Rollins v. Odom

519 So. 2d 652, 1988 WL 800
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 12, 1988
DocketBR-442 to BR-444
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 519 So. 2d 652 (Rollins v. Odom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rollins v. Odom, 519 So. 2d 652, 1988 WL 800 (Fla. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

519 So.2d 652 (1988)

George E. ROLLINS, Margaret Rollins, Elizabeth Rollins, Kenneth Lenard Rollins, et al., Rayfield Rollins, et al., Annaleese T. Mobley, Nathaniel Oliff and George L. Rollins, As Trustees of the New Hope Church of God Deliverance, Inc., Appellants,
v.
J.D. ODOM, Jr., and Vernie Odom, His Wife, Appellees.

Nos. BR-442 to BR-444.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.

January 12, 1988.
Rehearing Denied February 25, 1988.

*653 Bryce W. Ackerman of Savage, Krim, Simons, Fuller & Ackerman, P.A., Ocala, for appellants.

James S. Quincey, Sandra G. Smith, Robert McGinnis of Clayton, Johnston, Quincey, Ireland, Felder, Gadd, Smith & Roundtree, Gainesville, for appellees.

JOANOS, Judge.

This is a consolidated appeal from final judgments of foreclosure. The three points presented for our review are: (1) whether the statutory usury penalty was correctly applied, (2) whether acceleration of the mortgage interest rate resulted in criminal usury, and (3) whether consideration should have been given to evidence of additional interest in the initial transaction. We reverse.

Briefly stated, the voluminous record in this case reflects that the three mortgages which are the subject of this appeal all pertain to a single loan. The original mortgage was executed on July 9, 1980, by George, Margaret, and Elizabeth Rollins, to *654 secure a loan in the amount of $66,850.00, from J.D. and Vernie Odom. The mortgaged property consisted of a forty-acre tract of land, with a house and two other structures situated thereon. The property was owned by George Rollins, and his wife Margaret, and George's mother, Elizabeth. The loan was for a one-year period, with a stated interest rate of fourteen percent. On the same day that George, Margaret, and Elizabeth mortgaged the forty acres to the Odoms, the following documents were executed in connection with the same tract of land: (1) warranty deeds conveying 10 acres to Rayfield Rollins, 10 acres to Kevin Rollins, and 7.5 acres to New Hope Church of God Deliverance, Inc. (the Church); (2) mortgages and promissory notes executed in the amounts of $18,500.00 by Rayfield Rollins, $18,500.00 by Kevin Rollins, and $14,500.00 by the Church; and (3) assignments of these three mortgages to the Odoms. Rayfield and Kevin Rollins are sons of George and Margaret Rollins. In August 1980, George, Margaret, and Elizabeth Rollins conveyed approximately two acres to their youngest son Kenneth, for a stated sale price of $3,502.80. All documents pertaining to the forty-acre Rollins tract were prepared by the Odoms' attorney.

On July 9, 1981, payment was due on the mortgages. The George Rollins family had been unable to obtain alternative financing, and were in default on the first mortgage. In a letter dated December 30, 1981, the Odoms' attorney advised that the total amount due included: (1) interest at the rate of 14 percent from July 9, 1980, to July 9, 1981 — $9,359.00; (2) interest at the rate of 18 percent from July 9, 1981, to January 15, 1982 — $6,264.30; and (3) attorney's fees — $886.16, for a total amount of $83,359.46.

On January 18, 1982, the parties entered into mortgage and note modification agreements. These agreements restructured the loan, spreading repayment over a ten-year period, at a stated interest rate of 14 percent. Also in January 1982, the Odoms required Kenneth Rollins to execute a mortgage and promissory note in the amount of $12,762.86, with payment to be made directly to the Odoms. Although the modification agreements purportedly discounted the original mortgage liability to $49,301.50, George and Margaret Rollins were required to guarantee the promissory notes of their children and the church. This resulted in a total principal debt of $113,564.36.

Before Mr. Odom decided to take a mortgage on the Rollins tract, he inspected the land and its improvements. Based on his experience in land transactions, he determined the property was worth $80,000.00. According to his testimony, Mr. Odom considered the land and the improvements thereon constituted sufficient security for the loan. At the time of the initial transaction, Mr. Odom charged a 10 percent brokerage commission and a 14 percent interest rate. The modification agreement came into being when Mr. Odom advised Mr. Rollins that the alternative was foreclosure.

The record reflects that, in addition to other enterprises, the Odoms buy and sell land, and lend money on land. Mrs. Odom is a licensed real estate broker, and handles the business records and books for herself and her husband. For the most part, Mr. Odom collected the payments due in connection with the George Rollins transaction and then advised Mrs. Odom regarding the amount of payment received — at which point Mrs. Odom would post the payments on a ledger sheet. The system appears to have been casual at best, with the accuracy of the accounting records dependent upon whether Mr. Odom remembered to advise Mrs. Odom of payments he had received. We note the Odoms' testimony is at times conflicting with respect to payments received, and these contradictions resulted in possible inaccuracies in the final judgments. The record also reflects that Mrs. Odom received a mortgage brokerage commission of $6,635.00 in connection with the George Rollins transaction.

None of the $66,850.00 loaned in connection with the mortgage transaction was paid directly to George Rollins or any member of his family. Instead, the closing *655 statement prepared in connection with the transaction indicates the funds were allocated in the following manner:

  First Federal Savings & Loans Association of
    Bronson (Satisf. of foreclosure)              $49,068.23
  Walkup Lumber Co. (Satisf. of Lien)                 424.26
  Abel Supply, Inc. (Satisf. of Judgment)             178.92
  M.K. Flowers & Assoc. (Satisf. of Lien)           1,333.90
  S.E. First National Bank of Miami —
    (Judgment)                                         56.48
  Robert W. Morrions (Satisf. of Judgment)          1,250.00
  W.R. Grace & Co. (Satisf. of Judgment)              169.08
  Sportsman's World (payoff debt)                   4,500.00
  Closing Costs re loan and sale
    transactions (see prior page for
    itemization)                                    9,869.13
                                                    ________
                                                               $66,850.00
                                                               __________

Included within the closing cost total of $9,869.13, was the $6,635.00 mortgage brokerage commission paid to Mrs. Odom. Mr. Rollins's testimony indicates the $4,500.00 payment to Sportsman's World was repayment of $2,000.00 which Mr. Odom loaned to Mr. Rollins some six months prior to the mortgage transaction. Sportsman's World was a business owned by Mr. Odom.

The testimony of Kevin and Rayfield Rollins establishes that they executed mortgages and promissory notes at the request of their father. According to Kevin Rollins, he entered into the transaction because his father wanted to keep the land in the family. The Kevin Rollins mortgage was not included in the foreclosure proceedings which are the subject of this appeal.

Final judgments of foreclosure were entered in November 1986. After proceedings were held on appellants' motions for rehearing, the trial court entered amended final judgments of foreclosure. In Case No. 84-209 (the George, Margaret, Elizabeth and Kenneth Rollins mortgages), the trial court found the interest rate on the 1980 mortgage resulted in civil usury.

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Bluebook (online)
519 So. 2d 652, 1988 WL 800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rollins-v-odom-fladistctapp-1988.