1. This is an action for confirmation of a loan deed foreclosure under power, and calls first for a construction of that part of Code § 67-1503 which specifies that there shall be no action for deficiency judgment "unless the person instituting the foreclosure proceedings shall, within 30 days after such sale, report the sale” etc., the objection being that this action is proceeding illegally because the "person” instituting it is not the "person” instituting the foreclosure proceedings. It appears that the grantor gave a note for $1,055,000, secured by real estate, to Hamilton Mortgage Corp., which latter, reserving .01% of its interest to itself transferred the remainder to Hamilton National Bank of Chattanooga. On default these entities commenced foreclosure; sale pursuant thereto was held on February 3,1976, and they brought in the real estate for $1,075,000. On February 16 the bank was adjudicated insolvent and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was appointed receiver of its assets and later the liquidator of certain properties including this one. On February 20 the mortgage company filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy which was later converted into a Chapter XI proceeding, and Weems was first the receiver, then the trustee, of this entity. FDIC and Weems in their fiduciary capacities filed the petition for confirmation. Are they the persons instituting the foreclosure sale within the purview of the statute?
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The purpose of confirmation hearings is to establish that the sale was fairly conducted and that any disparity between value and sale price, if it exists, is not such as to shock the judicial conscience. Brooks v. Bast,
2. The appellants complain that when the plaintiffs objected to interrogatories and requests for production seeking the benefit of all appraisals of the property which the plaintiffs had caused to be prepared, the court overruled the objections only as to appraisals made within a six-month period prior to the sale. The question at issue was of course market value at the time of the sale. In determining this the judge has a fairly wide discretion.
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"What it may have brought or what it may have been regarded as being worth on the market at times relatively close to the date of sale may be considered as aids in arriving at market value
at the time of sale
— which is what the court is charged with determining.”
Thompson v. Maslia,
*80 3. The statement of the bidding agent for the creditors that he would have been willing to go as high as $1,225,000 for the property (which was in fact bid in for $1,055,000) does not demand a finding that the market price was higher than the bid price, although it is certainly subject to that construction. Whether the witness thought the higher price was in fact the value of the land or whether other factors would have been involved does not appear. The statement represents no more than a personal opinion in any event; there was other opinion evidence offered indicating a market price lower than that bid. There is no evidence whatever to indicate any interest in purchasing the land on the part of anybody other than the security deed grantees’ representatives. Accordingly, the opinion of the witness Thomas as to what his top bid might have been, had he been forced into that position, does not demand a finding that the market value was not approximated.
The trial court properly entered an order of confirmation.
Judgment affirmed.
