Dupree v. CIT Bank

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 1, 2023
DocketA163903
StatusPublished

This text of Dupree v. CIT Bank (Dupree v. CIT Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dupree v. CIT Bank, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 5/31/23

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION FOUR

ERIC DUPREE, as Trustee, etc.,

Plaintiff and Appellant, A163903

v. (Del Norte County Super. Ct. CIT BANK, N.A., et al., No. CVUJ-2017-1050)

Defendants and Respondents.

I. INTRODUCTION Before daily life in this country froze on November 22, 1963 at 1:38 p.m. Central Time when the tragic news from Dallas came across the airwaves—or perhaps later that day, which would confirm that our courts always remain open, even in times of crisis—a minor event of little note occurred here in California: A First District Court of Appeal, Division One panel filed its opinion in Oliver v. Swiss Club Tell (1963) 222 Cal.App.2d 528 (Oliver). Nearly 60 years later, the events in Dealey Plaza on the day Oliver was filed continue to reverberate through history. This case shows that Oliver, too, is still having ripple effects, here in an obscure corner of California civil procedure. Oliver was, in many respects, a routine summary judgment appeal. But it arose in an odd posture because there was evidence in the record that

1 the only defendant that was a party to the appeal, an unincorporated association, had been merged out of existence in 1934, more than two decades before the case was filed in 1958. That raised a novel, largely evidentiary question: Did statements in an answer filed on behalf of an apparently nonexistent entity operate as a binding admission of the entity’s existence, even though the lawyers who filed the answer later sought to withdraw from the case and filed an affidavit saying their client did not exist, pointing to publicly filed dissolution records to prove that fact? To the Oliver panel, it was a matter of “common sense” that “courts sit to settle disputes between existing parties and when the defendant is not a legal person no lawful judgment can be rendered against [it].” (Oliver, supra, 222 Cal.App.2d at p. 538.) All proceedings in such a case are void ab initio, the court declared. (Id. at p. 537.) But the panel declined to address whether an amendment substituting a successor corporation would be allowed, since no request for such an amendment had been made in the trial court. (Ibid.) And the panel’s bottom-line holding was narrow: There was a triable issue of fact as to whether the named defendant continued to exist, so the case was remanded for trial. (Id. at pp. 545-546.) In this case, the unaddressed question in Oliver whether an amendment should be allowed to substitute a new party—here, we have a lawsuit that was mistakenly brought in the name of the Jo Redland Trust (the Trust), and the proposed amendment would substitute Eric Dupree, a successor trustee, as plaintiff—is squarely presented. Relying on the void ab initio language in Oliver, the trial court ruled it had no power to allow a curative amendment substituting Dupree for the Trust. Since the complaint was a nullity from inception, the court ruled, Dupree could not rely on the

2 “relation back” doctrine to avoid a statute of limitations bar, thus rendering the proposed amendment legally futile and unjustifiably late. We reject this reading of Oliver and will reverse. We agree that a judgment entered for or against a nonexistent entity is unenforceable. That inarguable principle, however, is just a starting point. It does not answer the precise question before us: When a plaintiff mistakenly brings a lawsuit in the name of someone unrecognized in law as a legal “person” and the oversight goes unnoticed until several years into the proceedings, should we, by legal fiction, treat everything that happened in the course of the lawsuit as if it never occurred—including the filing of the complaint itself—thereby depriving the court of power to allow a curative amendment prior to entry of judgment? We think not. The complaint in this case was not a nullity as filed. The trial court had jurisdiction in the fundamental sense—that is, it was empowered to hear and decide the type of claims alleged. Although intervener Mortgage Assets Management LLC (MAM LLC) raised a legitimate question as to whether the Trust has any independent legal existence separate from Dupree—a potentially fatal jurisdictional defect—the defect was easily curable by allowing Dupree to substitute into the case by amendment under Code of Civil Procedure section 473, subdivision (a)(1). The court could have, and on this record should have, followed the traditional default rule that amendments to a complaint should be liberally allowed. II. BACKGROUND In 2006, the late Jo Redland, then age 83, obtained a reverse mortgage line of credit from a lender known as Financial Freedom Senior Funding (FFSF), a subsidiary of IndyMac Bank. The line of credit was secured by two parcels of property described by metes and bounds in an exhibit to the mortgage deed of trust. Redland’s house was situated on one parcel (Parcel

3 One), a .58-acre plot of land. The other parcel (Parcel Two), 9.4 acres in size, was adjacent to Parcel One. The borrower on this reverse mortgage line of credit and the owner of Parcels One and Two was the Trust, a legal entity organized under the authority of the Probate Code to hold and manage assets for Redland’s benefit during her lifetime. Redland, the trustee of the Trust, passed away in 2015. At that point, Eric Dupree, an attorney and Redland’s nephew, became the successor trustee of the Trust. The line of credit did not require repayment from Redland during her lifetime, but by its terms her death constituted a maturity event that allowed FFSF to accelerate the repayment of the then-outstanding debt, demand immediate payment from her estate, and if the heirs did not repay the outstanding indebtedness in full, to initiate foreclosure proceedings. After a series of bank failures, corporate acquisitions, and assignments, CIT Bank succeeded to the interests of FFSF in the line of credit loan and the deed of trust securing it; MAM Inc. succeeded to the interests of CIT Bank in the loan and deed of trust; and MAM LLC undertook the role of loan servicer. After Redland died, MTC Financial, a successor trustee under the deed of trust, sought to foreclose on both Parcel One and Parcel Two. In February 2017, two days before the nonjudicial foreclosure sale was scheduled to take place, the Trust, represented by Dupree as counsel, filed a complaint alleging that the line of credit loan is only secured by one of the two Parcels. The complaint named FFSF and MTC Financial as defendants (apparently by mistake, since under assignments they had been succeeded by other entities at that point). Seeking declaratory relief and asking the court to quiet title, the complaint alleged that the line of credit loan is secured only by Parcel Two, and not Parcel One (another apparent mistake because this

4 allegation conflicted with two lis pendens notices Dupree filed against both Parcels One and Two). In August 2018, the Trust filed an amended complaint, adding CIT Bank as a defendant, and alleging that the line of credit loan is secured only by Parcel One, and not by Parcel Two. The amended complaint also pleaded a cause of action for reformation of the deed of trust to reflect the alleged true intent to encumber only Parcel One. Along with the filing of the amended complaint, Dupree filed an amended notice of lis pendens against Parcel One only. In February 2019, CIT Bank filed a cross-complaint, naming the Trust as cross-defendant and seeking reformation and a declaration quieting title. CIT Bank alleged that, on its face, the deed of trust is clear that Redland and FFSF intended both Parcel One and Parcel Two to be security for the line of credit loan.

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Dupree v. CIT Bank, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupree-v-cit-bank-calctapp-2023.