Hall v. Mortgage Security Corp. of America

192 S.E. 145, 119 W. Va. 140, 111 A.L.R. 118, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 94
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1937
Docket8400
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 192 S.E. 145 (Hall v. Mortgage Security Corp. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Mortgage Security Corp. of America, 192 S.E. 145, 119 W. Va. 140, 111 A.L.R. 118, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 94 (W. Va. 1937).

Opinions

Riley, Judge:

This is a suit in equity of Lace Hall and Lilly Hall, his wife, against Mortgage Security Corporation of America, a corporation, Union Trust Company of Maryland, a corporation, trustee, Kanawha Banking & Trust Company, a corporation, trustee, and the unknown holders, if any, of the notes described in a certain deed of trust made by plaintiffs to defendant trustees. Its purpose is to enjoin an apprehended sale of real estate under said *142 deed of trust; to adjudicate the correct balance owing upon the notes secured thereby; and to purge the loan of alleged usurious charges. From a decree which, among other things, dismissed the bill of complaint as to the holders of six outstanding six per cent “Real Estate Trust Deed Notes,” the plaintiffs appeal.

Lace Hall, the owner of certain unimproved real estate in the City of Logan, applied to Williams-Redden & Company, of Charleston, for a loan to cover the cost of the construction of an apartment house thereon. The said loan was to be effective as of completion date. Upon the application (which was made on forms prepared by Mortgage Security Corporation of America) he agreed to pay certain charges out of the proceeds of the requested loan, which loan was to be evidenced by a series of first lien six per cent deed of trust notes, and to execute a second and subordinate lien series of non-interest bearing notes to cover certain additional items. The application, which provided for the purchase of the proposed notes by the Mortgage Security Corporation of America, was forwarded to said corporation by Williams-Redden & Company. Upon notification of the commitment, Hall proceeded to make the proposed improvements.

On September 15, 1925, the apartment having been completed, Lace Hall and Lilly Hall, in accordance with the plan theretofore agreed upon, executed a deed of trust to Union Trust Company of Maryland (Baltimore, Maryland) and Kanawha Banking & Trust Company (Charleston, West Virginia), trustees, on the property, to secure the holder or holders of the two series of notes, heretofore mentioned, bearing even date. The first series was made up of promissory, negotiable six per cent notes, numbered consecutively from one to sixteen, inclusive, aggregating the sum of $10,000.00, the first note falling due two years after date, i. e., September 15, 1927. Each of the notes in this series was executed on special registered forms, resembling bonds and other marketable securities, prepared by the lender, and carried interest coupon notes, falling due every six months. The *143 principal notes of this series, as well as each of the attached interest coupon notes, were signed by Lace Hall and Lilly Hall, and were made payable to bearer “in gold coin of the United States of America, of the present weight and fineness,” at the office of the lender, or Union Trust Company of Maryland. The second and subordinate lien series was composed of seven non-interest bearing notes (aggregating $1,610.00) payable to bearer, at offices of the lender, at three months’ intervals, the first falling due on December 15, 1925, and the last on June 15, 1927. The purpose of this second series, which was retained by the lender, was, according to the terms of the application, to cover (a) amounts charged by the National Surety Company and the lender corporation for their guarantees of the sixteen principal notes; (b) the trustees’ fees; and (c)the payment of all other costs and expenses incurred by the lender corporation in connection with the loan.

The trust deed provided for monthly payments of $130.00 for one hundred twenty months to one of the trustees, to be applied to the payment of principal and interest on the notes of the first, and principal on the second series, as the same came due.

At the time the foregoing notes and deed of trust were executed, Hall and wife signed an estoppel certificate, in which it is stated: “The undersigned having been requested to execute this instrument, in order that it may be exhibited to prospective purchasers of the notes or bonds evidencing said debt to induce a purchase of the same do hereby represent and certify that there are no defenses available to the undersigned or any of them against the payment of said notes or bonds, nor any offsets between the undersigned and -, and that the instrument securing said notes or bonds is truly a first lien upon the real estate conveyed thereby.”

Deductions were made out of the proceeds of the loan of $10,000.00 in accordance with the agreement in the application, for a survey of the property, attorney’s fee for examining and perfecting title, appraisal fee, recording fees, premium on title insurance, expense of *144 policy of title insurance, and services of Williams-Redden & Company in procuring the loan. It was stipulated of record that these were valid and proper charges.

The first series of notes, upon being turned over to the lender corporation, was guaranteed by it and National Surety Company, and originally delivered to Union Trust Company of Maryland, trustee, under a collateral agreement as collateral constituting security for certain bonds issued by the lender corporation. Later, other collateral was substituted and eleven of the sixteen notes withdrawn and sold by the lender corporation to various purchasers and investors through investment dealers or brokers, at face value.

The plaintiffs made eighty-seven of the one hundred twenty payments, the eighty-seventh one in December, 1932. On March 15, 1933, they failed to pay the semiannual interest installment, and have since failed to pay either principal or interest. Becoming apprehensive that the property covered by the trust deed would be sold under the provisions thereof, they brought this suit.

Some time between Hall’s default and the bringing of this suit (the process of which was returnable to August Rules, 1933), the Mortgage Security Corporation of America and the National Surety Company became insolvent and were placed in the hands of a receiver and the Insurance Commissioner of the State of New York, respectively, and their guarantees became of little, if any, value.

The circuit court'decreed that the amount of $1,610.00, represented by the second series of notes, except as to three items totalling $302.75, i. e., $284.75 paid by the National Surety Company for guaranteeing, and $10.00 and $8.00, paid the Kanawha Banking & Trust Company, trustee, and the Union Trust Company of Maryland, trustee, respectively, for certifying the principal notes, represented usurious charges on behalf of the Mortgage Security Corporation, and entered judgment against the latter for the $1,307.25 which represented the usury, together with interest, $699.41, making an aggregate of $2,006.66. It also decreed that all of the *145 first series noteholders (Mortgage Security Corporation of America not being one of them) were innocent holders of such notes in due course of business; that because of the circumstances alleged and established by such defendants, the plaintiffs are barred of their right to assert usury against such noteholders, and that, accordingly, as to such noteholders, the plaintiffs’ bill be dismissed.

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Bluebook (online)
192 S.E. 145, 119 W. Va. 140, 111 A.L.R. 118, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-mortgage-security-corp-of-america-wva-1937.