Day v. Longvue Mortgage Capital Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedJune 12, 2020
Docket2:17-cv-01596
StatusUnknown

This text of Day v. Longvue Mortgage Capital Inc. (Day v. Longvue Mortgage Capital Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Day v. Longvue Mortgage Capital Inc., (D. Nev. 2020).

Opinion

1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 2 DISTRICT OF NEVADA 3 Randolph Day, Case No.: 2:17-cv-01596-JAD-EJY

4 Plaintiff

5 v. Order Granting Summary Judgment in Favor of Defendants and Dissolving 6 Longvue Mortgage Capital Inc., as trustee for Injunction WestVue NPL Trust II, and American 7 Solutions, LLC, [ECF Nos. 55, 58, 70]

8 Defendants

9 Plaintiff Randolph Day brought this action to avoid foreclosure on his Henderson, 10 Nevada, home after many years of failing to pay his $900,000 mortgage, and he was granted a 11 preliminary injunction enjoining foreclosure early in this action.1 Day’s claims are based on two 12 main theories: that the endorsement of the note from his mortgage broker to the lender was 13 invalid and that the named trustee lacked the authority to foreclose after it assigned its interest to 14 another entity in 2015. The parties now cross-move for summary judgment.2 Because I find that 15 Day’s theories and claims are unsupported by the record, I grant summary judgment in favor of 16 the defendants, dissolve the preliminary injunction, and close this case. 17 Background 18 I. Flagstar Bank was the original note holder and beneficiary of the deed of trust. 19 In 2007, Randolph Day bought the home at 32 Via Paradiso Street in Henderson, 20 Nevada,3 with a $900,000 mortgage loan that he obtained by executing an adjustable-rate note in 21 22 1 ECF No. 15 (minutes). 23 2 ECF Nos. 55 (plaintiff’s motion); 58 (defendants’ motion). 3 ECF No. 58-1 (note). 1 favor of Mortgage Max Corporation, the mortgage brokerage that Day owned.4 Day secured the 2 note with a deed of trust in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) as 3 nominee for Mortgage Max.5 The deed of trust was recorded in Clark County, Nevada, on April 4 18, 2007, as Instrument No. 20070418-0003075.6 5 Mortgage Max was only the loan originator, not the lender, so it “did not have the power

6 or the authority to execute any endorsement.”7 That power remained with the lender, Flagstar 7 Bank, FSB, and the note contains an endorsement to Flagstar that is signed by Dorothy Davis, a 8 Loan Operations Associate with Flagstar.8 The note also contains an endorsement in blank for 9 Flagstar’s Senior Vice President and First Vice President.9 “Mortgage Max signed an 10 Endorsement Authorization Agreement (EAA) that empowered Flagstar, and its employees, to 11 endorse the note and assign the deed of trust on behalf of Mortgage Max.”10 Day also signed the 12 EAA.11 13 II. Flagstar assigns the loan to WestVue in June 2015. 14 Flagstar serviced the loan from 2007 to 2015.12 In June 2015, it assigned its interest in

15 the deed of trust to WestVue NPL Trust II and recorded the assignment.13 Flagstar also 16

17 4 ECF Nos. 1-1 (entity details); 58-2 at 5–6 (Day’s deposition). 18 5 ECF 58-3 (deed of trust). 6 Id. 19 7 ECF No. 58-1 at 4. 20 8 Id. 21 9 Id. at 5. 10 ECF Nos. 58 at 4; 58-4 at 13–14 (EAA). 22 11 Id. 23 12 ECF No. 58-4 at 4. 13 ECF No. 58-7 (WestVue assignment). 1 transferred the note to WestVue, thus making WestVue the holder of the note and the record 2 beneficiary for the deed of trust. Longvue Mortgage Capital Inc. serviced the loan for 3 WestVue.14 4 III. WestVue assigns the loan to WVUE in December 2015. 5 Longvue’s Rule 30(b)(6) designee Kevin Braga testified that WVUE 2015-I presently

6 holds the rights to the Day loan.15 Braga later explained in his declaration that WVUE 2015-I 7 and WestVue are “trust entities owned by the same investor that hold pools of loans that are 8 regularly transferred between those entities and other trust entities owned by the same 9 investor.”16 “WestVue transferred the Day loan to WVUE on December 11, 2015,” and 10 “[p]ursuant to an agreement between WestVue and WVUE[,] either party may proceed with 11 foreclosure on a Note and Deed of Trust on behalf of the other and in its own name, even though 12 the other party may hold the Note and Deed of Trust.”17 WVUE did not record the assignment 13 of the deed of trust until May 20, 2019, approximately two years into this lawsuit.18 14 IV. Longvue attempts to foreclose on Day’s home.

15 Day testified, and his wife Mary confirmed, that Mary made all of the mortgage 16 payments on the loan until 2011, when Carrington, their loan servicer at the time, sold the loan to 17 Flagstar and the Days stopped receiving payment statements.19 WestVue, not WVUE, caused 18

19 14 ECF No. 59 at 5. 15 ECF No. 59-9 at 3 (Braga’s deposition). 20 16 ECF No. 59 at 3 (Braga’s declaration). 21 17 Id. 18 ECF No. 58-8 (WVUE assignment). 22 19 ECF No. 58-2 at 12 (Randolph Day’s deposition); 58-10 at 4 (Mary Day’s deposition). 23 Carrington serviced the loan at some point after Flagstar initially serviced it, and Flagstar began servicing the loan again in 2011. See id.; ECF No. 55-1 at 2. In November 2010, while Carrington was the loan servicer, Day and Carrington agreed to a loan modification, increasing 1 three Notices of Default to be recorded: in June 2016, February 2017, and March 2017.20 For 2 each notice, WestVue, not WVUE, attested that it was the current beneficiary of the deed of 3 trust.21 But WVUE certified that it held the original note, deed of trust, and each subsequent 4 endorsement for the first notice.22 5 Day participated in a foreclosure meditation for the first notice, but neither WestVue nor

6 WVUE attended.23 However, Longvue participated in the process by reviewing—and denying— 7 Day’s request for a loan modification.24 The second notice was rescinded in March 2017, the 8 same day that Longvue filed the third notice.25 And in June 2017, WestVue’s servicer filed a 9 Notice of Trustee’s Sale, scheduling the foreclosure sale for July 3, 2017.26 10 V. Day sues and the foreclosure sale was enjoined. 11 Day filed this action in June 2017 and successfully moved to enjoin the foreclosure 12 sale.27 He asserts causes of action for statutorily defective foreclosure, slander of title, lack of 13 standing to foreclose/wrongful foreclosure, violations of the Fair Debt Collections Practices Act, 14 deceptive trade practices, civil racketeering, mortgage-lending fraud, and intentional infliction of

15 emotional distress.28 16

the principal balance of the loan to $902,667.01, setting a lower monthly payment schedule, and 17 otherwise reaffirming the terms of the original loan and deed of trust. ECF No. 58-6 at 2–4. 18 20 ECF No. 55-7 at 3 (First NOD); 55-9 (Second NOD); 55-10 (Third NOD). 21 ECF No. 55-7. 19 22 ECF No. 55-8 (certificate of possession). 20 23 ECF No. 55-1 at 4 (Day’s declaration) 21 24 ECF No. 59 at 4. 25 ECF No. 55-11 (notice of recission). 22 26 ECF No. 55-12 (notice of trustee’s sale). 23 27 ECF Nos. 4 (motion for preliminary injunction); 15 (minute order entering injunction). 28 ECF No. 1 (complaint). 1 Day now moves for partial summary on three of his claims—statutorily defective 2 foreclosure, wrongful foreclosure, and slander of title—based on his theory that WestVue did not 3 have the authority to foreclose on the home in 2016 and 2017 because it had already assigned its 4 interest to WVUE in December 2015.29 WestVue cross-moves for summary judgment on all of 5 Day’s claims.30 Its principal argument is that “WestVue and WVUE are trust entities owned by

6 the same investor that holds pools of loans that are regularly transferred between those two 7 entities and other[s] owned by the same investor” and, based on this arrangement, WestVue and 8 WVUE had an agreement that WestVue could foreclose on a loan in its name and on WVUE’s 9 behalf.31 Day conceded his seventh (mortgage-lending fraud) and eighth (IIED) claims, so I 10 grant summary judgment to WestVue on those claims and address only the parties’ points for the 11 remaining claims. 12 Discussion 13 I.

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