This foreclosure action presents the issue of whether a plaintiff mortgagee is entitled to a judgment in which a prepayment penalty is added to the mortgage debt. In Connecticut, only one Superior Court case has cursorily dealt with the issue, but it has been сonsidered by numerous federal and state courts throughout the country. Because the matter is of some significance, this *375 court has endeavored to read most of the relevant cases and authorities.
The short answer as to whether a prepaymеnt penalty can be included in the mortgage debt in a foreclosure proceeding is that it depends on the language of the prepayment penalty provision in the note and whether the mortgagor defaulted with the intent to avoid the penalty. The facts of this case are as follows.
On October 31, 2005, defendant Robert J. Munson executed a promissory note in favor of the plaintiff, Eastern Savings Bank, FSB, in the amount of $178,000. On the same date, to secure that note, Munson mortgaged to the plaintiff a piece or рarcel of land in Windsor Locks. Munson defaulted on the principal and interest due on October 1, 2006, and every month thereafter, and the plaintiff has exercised the option to declare the entire balance due and payable.
The promissory nоte contains the following provision: “Borrower’s Right to Prepay: If this note is prepaid in whole or in part, whether the prepayment is voluntary or involuntary, including any prepayment affected by the Note Holder’s exercise of the acceleratiоn provision of this note or the Security Instrument, within thirty-six months from the date of this note, then borrower must pay a prepayment premium. The premium will be six months interest, at the note rate, on the prepaid principal.”
Munson filed a disclosure of no defense but stated that he “wishes to preserve and reserve his right to contest the respective rights and priorities of the parties to the funds which may be generated herein.” The court granted the plaintiffs motion to default Munson, and the plaintiff moved for judgment. At the hearing on the motiоn for judgment, the plaintiff submitted an affidavit of debt as follows. Principal balance: $177,596.77; interest at 12.350 percent from September 2, 2006, to April *376 2, 2007, $13,002.19; late charges to date of acceleration (November 8, 2006), $288.06; prepayment penalty, $10,966.60; escrow balance-advances, broker opinion, $85; and positive escrow balance, $397.66. Total: $201,540.96.
The court disallowed the broker opinion for $85, questioned the inclusion of the prepayment penalty of $10,966.60 as part of the mortgage debt and requested the parties to filе briefs on that issue.
Our courts have recognized the legal validity of prepayment penalties in mortgages. They are not against public policy; Bankers Trust Co. v. Ellis, Superior Court, judicial district of Hartford, Docket No. CV-01-0811511 (May 22, 2002) (Satter, J.); or in violation of the Connecticut Unfair Tradе Practices Act, General Statutes § 42-110a et seq. See Equicredit Corp. v. Braese, Superior Court, judicial district of New Haven, Docket No. CV-01-0074256 (Curran, J.) (April 19,2001). They are specifically allowed, although limited, in General Statutes § 36a-746 et seq., the Connecticut Abusive Home Loan Lending Practices Act. See General Statutes § 36a-746c (6) (A), (B) and (C).
Moreover, the plaintiff is a federal savings bank chartered under § 5 of the Home Owners’ Loan Act, 12 U.S.C. § 1464. The director of the federal Office of Thrift Supervision has issued a regulation, 12 C.F.R. § 560.34, which provides in relevant part that “a Fedеral savings association may impose a fee for any prepayment of a loan.”
Prepayment penalties are also recognized to serve an important commercial purpose. They “lock in” the financial yield for which the mortgаgee bargained at the inception of the transaction and further compensate the mortgagee for losses that may adhere in a payment
*377
prior to maturity. Those losses include the administrative and legal costs of making a new loan and in some cases, additional tax liability. Restatement (Third), Property, Mortgages § 6.2 (a) (1997). A number of cases confirm the justification of prepayment penalties to compensate lenders for the loss of the bargain if the loan is paid before a specified period of time. See
In re LHD Realty Corp.,
There are limitations, however, on the right to receive a prepayment penalty. The penalty will not be enforced if it is unconscionable. See 2 Restatement (Second), Contracts §§ 205, 208 (1981). The penalty will not be allowed when the property is condemned by a government exercising its power of eminent domain and the mortgage loan is paid from the funds realized from the condemnation. In
Jala Corp.
v.
Berkeley Savings & Loan Assn.,
The limitation on the enforceability of prepayment penalties carries over to foreclosure cases.
In re LHD Realty Corp.,
supra,
The general rule is more broadly expressed as follows: when a mortgage note simply рrovides for a penalty if the note is paid before a specified date, the mortgagor defaults and the mortgagee brings an action to foreclose on the mortgage, a prepayment penalty is not permitted because the note is аccelerated at the option of the holder.
As stated in
Kirk
v.
Kitchens,
The courts however recognize that there cannot be a
per se
rule that acceleration precludes a claim for a prepayment provision because a borrower may default intentionally and induce the acceleration and foreclosure in order to avoid prepayment liability. One court deemed that scenario to be implausible given the ramifications of a default for a borrower’s credit rating and the risk of the borrowеr’s not being able to repay the loan in time to defeat the foreclosure sale. See
In re LHD Realty Corp.,
supra,
When there is clear evidence, however, that the mortgagor did intentionally default in order to avоid the prepayment penalty, the courts have no difficulty requiring that the prepayment penalty be added to the mortgage debt. Thus, in
Clean Harbors, Inc.
v.
John Hancock Life Ins. Co.,
64 Mass. App. 347, 359-60,
Where the promissory note, however, expressly provides for imposition of a prepayment premium upon acceleration, that premium is required to be included in the final fоreclosure judgment. Thus, in
Feinstein
v.
New Bethel Missionary Baptist,
The Florida appeals court in
Feinstein
allowed the prepayment fee on the ground that the parties bargained for that provision and that it should be enforced. Id., 563-64. To the same effect is
SO/Bluestar, LLC
v.
Canarsie Hotel Corp.,
33 App. Div. 3d 986,
This case falls into the latter category. As noted previously, the provision in the note provided: “If this note is prepaid in whole or in part, whether the prepayment is voluntary or
involuntary,
including any prepayment affeсted by the Note Holder’s exercise of the acceleration provision of this note or the Security Instrument, within thirty-six months from the date of this note, then borrower must pay a prepayment premium. The premium will be six months interest, at the note rate, on the preрaid principal.” (Emphasis added.) This is virtually the exact language of the note in
SO/Bluestar, LLC
v.
Canarsie Hotel Corp.,
supra, 33 App. Div. 3d 986, and
TMG Life Ins. Co.
v.
Ashner,
supra,
As a сonsequence, the court finds the mortgage debt to be $201,455.96 ($85 for broker opinion is subtracted), which includes a prepayment premium of $10,966.60. The court finds the appraised value of the subject property is $240,000 and renders judgment of foreclosure by sale. The sale date shall be September 8, 2007, at noon, publication shall be on August 26 and September 2, 2007, the sign on the premises shall be on August 8, the return of appraisers on August 28 and no interest or fees shall be incurred before July 31. The plaintiff is further awarded counsel fees of $2200, a title fee of $225 and an appraiser’s fee of $200.
