330 A.2d 525 | D.C. | 1974
Retired:
The sole issue on this appeal is whether appellants were liable for legal expenses incurred by the appellee in an action by the federal government to enforce a tax lien on appellants’ real property.
The operative facts are not in dispute. Othello and Ellen P. Washington (appellants) were the owners of certain land in Loudoun County, Virginia, known as “Old Thrift Farm”. Sometime in January 1956, appellants borrowed from the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (appellee) $24,000. The debt was evidenced by appellants’ promissory note payable to appellee in installments with interest and was secured by a deed of trust on the “Old Thrift Farm”.
On March 30, 1964, the federal government, seeking to enforce a tax lien on the
It was stipulated by the parties that . the land in question known as the Old Thrift Farm ... is . subject to the prior lien of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and to the dower interest of Ellen P. Washington, the wife of the said Othello Washington, and that the wife’s dower right and the Metropolitan lien are both superior to the Government’s tax lien. [United States v. Washington, 251 F.Supp. 359, 360 (E.D.Va.1966), aff’d in part and rev’d in part, 402 F.2d 3, 4 (4th Cir. 1968), cert. denied, 402 U.S. 978 [91 S.Ct. 1641, 29 L.Ed.2d 145] (1971).]
In May 1967, appellee demanded and the appellants paid $211.54 for expenses incurred by appellee in the tax lien enforcement proceedings.
Some four years thereafter appellants arranged to discharge the balance of their indebtedness to appellee, and in the settlement proceedings, handled by the Columbia Real Estate Title Insurance Company, ap-pellee, in September 1971, submitted a payoff statement which reads in part:
We have this day received Mr. Dudley Cocke’s bill . . . and we are, therefore, giving below the amount necessary to pay this loan in full provided payment is received on or before January 1, 1972:
Balance of the principal $11,600.00
* * * * * *
Attorney’s fee as per attached statement 2,396.64
The statement of Mr. Dudley Cocke submitted September 8, 1971, was to the effect that the attorney’s fee was “for all services in connection with representation of interest of Metropolitan in the matter of United States of America v. Othello Washington, et als, pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia . . . from 1964 to date
Appellants on September 17, 1971, discharged the balance of their indebtedness to appellee on the promissory note and upon the payment of $2,396.64 representing the amount demanded of them as attorney’s fees for appellee’s lawyer, appellants were released from their obligation under the deed of trust. Thereafter, appellants, seeking to recover the amount paid in order to obtain the release, commenced an action in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia demanding judgment against the appellee in the amount of $2,396.64, plus interest and costs.
There being no material issue of fact, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment which were resolved in favor of the appellee, and after trial without a jury on the issue of the reasonableness of the attorney’s fee, the court ruled that aside from a minor duplication the fee was reasonable. This appeal followed.
Urging reversal, appellants contend in substance that because Dudley Cocke was employed by and functioned at all times during the tax lien litigation as attorney for appellee, rather than as trustee under
Dudley Cocke, in his capacity as trustee under the deed of trust, was neither named nor joined as a party in the tax litigation, nor, under the circumstances, was he a necessary party.
The appellants, as makers of the note, agreed to pay “all cost of collection . , court costs and reasonable attorney’s fees which may be incurred in the collection or enforcement of [the] note or any part [thereof].” Appellees would distinguish “enforcement” from “collection” (“collection” was clearly not involved -in this case) and would define “enforcement” to include “keep[ing] the deed of trust in force as a first lien in the face of the Government’s attempt to enforce a gambling tax lien on the security . . . .”
When the federal government filed its suit to enforce the tax lien against the appellants’ property, appellee had several options open to it under the note and deed of trust. It could have, for example, demanded that appellants discharge the tax lien, and upon their failure to do so, appellee could have, itself, discharged the lien and
Reversed and remanded with directions to enter judgment consistent with this opinion.
. There is no record showing of a default in the payment of any of the prescribed installments or in the performance of a covenant in the deed of trust.
. After tlie stipulation in 1966, it was understood by the parties that the tax lien was subordinate to appellee’s lien, United States v. Washington, supra, 251 F.Supp. at 360, and on appeal the only question of substance was whether the property should be sold free of appellant Ellen Washington’s dower interest, 402 F.2d 3 (4th Cir. 1968), cert. denied, 402 U.S. 978, 91 S.Ct. 1641, 29 L.Ed.2d 145 (1971).
. The grantors and beneficiary under the deed of trust were the real parties in interest and as such were named defendants in the tax lien suit. See 26 U.S.C. § 7403 (b) (1970). A trustee under a deed of trust is, of course, the agent of both grantor and beneficiary, of debtor and creditor, and as such “is bound to stand neutral and impartial between them.” Stull v. Harvey, 112 Va. 816, 824, 72 S.E. 701, 704 (1911). Thus as a mere holder of legal title, the trustee was not required to be present so long as both grantor and beneficiary were sui juris and were before the court. Gf. id.
. Va.Oode Ann. § 55-59 (1950). The note and deed of trust were executed in Virginia, the “Old Thrift Farm” is located in Virginia and the litigation out of which the claim for attorney’s fees arose was conducted in Virginia. Thus the rights of the parties respecting the matter in controversy must be controlled by Virginia law. See Gagnon v. Wright, D.C.App., 200 A.2d 196, 198 (1964); Kirschner v. Klavik, D.C.Mun.App., 186 A.2d 227, 228-229 (1962); Richmond Fairfield Ry. Co. v. United States Housing Corp., 63 App.D.C. 285, 287, 72 F.2d 78, 80 (1934).
. Consequently, we need not decide whether the attorney’s fee here involved would be chargeable to appellants had such fee been incurred by Dudley Cocke while functioning in his capacity as trustee.
. Appellee’s Brief at 6.