AgAmerica, FCB v. Robson , 52 State Rptr. 800 ( 1995 )


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  •                               NO.    94-438
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    1995
    AgAMERICA, FCB, a corporation, successor
    in interest to The Bank of Spokane,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    -vs-
    GARY G. ROBSON and DONA ROBSON,
    husband and Wife,
    Defendants and Appellants.
    APPEAL FROM:     District Court of the Fourteenth Judicial District,
    In and for the County of Musselshell,
    The Honorable Kenneth R. Wilson, Judge presiding.
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellants:
    A. Clifford Edwards, Roger W. Frickle; Edwards Law
    Firm, Billings, Montana
    For Respondent:
    A. Lance Tonn; Lucas and Monaghan, Billings, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: April 6, 1995
    Decided:   August 17, 1995
    Filed:
    Justice Karla M. Gray delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    Gary G. Robson and Dona C. Robson (Robsons) appeal from an
    order of the Fourteenth Judicial District Court,                     Musselshell
    County,     granting summary judgment in favor of AgAmerica,                  FCB
    (AgAmerica) and denying their motion to compel discovery, and from
    the subsequent Judgment, Decree of Foreclosure and Order of Sale.
    We reverse in part, vacate in part and remand.
    The issues presented on appeal are:
    1.   Did the District Court err in granting summary
    judgment to AgAmerica on the Robsons' affirmative defense
    and AgAmerica's foreclosure action?
    2. Did the District Court err in granting summary
    judgment to AgAmerica on the Robsons' counterclaim?
    3.  Did the District Court err in denying the Robsons'
    motion to compel discovery?
    The Robsons borrowed $131,000 from AgAmerica's             predecessor in
    interest (hereafter also referred to as AgAmerica) to purchase real
    property in 1976.          They executed and delivered to AgAmerica a
    promissory note evidencing the loan.            As security for repayment of
    the   loan, the Robsons also executed, filed and recorded a mortgage
    covering    the    subject   property.       The mortgage incorporated the
    provisions of the Farm Credit Act of 1971 and amendments thereto,
    including    the   loan   restructuring      provisions   of   the   Agricultural
    Credit Act of 1987 (collectively, the Act).
    The terms of the loan required the Robsons to make annual
    installment    payments.     The Robsons made only a partial payment of
    the 1985 installment and did not pay any of the installments due in
    1986 through 1988.        In 1989, the Robsons and AgAmerica entered into
    2
    a restructure       agreement   regarding the loan.             After the Robsons
    failed to make         required payments on             the restructured loan,
    AgAmerica advised them that their loan "may be a distressed loan"
    pursuant to the Act and sent them an application for a second
    restructuring.
    In August 1990, the Robsons submitted the second restructure
    application to AgAmerica.             AgAmerica denied the application for a
    number of reasons, including insufficient income to repay the first
    restructured loan and the lack of additional collateral being
    offered for the second restructuring.                The Robsons requested review
    of the decision by AgAmerica's Credit Review Committee.                           The
    Credit     Review Committee   upheld the denial of the Robsons' second
    application to restructure their loan.
    AgAmerica filed, and later amended, a complaint to foreclose
    on   the    Robsons'     mortgage.             The   Robsons   answered,     denying
    AgAmerica's allegations regarding default and acceleration.                       The
    Robsons    alleged,    as an affirmative defense,              that   AgAmerica   had
    failed to comply with the loan restructuring provisions of the Act
    and counterclaimed for damages based on AgAmerica's alleged breach
    of fiduciary duty. After AgAmerica refused to respond to discovery
    requests relating to their affirmative defense, the Robsons filed
    a motion to compel discovery.
    AgAmerica        moved     for     summary      judgment on      the   Robsons'
    affirmative defense and counterclaim and on its foreclosure
    complaint; it also moved for protective orders regarding discovery
    sought by the Robsons.            The    District     Court    granted   AgAmerica's
    3
    motions for summary judgment and for protective orders, denied the
    Robsons' motion to compel discovery, and subsequently entered its
    Judgment, Decree of Foreclosure and Order.              The Robsons appeal.
    1.   Did the District Court err in granting summary
    judgment to AgAmerica on the Robsons' affirmative defense
    and AgAmerica's foreclosure action?
    Summary judgment is proper when there are no genuine issues of
    material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law.         Rule   56(c),    M.R.Civ.P.     The party moving for
    summary judgment bears the initial burden of establishing both the
    absence of genuine issues of material fact and entitlement to
    judgment as a matter of law.             Brinkman     & Lenon v. P & D Land
    Enterprises (1994), 
    263 Mont. 238
    , 242, 
    867 P.2d 1112
    , 1115.                 The
    same rules apply to a party seeking summary judgment on an opposing
    party's affirmative defense.           Brinkman & Lenon, 867 P.2d at 1115.
    The District Court granted summary judgment to AgAmerica on
    the   Robsons'     affirmative     defense      and    counterclaim    and    on
    AgAmerica's    foreclosure     complaint.      We review an order granting
    summary judgment by applying the same criteria as the district
    court.     Minnie v. City of Roundup (1993), 
    257 Mont. 429
    , 431, 
    849 P.2d 212
    , 214.
    We begin by examining the court's grant of summary judgment in
    AgAmerica's favor on the Robsons'               affirmative     defense.     The
    Robsons'     affirmative defense is based on allegations that, in
    considering    their   application      to   restructure,     the Act required
    AgAmerica:       (1) to consider whether the cost to the lender of
    4
    restructuring the loan is equal to,          or less than,     the cost of
    foreclosure;       (2) to perform specified computations in determining
    the cost of foreclosure;        (3) to perform certain computations in
    determining the cost of restructuring; and (4) to restructure a
    loan if the potential cost of restructuring is less than, or equal
    to, the potential cost of foreclosing.          The Robsons alleged that
    AgAmerica did not perform the computations necessary to determine
    the cost of         foreclosure or the cost of restructuring and,
    therefore,     that AgAmerica did not determine whether the cost of
    restructuring was equal to, or less than, the cost of foreclosure,
    all in violation of the requirements of the Act.
    Comparing the Robsons' affirmative defense allegations to the
    Act itself reveals that the allegations are nearly verbatim quotes
    of 12 U.S.C. §§ 2202a(d)      (1) (A), (a) (21, (e) (21, and (e) (1).   Thus,
    the clear and unequivocal crux of the allegations is that AgAmerica
    failed to comply with the Act in certain specified regards.               The
    District Court determined at the outset of its analysis, however,
    that the crux of the affirmative defense is a contention that,
    while AgAmerica complied with the substantive provisions of the
    Act,   its evaluation of the second restructure application was
    flawed.      The     court's determination is a misreading of the
    affirmative defense as pled by the Robsons.
    We recently resolved the issue of whether an affirmative
    defense to a mortgage foreclosure action may be predicated on a
    lender's failure to comply with the requirements of the Act. In
    Farm Credit Bk. of Spokane v. District Court (1994), 
    267 Mont. 1
    ,
    5
    24, 
    881 P.2d 594
    , 608, we held that, where the parties'                      mortgage
    incorporates the loan restructuring provisions of the Act, an
    affirmative defense based on the lender's failure to comply with
    the Act is available.       While Farm Credit Bk. of Spokane was decided
    after the District Court's decision in this case, the general rule
    is that an appellate court must apply the law in effect at the                   time
    it renders its decision.         Haines Pipeline v. MPC (1992), 
    251 Mont. 422
    , 433, 830 P.Zd 1230, 1238.          Thus, we examine the case presently
    before us under Farm Credit Bk. of Suokane.
    Here, it is undisputed that the mortgage at issue incorporated
    the loan restructuring provisions of the Act.             As set forth above,
    it is clear that the Robsons alleged AgAmerica's failure to comply
    with those provisions as an affirmative defense.                 Thus,    AgAmerica
    is entitled to summary judgment on the Robsons' affirmative defense
    only if it established the absence of genuine fact issues regarding
    its compliance with the Act's least cost analysis requirements, as
    contained in 12 U.S.C.           §§ 2202a(d)   (1) (A),   (a)   (2))     (e) (2) and
    (e) (1).
    In     this      regard,    the    District     Court       made      several
    determinations.         It first determined that the Robsons "tacitly
    admit"     that     AgAmerica    complied    with   all of       the     procedural
    requirements of the Act.         This determination is incorrect; it also
    impermissibly shifts the burden on summary judgment.                      The court
    based this determination on an erroneous reading of a portion of
    the Robsons' brief opposing summary judgment which, in turn, relied
    on Gary Robson's deposition.         In fact, while the Robsons admit that
    6
    AgAmerica        "complied with at least a portion of the Act's mandated
    provision[sl ,'I their brief did not admit compliance by AgAmerica
    with all of the Act's requirements.            Conspicuously absent from the
    admitted compliance list are the very requirements the Robsons
    allege were not met by AgAmerica and which form the basis for their
    affirmative defense; namely, compliance with the requirement that
    the lender consider the least cost factor when determining whether
    to accept a restructure application,               perform    computations      to
    determine        the   costs of      foreclosure and restructuring,            and
    restructure the loan where the cost of restructuring is less than,
    or equal to, the cost of foreclosure.
    Moreover, because the court had not determined that AgAmerica
    established the absence             of a genuine    issue    of material fact
    regarding        its   compliance    with the Act,      the District Court's
    determination also impermissibly shifted the initial burden on
    summary judgment from AgAmerica to the Robsons.                 The    nonmoving
    party need not establish the existence of a material factual issue
    unless and until the moving party has met its initial burden.                  See
    Brinkman     &    Lenon,   867 P.2d at 1115.         Thus,   the Robsons were
    entitled to rest on the allegations of their affirmative defense
    until AgAmerica established the absence of genuine                    issues of
    material      fact     regarding     its   compliance   with 12       U.S.C.    §§
    2202a(d) (1) (A), (a) (2), (e) (2), and (e) (1).
    The District Court also determined that the Act's least cost
    analysis     requirements     are "but one of a number of factors to be
    considered        in determining whether a restructure application
    7
    represents a sound credit decision."          This determination is not
    altogether correct, given the requirement of the Act that a lender
    "shall restructure" a loan if it determines that the potential cost
    "Of   restructuring    the    loan in     accordance      with a   proposed
    restructuring plan is less than or equal to the potential cost of
    foreclosure . . . .I'        12 U.S.C.   5 2202a(e)    (1).   In any event,
    however,   the court's determination should have led the court
    logically and    inexorably to the very question raised by the
    Robsons' affirmative defense: did AgAmerica consider the least cost
    factor as required by the Act?       The District Court did not require
    AyAmerica to come forward with evidence establishing that it had
    considered the least cost factor as the Act requires.          Instead, the
    court determined that AgAmerica denied the Robsons' restructure
    application for other reasons.       That determination simply begs the
    question and does not establish the absence of any genuine issue of
    material fact regarding the Robsons' affirmative defense.
    The effect of the District Court's decision is to allow
    AgAmerica to select the parts of the Act with which it chooses to
    comply.    The Act,   by its terms, does not permit such unfettered
    discretion in a lender,       and neither will this Court, where the
    mortgage at issue incorporates the Act into the mortgage contract.
    We conclude that the District Court erred in determining that
    AyAmerica established the absence of any genuine issue of material
    fact regarding the Robsons' affirmative defense. On that basis, we
    further conclude that the court erred in granting summary judgment
    to AyAmerica on the Robsons' affirmative defense.               Because   the
    affirmative defense remains to be adjudicated, vie hold that the
    District Court also erred in granting summary judgment to AgAmerica
    on its foreclosure action.
    2 . Did the District Court err in granting summary
    judgment to AgAmerica on the Robsons' counterclaim?
    After granting summary judgment to AgAmerica on the Robsons'
    affirmative defense, the District Court granted summary judgment on
    the Robsons'      counterclaim.     The Robsons contend that the court
    erred.
    The   Robsons'     counterclaim begins by         incorporating       the
    allegations    of   their   affirmative     defense.   In addition to the
    affirmative defense allegations summarized above, the allegations
    relate to the Robsons' first application to restructure their loan
    in   1988 and AgAmerica's         failure    to comply with the Act in
    permitting the first restructure.           The counterclaim then alleges a
    breach of fiduciary duty by AgAmerica relating to the first
    restructure.
    In ruling on AgAmerica's motion for summary judgment on the
    counterclaim, the District Court first stated that the counterclaim
    was largely disposed of by its ruling on the affirmative defense.
    Notwithstanding the court's error in the affirmative defense
    determinations,     this determination by the court does not take into
    account the substantial difference between an affirmative defense
    to foreclosure based on failure to comply with the Act in
    considering the second restructure application and a tort           claim   for
    breach of fiduciary duty relating to the first restructure
    9
    application.      The combination of these two errors prevented the
    District Court from properly addressing the Robsons' counterclaim
    in the      context of   AgAmerica's      motion     for summary judgment.
    Moreover,      neither   the   Robsons     nor     AgAmerica   analyzes     the
    counterclaim separately from the affirmative defense on appeal.
    We recognized in Farm Credit Bk. of Spokane that, where the
    parties'    mortgage incorporates the Act,         a party may enforce the
    terms of the Act via a breach of contract claim in the same manner
    as other contract terms are enforceable.                Farm Credit Bk. of
    Spokane,    881 P.Zd at 602.     Here,    however,     the Robsons have not
    alleged a breach of contract counterclaim against AgAmerica.              Thus,
    Farm Credit Bk. of Spokane is not directly applicable with regard
    to the Robsons' counterclaim as alleged, and the parties have not
    cited to any authority bearing directly on this issue.
    Given our conclusion above that the District Court erred in
    granting summary judgment on the Robsons' affirmative defense, the
    consequent necessity of remanding this case for further proceedings
    and the lack of adequate briefing on the counterclaim issue, we
    conclude that it is appropriate to vacate the District Court's
    order granting summary judgment to AgAmerica on the Robsons'
    counterclaim and allow the parties and the court to consider the
    matter further on remand.
    3.   Did the District Court err in denying the Robsons'
    motion to compel discovery?
    In its memorandum accompanying the order denying the Robsons'
    motion to compel discovery, the District Court concluded that:
    10
    AgAmerica's "least cost calculations" and other data
    relating to its decision to deny Mr. and Mrs. Robsons'
    second Restructure Application is [sic] not relevant
    evidence and will not lead to the discovery of relevant
    evidence.
    Our standard in reviewing a district court‘s ruling relating to
    discovery is whether the court abused its discretion.                       McKamey v.
    State (1994), 
    268 Mont. 137
    , 145, 
    885 P.2d 515
    , 520 (citation
    omitted).
    Generally,      parties    may     obtain    discovery         regarding      any
    unprivileged information relevant to the subject matter of the
    action,     including     information      which    "relates to the claim or
    defense of the party seeking discovery. .                      .I'     Rule 26(b) (l),
    M.R.Civ.P.     Here, the Robsons' motion to compel sought information
    regarding the least cost calculations performed by AgAmerica                        while
    processing the Robsons'           second    application   to         restructure    their
    loan.     As discussed above, this information is both the crux of the
    Robsons'     affirmative defense to the foreclosure action and a
    mandatory consideration in AgAmerica's              processing of their second
    application to restructure.          The allegations that AgAmerica                failed
    to consider the least cost factor and perform the computations
    necessary for that consideration,               all as required by 12 U.S.C. 5
    2202a, constitute a cognizable affirmative defense to a foreclosure
    action.     & Farm Credit Bk. of Sookane, 881 P.2d at 608.                         Thus,
    the Robsons' motion to compel discovery clearly sought information
    relevant to the "claim or defense of the party seeking discovery."
    See Rule 26(b) (l), M.R.Civ.P.             Accordingly,   we conclude that the
    District Court abused its discretion in denying the Robsons' motion
    11
    to compel discovery and in granting AgAmerica's related motions for
    protective orders.
    The District Court's order granting summary judgment to
    AgAmerica on the Robsons' affirmative defense and its foreclosure
    action are    reversed,   the order granting summary judgment to
    AgAmerica on the Robsons' counterclaim is vacated, and the orders
    denying the Robsons'      motion to compel discovery and granting
    AgAmerica's   motions for protective orders are reversed.   This case
    is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    We concur.
    Chief Justice
    12
    Justice Fred J. Weber dissents as follows:
    I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion.               Once again
    we are called upon to decide whether a lender has appropriately
    failed to restructure a distressed farm loan.
    The majority holds that the lender must consider the least
    cost   analysis     for   restructuring.         The federal statute at issue
    provides a list of five considerations that a lender is required to
    make when called upon to decide whether to foreclose on a party's
    farm loan or to restructure the loan.                 The statute requires a
    lender to determine whether or not to restructure based upon:
    1.    whether the cost to the lender of restructuring a loan is
    equal to or less than the cost of foreclosure;
    2.    whether the borrower is applying all income over and
    above necessary and reasonable living and operating expenses to the
    payment of primary obligations;
    3.    whether the borrower has the financial capacity and the
    management    skills      to protect       the    collateral   from    diversion,
    dissipation    or   deterioration;
    4.    whether the borrower is capable of working out existing
    financial difficulties, reestablishing a viable operation and
    repaying the loan on a rescheduled basis; and
    5.    in the case of a distressed loan that is not delinquent,
    whether restructuring consistent with sound lending practices may
    be taken to reasonably ensure that the loan will not become a loan
    that is necessary to place in nonaccrual status.                      12   U.S.C.   §
    13
    2202a(d)     (l)A-E.
    Here,    the lender gave the following reasons for its denial of
    the second restructuring application--insufficient farm income to
    repay the loan, the Robsons did not provide the needed information
    on past operating history,                the Robsons       did not provide accurate
    projections and figures for the restructuring plan they supplied,
    the figures that were supplied did not match with former figures
    supplied to the agency,                Farm Home had indicated that they would
    accelerate their loan because of large delinquencies and the
    Robson's        plan      did    not   deal   with   this    at   all,   no   documents
    supporting part of their projected income had been presented, and
    no additional collateral had been offered as security despite the
    fact that the Robson's plan called for an entire year lag time
    before a payment would be due.
    This list shows that the lender did not arrive at this
    decision     without        thought.     I note with interest that the Robsons
    had not paid a single payment on the first restructured loan, yet
    they expected the lender to consider a second restructure plan.
    The second plan included a "zero"                   figure for yearly interest and
    did not take into account the $34,765 payment owed to FCB yearly.
    Thus,    the Robsons, in offering this plan, admitted that they had no
    intent to repay this or any other loan, such as the Farm Home loan
    that was badly delinquent.
    The Robsons'            plan did not contain accurate figures and in
    certain pivotal areas, contained no figures.                      A lender cannot make
    a   "least      cost 1'    analysis     if it does not have the appropriate
    14
    information.         The Robsons were informed that they could provide
    documentation for their figures to the credit review committee.
    The majority would have all lenders in all situations make the
    "least cost" analysis involving foreclosure v.                        restructuring even
    if the lender,        as in this case,          has not been provided with the
    appropriate figures upon which it could make that decision.                          The
    majority would have all lenders do this far-from-simple task even
    if     common    sense and past performance have indicated that the
    farmers in question are without the sufficient ability to make the
    venture pay in any way.
    The record of this case shows that AgAmerica made its own
    figures and set them beside            the figures of the Robsons.                   The
    lender's        figures,   while not giving the "least                 cost" analysis,
    showed clearly that the Robsons were not able to make this farm
    pay.       The law specifically directs lenders to consider the
    borrower's repayment capacity when making a "cost                        of foreclosure"
    figure      1 2    U.S.C. 5 2202a(a) (2)   (A).       The lender determined that
    there was no repayment capacity here.                        Why does the majority
    believe that returning this case to the District Court is going to
    have any affect at all on the                   outcome of    the Robsons     repayment
    capacity?        The only thing accomplished by sending this case back is
    that the original $131,000 amount that was borrowed and is now
    close to $300,000 will be $400,000 by the                    time   the case is settled.
    There is nothing within the applicable legislation that
    indicates in any way that if the cost of restructuring is less than
    the cost of foreclosure the lender must restructure even if it is
    15
    painfully obvious, as here, that the farmer cannot make the venture
    pay or repay his escalating loan.             The wording of the law merely
    states that the lender must consider this along with the other four
    factors.   But if the lender determines that the farmers do not have
    the capacity to repay the loan, all the restructuring in the world
    is not going to repay the lender.            And putting a monetary figure on
    restructuring      when     that   is    not     a   plausible   alternative,
    accomplishes     nothing.
    If the restructuring plan itself is flawed as here, the lender
    cannot make the "least cost" analysis in any meaningful way.             Such
    a set of circumstances means that the lender must look to the other
    four concerns of the federal law because the lack of repayment
    capacity has shown that they are needed for analysis--such criteria
    as whether the persons involved have the ability to handle a farm
    enterprise become the determining factor behind the decision.
    I submit that the lender in this situation made the proper
    determination and that the District Court correctly analyzed the
    law and the lender's requirements under it.
    The courts do not belong in the middle of these restructuring
    decisions because we do not have the practical sense needed to
    evaluate the workings of the parties involved in the decision-
    making.    That is why the federal scheme provided for a credit
    review committee to review the lender's decision and not the
    courts.    Such a credit review committee here affirmed denial of
    restructuring.
    The majority's harangue against the "unfettered discretion" of
    16
    the lender in this case is unwarranted.       The lender used common
    sense when interpreting the rules provided it by the legislature
    and did not do anything in opposition to legislative directive.
    I strongly disagree with the majority opinion and would vote
    to affirm the District Court.
    /     Chief JM'$ice
    17
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 94-438

Citation Numbers: 272 Mont. 413, 52 State Rptr. 800, 901 P.2d 100, 1995 Mont. LEXIS 179

Judges: Gray, Weber, Trieweiler, Hunt, Nelson, Turnage

Filed Date: 8/17/1995

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024