Wells Fargo foreclosed on a dwelling owned by the deceased husband of appellant Hattie E. Rose, the personal representative of his estate. The major issue in this appeal is whether the notice of foreclosure was defective in setting forth Wells Fargo’s “address.” Although Rose’s argument in this regard is hardly frivolous, we conclude that the foreclosure was valid and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
I.
In 1999, Rose’s husband, James, received a loan from Option One Mortgage
At some point, the loan fell into default. On May 5, 2010, appellant Rose received a Notice of Foreclosure on the standard form provided by the District government. The notice stated that it was from Bier-man, Geesing, Ward & Wood, LLC (the law firm that was handling the foreclosure proceedings). The notice informed Rose that a foreclosure sale would occur on June 10, 2010. On the line for “Holder of the Note,” the notice read: “Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as Trustee for Option One Mortgage Loan Trust 1999-B Asset Backed Certificates, Series 1999-B; (877) 304-8100 c/o Bierman, Geesing, Ward & Wood, LLC, Suite 200, 4520 East West Highway Bethesda, MD 20814 301-961-6555.” The notice also called for a “Person to contact to stop foreclosure sale” and listed “Howard N. Bierman, Esq.” at the same address and phone number. (Although the form was not required to, and did not, identify the trustees under the deed of trust, they were in fact at that time appellees Howard Bierman, Jacob Geesing, and Carrie Ward, as substitute trustees.)
Rose took no action to prevent the foreclosure sale, which took place as scheduled on June 10. Appellee 101 Geneva LLC purchased Rose’s property at the foreclosure sale. A “Substitute Trustee’s Deed,” dated August 10, 2010, conveyed the property from the substitute trustees to 101 Geneva, and was recorded on August 27, 2010.
Appellant Rose, as personal representative of her late husband’s estate, filed this action in November 2010 seeking to void the foreclosure sale. Rose’s various claims were rejected by the Superior Court in an order partially granting motion for judgment on the pleadings in October 2011 and an order granting summary judgment in February 2012.
II.
The laws of the District of Columbia require the preparation and mailing of a notice of foreclosure at least thirty days before any foreclosure sale may take place. D.C.Code § 42 — 815(b) (2010 Repl.). At the time of the foreclosure this notice was required to be “in such format and contain such information as the Council of the District of Columbia shall by regulation provide.” Id. The applicable regulation in turn provides that the “holder of a note secured by a deed of trust, mortgage or other security instrument (hereinafter, ‘holder’), or the agent of any such holder,” must send the notice of foreclosure “on a form to be provided by the Mayor of the District of Columbia and to be available in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds.” 9 DCMR § 3100.1. This form, the regulation goes on to require, “shall provide for furnishing ... information concerning the sale,” including “[t]he name and address of the holder of the note and his or her telephone number of person to call if owner wishes to stop foreclosure.” 9 DCMR § 3100.2(f).
On the other hand, the use of an address “in care of’ another is a not uncommon form of address. With an intangible entity such as a corporation, partnership, investment trust, and the like, it is difficult to define with precision exactly what address would suffice for purposes of a notice of foreclosure. Necessarily, such entities must operate through agents. Here, the address of the agent could reasonably be viewed as the address of Wells Fargo for the purposes of this particular transaction. For purposes of communication about the foreclosure, it is indeed the most precise address, as indicated by the information on the “person to contact to stop foreclosure” line. And, as an alternate means of communication, Wells Fargo included its toll-free telephone number in addition to that of the agent. It is true that an address may also serve a significant purpose as a means of further identifying the holder, both for the debtor in challenging the foreclosure and for the government in its supervisory capacity. But there obviously is no suggestion here of any attempt to conceal the nature of or to impede access to the holder. A determination of noncompliance would be technical at best.
Rose, however, invokes our line of cases which have applied a doctrine of strict compliance to defects in the nonjudicial foreclosure process and in the closely analogous situation of tax sales. In Boddie v. Robinson,
However, in each of these cases, the defect in question pertained to an essential element of the foreclosure process and the interests that the statute and regulations were designed to protect. The proper giving of notice is a requirement of constitutional dimensions, as is the ability of a debtor to forestall foreclosure by paying a certain amount to cure the default. The provision of the address of the actual holder (versus the address of the holder’s agent) pales by comparison to such fundamental defects.
We conclude that in this case, we must be guided by our decision in Gore v. Newsome,
Similarly, in this context, we think that we must ask whether Wells Fargo’s substitution of its agent’s address “affects the accuracy of the notice” or creates a substantial risk of misleading the record owner about any of the information contained therein. On these facts, we do not think that Wells Fargo’s notice in this case did either. Wells Fargo was accurately identified as the holder of the note. Further, the use of “c/o” simultaneously dispelled any belief that Wells Fargo itself (in some form) could be found at the substitute trustee’s address while also clearly indicating the existence of an agency relationship between the substitute trustees and Wells Fargo for the purpose of this transaction. Therefore, the notice provided Rose with the information she needed to take steps to prevent the foreclosure or contact the person handling the foreclosure on Wells Fargo’s behalf, while avoiding any misleading impression.
III.
We turn now to a collection of other challenges Rose has raised in this case, which are based on Wells Fargo’s failure to comply with two other statutory provisions found in District law. After resolving these challenges, we must also address Rose’s Consumer Protection Procedures Act claim, which arises from the same statutory violations.
First, Rose argues that Wells Fargo cannot foreclose on her property because it failed to record its security interest. Central to this discussion are the provisions contained at D.C.Code §§ 47-
In arguing that Wells Fargo’s failure to record its interest prohibits the foreclosure in this case, Rose draws on the strict compliance case law we have already discussed in Part II, supra. She argues that Wells Fargo’s failure to abide by the mandatory recordation requirements means it has not “strictly complied” with the District’s law and therefore, cannot foreclose on her property. We disagree.
This court has previously ruled that security interests accompany the transfer of a note, even when no “formal assignment” has taken place. Smith v. Wells Fargo Bank,
Most importantly, our strict compliance doctrine only requires compliance with the
Next, Rose argues that Wells Fargo failed to comply with D.C.Code § 42-101(a) (2013), which provides that “all powers of attorney executed in accordance with this section shall contain” certain text “on the top of the front page, in bold and capital letters.”
However, in closing on this note, we must make one final comment about this case. Close attention to the legal requirements of recordation and what must be contained in different types of notices and instruments could save those in the home lending business (and the court system) from protracted litigation where they are forced to explain away violations of a variety of District statutes and regulations.
So ordered,.
Notes
. The appellee substitute trustees filed a brief in this appeal joining in, adopting and incorporating by reference the brief of Wells Fargo. Appellee 101 Geneva has taken no part in the appeal. Only Wells Fargo filed a notice of cross-appeal.
. Amendments to the District’s foreclosure laws have since significantly expanded the
. We note that, in this case, Wells Fargo’s listing of its agents’ address appears to have been in "good faith," in so far as the substitute trustees are actually Wells Fargo’s agents, and Wells Fargo has not endeavored to use any legal distinction between itself and its agent to its advantage in this proceeding. On different facts, for example, where a note holder claimed that service of process on an agent listed in its place on the foreclosure notice was insufficient to accomplish service on itself, we might find an effort to gain an advantage over a homeowner and look at the case differently.
. In furtherance of the mandatory recordation requirement, D.C.Code § 47-1432 creates a presumption that "all transfers, as described in § 47-1431, are required to be recorded.” Finally, D.C.Code § 47-1433 provides for penalties for the failure to record an instrument. However, pursuant to D.C.Code § 47-1433(c), a "person” who does not record a "security instrument” is exempt from the statutory penalty.
. See D.C.Code §§ 47-1411 to 1421, Editor’s notes (2013). Neither the expiration of the transfer excise tax nor later amendments to the District’s recordation taxation scheme, located in Title 42 ("Real Property”), see D.C.Code § 42-1101 to 1124 (2013), have relocated these mandatory recordation provisions, which remain in their original place in Title 47 ("Taxation, Licensing, Permits, Assessments and Fees”).
. On these grounds, we can distinguish the mandatory recordation of a security interest from the mandatory recordation of a notice of a tax sale. See Frassetto v. Barry,
. The required text is contained in the statute and reads as follows:
THIS POWER OF ATTORNEY AUTHORIZES THE PERSON NAMED BELOW AS MY ATTORNEY-IN-FACT TO DO ONE OR MORE OF THE FOLLOWING: TO SELL, LEASE, GRANT, ENCUMBER, RELEASE, OR OTHERWISE CONVEY ANY INTEREST IN MY REAL PROPERTY AND TO EXECUTE DEEDS AND ALL OTHER INSTRUMENTS ON MY BEHALF, UNLESS THIS POWER OF ATTORNEY IS OTHERWISE LIMITED HEREIN TO SPECIFIC REAL PROPERTY.
D.C.Code § 42-101(a) (capitalization in original).
. Accordingly, we dismiss Wells Fargo's effort to cross-appeal this order in its favor as moot, rather than dismissing it as unacceptable under D.C.Code § 11 — 721(b) (2013) (only "a party aggrieved by an order or judgment” may appeal).
.Relatedly, Rose points out that the Deed of Appointment of Substitute Trustees apparently fails to comply with D.C.Code § 42-101 (2013) because it does not reference a recorded power of attorney empowering American Home to act on Wells Fargo’s behalf. See D.C.Code § 42 — 101(a) ("If the power of attorney is recorded prior to the deed executed pursuant to the power of attorney, the deed being executed pursuant to the power of attorney shall include a recording date and instrument number reference of where the original recorded power of attorney is located in the Office of the Recorder of Deeds for the District of Columbia.”). It is not clear that Rose raised this claim below, and in any event, it appears to us to be an untimely challenge to a "failure[ ] in the formal requisites” under D.C.Code §§ 42-403 and 404(a)(1) (2013) (the curable failures include the "omission of an acknowledgement or a defective or improper acknowledgement”) for the same reasons given by the trial court in rejecting other challenges to Deed of Appointment that have not been renewed on appeal. See also Smith, supra,
.As an aside, we feel compelled to make one observation about Wells Fargo’s arguments as they relate to this question. In its briefs, Wells Fargo argues that Rose was not "damaged” by any of its allegedly unlawful trade practices, and argues that such "damages” are required before a CPPA claim may be brought. In support of this argument, Wells Fargo relies principally on cases from the federal District Court for the District of Columbia, see, e.g., Muldrow v. EMC Mortgage Corp.,
. We do not understand Rose to clearly articulate D.C.Code § 28-3905(k)(l) (2013) as an independent basis for a claim and we therefore do not address that issue. Such a claim would be presented for the first time on appeál, William J. Davis, Inc. v. Young,
. Any reading of the extensive discussion in Gore will illustrate the difficulty we had in that case of finding no violation, although, to
