Bank-Fund Staff Federal Credit Union v. Cuellar

639 A.2d 561, 1994 D.C. App. LEXIS 47, 1994 WL 99504
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 15, 1994
Docket91-CV-1325, 92-CV-282
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 639 A.2d 561 (Bank-Fund Staff Federal Credit Union v. Cuellar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank-Fund Staff Federal Credit Union v. Cuellar, 639 A.2d 561, 1994 D.C. App. LEXIS 47, 1994 WL 99504 (D.C. 1994).

Opinion

ROGERS, Chief Judge:

These consolidated appeals involve the right to cure residential mortgage foreclosure defaults under D.C.Code § 45-715.1 (Repl.1990). 1 In the first appeal, No. 91-CV-1325, appellant Bank-Fund Staff Federal Credit Union sued the Vivados, appellees, 2 for possession of real property and now appeals from the grant of summary judgment to appellees. The Bank-Fund contends that the trial judge erred (1) in ruling that the Bank-Fund’s statutory notice of foreclosure was deficient for failure to include a statement of the amount necessary to cure the Vivados’ loan default, despite a finding that the Vivados had actual notice of the amount needed, and (2) in determining on summary judgment that the mortgage loan was a “residential mortgage” under D.C.Code § 45-715.1 (Repl.1990). We hold that the foreclosure notice was invalid for two reasons: it erroneously stated that the Vivados did not have a right to cure and it failed to include the cure amount. Consequently, the Bank-Fund lacked standing, as the trial judge ruled, to obtain possession of the property.

In the second appeal, No. 92-CV-282, the Vivados, 3 having obtained a preliminary injunction to prevent the Bank-Fund et al. (and their trustees, employees and agents) from proceeding with the foreclosure on their home, contend that the motions judge erred in requiring them to pay, as security for the injunction, an amount equal to their monthly mortgage payments under the first and second trusts on the property. While we find no abuse of discretion by the motions judge in requiring security in such an amount, see Super.Ct.Civ.R. 65(c), consistent with our holding in the first appeal, we hold that the *564 cure amount stated in the foreclosure notice must be accurate, and because the record does not permit us to determine whether the cure amount was accurately stated in the foreclosure notice, a remand is required.

Accordingly, we affirm the grant of summary judgment to the Vivados in the first appeal, No. 91-CV-1325, and we remand the case to the trial court in the second appeal, No. 92-CV-282, to afford the Bank-Fund an opportunity to show that the cure amount stated in the November 25, 1991, foreclosure notice was properly based on amounts secured by the property at issue.

I.

The property at issue is a private, single-family residence in the District of Columbia. It is undisputed that on April 1, 1986, Guillermo and Dalia Vivado borrowed $36,000 from the Bank-Fund in order to pay off a seller take-back second trust given in 1983, when the Vivados originally bought their house at 4313 Embassy Park Drive, N.W. 4 It is also undisputed that the Vivados defaulted on their obligations. 5 On May 4, 1990, the Bank-Fund instituted foreclosure proceedings by mailing notice to the Vivados in LaPaz, Bolivia and to the Recorder of Deeds for the District of Columbia. The notice, on the Recorder of Deeds’ standard form — “Notice of Foreclosure Sale of Real Property or Condominium Unit” — stated that $46,397.73 plus expenses was the minimum balance required to cure the default obligation and reinstate the mortgage loan. A foreclosure sale set for June 6, 1990, did not occur as a result of an automatic stay under the bankruptcy laws. It was not until after the bankruptcy court modified the automatic stay, that the Bank-Fund was able to proceed with foreclosure proceedings. 6

On August 6, 1990, the Bank-Fund mailed a foreclosure notice to the Vivados’ Bolivian address and to the Recorder of Deeds setting September 5, 1990, as the date of the foreclosure sale. The August 6,1990 notice, also on the Recorder of Deeds’ standard form, unlike the May 4, 1990, notice, did not indicate the “amount to cure.” Instead, in the space on the Recorder’s standard form designated — “Minimum balance required to cure default obligation pursuant to D.C.Law 5-82 ‘Right to Cure a Residential Mortgage Foreclosure Default Act of 1984’” — the Bank-Fund had written “N/A — not a ‘residential mortgage.’ ”

By letter of September 7,1990, counsel for the Bank-Fund advised counsel for the Viva-dos, referring to an agreement reached on September 5, 1990, that in exchange for a payment by them of $20,000 to be applied toward the balance of the loan, the Bank-Fund agreed to postpone the foreclosure sale until October 3, 1990, in order to afford the Vivados a “limited opportunity to pay-off the mortgage loan” on the property. The letter also stated that “[i]t is understood that reinstatement of the mortgage loan account will not be permitted and that no further continuances will be granted.” 7 The letter stated that the amount required to pay off the loan was $98,753.80. According to the Bank-Fund, the Vivados were unable to raise the necessary funds, and the Bank-Fund purchased the property at the foreclosure sale *565 on October 3, 1990. 8 On March 28,1991, the Embassy Road property was conveyed by deed to the Bank-Fund.

On April 12, 1991, the Bank-Fund filed suit for possession against the Vivados on the ground that they were wrongfully holding over as former owners. A consent protective order was entered by praecipe dated May 8, 1991. 9 In their answer to the complaint, the Vivados asserted that the complaint for possession should be dismissed because of defects in the foreclosure sale. The Bank-Fund filed a motion for summary judgment and stated, as material facts not in dispute, that the Vivados were “at all relevant times to these proceedings” living in Bolivia, that they had received the notice of foreclosure required under § 45-715.1(b), and that following proper advertisement the property was sold to the bank at the foreclosure sale on October 3, 1990. The Bank-Fund argued that “[u]pon information and belief, the property was rental property and, therefore, the Bank-Fund loan did not satisfy the definition of a ‘residential mortgage’ under the statute.” Alternatively, the Bank-Fund argued that even if the Vivados were entitled to have their loan reinstated under the statute, the notice was not deficient because the “amount to cure” was not required by § 45 — 715.1(b) to be in the foreclosure notice. Furthermore, argued the Bank-Fund, the Vivados’ counsel had informed the Bank-Fund on September 5, 1990, that they did not have the money needed to cure the default and reinstate the loan. Additionally, the Bank-Fund argued that even if the Vivados had sufficient funds on September 5, 1990, the date of the foreclosure sale, neither the statute nor the loan documents required the Bank-Fund to permit reinstatement at that time. The Bank-Fund also referred to an agreement of September 5,1990, negotiated by counsel for the parties, whereby the sale was postponed until October 3, 1990, to afford time for the Viva-dos to pay off the delinquent loan account.

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Bluebook (online)
639 A.2d 561, 1994 D.C. App. LEXIS 47, 1994 WL 99504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-fund-staff-federal-credit-union-v-cuellar-dc-1994.