First State Bank v. Hoehnke Nursery Co.

667 P.2d 1022, 63 Or. App. 816, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 3049
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJuly 6, 1983
Docket116796, 119922 CA A21498
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 667 P.2d 1022 (First State Bank v. Hoehnke Nursery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First State Bank v. Hoehnke Nursery Co., 667 P.2d 1022, 63 Or. App. 816, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 3049 (Or. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

*818 ROSSMAN, J.

In these consolidated foreclosure actions, First State Bank of Oregon (Bank) and Capital Investment Company (Capital) are proceeding against defendant Hoehnke Nursery Company’s real property in Marion County (the Marion County property) and defendants Lofgrens’ residential property in Multnomah County (the Multnomah County property). Bank held a mortgage on the Marion County property and a trust deed on the Multnomah County property securing two notes, one given by the nursery for $380,595 and one given by the Lofgrens for $75,000. Capital held mortgages on both properties to secure a note given by the nursery for $350,000. In the foreclosure action, Capital also sought judgment against the Lofgrens individually as guarantors of the note. The trial court decreed foreclosure as to Bank but denied foreclosure as to Capital, because it had “unclean hands,” and also denied Capital judgment on the note and the guaranty. Capital, Bank, the Lofgrens and the nursery all appeal some aspect of the court’s decree. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

In January, 1976, the nursery gave Capital a note for $350,000, with the Lofgrens’ personal guaranty. A condition of the loan was that Capital would place two representatives on the nursery’s board of directors. The nursery’s obligation to Capital was subordinated to its “institutional debt,” at that time owed the First National Bank of Oregon. In early 1977, the nursery terminated its dealings with First National Bank and began dealing with Bank, which approved a $365,000 line of credit for the nursery. The nursery’s obligation to Bank was then unsecured, but Capital’s rights were subordinate to those of Bank.

In the spring of 1978, the nursery was in serious financial difficulty. The parties agreed that, if the nursery were to survive, it would require new capital. Bank and Capital therefore entered into a “Participation Agreement” by the terms of which Capital agreed to waive its right to declare a default and Bank agreed to convert its demand notes to installment payments and to provide an additional $100,000, if all of the nursery’s obligations to both parties were collateralized. The agreement required that the nursery provide Bank and Capital with first and second mortgages, respectively, on the nursery property in Marion County and the Lofgren home in *819 Multnomah County. Accordingly, in August, 1978, the nursery executed and delivered to Bank a mortgage on the Marion County property to secure its note for $380,595. The Lofgrens, individually, also executed and delivered to Bank a trust deed on their Multnomah County property to secure the $75,000 in new money that Bank advanced to them for use by the nursery. Similarly, to secure its $350,000 note, in July, 1978, the nursery executed and delivered to Capital a mortgage on the Marion County property. The Lofgrens, as individuals, also executed and delivered to Capital a mortgage on their Multnomah County property to secure the same note that they had earlier guaranteed.

In the spring of 1979, the company was still in financial difficulty. Mr. Lofgren and Messrs. Banner and Norris, the Capital representatives who sat on the nursery board, discussed the situation in detail at a board meeting in June, 1979. The parties disagree as to what was said and what course of action was agreed upon. Banner and Norris testified that the nursery was in default at the time of the meeting but that they had agreed that Capital would not declare a default, provided Mr. Lofgren immediately develop a “restructuring” of the current debt with the Bank and provided also that an upcoming July 1, 1979, interest payment be paid on time. 1 The nursery did not make the July interest payment. Banner testified that, although he was in continual contact with Mr. Lofgren from July through September, no restructuring plan was forthcoming.

Mr. Lofgren, on the other hand, testified that, at the June board meeting, Banner and Norris agreed to give him time to develop a restructuring plan that would meet Bank’s approval. With this direction, and with Bank’s input, he set about formulating a restructuring plan. He testified that he kept Banner fully informed of his progress. By early fall, he said, he had received three commitments from investors of $50,000 each in new capital and was working on three more. He agrees that the nursery never made the July, 1979, interest payment.

*820 On September 12, 1979, Capital declared a default. Bank, which had earlier given Lofgren until October 14 to come up with a restructuring plan, changed its position and declared a default on September 19. Mr. Lofgren testified that, on receiving this information, the prospective investors withdrew their offers.

Bank brought suit in Marion County, seeking foreclosure against the nursery property. 2 Capital cross-claimed against Hoehnke Nursery Company and the Lofgrens, seeking judgments against them and foreclosure against the nursery property. Shortly thereafter, in a suit brought in Multnomah County, Capital sought to foreclose on the Lofgren home and asked for judgment against the Lofgrens. The two cases were then consolidated for trial in Marion County.

The trial court entered a decree foreclosing Bank’s mortgage on the nursery property and the trust deed on the Lofgren home. It found, based on a “Cross-Collateralization Agreement” among the Lofgrens, the nursery and Bank, that the two properties secured the full amount due Bank and that Bank’s position was senior to that of Capital as to both properties. The court also permitted Bank to pursue a deficiency judgment on the nursery property. In addition, it awarded it attorney fees, but excluded from computation of those fees the services performed in this litigation relative to Bank’s priority, in relation to Capital, as opposed to its right to foreclose against the nursery and the Lofgrens.

The trial court found Capital’s mortgage against the nursery property to be a valid and subsisting lien, superior to any interest other than that of Bank’s but decreed that Capital was not entitled to foreclosure, because it “did not come into court with clean hands.” That was apparently based on the Lofgrens’ affirmative defense that Capital, through its representatives on the nursery board, had breached its fiduciary duty to the nursery by declaring the default. The court also declared Capital’s mortgage on the Lofgren home “satisfied,” presumably for the same reason that it refused to foreclose its mortgage on the nursery property. It found that Capital was not entitled to judgment on the guaranty against Jean Lofgren, *821 because it did not give her the notice required by the terms of the guaranty. It also decreed, without explanation, that Capital was not entitled to judgment against William Lofgren on the guaranty or otherwise. Finally, the court declared that neither the Lofgrens nor Capital were entitled to attorney fees.

All parties appeal some aspect of the court’s decree. We consider each in turn.

CAPITAL’S APPEAL

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Related

Parsons v. Biscayne Valley Investors, Ltd.
935 P.2d 218 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1997)
Capital Investments, Inc. v. Lofgren
724 P.2d 862 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
667 P.2d 1022, 63 Or. App. 816, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 3049, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-state-bank-v-hoehnke-nursery-co-orctapp-1983.