(Ret.), Specially Assigned. This case involves a mortgage foreclosure which was brought by plaintiff-mortgagee, The Merchants Bank, against the homestead premises of the defendant-mortgagor, Julie Lambert. The homeplace had been pledged as collateral to secure a note executed by the defendant’s daughter and son-in-law. Defendant Lambert did not sign the note, never saw the note, did not attend the loan closing and received none of its proceeds. The proceeds financed the establishment and operation of a beauty shop by the daughter and son-in-law. Domestic trouble between the couple put the business at risk, and it eventually failed, leaving the note in default.
The lower court refused foreclosure relief to the bank. It relied on certain stipulated and unchallenged facts to support defendant’s equitable defense of laches. We concur that the matter should be resolved on equitable principles, but find that their application leads to a somewhat different result.
The son-in-law and daughter made their last payment on the note on August 10. 1981, about a year and a half after the original transaction. At about that time, having some indication that the business might be in trouble, and in connection with her upcoming marriage, the defendant inquired of the bank concerning the possibility of having the mortgage lifted from the property. However, the bank, according to the unchallenged findings, did not give her any information of substance concerning the state of the note.
Over two years later, on December 2, 1983, the bank gave the defendant her first notice of default by calling on her to pay in full the outstanding loan obligation of more than $20,000 in fifteen days or foreclosure would follow. During the time between 1981 and 1983, the business had failed beyond rescue, and the son-in-law had sold off some $5,600 worth of shop equipment pledged to the bank as security for the note, without applying any of the proceeds to its reduction. Even with notice of this, the bank had taken no action, and had failed to notify the defendant.
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The trial court noted correctly that, under
Merchants Bank
v.
Thibodeau,
The doctrine of laches rests on the premise that there was a failure to assert a right for an unreasonable and unjustified length of time resulting in loss and prejudice to the adverse party and rendering the enforcement of the right inequitable.
Stamato
v.
Quazzo,
The bank must be charged, however, with its failure to keep the defendant informed of the changing financial picture. The bank was in possession of information which the defendant needed and sought, but which the bank did not disclose. The bank had exclusive knowledge of the developing possibility that the note would be defaulted and that resort to the mortgage security was likely. Considerations of candor and fair dealing, even in an arm’s length transaction, required the'bank to reveal, not suppress, facts important to the financial risk undertaken by the defendant in the pledge of her home. See
Griffin
v.
Griffin, 125
Vt. 425, 437,
Thus we join with the trial court in finding that the bank’s failure to inform the defendant of the deteriorating situation regarding the unpaid note unequivocally caused her loss and detriment, and substantially eliminated any opportunity for her to mitigate her potential loss. See
Turner
v.
Turner,
It is not the nature of equity, however, to work a forfeiture, even against a set of facts such as these. See
Whiting
v.
Adams,
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings in accordance with the views expressed in the opinion.
Notes
Defendant counterclaimed that, because she is an “indorser” or an “accommodation party” to the underlying note, principles of Article 3 of the Uniform Commercial Code regarding commercial paper should apply in this case. This claim is without merit. We conclude that defendant was neither an “indorser nor an accommodation party” to the note, and therefore her liability to the creditor is not controlled by Article 3. See
Simpson
v.
Milne,
