DIPLOMAT PROPERTY MANAGER, LLC vs. LOZANO, 102 Mass. App. Ct. 57
SULLIVAN, J. In this summary process action, the defendants, James A. Lozano and Crystal A. Himes, appeal from a judgment
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entered after a judge of the Housing Court allowed a motion for summary judgment granting possession of a condominium unit in Upton (unit) [Note 2] to the plaintiff, Diplomat Property Manager, LLC (Diplomat). [Note 3] On appeal, the defendants challenge Diplomat's standing to bring a summary process action, the authority of the foreclosing entity to foreclose on the unit, and the denial of their motion to dismiss due to a prior pending action. [Note 4] For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
Background. We summarize the facts from the summary judgment record in the light most favorable to the defendants, reserving certain facts for later discussion. See Williams v. Board of Appeals of Norwell, 490 Mass. 684, 685 (2022). We do so aware that "[a]ny doubts as to the existence of a genuine issue of material fact are to be resolved against the party moving for summary judgment." Lev v. Beverly Enters.-Mass., Inc., 457 Mass. 234, 237 (2010).
The defendants purchased the unit and obtained a mortgage loan of $280,000 on September 1, 2005, from Mortgage Master, Inc., secured by a first mortgage on the unit granted to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS), as nominee for Mortgage Master, Inc. On the same day, the defendants also obtained a second loan from Mortgage Master, Inc. in the amount of $50,500, secured by a second mortgage on the property, also granted to MERS. The judge noted that the defendants stopped making payment on their loan obligations in March 2011, and have not made any payments since then. On appeal, the defendants do not contend otherwise.
On January 6, 2012, MERS assigned the defendants' first mortgage to CitiMortgage, Inc. CitiMortgage, Inc.'s loan servicer sent a written notice of default on the defendants' first mortgage loan on February 2, 2012, and on March 29, 2012, sent another notice of default and notice of the defendants' right to cure
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pursuant to G. L. c. 244, § 35A. CitiMortgage, Inc. thereafter assigned the defendants' first mortgage to Citibank, N.A., as trustee for the benefit of SWDNSI Trust Series 20010-2 on September 26, 2013, and on January 14, 2016, Citibank, N.A. assigned it to "Christiana Trust, a division of Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB, not in its individual capacity, but solely as separate trustee for PennyMac Loan Trust 2012-NPL1" (Christiana Trust). The defendants do not dispute that Christiana Trust also held the defendants' note. Between September 5, 2014, and April 22, 2016, Christiana Trust's servicer sent at least eight letters to the defendants noting their default and informing them of mortgage assistance programs. So far as the record reflects, the defendants did not respond.
On November 30, 2016, Christiana Trust conducted a duly noticed foreclosure sale at which Christiana Trust was the high bidder with a bid of $301,000. [Note 5] After acquiring title at the foreclosure sale, Christiana Trust transferred the unit by quitclaim deed to PNMAC Mortgage Co., LLC (PNMAC), and on March 1, 2018, PNMAC transferred the unit by quitclaim deed to Diplomat.
On November 14, 2018, Diplomat served on the defendants a notice to vacate the unit, and on May 13, 2019, Diplomat served the defendants with a summary process summons and complaint seeking possession and use and occupancy charges. The defendants filed an answer that included defenses claiming, among other things, superior title to Diplomat and that Diplomat lacked standing.
Ultimately, on Diplomat's motion for summary judgment, the judge concluded that Christiana Trust (i) was a trade name of Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB, (ii) had authority to exercise the statutory power of sale, and (iii) conducted a proper foreclosure sale and passed valid title to PNMAC, which then passed valid title to Diplomat. The judge concluded that Diplomat was entitled to possession and use and occupancy payments of $67,200, and awarded Diplomat a total of $79,009.11.
Discussion. "Summary judgment is appropriate where there is no material issue of fact in dispute and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." HSBC Bank USA, N.A. v. Morris, 490 Mass. 322, 326 (2022) (Morris). The burden is on
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the moving party to affirmatively demonstrate "the absence of a genuine issue of material fact on every relevant issue, regardless of who would have the burden on that issue at trial." Khalsa v. Sovereign Bank, N.A., 88 Mass. App. Ct. 824, 829 (2016), quoting Arcidi v. National Ass'n of Gov't Employees, Inc., 447 Mass. 616, 619 (2006). We review the judge's decision on summary judgment de novo, and we may affirm on any grounds supported by the record. Roman v. Trustees of Tufts College, 461 Mass. 707, 710-711 (2012).
1. Standing. The defendants contend that Diplomat lacks standing to bring a summary process action because it is a "remote purchaser," that is, a purchaser that did not purchase the unit at the foreclosure sale. They rely on a series of cases first generated in the Nineteenth Century for the proposition that "if facts do not fall within the narrow classes of cases for which summary process may be used, there must be resort to the writ of entry. Summary process cannot be extended to try title in cases outside its terms." Sheehan Constr. Co. v. Dudley, 299 Mass. 51, 53 (1937), and cases cited. See Warren v. James, 130 Mass. 540, 542-543 (1880). [Note 6]
However, this narrow construction of the summary process statute has been largely negated since the merger of law and equity in 1974. See G. L. c. 231, § 31, as appearing in St. 1973, c. 1114, § 164; Mass. R. Civ. P. 2, 365 Mass. 733 (1974). This merger culminated in a series of cases from the Supreme Judicial Court (and this court) recognizing the broad authority of the Housing Court (among others) to hear not just challenges to the validity of the foreclosure, but to challenges to title, and other claims, defenses, and counterclaims in summary process matters. See Morris, 490 Mass. at 326 (counterclaims under G. L. c. 183C, § 15 [b] [2]); Federal Nat'l Mtge. Ass'n v. Rego, 474 Mass. 329, 330 (2016) (Rego) (defenses and counterclaims pursuant to G. L. c. 93A); Bank of Am., N.A. v. Rosa, 466 Mass. 613, 615-616 (2013) (Rosa) (Housing Court's authority to hear and decide myriad defenses and counterclaims); Bank of N.Y. v. Bailey, 460 Mass. 327, 328 (2011) (Bailey) ("Housing Court has jurisdiction to consider the validity of the plaintiff's title as a defense to a summary process action"); Deutsche Bank Nat'l Trust Co. v. Gabriel, 81 Mass. App. Ct. 564, 568-570 (2012) (Gabriel)
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(considering adequacy of affidavit of sale). [Note 7] As a result, the narrow application of the summary process statute urged on us by the defendants no longer applies. We explain.
Early Nineteenth Century iterations of the summary process statute limited summary process to parties in a landlord-tenant relationship. See Warren, 130 Mass. at 541 (summary process limited to whether relation of landlord and tenant existed and was terminated; no question of title could be raised). However, in 1879, the statute underwent an expansion to permit the use of summary process by those with title after a foreclosure sale. See St. 1879, c. 237 (now embodied in G. L. c. 239, § 1). [Note 8] See also Bailey, 460 Mass. at 332 ("The summary remedy statute was in force when the General Statutes were revised in 1835 and was retained through later revisions, to provide a cause of action to those not in a traditional landlord-tenant relationship"). Nonetheless,
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the Supreme Judicial Court interpreted the words "person having valid title after a foreclosure sale" to apply only to the immediate purchaser at foreclosure, even though the statute -- by its broad terms -- appeared to allow "the person entitled to the land or tenements" to recover possession after a mortgage had been foreclosed by a sale, and did not expressly restrict the term "person" to the purchaser at foreclosure. St. 1879, c. 237. See, e.g., Swain v. Sogliero, 267 Mass. 236, 237 (1929) (summary process not available to grantee of purchaser at foreclosure, citing Warren); Covell v. Matthews, 245 Mass. 135, 136-137 (1923) (same, citing Warren); Warren, supra at 542-543.
The rationale of these cases was that the summary process statute limited legal challenges to foreclosure to the exercise of the power of sale, and that other challenges, including challenges to title, should be sought in equity. [Note 9] The necessity of this bifurcated approach was eliminated with the merger of law and equity in 1974. As the Supreme Judicial Court observed in Rosa, 466 Mass. at 615, the Housing Court "has jurisdiction to hear defenses and counterclaims that challenge the title of a plaintiff in a postforeclosure summary process action, which previously only could have been the subject of an independent equity action in the Superior Court."
Our current case law not only reflects historical change, but a modern legislative scheme that "promotes the legislative goal of just, speedy, and inexpensive resolution of summary process cases. The pursuit of speedy and inexpensive summary process actions is compromised if the Housing Court must stay summary process proceedings while litigation on the validity of the foreclosure proceedings continues in another court. This creates precisely the type of unnecessary delay and inefficiency that the Legislature intended to eliminate when it reorganized the trial courts in the Commonwealth." (Quotations and citation omitted.)
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Bailey, 460 Mass. at 334. [Note 10] For this reason, courts hearing summary process actions, including the Housing Court, have jurisdiction to hear numerous challenges to foreclosure, including cases involving foreclosures initiated by so-called "remote" purchasers. [Note 11] See generally, Rego, 474 Mass. at 338-339; Rosa, 466 Mass. at 615; Bailey, 460 Mass. at 334. Accordingly, Diplomat had standing to bring this action.
2. Christiana Trust. The defendants maintain that Christiana Trust is not a legal entity authorized to foreclose on property or to sue and be sued in courts of the Commonwealth, and therefore, the foreclosure sale was invalid. They rely on Federal cases that they contend stand for the proposition that divisions of companies have no standing to sue or be sued in their own name. See, e.g., Griffith v. Keystone Steel & Wire, Div. of Keystone Consol. Indus., Inc., 887 F. Supp. 1133, 1138 (C.D. Ill. 1995).
"Massachusetts is a nonjudicial foreclosure State . . . and thus 'does not require a mortgage holder to obtain judicial authorization to foreclose on a mortgaged property.'" Morris, 490 Mass. at 336, quoting U.S. Bank Nat'l Ass'n v. Ibanez, 458 Mass. 637, 645-646 (2011). Where it was never necessary to sue the defendants in order to foreclose on their mortgage, we need not determine whether Christiana Trust could sue or be sued.
We consider nonetheless whether Christiana Trust could take title to the mortgage and note and authorize its servicer to foreclose on the unit. The judge determined that Christiana Trust was a trade name of Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB (WSF), and the record reflects that a vice-president of WSF averred that Christiana Trust was both a division of WSF and a trade name for WSF and that registration filings for Christiana Trust were made in the State of Delaware. The defendants
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countered with documents they contended were compiled by their attorney that, they purport, demonstrated that no entity in Delaware was registered as Christiana Trust. To the extent the documents were even properly part of the summary judgment record, attached as they were to counsel's affidavit with little explanation, we conclude that the debate as to whether Christiana Trust was registered in Delaware is immaterial to the issues before us.
In Massachusetts, "[t]here is no statutory prohibition whereunder a corporation may not use a name other than its own apart from the matter of infringing upon another's right to use a name." Women's Mut. Benefit Soc'y, St. Mary of Carmen v. Catholic Soc'y Feminine of Maria S.S. of Monte Carmelo, 304 Mass. 349, 351-352 (1939). Indeed, "[i]t is well settled that a person or corporation may assume or be known by different names, and contract accordingly, and that contracts so entered into will be valid and binding if unaffected by fraud." William Gilligan Co. v. Casey, 205 Mass. 26, 31 (1910). See General Motors Acceptance Corp. v. Haley, 329 Mass. 559, 565-566 (1952). Here, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the defendants, there was no evidence of intent to defraud; at all relevant times, documents explicitly identified Christiana Trust as "a division of Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB, not in its individual capacity, but solely as separate trustee for PennyMac Loan Trust 2012-NPL1." There was no evidence of an attempt to hide that Christiana Trust was a division of WSF. See Sales Fin. Corp. v. McDermott Appliance Co., 340 Mass. 493, 494 (1960) (no reasonable possibility that anyone would be misled where fact that trustee was corporation was expressed in name). While G. L. c. 110, § 5, requires persons conducting business in the Commonwealth under any title other than the real name of the person conducting business to "file in the office of the clerk of every city or town where an office of any such person or partnership may be situated a certificate" identifying the name and residence of each person conducting such business, it has not been shown that WSF had an office in the Commonwealth.
Moreover, the penalty for violating the registration requirement is a fine; a violation does not affect contractual rights. "[F]ailure to comply with G. L. . . . c. 110, § 5, does not render a contract void." Farnum v. Bankers' & Shippers' Ins. Co. of N.Y., 281 Mass. 364, 369 (1933). Thus, even accepting that Christiana Trust was a division of WSF, that does not mean that it was not also doing business on behalf of WSF as Christiana Trust, and its title
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to the unit and its subsequent foreclosure process were valid.
3. Prior pending action. The defendants contend that their motion to dismiss this action should have been allowed because a pending action in Superior Court in Barnstable County constituted a prior pending action under Mass. R. Civ. P. 12 (b) (9), as amended, 450 Mass. 1403 (2008). The parties have engaged in litigation in multiple courts regarding the unit. [Note 12] Pertinently here, on May 8, 2019, the defendants commenced an action in the Superior Court in Barnstable County against mortgage insurer United Guaranty Residential Insurance Co. (UGRIC), Christiana Trust, Harmon Law Offices, P.C., and Diplomat that, with regard to Diplomat, challenged the foreclosure, sought to quiet title, and sought a declaratory judgment that the assignments of title leading to Diplomat's title were void (Barnstable action). [Note 13] The docket shows that the defendants, however, did not serve the complaint in the Barnstable action on Diplomat until at least July 3, 2019, by certified mail. Diplomat commenced this summary process action on May 15, 2019, weeks before it was served with the Barnstable action complaint. Thus, the defendants' insinuations of nefarious conduct by Diplomat in bringing the summary process action are unfounded.
Moreover, the claim splitting that Mass. R. Civ. P. 12 (b) (9) seeks to prevent, see Lyons v. Duncan, 81 Mass. App. Ct. 766, 771 (2012), is not at issue here. First, it does not appear to us that the Superior Court in Barnstable County has venue over the possession of real property located in Worcester County. See G. L. c. 239, § 2. Second, one party cannot by anticipatory action prevent the other from benefiting from the attributes of summary process -- which includes "[s]peedy completion of pleadings,
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expedited and limited discovery, an early litigation control conference, and assignment of an early trial date, " devices the Legislature has allowed to enable "real estate owners to oust an illegal possession with a modicum of speed." Lawless-Mawhinney Motors, Inc. v. Mawhinney, 21 Mass. App. Ct. 738, 743 (1986). Thus, the defendants have not demonstrated that the Housing Court judge abused his discretion in proceeding with the summary process action. See Gold Star Homes, LLC v. Darbouze, 89 Mass. App. Ct. 374, 378-379 (2016) (no error, abuse of discretion, or prejudice to mortgagors in Housing Court judge's denial of motion to dismiss under Mass. R. Civ. P. 12 [b] [9] where no unfairness claimed).
We affirm the judgment and the order denying the motion for reconsideration. As noted above, see note 4, supra, we address additional arguments in our decision issued this day pursuant to our rule 23.0.
So ordered.