MONEY STORE INVESTMENT CORP. v. Summers

909 N.E.2d 450, 2009 Ind. App. LEXIS 950, 2009 WL 2003963
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 10, 2009
Docket02A03-0807-CV-384
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 909 N.E.2d 450 (MONEY STORE INVESTMENT CORP. v. Summers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MONEY STORE INVESTMENT CORP. v. Summers, 909 N.E.2d 450, 2009 Ind. App. LEXIS 950, 2009 WL 2003963 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

SHARPNACK, Senior Judge.

This appeal involves issues of liens and priorities between Paula Phillips ("Phillips"), a judgment creditor and assignee of a first mortgage holder ("National City"), and The Money Store Investment Corporation, d/b/a First Union Small Business Capital ("Money Store") 1 , the holder of a second mortgage, for the cost of repairs, insurance, and taxes with respect to the mortgaged property owned by Neal Summers, on a part of which Phillips has been operating a restaurant. This is the second appeal of the case and is brought by Money Store from a judgment of the trial court adding to the lien of Phillips as assignee of National City's mortgages amounts spent to repair the restaurant, insure it, and pay taxes on the mortgaged property during the pendency of the first appeal.

Money Store raises the following restated issues for our review:

I. Whether the trial court erred in granting Phillips a first priority lien on the real estate for the cost of repairs, insurance payments, and tax payments;
II. Whether the trial court erred in concluding that Money Store was personally liable to repay Phillips for the cost of repairs, insurance payments, and tax payments;
III. Whether the trial court erred in awarding Phillips prejudgment interest; and
IV. Whether the trial court erred in failing to order an accounting and an application of the restaurant's profits to Phillips' lien.

*455 We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

We begin our review of this appeal with reference to the decision of our Supreme Court in the first appeal. There, the Court summarized the facts and proceedings relevant to that decision as follows:

From 1992 to 1996, Neal Summers granted eleven mortgages on three parcels of his real estate to Fort Wayne National Bank as security for a series of loans. Three of these mortgages contained dragnet clauses.
In February 1998, Paula Phillips sued Summers and the company in which he was the sole shareholder, Mangy Moose Enterprises, Inc. Her complaint raised a dispute over the ownership of the trademark/trade name "Paula's Seafood." The parties entered into a written settlement agreement on September 21, 1999, and the suit was subsequently dismissed without prejudice.
On September 15, 2000, Summers and Mangy Moose borrowed $508,275 from the Money Store Investment Corporation d/b/a First Union Small Business Capital and granted a mortgage on the same three parcels used to secure the Fort Wayne National mortgages (to which National City succeeded), plus an additional six lots. On the same day, Mangy Moose, by Summers as president and secretary, borrowed $471,000 from Money Store, and granted a mortgage on the same real estate.
Prior to these loans, on August 30, National City sent to Money Store's title company three pay-off statements that included the daily interest. National City assured the title company that eight mortgages and two assignments of rents and leases would be released upon the proper payoff of the three loans. On September 15, National City received three payments, but one payment came up $375 short of the amount reflected on the pay-off statements. National City did not release any of the mortgages and was still owed some $4700 on Mangy Moose's overdrawn checking account.
Phillips filed a motion to enforce the settlement agreement on August 10, 2001. Just over a month later, Money Store filed a complaint for foreclosure and appointment of a receiver. On February 5, 2002, the trial court in the Phillips' action found that Summers and Mangy Moose had failed to comply with an earlier order and granted Phillips a $205,700 judgment.
Phillips then purchased National City's nine mortgages and two assignments of rents and leases, and National City assigned all of its interest to Phillips. In March 2002, Phillips filed a complaint to foreclose these mortgages, and also moved to intervene in the Money Store foreclosure action. Both Phillips and Money Store moved for summary judgment.
The trial court entered its judgment and decree foreclosing both Phillips' and Money Store's mortgages. It held that "dragnet" clauses contained in three of the mortgages assigned to Phillips secured "all debts or obligations owed to Paula Phillips by Summers," which included Phillips' judgment lien against Summers, Mangy Moose's overdrawn checking account, collection fees, attorneys fees, and interest. It granted Phillips priority over Money Store on the three Summers' lots used as collateral in the mortgages assigned to Phillips.
The Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that "the mortgage dragnet clauses support[ ] the trial court's conclusion that the monetary judgment resulting from Summers' failure to comply with his written settlement agreement was, after Phillips acquired the mortgage *456 through assignment by National City, 'secured by' the dragnet mortgages." The Money Store Investment Corp. v. Summers, 822 N.E.2d 223, 229 (Ind.Ct.App.2005) vacated. We granted transfer.

Money Store Inv. Corp. v. Summers, 349 N.E.2d 544, 546-47 (Ind.2006) (citations omitted).

The Court went on to conclude as follows:

While it is true that Phillips stepped into the shoes of the mortgagee, this entitled her to collect debts secured in accordance with the terms of the mortgages, not her judgment lien. The debts in this case were limited to the $375 short payment on the loan payoff and the $4700 overdrawn checking account, plus interest, collection costs, and attorney's fees. We reverse the trial court's grant of priority to Phillips over Money Store on the lots in question.

Id. at 548. After the decision of our Supreme Court, Phillips and Money Store stood in the following order of priority: 1) Phillips as assignee of the National City mortgages for the amounts as limited by the Supreme Court, including $5,181.25 for the debt from Summers plus interest and attorneys fees; 2) Money Store for its foreclosure judgment, including $569,470.28 plus interest and attorneys fees; and 3) Phillips for her $205,700 judgment against Summers.

We turn now to this appeal. The primary facts relevant to this appeal concern actions that occurred for the most part between the judgment of foreclosure by the trial court on December 4, 2003, and the affirmance of that judgment by this court on April 18, 2005. The Indiana Supreme Court granted transfer on August 11, 2005, and handed down its previously referenced opinion on June 27, 2006.

The dispute between Phillips and Summers that led to her judgment against him concerned a restaurant that Phillips had operated for some years in part of the buildings on the subject property. When she began operations, the property was owned by someone other than Summers.

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Bluebook (online)
909 N.E.2d 450, 2009 Ind. App. LEXIS 950, 2009 WL 2003963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/money-store-investment-corp-v-summers-indctapp-2009.