Smith v. General Mortgage Corp.
Smith v. General Mortgage Corp.
Opinion of the Court
Where fire occurs before a mortgage foreclosure at which the mortgagee has bid in the property for the balance remaining due on the mortgage, who, as between mortgagor and mortgagee is entitled to the fire insurance proceeds? This question of apparent first impression in Michigan, though considered in other jurisdictions, comes to us following the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant mortgagees.
The mortgage in question was issued on January 4, 1969. The named mortgagee was defendant General Mortgage Corporation. That defendant is
The property was insured for $18,000. As of October, 1974, the balance due on the mortgage had been reduced to approximately $13,000. On October 17, 1974, the mortgaged house was totally destroyed by fire. At that time, plaintiffs were either already in default on their mortgage payments or went into default when they failed to make the November, 1974 payment on the mortgage.
In its capacity as a servicing agent for defendant FNMA, defendant General Mortgage began foreclosure proceedings on December 1, 1974. At a foreclosure sale held on January 7, 1975, defendant mortgagee FNMA bid in the property for $13,961, the amount of the then outstanding debt plus its foreclosure costs and attorneys’ fees. One of several mysteries raised by these facts is why the plaintiff mortgagors allowed their default to continue once it became clear that they could ultimately collect $18,000 from the insurance company. Their failure to clear the default or even to ask the defendants about the possibility of doing so has never been satisfactorily explained.
Six months after the foreclosure sale, the insurance company sent a check for $18,000 to defendant General Mortgage. The payees’ names on the
We previously indicated our inability to understand why the plaintiffs allowed their default to continue when they could readily have cured the
The trial judge relied upon FNMA v Ohio Casualty Insurance Co, supra, as authority for granting summary judgment for the defendants. It seems likely that defendant FNMA also relied upon the Ohio Casualty case and others like it from other jurisdictions when it decided to bid the full amount of the mortgage debt at the foreclosure sale. In other words, the bid of $14,000 for the worthless property made sense if FNMA believed that it would be entitled to collect at least $14,000, and perhaps $18,000, of insurance proceeds.
But both the trial judge and the defendants failed to note that there is one very important factual difference between this case and the more typical situation involved in the Ohio Casualty decision. That difference is that the fire in this case occurred before the foreclosure sale. This type of case should arise very infrequently since, as we have already noted, there should be no need for a foreclosure sale where the fire insurance proceeds are available to cure the default. Nevertheless, a few jurisdictions have dealt with this problem.
Although Smith could be distinguished on that basis, it so happens that it has properly anticipated the ruling of courts in other states which have considered precisely the problem raised by the present appeal. In both Whitestone Savings & Loan Ass’n v Allstate Insurance Co, 28 NY2d 332; 321 NYS2d 862; 270 NE2d 694 (1971), and Northwestern National Insurance Co v Mildenberger, 359 SW2d 380 (Mo App 1962), the courts concluded that mortgagees in the position of the present defendants were not entitled to any of the insurance proceeds. We are persuaded by Judge Breitel’s reasoning in the Whitestone case:
"What seems to have caused confusion is the equally well-settled rule that the rights under a fire insurance policy are fixed both as to amount and standing to recover at the time of the fire loss. From this rule it has been further and improperly deduced that the mortgagee could do nothing to impair his rights thus fixed at the time of loss.
* * *
"The theory of recovery by a mortgagee is indemnity. The risk insured against is an impairment of the mort*726 gaged property which adversely affects the mortgagee’s ability to resort to the property as a source for repayment. Where the debt has been satisfied in full subsequent to the fire, neither reason nor precedent suggest recovery on the policy by the mortgagee.
"The rule is not harsh and it is eminently practical. None disputes that the mortgagee is entitled to recover only his debt. Any surplus value belongs to others, namely, the mortgagor or subsequent lienors. Indeed, it is not conceivable that the mortgagee could recover a deficiency judgment against the mortgagor if it had bid in the full amount of the debt at foreclosure sale. To allow the mortgagee, añer effectively cutting off or discouraging lower bidders, to take the property—and then establish that it was worth less than the bid— encourages fraud, creates uncertainty as to the mortgagor’s rights, and most unfairly deprives the sale of whatever leaven comes from other bidders.”321 NYS2d at 863, 866. (Emphasis supplied.)
See also Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Co v Wilborn, 291 Ala 193; 279 So 2d 460 (1973), Insurance Co of North America v Citizens' Insurance Co of New Jersey, 425 F2d 1180 (CA 7, 1970), and Rosenbaum v Funcannon, 308 F2d 680 (CA 9, 1962).
From all of the preceding cases, we draw the following rules to be applied in situations where the mortgagee purchases the mortgaged premises at a foreclosure sale for a bid which is sufficient to completely extinguish the mortgage debt:
(1) Where the sequence of events is fire after foreclosure sale, the mortgagee is entitled to receive all of the insurance proceeds if the fire occurs before the equity of redemption expires. FNMA v Ohio Casualty Insurance Co, supra, Consolidated Mortgage Corp v American Security Insurance Co, supra.
(2) If the sequence of events is fire before foreclosure sale, the mortgagor is entitled to all of the
A strict application of the second rule would mandate reversal of judgment in the present case and entry of summary judgment awarding plaintiffs the full amount of the check for $18,000. But we decline to do so because that result would be contrary to the very equitable principle, viz., prevention of unjust enrichment, which the plaintiffs have invoked. The rule announced in Whitestone Savings & Loan Ass’n v Allstate Insurance Co, supra, and the other foreign jurisdiction cases has never previously been recognized in Michigan.
"The important question was not whether the mistake was one of law or fact, but whether the particular mistake was such as a court of equity will correct, and this depends upon whether the case falls within the fundamental principle of equity that no one shall be allowed to enrich himself unjustly at the expense of another by reason of an innocent mistake of law or of fact entertained by both parties. ” (Emphasis supplied.) 305 Mich at 634.
In Michigan, appellate courts review equity actions de novo. Stachnik v Winkel, 394 Mich 375; 230 NW2d 529 (1975). We have done so and now remand this case for entry of an order embodying the following provisions:
(1) Plaintiffs shall endorse the check from the insurance company now held by defendant General Mortgage.
(2) From the proceeds of that check, defendant General Mortgage shall pay $13,961 to defendant FNMA and pay the remaining $4,039 jointly to plaintiffs Charles and Peggy Smith.
(3) If the plaintiffs so request in the trial court, the judgment entered pursuant to this opinion shall require defendant FNMA to give the plaintiffs a deed conveying fee title to the property from defendant FNMA to plaintiffs Charles and Peggy Smith as tenants by the entireties. If the plaintiffs make no such request prior to the entry of judgment, title to the property shall remain in defendant FNMA.
In all cases involving foreclosure sales occurring after the release date of this opinion, this case should be cited only for the general rules announced herein, not the specific equitable exception created for these unique facts.
Judgment vacated; cause remanded for entry of a judgment in accord with this opinion.
Plaintiffs also challenge the trial judge’s decision to allow defendant FNMA to intervene in an action brought only against defendant General Mortgage. Although styled as an action to prevent unjust enrichment, the present suit has many of the characteristics of interpleader actions. GCR 1963, 210. We believe that the intervention of FNMA was authorized by GCR 1963, 209.1(4). At the very least, the trial judge did not abuse his discretion to allow intervention pursuant to GCR 1963, 209.2(2).
But see the discussion of Smith v Mutual Fire Insurance Co of Michigan, supra.
Concurring in Part
(concurring in part, dissent
The proper rule applicable herein is that if the sequence of events is that the fire occurs before the foreclosure the mortgagor is entitled to all of the insurance proceeds, majority opinion page 726, Whitestone Savings & Loan Association v Allstate Insurance Co, 28 NY2d 332; 321 NYS2d 862; 270 NE2d 694 (1971). There is no direct Michigan authority on this point. Nevertheless, there was sufficient authority in other jurisdictions which should have put defendant on notice. Northwestern National Insurance Co v Mildenberger, 359 SW2d 380 (Mo App, 1962), Insurance Co of North America v Citizens Insurance Co of New Jersey, 425 F2d 1180 (CA 7, 1970). Furthermore, this rule is dictated by common sense, majority opinion at 725, citing Whitestone, supra. The mortgage company should not be entitled to plead ignorance to their advantage "over the individual mortgagor plaintiffs herein. This is a case of first impression in Michigan and defendant therefore is entitled to some consideration. The proper relief which should be granted is to set aside the foreclosure and place the parties in the same position as had their expectations and intent been carried out. Under this approach, plaintiffs would receive title to the property and the surplus of the insurance proceeds. The defendant would receive the amount
This writer concurs in the majority’s opinion vacating the order of the trial court, but must respectfully dissent from that part of the opinion directing judgment below. This writer so votes.
The amount owing on the mortgage was approximately $13,000. However, the majority opinion authorizes payment of $13,961 to defendant, the difference constituting foreclosure costs and attorney’s fees. See majority opinion, pp 722 and 728.
It is not hard to see why a layman would think that his obligation to continue mortgage payments ceased upon destruction of the property when he knew that the mortgage provided for the mortgagee to receive insurance proceeds which were more than sufficient to pay the amount owing on the mortgage.
Reference
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- Smith v. General Mortgage Corporation
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