RUBY VALLEY NATIONAL BANK, Plaintiff and Appellee, v. WELLS FARGO DELAWARE TRUST COMPANY, N.A.; VERICREST FINANCIAL, INC., Defendants and Appellants.
No. DA 13-0251
Supreme Court of Montana
January 21, 2014
2014 MT 16 | 373 Mont. 374 | 317 P.3d 174
Submitted on Briefs December 18, 2013.
For Appellee: Andrew P. Suenram, Adam M. Shaw; Erb & Suenram, PLLC; Dillon.
JUSTICE RICE delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Wells Fargo Delaware Trust Co. (Wells Fargo) appeals from the order of the Fifth Judicial District Court, Madison County, denying
¶2 We restate and address the following issue:
¶3 Did the District Court err by determining that RVNB‘s lien held priority over Wells Fargo‘s lien, and granting summary judgment to RVNB?
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶4 This case involves real property located in Madison County. The subject property was owned by Cherie Lewis (Cherie), but on February 2, 2005, Cherie conveyed the property to her daughter, Beckie Lewis (Beckie), by recorded deed. Beckie mortgaged the property by executing a DOT that secured a promissory note in the amount of $279,000 in favor of Elliot Ames Nevada, Inc. (Indenture 1). Indenture 1 was entered pursuant to the Small Tract Financing Act (STFA), named Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) as beneficiary, and was recorded on February 3, 2005.1 Subsequently, Beckie executed a second DOT to secure a promissory note for $102,057 to RVNB. This DOT (RVNB Indenture) was recorded on December 29, 2005.
¶5 In 2009, Cherie filed an action against Beckie, alleging breach of an oral contract. The facts of that matter are irrelevant to this proceeding, but the judgment entered therein quieted title to the subject property in Cherie and terminated all of Beckie‘s claimed interest in the property. Elliot Ames Nevada, Inc., MERS, and RVNB were not made parties to the action, and the court‘s order specifically restored title in Cherie as previously encumbered. Shortly thereafter, Beckie died in a car accident.
¶6 On June 4, 2010, MERS assigned its interest in Indenture 1 and the underlying promissory note to Flagstar Bank, FSB. This assignment was recorded on June 15, 2010. Flagstar Bank subsequently assigned its rights in the DOT and note to U.S. Bank Trust National Association as trustee for LSF7 NPL V Trust, executed by Vericrest Financial, Inc., as attorney in fact for Flagstar Bank. This assignment was recorded on August 10, 2011. U.S. Bank assigned the DOT and note to Wells Fargo as trustee for Vericrest Opportunity Loan Trust 2011-NPL1. This assignment was recorded on September 21, 2011. Vericrest Financial, Inc. is the current servicer of Indenture 1.
¶7 RVNB filed for judicial foreclosure of its interest in December of 2011, naming
¶8 Though served with process, U.S. Bank, Flagstar Bank, and MERS failed to answer the complaint, and default judgment was entered against each of them. Wells Fargo was the only asserted beneficiary to answer the complaint, and thus is the only entity in the litigation claiming to be the beneficiary of Indenture 1. Cherie and Beckie‘s Estate moved for summary judgment on various grounds, but their claims were denied and judgment was entered against them in favor of RVNB. Neither Cherie nor Beckie‘s Estate appeal.
¶9 Wells Fargo filed its trial witness and exhibit list ten days after the deadline set by the court‘s scheduling order. The District Court granted RVNB‘s motion to strike Wells Fargo‘s trial witness and exhibit list as untimely and vague. Wells Fargo moved for summary judgment on the basis that, as the holder of the first-in-time interest, it had priority over RVNB‘s interest. RVNB filed a cross-motion for summary judgment, asserting its lien was entitled to priority because Wells Fargo had failed to make a compulsory counterclaim to foreclose its interest. The District Court granted summary judgment in favor of RVNB, holding that Wells Fargo had not proven the elements necessary for judicial foreclosure, and was unable to do so because its trial witness and exhibit list had been stricken. Wells Fargo appeals.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶10 We review a district court‘s ruling on a motion for summary judgment de novo, applying the same
DISCUSSION
¶11 As a general rule, “[o]ther things being equal, different liens upon the same property have priority according to the time of their creation.”
¶12 RVNB has not alleged that it did not have notice of Indenture 1 or that any other special exception with regard to priority applies. Rather, RVNB argues that Wells Fargo was obligated to assert a compulsory counterclaim for judicial foreclosure in response to RVNB‘s complaint and that Wells Fargo‘s failure to do so resulted in the loss of its indenture‘s priority. The authority cited by RVNB for this position is Zimmerman v. Kevin Connor Construction, 1998 MT 131, ¶ 9, 289 Mont. 148, 958 P.2d 1195. In Zimmerman, Kevin Connor Construction (Connor) had foreclosed on a construction lien against Zimmerman in a prior action. Zimmerman subsequently brought a separate
¶13 We addressed the necessity of filing a compulsory counterclaim for foreclosure of a trust indenture in Deschamps. There, we held that a nonjudicial foreclosure of property is “not the type of claim contemplated by
¶14 Although the District Court concluded it was unnecessary to determine whether Wells Fargo was compelled to counterclaim for judicial foreclosure, the court nonetheless reasoned that Wells Fargo was unable to “prove the required elements necessary” to make out a prima facie case for judicial foreclosure. It therefore determined that RVNB‘s indenture was entitled to priority over Wells Fargo‘s indenture. The court‘s order did not address the reason Wells Fargo was required to demonstrate the elements of judicial foreclosure when its interest was secured by a trust indenture that could be foreclosed nonjudicially under the STFA.
¶15 The District Court‘s order failed to recognize certain principles of judicial foreclosure. A foreclosure extinguishes or “closes” the mortgagor‘s (or “grantor‘s“) interest and terminates junior interests in the property that are either named in the foreclosure action or unnamed but against whom the proceeding is deemed conclusive by operation of statute. See
“[T]he lien of the junior encumbrancers cannot follow the land because they are parties to the record and the [foreclosure] decree cuts them off from the land, but for that very reason their rights may be asserted against the surplus fund in court.” 1 Garrard Glenn, Mortgages, Deeds of Trust, and Other Security Devices as to Land § 86.3, 520 ([Michie Co.] 1943); accord United States v. Sage, 566 F.2d 1114, 1114-15 (9th Cir. 1977) (“Foreclosure affects the rights of all mortgagees junior to the foreclosing mortgagee and requires them to look to the proceeds for satisfaction, but it has no effect whatsoever upon the interest of senior mortgagees.“).
Worden v. Smith, 2013 Wash. App. LEXIS 2815, ¶ 23 (Wash App. Div. 3 December 12, 2013). See also Williams v. Nationstar Mortg., LLC, 349 S.W.3d 90, 95 (Tex. App.-Texarkana 2011) (citing 59 C.J.S. Mortgages § 549 (1998); 59A C.J.S. Mortgages § 601; other citations omitted) (“Foreclosure does not terminate interests in the foreclosed real estate that are senior to the mortgage being foreclosed. In fact, the general rule is that the successful bidder at a junior lien foreclosure takes title subject to the prior liens.“).
¶16 Thus, a senior lien is unaffected by foreclosure of a junior lien, and a purchaser at the foreclosure sale of a junior lienholder will take the property subject to the senior lien. “Foreclosure does not terminate interests in the foreclosed real estate that are senior to the mortgage being foreclosed.”
¶17 These principles correspondingly impact the issue of what parties are “necessary” in a judicial foreclosure proceeding. It has long been a general rule that “persons holding mortgages or liens prior to the mortgage under foreclosure are neither necessary nor proper parties to the action. A prior mortgagee may elect for himself the time and manner of enforcing his security. He cannot be compelled to be a party to a suit by a junior encumbrancer foreclosing his lien.” Cone Bros. Const. Co. v. Moore, 141 Fla. 420, 426 (1940) (citing Emigrant Industrial Sav. Bank v. Goldman, 75 N.Y. 127 (1878)). As has been explained:
A senior lienor is not a necessary party because it is not subject to or subordinate to the mortgage being foreclosed. To omit it from a foreclosure suit brought by a junior lienor will not defeat the purposes of foreclosure because the senior lien existed on the land as of the time the mortgage being foreclosed was executed. Grant S. Nelson & Dale A. Whitman, Real Estate Finance Law vol. 1, § 7.12, 582-83 (3d ed., West Pub. 1993).
Since a senior mortgagee‘s interest cannot be affected by an action to foreclose a junior lien, it follows that an attempt to join the senior as a party to such action can be defeated through a timely objection. Such is the logic of the rule. To it is added the practical reason that the prior mortgagee should be able to choose its own time for selling and not be forced to realize in a market that in its judgment is unfavorable. Nelson & Whitman, Real Estate Finance Law at § 7.14, 590 (emphasis added).
¶18 However, an exception to this general rule is made to permit joinder of a senior lienholder as a party in a foreclosure action for the limited purpose of establishing the “nature and extent of the prior lien.” Nelson & Whitman, Real Estate Finance Law at § 7.12, 583. This would include determination of priority and calculation of the value of the prior interest when these issues are disputed. See Richard R. Powell, Powell on Real Property vol. 4, § 37.37[7] (Michael Allan Wolf ed., LexisNexis 2000) (“If there is doubt as to the precise nature or extent of the claimed superior interest, joinder of its claimant permits the clarification needed for prospective purchasers of the mortgaged interest at the time of sale. Thus, courts have been willing to permit joinder of such parties where such a dispute in priorities exists.“); Restatement (Third) of Property: Mortgages § 7.1 cmt. a (“a foreclosing junior lienor may make the holders of senior liens parties to a judicial foreclosure action for the limited purpose of determining the amounts of those liens“).
¶19 Consequently, because a senior lienholder‘s interest is unaffected by the foreclosure of the junior lien, Wells Fargo, assuming its lien was prior to RVNB‘s, was not required to counterclaim for foreclosure of its security interest in order to retain its priority. Its interest would remain as an encumbrance on the property after RVNB‘s foreclosure sale. The foreclosure buyer would take subject to Wells Fargo‘s indenture, which Wells Fargo could foreclose at a time of its choosing.
¶20 While RVNB argued, and the District Court essentially agreed, that the “one action rule” contained in the foreclosure statute, see
¶21 Having determined that Wells Fargo was not required to file a counterclaim for foreclosure in order to protect its interest in the property, we now turn to the issue of priority between the parties. The District Court held that, because Wells Fargo‘s trial witness and exhibit list had been stricken, it was unable to offer any evidence establishing an interest in the property. It further held, without explanation, that the documents offered in support of Wells Fargo‘s motion for summary judgment were inadequate.
¶22 The District Court‘s conclusion that there was no evidence by which Wells Fargo could establish its interest in the property because Wells Fargo‘s trial witness and exhibit list had been stricken does not reflect the nature of the record in this case. RVNB itself filed copies of all the relevant recorded documents, including Indenture 1 and subsequent assignments, with its complaint. Documents attached to pleadings are considered part of the pleading.
¶23 Contrary to RVNB‘s position, we conclude it is possible to identify the present beneficiary of Indenture 1. The documents filed by both RVNB and Wells Fargo clearly indicate a chain of assignment of Indenture 1 from MERS to Flagstar Bank; then Flagstar Bank to U.S. Bank (as trustee for LSF7 NPL V Trust); and finally from U.S. Bank (as trustee for LSF7 NPL V Trust) to Wells Fargo (as trustee for Vericrest Opportunity Loan Trust 2011-NPL1). MERS, Flagstar Bank, and U.S. Bank did not appear in this action to contest any of these assignments. Further, RVNB has presented no evidence that would dispute the signed, notarized, and recorded documents. The undisputed facts establish that Wells Fargo, as trustee for Vericrest Opportunity Loan Trust 2011-NPL1, is the current beneficiary of Indenture 1.
¶24 RVNB further argues that there is no evidence the promissory note was assigned along with the DOT. It also asserts that the validity of the promissory note itself is now disputed because Beckie is deceased and, because Wells Fargo‘s trial witness and exhibit list was stricken, no one from Wells Fargo or any other bank can testify to the note‘s validity. However, the recorded assignments all state that the assigning party “has ENDORSED said Trust Indenture and Note and does hereby ASSIGN, SELL CONVEY AND DELIVER” to the assignee “all right, title and interest in said Note and all rights accrued or to accrue under said Trust Indenture.” (Emphasis in original.) Thus, the documents facially demonstrate that both the promissory note and the DOT were assigned down the same chain previously detailed, and there is no evidence to the contrary.
¶25 After a signed copy of the promissory note was submitted into the record, the burden shifted to RVNB, as the party opposing summary judgment, to present “substantial evidence, as opposed to mere denial, speculation, or conclusory statements” to establish the existence of a genuine issue of material fact as to the note‘s validity. Peterson v. Eichhorn, 2008 MT 250, ¶ 13, 344 Mont. 540, 189 P.3d 615. Wells Fargo did not have the burden of establishing the validity of the
¶26 Finally, RVNB offers that this Court should not allow “non-judicial foreclosures of security interests that are of questionable authenticity” because such foreclosures will “put[] the Small Tract Financing Act at risk.” However, Wells Fargo has not here sought nonjudicial foreclosure. Further, no claim has been made that Wells Fargo‘s indenture, recorded nearly a year before RVNB‘s indenture, is invalid or has been discharged. The recorded documents clearly demonstrate that Wells Fargo, as trustee for Vericrest Opportunity Loan Trust 2011-NPL1, is the current beneficiary of Indenture 1. Thus, the undisputed facts establish that Wells Fargo is entitled to judgment as a matter of law that its indenture holds priority over RVNB‘s indenture. RVNB may foreclose on the property, following proper procedure, but the property, when sold, will remain subject to Wells Fargo‘s senior indenture.
¶27 Reversed and remanded for entry of judgment consistent herewith.
JUSTICES COTTER, MCKINNON, BAKER and WHEAT concur.
CHIEF JUSTICE McGRATH dissents.
¶28 I dissent. The Court declines to address the status of MERS as the purported beneficiary of the Deed of Trust later assigned to Wells Fargo. Opinion, ¶ 4 n. 1. The parties have not challenged the validity of the beneficiary designation. Questions of standing, however, must be addressed even if not raised by a litigant. Dick Anderson Constr., Inc. v. Monroe Constr. Co., 2009 MT 416, ¶ 46, 353 Mont. 534, 221 P.3d 675. Standing is a jurisdictional requirement. Heffernan v. Missoula City Council, 2011 MT 91, ¶ 29, 360 Mont. 207, 255 P.3d 80. A court does not have the power to resolve a case brought by a party with no personal stake in the outcome. Heffernan, ¶ 29.
¶29 Wells Fargo‘s stake in the outcome of this case is directly traceable to the original designation of MERS as the beneficiary of the Deed of Trust. MERS assigned its beneficial interest to Flagstar Bank. Flagstar Bank assigned that interest to U.S. Bank, which in turn assigned that interest to Wells Fargo. Wells Fargo “stepped into [MERS‘] shoes,” assuming those rights, and only those rights, previously held by MERS. See Watts v. HSBC Bank U.S. Trustee, 2013 MT 233, ¶ 18, 371 Mont. 295, 308 P.3d 57. We have recently held that MERS “does not meet the STFA‘s definition of ‘beneficiary.‘” Pilgeram v. GreenPoint Mortg. Funding, Inc., 2013 MT 354, ¶ 18, 373 Mont. 1, 313 P.3d 839. The beneficiary of a deed of trust must be “the entity to whom the secured obligation flows.” Pilgeram, ¶ 17. That entity is the lender, not an electronic registry such as MERS. Pilgeram, ¶ 18. MERS was not a valid beneficiary and had no interest in the Deed of Trust. The chain of assignments leading from MERS to Wells Fargo was empty. Wells Fargo has no stake in the outcome of this case, and therefore lacks standing. Further, because Wells Fargo has no interest, its interest certainly cannot have priority over that of RVNB.
¶30 I respectfully dissent from those portions of the Opinion declining to address the status of MERS and determining Wells Fargo‘s purported indenture to have priority over the indenture held by RVNB.
