People's Bank v. Bilmor Building Corp.

614 A.2d 456, 28 Conn. App. 809, 1992 Conn. App. LEXIS 343
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1992
Docket10642
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 614 A.2d 456 (People's Bank v. Bilmor Building Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People's Bank v. Bilmor Building Corp., 614 A.2d 456, 28 Conn. App. 809, 1992 Conn. App. LEXIS 343 (Colo. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Dupont, C. J.

The principal issue to be decided in this mortgage foreclosure action is whether a prejudgment attachment may be obtained, as additional security, to secure recovery of an anticipated deficiency judgment when there is an expectation that the property securing the debt may not be sufficient to satisfy the debt. We conclude that such an attachment may be obtained upon the requisite determination of probable cause.

The salient facts are not in dispute. On September 14, 1989, the defendant Bilmor Building Corporation (Bilmor), through its president, the defendant Eamon F. Moran, executed a promissory note in favor of the plaintiff, People’s Bank (bank),1 in the amount of $650,000. Moran personally guaranteed payment of the debt. As further security for the debt, Bilmor contemporaneously mortgaged to the plaintiff its interest in certain real property located in the town of Bloomfield and the mortgage was subsequently recorded on the Bloomfield land records. In December, 1990, Bilmor and Moran defaulted on the note by failing to make timely payments under the terms of the note.

The plaintiff instituted the present action on July 17, 1991, seeking inter alia, foreclosure of the mortgage, a deficiency judgment against the defendants, and money damages. In conjunction with this action, the plaintiff, through its attorney, issued a $705,000 ex parte prejudgment attachment against Bilmor’s interest in two properties located in the town of Windsor. The complaint alleged that a lis pendens relating to [811]*811these properties had also been recorded on the land records. The attachment was issued and recorded on July 25,1992, without prior notice or hearing and without any action by a court, pursuant to a clause in the note that expressly waived the defendants’ rights to a notice and hearing,2 as permitted by General Statutes § 52-278f.3

Bilmor and Moran subsequently, on August 21,1991, moved to dissolve the prejudgment attachment.4 At the [812]*812scheduled hearing on the motion, the defendants claimed that the attachment was improper because it was filed without a court hearing in violation of law, that the attachment was based on the assumption that a deficiency judgment would enter in the foreclosure action, that no deficiency had yet been found to exist, and that the sole remedy in an action to foreclose a mortgage is against the real property liened by the mortgage. The motion to dissolve was granted on September 16,1991, from the bench by the court, A. Aron-son, J. A memorandum of decision was later filed on November 22, 1991.

After the defendants moved to dissolve the ex parte attachment, the plaintiff, on September 10,1991, filed an application for a prejudgment remedy that was based not on General Statutes § 52-278f, but on § 52-278d. A scheduled hearing on the application was held on October 7,1991, and the application was denied by the same court on October 25, 1991. Pursuant to the plaintiff’s motion for articulation, the trial court issued a memorandum of decision as to the denial of the application on January 14, 1992.

On December 2,1991, the trial court, Freed, J., rendered a judgment of strict foreclosure against the mortgaged property. Both defendants had previously been defaulted for failure to disclose a defense. The court found the total amount of the debt, including appropriate fees, to be $705,890.03 and the value of the property to be $605,000. The law days passed without redemption and title to the Bloomfield property vested in the plaintiff. After the judgment of strict foreclosure [813]*813was entered, the plaintiff moved for a deficiency judgment, which was granted on February 10,1992, by the trial court, Salter, J.5

The trial court, Aronson, J., dissolved the ex parte attachment and denied the application for an attachment because it concluded, as a matter of law, that a mortgagee may not “obtain additional security for a mortgage debt based solely on an expectation that the property securing the debt may be inadequate” and that, until a deficiency judgment is rendered, there can be no probable cause to support a plaintiff’s application for a prejudgment remedy or the plaintiff’s ex parte real estate attachment. At the hearing on the defendants’ motion to dissolve the attachment, there were representations by the attorneys for the parties as to the amount of the debt and the value of the property as of that date. At the hearing on the plaintiff’s application for a prejudgment remedy, the plaintiff offered to present testimony of a bank official that the debt exceeded $690,000 and the testimony of a real estate appraiser that the fair market value of the property was $610,000. The plaintiff also relied on the affidavit filed with the § 52-278Í attachment to establish probable cause. The defendants conceded that the plaintiff’s figures were accurate. The court, however, allowed no evidence because of its view of the law.

[814]*814The determination of a deficiency, according to the trial court, could be made only following a hearing on a motion for a deficiency judgment, which could only occur after a judgment of foreclosure had been rendered. Therefore, because the existence or amount of any deficiency had not yet been determined as of the dates of the hearings on the motion to dissolve the prejudgment remedy attachment and on the application for a prejudgment remedy, the former was granted, and the latter denied. The memoranda of decision as to both the motion and application are virtually identical as to their rationale.

The bank appealed from the dissolution of the attachment and from the denial of its application for a prejudgment remedy and filed a motion to stay the dissolution of the attachment pursuant to General Statutes § 52-278l (c). The trial court granted the plaintiffs motion to stay the dissolution of the prejudgment attachment.

The resolution of the appeal from the granting of the defendants’ motion to dissolve the attachment and the resolution of the appeal from the denial of the plaintiff’s application to obtain an attachment require the same analysis. We, therefore, discuss them together unless otherwise noted.

The plaintiff claims that the prejudgment attachment should not have been dissolved because it was a legally allowable remedy in a mortgage foreclosure action that also sought a deficiency judgment and damages. The plaintiff further argues that it should have been allowed to present evidence relating to the merits of whether probable cause existed for the attachment. The plaintiff also claims that the court improperly denied its application for a prejudgment remedy.

The defendants assert that the “contingent” nature of a deficiency judgment, coupled with General Stat[815]*815utes §§ 49-1,49-14, and 49-28, has the net effect of prohibiting prejudgment attachments to secure recovery of an anticipated deficiency judgment in foreclosure cases. The foundation of the defendants’ argument is that a deficiency judgment does not “accrue” unless and until an ascertainable dollar amount of the deficiency is established at the time of foreclosure, and that, until then, the deficiency judgment is merely contingent. The defendants maintain that the deficiency judgment is contingent until the time of the judgment of foreclosure for two reasons.

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Bluebook (online)
614 A.2d 456, 28 Conn. App. 809, 1992 Conn. App. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-bank-v-bilmor-building-corp-connappct-1992.