On April 26, 1991, Tufts entered into an agreement to sell a house to Bennett and her parents, the Levins, for $225,000. The sale of the property closed on October 15, 1991. In accordance with the purchase and sale agreement, Tufts conveyed the property to Bennett. Two notes were signed:
1. Bennett executed a 30-year purchase money note in favor of Tufts in the amount of $200,000, with a $3,690.36 accrued interest shortagе resulting from lower interest payments during the first two years of the loan due and payable on October 15, 1994. This indebtedness was secured by a security deed referred to as the purchase money security deed.
2. The Levins executed a $25,000 balloon note in favor of Tufts, with a $25,000 principal balance, $7,500 in accrued interest, and $3,690.36 in deferred interest on the primary note, for a total of *36 $36,190.36, due and payable on October 14, 1994. This represented the down payment. To secure this indebtedness, Bennett executed a separate security deed in favor of Tufts.
Each note contained a cross-default clause stating that defаult by the borrowers under any term of one note and deed to secure debt would be a default on the other. The security deeds were recorded on the same date, the purchase money security dеed first.
Bennett defaulted in making monthly payments under the purchase money note. On December 7, 1992, Tufts declared the balloon note due and payable by reason of default. On January 5, 1993, Tufts sold the property tо herself at foreclosure under powers contained in the purchase money security deed. She bid in the property in satisfaction of the purchase money note, interest, attorney fees, and еxpenses of sale.
Tufts then sued the Levins on the balloon note. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The contested issue is whether Tufts’ action is one for deficiency judgment, barred as a result of Tufts’ failure to obtain judicial confirmation of the foreclosure sale. The trial court granted the Levins’ motion and denied Tufts’.
The confirmation statute, OCGA § 44-14-161 (a), provides: “When any real estate is sold on foreclosurе, without legal process, and under powers contained in security deeds . . . and at the sale the real estate does not bring the amount of the debt secured by the deed ... , no action may be taken to obtain a deficiency judgment unless the person instituting the foreclosure proceedings” obtains a judicial confirmation. (Emphasis supplied.)
The question thus presented is whether the debt evidenced by the balloon note was “somehow included or includablе in” the debt secured by the purchase money security deed.
Clements v. Fleet Finance,
Langley v. Stone,
Murray v. Hasty,
Our view was that “[t]he present action is not to recover a deficiency judgment on the debt secured, but to recover on an independent, separate, unsecured obligation. It is not within the ambit of the statute requiring confirmation.” (Emphasis in original.) Id. at 126 (1). Murray distinguished Langley by stating that in Langley, “The two debts, secured by the same property, held by the same creditor and with the assumption of the debt, are owed by the same debtor and аre inextricably intertwined. They are not independent of each other, and a foreclosure of one affects the other.” Id. at 127.
In
Kennedy v. Gwinnett Commercial Bank,
In
Kennedy I,
we overruled
Langley
insofar аs it held that failure to obtain fair market value of the property at the sale, standing alone, is a breach of the duty to fairly exercise the power of sale in the deed.
In
Kennedy II,
we held that
Kennedy,
like
Murray,
was an action to reсover on an independent, separate, unsecured obligation not subject to the confirmation statute.
*38 “Furthermore, and perhaps more importantly,” the court in Kennedy II held, “in Langley both debts held by the creditor and secured by the security deeds represented loans to the debtor to purchase the property itself. Thus the twо debts represented purchase money loans and the security for both was the property purchased. When the creditor holds both purchase money security deeds and the debtor is obligated on both, it is not unreasonable to view a subsequent suit on the junior debt as an action to obtain a ‘deficiency’ judgment for the amount of the entire purchase money debt that remained unpaid after foreclоsure of the first deed. Such is not the case here, where appellants’ consumer collateral notes do not represent loans for the purchase of property and are not secured by appellants’ security deed to the Bank. The notes are totally outside the chain of purchase money security deeds on the property and are clearly unrelated to and independent of the purchase money debt secured by the first security deed foreclosed on. The only debt secured by the first deed was a purchase money debt and the sale under power pursuant to that deed, without confirmation, bars a subsequent suit by the Bank for any deficiency on that debt. The instant suit is for recovery on consumer collateral notes and cannot be deemed an action for a deficiency judgment as to the debt secured by the first deed.” (Emphasis in original.) Id.
Both
Devin Lamplighter, Ltd. v. American Gen. Finance,
The lead opinion in
Clements
(a three-judge panel opinion) was premisеd on the fact that the debts were unrelated and not “inextricably intertwined.”
One additional case bears comparison. In
C. K. C., Inc. v. Free,
In the case now before us, there was one seller (Tufts) of one house to three purchasers (Bennett and the Levins), only one of whom (Bennett) obtained title. The $225,000 purchase money debt was evidenced by a $200,000 purchase money note between Bennett and Tufts and a $25,000 balloon note between the Levins and Tufts. Part of the money payable under the balloon note was deferred interest on the primary debt. Both notes were secured by security deeds from Bennett to Tufts. Each note contained a cross-defаult clause.
Not only were the debts “inextricably intertwined,” but also “it seems clear that, [like]
Langley,
[Tufts] was . . . vested with title by ‘merger’ of two security deeds on the same property and consequently the instant case is ... a suit on а debt secured by the junior of two ‘merged’ security deeds. As thus viewed, ‘(t)he present action is . . . to recover a
deficiency
judgment on the debt secured (by the first security deed), [and not] to recover on an independent, separate, unsecured obligation.’ [Cit.]” (Emphasis in original.)
Kennedy II,
supra,
Judgment affirmed.
