Stephens v. Dominion Bank of Richmond, N.A.

13 Va. Cir. 94, 1988 Va. Cir. LEXIS 430
CourtVirginia Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1988
DocketCase No. (Chancery) 87-75
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 Va. Cir. 94 (Stephens v. Dominion Bank of Richmond, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Virginia Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephens v. Dominion Bank of Richmond, N.A., 13 Va. Cir. 94, 1988 Va. Cir. LEXIS 430 (Va. Super. Ct. 1988).

Opinion

By JUDGE WILLIAM H. LEDBETTER, JR.

Thomas F. and Gladys E. Stephens ("the Stephens") borrowed $41,000.00 in 1981 from the Bank of West Point, now Dominion Bank of Richmond, N.A. ("the Bank"). They executed a demand note dated August 21, 1981, and a deed of trust securing the debt was recorded the same day.

Notwithstanding the pay-on-demand format of that note, everyone agrees that the parties actually structured an installment payment loan. They used a ten-year amortization to calculate monthly payments, with the understanding that the interest rate and, consequently, the amount of monthly payments, would be renegotiated every two years.

Consistent with that understanding, the Stephens executed a second promissory note on September 19, 1981, in the principal sum of $41,000.00, bearing interest at 18%, payable in monthly installments of $738.76.

Two years later, as agreed, the parties renegotiated the interest rate. The Stephens executed a third note on September 20, 1983, in the principal sum of $37,456.33 (the principal balance of the loan), bearing interest at 13.5%, payable in twenty-three monthly installments of $640.06 and a twenty-fourth installment of $32,109.69 (the amount that would then be the principal balance of the loan) "subject to refinancing."

[95]*95Pursuant to their understanding, the parties got together again in September of 1985 to renegotiate the interest rate and make a new note.

Kemp Smith, the bank officer who was dealing with the Stephens’ loan, asked his assistant, Lynn Goldin, to obtain the principal balance figure for the new note. Ms. Goldin called Dominion Bankshares Mortgage Company and, she says, was given a pay-off figure of $24,111.72. She gave this figure to Mr. Smith who then met with the Stephens at their restaurant in Bowling Green.

At that meeting, the Stephens’ daughter, Gladys L. Huff, who happened to be present, told Mr. Smith that the figure "didn’t seem like enough money; it couldn’t be right." He responded that the figure was accurate.

The Stephens then executed a new note, dated September 20, 1985, bearing interest at 12%. The principal amount of the note was $24,111.72, payable in monthly installments of $471.39, with an interest rate "change date" in the twenty-fourth month. A new $41,000.00 deed of trust, dated September 20, 1985, was recorded on October 3, 1985.

The figure which Mr. Smith used as the principal amount of the new note was incorrect. The balance owed on the loan, as of September 20, 1985, was $31,469.67. It was that figure which should have been inserted in the new note.

A few months later, the Bank caught the error and notified the Stephens. Mr. Smith traveled to Richmond to verify the error. In January of 1986, he met with the Stephens and thought that they understood the problem and would sign a corrected note. However, a few days later the Stephens refused to sign a new note.

However, the Stephens continued to make the installment payments called for in the note until July of 1986, when the Bank refused to accept any more of them because they were "not in the proper amount."

When the Stephens were notified of impending foreclosure by the trustees under the deed of trust, they filed a bill of complaint to enjoin the foreclosure.

On July 29, 1987, the court entered a temporary restraining order against collection of the note and foreclosure.

The Bank filed a responsive pleading and cross-bill. In its cross-bill, the Bank seeks reformation of the note [96]*96and an adjudication of the Stephens’ default and amount of arrearage.

The Stephens filed an answer to the cross-bill.

The case was heard ore tenus on November 25, 1987. By agreement, counsel filed post-hearing memoranda in support of their respective positions.

From the beginning, the parties intended that the Stephens would repay the $41,000.00 which they borrowed from the Bank in 1981, together with interest at a variable rate to be recalculated every two years over the ten-year pay-back term of the loan. The evidence clearly establishes this intent and the parties' course of dealing consistent with it.

In furtherance of that undisputed arrangement, the parties were to "roll over," or refinance, the unpaid balance of the loan each time the interest rate was renegotiated, and that loan balance would become the principal amount of each new note.

The parties did this in 1983. They did it again in 1985. In 1985, however, the wrong figure was inserted in the new note.

The Stephens argue that since the wrong figure was inserted by the Bank, as result of the Bank's negligence, the Bank is now stuck with the consequences of that negligence. The instrument should not be reformed, they say, nor should they be required to pay more than the face amount of the 1985 note. Stated differently, the Stephens claim that they should be exonerated from repayment of approximately $7,000.00 of the sum they admittedly received because the Bank erred in preparing the new note which stands as evidence of their indebtedness.

This position is untenable.

Both parties intended that the principal amount of the new note would be the loan balance, whatever that might be. The original debt could be satisfied only if the correct loan balance appeared in the new note. The parties were mutually mistaken in their good faith belief, on September 20, 1985, that the principal amount of the new note reflected the correct loan balance.

The element of mutuality is not negated by the fact that the mistake resulted from an error of one of the parties. By definition, a mistake is always someone’s fault. A mistake is, in essence, a fault. The prefix [97]*97”misn means "wrong" or "wrongly." Every mistake is a wrong act done unintentionally.

Most mistakes arise out of some degree of negligence. It is impossible, therefore, to fix any inflexible rule to determine the amount of [fault] necessary to deprive a party of relief . . . on account of mistake .... If a mistake has been mutual, the fact that the party who is to be injured thereby, if the mistake is not corrected, was negligent in making the mistake should not prevent equity from correcting it .... 13A MJ., Mistake and Accident § 8.

The mutuality exists in the fact that the mistake was not unilateral, i.e., was not harbored by only one of the parties. Rather it created a misexpression of the true intent of both parties.

The authorities all agree that a mutual mistake, over which equity has jurisdiction for reformation, exists where there has been a meeting of the minds, an agreement actually entered into, but the written instrument in its written form does not express what was really intended by the parties. See, 4 Pomeroy’s Equity (5th ed.) § 1376, quoted in Larchmont Properties v. Cooperman, 195 Va. 784 (1954); Lile, Notes on Equity Jurisprudence, pp. 123-130.

Here, there was a meeting of the minds: both parties intended that the figure inserted in the new note be the amount of the Stephens’ loan balance. The instrument does not express that true intent. The evidence on this point is clear and convincing, leaving but little, if any, doubt.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Va. Cir. 94, 1988 Va. Cir. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephens-v-dominion-bank-of-richmond-na-vacc-1988.