The Carnation Company appeals a decision of the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (BAP) holding that Carnation violated California Civil Procedure Code § 726 (West 1980), and therefore its security interest in a promissory note was void. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Since the facts are thoroughly detailed in the opinion below,
In re Kristal,
Kristal filed a Chapter 7 petition in bankruptcy. Carnation commenced an adversary proceeding seeking leave of the bankruptcy court to foreclose on the .note collateral pursuant to the state court judgment. The bankruptcy trustee opposed the foreclosure. The bankruptcy court held that Carnation’s pursuit of Kristal’s unpledged assets violated the security first principle of § 726, and, as a consequence, its security interest in the collateral was void. The BAP affirmed the bankruptcy court’s decision.
II. SECTION 726
The bankruptcy court’s conclusions of law are subject to
de novo
review.
In re Comer,
Section 726 provides that there can be but one form of action for the recovery of any debt secured by a mortgage on real property. In the event of a default, the mortgagee’s sole judicial remedy is a foreclosure action. If the creditor fails to include security in the action, the debtor may treat the omitted property as free of the lien.
The purposes underlying this and other anti-deficiency statutes enacted during the Great Depression were:
to prevent multiplicity of actions, to compel exhaustion of all security before entry of a deficiency judgment and to require the debtor to be credited with the fair market value of the secured property before being subjected to personal liability.
Walker v. Community Bank,
We have carefully considered the arguments advanced by Carnation in this appeal. Nevertheless, we are convinced that the reasoning of the BAP is sound, and that it correctly analyzed and applied California law. Accordingly, we affirm for the reasons set forth in the BAP decision. Id. at 661-64.
III.COLLATERAL ATTACK
Carnation received a state court judgment providing for both a money and a *456 foreclosure remedy. Carnation contends that this judgment allowed it to pursue both remedies concurrently. The trustee asserts that Carnation should have elected between the remedies and that its pursuit of execution constituted an election, thus waiving foreclosure. Carnation answers that the trustee is launching an impermissible collateral attack on a valid state court judgment.
Although the BAP did not expressly address this issue, it did state:
The money judgment Carnation held as a result of the state court action did not waive compliance with the deficiency judgment prescriptions stated in the statute. Carnation’s nonfeasance caused it to violate C.C.P. § 726. Carnation cannot do by judicial declaration that which is prohibited by statute.
In re Kristal,
IV. POST-JUDGMENT LIENS
Since the BAP decision is affirmed, Carnation seeks a determination of whether it obtained valid judgment liens through its efforts to pursue the money judgment portion of its state decree. As this issue was not briefed or argued below, we choose not to decide it.
United States v. Whitten,
AFFIRMED.
