OPINION
In this appeal from a mortgage foreclosure by action, appellant mortgagors argue that a fact question exists regarding whether the promissory note associated with the mortgage had been properly assigned to respondent bank at the time the bank foreclosed the mortgage. Appellants argue that, because such a fact question exists, the district court erred (1) in granting summary judgment to allow the bank to foreclose the mortgage; and (2) in confirming the bank’s purchase of the premises at the foreclosure sale by credit bid.
The bank, as the owner of legal title to the mortgage, can foreclose its mortgage by action even if does not hold the promissory note associated with that mortgage. Further, because the bank is the successor to the original mortgagee, the bank could, at the foreclosure sale, make a credit bid in the amount of the debt secured by the premises. Therefore, we reject appellants’ arguments and affirm the district court.
FACTS
In November 2006, appellants Trevor and Melissa Erlandson borrowed money from Homecomings Financial, LLC (Homecomings Financial), executed a promissory note in favor of Homecomings Financial, and secured the note with a mortgage naming the nominee of Homecomings Financial, Mortgage Electronic Systems, Inc., (MERS), as the mortgagee. Respondent JPMorgan Bank, N.A., was assigned the legal title to the mortgage. Appellants defaulted on their repayment obligations and the bank sued to foreclose the mortgage by action. See Minn.Stat. §§ 581.01.12 (2010). As the purported owner of the promissory note, the bank also sought a deficiency judgment against appellants on the note.
With new counsel, appellants moved the district court to vacate the summary judgment. Minn. R. Civ. P. 60.02. Appellants asserted that their failure to respond to the bank’s discovery and summary judgment motion was excusable, and that the bank could not foreclose the mortgage, nor could it recover on the note, because the bank had failed to show that it had been assigned the note associated with the mortgage. The district court partially granted appellants’ motion by vacating the money judgment that had been awarded to the bank and by reopening discovery relative to the parties’ disputes about the note. However, the district court denied appellants’ motion to vacate the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and order pertaining to the foreclosure, and, instead, reaffirmed its prior directive that the sheriff sell the premises. Judgment was entered on this order on July 14, 2011.
At the sheriffs sale, the bank bought the foreclosed premises with a credit bid of $98,540. Waiving its claim for a deficiency judgment, the bank then moved the district court for an order confirming the sheriffs sale. Appellants opposed the bank’s motion to confirm the sheriffs sale, asserting that the foreclosure was defective because the bank failed to show that it had obtained any rights to the note and therefore did not have the right to foreclose or purchase the premises at the sheriffs sale. The district court confirmed the sheriffs sale, reduced the money judgment against appellants from $159,610.23 to $98,540 because the bank waived its deficiency and other note-related claims, directed that the court administrator “fully satisfy the amended money figure ... such that there is no surplus or any deficiency,” and dismissed all other claims in the case. Judgment was entered on this order on December 20, 2011 from which appellants now appeal.
ISSUES
I. Did the district court err in granting the bank summary judgment allowing it to foreclose the mortgage?
II. Did the district court err in determining that the bank could make a credit bid for the property without showing that it holds the note associated with the mortgage that was foreclosed?
ANALYSIS
I.
On appeal from summary judgment, an appellate court addresses “whether any genuine issues of material fact exist and whether the district court erred in its application of the law.” Bearder v. State,
Appellants argue that, to foreclose a mortgage, the foreclosing entity must possess both the mortgage and the note associated with that mortgage, or that the foreclosing entity be acting on behalf of one who possesses both the mortgage and
When a purchaser of real estate borrows money to finance the purchase, the purchaser usually signs two distinct, but related, documents. One is a promissory note, which represents the purchaser’s promise to repay the lender the amount of the loan, plus interest. The second is a security instrument, usually a mortgage, which conveys to the mortgagee — who is, at least initially, usually the lender — an interest in the property as security for the purchaser’s obligations under the promissory note. See Jackson v. Mart. Elec. Registration Sys., Inc.,
In an extensive discussion of the advent of MERS and the Minnesota caselaw ad
Jackson noted that this more streamlined system “improve[d] the efficiency and profitability of the primary and secondary mortgage markets,” so that an originating mortgage lender may sell a mortgage loan on the secondary market to investors which could resell the loan, without the time, money and paperwork associated with recording the documents associated with each assignment. Id. “Once registered, MERS serves as the mortgagee of record for all loans in its system.” Id.
MERS was enabled by the legislature’s enactment of what is known as the “MERS statute.” Minn.Stat. § 507.413 (2010); Jackson,
In holding that MERS has authority to foreclose as a nominee for the mortgagee, the court reasoned that “an assignment of the promissory note operates as an equitable assignment of the underlying security instrument,” but it does not convey the legal title to that instrument, which remains in MERS. Id. at 497. Thus, equitable title to the security instrument follows the note, while legal title is held by the entity that actually owns the security instrument. See id. at 500 (“ ‘[0]ur own decisions have repeatedly recognized’ the doctrine that the debt, and consequently the real ownership of the security instrument, may be in one person, ‘while what may be termed the legal title’ to the security instrument is in another.” (quoting Burke v. Backus,
A mortgage may be foreclosed either by advertisement or by action. “A foreclosure by advertisement takes place without recourse to the courts, and is a proceeding in pais, ex parte, and in rem.” Norwest Bank Hastings Nat’l Ass’n v. Franzmeier,
A mortgage “foreclosure by action requires a judicial decree and approval of sale and is an in personam proceeding, although it is in the nature of a proceeding in rem since its purpose is to enforce a lien on the mortgaged property.” Norwest Bank Hastings Nat’l Ass’n,
If a mortgagor defaults, the mortgagee and holder of the promissory note may sue for a personal judgment on the note or, relying on the security of the mortgage, may sell the property and apply the proceeds of the sale to payment of the debt. City of St. Paul v. St. Anthony Flats Ltd. P’ship,
The current appeal involves a foreclosure by action in which it is undisputed that the foreclosing bank had legal title to the mortgage at the time of the foreelo-
Here, the bank, as the undisputed owner of legal title to the mortgage, exercised its independent remedy to foreclose under well-established principles of real-estate law that pre-exist the holding in Jackson. See Lundberg v. Nw. Nat’l Bank of Minneapolis,
Appellants argue that allowing the bank to foreclose the mortgage without showing that it also possesses the associated note exposes mortgagors to double liability on the mortgage debt if, after a foreclosure, the owner or possessor of the note — or one acting on behalf of the owner or possessor of the note — -starts a separate action against the mortgagors seeking to recover on the note.
Even where a deficiency judgment is not waived, any potential disputes regarding a possible deficiency judgment do not cause a court-ordered mortgage foreclosure to be invalid. This is because any dispute between the possessor of legal title to a mortgage (i.e., the entity with the authority to foreclose the mortgage) and the entity possessing equitable title to that mortgage (i.e., the note-holder), does not alter the status of the mortgagor for purposes of foreclosure. See Jackson,
Appellants did not cite any authority from Minnesota in support of their claims that only the holder or possessor of the note, rather than the entity with legal title to a mortgage, can or must foreclose that mortgage. Although appellants’ “show me the note” theory has been resoundingly rejected by the federal district and appellate courts in the Eighth Circuit,
First, Banks is distinguishable; it involved whether there was an issue of fact regarding whether a claimant wanting to enforce a note had possession of the original note.
Citing a mortgage provision allowing the lender to “invoke the power of sale,” appellants also argue that the note and mortgage avoid the possibility of a double recovery by reserving the remedy of exercising the power of sale in the mortgage to a single entity, apparently the
II.
Finally, appellants assert that because the bank did not show that it is the note holder or that it is entitled to collect anything under the note, the bank is not permitted to make a credit bid at the foreclosure sale. Appellants presumably make this argument because they believe that only the holder or possessor of the note can make such a bid. However, “[t]he mortgagee, or any one claiming under the mortgagee, may fairly and in good faith bid off the premises at such sale; and that in such case the statement of such fact in the report of sale shall have the same effect as a receipt for money paid upon a sale for cash.” MinmStat. § 581.05 (2010). Not only may “[t]he mortgagee, or any one claiming under the mortgagee”— here, MERS’s successor, the bank — “bid off the premises” at the sale, but, because the mortgagee’s bid “shall have the same effect as a receipt for money paid upon a sale for cash,” the bid of a mortgagee or a mortgagee’s successor may be for something other than cash; typically the mortgage debt. Id.; see also City of St. Paul,
DECISION
The holder of legal title to a mortgage can foreclose its mortgage by action regardless of whether it also holds the note associated with the mortgage. Here, it is
Affirmed.
Notes
. While the bank maintains that it owned and possessed the original promissory note when it foreclosed the mortgage, for purposes of this appeal we accept appellants’ claims that there was at least a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the bank owned the promissory note at the time of the foreclosure.
. The mortgagors appeal from the December 20, 2011 judgment confirming the foreclosure sale, but challenge the propriety of the May 13, 2011 judgment authorizing the bank to foreclose the mortgage. The bank argues that challenges to the May 13, 2011 judgment are not timely. See Minn. R. Civ.App. P. 104.01, subd. 1 (allowing an appeal to a judgment only within 60 days of its entry). But, on the mortgagors' motion, the district court, by judgment on July 14, 2011, vacated, and left open, portions of the May 13, 2011 judgment. On this record, the July 14, 2011 judgment rendered the May 13, 2011 judgment non-final and non-appealable. See T.A. Schifsky & Sons, Inc. v. Bahr Const., LLC, 773 N.W.2d 783, 788 (Minn.2009) (noting that, generally, to be appealable, a judgment must be final and that a final judgment is one that ends the litigation on the merits, leaving the court nothing to do but execute the judgment). The issues that were left open in the July 14, 2011 judgment were finally resolved in the December 20, 2011 judgment that also confirmed the foreclosure sale. Because Minn. R. Civ. App. P. 104.01, subd. 1 generally precludes appeals from a partial judgment until final judgment has been entered on all remaining claims, and because the mortgagors timely appealed the December 20, 2011 judgment, we address the mortgagors’ challenges to the May 13, 2011 judgment.
. These types of arguments have been referred to as “show me the note” claims. See Welk v. GMAC Mortg., LLC,
. See Stein,
. If this were a foreclosure by advertisement, the amount received from a foreclosure by advertisement is deemed to be "full satisfaction of the mortgage debt, except as provided in section 582.30.” Minn.Stat. § 580.225 (2010). If the proceeds of the foreclosure by advertisement are less than the amount owed under a promissory note, and the mortgage "has a redemption period of six months under section 580.23, subdivision 1, or five weeks under section 582.032,” the mortgagee does not have the right to a deficiency judgment against the mortgagors. Minn.Stat. § 582.30, subd. 2 (2010).
. In a foreclosure by action, the district court is directed to enter judgment for the amount due under the mortgage, along with costs and disbursements, and to order that the real estate be sold by the sheriff. Minn.Stat. § 581.03 (2010). Upon the report of sale and confirmation of the sale by the court, "the court administrator shall enter satisfaction of the judgment to the extent of the sum bid for the premises, less expenses and costs.” Minn.Stat. § 581.09 (2010); see Minn.Stat. § 581.08 (2010) (describing the confirmation process). Further, “[tjhe amount entered is full satisfaction of the judgment unless a defi
. The federal district court, in referring to similar litigation brought by appellants’ counsel observed: "The fact that the Eighth Circuit rejected Butler's show-me-the-note theory has not deterred Butler from continuing to file dozens of claims based on that theory. Nor has Butler been deterred by the fact that his show-me-the-note theory has been rejected by every federal judge that has addressed it.” Welk,
. A mortgage is a species of contract. See Sch. Dist. No. 10 v. Peterson,
. Without making an argument on the point, appellants observe that the Truth in Lending Act (TILA), 15 U.S.C. §§ 16011667Í (2006, Supp.2008 & Supp.2010) does not allow rescission claims against the entity that services a loan, and that the Jackson analysis could preclude them from exercising certain rights under TILA. Because Jackson reached its result despite acknowledging this possibility,
