Stearns Bank, N.A. v. First Bank of Dalton , 811 S.E.2d 490 ( 2018 )


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  •                              FIRST DIVISION
    BARNES, P. J.,
    MCMILLIAN and RICKMAN, JJ.
    NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
    physically received in our clerk’s office within ten
    days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
    http://www.gaappeals.us/rules
    February 28, 2018
    In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
    A17A2121. COMMUNITY & SOUTHERN BANK v. FIRST
    BANK OF DALTON et al.
    A17A2122. STEARNS BANK, N. A. v. FIRST BANK OF
    DALTON et al.
    MCMILLIAN, Judge.
    These consolidated appeals require us to once again consider how the proceeds
    from the sale of certain real property following foreclosure should be distributed
    among three banks with participation interests in the underlying loans. In Case No.
    A17A2121, appellant Community & Southern Bank (“CSB”) contends that upon
    remand from this Court, the trial court erred by re-entering the same judgment in
    favor of First Bank of Dalton (“Dalton”), Community Bank of Pickens (“Pickens
    Bank”) and Stearns Bank, N. A. (“Stearns”) despite our direction in the previous
    appeal to vacate and reconsider certain issues. Community & Southern Bank v. First
    Bank of Dalton, 
    338 Ga. App. 341
     (790 SE2d 80) (2016) (“CSB I”). In Case No.
    A17A2122, appellant Stearns contends that the trial court erred by finding that a jury
    must determine how the proceeds from the sale should be distributed among the
    participating banks.
    The facts are largely undisputed. In 2004, Gilmer Bank made two loans, one
    for $3,700,000 (“Loan 74744”) and the other for $1,800,000 (“Loan 74747”) to real
    estate developer A. S. Dover Development, Inc. (“Dover”).1 Both loans were secured
    by a security deed that encumbered the same parcel of undeveloped land, which
    Dover planned to develop into residential lots as part of a subdivision. Each loan
    agreement referenced the security deed, and the security deed referenced the two
    loans.
    Shortly thereafter, under the terms of separate Participation Certificates and
    Agreements (collectively “Participation Agreements”), Gilmer sold a 27.07 percent
    participation interest in Loan 74744 to Dalton; a 27.07 percent participation interest
    in that loan to Pickens Bank, and a 45.946 percent participation interest in that loan
    to Jasper Banking Company (“Jasper”). In 2006, Gilmer Bank entered into a
    Participation Agreement with Jasper for a 100 percent participation interest in the
    1
    Many, if not most, of the salient facts are more fully set out in our opinion
    from the prior appeal in this case.
    2
    other loan, Loan 74747.2 Each Participation Agreement referenced the security deed.
    The Participation Agreements were subsequently renewed under substantially
    identical terms, with the last renewal occurring in 2008. When Gilmer ultimately
    failed in 2010, the FDIC transferred Gilmer’s assets and responsibilities, including
    the loans and administration of the Participation Agreements, to CSB.3 Jasper Bank
    also failed and its assets, including the Participation Agreements, were ultimately
    transferred to Stearns. 
    Id.
    In 2013, Dover defaulted on both loans, and CSB purchased the property in
    foreclosure for over $1.61 million. In December 2014, CSB sold the property to a
    third party for $1,452,470.12. A few days after the sale, Dalton and Pickens Bank
    filed a petition seeking a temporary restraining order, interlocutory injunction, and
    declaratory judgment against CSB and Stearns, contesting CSB’s right to deduct its
    fees and expenses prior to distributing the funds to the Participating Banks, and
    further alleging that based upon “information and belief,” CSB intended to distribute
    the proceeds from the sale “contrary to contract and the parties’ course of
    2
    Dalton, Pickens Bank, and Jasper or its successor Stearns, will be referred to
    collectively as “Participating Banks.”
    3
    CSB apparently has now been succeeded by Bank of the Ozarks.
    3
    performance.” Dalton and Pickens Bank also gave notice of its intent to enforce the
    attorney fee provision of their Participation Agreements if CSB did not distribute the
    funds from the sale within ten days. CSB and Stearns filed answers to the petition,
    and Stearns also filed a counterclaim against Dalton and Pickens Bank, contending
    the proceeds of the sale should be distributed on a pro rata basis between Loan 74744
    and Loan 74747.4
    Several months later, on March 2, 2015, CSB filed a motion to tender the funds
    from the sale into the trial court registry. In making the tender, CSB specifically
    represented to the trial court that:
    There is a dispute as to the proper distribution of the . . . sale proceeds
    between the parties. Simultaneously with the filing of the Motion [CSB]
    tenders the amount of $862,565.70 into the Registry of the Court for
    determination of its proper distribution. The funds are submitted in four
    checks as follows: (a) $266,611.59 representing [Stearns’] portion of
    sale proceeds from the collateral for loan 74744; (b) $156,830.01
    representing [Pickens Bank’s] portion of sale proceeds from . . . loan
    number 74744; (c) $156,830.01 representing [Dalton’s] portion of sale
    proceeds from . . . loan number 74744; (d) $282,294 representing
    [Stearns’] . . . portion of sale proceeds from . . . loan number 74747.
    4
    Stearns also asserted a cross-claim against CSB for breach of contract based
    on Stearns’ attempt to remove CSB as administrator of the loans.
    4
    Dalton and Pickens Bank objected to the proposed distribution of funds in
    CSB’s motion to tender, and the parties filed motions and cross motions for partial
    summary judgment on various issues, including the proper distribution of the
    proceeds among the Participating Banks and whether CSB could deduct its expenses
    from the total amount available for distribution.
    On August 3, 2015, the trial court entered an order addressing eight separate
    grounds raised in the parties’ motions, finding that: (1) CSB received a payment that
    it was obligated to distribute to the Participating Banks in the amount of $1.45 million
    on December 15, 2014, which CSB was required to distribute within ten business
    days; (2) the Participating Banks were entitled to prejudgment interest pursuant to
    OCGA § 7-4-15 calculated on the $1.45 million sale price at the rate of seven percent
    beginning on December 15, 2014; (3) CSB was not entitled to deduct expenses prior
    to distributing the sale proceeds to the Participating Banks; (4) CSB was not entitled
    to deduct administrative fees; (5) CSB was liable for late fees; (6) Dalton and Pickens
    Banks were entitled to attorney fees as prevailing parties as defined in the
    Participation Agreements; (7) deferring the question of whether CSB’s liability
    should be capped at the sale price to a later date; and (8) based on the proposed
    amounts as tendered in the trial court, CSB was liable in the minimum amounts to
    5
    each Participating Banks as follows: Dalton $156,830.01, Pickens Bank $156,830.01,
    and Stearns Bank $548,905.68 (“August 2015 order”). Adding prejudgment interest,
    late charges, attorney fees and court costs, the trial court then entered judgment for
    Dalton in the amount of $179,838.41; Pickens Bank in the amount of $179,838.41;
    and Stearns in the amount of $571,426.06. The trial court noted that these were the
    minimum amounts the Participating Banks were entitled to receive and that it had not
    yet ruled upon the exact amount owed to each participant.
    CSB filed a notice of appeal, which was docketed in this Court as Case No.
    A16A0313. On appeal, CSB asserted two enumerations of error: (1) the trial court
    erred by failing to account for and deduct CSB’s applicable expenses in collecting the
    loans from the damages awarded to the Appellees and (2) by granting partial
    summary judgment and by awarding attorney fees. In CSB I, we vacated the trial
    court’s order, finding that, under the controlling default provision of the Participation
    Agreements, CSB was entitled to deduct its expenses from the proceeds of the sale
    before distribution to the Participating Banks and remanded “with instructions for the
    trial court to consider the amount of expenses CSB may deduct before it distributes
    any remaining amounts to the Purchaser.” And because Dalton and Pickens Bank
    were no longer prevailing parties with respect to that issue, we also vacated the award
    6
    of attorney fees on that ground. CSB I, 338 Ga. App. at 346-47 (1) & (2). In so doing,
    we noted that Dalton and Pickens Bank were prevailing parties on other issues raised
    in their motion for partial summary judgment and that CSB had not appealed those
    findings. CSB I, 338 Ga. App. at 347 (2) & n.8.
    Following remittitur, Dalton and Pickens Bank filed a motion for entry of
    judgment requesting that the trial court distribute the $862,565.70 CSB had deposited
    in the trial court’s escrow account, arguing that CSB had previously admitted that
    amount was subject to disbursement and our opinion merely concerned the
    distribution of any “remaining” amounts over and above the amount CSB tendered
    in the trial court, that is, the amounts CSB had not deposited in the court’s registry.
    The trial court agreed and also found that Dalton and Pickens Banks remained
    “prevailing parties” in this matter and left intact the attorney fees included in the
    previous award. The trial court then re-entered judgment to Dalton and Pickens Bank
    in the same amount of $179,838.41, nunc pro tunc to August 3, 2015; that order,
    which was entered on April 25, 2017, is the subject of the appeal in Case No.
    A17A2121. The trial court also entered a separate order denying Stearns’ motion for
    summary judgment on the issue of how the proceeds of the sale should be
    apportioned among the Participating Banks, leaving that issue for resolution by a
    7
    jury; that order, which was also entered on April 25, 2017, is the subject of the appeal
    in Case No. A17A2122.5
    Case No. A17A2121.
    1. CSB argues that the trial court erred by entering judgment for Dalton and
    Pickens Bank in the exact same amount as the order on partial summary judgment
    that we vacated in our earlier appeal. We agree.
    In CSB I, we unequivocally directed the trial court to vacate the summary
    judgment order and “remanded with instructions for the trial court to consider the
    amount of expenses CSB may deduct before distributing any amounts of the proceeds
    to the Purchaser.” CSB I, 338 Ga. App. at 346 (1) (emphasis added). In concluding
    the opinion, we summarized our holdings as follows:
    In summary, we vacate the trial court’s order and remand with
    instructions for the trial court to consider the amount of expenses CSB
    may deduct before it distributes any remaining amounts to the Purchaser.
    We also vacate the trial court’s award of attorney fees in connection
    5
    The trial court directed that its order on the motion for enforcement of
    judgment be made final pursuant to OCGA § 9-11-54 (b). Thus, although issues
    remained pending below, that order was directly appealable. Stearns also filed an
    application for interlocutory review of the trial court’s order denying summary
    judgment on the distribution of the proceeds among the Participating Banks, and we
    granted Stearns’ application on that issue.
    8
    with the deduction of expenses because Dalton and Pickens Bank are no
    longer entitled to attorney fees on that issue.
    Id. at 347 (2). The judgment line also provided: “Judgment vacated and case
    remanded with direction.”
    On remand, Dalton and Pickens Bank argued, and the trial court accepted, that
    the reference to “remaining amounts” in the summary paragraph referred to the
    amounts that CSB had not tendered in the court’s registry and thus CSB I only dealt
    with amounts not included in the judgment that had been entered, leaving the
    previous judgment “unappealed and . . . undisturbed.” But that is a fundamental
    misreading of our previous opinion, which explicitly vacated the trial court’s order
    that had entered the judgment in the body of the opinion and in the judgment line.
    Moreover, to the extent that confusion stems from the use of the term “remaining
    amounts” in the summary paragraph of the opinion, in context that term refers to the
    amounts remaining after the deduction of expenses, not the amounts remaining with
    CSB after tender to the trial court. Accordingly, the trial court erred by concluding
    9
    that we left the prior award undisturbed when we instructed that the court first deduct
    CSB’s expenses prior to making any distributions of the proceeds.6
    In the alternative, Dalton and Pickens Bank also advance the argument that the
    trial court’s minimum judgment of $179,838.41 in their favor should be affirmed
    because CSB’s tender in the trial court of those specific amounts to each Participating
    Bank constituted an admission in judicio of the Participating Banks’ entitlement to
    the specific amount tendered. We find no merit to this contention. CSB’s motion to
    tender plainly states that “[t]here is a dispute as to the proper distribution of the . . .
    sale proceeds between the parties[,]” and that CSB was tendering the funds into the
    registry of the trial court “for determination of its proper distribution.” Tendering the
    funds under these stated conditions and caveats did not constitute an admission in
    judicio. Accordingly, the trial court’s order of August 25, 2017 on Dalton and Pickens
    Bank’s motion for entry of judgment is vacated and the case remanded for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion and CSB I.
    2. The trial court likewise erred in failing to reconsider the award of attorney
    fees on remand. In CSB I, we concluded that because Dalton and Pickens Bank were
    6
    CSB also contends that the trial court improperly calculated interest on the
    total amount of the sale proceeds, and on the face of the trial court’s order that
    assertion appears to be true. Thus, the interest award must be recalculated.
    10
    no longer prevailing parties with respect to the issue that CSB was permitted to
    deduct expenses before distributing any proceeds, the prior award of fees was
    vacated. Thus, we once again vacate the trial court’s award of attorney fees in
    connection with the deduction of expenses because Dalton and Pickens Bank are no
    longer prevailing parties with respect to this issue and remand for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion and CSB I.7
    Case No. A17A2122.
    3. We now turn to the issue of the distribution of the proceeds among the
    Participating Banks. The trial court denied the Participating Banks’ motions for
    partial summary judgment on this issue, finding that a jury should decide how the
    proceeds of the sale should be distributed between Dalton, Pickens Bank, and
    Stearns.8 Stearns argues that based on the Participation Agreements and the rule
    announced in Georgia Realty Co. v. Bank of Covington, 
    19 Ga. App. 219
     (
    1 SE 267
    )
    7
    As in CSB I, we note that Dalton and Pickens Bank were prevailing parties
    on other issues raised and decided on their motion for partial summary judgment.
    Because CSB did not challenge these rulings in the previous appeal, we express no
    opinion on the fees awarded with respect to these claims.
    8
    As set out above, at the time of the sale of the collateral real estate, Stearns
    owned a 45.946 percent interest in Loan 74744, and Dalton and Pickens Bank each
    owned a 27.027 percent interest. Stearns also owned a 100 percent interest in Loan
    74747.
    11
    (1917), the sale proceeds should be distributed pro rata based on the ownership
    interests set out in the Participation Agreements for both loans. Thus, according to
    Stearns, its pro rata share is its percentage of ownership interest in the total amounts
    secured by the Security Deed, or 86.252 percent of the total debt, and Dalton and
    Pickens are entitled to divide the remaining amounts, which would substantially
    reduce their respective participation interests. Further, Stearns argues that the Default
    Provision of the Participation Agreements also provides for pro rata distribution of
    the proceeds.
    In Georgia Realty, which was decided over 100 years ago, we considered the
    priority of payment when separate loans are secured by a single security deed and the
    proceeds from the sale of the collateral are insufficient to satisfy the entire debt,
    concluding that
    [i]n the absence of any agreement or special equities to the contrary, the
    assignees and holders of the several separate notes of debt secured by a
    mortgage are entitled to share pro rata and without any preferences in
    the proceeds of the mortgage, when insufficient to satisfy them all; and
    it makes no difference that some of the debts matured earlier than the
    others or that the assignments were made at different times.
    Id. at 223 (4).
    12
    Dalton and Pickens Bank acknowledge that the Court in Georgia Realty set out
    a general rule to be applied when multiple loans are secured by the same security, but
    point out that the general rule only applies “[i]n the absence of any agreement or
    special equities to the contrary.” Further, contrary to Stearns’ assertions, they argue
    the Participation Agreements only pertain to the particular loan for which the shares
    have been sold, and thus do not answer the question of how to distribute the proceeds
    when there are multiple loans and different Participation Agreements for each loan.
    We turn first to the Participation Agreements. Under the Default Provision,
    which we held in CSB I controls here, payments are applied ratably first to expenses,
    and then “to the unpaid principal amount of the Loan in proportion to the respective
    unpaid investments of Seller and Purchaser in the Loan at the time of the Default . .
    .” Although we agree that answers the question of how the proceeds of the sale should
    be distributed with respect to each Participating Banks’ interest in the “Loan” listed
    and referenced in that particular Participation Agreement, it does not answer the
    question of how the proceeds should be divided when there are separate loans.
    Likewise, we find no “special equities” to support deviating from the general
    rule. Dalton and Pickens Bank claim that they were misled to believe that they, along
    with Stearns, were purchasing 100 percent of the security interests in the collateral
    13
    real estate, but the Participation Agreements stated on their face that the loans were
    secured by the property listed in the security deed, and the security deed referenced
    the two loans and each loan agreement referenced the security deeds. Further, the
    2008 renewal of Loan 74744 states that it is “crossed with Loan # 74747” and the
    2008 renewal of Loan 74747 states that it is “crossed with Loan # 74744.”
    Accordingly, even accepting Dalton and Pickens Bank’s contention that they were
    unaware that a hundred percent participation interest had been sold in Loan 74747,
    they were aware that the loan itself was secured by the same piece of property that
    secured Loan 74744. And under the general rule in Georgia Realty, if no participation
    interest had been sold in Loan 74747, CSB, as the successor to the lender, would have
    had the right to a pro rata share of the proceeds from the sale of the collateral real
    estate. Accordingly, the fact that Dalton and Pickens Bank may have been unaware
    that Stearns subsequently obtained a hundred percent participation interest in Loan
    74747 does not present a special equity such that the general pro rata distribution rule
    should not apply. See Georgia Realty, 19 Ga. App. at 224 (4) (“it makes no
    difference... that the assignments were made at different times”).
    Nor do we agree with Dalton and Pickens Bank that the parties’ conduct prior
    to default constitutes a special equity supporting a deviation from the general rule.
    14
    Although the two loans may have been treated differently with respect to payments
    made on the loans,9 once the loans went into default, the Default Provision controlled.
    Accordingly, and based on the foregoing, the trial court erred by denying Stearns’
    motion for partial summary judgment seeking a pro rata distribution of the proceeds
    of the sale among the Participating Banks.
    Judgment vacated and case remanded with direction in Case No. A17A2121.
    Judgment reversed in Case No. A17A2122. Barnes, P. J., and Rickman, J., concur.
    9
    Under the terms of the Agreements, when lots were sold in the subdivision,
    the proceeds of the sales were transferred to Gilmer/CSB, who then distributed the
    proceeds pro rata according to the interests in the loans to the Participating Banks in
    Loan 74744. However, it does not appear that payments made in connection with
    Loan in 74747 were tied to the sale of the lots.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A17A2121; A17A2122

Citation Numbers: 811 S.E.2d 490

Judges: McMillian

Filed Date: 2/28/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024