In Mаy, 1995, Allen and Karen Bondeson began to miss monthly payments due on a mortgage note of $159,000 that they had given to the Carmel Credit Union (credit union) on September 15, 1987. Their default on the mortgage note triggered a dеfault on a mortgage of real property at 133-139 En-nell Street in Lowell.
We may jump over the work-out efforts that followed the initial defaults. On February 16, 1996, the credit union began foreclosure proceеdings. The only question on appeal is whether a mortgage lender must prove that the borrower actually received the notice that G. L. c. 244, § 17B, requires a lender to give if it proposes to hold the borrower liable, after mortgage
Section 17B provides that the holder of a mortgage note may not bring an action for a deficiency after a mortgage foreclosure sale unless it has, not less than twenty-one days before the foreclosure sale, sent written notice to the person to be charged with the deficiency. The notice, which must contain a warning of liability for the deficiency, is to be sent by registered mail, with return receipt requested,' to persons whom the mortgagee рroposes to charge with a deficiency. Within thirty days after the foreclosure sale, the mortgagee is required to make an affidavit that the requisite notice was mailed. There are appеnded to the statute forms of the required notice letter and affidavit, which the mortgagee is to follow “substantially.” See G. L. c. 244, § 17B.
Facts. We set out some additional material facts that the parties do not dispute. On August 16, 1996, the credit union mailed
Discussion. The core of the Bondesons’ argument is that it is not enough for a mortgagee to prove it has sent notice to a dеbtor in strict conformity within G. L. c. 244, § 17B. If, their argument continues, the statute is to achieve its purpose of protecting parties who may become hable for a mortgage note deficiency, Framingham Sav. Bank v. Turk,
The first difficulty with that argument is that the statute prescribes in great detail how notice shah be given-, it does not prоvide that the mortgagee must prove that the notice was
The Bondesons rely primarily on Mutual Bank for Sav. v. Sil-verman,
In Pemstein v. Stimpson,
The Bondesons have thrown in the hopper arguments that
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Although the motion had been for partial summary judgment, the parties agreed that the judge’s action, as a practical matter, was dispositive, because it established liability and the parties had agrеed on damages. Accordingly, the parties jointly moved under Mass.R.Civ.P. 54(b),
So far as relevant, the statute specifies the following:
“No action for a deficiency shall be brought. . . unless a notice in writing of the mortgagee’s intention to foreclose the mortgage has been mailed, postage prepaid, by registered mail with return receipt requested, to the defendant ... at his last address then known to the mortgagee, togethеr with a warning of liability for the deficiency, in substantially the form below, not less than twenty-one days before the date of the sale under the power in the mortgage, and an affidavit has been signed and sworn to, within thirty days аfter the foreclosure sale, of the mailing of such notice. A notice mailed as aforesaid shall be a sufficient notice, and such an affidavit. . . shall be prima facie evidence . . . of the mailing of such notice. The notice and affidavit, respectively, shall be in substantially the . . . forms [prescribed in the remainder of the section].”
G. L. c. 244, § 17B. Compliance with the statutory forms of notice and affidavit is not challenged in this appeal.
Under G. L. c. 4, § 7, Forty-fourth, “ ‘Registered mail’, when used with reference to the sending of notice . . . shall include certified mail.” See Durkin v. Siegel,
