National Housing Partnership v. Municipal Capital Appreciation Partners I, L.P.

935 A.2d 300, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 653, 2007 WL 3194090
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 1, 2007
Docket03-CV-1080, 03-CV-1253, 05-CV-32 and 05-CV-62
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 935 A.2d 300 (National Housing Partnership v. Municipal Capital Appreciation Partners I, L.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Housing Partnership v. Municipal Capital Appreciation Partners I, L.P., 935 A.2d 300, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 653, 2007 WL 3194090 (D.C. 2007).

Opinion

GLICKMAN, Associate Judge:

These appeals, arising under Maryland law, require us to delve into the meaning of an agreement furnishing security for the payment of a promissory note and the requirements of former Article 9, the Secured Transactions Article, of the Uniform Commercial Code. The parties’ disputes began when National Housing Partnership (“NHP”) defaulted on a $3.2 million note payment, leading Municipal Capital Appreciation Partners I, L.P. (“MCAP”) to foreclose on the collateral and acquire it for $1.4 million. In the ensuing litigation, NHP was held liable for the entire amount of the deficiency and for MCAP’s attorneys’ fees and costs. We now reverse that judgment and remand for further proceedings.

I.

NHP is a District of Columbia partnership that was established at the direction of Congress to foster private investment in low and moderate income housing. 1 NHP acquired and managed affordable multifamily housing projects through limited partnerships, in which it served as the general partner.

In August 1984, NHP entered into a Purchase Agreement with Laurel Kimberly Associates to acquire Kimberly Gardens, a 172-unit housing project in Laurel, Maryland. As part of the purchase price, NHP agreed to furnish the seller a secured, long-term note in the amount of $1,401,600, under which all payments of principal and interest at the rate of nine percent per annum would be deferred until the end of the term. The term of this deferred note was ten years, with the purchaser having the option to extend the maturity date by five years. NHP also agreed to an initial cash payment of $230,000; a three-year installment note for $409,000; and the assumption by the purchaser of an existing low-interest mortgage that was insured by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”). The original principal amount of the HUD mortgage was $2,708,800.

Prior to the closing, NHP assigned its rights, title and interest under the Purchase Agreement to Kimberly Associates Limited Partnership (“KALP”), a Maryland single-asset real estate limited partnership formed for the purpose of owning and managing Kimberly Gardens. NHP was the general partner and one of two limited partners of KALP. Thereafter, on December 13, 1984, KALP signed and furnished the seller a $1.4 million Acquisition Note (“Note”) and the other documents *306 necessary to complete the purchase. The Security Agreement, executed by NHP, provided that in the event of default, the seller would be entitled to foreclose on NHP’s partnership interests in KALP, its rights with respect to KALP, and all monies owed to NHP by KALP, in order to satisfy the,outstanding debt.

Following its acquisition by KALP, Kimberly Gardens was renamed Cherry Branch Townhomes (“Cherry Branch”). In 1993, KALP exercised its option to extend the maturity date of the Note by five years, to December 13,1999.

In late 1997 or early 1998, roughly two years before the Note’s maturity date, MCAP paid $1.9 million in cash to acquire the Note from Laurel Kimberly Associates, together with all rights of the secured party under the Security Agreement. A year or so later, NHP was acquired by AIMCO, a real estate investment trust that was one of the country’s largest owners and operators of affordable multifamily housing, with approximately 1,600 properties in forty-seven states.

The price that MCAP paid for the Note was heavily discounted. When the Note came due on December 13, 1999, KALP owed $3,293,760 in deferred principal and interest. As MCAP may have foreseen, NHP preferred to lose Cherry Branch (KALP’s sole asset) rather than pay off the Note. In deciding to cause KALP to default on the Note payment, NHP understood that the Note was nonrecourse, so that if the forfeited collateral (ie., NHP’s interests in KALP) was worth less than the debt, NHP would not be hable to MCAP for the difference.

As NHP anticipated, MCAP elected to enforce its security interest. On January 3, 2000, MCAP sent NHP a formal notice of foreclosure on the collateral. The notification stated that MCAP would sell NHP’s partnership interests in KALP at a public auction on January 25, 2000 and enclosed the advertisement for the foreclosure sale that MCAP would place in the Official Notices section of The Washington Post on January 4, 11, and 18, 2000. These advertisements ran as planned and elicited three telephone inquiries from persons expressing interest in the sale. MCAP responded to these inquiries by providing additional information to the callers.

NHP raised no objection to the foreclosure arrangements, the notification it received, or the advertisements in The Washington Post. However, NHP found itself in a dispute with MCAP over whether the foreclosure would wipe out NHP’s right to be repaid approximately $3 million on account of outstanding partnership loans that it had extended to KALP. To preserve its rights as a creditor of KALP, NHP sued MCAP in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia on January 24, 2000, the day before the foreclosure sale was to be held. The complaint sought, inter alia, a judicial declaration that the Note was nonrecourse and that NHP’s loans would survive the foreclosure as valid, continuing debts of KALP.

Because of a snowstorm on January 25, and with NHP’s agreement, MCAP adjourned the public foreclosure sale to February 2, 2000. MCAP advertised the postponement in the Public Sale Notices section of The Washington Post on January 29. NHP did not object to this advertisement or seek to enjoin the foreclosure sale.

On February 2, the foreclosure sale of NHP’s interests in KALP went ahead at the District of Columbia offices of MCAP’s legal counsel. NHP’s representatives attended the auction but did not bid on the collateral securing the Note. MCAP was the only bidder and purchased the collater *307 al for $1,411,385.60. According to MCAP, its bid was discounted to reflect the fact that NHP’s lawsuit had created a $3 million cloud against the collateral. As the deferred principal and interest had risen by February 2 to $3,332,928, a deficiency of $1,921,542.40 remained. MCAP asserted that, under the terms of the Security Agreement, NHP was hable for this deficiency, and on February 24, 2000, MCAP made a formal, written demand on NHP for its payment. Disagreeing with that position, NHP refused MCAP’s demand.

In the ensuing months, NHP twice amended its complaint in Superior Court, eventually seeking a declaratory judgment (1) that it had no personal liability for any deficiency due on the Note after application of the foreclosure sale proceeds, and (2) that its loans to KALP were valid obligations not extinguished by the foreclosure and inherited by MCAP. 2 Count III of NHP’s Second Amended Complaint alleged that, by virtue of MCAP’s failure to repay NHP’s loans, the foreclosure sale had resulted in a de facto surplus, rather than a deficiency, to which NHP was entitled. MCAP answered NHP’s complaints and counterclaimed for a deficiency judgment. MCAP’s counterclaim also sought damages from NHP for mismanagement of KALP and waste of the Cherry Branch property.

The parties eventually filed cross motions for summary judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
935 A.2d 300, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 653, 2007 WL 3194090, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-housing-partnership-v-municipal-capital-appreciation-partners-i-dc-2007.