Appellees brought this action for damages for wrongful foreclosure of a second security deed on their home. The jury returned a verdict in their favor against Decatur Investments Company and General Improvement Corporation, two corporations headed by the same individual, which shared in the distributions of the proceeds obtained in the foreclosure. This appeal attacks the verdict on general grounds. Held:
The evidence is in some dispute, and we must consider it in a light most favorable to the verdict. See
Mathis-Akins Concrete &c. Co. v. Tucker,
1. “Where parties, in the course of the execution of a contract, depart from its terms and pay or receive money under such departure, before either can recover for failure to pursue the letter of the agreement, reasonable notice must be given the other of intention to rely on the exact terms of the agreement. Until such notice, the departure is a quasi new agreement.” Code § 20-116. The appellees were entitled to reasonable notice of such intention prior to acceleration of the debt and exercise of the power of sale contained in the security deed.
Byrd v. Prudential Ins. Co.,
2. The jury also awarded punitive damages, apparently based on evidence that the appellants acted in bad faith when they failed to make a proper distribution of the surplus after satisfaction of principal, interest, and costs connected with the sale, [see
Holland v. Sterling,
3. “Since the evidence for the plaintiff clearly and unequivocally authorized the verdict, and since it is a well-established rule of law that a verdict authorized by the evidence, under a proper application of well-settled principles of law, must be affirmed when excepted to only upon the general grounds, it clearly appears that [the appeal] brought to this court is brought here for the purpose of delay only.”
Yeomans v. Beasley,
Judgment affirmed with damages.
