First Financial Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Title Insurance

557 F. Supp. 654, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17122
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedSeptember 28, 1982
DocketCiv. A. C81-416A
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 557 F. Supp. 654 (First Financial Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Title Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Financial Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Title Insurance, 557 F. Supp. 654, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17122 (N.D. Ga. 1982).

Opinion

SHOOB, District Judge.

ORDER

This diversity action is before the Court on various motions for summary judgment. Before setting out the facts of the case, the Court will briefly identify the parties involved.

PARTIES

1. Plaintiff First Financial Savings and Loan Association (“First Financial”) commenced this action against the various defendants to recover funds lost as a result of its purchase of two loan packages from Heritage National Mortgage Corporation (“Heritage”). Heritage, which played a central role in the events giving rise to this litigation, filed for bankruptcy shortly after the sale to First Financial and is not a party to this lawsuit.

2. Defendant Title Insurance Company of Minnesota’s (“Minnesota Title”) involvement in this case arises from its issuance, through its agent defendant Southern Heritage Insurance Agency, Inc., (“Southern Heritage”), of title binders received by First Financial as part of the loan packages purchased from Heritage, as well as from an “insured closing letter” addressed to Heritage with respect to one of the loan packages.

3. Defendants Robert Silliman, an attorney, and the law firm of Chalker & Silliman (hereinafter referred to collectively as the “Silliman defendants”) were retained by Heritage to handle the closing of one of the loan packages now a subject of this litigation.

4. Defendants G.C. Payne, Jr., an attorney, and the law firm of Payne, Stokes & Payne (hereinafter referred to collectively as the “Payne defendants”), were retained by Heritage to handle the closing of the second loan package involved in this suit.

FACTS

Unless otherwise noted, the facts as narrated below are undisputed by the parties.

This lawsuit arises out of two loan/home sale closing transactions. The two transactions, hereinafter referred to as the “Harris loan” closing and the “Rogers loan” closing after the intended borrower/purchaser in each case, took place on March 10,1978, and March 14, 1978, respectively. Although the specific facts of the two transactions differ in some respects, the essential facts relevant to plaintiff’s claims are the same in both and are as follows.

Heritage, the lender in both transactions, retained the Silliman defendants to handle the Harris loan closing and the Payne defendants to handle the Rogers loan closing. In preparing for the closings, the attorneys searched the titles to the residential property that was to secure each loan and, pursu *657 ant to Heritages closing instructions 1 directing them to obtain title insurance through Southern Heritage, they each prepared a “Request for Binder” based on their respective preliminary title searches. Based on these requests, Southern Heritage, acting as the authorized agent of Minnesota Title, issued Minnesota Title title binders to Heritage with respect to each of the transactions. 2

At each closing, the closing attorney (defendant Silliman and defendant Payne, respectively) had the intended seller execute a warranty deed conveying title to the intended purchaser/borrower, who in turn executed a promissory note payable to Heritage and a security deed conveying title to Heritage. Most important, each closing attorney executed a certification on a form provided by Heritage, which stated in part:

This is to advise you that the captioned mortgage loan has been closed and disbursed for the amount listed above, advanced by Heritage National Mortgage Corporation, and secured by a loan deed properly executed by said borrower(s).
The loan deed is being filed of record with the recording clerk.
We certify that you hold a first and valid lien on the subject property.

Complaint, Exhibits F and K.

Also at the closing, based on drafts provided by Heritage along with its closing instructions, 3 the attorneys prepared checks drawn on their escrow accounts to pay for taxes, recording, real estate commissions, sellers’ proceeds and cancellation of prior security deeds. The attorneys then explained to the parties at the closings that because the loan funds provided by Heritage were in the form of drafts, the closings would not be consummated until the respective drafts had been funded. 4

On the next business day following their respective closings, the attorneys delivered the loan packages to Heritage. 5 These packages each included the original of the promissory note, a copy of the security deed, and the closing attorney’s certification that the loan had been closed. Both attorneys informed Heritage at that time that the closing was conditional on its draft being funded. 6 Immediately following the *658 respective closings, and by an assignment instrument dated the same day as each closing, Heritage sold both the Harris and Rogers loan packages to plaintiff First Financial for a slightly discounted amount, pursuant to an agreement between Heritage and plaintiff providing for such sales. At or shortly after the times of these assignments, plaintiff wired to Heritage the sums of $27,768.50 and $19,938.00 as the purchase prices of the Harris and Rogers loans, respectively.

Meanwhile, Heritage’s drafts had been presented for payment by the closing attorneys and had been dishonored. Upon discovering that Heritage’s drafts would not be funded, the attorneys notified the parties to their respective closings, as well as Heritage, that the condition of the closing had not been met and that the transaction could not be consummated. 7 They then proceeded to cancel or seek a return of the various documents and checks signed at the closings. As a result, in both cases, none of the deed instruments (neither warranty deeds from intended sellers to intended purchasers nor security deeds from intended purchasers to Heritage) was ever recorded, nor were the prior existing first security deeds ever satisfied or cancelled of record. Thus there was never a record sale or transfer of title in either transaction. The loan packages purchased by First Financial were therefore worthless.

Shortly thereafter, on March 29, 1978, Heritage filed its petition in bankruptcy. Plaintiff has filed a proof of claim against Heritage in that bankruptcy proceeding seeking to recover the monies it paid Heritage for the two loan packages. Plaintiff also seeks recovery of the same funds from defendants in this action on a variety of legal theories.

DISCUSSION

Based on the foregoing undisputed facts, both the Payne defendants and the Silliman defendants have moved for summary judgment. Plaintiff First Financial has responded with its own cross motions for summary judgment. Defendant Minnesota Title has also moved for summary judgment and plaintiff opposes this motion.

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Bluebook (online)
557 F. Supp. 654, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-financial-savings-loan-assn-v-title-insurance-gand-1982.