Buettner, III v. Residential Funding Corporation

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. California
DecidedOctober 17, 2023
Docket22-02015
StatusUnknown

This text of Buettner, III v. Residential Funding Corporation (Buettner, III v. Residential Funding Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buettner, III v. Residential Funding Corporation, (Cal. 2023).

Opinion

1 2 UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 3 In re: ) Edwin Buettner, III, and ) Michele Kay Elkins, ) Case No. 16-26531-C-13G 5 Debtors. ) ) Adv. Pro. No. 22-02015-C 6 || Hal Edwin Buettner, III, and ) Michele Kay Elkins, ) Consolidated 7 Plaintiffs, ) V. ) DCN BWWw-OO01 8 ) PHH Mortgage Corporation, ) 9 Defendants. ) In re: ) 10 || Kevin Randall Krone, ) Debtor. ) 11 )} Case No. 15-21528-A-13C Kevin Randall Krone, ) 12 Plaintiff, ) Adv. Pro. No. 22-02038-C ) 13 ) Consolidated PHH Mortgage Corporation, and ) 14 || Deutsche Bank National Trust } DCN BWW-OO1 Company, ) 15 Defendants. ) 16 ORDER AMENDING OPINION 17 The Opinion filed by this court on October 11, 2023, is 18 | hereby amended to correct nonsubstantive typographic errors. 19 The sentence on Page 14, lines 14-16, is corrected to read: 20} “PHH’s contention in this case that there is no federal statutory 21} or common law lien removal authority necessitates explaining 22 federal lien removal.” 23 A copy of the complete Opinion in corrected form is attached 24 || hereto 25 || patea: October 17, 2023 26 | | \| 27 We 28 United States Bankruptcy Judge

1 FOR PUBLICATION 2 UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 3 In re: ) 4 Hal Edwin Buettner, III, and ) Michele Kay Elkins, ) Case No. 16-26531-C-13G 5 Debtors. ) ________________________________) Adv. Pro. No. 22-02015-C 6 Hal Edwin Buettner, III, and ) Michele Kay Elkins, ) Consolidated 7 Plaintiffs, ) v. ) DCN BWW-001 8 ) PHH Mortgage Corporation, ) 9 ___________________D_e_f_e_n_d_a_n_t_s_.__)_____________________________ In re: ) 10 Kevin Randall Krone, ) Debtor. ) 11 ________________________________) Case No. 15-21528-A-13C Kevin Randall Krone, ) 12 Plaintiff, ) Adv. Pro. No. 22-02038-C v. ) 13 ) Consolidated PHH Mortgage Corporation, and ) 14 Deutsche Bank National Trust ) DCN BWW-001 Company, ) 15 ____________________D_e_f_e_n_d_a_n_t_s_.__) 16 OPINION 17 CHRISTOPHER M. KLEIN, Bankruptcy Judge: 18 Wholly unsecured junior mortgages may be “stripped off” and 19 rendered “void” in chapter 13 cases by virtue of 11 U.S.C. 20 §§ 506(d) and 1322(b)(2) once plan payments are complete. The 21 chapter 13 plan confirmation order determines the rights of the 22 junior mortgagee. The problem is how to implement the “strip off” 23 when unsecured junior mortgagees do not cooperate to clear title. 24 The issue in these quiet title actions is whether Bankruptcy 25 Courts have the power to order liens removed and to clear title 26 following completion of chapter 13 plan payments that render 27 “void” and “strip off” wholly unsecured mortgage liens pursuant 28 to § 506(d). The answer is yes; Federal Rule of Bankruptcy 1 Procedure 7070, incorporating Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 70, 2 embodies a federal lien removal power, which has been recognized 3 for more than a century, permitting federal courts to remove 4 liens and clear title. 5 The Rule 7070 federal cause of action is a species of in rem 6 judgment enforcement in which the judgment being enforced is the 7 final § 1322(b) order confirming the chapter 13 plan, which order 8 has res judicata effect and renders a lien “void” under § 506(d) 9 upon completion of plan payments. 10 Defendant PHH Mortgage Corporation1 contends on summary 11 judgment that there is no statutory or common law basis for the 12 federal cause of action and that, in any event, it was mooted 13 when PHH reconveyed during the adversary proceeding. PHH is not 14 correct – there is such a cause of action and belated 15 reconveyances by PHH in response to the filing of the Complaint 16 make the Plaintiffs “prevailing parties” for purposes of their 17 demands for attorneys’ fees under California Civil Code § 1717. 18 There is no genuine issue of material fact that the 19 Plaintiffs are “prevailing parties” on the federal count. The 20 actions qualify as “on the contract” for purposes of California 21 Civil Code § 1717, entitling Plaintiffs to invoke the attorneys’ 22 fee provisions in the underlying notes and deeds of trust. 23 As PHH has been fully heard on the federal cause of action 24 and on eligibility for attorneys’ fees and cannot win as a matter 25 of law, summary judgment will be entered for nonmoving parties. 26 27 1PHH Mortgage Corporation (“PHH”) is successor by merger to Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, which was successor in interest to 28 Residential Funding Corporation. Buettner Adv. Dkt. #54 at 7; Krone Adv. Dkt. # 37 at 7. Party names are restated as PHH. 1 Proceedings 2 These identical actions were consolidated because PHH is 3 lackadaisical (710 and 180 days) about reconveying deeds of trust 4 rendered void upon completion of chapter 13 payments. 5 The Complaint alleges five counts: declare value of deed of 6 trust under federal Law; extinguish lien under federal law; 7 violation of California Civil Code § 2941(d); breach of contract; 8 and attorneys’ fees. 9 PHH’s summary judgment motion addressing the federal law 10 counts contends: (1) there is no applicable federal statutory or 11 common law cause of action; (2) any such action became moot upon 12 reconveyance; and (3) attorneys’ fees are not available. 13 As will be explained, construing the record in the light 14 most favorable to the losing party, there is no genuine issue of 15 material fact that the Plaintiffs are “prevailing parties” on 16 their federal lien removal counts and that they are entitled to 17 judgment as a matter of law regarding their entitlement to fees. 18 This determination under federal law renders it unnecessary 19 to rule on state-law issues (Civil Code § 2941 and breach of 20 contract), even though they lead to similar results under 21 California law, but not necessarily under law of other states. 22 23 Jurisdiction 24 Subject-matter Jurisdiction is based on 28 U.S.C. § 1334(a). 25 In rem jurisdiction over property of the debtor as of the filing 26 of the case is founded on 11 U.S.C. § 1334(e)(1). Venue is 27 authorized by 28 U.S.C. § 1655 and Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7070. This 28 is a core proceeding. 28 U.S.C. §§ 157(b)(2)(B), (K), (L), & (O). 1 Summary Judgment Facts 2 These junior mortgages dating from 2006 are relics of the 3 housing mortgage bubble that collapsed into the Great Recession. 4 The easy money financing scheme that inflated the bubble was to 5 issue a first mortgage that arguably met underwriting standards 6 on a sketchy appraisal and a second mortgage for an additional 7 inflated purchase price, all on the fantasy that eternally rising 8 real estate values assured eventual payment in full. 9 These second mortgages are completely underwater. 10 11 Plaintiff Krone 12 Plaintiff Krone executed a “Secondary Lien Note” for 13 $61,740.00 and a “Secondary Lien Deed of Trust” on February 1, 14 2006, on real property in Yuba City, California. 15 Krone filed a chapter 13 case on February 27, 2015. Pursuant 16 to § 506(a), the PHH secured claim on the secondary deed of trust 17 was valued by court order at $0.00, leaving an allowed unsecured 18 claim. The chapter 13 plan was confirmed and performed. Notice of 19 Completed Plan Payments was docketed September 11, 2020. The 20 Trustee’s Final Report and Account filed December 11, 2020, 21 reported PHH was paid $41,365.80 on its allowed unsecured claim.

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Bluebook (online)
Buettner, III v. Residential Funding Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buettner-iii-v-residential-funding-corporation-caeb-2023.