National Mortg. Co. v. Williams

357 So. 2d 934, 1978 Miss. LEXIS 2518
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1978
Docket49591
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 357 So. 2d 934 (National Mortg. Co. v. Williams) 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
National Mortg. Co. v. Williams, 357 So. 2d 934, 1978 Miss. LEXIS 2518 (Mich. 1978).

Opinion

357 So.2d 934 (1978)

NATIONAL MORTGAGE COMPANY
v.
Margaret A. WILLIAMS.

No. 49591.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

April 19, 1978.
Rehearing Denied May 10, 1978.

Roy D. Powell, Robert W. King, Alex A. Alston, Jr., Jackson, for appellant.

Michael J. Malouf, Jackson, for appellee.

Before SMITH, BROOM and LEE, JJ.

LEE, Justice, for the Court:

National Mortgage Company has appealed from a judgment entered against it by the Circuit Court of Hinds County at the suit of Margaret A. Williams in the sum of three thousand seven hundred eighty-five dollars ($3,785) actual damages and twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) punitive damages. Williams' suit was predicated upon alleged wrongful foreclosures of a mortgage.

National assigns the following errors in the trial below:

(1) The foreclosure(s) by the appellant were valid foreclosure(s) and were commenced and completed at a time when the appellee was delinquent in the installment payments and after she had failed to tender the delinquency and the circuit court erred in submitting the case to the jury on any issue.

*935 (2) The circuit court committed reversible error in overruling appellant's motion for a directed verdict when appellee had rested her case and further committed reversible error when it refused to grant appellee's preemptory [sic] instruction after both parties had rested.

(3) The circuit court erred in submitting to the jury the issue of punitive damages inasmuch as appellant was within its legal right in commencing and concluding the foreclosure and no cause of action accrues when one does what he clearly has a legal right to do.

(4) The circuit court erred in admitting on behalf of appellee evidence of actual damages, including expenses of moving from the property in question, redeeming her property from the moving and storage company, and attorney's fees incurred in defending the foreclosure.

PART I

Assigned Errors 1, 2 and 3 will be discussed under this Part I.

Williams purchased a house in Jackson for seventeen thousand three hundred dollars ($17,300). She executed a note secured by first mortgage or deed of trust on the property, payable in monthly installments of one hundred forty-seven dollars forty cents ($147.40). The loan was guaranteed by the Federal Housing Administration and subsidized under Section 235 of the Federal Housing Act so as to require Williams to pay eighty dollars seventy-one cents ($80.71) of the amount due each month, the Federal Housing Authority paying the remainder of sixty-six dollars sixty-nine cents ($66.69).

Payments began June 1, 1973, and the first several installments were duly paid.

On September 18, 1973 National notified Williams that the note and security instrument had been assigned to it. She was instructed to make future payments to National and was told that she would be credited with the payments she had made to the assignor.

Some time afterward a controversy arose between Williams and National as to the state of the account and the latter rejected and returned to Williams two (2) payments which had been mailed in by her, informing Williams that instead of two payments she owed four (4) payments at that time. Williams steadfastly maintained that the two payments, which she had sent in, made her account current but National continued to insist that she was in default. An offer by Williams to produce her receipts for the alleged missing payments was rejected with the statement from National that "they meant nothing." She was told, moreover, that National would continue to refuse to accept payments unless and until the whole amount claimed by National was paid.

In this condition of stalemate, National began foreclosure proceedings, although Williams continued her attempts to explain and to show that she was not delinquent. National told her that to stop the foreclosure then in progress would cost her more than two thousand dollars ($2,000). At this point Williams offered to make the payments but declined to pay attorneys' fees and publication costs demanded by National.

The foreclosure proceeded to sale and the property was purchased by National. Afterward, National brought suit in the county court against Williams for the purpose of dispossessing her. This suit then came to trial in due course but was dismissed by the court when it developed that at the time of the foreclosure Williams had not been delinquent in fact, but that the apparent delinquency resulted because National had failed to give her credit for payments which she had made to its assignor, the original owner and holder of the note and mortgage.

The general rule with reference to wrongful foreclosures is stated in 59 C.J.S. Mortgages § 491, at 774 (1949):

"A mortgagor is entitled to recover damages for a wrongful or fraudulent foreclosure of the mortgage, as where an unlawful foreclosure is attempted solely from a malicious desire to injure the mortgagor; or he may recover damages *936 where the foreclosure is conducted negligently or in bad faith, to his detriment... ."

The rule is stated also in 55 Am.Jur.2d Mortgages § 535, at 516-517 (1971):

"In general, the authorities support the rule that an action at law by the mortgagor against the mortgagee will lie to recover damages for a wrongful foreclosure — that is, a foreclosure without right, which would ordinarily be ineffective and invalid irrespective of the manner in which it is executed. Generally, in such circumstances, the mortgagor has the right to elect between (1) having the sale set aside and (2) recovering from the mortgagee the damages suffered as a result of the wrongful foreclosure.
Actions at law for damages for premature foreclosures have been sustained, particularly where a required demand of payment was not made to accelerate maturity, although there is authority to the effect that a right to maintain such an action may be lost by electing to proceed in equity for the return of the equity of redemption and obtaining a decree ordering restoration of the property.
There is authority to the effect that an action at law for damages lies for an improper execution of a rightful foreclosure. However, the contrary view, that an action at law does not lie for damages for an improper execution of a rightful foreclosure, has been taken, at least in the absence of a preconceived plan thereby to carry out a fraudulent purpose; the view is that the remedy, if any, is in equity.
Compensatory damages for wrongful foreclosure have been held to be the reasonable market value of the property on the date of foreclosure. Punitive damages have also been allowed where the foreclosure was found to have been pursued with malice.
The remedies in equity for wrongful, improper, or premature foreclosures are considered elsewhere."

In Milner Hotels, Inc. v. Brent, 207 Miss. 892, 43 So.2d 654 (1949), the elements permitting punitive damages were stated as follows:

"The first assignment of error was to the effect that the appellee was entitled to only nominal damages and was not entitled to recover punitive damages. It is well established law in this state that the elements allowing punitive damages are: (1) a wrongful act, (2) intentionally performed, (3) gross disregard of rights, and (4) wilfullness.
This principle was clearly laid down in Illinois Central R. Co. v. Ramsay, 157 Miss. 83, 127 So.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
357 So. 2d 934, 1978 Miss. LEXIS 2518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-mortg-co-v-williams-miss-1978.