OPINION
This case involves the priority of hens against residential real estate. Chase Manhattan Mortgage Corporation was awarded summary judgment in the trial court, and West Trinity Properties, Ltd. appeals. We affirm the judgment.
The summary judgment evidence is undisputed. On April 25, 1997, Franklin D. Brooks purchased a house and lot in the Greene Addition of Duncanville and executed and delivered a ■ purchase money note in the principal sum of $89,264.00 to Sun West Mortgage Company. Both Franklin Brooks and his wife, Mildred Brooks, signed a deed of trust securing the note. The note and deed of trust hen securing it were later assigned to Chase. On January 25, 1999, the Greene Home Owners Association (Greene) obtained a judgment hen against the Brookses in the amount of $4,051.61 for past dues owed by the Brookses. In June of 1999, the Brookses stopped making payments to Chase on the promissory note. In October of 1999, Chase notified the Brookses that the promissory note was in default. Two weeks later,. Mildred Brooks filed for bankruptcy. According to an affidavit attached to Chase’s motion for summary judgment, Chase did not receive notice of Mildred Brooks’ pending bankruptcy. On November 12, 1999, Chase notified the Brookses by certified mail of a foreclosure sale on the property scheduled for December 7, 1999. On November 30, 1999, the bankruptcy court dismissed Mildred Brooks’ bankruptcy action. James C. Frappier, substitute trustee under Chase’s deed of trust, conducted the scheduled nonjudicial foreclosure sale on December 7, 1999. Chase purchased the property at the foreclosure sale and recorded its deed on December 13,1999.
Three months later, on March 7, 2000, Greene caused the sheriff to conduct a foreclosure sale of the Brooks property to enforce the lien created by the January 1999 judgment it had obtained against the Brookses. At this sale, West Trinity purchased the property for $9,000.00 and obtained a sheriffs deed purporting to convey the Brookses’ interest in the property. On August 31, 2000, nine months after *868 Chase’s foreclosure sale, Chase attempted to reopen Mildred Brooks’ November 1999 bankruptcy case by filing both a motion to reinstate for a limited purpose and a motion for relief from stay. The bankruptcy court dismissed the motions without prejudice and ordered that the validity of the December 7, 1999, sale be resolved by a state court. On November 17, 2000, without seeking a state court’s determination of the validity of the original foreclosure sale, Chase and its substitute trustee, Frappier, rescinded and canceled the December 7,1999, foreclosure sale.
Franklin and Mildred Brooks filed this suit on October 23, 2000, naming West Trinity, Greene, and Chase as defendants. West Trinity cross-claimed against Chase seeking: 1) a declaration that West Trinity has title to the property free and clear of any interest asserted by
Summary judgment under Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a provides a method of terminating a case when it clearly appears that only a question of law is involved and there is no genuine material fact issue.
Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. v. Steel,
Summary judgments must stand on their own merits.
See M.D. Anderson Hosp. & Tumor Inst. v. Willrich,
In its motion for summary judgment and again on appeal, Chase asserts that, under any conceivable application of the law, it has a superior lien on the property and, therefore, West Trinity’s cross-claims fail as a matter of law. On appeal, West Trinity challenges this assertion by raising two different fact issues: 1) whether Chase’s December 7, 1999, foreclosure sale was valid, and 2) whether the *869 rescission of the substitute trustee’s sale on November 17, 2000, was effective. First, we must determine whether the fact issues West Trinity raises are genuine issues of material fact. If they are not, summary judgment was proper.
The mere existence of a fact question cannot preclude summary judgment; the fact must be material to the claims for which summary judgment is sought.
See Lampasas v. Spring Ctr., Inc.,
Here, Chase contends that the fact issues presented by West Trinity are not genuine issues of material fact. We agree.
Chase produced summary judgment evidence showing it possessed a valid first mortgage lien on the property owned by the Brookses. This lien was secured by a deed of trust recorded in May 1997. The summary judgment evidence also shows that West Trinity’s interest in the property, if any, derives from its purchase at the March 7, 1999, sheriffs sale based on the foreclosure of Greene’s judgment hen. Without proof to the contrary, a judgment hen is junior and subject to all equities in existence at the time of the judgment.
See Mercer v. Bludworth,
West Trinity presented no summary judgment evidence to refute Greene’s junior hen status. Ah that West Trinity offers is an unsupported allegation that the Brookses purchased the property “subject to The Greene Homeowners Association’s hen for assessments and other approved fees as reflected in the Declaration of Covenants recorded in the Real Property Records of Dallas County, Texas.” West Trinity, however, did not make the alleged declaration of covenants a part of the summary judgment evidence, and it is not part of the record before us. Nor is there any summary judgment evidence supporting the proposition that Chase’s original hen was ever subject to any other hens or interests. Issues not expressly presented to the trial court may not be considered on appeal as grounds for reversal of a summary judgment.
See Carlton v. Trinity Universal Ins. Co.,
Because Chase possessed a superior hen, neither of the fact issues West Trinity presents in this appeal affects Chase’s superior interest in the property. Thus, West Trinity has not presented a material fact issue. Regardless of whether the December 7, 1999, foreclosure sale was valid, void, or voidable, and whether the November 2000 rescission was valid, West Trinity’s interest in the property, if any, is still subordinate to that of Chase.
A vahd December 7, 1999, nonjudicial foreclosure sale, as West Trinity urges us to recognize, would extinguish ah junior hens, including Greene’s judgment hen.
See Houston Inv. Bankers Corp. v. First City Bank,
A voidable sale would have the same effect. In Texas, a voidable foreclosure sale, unlike a void sale, is treated as valid until it is set aside, and acts to pass the debtor’s title to the purchaser.
Diversified, Inc. v. Walker,
Finally, a void December 7, 1999, sale, as is consistent with the trial court’s final judgment, would result in Chase retaining its first lien on the property. The effect of this is that all subsequent purchasers would then take title subject to Chase’s
lien. See Mercer v. Bludworth,
Under any theory, West Trinity does not have a superior claim against Chase. Therefore, the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment. Having found summary judgment proper, we do not need to decide the ancillary issues that West Trinity raises regarding the effect of Mildred Brooks’ bankruptcy.
For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment.
