Davies v. Fuhrer

2018 WI App 66, 921 N.W.2d 526, 384 Wis. 2d 415
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedSeptember 13, 2018
DocketAppeal No. 2017AP1956
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 WI App 66 (Davies v. Fuhrer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davies v. Fuhrer, 2018 WI App 66, 921 N.W.2d 526, 384 Wis. 2d 415 (Wis. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

¶ 1 This is a foreclosure action initiated by Laurence Davies against his daughter and son-in-law, Tamera Davies Fuhrer and Todd Fuhrer. At the time of the final judgment, Tamera and Todd were in the process of getting a divorce. This appeal involves just Laurence and his daughter Tamera. For ease of discussion, we ignore Todd and speak as if Tamera was the sole defendant and mortgagor during all relevant time periods.

¶ 2 The circuit court granted Laurence's motion for summary judgment of foreclosure. Tamera contends, for multiple reasons, that the circuit court erred in granting Laurence's summary judgment motion and that she is entitled to a court trial. We disagree, and affirm the circuit court.

Background

¶ 3 In 2005, Tamera purchased a house in Monona, Wisconsin, from her father, Laurence.1 Tamera financed the purchase with a mortgage loan from U.S. Bank. Tamera later took out a second mortgage.

¶ 4 In September 2008, Laurence assisted Tamera in refinancing her mortgage loans through McFarland State Bank. Tamera paid, respectively, $153,654.78 and $38,922.79 to pay off the first and second mortgages.2 Undisputed testimony from Laurence indicates that Tamera was paying 8.5% interest on the primary mortgage loan and about 11% interest on the second mortgage loan. Laurence assisted Tamera in consolidating the loans into a single 7% loan. A "First Payment Letter" from McFarland State Bank indicates that, after refinancing, Tamera ended up with a new principal and interest payment of $1,296.03 and an escrow payment of $331.61, for a total new payment of $1,627.64. Laurence was a cosigner on this refinanced mortgage loan.

¶ 5 In June 2011, Laurence paid off the mortgage loan on Tamera's home. Tamera asserted that this was done without her knowledge or approval. Laurence then offered Tamera a mortgage loan at 4.5%. The principal balance of the new loan included amounts that Tamera later contested in response to Laurence's foreclosure action but, at the time of the mortgage agreement with Laurence, Tamera agreed to a $191,846.63 mortgage loan at 4.5% interest with a principal and interest payment of $972.06 and an escrow payment of $409 for property taxes and insurance, for a total payment of $1,381.06. Tamera entered into this new mortgage loan agreement with Laurence in August 2011.

¶ 6 With exceptions that do not matter for purposes of this appeal, Tamera stayed mostly current with her principal and interest mortgage payments to Laurence until approximately January 2015. Thereafter, according to Laurence's amortization schedule and payment information submitted by Tamera, Tamera made five more monthly payments that, with one exception, excluded an amount for escrow. In effect, prior to the filing of the foreclosure action, Tamera's last mortgage payment was applied to her payment due in June 2015.3

¶ 7 Laurence commenced this foreclosure action about one year later in July 2016. In March 2017, Laurence filed a motion for summary judgment of foreclosure. Tamera filed a brief in opposition to Laurence's motion, along with a document titled "Statement of Proposed Undisputed Facts" with attached documentary support.

¶ 8 The circuit court held a hearing on the motion on June 28, 2017, at which Tamera appeared pro se. Perhaps because of incomplete and sometimes conflicting information in the pleadings and submissions, the circuit court permitted both parties to provide additional factual allegations, in the form of testimony. One focus of the hearing was on whether there were any material factual disputes regarding Tamera's payment history and Laurence's handling of the escrow payments.

¶ 9 According to Laurence's documentation and his testimony, most of Tamera's payments included the agreed-on escrow amount of $409. Laurence did not keep a separate escrow account, and he does not dispute that he did not, either directly or through Tamera, apply all of the escrow payments to property taxes and insurance. Laurence's documents and testimony indicate that he received from Tamera escrow payments totaling $15,542 and that he disbursed $9,910.35, including a direct payment of 2013 property taxes of $4,675.59 and a $3,000 payment to Tamera at the end of 2012 for attorney fees she owed.

¶ 10 Tamera disputed these figures. According to Tamera, she paid a total of $18,814 in escrow to Laurence and, from that amount, Laurence only paid property taxes in 2013 and gave her an additional $3,000. In total, Tamera stated that Laurence paid $7,675.59 for her benefit. Thus, Tamera contended that Laurence owed her $11,138.41, the difference between the $18,814 in escrow payments to Laurence and the $7,675.59 disbursed for her benefit. According to Tamera, she paid her homeowner's insurance without help from Laurence or the escrow account.4

¶ 11 The circuit court accepted Tamera's accounting of Laurence's handling of escrow funds as correct and concluded that Tamera should get a "credit" of $11,138.41 that she could use toward paying the delinquent property taxes. The court inquired about the current back taxes owed. Tamera informed the court that, as of June, 2, 2017, the back taxes, penalties, and interest totaled $13,110.5

¶ 12 When Tamera was asked by the circuit court about falling behind in mortgage payments, she did not, at least in any clear way, blame Laurence's handling of the escrow funds. Rather, she said she fell behind because of surgery for cancer, her husband leaving her, a torn rotator cuff injury, and her inability to work, first because of cancer and later because of the shoulder injury. We acknowledge that Tamera made the vague assertion that the "[mortgage] got screwed up ... because of the escrow account." But, when questioned further by the circuit court, she repeated that the reason she missed mortgage payments was that she "got cancer... and then [her] husband left." Indeed, Tamera stated: "I breached the contract in April of 2015 when I was not able to make any more payments because I was not working and had no income."

¶ 13 The circuit court concluded that there was no dispute that Tamera defaulted on her obligation to make principal and interest payments to Laurence under the mortgage note and, therefore, granted Laurence's request for a foreclosure judgment. As to Tamera's allegation that Laurence failed to use $11,138.41 in escrow funds to pay property taxes and insurance, the court, as noted, accepted Tamera's assertion and, as a remedy, reduced Laurence's judgment. However, the circuit court reduced Laurence's judgment, not by the $11,138.41 claimed by Tamera, but by $13,110, the amount of the current tax delinquency, as reported by Tamera. The foreclosure judgment gives Tamera an "escrow credit" of $13,110 "as a result of [Tamera's] escrow account with [Laurence]."

Discussion

¶ 14 Tamera challenges the circuit court's decision to grant summary judgment to Laurence. We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, employing the same methodology as the circuit court. Palisades Collection LLC v. Kalal , 2010 WI App 38, ¶ 9, 324 Wis. 2d 180, 781 N.W.2d 503.

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Bluebook (online)
2018 WI App 66, 921 N.W.2d 526, 384 Wis. 2d 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davies-v-fuhrer-wisctapp-2018.