Margaret A. APAO, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
The BANK OF NEW YORK, as Trustee for Amresco Residential Securities Corporation Mortgage Loan Trust 1997-3 Under the Pooling & Servicing Agreement dated as 9/1/97; San Diego Home Loans, Inc., a California corporation, Defendants, and
ARM Financial Corporation, a California corporation, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 01-16565.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted November 6, 2002.
Filed April 4, 2003.
Gary Victor Dubin, Dubin Law Offices, Honolulu, HI, for the plaintiff-appellant.
R. John Seibert and Kenneth J. Mansfield, McCorriston Miller Mukai MacKinnon, LLP, Honolulu, HI, for the defendant-appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Hawaii; David A. Ezra, District Judge, Presiding. D.C. No. CV-00-00557-DAE(KSC).
Before: SCHROEDER, Chief Judge, ALARCÓN and FISHER, Circuit Judges.
SCHROEDER, Chief Judge.
Plaintiff-appellant Margaret Apao lost her home to a foreclosure and sale under procedures provided for in her mortgage contract and authorized under Hawaii's non-judicial foreclosure statute. See Haw. Rev.Stat. § 667-5. She filed this action in federal district court challenging that statute as violating the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
The district court dismissed the case for failure to state a claim because the sale was a purely private remedy and involved no state action. Apao appealed. In effect, she asks us to reconsider the round of decisions by this circuit and others a generation ago that upheld the constitutionality of similar statutorily authorized sale procedures. See, e.g., Charmicor, Inc. v. Deaner,
Margaret Apao obtained an approximately $280,000 mortgage on her Honolulu residence in June of 1997 from defendant San Diego Home Loans, Inc. The mortgage agreement included the following power of sale .... clause:
19. Acceleration; Remedies. Lender shall give notice to Borrower prior to acceleration.... The notice shall specify: (a) the default; (b) the action required to cure the default; (c) a date, not less than 30 days from the date the notice is given to Borrower, by which the default must be cured; and (d) that failure to cure the default on or before the date specified in the notice may result in acceleration of the sums secured.... If the default is not cured ... Lender, at its option ... may invoke the power of sale....
Such a contractual remedy is authorized under Haw.Rev.Stat. § 667-5, which provides in relevant part:
When a power of sale is contained in a mortgage, the mortgagee, or the mortgagee's successor in interest, or any person authorized by the power to act in the premises, may, upon a breach of the condition, give notice of the mortgagee's, successor's, or person's intention to foreclose the mortgage and of the sale of the mortgaged property, by publication of the notice once in each of three successive weeks (three publications), the last publication to be not less than fourteen days before the day of sale, in a newspaper having a general circulation in the county in which the mortgaged property lies; and also give such notices and do all such acts as are authorized or required by the power contained in the mortgage. Copies of the notice shall be filed with the state director of taxation and shall be posted on the premises not less than twenty-one days before the day of sale.
Three years into her mortgage, Apao notified San Diego Home Loans that she intended to cancel and rescind the mortgage and make no further payments because of perceived violations of the Truth and Lending Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1601. San Diego Home Loans then instituted a non-judicial foreclosure, hiring defendant-appellee ARM Financial Corporation to assist. ARM followed the provisions of the contract and sold the property in a foreclosure sale on August 22, 2000.
Apao immediately filed her complaint and styled it a class action. The district court granted the defendant-appellee's motion to dismiss in March of 2001 and entered final judgment in June of 2001. This appeal followed.
The Fourteenth Amendment provides: "No state shall ... deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." It thus shields citizens from unlawful governmental actions, but does not affect conduct by private entities. In Shelley v. Kraemer,
Similarly, in cases involving foreclosures or seizures of property to satisfy a debt, the Supreme Court has held that the procedures implicate the Fourteenth Amendment only where there is at least some direct state involvement in the execution of the foreclosure or seizure. See Fuentes v. Shevin,
In contrast, in a case materially similar to this one, when a creditor enforced a lien through a purely private, non-judicial sale, the Supreme Court held that there was no state action, even though the lien was authorized by the state's legislative enactment of the Uniform Commercial Code. See Flagg Bros., Inc. v. Brooks,
The Court held that legislative approval of a private self-help remedy was not the delegation of a public function. Id. at 158-60,
Flagg Bros. further held that the state's statutory authorization of self-help provisions is not sufficient to convert private conduct into state action.
The Fifth Circuit put it this way:
To hold that the state, by recognizing the legal effect of those arrangements, converts them into state acts for constitutional purposes would effectively erase... the constitutional line between private and state action and subject to judicial scrutiny under the Fourteenth Amendment virtually all private arrangements that purport to have binding legal effect.
Barrera,
When the constitutionality of such statutes was challenged in a series of cases beginning in the 1970s, six circuits, including our own, found that the provisions did not violate the Fourteenth Amendment. They held there was no state action in either the availability of such private remedies or their enforcement. See Mildfelt v. Circuit Court of Jackson County,
Appellant attempts to distinguish Charmicor, the controlling case in our circuit, on the ground that the foreclosure sale there was conducted by a neutral trustee, see
Appellant suggests that because the residential mortgage business is regulated by both state and federal laws for the interests of the consumer, any action of the mortgage lenders is converted into state action. We have rejected that argument as well. "The mere fact that a business is subject to state regulation does not by itself convert its action into that of the State for purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment." Jackson v. Metro. Edison Co.,
What is required for state action in this area is "overt official involvement" in the enforcement of creditors' remedies. Thus, in Flagg Bros., where there was a "total absence of overt official involvement,"
AFFIRMED.
