BV/B1, LLC v. InvestorsBank

2010 WI App 152, 792 N.W.2d 622, 330 Wis. 2d 462, 2010 Wisc. App. LEXIS 859
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedOctober 26, 2010
DocketNo. 2009AP2721
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2010 WI App 152 (BV/B1, LLC v. InvestorsBank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BV/B1, LLC v. InvestorsBank, 2010 WI App 152, 792 N.W.2d 622, 330 Wis. 2d 462, 2010 Wisc. App. LEXIS 859 (Wis. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

BRENNAN, J.

¶ 1. BV/B1, LLC, appeals from a declaratory judgment awarding InvestorsBank $833,798.52 in prepayment penalty fees following a summary judgment hearing. BV/B1 argues that the clause on which the circuit court relied is subject to at least four different logical interpretations, thereby making the clause ambiguous and inappropriate for construction on summary judgment. BV/B1 also argues that the circuit court erred in failing to conclude that InvestorsBank waived its right to counterclaim for additional monies after accepting BV/Bl's payment and releasing the collateral property. We disagree on both grounds and affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2. BV/B1 is a limited liability company formed in 2004. Originally, BV/B1 had four members: Boulder Venture 13, LLC; Jeffrey Metz; Brian Byrne; and John Lubotsky. The members of Boulder Venture were Robert E. Schmidt, III; Sharon Bell; and Crista Wojack. InvestorsBank is a financial institution located in Waukesha, Wisconsin and is engaged in commercial lending.

¶ 3. In late 2004, BV/B1 began shopping around for permanent financing for a commercial building it was constructing in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. BV/B1 approached TCF Bank for a loan. TCF Bank was willing to provide BV/B1 with a $4.8 million loan, with a term of ten years, at a fixed interest rate of 6.87%, but would [467]*467require personal guarantees of BV/Bl's members, which it would cap at ten percent of the loan amount.

¶ 4. BV/B1 then approached InvestorsBank who held the construction loan on the building to see if it would be willing to provide more favorable terms. George Schonath, InvestorsBank's president,1 told BV/B1 that InvestorsBank was willing to provide BV/B1 with a $4.85 million loan, with a term of ten years, at a fixed interest rate of 6.75%, with no personal guaranties. In lieu of personal guaranties, however, Investors-Bank required a prepayment penalty if the loan was paid before maturity.

¶ 5. Schonath personally drafted a unique prepayment penalty provision for its loan with BV/B1 that had not previously been utilized by InvestorsBank. Investors Bank's standard prepayment penalty provision at that [468]*468time provided for a prepayment penalty of ninety days interest on the outstanding principal balance of the loan on the date of repayment, if the loan was refinanced with another financial institution. The term loan given to BV/B1, however, was unique in many respects, including: (1) it locked in an interest rate for ten years, which is unusual in commercial real estate; (2) it provided an interest rate below the market rate; and (3) it required no personal guarantees, which was highly unusual in commercial real estate and which poses substantial risk for the lender.

¶ 6. After extensive negotiation over the terms of the loan, including the addition of an eighteen-month grace period, which permitted BV/B1 to sell the building without incurring a prepayment penalty, the parties agreed on the following prepayment penalty clause:

If the loan is prepaid in full or in part at any time on or before July 30, 2006 there shall be no prepayment penalty. If the loan is prepaid in full or in part at any time after July 30, 2006 or if the prepayment is the result of an acceleration due to an event of default, the prepayment penalty shall be equal to the fixed rate on the loan minus the yield on a US Treasury Bond with a maturity similar to the number of years remaining on the fixed rate loan plus 2.5% times the number of years remaining at a fixed rate times the outstanding principal balance of the loan.

(Emphasis added.)

¶ 7. As the grace period in the prepayment penalty provision was coming to an end, BV/B1 had not sold the building nor had it requested an extension of the grace period from InvestorsBank. In February 2007, after the grace period had expired, Graff/Goldman Interests, Inc., secured an option to purchase the build[469]*469ing and interest in the lease. Graff/Goldman subsequently exercised the option.

¶ 8. BV/B1 informed InvestorsBank of the intended sale to Graff/Goldman on September 14, 2007. On that same day, Sarah Frantz, a loan administrator for InvestorsBank, prepared a payoff letter that she believed reflected the principal and interest due on the term loan. Frantz assumed that InvestorsBank's standard prepayment penalty clause applied, which would have resulted in no prepayment penalty fee. The letter, which was sent to BV/B1, advised BV/B1 that the total payoff amount was $4,523,073.69: $4,507,019.43 constituting the remaining balance on the loan and $16,054.26 in interest. The letter explicitly stated that no prepayment penalty fee was being assessed.

¶ 9. Schonath soon realized that Frantz had applied the wrong prepayment penalty clause and instructed her to send a revised payoff letter to BV/B1 based upon the clause the parties drafted specifically for the BV/B1 loan. Frantz emailed BV/B1 the revised payoff letter, advising BV/B1 of InvestorsBank's error. The revised payoff letter informed BV/B1 that in addition to the $4,523,073.69, BV/B1 owed $1,630,909.90 in prepayment penalty fees for a total payoff amount of $6,153,983.59.

¶ 10. On behalf of BV/B1, Schmidt attempted to negotiate the prepayment penalty, and set up a meeting with Schonath. During the meeting, Schmidt stated that BV/B1 would not be able to close on its deal with Graff/Goldman if assessed the $1.6 million prepayment penalty fee. As a result, Schmidt asserted that BV/B1 would be sued by Graff/Goldman, which would only "make the situation . . . ugl[y] for everyone."

¶ 11. After the meeting, Schonath considered reducing the prepayment penalty fee in hopes of main[470]*470taining a long-term relationship with Boulder Venture and Schmidt. The next morning, InvestorsBank emailed a second revised payoff letter to BV/B1. The letter set forth a new prepayment penalty fee of $797,111.38, calculated by removing the "plus 2.5%" variable from the prepayment penalty clause. Accordingly, InvestorsBank set the new total payoff amount on the loan at $5,321,030.14: the $4,507,019.43 loan balance, plus $16,899.33 in loan interest,2 plus the $797,111.38 reduced prepayment penalty fee. Schmidt was not satisfied with the reduced prepayment penalty fee, but he decided to pay the reduced amount in order to close on the sale of the property with Graff/Goldman.

¶ 12. On September 21, 2007, during the closing, BV/B1 wired $5,323,565.35 to InvestorsBank to pay off the loan. That amount comprised of $4,507,019.43 in remaining principal, $19,434.54 in interest, and the $797,111.38 reduced prepayment penalty fee. Immediately after the closing, BV/B1 faxed a letter to InvestorsBank, which stated that BV/B1 reserved its right "to contest the validity and enforceability of the prepayment penalty" fee. On September 25, 2007, Investors-Bank provided BV/B1 with a document entitled "SATISFACTION OF LEAS [E] HOLD REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE - BY LENDER," stating that the loan was "satisfied and released as security."

¶ 13. BV/B1 faxed another letter to Investors-Bank on October 8, 2007, stating that BV/B1 sought immediate return of the reduced prepayment penalty fee — $797,111.38—and that if the funds were not returned by October 15, 2007, BV/B1 would commence litigation. InvestorsBank did not return the prepayment penalty fee.

[471]*471¶ 14.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2010 WI App 152, 792 N.W.2d 622, 330 Wis. 2d 462, 2010 Wisc. App. LEXIS 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bvb1-llc-v-investorsbank-wisctapp-2010.