G. E. Capital Mortgage Services v. Monno

53 Va. Cir. 154, 2000 Va. Cir. LEXIS 129
CourtFairfax County Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 19, 2000
DocketCase No. (Chancery) 150591
StatusPublished

This text of 53 Va. Cir. 154 (G. E. Capital Mortgage Services v. Monno) 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
G. E. Capital Mortgage Services v. Monno, 53 Va. Cir. 154, 2000 Va. Cir. LEXIS 129 (Va. Super. Ct. 2000).

Opinion

By Judge Jane Marum Roush

This matter came before the Court on March 3, 2000, upon the Plaintiff’s exceptions to the Commissioner’s Report. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Court took the case under advisement. For the reasons stated below, the Complainant’s exceptions will be sustained in part and overruled in part.

I. Facts

The facts of this case are largely uncontroverted. On December 31,1990, Dale.J. Monno (“Mrs. Monno”) and John Monno (“Mr. Monno”), who were then husband and wife, executed a note in the original principal amount of $191,250 made payable to TrustBank Savings F.S.B. (“TrustBank”). Repayment of the note was secured by the lien of a deed of trust on the Monnos’ marital residence located at 9124 Patton Boulevard in Fairfax County.

Mr. and Mrs. Monno separated in December 1992. In October 1993, Mrs. Monno, who continued to live in the marital residence, refinanced the TrustBank loan with Ryland Mortgage Corporation. Mrs. Monno alone executed a note in favor of Ryland Mortgage in the original principal amount of $208,000. Texas Commerce Bank, now known as Chase Bank of Texas, subsequently became the holder of the new note. G.E. Capital Mortgage Services, Inc., services the loan for Chase Bank of Texas. (Ryland Mortgage [155]*155Corporation, Chase Bank of Texas, and G.E. Capital Mortgage Services shall be referred to collectively as “G.E.”) The proceeds of G.E.’s loan were used in part to satisfy in full the couple’s joint loan from TrustBank, which at that time had an outstanding principal balance of $188,468.28. Mr. Monno knew nothing of the G.E. loan. In order to obtain the loan, Mrs. Monno provided G.E. with an affidavit stating falsely that she was the sole owner of the property.

Mrs. Monno stopped paying the G.E. loan and filed for bankruptcy in April 1995. The couple was divorced by a final decree entered in this Court on May 11, 1995. The Court did not at that time make any equitable distribution award because of the pendency of Mrs. Monno’s bankruptcy.1 As a result of the divorce, Mr. and Mrs. Monno now own the property as tenants in common by operation of law. Ya. Code § 20-111. Mrs. Monno received a discharge in bankruptcy in November 1996. Consequently, she is no longer personally obligated to repay the G.E. loan. G.E.’s lien has, of course, survived Mrs. Monno’s bankruptcy discharge. The lien, however, encumbers only Mrs. Monno’s undivided interest in the property as a tenant in common with Mr. Monno.

II. The Bill of Complaint

G.E. filed this cause against Mr. Monno, Mrs. Monno, and the trustees under G.E.’s deed of trust. In Count I of its Bill of Complaint, G.E. asks this Court to impose a constructive trust on the property and determine that the defendants hold the property in trust for the benefit of G.E. In Count n, G.E. asks that its deed of trust be reformed to “reflect accurately the interest of [both of the Monnos] in the subject property.” G.E. asks that the Monnos be required to execute a deed of trust in favor of G.E. or that a special commissioner be appointed to execute such a deed of trust in favor of G.E. Finally, in Count HI, G.E. seeks a money judgment against Mr. Monno in the amount of the proceeds of the G.E. loan that were used to satisfy the TrustBank loan.

Mr. Monno filed a cross-complaint asking that the property be partitioned and that title to the property be quieted.

[156]*156IE. The Commissioner’s Report

The matter was referred to a Commissioner in Chancery. The Commissioner was asked to determine (1) the validity and priority of liens on the property, (2) whether the G.E. deed of trust constitutes a valid and subsisting lien on the property, (3) whether G.E. should be equitably subordinated2 to the lien of the TrustBank deed of trust, (4) whether Mr. Monno and/or Mrs. Monno are holding the property under a constructive trust for the benefit of G.E., (5) whether Mr. Monno and/or Mrs. Monno should be ordered to execute a deed of trust for the benefit of G.E., (6) whether the G.E. deed of trust should be reformed, and (7) any other matters raised by the pleadings.

The Commissioner held an evidentiary hearing over five days from February 1998 to April 1999. The Commissioner filed his report in which he concluded that G.E. was not entitled to any of the relief it seeks in its Bill of Complaint.

The Commissioner found that Mrs. Monno clearly informed G.E. at the time of the refinancing that she was not yet divorced from Mr. Monno. G.E. obtained a title report that showed that the property was titled jointly in the names of both of the Monnos. The title report advised G.E. of the need for title to the property to be transferred to Mrs. Monno alone. G.E. charged Mrs. Monno a fee for the review of the title report and other documents. Mr. Monno did not learn of the refinancing until January 1994. He immediately notified G.E. that the deed of trust to the property was incorrect in that it identified Mrs. Monno as the sole owner of the property. As Mrs. Monno was then paying the note, G.E. took no action. G.E. was unresponsive to Mr. Monno’s many efforts to bring the deficiencies of the G.E. deed of trust to the attention of G.E. The Commissioner noted that:

Mr. Monno had written numerous letters and made numerous telephone contacts with Ryland Mortgage, the Complainant [G.E.], and the Trustee in Bankruptcy as regards the improper Deed of Trust to no avail. Mr. Monno testifies that he also made an attempt to join with [G.E.] in an effort to foreclose on the property so as to minimize all parties[’] damages. However, [G.E.] told Mr. Monno that they would foreclose only if they got nearly all of the money from the foreclosure, and [Mr.] Monno would have lost all of the equity that [157]*157he had in the house prior to the improper refinancing of the Deed of Trust.

Commissioner’s Report at 3-4. The Commissioner further found that G.E. made no attempt in Mrs. Monno’s bankruptcy case to have her debt to G.E. declared to be non-dischargeable as having been procured by fraud.

The Commissioner concluded that G.E. “sat on its rights” and that G.E.’s delay caused prejudice to Mr. Monno. The Commissioner found that G.E. “certainly would have mitigated the damages of both Mr. Monno and [G.E.],had G.E. acted in 1994 instead of the present time.” The Commissioner noted that the property had deteriorated in physical condition and value during the period of G.E.’s inaction.

The Commissioner found that the property is owned by the Monnos as tenants in common, that the only deed of trust on the property is G.E.’s deed of trust, and that G.E.’s deed of trust encumbers only Mrs. Monno’s' interest, in the property. The Commissioner recommended that all of the equitable relief sought by G.E. be denied. Specifically, the Commissioner recommended that G.E. should not be subordinated to the lien of the TrustBank deed of trust, that the Court should not impose a constructive trust in favor of G.E. on Mr. Monno’s interest in the property, that the Monnos should not be ordered to execute a joint deed of trust for the benefit of G.E., that G.E.’s deed of trust should not be reformed to encumber Mr. Monno’s interest in the property, and that Mr. Monno should not be held to be personally liable to G.E. The Commissioner concluded that G.E. should be left to pursue its legal remedies..

IV. G.E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Va. Cir. 154, 2000 Va. Cir. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-e-capital-mortgage-services-v-monno-vaccfairfax-2000.