IPI Liberty Village Associates v. Spalding Corners Associates

751 S.W.2d 120, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 670, 1988 WL 45278
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 10, 1988
DocketWD 39273
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 751 S.W.2d 120 (IPI Liberty Village Associates v. Spalding Corners Associates) 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
IPI Liberty Village Associates v. Spalding Corners Associates, 751 S.W.2d 120, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 670, 1988 WL 45278 (Mo. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

KENNEDY, Chief Judge.

IPI Liberty Village Associates, a California limited partnership, brings this suit to set aside what it claims was the wrongful sale in foreclosure of a mobile home park owned by it. The buyer at the August 1, 1986, foreclosure sale was Spalding Corners Associates, another California limited partnership, which is one of the defendants in the case — although the trustee’s deed ran to the owners of the note secured by the foreclosed deed of trust, in proportion to their respective ownerships therein, to wit, Spalding Comers 58.34 percent, Dyan-na S. Wong 22.22 percent, and Jansen P. Wong (Dyanna’s ex-husband) 19.44 percent.

From an adverse judgment upon a trial to the court, Liberty Village appeals.

The background facts are as follows:

Liberty Village purchased the mobile home park in Clay County from Westwind Associates, yet a third California limited partnership, for an agreed purchase price of $955,000. Both Westwind Associates and Spalding Comers Associates were affiliated with Tandem Affiliates Group, and all were under the direction and control of William E. Cavanaugh and Norman I. Tatch. Liberty Village, on the other hand, *121 was under the direction and control of Dyanna S. Wong. Of the $955,000 price, $100,000 was paid in cash. The balance was represented by a promissory note dated June 24, 1983, for $855,000, running to Tandem Affiliates Group, secured by a purchase money deed of trust on the property. Of this sum, the buyers were to pay $175,-000 in installments within 90 days from closing.

After the foregoing payments, the note recited that there remained on the note an indebtedness of $680,000. 1 The buyers were to pay only interest on this sum, in monthly installments, for ten years. The first year’s interest rate was 8.09%, and called for monthly payments of $4583.33. The second year’s interest rate was 9.56% and called for monthly payments of $5416.67. For the third and fourth years, the interest rate was 11.76%, and called for monthly payments of $6666.67. For the fifth through the tenth years, the interest rate and the monthly interest payments stepped up to another level, but that gets beyond the time that is involved in the present case. The entire principal balance and unpaid interest was due at the end of ten years.

The note was a “wrap note”, by which is meant there remained on the property certain liens which were superior to the lien of the deed of trust securing the note which is described above. The holder of the note was obliged to continue to pay those underlying liens as they came due. See, e.g., Goldberg v. Lowe, 509 F.Supp. 412, 417 (N.D.Miss.1981); Levin v. Garfinkle, 499 F.Supp. 1344, 1347 (E.D.Pa.1980). The underlying liens were described in the note as follows:

1. A note and deed of trust to Merchants Bank with an unpaid principal balance of $349,578.80, which was payable at the rate of $3193.59 per month, interest included.

2. A note and second deed of trust to Liberty Village for $67,000, payable annually at a 10% annual rate the first two years and 11% the third year, and the principal payable in a lump sum at the end of five years. This would require $6700 per annum for the first year and second year, accruing at the rate of $558.33 per month. For the third and fourth year, the annual interest would be $7370, accruing at the rate of $614.17 per month.

3.The third note, payable to Merchants Bank, was for $83,383.38. It was payable at the rate of $1854.55 per month, inclusive of interest, with the entire unpaid balance due and payable on May 10, 1985. It was secured by a security interest in thirteen mobile homes.

It will be seen that the payments by the buyer on the wrap note were insufficient to meet the payments on the three underlying liens for the first two years. The monthly payments to be made by the sellers on the underlying liens in the first two years (including the monthly accrual of $558.33 on the second note) would be $5606.47 per month, whereas the wrap note payments from the buyer to the seller in the first year were only $4583.33. In the second year, the wrap note payments would be $5416.67 per month. The shortfall would therefore be $12,277.68 in the first year, and in the second year $2,277.60. The monthly payments on the underlying liens in the third and fourth years (including the monthly accrual of $614.17 on the second note) would be $5662.61. In the third and fourth years, the wrap note payments would exceed the payments on the underlying liens by $12,052.32 per year. 2

The evidence does not show when the Liberty Village-to-Tandem note was assigned, but fairly early in its life it was assigned by Tandem to Spalding Comers Associates to the extent of 58.34 percent; to Dyanna S. Wong to the extent of 22.22 percent; and to Jansen P. Wong to the extent of 19.44 percent. Thus it will be seen that Dyanna, a general partner in IPI Liberty Village Associates, which was the *122 debtor on the note, was also a substantial part owner of the wrap promissory note secured by the lien on the mobile home park.

Dyanna explained how she came to have assigned to her a fractional interest in the promissory note. “And the way I got to be one of the owed as well,” she testified, “is I had invested as a limited partner in one of Bill (Cavanaugh) and Norms’ (Tatch) partnerships that went bankrupt. And they ... said well, you’re going to lose all of your money if you don’t sign off this partnership. This is way back before I ever got into this situation. And at the time they were friends, and Bill acted, I guess, as everyone’s attorney, so he had gave me some documents to sign which signed me off the Midwest Mobile Home Park partnership, and they said, well, we’ll make it up to you later. And the way they made it up to was they assigned a portion of the mortgage from Liberty Village ...”

At the time the transaction was entered into, Dyanna and Tatch and Cavanaugh were on friendly terms, and had had other business deals together. This accounts, no doubt, for the informal way they conducted business between themselves after the initial transaction. After the Liberty Village transaction, a schism developed between Dyanna on the one side and Tatch and Cavanaugh on the other. Their relations turned hostile and continued so.

For two months or so, after the closing of the mobile home park sale, Liberty Village paid the payments to Tandem as called for by the wrap promissory note. Dyanna then discovered that Tandem was not paying the payments on the underlying notes as it was supposed to do under the terms of the wrap note. She proposed to Tandem that Liberty Village make the payments on the underlying debts directly to the obli-gees thereof, and this proposal was agreed to. From that time forward until the foreclosure Dyanna continued to make the payments directly to the creditors on the underlying notes, and there is no contention that Liberty Village was at any time delinquent in their payment.

On May 10, 1985, the third of the underlying obligations, i.e., the mobile home note to Merchants Bank, had come due and Merchants Bank had demanded payment.

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Bluebook (online)
751 S.W.2d 120, 1988 Mo. App. LEXIS 670, 1988 WL 45278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ipi-liberty-village-associates-v-spalding-corners-associates-moctapp-1988.