Mickler v. Maranatha Realty Associates, Inc. (In re Mickler)

20 B.R. 346, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4205
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedMay 3, 1982
DocketNo. 80-1226; Adv. No. 81-92
StatusPublished

This text of 20 B.R. 346 (Mickler v. Maranatha Realty Associates, Inc. (In re Mickler)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mickler v. Maranatha Realty Associates, Inc. (In re Mickler), 20 B.R. 346, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4205 (Fla. 1982).

Opinion

ORDER ON MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT

ALEXANDER L. PASKAY, Chief Judge.

THIS IS an adversary proceeding and the matter under consideration is a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment filed by Mara-natha Realty Associates, Inc. (Maranatha) and Stanley E. Kreimer (Kreimer), the Defendants and Counter-Plaintiffs in this action. The Plaintiffs and Counter-Defendants, Bartley L. and Elaine Mickler, are the Debtors who filed their petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on August 20, 1980.

The undisputed facts which control the matter under consideration can be summarized as follows:

On January 31, 1979, Maranatha and Kreimer, as lenders, and the Micklers, as borrowers, entered into an interstate loan agreement whereby certain funds would be advanced as seed money to assist in the proposed development of a shopping center and dinner theater in Pasco County, Florida, upon land owned by the Micklers. The transaction included the execution of a promissory note and a mortgage by the Micklers. The note recited an interest rate of 12% on a principal amount of $400,000. The mortgage encumbered the Micklers’ substantial land holdings in Pasco County. Although the exact amount of acreage encumbered is hotly disputed, the determination of this issue is not germane to the matters presently under consideration and, therefore, must await the outcome of litigation.

During the preliminary negotiations, the lenders, upon the advice of their counsel, decided that Florida law should control the terms of the note. To effectuate this intention the lenders’ Georgia counsel, who drafted all of the necessary loan documents, included in paragraph four of the promissory note the following language:

“This note is to be construed and enforced according to the laws of the State of Florida.”

There is no question that the terms of the loan agreement were not the result of arm-length negotiations between the parties and that the documents were prepared solely by counsel for the lenders after a brief discussion with the Florida counsel for the borrowers.

In addition to the express designation of Florida law by the loan agreement, the following undisputed facts appear from the record which are relevant to the matters under consideration. The initial transaction and negotiations for the loan agreement in question were conducted in Georgia which is also the principal place of business of Maranatha and Kreimer. The Debtors reside in Florida and the property involved in this controversy, that is, the land encumbered by the mortgage, is located in the State of Florida. The project envisioned by the parties, i.e. the construction of a shopping center and a dinner theater, was to be located in the state of Florida. Although, [348]*348as noted, the Debtors are residents of Florida, the loan agreement was executed by them in North Carolina during one of their frequent sojourns in that state.

The threshhold issue for this Court’s determination involves a choice of law question in the context of this interstate loan agreement. Under the law of Georgia, Ga. Code Ann. § 57-119 (1969), the interest rate of 12% provided for in the promissory note is not usurious since that state places no restriction on the amount of interest which may be paid on any loan of $100,000 or more. Whether the specified interest rate of 12% is usurious under Florida law is a more difficult question. If the contractual rate of interest is governed by the Florida Statute in effect at the time the loan documents were executed, it is clearly usurious since the maximum allowable rate of interest at that time was 10%. See, Fla. Stat. 687.03(1) (1977). However, this statutory section was amended in 1979 and the permissible interest rate is currently 18%. 1979 Fla.Laws Ch. 79-274. Thus, if this change in the law applies retroactively, an issue to be discussed infra, then the interest rate set forth in the note is not prohibited by Florida law. Yet, even assuming for the moment that the 18% rate should be applied retroactively, this still does not settle the issue since the Plaintiffs have alleged that a substantial portion of the consideration furnished by the lenders was in effect disguised interest and that the interest rate, in any event, exceeds 18%. See e.g. American Acceptance Corp. v. Schoenthales, 391 F.2d 64 (5th Cir. 1968). Therefore, depending upon the issue of retroactivity, discussed below, and the proof to be presented at trial concerning the de facto rate of interest, there may be no conflict between the respective laws of Florida and Georgia. With these facts and principles in mind, this Court must initially decide which state’s law applies.

In the recent case of Continental Mortgage Investors v. Sailboat Key, Inc., 395 So.2d 507 (1981), the Supreme Court of Florida was confronted with a similar, but not an identical, question. There, the parties entered into an interstate loan agreement which contained a choice of law provision designating the application of a foreign law (Massachusetts) which would validate the contractual interest rate, while under the law of Florida the interest rate would be usurious. Chief Justice Sundberg stated the rule:

“We conclude that in an interstate commercial loan transaction with which several states have contacts and in which usury is implicated, Florida courts will recognize a choice of law provision provided by the parties so long as the jurisdiction chosen in the contract has a normal relationship with the transaction.” at p. 508. (emphasis supplied)

As the Chief Justice noted, the historical rule at play here is the principle of validation. That is, the parties contract with a view toward the validity of the contract and its provisions. Therefore, to the extent the Courts uphold the parties express designation of the validating law, the expectations of the parties are fulfilled. The difference, however, between Continental Mortgage Investors, supra, and the case, sub judice, is that, here, the parties have expressly designated the law of the forum (Florida) whose usury law, at least at the time of contracting, prohibited the rate of interest provided for in the note. Stated another way, the parties expressly designated a choice of law which is at odds with their expectations of contractual validity.

Counsel for the defendants strenuously urges the application of Georgia law since Georgia has a normal relationship with the transaction and for the obvious reason that the law of that state would permit interest at the rate of 12%. However, one glaring fact militates against the application of Georgia law. As stated earlier, all of the loan documents, including the promissory note with its express designation of Florida law, were prepared by the Defendants’ Georgia counsel. The mere fact that the Defendants’ Georgia attorney failed to apprise himself and his clients of controlling Florida law cannot change the lenders’ unambiguous expression of Florida law in the promissory note. Therefore, considering [349]

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20 B.R. 346, 1982 Bankr. LEXIS 4205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mickler-v-maranatha-realty-associates-inc-in-re-mickler-flmb-1982.