GRANT, Senior District Judge.
Century Investment Fund VIII [Century], a Wisconsin Limited Partnership presently under chapter 11 protection in bankruptcy, is the owner of the Alhambra Village Apartments in DePere, Wisconsin. First Bank [Bank] holds the first mortgage on the apartment complex. In this appeal we are asked to determine whether the Bank perfected its security interest in the rents and other income from that real estate prior to Century’s bankruptcy filing. The bankruptcy court found prepetition perfection; the district court did not. For the reasons stated below we hold that the Bank successfully perfected its security interest in rents and profits, and therefore reverse the determination of the district court.
FACTS
The facts herein are undisputed and straightforward. On April 3, 1987 (effective as of April 1, 1987), Century executed
a note and first mortgage on its real estate in consideration for a $2.1 million loan from the Bank. Contemporaneously it executed an Assignment of Leases and Rents as further security. The Bank properly recorded both documents on April 7, 1987.
Century defaulted on its mortgage on July 1, 1988, and failed to make payments thereafter. By letter of October 3, 1988 to Century, the Bank pointed out Century’s existing arrearage and failure to cure the default; it notified Century that a law firm would collect the accelerated balance and that a default rate of interest would be charged in ten days if the entire obligation was not paid in full. On October 19, 1988, in Brown County Circuit Court, the Bank filed its foreclosure action against Century, and a motion for appointment of receiver and affidavit in support of the motion.
A hearing on those matters was set for November 18, 1988. On November 17 Century filed its chapter 11 bankruptcy petition.
The written contracts between Century and the Bank are crucial to the determination of property interests herein. The mortgage note provides that, if the monthly mortgage payment is not timely paid, the entire obligation is due ten days after the mortgage holder Bank sends written notice to the mortgagor Century.
It further states that personal liability may attach if, after an uncured default, rents at the Alhambra Village Apartments are collected by Century but are not delivered to the mortgagee.
And it grants to the mortgage holder the right to exercise any remedy available to it at law or equity or under the agreements made by the parties.
The mortgage gives the mortgagee a present assignment in and entitlement to all rents and leases upon default. That entitlement attaches without further action on the part of the Bank.
Under the mortgage the parties agree that the mortgagee may collect the rents directly from the tenants.
However, if the mortgagee commences a foreclosure action, as is allowed under paragraph 15 of the mortgage, it may seek a receiver to take possession and to collect the rents.
The Assignment of Leases and Rents, an additional agreement between the parties to further secure the mortgagee, takes effect after a default under the mortgage.
It transfers to the Bank all of Century’s rights and interests under the lease agreements, including the right to possession of the premises and the rents.
Under the assignment, Century appoints the Bank the attorney-in-fact to collect the rents by any lawful means,
and grants the Bank extensive power to act and to appoint substitutes to act on its behalf. The assignment also
acknowledges that the Bank may pursue any remedy it has if there is a breach of the mortgage terms.
Moreover, present and future lessees and tenants are authorized and instructed to pay rent to the mortgagee upon receipt of demand.
The Bank urges us to follow the reasoning of the bankruptcy court, which found that the Bank had perfected its security interest in rents and other income when it filed its foreclosure action on October 19, 1988. Its determination relied primarily upon
First Wisconsin Trust Co. v. Adams,
218 Wis. 406, 261 N.W. 16 (1935), in which the Wisconsin Supreme Court interpreted a mortgage provision identical to the one before this court
and concluded that the commencement of a foreclosure action was equivalent to a demand for possession of the premises and for the rents therefrom.
Adams,
218 Wis. at 411, 261 N.W. at 18.
Century, on the other hand, argues that the district court’s reversal of the bankruptcy court ruling should be upheld. After reviewing and reinterpreting Wisconsin law following
Adams,
particularly the Wisconsin Supreme Court decisions
Wuorinen v. City Federal Savings & Loan Association,
52 Wis.2d 722, 191 N.W.2d 27 (1971) and
Lincoln Crest Realty v. Standard Apartment Development,
61 Wis.2d 4, 211 N.W.2d 501 (1973), the court found that the filing of a foreclosure action and motion for the appointment of a receiver perfects a security interest only when those actions are specified in the mortgage agreement as the events that transfer to the Bank the right to the rents. It then held that, because Century’s mortgage did not so indicate, the Bank’s foreclosure filing did not give rise to a perfected security interest in the rents.
ANALYSIS
With no factual disputes to resolve, we review the issues of law before us
de novo. Matter of Newman,
903 F.2d 1150, 1152 (7th Cir.1990). The legal issue is the validity and extent of the Bank’s lien on Century’s apartment complex and the rents therefrom at the time Century filed its bankruptcy petition.
The property interests of the mortgagor Century and the mortgagee Bank are created and defined by state law.
Butner v. United States,
440 U.S. 48, 55, 99 S.Ct. 914, 59 L.Ed.2d 136 (1979). Generally speaking, if a mortgagee has protected its security interests in a mortgagor’s property and rental proceeds by perfecting its liens under the requirements of state law, then those interests do not later become property of the bankruptcy estate.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
GRANT, Senior District Judge.
Century Investment Fund VIII [Century], a Wisconsin Limited Partnership presently under chapter 11 protection in bankruptcy, is the owner of the Alhambra Village Apartments in DePere, Wisconsin. First Bank [Bank] holds the first mortgage on the apartment complex. In this appeal we are asked to determine whether the Bank perfected its security interest in the rents and other income from that real estate prior to Century’s bankruptcy filing. The bankruptcy court found prepetition perfection; the district court did not. For the reasons stated below we hold that the Bank successfully perfected its security interest in rents and profits, and therefore reverse the determination of the district court.
FACTS
The facts herein are undisputed and straightforward. On April 3, 1987 (effective as of April 1, 1987), Century executed
a note and first mortgage on its real estate in consideration for a $2.1 million loan from the Bank. Contemporaneously it executed an Assignment of Leases and Rents as further security. The Bank properly recorded both documents on April 7, 1987.
Century defaulted on its mortgage on July 1, 1988, and failed to make payments thereafter. By letter of October 3, 1988 to Century, the Bank pointed out Century’s existing arrearage and failure to cure the default; it notified Century that a law firm would collect the accelerated balance and that a default rate of interest would be charged in ten days if the entire obligation was not paid in full. On October 19, 1988, in Brown County Circuit Court, the Bank filed its foreclosure action against Century, and a motion for appointment of receiver and affidavit in support of the motion.
A hearing on those matters was set for November 18, 1988. On November 17 Century filed its chapter 11 bankruptcy petition.
The written contracts between Century and the Bank are crucial to the determination of property interests herein. The mortgage note provides that, if the monthly mortgage payment is not timely paid, the entire obligation is due ten days after the mortgage holder Bank sends written notice to the mortgagor Century.
It further states that personal liability may attach if, after an uncured default, rents at the Alhambra Village Apartments are collected by Century but are not delivered to the mortgagee.
And it grants to the mortgage holder the right to exercise any remedy available to it at law or equity or under the agreements made by the parties.
The mortgage gives the mortgagee a present assignment in and entitlement to all rents and leases upon default. That entitlement attaches without further action on the part of the Bank.
Under the mortgage the parties agree that the mortgagee may collect the rents directly from the tenants.
However, if the mortgagee commences a foreclosure action, as is allowed under paragraph 15 of the mortgage, it may seek a receiver to take possession and to collect the rents.
The Assignment of Leases and Rents, an additional agreement between the parties to further secure the mortgagee, takes effect after a default under the mortgage.
It transfers to the Bank all of Century’s rights and interests under the lease agreements, including the right to possession of the premises and the rents.
Under the assignment, Century appoints the Bank the attorney-in-fact to collect the rents by any lawful means,
and grants the Bank extensive power to act and to appoint substitutes to act on its behalf. The assignment also
acknowledges that the Bank may pursue any remedy it has if there is a breach of the mortgage terms.
Moreover, present and future lessees and tenants are authorized and instructed to pay rent to the mortgagee upon receipt of demand.
The Bank urges us to follow the reasoning of the bankruptcy court, which found that the Bank had perfected its security interest in rents and other income when it filed its foreclosure action on October 19, 1988. Its determination relied primarily upon
First Wisconsin Trust Co. v. Adams,
218 Wis. 406, 261 N.W. 16 (1935), in which the Wisconsin Supreme Court interpreted a mortgage provision identical to the one before this court
and concluded that the commencement of a foreclosure action was equivalent to a demand for possession of the premises and for the rents therefrom.
Adams,
218 Wis. at 411, 261 N.W. at 18.
Century, on the other hand, argues that the district court’s reversal of the bankruptcy court ruling should be upheld. After reviewing and reinterpreting Wisconsin law following
Adams,
particularly the Wisconsin Supreme Court decisions
Wuorinen v. City Federal Savings & Loan Association,
52 Wis.2d 722, 191 N.W.2d 27 (1971) and
Lincoln Crest Realty v. Standard Apartment Development,
61 Wis.2d 4, 211 N.W.2d 501 (1973), the court found that the filing of a foreclosure action and motion for the appointment of a receiver perfects a security interest only when those actions are specified in the mortgage agreement as the events that transfer to the Bank the right to the rents. It then held that, because Century’s mortgage did not so indicate, the Bank’s foreclosure filing did not give rise to a perfected security interest in the rents.
ANALYSIS
With no factual disputes to resolve, we review the issues of law before us
de novo. Matter of Newman,
903 F.2d 1150, 1152 (7th Cir.1990). The legal issue is the validity and extent of the Bank’s lien on Century’s apartment complex and the rents therefrom at the time Century filed its bankruptcy petition.
The property interests of the mortgagor Century and the mortgagee Bank are created and defined by state law.
Butner v. United States,
440 U.S. 48, 55, 99 S.Ct. 914, 59 L.Ed.2d 136 (1979). Generally speaking, if a mortgagee has protected its security interests in a mortgagor’s property and rental proceeds by perfecting its liens under the requirements of state law, then those interests do not later become property of the bankruptcy estate. Once bankruptcy is filed, the debtor has the right to the use of the rental proceeds only if the security interests were not perfected under state law. When default has occurred prior to the bankruptcy petition, as it has herein, the
Butner
Court has made clear that “the primary reason why any holder of a mortgage may fail to collect rent immediately after default must stem from state law.”
Id.
at 57, 99 S.Ct. at 919.
Under the law of Wisconsin, a lien theory state, the mortgagor remains the legal owner of the mortgaged property, and the mortgagee has only a lien on the property.
State v. Phillips,
99 Wis.2d 46,
298 N.W.2d 239, 241 (Wis.App.1980). Title to the property does not transfer to the mortgagee until the judgment of foreclosure has been entered and the foreclosure sale has been held.
Matter of Madison Hotel Associates,
749 F.2d 410, 422-23 (7th Cir.1984);
Glover v. Marine Bank of Beaver Dam,
117 Wis.2d 684, 345 N.W.2d 449, 453 (Wis.1984). The right to rents and profits from that property is an incident of possession of real estate rather than a question of title.
Lincoln Crest,
61 Wis.2d at 12, 211 N.W.2d at 505, citing
Grether v. Nick,
193 Wis. 503, 512, 215 N.W. 571, 572 (1927).
In
Lincoln Crest,
the Wisconsin Supreme Court recognized the long-established general rule in Wisconsin that a mortgagee does not have the right to the rents and profits, even though they have been assigned, until he gains actual or constructive possession or until a receiver is appointed.
Grether,
215 N.W. at 572. However, the exception to this rule, which grew out of
Adams
and its progeny, concerns those mortgages in which specific contractual terms “leave no doubt of what must be done to assign the rents and profits.”
Id.
Explaining the third principle, the court cites
Adams
to show that, when an assignment contains provisions clearly activating the assignment of rents and those actions called for in the assignment are taken, “the right to rents and profits ripen[s] before the taking of possession.”
Id.
In this case, since the Bank obtained neither possession of the property nor appointment of a receiver, both the bankruptcy and district courts focused on the
Lincoln Crest
alternative method of perfection and examined the terms of the agreements between Century and the Bank for express terms that would perfect the mortgagee’s claim to the rents and profits. According to the bankruptcy court, under the provisions of the mortgage and assignment, the Bank could have perfected its interest by demanding the rents directly from the tenants, but failed to take that action. Nevertheless, that court found that the provision authorizing the Bank’s commencement of its foreclosure action and motion for appointment of a receiver sufficiently set out a specific event giving right to possession under the mortgage. It reached this conclusion by comparing the language of paragraph 15 of the mortgage,
[u]pon the commencement or during the pendency of an action to foreclose this mortgage or enforce any other remedies of mortgagee ... mortgagee may seek and the court may appoint a receiver ... to ... take possession of the property and collect its rents ...,
with the identical provision in
Adams,
and by following its holding:
The commencement of the [foreclosure] action and request for a [receiver] was the equivalent of a demand for rents, profits, and that the mortgagors give up possession. From that time on, the rights and ’ '.abilities of the mortgagors were limits, by the provisions of the contract relating to default.
Adams,
218 Wis. at 411, 261 N.W. at 18.
The district court disagreed. According to its reading of the mortgage, the action the mortgagee was required to take in order to perfect its right to the rents was a demand that the tenants pay the mortgagee, as found in paragraph 14: “Upon default ... mortgagee may, at its sole option without any prior approval of mortgagor, notify any or all tenants to pay directly to mortgagee all rent, issues and profits arising out of the property....” It stated that paragraph 15 allowed for foreclosure and the appointment of a receiver, but did not expressly indicate that such filings constituted perfection. Thus it concluded that the Bank’s actions in state court did not give rise to a perfected security interest in the rents.
To determine the meaning of the mortgage and assignment agreements, we follow the applicable Wisconsin rules of contract interpretation.
The interpretation of a contract is a question of law which we review
de novo.
Where the terms of a contract are plain and unambiguous, we will construe
it as it stands. However, a contract is ambiguous when its terms are reasonably or fairly susceptible of more than one construction. Whether a contract is ambiguous is itself a question of law.
Borchardt v. Wilk,
156 Wis.2d 420, 456 N.W.2d 653, 656 (Wis.App.),
review denied,
458 N.W.2d 533 (1990) (citations omitted). We find that we need look no further than the clear language of the agreements to determine whether the Bank perfected its security interest. Our review of those contracts leads us to disagree with the district court’s ruling.
The mortgage agreement and note, read in their entirety and construed together,
see Wipfli v. Bever,
37 Wis.2d 324, 327, 155 N.W.2d 71, 72-73 (1967), offer various options to the mortgage holder in the event of an uncured default.
The Bank can demand the immediate payment of the outstanding balance and seek personal liability if any rents collected by the mortgagor were not turned over to the mortgagee. It is given immediate entitlement to all rents and profits, without further action on its part, and can enforce any remedy it has under law or under the terms of the mortgage and assignment. And it can collect payments directly from the tenants or commence a foreclosure action and seek the appointment of a receiver. The assignment underscores the Bank’s right of possession and of the rents after a default in payment or in performance of other conditions, and its right to use any measures it deems necessary and to pursue any remedy it may have.
An immediate transfer of the assignment of rents on default (as was found in paragraph 14) is enforceable, albeit only when it is the clearly expressed intention of the parties.
See Lincoln Crest,
211 N.W.2d at 506 (quoting favorably
Childs Real Estate Co., Inc. v. Shelburne Realty Co.,
23 Cal.2d 263, 268, 143 P.2d 697, 700 (1943)). Throughout the mortgage before us, including paragraph 14, there are added and deleted segments; these changes reflect the negotiations that transpired between the parties, and the signing of the documents reflects the accord reached by them. However, no changes were made in the immediate entitlement provision of that paragraph. Thus, we conclude that the parties clearly intended that provision to be enforceable as stated.
Although unambiguous provisions granting entitlement to rents immediately upon default are upheld, the Wisconsin courts have disapproved of such clauses, since they afford an easy way of evading the state’s lien theory of mortgages and of taking legal title and right of possession from the mortgagor.
Grether v. Nick,
215 N.W. at 572. Therefore, rather than allowing the transfer to be self-executing, they have insisted that a mortgagee assert its claim by taking an affirmative action to perfect its interests.
See Lincoln Crest,
211 N.W.2d at 506; and
Adams,
261 N.W. at 19, citing
Prudential Insurance Co. v. Liberdar Holding Corp.,
74 F.2d 50, 52 (2nd Cir.1934). In compliance with that requirement, the Bank did not rely on its self-executing entitlement to the rents; instead, upon Century’s default it accelerated the debt and filed both a foreclosure action and a motion for appointment of a receiver. By taking actions specifically referable to the agreements, the Bank can claim the rents and profits.
Lincoln Crest,
211 N.W.2d at 506.
We disagree with the district court’s analysis of the contracts in two respects. First, its determination that paragraph 14
mandated
the Bank’s demand for rent payments was a misconstruction of the clear
language of paragraph 14:
The right of the mortgagee, who “may, at its sole option,” seek direct payment of rents from the tenants, is permissive, not required. An additional option, the remedy of foreclosure and appointment of a receiver, is provided in the next paragraph.
These alternative methods for taking possession of the rents correspond to other provisions in the agreements that grant the mortgage holder the right to pursue any legal remedy and to appoint substitutes to act on its behalf.
We find that either act, direct collection or the request for appointment of a receiver, specifically activates the Bank’s right to the rents.
The district court’s second error was to overturn the ruling of the bankruptcy court because it did not identify the contractual language that clearly expressed the “demand” (requisite event or act by the Bank) giving rise to a perfected security interest in the rents.
The agreements do instruct the tenants to pay rent upon demand from the mortgagee. But, as we have indicated above, the mortgage permits the mortgagee to demand the rents directly; if the Bank so chooses, the tenants then are required to comply with the Bank’s demand for those payments. Therefore this “demand” is a requirement placed on the tenants, not on the mortgagee.
Furthermore, the bankruptcy court did identify the language in paragraph 15 as the “proper demand.” Relying on the
Lincoln
Crest-rule that perfection of a mortgagee’s interest in rents can be attained by the happening of an event clearly set out in the mortgage, the bankruptcy court examined both the contract language and the Bank’s actions. It first noted that, under the mortgage and assignment, a demand for direct payments from the tenants could have constituted perfection, but the Bank did not so act. And the Bank’s letter to Century demanding the accelerated payment of the mortgage was not a demand for payment of the rents, commented the court. However, the Bank’s commencement of a state court action “demanding” both foreclosure and receivership was found to constitute a proper demand giving rise to the right of possession under
Adams.
Since the mortgage provisions in
Adams
were identical to those herein, the bankruptcy court followed the
Adams
analysis. It held that the commencement of the foreclosure action and request for a receiver was the equivalent of a demand for rents and thus constituted perfection.
We find that this careful analysis of the contractual provisions herein comports with the requirement for perfection stated most recently by the Wisconsin Supreme Court:
Accordingly, as this court did in
Adams,
we conclude that a default will only activate the right to rents and profits when the exact default is clearly defined and when requisite action has been taken under a specific provision that gives the right to the rents.
Lincoln Crest,
211 N.W.2d at 506. The default was clearly defined in the mortgage agreement,
and the date and amount of the default was presented in the complaint, motion for appointment of a receiver, and affidavit in support thereof. Under paragraph 14 of the mortgage, the Bank’s entitlement to the rents was immediate when Century defaulted, and in paragraphs 14 and 15 the agreement offered two specific actions the Bank could take for collecting the rent. We find that the Bank’s choice to foreclose and to request a receiver, rather than to collect the rents itself, was clearly a post-default option under the terms of these contracts when read as a whole, and that the commencement of its state court action was a “proper demand” for possession of the premises and the right to the rents and profits. Accordingly we hold that, under Wisconsin law as defined in
Adams
and
Lincoln Crest,
the
security interest of the mortgagee Bank in the rents from Century’s property was perfected upon commencement of the action of foreclosure and petition for a receiver.
Our analysis of Wisconsin law does not ignore
Wuorinen v. City Federal Savings & Loan Association,
52 Wis.2d 722, 191 N.W.2d 27 (1971), upon which Century places much reliance. In that ruling, handed down two years before
Lincoln Crest,
the Wisconsin Supreme Court stated a general rule that, “[f]or a mortgagee to have any possessory rights in property in the absence of a peaceable yielding up of possession, he must petition for and be granted the appointment of a receiver.” 52 Wis.2d at 729, 191 N.W.2d at 30. According to Century, the Bank failed to fulfill the conjunctive requirement of
Wuorinen
that a receiver be sought and actually appointed.
We find
Wuorinen
to be simply not on point. We note first that the facts in
Wuorinen,
and thus the basic thrust of the issues therein, are significantly different from those before us.
Moreover, the terms of the mortgage were never raised or analyzed. But, most significantly, we note that the court, in its conclusion, did not require the actual appointment of a receiver, but rather, the invocation of the court’s powers:
By equitable principles the mortgagors were entitled to the rents during the period of foreclosure
unless the mortgagee invoked the equitable powers of the court.
It would be inequitable for this court under the circumstances to permit the mortgagee to retain the rental proceeds.
191 N.W.2d at 31 (emphasis added). In
Wuorinen
the court’s powers would have been invoked by the mortgagee’s filing of a motion for appointment of a receiver; herein the court’s powers were so invoked. We therefore find, first, that
Wuorinen
is distinguishable on its facts, and second, that its conclusion falls squarely in line with the other Wisconsin cases.
After consideration of the equitable approach taken in
Wuorinen,
one last comment seems appropriate. Prior to its foreclosure filing, the Bank gave Century three months after its failure to make the mortgage payments in which to cure the default or to show good faith progress toward a remedy. Its letter of notification of the debt acceleration gave Century a ten-day period in which to make full payment before charging a default interest rate. At no time during that period did Century fulfill its obligation to the Bank. Moreover, the Bank’s state court actions were properly based upon statutory authority and properly filed. We believe that Century’s bankruptcy filing, one day before the hearing on foreclosure and receivership, should not delay the Bank’s exercise of its right to foreclose an acquisition of its security interest in rents any longer than a state court proceeding would cause delay.
See Butner,
440 U.S. at 57, 99 S.Ct. at 919.
CONCLUSION
After analyzing the documents before us according to Wisconsin law, we find that the terms of the contracts are fairly susceptible to only one interpretation and thus are unambiguous.
Kremers-Urban Co. v. American Employers Insurance Co.,
119 Wis.2d 722, 735-36, 351 N.W.2d 156, 163 (1984). Our task, therefore, is simply to apply the terms rather than to engage in contractual construction.
Leverence v.
United States Fidelity & Guaranty,
158 Wis.2d 64, 462 N.W.2d 218, 222 (Wis.App.),
review denied,
464 N.W.2d 423 (1990). The provision of alternative methods or options in an agreement does not itself render the contract ambiguous.
Wilke v. Eau Claire First Federal Savings & Loan Association,
108 Wis.2d 650, 654, 323 N.W.2d 179, 181 (Wis.App.1982), cited in
Prudential Insurance Co. v. Miller Brewing Co.,
789 F.2d 1269, 1276 (7th Cir.1986).
Accordingly, we hold that the mortgage and assignment contracts clearly and specifically provided that Century’s default was the condition precedent upon which the Bank’s right to possession and to the rents depended. After the default the Bank had an immediate right to the rents without further action on its part; but under Wisconsin law it was required to take further action beyond the automatic triggering of its lien in order to perfect that right. The mortgage clearly expressed alternative permissible methods by which the Bank could acquire the rents and profits after default. By affirmatively choosing to commence a foreclosure action and to seek the appointment of a receiver, the Bank established its right to the rents and thereby perfected its security interests in those rental proceeds. Following the clear precedent in Wisconsin law concerning perfection of a security interest in rents prior to bankruptcy, we hold that the Bank’s commencement of a foreclosure action and motion for the appointment of a receiver, pursuant to the mortgage terms, perfected its security interest in the rents and profits from Century’s property.
This case is ReveRsed and Remanded to the district court with instructions to reinstate the March 22, 1989 Order of Judge Margaret Dee McGarity of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin.