MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
I.
This matter is before the Court upon the motion in limine of defendants CBL Management, Inc. (“CBLM”), Lebcon Associates (“Lebcon”) and CBL Associates, Inc. (“CBLA”) (collectively the “CBL” defendants) (Court File No. 196) and the motion in limine of Cleveland Mall Associates (“CMA”), Cleveland Mall Corporation (“CMC”), Clev-Tenn Associates (“Clev-Tenn”), Martin C. Bareli (“Bareli”), 1 Donald Shack (“Shack”) and Steven A. Frankel (“Frankel”) (collectively the “CMA” defendants) (Court File No. 198).
II.
This lawsuit centers upon a loan made by plaintiff Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company (“Penn Mutual”) to CMA to update the Cleveland Mall in Cleveland, Tennessee. During the course of their negotiations for this loan, Penn Mutual alleges that both the CBL and CMA defendants knowingly and/or negligently made representations concerning the continued status of Sears, Roebuck and Co. (“Sears”) as an anchor tenant at the Cleveland Mall. Following the loan closing, Sears vacated the Cleveland Mall, CMA defaulted, and Penn Mutual foreclosed on the property. At the time of the foreclosure sale, June 7,1991, the outstanding balance on the non-recourse loan was approximately $5.5 million. Penn Mutual, as the sole bidder at the sale, bid the real estate in at just under $5 million. Thereafter, Penn Mutual claims that it learned of the events which gave rise to its allegations of fraud and breach of fiduciary duty. Penn Mutual sold the property for $1.5 million more than four years after it had purchased it at the foreclosure sale. The motions in limine seek to have this Court determine whether for the purposes of any damage calculations, the value of the Cleveland Mall is the amount that Penn Mutual bid for it at the foreclosure sale.
III.
At the heart of this issue is the decision in
Whitestone Savings and Loan Assoc. v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
Penn Mutual contends that the Second Circuit, applying Michigan law, made the wrong decision because the policy reasons behind the
Whitestone
rule do not apply when a fraud claim is asserted by the mortgagee. Under the
Whitestone
rule, “a mortgagee is entitled to one satisfaction of the debt and no more.”
Property should bring its fair market value at foreclosure sales. Mortgagees who bid in the property for the full amount of the debt must have determined that the property was worth at least as much as the debt since reasonably prudent lenders would not purchase property for more than its fair market value and would not imprudently relinquish their right to pursue a deficiency against the mortgagor. Allowing mortgagees to purchase property for the full amount of the debt to assert that the property is actually worth less than their bid undermines the integrity of the foreclosure sale itself and creates the possibility of fraud or of a double recovery when .the mortgagee seeks the proceeds of any insurance on the property.
First Investment Co. v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
Penn Mutual concedes that these policy reasons are valid when applied to contractual disputes where the mortgagee seeks a deficiency against the mortgagor, or seeks to collect pursuant to a loss payee clause in a fire insurance policy after having foreclosed on the insured collateral. However, Penn Mutual says that these policy reasons are inapplicable where (1) there is alleged fraud on the part of the mortgagor; and (2) the loan secured by the mortgage is non-reeourse.
Should there be a tort/fraud exception to the Whitestone rule? No. Essentially, Penn Mutual says that a rule designed to prevent fraud should not be allowed to further a fraud against Penn Mutual as the mortgagee. This argument was rejected by the Second Circuit in Grella:
In spite of th[e] case law [adopting and applying Whitestone ], Chrysler would have us carve out an exception to the rule whenever the mortgagee claims that the underlying mortgage transaction was induced by fraud.... [T]he Michigan courts have explicitly adopted the White-stone rule and have applied it consistently in several circumstances. These decisions mark the course of Michigan law in this area; in them, we discern no indication that would authorize or require a fraud exception to the firmly-established White-stone rule.
The Whitestone rule protects mortgagors from deficiency actions after a fore *718 closure sale and brings certainty to the foreclosure proceedings. Although a borrower may fraudulently induce a mortgage loan, the mortgagee may always limit his damages from the fraud by bidding for the security no more than its fair market value at the time of the foreclosure sale. Moreover, applying Whitestone in some circumstances but not in others, would, in effect, destroy its utility in all circumstances.
The policy reasons for the
Whitestone
rule are not changed by characterizing the course of action as either contract or tort. As the Court in
Grella
said, “the important policy of finality in foreclosure sales must prevail in these circumstances.”
Id.
Moreover, whether an application of the
Whitestone
rule would work a fraud upon Penn Mutual begs the question of the outcome of this entire case. A different result might be reached in a case where it is contended that the mortgagor made fraudulent representations that caused the mortgagee at the foreclosure sale to bid more for the collateral than it would otherwise have bid.
See Alliance Mort. Co. v. Rothwell,
Should the Whitestone apply where the loan is non-recourse, i.e., where, as was the case here, the mortgagee can look only to the collateral for satisfaction of the debt? Penn Mutual says that a mortgagee could not be motivated to manipulate its bid so as to pursue a deficiency against the mortgagor, especially in the absence of other bidders. Therefore, says Penn Mutual, there is no policy reason to apply Whitestone in this case. Yet there is also no reason under these facts that Penn Mutual would not have submitted a bid for the property for anything other than what it was worth to Penn Mutual. Moreover, even though a mortgagee might not, with a non-recourse loan, be pursuing a deficiency, it could, as did Penn Mutual in this case, pursue the mortgagor for other reasons. In this event a double recovery is no more desirable than it would be if a deficiency were being sought. As the Second Circuit determined in Grella, the non-recourse status of the loan does not prevent application of the Whitestone rule.
Finally, Penn Mutual contends that it would be an injustice to apply the
Whitestone
rule in this case because to do so would be to retroactively apply a “previously unannounced rule of law.” This contention is not supportable. To begin with, as the
White-stone
court pointed out, the rule is not harsh.
IV.
For all these reasons, the defendants’ motions in limine (Court File Nos. 196 and 198) are hereby Granted. The value of the Cleveland Mall will, for the purposes of any damage calculations in this case be the amount that Penn Mutual successfully bid for it at the foreclosure sale.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Subsequent to the commencement of this action Mr. Bareli died. Phyllis Bareli, executrix of the estate of Martin Bareli, has been substituted as a party defendant (Court File No. 64).
.
See Benton Banking Co. v. Tenn. Farmers Mut. Ins. Co.,
