Mortgage Investors v. Citizens Bank & Trust Co.

366 A.2d 47, 278 Md. 505
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 23, 1976
Docket[No. 16, September Term, 1976.]
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 366 A.2d 47 (Mortgage Investors v. Citizens Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mortgage Investors v. Citizens Bank & Trust Co., 366 A.2d 47, 278 Md. 505 (Md. 1976).

Opinions

Singley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court. Levine, J., dissents and filed a dissenting opinion at page 511 infra.

[506]*506This case presents the question whether a court should consider the reasonableness of an attorney’s collection fee when it is derived from an application of a percentage stipulated in a note to the amount of the recovery. The Circuit Court for Montgomery County concluded that it should not. The Court of Special Appeals affirmed in Mortgage Investors of Washington v. Citizens Bank & Trust Co. of Maryland, 29 Md. App. 591, 349 A. 2d 647 (1976). We granted certiorari in order that we might consider the matter.

Mortgage Investors of Washington (Mortgage Investors) is a multimillion dollar real estate investment trust which makes loans nationally to the real estate industry. At the inception of this matter, it had negotiated lines of credit with 22 banks, including Citizens Bank and Trust Company of Maryland (Citizens).

Under the arrangement with Citizens, which was apparently similar to those with the other banks, Mortgage Investors could borrow up to $1,000,000.00 at the prime rate. Mortgage Investors agreed to maintain a minimum compensating balance of $100,000.00 plus 10% of the amount of borrowing actually in use at any one time and to “rest” the line of credit for 30 consecutive days each year: in other words, to have no loans from Citizens outstanding during this period.

On 17 July 1974, Mortgage Investors borrowed $750,000.00 from Citizens. The borrowing was evidenced by a printed note of that date, on a form prepared by Citizens, but supplied at the request of Mortgage Investors, due 15 October 1974. On 21 August, an additional borrowing of $250,000.00 was made, similarly evidenced by a note due 15 October. Both notes contained an explicit provision as to the payment of attorney’s fees by the borrower upon default: “If, upon our default, suit is instituted, we agree to pay all court costs and an attorney’s fee of 15% of the outstanding balance at the time of the suit.”

Although Citizens notified Mortgage Investors that it would expect payment of the notes when due and that the [507]*507loan agreement would not be renewed, Mortgage Investors paid only the interest on but not the principal of the notes, apparently because of the possibility that the refusal of Citizens to renew the notes would have precipitated the call of loans outstanding under Mortgage Investors’ agreements with certain other banks.

When the principal amount of the notes was not paid when due, Citizens filed suit on 13 November 1974 on the notes. A day later, Citizens credited Mortgage Investors with the compensating balance of $200,000.00, thus reducing the unpaid principal balance of the loan evidenced by the notes to $800,000.00.

On 25 October 1974, after Mortgage Investors’ default, but prior to the institution of suit, Citizens’ attorneys, by letter had set their fees in collection cases to be handled for Citizens on a contingency basis. The letter read:

“After a careful review of our collection cases, we suggest the following contingent fee schedule which we believe will be reasonably fair to the Bank and to us, particularly in light of the removal of confession of judgment provisions from Bank forms.
“For any collection case, the gross amount of which is $750.00 or less, we will charge the same rate as a collection agency — 50%
“For any case involving more than $750.00:
(a) for the first $1,500.00 collected —- one-third
(b) for the next $3,500.00 collected — from 25% to 33 1/3%
(c) for the next $5,000.00 collected —• 15% to 33 1/3%
(d) for all sums collected thereafter — 10% to 25%.
“If a lump sum collection is made prior to filing suit, the fee to be charged to the Bank will be one-half of the above minimum (excepting cases of $750.00 or less).
[508]*508“If the collections are made after suit is instituted, but before trial, the minimum above fees. If after trial, but before judgment, a reasonable figure between the minimum and maximum fees.
“If collections are made either by installment whether before or after suit, or if collection is made after judgment, the maximum above fees.”

On motion for summary judgment, judgment was entered against Mortgage Investors in favor of Citizens for $815,714.30, which included the unpaid balance of principal plus interest. Another judgment was entered in Citizens’ favor for $150,640.26 for attorneys’ fees. The Court of Special Appeals, while recognizing that $150,640.26 was 15% of $1,004,268.40, the amount due at the time suit was instituted, concluded at the suggestion of Citizens’ attorneys that the amount which Citizens was obligated to pay its attorneys under its agreement with them was $105,750.58, and reduced the judgment to this amount.

Mortgage Investors mounts a multifaceted attack on this judgment, the crux of which is that a court should not be insulated from determining the reasonableness of an attorney’s collection fee by the fact that the amount of the fee or the percentage by which the fee is to be determined is stipulated in the note or other instrument which is the subject of the suit. They argue that they can find no other common law jurisdiction in which a trial court is precluded from considering the reasonableness of a collection fee stated as a percentage or amount in the instrument on which suit is brought.

We are squarely faced with the problem of reconciling four well grounded doctrines: first, the inherent power of a court to oversee the activities of members of its bar, American Nat’l Bank v. Mackey, 241 Md. 319, 323-25, 231 A. 2d 15, 18-20 (1967) (collection fee is not applicable to both mortgage and mortgage note); Weiner v. Swales, 217 Md. 123, 126-27, 141 A. 2d 749, 751 (1958) (attorney’s collection fee not payable when attorney is the holder of the note and [509]*509performs collection work himself); Rheb v. Bar Ass’n of Baltimore, 186 Md. 200, 205, 46 A. 2d 289, 291 (1946) (“In the last analysis the duty rests upon the courts, and the profession as a whole, to uphold the highest standards of professional conduct and to protect the public from imposition by the unfit or unscrupulous practitioner.”); second, the rights of parties to make such contracts as they please, so long as they are consistent with law, Webster v. People’s Loan, Savings & Deposit Bank, 160 Md. 57, 61, 152 A. 815, 817 (1931); Gaither v. Tolson, 84 Md. 637, 639, 36 A. 449 (1897); Bowie v. Hall, 69 Md. 433, 435, 16 A. 64 (1888); Maryland Fertilizing & Mfg. Co. v. Newman, 60 Md. 584, 588 (1883) (“Parties have the right to make their contracts in what form they please, provided they consist with the law of the land; and it is the duty of the courts so to construe them, if possible, as to maintain them in their integrity and entirety.”); third, the duty of the courts to protect other creditors, Johnson v. Phillips, 143 Md. 16, 26, 122 A.

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Bluebook (online)
366 A.2d 47, 278 Md. 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mortgage-investors-v-citizens-bank-trust-co-md-1976.