Hawthorn Bank and Hawthorn Real Estate, LLC v. F.A.L. Investments, LLC (Successor to Green and Samson, LLC) Jerry Green, Melody Green, Richard L. Samson, Individually and as Trustee of the Richard L. Samson Revocable Living Trust U/AD and Janet Samson

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 16, 2014
DocketWD77057 and WD77145
StatusPublished

This text of Hawthorn Bank and Hawthorn Real Estate, LLC v. F.A.L. Investments, LLC (Successor to Green and Samson, LLC) Jerry Green, Melody Green, Richard L. Samson, Individually and as Trustee of the Richard L. Samson Revocable Living Trust U/AD and Janet Samson (Hawthorn Bank and Hawthorn Real Estate, LLC v. F.A.L. Investments, LLC (Successor to Green and Samson, LLC) Jerry Green, Melody Green, Richard L. Samson, Individually and as Trustee of the Richard L. Samson Revocable Living Trust U/AD and Janet Samson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawthorn Bank and Hawthorn Real Estate, LLC v. F.A.L. Investments, LLC (Successor to Green and Samson, LLC) Jerry Green, Melody Green, Richard L. Samson, Individually and as Trustee of the Richard L. Samson Revocable Living Trust U/AD and Janet Samson, (Mo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

 HAWTHORN BANK AND HAWTHORN  REAL ESTATE, LLC.,  WD77057 WD77145 Respondents,   OPINION FILED: v.   September 16, 2014 F.A.L. INVESTMENTS, LLC,  (SUCCESSOR TO GREEN AND  SAMSON, LLC), JERRY GREEN,  MELODY GREEN, RICHARD L.  SAMSON, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS  TRUSTEE OF THE RICHARD L.  SAMSON REVOCABLE LIVING  TRUST U/AD AND JANET SAMSON,   Appellants. 

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cole County, Missouri The Honorable Patricia S. Joyce, Judge

Before Division Two: Victor C. Howard, P.J., James Edward Welsh, and Anthony Rex Gabbert, JJ.

Appellants Jerry and Melody Green and F.A.L. Investments, LLC, appeal the circuit

court's judgment in favor of Hawthorn Bank and Hawthorn Real Estate, LLC (collectively,

"Hawthorn") on Hawthorn's petition for declaratory judgment. Finding no error in the circuit

court's judgment, we affirm. Background

The circumstances underlying this lawsuit began in 2008 when Jerry Green and Richard

Samson1 each held a fifty-percent interest in Green and Samson, LLC, a real estate development

company. The company's sole asset consisted of seventy-eight acres of undeveloped property

along Highway 179 in Cole County (the "Highway 179 Property").

A deed of trust on the Highway 179 Property secured four promissory notes owed to

Hawthorn Bank2 by Green and Samson, LLC, and Hazel Hills Development (also jointly owned

by Green and Samson). Those four notes, totaling $1.78 million, each had a maturity date of

November 30, 2008. In late 2008, Green began to negotiate with Hawthorn about an agreement

to extend the maturity date of those notes.

During this time, Samson was experiencing financial difficulties with his own business,

FAB Building Center, Inc. ("FAB"). Among other things, FAB owed Hawthorn $2,211,450 (the

"FAB Debt") on seven notes that were past due and in collection status. Concerned about the

effect that Samson's financial difficulties might have on their jointly held companies, Green

thought it "imperative" that Samson transfer his interest in the companies to him.

On April 27, 2009, Green and Samson entered into a Membership Interest and Stock

Purchase Agreement (the "Purchase Agreement"), which provided for the immediate transfer to

Green of Samson's one-half interest in both Hazel Hills and Green and Samson, LLC (which

Green renamed F.A.L. Investments, LLC ("FAL")). The consideration received by Samson

1 Although Samson's businesses are held in the name of the "Richard L. Samson Revocable Living Trust U/D/A September 17, 1998," for the sake of brevity "Samson" is used to refer to both the Trust and the individual. 2 "A loan transaction typically consists of a promissory note and a security interest, such as a deed of trust." Richard v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 418 S.W.3d 468, 473 (Mo. App. 2013). "A deed of trust pledges land to secure a debt and entitles its holder to foreclose on property under certain circumstances." Id.

2 included a waiver of over $108,000 in past-due capital contributions that he owed the companies

and Green's agreement to secure payment of FAB's $2.21 million debt to Hawthorn.

Four days later, on May 1, 2009, Melody and Jerry Green, individually, and Jerry Green,

on behalf of FAL and Hazel Hills, entered into a "Loan Agreement" with Hawthorn Bank. Loan

Officer James Vossen executed the agreement on behalf of Hawthorn. The Loan Agreement

incorporated twenty separate promissory notes owed to Hawthorn. These included the notes of

FAL, Hazel Hills, and FAB (in accordance with the terms of the Purchase Agreement), the notes

of the Greens themselves, and a new note on a $470,000 line of credit. The Loan Agreement

further provided that Green would grant Hawthorn an "additional deed of trust" on the Highway

179 Property to secure the $2.21 million of FAB Debt, and neither FAL nor the Greens would

have personal liability for repayment of the FAB Debt. Paragraph 7 of the Loan Agreement

established that the proceeds from any sale of the Highway 179 Property would first be applied

to the debts of FAL and Hazel Hills and then half of "any remaining proceeds" would be applied

toward payment of the FAB Debt. The Loan Agreement extended the date for payment of the

principal on all the notes to May 1, 2012. During that time, only interest on the notes would be

due and payable. The Agreement also provided that Hawthorn would not "under any

circumstance extend the date for full payment of all Obligations beyond May 1, 2012."

As agreed, on May 1, 2009, Green executed a "Deed of Trust" in favor of Hawthorn,

pledging the Highway 179 Property as security on all twenty promissory notes. The Deed of

Trust contained a "due on sale" clause permitting Hawthorn, "at its option, [to] declare the entire

balance of the Secured Debt [$6,579,937] to be immediately due and payable upon . . . sale of

the Property" and which "shall remain in effect until the Secured Debt is paid in full and this

Security Instrument is released."

3 In October 2011, Green met with Vossen and another Hawthorn Bank official. The bank

officers advised Green that Hawthorn would not renew the Loan Agreement after May 1, 2012,

and would not refinance any of the notes secured by the Deed of Trust. In order to avoid default

and foreclosure, Green resolved to sell the Highway 179 Property. In late March 2012, Green

executed a contract on behalf of FAL to sell the property to an "undisclosed buyer." That buyer

turned out to be a limited liability company that Green and two other investors had recently

formed, named "The Commons on 179, LLC." Green was the majority owner (owning 60% of

the company) and the Managing Member.3

On March 30th, the title company contacted Hawthorn for the payoff amount on the

Highway 179 Property, and Hawthorn provided the amount required to pay off the entire debt

secured by the Deed of Trust (about $4.5 million). Five days later, on April 4th, the title

company informed Hawthorn that $2,273,570 had been placed in escrow and would be

transmitted to it upon the full release of the Deed of Trust. The amount that Green sought to

tender was the amount needed to pay off all the notes secured by the Deed of Trust, except for

the $2.21 million FAB Debt. Hawthorn told the title company that the amount tendered was less

than the payoff amount it had earlier provided and that it would not release the Deed of Trust.

Hawthorn thereafter filed suit against the Greens, FAL, and the Samsons seeking a

declaration that the contract for sale of the Highway 179 Property did not require Hawthorn to

execute and deliver a full deed of release and that it was entitled to enforce its rights under the

notes, obligations, deeds of trust, and security interests. Hawthorn claimed that the contract for

sale triggered its right under the Deed of Trust to accelerate the $2.21 million FAB Debt, making

3 The Commons on 179, LLC, is 60% owned by Jerry and Melody Green, 20% is owned in trust by Thomas and Christine Carr, and 20% is owned in trust by William Marshall.

4 that amount immediately due and payable. Hawthorn also alleged that Green violated the

implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing by selling the Highway 179 Property for less than

fair market value and by selling it to an entity controlled by Green. The defendants responded by

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Hawthorn Bank and Hawthorn Real Estate, LLC v. F.A.L. Investments, LLC (Successor to Green and Samson, LLC) Jerry Green, Melody Green, Richard L. Samson, Individually and as Trustee of the Richard L. Samson Revocable Living Trust U/AD and Janet Samson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawthorn-bank-and-hawthorn-real-estate-llc-v-fal-investments-llc-moctapp-2014.