Opinion
I. INTRODUCTION
Plaintiff Mui Ung gave a promissory note, secured by a deed of trust on real property, to defendant Henry Koehler. Some 11 years after the note became due, defendant, claiming nonpayment, recorded a notice of default against the property in anticipation of a nonjudicial foreclosure sale. Plaintiff filed this action to enjoin the sale, contending that the statutory time limit for exercising the power of sale in the deed of trust had expired.
At common law there was no time limitation on the exercise of the power of sale in a deed of trust. The Legislature reversed that rule of law in 1982 when it passed the Marketable Record Title Act (Act) (Civ. Code, § 880.020 et seq.), 1 which has been held in prior decisions to impose a time limit on such exercise of either 10 or 60 years from the “final maturity date” of the underlying debt. Notwithstanding this authority, plaintiff argued that defendant’s right to nonjudicial foreclosure under the deed of trust expired four years, rather than 10 or 60 years, after the note became due. She premised this argument on a provision of the Act, section 882.030, which had not been considered in the prior decisions. The trial court accepted her argument and granted summary adjudication precluding sale of plaintiff’s property under the deed of trust.
We conclude that the 10-year and 60-year time limits for the exercise of a power of sale in a deed of trust imposed by section 882.020 are not overridden by section 882.030. Further, we conclude that
II. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff borrowed money from defendant in December 1991. The loan was evidenced by a promissory note that was secured by a deed of trust to two real properties in Oakland. The note matured on December 31, 1992. More than 11 years after the note matured, on April 12, 2004, an agent for defendant recorded a notice of default against one of the two properties for which defendant held a deed of trust. Soon after, plaintiff filed this lawsuit to prevent defendant from enforcing the security interest provided by the deed of trust, contending that the statutory time period for enforcement had long since expired.
Plaintiff first filed a motion for a preliminary injunction to prevent defendant from conducting a nonjudicial sale of the property. The trial court granted the motion in an extensive written opinion. The opinion first noted that there was no dispute that judicial foreclosure on the deed of trust was precluded by section 2911, which extinguished that remedy upon expiration of the four-year statute of limitations applicable to the underlying promissory note. The trial court then turned to the availability of nonjudicial foreclosure. Prior to passage of the Act, the court noted, the law was clear that exercise of the power of sale in a deed of trust was not subject to any time limit at all. For the first time, the Act established such time limits. As the court recognized, California decisions had held that one of the Act’s provisions, section 882.020, subdivision (a), imposes a time limit for nonjudicial foreclosure of either 10 or 60 years from the “final maturity date” of the debt. Despite acknowledging these authorities, the trial court refused to follow them because they did not consider the effect of section 882.030. Concluding that section 882.030, in concert with section 2911, acts to extinguish the remedy of nonjudicial foreclosure upon expiration of the statute of limitations on the underlying debt, the trial court preliminarily enjoined defendant from conducting a nonjudicial sale of plaintiff’s property.
In response to subsequent cross-motions for summary adjudication, the trial court reaffirmed its ruling, granted summary adjudication for plaintiff on her claims against defendant, and made its injunction against foreclosure permanent. Because the trial court found that defendant’s time to foreclose had expired under section 882.030, it had no occasion to reach plaintiff’s alternative argument that defendant was entitled, at most, only to the expired 10-year time limit of section 882.020, subdivision (a)(1). 2
III. DISCUSSION
A. The Time Limits Applicable to Exercise of a Power of Sale
Defendant contends that, contrary to the ruling of the trial court, the applicable
1. The Legal Background
The beneficiary of a deed of trust ordinarily has two means to enforce the security interest provided by the deed. First, Code of Civil Procedure section 725a expressly grants the beneficiary the right to bring an action for judicial foreclosure “in the manner ... of a mortgage upon such property.” (Code Civ. Proc., § 725a; see
Field v. Acres
(1937)
Historically, California law did not impose a time limit on nonjudicial foreclosure pursuant to a power of sale in a deed of trust. (E.g.,
Bank of Italy,
supra,
Code of Civil Procedure section 725a, which expressly authorizes judicial foreclosure of a deed of trust, was enacted in 1933. The Supreme Court thereafter recognized that section 2911 extinguished the right to bring an action under section 725a of the Code of Civil Procedure for judicial foreclosure of a deed of trust upon expiration of the statute of limitations on the underlying debt, but the court reaffirmed the principle that exercise of the right of nonjudicial foreclosure was not subject to any time limit.
(Flack v. Boland
(1938)
Although both Miller and Nicolopulos would appear to be controlling here, plaintiff argues that the analysis in those cases is incomplete because it did not include consideration of a further provision of the Act, section 882.030. The trial court accepted this argument, concluding that “[s]ince neither Miller nor Nicolopulos ‘considered and passed upon’ the application of section 882.030 in this context, they are not controlling authorities. [Citation.]”
2. The Impact of Section 882.030
Section 882.030 states: “Expiration of the lien of a mortgage, deed of trust, or other security interest pursuant to this chapter or any other statute renders the lien unenforceable by any means commenced or asserted thereafter and is equivalent for all purposes to a certificate of satisfaction, reconveyance, release, or other discharge of the security interest, and execution and recording of a certificate of satisfaction, reconveyance, release, or other discharge is not necessary to terminate or evidence the termination of the security interest. Nothing in this section precludes execution and recording at any time of a certificate of satisfaction, reconveyance, release, or other discharge.” Plaintiff does not press the argument, rejected in
Miller,
that section 882.030 limits nonjudicial foreclosure because the power of sale is a “lien” that expires pursuant to section 2911. Rather, she bases her argument on the undisputed fact that, as noted
“When engaged in statutory construction, our goal is ‘to ascertain the intent of the enacting legislative body so that we may adopt the construction that best effectuates the purpose of the law.’ ”
(Coachella Valley Mosquito & Vector Control Dist. v. California Public Employment Relations Bd.
(2005)
Applying these principles, we find plaintiff’s argument untenable for two distinct reasons. First, the language of section 882.030, when given the meaning assigned it in a century’s worth of case law construing section 2911, does not support plaintiff’s interpretation. Second, plaintiff’s construction of section 882.030 would effectively impose a four-year time limit on the enforcement of powers of sale, thereby overriding the 10-year and 60-year time limitations so clearly established by section 882.020, subdivision (a), and rendering that subdivision largely pointless.
Turning first to the language of the statute, the impact of section 882.030 in these circumstances turns on the meaning of the word “lien.” The section states that once “the hen” of a deed of trust has expired pursuant to the Act or any other statute, “the lien” becomes unenforceable by any means. Going back at least to Flack in 1938, and implicitly to Grant v. Burr in 1880, California law has treated “the lien” created by a deed of trust, as that term is used in section 2911, as including only the security interest enforceable through judicial foreclosure, while excluding the power of sale. An unbroken line of cases, continuing through Miller, has affirmed this principle.
Courts have squared this doctrine with the “seemingly uncompromising language” -of section 2911
(Carson Redevelopment, supra,
This judicial history has important implications for the proper interpretation of the language of section 882.030. Section 882.030 does not state that when “the lien” of an instrument creating a security instrument expires, “the security instrument” itself becomes unenforceable; rather, it states that when “the lien” of the instrument expires, “the lien” becomes unenforceable. In other words, section 882.030 precludes enforcement of the security interest that has been statutorily extinguished, not necessarily the entire instrument creating the security interest. As discussed above, the reference to a “lien” in section 2911 has invariably been construed not to include the power of sale, which was deemed to create its security interest through passing title rather than imposing a lien. Giving effect to this long-standing judicial understanding of the term “lien” in section 2911, section 882.030 must be construed as making unenforceable only the right of judicial enforcement under Code of Civil Procedure section 725a, the only interest that is extinguished by section 2911.
Plaintiff argues that the subsequent language of section 882.030, which states that extinction of the lien under section 2911 “is equivalent for all purposes to a certificate of satisfaction, reconveyance, release, or other discharge of the security interest. . . ,” effectively extinguishes the power of sale. As she points out, the recording of a deed of reconveyance would unquestionably prevent enforcement of any power of sale in the original deed of trust. Like the language discussed above, however, this portion of section 882.030 is consistent with a legislative intent to extinguish only the security interest reached by section 2911, not the entire deed of trust.-As noted, it states that extinction under section 2911 is equivalent to documents creating a discharge of the “security interest,” not a discharge of the instrument creating the security interest. It adds nothing to plaintiff’s argument.
Our interpretation is consistent with the remaining language of section 882.030, which gives no hint that it was intended to work a dramatic change on the preexisting law governing powers of sale. The operative language relied on by plaintiff, “unenforceable by any means commenced or asserted thereafter,” is only a portion of the statute. The predominant purpose of section 882.030 is served by the remaining text, which states that (1) extinguishment
Even if the language of section 882.030 were ambiguous, plaintiff’s interpretation fails for the second and independent reason that its practical effect would be to replace the time limit of 10 or 60 years for the enforcement of a power of sale expressly established by section 882.020, subdivision (a), with a time limit of four years, thereby reducing that section to virtual surplusage.
As noted above, the goal of statutory interpretation is to discern and implement the purpose of the Legislature
(Coachella Valley, supra,
Plaintiff’s interpretation would render subdivision (a) of section 882.020 virtual surplusage. As both
Miller
and
Nicolopulos
held, the language of section 882.020 indicates that the statute was intended to end the unrestricted enforceability of a power of sale in deeds of trust by placing a time limit of either 10 or 60 years, as applicable, on the power’s enforcement. Under plaintiff’s reading, the power of sale would become unenforceable at the same time the right of judicial foreclosure is extinguished by section 2911. Because the right of judicial foreclosure is ordinarily extinguished four years after the final maturity date of the underlying obligation—that is, upon the expiration of the statute of limitations applicable to contracts in writing (Code Civ. Proc., § 337)—this interpretation would cause powers of sale to become unenforceable four years after the debt matured. The time limits of 10 and 60 years specified in section 882.020 would become irrelevant in nearly all cases.
6
The Legislature is unlikely to have intended to grant holders of a power of sale an enforcement period of either 10 or 60
3. The Statutory History
Although our holdings on the language and structure of the Act make it unnecessary to consult the statutory history
(Bonnell v. Medical Board, supra,
The Act was derived from a recommended text drafted by the California Law Revision Commission (Law Revision Commission) in 1981. (Recommendation Relating to Marketable Title of Real Property (Nov. 1981) Cal. Law Revision Com. Rep. (1981) p. 402 (Commission Recommendation).) As recommended by the Law Revision Commission, the portion of the Act dealing with “Ancient Mortgages and Deeds of Trust”—current sections 882.020 through 882.040—contained an additional section, numbered section 882.010. Recommended section 882.010 unambiguously extinguished the rights to both judicial and nonjudicial foreclosure, expressly including powers of sale, upon the expiration of the statute of limitations applicable to the underlying obligation. (Commission Recommendation, at p. 436.) Recommended section 882.030, in turn, did not include the current language stating that expiration of the lien renders the lien unenforceable by any means; instead, it included only the latter portions of the current section addressing certificates of satisfaction and other documents indicating release. (Commission Recommendation, at p. 438.)
Had these provisions survived the Legislature unscathed, defendant’s power of sale would clearly have been extinguished four years after December 1992. They did not. Although these provisions of the bill passed the Assembly essentially as recommended by the Law Revision Commission, they were amended by the Senate. On June 1, 1982, the Senate deleted recommended section 882.010 in its entirety, thereby eliminating the provision stating unambiguously that a power of sale terminated upon expiration of the statute of limitations. Slightly over a week later, by a separate amendment, the Senate inserted the present phrase containing “renders the lien unenforceable by any means” into section 882.030. There is no contemporary commentary that explains the purpose of these changes.
The authoritative commentary on the Act is the comment by the Senate Committee on Judiciary (Committee), published with the final bill. (Sen. Com. on Judiciary, Rep. on Assem. Bill No. 2416 (1981-1982 Reg. Sess.) p. 11018 (Committee Comment).) The Committee Comment on section 882.020 states that “[s]ection 882.020 prescribes a maximum time for enforcement of a mortgage or deed of trust. . . . The section limits the time for exercise of a power of sale under a deed of trust, reversing the rule of case law that such a power of sale ‘never outlaws.’ ” (Committee Comment, at p. 11018.) This confirms the impression created by the language of the Act that section 882.020 was intended, in the form passed by the Legislature, to impose time limits on the exercise of powers of sale—in contrast to the original proposal, in which section 882.010 played that role.
The Committee Comment on section 882.030 makes no mention of an intent to reverse the long-standing lack of time limits applicable to powers of sale, as one would expect if plaintiff’s interpretation accurately reflected legislative intent. Rather, the comment states only that “running of the enforcement period prescribed in Section 882.020 ... or any other statute such as Section 2911 .. . has the effect of
Accordingly, the legislative history is at most ambiguous. Aside from the reference in the Committee Comment to a complete discharge of the deed of trust, there is little in the legislative history that supports plaintiff’s interpretation. Further, it is nearly impossible to square her construction of the Act with the Legislature’s deletion of a section of the original draft that unambiguously would have accomplished her purpose. Because nothing in the legislative history is sufficiently convincing to overcome the relatively clear language of sections 882.020 and 882.030, when interpreted in light of the judicial history of section 2911, the trial court’s ruling that section 882.030 overrides the time limits of section 882.020, subdivision (a), must be reversed.
B. The Effect of Defendant’s Recordation of a Notice of Default
Plaintiff contends that even if defendant’s power of sale did not become unenforceable through operation of section 882.030, it was subject to the 10-year time limit of section 882.020, subdivision (a)(1), rather than the 60-year time limit of subdivision (a)(2). Because the 10-year period expired more than a year before defendant sought nonjudicial foreclosure, he would be. time-barred under subdivision (a)(1). Although the trial court found it unnecessary to reach this argument, it is appropriate for us to decide the question because it has been fully briefed by the parties, appears certain to arise on remand, and is an issue of law that can be decided on undisputed facts. (Code Civ. Proc., § 43; see
Cobbs v. Grant
(1972)
Section 882.020, subdivision (a)(1), states that “[i]f the final maturity date or the last date fixed for payment of the debt or performance of the obligation is ascertainable from the record,” the beneficiary has 10 years within which to exercise a power of sale under a deed of trust, measured from that ascertainable final date. If the final date cannot be ascertained from the record, subdivision (a)(2) dictates application of a 60-year time period, measured from the recording of the deed of trust. It is undisputed that defendant’s recorded deed of trust did not attach a copy of the underlying promissory note or otherwise indicate the maturity date of the obligation, nor did any other document recorded with respect to the property specify that date during the 10 years following maturation of the note in 1992. Defendant’s notice of default, recorded more than 11 years after the maturity date, does indicate the final maturity date.
Plaintiff argues that the reference to “the record” in section 882.020 should be construed to include any document recorded with respect to a property. She therefore contends that once the notice of default
The term “the record,” undefined in the Act, does not have a commonly accepted definition, either in everyday life or in the law of real estate transactions. The parties assume that the term was intended to refer to recorded documents, a sensible assumption in light of the importance in real estate law of documents that have been officially recorded with the county. This meaning is consistent with the statute’s requirement that the maturity date be “ascertainable,” since recording with the county would make it possible for interested parties to determine the duration of a security interest solely on the basis of public records. (See
Miller, supra,
Because the plain language of the statute is inconclusive on this point, “ ‘ “we look to a variety of extrinsic aids, including the ostensible objects to be achieved, the evils to be remedied, the legislative history, . . . and the statutory scheme of which the statute is a part.” ’ ”
(State
v.
Altus Finance
(2005)
We therefore proceed to consideration of the more general “ ‘ “statutory scheme of which the statute is a part.” ’ ”
(State
v.
Altus Finance, supra,
“ ‘A purpose of the required statement in the notice of default is to afford the debtor an opportunity to cure the default and obtain reinstatement of the obligation within three months after the notice of default as provided in section 2924c of the Civil Code. [Citation.]’ [Citation.] The debtor is to be given enough information so the default can be cured. ‘[T]he statute is sufficiently complied with if the notice of default contains a correct statement of some breach or breaches sufficiently substantial in their nature to authorize the trustee or beneficiary to declare a default and proceed with a foreclosure.’ [Citation.]”
(Little v. Harbor Pacific Mortgage Investors
(1985)
While section 2924 does not expressly require a beneficiary to state the date on which the underlying obligation became due when recording a notice of default, there are times when a beneficiary will need to state that date in order to provide a complete description of the nature of the breach. The beneficiary runs a clear legal risk of invalidity by omitting that date when it is necessary for clarity. A vague description of the breach, such as the bare statement that “a payment was not made when due,” fails to satisfy the statutory purpose of placing the obligor on sufficient notice of the nature of the breach to allow challenge or satisfaction. Further, unless the date on which a required payment was due is stated in the notice, the notice might not demonstrate that the breach is “ ‘sufficiently
With this background, it becomes clear that plaintiff’s argument creates a serious dilemma for a beneficiary attempting nonjudicial foreclosure after more than 10 years have elapsed from maturity of the underlying debt. If the previously recorded documents do not disclose the final maturity date of the obligation, section 882.020, subdivision (a)(2), grants the beneficiary 60 years from the date of recording of the deed of trust to seek nonjudicial foreclosure. As a prerequisite to seeking nonjudicial foreclosure, however, section 2924 requires such a beneficiary to record a notice of default. Unless the beneficiary is willing to run a risk of insufficiency of notice, the notice of default will state the final maturity date in its description of the nature of the breach. Upon recordation of the notice of default, plaintiff’s interpretation would instantly reduce the time for nonjudicial foreclosure from 60 years to 10 years, since recordation of the notice would make it possible to ascertain the final maturity date from the record. Because, under our hypothetical, those 10 years had already elapsed, recording the notice of default would deprive the beneficiary of nonjudicial foreclosure.
In other words, plaintiff argues that every beneficiary who is otherwise entitled to 60 years under section 882.020, subdivision (a)(2), and fails to seek nonjudicial enforcement within the first 10 years, will be entitled to the remaining years only until the beneficiary files the required notice of default,
at which time the beneficiary will retroactively be entitled to only 10 years, all of which has by definition elapsed. This argument creates a classic catch-22 by requiring a party seeking nonjudicial foreclosure to file a document, the notice of default, whose filing prevents the party from obtaining nonjudicial foreclosure. Statutes should be construed to avoid “the absurdity of creating [a] catch-22.”
(Padres Hacia una Vida Mejor
v.
Davis
(2002)
Plaintiff argues that defendant could have avoided this absurdity by filing a “notice of intent to preserve the security interest” under the authority of section 882.020, subdivision (a)(3), thereby preserving his right to nonjudicial foreclosure beyond the 10 years of subdivision (a)(1).
8
While this may be true, there was no reason for defendant to believe that such a notice was necessary. Because the final maturity date of the underlying obligation was not ascertainable from the record, he would have presumed himself entitled to the full 60 years, not merely the additional 10 years gained through the filing of a notice of intent to preserve interest. Further, nothing in the statute suggests that a beneficiary who is otherwise entitled to the 60 years of section 882.020, subdivision (a)(2), must file a notice of intent to secure that entitlement. On the contrary, since filing a notice of intent to preserve interest is only effective for an additional 10 years beyond the time provided in subdivision
In order to avoid a statutory absurdity, we hold that a notice of default under section 2924 that is recorded more than 10 years after “the last date fixed for payment of the debt or performance of the [underlying] obligation” does not constitute a part of the “record” for purposes of section 882.020, subdivision (a). 9
IV. DISPOSITION
The trial court’s grant of summary adjudication is reversed. The matter is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
Marchiano, P. J., and Swager, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied January 25, 2006, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Respondent’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied April 12, 2006, S140909. Werdegar, J., did not participate therein.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Civil Code, unless otherwise indicated.
Although defendant filed his notice of appeal from the order granting summary adjudication without waiting for or obtaining formal entry of judgment, the parties agree that we can and should treat the appeal as having been taken from a final judgment. (See, e.g.,
Swain v. California Casualty Ins. Co.
(2002)
The full text of the initial portion of section 882.020 reads as follows: “(a) Unless the lien of a mortgage, deed of trust, or other instrument that creates a security interest of record in real property to secure a debt or other obligation has earlier expired pursuant to Section 2911, the lien expires at, and is not enforceable by action for foreclosure commenced, power of sale exercised, or any other means asserted after, the later of the following times: [f] (1) If the final maturity date or the last date fixed for payment of the debt or performance of the obligation is ascertainable from the record, 10 years after that date, [f] (2) If the final maturity date or the last date fixed for payment of the debt or performance of the obligation is not ascertainable from the record, or if there is no final maturity date or last date fixed for payment of the debt or performance of the obligation, 60 years after the date the instrument that created the security interest was recorded.”
Prior to 1945, section 2911 read, “A lien is extinguished by the lapse of the time within which, under the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, an action can be brought upon the principal obligation.” (See
Flack, supra,
Plaintiff argues that we should not construe the term “lien” in section 882.030 to refer solely to the type of security interest enforceable by judicial foreclosure because such a limitation is inconsistent with the use of the same term in section 882.020, subdivision (a), in which “lien” is used more broadly. We decline to adopt plaintiff’s argument merely to avoid an inconsistency because, as explained above, the remaining language of section 882.030 indicates no intent to overturn the long-standing interpretation of “lien” as that term is used in section 2911 and, as explained below, adoption of plaintiff’s argument would render section 882.020 virtual surplusage.
While it is true, as plaintiff argues, that her reading might leave a few situations that are reached by section 882.020—such as when the statute of limitations had not run by the end of 10 years due to tolling, partial payment, or waiver—the overwhelming majority of security interests that have not “earlier expired pursuant to Section 2911” are powers of sale. As to these, her reading would render section 882.020 a nullity.
Section 2924c, subdivision (b)(1) also specifies the text of the notice of right to cure and reinstatement that must be included in every notice of default.
Notices of intent to preserve interest are provided for in sections 880.310-880.370. The form of the notice is set forth in section 880.340.
Because of the narrow basis for our holding, we render no opinion about (1) the legal effect of a notice of default recorded before the expiration of 10 years; or (2) the effect of any other recorded document that discloses the final maturity date, regardless of its recordation date.
