Opinion
Robert D. Hesselgesser appeals from a judgment awarding respondent, Jack Erickson and Associates, $112,000 on a promissory note. We affirm and hold that the judgment is not barred by the antideficiency provision of Code of Civil Procedure section 580b. 1
Facts
On June 15, 1989, appellant and his wife, Jane Hesselgesser, purchased a residence from respondent for $560,000. Appellant put $56,000 down, borrowed $392,000 from Great Western Savings, and gave respondent a $112,000 note secured by a second deed of trust.
Appellant bought the residence for investment purposes and never lived in it. He planned to fix it up and quickly sell it. The promissory note to respondent had a June 15, 1990, due date.
In 1991, appellant decided to rebuild most of the residence and obtained a $300,000 construction loan from Union Bank. The bank required that respondent subordinate the second deed of trust to the construction loan. Respondent, at appellant’s request, signed a subordination agreement and received a written guaranty. 2
In 1993 appellant defaulted on the Great Western Savings and Union Bank loans. The banks foreclosed. Appellant sold the property a week before
Respondent sued on the note and guaranty. Appellant claimed that the action was barred by section 580b. The trial court found for respondent and entered judgment against appellant and his wife. Appellant appealed but not his wife.
Section 580b
Section 580b provides in pertinent part: “No deficiency judgment shall lie in any event after a sale of real property . . . under a deed of trust or mortgage given to the vendor to secure payment of the balance of the purchase price of that real property . . . .”
The purpose of section 580b is to stabilize land values during economic downturns and to discourage vendors from overvaluing the security. (Th
ompson
v.
Allert
(1991)
The courts have held that a buyer cannot waive the antideficiency protection in advance. (See
Freedland
v.
Greco
(1955)
The trial court found that appellant waived the protection of section 580b when he had respondent subordinate to a construction loan. The court,
Appellant contends that section 580b was not waived because the underlying debt was secured by a purchase money deed of trust. He cites
Brown
v.
Jensen
(1953)
The rule applies to standard purchase money transactions.
(Spangler
v.
Memel
(1972)
The Supreme Court held that the buyer waived section 580b because the subordination agreement contemplated a change in the use of the property.
(Spangler
v.
Memel, supra,
Appellant argues that section 580b cannot be waived unless the subordination is contemporaneous to the sale. We disagree. The courts have applied
Palm v. Schilling
Appellant cites
Palm
v.
Schilling
(1988)
The Court of Appeal rejected the argument that Schilling contractually waived section 580b.
(Palm
v.
Schilling, supra,
Palm v. Schilling, supra, is factually distinguishable. Appellants purchased the property as an investment, not to live in. Respondent carried back a purchase money deed of trust based on the representation that appellant would pay off the note in a year. Appellant changed plans midstream, had respondent subordinate to a construction loan, and executed a personal guaranty.
The guaranty added nothing to the obligation. (See
Torrey Pines Bank
v.
Hoffman
(1991)
“If a change in use makes the original security value of the property an unreliable indicator of its value after construction improvements have been made, then even a change from a less intensive residential use to a more intensive one is sufficient to make the transaction a variation on the standard purchase money transaction. (See
Spangler
v.
Memel, supra,
Substantial evidence supported the finding that there was a change of use affecting the value of respondent’s security. Appellant tore down the house, left two walls standing, and spent two years rebuilding it, all with the knowledge that real estate prices were falling. Real estate values dropped 40 to 50 percent. Because of the construction delays and cost overrun, the value of the property at the time of sale (i.e., 1989, when the purchase money deed of trust was executed) was not a reliable indicator of the value of the property three years later. (E.g.,
Spangler
v.
Memel, supra,
Palm
v.
Schilling, supra,
Appellant, by his conduct, waived the protection of section 580b when he asked respondent to subordinate to the construction loan. A second waiver
It is well established that unsecured purchase money notes are not subject to section 580b.
(Nevin
v.
Salk
(1975)
The judgment is affirmed with costs to respondent.
Gilbert, J., and Coffee, J., * concurred.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise stated.
The guaranty, dated February 9, 1991, stated: “I, Robert D. Hesselgesser, personally guarantee the existing note & trust deed secured by 808 Vallombrosa, Pas[adena] in the amount of $112,000 in consideration of its subordination to Union Bank for construction loan for said property.”
Judge of the San Luis Obispo Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
