U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE C-BASS MORTGAGE LOAN ASSET-BACKED CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-RP2 v. WILLIE LEE PINKNEY, CLARA PINKNEY, SIDDCO, INC., AND POORE SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE, LTD
No. 229PA16
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA
Filed 9 June 2017
369 N.C. 723 (2017)
NEWBY, Justice.
Mortgages and Deeds of Trust—foreclosure—pleadings
The trial court erred by dismissing plaintiff‘s foreclosure claim under
Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP, by Brian M. Rowlson, for plaintiff-appellant.
Law Office of Benjamin D. Busch, PLLC, by Benjamin D. Busch, for defendant-appellees Willie Lee Pinkney and Clara Pinkney.
Foreclosure by action or “judicial foreclosure,” unlike non-judicial foreclosure by power of sale, is an ordinary civil action governed by the liberal standard of notice pleading. As such, a complaint is sufficient if it alleges a debt secured by a deed of trust, a default, and the plaintiff‘s right to enforce the deed of trust. Here plaintiff‘s complaint adequately states a cause of action for judicial foreclosure. The Court of Appeals erred by applying the requirements applicable in non-judicial foreclosure by power of sale to the plaintiff‘s judicial foreclosure action and, accordingly, we reverse the decision of that court.
In December 1997, defendants Willie Lee Pinkney and Clara Pinkney (collectively borrower) executed a promissory note with Ford Consumer Finance Company, Inc. (the Note) in the principal amount of $257,256.89 to purchase real property situated in Forsyth County. The debt is repayable through monthly installments due on the seventeenth of the month and matures on 17 December 2027. The Note includes default and acceleration provisions. The debt is secured by a deed of trust on the underlying real property, identified “as Lot No. 2, ... SHERWOOD FOREST, ... recorded in Plat Book 29, Page 22, in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Forsyth County.” U.S. Bank National Association (the Bank)1 alleges that it “is the present holder of the Note and Subject Deed of Trust and is the party entitled to enforce the same.”
In September 2014, the Bank filed its complaint against borrower and the substitute trustee under the deed of trust in Superior Court, Forsyth County, seeking judicial foreclosure and judgment on the Note.2 The Bank alleges, inter alia, that “the Note evidences a valid debt owned [sic] by [borrower] to [the Bank],” that borrower “defaulted under the terms of the Note for failure to make payments,” and that the Bank “has given [borrower] written notice of default,” but that borrower has “refused . . . to make the payments required.” The Bank claims that the outstanding balance on the Note is $268,171.13 plus “past due interest” of $118,055.05.
In regard to the Bank‘s authority to enforce the terms of the deed of trust, the complaint states that the Note was “transferred” several times, ultimately to the Bank. Ford Consumer Finance “endorsed” the Note to Credit Based Asset Servicing and Securitization, LLC (Credit Asset), which “assigned” the Note to the “Salomon Mortgage Loan Trust” Indenture, which “specifically endorsed” the Note to the Bank.3
The Bank also attached exhibits to its complaint, including Exhibit E (the Note), which includes allonges evidencing the two endorsements, and Exhibit G (“Assignment of Mortgage/Deed of Trust“) evidencing the assignment, which states that Credit Asset “for value received, does by these presents grant, bargain, sell, assign, transfer and set over unto: [the Salomon Mortgage Loan Trust Indenture] . . . all of [its] right, title and beneficial interest in and to that certain Deed of Trust.”
Borrower moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted under
The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court‘s dismissal order. U.S. Bank v. Pinkney, ___ N.C. App. ___, 787 S.E.2d 464, 2016 WL 2647709 (2016) (unpublished). Applying the requirements of
We review dismissals under
The precise question presented is whether the complaint reveals sufficient allegations to survive borrower‘s motion to dismiss the Bank‘s judicial foreclosure claim. Here the complaint provides adequate notice of the claim. Because the Court of Appeals applied the requirements applicable to non-judicial foreclosure by power of sale, not judicial foreclosure, we conclude that the court erred and that dismissal on that basis was improper.
North Carolina law has long recognized a creditor‘s right to proceed with non-judicial foreclosure by power of sale or foreclosure by action (judicial foreclosure). In re Foreclosure of Lucks, ___ N.C. ___, ___, 794 S.E.2d 501, 504-05 (2016); e.g., Blackledge v. Nelson, 16 N.C. (1 Dev. Eq.) 418, 419 (1830). “Non-judicial foreclosure by power of sale arises under contract and is not a judicial proceeding.” In re Lucks, N.C. at ___, 794 S.E.2d at 504 (citation omitted). Judicial foreclosure, on the other hand, is an ordinary civil action. See Shaw v. Wolf, 23 N.C. App. 73, 76, 208 S.E.2d 214, 216 (1974) (“A proceeding to foreclose a mortgage under an order of court is a civil action.” (quoting 1 Thomas Johnston Wilson, II & Jane Myers Wilson, McIntosh North Carolina Practice and Procedure § 239(4), at 151 (2d ed. 1956))); see also
and procedures available in a civil action, including the opportunity for discovery, to present and defend evidence, and to make legal arguments. See In re Lucks, N.C. at ___, 794 S.E.2d at 503 (The Rules are “applicable to formal judicial actions [for foreclosure].“); see also
Procedurally, to pursue a claim for judicial foreclosure, the creditor files a complaint “in the county in which the subject [property] of the action, or some part thereof, is situated,”
If successful, the creditor obtains a judgment on the debt and a foreclosure decree, culminating in judicial sale of the mortgaged property. See
As with any other civil action, a creditor seeking judicial foreclosure is not required to prove its entire case at the initial pleading stage. See In re Lucks, N.C. at ___, 794 S.E.2d at 505 (Non-judicial foreclosure by power of sale, on the other hand, requires that the “creditor must show the existence of” all the
Here the Bank pled the facts and circumstances necessary to give borrower adequate notice of the judicial foreclosure claim. The complaint states that borrower “executed a
Though the Bank elected to attach additional Exhibits in support of its claim, the Exhibits do not deprive borrower of adequate notice of foreclosure by judicial action. See Stanback v. Stanback, 297 N.C. 181, 202, 254 S.E.2d 611, 625 (1979) (“[W]hen the allegations in the complaint give sufficient notice of the wrong complained of an incorrect choice of legal theory should not result in dismissal.“). The Bank is entitled to submit and prove by evidence at trial its right to foreclose in a number of ways.7 Borrower is free to defend the action, such as by raising evidentiary objections and testing the legal sufficiency of the Bank‘s case. See Thompson v. Osborne, 152 N.C. 408, 410, 67 S.E. 1029, 1029 (1910) (noting that the defendant was entitled to assert legal and equitable defenses in response to an action on the note at trial). A missing indorsement at this initial notice-pleading stage does not preclude the Bank from proceeding with its civil action. See In re Lucks, N.C. at ___, 794 S.E.2d at 506. The Court of Appeals therefore erred by applying the statutory requirements of
In sum, the Bank adequately pled its claim for judicial foreclosure. Because the Court of Appeals failed to analyze the complaint under the notice-pleading standard applicable to judicial foreclosures, we reverse the decision of that court and remand this case to the Court of Appeals for consideration of borrower‘s remaining issue on appeal.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
