Costas v. First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n

321 S.E.2d 51, 283 S.C. 94, 1984 S.C. LEXIS 352
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 29, 1984
Docket22162
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 321 S.E.2d 51 (Costas v. First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Costas v. First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n, 321 S.E.2d 51, 283 S.C. 94, 1984 S.C. LEXIS 352 (S.C. 1984).

Opinion

Littlejohn, Chief Justice:

Respondent-Appellant First Federal Savings and Loan Association brought this action to recover a debt owed by Wyboo Gulf Marina, Inc., and by owners, Respondent John B. Houser, Jr., Respondent James R. Bradham, Jr. and also by Respondent-Appellant A. W. Hursey and Respondent-Appellant W. C. Hopper, all of whom endorsed the note evidencing the debt. First Federal sued these four endorsers and the next subsequent holders in the chain of possession of Wyboo Gulf Marina, Inc., who are Appellants-Respondents Wade H. Jones, Sr., and Wade H. Jones, Jr. Through numerous cross-complaints and counterclaims the next two subsequent holders Respondent-Appellant John T. Adair and Appellant-Respondent Alex H. Costas also became involved in this litigation.

The matter was referred to a Master who recommended denial of First Federal’s claim on the note, granted judgments of $10,000 each for actual and punitive damages on the counterclaims by Hopper, Hursey, Houser, and Bradham, and ordered First Federal to pay attorneys’ fees to the attorneys involved in the action.

The Circuit Court judge reversed, holding (1) that each holder in the chain of possession of Wyboo was liable on the note; (2) that each successive holder was liable to the preceding holder; and (3) that each preceding holder was entitled to indemnification from each subsequent holder. He denied all attorney’s fees and the counterclaims of Hopper, Hursey, Houser, and Bradham. We affirm.

Five Appellants set forth as many groups of exceptions for a total of thirty-six allegations of error. We will not treat them seriatim but all have been considered and the result which we reach disposes of all of them.

The missteps and errors of some of the parties to this action have created a tangled web of confused and complex facts which do not allow for an easy solution. We first endeavor jto sort through these facts.

[97]*97W. A. Loflin, the owner of a tract of land on Lake Marion, leased it to Hursey and Hopper in late 1971. The lease was for a period of ten years with provisions for three additional ten year renewal terms. Hursey and Hopper assigned that lease in January 1972, to Wyboo Gulf Marina, Inc. (Wyboo), a corporation owned entirely by them.

In October 1972, First Federal Savings and Loan Association (First Federal) lent $58,500 to Wyboo. In return, Wyboo gave First Federal a note personally endorsed by Hursey, Hopper, Houser, and Bradham (the endorsers). Wyboo also gave to First Federal as security for the loan what purported to be a first mortgage on the property leased by Loflin to Hursey and Hopper and assigned by them to Wyboo. For some reason, this mortgage was never properly finalized since the lease was not assigned to First Federal.

In July 1973, Hopper and Hursey sold all of the common stock of Wyboo to Wade H. Jones, Sr., and Wade H. Jones, Jr., (Joneses) who signed an Assumption Agreement by which they assumed the obligation to First Federal. First Federal never recognized this agreement but accepted payments from the Joneses.

In July 1974, the Joneses sold all of the common stock of Wyboo to J. T. Adair who signed an Assumption Agremment by which he assumed the obligation to First Federal. He also warranted and guaranteed to the Joneses that he would indemnify them for all claims arising under the contract. The Joneses continued to hold the shares of stock as collateral for the balance of the purchase price.

Sometime prior to September 1974, landowner Loflin attempted to terminate the lease because payments were in default. On September 11,1974, First Federal wrote a letter to the four endorsers and the Joneses telling them of the proposed termination of the lease, of irregularities in the loan, and of the necessity that the loan documents be put in order. None of the recipients responded in any way to this letter.

By January 15,1975, the lease agreement between Wyboo and Loflin had been terminated and a new lease executed between Loflin and Adair, then in charge of the property. The Joneses were not notified of this. In February 1975, Hursey, Hopper, Houser, and Bradham entered into a Forbearance

[98]*98Agreement with First Federal in which they:

(a) acknowledged that they were jointly and severally liable for the debt;
(b) waived all past irregularities in the loan; and
(c) acknowledged that the property covered by the mortgage was then in possession of Adair and Wyboo.

The loan had been in arrears off and on since 1973 and had just been made current by payment on January 27,1975. No notice of this Forbearance Agreement was sent to Adair.

In August 1975, Adair (with the permission of the Joneses) sold to Alex Costas one-half (200 shares) of the shares of common stock in Wyboo. In June 1976, Adair abandoned Wyboo and left South Carolina. Costas eventually paid off the balance of the contract price between the Joneses and Adair. Costas then created Gangplank Marina, Inc., with the assets of Wyboo and sold the assets to Robert J. and Dorothy J. Sorenson, who are not a party to this action. The purchase price included assumption of the loan from First Federal. The entire amount of cash received from the Sorensons was used to pay the debts of Wyboo. In July 1977, the Sorensons negotiated a new lease of the property from Loflin.

During this period, First Federal was aware of the transfers and accepted payments from the different owners of Wyboo.

After the loan went into default, First Federal brought this action in September 1978, and numerous cross-complaints and counterclaims were filed.

I.

The first issue which confronts this Court is that of liability on the part of the four endorsers of the note. Hursey, Hopper, Houser, and Bradham endorsed, as individuals, the note for $58,000 loaned to Wyboo by First Federal. As security for this note Wyboo attempted to execute a mortgage either on a fee simple title to the real estate or on the lease between Wyboo and Loflin. Wyboo had no fee simple interest. The attorney at the closing failed to assign to First Federal the lease from Loflin. The note accordingly was unsecured except by the four endorsements.

[99]*99In reversing the Master, the trial judge correctly found that the attorney acted as an agent for Wyboo and the four endorsers when he neglected to have the lease assigned. Thus, there was a unilateral mistake which was imputed to Wyboo and the four endorsers. This mistake did not render the endorsements voidable. In Jones v. Thomas and Hill, Inc., 265 S. C. 66, 216 S. E. (2d) 871 (1975), this Court stated that the question of the agency of an attorney at a closing was a question of fact.

Here, the borrowers selected the attorney and paid him. First Federal did approve the attorney after the borrowers selected him. There was no evidence that the attorney selected by the borrowers had to follow the sole direction of First Federal. The trial court correctly found that this attorney was the agent of the endorsers. Jones. The actions of the attorney at the closing are imputable to the four endorsers. See Graham v. Town of Loris, 272 S. C. 442, 248 S. E. (2d) 594 (1978). Accordingly, the endorsers remain liable on the note. S. C. Code Ann. § 36-3-414(1); § 36-3-414 Official Comment 1; § 36-3-416(1).

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Costas v. FIRST FED. SAV. AND LOAN ASSOC.
321 S.E.2d 51 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1984)

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Bluebook (online)
321 S.E.2d 51, 283 S.C. 94, 1984 S.C. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/costas-v-first-federal-savings-loan-assn-sc-1984.