Finn v. D.A.N. Joint Venture Ltd. Partnership

37 Va. Cir. 158, 1995 Va. Cir. LEXIS 1061
CourtLoudoun County Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 12, 1995
DocketCase No. (Chancery) 16290
StatusPublished

This text of 37 Va. Cir. 158 (Finn v. D.A.N. Joint Venture Ltd. Partnership) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Loudoun County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finn v. D.A.N. Joint Venture Ltd. Partnership, 37 Va. Cir. 158, 1995 Va. Cir. LEXIS 1061 (Va. Super. Ct. 1995).

Opinion

By Judge James H. Chamblin

This cause came on for final hearing on June 15,1995, on the Amended Bill of Complaint for Injunctive Relief wherein the Complainants seek a permanent injunction prohibiting the Defendants from foreclosing under a credit line deed of trust on real estate owned by the Complainants.

For reasons that follow, the request for a permanent injunction is denied and the Bill of Complaint is dismissed. On September 11,1985, Edward V. Finn and Helen C. Finn, his wife, who then owned the subject property, placed on it a credit line deed of trust in favor of First American Bank of Virginia (“FAB”). The deed of trust states in part:

In trust, however, to secure the prompt payment of certain negotiable promissory notes to be executed in accordance with that certain Credit Line Collateral Loan Agreement referred to in the Credit Line dated September 11, 1985, in an amount not to exceed $250,000.00, and payable to the order of First American Bank of Virginia ....

On the same date, Mr. and Mrs. Edward V. Finn executed the Credit Line Collateral Loan Agreement referred to in the Credit Line Deed of Trust. The Credit Line Collateral Loan Agreement was recorded just prior to the Credit Line Deed of Trust.

[159]*159On September 11, 1985, Information Management Associates, Inc. (“IMA”) made a commercial note payable to FAB in the original principal amount of $250,000.00. The note was executed by Thomas A. Finn, as President, and Jane A. Finn, as secretary, of IMA. Edward V. Finn and Helen C. Finn signed the note as pledgors. The note when executed provided in part:

This loan is secured fully. As security for the payment of this liability of the signed borrower to First American Bank of Virginia, McLean, Virginia, the undersigned hereby grants a security interest to said Bank in and pledges to said Bank the following: Third Deed of Trust.
In the event that all or any part of the Collateral is a deed of trust or deeds of trust on real property, the terms of such Trust or Trusts are incorporated herein by reference as to the rights, duties, and obligations of the parties with respect to such real property.

Edward V. Finn and Helen C. Finn signed below the two provisions set out above.

After the note was executed and delivered to FAB, words were added in two places on the note. First, after “Third Deed of Trust” in the provision set forth above, the following was added: “All that certain tract of land situate, lying and being on the westerly side of State Route No. 612, Mercer Magisterial District, Loudoun County, Virginia, containing 100 acres (more fully described in Credit Line Deed of Trust).” Second, in a blank after the words “The collateral will be kept at,” the following words were inserted: “1970 Chain Bridge Road, McLean, Virginia, 22102.”

Donald E. Nelson, an attorney in Leesburg, Virginia, handled the settlement of this transaction. The instruction letter to him dated July 16,1985, from Dale L. Fritts, Commercial Loan Officer, of FAB (part of Complainants’ Exhibit No. 1) stated that FAB had approved financing of a consolidation of loans to Thomas A. Firm, Jane A. Finn, and IMA “to be secured by a 3rd Deed of Trust on property owned by Edward V. and Helen C. Finn’s personal residence located at Route # 1, Box 16, Aldie, Virginia.” Attached to the letter were the forms for the Credit Line Collateral Loan Agreement and Credit Line Deed of Trust which were subsequently executed as stated above. The letter states that the loans being consolidated were loans of FAB to IMA and Support Services, Inc. (Thomas A. Finn was at least a stockholder in both corporations) totalling over $234,000.00. [160]*160The instruction letter shows the intention of FAB to secure the consolidated loan with a third deed of trust utilizing the documents attached to the letter.

The Credit Line Deed of Trust did become a third deed of trust on the subject property when it was recorded. After settlement, the proceeds of the transaction went to pay off the three loans mentioned above. No loan proceeds were ever paid to Edward V. Finn or Helen C. Finn. However, they did have the benefit of having the cost of recording the Credit Line Deed of Trust paid out of the loan proceeds. In addition, as a result of this transaction, Edward V. Finn and Helen C. Finn were released by FAB :as guarantors of prior loans from FAB to IMA.

Mr. Nelson testified that Edward V. Finn told him at settlement on September 11, 1985, that he intended to “back up” his son, Thomas A. Finn, and that the Credit Line Deed of Trust was a “credit facility” which he could use for funds to pay the IMA note executed that day “if he had to do so.”

Neither Edward V. Finn nor Helen C. Finn testified in this proceeding.

The loan officer of FAB who put together the loan consolidation testified that before the settlement he had talked to Edward V. Finn. The loan officer stated that Edward V. Finn knew that FAB would be obtaining a deed of trust on the subject property to secure the loan consolidation.

The IMA note became due September 12, 1988. It was renewed by another note dated September 12, 1988, and renewed again by a subsequent note dated September 12,1991. FAB sold the note dated September 12,1991, to D.A.N. Joint Venture Limited Partnership (“D.A.N.”) which is the present holder and owner of the note.

Through a series of conveyances, the subject property is presently owned by the Complainants, Thomas A. Finn and Patricia F. Graves, Trustees of the Cold Run Trust. The Credit Line Deed of Trust dated September 11, 1985, is still a lien on the subject property.

The September 12, 1991, note went into default, and on March 27, 1995, the defendant, William E. Schmidheiser, HI, acting substitute trustee under the Credit Line Deed of Trust, gave notice of foreclosure. The Complainants filed this suit and secured a temporary injunction (Order entered April 24,1995, from the hearing on April 19,1995) prohibiting the foreclosure sale until a final resolution of the issues raised.

The Complainants make no claim that the note is not in default or that money is not owed. Their claim is that the words used in the relevant documents do not create a lien on the subject property securing the note.

[161]*161At the hearing on June 15, 1995, D.A.N. presented evidence that Edward and Helen Finn executed a document in 1988 stating that the subject property is collateral for the loan to IMA. Neither the original nor a copy of this document was offered in evidence. Considering that such a document would not be something usually requested by a bank and the lack of evidence of the specific content of the document, I cannot find that such a document ever did exist.

In construing the effect of the relevant documents, the intent of the parties as ascertained from the words used in them is controlling. A considerable amount of evidence was offered as to the intent of the parties to the September, 1985, transaction. I do not agree with Mr. Harris’ argument that the documents alone are controlling and that the intent of the parties is immaterial. If the words used in the documents can reasonably be reconciled with the intentions of the parties, then such intentions must be controlling.

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Bluebook (online)
37 Va. Cir. 158, 1995 Va. Cir. LEXIS 1061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finn-v-dan-joint-venture-ltd-partnership-vaccloudoun-1995.