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Midland Properties v. Wells Fargo
296 Neb. 407
Neb.
2017
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Background

  • Jerry Morgan obtained a loan secured by a deed of trust on Douglas County property, transferred title to Midland Properties, LLC, and managed it as a rental.
  • Wells Fargo acquired the lender’s interest, alleged borrower default, and conducted a nonjudicial trustee’s sale; HBI purchased the property and later conveyed it to H & S Partnership, LLP.
  • Morgan and Midland sued Wells Fargo, HBI, and H & S for wrongful foreclosure, quiet title, declaratory relief, and tortious interference with business relationships based on alleged presale contact with tenants and irregularities in assignments and trustee substitutions.
  • Wells Fargo moved for summary judgment, producing documentary evidence of default, notice, compliance with sale procedures, and an affidavit from a tenant denying contact by Wells Fargo.
  • Appellants relied primarily on Morgan’s deposition/affidavit recounting unnamed telephone conversations with Wells Fargo representatives and secondhand tenant reports; the district court excluded those portions for lack of foundation and hearsay and granted summary judgment.
  • The district court also denied leave to file a second amended complaint to add Wells Fargo’s independent contractor as a defendant as untimely and futile; the Nebraska Supreme Court affirmed.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Right to foreclose (wrongful foreclosure / quiet title) Morgan testified Wells Fargo reps told him not to make payments and that they would not foreclose, so no default existed Wells Fargo produced records showing missed payments, notices of default, and communications contradicting Morgan's alleged instructions Court excluded Morgan's unidentified hearsay calls for lack of foundation; no genuine factual dispute; summary judgment for Wells Fargo
Evidentiary exclusion (foundation/hearsay) Morgan's deposition and affidavit statements were admissible and created issues for trial Morgan could not identify speakers or dates; tenant reports were hearsay without tenants' own affidavits/depositions Exclusion was not an abuse of discretion; statements inadmissible; appellants failed to create material factual disputes
Tortious interference with business relationships Tenants were allegedly contacted/harassed by Wells Fargo representatives causing lost rentals and $50,000 damages Wells Fargo showed no contact with tenants; an independent contractor did occupancy checks and a tenant affidavit denied contact Plaintiffs lacked admissible evidence (tenants’ first‑hand testimony); summary judgment for Wells Fargo on tort claim
Leave to amend to add independent contractor Appellants sought to add the contractor nearly 9 months after amendment deadline; claimed late discovery Wells Fargo identified the contractor earlier in deposition; amendment was untimely and the claim would be futile District court did not abuse discretion denying leave to amend; appellate court affirmed

Key Cases Cited

  • Bixenmann v. Dickinson Land Surveyors, 294 Neb. 407 (appellate standard for summary judgment and inferences)
  • State v. Casterline, 293 Neb. 41 (evidentiary‑foundation review is abuse‑of‑discretion)
  • Golnick v. Callender, 290 Neb. 395 (procedural principles cited in summary judgment review)
  • SID No. 196 of Douglas Cty. v. City of Valley, 290 Neb. 1 (summary judgment burden shifting)
  • Linch v. Carlson, 156 Neb. 308 (evidence on contacts and proof)
  • Steinhausen v. HomeServices of Neb., 289 Neb. 927 (elements of tortious interference and related standards)
  • Green v. Box Butte General Hosp., 284 Neb. 243 (trial court discretion on leave to amend)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: Midland Properties v. Wells Fargo
Court Name: Nebraska Supreme Court
Date Published: Apr 14, 2017
Citation: 296 Neb. 407
Docket Number: S-16-260
Court Abbreviation: Neb.