George A. Unsinn and Margaret Unsinn v. Leslie R. Wilson and Mary K. Wilson

285 F.2d 273, 109 U.S. App. D.C. 193, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3301
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedNovember 17, 1960
Docket15615_1
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 285 F.2d 273 (George A. Unsinn and Margaret Unsinn v. Leslie R. Wilson and Mary K. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George A. Unsinn and Margaret Unsinn v. Leslie R. Wilson and Mary K. Wilson, 285 F.2d 273, 109 U.S. App. D.C. 193, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3301 (D.C. Cir. 1960).

Opinion

DANAHER, Circuit Judge.

The complaint in this action entitled “Complaint To Reform Promissory Note” was dismissed by the District Court and judgment was entered for the appellees. We are satisfied, however, that the appellants had actually stated a claim for declaratory judgment. The issues treated in the record and the evidence adduced by the respective parties demonstrate that the action should have been dismissed without prejudice to its renewal at the proper time. However since the various instruments are before us and are subject to construction as matter of law, in the interest of possibly indicating a basis upon which to put an end to the litigation, we will consider the case.

Appellees, husband and wife, hereinafter referred to as “the Wilsons,” on December 8, 1955, signed a contract to purchase property owned by 801 Irving Street Incorporated at a price of $182,-500.00. The buyers agreed to pay $40,-000. 00 in cash, and to assume “trust or trusts not to exceed $142,500.00 payable $950.00 per month, including interest at 5% with privilege of paying off at any time.” When at the time of settlement it developed that the property was already subject to a first trust on which the balance was $69,020.38, the Wilsons on December 30, 1955, executed and delivered to the corporate seller as payee, or order, their note for $73,479.62 with interest at 5%, secured by a second trust.

The first trust note called for payments of $800.00 per month, including principal and interest. The Wilsons accordingly in the second trust note agreed to pay $150.00 per month “to be applied, first, on the payment of interest on the amount of principal remaining unpaid.” Thus the $800.00 payment and the $150.00 payment made up the $950.00 per month which the contract called for.

Interest on the second trust note annually comes to $3,673.98. Our examination of the note discloses that the Unsinns have regularly been crediting the monthly payments of $150.00. Obviously the total indebtedness secured by the second trust is mounting each year at the rate of $1,873.98, so that the debt has now become nearly $80,000.00.

In April, 1956, the appellants, husband and wife, hereinafter “the Unsinns,” had commenced suit 1 against the corporate payee, 801 Irving Street Incorporated and certain stockholders. In settlement of that action, the Wilsons’ note held by the corporation was endorsed, without recourse, to the Unsinns. The latter in 1958 commenced this action seeking to recover the accrued unpaid interest. 2 They also asked for a judgment (a) that the annual interest deficit be subjected to a 5% interest charge and (b) after the first trust note shall have been paid in *275 full, that the Wilsons be required to pay the entire sum of $950.00 “payable each month in accordance with the contract of December 8, 1955 * * * on the note now owned by the plaintiffs * * * until the full amount of principal and interest is paid in full.”

The trial judge in his oral decision set forth his findings of fact and conclusions of law. He stated in part:

“There is no doubt that the note does not conform to the contract, because the contract, although perhaps not artistically drawn, contemplated the payment of $950. per month continuously, whereas in the form that the transaction took when the settlement was made, the payments on the trust would, in effect, be reduced from $950.00 to $150.00 per month as soon as the first trust shall have been paid off. The fact, however, that the note as executed does not conform to the contract is not sufficient to justify a reformation. It must be established that there was a mistake in the execution of the note in order to justify its reformation so that it would correspond to the original contract.” 3

The trial judge further observed that the note “on its face, appears somewhat incongruous or unusual, because the payment of $150.00 per month is not sufficient to pay the entire interest on the note, not to speak of any part of the principal.” This result, he continued, reflected no mistake but rather an understanding of the parties and that “the intention was that [the unpaid interest and principal] should remain as an encumbrance on the property, with the implication that the makers, in order to clear their title, at some future time would pay off the note at a substantial discount and on favorable terms.”

The trial judge correctly concluded that the contract of sale contemplated with respect to the “trust or trusts not to exceed $142,500.00,” assumed by the buyers, that the Wilsons were obligated to pay $950.00 per month, principal and interest, “continuously.” The note which the Wilsons signed and delivered purports to call for payments of interest only, and at the rate of $150.00 per month. But the trial judge erred in concluding that “the payments on the trust would, in effect, be reduced from $950.00 to $150.00 per month as soon as the first trust shall have been paid off.”

The error arises from the failure to recognize that the second trust note is a demand note. The statute is clear on this point. D.C.Code § 28-108 (1951), in pertinent part, specifically provides:

“An instrument is payable on demand—
“First * * *.
“Second. In which no time for payment is expressed.” (Emphasis added.) 4

It may be discerned from this record that neither the original payee nor the makers realized or recognized that a demand note had been uttered. We may assume that any such result was not in accord with what the original parties contemplated, but we must look to the instrument at hand, and the law is clear, this is a demand note. 5

*276 The reasons underlying the effort of the Wilsons to keep fluid the terms of payment on the second trust note are understandable and abundantly manifested of record. When the Wilsons bought the property, there were two outstanding leases. One, with a monthly rental of $400.00 will expire July 14, 1964. The other, with a monthly rental of $1,142.00, will expire August 1, 1965. With the expiration of the first trust in 1964, the Wilsons could not know “what our circumstances will be, whether the place remains rented or whether the bank will refinance the loan to begin with, in which case we may be able to get a discount on that second trust note to pay cash.” They prudently bargained for total payments of $950.00 per month, which were well within the foreseeable income. They wanted the second trust note written as we have seen “because we would renegotiate the note when the first trust was paid off and we knew what income we would be receiving from the property.” But they signed a demand note which now is owned by the Unsinns.

It has been “convincingly” established ■that the legal effect of the note is vitally .different from what the original parties ■intended. 6

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Bluebook (online)
285 F.2d 273, 109 U.S. App. D.C. 193, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-a-unsinn-and-margaret-unsinn-v-leslie-r-wilson-and-mary-k-wilson-cadc-1960.