Is Equitable Subrogation Dead for Lenders and Insurers in Missouri?
| Copyright: | (c) 2010 Mondaq, Source: The Financial Times Limited |
| Source: | Financial Times Limited |
| Wordcount: | 6761 |
Previously published in the July-
Overview
This article discusses the recent abandonment of the equitable subrogation doctrine as a remedy in
Introduction
A recent unsuccessful attempt by an insurance company to use the equitable subrogation doctrine in
The Meaning of Equitable Subrogation
In short, lender's equitable subrogation is a tool by which real property lenders, or lienors, may replace the prior, senior lien position of an earlier in time lender by paying off that prior lender's loan.5 This result could soften the blow dealt by
Likewise,
Insurers, too, once relied on the doctrine for relief when an insured compromised or destroyed the insurer's right to recover a policy loss from a tortfeasor.11
The standard definition or understanding of subrogation (often found in lender/borrower or insurer/insured relationships) arises when one party pays an obligation or incurs debt that should be borne by another. It is, then, a principle of equity that an insurer, upon payment of the loss, acquires the legal right to be subrogated pro tanto "to the assured's right of action against the person responsible for the loss."12 The conventional legal wisdom was that the payor could recover from the beneficiary of the satisfied debt as a matter of equity. This logic was often reduced to contractual terms and thus became what could be described as "conventional" or "legal" subrogation. Historically, when no such contract right existed, but the circumstances were such as to warrant subrogation, courts would use "equitable" subrogation in lieu of a contractual subrogation right.13
Development of the Remedy for Lenders
The First 100 Years: From Reluctance to Acceptance
Valle's Heirs -
In
In Bright v. Boyd, like Valle's Heirs, an invalid estate sale prompted a purchaser to extend new funds to retire pre-existing liens.21 Yet in Bright the subsequent purchaser sued for a refund after his substantial improvements created equity.
[T]he broad doctrine, as a doctrine of equity, that so far as an innocent purchaser for a valuable consideration without notice of any infirmity . . . has . . . added to the permanent value of the estate, he is entitled to a full remuneration. . . This is the clear result of the Roman law; and it has the most persuasive equity, and, I may add, common sense and common justice, for its foundation.24
Discounting the Remedy Absent Wrongdoing and the Volunteerism Bar
After a strong start in
The
Equitable subrogation's tribulations continued in early 19th century estate cases where
Norton saw mistakes of fact as operative in determining whether to apply equitable subrogation. The Norton Court also established a firm limitation:
[B]efore a third party, making payment of a debt secured by mortgage, can be subrogated to the rights of the mortgagee, he must show either that he made the payment at the request of the mortgagor, or to protect some interest he had of his own . . .31
Norton recognized
Berry v. Stigall - Debtors' Opportunism Triggers Equitable Subrogation
It took another estate sale case, Berry v. Stigall,36 to finally laud the doctrine's ability to thwart unjust enrichment of opportunistic borrowers. Berry involved debtors who both consciously allowed a new but technically unauthorized mortgage to satisfy prior liens, but then sought to enjoy their resultant unencumbered property free of an unauthorized mortgage that they later self-servingly rebuked.
State Savings Expands the Doctrine
Unlike previous
The facts of
The year 1918 also saw Frazier v. Crook49 use equitable subrogation to prevent the defendant's windfall when the plaintiff wrongfully inserted a post-execution insurance clause, which, it was held, voided the instrument, but did not vitiate the lien in equity.50 In Frazier, all parties intended for the plaintiff to hold a first-priority lien, so the lien's preservation harmed no one. So preventing the borrower's unjust enrichment trumped the rules of construction-based technicality.
The 1926 case of Baker v.
Anison v. Rice and Validation of the
In Anison, two joint tenants asked a new lender to satisfy their foreclosing creditor in exchange for a new note and new deed of trust, ostensibly to replace the to-be-foreclosed first. Anison's plaintiff advanced funds to retire the default loan, but never received his promised collateral interest.
Seceding Appellate Courts and a Fraud-Based Limitation
Three decades after Anison, an attempted exploitation of equitable subrogation's capability prompted an appellate court's abandonment of the doctrine. An over-aggressive perversion of the doctrine led the appellate courts to apply equitable subrogation only so as to punish wrongdoing, not to prevent unjust enrichment. These appellate decisions trended away from equitable subrogation until the 2007 landmark case of Ethridge v. Tierone.58
Sage,
Frago v. Sage59 introduced a renewed distrust of equitable subrogation because the party seeking subrogation stood to reap a windfall. In Frago, the plaintiffs paid off their own senior debt to avoid foreclosure, but then boldly sought subrogation as to their own junior debt. Frago's plaintiffs sought to appoint themselves, like Napoleon's self-anointment as emperor, as first priority lienors as to their own collateral.
This potential exploitation of the doctrine drew the ire of the court, which even cited insurance-based conventional subrogation standards to limit the doctrine's future application.60 In Frago, "[t]he burden [was] placed upon the party seeking subrogation to substantiate by clear and convincing evidence that . . . the other party, in equity, should endure the loss."61
In
In
The courts' focus on fraud became acute in Metmor v. Landoll,68 where a recorder of deeds did not reflect a prior lienor's interest, but electronic recordation made the instrument theoretically discoverable. According to the
Thompson v. Chase71 continued
Even
The decisions in
In 2006, the
The lender sought reformation to reflect both parties as the borrowers, since both benefitted from the refinance loan and the attendant satisfaction of the prior deed of trust.75 Alternatively, the widow's potential windfall supported a claim for equitable subrogation.
However, the
Equitable Subrogation for Insurers
Fraud is not a prerequisite for equitable subrogation for the benefit of lenders only, though. In a recent
The treatment of equitable subrogation for insurers in
A Bright Beginning for Insurers' Equitable Subrogation
By the early 20th century,
"[C]onventional subrogation" allowed insurers to stand in the shoes of their insured and recover losses paid out on policies which were, in turn, recoverable via actions against third party tortfeasors or other faulty parties.80 One such case resembled several lender-themed cases where the insured stood to collect on his injuries from both his insurer and the responsible party.81
The court in
Equitable subrogation for insuers, then, arose when, for whatever reason, the contractual subrogation policies failed, but in equity the insurers should stand in the insured's shoes for recompense.84 In Knight v.
One familiar reason for invoking the equitable cousin of conventional subrogation involved the insured acting to prejudice the insurer.87 For instance, if an insured settled his claim with a tortfeasor and thereby released him from liability, the insurer lost its right to proceed against the actual guilty party.88 Equitable subrogation, then, would entitle the insurer to collect those amounts received by the insured pro tanto the amounts paid by the insurer. This is precisely the type of unjust enrichment avoidance that early
Essentially, the release of a tortfeasor or guilty third party equivocates the misfeasance or malfeasance that courts once looked for in evoking equitable subrogation as to lenders.89 The insurer (or lender) lost its ability to recoup its loss against the true wrongdoer, so it should be permitted to recoup its loss (or collateral) from the insured (or borrower). Thus, equitable subrogation protected when contract provisions failed.
Just as early
The Need for Fraud Now Applies to All Types of Equitable Subrogation
Another reason courts would use to justify equitable subrogation involved the presence of fraud chargeable to the insured.92 Any type of collusion or wrongful maneuver by the insured to the detriment of the insurer would call for the employment of equitable subrogation. Over the latter half of the 20th century and culminating only recently, insurers seeking equitable subrogation faced a familiar gauntlet that tightened the standards and limited the scenarios in which the doctrine would be utilized.
First, the court in Street v.
Then, in the 1960s, it became abundantly clear that the doctrine would face another severe limitation -
Two recent cases went on to discuss the utility of equitable subrogation in the legal malpractice arena. Drawing upon the conventional wisdom and statutory mandate as to the non-assignability of personal causes of action,
Similar to their lender counterparts, insurers in
Ethridge's Legacy and Other States' Approach
Insurers in Missouri Must Still Overcome Ethridge
St. Paul Surplus Lines provides an interesting snapshot into how future courts might approach the issue of equitable subrogation, both within the lending and insuring perspectives. The remedy of equitable subrogation can be an extremely powerful and useful one for those institutions, such as lenders and insurers, that regularly extend funds for the benefit of others. Given the turbulent nature of the recent economic climate, it would seem that lenders and insurers would become increasingly motivated to seek recompense from a technically "indirect" debtor (i.e. not the borrower or insured), but in actuality the most direct liability (a tortfeasor or third party lender). Add to this framework
Such was the case in St. Paul Surplus Lines, a case in which an insurer sought to assert a direct legal malpractice claim against its insured's unsuccessful attorney after it paid a large personal injury settlement. In St. Paul Surplus Lines, the court dismissed the plaintiff's cites to recent cases from other jurisdictions, especially
"[e]quitable subrogation is a broad doctrine" or that "
In taking up an excess carrier's claim for equitable subrogation to its insured's legal malpractice cause of action, the court in St. Paul Surplus first cited to prior property-based equitable subrogation cases, such as
However, the decision in St. Paul Surplus Lines quickly echoed the "Pandora's Box"104 sentiment held by earlier courts in regard to allowing insurers to stand in the shoes of those from whom no legal or contractual rights or privity would otherwise flow. Such was the scenario when an excess insurance carrier wished to sue its insured's lawyers for malpractice - a right traditionally solely afforded for the benefit of the client and thus impinging on the sacred lawyer-client relationship. The court then took the opportunity to examine other states' approaches to subrogation in such situations and noted that states such as
Thus, the lack of privity and potential invasion of the attorney-client privilege provided a detracting effect as to equitable subrogation. Note, too, that the windfall deterrent in that decision was targeted toward an attorney who may theoretically not face the true victim of his malpractice - the insurer. This is akin to allowing a borrower, as in Ethridge or
The St. Paul Surplus Lines court cited
. . . usually only allowed in extreme cases" where "the defendant . . . engaged in fraudulent conduct."109 Although the court included a historic review of the privity-based arguments against equitable subrogation to the insurance context, the weight of the argument against equitable subrogation in the St. Paul Surplus facts orbited around fraud. In conclusion, though, the court noted that the plaintiff had not alleged fraudulent misconduct on the part of defendant, and with that the analysis ended.110
The Heightened Standards of Ethridge Have Yet to Be Tested in
In Howard v. Turnbull,111 another post-Ethridge case assering a claim for equitable subrogation, the plaintiff guarantor sued a debtor's bank after satisfying the debtor's obligation. The guarantor was not involved in the debtor's business, which utilized the bank's loan and therefore reached an "agreement" holding that if the guaranty was ever called by the bank, the bank would assign other collateral to the guarantor in exchange.112 However, despite the guarantor's eventual payment of the entire balance, no such collateral reached the plaintiff and he asserted claims for, among other things, unjust enrichment as to the debtors, equitable subrogation as to the bank, and fraud as to all parties. However, the fraud claim was voluntarily dismissed and all claims, including equitable subrogation, were dismissed by the trial court. On appeal, the
The only other reported
So it remains to be seen whether the pendulum of equitable subrogation will swing back into favorability in
Footnotes
1 Scott B. Mueller graduated from
2
3 Ethridge v.
4 Bright v. Boyd, 4 F.Cas. 127 (C.C. Me. 1841) (No. 1,875).
5 Anison v. Rice, 282 S.W.2d 497, 503 (Mo. 1955)
6 Id.
7 See, In re Gateway Center Bldg.
8 See, State Sav.
9 Ethridge v.
10 Id.; St. Paul Surplus Lines Ins. Co. v. Remley, No. 4:08CV1868-DJS, 2009 WL 2070779 (
11 Knight v. Calvert Fire Ins. Co., 268 S.W.2d 53 (Mo. App. E.D. 1954).
12
13 Nat'l
14 Bunn v. Lindsay, 7 S.W. 473 (Mo. 1888); Berry v. Stigall, 162 S.W. 126 (Mo. 1913).
15 Valle's Heirs v. Fleming's Heirs, 29 Mo. 152, 155 (Mo. 1859); 4 JohnNortonPomeroy & SpencerW. Symons, Pomeroy'sEquity Jurisprudence, 1211 (5th ed. 1943); 37 Cyc. 363.
16 Valle's Heirs v. Fleming's Heirs, 29 Mo. 152, 155 (Mo. 1859).
17 Id.
18 Id.
19 Id.
20 Bright v. Boyd, 4 F.Cas. 127 (C.C. Me. 1841) (No. 1,875).
21 Id. at 130-2.
22 Id. at 133.
23 Id. at 133.
24 Valle's Heir v. Fleming's Heirs, 29 Mo. 152, 159 (Mo. 1859), citing Bright v. Boyd, 4 F.Cas. 134 (C.C. Me. 1843) (No. 1,876).
25 Wooldridge v. Scott, 69 Mo. 669 (Mo. 1879).
26 Id. at 670.
27 Id. at 673.
28 Norton v. Highleyman, 88 Mo. 621 (Mo. 1886).
29 Id.
30 Id. at 624.
31 Id.
32 Bunn v. Lindsay, 7 S.W. 473 (Mo. 1888).
33 Id.
34 Id. at 475-76.
35 Oldham v. Wade, 200 S.W. 1053 (Mo. banc 1918).
36 Berry v. Stigall, 162 S.W. 126 (1913).
37 Id.
38 Id. at 129.
39
40 Id.
41 Id. at 969 (citing 37 Cyc 363).
42
43 Id. at 969.
44 Bunn v. Lindsay, 7 S.W. 473 (Mo. 1888); Norton v. Highleyman, 88 Mo. 621 (Mo. 1886).
45 Id.
46
47
48 Anison v. Rice, 282 S.W.2d 497 (Mo. 1955).
49 Frazier v. Crook, 204 S.W. 392 (Mo. 1918).
50 Id.
51 Baker v.
52 Id. at 432.
53 Id.
54 Anison v. Rice, 282 S.W.2d 497 (Mo. 1955).
55 See, Wooldridge v. Scott, 69 Mo. 669 (Mo. 1879).
56 Id.
57 Anison v. Rice, 282 S.W.2d 497, 503 (Mo. 1955).
58 Ethridge v.
59 Frago v. Sage, 737 S.W.2d 482 (Mo. App. E.D. 1987).
60 Id. at 483.
61 Id.
62
63 Id. at 928.
64 Id.
65 In re Gateway Centers Bldg.
66 Id.; citing
67 Id.
68 Metmor Fin., Inc. v. Landoll, 976 S.W.2d 454 (Mo. App. W.D. 1998).
69 Id. at 462.
70 Id.
71 Thompson v.
72 Berry v. Stigall, 162 S.W. 126 (Mo. 1913); Frazier v. Crook, 204 S.W. 392 (Mo. 1918).
73 Ethridge v.
74 Id.
75 Id.
76 Ethridge v.
77 Id.
78 St. Paul Surplus Lines Ins. Co. v. Remley, No. 4:08CV1868-DJS, 2009 WL 2070779 at *4 (
79
80 The Home Ins. Co. of New York v. Smith, 140 S.W.2d 64 (Mo. App. E.D. 1940).
81 Id.
82 140 S.W.2d 64 (Mo. App. E.D. 1940).
83 Id. at 68
84 Knight v. Calvert Fire Ins. Co., 268 S.W.2d 53 (Mo. App. E.D. 1954).
85 Id. at 54-55.
86 Id.
87 Id.
88 Id.
89 Id.; The Home Ins. Co. of New York v. Smith, 140 S.W.2d 64 (Mo. App. E.D. 1940).
90 Id.
91 Id.
92 Id.
93 347 S.W.2d 455 (Mo. App. W.D. 1961).
94 416 S.W.2d 208 (Mo. App. E.D. 1967).
95 Reese v. Preferred Risk Mut. Ins. Co., 457 S.W.2d 205 (Mo. App. E.D. 1970); Kroeker v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 466 S.W.2d 105 (Mo. App. W.D.1971).
96 394 S.W.2d 418 (Mo. Ct. App. S.D. 1965)
97 Id. at 425.
98 456 F.3d 909 (8th Cir. 2006).
99 No. 4:08CV1868-DJS, 2009 WL 2070779 (
E.D. Mo.,
101 976 S.W.2d at 461.
102 868 S.W.2d 210, 223 (Mo. App. W.D. 1994).
103 No. 4:08CV1868-DJS, 2009 WL 2070779 (
104 456 F.3d 909 (8th Cir. 2006).
105 No. 4:08CV1868-DJS, 2009 WL 2070779 (
106 868 S.W.2d at 224.
107 976 S.W.2d at 461.
108 226 S.W.3d 127, 134.
109 No. 4:08CV1868-DJS, 2009 WL 2070779 (
110 Id.
111 258 S.W.3d 73 (Mo. App. W.D. 2008).
112 Id.
113 278 S.W.3d 702 (Mo. App. E.D. 2009).
114 Bunn v. Lindsay, 7 S.W. 473 (Mo. 1888);
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