White v. AAMG Construction Lending Center

700 S.E.2d 791, 226 W. Va. 339, 2010 W. Va. LEXIS 93
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 2010
Docket35286
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 700 S.E.2d 791 (White v. AAMG Construction Lending Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. AAMG Construction Lending Center, 700 S.E.2d 791, 226 W. Va. 339, 2010 W. Va. LEXIS 93 (W. Va. 2010).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

In this appeal from the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, we are asked to examine a construction loan by a bank to build a new house. The plaintiff — the owner of the new house — asserted that the defendant bank had a duty, in contract and in tort, not to distribute any money from the loan to the contractor building the house until the house had been inspected and the inspector had confirmed that the work’ being paid for was completed and in place. The plaintiff brought the instant suit alleging that the defendant bank had breached both duties, and could be held liable for breach of contract and for negligence. The plaintiff did *341 not allege that the bank’s inspection failed to reveal any defective construction.

The circuit court, however, entered an order granting summary judgment to the defendant bank on both the contract and the tort claims. The plaintiff now appeals.

As we discuss below, after careful consideration of the record, the briefs, and the arguments of the parties, we reverse, in part, the circuit court’s summary judgment order and find that the plaintiff has established sufficient questions of material fact to support her allegation that the bank may have breached its contract with the plaintiff. However, we affirm the circuit court’s order dismissing the plaintiffs tort claims.

I.

Background and Procedure

In mid-2004, appellant and plaintiff-below Anissa White hired 'White Family Properties (“WFP”) to build a new house on her land in Lincoln County, West Virginia. The total cost of construction by WFP was projected to be $193,500.00. The plaintiff gave WFP a check for $40,000.00 before construction commenced, to pay for the initial costs of construction.

To finance the remaining costs to build the new house, on January 28, 2005, plaintiff White signed a construction loan agreement to borrow up to $150,000.00 from a combination of entities (including ABN AMRO Mortgage Group, Inc., AAMG Construction Lending Center, Allied Home Mortgage Capital Corporation, and RG Crown Mortgage/RG Crown Bank). Those entities later sold the construction loan to the appellee and defendant-below, Fifth Third Bank (“the Bank”).

The loan agreement signed by the plaintiff provided that the Bank would only disburse loan money in measured increments as construction progressed, and only for work that had been finished and was “in place.” 1 Importantly, to ensure that construction work was “in place,” the Bank repeatedly stated in the loan documents that it would inspect the plaintiffs new house to gauge the extent of progress, and would only disburse money for completed work “based on the inspection.” For example, the loan agreement states, in all capital letters:

IF THE PROGRESS OF THE WORK IN PLACE IS NOT CONSISTENT WITH THE DRAW SCHEDULE, THE LENDER SHALL DISBURSE ONLY THE AMOUNT OF FUNDS THAT IT DETERMINES IS APPROPRIATE BASED ON THE INSPECTION OF THE PROGRESS OF THE WORK.

Likewise, a rider to the loan agreement (signed contemporaneously with the loan agreement) says:

2. Work In Place

The Lender has agreed to make the loan herein described to be paid in installments as the work is completed and to disburse funds only FOR WORK IN PLACE, based upon inspection.

Additionally, the Bank provided the plaintiff with a “Construction Loan Disbursement Information Sheet” — a copy of which the plaintiff signed and left with the Bank — which again makes it clear that the Bank agreed to only release money for work on the house that an inspection had established had been completed:

Disbursements will be made only after inspection of the property has been made to determine the status of completion ...
Lender shall not release any draw unless:
E. An inspector selected by Lender has certified that the WORK supporting the draw request is “IN PLACE”.

The loan agreement states that the inspections were solely for the Bank’s benefit to measure the extent of work that was “in place.” The loan agreement makes it clear that the inspections were not to measure the quality of the construction work, and that the *342 inspections were not for plaintiff White’s benefit. The loan agreement says:

Inspections of Apparent Status, Not Quality of Work: All inspection services, if any, by Lender ... are or shall be rendered solely for the benefit of Lender, and said inspections are not made for the benefit of, and shall not be construed to have been made for the benefit of Borrower.... Borrower acknowledges that such inspections shall not regard nature and quality of the work, but are intended only to appraise the Lender of the apparent progress thereof. Consequently, Borrower hereby exonerates, excuses and releases Lender from any and all claims of loss or damage that may be suffered by Borrower, which relate in any way to the quality of construction or lack thereof.

A rider to the loan agreement states to the same effect (with emphasis in the original):

INSPECTION FOR STATUS OF COMPLETION ONLY
The Lender shall inspect the project in order to ascertain the status of completion and the progress of the construction improvements. The sole purpose for Lender’s inspection is to determine the approximate amount and value of the work which has been done, so that Lender may disburse funds for such work in place. Such inspections shall not require a review by Lender of the quality of the construction. As Borrower, I will not rely on the Lender’s inspection for any purpose whatsoever. Rather, I will be solely responsible for the progress and quality of construction, and the discovery of all delays, defects, faults, imperfections and deviations from the Plans and Specifications shall be my sole responsibility as Borrower.

In spring 2005, WFP began construction on the plaintiffs new house. The construction contract between the plaintiff and WFP allowed the contractor to make five “draws” against the construction loan in tranches when the house was 20%, 45%, 70%, and 90% complete, with the final 10% to be drawn upon the completion of the house.

On July 18, 2005, plaintiff White signed 2 and submitted the first draw request form requesting that the Bank pay $48,375.00 for “work in place.” The draw request form indicated that various tasks in the construction of the house had been completed. The Bank’s inspection report showed the progress of construction to be at 30% completion, ' and a week later the Bank approved the first draw request and wire-transferred $48,375.00 to WFP.

On September 22, 2005, a second draw request in the amount of $48,395.00 was submitted for the Bank’s approval. The Bank’s inspection report showed the progress of construction to be at 55% completion, and on September 26, 2005, the second tranche of $48,395.00 was wired to WFP.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
700 S.E.2d 791, 226 W. Va. 339, 2010 W. Va. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-aamg-construction-lending-center-wva-2010.