Iamartino v. Avallone

477 A.2d 124, 2 Conn. App. 119, 1984 Conn. App. LEXIS 599
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1983
Docket(2340)
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 477 A.2d 124 (Iamartino v. Avallone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iamartino v. Avallone, 477 A.2d 124, 2 Conn. App. 119, 1984 Conn. App. LEXIS 599 (Colo. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

Borden, J.

This is an appeal 1 from two judgments of strict foreclosure rendered by the trial court. The plaintiffs commenced two separate mortgage foreclosure actions against the defendants: one, in the judicial district of Danbury, concerns a lot and house in *121 Brookfield; the other, in the judicial district of Litchfield, concerns unimproved real property in New Milford. The action filed in Litchfield was transferred to Danbury and the two cases were consolidated for trial.

The plaintiffs’ mortgages on both parcels were junior to first mortgages. At oral argument on this appeal we were informed that the first mortgage on the New Milford property has since been foreclosed, extinguishing the plaintiffs’ second mortgage on that property. This renders the appeal from that judgment moot. City National Bank of Connecticut v. Henderson, 1 Conn. App. 96, 468 A.2d 1258 (1983). We therefore confine our discussion to the appeal from the judgment of foreclosure rendered on the Brookfield mortgage.

The court found the following facts. On May 23,1979, the named defendant, Lawrence J. Avallone, 2 executed a promissory note in the principal amount of $66,000, plus interest, payable monthly at an annual rate of eighteen percent. The principal was due on or before November 23, 1979. To secure this note Avallone granted a second mortgage on the property in Brook-field. This mortgage deed was executed in the statutory form and upon the statutory condition. See General Statutes §§ 47-36c and 47-36j. Avallone did not pay this note when it came due.

On January 23, 1980, Avallone executed and delivered to the plaintiffs a second note in the principal amount of $72,600, plus interest, at the annual rate of *122 eighteen percent, payable monthly beginning February 23,1980. The principal was due May 23,1980. The difference between the $66,000 due on the first note and the $72,600 principal amount of the second note represented a bonus. The second note provided for forgiveness of the bonus if the note was paid in full on or before February 23,1980. Upon the execution of this note, the plaintiffs returned the first note to Avallone. Although the plaintiffs did not lend Avallone any new money in connection with the second note, they did give consideration in the form of forebearance from foreclosure on the mortgage, which was in default by virtue of nonpayment of the first note. The parties also executed and recorded a mortgage modification agreement. Avallone did not pay this note when due.

The court further found that Avallone is a speculator in buying, selling and developing land, and has been a contractor for six years. Before that he was in the home improvement business. He has owned a variety of properties, including a shopping center. At the time of the Brookfield mortgage, the house on the property was seventy percent completed, and was built on speculation. He later moved his family into the house, where they resided at the time of the trial.

Avallone was represented by counsel in all his dealings with the plaintiffs. He was accustomed to doing business with second mortgage lenders other than the plaintiffs. These plaintiffs were not the only second mortgage lenders available to him in the Danbury area. In May, 1980, he had obtained an eighteen month mortgage loan on other property, in the principal amount of $100,000, plus interest at an annual rate of twenty-two percent and a bonus of fifteen points. Between January and March, 1980, he obtained another second mortgage loan from another lender in the amount of $75,000, plus interest for one year at an annual rate of thirteen percent and a bonus of ten points. His busi *123 ness was speculation. The loans involved here are not the loans of a householder or a long-established commercial or manufacturing business. The interest rates and bonuses involved reflected the general charges made at that time for the type of financing sought by Avallone: highly speculative, with great credit risk to the lender, in an economic environment of high interest rates for the most credit-worthy borrowers. Avallone was not misled by the plaintiffs; was not forced into the transaction by them; and entered it with full knowledge of what he was doing and receiving.

The court, rejecting the legal claims of the defendants, Lawrence and Loumay Avallone, concluded that neither the usury statute, the mortgage modification agreement nor the doctrine of unconscionability barred foreclosure, and rendered judgment for the plaintiffs. The defendants appeal, claiming error in these three issues; in addition, they claim error in a ruling on evidence and in a reference in the judgment to a default purportedly entered against Loumay Avallone. We find no error.

I

We disagree with the defendants’ first claim on appeal; namely, that there was no bona fide mortgage upon which to bring an action of foreclosure because of the substitution of the notes. It is settled law in this state that a mortgage deed secures a debt, not a note. Bolles v. Chauncey, 8 Conn. 389, 391-92 (1831). When the second note was substituted for the original note, it did not extinguish Avallone’s debt to the plaintiffs; it simply enlarged that debt, which enlargement the mortgage modification agreement reflected on the land records. As between the plaintiffs and these defendants, the initial mortgage remained valid, even though a new note had been given in substitution for the original note. See City National Bank v. Stoeckel, 103 Conn. *124 732, 741, 132 A. 20 (1926); see also State National Bank v. Dick, 164 Conn. 523, 530, 325 A.2d 280 (1964) (the principle that a mortgage deed must accurately describe the debt is relevant to subsequent encumbrancers but not as between the parties to the deed).

The defendants’ contention that the mortgage modification agreement was invalid because it did not contain the word “grant” is equally bereft of merit. General Statutes § 47-36a (b) (1) specifically provides that “[t]he use of the word ‘grant’ is not necessary to convey” real estate. Since the initial mortgage deed did not require the inclusion of the word “grant,” neither did the mortgage modification agreement.

II

The defendants next claim in effect that the foreclosure is barred because the note was usurious. We agree with the trial court that the loan to Avallone falls within the exemption from the operation of the usury statute; General Statutes § 37-4; of a “bona fide mortgage of real property for a sum in excess of five thousand dollars.” General Statutes § 37-9 (3). Thus, the defense of usury was unavailable in a suit for foreclosure of this mortgage. Associated East Mortgage Co. v. Highland Park, Inc., 172 Conn. 395, 405, 374 A.2d 1070 (1977).

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Bluebook (online)
477 A.2d 124, 2 Conn. App. 119, 1984 Conn. App. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iamartino-v-avallone-connappct-1983.