Suh Joon Yang v. Chun Young Yoo

812 P.2d 210, 1991 Alas. LEXIS 40
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1991
DocketS-3380
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 812 P.2d 210 (Suh Joon Yang v. Chun Young Yoo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Suh Joon Yang v. Chun Young Yoo, 812 P.2d 210, 1991 Alas. LEXIS 40 (Ala. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

COMPTON, Justice.

The Yoos sold the Inlet Inn in downtown Anchorage to the Yangs. The Yangs defaulted on their payments to the Yoos, and the Yoos sought judicial foreclosure. The Yangs filed a counterclaim alleging that the Yoos promised to return their down payment if the Inlet Inn’s revenues for the first year did not exceed $1 million. The Yangs argued that their default was excused and they were entitled to receive their down payment back since the Inlet Inn’s revenues were much less than promised. After a jury trial, the superior court entered judgment in favor of the Yoos and ordered foreclosure and sale of the property. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In October 1985, Suh Joon Yang and Ha Sook Yang came to Anchorage to look into the possibility of purchasing the Inlet Inn from Chun Young Yoo and Jun Nam Yoo. The Inlet Inn is a 93-room hotel located in downtown Anchorage near the bus station. The Yangs met with real estate agent Ken Zong, who had informed them of the opportunity to buy the Inlet Inn. Zong showed the Yangs the Inlet Inn, as well as several other hotels. The Yangs inspected the physical premises of the Inn and a brief financial report prepared by Zong indicating that the previous year’s room revenues were $960,000. Before returning to Los Angeles where they were living at the time, the Yangs made an offer to purchase the Inlet Inn for $2,700,000.

The Yoos made a counter-offer to sell the Inn for $3,100,000, which the Yangs rejected. According to the Yangs, they nevertheless remained interested in the Inn because Zong assured them that,the Yoos would refund the down payment, retake possession of the hotel, and reassume the underlying note if revenues during the Yangs’ first year of ownership did not at least equal the revenues for the previous year. The Yangs consulted Michael Kim, a Korean-speaking attorney in Los Angeles, who drafted some language which he understood incorporated the substance of the Yoos’ guaranty.

Mr. Yang made a second trip to Anchorage and met with Zong and the manager of the Inlet Inn, Myung Ho Won. They reviewed the Inn’s daily revenue reports.

Yang returned to Los Angeles, and several days later he received a call from Zong and Mr. Yoo. According to the Yangs, Yoo confirmed that he would retake possession of the Inlet Inn and refund the Yangs’ down payment if future revenues did not equal or exceed $1 million per year. At trial Yoo denied making a guaranty for future revenues, but admitted that he had guaranteed the past income.

Before traveling to Anchorage to consummate the transaction, the Yangs again visited their Los Angeles attorney Mr. Kim. He prepared a second document designed to protect the Yangs in the event that revenues during their first year of ownership did not reach the guaranteed minimums and thereby provide sufficient cash flow to meet their debt obligations.

On January 10, 1986, the Yangs executed a “Sales Agreement and Earnest Money Receipt” prepared by Zong. The Yoos had signed the agreement on December 18, 1985. The Yangs made a few changes to which the Yoos agreed. The agreement states a purchase price of $3,050,000. The Yangs were to make a cash down payment of $400,000, which included $20,000 earnest money, $300,000 before closing, and an additional $80,000 at the time the sale closed. In addition to assuming the underlying deed of trust of $1 million held by the United Bank of Alaska (UBA), the Yangs agreed to execute a promissory note to the Yoos in the principal amount of $1,650,000. The agreement was expressly subject to approval by UBA of the assumption by the Yangs of the first deed of trust.

The agreement did not contain any of the language drafted by Mr. Kim designed to protect the Yangs from low revenues. Ac *212 cording to the Yangs, they tried to incorporate such language into the agreement, but Zong convinced them that the strong ties of trust which bind Korean nationals made such a request improper.

The Yangs paid the Yoos $120,000, sold their Los Angeles house, removed their daughter from school, and moved to Anchorage for the anticipated closing in February.

A “due on sale” clause in the UBA deed of trust prevented the Yangs from assuming it. However, First Federal Bank agreed to refinance the UBA note. The Yangs borrowed $1 million from First Federal and simultaneously applied for a Small Business Administration (SBA) loan which would pay the First Federal loan down to $375,000.

The closing occurred on February 18, 1986, at which time the Yangs paid the Yoos $87,741.52. Previously the Yangs had paid the Yoos $200,000 in addition to the $120,000 payment. Thus, the Yangs had paid a total of $407,741.52 to the Yoos by the closing date. This amount represented the $400,000 down payment plus half of the loan and escrow fees. The Yangs were to make monthly payments to the Yoos of $17,881.40.

The SBA loan was approved and closed on May 9, 1986. Since the Yoos agreed at closing to subordinate their lien position to the SBA loan, this left the Yangs in debt to the following parties in the respective positions of priority: First Federal ($375,000), SBA ($625,000), and the Yoos ($1.65 million).

The $375,000 owed to First Federal was due October 1, 1986. The $625,000 owed to the SBA was due over fifteen years. The Yoos had agreed that on October 1, 1986, they would pay $125,000 of the amount due to First Federal and the Yangs would pay $250,000 of this sum. The portion paid by the Yoos would then be added to the principal balance of the Yoo-Yang note.

By August 1986, it became evident to the Yangs that revenues would not approach the guaranteed amount of $1 million. They requested return of their down payment, but were refused. It also became apparent that the $375,000 obligation due First Federal could not be met. The Yoos had not tendered the promised $125,000, and lack of revenues from the Inlet Inn precluded the Yangs from making their balloon payment of $250,000.

In October the Yangs again requested the Yoos to return their down payment and take back the hotel. The Yoos refused. In order to avoid foreclosure by First Federal, the Yangs negotiated a loan modification agreement with the bank in which the $375,000 would be paid as follows: $175,-000 due on October 30, 1987; $100,000 on October 30, 1988; and $100,000 on October 30, 1989. Both the Yoos and the Yangs, as well as First Federal, signed this loan modification agreement.

On October 23, 1986, the Yoos and the Yangs signed two agreements between themselves. In one document, the Yoos agreed to pay $125,000 of the sum due to First Federal on October 30, 1987. The Yangs were to pay the remaining $50,000. The $125,000 paid by the Yoos would then be added to the amount the Yangs owed the Yoos. The second document provided that the monthly payments the Yangs owed the Yoos would remain at $17,881.21 and would increase to $19,235.80 only when the Yoos paid the $125,000 to First Federal.

In April 1987 the Yangs stopped making payments to the Yoos. At this point, the Yangs had paid the Yoos $246,336.94 in addition to the initial $400,000 down payment. The Yangs did not respond to a written notice sent by the Yoos. On July 14, 1987, the Yoos sued in an attempt to convert their note to a judgment and to judicially foreclose on the underlying deed of trust.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
812 P.2d 210, 1991 Alas. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suh-joon-yang-v-chun-young-yoo-alaska-1991.