Progressive Acquisition, Inc. v. Lytle

806 P.2d 239, 1991 WL 17380
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedFebruary 13, 1991
Docket890587-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 806 P.2d 239 (Progressive Acquisition, Inc. v. Lytle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Progressive Acquisition, Inc. v. Lytle, 806 P.2d 239, 1991 WL 17380 (Utah Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

BENCH, Judge:

Progressive Acquisition appeals a summary judgment granted in favor of Ezra and Mae Lytle. This case was initiated by Mountain Fuel in order to condemn an easement across property subject to a trust deed naming the Lytles as beneficiaries. Subsequent to the initiation of this suit, and prior to the award of the condemnation proceeds, the property was sold at trustee's sale. The trial court ruled that the trustee’s sale was valid and therefore awarded the entire condemnation proceeds to the Lytles as sole owners of the property. We affirm.

FACTS

The Lytles were the original owners of the subject real property. In May of 1980, the Lytles sold the property to H. Clark Houston and Associates. The sale was financed by a note secured by a trust deed naming Houston as trustor and the Lytles as beneficiaries. In October of that year, Houston assigned its rights in the property to Progressive.

Progressive became delinquent on the note. A notice of default was filed with the county recorder in order to foreclose the trust deed pursuant to its power of sale provision and in accordance with Utah Code Ann. § 57-1-24 (1990). The notice of default also declared the entire debt immediately due and payable to the Lytles as permitted by the trust deed and note. 1

Before the property was sold by trustee’s sale, however, Progressive filed a petition under chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Hawaii. Under section 362 of the Bankruptcy Code, the filing of the petition automatically stayed the impending foreclosure sale. 11 U.S.C. § 362(a). Approximately one year later, the Lytles moved the bankruptcy court for relief from the automatic stay in order to complete foreclosure on the property. The bankruptcy court denied Lytles’ motion, but it did require that the Lytles be provided with “adequate protection” while the stay remained in effect.

The order for adequate protection required Progressive to pay within five days all delinquent interest owed to the Lytles, which amounted to $148,000. Progressive was also required to make twelve monthly interest payments of $7,598.45. The bankruptcy court ordered that if the lump sum *241 and monthly payments were made, the stay would remain in effect for one year during which time Progressive could become “current on all delinquent installment payments due and payable under the reinstated Promissory Note” (emphasis added).

Progressive made the lump sum and monthly payments, but it was unable to become current within the allotted period. The Lytles again moved for relief from the stay, and the bankruptcy court gave Progressive an extension of time to become current. Progressive, however, was still unable to cure the default. The bankruptcy court then lifted the stay on June 29, 1988.

UTAH COURT PROCEEDINGS

On September 12, 1988, Mountain Fuel initiated the present action to condemn an easement across the property for a gas line. Since no foreclosure sale had yet occurred, both Progressive and the Lytles were named by Mountain Fuel as defendants along with several others with possible interests in the property. Mountain Fuel asked the trial court to “determine and adjudicate the amounts, if any, to be paid to each of the defendants.”

On September 28, 1988, the trustee executed and mailed a notice of trustee’s sale scheduled for October 25, 1988. He did so without executing a new notice of default, choosing instead to rely on the prebank-ruptcy notice of default. When Progressive received the notice of sale, it notified the Lytles and the trustee that it viewed the scheduled sale to be defective absent a new notice of default. Progressive explained that it believed the note was “reinstated” by order of the bankruptcy court and requested that the notice of trustee’s sale be cancelled and a new notice of default be filed.

In response to Progressive’s letter, Ly-tles’ counsel sent a letter to Progressive indicating that he had reviewed the bankruptcy court’s order and that he did not believe that the issue of “reinstatement,” as that term is used in Utah Code Ann. § 57-1-31 (1990), was ever litigated, considered, or even at issue before the bankruptcy court. He indicated that such a statutory “reinstatement” could only occur when the trustor pays the entire delinquent amount then due. He concluded that because Progressive had never cured the default by paying the principal portion of the installments due under the terms of the note, the bankruptcy court had simply used the term “reinstatement” in a gratuitous manner and that the note had not been reinstated under Utah law. 2

The trustee’s sale proceeded as scheduled on October 25,1988. The Lytles made the highest bid and the trustee deeded the property back to them. On November 11, 1988, the Lytles moved to be substituted in place of all other defendants claiming an interest in the property because the Lytles had, by virtue of the trustee’s sale, succeeded to all interests of the other defendants. Progressive objected, arguing that its interest was not foreclosed by the trustee’s sale. The trial court granted the motion as to all relevant defendants except Progressive.

The Lytles then moved for a summary judgment, claiming that Progressive had no interest in the condemnation award. In response, Progressive asserted that the trustee’s sale was invalid. Progressive argued that the Lytles should have filed a new notice of default following the bankruptcy court’s “reinstatement” of the note. *242 Progressive did not contend that the Lytles were not entitled to receive the condemnation award pursuant to the trust deed, but rather, that Progressive was entitled to a credit against its indebtedness under the note.

In an effort to establish that the note had not been “reinstated” by the bankruptcy court, the Lytles moved the bankruptcy, court to strike the term “reinstated” from its order requiring adequate protection. On January 18, 1989, the bankruptcy court interpreted the order as follows:

By the phrase “reinstated promissory note,” the Court did not mean that the note was reinstated under Utah law. The Court meant that the Court was de-aceelerating payment on the note and that the debtor was to pay according to the orders of the Court and to cure the delinquent amounts within the one-year period. Thereafter, the debtor could either pay off the note, become current thereon or return the property to the Lytles. The Court did not intend to imply that the note was reinstated under Utah law because there was no discussion regarding the Utah law at the hearing on the motion for relief from stay.

Following this clarification by the bankruptcy court, the Utah court concluded that the trustee’s sale was valid and granted Lytles’ motion for summary judgment.

Progressive raises two issues on appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
806 P.2d 239, 1991 WL 17380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/progressive-acquisition-inc-v-lytle-utahctapp-1991.