the Note Investment Group, Inc. v. Associates First Capital Corp., Successor by Merger to Associates Financial Services Company, Inc.

476 S.W.3d 463, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 9980, 2015 WL 5604682
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 24, 2015
DocketNO. 09-12-00573-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 476 S.W.3d 463 (the Note Investment Group, Inc. v. Associates First Capital Corp., Successor by Merger to Associates Financial Services Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
the Note Investment Group, Inc. v. Associates First Capital Corp., Successor by Merger to Associates Financial Services Company, Inc., 476 S.W.3d 463, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 9980, 2015 WL 5604682 (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

CHARLES KREGER, Justice

This is an appeal from a dispute between appellant, The Note Investment Group, Inc. (“TNIG”), and appellee, Associates First Capital Corp., successor by merger to Associates Financial Services Company, Inc. (“Associates”), regarding the sale by TNIG of partial interests in certain seller-financed- notes and contracts for deed to Associates. In three points of error, TNIG contends that the trial court erred by: (1) awarding litigation costs to Associates under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 167; (2) concluding that Associates made a valid tender of funds to TNIG, thereby precluding TNIG’s recovery of attorney’s fees and: interest following the date of the .tender; and (3) reconsidering and granting Associates’ motion for partial summary judgment without notice after previously denying, same. We affirm.

I. Factual Background

A. Associates’ Purchases of Seller-Financed Notes and Contracts for Deed

Associates, through its private mortgage operations division (“PMO”), was in the business of purchasing seller-financed notes and contracts for deed. In some cases, Associates purchased the entirety of a note or contract for deed, and in each such instaneé, Associates paid the full purchase price for the note or contract at the time of the purchase. In other cases, Associates purchased only a partial interest in the note or contract for deed. A “partial interest” consists of a set number of payments under a note or contract for deed. 1 On occasion, Associates purchased the “back-end” or remainder interest in a note or contract for deed after initially purchasing a partial' interest. The “remainder interest” consisted of all payments remaining due under the note or contract following the partial interest. 2

In 1999, Associates began purchasing partial interests in seller-financed notes and contracts for deed from TNIG. Each transaction involving the sale of a partial interest was governed by an individual, transaction-specific written agreement between TNIG and Associates, taking one of *468 two forms. For transactions involving the sale of a partial interest in a promissory-note secured by a deed of trust, TNIG and Associates entered into a written agreement called a “Deed of Trust Participation Agreement.” For transactions involving the sale of a partial interest in a contract for deed, TNIG and Associates entered into a written agreement called an “Agreer ment for Purchase of a Participation in an Installment Land Sales Contract.” For simplicity, and unless otherwise stated, we refer to both types of agreements collectively as “DOTPAs.”

The DOTPAs provided for certain contingencies based on the manner in which the borrower’s payments under the note or contract for deed were ultimately made. First, if a note or contract for deed was. paid in full by the borrower prior to the end of Associates’ partial interest, the DOTPAs provided that Associates would be entitled to retain a certain portion of the payoff proceeds (the “Guaranteed Yield”). All proceeds in excess of the Guaranteed Yield were required to be paid to the “Seller,” which the DOTPAs defined as TNIG. When a note or contract for deed was paid in full by the borrower prior to the end of Associates’ partial interest, the partial interest in the note or contract for deed was referred to as a “paid-off’ partial.

Second, if a note or contract for deed' went into default for a period of sixty days during the time period covered by Associates’ partial interest, the DOTPAs provided that TNIG was entitled to either (1) repurchase Associates’ interest in the note or contract for deed within thirty days following notice from Associates, or (2) cure the default within thirty days and undertake in writing to make all future scheduled payments to Associates. ' If TNIG failed to repurchase Associates’ interest or cure the default in a timely manner, Associates had the right under the DOTPAs to foreclose on the property that was the subject of the note or contract for deed. In the event Of a foreclosure sale, the DOTPAs provided a formula for the calculation of the amount of the foreclosure proceeds that Associates was entitled to retain (the “Foreclosure Minimum”), and all proceeds, if any, in excess of the Foreclosure Minimum were to be paid to the “Seller.”

Third, if all payments were timely made to Associates under its partial interest as they became due, the Deed of Trust Participation Agreements provided that Associates, upon receipt of the final payment under the partial interest, was required to assign the note to the owner of the remainder interest and advise the borrower to make all future payments to the “Seller.” Under such circumstances, the partial interest in the note was referred to as a “paid-out” partial.

TNIG brokered the sales of the partial interests to Associates. Specifically, TNIG purchased notes or contracts for deed in their entirety from third-party sellers, and on the same day or shortly after those purchases, TNIG sold partial interests in those notes or contracts for deed to Associates. In many cases, TNIG purchased the notes and contracts for deed from its sellers under purchase agreements requiring two installment payments by TNIG. Under those purchase agreements, TNIG agreed to pay the first installment to its seller at the time it purchased the note or contract for deed from the seller, and it agreed to pay the second installment to its seller thirty-six months thereafter, provided that the note or contract for deed did not go into default or was not paid in full prior to that time. If the note or contract went into default within the first thirty-six months of TNIG’s purchase, TNIG was not required to pay *469 the second installment to its seller. If the note or contract for deed was fully paid within the first' thirty-six months of TNIG’s purchase, TNIG was required to pay its seller the second installment at the time of the payoff, and TNIG usually made such payment using the excess funds that TNIG received from Associates for the paid off partial under the terms of the DOTPAs. However, if the note or contract for deed did not go into default and was not fully paid.within the first thirty-six months of TNIG’s purchase, TNIG was contractually obligated to pay its sellers the second installment on the thirty-six month anniversary of its original purchase of the note or contract.

B. The “Global Agreement” Dispute

Most, if not all, of the sales of partial interests by TNIG to Associates occurred between late 1999 and mid-2001. In 2000, Citigroup, Inc. (“Citigroup”) acquired Associates. Within a few months of the acquisition, Citigroup decided to wind down the operations of Associates’ PMO division and to cease purchasing seller-financing paper. Accordingly, in May 2001, Associates notified its brokers and sellers, including TNIG, that it would no longer be purchasing seller-financing paper, and in June 2001, Associates ceased purchasing such paper from its brokers’ and sellers.

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Bluebook (online)
476 S.W.3d 463, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 9980, 2015 WL 5604682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-note-investment-group-inc-v-associates-first-capital-corp-texapp-2015.