Tuscarora, Inc. v. B.V.A. Credit Corp.

241 S.E.2d 778, 218 Va. 849, 1978 Va. LEXIS 237
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 3, 1978
DocketRecord 761467
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 241 S.E.2d 778 (Tuscarora, Inc. v. B.V.A. Credit Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tuscarora, Inc. v. B.V.A. Credit Corp., 241 S.E.2d 778, 218 Va. 849, 1978 Va. LEXIS 237 (Va. 1978).

Opinion

Cochran, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this appeal the question is whether Tuscarora, Inc. (Tuscarora), the complainant in the court below, in its original and its amended bill of complaint, in which it sought to establish the priority of a purchase-money deed of trust, failed to state a cause of action.

On April 18, 1975, Tuscarora filed its original bill of complaint against Jeffrey Sneider & Co., Inc. (Sneider), B.V.A. Credit Corporation (BVA), and Virginia National Bank (which is not a party to this appeal, and asserts no rights to be considered herein), alleging that by deed dated October 13, 1972, Tuscarora conveyed to Sneider twelve lots in a Loudoun County subdivision, taking a note made by Sneider in the amount of $87,750 for part of the purchase money, secured by a deed of trust of the same date conveying eight of the lots to Frank S. Embrey and Vincent Tramonte, Trustees, none of the principal of said note having been paid, and the interest being in default; that by deed of trust dated November 17,1972, Sneider conveyed all twelve lots to Wiegmann and Runkle, Trustees, to secure construction loans of $36,050 on each lot, or a total of $432,600, made by Commonwealth Mortgage Company, now BVA; and that by deed of subordination dated November 27, 1972, Embrey and Tramonte, Trustees, subordinated Tuscarora’s first deed of trust to the lien of the deed of trust securing the $432,600 loan which was referred to in the subordination deed as a “construction loan”.

The bill further alleged that BVA claimed to have advanced $92,000 of said construction loan on the eight notes secured by the eight lots coyered by Tuscarora’s deferred purchase-money trust, although there has been no construction on any of the lots; and that by deed of subordination dated April 6, 1973, Embrey *852 and Tramonte, Trustees, subordinated Tuscarora’s deed of trust to an additional deed of trust to Wiegmann and Runkle, Trustees, securing a note of $120,000 payable to Commonwealth Mortgage Company (BVA), but no money had been advanced under this deed of trust. Copies of the deeds of trust and deeds of subordination were attached to the bill of complaint as exhibits.

The purchase money deed of trust, which provided that each Trustee “shall be clothed with full power to- act when action under said deed of trust is required”, contained the following provision for subordination:

“IT IS UNDERSTOOD AND AGREED between the parties hereto, that the trustees, without the necessity of obtaining the prior consent or joinder of the noteholder thereof, to subordinate the lien of this deed of trust to the lien of any bona fide land loan, first trust construction and/or permanent loan or loans placed from time to time, upon the described property, or any portion thereof, without curtailment and at no cost to the maker thereof.
“If subordination is to construction loans only, and if the same note and trust secure both the construction and the permanent loan, this deferred purchase money trust and said note secured hereby shall be paid in full concurrently, with the purchase of the construction loan by the permanent lender.”

The deed of subordination dated November 29,1972, contained a first clause referring to the purchase-money deed of trust, a second clause reciting the terms of the provision in the deed of trust authorizing subordination by action of the trustees, and the following:

“WHEREAS, by a certain deed of trust dated November 17, 1972, and recorded immediately prior hereto ... Jeffrey Sneider and Company, Inc., did convey [the specified 12 lots] in trust ... to secure . . . payment of twelve (12) notes, aggregating the total principal sum of $432,600.00 and interest, representing a construction loan.
“NOW THEREFORE . .. the said parties of the first part do hereby subordinate the lien of the deed of trust... to the lien of the deed of trust dated November 17, 1972, and recorded immediately prior hereto ... securing payment of twelve (12) notes, aggregating a total principal sum of $432,600.00.”

*853 The second deed of subordination, dated April 6, 1973, followed the same format except that it omitted the words “representing a construction loan” in the third clause describing the deed of trust to be given priority.

The bill also alleged that, although BVA contended that the deed of trust of November 17, 1972, secured what was both a construction and a land acquisition loan, the $92,000 advanced to Sneider by BVA was not a bona fide construction loan because none of the money was used for construction on the eight lots, that it was not a bona fide land or land acquisition loan because the $92,000 was not used for acquisition of or payment for the eight lots, and that Tuscarora’s deed of trust was superior to the deeds of trust securing BVA. Tuscarora further asserted that the subordinations were made upon the implied condition that any funds advanced under BVA’s deeds of trust would be applied to construction on the property or to land acquisition costs. Tuscarora finally alleged that BVA owed a duty, which it breached, to see that moneys advanced under its deeds of trust were used for construction on the land or for payment on account of the purchase price.

Tuscarora asked that the court determine the amounts due and the priorities of the several deeds of trust, giving priority to Tuscarora’s deed of trust and, pending such determination, that BVA be enjoined from foreclosing its deeds of trust.

Demurrers were filed by BVA and by Wiegmann and Runkle, Trustees, who had been permitted to intervene over the objection of Tuscarora, on the grounds that Tuscarora was estopped to deny the acts of its agents, the trustees, in subordinating its lien, that BVA and its trustees were entitled as a matter of law to rely upon the subordination deeds, and that as a matter of law there were no implied conditions or duties imposed upon BVA.

The chancellor filed a letter opinion sustaining the demurrers. He rejected the theory of conditional subordination, and ruled that Tuscarora had “abdicated control” of its lien by giving its trustees authority to subordinate without the consent or joinder of the noteholder, that the reference in the second clause of the deed of subordination to “any bona fide land loan, first trust construction and/or permanent loan or loans ...” 1 was a *854 recitation only, whereas the language of subordination was unqualified, and that, as Tuscarora did not aver any agreement between itself and BVA, the court could not imply conditions. A decree sustaining the demurrers and giving Tuscarora 21 days to file additional pleadings was entered on January 12,1976.

Tuscarora filed an amended bill of complaint alleging that the purchase price for the twelve lots was $138,600, of which $87,500 was secured by the purchase-money deed of trust; that upon recordation of its deed of trust dated November 17, 1972, BVA disbursed the sum of $138,600, knowing that the money would not be used for construction purposes; and that BVA now claims a balance due of $92,400 secured by this deed of trust. 2

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Bluebook (online)
241 S.E.2d 778, 218 Va. 849, 1978 Va. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuscarora-inc-v-bva-credit-corp-va-1978.