This appeal primarily involves the relative priority of two deeds of trust held, respectively, by Respondents, Gary and Martha Burney and Gary and Patsy Sna-don (hereinafter “Respondents”) and Appellant, Bank of America, N.A. (“Bank”) on a parcel of land located in Taney County, Missouri. 1 Although Respondents had subordinated their deed of trust to that of Bank’s, they contended at trial that the subsequent material modification of the Bank’s note so impaired Respondents’ security that a court of equity was justified in reordering the priority of the parties’ deeds of trust. The circuit court agreed with Respondents and Bank now appeals. 2
The record shows that at the commencement of the litigation the Foxborough Inn (the “Inn”) was a 178 room hotel in Bran-son, Missouri. The land on which it was
In early 1992, Respondents constructed 77 units of the Inn on the front parcel which they owned. They borrowed over one million dollars from Ozark Mountain Bank (“OMB”) to pay for this construction. The loan was secured by a deed of trust on the front parcel.
Later in the year, Respondents sold the front parcel and the Inn’s 77 units to C & J Properties, Inc. (“C & J”) for a total purchase price of $3.3 million. The terms were, generally, as follows: C & J paid Respondents nearly $1 million in cash at closing; paid off Respondents’ existing note on the property by borrowing $1.1 million from OMB and giving OMB a first deed of trust on the front parcel; and gave Respondents a note (“Respondents’ Note”) for the remaining $1.2 million of the purchase price secured by the lien of a second deed of trust on the front parcel (“Respondents’ Deed of Trust”).
Less than a year later, C & J borrowed approximately $3.2 million from Bank in order to refinance the existing OMB debt and fund C & J’s efforts to construct an additional 101 units, located on the back parcel, which C & J purchased. This was accomplished in three steps:
First, on June 23, 1993, Bank loaned C & J $1,077 million to pay the balance of the note secured by the first deed of trust held by OMB. This new note (“Bank’s Note No. 1”) was secured by a deed of trust against the front parcel only (“Bank’s Deed of Trust No. 1”). It had a maturity date of December 23, 1993, and bore interest of 7% before maturity and 13% in the event of default. No principal payments before maturity were required. The monthly payments were to be interest only and the maker agreed to pay “all costs of collection when incurred, including reasonable attorneys’ fees.”
Second, on the same date Respondents executed a Subordination Agreement in favor of Bank. It provided, in pertinent part, that Respondents subordinated their Note and Deed of Trust (on the front parcel) to Bank’s Deed of Trust No. 1, “to the end that the [Bank’s Deed of Trust No. 1] shall be superior to [Respondents’ Deed of Trust].” The subordination agreement contained no other significant provisions.
Third, Bank loaned C & J $2,117 million (“Bank’s Note No. 2”) to fund the construction of 101 additional units on the back parcel. This note was secured by a deed of trust placed against the back parcel only (“Bank’s Deed of Trust No. 2”).
On June 2, 1994, C & J granted Bank another deed of trust (“Bank’s Deed of Trust No. 3”) securing both Bank’s Note No. 1 and Bank’s Note No. 2. This latter deed of trust placed a lien against both the front parcel and the back parcels.
Almost immediately after expansion of the Inn, C & J experienced financial problems which persisted over a number of years. As best we can glean from the record, an economic downturn occurred in the Branson area due to a glut of motel rooms. As a result, between December 1993 and December 1999, Bank and C & J (and a third party in some instances) entered into a series of eight separate modification agreements, which resulted in extending the maturity date and other terms and conditions of Bank’s Note No. 1 and Bank’s Deed of Trust No. 1, and the last three modifications extended maturity date and other terms of Bank’s Notes No. 1 and No. 2.
3
Each modification was duly record
During December of 1999, C & J terminated its payments to Bank on Bank’s Note No. 1 and Bank’s Note No. 2 and notified Bank that the Inn would not reopen following the annual winter closing period in 1999-2000. Bank subsequently instructed the trustee(s) of its three deeds of trust to commence foreclosure proceedings. Two days prior to the foreclosure sale Respondents filed a three-count petition for equitable relief. Respondents sought, in pertinent part: (a) temporary injunctive relief prohibiting Bank from conducting the foreclosure sale; (b) a declaration that their deed of trust, i.e., Respondents’ Deed of Trust (secured by the front parcel), was prior and superior to Bank’s Deed of Trust No. 1, as well as to any other deeds of trust Bank held against the front parcel; and (c) requested judicial foreclosure of Respondents’ Deed of Trust, pursuant to § 443.190, RSMo 1994, et seq.
Respondents argued that their interest in the front parcel should be declared “superior to and take[ ] priority over any interest asserted by Bank” because the “actions and conduct of Bank ... so materially adversely affected and impaired [Respondents’] collateral and/or destroyed the original economics of the subject property, so as to render the Subordination Agreement of June 23, 1993[,] null and void.”
The circuit court seasonably entered an order granting a temporary restraining order enjoining Bank from conducting its foreclosure sales on June 9, 2000, provided Respondents posted an injunction bond of $100,000.00, which Respondents did.
Review of this non-jury matter is set forth in Rule 84.13(d). In such a review, this Court views the evidence and permissible inferences drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the judgment and affirms the judgment unless it is against the weight of the evidence, there is insufficient evidence to support it, or it erroneously declares or applies the law.
Ridgway v. TTnT Dev. Corp.,
In its Point One, Bank asseverates circuit court error in declaring Bank’s Deed of Trust No. 1 (on the front parcel) junior
Furthermore, Bank argues that even if this Court were to conclude that the modification agreements “substantially impaired” the junior lienholders’ interests and were invalid for lack of Respondents’ consent, this Court should, nonetheless, reverse the decision of the circuit court which entirely disregarded the subordination agreement and afforded complete priority to Respondents. Citing Restatement (Third) of the Law of PROPERTY, Mortgages, § 7.3 (1997), Bank insists that under these conditions it would lose priority only to the extent of the modifications.
Respondents counter that the “remedy awarded when there is prejudice to the junior lienor — partial or complete loss of priority — depends on the degree of prejudice.” They assert that Bank’s Note No. 1 went from one page of text to seven in the final modification; that no one ever notified them of these modifications; that there were eight extensions of the maturity date of the note and multiple increases in the interest rate charged by over 50% (from 7% to 10¾%), which resulted in over $200,000.00 in additional interest payments to the Bank.
Furthermore, Respondents maintain that the introduction of cross-collateralization provisions added two tracts of property to the collateral contemplated by the original note and tripled the amount of debt collateralized from $1.2 million to over $3.4 million. They also point to the introduction of cross-default provisions, waiver of bankruptcy stay provisions, and the addition of appraisal fees, loan extension and renewal fees, and payment of collection fees which together “ ‘substantially impaired’ the value of [their] security interest — -the motel property — and ‘effectively destroyed’ the remaining equity in the property.”
I.
The matter of the reordering of priorities of deeds of trusts appears to be a matter of first impression in Missouri. Neither of the primary parties has called our attention to any reported case in this state, and our own research has failed to find any reported cases in this jurisdiction involving this particular subject. However, as discussed, infra, a significant body of case law from other jurisdictions has dealt with this issue.
We initially observe that a “mortgagee may waive the priority of his lien.... ”
Community Title Co. v. Crow,
“It is well established that while a senior mortgagee can enter into an agreement with the mortgagor modifying the terms of the underlying note or mortgage without first having to notify any junior lienors or to obtain their consent, if the modification is such that it prejudices the rights of the junior lienors or impairs the security, their consent is required.”
Shultis v. Woodstock Land Dev. Assocs.,
In
Koloff v. Reston Corp.,
A similar result was reached in
Gluskin v. Atlantic Savings and Loan Ass’n.,
It is our view, however, and the view of both parties to this appeal, that cases in which a junior mortgage lien is elevated above the paramount mortgage are the exception and not the rule. It is this Court’s observation, on reviewing the case law in this area, that only in a rare number of cases such as in
Kolojf
and
Gluskin, supra,
where the paramount mortgage has substantially impaired the security interest of the junior mortgage, are the priorities rearranged.
See Lennar Northeast Partners v. Buice,
Replacement and Modification of Senior Mortgages: Effect on Intervening Interests.
(b) If a senior mortgage or the obligation it secures is modified by the parties, the mortgage as modified retains priority as against junior interests in the real estate, except to the extent that the modification is materially prejudicial to the holders of such interests and is not within the scope of a reservation of right to modify as provided in Subsection (c). 4
Restatement (ThiRd) of the Law of PROPERTY,
Mortgages,
§ 7.3(b) (1997) (emphasis added). The term “materially prejudicial” cannot be precisely defined. It is similar to the term “substantially impaired.”
See Shultis,
There is a strong presumption under this section that a time extension on a senior mortgage or obligation, standing alone, is not materially prejudicial to intervening interests. A finding of material prejudice is justified only in the rare situation where the time extension can fairly be said to place the junior interest in substantially weaker position. The typical junior lienholder is normally grateful to have a time extension forestall the destruction of its lien by a senior foreclosure.
In accord with the foregoing comments are
Lennar Partners,
“Other sorts of changes that may be made in the terms of a replacement mortgage are not so benign. Obviously an increase in the principal amount will prejudice the holders of junior interests.” Comment b, Restatement (Third) of the Law of Property,
Mortgages,
§ 7.3 (1997). “[W]hen the obligation is increased, by an increase in the principal amount or an increase in the interest rate, the junior lienholder’s position is worsened. (3 Powell,
Real Property,
(1996) § 458, pp. 37-258 — 37-259).”
Lennar,
Accordingly, “[w]here the modification entails an increase in the senior mortgage interest rate or an increase in its principal amount, the junior lienor will gain priority over the earlier mortgage to the extent of the modification.” Nelson & Whitman Real Estate Finance, 3d ed., Vol. 1, § 9.4 (1993);
Shultis,
Lastly, cross-collateralization provisions which tie together unrelated properties, the foreclosure of which triggers foreclosure of all properties held by the debtor, can pose “unique risks” to the interests of a junior lienholder depending upon the circumstances of each case. See Koloff, supra, at 3. We now apply the foregoing principles to the facts of this case.
We are not convinced that the eight extensions of the maturity date of Bank’s Note No. 1 over a six year period, in and of themselves, materially prejudiced Respondents interest in its collateral to
Here, while Bank reaped additional interest payments, as best we can glean, the record also shows that during this time period the principal owed Respondents on Respondent’s Note was reduced from an approximate balance of $1,077 million to approximately $932,000.00 at the time of C & J’s default in December 1999. 5 This constituted a reduction of about $145,000.00 in the principal amount owed Respondents. More importantly, extending the maturity date of Bank’s Note No. 1 resulted in Respondent receiving over $762,000.00 in payments from C & J after December 1993, the original maturity date for Bank’s Note No. l. 6
It is our view, however, that modifications of Bank’s Note No. 1 requiring C & J to pay interest in excess of 7%, combined with the addition of appraisal fees, loan extension and renewal fees, cross-collateralization, cross-default and waiver of bankruptcy stay provisions, all of which were absent from the original text of Bank’s Note No. 1 on June 23, 1993, materially impaired the value of Respondents’ interest in the front parcel of the property. This is supported by the record.
See Lennar Partners,
Furthermore, the modification agreement of March 30, 1999, made provisions for the payment by C & J of a “loan extension fee” in the amount of $14,265.98 together with an “appraisal fee” of $4,000.00, which added to the debt burden assumed by C & J. The cross-collateralization clauses meant that the front parcel, as well as the back parcel, were pledged as collateral for two of Bank’s loans, and in a similar vein, cross-default provisions contained in the modification agreements meant that a default by C & J under either of Bank’s loans acted as a default under both. Without these cross-collateralization and cross-default provisions, C
&
J would have been better posed to pay on one Bank note and not the other. While speculative, C & J might have been better positioned to have avoided the risk of a foreclosure on the entire property.
See Koloff,
Despite these impairments, however, we are not prepared to agree that the Bank should lose its priority as senior lienholder relative to its senior position
The circuit court erred as a matter of fact and law in its declaration that the lien of Respondents’ Deed of Trust No. 1 was superior to that of Bank’s Deed of Trust No. 1.
Ridgway,
II.
As previously set out, in its remaining two points Bank premises circuit court error arising from both the issuance of a TRO preventing Bank’s foreclosure of the Inn, and in releasing the injunction bond posted by Respondents in conjunction with the issuance of the TRO. Both points are interrelated and are reviewed together.
A TRO is an injunction and generally an appeal lies from an order dissolving it.
Hagen v. Bank of Piedmont,
“Damages are allowable ‘where the injunction was improvidently granted, was wrongful in its inception or at least was continued owing to some wrong on the part of the plaintiff.’ ”
Rogers v. Stanec,
In the instant matter, the TRO “was merely an auxiliary remedy to the main purpose of the suit ...,”
Jones v. Campbell,
Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in entering the TRO. Nor did it abuse its discretion in dissolving the TRO. As discussed previously, Respondents were justified in seeking and obtaining injunctive relief as an adjunct to their main action.
Jones,
In either event, given the state of the record, Bank was not entitled to obtain damages resulting from the issuance of the TRO in the first instance because it made no request for damages. “Numerous cases hold that a proceeding for the assessment of damages on an injunction bond is in the nature of a new, separate and independent controversy.”
Rogers,
The judgment of the circuit court dated October 31, 2000, as modified December 8, 2000, is set aside and the cause is remanded with directions to the circuit court to enter a judgment consistent with this opinion. Upon remand, the trial court is directed to determine the balance due under the original terms of Bank’s Note No. 1, except for the maturity date extensions. The judgment should reflect that Respondent’s deed of trust is junior to that balance as determined. To this end, the circuit court is authorized to conduct further proceedings and make such further orders which may be just and proper, including orders relating to foreclosure of the parcels of land involved in this litigation.
Notes
. Bank and Bank’s predecessor in interest are collectively referred to as "Bank” in this opinion.
. Bank raises two other points on appeal. It postulates trial court error in: (a) improvidently entering a temporary restraining order ("TRO”) prohibiting Bank and its trustee from foreclosing Bank’s deed of trust; and (b) releasing the injunction bond posted by Respondents in conjunction with the issuance of the TRO.
. The eight modification agreements generally provided for the extension of maturity dates
. Restatement (Third) of the Law of Property, Mortgages, § 7.3(c) (1997) sets out, in pertinent part, that:
If the mortgagor and mortgagee reserve the right in a mortgage to modify the mortgage or the obligation it secures, the mortgage as modified retains priority even if the modification is materially prejudicial to the holders of junior interests in the real estate, except as provided in subsection (d).
In this opinion we neither affirm or reject the tenets of § 7.3(c), since they are outside the scope of the facts in the instant case.
. Our recitals relative to account balances are approximate only and are subject to a more formal accounting.
. Respondents' Note of October 1992 provided for monthly installment payments of $11,580.27, carrying interest at the rate of 10% annually, maturing with a final balloon payment in five years.
. Bank's Deed of Trust No. 2, securing Bank's Note No. 2, involve only the back parcel.
. Evidence exists in the record suggesting that the Bank intended to sell the entire motel as one parcel, which would have required the outlay of a sum of money greater than the collateral to which Respondents had initially subrogated their interest in 1993. Without equitable relief, Respondents contention that they would have had to pay the Bank’s first lien and bid in their debt on the entire 177 unit motel, which was originally appraised at $5 million, posed a distinct probable scenario. This would have required Respondents to invest a large sum of money merely to protect their interest. Necessarily, this would have entailed more litigation in the future.
. "The measure of damages recoverable on an injunction bond is the amount necessary to compensate a defendant for losses directly caused by the restraint....”
Kahn v. Royal Banks of Missouri,
