McHUGH, Justice:
This is an appeal from the March 14, 1994 order of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, which allowed the prepayment, in full, of a promissory note, the terms of which did not provide for such prepayment. This Court has before it the petition for appeal, all matters of record and the briefs and argument of counsel. For the reasons stated below,, the order of the circuit court is reversed.
I
The facts of this case are, for the most part, undisputed. Appellees Ralph R. Young, Jr. and Marion M. Young, by deed dated November 5, 1990, conveyed to B & J Equipment Company, Inc. (hereinafter “B & J Equipment”) certain real estate consisting of approximately 1.748 acres located in Union District, Kanawha County, West Virginia. The purchase price for the property was $415,000.
Appellant Sheryl Sodaro loaned B & J Equipment $135,000 to assist in the financing of the purchase of the property. Accordingly, a note in the original principal sum of $135,000 was executed by B & J Equipment and William E. Mattingly and Janice E. Mat-tingly, individually, and made payable to appellant. This note, dated November 29, 1990, carries interest at the rate of fourteen percent (14%) per annum, on the unpaid principal balance until paid. The note further provides that the principal and interest are to be paid in monthly installments of $1,678.75 each, “commencing on the first day of January, 1991 and continuing thereafter on the first day of each succeeding month until a total of sixty monthly payments have been made, at which time the remaining balance of principal and interest shall become due and will be paid in full. Each of the said monthly installments shall be applied first to
the interest due hereon and the balance, if any, to the principal.”
The record reveals that B & J Equipment and the Mattinglys initially tendered to appellant a note granting them the right to prepay the unpaid principal sum prior to maturity.
However, appellant specifically rejected the proposed note containing prepayment language, as it was her desire to have the principal and interest paid to her over a sixty-month period. The note upon which the parties eventually agreed did not confer upon the makers the right to prepay the loan prior to maturity. B & J Equipment and the Mattinglys executed a first deed of trust on the property securing the payment of the aforementioned $135,000 note, also dated November 29, 1990, payable to appellant.
B
&
J Equipment and the Mattinglys subsequently executed a second note, dated November 29, 1990, in the amount of $290,000, payable to appellees. This second note is secured by a deed of trust on the subject property which is a second lien thereon, junior to the deed of trust held by appellant.
When B & J Equipment became delinquent on both notes, appellant advised appel-lees that she was going to foreclose on the subject property under her first deed of trust if payments due on her note were not brought up to date. In response, appellees sought to foreclose under their second deed of trust so that their lien would not be extinguished by foreclosure under the first lien. Appellant agreed and on February 27, 1992, appellees purchased the subject property at the foreclosure sale for $297,000, which was the total sum then due and owing, including any costs and interest owed thereon. Appel-lees, consequently, owned the property subject to the note and deed of trust held by appellant.
Appellees claim that it was not until after they paid the delinquencies on the first note that they learned that the interest rate thereon was 14 percent per annum. Upon learning of the terms of the note, appellees made arrangements to borrow money at a lower rate of interest to pay off the first note in full. On March 20, 1992, appellees delivered a check in the amount of $137,939.54 to appellant’s attorney as payment in full of the first note. Appellant refused to accept the check on the grounds that the note payable to her does not contain a provision allowing prepayment and that, absent her agreement to the contrary, she is not obliged to accept payment in fuE of the note in advance of its terms, without inclusion of future interest.
A declaratory judgment action
was subsequently filed in Kanawha County Circuit Court.
The circuit court held that appeEant was required to accept payment in ftdl of the note in the amount of $137,939.54 and that any interest accrued after March 20, 1992, the date appeEees attempted to tender payment to appeEant, is forfeited and barred. It is from this ruHng that appeEant now appeals.
II
The sole issue before this Court is a matter of first impression in West Virginia: whether a debtor has a right to prepay a promissory note, which is secured by a deed of trust, when the instruments are sEent and do not expressly grant that right.
Though
some states have conferred upon borrowers a statutory right to prepay a loan,
no such legislation has been passed in West Virginia. We, therefore, look to the common law as it exists in other jurisdictions.
The majority rule is sometimes referred to as the default rule of perfect tender in time, which may be expressed as follows: Absent statutory authority or express contractual language to the contrary, a borrower has no right to prepay his mortgage or deed of trust obligation
prior to the maturity date specified on the underlying promissory note and the agreed upon payment schedule is to be enforced.
See Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Promenade Towers Mut. Hous. Corp.,
84 Md.App. 702, 581 A.2d 846, 849 (1990),
cert. granted,
322 Md. 333, 587 A.2d 510 (1991);
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Strnad,
255 Kan. 657, 876 P.2d 1362 (1994).
See also
55 Am.Jur.2d
Mortgages
§ 397 (1971). In both
Met. Life
II,
supra,
597 A.2d at 1380 and
Strnad, supra,
876 P.2d at 1367, the Court of Appeals of Maryland and the Supreme Court of Kansas, respectively, noted:
‘Since the early nineteenth century the general rule has been that a debtor cannot, without the lender’s consent, prepay a mortgage debt. More precisely, when a specific amount of indebtedness is secured by a mortgage covering the debtor’s real property, and the note specifies a date certain for repayment of the debt, the debtor is not entitled to pay the indebtedness before that date unless the lender agrees to accept such payment. This is the requirement of perfect tender in time.’
(quoting
Frank S. Alexander,
Mortgage Prepayment: The Trial of Common Sense,
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
McHUGH, Justice:
This is an appeal from the March 14, 1994 order of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, which allowed the prepayment, in full, of a promissory note, the terms of which did not provide for such prepayment. This Court has before it the petition for appeal, all matters of record and the briefs and argument of counsel. For the reasons stated below,, the order of the circuit court is reversed.
I
The facts of this case are, for the most part, undisputed. Appellees Ralph R. Young, Jr. and Marion M. Young, by deed dated November 5, 1990, conveyed to B & J Equipment Company, Inc. (hereinafter “B & J Equipment”) certain real estate consisting of approximately 1.748 acres located in Union District, Kanawha County, West Virginia. The purchase price for the property was $415,000.
Appellant Sheryl Sodaro loaned B & J Equipment $135,000 to assist in the financing of the purchase of the property. Accordingly, a note in the original principal sum of $135,000 was executed by B & J Equipment and William E. Mattingly and Janice E. Mat-tingly, individually, and made payable to appellant. This note, dated November 29, 1990, carries interest at the rate of fourteen percent (14%) per annum, on the unpaid principal balance until paid. The note further provides that the principal and interest are to be paid in monthly installments of $1,678.75 each, “commencing on the first day of January, 1991 and continuing thereafter on the first day of each succeeding month until a total of sixty monthly payments have been made, at which time the remaining balance of principal and interest shall become due and will be paid in full. Each of the said monthly installments shall be applied first to
the interest due hereon and the balance, if any, to the principal.”
The record reveals that B & J Equipment and the Mattinglys initially tendered to appellant a note granting them the right to prepay the unpaid principal sum prior to maturity.
However, appellant specifically rejected the proposed note containing prepayment language, as it was her desire to have the principal and interest paid to her over a sixty-month period. The note upon which the parties eventually agreed did not confer upon the makers the right to prepay the loan prior to maturity. B & J Equipment and the Mattinglys executed a first deed of trust on the property securing the payment of the aforementioned $135,000 note, also dated November 29, 1990, payable to appellant.
B
&
J Equipment and the Mattinglys subsequently executed a second note, dated November 29, 1990, in the amount of $290,000, payable to appellees. This second note is secured by a deed of trust on the subject property which is a second lien thereon, junior to the deed of trust held by appellant.
When B & J Equipment became delinquent on both notes, appellant advised appel-lees that she was going to foreclose on the subject property under her first deed of trust if payments due on her note were not brought up to date. In response, appellees sought to foreclose under their second deed of trust so that their lien would not be extinguished by foreclosure under the first lien. Appellant agreed and on February 27, 1992, appellees purchased the subject property at the foreclosure sale for $297,000, which was the total sum then due and owing, including any costs and interest owed thereon. Appel-lees, consequently, owned the property subject to the note and deed of trust held by appellant.
Appellees claim that it was not until after they paid the delinquencies on the first note that they learned that the interest rate thereon was 14 percent per annum. Upon learning of the terms of the note, appellees made arrangements to borrow money at a lower rate of interest to pay off the first note in full. On March 20, 1992, appellees delivered a check in the amount of $137,939.54 to appellant’s attorney as payment in full of the first note. Appellant refused to accept the check on the grounds that the note payable to her does not contain a provision allowing prepayment and that, absent her agreement to the contrary, she is not obliged to accept payment in fuE of the note in advance of its terms, without inclusion of future interest.
A declaratory judgment action
was subsequently filed in Kanawha County Circuit Court.
The circuit court held that appeEant was required to accept payment in ftdl of the note in the amount of $137,939.54 and that any interest accrued after March 20, 1992, the date appeEees attempted to tender payment to appeEant, is forfeited and barred. It is from this ruHng that appeEant now appeals.
II
The sole issue before this Court is a matter of first impression in West Virginia: whether a debtor has a right to prepay a promissory note, which is secured by a deed of trust, when the instruments are sEent and do not expressly grant that right.
Though
some states have conferred upon borrowers a statutory right to prepay a loan,
no such legislation has been passed in West Virginia. We, therefore, look to the common law as it exists in other jurisdictions.
The majority rule is sometimes referred to as the default rule of perfect tender in time, which may be expressed as follows: Absent statutory authority or express contractual language to the contrary, a borrower has no right to prepay his mortgage or deed of trust obligation
prior to the maturity date specified on the underlying promissory note and the agreed upon payment schedule is to be enforced.
See Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Promenade Towers Mut. Hous. Corp.,
84 Md.App. 702, 581 A.2d 846, 849 (1990),
cert. granted,
322 Md. 333, 587 A.2d 510 (1991);
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Strnad,
255 Kan. 657, 876 P.2d 1362 (1994).
See also
55 Am.Jur.2d
Mortgages
§ 397 (1971). In both
Met. Life
II,
supra,
597 A.2d at 1380 and
Strnad, supra,
876 P.2d at 1367, the Court of Appeals of Maryland and the Supreme Court of Kansas, respectively, noted:
‘Since the early nineteenth century the general rule has been that a debtor cannot, without the lender’s consent, prepay a mortgage debt. More precisely, when a specific amount of indebtedness is secured by a mortgage covering the debtor’s real property, and the note specifies a date certain for repayment of the debt, the debtor is not entitled to pay the indebtedness before that date unless the lender agrees to accept such payment. This is the requirement of perfect tender in time.’
(quoting
Frank S. Alexander,
Mortgage Prepayment: The Trial of Common Sense,
72 Cornell L.Rev. 288, 290-91 (1987)).
Justification of the rule of perfect tender in time has been expressed in both economic and philosophic terms. Conferring the right of prepayment when such right is absent from the note or mortgage instrument may cause economic hardships upon the lender, “not the least of which include the loss of the bargained-for-rate of return, an increased tax burden, unanticipated costs occasioned by the need to reinvest the principal, and for those creditors anxious to ensure regular payments not unlike an annuity, it undoes the mortgagee’s purpose in making the loan.”
In re Arthur v. Burkich,
131 A.D.2d
105, 520 N.Y.S.2d 638, 639 (1987)
(citing,
Alexander,
supra
at 310-17) (footnote added).
See also Strnad, supra
at 1368;
Dugan v. Grzybowski
165 Conn. 173, 332 A.2d 97, 99 n. 2 (1973).
In the present case, appellant has indicated that as a result of liquidating certain assets in order to loan B & J Equipment $135,000 to purchase the property, she incurred additional income tax liability.
The rule of perfect tender in time has further been rationalized philosophically, viewing the rights of creditor and debtor as equal and reciprocal:
“ ‘A creditor can no more be compelled to accept payments on a contract before, by the terms thereof, they are due, than can a debtor be compelled to make such payments before they are due. The time of payment fixed by the terms of a pecuniary obligation is a material provision, and each party has the right to stand on the letter of the agreement and perform accordingly.’”
Kruse v. Planer,
288 N.W.2d 12, 14 (Minn. 1979)
(citing Peryer v. Pennock,
95 Vt. 313, 115 A. 105 (1921)).
See also Strnad, supra
at 1367 (“a debtor has no more right to pay off an obligation prior to its maturity date than the creditor has to compel collection of the debt prior to its maturity”); Alexander,
supra
at 317.
In contrast, the minority of jurisdictions has adopted the rule that, absent a statute or contractual provision to the contrary, there is a presumption of a right to prepay a note where a mortgage is silent as to that right.
Mahoney v. Furches,
503 Pa. 60, 468 A.2d 458 (1983). Though the
Mahoney
court agreed with the majority’s rationale that “the use of the mortgage for private investment purposes is increasing and may also support a policy encouraging such use[,]” it found the more dominant policy to be the free alienability of land “since the fundamental purpose of the mortgage note in most instances is to secure a debt incurred in the purchase of land from which the debt arises rather than to secure investment income for the mortgagee.”
Id.,
468 A.2d at 461.
But see Strnad, supra; Met. Life
I,
supra; Met. Life
11.
supra; Burkich, supra
(all of which reject the restraint on alienation argument).
Though we are mindful of the minority rule and the various reasons for which it has been adopted in some states,
Hatcher v. Rose,
329 N.C. 626, 407 S.E.2d 172 (1991);
Skyles, supra; Spillman v. Spillman,
509 So.2d 442 (La.Ct.App.1987), we, nevertheless, find the majority rule to be more compelling. Therefore, we hold that, under the rule of perfect tender in time, a debtor, absent statutory authority or contractual language to the contrary, has no right to prepay a promissory note secured by a deed of trust prior to the date of maturity.
For the reasons stated herein,
the order of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, dated March 14, 1994, is reversed.
Reversed.
BROTHERTON, J., did not participate.
FOX, J., sitting by temporary assignment.