Bibi v. Elfrink

408 P.3d 809
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 2017
Docket7202 S-15987
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 408 P.3d 809 (Bibi v. Elfrink) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bibi v. Elfrink, 408 P.3d 809 (Ala. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

STOWERS, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

' Mariam Bibi and'Javed Raja married and later bought a home in Anchorage with loans from IndyMac Bank, F.S.B. (IndyMac). In-dyMac’s loans were secured by deeds of trust on their home. The couple later received an additional loan of around $10,000 from Kerin Elfrink. The loan from Elfrink charged 10% interest but also included a funding fee of $4,000 rolled into the rest of the loan for payment over time rather .than charged and paid at the outset. Over the course of six years, the couple made irregular payments, increased the loan balance three times until it exceeded $25,000, and eventually defaulted. Elfrink initiated foreclosure proceedings and then bought the house at his own foreclosure sale by credit-bidding all money he asserted was due to him under thé modified promissory note, satisfying the couple’s debt to him.

Following the foreclosure, Elfrink filed a complaint against Bibi and Raja for forcible entry and detainer to remove them from the home. Bibi moved out of her home but filed a counterclaim for usury, quiet title and possession, and surplus proceeds from the foreclosure sale. Raja confessed judgment to his removal from the home. As 'the lawsuit proceeded, IndyMac initiated a foreclosure on its senior deed of trust and Elfrink bought the house for a second time at IndyMac’s foreclosure sale. The superior court ultimately denied Bibi’s usury claim, determining that Bibi had no standing, her claim was time barred, and in any event, the loan did not violate Alaska’s usury statute because the funding fee was not interest and the usury statute did not apply once the loan’s principal rose over *813 $25,000. 1 The superior court also, denied Bibi’s claim for title, ruling that the foreclosure statutes gave Elfrink clear title.

Bibi appeals. We hold that (1) Bibi has standing; (2) it was error for the .superior court to deny Bibi’s usury claim because the funding fee was disguised interest and violated the usury statute, which applied to at least the initial period of the loan’s life; and (3) the superior court correctly denied Bibi’s claim for title and possession of her prior home because IndyMac’s foreclosure extinguished hér claim to the property.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Mariam Bibi married Javed Raja in Pakistan. The couple moved to Alaska and had two children. They eventually bought a house in Anchorage in August 2006. They financed the purchase of their home with two promissory notes to IndyMac for $2Í6,000 and $54,000. The notes were secured by first and second deeds of trust on the couple's home'. Approximately seven months after they purchased their home, the couple’s pizza business, Pizza Omega and Luigi’s Pizza, were struggling. They needed money, and Raja went to Kevin Elfrink for help. Elfrink was a real estate broker who had met Raja briefly when Elfrink was selling property near the couple’s pizza business.

Elfrink started making loans in the 1990s and did a few per year, borrowing money against his credit cards to finance them. El-frink met with Raja and Bibi and they executed a promissory note in the amount of $14,597, dated March 19, 2007, to be paid back with 10% interest by March T6, 2009. But Raja and Bibi only received $10,597 at the time: $9,950 plus money to pay for the $647 in closing costs. The extra $4,000 Raja and Bibi were obligated to pay back was a “funding.fee” Elfrink charged. Elfrink testified that the fee was to compensate him for educating himself about the pizza businesses, inventorying their equipment, making calls, and generally ensuring that he was making a sound loan; he also testified that he only charges the fee when he decides to extend a loan, not when he declines. The loan was secured by a security agreement on the pizza businesses, as well as á third deed of trust on Bibi and ■ Raja’s home. The deed of trust contained language stating it was for the purpose of securing “[pjayment of the indebtedness evidenced by the promissory note ... including all renewals, extensions or modifications -thereto.”

The loan was escrowed at First National Bank Alaska (FNBA). Over the next six years the couple made irregular'payments and the account balance was increased three times through amendments to the escrow instructions, though Bibi claims these increases occurred without her knowledge. In September 2007 Raja and Elfrink signed an amendment to the escrow instructions increasing the account balance by $7,061. The amendment was not signed by Bibi. In February 2008 Raja and Elfrink increased the account balance a second time by $4,632.90 through an amendment to the escrow instructions.' Again, Bibi did not sign the amendment. These two amendments together brought the account balance up to $23,467.51.

Meanwhile in.May 2007, Raja had hired Elfrink to sell Pizza Qmega for $169,000 and signed a listing with a 10% commission. The pizza parlor later sold for about $90,000, and for the commission Raja signed an escrow instruction form in March 2008 making, a third and final increase of $12,153.49 to the loan balance. Bibi’s signature is on this amendment form, but she testified that she did not sign.the form, and Raja testified he did not sign for her. Bibi testified that she knew nothing about these three balance increases until her attorney sent her documents obtained from Elfrink through discov-éry shortly before trial.

With the loan increase in March 2008 the account balance rose to $35,621. The interest rate was increased at that tíme to 12%, the maturity date was extended' by nine years, monthly payments were lowered to $500 per month, and Elfrink waived the existing delinquency. Between- May and December 2008 Bibi and Raja made eight monthly payments *814 of $500. In 2009 they made another five monthly payments of $500. In 2010 they made three payments totaling $1,300. Bibi and Raja’s last two payments on the debt were each for $500, one in 2011 and one in 2012. In addition, Bibi claimed a $500 payment was made in June 2013, and Raja testified to making a $2,500 payment outside of the FNBA escrow account sometime after mid-2013.

In June 2013 Elfrink closed the escrow account. FNBA calculated that interest had been paid only through July 2009 and that the principal balance was $35,275.72. All in all, Raja and Bibi had paid Elfrink $13,419.32 or $13,919.32 through the escrow account, depending on whether they are credited with the final June 2013 payment of $500.

Elfrink commenced foreclosure proceedings in August 2013 and notice of default was sent to Raja and Bibi. Alaska Trustee, LLC conducted a trustee’s sale in November 2013. Based on audit figures from FNBA, the trustee calculated the amount due under the deed of trust to be $56,629.65. This was the amount necessary to cover $35,275.72 in unpaid principal, $18,486.41 in interest accruing since July 2009 — the date Bibi and Raja had stopped paying on the interest — plus escrow fees, late fees, and fees charged by the trustee for conducting the foreclosure sale. El-frink purchased the property at the foreclosure sale by offering this amount as an offset bid. 2 He was not required to pay any cash because he was entitled to the amount he bid as the beneficiary of the deed of trust.

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Bluebook (online)
408 P.3d 809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bibi-v-elfrink-alaska-2017.