THOMAS C. ABATE vs. FREMONT INVESTMENT & LOAN & others.
470 Mass. 821 (2015)
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
March 9, 2015
470 Mass. 821
Suffolk. November 4, 2014. - March 9, 2015. Present: GANTS, C.J., SPINA, CORDY, BOTSFORD, DUFFLY, LENK, & HINES, JJ.
In an action in the Land Court to try title (brought pursuant to
Discussion of the judicial avenues available to a property owner who seeks to challenge a claimed adverse property interest, and of the jurisdictional elements of an action to try title pursuant to
Discussion of the standard of review applicable to a motion to dismiss a complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted in the “first step” of an action to try title pursuant to
Statement that, in an action to try title pursuant to
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Land Court Department on May 25, 2012.
Motions to dismiss were heard by Robert B. Foster, J.
The Supreme Judicial Court on its own initiative transferred the case from the Appeals Court.
Thomas B. Vawter for the petitioner.
James L. Rogal for Deutsche Bank National Trust Company & another.
Robert M. Brochin for Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.
James P. Long, pro se, amicus curiae, submitted a brief.
HINES, J. In this appeal, we determine whether a respondent in a try title action brought pursuant to
Background. 1. Procedural history. The petitioner, Thomas C. Abate, brought this action in the Land Court asserting that a purported assignment of a mortgage was invalid and, thereby, indirectly challenging a foreclosure by Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as trustee for Carrington Mortgage Loan Trust, Series 2005-FRE1, Asset Backed Pass-Through Certificates (Deutsche Bank). At the time of filing, Deutsche Bank as the assignee of the mortgage already had foreclosed on Abate‘s mortgage. The respondents filed motions to dismiss under
2. Facts. The following facts are taken from undisputed facts in the record.5 On June 17, 2005, Abate granted a mortgage to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS), as nominee for Fremont Investment & Loan (Fremont). On that same date, Abate took title to the property at 14 Owatonna Street, Newton, through a quitclaim deed. The mortgage and quitclaim deed were recorded in the Middlesex County registry of deeds. An assignment of the mortgage, recorded on December 3, 2010, purported to assign Abate‘s mortgage from MERS to Deutsche Bank on November 16, 2010.
Abate has been in possession of the property since 2005. He filed bankruptcy on October 29, 2010, and represented during bankruptcy proceedings that he intended to surrender the property.6 On December 9, 2010, the bankruptcy court ordered that Deutsche Bank be released from an automatic stay so that it could exercise its rights pursuant to the mortgage. On March 28, 2012, Deutsche Bank conducted a nonjudicial foreclosure auction in accordance with the statutory power of sale provision in the mortgage and the nonjudicial foreclosure process set forth in
In May, 2012, Abate filed a petition to try title, pursuant to
On July 31, 2012, Deutsche Bank and Carrington filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to
After a hearing, and with the benefit of additional briefing, the judge allowed the motion on December 10, 2012 (Deutsche Bank/Carrington Order), agreeing with the argument of Deutsche Bank and Carrington that Abate failed to state a claim on which relief can be granted. Addressing separately each of the claimed defects in the assignment, the judge ruled that Abate‘s petition failed to sufficiently allege effective record title because none of the allegations established any ground on which the assignment could be found void or invalid.
Subsequently, on January 16, 2013, MERS filed a motion to dismiss the petition pursuant to
A judgment entered dismissing the petition against Deutsche Bank, Carrington, and MERS with prejudice.10 Abate timely appealed the judgment of dismissal.
While the appeal was pending, Abate filed a motion for relief from judgment pursuant to
Discussion. In this appeal, Abate argues that in allowing the respondents to bring a motion to dismiss under
1. Statutory background. A try title action is one of several
2. Motions to dismiss in try title actions. Abate‘s main contention in this appeal flows from our prior case law explaining the two steps of a try title action and noting that the question who “has a better title . . . does not arise, and is not to be determined in [the first step], but in the actions which the respondents may be ordered to bring.” Blanchard, 177 Mass. at 504-505. The rule that “better title” is to be determined in the second step, however, does not preclude consideration of the issue presented in the defendants’ motions to dismiss. At issue in the defendants’ motions to dismiss was the threshold question of jurisdiction, or more specifically Abate‘s standing to bring the try title action. Where, as here, the determination of standing, and ultimately jurisdiction, necessarily reaches and effectively negates the merits of a petitioner‘s claim, the two-step procedure is not abrogated. Indeed, dismissal of a try title petition for lack of standing on a motion to dismiss is a procedural disposition we expressly approved in Bevilacqua, 460 Mass. at 763-764.17 Standing may be considered under either
In Bevilacqua, 460 Mass. at 764, the judge was compelled to
a. Standard of review of a motion to dismiss in the “first step” of a try title action. In a typical case, a plaintiff is required to prove jurisdictional facts if those facts are challenged by an opposing party through evidence accompanying a motion to dismiss. Callahan v. First Congregational Church of Haverhill, 441 Mass. 699, 710-711 (2004) (“factual challenge” to subject matter jurisdiction, made through presentation of extrapleadings material, “gives no presumptive weight to the averments in the plaintiff‘s complaint, and requires the court to address the merits of the jurisdictional claim by resolving the factual disputes between the plaintiff and the defendants“). In Bevilacqua, 460 Mass. at 764 n.2, we recognized some of the difficulties of applying the procedure and standards of
This approach is also consistent with that taken in try title actions before the rules of civil procedure were adopted. This court has historically reviewed the factual accuracy of a petitioner‘s claimed jurisdictional facts required for standing, i.e., record title and possession - but not necessarily the third nonstanding jurisdictional fact, i.e., adverse claim, in the first step of a try title action. See Arnold v. Reed, 162 Mass. 438, 440 (1894) (determining record title in first step of try title action based on “examination of the records of the Probate Court“), cited with approval in Bevilacqua, 460 Mass. at 769 n.6. See also Blanchard, 177 Mass. at 505 (determining possession in first step of try title action after review of petitioner‘s testimony and respondents’ competing arguments).
In addition, our case law requires the plaintiff to bear the burden of establishing sufficient facts on which jurisdiction can be found. See Droukas v. Divers Training Academy, Inc., 375 Mass. 149, 151 (1978) (personal jurisdiction). See also Williams v. Episcopal Diocese of Mass., 436 Mass. 574, 577 n.2 (2002) (subject matter jurisdiction). In Cepeda v. Kass, 62 Mass. App. Ct. 732, 736-738 (2004), the Appeals Court held that a reviewing court shall accept as true all prima facie evidence of personal jurisdiction unless contradictory evidence is introduced, in which case the plaintiff must “establish jurisdiction by a preponderance of the evidence at an evidentiary hearing or at trial.” As with
Although the judge‘s decision ostensibly resolved the respondents’ claim that the petition failed to state a claim under
b. Abate‘s standing.20 Abate asserted that he held record title and acknowledged his grant of a mortgage to MERS and the purported assignment of that mortgage to Deutsche Bank. Without acknowledging in his petition that Deutsche Bank had already foreclosed on the mortgage, Abate merely claimed that the assignment was invalid. Deutsche Bank responded in its motion to dismiss that it had foreclosed on Abate‘s equity of redemption under the mortgage, thus challenging Abate‘s claim of record title. Abate did not dispute that Deutsche Bank purported to foreclose on Abate‘s equity of redemption prior to Abate filing his try title action.21 The judge concluded that Abate lacked record
title based on the absence of any viable claim that the mortgage assignment, and by extension the subsequent foreclosure, was invalid.
Although it is correct that “better title” is typically determined in the second step of a try title action if the petitioner sufficiently alleges all jurisdictional facts, a try title action brought by a mortgagor against a foreclosing mortgagee may sometimes require a determination of better title in the first step. In circumstances such as this, where the mortgagor‘s claim of record title is predicated on a determination that a foreclosure auction held by a mortgagee was void because of a flaw in the mortgagee‘s chain of title, the petitioner must demonstrate “better title” than the mortgagee in order to show that the foreclosure was invalid and, thus, that the mortgagor retained title after the foreclosure auction occurred. If a valid foreclosure did not occur, the mortgagor and mortgagee have complementary claims to title; however, a valid foreclosure terminates a mortgagor‘s claim of title.22 Bevilacqua, 460 Mass. at 775 (“a mortgage, by its nature, necessarily implies the simultaneous existence of two separate but complementary claims to the property that do not survive the mortgage or each other“). See Blanchard, 177 Mass. at 504-505. Under Massachusetts law, which subscribes to the “title theory” for mortgages, the title interests are split between the mortgagor and mortgagee. The legal ” ‘title’ to the mortgaged real estate remains in the mortgagee until the mortgage is satisfied or foreclosed.” Faneuil Investors Group, Ltd. Partnership v. Selectmen of Dennis, 458 Mass. 1, 6 (2010), quoting Restatement (Third) of Property (Mortgages) § 4.1 comment a (1997). Equitable title remains in the mortgagor. Bevilacqua, supra at 774. See Eaton v. Federal Nat‘l Mtge. Ass‘n, 462 Mass. 569, 575-576 (2012) (collecting cases and discussing common-law roots of separation of legal and equitable title between mortgagor and mortgagee); U.S. Bank Nat‘l Ass‘n v. Ibanez, 458 Mass. 637, 649 (2011).
Apart from his contention that the judge could not test the sufficiency of his claims under
c. The adverse claim element of jurisdiction. Where we have characterized the judge‘s decision as being premised on Abate‘s lack of standing based on the lack of record title, the remaining jurisdictional fact, adverse claim, has no bearing on the outcome of this appeal. It is undisputed that Abate filed his try title petition after the foreclosure occurred, which conclusively establishes the existence of an adverse claim. Nonetheless, because the issue may arise in future try title actions between a mortgagor and a mortgagee, we take this opportunity to resolve the conflict in the Land Court try title decisions on the adverse claim element of subject matter jurisdiction.24 We conclude that where a mortgagor challenges the right of the mortgagee to foreclose, the “adverse claim” element of a try title action is sufficiently alleged only if the foreclosure already has occurred.
Our view that an adverse claim arises only after foreclosure is dictated by application of well-settled mortgage law principles to the jurisdictional requirement of an adverse claim. In this regard, the analysis in Bevilacqua, 460 Mass. at 776, where we held that “a necessary element of [a] try title action [is] the existence of an adverse claim” is instructive. As between a mortgagor and a mortgagee, the title interests are not, as a matter of law, adverse. Because a mortgagor and mortgagee hold complementary claims of title, the law fashions a relationship that is in equipoise, which stands until either the mortgagor satisfies the debt or the mortgagee forecloses. See Bevilacqua, supra at 775, citing Negron v. Gordon, 373 Mass. 199, 205 n.4 (1977). Following the logic of Bevilacqua, neither is superior or inferior to the other.25
Our conclusion that the requisite adverse claim does not exist where a mortgagor challenges an impending foreclosure does not, however, preclude a try title action in circumstances where the very existence of a mortgage is called into question. In this regard, we recognize the continuing vitality of our holding in Brewster v. Seeger, 173 Mass. 281, 282 (1899), where we recognized the petitioner‘s right, under the try title statute, to chal-
Fidelity to the requirement of an adverse claim does not place unreasonable or unnecessary limits on the remedies available to a property owner seeking to prevent the obvious harm that may result when a foreclosure proceeds without challenge. We are mindful that in Massachusetts, a nonjudicial foreclosure State, a mortgagee may foreclose without prior judicial intervention. As we have noted, however, a property owner has other, and perhaps more suitable, remedies available to him or her. See, e.g.,
Conclusion. The judgment dismissing Abate‘s petition against Deutsche Bank, Carrington, and MERS with prejudice is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
“If the record title of land is clouded by an adverse claim, or by the possibility thereof, a person in possession of such land claiming an estate of freehold therein or an unexpired term of not less than ten years, and a person who by force of the covenants in a deed or otherwise may be liable in damages, if such claim should be sustained, may file a petition in the land court stating his interest, describing the land, the claims and the possible adverse claimants so far as known to him, and praying that such claimants may be summoned to show cause why they should not bring an action to try such claim.”
