MERCHANTS NAT. BANK, VICKSBURG v. Stewart

523 So. 2d 961, 1988 WL 24232
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1988
Docket57392
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 523 So. 2d 961 (MERCHANTS NAT. BANK, VICKSBURG v. Stewart) 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.

Bluebook
MERCHANTS NAT. BANK, VICKSBURG v. Stewart, 523 So. 2d 961, 1988 WL 24232 (Mich. 1988).

Opinion

523 So.2d 961 (1988)

MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK, VICKSBURG, Mississippi
v.
Larry B. STEWART, Harry A. Stewart, Sr., and Betty Stewart.

No. 57392.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

March 16, 1988.
Rehearing Denied May 11, 1988.

*962 Edley H. Jones, III, Ward, Martin & Terry, Vicksburg, for appellant.

Phillip M. Nelson, Kirk & Nelson, Ridgeland, for appellees.

Before DAN M. LEE, P.J., and ROBERTSON and GRIFFIN, JJ.

ROBERTSON, Justice, for the Court:

I.

This appeal from an adjudication of civil contempt arises from the prior settlement of an action to enjoin a foreclosure and the failure of the secured party to carry out the agreed and court ordered settlement. The judgment appealed from amounts to little more than a directive that the secured party bank do what it has been ordered to do, albeit a daily penalty is assessed for future non-compliance. As in all civil contempt matters, of course, the party in contempt metaphorically has the keys to the jailhouse door in his pocket.

The adjudication below was within the law and the evidence. We affirm.

II.

Harry A. Stewart, Sr., and Betty Stewart, Plaintiffs below and Appellees here, farmed in Madison County, Mississippi, and financed those operations by a history of annual loans with Merchants National Bank of Vicksburg, Mississippi (MNB). Increasingly, the Stewarts had problems servicing their debt, and in January of 1983 MNB refused to extend them further credit under the then present circumstances.

Harry Stewart devised a plan for the 1983 crop year that would place the farming operations under the control of his son and son-in-law. They would obtain new loans and he would guarantee their debt. In February of 1983, the Stewarts divided their farm land in Madison County into equal shares. They conveyed one-half to their son, Harry A. Stewart, Jr., and the other half to their son-in-law, Eddie Ray Ellis. Stewart, Jr., and Ellis paid for the land each acquired as follows: First, on May 23, 1983, each executed a note in favor of the Stewarts in the sum of $170,000 payable January 1, 1984. Each such note was secured by a purchase money deed of trust on the property each had acquired. In addition, Stewart, Jr., and Eddie Ellis each borrowed $500,000 from MNB in the form of Farmer's Home Administration guaranteed loans. The $500,000 FmHA guaranteed loans and deeds of trust were subordinate in right to the lien of the $170,000 deeds of trust in favor of the Stewarts.

Stewart, Jr., and Ellis each then obtained crop production loans. More precisely, MNB extended a line of credit to Stewart, Jr., and Ellis in the amount of $170,000 each. Stewart, Jr., and Ellis, of course, gave their notes to the bank in these amounts, secured by a security interest in the crops. The Stewarts then executed and delivered to MNB a continuing guaranty and hypothecation agreement guaranteeing performance by Stewart, Jr., and Ellis of their obligations under the line of credit. To secure their guaranty obligations, the Stewarts assigned to MNB their notes from Stewart, Jr., and Ellis and their rights under the $170,000 deeds of trust securing each.

As fate would have it, the 1983 farming operations conducted by Stewart, Jr., and Ellis were unsuccessful. All loans fell into default. W.C. Way, Trustee, in the two $170,000 deeds of trust of May 23, 1983, commenced foreclosure proceedings with April 27, 1984, designated as the date of foreclosure sale. On April 27, 1984, MNB, as the holder of the assignment of these two deeds of trust, filed a substitution of trustee appointing and substituting C.E. *963 Sorey, II, as trustee instead of W.C. Way. Way, however, continued with the foreclosure, in fact conducted the sale on April 27, 1984, and on April 30, 1984, executed and delivered two trustee's deeds to Larry B. Stewart. Each trustee's deed recited a consideration of $112,500.

Notwithstanding, C.E. Sorey, II, as substituted trustee, on April 30, 1984, commenced foreclosure proceedings on the same two deeds of trust. This second foreclosure sale was scheduled for May 25, 1984.

On May 18, 1984, Larry B. Stewart, taking the position that he had acquired good title to the properties, brought an action in the Chancery Court of Madison County to enjoin MNB and Sorey from proceeding with this second foreclosure sale. The Chancery Court entered a temporary restraining order on that same date followed by a preliminary injunction on May 22, 1984, and the MNB/Sorey foreclosure sale scheduled for May 25 was effectively enjoined. The Stewarts were joined as additional plaintiffs in this action on July 27, 1984. Thereupon a complete settlement of the action was made and an agreed order of dismissal was entered by the Chancery Court on the same day, July 27, 1984.

The pertinent portions of the Agreed Order provide that:

(1) The foreclosure held on April 27, 1984, by W.C. Way is null and void;
(2) MNB shall advance $34,200 to the Stewarts upon entry of the Agreed Order as "an advancement of the equity held by" the Stewarts, "by virtue of an equitable interest in the first deed of trust";
(3) MNB shall further advance $34,200 "as an advancement of the equity held by" the Stewarts "by virtue of an equitable interest in the first deed of trust" on the date of the foreclosure sale to be held by MNB under the deed of trust entered into by Harry Stewart, Jr.;
(4) The "total aggregate advance" to the Stewarts "against their equity in said deeds of trust" shall be $68,400;
(5) MNB shall foreclosure on the first two deeds of trust as soon as possible;
(6) Sorey and Phillip Nelson shall be substituted as co-trustees under the first two deeds of trust;
(7) The Stewarts have the right to pursue claims against MNB, not a part of this litigation; and
(8) The Stewarts may pursue "their claims/counterclaim in a principal amount not to exceed $152,000 plus interest on $340,000 from May 23, 1983, to date of foreclosure exclusive of prejudgment interest, damages, and attorney fees, if any."

Pursuant to the Agreed Order the Stewarts received the first $34,200, and Sorey and Nelson were substituted as co-trustees of the first deeds of trust. The plan was temporarily interdicted as Stewart, Jr., and Ellis filed separate bankruptcy petitions in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Mississippi. In consequence, the foreclosure actions were stayed. The bankruptcy stay was lifted in early March of 1985. On March 14, 1985, MNB began foreclosing the second deeds of trust, those executed by Stewart, Jr., and Ellis to secure the FmHA guaranteed loans made by MNB. No foreclosure proceedings were commenced on the May 23, 1983, first deeds of trust, which MNB held by assignment, nor have any foreclosure proceedings been instituted since.

On March 18, 1985, Nelson, as the Stewarts' attorney, wrote the following letter to Jeffrey King (King), who at that time was representing MNB's interest:

It has come to my attention that Merchants National Bank, ..., is currently running a foreclosure against the Harry Stewart, Jr. and Eddie Ellis properties in violation of and contrary to the Agreed Order entered in the above styled and numbered cause on July 27, 1984.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
523 So. 2d 961, 1988 WL 24232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-nat-bank-vicksburg-v-stewart-miss-1988.