Ames v. Central Bank of Birmingham

460 So. 2d 1213, 1984 Ala. LEXIS 4301
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJuly 13, 1984
Docket82-529, 82-576 and 82-607
StatusPublished

This text of 460 So. 2d 1213 (Ames v. Central Bank of Birmingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ames v. Central Bank of Birmingham, 460 So. 2d 1213, 1984 Ala. LEXIS 4301 (Ala. 1984).

Opinions

ADAMS, Justice.

These appeals are taken from the Dallas County Circuit Court’s resolution of various cross-claims of the defendants in a case previously appealed to this court, namely, Ames v. Pardue, 389 So.2d 927 (Ala.1980). The facts of this case are as follows:

In 1977, appellants John Ames and Mae Ames contacted Central Bank of Birmingham about the possibility of purchasing a parcel of land mortgaged by J. Bruce Par-due and Mary Jane Pardue. Central Bank, the mortgagee, had advertised a foreclosure sale for the property. In the course of negotiating the financing of the purchase price of the land, Central Bank agreed to the Ameses’ payment of $150,-000.00 in cash and the execution of a purchase money mortgage. Central Bank does not contest that its officials were aware that the trust to be created and the Ameses were to pay the mortgage indebtedness by subdividing the land and selling parcels, by farming and timbering, and by refinancing the indebtedness through the Federal Land Bank.

In July 1977, the Ameses established the trust, the res of which was to be the Par-due land, for the benefit of their minor children. Central Bank and Ruth Binford were named as trustees. In August, Central Bank, having foreclosed the Pardues’ mortgage, executed a deed to the property in favor of the trust.

The trust assumed the Ameses’ obligation for the $675,000.00 purchase price; however, the obligation was personally guaranteed by the Ameses, who made cash payment of $150,000.00 to the trust, which, in turn, paid Central Bank in order to reduce its principal indebtedness to $525,-000.00. In exchange for a portion of this payment and the execution by Mae Ames of an unsecured note in the amount of $3,500.00, the trust conveyed 50 acres of the Pardue land to Mae Ames.

The trust also conveyed 486 acres of the Pardue property to the Ameses. In exchange, they executed a promissory note in the principal amount of $106,550.00. Thereafter, the Ameses took possession of the land, and lived thereon.

The Ameses and the trust made payments on all rental and note obligations until January 5, 1978. On that date, the Pardues filed suit attacking the validity of Central Bank’s foreclosure sale. Subsequently, the trial judge orally enjoined the Ameses from making additional improvement on the land, and from removing timber therefrom. Central Bank and the trust do not contest the fact that the suit filed by the Pardues, and the subsequent actions taken by the trial court, including its invalidation of the foreclosure sale, effectively prevented the Ameses from utilizing the land to pay their debt to the trust, and, ultimately, the trust’s debt to Central Bank.

The Ameses assert that Central Bank agreed that no interest would accrue on the trust’s indebtedness until the litigation initiated by the Pardues was concluded. Central Bank claims that it only acquiesced to a “moratorium” on the collection of the interest accruing during the pendency of the litigation. In any event, Central Bank did not again seek payment on the indebtedness until after this court had reinstated [1216]*1216the foreclosure sale and denied the Par-dues’ application for rehearing. See Ames v. Pardue, supra. At that time, Central Bank demanded payment of all the interest alleged to have accrued on the trust's indebtedness during the Pardue litigation.

In response to Central Bank’s demand for payment, the Ameses sought purchasers for the land. They received two offers: one for the purchase of the 486 acres that they had purchased from the trust and another for the land that John Ames was renting from the trust. One sale was completed, and the proceeds were used first to retire the principal indebtedness of the trust and then to pay interest agreed to have accrued, with the balance of the proceeds placed in escrow. The other sale was never consummated.

Following the trial of this case, the trial court denied all relief requested by the Ameses and the trust, including the trust’s claim against the Ameses for rent, which the court denied due to “impossibility of performance.” In addition, the trial court granted Central Bank’s claim for interest on the trust’s obligation during the penden-cy of the Pardue litigation; however, it also ordered “the Trustee, iri its corporate entity” (Central Bank) to pay the trust’s attorneys’ fees for its defense of the Pardues’ challenge. The Ameses, the trust, and Central Bank appeal.

The following issues have been raised by the parties:

1. Did the trial court err in denying the Ameses’ claims of fraudulent misrepresentation against Central Bank?
2. Did the trial court err in denying the claims of the trustees and the Ames-es against Central Bank for attorneys’ fees and damages resulting from their defense of the Pardues’ attack on the foreclosure sale?
3. Did the trial court err in holding that interest on the trust’s promissory note and mortgage to Central Bank continued to accrue during the pendency of the Pardue litigation?
4. Did the trial court err in ordering the application of a partial payment first to the principal indebtedness of the trust, and then to accrued interest?
5.Did the trial court err in assessing attorney’s fees against the “Trustee in its corporate entity”?

I.

In Ames v. Pardue, we concluded that John Ames had relied on Central Bank’s estimation of the balance of the Pardues’ mortgage indebtedness (just prior to the foreclosure sale) as $675,000.00, but that he “ha[d] not been injured as a result.” 389 So.2d at 931. On remand, the Ameses continued to claim that they were damaged in the sum of $75,000.00 as the result of the bank’s misrepresentation. The trial court concluded, as we did, that the Ameses were not entitled to prevail on their claim of fraudulent misrepresentation against the bank. John Ames’s conflicting testimony concerning his negotiations with Central Bank prior to his decision to bid $675,000.00 for the Pardue land, and the testimony of Central Bank officials to the effect that the bank did not reach a decision on an amount to bid for the land until immediately prior to the sale, required the trial court to make a determination of fact as to whether the bank, at any time prior to the sale, made actionable misrepresentations of the amount it was intending to bid on the property. We think the trial court properly resolved this dispute on the basis of credible testimony.

II, III and IV

The general rule of law applicable to issues two and three, as stated above, was enunciated by this court in Goulding Fertilizer Co. v. Blanchard, 178 Ala. 298, 59 So. 485 (1912):

Sales by a trustee or mortgagee under power granted are sometimes characterized as quasi judicial. This, we apprehend, only in the same sense that they operate to cut off the right of redemption as effectually as would a sale under judicial decree. So it is generally declared that the rule of caveat emptor applies to such sales, but certainly not in the same [1217]*1217sense or degree as to judicial sales proper.

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Related

Graddick v. First Farmers & Merchants Nat.
453 So. 2d 1305 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1984)
Ames v. Pardue
389 So. 2d 927 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1980)
Alger-Sullivan Lumber Co. v. Union Trust Co.
118 So. 760 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1928)
Goulding Fertilizer Co. v. Blanchard
59 So. 485 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1912)
Alpine Construction Co. v. Water Works Board of the City of Birmingham
377 So. 2d 954 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
460 So. 2d 1213, 1984 Ala. LEXIS 4301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ames-v-central-bank-of-birmingham-ala-1984.