Neusteter Realty Co. v. Holzman-Demuth Noteholders (In Re Neusteter Realty Co.)

79 B.R. 30, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12068
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedJune 23, 1987
DocketCiv. A. No. 87-M-0058, Bankruptcy Nos. 85-B-07034 M to 85-B-07036 M
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 79 B.R. 30 (Neusteter Realty Co. v. Holzman-Demuth Noteholders (In Re Neusteter Realty Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neusteter Realty Co. v. Holzman-Demuth Noteholders (In Re Neusteter Realty Co.), 79 B.R. 30, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12068 (D. Colo. 1987).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

MATSCH, District Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment awarding $85,473.02 on a secured claim in a Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceeding over the debtors’ objections. The dispute arises from the sale of property which was subject to a deed of trust to secure promissory notes held by creditors who are identified as the Holzman-Demuth Noteholders, ap-pellees (“noteholders”).

The appellants stopped making the required monthly payments on the notes in August of 1985. On November 8, 1985 the noteholders sent a letter to the appellants, notifying them of the default in the payment of the October and November installments and declaring the following:

Under the provisions of the foregoing promissory notes, if this default remains uncured for ten days, we have the right under the notes to accelerate the maturity on all the principal and interest due under the notes and to declare such principal and interest immediately due and payable. Accordingly, unless the default on all the notes listed above are [sic] cured within the next ten days, I hereby give you notice that we intend to accelerate and pursue appropriate legal remedies.

Record on Appeal, Vol. I, p. 201 (emphasis added).

The debtors made no payments and filed their voluntary bankruptcy petitions on the tenth day, November 18, 1985.

The issues raised on appeal have been briefed adequately and the decisional process would not be significantly aided by oral argument. Accordingly, oral argument is not needed under Bankruptcy Rule 8012.

I. Did the Bankruptcy Judge Err in Awarding Interest at the Maturity Rate Based on the Acceleration of the Debt?

The notes provided for a 10% rate of interest until maturity when a default rate of 18% became applicable. The bankruptcy judge found and concluded that the November 8, 1985 letter “was sufficient for both purposes of declaring a default and acceleration of the indebtedness.” Findings Of Fact, Record On Appeal, Vol. I, p. 259. The effect was to award the noteholders $70,511.21 as the difference in interest rates to the time of the sale of the property when the disputed amounts were placed in escrow.

The appellants contend that this letter did not accelerate the debt because (1) the notes provided for separate notices and (2) a separate notice is required under the common law of Colorado.. In support of the first assertion, the appellants rely on the following language in the notes:

Maturity of all principal and interest due hereunder may be accelerated and such principal and interest declared immediately due and payable, at the option of the holder of this note (i) upon the occurrence of a default in the payment of an installment due hereunder which remains uncured after ten (10) days notice

Appellants brief, p. 4 (emphasis added in brief; quoting Record On Appeal, Vol. I, p. 170).

This language does not support the argument. The parties did not agree to a requirement of a second notice if the intent to accelerate is made clear in the notice of default. The election to accelerate was made known to the debtors in the letter of November 8, 1985.

The deed of trust, which the appellants also signed, explicitly provides that upon default the noteholders “may, without notice or demand, declare all of the Secured Obligations immediately due and payable in *32 full.” Record On Appeal, Vol. I, p. 192. That language is entirely consistent with the conclusion that no separate notice of the election to accelerate was required.

The appellants also argue that well established common law in other states requires a separate notice of acceleration after notice of default and expiration of the time to cure the default. The terms of the note declare that Colorado law will govern all disputes arising under it (Record On Appeal, Vol. I, p. 171). The appellants urge the law of other jurisdictions on the claim that no Colorado court has decided the question under similar circumstances.

The appellants ignore Hendron v. Bolander, 101 Colo. 414, 74 P.2d 706 (1937). In response to the debtor’s contention that notice must be given before an acceleration option may be exercised, the Supreme Court of Colorado held that “[t]he holder of ... a note need not give the makers notice of his election to accelerate the maturity upon default unless there is some provision in the note therefore, of which the note here is devoid.” Id. at 708. The case is dispositive on the question of whether Colorado law requires two distinct notices to effect acceleration regardless of the terms of the note.

The cases cited by the appellants give the following rationale for requiring two separate notices:

Notice of intent to accelerate is necessary in order to provide the debtor an opportunity to cure his default prior to the harsh consequences of acceleration and foreclosure. Proper notice that the debt has been accelerated ... cuts off the debtor’s right to cure his default and gives notice that the entire debt is due and payable.

Ogden v. Gibraltar Savings Assoc., 640 S.W.2d 232, 234 (S.Ct.Tex.1982).

In the present case the appellants received a clear notice warning them of the “harsh consequences of acceleration” should their default remain uncured for ten days. By the terms of the notes and deed of trust the appellants were aware that a second notice was not required to accomplish the actual acceleration. That awareness is shown by the fact that the bankruptcy petitions were filed on the tenth day after receipt of the notice.

Furthermore, the requirement of a second notice is an equitable principle and in this case the equities lie, not with the appellants, but with the appellees. Rather than responding with the payment of the delinquent installments, the debtors blocked foreclosure of the deed of trust by obtaining the protection of the Bankruptcy Code.

The appellants have also argued that after they filed their petitions the automatic stay provision of Section 362 of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 362, prevented the noteholders from later taking any actions which would effect acceleration. They state in their reply brief that:

“[t]he Debtors agree that, were acceleration under the notes automatic, Section 362 would not serve to stay that acceleration. Here, however, a notice of acceleration was required. The giving of that notice was stayed by Section 362, and the Noteholders made no effort to obtain relief from the stay in order to give the requisite notice.”

Appellants’ Reply Brief, p. 4.

Because neither Colorado law nor the terms of the agreement between the parties required a second notice, the acceleration did occur automatically at the end of the ten day period. The appellants’ contention is irrelevant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 B.R. 30, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neusteter-realty-co-v-holzman-demuth-noteholders-in-re-neusteter-realty-cod-1987.