Defendants appeal from an order granting summary judgment to plaintiff bank in a foreclosure suit and denying defendants’ motion for permission to aрpeal pursuant
The essence of defendants’ argument is that the bank wrongfully induced them to buy the business, failure of which triggered the foreclosurе. Defendants had filed a tort claim of their own on these grounds prior to the foreclosure action and thereafter included the same grounds as affirmative defenses in their answer to the foreclosure complaint. Plaintiff moved for summary judgment, and the trial court granted the motiоn, rejecting these defenses as insufficient in a foreclosure suit and concluding that the only issues to be considered were “the validity of the mоrtgage, the amount of indebtedness due on the mortgage, and the right of the mortgagee to seek satisfaction of the indebtedness from the mоrtgaged property,” citing
LaFarr v. Scribner,
I.
Plaintiff argues that this Court lacks jurisdiction to hear the
present appeal under § 4601, which states: “When a judgment is for the foreclosure of a mortgage, permission of the court shall be required for review.” Plaintiff contends that absent express permission of the trial court, this Court does not have jurisdiction over the appeal, citing
Denlinger v. Mudgett,
Our longstanding rule on discretionary rulings by the trial court is that they will not be disturbed unless an abuse of discretion is clearly shown. Abuse of discretion requires a showing that the trial court has withheld its discrеtion entirely or that it was exercised for clearly untenable reasons or to a clearly untenable extent.
Lent v. Huntoon,
The important point for the present matter is that in
Factory Point National Bank
we reviewed the trial court’s exercise of discretion in granting an appeal from the foreclosure decree, as
we may do in the present matter. Nothing in § 4601 suggests that we lack the power to review the trial court’s order denying an appeal. Nor does our considеration of this denial render the operation of § 4601 meaningless. It is the grant of discretion to the court contained in § 4601 that enables the court to impose reasonable conditions upon its allowance of an appeal.
Factory Point National Bank,
In sum, we hold that we may review the denial of a motion for permission to appeal under 12 V.S.A. § 4601 for an abuse of discretion in the issuance of that denial.
II.
Undertaking this review, we conclude that the trial court misread
LaFarr
as precluding affirmative defenses to a foreclоsure action based on a mortgagee’s conduct prior to the creation of the mortgage. In
LaFarr
we distinguished the theory of a foreсlosure action from that of a suit for a deficiency judgment.
LaFarr,
We think it clear that any conduct of a mortgageе known to the mortgagor prior to the institution of a foreclosure that could be the basis of an independent action for damages by reason of the mortgagee having brought the foreclosure could be raised as an equitable defense in the foreclosure.
See
Merchants Bank v. Lambert,
We are not, of course, simply reviewing the merits of a grant of summary judgment. We are reviewing the trial court’s denial of permission to appeal under an abuse of discretion standard. An abuse of discretion “will be found only when the trial court has entirely withheld its discretion or where the exercise of its discretion was for clearly untenable reasons or to an extent that is clearly untenable.”
Lent,
The trial court’s denial of defendants’ motion fоr permission to appeal is vacated. In addition, the trial court’s grant of plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for reconsideration in light of the law announced in this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
