Kaiser Investments, Inc. v. Davis
This text of 538 So. 2d 427 (Kaiser Investments, Inc. v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
KAISER INVESTMENTS, INC.
v.
Howard Q. DAVIS, Jr., as Trustee and Agent for Virginia Bob Mahaffey, Arthur Owen Ringold, Powell D. Mahaffey, Jr., Arthur J. Mahaffey, Barbara Ann Mahaffey Bell, Arthur Owen Ringold, Jr. and Cynthia Louise Ringold.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
James E. Upshaw, F. Ewin Henson, III, Upshaw, Williams, Biggers, Page & Kruger, Greenwood, for appellant.
Randolph Noble, Jr., Robertshaw, Terney, Noble & Smith, Greenville, for appellees.
Before ROY NOBLE LEE, C.J., and ROBERTSON and ANDERSON, JJ.
ROBERTSON, Justice, for the Court:
I.
This case concerns the legality of a fee sought to be charged by the trustee in a land deed of trust, but who is also an attorney, incident to a foreclosure which was commenced but never consummated. We hold that fees may be allowed only as provided by the contract documents. Because the Court below failed to respect this premise, we reverse and remand.
II.
Kaiser Investments, Inc., a Mississippi corporation, is the owner of approximately 1410 acres of land situated in Sunflower County, Mississippi, by warranty deed of August 19, 1980. At the time of its acquisition of this land, Kaiser assumed all obligations under an outstanding promissory note held by Virginia Bob Mahaffey, Arthur Owen Ringold, Powell D. Mahaffey, Jr., Arthur J. Mahaffey, Barbara Ann Mahaffey Bell, Arthur Owen Ringold, Jr. and Cynthia Louise Ringold. The note provided *428 for $70,000.00 payments each year on January 6 with a final balloon payment on the tenth anniversary of the note, January 6, 1988. In language the importance of which will presently appear, the promissory note reads:
In the event of failure to pay this note or any installment thereof at maturity, or when it becomes due and exigible under any of the provisions hereof or otherwise, and of the same being placed in the hands of an attorney at law for collection, the maker, endorser, and sureties agree to pay, in addition to principal and interest, reasonable attorney's fees.
Performance of all obligations under the promissory note was secured by a deed of trust under which title to the property was held by Howard Q. Davis, Jr., as Trustee for the Mahaffeys and Ringolds. The deed of trust contains the following provision of consequence here:
Out of the proceeds arising from said sale, the costs and expenses of executing the Deed of Trust, including a ten (10%) percent trustee's fee, which is hereby agreed to be a reasonable trustee's fee, and the attorney's fee prescribed in said note or notes shall first be paid, next the amount of said indebtedness then remaining unpaid shall be paid....
On January 4, 1988, two days before the balloon payment was due, an employee of Kaiser's management company called Davis to ask if Kaiser could wire the money, rather than get certified funds. Davis agreed, and mentioned that the amount due was approximately $578,000.00, which "surprised" the employee, who "thought it was another $70,000.00 or in that range." That same day Alton Turnipseed, attorney and Vice President for Kaiser, called Davis to tell him the funds were not currently available, but ultimately would be.
After the January 4 phone conversation, Davis sent a letter to Turnipseed enclosing a copy of the amortization schedule and relevant documents, with the following closing paragraph:
If payment is not timely received or if you cannot inform me that payment is on the way sufficient to be here not later than noon, Friday, January 8th, 1988, this note will be declared in default, and we will begin efforts to insure collection which will also cause attorneys fees to accrue in accordance with the terms of the note.
The letter did not reach Kaiser until Friday noon on January 8th, 1988.
Kaiser did not make the balloon note payment on or before January 6, 1988. On January 11, 1988, Trustee Davis began foreclosure proceedings.
On January 15, 1988, Kaiser tendered to Davis the sum of $579,144.87 representing the full amount of principal and interest due and owing through that date. Davis returned the check forthwith and advised Kaiser that
Payment cannot be accepted at this time in the amount tendered, because foreclosure has been commenced, and the amount tendered does not include any trustee's fee or attorney's fees as provided by the note and deed of trust. We had informed you that if payment was not made by noon, January 8th, that at least 5% would be added for trustee and attorneys fees. We notified Tommie [Williams, an attorney representing Kaiser] that the deed of trust provided for 10% trustee's fee plus reasonable attorneys fees. We informed you today that we would settle for 5% attorneys/trustee fees, and we will keep that offer open until January 20th at which time they will go to 10%, and if sale is held on the 8th, 15%.
On January 21, 1988, Kaiser commenced this civil action by filing its complaint in the Chancery Court of Sunflower County, Mississippi. At the same time Kaiser tendered into the registry of the Court the sum of $579,144.87. Kaiser sought to enjoin the pending foreclosure. The central issue below and here was the amount of the fee to which Davis was entitled in his capacity as trustee and as attorney for the Mahaffeys and the Ringolds. Between January 6, 1988, the date the balloon payment was due, and January 15, 1988, the date Kaiser first tendered full payment of principal and interest, Davis examined the *429 title, prepared foreclosure papers, delivered notice of foreclosure to the newspaper, and served notice upon all interested parties. When asked how much time this took, Davis answered, "I would say in excess of twenty [hours], but I wouldn't know exactly how many." The Court below held the matter controlled by the ten percent (10%) provision in the deed of trust and allowed Davis a fee of $58,217.21.
Kaiser now appeals to this Court. Pending appeal, and upon Kaiser's payment into the registry of the Court of a sum equal to 125 percent of the fee allowed, the Chancery Court has stayed foreclosure.
III.
Where an obligor on a promissory note secured by a land deed of trust defaults in its obligations and foreclosure proceedings are begun, the obligor may become liable for trustee's fees and attorney's fees. The measure of each of these fees is the obligor's contractual undertaking. Parties to such secured transactions may ordinarily contract as they wish with regard to trustee's fees and attorney's fees. Mississippi Hill & Delta Savings & Loan Association v. The Valley Bank, 392 So.2d 1126, 1129 (Miss. 1981). Courts will refuse to enforce such contractual undertakings only upon grounds which would require avoidance generally, e.g., fraud or duress.
Where an obligation, secured by a land deed of trust, falls into default and foreclosure proceedings are begun, the obligor has by law a pre-foreclosure right of redemption. Cf. Crystal v. Duffy, 493 So.2d 942, 944 (Miss. 1986). To obtain reinstatement of the obligation and to avoid foreclosure, the obligor must before the sale pay all sums due including "all accrued costs, attorneys' fees and trustees' fees." Miss. Code Ann. § 89-1-59 (Supp. 1988). Those fees shall be measured by the terms of the note and deed of trust.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
538 So. 2d 427, 1989 WL 5094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaiser-investments-inc-v-davis-miss-1989.