Fannie Mae, Appellant/Cross-Respondent v. University Village Apartments, UVA Partners L.L.C., Rick Yackey, Midland Management, L.L.C., Woodsmill Management Company, and Bill L. Bruce, Respondents/Cross-Appellants.

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 27, 2015
DocketED101796
StatusPublished

This text of Fannie Mae, Appellant/Cross-Respondent v. University Village Apartments, UVA Partners L.L.C., Rick Yackey, Midland Management, L.L.C., Woodsmill Management Company, and Bill L. Bruce, Respondents/Cross-Appellants. (Fannie Mae, Appellant/Cross-Respondent v. University Village Apartments, UVA Partners L.L.C., Rick Yackey, Midland Management, L.L.C., Woodsmill Management Company, and Bill L. Bruce, Respondents/Cross-Appellants.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fannie Mae, Appellant/Cross-Respondent v. University Village Apartments, UVA Partners L.L.C., Rick Yackey, Midland Management, L.L.C., Woodsmill Management Company, and Bill L. Bruce, Respondents/Cross-Appellants., (Mo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION TWO

FANNIE MAE, ) ) No. ED101796 Appellant/Cross-Respondent, ) ) vs. ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of ) the City of St. Louis UNIVERSITY VILLAGE APARTMENTS, ) UVA PARTNERS L.L.C., RICK YACKEY, ) MIDLAND MANAGEMENT, L.L.C., ) Honorable Thomas C. Grady WOODSMILL MANAGEMENT COMPANY, ) and BILL L. BRUCE, ) ) Respondents/Cross-Appellants. ) Filed: October 27, 2015

Introduction

Fannie Mae appeals the judgment of the Circuit Court of St. Louis City awarding it

$161,816.08 for the breach of the obligation to pay net rents and $194,146.96 in attorney and

expert fees. In four points on appeal, Fannie Mae claims that the trial court erred by reducing

Fannie Mae’s net rents damages because (1) reduction of damages is an affirmative defense that

was not pleaded or tried by consent; (2) the loan documents allowed a credit only for “current

operating expenses;” (3) the amounts credited were unrelated to the borrower’s failure to pay net

rents and, thus, do not reduce liability; and (4) even if the reduction was warranted, $142,060.66

of that amount was improperly credited twice. University Village Apartments, L.P., UVA

Partners, L.L.C., Bill L. Bruce, Rick Yackey, Midland Management L.L.C., and Woodsmill Management Company (Defendants) cross-appeal. In two points, Defendants claim that the trial

court erred by (1) awarding Fannie Mae any net rents damages because payments made from

rents collected post default were made for “reasonable operating expenses;” and (2) assessing

attorney and expert fees against Bruce and Yackey. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and

remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Factual Background

In 2005, real estate developers, Bruce and Yackey, undertook the redevelopment of a St.

Louis warehouse near St. Louis University into a modern 242-unit apartment complex, including

commercial space on the ground level. Multiple entities were formed for the execution of the

project, including University Village Apartments, L.P. (Borrower), which would be the owner of

the project; UVA Partners, L.L.C. (Partner), which was Borrower’s general partner; and

University Village Tenant, L.L.C. (Tenant), which was the master tenant that entered into a

Master Lease for the property. Woodsmill Management Company (Woodsmill), wholly owned

and controlled by Bruce, entered into a management agreement to manage the property. Midland

Management, L.L.C. (Midland), owned and controlled by Bruce, actually performed the daily

management of the property. Landmark Capital (Landmark), also owned by Bruce, subleased

the property’s commercial space from Tenant.

Initially, the project was financed through several loans. Additional financing was

available through the sale of historical tax credits, for which the building was eligible. Because

this financing would not be realized until the sale of the credit, a smaller “bridge” loan was

obtained from Great Southern Bank (GSB) for use until the tax credits were sold.1 Several years

later, near the project’s completion, Borrower sought a permanent loan to replace these loans.

1 The GSB loan included an additional amount secured by a tax increment financing arrangement with the City of St. Louis.

2 Loan Documents

Consequently, in March 2008, Borrower executed a Multifamily Note (Note) in the

amount of $31,000,000. The Note was secured by a security instrument, the Multifamily Deed

of Trust, Assignment of Rents and Security Agreement (Deed of Trust), which encumbered the

property. The Note and Deed of Trust were assigned to Fannie Mae.

As relevant to this dispute, Paragraph 9(a) of the Note provides that Borrower “shall have

no personal liability” under the Note or Deed of Trust for repayment of the indebtedness.2

Paragraph 9(b), however, includes several exceptions to non-recourse liability, or bar against

personal liability, including liability for a “portion of the Indebtedness equal to any loss or

damage suffered by [Fannie Mae] as a result of:

(1) failure of Borrower to pay [Fannie Mae] upon demand after an Event of Default, all Rents to which [Fannie Mae] is entitled under Section 3(a) of the [Deed of Trust] and the amount of all security deposits collected by Borrower from tenants then in residence; [or]

* * *

(5) failure to apply Rents, first, to the payment of reasonable operating expenses . . . and then to Debt Service Amounts, except that Borrower will not be personally liable (i) to the extent that Borrower lacks the legal right to direct the disbursement of such sums because of a bankruptcy, receivership or similar judicial proceedings, or (ii) with respect to Rents that are distributed in any calendar year if Borrower has paid all operating expenses and Debt Service Amounts for that calendar year.

Section 3(a) of the Deed of Trust, referenced by Paragraph 9(b)(1), provides that Borrower

“absolutely and unconditionally assigns and transfers to [Fannie Mae] all Rents.”3

2 Such a financing vehicle is known as a “non-recourse loan,” which is a secured loan “that allows the lender to attach only the collateral, not the borrower’s personal assets, if the loan is not repaid.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (7th ed. 1999). Typically, the consideration for such an agreement is the borrower’s promise not to encumber the property with other liens or security interests. 3 Section 1(x) of the Deed of Trust defines “rents” as:

3 The Note was also accompanied by an Acknowledgement and Agreement of Key

Principal to Personal Liability for Exceptions to Non-Recourse Liability (Acknowledgment).

This document was signed by Bruce and Yackey, who agreed to “absolutely, unconditionally,

and irrevocably . . . pay to [Fannie Mae], or its assigns, on demand, all amounts for which

Borrower is personally liable under Paragraph 9 of the [Note].”

Default & Foreclosure

On May 1, 2010, Borrower failed to fulfill its monthly payment obligation on the debt. 4

Thereafter, Borrower remained in default, remitting only partial payments in May and July 2010.

In January 2011, Fannie Mae filed a petition against Borrower, Partner, Bruce, Yackey, Midland,

and Woodsmill, among others. Fannie Mae contemporaneously filed a motion to appoint a

receiver. The trial court appointed the receiver on January 24, 2011.

On November 22, 2011, consistent with the power of sale provision in the Deed of Trust,

Fannie Mae foreclosed on the property and a trustee’s sale was held. The successor trustee

accepted Fannie Mae’s credit bid of $26,000,000 and ownership of the property was transferred

to Fannie Mae. At the time, the total payoff amount on the loan was $44,155,374.89. At the

time of the foreclosure, PNC Bank held the post-default payments Borrower had made, which

included $142,060.66 in partial debt service payments from May and July 2010 and $66,141.26

in “replacement reserves,” an account that Borrower had paid into every month to cover the

all rents (whether from residential or non-residential space) revenues and other income of the Land or the Improvements, including subsidy payments received from any sources . . . , parking fees, laundry and vending machine income and fees and charges for food, health care and other services provided at the Mortgaged Property, whether now due, past due, or to become due, and deposits forfeited by tenants. 4 Occupancy in the building decreased shortly after the project’s completion because of competition from other residential complexes and because St.

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Fannie Mae, Appellant/Cross-Respondent v. University Village Apartments, UVA Partners L.L.C., Rick Yackey, Midland Management, L.L.C., Woodsmill Management Company, and Bill L. Bruce, Respondents/Cross-Appellants., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fannie-mae-appellantcross-respondent-v-university-village-apartments-moctapp-2015.