Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. vs. Nancy B. Cook & another
No. 14-P-381
Suffolk. January 7, 2015. - May 19, 2015.
87 Mass. App. Ct. 382 (2015)
Present: Kafker, Meade, & Maldonado, JJ.
In a postforeclosure summary process action brought in the Housing Court, the judge erred in allowing summary judgment in favor of the mortgagee, where, in construing the requirement of a face-to-face interview under
Summary Process. Complaint filed in the Boston Division of the Housing Court Department on August 6, 2012.
The case was heard by MaryLou Muirhead, J., on motions for summary judgment.
Julia E. Devanthery for the defendants.
David E. Fialkow for the plaintiff.
KAFKER, J. Nancy and Abena Cook appeal from the judgment entered in favor of Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. (Wells Fargo), in its postforeclosure summary process action against them in the Boston Housing Court. The Cooks contend that the judge erred in granting summary judgment for Wells Fargo on its claim for possession because (1) the judge should have considered the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Handbook No. 4330.1 REV-5, Administration of Insured1
1. Background. The facts, construed in the light most favorable to the Cooks, are as follows. See DiPietro v. Sipex Corp., 69 Mass. App. Ct. 29, 30 (2007). In 1971, Nancy Cook purchased property at 38-40 Rosewood Street in the Mattapan section of Boston, and in 2006 became co-owner of the property with her daughter Abena Cook. In March, 2008, the Cooks refinanced the property with a loan from Fairfield Financial Mortgage Group, Inc. To secure the loan, the Cooks granted a mortgage, including a statutory power of sale, to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee for the lender. The Cooks also executed a promissory note (note) to the lender in the amount of $469,133. The Cooks’ mortgage payments were due on the first day of each month, and the lender could impose a late charge on payments not received in full by the fifteenth day of the month (the grace period). Because the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) insured the mortgage, HUD regulations were expressly incorporated into the mortgage as a limit on the mortgagee‘s right to accelerate the loan and foreclose on the property.
Paragraph 9(a) of the mortgage provides, “Lender may, except as limited by regulations issued by the [HUD] Secretary in the
Wells Fargo acquired servicing rights to the Cooks’ mortgage on April 10, 2008. Thereafter, from June through August, 2008, the Cooks failed to remit their monthly mortgage payments of $2,775.10. On August 12, 2008, the Cooks attended a large event at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough.4 After standing in line and receiving a ticket, the Cooks met with a Wells Fargo representative for approximately fifteen minutes. The Cooks contend that they brought $10,287.14 in cash to this meeting and attempted to cure their default by making a cash payment to the Wells Fargo representative, but the representative said he was not allowed to accept any payments at the event.5 The representative also indicated that a letter would be sent to them regarding modification and payment of their loan. On August 15, 2008, the Cooks received a letter from Wells Fargo offering them a “Special Forbearance Agreement” (agreement), which they accepted. The agreement provided that once the Cooks paid in accordance with the payment schedule set out in the agreement, their loan would be “reviewed for a Loan Modification,” and would be modified so long as there were no changes to their “income or financial situation.”6 The Cooks made the first three payments of $3,429.06
On April 16, 2012, Wells Fargo purchased the property at the foreclosure auction. Wells Fargo subsequently commenced a summary process action in the Boston Housing Court seeking to evict the Cooks. The Cooks’ answer, among other things, challenged the validity of Wells Fargo‘s title to the property and counterclaimed under
2. Discussion. We review the judge‘s grant of summary judgment de novo, and construe the facts “in the light most favorable to the nonmovant[s], drawing all permissible inferences and resolving any disputes or conflicts in [their] favor.” DiPietro, 69 Mass. App. Ct. at 30. At the outset we note that a defendant in a summary process action subsequent to foreclosure may raise as an affirmative defense a title defect arising from the failure to foreclose in accordance with the terms of the mortgage. “The purpose of summary process is to enable the holder of the legal title to gain possession of premises wrongfully withheld. Right to possession must be shown and legal title may be put in issue. . . . Legal title is established in summary process by proof that the title was acquired strictly according to the power of sale provided in the mortgage; and that alone is subject to challenge.” Bank of N.Y. v. Bailey, 460 Mass. 327, 333 (2011), quoting from Wayne Inv. Corp. v. Abbott, 350 Mass. 775, 775 (1966). “Failure to comply strictly with the power of sale renders the foreclosure sale void.” U.S. Bank Natl. Assn. v. Schumacher, 467 Mass. 421, 428 (2014).
In this case, the Cooks’ mortgage contained a power of sale and authorized the mortgagee to exercise it only upon certain condi-
that the Cooks were not offered a loan modification because their loan was not yet eligible under the FHA guidelines. Wells Fargo claims that instead it offered the Cooks a second special forbearance agreement. The Cooks deny ever receiving the second agreement proposal.
a. The judge‘s failure to consider the HUD Handbook. The Cooks first contend that the judge erred in refusing to consider the HUD Handbook as interpretive guidance when construing
b. The face-to-face interview requirements. We conclude that the Gillette Stadium meeting was not timely even though it occurred before expiration of the fifteen-day grace period (set out
Untimeliness alone, however, is not dispositive of the summary judgment question here. A delay of a few days, for example, followed by a face-to-face meeting in conformance with the regulations, with no resulting demonstrated prejudice to the mortgagors, would not be sufficient to defeat summary judgment. Cf. Rivas v. Chelsea Hous. Authy., 464 Mass. 329, 337 (2013) (requiring a demonstration of prejudice arising from an agency‘s disregard of its rules); PNC Mort. v. Garland, 2014-Ohio-1173, at ¶ 30 (Ct. App. 2014) (describing the “specific time deadlines” set out in the HUD regulations as “aspirational,” whereas the obligation to perform the face-to-face meeting prior to foreclosure is “mandatory“). A late face-to-face meeting, such as the one that occurred here, would, nonetheless, have to consider and address the consequences of the delayed meeting on the borrower in order to satisfy the regulatory requirements. Here, however, it is difficult to identify any prejudice arising from the time delay between August 3 and August 12, 2008, as the grace period for the August payment had not expired when the Gillette Stadium meeting took place.10
that the regulatory deadline, if missed, prevents a lender thereafter from ever conducting a lawful foreclosure sale. We recognize that the regulations impose an obligation for a timely face-to-face meeting shortly following the initial default, in part to assure that it will occur before the amount of the arrearage (including penalties and interest) grows so large that it might impede, as a practical matter, any realistic prospect of loan restructuring. That being said, the regulations obviously do not state or require that the deadline specified in the regulations, once missed, could never again be met, thereby forever precluding the lender from accelerating the loan or exercising its right of foreclosure. Even the Cooks recognize that a lender who misses the three-payment window in which to conduct the face-to-face meeting still “has a viable path to foreclosure . . . [by] giving the borrower an opportunity to access loss mitigation services that she should have been offered through a face-to-face meeting.”
c. The statutory power of sale. Wells Fargo also argues that even if it did not conduct a timely face-to-face meeting with the Cooks, such noncompliance would not as a matter of law render a foreclosure sale void, that a standard of less than strict compliance should be applied, and that summary judgment thus would still be appropriate. We disagree. Pursuant to
We reject Wells Fargo‘s contention that the Supreme Judicial Court decision in U.S. Bank Natl. Assn. v. Schumacher, supra, requires a different result. In Schumacher, the court rejected the mortgagors’ attempt to “engraft the required notice provisions of [
3. Conclusion. The judgment of summary process in favor of Wells Fargo is vacated. We remand the matter to the Boston Housing Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
