Fikes v. First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n of Anchorage

533 P.2d 251, 1975 Alas. LEXIS 355
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1975
Docket2011, 2020
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 533 P.2d 251 (Fikes v. First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n of Anchorage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fikes v. First Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n of Anchorage, 533 P.2d 251, 1975 Alas. LEXIS 355 (Ala. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

Before RABINOWITZ, C. J., and CONNOR and BOOCHEVER, JJ.

RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.

These consolidated appeals involve a controversy regarding the extent of a lending institution’s duty to assure proper disbursement of an interim construction loan secured by a deed of trust on property in which a buyer has a prior equitable interest.

Sometime in early 1970, Neil C. Fikes and his wife Lillian began searching for land upon which to build a house. They located a desirable site, Lot 11, Block 32 of the South Addition to Anchorage, which has become the subject of this suit. When initial talks with a real estate agent did not produce a purchase agreement, Fikes contacted Richard Black, a contractor and friend, and discussed the possibility of having a house built. 1 These discussions culminated in a written agreement dated February 26, 1970, setting $55,600 as the total price for the South Addition lot and a duplex to be constructed upon it. Fikes made a $2,500 downpayment, leaving an unpaid balance of $53,100. It was Fikes’ understanding that Black would obtain the property for Fikes and build the duplex. Furthermore, Black assured Fikes that if Fides did not like the duplex when it was *255 completed, the downpayment would be returned.

Black then contacted Louis Gavrilovich, attorney-in-fact for the lot owner, to arrange the purchase of the property. Negotiations resulted in an earnest money agreement between Fikes and Gavrilovich signed on March 4, 1970. Black acted as intermediary between the parties and paid Gavrilovich $1,500 out of Fikes’ downpayment under the February 26, 1970 agreement. A balance of $8,000 was to be paid by Black out of the purchase price of the property and duplex.

After Black’s agreement with Fikes was signed in February 1970, Black sought interim construction financing from Commonwealth Bank. Both Black and Fikes went to Commonwealth, and a description of the materials needed, signed by both Fikes and Black, was delivered to the bank. This document listed Fikes as the mortgagor or sponsor. In addition, a request for an appraisal of the project was submitted to Commonwealth in Fikes’ name.

According to Black, “Commonwealth requested that a construction contract be made available to them to submit to their people for financing.” Black believes that, for this reason, he and Fikes entered into a second agreement dated June 16, 1970. This second contract between Black and Fikes provided that the “[ojwner shall furnish all financing and closing costs.” The contract further provided that Fikes, as the “owner”, would request all payouts from the lending institution and authorize such payouts to Black’s construction company after inspections of the building site.

Black contemplated building homes for several other parties, but Commonwealth would not finance all of these. Thereafter, sometime in July or August of 1970, Black approached First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Anchorage and spoke with Kenneth Kadow, then vice president of First Federal, about interim financing for fourteen different units, including Fikes’ duplex. After consulting with other officers of the lending institution, Kadow informed Black that First Federal would finance only four houses at any one time. Black agreed that only when one of the four units had been completed would he commence construction on another. Fikes’ duplex was not among the first four units approved by First Federal.

Kadow testified that, according to First Federal’s normal loan-monitoring practices, disbursement of interim construction loan proceeds to a contractor was carefully scrutinized. An inspection of the building site was first conducted to determine that construction progress evidenced proper application of past disbursements of the loan. The contractor would then sign an affidavit listing his outstanding obligations to subcontractors and suppliers. The contractor’s creditors would be paid by First Federal only after release forms had been signed. For out-of-pocket or labor expenses, First Federal would usually write a check directly to the contractor.

Kadow also stated that a loan secured by a deed of trust ordinarily provided construction funding only for the house and property covered by the deed. In financing multiple units, expenditures on a particular lot were not charged to the deed of trust on a different lot; the accounts for each lot were kept separate. To disburse funds under one deed of trust for expenses incurred on another property secured by a different deed of trust, Kadow said, was not the proper or normal course of business.

On Black’s next visit to First Federal, sometime in August 1970, Fikes accompanied him to apply for permanent financing. First Federal then inquired about Fikes’ credit standing. Kadow also requested that Black bring to First Federal the financing applications for all of the proposed units. Since Fikes had, along with Black, applied to Commonwealth for a loan, First Federal wrote to Commonwealth requesting all the purchase commitments that had been previously supplied by Black. Commonwealth responded with a *256 form letter that listed Neil Fikes as the mortgagor and Black as the seller. In the meantime, First Federal began processing Fikes’ application for permanent financing. According to the notations on the loan folder, on August 11, 1970, First Federal either sent out or received verifications of employment, deposits, and debt of the Fikes family. On August 12, 1970, First Federal received Fikes’ credit report, and by September 2, 1970, the association was ready to start working on the loan. Notations on the loan application included a figure of $2,500 credited as a “cash deposit on purchase”. Kadow said the figure represented a downpayment toward purchase of the property.

Title to the lot was to be acquired by Fikes in accordance with the earnest money agreement between Fikes and Gavrilo-vich signed on March 4, 1970. However, Black stated that, in early September 1970, Fikes orally agreed to Black’s acquisition of title to the property so that the interim financing would be in Black’s name. This transfer was prompted by First Federal’s suggestion that the transaction would be simplified if all the interim financing were in Black’s name rather than in the names of final purchasers. Upon completion of construction of a unit, title would be transferred from Black to the home buyer.

On September 21, 1970, First Federal gave a conditional commitment for financing construction of Fikes’ duplex under a deed of trust in Black’s name with a loan of $44,400 at nine and one-half percent interest. According to this conditional commitment, a loan fee of one and one-half percent was also charged. Kadow testified that the loan fee was in addition to interest charges and was not used to pay for specific items of expense incurred in processing the loan. Instead, the funds derived from the loan fee entered the bank’s income account and, at the end of the year, were credited to undivided profits and federal insurance reserves.

When Black completed one of the first four units financed by First Federal, he secured the promised interim construction loan on Fikes’ duplex.

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Bluebook (online)
533 P.2d 251, 1975 Alas. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fikes-v-first-federal-savings-loan-assn-of-anchorage-alaska-1975.