Warren v. Percy Wilson Mortgage & Finance Corp.

472 N.E.2d 364, 15 Ohio App. 3d 48, 15 Ohio B. 76, 1984 Ohio App. LEXIS 11950
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 1984
DocketC-830106 and -830125
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 472 N.E.2d 364 (Warren v. Percy Wilson Mortgage & Finance Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren v. Percy Wilson Mortgage & Finance Corp., 472 N.E.2d 364, 15 Ohio App. 3d 48, 15 Ohio B. 76, 1984 Ohio App. LEXIS 11950 (Ohio Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

Black, J.

The trial court granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment on the issue of liability only, *49 against defendants-appellants Percy Wilson Mortgage & Finance Corp. (“Wilson”) and Northwestern National Life Insurance Co. (“Northwestern”). 1 The court did not favor us by stating its reasons on the record, and we must assume that the court may have held Wilson and Northwestern liable on any one or more of the four claims set forth in the amended complaint. Basically, plaintiffs asserted that Wilson and Northwestern were liable for damages because they misled the plaintiffs about certain insurance on the life of Charles H. Warren, Jr. The four causes of action were: conspiracy to defraud, conduct intentionally defrauding, breach of contract, and breach of fiduciary duty. At the hearing on appeal, counsel argued principally the claim based on breach of fiduciary duty. We will discuss that claim first, but we will also take up the other claims. Briefly, we find the trial court erred because, on the record before us, plaintiffs were not entitled to summary judgment on any theory. 2

'The documentary evidence presented to the trial court is sparse but sufficient to disclose the following information, which is all the trial court had before it. In 1962, plaintiffs (meaning Miriam Warren and her late husband) purchased a residence, securing the deferred purchase price by a note and mortgage to Eastern States Mortgage Company. The note and mortgage were promptly assigned to the Hamburg Savings Bank of Brooklyn (“Hamburg Bank”). Plaintiffs made their monthly payments to that bank until August 1971, when the bank contracted with Wilson to service many of its mortgage loans, including the Warren loan; the Hamburg Bank reserved to itself the right to terminate the servicing contract in its discretion on short notice. The plaintiffs were advised about the change in servicing of their mortgage but not about the unilateral right to terminate. Thereafter, they made their monthly payments by mail to Wilson at its principal office in Chicago. Early in 1975, Wilson mailed, with plaintiffs’ routine monthly statement, a form letter and printed brochure offering a “mortgage protection plan” in the form of Northwestern’s term life insurance in the initial amount of the mortgage balance, with the monthly premium to be added to the routine mortgage payments. The contents of that letter and brochure are crucial to the question whether Wilson or Northwestern had a duty to disclose the fact that the insurance would be cancelled if and when the Hamburg Bank terminated Wilson's servicing contract.

Plaintiffs emphasize the following language in the form letter: “WILL YOUR FAMILY INHERIT A HOME OR A MORTGAGE,” “LEAVE A DEED - NOT A DEBT,” and “Here’s your passport to security.” Plaintiffs also point to Wilson’s recommendation to its mortgagors that they buy this insurance, and to the statement in the *50 brochure that the insurance “assures your family the comfort of their home without disturbing [your] savings and regular life insurance program.”

Wilson and Northwestern claim the brochure adequately disclosed the possibility of early termination, by reason of the following question and answer, one of six sets of questions and answers displayed in a “box” in the brochure:

“Q. How long will this insurance protection continue?
“A. As long as we service your loan — protection will continue until (1) Your mortgage indebtedness has been repaid, (2) You sell your home, (3) You reach age 70, (4) Your mortgage is in default, whichever may occur first.”

While the full contractual arrangements between Northwestern and Wilson are not in the record, documents are there that establish the acceptance by Northwestern of full responsibility for the contents of the brochure, and the agreement by Northwestern to pay Wilson compensation for informing Northwestern about its mortgagors, collecting premiums, servicing claims and other services. Wilson was an agent for Northwestern as well as an agent for the Hamburg Bank. It is also uncon-troverted that the only communications about purchasing insurance occurred by mail between plaintiffs and Wilson. Plaintiffs knew they were purchasing “declining insurance”; that is, insurance for a term equal to the number of remaining years on their loan, decreasing in amount year by year.

Mr. Warren applied for this insurance, and his application was accepted for $8,500. His policy became effective February 5, 1975, and plaintiffs began making premium payments at the rate of $8.33 per month.

Less than two years later, on January 6,1977, the Hamburg Bank exercised its unilateral right to terminate the service contract with Wilson. The effective date was January 20,1977, when Wilson was ordered to deliver all documents to National Homes Acceptance Corp., 3 the new organization chosen by the Hamburg Bank to service all its mortgage loans. On January 20, 1977, Wilson mailed to all Hamburg Bank mortgagors on its lists a written notice of the change in servicing agents, a copy of which notice was received- by the Warrens on January 23, 1977. This letter also told them that the decreasing term life insurance was cancelled.

On January 19, 1977, Mrs. Warren had informed Wilson by a long-distance telephone call that her husband had terminal cancer. She had just come home from visiting her husband at the hospital and had found a delinquency notice in the mail. Thinking this meant an immediate foreclosure, she called Wilson and in the conversation about clearing the delinquency told Wilson about the terminal illness. 4

It is obvious that Wilson did not know of Mr. Warren’s terminal illness before the Hamburg Bank unilaterally notified it of the servicing termination. Northwestern states it was never advised of the terminal illness.

Mr. Warren died of cancer on April 10,1978, without obtaining insurance to replace the cancelled Northwestern policy. Northwestern refused to pay Mrs. Warren’s demand for insurance proceeds from the policy bought in 1975, and she brought this suit.

*51 In support of the judgment below, the plaintiffs claim that Wilson and Northwestern owed them a fiduciary duty of fair disclosure that their insurance would terminate with the termination of the Wilson servicing contract, and that this duty was not fulfilled. Stone v. Davis (1981), 66 Ohio St. 2d 74 [20 O.O.3d 64], certiorari denied sub. nom. Cardinal Fed. S. & L. Assn. v. Davis (1981), 454 U.S. 1081, held that a fiduciary duty of fair disclosure was created when a young married couple were guided by a savings and loan association through their first encounter with a complex mortgage loan process, and the association “broached” the subject of mortgage insurance by having them fill out a Federal Reserve Board Regulation Z disclosure form containing the question whether the young couple wanted mortgage insurance.

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Bluebook (online)
472 N.E.2d 364, 15 Ohio App. 3d 48, 15 Ohio B. 76, 1984 Ohio App. LEXIS 11950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-percy-wilson-mortgage-finance-corp-ohioctapp-1984.