Baader v. Walker
This text of 153 So. 2d 51 (Baader v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Hans BAADER and Kathryn A. Baader, Appellants,
v.
T.B. WALKER and Dorothy M. Walker, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.
*52 Carl O. Dunbar, Jr., Dunedin, for appellants.
John L. Estes, Clearwater, for appellees.
WHITE, Judge.
Appellants Hans Baader and wife were plaintiffs in a foreclosure suit in which the chancellor decreed that the mortgage indebtedness had been paid prior to suit and that the mortgage should be satisfied of record. The chancellor thus sustained the position of the defendant-appellees T.B. Walker and wife.
The facts are essentially undisputed. In September, 1957, the defendants executed their note and mortgage to Suncoast Holding and Investments, Inc. In October, 1957, the note and mortgage were assigned to plaintiffs Baader who entered into a servicing agreement with Insured Mortgage and Title Corporation by which the latter agreed to act as plaintiffs' collecting agent.
The defendants made regular installment payments to the agent through November, 1960. The payment due December 20, 1960, was not paid until January 10, 1961, on which date the entire balance of the indebtedness, $3,202.29, was paid by the defendants to the agent. In March, 1961, the agent went into receivership and the sum so collected was not remitted to the plaintiff-mortgagees. The plaintiffs sued to foreclose and the defendants pleaded payment and counterclaimed for an order directing that the mortgage be satisfied of record.
The pertinent acceleration clause reads as follows:
"* * * (U)pon default in payment of principal and/or interest due on any note secured by said mortgage, all notes so secured and remaining unpaid shall forthwith become due and payable notwithstanding their tenor." (Emphasis supplied)
The import of plaintiffs' contention on appeal is that the foregoing clause was not self-executing and that the chancellor should have held that the agent was not authorized to collect principal in advance of specified maturity dates or prior to acceleration through the election of plaintiffs to declare the entire indebtedness due and payable which they had not done. Thus the theory of plaintiffs' position is that the law supplies for the creditor's benefit alone an option to accelerate even though such provision is conspicuously absent from the written instrument. The chancellor, as indicated, held that the unqualified acceleration clause did become self-executing upon defendants' default and that consequently the entire indebtedness *53 became due and payable not later than the contractual ten day grace period subsequent to December 20, 1960.
This appeal thus presents the conjunctive questions of whether the defendants had the right to pay the full balance of the mortgage indebtedness and whether the plaintiffs' agent had authority to collect it. We shall consider first whether the collecting agent had express or implied authority to receive payment of principal prior to regular maturity dates. In this connection the plaintiffs argue that neither the note nor the mortgage expressly conferred on the defendant-obligors the privilege or option of prepayment. On the other hand, the defendants point to the unqualified language of the acceleration clause supra and to the broad powers conferred upon the corporate agent in its guarantee and collection agency agreement with the plaintiffs:
"The owner or holder of this stipulated mortgage shall in no manner interfere with the method or action we employ or use to promote the collection of the note and enforce the terms, conditions or covenants of the said mortgage and should the mortgagor of this mortgage and note or assigns of the property this mortgage covers contact the owner or holder of this mortgage, relative to change of any of the conditions or payments of this mortgage and note, the said owner or holder shall refer such persons to us as exclusive collection agents for the term of the said mortgage." (Emphasis supplied).
In addition to the foregoing it was agreed that the agent would pay plaintiffs the stipulated monthly payments without reference to whether or not corresponding payments were actually received from the defendants:
"We [agent] agree to pay all payments stipulated in the note of this mortgage in the following manner: All payments stipulated within the note of the afore-described mortgage will be mailed to the owner thereof on either the 1st or the 15th of the month, whichever date is subsequent to the stipulated due dates of said note and we agree to render a full administration of the terms, conditions and covenants of both the said mortgage and note without charges to the owner of same for the period of time the said note specifies * * *"
It therefore is apparent that the order of payments to be made by plaintiffs' agent was not contingent upon the order of the agent's collection of payments from the defendants; and this extraordinary undertaking no doubt accounts for the broad powers of collection conferred upon the agent. The plaintiffs nevertheless contend that the agent's authority to collect was in effect limited by the regular maturity dates and that until the plaintiffs elected to declare an acceleration the agent was without authority to collect the unpaid balances notwithstanding the default of the defendants. The defendants, of course, take the contrary position.
Did the defendants' entire indebtedness, in relation to the agent's authority to collect, become payable ipso facto upon the default of the defendants? Did the agent collect an indebtedness that was due? An affirmative answer to these questions is, in our opinion, consistent with the law well stated in the annotation in 100 A.L.R. 389 at page 390:
"It is the general rule that an agent's authority to make collections for his principal may not ordinarily be extended by implication so as to justify his collecting money before it is due, particularly a considerable time before the obligation matures, at least in the absence of some known course of dealing of such a character that reliance may properly be placed thereon by the obligor as indicating that the agent is actually authorized so to collect, or of other circumstances giving the appearance of actual authority or a *54 holding out of ostensible authority." 100 A.L.R. 389, 390. (Emphasis supplied)
It is notable in this connection that the rule against extension of an agent's authority by implication so as to justify premature collections was not derived from cases involving instruments providing for acceleration prior to regular maturity. 100 A.L.R. 390, supra.
We come now to consider whether the acceleration clause in this case falls within the optional or the absolute category. If absolute, the indebtedness became due and payable consequent upon default of the defendant or at the end of the specified grace period, subject to waiver of default by mutual assent or acquiescence. On the other hand, if acceleration were optional with the plaintiffs, maturity did not occur until the exercise of such option. See 159 A.L.R. 1077, 1079; 10 C.J.S. Bills and Notes § 251c.
We find no Florida decision squarely in point on the facts and the decisions in other jurisdictions are not in accord on whether an unqualified acceleration clause, such as here involved, is "self-executing" by causing the whole debt to become "due" automatically upon default.
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153 So. 2d 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baader-v-walker-fladistctapp-1963.