Andrews v. Fleet Real Estate Funding Corp. (In Re Andrews)

78 B.R. 78
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 23, 1987
Docket19-10175
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 78 B.R. 78 (Andrews v. Fleet Real Estate Funding Corp. (In Re Andrews)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. Fleet Real Estate Funding Corp. (In Re Andrews), 78 B.R. 78 (Pa. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVID A. SCHOLL, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this case, we decide that, due to the wording of the mortgage in issue, the mortgagee is not authorized to measure “late charges” which may be imposed upon the mortgagor for tardy payments by reference to the entire monthly payment, as is the general practice, but by reference to only that portion of the payment attributable to principal and interest.

We also hold that the improper past collection of excess late charges is actionable under the Pennsylvania statute regulating “unfair or deceptive acts or practices,” 73 P.S. § 201-1, et seq. (referred to herein after as “UDAP”). However, we refuse the mortgagor’s invitation to transform our first two holdings into a treasure trove for the mortgagor, and conclude that, given the particular facts here, the mortgagee’s repeated overcharges should be deemed a single “method, act or practice” entitling the mortgagor to one award of treble the entire sum of overcharges imposed by the mortgagee. We shall consequently reduce the mortgagee’s Proof of Claim by the modest sum of $250.85.

The Debtor, BRENDA DENISE ANDREWS, filed her underlying Chapter 13 bankruptcy case on December 31, .1986. On April 13, 1987, she commenced the instant Adversary proceeding challenging *80 the secured Proof of Claim filed by FLEET REAL ESTATE FUNDING CORPORATION, the holder of the first mortgage on her residence (referred to hereinafter as “the Mortgagee”) in the amount of $11,-021.59 for arrearages and $22,640.88 for the total debt. The Complaint, as amended, raised a number of issues, which, when the parties came before us on the designated trial date of July 15, 1987, their respective counsel advised us has been resolved except that related to the imposition of “late charges” by the mortgagee. On that day, we entered an Order directing the parties to file a Stipulation of Facts relating to the remaining relevant issue on or before July 24, 1987, and to submit Briefs pursuant to a schedule to be completed on September 14, 1987.

The brief Stipulation of Facts had attached thereto the pertinent mortgage and note of October 30,1979, in favor of Forbes Mortgage Co., which were assigned to the Mortgagee on October 1, 1980. From January 1, 1981, through December 31, 1986, the Debtor had paid $375.07 in late charges, computed at four (4%) percent of the entire monthly mortgage payment of $199.22, i.e., $7.96 per month. However, the parties further stipulated that seventy-two (72) late charges were due as of December 31, 1986.

The Debtor, by dividing $375.07 by $7.96, ascertained that forty-seven (47) late charges had been collected from her by the Mortgagee as of December 31, 1986. Another thirty-two (32) such charges were alleged to be due and unpaid per the Mortgagee’s Proof of Claim, filed February 17, 1987.

The parties agree that the pertinent portions of paragraph two of the Mortgage, relating to late charges collectible, provide as follows:

2. To more fully protect the security of this Mortgage, the Mortgagor shall pay to the Mortgagee as trustee (under the terms of this trust as hereinafter stated) in addition to and concurrently with, each monthly installment of principal and interest until said Note is fully paid, the following sums:
(a) A sum equal to the ground rents, if any, next due, plus the premiums that, will next become due and payable on policies of fire and other hazard insurance, plus taxes, assessments, and sewer and water rents, next due on the premises covered by this Mortgage (all as estimated by the Mortgagee, and of which the Mortgagor is notified) less all sums already paid therefor divided by the number of months to elapse before one month prior to the date when such ground rents, premiums, taxes, assessments, and sewer and water rents, will become due, such sums to be held by Mortgagee in trust to pay said ground rents, premiums, taxes, assessments, and sewer and water rents....
Any deficiency in the amount of any such aggregate monthly payment shall constitute an event of default hereunder and under said Note, unless made good by Mortgagor prior to the due date of the next such payment. At Mortgagee’s option, Mortgagor will pay a “late charge’’ not exceeding four per centum (Jffi) of any installment when paid more than fifteen (15) days after the due date thereof to cover the extra expense involved in handling delinquent payments, ... (emphasis added).

The Debtor points out that both the mortgage and the note, like the first portion of paragraph two of the Mortgage emphasized above, make reference to “monthly installments” of $162.72, which is the amount of the monthly payment attributable to principal and interest only. Meanwhile, the total sum due each month, $199.22, is referred to in the second portion of paragraph two emphasized above, as the “aggregate monthly payment.” Thus, argues the Debtor, the reference to “four per centum (4%) of any installment” in the third portion of paragraph two emphasized above must mean that four (4%) percent is to be taken of $162.72, referred to else-whereas the monthly installment, not $199.22, the “aggregate monthly payment,” in calculating the late charges. As a result, the Debtor contends that the proper monthly late charges should have been *81 four (4%) percent of $162.72, or $6.51, not four (4%) percent of $199.22, or $7.96. Thus, the Debtor concludes that she has been overcharged $1.45 in late charges on the forty-seven (47) occasions when late charges were imposed in the past, and would be overcharged $1.45 as to each of the thirty-two (32) months for which late charges are claimed to be due in the Mortgagee’s Proof of Claim.

This argument is as lucid as it is ingenious. The Mortgagee, apparently transfixed thereby, is forced to concede that “the analysis of the meaning of the word ‘installment’ in the contractual language ably set forth in Debtor’s brief is probable [sic] the best interpretation.” Defendant’s Brief in Opposition to Complaint Objecting to Secured Claim of Fleet Real Estate Funding Corporation, at 8. The most that is said by the Mortgagee, in attempting to defend against the thrust of the Debtor’s UDAP claim, is that “it can not be said that the language is completely unambiguous.” Id. Thus, the effective thrust of the Mortgagee’s reply is not that it was correct in imposing late charges of $7.96 monthly, but that it did not do so without some colorable right to do so and hence did not intentionally overcharge the Debtor.

It is well-established that any ambiguities in a contract, particularly in an adhesion contract in which there was doubtless no bargaining over terms, must be construed strictly against the party who drafted the contract. See, e.g., In re Tashjian, 72 B.R. 968, 976 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987); In re Jablonski, 70 B.R. 381, 389 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987); and In re United Nesco Container Corp., 68 B.R. 970, 973 (Bankr.E.D.Pa.1987). Since the Mortgagee, as an as-signee, steps into the shoes of Forbes Mortgage Co., the drafter of the adhesion contract, the admitted ambiguity in the foregoing passages must be construed against the Mortgagee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 B.R. 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-fleet-real-estate-funding-corp-in-re-andrews-paeb-1987.