People's United Bank, NA v. Alana Provencale, Inc. (R.E.E. & C. Capital Management Services, Inc., Appellant) , 189 A.3d 71 ( 2018 )


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  • NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal
    revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter
    of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109
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    before this opinion goes to press.
    
    2018 VT 46
    No. 2017-250
    People’s United Bank, NA                                            Supreme Court
    On Appeal from
    v.                                                               Superior Court, Bennington Unit,
    Civil Division
    Alana Provencale, Inc., et al.                                      December Term, 2017
    (R.E.E. & C. Capital Management Services, Inc.,
    Appellant)
    William D. Cohen, J.
    John A. Serafino and Elizabeth A. Glynn of Ryan Smith & Carbine, LTD., Rutland, for
    Plaintiff-Appellee.
    Merrill E. Bent of Woolmington, Campbell, Bernal & Bent, P.C., Manchester Center, for
    Interested Party-Appellant.
    PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Skoglund, Robinson, Eaton and Carroll, JJ.
    ¶ 1.    CARROLL, J. R.E.E. & C. Capital Management Services, Inc. (buyer) appeals a
    trial court order granting People’s United Bank’s motion to compel buyer to complete the purchase
    of a foreclosed property. Buyer raises three arguments: first, that it is not a party to the foreclosure
    sale, and the court therefore lacked jurisdiction to compel it to purchase the property; second, that
    the trial court erred in declining to apply the statutory remedy; and, third, that the trial court erred
    in ordering specific performance because an adequate remedy at law exists. We reverse and
    remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    ¶ 2.    This case arises from the foreclosure sale of a commercial property located in
    Manchester, Vermont. Prior to this dispute, the Bank issued loans to mortgagors and secured these
    loans with a mortgage on the property. Mortgagors were unable to repay the loan and eventually
    defaulted on the obligation to the Bank. The Bank then sought a judgment of foreclosure on the
    property and an order of public sale. The foreclosure proceeded without opposition or controversy
    and in September 2016, the court issued a judgment and decree of foreclosure by judicial sale.
    ¶ 3.    The foreclosure judgment ordered that the property “shall be sold as a whole, to the
    highest bidder at public sale.” The property was subsequently auctioned in November 2016.
    During the auction, seven registered bidders lodged twenty-eight bids on the property. Buyer
    placed the highest bid, which was one thousand dollars above the runner-up’s highest bid. Buyer
    made the required deposit and signed an auction purchase and sale agreement. This buyer’s
    agreement documents buyer’s obligation to purchase the property, subject to the trial court’s
    confirmation of the sale. The buyer’s agreement also recognized the Bank’s right, pursuant to 12
    V.S.A. § 4954(e), to request relief from the court in the event buyer failed to pay the balance of
    the purchase price.
    ¶ 4.    The Bank filed a motion for confirmation of the sale to buyer and provided all of
    the relevant reports to the court and to buyer. The trial court granted the Bank’s motion and
    confirmed the sale in December 2016. The confirmation order names buyer and states that “the
    sale reported is hereby confirmed and title to the lands and premises shall be transferred to R.E.E.
    & C. Capital Management Services, Inc.” This order, as well as the auctioneer’s report of sale,
    refers to buyer by name and indicates buyer as the high bidder at the public sale. The confirmation
    order also listed the property’s sale price and confirmed buyer’s obligation to purchase the
    property.
    ¶ 5.    On the day the court issued the confirmation order, the Bank’s attorney sent the
    confirmation order to buyer’s attorney; the two parties agreed to close on the property on February
    2
    10, 2017. On February 8, 2017, two days before the scheduled closing, buyer wrote to the Bank,
    stating that “[i]t is with much regret that I need to inform you that I am not able to follow through
    with this transaction at this time.” Buyer further stated that his “current investment group [had]
    decided that even at [the sale] price it [was] too risky to proceed with a new endeavor at this time.”
    Thus, no closing occurred.
    ¶ 6.    The Bank then filed a motion with the trial court requesting that it enforce the
    confirmation order and arguing that, as the high bidder, buyer subjected itself to the court’s
    jurisdiction and undertook an obligation to the court to purchase the property. Specifically, the
    Bank argued that specific performance was the appropriate remedy and that, therefore, the court
    should act in equity to compel buyer to close on the property. The Bank did not request forfeiture
    of the deposit or that the confirmation order be vacated. Buyer did not dispute that it defaulted on
    its obligation to purchase the property pursuant to the parties’ purchase agreement but otherwise
    opposed the Bank’s motion. In opposition, buyer argued that since it was not a party to the
    underlying foreclosure action, the court lacked jurisdiction over buyer, and therefore the court
    could not order buyer to close on the sale of the foreclosed property. Buyer also argued that the
    statute dictated an exclusive remedy—that the court could only order buyer to forfeit its deposit
    and vacate the confirmation order, and because the statute provided for an exclusive remedy, the
    court was barred from ordering the common law remedy of specific performance.
    ¶ 7.    The court heard oral argument on the motion to enforce, but no evidence was
    offered at the hearing. The court granted the motion to enforce, finding first that by bidding at a
    judicial sale, a bidder, such as buyer, subjects itself to the court’s oversight, becoming a “quasi-
    party.” The court then concluded that it could issue orders as to the high bidder in furtherance of
    its statutorily mandated judicial obligation to oversee the foreclosure process. With respect to the
    Bank’s right, pursuant to the foreclosure statute, to ask the court to order forfeiture of the deposit
    and to vacate the confirmation order, the court concluded that those were not the Bank’s exclusive
    3
    and mandatory remedies. The court determined that the mandatory language in the relevant
    statutory provision requires the court to order this remedy only when a bank chooses that option.
    Ultimately, the court concluded that specific performance was a permissible and appropriate
    remedy and ordered buyer to close on the property. Buyer appealed.1
    ¶ 8.     “[A] decree for specific performance of a contract is not a matter of right and rests
    in the sound discretion of the court.” Davis v. Hodgdon, 
    133 Vt. 49
    , 53, 
    329 A.2d 669
    , 672 (1974).
    We review a trial court’s discretionary rulings for abuse of discretion, and we will find an abuse
    of discretion only upon “a showing that the trial court has withheld its discretion entirely or that it
    was exercised for clearly untenable reasons or to a clearly untenable extent.” Quenneville v.
    Buttolph, 
    2003 VT 82
    , ¶ 11, 
    175 Vt. 444
    , 
    833 A.2d 1263
    (quotation omitted). Our interpretation
    of a statute, as a question of law, is de novo. State v. Therrien, 
    2011 VT 120
    , ¶ 9, 
    191 Vt. 24
    , 
    38 A.3d 1129
    . “When construing a statute, our paramount goal is to effectuate the intent of the
    Legislature.” State v. Thompson, 
    174 Vt. 172
    , 174, 
    807 A.2d 454
    , 458 (2002). Our review begins
    with a statute’s plain language—if that language conveys the Legislature’s intent clearly, we need
    go no further. 
    Id. at 174-75,
    807 A.2d at 458.
    ¶ 9.     We begin with buyer’s argument that the court lacked authority to compel it to act
    because buyer was not a party to the underlying foreclosure action. We disagree and hold that a
    high bidder’s successful bid in a judicial sale, and the court’s subsequent confirmation of the
    foreclosure sale pursuant to 12 V.S.A. § 4954(a), renders a buyer a limited party such that the court
    is authorized to issue orders directing the buyer’s action relative to the property’s purchase.
    Section 4954 of Title 12 vests in the superior court the authority and discretion to confirm the sale
    of a property foreclosed by judicial sale. See HSBC Bank USA v. McAllister, 
    2018 VT 9
    , ¶ 7, __
    Vt. __, __ A.3d __. The buyer of a foreclosed property thus comes within the superior court’s
    1
    Mortgagors did not participate in this appeal.
    4
    jurisdiction in the court’s order confirming the sale of the property, such that “[t]he order of the
    court confirming the sale shall be conclusive evidence as against all persons that the foreclosure
    and sale were conducted in accordance with” statutory requirements. 12 V.S.A. § 4954(a). The
    civil division of the superior court has “exclusive jurisdiction to hear and dispose of any requests
    to modify or enforce orders in civil cases previously issued by” the court. 4 V.S.A. § 31(4).
    Therefore, the superior court has continuing jurisdiction regarding the court’s own confirmation
    of the sale of a foreclosed property as to the parties to the sale, including the buyer of the foreclosed
    property, and is authorized to issue orders concerned with the transfer of the property between the
    two parties.
    ¶ 10.   Our conclusion here echoes the trial court’s conclusion on this issue with one
    exception—the trial court characterized buyer as a “quasi-party.” In this context, “limited party”
    is a more appropriate designation. “Quasi” lends its usefulness to many situations where it is
    meant as “having some resemblance to,” “seemingly,” or “apparently.”                   Webster’s New
    International Dictionary 2035 (2d ed. 1961). Here, a more concrete and actual relationship exists
    that deserves a designation fitting to reality—that the party is subject to the authority of the court,
    but only for a limited purpose.2
    ¶ 11.   We now turn to buyer’s primary argument, that the trial court erred in ordering
    specific performance because the court was required to apply an exclusive statutory remedy, and,
    moreover, the buyer’s agreement required the same remedy. First, we disagree with buyer that the
    Bank was limited to the remedy provided by statute. We agree with the trial court’s decision—
    2
    This narrow limited party status does not confer all of the rights of a legal party to an
    action. A high bidder, or other interested entity, such as an unsuccessful bidder challenging the
    judicial sale process, may seek actual party status through a proper motion to intervene. See
    V.R.C.P. 24. We also note that in this case, a confirmation order was issued. Because a
    confirmation order was issued, we need not consider whether the court might, in some instances,
    have jurisdiction over an auction’s high bidder earlier in the judicial foreclosure process, such as
    between the time of sale and the issuance of the confirmation order.
    5
    that 12 V.S.A. § 4954(e) does not limit the Bank’s remedies. In relevant part, § 4954(e) provides
    “[i]n the event that the purchaser fails to pay the balance of the purchase price according to the
    terms of the sale, then, upon the request of the plaintiff, the down payment shall be forfeited and
    the court shall issue an order vacating the confirmation order.” The statute also provides that
    “[u]pon motion and after hearing, the court may issue a confirmation order to the second highest
    bidder.” 
    Id. By the
    plain language of the statute, these remedies are conditioned on a bank’s, or a
    plaintiff’s, request. If a bank makes a request, then the down payment shall be forfeited, and the
    court shall vacate the confirmation order. The mandatory language “shall” only requires a
    particular response by the court if a bank invokes the remedy by making the request. Likewise,
    only “upon motion and after hearing” can a court issue a confirmation order to the second highest
    bidder. In this case, the Bank did not request that the court order this statutory remedy. Because
    neither of these potential remedies were invoked, the court was not limited to application of either
    of them and could consider the appropriateness of other remedies.
    ¶ 12.   Buyer argues that our decision in Winney v. Ransom & Hastings, Inc., 
    149 Vt. 213
    ,
    
    542 A.2d 269
    (1988), requires the contrary conclusion. In that case we explained “[i]t is a general
    rule of construction in Vermont that ‘[w]here a statute confers a remedy unknown to common law,
    and prescribes the mode of enforcing it, that mode alone can be resorted to.’ ” 
    Id. at 214,
    542 A.2d
    at 270 (quoting Thayer v. Partridge, 
    47 Vt. 423
    , 428 (1875)). But the Winney rule does not apply
    in this case. There, the Court considered the exclusivity of the statutory remedy provided by
    Vermont’s Dram Shop Act, which the Court had previously held “ ‘changed the common-law rule
    of proximate cause which obtains in other tort actions.’ ” 
    Id. at 215,
    542 A.2d at 270 (quoting
    Healey v. Cady, 
    104 Vt. 463
    , 466, 
    161 A. 151
    , 152 (1932)). The Dram Shop Act did not require
    proof of proximate cause and, thus, created a new legal right and furnished a new—and
    exclusive—legal remedy for violation of that right. 
    Id. at 215-16,
    542 A.2d at 270. Here, the
    fundamental legal right enforced by § 4954(e)’s remedy is the right of a party to have a land
    6
    transfer agreement completed. Even though this legal right, in this context, is within the statutory
    framework that governs foreclosure, the right is not, in itself, a creature of statute. That is, the
    legal right to an agreement’s completion does not arise exclusively from Vermont’s foreclosure
    statutes. Thus, Winney’s first prong is not met here, and our holding in that case does not require
    us to conclude that the remedy here is exclusive.
    ¶ 13.   Buyer also argues as a component of its primary argument that the purchase and
    sale agreement provided an exclusive remedy. After auction, both parties signed this contract,
    which provides for a remedy provision nearly identical to the language in § 4954(e). As one
    example, Term 5 of the contract read:
    In the event the Purchaser shall fail to pay the balance of said
    purchase price on the Closing Date, Plaintiff shall have the right to
    request that the Court make an order forfeiting the deposit and
    vacating the confirmation order. Plaintiff shall also have the right
    to request that the court issue a confirmation order for sale to the
    second highest bidder.
    This language, which is essentially identical to § 4954(e), indicates a plaintiff has the option of
    requesting a forfeiture of the deposit and vacating the confirmation order. Nothing in the contract
    says the remedy is mandatory or exclusive. See 9A V.S.A. § 2—719(1)(b) (“[R]esort to a remedy
    as provided [in a contract for sale of goods] is optional unless the remedy is expressly agreed to
    be exclusive, in which case it is the sole remedy.”).
    ¶ 14.   Having concluded that buyer is subject to court authority and that seller is not bound
    by an exclusive statutory remedy, we now turn to the question of whether specific performance
    was a permissible and appropriate remedy in this case. Seller contends that specific performance
    is an appropriate remedy; the trial court agreed and ordered buyer to close on the property. The
    trial court relied on First Hawaiian Bank v. Timothy, in which the Hawaii appellate court looked
    to the American Jurisprudence treatise for available remedies when a purchaser fails to close on a
    property acquired at a judicial sale. The court in First Hawaiian noted five distinct remedies:
    7
    (1) it may set aside the sale, release the purchaser, and decree a
    resale; (2) it may confirm the sale and permit an action at law to be
    instituted against the purchaser and its sureties, to recover the
    amount of the bid, or damages; (3) it may have recourse to the
    vendor’s lien reserved for the price, or to the purchase-money
    mortgage or other security that may have been given; (4) it may
    specifically enforce compliance by summary proceedings against
    the purchaser; and in some jurisdictions, its successors or sureties;
    or (5) it may order a resale at the purchaser’s risk, with a provision
    that he or she shall be held for the deficiency and costs of resale in
    case the property brings less than the bid at the first sale.
    First Hawaiian Bank v. Timothy, 
    31 P.3d 205
    , 219 (Haw. Ct. App. 2001) (quoting 47 Am. Jur. 2d
    Judicial Sales § 223, at 602). Based on this language, the trial court concluded that specific
    performance was a remedy potentially available to seller and then ordered buyer to close on the
    property, thus granting seller the remedy it sought.
    ¶ 15.   The court also considered Vermont caselaw to decide whether specific performance
    was a permissible remedy in this case. This court has previously held that “specific performance
    of [a contract for sale of land] is granted in favor of the vendor as freely as in favor of the vendee
    though the relief actually obtained is only the recovery of money.” First Nat’l Bank of St.
    Johnsbury v. Laperle, 
    117 Vt. 144
    , 154, 
    86 A.2d 635
    , 641 (1952). Thus, in Laperle, the Court held
    that the “plaintiff vendor had the right to bring its bill for specific performance.” 
    Id. at 155,
    86
    A.2d at 642. This holding established that a seller of property can seek specific performance
    instead of just seeking monetary damages. Thus, the Bank in this case was allowed to ask for
    specific performance and, under the right circumstances, the court could award that remedy.
    ¶ 16.   Given that specific performance is a permissible remedy in some instances, the
    question becomes whether the facts of this case support the trial court’s decision granting that
    remedy to the Bank. We conclude that here, the trial court did not engage in the analysis of this
    question required by our caselaw and that, therefore, the court’s decision was an abuse of
    discretion.
    8
    ¶ 17.    Though “specific performance is at the trial court’s discretion,” Quenneville, 
    2003 VT 82
    , ¶ 11, this Court has held that specific performance is not available if there is a sufficient
    legal remedy.
    Where the inadequacy of damages is great, and the difficulties not
    extreme, specific performance will be granted and the tendency in
    modern times has been increasingly to grant relief, where under the
    particular circumstances of the case damages are not an adequate
    remedy. Of course, in a particular case, the remedy at law may be
    adequate and specific performance will be denied for that reason.
    Gerety v. Poitras, 
    126 Vt. 153
    , 154-55, 
    224 A.2d 919
    , 921 (1966) (citation omitted). In short,
    “[e]quity will not afford relief where there is a plain, adequate, and complete remedy at law.” 
    Id. at 155,
    224 A.2d at 921.         A party seeking the “special equitable remedy of specific
    performance . . . has the burden to allege and demonstrate in the complaint why money damages
    will not furnish an adequate remedy.” 
    Id. Put simply,
    specific performance is a remedy available
    only when there is no adequate alternative remedy, and the plaintiff has the burden to prove that
    alternative remedies are inadequate.
    ¶ 18.    Thus, in determining whether to order specific performance, the trial court must
    determine whether there is an alternative plain, adequate, and complete remedy that could make
    the Bank whole, and then weigh that alternative remedy against the Bank’s argument regarding
    the insufficiency of that remedy. In this case, the trial court did not consider the adequacy of other
    potential remedies. The trial court effectively withheld its discretion in this case, constituting an
    abuse of that discretion.
    Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    FOR THE COURT:
    Associate Justice
    9