Opinion
J . — A successor trustee of an express trust (the trust) sued Fidelity National Title Insurance Company (Fidelity). The complaint alleged Fidelity negligently breached its duties to the trust. Fidelity obtained summary judgment. The successor trustee timely filed this appeal. We affirm the judgment.
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Facts
In the mid-1980’s Mr. Skouras, the trustee of the trust, sold three parcels of trust real property. Fidelity was the escrow holder and title insurer for the sales and the trustee of deeds of trust securing purchase money notes payable to the trust that financed the sale of the properties to the buyers.
The trust provisions required Skouras to obtain consent of at least two of the trust beneficiaries before selling trust property. 1 Skouras made all three sales without the knowledge or consent of the trust beneficiaries and diverted the sales proceeds to his own use.
n
The Lawsuit
In 1994 the trust beneficiaries discovered Skouras’s unauthorized sales of trust properties. In October 1994 they removed Skouras as trustee and appointed a successor trustee. The successor trustee 2 filed this action against Fidelity, seeking damages based on Fidelity’s alleged negligence. Appellant alleged that Fidelity had a duty to determine whether Skouras had obtained the beneficiaries’ consent to the sales, that Fidelity negligently breached that duty, that as a result of Fidelity’s negligence Skouras was allowed to transfer the trust properties without the beneficiaries’ consent, and that the trust was damaged in the amount of the value of the properties.
Fidelity moved for summary judgment, arguing that it owed no duty to the beneficiaries and that it was entitled to the statutory protections afforded by Probate Code 3 sections 18100 and 18101. Appellant opposed the motion, arguing that: (1) Fidelity owed duties of care to the trust in Fidelity’s capacities as escrow holder, title insurer, and trustee under the deeds of trust and there were triable issues of fact whether Fidelity breached those duties of care; and, (2) neither the Probate Code nor the provisions of the trust instrument immunized Fidelity from liability for its negligence.
The trial court granted Fidelity’s motion for summary judgment and denied appellant’s motion for a new trial. Appellant filed this appeal.
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Discussion
A. Standard of Review
The purpose of summary judgment is to penetrate through the pleadings to ascertain, by means of affidavits, the presence or absence of triable issues of material fact.
(Molko
v.
Holy Spirit Assn.
(1988)
If the motion for summary judgment is supported by affidavits sufficient to sustain the motion, the burden shifts to the party opposing the motion to show that triable issues of material fact exist.
(Chern
v.
Bank of America
(1976)
In a negligence action, the existence of a duty of care owed by a defendant to a plaintiff is a legal issue that is particularly amenable to resolution on summary judgment.
(Parsons
v.
Crown Disposal Co.
(1997)
B. Fidelity Did Not Owe Appellant a Duty to Investigate Whether Skouras Had. Obtained the Consent of the Trust Beneficiaries to the Sales
Appellant alleged that Fidelity as escrow holder, title insurer and deed of trust trustee assisted Skouras’s sale of the trust properties and owed *673 a duty to appellant and to the beneficiaries of the trust to investigate and determine whether Skouras had obtained the required beneficiary consent. However, under applicable trust principles, the trustee of the trust is vested with legal title to the trust property. When third parties deal with the trustee in connection with trust property, section 18100 provides that: “With respect to a third person dealing with a trustee or assisting a trustee in the conduct of a transaction, if the third person acts in good faith and for a valuable consideration and without actual knowledge that the trustee is exceeding the trustee’s powers or improperly exercising them: [¶] (a) The third person is not bound to inquire whether the trustee has power to act or is properly exercising a power and may assume without inquiry the existence of a trust power and its proper exercise. [¶] (b) The third person is fully protected in dealing with or assisting the trustee just as if the trustee has and is properly exercising the power the trustee purports to exercise.” (Italics added.)
Section 18100 was specifically adopted to change the prior law that placed third parties on constructive or inquiry notice of possible breaches of the trust.
4
Section 18100 protects third parties who deal with or assist the trustee by excusing them from investigating and permitting them to assume “ ‘the existence of a trust power and its proper exercise,’ ” except where the third parties have actual knowledge of a breach of the trust.
5
(Adler
v.
Manor Healthcare Corp.
(1992)
The complaint does not allege and appellant did not show that Fidelity had actual knowledge Skouras was acting in violation of the trust provisions, did *674 not act in good faith or acted without consideration. 6 Because the statutory scheme exempts third parties from a duty to investigate, Fidelity breached no duty owed to appellant. 7
C. The Duties Owed by Fidelity Do Not Supersede the Statutory Scheme
Appellant appears to argue that notwithstanding section 18100, Fidelity in each of its three capacities undertook duties it then breached. We examine each of appellant’s claims.
1. Duty Owed by Fidelity as Escrow Holder
An escrow holder, as a dual agent of the parties to the escrow, owes duties to the parties to the escrow. However, those duties are limited. The primary duty owed by an escrow holder is to strictly and faithfully perform the instructions given to it by the parties to the escrow. (2 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate (2d ed. 1989) Escrows, § 5:22, pp. 442-449.) Appellant neither appended the escrow instructions involved in the trust property sales to his opposition to the motion for summary judgment, nor alleged Fidelity did not faithfully perform those escrow instructions.
Appellant instead alleges that Fidelity, as an escrow holder, breached its fiduciary duty by not informing the parties to the escrows of the “beneficiary consent” provisions of the trust instrument. Even assuming Fidelity owed that duty of disclosure,
8
that duty was owed to the parties to the escrow. The parties to the escrows were Skouras, as seller, and the respective buyers. When an escrow holder knows the seller is relying on him for protection as
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to facts learned by the escrow holder, the escrow holder can be held liable to the seller if he does not disclose those facts to the seller. (See, e.g.,
Spaziani
v.
Millar
(1963)
2. Duty Owed by Title Insurer
Fidelity issued lender’s policies of title insurance to Skouras, individually and as trustee for the trust, insuring the priority of the purchase money deeds of trust that Skouras as trustee received from the buyers of the trust properties. Appellant asserts that a title insurer’s standard of care, as set forth in the California Land Title Association (CLTA) manual that Fidelity follows, mandates that before a title insurer may issue title insurance in connection with transactions involving a trust, the insurer must review the trust instrument and determine, among other things, whether the trustee has “[a]dequate powers ... to sell and convey.” Appellant contends Fidelity owed this duty to the trust, that Fidelity breached this duty by not investigating whether Skouras had obtained the requisite beneficiaries’ consent, and that appellant is therefore entitled to recover from Fidelity.
Appellant misconstrues the nature and limited scope of a title insurer’s obligations. Title insurance is a contract by which the title insurer agrees to indemnify its insured against losses caused by defects in or encumbrances on the title not excepted from coverage.
(Siegel
v.
Fidelity Nat. Title Ins. Co.
(1996)
Here, appellant made no claim on the title policy issued by Fidelity insuring the priority of the purchase money deeds of trust. Instead, he argues that Fidelity can be liable based on separate duties allegedly owed by a title insurance company. Appellant cites
Seeley
v.
Seymour
(1987)
Here, Fidelity’s failure to follow the CLTA manual was not intended to affect the trust. 10 Moreover, section 18100 specifically permits parties assisting a trustee to assume “the existence of a trust power and its proper exercise,” suggesting a legislative determination that it is not reasonably foreseeable that the absence of an investigation will facilitate fraud by a fiduciary. Most importantly, Seeley did not involve title insurance or an escrow to which the plaintiff was a party, the injury suffered by the trust was caused not by Fidelity’s action but by Skouras’s action, and the injury is neither clearly nor closely related to Fidelity’s lack of investigation.
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The Legislature has eliminated any duty to investigate, and we decline to undercut that legislative determination by a judicial rule that imposes on Fidelity a duty to police the activities of Skouras merely because Fidelity sold a lender’s title insurance policy to Skouras. (Cf.
Ott
v.
Alfa-Laval Agri, Inc.
(1995)
3. Duty Owed by Trustee on Deed of Trust
Appellant finally argues Fidelity, in its capacity as trustee under the deed of trust securing Skouras’s purchase money note to the trust, breached fiduciary obligations owing to the trust. 11 Appellant alleges Fidelity was obligated to confirm that Skouras had repaid the note before reconveying the deed of trust, and that Fidelity breached that obligation because it recon-veyed the deed of trust even though the note allegedly was not paid.
The trustee of a deed of trust is not a true trustee, and owes no fiduciary obligations; he merely acts as a common agent for the trustor and the beneficiary of the deed of trust.
(Hatch
v.
Collins
(1990)
It is undisputed that the named beneficiary of the deed of trust in question was Skouras as trustee of the trust. It is also conceded that Skouras remained as trustee until 1994 and was still the beneficiary of the deed of trust in 1988 when he informed Fidelity the note had been repaid and instructed Fidelity to reconvey the deed of trust. Appellant’s sole argument is that Fidelity had a duty to confirm that the note had been repaid before it reconveyed the deed of trust. However, appellant cites no authority to support that contention, and the law is to the contrary. (See, e.g.,
Fleisher
v.
Continental Auxiliary Co.
(1963)
IV
Conclusion
Because appellant did not show that Fidelity had actual knowledge of Skouras’s unauthorized actions, or that it did not act in good faith without consideration, and applicable principles impose on Fidelity no duty of care that it breached, we conclude summary judgment was proper.
V
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed. Fidelity is entitled to costs on appeal.
Work, Acting P. J., and McIntyre, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied September 29, 1999. Mosk, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Article II-F-3 of the trust instrument provided that the trustee “shall obtain the written approval of at least two [trust beneficiaries] before: [¶] • • ■ [s]elling any trust assets at that time producing or required to produce income . . . .”
The successor trustee who filed the action was Mr. Oldknow. However, Mr. Vournas was later substituted for Mr. Oldknow as the successor trustee and as plaintiff/appellant in this action. For ease of reference we will refer to the successor trustee as “appellant.”
All statutory references are to the Probate Code unless otherwise specified.
Section 18100 replaced former Civil Code section 2243, which the courts had interpreted as creating a duty of inquiry, thus making constructive notice as binding on third party purchasers as actual notice. (See, e.g.,
Central Construction Co.
v.
Hartman
(1935)
The trust instrument contains language providing similar immunities to third persons. Article V, paragraph C provided: “No corporation, transfer agent, or other person dealing with the trust shall be obligated to see to the application of any money or property delivered to such Trustee, or to examine into the terms upon which any property is held by the Trustee, but any such corporation, transfer agent or other person may deal with any such property and with the Trustee as if such Trustee were the owner thereof free of any trust.”
Although appellant asserts on appeal that there are triable issues of fact whether Fidelity had actual knowledge of Skouras’s lack of authority, appellant did not submit evidence below supporting that contention. More importantly, appellant may not defeat a summary judgment motion by producing evidence to support claims that are outside the issues framed by the pleadings.
(Robinson
v.
Hewlett-Packard Corp.
(1986)
Appellant argues the court did not rely on section 18100 to grant Fidelity’s motion for summary judgment. However, we review the ruling, not its rationale, and affirm if the summary judgment is correct, regardless of the rationale articulated by the trial court,
(Szadolci
v.
Hollywood Park Operating Co.
(1993)
Appellant quotes
Kirby
v.
Palos Verdes Escrow Co.
(1986)
Appellant appears to argue Fidelity breached its duty because it did not disclose to the buyers the beneficiary consent requirement. However, appellant cites no authority holding that an escrow agent’s breach of its duty of disclosure to a buyer would entitle the seller to recover damages. The cases cited by appellant are not applicable. In
J’Aire Corp.
v.
Gregory
(1979)
Instead, the procedures outlined in the CLTA manual appear intended to affect or benefit the title insurer. These are guidelines used by Fidelity to make its underwriting decision on whether to issue a title policy, and are designed to guide its employees on steps to take before issuing a policy. Because these steps are designed to reduce the risk to Fidelity that it will be required to pay a claim on a title policy it issues, the CLTA manual outlines duties intended to affect and benefit Fidelity rather than third parties.
In one of the transactions, Skouras purchased the trust property in his individual capacity and gave the trust a $125,000 note secured by a deed of trust as consideration for the purchase. Fidelity was the trustee under that deed of trust.
