Lead Opinion
This case involves a question of priority between two lien creditors: who is entitled to be paid first from the proceeds of a mortgage foreclosure sale, the creditor who recorded its lien against the property first, or a second creditor who recorded later, but did so as part of a refinancing in which it discharged preexisting mortgages and judgment liens on the same property? In the proceedings below, the second creditor to record its lien, Eastern Savings Bank, FSB (“Eastern Savings”), argued that the doctrine of equitable subrogation protected its right to receive the proceeds of the foreclosure sale first, even though it recorded its mortgage after the first creditor, CACH, LLC (“CACH”), recorded its judgment. The Court of Common Pleas and the Superior Court both disagreed, and .held that CACH was entitled to be paid before Eastern Savings under Delaware’s pure race recording statute.
Eastern Savings now appeals irom the Superior Court order denying its appeal of a Court of Common Pleas’ order granting summary judgment to CACH. On appeal, Eastern Savings contends that the Superi- or Court erred by failing to apply the doctrine of equitable subrogation to place the priority of its mortgage above CACH’s lien. We disagree and find that the doctrine of equitable subrogation is inapplicable to the facts of this case. Thus, the parties’ ■ priorities are governed by Delaware’s race recording statute, and the judgment of the Superior -Court, is affirmed.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The facts of this case are not in dispute. CACH obtained a judgment against Aaron Johnson, Jr., to satisfy a deficiency balance on Johnson’s car loan on December 7, 2006. ' CACH transferred its judgment to the Superior Court on December 21, 2006. As of that date, the property records reflected that Johnson individually owned property located at 19 Sanford Drive in Newark, Delaware. CACH’s judgment therefore became a lien on that property on December 2Í, 2006.
On December 19, two days before CACH obtained its lien on the premises at 19 Sanford Drive, Johnson engaged in a mortgage refinancing with Eastern Savings. In the course of that transaction, Johnson executed a deed conveying the property to himself and his wife, Angela, as tenants by the entireties. Both John-sons then executed a mortgage in the amount of $168,000 to Eastern Savings. Loan proceeds were used to pay off five previous debts secured by liens upon the Newark property: a mortgage to Wilmington Trust Company, dated June 29, 1999; a mortgage to Pacific Shore Funding dated July 25, 2002; a judgment to- Norman E. Levine dated June 7, 2004; a judgment to the State of Delaware dated September 27, 2006; and a judgment to First Premier Bank dated March 10, 2006. The total debt paid with Eastern Savings’ funds was $148,479.56. The CACH judgment lien, which had not yet been recorded, was not paid off as part of the refinancing. But
The Eastern Savings mortgage was not recorded until December 29, ten days after it was executed. According to the stipulated facts, “[a]t the time of recording a bring-down search was done by Global Title. The law office and the title company took no action at that time.”
To summarize the key dates:
• Dec. 7, 2006: CACH obtained a judgment against Aaron Johnson, Jr.
• Dec. 19, 2006: Johnson refinanced, and with his wife, executed a mortgage in the amount of $168,000 to Eastern Savings.
• Dec. 21, 2006: CACH recorded its judgment lien.
• Dec. 29, 2006: Eástern Savings recorded its mortgage.
• Jan. 25, 2007: Satisfaction of Pacific Shore Funding mortgage was recorded.
• Feb. 26, 2007: Satisfaction of Wilmington Trust Company mortgage was recorded.
In August 2008, Eastern Savings filed a foreclosure action against the Johnsons for the property located at 19 Sanford Drive. An attorney for CACH informed Eastern Savings’ attorney that CACH’s lien, then worth approximately $16,000, was ahead of Eastern Savings’ mortgage, but Eastern Savings did not respond. On April 14, 2009, the Johnsons’ property was sold at a sheriffs sale for $133,000. Minus the costs of the sale, the sheriff sent Eastern Savings all of the proceeds, which were insufficient to satisfy the Johnsons’ outstanding mortgage debt. CACH demanded that its judgment be paid by Eastern Savings. Eastern Savings refused. CACH then filed suit in the Court of Common Pleas, alleging misappropriation and unjust enrichment.
Eastern Savings filed a motion to dismiss, which the Court of Common Pleas granted. On appeal, the Superior Court reversed that decision, holding that CACH’s judgment lien had been discharged at the sheriffs sale, and that CACH’s lien had priority over Eastern Savings’ mortgage.
When we concluded ... that the record did not reflect that proceeds from appellant’s mortgage were used to pay off a prior mortgage on the property, we did not intend to preclude a presentation of facts that could show otherwise. To the extent that our Opinion ... could be read to bar the presentation of facts supporting a claim of equitable subroga*589 tion, we have granted reargument. We believe the issue could be fairly presented to the Court of Common Pleas.6
Accordingly, on remand, the Court of Common Pleas considered Eastern Savings’ claim that the doctrine of equitable subrogation applies, such that Eastern Savings was first in priority and thus had the right to all of the proceeds from the sheriffs sale. The Court of Common Pleas held that the doctrine was not applicable to the facts of this case, both because equitable subrogation does not apply to mortgage refinances in Delaware, and because Eastern Savings had not satisfied all of the elements required to warrant subro-gation.
II. ANALYSIS
“We review the Superior Court’s grant or denial of a summary judgment motion de novo.”
A. Delaware’s Pure Race Recording Statute
In Delaware, the priority of mortgages is governed by 25 Del. C. § 2106. Section 2106 is a pure race statute, providing that the time of recording is determinative of the priority of competing creditors.
A mortgage, or a conveyance in the nature of a mortgage, of lands or tenements shall have priority according to the time of recording it in the proper office, without respect to the time of its being sealed and delivered, and shall be a lien from the time of recording it and not before.12
In the case at bar, CACH recorded its judgment lien against Johnson on December 21, 2006, eight days before the Eastern Savings mortgage was recorded. Thus, the CACH judgment has priority over the Eastern Savings Mortgage under the race recording statute.
Eastern Savings, however, contends that the doctrine of equitable subrogation should be applied to allow it to take priority over the CACH judgment. Eastern Savings argues that the doctrine of equitable subrogation is applicable to a mortgage refinancing, and that it has satisfied the elements required to be subrogated in this case. Eastern Savings contends that because it paid the preexisting mortgages and judgments on the Johnsons’ property, it stepped into the shoes of those previous lien-holders for purposes of being first in priority to receive the proceeds from the foreclosure sale. CACH responds that Eastern Savings cannot jump ahead in priority, both because equitable subrogation does not apply to mortgage refinances in Delaware, and because Eastern Savings has not satisfied the requirements to be subrogated on the facts of this case.
Equitable'subrogation is a doctrine that “allows one who has discharged the debt of another to succeed to the rights of the satisfied creditor.”
Under the Court of Chancery’s precedent, there are five elements necessary to establish a claim for equitable sub-rogation;
(1) payment must have been made by the subrogee to protect his or her own interest; (2) the subrogee must not have acted as a volunteér; (3) the debt paid must have been one for which the subro-gee was not primarily liable; (4) the entire debt must have been paid; and
(5) subrogation must not work any injustice to the rights of others.16
As in other jurisdictions,
In Stoeckle v. Rosenheim, á case from 1913, there were three competing mortgages.
More recently, in Oldham v. Taylor, the Court of Chancery applied the doctrine of equitable subrogation to prevent unjust enrichment.
The Court of Chancery determined that the AFS mortgage was unenforceable against the plaintiff, but that she was still liable to AFS or the defendants under the doctrine of equitable subrogation.
C. The Doctrine of Equitable Subrogation is Inapplicable Here
Unlike Stoeckle and Oldham, there was no reasonable mistake or unjust enrichment in this case.
Equitable subrogation has never been used to undercut the authority of a Delaware statute without equitable cause. When, as here, there is no equitable reason to set aside the provisions of Delaware’s pure race recording statute, the
Moreover, Delaware courts have refused to apply subrogation when it would “work any injustice to the rights of others.”
Eastern Savings’ argument also ignores the fact that CACH did not bargain for its subordinate position. In other cases in which courts have applied the doctrine of equitable subrogation, the intervening lien-holder was another mortgage lender who had agreed when lending money to be third or fourth in priority.
For all of the preceding' reasons, the judgment of the Superior Court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. See 25 Del C. § 2106.
. The exact amount of CACH’s lien at the time it was recorded is not in the record, but it could not have been more than $16,000, the amount owed to CACH at the time Eastern Savings filed its foreclosure action against the Johnsons.
. Appellant’s Op. Br. at 3.
. CACH, LLC v. E. Sav. Bank, FSB,
. E. Sav. Bank, FSB v. CACH, LLC,
. E. Sav. Bank, FSB v. CACH, LLC,
. CACH, LLC v. E. Sav. Bank, FSB, C.A. No. CPU4-09-009022 (Del. Com. Pi. June 3, 2013).
. E. Sav. Bank, FSB v. CACH, LLC,
. ConAgra Foods, Inc. v. Lexington Ins. Co.,
. First Mortg. Co. v. Fed. Leasing Corp.,
. Id.
. 25 Del. C. § 2106.
. E. Sav. Bank, FSB,
. Gregg H. Mosson, Comment, Equitable Subrogation in Maryland Mortgages and the Restatement of Property: A Historical Analysis for Contemporary Solutions, 41 U. Balt. L.Rev. 709, 715 (2012).
. See Miller v. Stout, 5 Del.Ch. 259, 261 (1878) ("When a surety of guarantor pays a debt of a principal, equity substitutes him in the place of a creditor, as a matter of course, without any special agreement to that effect.”).
. Reserves Dev. LLC v. Severn Sav. Bank, FSB,
. See Mosson, supra note 14, at 717 (“By the end of the 1800s in America, subrogation had expanded to apply' to refinancing lenders in some jurisdictions.... By the 1920s and 1930s, American subrogation covered various . just claims by plaintiffs to stand in another's shoes and seek repayment.”). The majority of states still do not permit those with actual notice of the pre-existing lien to move up in priority, and a minority of jurisdictions do not permit a party with either actual or constrictive (i.e., record) knowledge to be subrogated. 73 Am. Jur. 2d Subrogation § 58 (1974); see also Glenn R. McGillivray, What’s your priority?: Revitalizing Pennsylvania’s Approach to Equitable Subrogation of Mortgages After First Commonwealth Bank v. Heller, 58 Vill. L.Rev. 301, 310 (2013). For two cases in which courts have rejected the broader application of equitable subrogation and adopted the minority view, see Wells Fargo Bank, Minn., N.S. v. Ky., Fin. & Admin., Dep't of Revenue,
. See, e.g., E. States Petroleum Co. v. Universal Oil. Prods. Co.,
. Stoeckle v. Rosenheim, 87 A, 1006, 1007 (Del. Ch. 1913).
. The Court of Chancery reasoned:
[T]he overlooking by the complainants of the right to be subrogated to the rights of the first mortgagee, or to be treated as the equitable assignees of that mortgage, is to be considered in this court as analogous to, if not identical with, a mistake of fact, and, therefore, entitles the second mortgages to relief from the consequences of such.a mistake.
Id. at 1008.
. 2003 Wt 21786217, at *5 (Del. Ch. Aug. 4, 2003).
. Id. at *2.
. Id. át *3-4.
. Oldham,
. Id. at *4-5. "The basis for this argument is that under the doctrine of subrogation, Old-ham’s liability to pay that previous mortgage debt was shifted from the prior mortgage lenders'to [the new lender] when [it] paid those prior mortgage creditors off. That is,
. Id. at *5. The Oldham Court applied the doctrine of equitable subrogation to remedy a finding of unjust enrichment. Oldham,
. Oldham,
. In order to show unjust enrichment, there must be: "(1) an enrichment, (2) an impoverishment, (3) a relation between the enrichment and impoverishment, (4) the absence of justification, and (5) the absence of a remedy provided by law.” Nemec,
. Chavin v. H.H. Rosin & Co.,
. Reserves Dev. LLC,
. See, e.g., Bank of America, N.A. v. Prestance Corp.,
. Cf. Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys., Inc. v. Roberts,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The October 30, 2012 order from this Court remanded the case to the Superior Court, to remand to the Court of Common Pleas, to allow the presentation of facts by Eastern in support of an equitable subro-gation claim.
Procedural Background
As the Majority notes, the dispute arose out of a refinancing transaction where the Johnsons secured a loan from Eastern to refinance and consolidate two notes secured by mortgages, and to satisfy three judgment liens on their, property.
After the housing bubble burst and the Johnsons defaulted on the Eastern note, Eastern filed a mortgage foreclosure ac-. tion. The New Castle County Sheriff sold the Johnsons’ property at a mortgage foreclosure sale and distributed the sale proceeds net of expenses only to Eastern.
In our first decision on August 24, 2012, we recognized a claim for equitable subro-gation, which allows “one who has discharged the debt of another to succeed to the rights of .the satisfied creditor.”
When we concluded in our Opinion dated August, 24, 2012 that the record did not reflect that proceeds from appellant’s mortgage were used to pay off a prior mortgage on the property, we did not intend to preclude a presentation of facts that could show otherwise....
To the. extent that our Opinion dated August 24, 2012 could be read to bar the presentation of facts supporting a claim of equitable subrogation, we have granted reargument. We believe the issue could be fairly presented to the Court of Common Pleas.39
Following remand, the parties stipulated to the missing record evidence; namely, that the “proceeds from Eastern’s mortgage were used to pay off a prior mortgage on the property.”
Equitable Subrogation
Equitable subrogation “allows ‘one who has discharged the debt of another to succeed to the rights of the satisfied creditor.’”
One who fully performs an obligation of another, secured by a mortgage, becomes by subrogation the owner of the obligation and the mortgage' to the extent necessary to prevent unjust enrichment. Even though the performance would otherwise discharge the obligation and the mortgage, they are preserved and the mortgage retains its priority in the hands of the subrogee.43
An equitable subrogee, meaning the person or institution that refinanced the existing debt, might or might not have her own lien on the property. The subrogee is simply the “payer” of the secured obligation.
Subrogation to a mortgage is usually of importance only when a subordinate lien or other junior interest exists on the real estate.... In this setting the sub-rogee wants more than a lien; he or she*596 wants a lien with the priority of the original mortgage, and this is precisely what subrogation gives. The holders of intervening interests can hardly complain about this result, for they are no worse off than before the senior obligation was discharged. If there were no subrogation, such junior interests would be promoted in priority, giving them an unwarranted and unjust windfall.45
In Delaware, as early as 1945, the Chancellor stated that equitable subrogation should be expansively applied to prevent injustice:
Originally, that remedy might have been largely confined to cases involving the relation of principal and surety, but it now has a much broader application; and when right and justice demand it the tendency is to extend, rather than to restrict, its application. One who pays the debt of another at his direct or indirect request is, therefore, usually entitled to subrogation.46
Equitable subrogation is now a recognized doctrine in many states and applied in one form or another.
Equitable Subrogation. And Mortgage Re-financings
Given the limited case law addressing equitable subrogation in the refinancing context in Delaware,
As the authors note, “[these] sums [are], from the viewpoint of consumers, a deadweight loss because consumers have no independent need or desire for a new title insurance policy when refinancing.”
a liberal equitable subrogation doctrine can save billions of dollars by reducing title insurance premiums. Title insurance primarily ensures there are no intervening liens, and when a jurisdiction adopts the liberal view of equitable sub-rogation, the insurance premium is greatly reduced.54
In the absence of liberal application of replacement and subrogation rights where lien priorities are in dispute in a refinancing, borrowers are locked into the terms of their original mortgages or subject to monopoly power on the part of their original lenders when seeking to refinance.
The Doctrine is Compatible with Delaware’s Recording Statutes and Consistent with Existing Delaware Laio
As the Majority notes, Delaware has a “pure race recording statute.”
[a] mortgage, or a conveyance in the nature of a mortgage, of lands or tenements shall have priority according to the time of recording it in the proper office, without respect to the time of its being sealed and delivered, and shall be*598 a lien from the time of recording it and not before.59
According to the Court of Common Pleas, the phrase “and not before,” shows “the statute was crafted specifically to rebut claims like Defendant’s which seek to advance the priority of their mortgage to a time prior to it's recording.”
Even though Delaware is a pure race recording jurisdiction, the Delaware courts have not shied away from using equitable subrogation to prevent unjust enrichment in the mortgage refinancing context. Two cases from the Court of Chancery illustrate its broad application, where in the first case the Court of. Chancery found that a second-mortgage holder who paid off a first mortgage “had a right to ... be substituted for the [first-mortgage] creditor”
In Stoeckle, the complainants were a brewing company and its president. The brewing company held a second mortgage on the property being foreclosed iipon and had also paid off the first mortgage on the property, albeit accidentally and without acquiring assignment of the first mortgage. The defendants were holders of a third mortgage on the property and sought to foreclose and collect.
The Superior Court found Stoeckle distinguishable “because the remedy sought there was an injunction; the prevention of a foreclosure sale,” whereas in this case, “the applicability of the recording statute is at center stage_”
A preliminary injunction will, therefore, be awarded to the complainants, enjoining further proceedings on the execution until the complainants at' least had an opportunity to obtain a decree establishing the first mortgage as a lien, and thereupon obtain an order for the sale of the mortgaged'premises, from the proceeds of which sale the mortgage debt of the defendants will be paid by this court if the proceeds of sale be sufficient.70
In Oldham v. Taylor,
The Superior Court’s view, shared by the Majority, that “Oldham is better understood. as relying on a more general theory of unjust enrichment”
The basis for this argument is that under the doctrine of subrogation, Old-ham’s liability to pay that previous mortgage debt was shifted from the prior mortgage lenders to [the refinancing lender] when [the refinancing lender] paid those prior mortgage creditors off. That is, metaphorically speaking, [the refinancing lender] stepped into the shoes of the former mortgage lenders, with the result that after the refinancing, [the plaintiff’s] obligation to repay her share of the preexisting mortgages ran to [the refinancing lender].76
It is true, as- the Superior Court pointed out in its opinion, that the Court of Chancery in Oldham did not find that the plaintiffs interest in the property continued to be encumbered by a lien.
the relief granted here will require: 1) a partition sale of the entire property, 2) [the plaintiff] to pay [the defendants], from her share of the sale proceeds, her lawful portion of the paid-off preexisting mortgage balance, and 3) [the defendants], in turn, to transfer [the plaintiffs] mortgage payment to [the refinance lender].80
While Stoeckle and Oldham are not the same as the factual posture of the instant ease, the cases do stand for the proposition that equitable subrogation is an available remedy in Delaware and can be used to establish priority in mortgage foreclosure proceedings.
Eastern Has Satisfied All Of The Equitable Subrogation Elements
In Reserves Development, LLC v. Severn Sav. Bank, FSB, the Court of Chan-eery set forth the elements of an equitable subrogation claim:
1) payment must have been made by the subrogee to protect his or her own interest; 2) the subrogee must not have acted as a volunteer; 3) the debt paid must have been one for which the subrogee was not primarily liable; 4) the entire debt must have been paid; and 5) subro-gation must not work any injustice to the rights of others.81
Based on the stipulated facts, Eastern has satisfied each of these elements. Eastern paid off the entire debt of the prior mortgages and judgments to protect its own interest and therefore was not a volunteer.
The Superior Court did not address the Reserves Development elements, because it found equitable subrogation to be unavailable as a matter of law.
CACH also argued that Eastern fails to meet the first element because Eastern did not pay off the prior mortgages and judgments, the Johnsons did.
The Equities and Injustice
When CACH transferred its judgment to the Superior Court judgment docket, its resulting lien was junior to each of the mortgages and liens already of record against the property. CACH had no right or reasonable expectation that it could jump ahead of the existing liens in a foreclosure proceeding. After the refinancing, CACH was no worse off than before.
The Majority finds that CACH suffered prejudice because Eastern refinanced the existing loan in an amount greater than required to satisfy the existing mortgages and liens. The record is unclear whether some or all of the excess amount was necessary to cover the refinancing transaction costs. In any event, unlike a mortgage, which secures a note for the property and is not implicated until a default occurs, CACH had the immediate right to collect on its judgment, and did not have to suffer any or at worst minimal prejudice while engaging in the foreclosure process. As other courts have held, prejudice is reviewed at the time of foreclosure, not at the time of refinancing.
Conclusion
The record shows “that proceeds from Eastern’s mortgage were used to pay off a prior mortgage on the property.”
. E. Sav. Bank, FSB v. CACH, LLC,
. App. to Opening Br. at 45. The existing -notes and judgments prior to refinancing were 6/29/99 — Wilmington Trust mortgage $106,902.00; 7/25/02 — Pacific Shore Funding mortgage ' $23,724.40; 6/07/04 — Attorney judgment lien $16,838.31; 3/10/06 — First Premier Bank judgment lien $715.00; and 9/27/06 — State of Delaware lien $299.85.
. App. to Opening Br. at 45-46. According to the Statement of Stipulated Facts, CACH transferred the judgment to Superior Court and had it recorded two days after the John-sons executed their mortgage to Eastern, and five days before Eastern recorded its mortgage on December 29, 2006. App. to Opening Br. at 45. The judgment attached as a lien on the property from the time of its entry upon the Superior Court docket on December 21, 2006. 10 Del. C. §§ 4202-4207. The judgment attached to the property before Mr. Johnson transferred title in the property on December 29, 2006 to joint ownership with his wife. The title transfer was no doubt required as part of the refinancing transaction to have both husband and wife on the deed.
. App. to Opening Br. at 46.
. E. Sav. Bank, FSB v. CACH, LLC,
. E. Sav. Bank, 55 A.3d at 351 (quoting Oldham v. Taylor,
. E. Sav. Bank,
. E. Sav. Bank, 55 A.3d at 351; App. to Opening Br. at 45.
.E. Sav. Bank, FSB v. CACH, LLC,
. E. Sav. Bank, 55 A.3d at 351 (quoting Reserves Dev.,
. Restatement (Third) of Property (Mortgages) § 7.6(a).
. Id. at § 7.6, cmt. a.
. Id.
. E. States Petroleum Co. v. Universal Oil Prods. Co.,
. See Bank of Amer., N.A. v. Prestance Corp.,
. Delaware is not alone in having little case law on point, at least in the context of mortgage refinancing. Prestance,
. See Restatement (Third) of Property (Mortgages) § 7.3(a) (“If a senior mortgage is released of record and, as part of the same transaction, is replaced with a new mortgage, the latter mortgage retains the same priority as its predecessor_”); Freedom Mortg. Corp. v. Trovare Homeowners Ass’n,
. Grant S. Nelson & Dale A. Whitman, Adopting Restatement Mortgage Subrogation Principles: Saving Billions of Dollars for Refinancing Homeowners, 2006 BYU L.Rev. 305, 365-66 (2006) ("[Title insurers] pay claims out of the premiums paid by their insureds, and if they are forced to pay unnecessary claims, the competitive forces of the insurance market will inevitably drive their premiums upward, malting settlement costs higher for all mortgagors. There is simply no reason to impose on consumers the cost of giving windfall promotions of priority to junior lien-holders.”).
. Nelson & Whitman, supra note 18, at 365.
. Id. at 310.
. Glen R. McGillivray, Note, What’s Your Priority?: Revitalizing Pennsylvania's Approach to Equitable Subrogation of Mortgages After First Commonwealth Bank v. Heller, 58 VILL. L.Rev. 301, 305 (2013) (noting popularity of refinancing alternative to sub-prime loan foreclosure proceedings).
. Prestance,
. See Prestance,
. E. Sav. Bank,
. 25 Del. C. § 153.
. E. Sav. Bank,
. 25 Del. C. § 2106 (emphasis added).
. CACH, LLC v. E. Sav. Bank, FSB, No. CPU4-09-009022, at *8 (Del. CCP June 3, 2013) (emphasis added).
. It appears from the Majority opinion that they too disagree with the Superior Court's analysis of Delaware’s recording statutes and an absolute bar on asserting equitable subro-gation. The Majority appears to hold that equitable reasons might exist in a given case to apply equitable subrogation regardless of Delaware’s recording statutes. See Majority Opinion at 592-93 ("Equitable subrogation has never been used to undercut the authority of a Delaware statute without equitable cause. When, as here, there is no equitable reason to set aside the provisions of Delaware’s pure race recording statute, the rule of ‘first in ■ time, first in right’ governs the priority of the parties’ competing claims.”) (emphasis added). This is, of course, not what the Superior Court ruled. Our differences in this Court, therefore, narrow to whether the elements of equitable subrogation have been satisfied in this case.
. See Hicks v. Londre,
. Supra note 30. See also Weitz Co., LLC v. Heth,
. Stoeckle v. Rosenheim,
. Id. at 1007.
. Oldham,
; Stoeckle, 87 A. at'1006.
. Id. at 1007.
. B. Sav. Bank,
. Stoeckle,
. E. Sav. Bank, No. CPU4-09-009022, at *8-9; Majority Opinion at 591, 592.
.
. Id. at *1-2.
. Id. at *5, n. 8.
. Majority Opinion at 592, n. 27 (quoting the Superior Court’s opinion).
. Id. at *4.
. E. Sav. Bank,
. Oldham,
. See id. ("One proposition that is indisputable is that the [refinance lender’s] mortgage is not enforceable as against [the plaintiffs] one-half interest in the property, because [the plaintiff] never executed that mortgage.”).
. Id. at *5, n. 11.
. Reserves Dev.,
. Han v. United States, 944 F,2d 526, 530 (9th Cir.1991) (concluding that the equitable claimants were not volunteers where they paid off the prior obligation "to establish and to protect their own interest, rather than simply to meddle officiously”); Hicks,
.E. Sav. Bank,
. E. Sav. Bank, No. CPU4-09-009022, at *9-10.
. Id. at *10.
. See Sourcecorp, Inc. v. Norcutt,
. See Prestance,
. Answering Br. at 20.
. Reply Br. at 8.
. Id.; see also Sang Jun Yoo, Note, A Universal Test for the Equitable Subrogation of Mortgages, 32 Cardozo L.Rev. 2129, 2136 (2011) ("Refinancing mortgagees agree to issue a refinancing mortgage loan on the condition that all prior interests on a property are satisfied by the refinancing mortgage loan in order to secure the protection of being first in priority in case of default.").
. Restatement (Third) of Property (Mortgages) § 7.6, cmt. a. See also Hicks,
. Prestance,
. Bernhardt, supra note 31.
. See Ex Parte AmSouth Mortg. Co., Inc.,
. Senchuk,
. As noted in the Restatement, there is no right of subrogation with respect to any excess funds, meaning • Eastern would only be entitled to subrogation for the amounts due under the mortgages and liens it paid off. Restatement (Third) of Property (Mortgages) § 7.6 cmt. e.
. Reserves Dev.,
. E. Sav. Bank,
