Farm Credit Services of America, FLCA v. Dale W. Braaksma, Danna S. Braaksma, and Braaksma Grain Farms, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 23, 2019
Docket18-0514
StatusPublished

This text of Farm Credit Services of America, FLCA v. Dale W. Braaksma, Danna S. Braaksma, and Braaksma Grain Farms, Inc. (Farm Credit Services of America, FLCA v. Dale W. Braaksma, Danna S. Braaksma, and Braaksma Grain Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farm Credit Services of America, FLCA v. Dale W. Braaksma, Danna S. Braaksma, and Braaksma Grain Farms, Inc., (iowactapp 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 18-0514 Filed October 23, 2019

FARM CREDIT SERVICES OF AMERICA, FLCA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

DALE W. BRAAKSMA, DANNA S. BRAAKSMA, and BRAAKSMA GRAIN FARMS, INC., Defendants-Appellants. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Osceola County, Carl J. Petersen,

Judge.

Borrowers appeal the district court’s denial of their motion to continue the

lender’s action to foreclose their real estate mortgage without an evidentiary

hearing. APPEAL DISMISSED IN PART AND AFFIRMED IN PART.

Richard H. Moeller of Moore, Heffernan, Moeller, Johnson & Meis, L.L.P.,

Sioux City, for appellants.

Thomas H. Burke and Molly M. Brown of Whitfield & Eddy, P.L.C., Des

Moines, for appellee.

Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Tabor and Mullins, JJ. 2

TABOR, Judge.

It’s a bit like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. That’s how counsel

for Farm Credit Services of America described a motion to continue its mortgage

foreclosure action under Iowa Code section 654.15 (2017), filed by borrowers Dale

and Danna Braaksma and Braaksma Grain Farms, Inc. (collectively, the

Braaksmas). Farm Credit sought foreclosure against the Braaksmas for amounts

due on two promissory notes and sought to conclude litigation with a summary

judgment motion.1 The Braaksmas filed their motion to continue the day before

the summary judgment hearing. Farm Credit argued the Braaksmas did not seek

the continuance in good faith—given its timing and the extent of their other

indebtedness. The district court agreed, calling the motion a “last ditch effort” to

delay the foreclosure proceedings.

The Braaksmas contend the district court abused its discretion in denying

their motion to continue the foreclosure action without setting an evidentiary

hearing. Farm Credit defends the district court’s decision but also urges the appeal

is moot as to one of the two promissory notes. To prove mootness, Farm Credit

points to a February 2019 redemption assignment in which the Braaksmas assign

1 In 2008, the Braaksmas executed the first promissory note (Note 201) in the original principal amount of $150,000. The mortgage on Note 201 encumbered a thirty-five-acre parcel of agricultural real estate in Osceola County. In 2009, the Braaksmas executed the second note (Note 325) for the original principal amount of $90,000. About nine acres of commercial, non-agricultural real estate in Osceola County served as collateral for Note 325. According to the suit, as of July 2018, the Braaksmas owed Farm Credit $122,294.52 on Note 201 and $32,380.38 on Note 32. For ease of reference, we refer to the properties securing the notes as the Note 201 property and the Note 325 property, respectively. 3

their right of redemption “as well as all of their right, title, interest, and equity” in the

Note 201 property to a third party.2

Jo’s Family Farms, LLC, purchased the Note 201 property at a February

2018 sheriff’s sale.3 One year later—before the Braaksmas’ redemption window

closed—they assigned their right of redemption to Robert Zylstra. Zylstra then

exercised his newly acquired right of redemption, tendering $255,363.45 for the

Note 201 property. The district court ordered the funds disbursed to Jo’s Family

Farms and a sheriff’s deed issued to Zylstra.

Because the Braaksmas do not retain an interest in the collateral for Note

201, we agree the appeal is moot as to that real estate. See Lincoln Joint Stock

Land Bank of Lincoln, Neb. v. Hansen, 263 N.W. 821, 822 (Iowa 1935) (dismissing

as moot an appeal from refusal to grant continuance of mortgage foreclosure

action and hypothetically asking: “Should the court find that the order refusing to

grant a continuance should be reversed, of what benefit would it be to the

appellant?”); see also Newman v. Callahan, 237 N.W. 514, 514 (Iowa 1931)

(deeming question of fraudulent transfer of real estate was moot where “one of the

mortgages against said land had been foreclosed, and the sheriff’s certificate

issued thereon to an outside party, who is not a party to this litigation, and the time

for redemption expired without any redemption having been made by any of the

parties”). We will address the Braaksmas’ claim as to the Note 325 property.

2 Generally, “on appeal we cannot consider matters outside the trial court record.” Clarke Cty. Reservoir Comm’n v. Robins, 862 N.W.2d 166, 170 n.3 (Iowa 2015). We recognize an exception to this rule when considering mootness. Id. 3 The Braaksmas redeemed the Note 325 property before the scheduled sheriff’s sale. 4

I. Prior Proceedings

In August 2017, Farm Credit petitioned for foreclosure on both Note 201

and Note 325. The lender alleged the notes were in default due to the Braaksmas’

failure to make payments when due. Farm Credit recounted sending the

Braaksmas notices of the right to cure in February and June 2017, and a notice of

default and acceleration of the demand for payment in July 2017. The petition also

listed other potential encumbrances on the Note 201 property including a judgment

of $1,140,851 owed to the estate of Tena Steensma and a judgment of $1,175,000

owed to Sibley State Bank.

In the Braaksmas’ September 2017 answer, they denied Farm Credit’s

allegations of default on the two promissory notes.

Later that month, Farm Credit moved for summary judgment. The

Braaksmas resisted the motion.4 The court set a summary judgment hearing for

October 27, 2017. On the eve of the hearing, the Braaksmas asked the court for

a continuance under Iowa Code section 654.15:

COMES NOW the Defendants and in support of their Motion for Continuance state as follows: 1. That the Defendants request a stay of proceeding pursuant to Section 654.15 of the [c]ode and allege that the reason the Owners failed to pay was caused by excessive rain in the spring and as a result of those climatic conditions, it resulted in lower yields. 2. That the fall was caused by excessive rains received after March 1, 2017, and was for crop year, 2016.

4 The Braaksmas’ resistance contained only two sentences: COMES NOW the Defendants and resist the Motion for Summary Judgment filed by the Plaintiff herein. WHEREFORE, the Defendants pray that the Court deny the relief requested by the Plaintiff and further be allowed to participate by telephone at said hearing and for such other and further relief as the Court deems equitable in the premises. 5

3. That out of the 2017 crop, the Receiver shall receive a fair market rental value of $200.00 per acre to pay the expenses as set forth in previous paragraphs. 4. That said application is based upon the use of the real estate for farming. WHEREFORE, the undersigned prays that the court enter an Order continuing the Motion for Summary Judgment scheduled for October 27, 2017, set a time and place for a hearing for a determination of whether [s]ection 654.15 applies and for such other and further relief as the Court deems equitable in the premises.

Just hours later, Farm Credit filed its resistance, pointing out the Braaksmas

had not satisfied a prerequisite to a section 654.15(1)(a) motion—admission to

some indebtedness and breach of their obligations.5 The court set a hearing on

the Braaksmas’ motion to coincide with the summary-judgment hearing at 11:30

the next morning.

At 10:42 a.m.

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Farm Credit Services of America, FLCA v. Dale W. Braaksma, Danna S. Braaksma, and Braaksma Grain Farms, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farm-credit-services-of-america-flca-v-dale-w-braaksma-danna-s-iowactapp-2019.