substitution because, whether the instrument was a mortgage or a contract for deed, the Pashas were going to reinvest the proceeds into Bell’s company anyway.
¶8 The substitution of a mortgage led to a break-down in relations between the parties. Although Bell created a company to run the ranch, ‘Bell Cattle Company, Inc.,” the mortgage was never transferred into the company. Bell did seek to renegotiate the transfer, but offered terms much less favorable to the Pashas then the prior agreement had called for. Instead of a 21 percent share of the ranch, Bell offered the Pashas the equivalent of a 7.5 percent ownership share. Subsequently, the Pashas sued Bell in September 2001 for fraud *494 and breach of contract. Bell counterclaimed for fraud and unlawful detainer, contending that the Pashas continued to live on the ranch after ownership passed to him and after he had asked them to leave. The matter went to trial with the jury awarding the Pashas $400,000 in compensatory damages, and $100,000 in punitive damages. The jury also found for Bell on his unlawful detainer claim, awarding a total of $14,300, which the court then trebled to $42,900, pursuant to §70-27-205(2), MCA.
¶9 Following the judgment, on January 8,2004, Bell filed a notice of appeal but did not post a supersedeas bond or obtain a stay of execution of the Pashas’ judgment. The Pashas proceeded to execute on the judgment and were in the process of planning a sheriffs sale on the ranch when Bell filed for bankruptcy protection in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of California. Bell sought bankruptcy protection from both the Pashas and Zion Bank. In late December 2004, the bankruptcy court granted the Pashas’ motion to lift the stay on their judgment lien as of February 2, 2005. Therefore, as of that date the Pashas were free to foreclose on the ranch. However, the bankruptcy court also allowed (but did not order) Bell to sell the ranch with the caveat that if the ranch were sold Bell must pay his creditors in full, including the Pashas and Zion Bank. Bell thenceforth sold the ranch and paid Zion Bank and the Pashas in full. Accordingly, the Pashas’ mortgage on the ranch was released.
¶10 After the close of briefing in the appeal to this Court, Pashas moved that Bell’s appeal be dismissed on account of waiver and mootness. We conclude below that Bell’s appeal is moot. Therefore, we do not address the issue of waiver or the issues raised in Bell’s appeal.
DISCUSSION ISSUE ONE
¶11 Whether Bell’s appeal is moot because this Court cannot grant effective relief.
¶12 As we have explained before, “In deciding whether a case is moot, we determine whether this Court can fashion effective relief.”
Turner v. Mountain Eng’g & Constr., Inc.
(1996),
¶13 In determining mootness we distinguished
Turner
from
Martin Dev. Co. v. Keeney Constr. Co.
(1985),
¶14 Although the present case involves a money judgment, the money is merely part of a package deal involving the transfer of property. Therefore it is much closer to the situation in Turner than that in Martin. As in Turner, relevant property has changed hands and third-party interests, in fact multiple third-party interests, are involved. At the beginning of the litigation the Pashas owned the ranch subject to a $500,000 debt to U.S. Bank. They made a deal with Bell whereby he would pay-off their debt and they would receive an ownership interest in Bell’s new company that would manage the ranch. Bell made this deal by incurring a $500,000 debt to Zion Bank. He fronted very little of his own money.
¶15 Were Bell still the owner of the ranch, this Court could merely reverse the $500,000 money judgment below and the Pashas would retain their ownership interest in the ranch company. However, now the situation is not so simple. Bell sold the ranch and paid-off his debt to Zion Bank. He also paid the money judgment whereupon his mortgage to the Pashas was released. Were we to reverse the judgment in Bell’s favor he would stand to be considerably richer than he was when he entered into the original deal. This is because he has paid-off his debt to Zion Bank and invested very little of his own money into the original deal. The Pashas, on the other hand, would have no *496 mortgage, no interest in Bell’s company (as the company has no ranch to manage and is therefore worthless), and no ranch. This would not be effective relief, but a $500,000 windfall in favor of Bell. In such circumstances we are compelled to conclude that the appeal is moot.
ISSUE TWO
¶16 Whether the District Court erred in concluding the Pashas were liable for unlawful detainer and in trebling the jury’s damage award.
¶17 We review a district court’s conclusion of law to determine whether the court’s interpretation of law is correct.
Marcher v. Bonzell,
¶18 At trial, the jury found the Pashas liable for a total of $14,300. This included damages of $4,200 against both Elvan and Nancy Pasha, $2,800 against both Amy and Brad Alder (the daughter and son-in-law of the Pashas), and $300 against Graveyard Creek Ranch, Inc. Pursuant to §70-27-205(2), MCA, Bell moved to treble these damages, and the court entered judgment accordingly. That statute states that once a jury renders its verdict for unlawful detainer, “[T]he judgment
shall
be rendered against the defendant, guilty of the ... unlawful detainer,
for three times the amount
of the damages thus assessed and of the rent found due.” (Emphasis added.) ‘This court has long regarded the provisions of [§70-27-205(2), MCA] as mandatory and as imposing the duty on the trial court to treble the amount of damages assessed and the amount of the rent found
due.” Needham v. Justice Court
(1946),
¶19 Nevertheless, the Pashas, who did timely object to the treble damage award, argue that
Montana Williams Double Diamond Corp. v. Hill
(1978),
CONCLUSION
¶20 We conclude that Bell’s appeal is moot, and we affirm the judgment of the District Court trebling the award for unlawful detainer.
Notes
We will collectively refer to the Respondents, including Graveyard Creek Ranch, Inc., as ‘Pashas.”
