Fleet Finance v. Burke & Herbert Bank & Trust

27 Va. Cir. 98, 1992 Va. Cir. LEXIS 146
CourtFairfax County Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1992
DocketCase No. (Chancery) 122305
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 Va. Cir. 98 (Fleet Finance v. Burke & Herbert Bank & Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Fairfax County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fleet Finance v. Burke & Herbert Bank & Trust, 27 Va. Cir. 98, 1992 Va. Cir. LEXIS 146 (Va. Super. Ct. 1992).

Opinion

By Judge Thomas A. Fortkort

This case is before the Court on the Demurrer of defendants Burke & Herbert Bank and Trust and David D. Elsberg, Trustee, to the plaintiff’s Bill of Complaint. After hearing oral argument, the Court took the matter under advisement. For the reasons set forth below, the defendants’ Demurrer is overruled with respect to the plaintiff’s claim of fraud alleged in Count II of the Bill of Complaint. The Demurrer is sustained as to the claims of fraudulent conveyance stated in Count I and breach of fiduciary duty stated in Count III of the Bill of Complaint.

The events giving rise to this litigation are disclosed in the plaintiff’s initial pleading. The plaintiff asks that the Court set aside the foreclosure sale of the property located at 7140 Dominion Drive, McLean, Virginia, conducted by defendant David Elsberg on June 26, 1991.

At the time of the foreclosure sale, the defendants Robert A. Alden and Diane C. Alden owned the property, which was encumbered by three deeds of trust securing loans made to the Aldens. The first deed of trust recorded on July 7, 1988, secured a loan from the defendant Burke & Herbert Bank and Trust in the amount of $550,000.00. The Aldens and Burke & Herbert later modified this [99]*99deed of trust, increasing the loan amount to $732,000.00. They recorded the modification on March 31, 1989. The plaintiff Fleet Finance extended a second loan to the Aldens in the amount of $400,000.00, and this loan was secured by a second deed of trust recorded on September 15, 1989. Burke & Herbert provided a third loan to the Aldens in the amount of $98,000.00 and recorded the third deed of trust on October 29, 1990.

Fleet Finance claims that within months after the Aldens executed the third deed of trust, they had difficulties meeting their loan obligations to Burke & Herbert. When refinancing negotiations between Burke & Herbert and the Aldens failed, Burke & Herbert began procedures to foreclose on the property. On May 8, 1991, Burke & Herbert substituted the defendant David Elsberg for the trustees named in the first deed of trust. Elsberg conveyed a trustee’s deed to Burke & Herbert on June 26, 1991, which recites foreclosure under the first deed of trust and notes in the margin that Burke & Herbert directed foreclosure on the property, that Burke & Herbert was the sole bidder at the sale, and that it bid $800,000.00, which was less than the total indebtedness under the first deed of trust.

Fleet Finance contends that appraisals of the property at this time showed a fair market value of approximately $1,250,000.00. The plaintiff also claims that Burke & Herbert and the Aldens agreed that the Aldens would remain in possession of the property and that the Aldens could possibly reacquire the property from Burke & Herbert within six months of foreclosure.

The Bill of Complaint requests that the Court set aside the foreclosure sale of June 26, 1991, and that the Court supervise a new foreclosure sale of the property. The plaintiff bases its request on three legal theories given as counts in the Bill of Complaint. Count I claims that the foreclosure sale constituted a fraudulent conveyance because Burke & Herbert:

consciously avoided notifying Complainant Fleet of the event of foreclosure, as sole bidder bid an amount below the indebtedness secured by the first deed of trust and substantially below what it knew to be fair market value, and has engaged in negotiations with Defendant Robert Alden to re-convey the Property back to the Aldens, all with the purpose and intent of eliminating Fleet’s security interest in the Property and improving Burke & Herbert’s security for the loans.

[100]*100Bill of Complaint, para. 21. In response to this charge, the defendants’ Demurrer argues that the fraudulent conveyance statute given in § 55-80 of the Virginia Code speaks to the actions of debtors/ borrowers rather than to the actions of trustees and thus would concern only fraudulent actions of the Aldens. The defendants also claim that the duties of the trustee prior to a foreclosure sale stated in § 55-59.2 of the Virginia Code require notice only to the current owners of the property.

The Court sustains the Demurrer as to Count I of the Bill of Complaint because as the defendant contends, Count I does not state a claim for fraudulent conveyance under Virginia Code § 55-80. In the present case, David Elsberg as trustee under the first deed of trust conducted the foreclosure sale in full compliance with Virginia statutory law, and thus the sale enjoys a presumption of validity. The fraudulent conveyance statute given in § 55-80 does not contemplate a trustee’s actions taken pursuant to legal foreclosure proceedings. The Court therefore sustains the defendants’ Demurrer as to the fraudulent conveyance claim given in Count I of the Bill of Complaint.

In Count II of the Bill of Complaint, Fleet Finance asserts two reasons that the defendants’ actions constitute fraud. First, the plaintiff claims that David Elsberg occupied a conflicting position of confidence with respect both to Burke & Herbert, because Elsberg had acted as its counsel on prior occasions, and to the Aldens and Fleet Finance, because Elsberg owed these parties an obligation to use best efforts to obtain maximum value for the property at the foreclosure sale. Second, the plaintiff contends that since the foreclosure sale was conducted without notice to Fleet Finance, the sale was not conducted in a fair and reasonable manner and is tainted by fraud.

In response the Count II of the bill of Complaint, the defendants argue that fraud was not properly alleged in the Bill of Complaint because the plaintiff failed to claim intentional misrepresentation by the defendants.

The Court finds that the allegation of fraud is sufficient to survive the Demurrer. While intentional misrepresentation by a defendant and reliance by a plaintiff must be alleged as the basis for an action at law for fraud and deceit, see Lloyd v. Smith, 150 Va. 132 (1928), a claim brought in equity for fraud requires no such strict pleading. Here the plaintiff has stated a claim for fraud which invites equitable [101]*101relief; because no adequate remedy at law exists, the authority of the equity court to grant relief is invoked. Metcalf v. Williams, 104 U.S. 93 (1881). In a case such as this one, where the facts alleged by the plaintiff demonstrate the defendants’ use of the law to improve their financial position through a procedure that can only be described as sharp dealing, the Court is compelled to examine general equitable principles of law to achieve a remedy.1 “A court of equity, which looks to substance and not merely to form of transaction, may be resorted to in order to prevent a fraud.” Cooper v. Gregory, 191 Va. 24, 31, 60 S.E. 50 (1950).

Finally, in Count III of the Bill of Complaint, the plaintiff claims breach of fiduciary duty on the part of the trustee David Elsberg because Elsberg failed to notify Fleet Finance of the foreclosure sale. The defendants demur on this matter, claiming that the trustee owed no duty of any kind to Fleet Finance. The Court finds on this issue that Virginia law does not impose fiduciary duties on trustees beyond those duties owed to the parties under the deed of trust.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 Va. Cir. 98, 1992 Va. Cir. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleet-finance-v-burke-herbert-bank-trust-vaccfairfax-1992.