| Robert E. Barrat, Esq. Martinsburg, West Virginia Attorney for Appellant |
Kenneth J. Barton, Jr., Esq. Gregory A. Bailey, Esq. Steptoe & Johnson Martinsburg, West Virginia Attorneys for Appellees |
A motion for summary
judgment should be granted only when it is clear that there is no genuine issue
of fact to be tried and inquiry concerning the facts is not desirable to clarify
the application of the law. Syllabus Point 3, Aetna Casualty and Surety
Company v. Federal Insurance Company of New York, 148 W. Va. 160, 133
S.E.2d 770 (1963).
Per Curiam:
This is an appeal by Timothy
Hafer from an order of the Circuit Court of Berkeley County rejecting his petition
to set aside a trustee's sale. In rejecting the petition, the circuit court
granted the respondents summary judgment. Mr. Hafer, in the present proceeding,
contends, among other things, that as a matter of law, the trustee's sale which
he sought to have set aside was improperly conducted and that the price received
by the trustee was grossly inadequate and that the trial court, under the circumstances,
erred in refusing to grant him the relief which he sought.
In 1987, a group of individuals, including the appellant Timothy Hafer, acting as K.T.L. Partnership purchased a parcel of real estate located in Martinsburg, West Virginia, for $22,000. The sellers, Howard W. Collins and Margaret L. Collins, loaned K.T.L. Partnership $20,900 of the $22,000 purchase price. As a consequence, the partners executed a note payable to the sellers, and also executed a deed of trust to secure the loan. Martinsburg attorneys John L. Van Metre, Jr. and Lucien G. Lewin were named as trustees under that deed of trust. The deed of trust contained language which specified how substitute trustees might be appointed. The substitution language stated:
20. Substitute Trustee.
Lender at its option may from time to time, without notice, remove any person
or persons herein or hereafter designated as Trustee and appoint a successor Trustee
to any Trustee appointed herein or hereafter by an instrument recorded in any
County in which this Deed of Trust is recorded. Without conveyance of the Property,
the successor trustee shall succeed to all the title, power and duties conferred
upon Trustee herein and by applicable law. Trustee is hereby authorized to act
by agent or attorney in the execution of this trust.
K.T.L. Partnership,
in time, failed to make certain payments due under the note, and on July 30,
1998, Robert Skinner, an attorney, sent letters demanding payment of the loan.
While it appears that Howard and Margaret Collins, the secured parties, may
have authorized Mr. Skinner to take this action, no instrument was, at that
time, recorded in Berkeley County substituting Mr. Skinner for Mr. Van Metre
and Mr. Lewin as trustee under the deed of trust.
On October 2 and October 9,
1998, Mr. Skinner, asserting that he was a substitute trustee, advertised the
sale of the real estate secured by the deed of trust in a Matinsburg newspaper,
The Journal. The advertisement announced a Notice of Substitute
Trustee's Sale of Valuable Real Estate.
On October 16, 1998, seven days after the last advertisement, Mr. Skinner sold the property at the advertised sale for $5,000.
At 9:57 a.m. on October 16, 1998,
approximately one hour after conducting the sale, Mr. Skinner recorded a Deed
of Substitution of Trustee in the Office of the Clerk of the County Commission
of Berkeley County. By that document, Howard and Margaret Collins authorized Robert
Skinner to act as trustee in place of John L. Van Metre and Lucian Lewin.
Following the foreclosure
sale, Mr. Skinner instituted a deficiency proceeding in the Circuit Court of
Berkeley County. In that proceeding, Mr. Skinner sought judgment on behalf of
Howard and Margaret Collins for over $8,000, the amount of the deficiency in
the sale price, together with the costs of the sale.
Subsequently, in February
1999, Timothy Hafer, the appellant in the present proceeding, instituted an
action in the Circuit Court of Berkeley County to set aside the trustee's sale.
In the complaint instituting the action, Mr. Hafer alleged that the sale had
not been conducted in accordance with the provisions of the West Virginia Code
relating to trustee's sales, and that the sale had violated the West Virginia
Consumer Credit and Protection Act. He also claimed that the price received
was grossly inadequate.
Following the institution
of Mr. Hafer's action, various documents were filed, and on June 10, 1999, counsel
for Mr. Skinner moved for summary judgment. His motion was accompanied by a memorandum of law and eight exhibits. Mr. Hafer filed
a counter- motion for summary judgment and a memorandum in opposition.
The Circuit Court of Berkeley
County took the motions for summary judgment under consideration, and by order
dated July 22, 1999, granted Mr. Skinner's motion. The court ruled solely on
the basis of the pleadings and the documents filed without conducting a hearing.
In granting summary judgment, the circuit court found, among other things, that:
The undisputed evidence shows that Respondent Successor Trustee Robert
R. Skinner, Esq. complied with all applicable provisions of West Virginia law
in conducting the trustee sale of the subject property . . . .
It is from the grant of summary
judgment that Timothy Hafer now appeals. He argues, among other things, that
Robert Skinner was not authorized to act as trustee at the time of the sale.
Mr. Skinner, on the other hand, argues that there is no genuine issue of material
fact that he, as substitute trustee, complied with the applicable provisions
of West Virginia's law governing foreclosures and that Mr. Hafer's challenge
to the foreclosure sale is without merit.
The undisputed facts of this case
show that in the deed of trust which the K.T.L. partners signed, John L. Van Metre,
Jr., and Lucian Lewin were appointed trustees. As such, Mr. Van Metre and Mr.
Lewin had authority to conduct an appropriate sale under the deed of trust. The
undisputed facts also show that the deed of trust contained a substitution-of-trustee
clause authorizing a substitution to be made by filing an instrument in the office
of the County Clerk of Berkeley County and that such an instrument was filed substituting
Mr. Skinner for Mr. Van Metre and Mr. Lewin, but that it was filed only after
the sale had been completed. Since, as will hereafter be discussed, the Court
believes that these are the facts governing the disposition of this case, and
since these facts are not in dispute, the Court believes that summary judgment,
from a procedural point of view, was appropriate under the rule set forth in Syllabus
Point 3 of Aetna Casualty and Surety Company v. Federal Insurance Company of
New York, supra. However, as will hereafter appear, the Court believes that
the ultimate conclusion reached by the circuit court was erroneous.
West Virginia law recognizes
that under certain circumstances, it may be necessary or desirable for there
to be a substitution of trustees under a deed of trust. When such a circumstance
rises, W. Va. Code 44-14-1 specifies how a secured party, or a surety,
may accomplish the substitution. A portion of W. Va. Code 44-14-1, W. Va.
Code 44-14- 1(a), authorizes a circuit court, upon motion of an appropriate
party, to appoint a substitute trustee. A second portion, W. Va. Code 44-14-1(b), provides an alternative
procedure, which may apply in certain circumstances, and which will relieve
the party seeking substitution of the burden of going to court. That statutory
section specifically provides:
(b) As an alternative to the
method of substitution provided for in subsection (a) of this section, in the
case of a trust deed to secure a debt or obligation if the trust deed does not
by its terms prescribe a method for substitution, the party secured by the trust
deed, or any surety indemnified by the deed, or the assignee or personal representative
of any such secured party or surety has the authority, in the event of such
death, removal, declination, resignation, refusal or inability as is described
in subsection (a), to substitute a trustee or trustees in the place of the trustee
or trustees named in such instrument, independent of any court action otherwise
required by the provisions of subsection (a).
W. Va. Code 44-14-1(b).
A careful reading of this section suggests that it actually contemplates two possible situations, the first where a trust deed prescribes a method for substitution, and the second if the trust deed does not by its terms prescribe a method of substitution. If the trust deed does not prescribe a method of substitution, W. Va. Code 44-14-2(b) states that a substitution may be made by mailing copies of a notice of substitution to certain individuals and by presenting the original of such notice to the clerk of the county commission in whose office the trust deed is recorded, causing such notice to be recorded and indexed in a general lien book or other such appropriate book wherein trust deeds or assignments of trust deeds are recorded. W. Va. Code 44-14-2(b).
In the present case, no party
requested that the court appoint a substitute trustee under W. Va. Code 44-14-1(a).
Rather, the alternative approach was used, and since the deed of trust by its
own terms prescribed a method of substitution, the Court believes that the validity
of the substitution is governed by those terms.
As has been stated previously,
Item 20 of the deed of trust has a Substitute Trustee provision,
and that provision states, in relevant part, Lender . . . may . . . appoint
a successor Trustee . . . by an instrument recorded in any County in which this
Deed of Trust is recorded.
This Court believes that the
clear meaning of this language is that the substitution is, or would be, accomplished
when the appropriate notice is, or has been recorded in the appropriate county,
Berkeley County.
There is no dispute that the
facts show that no notice of the substitution of Mr. Skinner as trustee for
Mr. Van Metre and Mr. Lewin was filed in the Office of the Clerk of the county
Commission of Berkeley County until after the deed of trust sale was conducted.
They, in effect, show that Mr. Van Metre and that Mr. Lewin were the trustees
at the time of the sale and that no substitution of Mr. Skinner had yet been
accomplished, and that as a consequence, Mr. Skinner lacked authority to act as trustee at the time of
the sale or to sell the property in accordance with the terms of the deed of
trust.
In view of this, this Court
believes that the trial court should have set aside the trustee's sale as a
nullity and that the court's refusal to do so constituted reversible error.
The Court notes that Mr. Hafer
makes a number of other assignments of error. For instance, he claims that the
sale violated the West Virginia Consumer Credit and Protection Act, W. Va.
Code 46A-1-101, et seq. This claim is without merit since the Consumer
Credit and Protection Act covers only consumer loans, and a consumer
loan is defined by W. Va. Code 46A-1-102(15) as:
Consumer loan is
a loan made by a person regularly engaged in the business of making loans in
which:
(a) The debtor is a person
other than an organization; . . .
The loan in the present case was made to K.T.L. Partnership, an
organization.
The remainder of Mr. Hafer's
assignments of error relate to the notice given of the trustee's sale in the
present case, as well as the adequacy of the price received at the sale. Since
the Court has already concluded that the trustee lacked authority to conduct
the sale, since the law relating to notice is rather clearly spelled out in
West Virginia's statutes and since the law relating to adequacy of price is discussed in other opinions,
the Court believes that it is unnecessary to discuss those points here.
For the reasons stated, the
judgment of the Circuit Court of Berkeley County is reversed, and this case
is remanded with directions that the circuit court set aside the trustee's sale
involved in this case.