Court Opinion

ID: 9896326
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-09 21:09:20.417228+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:14:42.097957
License: Public Domain

STATE OF LOUISIANA

                                 COURT OF APPEAL

                                   FIRST CIRCUIT

                               NUMBER 2022 CA 1368

                            WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A.

                                       VERSUS

   JOHN T. DOYLE AND DEBORAH THERIOT DOYLE A/ K/A DEBORAH
                               ANN THERIOT DOYLE

                                          Judgment Rendered:         NOV 0 9 2023

                                  Appealed from the
                          Twenty First Judicial District Court
                          In and for the Parish of Livingston
                                  State of Louisiana
                                 Suit Number 161530

                       Honorable William S. Dykes, Presiding

Garth J. Ridge                                 Counsel for Defendant/ Appellant
Baton Rouge, LA                                John T. Doyle

Elizabeth Crowell Price                        Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee
Monroe, LA                                     Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.

Christopher D. Meyer
Jackson, MS

              BEFORE: GUIDRY, C. J., CHUTZ, AND LANIER, JJ.
GUIDRY, C.J.,

       Defendant, John Doyle, appeals from a trial court judgment granting a Motion

to Set Aside Sheriffs Sale and Reinstate Liens and Mortgages filed by plaintiff,
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. ( Wells Fargo), ex parte. For the reasons that follow, we

vacate the trial court' s judgment.

                      FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

       On December 3, 2018,         Wells Fargo filed a Petition to Enforce Security

Interest by Ordinary Process, naming John Doyle and Deborah Theriot Doyle as

defendants ( the Doyles), seeking to enforce a note and mortgage executed by the

Doyles ( foreclosure proceeding). Wells Fargo alleged that the Doyles defaulted on

the note and mortgage by failing to pay, when due, the monthly installments as

required.   Wells Fargo sought a judgment for the amounts due under the note and

mortgage and sought a judgment declaring that the mortgage in favor of Wells Fargo

be recognized and declared enforceable.'

       When defendants failed to answer or respond to Wells Fargo' s petition, Wells

Fargo filed a motion for preliminary default, which the trial court granted on April

15, 2019.     Thereafter, the trial court signed a judgment confirming the default

judgment rendered in favor of Wells Fargo and against defendants, granting Wells

Fargo relief as prayed for in the petition.       The property listed in the mortgage was

subsequently sold to Wells Fargo at a sheriff' s sale on January 3, 2020.

       Thereafter, on January 4, 2021, Wells Fargo filed a Petition to Set Aside

Sheriff's Sale and Reform Mortgage in the same proceeding, naming the Doyles as

defendants.     Wells Fargo sought a judgment annulling the sheriff' s sale and

declaring that the annulled sheriffs sale had no effect on the debt the Doyles owed

 The Doyles obtained a loan from Wachovia Mortgage Corporation ( Wachovia), which loan was
secured with a mortgage executed by the Doyles in favor of Wachovia. Wachovia thereafter
merged with Wells Fargo on August 30, 2011, with Wells Fargo being the surviving entity in the
merger, succeeding to all of the rights and interests owned by Wachovia.
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to Wells Fargo or on Wells Fargo' s mortgage over the Doyles' property. Wells

Fargo also requested that the legal description of the property encumbered by the
mortgage be reformed to conform to the parties' mutual intent. Particularly, Wells

Fargo alleged that the Doyles had purchased two parcels of immovable property,
namely Lot 148- A and 148- A- 1, with a residence situated on Lot 148- A. However,

while the loan and supporting mortgage documents reference both parcels, the

mortgage executed by the Doyles only encumbered Lot 148- A- 1.                    As such, Wells

Fargo alleged that the parties intended for the entirety of the property to be

encumbered by the mortgage, and therefore a portion of the property encumbered by

the mortgage was omitted from the property description attached to the mortgage.

Therefore, Wells Fargo alleged the legal description set forth in the foreclosure

proceeding and subject to sheriff' s sale was incorrect and requested that the trial

court annul the sheriffs sale, recognize the defendants' debt under the note is still

valid and outstanding, and issue a declaratory judgment reforming the property

description to conform with the parties' intent.

       Mr. Doyle answered the petition on April 30, 2021, generally denying Wells

Fargo' s allegations and pleading the dilatory exception raising the objection of

improper cumulation of actions and the peremptory exception raising the objections

of no cause of action and prescription.2 Wells Fargo, thereafter, filed a memorandum

in opposition to Mr. Doyle' s exceptions and requested that the trial court set a

hearing on the exceptions. The hearing was set for February 22, 2022, but neither

Mr. Doyle nor his counsel appeared at the hearing. At the conclusion of the hearing,

at which only the exceptions were considered, the trial court denied the exception

raising the objections of no cause of action and prescription. However, the trial court

2 Mrs. Doyle died prior to Wells Fargo' s filing of its Petition to Set Aside Sheriff' s Sale and
Reform Mortgage. Because her heirs were unknown and no succession representative had been
appointed, the trial court appointed a curator ad hoc to represent her in the action. The attorney so
appointed filed an answer to the petition, but Mrs. Doyle is not a party to the present appeal.
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allowed Wells Fargo thirty days to file a motion to sever to resolve the exception

raising the objection of improper cumulation of actions.

       On March 7, 2022, Wells Fargo filed a Motion to Sever, requesting that the

Petition to Reform Mortgage be severed from the Petition to Set Aside Sheriff' s Sale

and that the Petition to Reform Mortgage be assigned a new docket number.        Wells

Fargo attached an order to its motion as well as a proposed Petition to Reform

Mortgage and a proposed Motion to Set Aside Sheriffs Sale and Reinstate Liens

and Mortgages. On that same date, Wells Fargo also filed into the record its Motion

to Set Aside Sheriff' s Sale and Reinstate Liens and Mortgages, with attached

judgment.

      Thereafter, on March 16, 2022, the trial court signed a judgment denying Mr.

Doyle' s exceptions. The trial court also signed an order on March 16, 2022, granting

Wells Fargo' s Motion to Sever and ordering that the Petition to Set Aside Sheriffs

Sale and Reform Mortgage is amended to the Motion to Set Aside Sheriff' s Sale and

Reinstate Liens and Mortgages and shall be received and filed in the proceeding.

Finally, on the same date, the trial court signed the judgment submitted by Wells

Fargo with its Motion to Set Aside Sheriff s Sale and Reinstate Liens and Mortgages,

ex parte, declaring the sheriff s sale null and void, setting the sheriff s sale aside,

and reinscribing and reinstating the mortgage in favor of Wells Fargo.      Mr. Doyle

now appeals, asserting that the trial court erred in granting Wells Fargo' s Motion to

Set Aside Sheriff's Sale and Reinstate Liens and Mortgages ex parte and rendering

a final judgment in favor of Wells Fargo.

                            RULE TO SHOW CAUSE

      On January 6, 2023, this court issued, ex proprio mote, a Rule to Show Cause,

noting that the notice ofjudgment in the record indicated that notice of a March 16,

2022 judgment was issued on March 17, 2022.        Because the motion and order for

appeal, which sought to appeal a judgment signed on March 16, 2022, was filed on

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May 31, 2022, this court ordered the parties to show cause by briefs as to whether

Mr. Doyle' s appeal should or should not be dismissed as untimely.            The parties

thereafter acknowledged that while notice of the judgment denying Mr. Doyle' s

exceptions was in the appellate record, the notice of judgment for the March 16,

2022 judgment setting aside the sheriffs sale was not. Therefore, the parties jointly
requested that the trial court supplement the appellate record to include this notice

of judgment. The appellate record was thereafter supplemented with the judgment

setting aside the sheriffs sale and the notice of judgment on August 16, 2023.

       From our review of the supplemented documents, it is clear that Mr. Doyle

was personally served with the notice ofjudgment setting aside the sheriff' s sale on

April 18, 2022.   Accordingly, because his motion for appeal was filed on May 31,

2022, within sixty days of the service of notice of judgment, we find the appeal is

timely and recall the rule to show cause.

                                     DISCUSSION

       An action to nullify a sheriff' s sale authorized by executory process must be

instituted as a direct action in an ordinary proceeding. See Reed v. Meaux, 292 So.

2d 557, 560 (La. 1973); see also Walter Mortgage Company, LLC v. Turner, 51, 007,

p. 12 ( La. App. 2nd Cir. 11116116), 210 So. 3d 425, 433- 34. A direct action means

that the party praying for the nullity of a judgment, before the court which has

rendered same, must bring his action by means of a petition, and the adverse party

must be cited to appear. Deutsche Bank National Trust Company v. Carter, 10- 663,

p. 8 ( La. App. 5th Cir. 1125111), 59 So. 3d 1282, 1286, writ denied, 11- 0392 ( La.

4/ 8/ 11), 61 So. 3d 691.   A motion seeking to set aside the sale of property is not a

direct action; rather it is a summary proceeding which does not require citation and

other formalities required in ordinary proceedings.        See La. C. C. P.   art.   2591;

Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, 10- 663 at p. 8, 59 So. 3d at 1286.

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       In the instant case,   Wells Fargo originally filed a Petition to Set Aside

Sheriff' s Sale and Reform Mortgage.        However, following the hearing on Mr.

Doyle' s exceptions, Wells Fargo filed a Motion to Sever the Petition to Reform

Mortgage from the Petition to Set Aside Sheriff' s Sale and amended its Petition to

Set Aside Sheriffs Sale to a Motion to Set Aside Sheriff's Sale and Reinstate Liens

and Mortgages with an accompanying judgment.              The trial court signed this

judgment, ex parte, which declared the sheriff' s sale null and void, set aside the

sheriffs sale, and reinscribed and reinstated the mortgage in favor of Wells Fargo.

       From our review of the record, we find that the trial court erred in rendering
judgment in favor of Wells Fargo. Despite Wells Fargo' s argument on appeal, the

merits of the original Petition to Set Aside Sheriff' s Sale were never set for hearing

and were not heard before the trial court at the hearing on Mr. Doyle' s exceptions.

Furthermore, the subsequent Motion to Set Aside Sheriff' s Sale and Reinstate Liens

and Mortgages sought to summarily determine the merits of Wells Fargo' s nullity

action without observing the formalities of an ordinary proceeding.          Therefore,

because such nullity actions can only be determined as part of an ordinary

proceeding,   the trial court erred in signing the instant judgment annulling the

sheriff' s sale, setting aside the sheriff' s sale, and reinscribing and reinstating the

mortgage in favor of Wells Fargo pursuant to Wells Fargo' s motion.

                                   CONCLUSION

      For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the trial court' s March           16, 2022

judgment declaring the sheriffs sale null and void, setting aside the sheriff' s sale,

and reinscribing and reinstating the mortgage in favor of Wells Fargo. All costs of

this appeal are assessed to Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.

      RULE TO SHOW CAUSE RECALLED; JUDGMENT VACATED.

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