This appeal concerns a dispute over the security interest of appellants, Joseph W. Fleming et al, trading as “Equity 80-F” (Equity), in computer hardware and software they “leased” to appellee Carroll Publishing Co. (Carroll). Appellants contend the trial court erred in ruling that Equity (1) was barred from seeking a deficiency judgment for the amount of the contract payments attributable to the software, (2) had abandoned any security interest in the software remaining in Carroll’s possession, and (3) was not entitled to any attorney’s fee, either under the contract or under Super.Ct.Civ.R. 11. We affirm the trial court’s ruling on the first issue. However, because we conclude as a matter of law that, under the circumstances of this case, Equity did not lose its security interest in the software, we reverse on the second issue and remand this case to the trial court for further proceedings concerning attorney’s fees and other appropriate remedies.
I.
The facts are detailed in this court’s opinion in an earlier appeal by the same parties,
In response, Equity filed suit against Carroll on February 22, 1983, declaring that Carroll had defaulted on the “lease” agreement and seeking recovery of the remaining amount to be paid on that contract plus costs, including attorney’s fees. In its answer and counterclaim, Carroll alleged, among other things, that Equity had no enforceable security interest under the agreement because the equipment had never been delivered. 1 On June 27,1983, Equity moved for an order directing Carroll to return to Equity all equipment covered by the agreement. Attached to this motion was a listing of the leased equipment then in Carroll’s possession, including both hardware and software. Carroll responded by stating its willingness to turn over the hardware, omitting any mention of the software. The trial court then issued an order on August 4, 1983, granting Equity’s motion and ordering Carroll to deliver within 30 days “the equipment listed upon the documents filed in conjunction with the motion for return of equipment.” On September 29, 1983, an Equity representative arrived at Carroll with the order in hand. Carroll turned over several items of hardware but did not deliver any software, except for one disk that happened to be in the disk drive of one of the computers repossessed by Equity. Nor did Equity’s representative specifically request the return of any software. In the course of 1984, Equity sold several of the repossessed hardware items without notice to Carroll.
On April 18, 1985, while still waiting for trial on its complaint for damages on the contract, Equity filed a motion for contempt against Carroll for its failure to return the software specified in the earlier court order. In response, Carroll asserted that it had fully complied with the court order for return of the “equipment,” which meant only hardware, not software. The trial on Equity’s complaint for breach of contract did not begin until September 9, 1985. Arguments on Equity’s contempt motion were also heard at trial. The parties made their final arguments on October 1, 1985, and submitted post-trial briefs on October 11, 1985. The trial court issued its decision on September 22, 1987.
In
Fleming I,
we affirmed the trial court’s rulings that (1) the “lease” contract between the parties was in fact a security agreement under the provisions of Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code, D.C.Code §§ 28:9-101 through 9-507 (1989), and (2) Equity’s failure to give Carroll advance notice of the sale of repossessed property, in violation of D.C.Code § 28:9-504, barred Equity from seeking a deficiency judgment
2
against Carroll.
The facts as finally determined may indicate that in fact Equity by its actions at the time of repossession effectively determined to abandon any security interest it had in the collateral not repossessed in September 1983 or is otherwise estopped to make any claim to the unre-possessed property.
Id. at 1226 n. 15.
Accordingly, we remanded the case for the trial court to determine what rights, if any, Equity retained in the remaining unre-possessed property. We also asked the trial court to reconsider the attorney’s fees the trial court had awarded to Equity on the basis of a contractual provision between the parties. We said that, even where the asserted right of attorney’s fees is contractually based, “the degree of success in litigation is a relevant factor in the award of attorney’s fees.” Id. at 1228. Because Equity “appealed] in fact to have been largely unsuccessful” in its suit on the debt, id. at 1227, we questioned the trial court’s decision to award substantially all of Equity’s claimed fees.
In an Opinion and Order dated March 29, 1991, the trial court found that Equity had voluntarily relinquished all rights to any software remaining in Carroll’s possession. By failing to ask for the return of the software until more than two and one half years after Carroll’s default, the court said, Equity had abandoned its interest in this security. 3 The court refused to credit Equity’s excuse that it delayed in asserting its ownership because it did not know that Carroll possessed the software. The court also relied on a finding that the software was of doubtful economic value to Equity. Furthermore, the court ruled that Equity could not seek the alternative remedy of a monetary judgment for the remainder of the contract payments attributable to software costs. In the trial court’s opinion, “[t]he absolute bar rule [announced by this court in Fleming /] preclude[d] a deficiency judgment with respect [to] a portion of the debt just as it had prevented Equity from collecting on the whole debt.” Finally, the court ruled that Equity was not entitled to any attorney’s fees because “Equity lost this litigation in almost every respect.” As for Equity’s claim for attorney’s fees as a sanction for alleged Rule 11 violations, the court determined that Equity had failed to preserve this issue in the original trial proceeding. Equity now challenges these rulings.
II.
Equity argues that the trial judge ignored this court’s opinion in
Fleming I
when he ruled that Equity was precluded from seeking a deficiency judgment even for that portion of the contract payments attributable to the software. This contention is mistaken.
Fleming I
held that where, as in this case, the various items of collateral are all the subject of a single transaction and are not identified or priced individually, the failure to comply with the requirements for disposition of repossessed property bars
any
further deficiency judgment.
III.
We consider next the trial court’s conclusion that Equity had voluntarily relinquished its rights in the software. This is a mixed question of fact and law, insofar as it involves the interpretation of Equity’s intent — an essentially factual issue — in light of the legal standard for determining a secured creditor’s waiver of rights in collateral under U.C.C. Article 9. Thus, while it is generally true that we defer to the trial court’s finding regarding intent and will not upset that finding unless it is “plainly wrong or without evidence to support it,” D.C.Code § 17-305(a) (1989 Repl.);
see Fleming I,
A.
In determining that Equity had relinquished all its rights to the software collateral, the trial court failed to consider any of the implications of Equity’s status as a secured creditor under U.C.C. Article 9. Instead, the trial court relied entirely on the law of abandonment, as set forth in
Kearns v. McNeill Bros. Moving & Storage Co.,
Abandoned property is that to which the owner has voluntarily relinquished all right, title, claim, and possession, with the intention of terminating his ownership, but without vesting it in any other person and with the intention of not reclaiming future possession or resuming its ownership, possession or enjoyment.
Id.
at 1136 (quoting 1 Am.Jur.2d
Abandoned, Lost, and Unclaimed Property
§ 1, at 3-4 (1962)). While
Kearns
and
Block v. Fisher,
“To constitute implied waiver [of a security interest], there must exist unequivocal acts or conduct evidencing an intent to waive; waiver will not be inferred from doubtful or ambiguous factors.”
Central Washington Bank v. Mendelson-Zeller, Inc.,
Furthermore — and of crucial significance here — a secured creditor does not waive its rights in collateral by initially suing on the debt instead of seeking immediate repossession. “[A] secured creditor’s effort to collect its debt through the judicial process will not ‘operate to destroy his [or her] security interest vis-a-vis the debt-or_’”
State Bank of Piper City v. A-Way, Inc.,
B.
With this legal background in mind, we turn now to the facts of the case before us. In this case, there is no evidence in the record that Equity took any affirmative action manifesting an intent to abandon its security interest in the collateral. In concluding, nonetheless, that Equity had relinquished its interest in the collateral, the trial court relied entirely on circumstantial proof and passive behavior, focusing primarily on Equity’s delay in seeking the return of the software. In light of the legal standards set forth above, however, we must disagree with the trial court’s ruling.
Equity’s decision to rely on its suit for a monetary judgment as the initial means of recovering the debt owed by Carroll, and its subsequent decision to repossess hardware as an additional means of satisfying that debt, did not mean that Equity waived its rights in the remaining (software) collateral in Carroll’s possession. In light of Carroll’s apparent refusal and/or inability 11 to tender the software, it was not unreasonable for Equity to focus on its suit rather than on repossession of the software. But that choice does not mean that Equity had made, or was obliged to make, an irrevocable election of remedies.
Moreover, in assessing the significance of Equity’s delay in enforcing its security interest, we must consider the fact that during the entire time that Equity was supposedly sleeping on its rights, its suit was still pending. Equity’s contempt motion, although not filed until April 1985— more than eighteen months after Equity initially obtained the court order authorizing repossession of collateral — still predated the trial of its suit, which did not begin until September 1985. If, as both D.C.Code § 28:9-501(5) and the caselaw indicate, a secured creditor may wait until after the resolution of its suit before levying on the collateral, then surely Equity cannot be said to have abandoned its interest in the software simply because it did not file the contempt motion until five months before its suit came to trial.
We note, further, that filing the contempt motion was not the first action Equity took with respect to the software. While the trial court found that Equity’s
The trial court also based its finding of abandonment on the belief that the software was of “doubtful value.” The court noted, first of all, that appellants are passive investors with no apparent interest in software designed for a small publishing firm. That point is only marginally significant in comparison to the crucial question whether the software had commercial value. On this issue the trial court, taking judicial notice of the “vast changes in microcomputer technology over the last decade,” did not credit Equity’s assertions that the software would find a ready market. But there was no testimony on this issue, nor did the trial court cite any evidence in the record to support its position.
In sum, the evidence that Equity waived its rights to the software collateral is, at best, doubtful and ambiguous and, therefore, does not satisfy the proper standard for finding an implied waiver of a security interest. While Equity did not seek to enforce its rights as assiduously as it might have, on two occasions — when it sought the repossession order and when it filed the contempt motion — it had manifested its intent to rely on the software as a means of recovering on Carroll’s debt. Given the pendency of Equity’s suit on this debt (which, if Equity had prevailed, would have entitled Equity to execute a levy on this collateral in any case), and in the absence of any other evidence demonstrating estoppel
12
or a positive intention to relinquish its interest in the software, we must conclude that Equity’s delay was not an adequate ground for stripping it of its rights to the software. Accordingly, we conclude that, in light of the legal standard for determining when a security interest has been waived, the trial court’s finding that Equity had relinquished its rights to the software collateral cannot be sustained under our standard of review.
See
D.C.Code § 17-305(a) (“plainly wrong”);
Fleming I,
It follows that Equity is entitled either to repossess the software collateral remaining in Carroll’s possession or to recover the reasonable value thereof.
See Fleming I,
Neither of these remedies is necessarily foreclosed by the fact that the trial court found, in its first order in 1987, that the evidence concerning the software collateral’s existence and value was inadequate.
13
With regard to the questions of what soft
IV.
Paragraph 11 of the lease agreement between the parties provided that, in the event of Carroll’s default, Carroll would be liable for “expenses of collection, including reasonable attorney’s fees.”
Fleming I,
As for Equity’s alternative argument for attorney’s fees under Rule 11, that claim is foreclosed by Equity’s failure to raise the point on the first appeal. “[W]here an argument could have been raised on an initial appeal, it is inappropriate to consider that argument on a second appeal following remand.”
Northwestern Indiana Tel. Co. v. F.C.C.,
V.
In light of our conclusions, we affirm the trial court’s ruling that Equity is not entitled to a deficiency judgment for the prorated portion of the debt attributable to the software, reverse the trial court’s determination that Equity has abandoned its security interest in the software, and remand this case to the trial court (1) to order an appropriate remedy,
i.e.,
either the return to Equity of the software collateral in Carroll’s possession or the payment by Carroll of the reasonable value thereof,
15
and (2) to
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
. Carroll had previously filed suit against ISC on August 18, 1982, alleging breach of contract and breach of warranty. Carroll also named ISC as a third-party defendant in the suit between Equity and Carroll. The trial court later granted Carroll's motion to consolidate both suits. It appears that ISC filed for bankruptcy sometime in the fall of 1983; a default judgment was entered against ISC on April 10, 1984. In Equity’s action against Carroll, the trial court ultimately held that responsibility for delivery rested on ISC, that Equity was not ISC’s agent, and that, therefore. Equity could not be held liable for any nondelivery of promised hardware and software.
. Because the "lease” agreement was actually a security agreement and Equity had already repossessed and sold the hardware collateral, the trial court treated Equity’s breach of contract suit as a suit for deficiency judgment.
. As we noted above, although the repossession order listed the software, as well as hardware, components, the trial court found that Equity's agent did not specifically request the return of the software when he repossessed the hardware.
. In Kearns, appellant sued a storage company for conversion of personal property he had left to be stored by the company. In Block, appellant sued appellee for conversion of refrigerators that appellant claimed to own and that appellee had found in a building that appellee had razed at the direction of the District government.
.
Accord, First Interstate Bank v. Interfund Corp.,
.
See also Brown v. Arkoma Coal Corp.,
.
See also, e.g., In re Adrian Research & Chem. Co.,
. D.C.Code § 28:9-501(1) reads in pertinent part:
When a debtor is in default under a security agreement, a secured party has the rights and remedies provided in this part and except as limited by subsection (3) those provided in the security agreement. He may reduce his claim to judgment, foreclose or otherwise enforce the security interest by any available judicial procedure_ The rights and remedies referred to in this subsection are cumulative.
. There remains some disagreement as to whether the secured creditor may seek both repossession and a judgment simultaneously. See 2 White & Summers § 27-4, at 572-73. We need not decide that issue here.
.
See In re Hill, supra
note 7 (holding that creditor bank that had taken only a personal judgment against a bankrupt debtor had not thereby lost its status as a secured creditor);
State Bank of Piper City v. A-Way, Inc.,
. In its order of September 22, 1987, the trial court decided not to hold Carroll in contempt for failure to comply with the repossession order because Carroll would have been unable to identify and return this software.
. The proponent of an equitable estoppel claim must demonstrate that he or she "changed his [or her] position prejudicially in reasonable reliance on a false representation or concealment of material fact which the party to be estopped made with knowledge of the true facts and intent to induce the other to act."
Nolan v. Nolan,
. In its September 22, 1987 Order, the trial court stated that "[f|rom the evidence before it, the Court has no way of ascertaining what, if any, software covered by the original lease still exists and thus cannot order its return.” Furthermore, the court held that Equity had not "presented sufficiently exact evidence of the software’s value to enable the court to make ... an award” of the software's value. See also supra note 11.
. “To be deemed a ‘prevailing party,’ it is necessary only that the plaintiff 'succeed on any
significant
issue in litigation which achieves
some of the benefit
the parties sought in bringing the suit.’ ”
District of Columbia v. Jerry M.,
. For guidance in determining whether the software collateral includes any modification by Carroll, we refer the trial court to Fleming I. There we said:
To the extent that the security agreement gave Equity any rights in the software as its form permutated, those rights should remain thesame before and after default.... [Equity’s] Article 9 security interest in the unrepossessed collateral continued until the debt was paid, absent an express or implied relinquishment of the security interest.
