Campbell v. Werner
This text of 232 So. 2d 252 (Campbell v. Werner) 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
James E. CAMPBELL, and Beatrice D. Campbell, His Wife, Appellants,
v.
Thomas WERNER, As Trustee, and Thomas Werner and Wilma Werner, His Wife, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*253 Jordan & Chambers, Homestead, for appellants.
Gong & Pohlig, Miami, for appellees.
Before PEARSON, C.J., and CHARLES CARROLL and HENDRY, JJ.
CHARLES CARROLL, Judge.
This appeal challenges the correctness of an interlocutory order in a suit for foreclosure of a purchase money mortgage on real estate, entered prior to service of process on the mortgagor-owner, holding that the plaintiff mortgagees could not foreclose for the accelerated balance owed, and permitting the mortgagor to return the mortgage to good standing by curing the default. We find error, and reverse.
The complaint for foreclosure which was filed by the appellants on July 24, 1969, named as defendants Thomas Werner, as *254 trustee and individually, and Wilma Werner, his wife. It was alleged that the plaintiffs were owners and holders of a promissory note and a purchase money mortgage given to secure the same, made and delivered to them by the defendant Thomas Werner, as trustee, on June 28, 1968. Copies of the note and mortgage were attached to the complaint. The note was for $77,981.45, with interest at 6% per annum payable annually. It provided for the payment of the principal in five equal annual installments beginning June 29, 1969, authorized prepayment without penalty, and contained an acceleration clause. The mortgage embodied a copy of the note and provided a 15-day grace period for the payments called for therein and contained an acceleration clause, as follows:
"If any of said sums of money herein referred to be not promptly and fully paid within 15 days next after the same severally become due and payable, or if each and every the stipulations, agreements, conditions and covenants of said promissory note and this deed, or either, are not fully performed, complied with and abided by, the said aggregate sum mentioned in said promissory note shall become due and payable forthwith or thereafter at the option of the Mortgagees, their heirs, legal representatives or assigns, as fully and completely as if the said aggregate sum of seventy-seven thousand, nine hundred eighty-one and 45/100 dollars were originally stipulated to be paid on such day, anything in said promissory note or herein to the contrary notwithstanding."
The complaint alleged that the property involved was owned by the mortgagor; that the mortgagor had failed to pay the installment of principal which became due on June 29, 1969, and the annual interest payment which fell due on said date; and announced the election of the mortgagees to declare the full amount owed on the said note and mortgage to be due and payable,[1] for which, together with attorney fees and costs, they prayed for foreclosure.
The complaint contained no allegations upon which to predicate or explain the joining of Thomas Werner individually, and his wife, as defendants. There was no allegation that either of them, as individuals, held or claimed any interest in the property involved.
After service of process on Thomas Werner individually and his wife, but prior to service of process on the alleged mortgagor-owner, Thomas Werner, as trustee, the plaintiffs made application for appointment of a receiver, supported by their affidavit stating the value of the property to be $100,000, and stating without any supporting facts, that waste had been and would continue to be committed on the property. In opposition to the application for receiver, the mortgagor-owner Thomas Werner, as trustee, filed an affidavit stating he had acquired title to the property by purchase from the plaintiffs on June 28, 1968, and had been in possession of the property since November 1, 1967, pursuant to the contract upon which he had made the purchase; that "said property is a lime grove of approximately 3,075 trees, and contains a private airplane hangar and landing strip;" that since taking possession he had expended $54,000 on the property in cultivation of the grove, replacement of trees, and for fertilizers and sprays and in harvesting crops; and stating that *255 unless he was permitted to retain possession and manage the grove its condition would deteriorate. On consideration thereof the trial court denied the application for receiver, and no question with relation to that ruling is presented on this appeal.
A motion to dismiss was filed on behalf of the three defendants. Therein the mortgagor-owner challenged jurisdiction on the ground that he had not been served with process, and the individual defendants Thomas Werner and Wilma Werner sought to be dismissed from the cause due to the absence of any allegations showing them to be either necessary or proper parties.
On consideration of the motion to dismiss, the trial court entered the order from which the plaintiffs have taken this appeal. Upon reciting that the defendant mortgagor Thomas Werner, as trustee, was ready, willing and able to pay to plaintiffs the defaulted installment of principal and interest the trial court ordered the said Thomas Werner, as trustee, to pay to plaintiffs the defaulted installment of principal in the amount of $15,596.29 and the defaulted interest in the amount of $4,678.89 with attorney fees in the amount of $750 and the court costs of $35. The plaintiffs were then ordered to serve the trustee with process. The lis pendens which was filed by the plaintiffs incident to the cause was ordered to be cancelled of record. The court retained jurisdiction to enforce payment of each future installment as it should become due.
The effect of the order was to deny to the plaintiffs their right to accelerate the mortgage indebtedness as contracted for in the note and mortgage and their remedy to enforce the contract by foreclosure, and to place the mortgage in good standing upon payment by the mortgagor of the defaulted installment of principal and interest.
The first annual installment of principal and the interest fell due on June 29, 1969. The 15-day grace period ended on July 14. The complaint for foreclosure, which embodied the mortgagees' election to accelerate, was filed 10 days later on July 24, 1969.
An acceleration clause or promise in a note calling for payment in installments, and/or in a mortgage given as security therefor, confers a contract right upon the mortgagee which he may elect to enforce, upon a default. In the case of Treb Trading Co. v. Green, 102 Fla. 238, 135 So. 510, 136 So. 688, after holding that foreclosure can be had for an entire mortgage indebtedness upon election to accelerate for a default consisting of nonpayment of taxes, required to be paid by a mortgage which contains a clause authorizing acceleration for default therein, the Supreme Court said:
"* * * Such an agreement is not prohibited by statute, nor is it against public policy; it is not in the nature of a forfeiture nor a hard contract which it would be unconscionable to enforce, because an investor may very properly insist that his security shall be kept intact or that the loan shall mature. In fact, such a provision is very analogous to an agreement that a failure to pay the interest promptly shall render the whole principal due. Such stipulations have almost invariably been [up]held by the courts.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
232 So. 2d 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-werner-fladistctapp-1970.