Court Opinion

ID: 4202600
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-09-11 21:21:50.762747+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:14:21.379643
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
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21st MORTGAGE CORPORATION,                        )                             cf)     ITT-
a Delaware Corporation,                           )                            ......
                                                  )       No. 75262-6-1         —         >—
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                      Respondent,                 )                            -0 CA rrie.,
                                                  )       DIVISION ONE         = =›,---,
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DUNCAN K. ROBERTSON,                           )          UNPUBLISHED OPINION
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                       Appellant.              )
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LINDA C. NICHOLLS,                             )
                                               )
                       Third-Party Plaintiff   )
                                               )
RESIDENTIAL FUNDING COMPANY, LLC, )
a limited liability company, OCWEN LOAN        )
SERVICING, LLC, A LIMITED LIABILITY            )
COMPANY; NORTHWEST TRUSTEE                     )
SERVICES, INC., a Washington corporation, )
MARY A. MILLER, an Iowa resident; TYRONE)
THORGOOD, a Pennsylvania resident; DOES )
1-10,                                          )
                       Third-Party Defendants. )          FILED: September 11, 2017

       SPEARMAN, J. — The holder of a promissory note secured by real property

is entitled to enforce it through judicial foreclosure. A holder is the person in

possession of a note that is payable either to bearer or to the person in

possession. On summary judgment in this judicial foreclosure, defendant Duncan

Robertson presented an affidavit opining that the note and its endorsements to

the holder, 21st Mortgage (21st), are not authentic. This evidence is sufficient to

create a genuine issue of material fact whether 21st is entitled to enforce the
75262-6-1/2

note. In this respect, the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to 21st.

We reverse in part and affirm in part.

                                         FACTS

       Linda Nicholls inherited a house in southwest Seattle (Property). In 1999,

she borrowed $100,000 from Old Kent Mortgage Company and executed a

promissory note secured by a deed of trust that encumbered the Property (first

priority loan).

       In 2006, Nicholls borrowed $82,000 from defendant Duncan Robertson

(Robertson loan). The loan was secured by a deed of trust that acknowledged

the first priority loan. Nicholls defaulted on the Robertson loan. A notice of

trustee's sale was recorded on January 8, 2008 and announced that the sale

would take place on April 11, 2008. When the sale actually took place, on

September 26, 2008, Robertson purchased the Property.

       In the meantime, the first priority loan changed hands several times. Old

Kent endorsed the note to Residential Funding Corporation. Residential Funding

Corporation placed the loan in a securitized trust and endorsed the note to Bank

One as trustee for that trust. In an undated allonge attached to the note, Bank

One as trustee for Residential Funding Company endorsed the note in blank. In

another allonge, the Bank of New York Mellon Trust Company (Mellon), as

trustee for Residential Funding Company, endorsed the note to Residential

Funding Company. In a third allonge, Residential Funding Company endorsed

the note in blank.

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75262-6-1/3

        On May 14, 2012, Residential Funding Company filed for bankruptcy. The

Nicholls loan was among the assets liquidated in the bankruptcy and sold to

Berkshire Hathaway. Berkshire Hathaway deposited the Nicholls loan in the

Knoxville 2012 Trust, with Christiana Trust as its trustee. Christiana then elected

21st as the Servicer for the Knoxville 2012 Trust.

        Nicholls defaulted on the first priority loan. She made her last payments on

July 8, 2009 and August 11, 2009. At least two non-judicial foreclosures were

scheduled, but eventually cancelled. Robertson v. GMAC Mortg. LLC, 982
F. Supp. 2d 1202, 1205(W.D. Wash. 2013).

        21st purports to hold the original note for the first priority loan. 21st filed a

complaint for judicial foreclosure against Nicholls and Robertson on July 24,

2014. Nicholls did not respond to the foreclosure complaint and defaulted.

Robertson answered, asserting 22 affirmative defenses and 13 counterclaims.

The trial court stayed Robertson's counterclaims and third party claims pending

the outcome of related federal litigation.1

        Both 21st and Robertson filed motions for summary judgment in the

judicial foreclosure.2 21st also moved to strike certain expert declarations filed by

          1 In 2012, Robertson filed a complaint in superior court against multiple defendants. It
sought quiet title and a declaratory judgment that 21st's predecessors violated the law with
respect to their attempted foreclosures of the Property. Robertson, 982 F. Supp. 2d at 1206.
Meanwhile, Residential Funding Company had entered bankruptcy and Robertson filed claims in
those proceedings, several of which were permitted to proceed. A number of Robertson's causes
of action were stayed due to the bankruptcy proceedings. The case was removed to federal
district court. The district court dismissed the two causes of action that were not stayed.
Robertson appealed. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals found that the district court had not
established subject matter jurisdiction and remanded the case for an evidentiary hearing on the
citizenship of the corporate defendants.
                 moved for a judgment on the pleadings. The trial court converted it to a motion
        2 21st first
for summary judgment, and considered it at the same time as 21st and Robertson's motions for
summary judgment.

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Robertson in opposition to 21st's motion. In its order on summary judgment, the

trial court found that the 2008 trustee sale was invalid, and thus that Robertson

was not the owner of the Property. The court ordered that 21st was entitled to a

decree of foreclosure and struck Robertson's affirmative defenses. It did not rule

on 21st's motion to strike. On reconsideration, the trial court revised the summary

judgment order to clarify that it considered all written submissions in connection

with the motions. On April 28, 2016, the court certified its orders as final for the

purposes of appeal under CR 54(b).

        Robertson appeals.

                                        DISCUSSION

Authenticity of the Promissory Note

        Robertson argues that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment

to 21st because there is a genuine issue of material fact whether 21st is a

beneficiary of the Nicholls promissory note. Robertson disputes that 21st holds

the original note and that it can establish chain of title for the note. Thus, he

argues that 21st is not entitled to enforce the note. Robertson also argues that

21st is excluded from the definition of "beneficiary" as a result of the bankruptcy

proceedings.3

        We review an order granting summary judgment de novo. Deutsche Bank

Nat. Trust Co. v. Slotke, 192 Wash. App. 166, 170, 367 P.3d 600, rev. denied, 185
Wash. 2d 107, 377 P.3d 746 (2016). Summary judgment is appropriate if there is no

        3 Robertson also challenges 21st's chain of title for the deed of trust, but he does not
support this with argument. Thus, we decline to review it. Joy v. Dep't of Labor & Indus., 170 Wn.
App. 614,629, 285 P.3d 187(2012).

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genuine issue as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to a

judgment as a matter of law. CR 56(c). The initial burden is on the moving party

to show there is no genuine issue of any material fact. CR 56(e). The burden

then shifts to the nonmoving party to "'set forth specific facts which sufficiently

rebut the moving party's contentions and disclose the existence of a genuine

issue as to a material fact." Slotke, 192 Wash. App. at 170-71 (quoting Meyer v.

Univ. of Washington, 105 Wash. 2d 847, 852, 719 P.2d 98 (1986)). To accomplish

this, the nonmoving party "may not rely on speculation [or] argumentative

assertions that unresolved factual issues remain." Ranger Ins. Co. v. Pierce

County, 164 Wash. 2d 545, 552, 192 P.3d 886(2008)(quoting Seven Gables Corp.

v. MGM/UA Entm't Co., 106 Wash. 2d 1, 13, 721 P.2d 1(1986))."A genuine issue of

material fact exists where reasonable minds could differ on the facts controlling

the outcome of the litigation." Id. (citing Wilson v. Steinbach, 98 Wash. 2d 434, 437,

656 P.2d 1030 (1982)). We review the facts and all reasonable inferences from

those facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Id.

       A deed of trust may be judicially foreclosed to secure the performance of

an obligation to the beneficiary by a borrower on a promissory note. Slotke, 192
Wash. App. at 171. The person entitled to enforce a promissory note is:

       (i) the holder of the instrument, (ii) a nonholder in possession of the
       instrument who has the rights of a holder, or (iii) a person not in
       possession of the instrument who is entitled to enforce the
       instrument pursuant to RCW 62A.3-309 or 62A.3-418(d). A person
       may be a person entitled to enforce the instrument even though the
       person is not the owner of the instrument or is in wrongful
       possession of the instrument.

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RCW 62A.3-301. A "holder" is "[t]he person in possession of a negotiable

instrument that is payable either to bearer or to an identified person that is the

person in possession." RCW 62A.1-201(b)(21)(A). "[1]t is the holder of a note who

is entitled to enforce it. It is not necessary for the holder to establish that it is also

the owner of the note secured by the deed of trust." Slotke 192 Wash. App. at 173.

        Robertson argues that his evidence creates a genuine issue of material

fact that 21st does not possess the original first priority promissory note.4 He

relies on a report and affidavit by James Kelley, who examined the note. Kelley

concluded that the note is "not the original adjustable rate note but a copy

thereof." CP at 2049. 21st argues that the Kelley report is inadmissible, but the

trial court explicitly left that question open, and the report was among the

documents considered on summary judgment. Thus, we consider it in the light

most favorable to Robertson. The Kelley report is evidence that the note is a
                c
copy, so there is a genuine issue of material fact whether 21st holds the note and

is entitled to enforce it.

        Robertson's evidence distinguishes this case from Bavand v. OneWest

Bank, 196 Wash. App. 813, 385 P.3d 233(2016). In Bavand, the beneficiary wrote

a declaration that it was the actual holder of the note. But the declarant did not

write the year that he signed the declaration. Bavand argued that this created a

        4 As a  threshold matter, 21st argues that Robertson does not have standing to contest
the assignment of the promissory note. It cites two federal district court cases holding that a
borrower does not have standing to challenge the appointment of a successor trustee to a deed
of trust. Cagle v. Abacus Mortg. Inc., 2014 WL 4402136(W.D. Wash. Sept. 5, 2014); Brodie v.
Northwest Trustee Servs., Inc., 2012 WL 6192723(E.D. Wash. Dec. 12, 2012). But in Bavand V.
OneWest Bank, 196 Wash. App. 813, 385 P.3d 233(2016), this court clarified that in Washington,
the borrower has standing to challenge the appointment of a successor trustee. The district court
cases cited by 21st are not controlling.

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genuine issue of material fact whether the declaration was ineffective because it

could have been signed after the foreclosure started. This court disagreed, noting

that Bavand did not point to any evidence in the record to substantiate that the

declaration was signed after the foreclosure started. Here, Robertson goes

further than the borrower in Bavand. He provides the Kelley affidavit to

substantiate that there is a question of fact whether 21st possesses the original

note. To the extent that the affidavit is an admissible expert opinion, which is a

question that is not before us, it creates a genuine issue of fact whether 21st is

the holder of the note.

       Robertson next argues that the allonges documenting the history of the

note's negotiation are invalid. Robertson appears to propose that they were

created sometime after 21st filed its complaint in this matter because they were

not attached to the promissory note in the complaint, or submitted to the

bankruptcy court. He supports this argument with Kelley's affidavit, which opines

that the allonges were never permanently affixed to the note, and that signatures

on two of the allonges were made with a printer and are thus most likely copies.

Viewing the Kelley affidavit in the light most favorable to Robertson, it creates a

genuine issue of fact whether 21st is a holder and entitled to enforce the note. If

the allonges are fraudulent, the note is not endorsed in blank, but is instead

endorsed to Bank One. And if that is true, 21st holds a note endorsed to an entity

other than itself and is thus not entitled to enforce it. Thus, the Kelley affidavit

creates an issue of material fact on this question as well.

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       Finally, Robertson questions whether 21st is the beneficiary as defined by

the deeds of trust act,(DTA) chapter 61.24 RCW, because the Nicholls loan may

have been pledged as collateral when it became a bankruptcy asset. Excluded

from the definition of "beneficiary" in the DTA are "persons holding the

[instrument] as security for a different obligation." RCW 61.24.005(2). Robertson

contends that the Nicholls loan may be held as security in the Residential

Funding Company bankruptcy because a "significant amount of the assets on the

Debtors' Schedule B have been pledged as collateral by the Debtors and are

outside of the Debtors' control." CP at 1569. But because Robertson provides no

evidence that the Nicholls loan was among those assets, he fails to raise a

genuine issue of fact. Regardless, Robertson's argument would fail on the merits.

When the court transferred the loan through the bankruptcy, it ordered that the

asset was "free'and clear of all Claims, Liens, encumbrances, or other interests. .

. ." CP at 1361. Thus, it could not have been held as collateral after the

bankruptcy.

       With the Kelley affidavit, Robertson met his burden to present evidence

that creates a genuine issue of material fact whether the note and its allonges

are original, and thus whether 21st is the holder entitled to enforce the note.

Robertson's 2008 non-judicial foreclosure

       Robertson argues that the trial court erred by finding that he did not

acquire title to the Property after the 2008 trustee's sale. He claims that there are

issues of material fact related to ownership of the Property.

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        Robertson's status as either junior lienholder or owner is immaterial to

whether 21st is entitled to a decree of foreclosure.5 Regardless of whether

Robertson owns the property or is a junior lienholder, his interest in it will be

foreclosed, and he will be entitled to any surplus. BAC Home Loans Servicing,

LP v. Fulbright, 180 Wash. 2d 754, 761, 328 P.3d 895(2014); RCW 61.12.150.

Therefore, we decline to reach whether the trial court erred in granting summary

judgment on this ground.6

Affirmative Defenses

        Robertson argues that the trial court erred in striking his 22 affirmative

defenses. But in his briefing to this court, he advances arguments in support of

only two of them: statute of limitations and standing.7

        Robertson argues that the judicial foreclosure is barred by the six year

statute of limitations, which he contends expired in 2010. RCW 4.16.040. 21st

argues that the claim was timely filed on July 24, 2014 and in support, offers

evidence that Nicholls made payments on the first priority loan in June and

August of 2009. Robertson argues that the evidence is not credible but he offers

no evidence disputing that Nicholls made those payments.

        5 Robertson's status as junior lienholder or property owner may be material to his stayed
counterclaims, which are not on appeal.
         6 Robertson advances another argument in support of his position that he owns the
Property. He contends that because the federal district court previously noted that he owned the
Property, the trial court's ruling to the contrary violated principles of federalism, the "exclusive
jurisdiction doctrine," and the law of the case. Brief of App. at 37-45. But as discussed,
Robertson's interest in the Property is not material to the foreclosure. Therefore, we decline to
reach this issue.

         7 In his brief, Robertson anticipates arguing laches, but makes no such argument See
Br. of App. at 29-37.

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       Robertson additionally argues that under Berteloot v. Remillard, 130

Wash. 587, 228 P. 690(1924), 21st must show that Nicholls intended to keep the

debt alive when making her 2009 payments. But Berteloot requires evidence of

intent to revive the debt where the statute of limitations has run at the time of

payment. Here, there is no evidence that the statute of limitations had run in

2009. Thus, even if it carried the burden to do so, 21st need not prove that

Nicholls made her payments voluntarily. The trial court did not err in striking the

statute of limitations affirmative defense.

       Robertson next argues that it was improper for the trial court to strike his

affirmative defense that 21st lacks standing for a judicial foreclosure on the

Property. As discussed, the Kelley affidavit creates a genuine issue of material

fact whether 21st holds the note. If 21st does not hold the note, then it does not

have standing to enforce it. See RCW 62A.3-301. The trial court erred in striking

this affirmative defense.

       Robertson fails to advance argument or cite authority in support of his

remaining affirmative defenses. The defendant carries the burden of proof on an

affirmative defense. See Rivas v. Overlake Hosp. Med. Ctr., 164 Wash. 2d 261,

267, 189 P.3d 753(2008). Because Robertson bears the burden of proof on his

affirmative defenses, he must make a showing sufficient to establish the

existence of the essential elements of those affirmative defenses. Young v. Key

Pharm., Inc., 112 Wash. 2d 216, 225, 770 P.2d 182(1989). While Robertson refers

to prior arguments in the record on each of his affirmative defenses, he does not

take the opportunity to argue each defense on appeal. The court is not required

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to search the record to locate the portions relevant to a litigant's arguments.

Cowiche Canyon Conservancy v. Bosley, 118 Wash. 2d 801, 819, 828 P.2d 549

(1992). Passing treatment of an issue or lack of reasoned argument are

insufficient to merit judicial consideration. Joy v. Dep't of Labor & Indus., 170 Wn.

App. 614, 629, 285 P.3d 187(2012)(citing West v. Thurston County, 168 Wn.

App. 162, 187, 275 P.3d 1200 (2012)). We decline to consider Robertson's

remaining affirmative defenses due to lack of argument.

       Reversed in part and remanded.

WE CONCUR:

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