Pine v. Gibraltar Savings Association

427 S.W.2d 714, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 3031
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 25, 1968
Docket15239
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 427 S.W.2d 714 (Pine v. Gibraltar Savings Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pine v. Gibraltar Savings Association, 427 S.W.2d 714, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 3031 (Tex. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

BELL, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a summary judgment rendered in favor of appellee granting it recovery on the balance due on three promissory notes plus accrued interest and attorney’s fees of 10% of the principal *715 and interest as provided in the notes. The total amount of the judgment was $35,318.-30. This represented the total of the deficiencies on the notes after foreclosure by a substitute trustee on property covered by deeds of trust given to secure the notes. The judgment also denied appellant recovery on his counterclaim for damages for breach of contract, the amount asked for being $450,000.00.

Appellee’s Original Petition was filed February 1, 1967. It very precisely alleged the execution on April 18, 1964, of a note for $87,000.00; alleged its terms; attached a photographic copy and expressly made the copy a part thereof. The deed of trust given to secure the note was alleged and a photographic copy of it was attached to and made a part of the petition. There is then alleged that default was made in payment of the note, and there was a trustee’s sale of the property on December 6, 1966. A balance of $9,044.10 was alleged to be due and owing after the sale and that all just and lawful credits, offsets and payments had been allowed.

The petition then set up the note of November 17, 1964 in the amount of $217,-665.00, the deed of trust securing it, default in payment, the trustee’s sale of the property on December 6 and the balance due after sale in the amount of $20,760.66. Too, there were the allegations that all just and lawful credits, offsets and payments had been allowed. Photographic copies of each instrument were attached to and made a part of the petition.

What we have said about the above two notes is also in all respects true of the third note dated January 4, 1965, in the amount of $47,800.00, except a balance of $2,392.54 was alleged to be owing after the trustee’s sale.

While appellant’s original answer does not appear in the transcript, appellee’s motion for summary judgment which was filed March 10, 1967, recites appellant had filed an answer. A statement in appellee’s brief asserts it consisted of a general denial.

Appellee filed its unsworn motion for summary judgment based on its pleadings, appellant’s answer, a supporting affidavit, and the original trustee’s resignation and the instruments appointing a substitute trustee, photographic copies of which instruments were attached. Also attached, though not referred to in the motion itself, were photographic copies of the notices of sale posted by the substitute trustee. The affidavit of Charles E. Williams recites that he adopted all statements, allegations and facts set out in appellee’s Original Petition and he “knows of his own knowledge they are true and correct.” He further swears to facts which show the validity of the sales by him as trustee. In fact, at this point appellee would have been undoubtedly entitled to judgment as prayed for.

Hearing on the motion was set for April 10. On April 7 appellant filed his First Amended Answer which is not sworn to, the substance of which was that appellant was not indebted to appellee because ap-pellee breached various development contracts for the orderly development of Glen-wood Bayou Subdivision and such breach resulted in damage to him in excess of the amount sued for by appellee, as would be shown in appellant’s cross-action which was being filed.

In the petition setting up the cross-action it is stated that prior to and after April 21, 1964, appellant entered into a development program for the construction of homes and single family dwellings on acreage in Brazoria County, some of which was owned by him and some of which was to be acquired by him. The development program was alleged to include (1) basic subdivision loan, (2) interim construction loans for the construction of single family residences, and (3) term mortgage loans to purchasers of such single family dwellings, based on a percentage of an appraised value of the real property and improvements thereon, sold by appellant and purchased by qualified purchasers under the terms of the loan program. The loan and development pro *716 gram referred to up to' this point was that contemplated by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board that could be financed by financial institutions such as appellee.

After recital of the above, appellant alleged that on April 17,1964, appellee issued its written loan commitment to appellant (emphasis ours unless otherwise indicated) in the amount of $217,665.00, to be secured by a first lien on 108 lots in the subdivision and the water and sewer plant, for a period of not to’ exceed three years, for which appellant paid appellee a 2% earned commitment fee, requiring appellant to commence construction of at least ten residences within six months and to complete residences on all lots within three years. Further it was alleged the commitment permitted partial releases of the basic lien upon the payment of 70% of the appraised value of each lot, plus accrued interest. Appellant then alleged that based upon “the loan commitment dated April 17, 1963 (probably meaning 1964) appellant at his own cost and expense proceeded to develop the subdivision” and on November 17, 1964, borrowed “under the terms of such loan commitment” the sum of $217,665.00 and mortgaged various improved properties and two additional parts of reserve property on which the water and sewer plant had been constructed. Appellant asserted he submitted twenty interim loan requests but appellee approved only four. Too, he alleged that on completion of these four houses he contracted to sell them to persons who qualified as purchasers but appellee refused to> approve loans to the prospective purchasers so appellant could not sell the homes. Appellant further alleged refusal by appellee to approve plans for additional single family dwellings or to make interim construction loans.

Appellant then alleges a breach by ap-pellee of its various agreements in that appellee failed and refused to (1) advance interim construction funds for houses to be erected in order for appellant to comply with the terms of appellee’s loan commitment, and (2) appellee failed to make term amortized loans to purchasers of erected homes, so that the subdivision could be developed orderly in strict compliance with the terms of appellee’s loan commitment.

We feel the above allegations of fact assert that appellee executed its written loan commitment obligating it to make interim construction loans for individual houses and then to finance the purchasers of the homes constructed by appellant, and that it breached such agreement in these respects.

We have not noticed the allegations of appellant with regard to the failure or refusal of appellee to comply with requirements of the Veterans Administration so it would make available home loans for purchases by veterans because we nowhere find in the cross-petition an allegation of any obligation on the part of appellee under any agreement with appellant to- do so.

Appellant alleges foreclosure under the deeds of trust on December 6, 1966, after appellee had agreed on November 1 to1 extend foreclosure for thirty days. Notice of the trustee’s sale to be held on December 6 would have to be posted by November 14.

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Bluebook (online)
427 S.W.2d 714, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 3031, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pine-v-gibraltar-savings-association-texapp-1968.