Brinton v. Haight

870 P.2d 677, 125 Idaho 324, 25 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 485, 1994 Ida. App. LEXIS 35
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 14, 1994
Docket20461
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 870 P.2d 677 (Brinton v. Haight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brinton v. Haight, 870 P.2d 677, 125 Idaho 324, 25 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 485, 1994 Ida. App. LEXIS 35 (Idaho Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

*326 LANSING, Judge.

This is an action brought by respondents James R. Brinton and Patricia J. Brinton to recover on a promissory note and to foreclose a deed of trust which secures the note. The makers of the note, G. W. Haight and W. Dea Haight, appeal the district court’s award of attorney fees and costs and of prejudgment interest accrued after the Haights had tendered payment of the full balance owed on the note. We conclude that the tender of full payment, made approximately seven months prior to commencement of this action and twenty-six months before judgment, halted further accrual of interest on the note and precluded the assessment of costs and attorney fees against the Haights. Therefore, we remand for modification of the judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

In 1988 the Haights purchased a parcel of real property fi’om the Brintons. Part of the purchase price was payable in installments under terms of a promissory note in the amount of $64,500. The note was secured by a deed of trust under which Pioneer Title Co., Coeur d’Alene (“Pioneer”) was trustee and the Brintons were beneficiaries. By a separate agreement, Pioneer also was designated to act as escrow holder to receive payments on the promissory note and transfer such payments to the Brintons or their assignee.

About one week prior to November 9, 1990, the Haights telephoned Pioneer and asked the amount of the payoff balance on the note. On Friday, November 9, 1990, at approximately 12:00 p.m. Mr. Haight called Pioneer again, and informed a Pioneer employee that he would be coming in to pay the note that day. Mr. Haight arrived at Pioneer at approximately 4:00 p.m. and, after being informed that the payoff amount was $53,272.80, began to write a personal check for that sum. Pioneer’s escrow supervisor informed Mr. Haight that Pioneer would not accept a personal check and required a cashier’s cheek instead. Mr. Haight then left Pioneer’s office but returned several minutes later with a cashier’s check for the $53,-272.80. He delivered the cashier’s check to the escrow supervisor and requested delivery of a trustee’s reconveyance deed. The escrow supervisor stated that she could not immediately give a reconveyance deed but that it would be ready the following business day. Finding it unsatisfactory to leave the cashier’s check without receiving a reconveyance deed that would remove the encumbrance from his property, Mr. Haight then took back the check after it had been in the escrow supervisor’s possession for less than ten minutes.

Over the weekend, the Haights examined the escrow statement provided by Pioneer and determined that the quoted payoff balance included both a $20.00 “payoff fee” and a $28.00 “reconveyance charge.” The Haights concluded that neither the escrow agreement nor the deed of trust provided that the Haights were responsible for these charges and, therefore, they should not be required to pay them. 1

On Tuesday, November 13, 2 Mr. Haight delivered a letter to Pioneer regarding these fees and what he considered to have been the course of conduct to that time. In this letter, Mr. Haight asserted that it was the duty of the beneficiary to furnish a deed of reconveyance under Idaho law and, therefore, he was not obligated to pay the $28.00 reconveyance fee. He further believed himself obligated to pay only one-half of any escrow fees. In his letter Mr. Haight offered to pay to Pioneer by personal check $53,233.80 (principal and interest through November 9 plus $11.00 for escrow fees) if Pioneer would agree to reconvey the premises without the payment of the $28.00 fee. The letter also stated that the *327 reconveyance need not be immediate but within the normal business practice of Pioneer and after the personal cheek cleared the payor bank. Mr. Haight also offered to pay the same amount by cashier’s check, conditioned, however, upon simultaneous delivery of a deed of reconveyance. Apparently in response to this letter, an agent of Pioneer called Mr. Haight and discussed the matter. Although it appears that as a result of this conversation Pioneer agreed to waive the $20.00 payoff fee and $3.00 of the reconveyance fee, Pioneer insisted on receiving a $2.00 escrow fee and a $25.00 reconveyance fee before executing a reconveyance.

On November 14, 1990, Pioneer sent a letter to the Haights explaining that the amount due on the note now included additional interest accrued since November 9, 1990, at a rate of $15,639 per day, bringing the balance to $53,318.63. Pioneer advised that when it received a cashier’s check for this amount plus any further accrued interest, it would deliver escrowed documents in compliance with the escrow agreement, but that Pioneer would not prepare a reconveyance deed due to the Haights’ refusal to pay the reconveyance fee. The letter further stated that Pioneer was resigning as trustee and that appointment of a new trustee would be necessary in order to accomplish any re-conveyance. The letter expressed Pioneer’s view that it was not responsible to make arrangements to collect the reconveyance fee.

The Haights thereafter made no payments on the note, although they assert they remained at all times ready, willing and able to remit the November 9, 1990, payoff amount. More than six months after Pioneer resigned, the Brintons appointed a successor trustee.

On June 10, 1991, the Brintons filed this action seeking a judgment for the unpaid principal balance of the promissory note plus interest accrued through date of judgment, and also requesting judicial foreclosure of the deed of trust. On January 6, 1993, following a court trial, the district court awarded judgment for the full amount requested by the Brintons. The judgment included interest in the amount of approximately $12,200 that had accrued at the rate of $15,639 per day from the Haights’ tender on November 9, 1990, through the date of judgment. The district court also awarded to the Brintons costs and attorney fees totalling approximately $5,000. The Haights have paid the judgment, but also brought this appeal, asserting that the award of interest accrued after November 9, 1990, and the award of costs and attorney fees were improper.

Thus has a $17,000 conflict grown from the inability of the Haights, Pioneer and the Brintons to resolve a disagreement over a $25.00 fee and three days’ interest.

The Haights acknowledge that they are liable for the principal and interest accrued through November 9, 1990. However, they maintain that when they offered to pay the full balance on November 9,1990, they properly tendered the amount due and that such tender stopped the accrual of interest after that date. The Brintons respond that the Haights unreasonably conditioned their tender upon immediate receipt of a deed of reconveyance and that they withdrew the tender when Pioneer could not immediately comply.

The district court, ruling in favor of the Brintons, found that the Haights had placed an unreasonable condition upon their tender and that Pioneer was never placed in effective control of the funds. The court concluded that proper tender was never made and the Haights consequently were not excused from payment of interest accruing after November 9, 1990.

On appeal, our inquiry is three-fold.

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Bluebook (online)
870 P.2d 677, 125 Idaho 324, 25 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 485, 1994 Ida. App. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brinton-v-haight-idahoctapp-1994.