Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca8-07-06045/USCOURTS-ca8-07-06045-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
American Residential Mortgage
Appellee
Bradley R. Thayer
Appellant
Judith N. Thayer
Appellant

Document Text:

United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel

FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

No. 07-6045

In re: *

*

Bradley R. Thayer and Judith N. Thayer, *

*

Debtors - Defendants *

*

* Appeal from the United States

American Residential Mortgage, LP, * Bankruptcy Court for the 

* District of Minnesota

Plaintiff - Appellee. *

*

v. *

*

Bradley R. Thayer and Judith N. Thayer, *

*

Defendant - Appellants. *

*

Submitted: February 13, 2008

Filed: March 31, 2008

Before SCHERMER, MAHONEY, and VENTERS, Bankruptcy Judges.

MAHONEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

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15 U.S.C. § 1601 et seq.

2

ORDERS APPEALED FROM

The debtors appeal four orders of the bankruptcy court. We affirm the two

orders that determined that a mortgage on the debtors’ property should be reinstated

and remain in effect. We reverse the remaining two orders that imposed monetary

sanctions on debtors’ counsel for alleged violations of Rule 9011.

 We have jurisdiction over this appeal from the final orders of the bankruptcy

court. See 28 U.S.C. § 158(b). 

BACKGROUND

On September 11, 2002, the debtors executed a promissory note for the

principal amount of $157,700 and a mortgage on their home in favor of American

Residential Mortgage, the plaintiff here. American Residential then assigned its

interests under the note and mortgage to TCF Mortgage Corp. On August 25, 2003,

the debtor, Mr. Thayer, executed a new promissory note for $170,000 to American

Residential, and both debtors executed a mortgage on their home in favor of American

Residential, with the intention of refinancing and paying off the TCF note. The funds

were transferred to a closing agent at that time. Three days later, on August 28, 2003,

the debtors completed a Notice of Right to Cancel pursuant to the Truth in Lending

Act (“TILA”)1

 and timely sent the form to American Residential. American

Residential received the form the next day. However, on that same day (Aug. 29,

2003), the closing agent – unaware of the cancellation – disbursed the funds to TCF

and a credit-card company, as designated in the settlement statement. After deducting

transactional costs, the closing agent sent Mr. Thayer a check for the balance

($4,093.46). The debtors returned that check to American Residential. 

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In September 2003, the debtors made their regular monthly payment to TCF;

the check was returned because, from the records of TCF, it appeared the TCF loan

had been paid in full. TCF so advised the debtors in a letter accompanying the

returned check. TCF executed a mortgage satisfaction document and mailed it to the

closing agent in early October 2003. The satisfaction and release was not filed in the

county land records at that time and had not been so filed at the time of the entry of

the order appealed from. 

American Residential contacted TCF to recover the payment. The money was

not returned, but on February 18, 2004, TCF assigned its rights under the TCF note

and mortgage to American Residential. On July 29, 2004 (post-petition), TCF again

assigned its rights under the TCF note and mortgage to American Residential.

From August 29, 2003, through the end of 2004, American Residential paid all

current obligations on real estate taxes and insurance on the property as they became

due, for a total of $4,459.72. The debtors did not tender any payments on these

obligations and have made no payments on the assigned TCF note to date. 

On May 5, 2004, the debtors filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, and listed

American Residential as an unsecured non-priority creditor. American Residential

asserted the status of a secured creditor holding a perfected and enforceable mortgage,

and filed the adversary proceeding underlying this appeal. The debtors argued that

American Residential’s mortgage had been released pre-petition and whatever in

personam liability they may have had on the debt was dischargeable in bankruptcy.

On cross-motions for partial summary judgment, the bankruptcy court found in favor

of American Residential, ruling that it holds a valid, perfected, and enforceable

mortgage against the debtors’ residence based on the original 2002 document, and that

the mortgage release executed by TCF was the result of a mistake and was therefore

invalid. The bankruptcy court found that the debtors had successfully exercised their

TILA rights, with the result of nullifying the refinancing transaction and returning the

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debtors to the status quo ante, as debtors of TCF, which rights were assigned to

American Residential. In a thorough and detailed opinion, the bankruptcy court

explained that the debtors had in fact effectively rescinded the refinancing transaction,

which rescission was honored by American Residential. The court noted that TCF and

the closing agent were not aware of the rescission, so their part in completing the

refinancing transaction was the result of a mistake. TCF documented the mortgage

satisfaction without knowledge of that loan rescission, so equity required the mistaken

satisfaction and release to be cancelled and annulled. 

American Residential’s adversary complaint also contained a count relating to

non-dischargeability of any debt incurred by the debtors in connection with the

refinancing loan. This count was, however, ultimately withdrawn.

In connection with its motion for summary judgment, American Residential

filed a motion for Rule 9011 sanctions against debtors’ counsel, based on the legally

and logically inconsistent positions taken by the debtors in opposition to American

Residential’s claims in the adversary proceeding. The bankruptcy court awarded

sanctions to American Residential of $15,000, or approximately half of the fees and

expenses incurred by American Residential to obtain summary judgment on Count I

of the complaint, finding that debtors’ counsel persisted in advancing a sham

argument that promoted form over substance and attempted to abate all debt and all

liens arising in connection with both loan transactions.

After entry of the bankruptcy court’s final order on July 6, 2007, the debtors

timely filed this appeal.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

The parties agree that no facts are in dispute. The bankruptcy court’s grant of

summary judgment is reviewed de novo, Ries v. Wintz Properties, Inc. (In re Wintz

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Cos.), 230 B.R. 848, 857 (B.A.P. 8th Cir. 1999) (citing Peter v. Wedl, 155 F.3d 992,

996 (8th Cir. 1998), Mayard v. Hopwood, 105 F.3d 1226, 1227 (8th Cir. 1997), and

Wade v. Midwest Acceptance Corp. (In re Wade), 219 B.R. 815, 818 (B.A.P. 8th Cir.

1998)), while its imposition of sanctions is subject to the deferential “clear abuse of

discretion” standard of review. Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp., 496 U.S. 384, 405

(1990) (appellate court should apply an abuse-of-discretion standard in reviewing all

aspects of a district court’s Rule 11 determination). “[T]he established standard for

imposing sanctions is an objective determination of whether a party’s conduct was

reasonable under the circumstances.” Snyder v. Dewoskin (In re Mahendra), 131 F.3d

750, 759 (8th Cir. 1997) (quoting In re Armwood, 175 B.R. 779, 788 (Bankr. N.D.

Ga. 1994)). “We apply an abuse-of-discretion standard of review in all aspects of Rule

11 (and by analogy, Rule 9011) cases.” Id. (quoting Grunewaldt v. Mut. Life Ins. Co.

of New York (In re Coones Ranch, Inc.), 7 F.3d 740, 743 (8th Cir. 1993)). “An abuse

of discretion occurs if the court bases its ruling on an erroneous view of the law or on

a clearly erroneous assessment of the evidence.” PW Enter., Inc. v. Kaler (In re

Racing Servs., Inc.), 332 B.R. 581, 584 (B.A.P. 8th Cir. 2005). 

DISCUSSION

1. The bankruptcy court properly reinstated the mortgage

At the trial level and this appellate level, the debtors take the position that they

properly exercised their right of rescission and thus the new financial transaction with

American Residential became a nullity and they had no obligation under the note and

mortgage they executed four days prior to the rescission. However, they also take the

position that American Residential violated the Truth in Lending Act by distributing

the funds to TCF before properly ascertaining that there had not been a rescission.

The payment to TCF, according to the debtors, extinguished their financial obligation

on the TCF note and therefore they have no further payment obligation to either TCF

or to American Residential. Their authority for such a position, that they get both the

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benefit of the rescission and the benefit of no further financial obligations on the

original note, comes from their analysis of state law concerning the Uniform

Commercial Code, the law of payment, and the law of contracts relating to

assignments. However, they ignore what rescission really is. Rescission under TILA

requires that the borrower be returned to the status quo ante the rescinded transaction.

Thorp Loan & Thrift Co. v. Buckles (In re Buckles), 189 B.R. 752, 765 (Bankr. D.

Minn. 1995). The bankruptcy judge determined, citing Williams v. Homestake

Mortgage Co., 968 F.2d 1137, 1140 (11th Cir. 1992), that “[c]onsonant with the

notion of rescission under general principles of equity, the statute requires the parties

to be returned to the positions they held prior to entering the transaction, as much as

possible.” Appendix at 14. 

The bankruptcy court focused on the substance of the transaction and the

windfall that the debtors would realize if their mortgage was released. It focused on

the business relationship created between American Residential and TCF at the time

of the mortgage payoff, separate and apart from the relationship between American

Residential and the debtors. To unwind the rescinded transaction, the mortgageholders treated the American Residential/TCF transfer as American Residential’s

purchase of TCF’s rights under the original mortgage. That purchase created a new

creditor-debtor relationship between American Residential and the debtors. The

bankruptcy court also ruled that TCF’s release of the mortgage before TCF was aware

of the rescission was a mistake. Following Minnesota’s law of equity, the court set

aside the release.

Although American Residential did not plead that it made a mistake in sending

the money to TCF, the trial court found that the payment could be considered as a

mistake in order to validate the assignment of the note and mortgage to American

Residential and thus place the debtors in the position that they would have been in had

the rescinded transaction never taken place. The trial judge's remedy of validating the

note and the lien assigned to American Residential is consistent with equitable

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principles. “The bankruptcy court is essentially a court of equity. Its equitable

powers are to be exercised with respect to claims and substance will not give way to

form and technical considerations will not prevent substantial justice from being

done.” Kenneally v. Standard Elec. Corp., 364 F.2d 642, 647 (8th Cir. 1966). “Equity

regards the substance and intent rather than the form.” Caplinger v. Patty, 398 F.2d

471, 476 (8th Cir. 1968). 

The trial judge returned the borrower to the status quo ante despite the

insistence of the debtors that American Residential had violated TILA by early

disbursement and therefore American Residential should be penalized, with the

penalty being the cancellation of the note and satisfaction of the mortgage. There is

no such remedy identified in the Truth in Lending Act or Regulation Z or the staff

notes upon which the debtors so strongly rely. And, as the trial court found, there was

no violation of TILA by virtue of the disbursement of funds on the fourth day

following the transaction. 

Summary judgment is to be granted when the record, viewed in the light most

favorable to the non-moving party, shows there is no genuine issue as to any material

fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ.

P. 56(c) (made applicable to adversary proceedings in bankruptcy by Fed. R. Bankr.

P. 7056); see, e.g., Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-23 (1986); Anderson

v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 249-50 (1986); Aviation Charter, Inc. v.

Aviation Research Group/US, 416 F.3d 864, 868 (8th Cir. 2005); Ferris, Baker Watts,

Inc. v. Stephenson (In re MJK Clearing, Inc.), 371 F.3d 397, 401 (8th Cir. 2004). That

standard was properly applied in this case. The debtors raise numerous arguments on

appeal about the effect of Minnesota property and mortgage law, Uniform

Commercial Code law, and the equitable doctrine of unclean hands on the transaction

between American Residential and TCF. However, these arguments miss the point

that the transaction between American Residential and TCF did not change anything

as far as the debtors were concerned, and the bankruptcy court’s validation of the

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assignment of TCF’s rights to American Residential – which was American

Residential’s way of fixing its mistake – put the parties essentially into the positions

they would have been in had there been no refinancing. Had American Residential

delayed disbursement a few days beyond the minimum TILA waiting period and

cancelled the refinancing transaction upon debtors’ rescission, with no money having

changed hands, the debtors would still be liable to TCF on the original mortgage. As

it was, American Residential and TCF treated the premature transfer of funds as

American Residential’s purchase of the original mortgage. There is no indication that

the terms were changed or that the debtors suffered in any manner as a result of the

agreement between American Residential and TCF. 

The bankruptcy court appropriately granted summary judgment to American

Residential and denied summary judgment to the debtors in this situation.

2. Rule 9011 sanctions were not warranted

The trial court sanctioned Mr. Oliver, the attorney for the debtors, because it

found that Mr. Oliver presented totally inconsistent arguments, even after having been

warned by a letter from counsel for American Residential that a motion for sanctions

would be filed if he did not relent. The inconsistent legal arguments, as found by the

trial court, were (1) arguing that the initial transaction had been rescinded, and (2)

arguing that the debtors had no obligation under the TCF note when held by TCF or

by American Residential after the assignment.

On appeal, Mr. Oliver argues that sanctions are unwarranted because he was

zealously and creatively representing his clients with what he believed to be a valid

argument on an issue of first impression concerning American Residential’s TILA

duties and Minnesota law on payments. 

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The standard by which courts are to judge conduct challenged under Rule 11

[or Bankruptcy Rule 9011] is one of objective reasonableness. Griffin v. Beaty (In re

Griffin), 330 B.R. 737, 740 (W.D. Ark. 2005) (citing Hartman v. Hallmark Cards,

Inc., 833 F.2d 117, 124 (8th Cir. 1987)). “[T]o impose a Rule 9011 sanction the court

must find that an attorney ‘submitted a claim that has no chance of success under

existing precedents and that fails to advance a reasonable argument to extend, modify,

or reverse the law as it stands.’” Halverson v. Funaro (In re Frank Funaro, Inc.), 263

B.R. 892, 900 (B.A.P. 8th Cir. 2001) (quoting Baker v. Latham Sparrowbush Assocs.

(In re Cohoes Indus. Terminal, Inc.), 931 F.2d 222, 227 (2nd Cir. 1991)). Sanctions

for litigation abuse are intended as a balance between responsible conduct by the

litigants and “creative and ardent representation.” Id. at 901 (quoting J. Scott

Humphrey, Sanctions Against the Creditor's Attorney in Non-reorganization

Bankruptcy Proceedings, 6 Bankr. Dev. J. 481, 482 (1989)). 

Although Mr. Oliver advanced arguments that were ostensibly inconsistent and

tantamount to a request that the debtors be allowed to “have their cake and eat it too”

– i.e., to rescind the refinancing of their mortgage and have it deemed satisfied at the

same time – Mr. Oliver’s position was not wholly without legal support. 

Mr. Oliver relied on and presented both to counsel for American Residential

and the court Minnesota state law concerning Uniform Commercial Code payment

provisions, the law of payments with regard to real estate mortgages, and the law of

contracts with regard to assignments. See, e.g., Wayzata Enter., Inc. v. Herman, 128

N.W.2d 156, 158 (Minn. 1964) (a check is a conditional payment, but upon payment

of the check, the debt is deemed to have been discharged when the check was given);

Northern Drug Co. v. Abbett, 284 N.W. 881, 883-84 (Minn. 1939) (when debt is

extinguished by act of the parties as by payment, accord and satisfaction, or voluntary

release, it ceases to have existence for any purpose); First Nat’l Bank of Benton v.

Gallagher, 138 N.W.2d 681, 682 (Minn. 1912) (payment of a promissory note secured

by a mortgage extinguishes the lien of the mortgage); McFadden v. Follrath, 130 N.W.

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542, 545 (Minn. 1911) (“While a check of the debtor does not, until paid, ordinarily

amount to payment of the debt, it does, after payment of the check, extinguish the

debtor's liability, if the same is paid to the creditor, or to the agent of the creditor

authorized to receive the check of the debtor . . . .”). On behalf of his clients Mr.

Oliver took the position that their arrangement with American Residential had been

rescinded under TILA and that TILA deals only with the effects of rescission as

between the borrower and the lender and not the effect on third parties to the

transaction. With regard to the continuing viability of the TCF note and mortgage, his

position was that the court should have looked to the Minnesota law of payments as

shown by older case law and now codified in the Uniform Commercial Code, which,

arguably, supports his position.

Here, American Residential delivered funds to TCF. TCF considered the note

paid in full. TCF notified the debtors that the note was paid in full and notified the

debtors that TCF had executed a release of the mortgage and had provided it to the

agent for American Residential. TCF refused further payments from the debtors.

There is no question that TCF considered the transaction complete. Several months

after the transaction was complete, American Residential and TCF worked out an

arrangement whereby the payment as between American Residential and TCF would

be considered a purchase of the note and assignment of the note and mortgage, rather

than a payoff. That transaction, at least in form, did not resurrect the note nor cancel

the satisfaction of the mortgage. Those actions did not occur until the trial judge,

exercising his equitable powers, determined that the only way to put the debtors back

in their original position was to resurrect the note and acknowledge that the

arrangement between TCF and American Residential was beneficial to both of them

and not detrimental to the debtors. 

Thus, the apparent contradiction in the debtors’ position advanced by Mr.

Oliver was not wholly unfounded in law or fact, nor was it patently frivolous; rather,

it resulted from the improper elevation of form over substance and a blind application

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of Minnesota law without considering equitable principles. Advancing different legal

theories that might result in an inequitable result should not subject an attorney to

sanctions when one of those arguments fails to carry the day. An attorney’s ethical

obligation is to represent his or her clients vigorously and zealously, which Mr. Oliver

did in this case. On the rescission issue under TILA the debtors prevailed. On the state

law issue of setting aside the 2002 TCF mortgage, the debtors did not prevail, and

rightly so, as such a result would have been inequitable. However, Mr. Oliver might

well have been faulted for the adequacy of his representation of the debtors had he not

raised and presented these arguments, which were based on well-established

Minnesota law.

Moreover, the trial court did not indicate that Mr. Oliver’s pursuit of the

conflicting legal theories resulted in any greater costs of discovery or trial preparation

for American Residential. Imposing a sanction of $15,000 without any finding that

Mr. Oliver’s legal position caused the opposing party to actually incur such costs is

a clear abuse of discretion.

CONCLUSION

The grant of summary judgment on American Residential’s complaint for a

determination of the validity of its lien is affirmed. Applying the abuse of discretion

standard of review, the finding of a violation of Rule 9011 is reversed and the

monetary sanction imposed by judgment against Mr. Oliver is vacated. 

SCHERMER, Bankruptcy Judge, dissenting in part.

I respectfully disagree with the majority’s conclusion that Rule 9011 sanctions

were not warranted. Deference should be given to a trial judge who imposes

sanctions; reversal is only warranted where the sanctions resulted from a clear abuse

of discretion. Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx, 496 U.S. at 405. I do not believe the trial

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judge clearly abused his discretion. The arguments presented by the debtor’s counsel

were entirely inconsistent. If the debtors rescinded the refinancing transaction under

TILA they must remain liable under the first mortgage because rescission requires the

parties to be returned to the status quo ante. The cases cited by the majority in

support of their conclusion that Mr. Oliver’s position “was not wholly without legal

support” have nothing to do with rescission under TILA. Rather, the cases discuss

general principles regarding payments and assignments, many of which have since

been codified, for example, in the Uniform Commercial Code, and all pre-date TILA’s

enactment in 1968. Arguing “apples” in support of “oranges” does not provide legal

support for an argument pursuant to which the debtors are seeking to “have their cake

and eat it too.” I therefore respectfully dissent with respect to that portion of the

opinion reversing the imposition of sanctions and would instead conclude that the trial

court did not abuse its discretion in awarding sanctions.

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