CoreFirst Bank & Trust v. Degginger

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedNovember 27, 2019
Docket119208
StatusUnpublished

This text of CoreFirst Bank & Trust v. Degginger (CoreFirst Bank & Trust v. Degginger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CoreFirst Bank & Trust v. Degginger, (kanctapp 2019).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 119,208

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

COREFIRST BANK & TRUST f/k/a COMMERCE BANK & TRUST, Appellee,

v.

TIMOTHY DEGGINGER, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Shawnee District Court; LARRY D. HENDRICKS, judge. Opinion filed November 27, 2019. Affirmed.

Eric Kjorlie, of Topeka, for appellant.

R. Patrick Riordan, of Riordan, Fincher & Beckerman, P.A., of Topeka, for appellee.

Before SCHROEDER, P.J., BUSER and ATCHESON, JJ.

ATCHESON, J.: Defendant Timothy Degginger appeals the decision of the Shawnee County District Court granting summary judgment to Plaintiff CoreFirst Bank & Trust in this mortgage foreclosure action and rulings awarding the bank attorney fees. We find no error in those determinations and affirm.

Degginger owns a house on a lot in Topeka that has been in his family for several generations. Degginger lives elsewhere, and the property is not considered his homestead. In 2004, he received a line of credit from CoreFirst Bank, then known as Commerce

1 Bank and Trust, and mortgaged the property as collateral. About seven years later, Degginger sought and received a loan from the bank for his foundry business, for which he signed a promissory note. The bank retained the mortgage on the property as security for that loan.

Degginger fell into arrears on the loan, and CoreFirst Bank filed a petition in 2015 to foreclose on the mortgage. The bank followed with a motion and supporting memorandum and exhibits seeking summary judgment. The district court granted the motion. The case then took various procedural twists and turns when Degginger filed a motion to dismiss, arguing he apparently didn't own a full fee-simple interest in the property and the bank purportedly withheld that information from him despite making the loans to him and taking a mortgage on the property. Based on the record evidence, the district court expressed concern that the judgment was sufficiently supported and directed the bank to review the chain of title and to provide notice to anyone with a potential interest in the property. The district court also entered an order requiring Degginger to pay attorney fees as provided in the loan documents. Degginger filed an appeal that this court dismissed for lack of a final judgment, since the bank hadn't completed its investigation of the property's title history.

CoreFirst Bank then filed an amended petition identifying additional parties with potential interests in the property. Degginger responded with an answer and a counterclaim for fraud. The bank filed a second motion for summary judgment with an expanded memorandum and evidentiary record seeking foreclosure on its petition and dismissal of Degginger's counterclaim. The documents CoreFirst Bank presented traced the chain of title to the property from Degginger's grandparents to various relatives and ultimately to him, establishing that the full fee-simple title had been reunified when his sister died and he took her interest by right of survivorship. In response to the second summary judgment motion, Degginger did not dispute the documents and other evidence regarding the transfers of various interests in the property or that he ultimately came into

2 possession of all of those interests. The district court entered summary judgment for CoreFirst Bank on the counterclaim, prompting various motions from Degginger, all of which were denied. Degginger again tried to appeal, but this court again denied the appeal as premature because the district court hadn't ruled on CoreFirst Bank's request for foreclosure.

The district court then entered judgment for CoreFirst Bank and issued a foreclosure order. Degginger filed several motions challenging the judgment; the district court denied them. And the district court granted CoreFirst Bank's motion for additional attorney fees. Degginger has now perfected an appeal that we consider.

On appeal, Degginger unleashes a diffuse collection of arguments premised on the inability of the district court to find in the bank's favor either because he didn't hold the full fee-simple title or because a tax lien somehow precluded foreclosure. He reiterates his assertion that bank officers involved in the loan transactions knew about those purported obstacles and somehow committed fraud by failing to disclose them. In turn, he weaves those arguments into barriers to the foreclosure statutes and under the holder in due course provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code. He further suggests that the fee- simple title either had not been or could not be reunited in him. Degginger also challenges the district court's orders granting attorney fees to CoreFirst Bank.

In reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we apply the same standard as the district court. Trear v. Chamberlain, 308 Kan. 932, 936, 425 P.3d 297 (2018). A party seeking summary judgment has the obligation to show, based on appropriate evidentiary materials, there are no disputed issues of material fact and judgment may, therefore, be entered in its favor as a matter of law. 308 Kan. at 935; Shamberg, Johnson & Bergman, Chtd. v. Oliver, 289 Kan. 891, 900, 220 P.3d 333 (2009). In essence, the movant argues there is nothing for a jury or a trial judge sitting as fact-finder to decide that would make any difference. In ruling on a summary judgment request, the district court must view the

3 evidence most favorably to the party opposing the motion and give that party the benefit of every reasonable inference that might be drawn from the evidentiary record. Trear, 308 Kan. at 935-36; Shamberg, 289 Kan. at 900. So CoreFirst Bank had to satisfy that standard to obtain summary judgment on its foreclosure petition and on Degginger's counterclaim for fraud.

The uncontroverted facts CoreFirst Bank submitted in support of its second motion for summary judgment established that Degginger held the full fee-simple title to the mortgaged property and had since his sister's death in 1999. Degginger tries to call that evidence into question because a report from a title company suggested a possible kink in the chain of title because his grandfather and grandmother held the property as tenants in common rather than as joint tenants with a right of survivorship. But the actual documents CoreFirst Bank produced (and Degginger didn't dispute) demonstrate the title company's report was abundantly cautious in its concern, though the concern proved unfounded upon inspection of the chain of title between Degginger and his grandparents.

Degginger's arguments pivot on the erroneous factual premise that he had less than a full fee-simple interest in the property. So they fail for that reason. Degginger owned the property in fee simple. And, in turn, the facts presented a fairly standard foreclosure action, notwithstanding his efforts to suggest impediments making it otherwise and his serial motions and attempts to appeal that delayed the procedural progression in this case.

Degginger also suggests a tax lien on the property fouled up foreclosure or somehow implicated the bank officers in nefarious plotting in extending the loans to him. Neither assertion is correct. Some (and, perhaps, most) tax liens would be paid as a priority from the proceeds of a foreclosure sale. Their existence, however, would not preclude a foreclosure sale. Likewise, a bank making a loan and taking real property subject to a tax lien as collateral, simply reduces the amount it might recover in a

4 foreclosure action.

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CoreFirst Bank & Trust v. Degginger, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corefirst-bank-trust-v-degginger-kanctapp-2019.