Anderson v. Anderson

266 A.2d 56, 107 R.I. 202, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 760
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 3, 1970
Docket825-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 266 A.2d 56 (Anderson v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Anderson, 266 A.2d 56, 107 R.I. 202, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 760 (R.I. 1970).

Opinion

*203 Joslin, J.

In this civil action Natalie Anderson asked the Superior Court to cancel and void a mortgage foreclosure sale on residential property owned jointly by her and her husband. She also asked that the mortgagee be enjoined from delivering, and the successful bidders from accepting, a deed of that property. The defendants are Robert, her husband; the Old Stone Savings Bank, the foreclosing mortgagee which at foreclosure time was owed $18,683.58 on account of principal and four overdue monthly installments of $137.58 each; and Jordan Kirshenbaum and Harold Smith who bid the property in for $19,-851 at the foreclosure sale. Judgment against Robert was by default; and after a nonjury trial a judgment was entered granting Natalie the right to redeem the property, and, subject to her exercising that right, voiding the foreclosure sale and enjoining the bank from delivering a deed to the purchasers. The purchasers appealed.

In argument before us the bank assumed the position of a stakeholder. While at all times insisting that the foreclosure procedures conformed both to the laws of this state and to the power of sale contained in the mortgage deed, it nonetheless professed its readiness to convey the property as it may be directed.

The property involved in the dispute is the marital domicile of the Andersons. A Family Court decree entered in a matrimonial dispute involving the Anderson family gave Natalie exclusive use of the property and directed Robert to pay the insurance and taxes on the property as well as. the monthly mortgage payments. When, without justification or excuse, Robert failed to make the mortgage payments, the bank commenced foreclosure proceedings. The first notice advertising the foreclosure sale was published on November 1, 1968, and it fixed 11:00 a. m. on November 25, 1968, as the time of the sale.

When Natalie learned about the pending foreclosure sale *204 she applied to the Family Court to have her husband adjudged in contempt. Thereupon, Robert agreed to pay $700 on the mortgage defaults in order to forestall the scheduled foreclosure sale, but the morning on which the sale was to take place arrived without any payment having been made. By then, however, Robert had concluded arrangements for obtaining the funds required to cure the defaults, and it was the knowledge of the availability of those funds which prompted Natalie’s attorney to telephone the bank’s counsel at about 9:15 that morning. What the attorneys said then and later, when the call was returned, is unclear.

The bank’s counsel was positive that during the first conversation Natalie’s attorney advised that money was available to pay the arrearages on the mortgage and spoke of the possibility of postponing the sale; he was equally positive that a postponement was not asked for when he returned the call about half an hour later and told Natalie’s attorney that nobody had communicated with the bank about making a payment on the mortgage and that he was on his way to the foreclosure sale.

Natalie’s attorney had a different version. He insisted that the first conversation was limited to a discussion of the arrangements which had been made for Robert to pay what was overdue on the mortgage; he also said that the request for a postponement was not made until after he had been informed during the second conversation that Robert had not communicated with the bank. The bank’s attorney, he said, then agreed to pass that request on to his client and to let him know whether or not the sale would be continued.

In any event, there were no other pre-sale communications, and Natalie’s attorney, relying upon his version of the two telephone conversations, took no further steps to protect her interests. The sale took place and the property, which had an agreed market value of $33,000, was *205 struck down to the purchasers for $19,851. The only other bidder at the sale was the bank. Its final bid was $19,850, which was the balance then due on the mortgage indebtedness plus foreclosure expenses.

The trial justice’s pertinent findings 1 were that the bid price was grossly inadequate and that Natalie had not protected her interests at the foreclosure sale because of a mistaken and justifiable belief that all overdue sums on the mortgage indebtedness would be paid and the foreclosure proceedings postponed or abandoned. It was upon these findings, rather than upon any suggestion that the sale was not duly advertised or properly conducted, that the trial justice invalidated the foreclosure sale, and the question for us is the validity of his conclusion.

Well-settled legal principles control the determination of what circumstances and conditions justify the impeachment of a foreclosure sale. They recognize that it is a delicate matter to interfere with a sale when the mortgagee in foreclosing has acted within the letter of his power; Holland v. Citizens Savings Bank, 16 R. I. 734, 738, 19 A. 654, 656; Nichols v. Flagg, 24 R. I. 30, 31, 51 A. 1039, 1040; that a purchaser at a foreclosure sale has rights which merit protection; Rosenfeld v. Wunsch, 45 R. I. 48, 53, 119 A. 658, 660; McKenney v. Burney, 49 R. I. 423, 425, 143 A. 778; and that a realistic awareness of what occurs in the marketplace suggests that land which is sold at auction under a power of sale will seldom produce a *206 price as high as its real value. Beacon Hill Land Co. v. Bowen, 33 R. I. 404, 412, 82 A. 81, 84-85. They recognize also that neither the delicacy of the proceedings nor a purchaser’s right to enjoy the benefits of his bargain should be allowed to override strong equities in favor of the owner of an equity of redemption. Rosenfeld v. Wunsch, supra at 53, 119 A. at 660, McKenney v. Burney, supra at 425, 143 A. at 778. In deciding whether there are such equities, any disparity between what was paid for the property and its fair market value will, of course, be an important consideration. And while inadequacy of price alone will not suffice to invalidate a sale, Woolley v. Tougas, 61 R. I. 434, 1 A.2d 92; Galvin v. Newton, 19 R. I. 176, 36 A. 3; Nichols v. Flagg, supra; Babcock v. Wells, 25 R. I. 30, 54 A. 599; Beacon Hill Land Co. v. Bowen, supra; it will be taken into account —- particularly if the disparity is so great that it shocks the conscience, Hanley v. Brayton, 66 R. I. 87, 92, 17 A.2d 857, 859, — together with the other attendant circumstances in ascertaining whether the sale was fair or whether instead it was so unjust and inequitable as to justify its being set aside. Woolley v. Tougas, supra; Rosenfeld v. Wunsch, supra; McKenney v. Burney, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
266 A.2d 56, 107 R.I. 202, 1970 R.I. LEXIS 760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-anderson-ri-1970.