Cofield v. Guaranty First Trust Co. (In Re Cofield)

138 B.R. 341, 1992 WL 75115
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedApril 1, 1992
Docket19-10735
StatusPublished

This text of 138 B.R. 341 (Cofield v. Guaranty First Trust Co. (In Re Cofield)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cofield v. Guaranty First Trust Co. (In Re Cofield), 138 B.R. 341, 1992 WL 75115 (Mass. 1992).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

JAMES A. GOODMAN, Judge.

I. Introduction

The issue before the Court is whether a third mortgage held by Guaranty First Trust Company (“GFTC”) is a valid mortgage. GFTC says the mortgage is valid because it was granted to secure a preexisting debt and to replace collateral which had declined in value or become worthless. The Debtor argues that the mortgage is void because at the time it was granted no debt existed between the Debt- or and GFTC. Moreover, the Debtor asserts the obligation the mortgage was intended to secure was not properly described.

II. Facts

The material facts are not in dispute. Indeed, the parties have supplied the Court with a “Stipulation of Facts and Agreed Exhibits.” The pertinent facts follow.

On December 30, 1986, Juan Cofield, (“Cofield”), as Trustee of the Lake Todd Nominee Trust (“LTNT”), purchased 285 acres of land in Newbury, New Hampshire for $1,350,000 and, as part of the transaction, granted a first mortgage to GFTC in the amount of $950,000. Cofield, as Trustee of LTNT, also gave a promissory note to Luther and Mildred Sweet, the sellers of the New Hampshire property, in the amount of $300,000, payable on December 31, 1988. Cofield personally guaranteed the promissory note. With interest, the note was payable in the amount of $349,920 at maturity. On the same day, GFTC issued an irrevocable letter of credit to Luther and Mildred Sweet, for the account of Cofield and LTNT, in the amount of $349,-920.

In conjunction with the issuance of the letter of credit, on December 30, 1986, Co-field, individually and as Trustee of LTNT, also executed a document captioned “Agreement for Letter of Credit,” pursuant to which he agreed to reimburse and pay to GFTC “the amount of any draft which may be drawn under and in accordance with the terms of the Credit or purport to be so drawn.” To secure this undertaking, in a separate pledge agreement dated December 30, 1986, Cofield pledged all the issued and outstanding capital stock of Malmart Mortgage Company, Inc. that he owned or held as of December 30, 1986. Moreover, he executed a personal guaranty on December 30, 1986 in favor of GFTC with respect to “all amounts now owing or which may hereafter be owing to said Bank from the Borrower on account of such loans, advances or credits, or otherwise, or the extensions or renewals thereof, and in whatever form ... at anytime due and owing.” Cofield agreed that this guaranty would be continuous and absolute until revoked in writing.

One day prior to the execution of the agreements outlined above, Cofield and his wife Sherdena Cofield granted a second mortgage, in the principal amount of $250,-000, on the Debtor’s personal residence at 284 Dean Road, Brookline, Massachusetts to GFTC as additional collateral for the first mortgage of LTNT. At the time, the *343 Dean Road property was subject to a first mortgage in the principal amount of $250,-000. However, the only mortgage in the amount of $250,000 in the collection of agreed exhibits appears to be the first mortgage dated December 21, 1981 between the Cofields as mortgagors and Mal-mart Mortgage Company, Inc. as mortgagee. In its memorandum, GFTC states:

Guaranty will foreclose on its third mortgage on the Dean Road Property if the Court grants its Motion for Relief from the Automatic Stay. Any issues involving Guaranty’s second mortgage on Dean Road are moot because Guaranty will discharge its second mortgage, although it believes debt still exists on a deficiency on the underlying obligation.

In 1987, Malmart Mortgage Company, Inc. filed for bankruptcy. Fearing that its collateral, namely Cofield’s stock in Mal-mart, was worthless or nearly so, in late 1987 or early 1988, GFTC requested that the second mortgagee of LTNT subordinate its mortgage to a new third mortgage on the New Hampshire property for $349,920. This request was denied by the second mortgagee.

However, on January 19, 1988, over eleven months before the Sweet note became due and payable, Cofield and his wife executed a document purporting to be a third mortgage on the Dean Road property in the amount of $349,920. The mortgage recites the following:

Juan M. Cofield and Sherdena D. Cofield for consideration paid, hereby grant unto ... [GFTC] ... with mortgage covenants, to secure payment of ... $349,920 ...: with interest on said sum until paid ... all payable as provided in a promissory note December 30, 1986 given by the Mortgagor [sic] to Luther Sweet and Mildred Sweet and a Letter of Credit dated December 30, 1986 Number 40357 issued by the Mortgagor to Luther Sweet or Mildred Sweet for the benefit of the Mortgagee [sic] and also to secure the performance of all agreements herein contained.

Additionally, Cofield executed a commercial promissory note to GFTC in the amount of $349,920, which note is dated January 19, 1988, purportedly secured by a second mortgage on the Dean Road Property. The Debtor alleges this note was signed well after the mortgage was executed.

LTNT defaulted on its payments on the first mortgage held by GFTC on the New Hampshire property. Subsequently, GFTC foreclosed on its mortgage, and was the purchaser at the foreclosure sale for $1.15 million.

On January 3, 1989, Luther and Mildred Sweet presented a sight draft to GFTC calling for payment of the letter of credit. GFTC honored the draft, and, on the same day, the Sweets assigned their note from Cofield to GFTC. Approximately two weeks later, GFTC notified Cofield of the assignment. Cofield, as Trustee of LTNT, acknowledged that $349,920 was due and payable. GFTC then attempted to foreclose on its third mortgage on the Dean Road property by filing, on November 1, 1989, a complaint in the Land Court. The protracted state court litigation that followed is not germane to the resolution of the instant dispute. GFTC, through its pending motion for relief from stay, now seeks permission from this Court to continue its foreclosure proceedings in the state court. Permission is predicated upon the validity of the third mortgage, an issue which is also the subject of the adversary proceeding commenced by Cofield against GFTC.

III. Discussion

With respect to the Sweet note, the Debtor correctly observes that GFTC was not the payee, owner, holder, holder in due course, endorsee, or possessor of the Sweet note at the time the Debtor executed the third mortgage. The Debtor also correctly argues that there was no debt of any description under the Sweet note between Cofield and GFTC. With respect to the letter of credit, the Debtor argues “the mortgagors of the purported mortgage, accrue no debt or other obligation to perform which is defeasible by them, by this instrument whatsoever.”

*344 Although technically these statements may be correct, clearly, Article 5 of the Uniform Commercial Code, M.G.L. Ch. 106, §§ 5-101 to 5-117 (West 1990 & Supp. 1991), contemplates a relationship between the account party (Cofield) and the issuing bank (GFTC). Specifically, M.G.L. Ch. 106, § 5-106(l)(a) provides: ... “a credit is established ...

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138 B.R. 341, 1992 WL 75115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cofield-v-guaranty-first-trust-co-in-re-cofield-mab-1992.