Alaska Seaboard Partners Ltd. Partnership v. Hood

949 N.E.2d 1247, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 992, 2011 WL 2139172
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 26, 2011
Docket32A01-1010-MF-546
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 949 N.E.2d 1247 (Alaska Seaboard Partners Ltd. Partnership v. Hood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alaska Seaboard Partners Ltd. Partnership v. Hood, 949 N.E.2d 1247, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 992, 2011 WL 2139172 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

VAIDIK, Judge.

Case Summary

Saint Ivan Equity Management Corporation, a California corporation, assigned a mortgage on real estate in Avon, Indiana, to SNGC, LLC, a related company of Alas *1250 ka Seaboard Partners Limited Partnership. Saint Ivan then assigned the same mortgage to Hendricks County Bank and Trust Company. Hendricks County Bank released the mortgage and deeded the real estate to Michael and Sheila McDonald, who later deeded the real estate to Normand and Linda Boutot.

SNGC filed a lawsuit in Orange County, California, alleging, among other things, that Saint Ivan improperly assigned the mortgage to Hendricks County Bank after it had already assigned it to SNGC and should not have received the $107,600 paid by Hendricks County Bank for the mortgage it no longer owned. As a result of that lawsuit, SNGC received a monetary judgment against Saint Ivan.

Alaska Seaboard, who had since been assigned the mortgage once owned by SNGC, then filed suit in Hendricks Superi- or Court to foreclose on the mortgage. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Hendricks County Bank, the McDonalds, and the Boutots. Because Alaska Seaboard’s foreclosure action is barred by the doctrines of collateral and judicial estoppel, we conclude that the trial court did not err by granting summary judgment in favor of Hendricks County Bank, the McDonalds, and the Boutots and denying Alaska Seaboard’s cross-motion for summary judgment. We further conclude that the trial court did not err by awarding attorney’s fees to Hendricks County Bank, the McDonalds, and the Boutots. We therefore affirm the trial court.

Facts and Procedural History

In 1996, Gerald Hood purchased real estate in Avon, Indiana. In 2005, Hood took out a $138,400 mortgage on that property from Wilmington Finance, a division of AIG Federal Savings Bank. Wilmington Finance assigned the mortgage to MorEq-uity, Inc., and MorEquity in turn assigned the mortgage to Saint Ivan Equity Management Corporation, a California corporation. The mortgage and assignments were each duly recorded. At some point during these assignments, Hood defaulted on the mortgage and eventually abandoned the property.

Five days before MorEquity assigned the Hood mortgage to Saint Ivan, Saint Ivan entered into a mortgage loan purchase agreement with SNGC, LLC, an Alaska limited liability company. The agreement provided that SNGC would pay over $3.5 million for the purchase of certain mortgages, and Saint Ivan would deliver the mortgages to SNGC by May 4, 2007. When Saint Ivan failed to deliver the mortgages, SNGC filed suit against Saint Ivan in Orange County, California. SNGC and Saint Ivan then reached a settlement agreement in which Saint Ivan was required to pay $279,000 and assign twenty-three mortgages, including the Hood mortgage, to SNGC on or before July 12, 2007. In accordance with this settlement agreement, on July 12, 2007, Saint Ivan assigned the Hood mortgage to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (“MERS”), who held the mortgage as the beneficiary of SN Servicing Corporation. 1 SN Servicing Corporation serviced the loan for SNGC. 2 This mort *1251 gage assignment was not recorded until October 22, 2007.

On September 7, 2007, less than two months after Saint Ivan assigned the Hood mortgage to MERS but before MERS recorded that assignment, Saint Ivan assigned the same mortgage to Hendricks County Bank and Trust Company. Hendricks County Bank paid Saint Ivan $107,600 in exchange. Hendricks County Bank also received from Hood a deed in lieu of foreclosure with regard to a second mortgage Hood had taken out on the Avon real estate and defaulted on. The deed in lieu of foreclosure stated that the Avon real estate was conveyed subject to the first mortgage. Hendricks County Bank recorded both Saint Ivan’s mortgage assignment and Hood’s deed in lieu of foreclosure on October 24, 2007, two days after MERS recorded its assignment from Saint Ivan. Hendricks County Bank eventually released both mortgages and sold the Avon real estate to Michael and Sheila McDonald, who later sold the real estate to Normand and Linda Boutot in 2009.

In the meantime, in November 2007, SNGC filed a second suit against Saint Ivan in Orange County, California, regarding four of the mortgages, including the Hood mortgage, that were to be assigned to SNGC pursuant to the agreement to settle the first suit SNGC had filed against Saint Ivan. With regard to the Hood mortgage, the second suit alleged: (1) breach of the settlement agreement because Saint Ivan extinguished the mortgage it purported to assign to SNGC when Saint Ivan accepted $107,600 for the mortgage, (2) intentional misrepresentation because Saint Ivan misrepresented that it would assign the mortgage to SNGC when it knew it was going to accept payoff of the mortgage, (3) conversion because Saint Ivan received payoff of the mortgage after it had already assigned it to SNGC, (4) that SNGC was entitled to punitive damages for intentional misrepresentation and conversion, and (5) that Saint Ivan was liable for money had and received. The lawsuit requested $872,561.91 in damages for the payoff of three of the mortgages, including the Hood mortgage, $24,575.84 for attorney’s fees and loss of profit with regard to the fourth mortgage, and punitive damages.

In January 2009, SNGC and Saint Ivan entered into a settlement agreement that required Saint Ivan to pay SNGC $430,000. The agreement included a clause requiring Saint Ivan to continue to cooperate with SNGC “to execute any and all documents necessary [to] transfer and/or assign” the mortgages as required under the agreement settling the first suit. Appellant’s App. p. 210. In April 2009, the trial court entered a stipulated judgment based on this settlement agreement.

A few months later, on July 7, 2009, MERS assigned the Hood mortgage to Alaska Seaboard Partners Limited Partnership. SNGC and Alaska Seaboard are related companies. A few days later, MERS filed this lawsuit against Hood, Hendricks County Bank, the McDonalds, and the Boutots to foreclose on the Hood *1252 mortgage. Later that month, the MERS assignment to Alaska Seaboard was recorded. In November 2009, Alaska Seaboard was substituted as the plaintiff in the suit.

In June 2010, Hendricks County Bank moved for summary judgment. Among Hendricks County Bank’s designations of evidence was: (1) SNGC’s trial brief in its second suit against Saint Ivan asking for damages for breach of the first settlement agreement, intentional misrepresentation, and conversion and (2) the subsequent settlement agreement and stipulated judgment against Saint Ivan for $430,000. The McDonalds and the Boutots joined in Hendricks County Bank’s motion later that month. Alaska Seaboard filed its response and a cross-motion for summary judgment in July 2010. Hendricks County Bank responded, and the McDonalds and the Bou-tots joined in the response.

After a hearing, the trial court granted the summary judgment motion of Hendricks County Bank, the McDonalds, and the Boutots and denied Alaska Seaboard’s cross-motion for summary judgment.

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949 N.E.2d 1247, 2011 Ind. App. LEXIS 992, 2011 WL 2139172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaska-seaboard-partners-ltd-partnership-v-hood-indctapp-2011.