Sylvania Savings Bank v. Turner

183 N.W.2d 894, 27 Mich. App. 640, 1970 Mich. App. LEXIS 1395
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 30, 1970
DocketDocket 8,506
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 183 N.W.2d 894 (Sylvania Savings Bank v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sylvania Savings Bank v. Turner, 183 N.W.2d 894, 27 Mich. App. 640, 1970 Mich. App. LEXIS 1395 (Mich. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

Levin, J.

The defendants appeal an order of the trial court denying their motion filed under GCB, 1963, 528 for relief from a default judgment. We affirm.

The defendants mortgaged two parcels of real estate, a restaurant and their home, to plaintiff Community Savings and Loan Association to secure repayment of a $40,000 indebtedness. They defaulted in paying required installments of principal and interest.

Community Savings acquired the fee to the restaurant by purchase at a mechanic’s lien foreclosure sale, subject to a right of the defendants to redeem from the sale. * 1 Thereafter, but before expiration of such redemption right, the plaintiffs commenced this action on May 16, 1966, to foreclose the mortgage on both parcels.

The defendants were personally served on May 18, 1966. Their default for failure to answer was filed on September 9, 1966, and a default judgment was entered on July 7, 1967, determining that the amount of the defendants’ indebtedness to Community Savings was $44,370.89.

At a mortgage foreclosure sale on August 31, 1967, the defendants’ home was sold for $8,000 to plaintiff, Sylvania Savings Bank Company, suc *643 cessor by merger to Community Savings. 2 Tbe defendants were notified of the filing of the circuit court commissioners’ report of sale, which determined that there was a deficiency of $36,902.45, 3 and that they could file objections within ten days; they made no response. The sale was confirmed September 18, 1967.

The defendants did not redeem from the mechanic’s lien foreclosure sale of the restaurant, and the bank did not proceed with the foreclosure of its mortgage on the restaurant. The bank expended, after acquiring the restaurant, over $5,000 on improvements, maintenance, taxes, and insurance. On November 3, 1967, i.e., after the confirmation of the mortgage foreclosure sale of the defendant’s home, the bank sold the restaurant to a third person for an amount not disclosed on the record.

Shortly before the expiration of the defendants’ equity of redemption in their home they filed, on February 13, 1968, a motion for relief from the July 7, 1967 default judgment.

The motion alleged that on June 26, 1966, the date that Community Savings acquired fee title to the restaurant (see footnote 1), its value exceeded the sum of (1) the amount of defendants’ indebtedness secured by the mortgage and (2) the cost incurred by Community Savings in acquiring the fee through the mechanic’s lien foreclosure sale. This allegation is not supported either by affidavit or by evidence.

During oral argument in our Court we were advised by Community Savings’ attorney that it sold the restaurant for a price between $40,000 and $50,000. If the sales price was, say, $45,000, and *644 one adds to that figure the $8,000 bid at the mortgage foreclosure sale of the defendants’ home, the total amount realized by the bank was $53,000. The defendants’ indebtedness to the bank, as determined by the default judgment, was $44,307.89; the sum of that amount and the amount for which the mechanic’s lien foreclosure sale was confirmed to the bank, $4,904.73, and the $5,000 expended for improvements, maintenance, taxes, and insurance before the sale of the restaurant in November, 1967, is $54,215.62 — $1,215.62 more than the $53,000 postulated as realized by the bank from the sale of the restaurant and the mortgage foreclosure sale of the home. 4

The defendants contend that their indebtedness to Community Savings was discharged by merger of the fee interest and the mortgagee’s interest in the restaurant. They claim the merger occurred either when Community Savings acquired the fee upon expiration of the mechanic’s lien foreclosure redemption period or when, after confirmation of the mortgage foreclosure sale of the home, the restaurant was sold free of the mortgage. They assert that it was, therefore, a fraud to have taken a default mortgage foreclosure judgment against them for the entire indebtedness or to sell the home pursuant to that judgment, and that in all events it was a fraud not to credit against the indebtedness the excess of the value or sales price of the restaurant over the cost of acquiring the fee.

When a mortgagee acquires fee title to the mortgaged property he frequently has no further reason to keep alive the lien of the mortgage. In such event the lien may merge into the fee and extinguish *645 the debt. But whether this occurs depends fundamentally on the mortgagee’s intention. If it is in his interest to preserve his lien separately from the fee, it will ordinarily be concluded that he did not intend to merge the lien into the fee. 5

In this case, when Community Savings acquired the fee to the restaurant in 1966 it was encumbered by a second mortgage for $11,000. 6 If the lien of the first mortgage in favor of Community Savings merged into the fee then the second mortgage would have become a first lien. It was, therefore, contrary to the interest of Community Savings to eliminate the priority of its first mortgage by merger; and it may safely be concluded that Community Savings did not intend to merge its fee and security interests. 7 It is not claimed that there are other relevant facts which would support a finding that in 1966 Community Savings intended to merge its mortgage and fee interests. No doubt, when it sold the restaurant to a third person in November, 1967 it conveyed the property free of the lien of the mortgage executed by the defendants ; 8 but by then the mortgage *646 on the defendants’ home had been foreclosed and the sale confirmed.

At the time the default judgment was entered, the price that would be realized upon a sale of the restaurant was unknown, and it did not become known until the restaurant was sold, which occurred after the confirmation of the mortgage foreclosure sale of the home. The defendants’ argument, therefore, of necessity narrows down to a claim that the fraud was in failing to credit the value, as distinguished from the sale price, of the restaurant.

Even if the bank should have allowed the claimed credit, 9 there is no concrete evidence of the value of the restaurant at the time the default judgment was entered. The only evidence is such as we can extrapolate from the facts that a $40,000 mortgage loan was given by a bank, the subsequent failure of the restaurant business, our knowledge that creditors, particularly banks, do not ordinarily retain property such as this for a longer time than needed to effect disposition, and the sales price which we were told was realized when the property was sold in November, 1967.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 N.W.2d 894, 27 Mich. App. 640, 1970 Mich. App. LEXIS 1395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sylvania-savings-bank-v-turner-michctapp-1970.