Garrison v. FIRST FEDERAL SAV. AND LOAN

402 S.E.2d 25
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 1, 1991
DocketRecord No. 900909
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 402 S.E.2d 25 (Garrison v. FIRST FEDERAL SAV. AND LOAN) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garrison v. FIRST FEDERAL SAV. AND LOAN, 402 S.E.2d 25 (Va. 1991).

Opinion

402 S.E.2d 25 (1991)

Alice Mae GARRISON
v.
FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF SOUTH CAROLINA, et al.

Record No. 900909.

Supreme Court of Virginia.

March 1, 1991.

*26 Henry L. Woodward (David D. Beidler, Roanoke, on briefs), for appellant.

William R. Baldwin, III (Hirschler, Fleischer, Weinberg, Cox & Allen, Richmond, on brief), for appellees.

Present: All the Justices.

LACY, Justice.

In this case we must decide whether a loan secured by a second deed of trust was null and void and unenforceable by an assignee under the applicable sections of Title 6.1, Chapter 7.2, Article 10 of the Code of Virginia.

In 1984 Alice Mae Garrison applied for and obtained a loan from an unregulated lender, Landbank Equity Corporation, a Virginia corporation. The principal amount of the loan as reflected on the documents was $9,224.19. The loan was secured by a second deed of trust on Garrison's home in Roanoke County. On October 30, 1984, eight days after the loan documents were executed, Landbank Equity sold the note, along with others, to First Federal Savings and Loan Association of South Carolina.

In December 1985 the loan became delinquent. Garrison was notified that on November 25, 1986 foreclosure proceedings would be held under the second deed of trust. On the day before the scheduled foreclosure, Garrison filed a bill of complaint seeking an injunction to prevent the sale and a declaration that the loan violated Virginia's subordinate mortgage laws and, *27 therefore, was void under § 6.1-330.47(A)[1] or, in the alternative, reformation of the obligation.

The trial court enjoined the foreclosure sale of Garrison's home and decided the merits of the case on her motion for summary judgment based on the pleadings, briefs, discovery materials, and stipulated loan documents. On April 6, 1990 the trial court entered an order denying Garrison's claim that the loan was null and void, "deeming it inequitable on the record to find the loan and related note and deed of trust to be void." The trial court granted Garrison's alternative request for relief, finding that "the inequities of the transaction justified the remedy of reformation." The trial court reformed the loan by excising all interest and other charges from the note, establishing the principal at $6,350.00, and crediting Garrison's payments against that principal, leaving a balance of $4,336.47, with interest payable at the judgment rate of interest from the date of the entry of the order.

Garrison appeals from this order, arguing that the risk management charge, the appraisal fee charges in excess of the actual cost of the appraisal, and the loan discount charge of $2,400 contained in the loan violated the subordinate mortgage statutes and, therefore, that the trial court erred in allowing enforcement, after reformation, of a loan which was null and void.

Although the trial court stated that it would be inequitable to hold the loan void, it did not identify any specific basis for its decision. First Federal asserts three separate grounds on which the trial court could properly have declined to declare that the loan was null and void and unenforceable by First Federal: (1) First Federal is not an agent or principal of Landbank Equity and, therefore, by its terms, § 6.1-330.47(A) does not apply to First Federal; (2) the charges in question are not interest charges which exceed those allowed by the statute and, therefore, § 6.1-330.47(A) is inapplicable; and (3) 12 U.S.C. § 1730g (1980) preempts application of the remedy contained in § 6.1-330.47(A). Any one of these propositions, if correct, would support the decision of the trial court and make further analysis unnecessary. However, since we conclude that the Garrison note was null and void and unenforceable by First Federal under § 6.1-330.47(A), we discuss each of the points raised in order.[2]

I.

Interest and other charges associated with the lending of money have been the subject of governmental regulation for years. By declaring secondary mortgage loans made by unregulated lenders to be null and void and unenforceable under certain circumstances, the General Assembly provided the borrower with the strongest possible remedy. No other category of loan is subject to this type of penalty. Code § 6.1-330.47(A), the statute imposing this penalty, provides:

Any contract, note, mortgage, or deed of trust made or received and providing for interest charges in excess of those permitted by §§ 6.1-330.16 and 6.1-330.24, except as hereinafter provided, shall be null and void and unenforceable by the lender or by his assignees, who are agents or principals of the lender.
The provisions of this section shall apply only to loans made under § 6.1-330.16 and shall not apply to any contract or note, or mortgage or deed of trust securing such obligation, which has been assigned to a person who is not the agent or principal of the lender, if such assignee has taken the note or obligation in good faith and in reasonable reliance upon the provisions of § 6.1-330.44.

Reading the first sentence of this section to limit its application to assignees who are *28 agents or principals of the lender, First Federal contends that the remedy provided by this Code section is unavailable against it because it does not come within that category of assignees. Garrison's loan then, First Federal suggests, is not absolutely void, and Garrison is left with whatever other remedies are available for violations of the usury laws. See, e.g., § 6.1-330.45 (1983 Repl.Vol.).

The initial vice in reading the first sentence as proposed by First Federal is that the second sentence would then become virtually meaningless. An otherwise void loan would be enforceable by a non-agent, non-principal assignee, regardless of whether it was taken in good faith and in reliance on § 6.1-330.44.[3] Recognizing this "presumed anomaly," First Federal turns to the history of the section and concludes that the addition of the second sentence in 1973 was intended to expand the protection for assignees, and was not intended to remove the protection previously granted assignees by the first sentence.

First Federal's analysis and historical interpretation of the section misconstrue the law and are not persuasive. Rules of statutory construction dictate that a statute should be construed as a whole, and, if it is subject to more than one interpretation, that which will carry out the legislative intent should be applied. McDaniel v. Commonwealth, 199 Va. 287, 294, 99 S.E.2d 623, 629 (1957); Rockingham Co-Operative Farm Bureau, Inc. v. City of Harrisonburg, 171 Va. 339, 344, 198 S.E. 908, 910 (1938). Furthermore, no part of an act should be treated as meaningless unless absolutely necessary. Raven Red Ash Coal Corp. v. Absher, 153 Va. 332, 335, 149 S.E. 541, 542 (1929). Here, both sentences read together can be given effect: The first sentence applies to lenders and assignees who are their agents or principals; the second to assignees who are not agents or principals of the lender.

The history of this section and of usury law supports this conclusion. Prior to 1874, the Virginia statute declared all usurious loans to be null and void. See Munford v. McVeigh, 92 Va.

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Bluebook (online)
402 S.E.2d 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrison-v-first-federal-sav-and-loan-va-1991.