Beasley v. Mellon Financial Services Corp.

569 So. 2d 389, 1990 WL 170505
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 28, 1990
Docket89-743
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 569 So. 2d 389 (Beasley v. Mellon Financial Services Corp.) 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
Beasley v. Mellon Financial Services Corp., 569 So. 2d 389, 1990 WL 170505 (Ala. 1990).

Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 391

Mellon Financial Services Corporation ("Mellon") filed suit against Jayne Y. Beasley, Richard Yarbrough, James J. Powell,1 and W.B. Scott,2 alleging that through a mutual mistake of all parties, there was an error in the description of a certain two-acre tract of land that resulted in a house being built on the wrong property. Mellon sought relief under the theory of reformation and the theory of constructive trust. The trial court granted Mellon the relief it sought. Ms. Beasley and Yarbrough appeal. We affirm.

In July 1984, Yarbrough deeded 80 acres of land to Ms. Beasley. Subsequently, Yarbrough obtained a default judgment against Ms. Beasley. To satisfy that judgment, Ms. Beasley sold approximately 40 acres of that land, which had been subdivided into five parcels, to Powell, who gave Ms. Beasley a promissory note and secured the payment of that note by a purchase money mortgage to Ms. Beasley. To secure her debt to Yarbrough, Ms. Beasley then executed to Yarbrough an assignment of that note and that mortgage as collateral. Subsequently, Ms. Beasley and Yarbrough executed a release of parcel 3 from the collateral assignment and from the mortgage. Thereafter, Powell obtained a construction loan from JMW Enterprises, Inc. ("JMW"), and then executed a mortgage to JMW conveying parcel 3 as security for the loan. JMW assigned the mortgage that had been executed for the purpose of financing Powell's house to Mellon. Ultimately, Powell's house was constructed, but not on parcel 3, which was the two-acre tract of land that Yarbrough had released from the collateral assignment, and on which Mellon held the mortgage. Rather, Powell's house was constructed on an adjacent two-acre tract of land that was located in parcel 5.

Powell never made any payments to Mellon; therefore, Mellon foreclosed on parcel 3, the lot on which the parties intended Powell's house to be constructed. In addition, Powell became delinquent in his payments to Ms. Beasley. As a result of Powell's failure to pay Ms. Beasley, she accepted from Powell a deed in lieu of foreclosure on the two-acre tract in parcel 5, on which the house had actually been constructed. Prior to accepting the deed in lieu of foreclosure, Ms. Beasley had discovered that Powell's house had not been constructed on parcel 3, but on the adjacent two-acre tract in parcel 5.

The trial court heard ore tenus evidence and made detailed findings of fact. Those findings of fact pertinent to this appeal are as follows:

"Based upon the evidence presented to the Court, the Court specifically finds that it was the intent of Beasley, Yarbrough, and Powell that Powell receive two acres free and clear from the Beasley mortgage for the purpose of building his home on said site. It is clear from the testimony that Powell needed to have *Page 392 two acres free and clear from said mortgage in order to induce [JMW] to build his home on said property. Further, it is clear from the testimony that within the entire [40] acres which Beasley sold to Powell, there was no significant difference in any particular two-acre tract of said land from any other particular two-acre tract contained within the whole parcel. . . .

"6. [Mellon] has requested the Court to reform the description contained in various documents presented to the Court so that the end result will be that Mellon owns the particular two-acre parcel on which the house is located . . . due to the fact that [Mellon] foreclosed on the Powell mortgage which was made for the purpose of financing the house in question. . . .

"7. In the instant case, the Court finds that [Mellon] has proved with clear, convincing, and satisfactory evidence that the intention of the parties was that Powell should receive a two-acre parcel of property free and clear from the Beasley mortgage on which he was to build his home. The Court is convinced by the evidence that through mutual mistake among Beasley, Yarbrough, Powell, and [JMW], the parcel released from the Beasley mortgage and the parcel on which the Powell home was built are not the same. Further, the Court finds that it is significant that . . . when Beasley accepted a deed in lieu of foreclosure from Powell, she was admittedly aware that the home had not been built on the parcel of property which had previously been released from her mortgage. . . . From the testimony presented at trial, it is clear that Powell was a party to a mutual mistake in that he is the one who selected the plot upon which the house was to be built and he is the one who executed the mortgage in favor of [JMW], which induced them to build the house on the property which he had designated. For this reason, if Powell had not executed a deed in lieu of foreclosure to Beasley, it is clear that Mellon would have been entitled to reformation against Powell of the mortgage which it subsequently received by assignment from [JMW], due to the mutuality of mistake which existed between [JMW] and Powell at the time the mortgage was executed and the home was constructed. As Mellon would be entitled to reformation against Powell, the statutes . . . in regard to deeds in lieu of foreclosure make it abundantly clear that Mellon is also entitled to reformation against Beasley and Yarbrough. Further, the testimony of Beasley at trial indicates that she was well aware of the situation at the time she accepted the deed in lieu of foreclosure, and further, that she did not acquire any rights in the property for value. The Court finds that it would not be prejudicial to Beasley or Yarbrough to reform the documents as requested by Mellon due to the fact that Beasley did not acquire her rights in good faith and for value. For all of the reasons set out above, the Court is convinced that Beasley and Yarbrough are parties to a mutual mistake and that equity requires that the reformation requested by Mellon be granted.

"8. [Mellon] has also requested relief under the theory of a constructive trust. . . . In the instant case, it is clear that Beasley unfairly holds [a] property interest in the parcel of land on which the house is located and that said parcel of property justly belongs to Mellon. Beasley was aware of the mistake at the time she accepted the deed in lieu of foreclosure and she has not paid anything for the home. Likewise, it is clear from the evidence that Mellon has paid for the home and to allow Beasley to retain title to the property on which the home is located and . . . the home itself would allow her to become unjustly enriched at the expense of Mellon.

"9. In conclusion, the Court finds that Mellon is entitled to the relief which it has requested both under the theory of reformation and under the theory of constructive trust. The Court finds that these theories are not inconsistent and that equity can be served under both theories by ordering that Mellon deed to Beasley the property interest which was *Page 393 obtained by foreclosure on Powell by Mellon (the two-acre parcel on which the home is not located) and that Beasley deed to Mellon the two-acre parcel of property on which the home is located. Equity will then be served in that Beasley will own a two-acre parcel of property (on which the home is not located) of equal value.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
569 So. 2d 389, 1990 WL 170505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beasley-v-mellon-financial-services-corp-ala-1990.