Ditech Fin. Llc Vs. Alliant Commercial Llc

CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 2021
Docket80903
StatusPublished

This text of Ditech Fin. Llc Vs. Alliant Commercial Llc (Ditech Fin. Llc Vs. Alliant Commercial Llc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ditech Fin. Llc Vs. Alliant Commercial Llc, (Neb. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

DITECH FINANCIAL LLC, F/K/A No. 80903 GREEN TREE SERVICING LLC, Appellant, vs. ALLIANT COMM ERCIAL LLC, A FILED NEVADA LIMITED LIABILITY OCT 1 9 2021 COMPANY; AND RJRN HOLDINGS, ailefTHA. BROM cLo LLC, By Res ondents.

ORDER OF AFFIRMANCE

This is an appeal from a district court order under NRCP 4.1(e), dismissing an HOA foreclosure action without prejudice and denying the counterclaimant's summary judgment motion as moot. Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County; Mark R. Denton, judge.

The underlying suit originated in 2013 when the original plaintiff, Rex Archambault, sued to quiet title to a property he purchased at an HOA foreclosure sale. The prior owner had obtained a mortgage on the property, financed by North American Funding (NAF), which identified Mortgage Electronic Registration System, Inc. (MERS) as beneficiary of the note and deed of trust, solely as nominee for NAF, its successors, and assignees. NAF assigned its interest in the loan to the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), though neither party ever recorded that assignment.1 :Fannie Mae then went into conservatorship of the Federal •Housing :Finance Agency (IFFIFA).

IThe parties dispute whether this assignment in fact occurred prior to the BOA foreclosure sale. As noted below, we decline to comment on the merits of their respective arguments. SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA

10) 1907A 440o MERS remained the nominee of record until, following Archambault's suit, it transferred its interest to appellant, Ditech Financial TLC. Archambault then quitclaimed his interest to RJRN Holdings, Inc.; RJRN in turn quitclaimed its interest to respondent, Alliant Commercial, LLC. Given these various assignments, the parties stipulated to substitute Alliant as the proper plaintiff, and repeatedly stipulated to extend discovery—five times—from November 12, 2014 to July 5, 2016. These changes necessarily shifted the set trial date from March 3, 2015 to November 21, 2016. Ditech filed a counterclaim for declaratory relief seeking to invalidate the HOA foreclosure and sale to Archambault, and to quiet title in its own right. Ditech's counterclaims turned on Fannie Mae's alleged ownership of the loan in question at the time of foreclosure. Ditech argued that this, coupled with FH.FA's conservatorship, meant that foreclosure on the property, without the consent of the FHFA, was prohibited under 12 U.S.C. § 4617(j)(3) (the Federal Foreclosure Bar). Following the close of discovery in 2016, .Ditech moved for summary judgment.2 The district court denied Ditech's motion, finding that genuine issues of material fact existed as to whether (1) Fannie Mae owned the loan at issue when the HOA foreclosed its lien, and (2) Alliant knew or should have known that Fannie Mae owned the loan at the time of foreclosure, such that Nevada's recording statutes might offer Alliant protection as a bona fide subsequent purchaser. The district court thereafter denied Ditech's motion for reconsideration of this decision.

2Alliant likewise moved for summary judgment on its claims at this tirne, which the district court denied in kind. Alliant does not challenge the merits of this decision on appeal.

2 At that point, forward motion in the case ceased. The exact reasons for the period of dormancy that followed are not clear. The parties stipulated to stay the matter based on a series of bankruptcy proceedings— one involving a third-party counter-defendant and then another for Ditech itself—and the district court therefore vacated the set trial date. But, even beyond the period in which the case was stayed and the five-year rule consequently tolled, neither party appears to have taken any action on the matter for more than two additional years, from 2016 to 2019. Then, on August 22, 2019, Ditech moved for the district court to reset discovery and to renew its summary judgment motion. Alliant objected and moved to dismiss the entire matter under NRCP 41(e)(2)(13) (the five-year rule), because rnore than five years had passed since Archambault filed his original suit. The district court granted the rnotion and dismissed the entire action—Alliant's complaint and Ditech's counterclaims—without prejudice. In its order, the district court denied Ditech's renewed motion for summary judgrnent as moot. This appeal followed. The facts laid out above illustrate the degree to which the underlying action has exceeded its shelf life. Particularly in light of this extensive history of delay and lack of meaningful activity, the core issue on appeal is rather straightforwardly resolvable. The five-year rule requires a district court to "dismiss an action for want of prosecution if a plaintiff fails to bring the action to trial within 5 years after the action was filed." This rule applies equally to a plaintiff s claims and a defendant's counterclaims.

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 3 101 1947A 444P44, Saticoy Bay LLC Series 2021 Gray Eagle Way v. JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., 133 Nev. 21, 23-24, 388 P.3d 226, 229-30 (20:17).3

Ditech admits that no party brought the action to literal trial within the relevant period, and instead argues that United Ass'n of Journeymen & Apprentices of Plumbing & Pipe Fitting Industries v. Manson controls. See 105 Nev. 8116, 820, 783 P.2d 955, 957 (1989) (holding that a district court's grant of a timely submitted motion for summary judgment constituted bringing the case to trial under NRCP 41(e)(2)(B), even where granted outside of the five-year period). But Manson is distinguishable. There, a timely filed motion for summary judgment was actually pending

at the expiration of the five-year period, 105 Nev. at 820, 783 P.2d at 957; here, the district court denied the only timely motion for summary judgment (and the related motion for reconsideration), while Ditech filed the pending motion to renew its prior summary judgment motion well outside the five- year deadline. And Ditech does not offer any legal support for extending Manson to circumstances such as these. Edwards v. Emperor's Garden Rest., 122 Nev. 317, 330 n.38, 1130 P.3d 1280, 1288 n.38 (2006) (noting that it is an appellant's "responsibility to cogently argue, and present relevant authority, in support of [their] appellate concerns").

31)itech urges us to revisit the issue of when the five-year rule starts

to run in a case involving assertedly time-barred counterclaims. lt does not demonstrate a basis for overcoming stare decisis. See Harris v. State, 1.30 Nev. 435, 441., 329 P.3d 619, 623 (2014.) (noting that the doctrine of stare decisis militates against overruling precedent unless the governing decisions prove to be "unworkable or are badly reasoned") (quoting State v. Lloyd, 129 Nev. 739, 750, 31.2 'P.3d 467, 474 (201.3)).

SUPREME COURT OF NEVADA 4 (0) 1947A

liZAVANY (‘W,1 Our independent research has revealed two cases that support the result for which Ditech contends. City & County of San Francisco v.

Eller Outdoor Advert., 237 Cal. Rptr. 815, 820 (Cal. Ct. App. 1987) (examining the rnerits of a denial of summary judgment following dismissal for failure to prosecute because if "the trial court should have granted full summary judgment . . . the action[] . . . would have been 'brought to trial"' for purposes of California's five-year rule); see Storey v. Shane, 384 P.2d 379,

382 (Wash.

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Clarence Marshall, Jr. v. Allyn R. Sielaff
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Storey v. Shane
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Ditech Fin. Llc Vs. Alliant Commercial Llc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ditech-fin-llc-vs-alliant-commercial-llc-nev-2021.