I think the clue is here:
https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/35624?hl=en
However, sometimes even pages with well-formulated, concise, descriptive titles will end up with different titles in our search results to better indicate their relevance to the query. There’s a simple reason for this: the title tag as specified by a webmaster is limited to being static, fixed regardless of the query. Once we know the user’s query, we can often find alternative text from a page that better explains why that result is relevant.
Searching for the text of the question
I have an application...
gives this result:
So it looks like it's used the query to modify the title of the page. As to why it does that, I'm not sure. It does look like Google's fault, and it's probably not worth trying to reverse engineer.
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(particularly often). Do you have a (presumably) more common query which gives this result?