Keever v. Nicholas Beers Co.

611 P.2d 1079, 96 Nev. 509, 1980 Nev. LEXIS 633
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1980
Docket11024
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 611 P.2d 1079 (Keever v. Nicholas Beers Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keever v. Nicholas Beers Co., 611 P.2d 1079, 96 Nev. 509, 1980 Nev. LEXIS 633 (Neb. 1980).

Opinion

*510 OPINION

By the Court,

Mowbray, C. J.:

Respondent Nicholas Beers Co. sued appellants Keever and Moore for the balance due on a promissory note which had been secured by a second trust deed on real property. The note made by appellants was due, and partially unpaid. The district court rejected appellants-defendants’ contentions below that recovery was barred by the one action rule, NRS 40.430, and by the antiwaiver provision of NRS 40.453; the court rendered judgment for respondent for the unpaid balance of the note plus interest. We reverse.

The note upon which Nicholas Beers Co. (hereinafter Beers) seeks to recover was executed as part of a real estate transaction. Beers held an option to purchase a tract of land which was later to become the Reno Heights subdivision. On May 14, 1974, Beers and Security National Bank entered into an agreement for financing the purchase of the land: the Bank was to *511 lend Beers over $680,000; Beers was to give the Bank a promissory note secured by a first trust deed on the property. Beers and the Bank further agreed that in the event of default on the loan the subdivided property would be sold to a third party, Mason-McDuffie Co., for a specified price of $7,500 per lot, an amount just sufficient to pay back the indebtedness to the Bank. Mason-McDuffie agreed to purchase the lots in a letter dated May 11, 1973; the obligation to purchase was to expire on June 30, 1974. In order to facilitate the transfer of the property to Mason-McDuffie in the event of default, Beers appointed the Bank its agent for the sale and deposited with the Bank an executed request for reconveyance of its interest under the deed of trust.

At this juncture, appellants Keever and Moore entered the transaction, as prospective developers of the property. They agreed to purchase Beers’ rights under its option to purchase the property and to step into Beers’ position with respect to the note and first deed of trust. In a series of documents dated between June 15 and June 26, 1973, Keever and Moore gave Beers a promissory note (the subject of the present action) secured by a second deed of trust on the property; Beers deeded its interest in the property to Keever and Moore; Keever and Moore assumed all of Beers’ obligations to the Bank and to Mason-McDuffie; and, in order to facilitate a sale to Mason-McDuffie on default, Keever and Moore adopted Beers’ appointment of the Bank as agent for the sale. At one point in the negotiations, the Bank expressed concern over whether, in the event of default, it would be able to sell the property to Mason-McDuffie free of all encumbrances, as specified in its agreement, because of the second deed of trust in favor of Beers. In a letter to the Bank, executed as part of the sale to appellants, Beers agreed to release its lien on the property, created by the second deed of trust, in the event of default, if the Bank would tender to Beers, five days before the contemplated sale to Mason-McDuffie, the remaining lots at the same specified price of $7,500; this letter did not specify a date upon which the agreement would expire. The letter was incorporated by reference into the instrument by which Keever and Moore adopted the appointment of the Bank as agent for the sale to Mason-McDuffie on default; the letter specified that the arrangement would not release Keever and Moore from their liability on the promissory note.

Ultimately, Keever and Moore defaulted on their obligation to the Bank. Although their attempts to keep the project going lasted beyond the June 30, 1974 date upon which the sale agreement between the Bank and Mason-McDuffie was to expire, *512 those parties agreed to extend their contract for six months. On October 15, 1974, the Bank tendered the remaining lots in the subdivision to Beers at $7,500 per lot, pursuant to their agreement. Beers declined to purchase them, and the Bank then sold them, at the specified price, to one Wilkerson, Mason-McDuffie’s nominee. In its letter to the Bank declining the tender of the lots, Beers acknowledged its release of its lien under the second deed of trust on the property.

Keever and Moore had meanwhile defaulted on their promissory note to Beers. Beers brought suit in the district court on the note; Keever and Moore defended on the ground that the note had been secured and that Beers’ remedy was to foreclose its interest in the security before seeking judgment against the general assets of the debtors. Keever and Moore further contended that the portions of the agreements which arranged the sale to Mason-McDuffie on default could not be given effect because they constituted waivers of their rights under the laws of the state, under NRS 40.453. They argued that by arranging for the disposal of the security for the note, Beers had lost its right to sue on the note itself. After trial to the court, the district court found that Keever and Moore’s agreement to Beers’ release of its lien on the property was not a waiver of any right under NRS 40.453, and that Keever and Moore’s consent to the release of the lien by Beers had been given in a telephone conversation in November, 1974. The court further found that the arrangement on default had not been entered into by Beers for the purpose of evading the one action rule, NRS 40.430. [Headnóte 1]

We are presented here with a situation in which a creditor has taken security for a debt, while making an arrangement by which, in case of default, the security cannot possibly return any amount of the debt: The creditor thus has no intention of looking to the security for repayment. We are called upon to decide whether suit upon the note evidencing the obligation is permissible under our statutes in these circumstances, and we conclude that it is not.

Chapter 40 of the Nevada Revised Statutes provides a comprehensive scheme of creditor and debtor protection with respect to the foreclosure and sale of real property subject to security interests. See also NRS 107.080 etseq. NRS 40.430(1), the one action rule, provides, in pertinent part:

[tjhere shall be but one action for the recovery of any debt, or for the enforcement of any right secured by mortgage or lien upon real estate, which action shall be in accordance with the provisions of this section and NRS 40.440 to *513 40.459, inclusive. In such action, the judgment shall be rendered for the amount found due the plaintiff, and the court shall have power ...

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Bluebook (online)
611 P.2d 1079, 96 Nev. 509, 1980 Nev. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keever-v-nicholas-beers-co-nev-1980.