Diversified Mortgage Investors v. Viking General Corp.

450 N.E.2d 176, 16 Mass. App. Ct. 142, 1983 Mass. App. LEXIS 1355
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJune 2, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 450 N.E.2d 176 (Diversified Mortgage Investors v. Viking General Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diversified Mortgage Investors v. Viking General Corp., 450 N.E.2d 176, 16 Mass. App. Ct. 142, 1983 Mass. App. LEXIS 1355 (Mass. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

The plaintiff (DMI) seeks to recover from the defendant (Viking) some $644,400 (plus interest) upon an unusually broad guaranty by it, dated December 21, 1973, of payment of the principal and interest on a note of Viking Mobile Homes, Inc. (Mobile). DMI is a Massachusetts business trust. Viking, the guarantor, is a Florida corporation, of which Mobile is a wholly owned subsidiary.

Mobile owned land in Florida. As part of a loan transaction in December, 1973, Mobile delivered in Massachusetts a note to DMI for $650,000, a loan agreement, a security agreement, and a third mortgage interest in the Florida land. Over $600,000 was advanced by DMI on its loan to Mobile. These advances remain unpaid.

On June 4, 1975, judicial foreclosure proceedings were initiated in a Florida Circuit Court by the holder of the first mortgage of Mobile’s Florida land. In 1975, Mobile defaulted in making interest payments on its note to DMI. As the consequence of Mobile’s defaults, two pieces of litigation thus have been conducted, (a) the first mortgage foreclosure proceeding in Florida and (b) this action in Massachusetts by DMI on Viking’s guaranty.

A. The Florida First. Mortgage Foreclosure.

In the Florida first mortgage foreclosure proceedings, DMI (as third mortgagee), Mobile (as owner), and Viking, the guarantor (as an “interest holder”), were joined as parties. Viking filed a cross claim against DMI which alleged failure by DMI to advance funds to Mobile to make payments on the first mortgage which Viking contended were required by the 1973 agreement, a loan commitment, and the mortgage. DMI’s original answer to Viking’s Florida cross claim did not assert any counterclaims against Viking. In the Florida proceedings, indeed, no counterclaim based on the guaranty was ever asserted by DMI against Viking. DMI, however, did amend its answer on February 11,1976, to add a counterclaim against Mobile on the note, 1 but by *144 then the Massachusetts action against Viking on its guaranty (not litigated in Massachusetts until 1980 or 1981 and never litigated in Florida) had been initiated.

After completion of the Florida proceedings summarized in n.l, a so called final judgment was entered on April 14, 1981, in favor of DMI against Mobile on the note in the sum of $759,558.99 plus interest at six percent (reserving jurisdiction with regard to costs). 2 This Florida judgment makes no mention of either Viking, the guarantor, or its guaranty.

B. The Massachusetts Action on the Guaranty.

On January 8, 1976, DMI filed in the Superior Court a complaint against Viking, the guarantor, alleging the execution of the note by Mobile in Boston on December 21, 1973 (together with the other instruments already mentioned as then executed). The complaint then alleged (a) the execution of the guaranty by Viking in Massachusetts (see Appendix 1, infra); (b) the advances made by DMI to Mobile based on the note; and (c) Mobile’s subsequent default. Viking filed its answer on March 2, 1976. The *145 Massachusetts action against Viking on the guaranty was brought after the initiation (on June 4, 1975) of the Florida judicial first mortgage foreclosure proceeding, but (as already stated) before the filing (on February 11, 1976) of DMI’s amended answer in the Florida proceedings.

On April 15, 1980, DMI filed in the Massachusetts action a motion for summary judgment as to liability only, based upon the Florida judgment entered on October 23, 1978. On June 18, 1980, Viking moved to amend its answer (of March 2, 1976) in the Massachusetts proceedings to aver (essentially as a defense) that in the Florida foreclosure litigation Viking, the guarantor, had “made a cross claim against” DMI, alleging that DMI had committed a breach of “its obligation to fund certain future advances under the terms of the transaction which included, as an integral part, the guaranty” and that DMI, in response to the cross claim, “made a counterclaim but failed to state therein a claim on . . . [Viking’s] guaranty.” After hearing, this motion was denied on July 2, 1980, by one Superior Court judge. On July 10,1980, Viking sought leave, pursuant to Mass.R.Civ. P. 15(d), 365 Mass. 762 (1974), to supplement its answer in much the same form as the amendment sought by it on June 18, 1980. This leave was denied on July 29, 1980, by another Superior Court judge. The denials were each without statement of reasons. Of course, no such statement was required.

Viking on March 25, 1981, filed in this action a motion for summary judgment, supported by an affidavit concerning the Florida proceedings and later by a copy of a document dated April 14, 1981, entitled “Final Judgment in Accordance with the Mandate of the Second District Court of Appeal,” which (as already stated) made no mention of Viking or its guaranty. DMI thereupon moved to strike Viking’s motion for summary judgment. That motion was denied by a third Superior Court judge. The cross motions for summary judgment were referred to a master who filed a report and recommendation for the guidance of a fourth Superior Court judge (hereafter the motion judge). The *146 master recommended that summary judgment be entered for DMI on the guaranty, even though, as he viewed the law of Florida, DMI should have raised in the Florida Circuit Court its claim against Viking on the guaranty as a compulsory counterclaim. Fla.R.Civ.P. 1.170(a), Fla. Stat. Ann. (West 1967). The master felt also that no special language of the guaranty prevented “the application of the compulsory counterclaim rule of law.” Instead, he took the position that “the earlier decisions of the two Superior Court [j Justices who independently refused to accept . . . [Viking’s] amendment [and supplement] to its answer . . . [raising] for the first time its claim of compulsory counterclaim” had become the “law of the case.” For this view he referred to Saporita v. Litner, 371 Mass. 607, 620 (1976), and Mr. Justice Lummus’s article, The “Law of the Case” in Massachusetts, 9 B.U.L. Rev. 225, 230-231 (1929). Compare Peterson v. Hopson, 306 Mass. 597, 601-605 (1940). The master did not regard the filing (on April 28, 1981) of the Florida judgment (dated April 14, 1981) in the Superior Court as a sufficient “change of circumstances” to require disregard of the prior action of two Superior Court judges (who, in effect, did not accept DMI’s failure to assert the guaranty in the Florida proceeding as precluding relief to DMI in Massachusetts on Viking’s guaranty).

The motion judge ordered summary judgment for DMI and denied Viking’s motion for summary judgment, without comment on the master’s recommendation, and also (after receiving a brief from Viking”s counsel and after hearing) denied reconsideration of his order. He then (see G. L. c. 231, § 111, and Mass.R.Civ.P. 64, 365 Mass. 831 [1974]) reported to this court the issue whether he correctly had allowed DMI’s motion for summary judgment and denied Viking”s similar motion.

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Bluebook (online)
450 N.E.2d 176, 16 Mass. App. Ct. 142, 1983 Mass. App. LEXIS 1355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diversified-mortgage-investors-v-viking-general-corp-massappct-1983.