Td Bank, Etc. v. Farrendale Investments, LLC

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedAugust 1, 2024
DocketA-0896-22
StatusUnpublished

This text of Td Bank, Etc. v. Farrendale Investments, LLC (Td Bank, Etc. v. Farrendale Investments, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Td Bank, Etc. v. Farrendale Investments, LLC, (N.J. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-0896-22

TD BANK, N.A., SUCCESSOR BY MERGER TO COMMERCE BANK/NORTH AND SUCCESSOR BY ASSIGNMENT TO TD EQUIPMENT FINANCE, INC.,

Plaintiff-Respondent,

v.

FARRENDALE INVESTMENTS, LLC, f/k/a FARRENDALE PROPERTIES, LLC, JOHN E. BAILYE, LYNDALL J. BAILYE, KOOKABURRA AIR, LLC, and KOOKABURRA CHARTERS, LLC,

Defendants-Appellants. _____________________________

Submitted March 13, 2024 – Decided August 1, 2024

Before Judges Accurso, Vernoia and Gummer.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Camden County, Docket No. L-2058- 19. Law Offices of Steven A. Varano, PC, attorneys for appellants (Joseph P. Slawinski, Alan Kraminsky, Albert Seibert and Justyna Karbarz, on the briefs).

Saldutti Law Group, attorneys for respondent (Andrew P. Chigounis, on the brief).

PER CURIAM

Defendants Farrendale Investments, LLC, John E. Bailye, Lyndall J.

Bailye, Kookaburra Air, LLC, and Kookaburra Charters, LLC appeal from a

$1,870,802.81 judgment in favor of TD Bank, N.A. entered after a fair market

value hearing following a residential mortgage foreclosure. They also appeal

from the dismissal of their counterclaims for breach of the covenant of good

faith and fair dealing, and violations of the Consumer Fraud Act, N.J.S.A.

56:8-1 to -229, and the deficiency statutes, N.J.S.A. 2A:50-2 to 2A:50-10 and

2A:50-22 to 2A:50-28.

We affirm the trial court's rulings that the case comes within one of the

exceptions to the deficiency statute and that plaintiff's post-sale costs to be

added to the amount due are limited to the $16,430.40 it actually expended.

But we reverse the judgment and remand for a new fair market value hearing

because we conclude at least two unsound pretrial orders deprived defendants

of relevant discovery and unfairly prejudiced them at trial. We also reverse

the dismissal of defendants' counterclaims for breach of the covenant of good

A-0896-22 2 faith and fair dealing and the Consumer Fraud Act because defendants stated

causes of action for both and should be permitted the opportunity to establish

them on remand.

In light of our disposition of the appeal, we confine ourselves to what we

understand to be the undisputed facts. John and Lyndall Bailye bought their

home, Cragwood, a Georgian Revival mansion built in the 1920's and now a

112-acre estate in Somerset County, in 1996 for $4,450,000, with funds

borrowed from the Bank of New York. The Bailyes took title in the name of

Farrendale Properties, LLC, a single-asset limited liability company, whose

members were the Bailyes and two trusts for their children.1 The estate

consists of a 16,156 square foot residence having eleven bedrooms, nine full

bathrooms, three half bathrooms, thirteen fireplaces, an elevator, a full,

furnished basement with a wine cellar, a gym and a media room. The property

also boasts a 2,600 square foot pool house, a 676 square foot cottage, which

functions as a game room, a two-story office with several staff apartments, a

715 square foot stable and kennels, two maintenance barns and a four-car

garage. Other amenities include a gated security fence, an in-ground pool,

fountain, gardens, and a tennis court. There is a working farm on the estate,

1 Farrendale Properties is now known as Farrendale Investments, LLC. A-0896-22 3 which is, in part, farmland assessed. The property is situated on Bernardsville

Mountain, straddling Far Hills and Bernardsville, and enjoys unobstructed

views of the surrounding countryside and Ravine Lake.

The Bailyes refinanced the property in 2003 with plaintiff's predecessor

Commerce Bank. They also obtained from Commerce a $2 million line of

credit for renovations and general upkeep, secured by a second mortgage on

Cragwood. The Bailyes personally guaranteed both debts. In 2007, the

Bailyes, through Kookaburra Air, LLC, borrowed another $6.4 million dollars

from a Commerce entity to purchase an airplane for the family's personal use.2

In addition to an aircraft security agreement in favor of Commerce, the Bailyes

and Farrendale guaranteed payment of the aircraft loan. In 2011, Farrendale

gave Commerce a third mortgage on Cragwood to secure the obligations of

Kookaburra Air. Plaintiff TD Bank has succeeded to Commerce's interest in

those loans either through merger or assignment.

In 2015, the Bailyes relocated their family to England, although

intending to return to Cragwood in the future. The estate remained fully

furnished with a full-time staff that maintained the home, grounds and farm.

The following year, however, the Bailyes faced financial difficulties and listed

2 Kookaburra Air was formerly known as Kookaburra Charters, LLC. A-0896-22 4 Cragwood for sale for $24 million. They dropped the price to $23 million in

2017 and attempted, without success, to negotiate amended payment terms

with the bank.

In February 2018, the Bailyes secured a $1,929,000 offer from a

neighbor for a seventeen-acre parcel, part of the Cragwood Estate but a

separate lot purchased after the Bailyes' initial purchase of the property. The

bank refused to approve the sale, apparently believing a better price could be

secured by not breaking up the estate. The neighbor remained interested,

eventually signing an agreement with the Bailyes to purchase the lot for $1.5

million cash with no contingencies and closing in thirty days.

The Bailyes failed to make their mortgage payments due March 1, 2018,

and the bank declared them in default. The bank secured an appraisal from

Tony F. Kamand, Jr., MAI, valuing Cragwood as of February 28, 2018, at

$16.8 million using a comparable sales approach. The bank shared Kamand's

appraisal with the Bailyes, after which they dropped Cragwood's listing price

to $16.5 million. The bank served the Bailyes with a notice of intent to

foreclose in April and filed its residential foreclosure complaint in June. John

Bailye testified defendants did not contest the foreclosure, in part because they

expected surplus funds from the sale based on the Kamand appraisal, and

A-0896-22 5 instead focused their funds on maintaining the estate to position it for the best

sale price.

In October 2018, while the foreclosure was pending, the Bailyes

attempted to sell Cragwood, less the seventeen-acre parcel, through an

auctioneer. Although the auctioneer had represented to both the Bailyes and

the bank that its solicited pre-bids for the property were minimum bids and it

expected the hammer price would be fifty to ninety percent higher, Bailye

testified the bank refused to permit the auction to go forward when the highest

pre-bid was only $5 million, $4 million lower than the bank's $9 million floor.

The bank disputes that account and contends Bailye called off the auction.

The bank obtained final judgment in foreclosure in January 2019, with

the court setting the amount due on the mortgages at $7,780,080.54. The bank

obtained another appraisal shortly before the sheriff's sale. Peter Sockler,

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