Handler Construction, Inc. v. CoreStates Bank, N.A.

633 A.2d 356, 1993 Del. LEXIS 435
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedDecember 1, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 633 A.2d 356 (Handler Construction, Inc. v. CoreStates Bank, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Handler Construction, Inc. v. CoreStates Bank, N.A., 633 A.2d 356, 1993 Del. LEXIS 435 (Del. 1993).

Opinion

HOLLAND, Justice:

This is a direct appeal from a final judgment entered by the Court of Chancery. These proceedings originated when the plaintiff-appellee, CoreStates Bank, N.A. (“Core-States”), filed a complaint in equity to foreclose upon an unsealed mortgage. That unsealed mortgage had been executed and recorded in favor of CoreStates’ predecessor in 1988. The defendant-appellant, Handler Construction, Inc. (“Handler”), is the assignee of a sealed mortgage on the same property which was executed and recorded in 1990. The Court of Chancery held that the sale of the mortgaged property, pursuant to Core-States’ equitable action to foreclose upon its unsealed mortgage, extinguished the lien of the subsequently recorded sealed mortgage, which had been assigned to Handler.

Handler has raised two basic contentions in this appeal. First, according to Handler, notwithstanding its express terms and recordation, an unsealed document can never be a “mortgage,” as a matter of Delaware law. Second, Handler argues in the alternative that even if a recorded unsealed document can be a “mortgage,” it cannot take priority over a subsequently recorded sealed mortgage executed in favor of a third party.

This Court has carefully considered Handler’s arguments. We have concluded that both of Handler’s contentions are contrary to the venerable equity jurisprudence of Delaware. Accordingly, the final judgment of the Court of Chancery, which extinguished Handler’s legal mortgage as a lien which was subordinate to CoreStates’ prior recorded equitable mortgage, is affirmed.

Facts

The relevant facts are, for the most part, undisputed. On July 21, 1988, Hitchens Farm Associates obtained a loan in the amount of $15,263,000 from First Pennsylvania Bank, N.A. (“First Pennsylvania”). As security it executed an unsealed mortgage on a parcel of real property known as “Hitchens Farm.” That mortgage was recorded in New Castle County, Delaware on July 25, 1988.

On February 21, 1990, Hitchens Farm Associates executed a sealed mortgage on Hitchens Farm in favor of Francis J. Grossi (“Grossi”) and Joseph A. Vilone (“Vilone”) for $1,450,000. This mortgage was recorded on March 12,1990. In May 1991, Grossi and Vilone signed a letter acknowledging their agreement to a proposed workout plan between First Pennsylvania and Hitchens Farm Associates. The letter referred to First Pennsylvania’s mortgage as a first mortgage and to Grossi and Vilone’s interest as a junior mortgage.

On October 24,1991, CoreStates, successor by merger to First Pennsylvania, commenced an action on its unsealed mortgage against Hitchens Farm Associates in the Court of Chancery. Grossi and Vilone, though not joined as defendants, were given notice of the action. Hitchens Farm Associates consented to the entry of judgment. The Court of Chancery issued an order on December 23, 1991, granting judgment against Hitchens Farm Associates for $5,040,535.43 and directing the Prothonotary of New Castle County to “enter the judgment in the same manner and form and in the same books and indexes as a judgment by default in a scire facias proceeding,” with the “same force and effect as though the judgment had been entered in Court pursuant to the scire facias sur mortgage procedure.”

On January 2, 1992, at CoreStates’ request, the Prothonotary issued a writ of execution and scheduled a sheriffs sale for March 10,1992. Fifteen minutes prior to the sale, Handler recorded an assignment of mortgage from Grossi and Vilone. Handler attended the sale. At the sale on March 10, 1992, the Sheriff sold the property to Core-States, the sole bidder, for $5 million.

*359 On April 13, 1992, Handler commenced a Superior Court mortgage foreclosure action against Hitchens Farm Associates and CoreStates. That action challenged the priority of CoreStates’ mortgage. On May 6, 1992, CoreStates filed a motion in the Court of Chancery to join Handler as a defendant, for confirmation of the March 10 sale, and for an adjudication that Handler's mortgage was discharged by the sale.

The motion to join Handler was granted. On July 29, 1992, the Court of Chancery issued an opinion holding that the CoreStates mortgage had priority over Handler’s mortgage, but denying CoreStates’ motion to confirm the March 10 sheriffs sale because the December 23, 1991 order authorizing the sale was ambiguous. According to the Court of Chancery, that order could be read to have erroneously directed the Prothonotary to enter the judgment as a “judgment by default in a scire facias proceeding,” which is not available in an equitable foreclosure. 1

The Court of Chancery also ruled, however, that upon submission of a new order by CoreStates, it would modify the December 23, 1991 order nunc pro tunc and direct a new sheriffs sale to be held pursuant to 10 Del.C. § 371, unless CoreStates chose to have the March 10,1992 sale confirmed, in which event Hitchens Farm would have remained subject to Handler’s mortgage. 2 The Court of Chancery also held that it would be “grossly inequitable” to confirm the March 10, 1992 sale and permit the Handler lien to remain undischarged. That holding had two bases: first, the clear purpose of the December 23 order was to accomplish this discharge; and second, Grossi and Vilone “agreed in writing before the equitable foreclosure proceeding was commenced that the second mortgage was subordinate to the first mortgage.” 3

Accordingly, the Court of Chancery issued a new order on August 25, 1992, modifying the December 23, 1991 order nunc pro tunc and authorizing a second sheriffs sale. That sale was held on November 10, 1992 and was confirmed by the Court of Chancery on December 18, 1992. The final judgment entered by the Court of Chancery provided *360 that Handler’s mortgage was discharged. 10 Del.C. § 4985. This appeal followed.

Equitable Mortgages Nature and History

The Anglo-Saxon/American history of the law regarding mortgages reflects the equitable nature of its present principles, many of which find their origin in Roman civil law. Those equitable tenets were developed over centuries by courts of equity, in response to what were perceived to be the shortcomings of legal rules on the subject. See Fox v. Wharton, Del.Ch., 5 Del.Ch. 200, 225-26 (1878). The Delaware Court of Chancery has characterized the law of mortgages as “one of the most splendid instances in the history of our jurisprudence, of the triumph of equitable principles over technical rules, and of the homage which those principles have received by their adoption in the courts of law.” Id. at 226 (quoting 4 Kent, Commentaries on American Law *158). A knowledge of that history is essential to an understanding of the powers which are now vested in the Delaware Court of Chancery in equitable foreclosure proceedings.

The Roman civil law recognized two kinds of transfers of property as security for debts: the pignus and the hypotheca. 2 Story, Commentaries on Equity Jurisprudence § 1005 (Bigelow, 13th ed. 1886). The

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633 A.2d 356, 1993 Del. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/handler-construction-inc-v-corestates-bank-na-del-1993.