Merritt v. Ridge

WELLS, Judge.

The principal question presented is whether North Carolina’s Anti-Deficiency Judgment statute, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 45-21.38, bars a purchase-money mortgagee from recovering from a defaulting purchase-money mortgagor attorney’s fees and the expenses of foreclosure, including the trustee’s commission, where such recovery was expressly provided for in the promissory notes executed by the parties. Plaintiffs contend that this question was squarely addressed and resolved in Reavis v. Ecological Development, Inc., 53 N.C. App. 496, 281 S.E. 2d 78 (1981). In Reavis, as in the present case, the purchase-money creditor brought suit, after foreclosure, to recover attorney’s fees and expenses, as expressly provided for in a promissory note. The defendants in Reavis argued, as do defendants in the present case, that North Carolina’s Anti-Deficiency Judgment statute bars the recovery of costs and attorney’s fees in such transactions. Our Court disagreed. We held that G.S. § 45-21.38 only prohibits a purchase-money creditor from suing to recover for a decline in the value of the property conveyed:

A deficiency under G.S. 45-21.38 refers to an indebtedness which represents the balance of the original purchase price for the real estate not recovered through foreclosure. The attorneys’ fees and expenses in this case do not represent the unrecovered “balance of purchase money for [the] real estate,” G.S. 45-21.38; the fees represent the costs of foreclosing on the property.

Defendants in the present case rely chiefly on Ross Realty Co. v. First Citizens Bank & Trust Co., 296 N.C. 366, 250 S.E. 2d 271 (1980), in which our Supreme Court held that the Anti-Deficiency Judgment statute not only abolishes deficiency judgments after foreclosure of a purchase-money mortgage or deed of trust, but also prohibits an action on the note even in the absence of an antecedent foreclosure of the mortgage or deed of trust securing the note. Defendants direct our attention to such broad language in Ross as the following:

While the statute now codified as G.S. 45-21.38 is not artfully drawn, we think the manifest intention of the Legislature was to limit the creditor to the property conveyed when the note and mortgage or deed of trust are executed to the *135seller of the real estate and the securing instruments state that they are for the purpose of securing the balance of the purchase price. [Emphasis added.]

Defendants contend that G.S. 45-21.38, as construed broadly in Ross, strips purchase-money creditors of the right to bring action on any term or provision of a secured note and limits the note-holder strictly and narrowly to the proceeds of the foreclosure sale, regardless what the terms of the note provide. They contend that to permit the recovery of attorney’s fees and expenses threatens circumvention of the statute and defeat of its historical purpose.

We agree with plaintiffs that Reavis controls the decision of the present lawsuit. Reavis is not inconsistent with Ross. Ross enforces the statutory prohibition against suing on the note for the unpaid balance of the purchase price. Reavis merely permits the recovery of attorney’s fees and expenses after default and foreclosure, insofar as attorney’s fees and expenses are not part of the balance owing on the note. We note that the language of the term providing for attorney’s fees and expenses given effect in Reavis is identical to the language of the term promising payment challenged in the present case.

Defendants further contend that in the light of the terms of the deed of trust and the provisions of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 45-21.31(a) the expenses of foreclosure should have been deducted from the proceeds of the sale and are not recoverable from them. The deed of trust provides that the proceeds received from the foreclosure sale be applied first to pay the trustee’s commission, next to pay the costs of foreclosure, and finally to pay the amount due on the notes. The provisions of G.S. § 45-21.31(a) require that the proceeds of a foreclosure sale be applied first to the costs and expenses of the sale, including the trustee’s commission, next to taxes due and unpaid on the property, next to special assessments as designated by statute, then finally to the obligation secured by the deed of trust.

But defendants fail to recognize that the costs of a foreclosure sale must be debited to the foreclosing noteholder, who receives that much less from the sale. In fact, plaintiffs in the present case have paid the costs of the foreclosure sale, and they are here seeking indemnifying recovery of those expenses in ac*136cordance with the terms of the promissory notes which were, as indicated supra, incorporated by reference into the deed of trust.

Relying on Ethics Opinion 166 of the N.C. State Bar, defendants further contend that the trustee could not legally act as attorney for the noteholders in enforcing their rights under the notes and deed of trust. We disagree. Opinion 166 merely enjoins an attorney/trustee from representing a noteholder “in a role of advocacy” at a foreclosure proceeding. The record in the present case discloses no contest in the foreclosure action. Defendants did not appear at the foreclosure hearing and have never denied their default nor contested plaintiffs’ right to foreclose.

We have carefully examined the rest of defendants’ assignments of error and find them to be without merit.

For the reasons elaborated above, plaintiffs were entitled to judgment as a matter of law. It follows that the trial court’s allowance of plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment must be, and is,

Affirmed.

Judges Johnson and Cozort concur.