Ronnie Charles Frye v. General Electric Credit Corporation

859 F.2d 921, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 13973, 1988 WL 104960
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 7, 1988
Docket87-6146
StatusUnpublished

This text of 859 F.2d 921 (Ronnie Charles Frye v. General Electric Credit Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ronnie Charles Frye v. General Electric Credit Corporation, 859 F.2d 921, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 13973, 1988 WL 104960 (6th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

859 F.2d 921

Unpublished Disposition
NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
Ronnie Charles FRYE, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
GENERAL ELECTRIC CREDIT CORPORATION, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 87-6146.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

Oct. 7, 1988.

Before BOYCE F. MARTIN Jr. and DAVID A. NELSON, Circuit Judges, and GEORGE CLIFTON EDWARDS, Jr., Senior Circuit Judge.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff Ronnie Charles Frye, a Knoxville real estate investor, borrowed funds from General Electric Credit Corporation (GECC) to finance the purchase of an apartment complex. Frye encountered financial difficulties, and GECC foreclosed the mortgages it had taken on various apartment buildings owned by Frye. Frye sued GECC for breach of contract, fraud, intentional interference with business relations, inducement of breach of contract, and usury. The district court granted GECC's motion for summary judgment on each of these claims, and Frye has appealed. We believe the district court's disposition of each of these claims was proper, and we shall affirm the judgment.

* In late 1978 Frye agreed to buy the Crestridge apartment complex contingent on getting the necessary financing. After various meetings and conversations with Ron Windsor, a loan officer at GECC's Atlanta office, GECC issued a commitment letter for a loan of $2,050,000. At the Crestridge closing Frye signed a promissory note for $2,050,000, repayable on March 25, 1982, at an interest rate of 12.5 percent for the first year and 3.5 percentage points above the prime rate for the second and third years. As security, Frye gave GECC deeds of trust on Crestridge and two other Knoxville apartment complexes he owned, Concorde and Grande.

Frye was unable to pay interest on the loan after April 1, 1980. The parties orally agreed to a "bow tie" loan modification under which Frye would be required for a time to pay the interest only up to a maximum rate of 15 percent, with any interest accruing above this rate to be payable at the maturity of the loan. This arrangement was later confirmed in writing.

In August of 1981 Frye and a business associate, Rex Moon, went to Atlanta to meet with Windsor and Van Caswell, another GECC officer, to discuss Frye's interest in converting Crestridge to condominiums. In his complaint Frye alleges that Windsor and Caswell orally agreed at that meeting to extend the Crestridge loan for 18 months. GECC denies that any such agreement was made, and points out that Frye's allegation is inconsistent with his sworn deposition testimony. Furthermore, GECC points to a letter from Moon to Caswell, written two months after the alleged contract was formed, in which Moon asks GECC to "consider" an extension of the existing loan. A letter sent by Moon several months later "request[s] ... an extension."

On March 15, 1982, Caswell called Frye to remind him that the loan was due to be paid in full on March 26. The next day Caswell sent Frye a letter confirming the amount due and giving instructions on how it should be paid. Frye was unable to pay on the appointed date. Various attempts to reach agreement on repayment were unsuccessful.

In July of 1982 Frye filed for bankruptcy. The parties subsequently entered into a stipulation in the bankruptcy court, agreeing that the automatic stay with respect to Crestridge would end on February 28, 1983, while the automatic stay with respect to Concorde and Grande would remain in effect until March 31, 1983. After the expiration of each stay GECC would "be free to enforce its personal property security interest and its rights under its deed of trust therein without further delay, restraint or order of Court." Frye was entitled to sell Crestridge "at any time prior to foreclosure sale by [GECC]," provided he could turn over to GECC net cash proceeds of $2 million or more. He was entitled to sell Concorde provided that he could turn over to GECC net cash proceeds of $600,000 or more. GECC agreed "that it and its employees and agents will not interfere with the Debtor's efforts to sell the Crestridge and Concorde Apartments."

Frye stipulated that "[t]he allegations contained in the complaint and the amended complaint for relief from the automatic stay filed by [GECC] are true and all of defendant's defenses are withdrawn." Frye also stipulated that he was

"truly and legally indebted to [GECC] in the sum of $2,471,474.78 (which sum includes principal of $2,050,000.00), together with costs and attorneys fees through said date in the amount of $49,669.65. Interest continues to accrue thereon at the rate of $1,174.66 per day, together with plaintiff's future costs and attorneys' fees."

The parties further stipulated that

"The covenants of General Electric Credit Corporation are personal to the Debtor, as Debtor-in-Possession and may not be sold or assigned by it and shall apply only so long as the Debtor remains under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code."

As contemplated by the stipulation agreement, Frye attempted to negotiate the sale of his various apartment complex holdings. He orally agreed with Dewey Waddell, another real estate investor, to give Waddell a 50 percent stake in Crestridge if Waddell could come up with the money to pay off the GECC loan. Ernest Norcross, a Waddell attorney who was also financially interested in the project, telephoned James Kelley, GECC's attorney, on March 28, 1983. Norcross asked Kelley whether the scheduled March 31 foreclosure on Crestridge could be delayed for two weeks. Kelley said the foreclosure would take place as scheduled and that Norcross would have to come up with $2.6 million to buy out GECC's position in all three buildings. When Norcross asked Kelley how much it would take to buy out GECC's position in Crestridge alone, Kelley said it would take $2.1 million. Norcross and Kelley did not specifically discuss the price GECC would require to release the Concorde and Grande buildings only. Norcross apparently assumed that GECC would release those buildings for $500,000, a figure he arrived at by subtracting the $2.1 million figure for Crestridge from the $2.6 million figure for all three buildings; however, he and Kelley never explicitly discussed a figure for the release of Concorde or Grande alone.

On March 31, 1983, Norcross called Kelley again and asked about the Concorde building specifically. Nothing concrete was agreed upon, apparently, but the "culmination" of the conversation was that GECC would allow its position to be bought out for $500,000. On that date, GECC sold Crestridge at a foreclosure sale for $2.1 million.

On April 10, 1983, Norcross called Kelley again to express his interest in buying out GECC's position in Concorde for $500,000. Kelley said the building could no longer be released at that price, since GECC had received a $575,000 offer from Mudball, Inc., another real estate investment firm. Norcross testified that Kelley's attitude was "not uncooperative," just "businesslike."

Frye also received an independent offer on the Concorde apartments from United Capital Properties, an Alabama firm.

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859 F.2d 921, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 13973, 1988 WL 104960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ronnie-charles-frye-v-general-electric-credit-corp-ca6-1988.