In Re Valentine

146 B.R. 945, 19 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 174, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 2139, 1991 WL 425023
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJuly 5, 1991
Docket94-14530
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 146 B.R. 945 (In Re Valentine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Valentine, 146 B.R. 945, 19 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 174, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 2139, 1991 WL 425023 (Va. 1991).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

DOUGLAS 0. TICE, Jr., Bankruptcy Judge.

In this chapter 13 case, the court must resolve a conflict between competing claimants to payment under a promissory note secured by a deed of trust on realty of the debtors. Robert L. Gilliam, III, and John A. Chandler each filed secured claims to payment of the note, and each has objected to the other’s claim. A hearing was held on the objections on April 24, 1991.

After considering the arguments of counsel and the evidence presented at the hearing this court allows Chandler’s secured claim and partially disallows Gilliam’s secured claim.

Facts

The debtors as makers executed a “Deed of Trust Note” dated December 8, 1987, wherein they promised to pay Westhamp-ton Mortgage Company, Inc., or order, the sum of $54,000.00 plus interest at 19¥2 percent. The note provided for 59 consecutive monthly installments in the amount of $1,025.74, beginning on January 8, 1988, *947 and continuing until December 8, 1992, at which time the entire principal and accrued interest would become due and payable.

The note was made as part of a transaction in which Westhampton Mortgage loaned the principal amount to the debtors. The note was secured by a deed of trust on three parcels of property located in Meck-lenburg County, Virginia. The funds were actually provided by Gilliam, and as part of his agreement with Westhampton Mortgage, the note was endorsed over to him with recourse by Sommerville Wickham, Jr., as president of Westhampton Mortgage.

The Valentines subsequently missed payments on the note. On November 21,1989, Gilliam endorsed the note back to West-hampton Mortgage with the following language: “Without recourse, pay to the order of Westhampton Mortgage Co. Inc.” At the hearing Gilliam testified that he endorsed the note back to Westhampton Mortgage at Wickham’s request for the sole purpose of permitting Westhampton Mortgage to foreclose on the deed of trust. Gilliam was unable to explain why Wick-ham required the note to be endorsed back to Westhampton Mortgage for foreclosure.

After Westhampton Mortgage had received the note back from Gilliam, by an agreement dated December 11, 1989, Westhampton Mortgage assigned to Chandler 33 payments falling due under the note after that date including part of the note’s balloon payment. In return for the stream of payments assigned to him Chandler paid Westhampton Mortgage $52,-424.71. The note was not endorsed over to him by Westhampton Mortgage. Chandler made no notation of his interest on the face of the note, nor did he take possession of it. However, the assignment agreement was recorded in the clerk’s office of Mecklen-burg County Circuit Court on January 26, 1990.

A few days later, on January 29, 1990, Gilliam caused the note to be endorsed to him once again. The endorsement read:

January 29, 1990
With Recourse, Pay to the order of Robert L. Gilliam, III.
Payment Guaranteed Westhampton Mortgage Co. Inc.
by Sommerville Wick- by Sommerville Wickham, Jr.
ham, Jr. President

Gilliam asserts that at the time of endorsement back to him he was unaware of the assignment to Chandler. He initiated a foreclosure sale on the property. The debtors halted the scheduled sale by filing this chapter 13 case on February 23, 1990.

The debtors’ chapter 13 plan provided for both prepetition delinquency and payments accruing postpetition to be paid by the trustee to Chandler, until October 1992, at which time remaining payments under the deed of trust note were to be paid to Gilliam. Both Chandler and Gilliam filed secured proofs of claim asserting rights under the note. Both objected to each other’s secured claim.

Sommerville Wickham, Jr., and West-hampton Mortgage are presently in chapter 7 bankruptcy cases in this court with little, if any, distribution expected to creditors such as Gilliam or Chandler.

Positions of the Parties

Gilliam argues that under the Uniform Commercial Code (U.C.C.) as adopted in Virginia at Va.Code Ann. §§ 8.1-101 to 8.11-108 (1965 Added Vol. & Supp.1991), he is a holder in due course of a negotiable instrument and that as such he takes free of Chandler’s claim to the stream of payments under the note. Even if he is not a holder in due course, argues Gilliam, he is still a holder of the instrument and therefore claims a superior right to Chandler.

Chandler makes the threshold argument that the U.C.C. does not apply to determine the rights between the parties. Further, *948 Chandler argues, even if the U.C.C. did apply, Gilliam could not be a holder in due course for three reasons: 1) because Gilliam did not take the note for- value; 2) because he was put on notice of Chandler’s assignment by virtue of its recordation on January 26, 1990, prior to transfer of the note back to Gilliam; and 3) because Gilliam was already on notice that the note was overdue. Not being a holder in due course, Chandler argues, Gilliam’s interest in the note is subordinate to Chandler’s.

Discussion and Conclusions

Under 11 U.S.C. § 502(b)(1) this court may determine the amount of each claim pursuant to applicable law. Gilliam’s claim is based upon his rights under the U.C.C. as adopted in Virginia; Chandler’s claim relies on the general law of assignments in Virginia.

WHETHER THE U.C.C. GOVERNS THE ANALYSIS.

The threshold issue is whether or not the U.C.C., and Title 8.3 (Article 3) in particular, applies to determine the rights between the claimants. Chandler’s argument that the U.C.C. does not apply relies largely on an illustration located in Official Comment No. 4 to Va.Code Ann. § 8.9-102, a section that defines the scope of Title 8.9 (Article 9):

The owner of Blackacre borrows $10,-000 from his neighbor, and secures his note by a mortgage on Blackacre. This Article is not applicable to the creation of the real estate mortgage. Nor is it applicable to a sale of the note by the mortgagee, even though the mortgage continues to secure the note. However, when the mortgagee pledges the note to secure his own obligation to X, this Article applies to the security interest thus created, which is a security interest in an instrument even though the instrument is secured by a real estate mortgage. This Article leaves to other law the question of the effect on rights under the mortgage of delivery or non-delivery of the mortgage or of recording or nonrec-ording of an assignment of the mortgagee’s interest. See Section 9-104(j). But under Section 3-304(5) recording of the assignment does not of itself prevent X from holding the note in due course.

Va.Code Ann. § 8.9-102 Official Comment 4 (Supp.1991).

Chandler argues that the comment is unequivocal in requiring the application of other law to any questions concerning the mortgagee’s .interest in a note and that “other law” does not refer to other articles of the U.C.C.

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Related

In re Phelps
186 B.R. 655 (E.D. Virginia, 1995)

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Bluebook (online)
146 B.R. 945, 19 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 174, 1991 Bankr. LEXIS 2139, 1991 WL 425023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-valentine-vaeb-1991.