Sargent D. Nichols, Individually and as He is Trustee of Andover Northway Realty Trust, Charles MacGill and Allan R. Ball v. The Cadle Company

139 F.3d 59, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 5831, 1998 WL 110167
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 18, 1998
Docket97-1518
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 139 F.3d 59 (Sargent D. Nichols, Individually and as He is Trustee of Andover Northway Realty Trust, Charles MacGill and Allan R. Ball v. The Cadle Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sargent D. Nichols, Individually and as He is Trustee of Andover Northway Realty Trust, Charles MacGill and Allan R. Ball v. The Cadle Company, 139 F.3d 59, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 5831, 1998 WL 110167 (1st Cir. 1998).

Opinions

BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.

On December 21, 1990, the Andover Northway Realty Trust executed a promissory note with installment payments in favor of the Woburn Savings Bank and secured it by giving the bank a mortgage on property the trust had purchased in Peabody, Massachusetts. The note was for $3.28 million for one year with installments of $30,969.40 to be paid each month and the balance due at year’s end. Three individuals — Messrs. Nichols, MacGill, and Ball — gave the bank personal guarantees on the note.

In July 1991, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation became the receiver for the bank. In December of the same year, the note matured but was not paid. In March 1994, the FDIC sold the note, the mortgage, and the personal guarantees to the Cadle Company for $1.1 million. At this point, the [61]*61note was in default, and unpaid interest was continuing to accumulate. The trust now began to make regular payments of $21,000 a month to Cadle, apparently approximating rents the trust was collecting.

Several months later, in May 1994, in a complex multi-step transaction, Cadle transferred possession of the note and mortgage to Foothill Capital Corp. to secure a loan from Foothill. Although there was in form an assignment of the mortgage and note to Foothill, it was qualified by the loan agreement which, among other things, purported to reserve to Cadle the responsibility to collect on the note and (if necessary) to foreclose on the mortgage.

In April 1995, after a year of monthly payments of $21,000 by the trust and efforts by it to refinance, Cadle sent the trust a notice of intent to foreclose and a deficiency notice. In May 1995, a foreclosure sale was held pursuant to a power of sale in the mortgage and Cadle purchased the property for $2.45 million. In June 1995, the trust and the three guarantors (hereafter, collectively, “the trust”) brought suit against Cadle in state court, attacking the foreclosure on multiple grounds. Two are pertinent here:

One theory is that Cadle had earlier made — and then breached by foreclosure— an alleged oral agreement between Cadle and the trust to forbear from foreclosure, so long as the trust paid $21,000 per month; the trust said that the agreement also obligated Cadle to accept $2.5 million in full payment if and when the plaintiffs could raise the money. The other theory is that Cadle’s foreclosure was unlawful because, by the time of the notice and foreclosure, Cadle had assigned the mortgage to someone else (Foothill) and had no right to foreclose and collect the deficiency in its own name.

Cadle removed the action to federal court and counterclaimed against the trust for unpaid principal and accumulated interest on the loan. In due course, the district court on summary judgment rejected the trust’s claim that because of the assignment Cadle could not foreclose on the mortgage; but it reserved for the jury the question whether foreclosure was independently barred by a forbearance agreement, as alleged by the trust but denied by Cadle.

In October 1996, the case was tried to a jury. Cadle claimed to be owed $1,310,560.55 in outstanding principal and interest, after deducting the $2.45 million received at the foreclosure sale and the $21,000 monthly payments (which Cadle treated as an offset to interest otherwise due). The trust claimed that at most it owed $50,000: the $2.5 million set by the alleged forbearance agreement as the final payment, less $2.45 million received by Cadle on foreclosure.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of Cadle, and against the trust, for $603,000. The trust moved for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was an irrational compromise. The district court heard argument and denied the motion. The trust has now appealed, challenging both Cadle’s right to foreclose and the damage award. Cadle has not objected to the jury award, although it is less than half of what it claimed to be owed.

The trust’s first argument is that the foreclosure was invalid under Massachusetts law. Massachusetts permits a mortgagor’s equity to be cut off immediately by a foreclosure sale where (as here) that power was stipulated in the mortgage. Mass. Gen. L. c. 244, § 14. Section 14 permits the power of sale to be exercised by

[t]he mortgagee or person having his estate in the land mortgaged, or a person authorized by the power of sale, or the attorney duly authorized by a writing under seal, or the legal guardian or conservator of such mortgagee or person acting in the name of such mortgagee or person....

A companion provision, Mass. Gen. L. c. 244, § 17B, permits a deficiency judgment if prior notice of foreclosure was given by the mortgagee.

It was Cadle that gave notice of and purported to undertake the sale. The trust says that when these events occurred, Cadle was no longer the mortgagee because it had assigned the mortgage to Foothill and therefore had no authority to give notice or exercise the power of sale. A post-sale reassignment by Foothill to Cadle, says the trust, [62]*62came too late. For both legal propositions, plaintiffs cite Lamson & Co. v. Abrams, 305 Mass. 238, 25 N.E.2d 374, 376-77 (1940). And Framingham Savings Bank v. Turk, 40 Mass.App.Ct. 384, 664 N.E.2d 472, 474, review denied, 422 Mass. 1110, 665 N.E.2d 1003 (1996), is cited to show that section 17B is strictly enforced, requiring notice in the name of the mortgagee.

If “ownership” of the mortgage and note had been transferred to Foothill, Lamson and Turk might well control. It is clear enough (as we will explain) that Foothill intended Cadle to manage the mortgage; but under the language of section 14 just quoted, Massachusetts has restricted those who may foreclose to “the mortgagee” and certain others, and it is by no means clear that Cadle, if not deemed the mortgagee, could be squeezed into the remaining categories. So, too, notice under section 17B must be in the mortgagee’s name.

Cadle counters that the “assignment” of the mortgage and note to Foothill were merely “conditional” and intended to create a security interest, that Foothill had no right to dispose of either unless Cadle defaulted, and that Cadle remained responsible for administering the mortgage and note, expressly including the responsibility for foreclosing the mortgage in its own name if this became necessary. The language of the Foothill-Cadle loan agreement bears out this description of the transaction.1

The more difficult question is whether this is enough: in Lamson, too, the mortgage was merely pledged to secure a loan and there was even vague language empowering the borrower to “realize” on collateral. See Lamson, 25 N.E.2d at 377. To meet the explicit wording of sections 14 and 17B, and to fully distinguish Lamson, it would be necessary to say that Cadle’s pledge in this case was so restricted that formal “ownership” of the mortgage remained in Cadle’s hands at the time of the foreclosure.

Neither side has given us any case law, beyond Lamson, to resolve the question of how much “ownership” is enough.

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139 F.3d 59, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 5831, 1998 WL 110167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sargent-d-nichols-individually-and-as-he-is-trustee-of-andover-northway-ca1-1998.