Darwin v. Beck (In re Fidelity Standard Mortgage Corp.)

839 F.2d 1517, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 3332
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 1988
DocketNo. 87-5007
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 839 F.2d 1517 (Darwin v. Beck (In re Fidelity Standard Mortgage Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darwin v. Beck (In re Fidelity Standard Mortgage Corp.), 839 F.2d 1517, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 3332 (11th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

ATKINS, Senior District Judge:

Mrs. Rebecca Darwin appeals a district court affirmance of the bankruptcy court’s ruling that she is not entitled to any interest in, or proceeds from two mortgages because the mortgages are the property of the bankrupt estate. WE AFFIRM. BACKGROUND

Mrs. Darwin was investing in fractional-ized interests in mortgages through the debtors, First Fidelity Financial Services, Inc. and Fidelity Standard Mortgage Corporation. Funds she advanced for this purpose were retained in escrow for eventual placement by the debtors into various mortgage interests. She received interest on these funds from the time they were placed with the debtors, regardless of whether they were held in escrow or they were invested in a mortgage. As mortgages were paid off, or at the request or agreement of an investor, funds would be “rolled out” or “rolled over” into either another mortgage or into the escrow account.

Mrs. Darwin held interests in many of the debtors’ mortgages. She received monthly checks from the debtors reflecting the interest payments on her mortgage interests and funds held in escrow. The investments were described on the check stubs. Where funds had been invested into a mortgage, the investments would be designated by the name of the mortgagor, while the terms “interest,” “investment,” or “escrow” were used interchangeably to designate funds held in escrow. The bankruptcy court found that Mrs. Darwin took great care each month to clip and retain the check stubs in order to confirm the status of her investments. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law at 2.

Among Mrs. Darwin’s investments were the “Wright” mortgage and the “Ivy” mortgage. Her August 1981 check stub read as follows:

Dempster $407.88
Johnson $248.10
Barber $465.00
Morgan $480.00
Ivy $304.79
Cox $225.00
Wright $315.00
[1519]*1519H157 Fidelity $456.25
Interest on $9,600.00 $ 71.80 (Exhibit F)

In November 1981, the name “Wright” was not included on the check stub, and was replaced with the words, “Interest on $21,000.00.”

Dempster $407.88
Johnson $248.10
Barber $465.00
Morgan $480.00
Ivy $304.79
Cox $225.00
157H Fidelity $456.25
Interest on $21,000.00 $390.25 (Exhibit F)

In December 1981 the name “Ivy” was not included on the check stub, and was replaced with the word “Investment.”

Dempster $407.88
Johnson $248.10
Barber $465.00
Morgan $480.00
Cox $225.00
157H Fidelity $456.25
Investment $390.25
Investment $193.69 (Exhibit F)

Mrs. Darwin’s check stubs contained neither the name “Wright” nor the name “Ivy” after December 1981. Records of the debtors from the same time period, introduced into evidence in the bankruptcy court, indicate that Mrs. Darwin’s interests in these mortgages had been converted to escrow.

The debtors filed voluntary Chapter 7 petitions on April 9,1982. The proceedings were subsequently converted to Chapter 11 reorganization, and then reconverted to Chapter 7 liquidation after that. As a result of the bankruptcy proceedings, investors holding specific mortgage interests were entitled to retain their interest in them, while those with funds in escrow were treated as general unsecured creditors. Mrs. Darwin did not object to the roll out of the Wright and Ivy mortgages until after the debtors’ Chapter 7 filing, and its subsequent conversion to Chapter 11 reorganization.

Mrs. Darwin thereafter engaged in a series of transactions with the debtor in possession in which she sought to regain her interests in the Wright and Ivy mortgage. She reassigned her interest in the Wright mortgage to the debtors. A dispute arose concerning the Ivy mortgage. Mrs. Darwin had signed a Satisfaction of Mortgage on the Ivy mortgage on November 15, 1981, around the time of the roll out. The debtors, however used reassignments and satisfactions interchangeably, and asserted that the Satisfaction has been erroneously executed. The parties agreed to execute another Satisfaction of this mortgage in order to facilitate its impending pay off, and to place the proceeds in escrow pending resolution by the bankruptcy court of the dispute. Finally, on December 10, 1982, Mrs. Darwin and the debtor in possession executed a Letter Agreement, in which the debtor in possession agreed to reassign her interest in the Wright mortgage, and in which the foregoing series of transactions was detailed. It is interesting to note that the Letter Agreement provides that Mrs. Darwin was to furnish the debtor in possession with an “Assignment” of the Ivy mortgage.

1) You will furnish us an Assignment of Mortgage back to Fidelity Standard Mortgage Corp. on the Ivy investment.
2) At the time this loan is refinanced and we are funded, we will place in trust with your attorney $9,918.24. This amount will be held in trust pending his seeking clarification from the Court on your rights to this money.
3) The monies will be disbursed to you or back to First Fidelity when the Court’s decision is arrived at.
4) Simultaneously with funding of the Ivy mortgage, we will reassign you your interest in the Wright mortgage.

THE ADVERSARY PROCEEDING

Mrs. Darwin commenced an adversary proceeding in bankruptcy court for declaratory relief and specific performance in which she sought a reassignment of her interest in the Wright mortgage and the turnover of the proceeds of the Ivy mortgage held in escrow. The trustee argued, as he does here, that the transactions show [1520]*1520that Mrs. Darwin agreed to be rolled out of the two mortgage interests into the general escrow fund. He argued that the reassignment of the Wright mortgage and the satisfaction of the Ivy mortgage did no more than administratively clear up what had been previously agreed to by Mrs. Darwin by her acceptance of monthly interest checks. He further contended that the Letter Agreement between Mrs. Darwin and the debtor in possession was ineffective against him in his capacity as trustee post conversion to Chapter 7.

The bankruptcy court agreed and found that the interests in both mortgages were the property of the bankrupt estate. It held that the “clear intent” of the parties in the transaction reflects that Mrs. Darwin was rolled out of both mortgages, and “consented to same by the informed receipt and cashing of the monthly interest checks reflecting the change in status of these investments in November and December of' 1981.” Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law at 4. In so holding, the bankruptcy court extended the standard articulated in In re Fidelity Standard Mortgage Corp., 36 B.R.

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Related

In Re Fidelity Standard Mortgage Corp.
839 F.2d 1517 (First Circuit, 1988)

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Bluebook (online)
839 F.2d 1517, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 3332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darwin-v-beck-in-re-fidelity-standard-mortgage-corp-ca11-1988.