Lupis v. Peoples Mortgage Co.

690 P.2d 944, 107 Idaho 489, 1984 Ida. App. LEXIS 529
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 30, 1984
Docket14601
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 690 P.2d 944 (Lupis v. Peoples Mortgage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lupis v. Peoples Mortgage Co., 690 P.2d 944, 107 Idaho 489, 1984 Ida. App. LEXIS 529 (Idaho Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

*490 BURNETT, Judge.

This appeal presents questions of estoppel and contract interpretation. The issues are framed by a transaction in which a commercial lender, Peoples Mortgage Company, made a real estate loan to Joseph and Sara Jean Lupis, for the purchase of a house. The loan was evidenced by a promissory note and secured by a deed of trust on the purchased property. As explained in greater detail below, the deed of trust was supplemented by other documents containing additional covenants by the borrowers. When the borrowers breached one of those covenants, the lender gave notice of intent to commence nonjudicial foreclosure proceedings. The borrowers sued to enjoin the proceedings but a district court entered summary judgment in favor of the lender. We affirm.

I

On review of a summary judgment, our task is to determine whether there exist genuine issues of material fact and, if not, whether the prevailing party was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. I.R.C.P. 56(c). In this case, the facts essential to our opinion are undisputed.

The loan in question was the product of a government program designed to assist low-income persons in obtaining home loans from commercial lenders. Under this program, administered in our state by the Idaho Housing Agency, qualified borrowers could receive commercial loans carrying interest rates below prevailing market rates. After closing this type of loan, the lender ordinarily would “sell” it to the agency. In contemplation of such a sale, the lender would require the borrowers to sign an addendum to the customary deed of trust. This addendum, furnished by the agency, provided that the lender or its assignee would be entitled to accelerate all payments due under the note and to exercise any remedy allowed by law, including foreclosure of the deed of trust, if the borrowers sold, rented or “fail[ed] to occupy the [property as [their] permanent and primary residence.” This additional covenant was modified in part by an attached “Certificate of Compliance” which recited that the borrowers could rent the dwelling if they obtained approval of the agency.

In the present case, these documents were signed, the loan was closed, and the borrowers purchased a house. However, the loan was not presented by the lender to the agency for purchase until several months had elapsed. During that period the borrowers made some late payments. The agency declined to purchase the loan until a better payment record had been established. Before that objective could be attained, the circumstances of the lender and of the borrowers changed. The lender ceased doing business in Idaho and the agency terminated its commitment to buy loans from the lender. The borrowers continued to encounter financial difficulty and the husband left Idaho in search of better employment opportunities. The wife later followed; but prior to her departure, she listed the house for sale with a realtor. She also contacted the housing agency to request approval for renting the home until it was sold. She then learned, for the first time, that the agency had not purchased the loan. When she made a similar request to the lender, it was denied. Upon the wife’s departure from Idaho the lender, invoking the supplemental covenant that the borrowers occupy the property as their “permanent and primary residence,” served notice of a breach. This lawsuit followed.

II

The parties do not appear to dispute the scope of documents comprising the contract between them. Both the lender and the borrowers have invited our attention not only to the note and deed of trust but also to the addendum and the “Certificate of Compliance.” Although the latter documents were furnished by the housing agency, it is obvious that but for the execution of these documents, the loan would not have been made at all — or, at least, it would not have been made at such a low interest rate. We accept the parties’ characterization of their contract as including *491 all of the documents. The documents, taken together, make it clear that the borrowers convenanted to occupy the property as their permanent and primary residence, upon penalty of being held in breach for failure to do so.

A

The borrowers have argued that although the agency documents are part of the contract, the lender should be estopped to rely upon the supplemental covenants contained in them. This argument is predicated upon the fact that the borrowers did not learn of the agency’s refusal to purchase the loan until a request was made for permission to rent the premises. The borrowers urge that if they had known the loan might not be purchased, they would have made more timely payments and their desire to move from the house without incurring an acceleration of the debt might have been viewed more sympathetically by the agency than by the disgruntled lender. We believe the borrowers have failed to make a case for estoppel against the lender.

Equitable estoppel requires, among other elements, a false representation or concealment of a material fact with intent that another party rely and act upon it to his detriment. Idaho Title Company v. American States Insurance, 96 Idaho 465, 531 P.2d 227 (1975). In the present case, the borrowers implicitly suggest the lenders had a duty to inform them that late payments could lead to the agency’s refusal to purchase the loan. Assuming, without deciding, that such a duty existed, there still is no factual showing that the lender's concealment of this “material fact” was accompanied by any intent that the borrowers act to their detriment by making untimely payments. It was in no one’s interest — least of all the lender’s — for a record of late payments to interfere with purchase of the loan. The record discloses that the lender frequently urged the borrowers to make prompt and timely payments.

Estoppel of another form, known as quasi estoppel, may arise when a party who has a duty to speak fails to do so and thereby produces an advantage for himself, or a disadvantage for someone else, which is unconscionable. See, e.g., KTVB, Inc. v. Boise City, 94 Idaho 279, 486 P.2d 992 (1971). In this case, even if we assume that the lender had a duty to speak, there is no factual showing that the lender obtained any advantage by failing to do so. Rather, the lender found itself burdened with a loan at unfavorable interest rates. The lender’s failure to speak may have produced a disadvantage for the borrowers, but we are not persuaded that the disadvantage was unconscionable. The borrowers knew that their payments were to be made on time. They knew when and where to make those payments. The lender did not attempt to use late payments as a basis for declaring a breach and seeking to foreclose the deed of trust. The breach arose from the borrowers’ change of residence. Therefore, the borrowers’ asserted disadvantage simply is that their payment record caused the loan to stay with an unhappy lender who chose, when the housing agency might not have chosen, to enforce the “permanent and primary residence” covenant. In our view, this disadvantage is so remote from the lender’s purported violation of a duty to speak, and so closely related to the borrowers’ own conduct, that the ultimate result cannot be deemed unconscionable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
690 P.2d 944, 107 Idaho 489, 1984 Ida. App. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lupis-v-peoples-mortgage-co-idahoctapp-1984.