21st MORTGAGE CORPORATION v. BRUCE CLARK DeMUSTCHINE.

186 N.E.3d 216, 100 Mass. App. Ct. 792
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedMarch 30, 2022
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 186 N.E.3d 216 (21st MORTGAGE CORPORATION v. BRUCE CLARK DeMUSTCHINE.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
21st MORTGAGE CORPORATION v. BRUCE CLARK DeMUSTCHINE., 186 N.E.3d 216, 100 Mass. App. Ct. 792 (Mass. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

21st MORTGAGE CORPORATION vs. DeMUSTCHINE, 100 Mass. App. Ct. 792

21st MORTGAGE CORPORATION vs. BRUCE CLARK DeMUSTCHINE.

100 Mass. App. Ct. 792

January 6, 2022 - March 30, 2022

Court Below: Housing Court, Northeast Division

Present: Neyman, Ditkoff, & Hand, JJ.

Summary Process, Appeal. Practice, Civil, Summary process, Dismissal of appeal, Bond.

Discussion of the procedure in a summary process action for the defendant to challenge the affirmance by a single justice of this court of a Housing Court judge's denial of a waiver of an appeal bond, an order to make use and occupancy payments, or both, by failing to post such a bond or make such payments, suffering the dismissal of the appeal, and then appealing from the order of dismissal [795-797], and of the de novo standard of review of the order of the single justice for an abuse of discretion [798].

In a summary process action in which, following the entry of judgment for possession in favor of the plaintiff, a single justice of this court affirmed a Housing Court judge's order to make use and occupancy payments (and waived the statutory requirement that the defendant post an appeal bond), a different Housing Court judge did not abuse his discretion in dismissing the defendant's appeal following the defendant's continued occupancy of the property and failure to make the use and occupancy payments as ordered, where, having obtained the judgment for possession as to the defendant, the plaintiff's right to possession trumped that of the defendant and entitled the plaintiff to dispossess the defendant of the property and to a bond against the defendant's appeal, and given that such a bond was waived, to use and occupancy payments pending the resolution of that appeal, in that the plaintiff's entitlement to an appeal bond or use and occupancy payments was not conditioned on the plaintiff's immediate right to exclusive possession of the property; in that the defendant was not excused from carrying his share of the cost to the plaintiff for his continued illegal possession of the property despite that there was another tenant occupying the property; and in that requiring the defendant to pay for use and occupancy avoided an absurd result under the statute that would permit the defendant (who had been adjudged to have a lesser right to possession of the property than did the record owner) to stay as a guest of another holdover tenant while neither occupant made any rent or use and occupancy payments to the record owner of the property. [798-801]


SUMMARY PROCESS. Complaint filed in the Northeast Division of the Housing Court Department on August 28, 2019.

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A petition for review of a use and occupancy order was heard in the Appeals Court by Hanlon, J.

A motion to dismiss the appeal was heard by Gustavo A. del Puerto, J.

Lucas B. McArdle for the defendant.

Michael R. Hagopian for the plaintiff.


HAND, J. Using summary process in the Housing Court, the plaintiff, 21st Mortgage Corporation, obtained a judgment for possession of a residential property (property) against the property's former owner, the defendant, Bruce Clark DeMustchine. The defendant's appeal from the judgment against him was dismissed when he failed to make monthly use and occupancy payments as ordered by both a Housing Court judge and a single justice of this court after the judge waived the statutory requirement that the defendant post an appeal bond. See G. L. c. 239, § 5 (e).

The plaintiff did not, by name, include the defendant's girlfriend, who also occupied the property, in its summary process summons and complaint, and thus did not obtain a judgment against her. [Note 1] On appeal, the defendant argues that because the plaintiff failed to obtain a judgment for possession against all occupants of the property in the underlying summary process action, it was not entitled to an order under G. L. c. 239, §§ 5 and 6, requiring him to pay amounts for use and occupancy pending the resolution of his appeal. We conclude that the defendant's obligation to post an appeal bond (or, where the bond was waived pursuant to G. L. c. 239, § 5 [e], to make use and occupancy payments) arose when judgment for possession entered against him and did not depend on the plaintiff's ability to obtain exclusive possession of the property from any other occupant. Additionally, we are not persuaded that by recasting himself as a guest of another holdover occupant, the defendant may remain in possession of the premises rent-free. Accordingly, we affirm.

Relevant procedural history. The plaintiff became the record owner of the property in June 2019, when it acquired title under a foreclosure deed. [Note 2] The defendant did not vacate the premises after the sale. In August 2019, the plaintiff brought a summary

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process action in the Housing Court against the defendant and "all other [o]ccupants" of the property; the summons and complaint, however, failed to name more specifically the other occupant of the property, the defendant's girlfriend, Valerie Jean Devine. Although the plaintiff obtained a judgment for possession of the property against the defendant, so much of the complaint as named "all other [o]ccupants" was dismissed. The judgment thus did not address the plaintiff's right to possession as to Devine, and the plaintiff was unsuccessful in moving to amend the judgment to include her. See note 1, supra.

The defendant appealed from the judgment against him, and pursuant to G. L. c. 239, §§ 5 and 6, the plaintiff sought an order requiring the defendant to post an appeal bond. The defendant opposed the motion, moved to waive the bond based on indigency and the existence of a nonfrivolous defense, see G. L. c. 239, § 5 (e), and argued that the statute did not provide for use and occupancy payments in postforeclosure summary process appeals. [Note 3] Additionally, in that opposition the defendant raised for the first time the claim that Devine was a co-occupant of the property; he contended that as an occupant, Devine "maintain[ed] superior rights of possession to the [p]roperty [as compared to the plaintiff], which include[d] the right to allow [the defendant] to continue to occupy the same." [Note 4]

After a hearing, the judge waived the bond requirement but ordered the defendant to make monthly use and occupancy payments of $3,000 pending the resolution of the appeal, implicitly

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rejecting the defendant's argument that he was entitled to remain at the property as Devine's guest. [Note 5] The defendant petitioned for review of the use and occupancy order by a single justice of this court, pursuant to G. L. c. 239, § 5 (f), challenging both the imposition of any order for use and occupancy payments and the amount of the $3,000 monthly payments ordered by the judge. The single justice affirmed the judge's use and occupancy order but lowered the monthly payment amount to $2,500. The defendant did not make the payments for use and occupancy as ordered, and his appeal was therefore dismissed. See G. L. c. 239, § 5 (h). The defendant appeals from the order of dismissal. See Matter of an Appeal Bond (No.1), 428 Mass.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 N.E.3d 216, 100 Mass. App. Ct. 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/21st-mortgage-corporation-v-bruce-clark-demustchine-massappct-2022.