Frederick Wuori v. Wilmington Savings Fund

666 F. App'x 506
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 2016
DocketCase 16-1327
StatusUnpublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 666 F. App'x 506 (Frederick Wuori v. Wilmington Savings Fund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frederick Wuori v. Wilmington Savings Fund, 666 F. App'x 506 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

BOGGS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs Frederick and Lori Wuori appeal from an order granting Defendant Wilmington Savings Fund Society’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). The Wuoris claim quiet title to a twenty-acre parcel of land in Houghton County, Michigan, which the Wuoris acquired unencumbered in fee simple absolute but subsequently mortgaged to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems (MERS), from which, through a series of mesne, assignments, 1 Wilmington purchased the mortgage and then foreclosed upon it. The district court held that even if all the facts pleaded in the Wuoris’ complaint were true, the Wuoris—who continue to occupy the land despite not having made a single mortgage payment in more than seven years—could not show superior title over Wilmington, and thus could not state a claim plausibly showing their entitlement to relief. For the reasons discussed below, we affirm.

I

Lori Wuori’s parents granted the twenty-acre parcel to the Wuoris free and clear in February 1998. The deed, recorded in July 1998, properly described the property as “the north half (N ½) of the northeast quarter (NE ½) of the northeast quarter (NE ⅝) of section thirty-six (36), township fifty-six (56) north of range thirty-four (34) west, containing 20 acres, more or less.” On February 18, 2004, the Wuoris executed a mortgage on the property in favor of MERS as security for a $133,082 loan they received. The mortgage, however, despite including the property’s correct street address, erroneously included an extra “of the northeast quarter (NE ⅜)” in its property description: “The North Half (N ½) of the Northeast Quarter (NE ⅝) of the Northeast Quarter (NE ⅜) of the Northeast Quarter (NE ⅞) of Section Thirty-six (36), Township Fifty-six (56) North of Range Thirty-four (34) West, containing 20 acres, more or less” (emphasis added). This property description is thus incoherent, at once describing five acres of property (one half of one quarter of one quarter of one quarter of a 640-acre section being five acres) but then calling it “20 acres, more or less.”

To cure this “scrivener’s error,” MERS recorded a “scrivener’s affidavit” 2 in August 2009, executed by an agent of Fidelity National Title Group and not signed by the Wuoris, attesting that the correct legal description of the mortgaged property was the twenty-acre description and not the five-acre description. While there is no indication from the record that the scrivener’s affidavit was sent to or served upon the Wuoris, they did not object to the affidavit at any time after its filing and do *508 not now argue that they lacked notice of the affidavit. In October 2009, following the Wuoris’ default on their loan—which then bore an outstanding balance of $133,-461.60—MERS foreclosed upon the mortgage, held a sheriffs sale of the twenty-acre parcel, and purchased the sheriffs deed after entering a high bid of $148,395.10. Unfortunately for MERS, the sheriffs deed contained the same property description as the mortgage: that is, it included the extra “of the northeast quarter” and described five rather than twenty acres of land, although with a proviso that the description was “[s]ubject to all exceptions, reservations, restrictions and conditions which remain in effect and which are contained in prior conveyance [sic] of record applicable to said property.”

In August 2011, MERS executed and recorded an “expungement affidavit” 3 purporting to “correct record title” in order to expunge the 2009 foreclosure sale and reinstate the 2004 mortgage. No one objected. In 2012, MERS then assigned the 2004 mortgage to Bank of America, which assigned the mortgage to the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, who assigned the mortgage to an entity called GCAT 2014-4, LLC, which in July 2015 assigned the mortgage to Wilmington. The assignment by MERS to Bank of America assigns MERS’s interest in “a certain real estate mortgage made by [the Wuoris] ... dated February 18, 2004, and recorded on March 1, 2004, in Liber 347 on Page 338, and modified by [the scrivener’s] Affidavit or Order recorded on September 21, -2009_” But the later assignments, including the assignment to Wilmington, include only the same five-acre property description and proviso as in the 2009 sheriffs deed, although all the assignments include the correct street address.

The Wuoris, by their own admission, had not made any mortgage payments to anyone since before the 2009 foreclosure sale, so in October 2015—by which time the Wuoris owed $225,299.92 on the mortgage—Wilmington initiated its own foreclosure proceedings, purchasing a sheriffs deed to the property at a foreclosure auction after entering a winning bid of $132,000. This sheriffs deed describes the foreclosed mortgage as the February 18, 2004, mortgage “modified by [the scrivener’s] Affidavit ...includes the twenty-acre property description rather than the five-acre description; and grants to Wilmington “all the estate, right, title and interest, which [the Wuoris] had in said land ... on the 18th day of February A.D. 2004, that being the date of said mortgage, or at any time thereafter.” The Wuoris had until April 8,2016, to redeem the property. Instead of redeeming it, however, they filed this suit against Wilmington, all the while continuing to reside on the land.

II

On November 13, 2015, the Wuoris filed their complaint against Wilmington in the Houghton County Circuit Court. The Wuoris brought a single count of quiet title, claiming that the 2009 foreclosure irrevocably extinguished the 2004 mortgage such that the expungement affidavit could not validly resurrect it, that the 2004 mortgage therefore did not exist, that the mesne assignments of the mortgage. to Wilmington were “void ab initio,” and that the Wuoris’ property was thus “unencumbered.” 4 Alternatively, the Wuoris argued *509 that if the mortgage had indeed been resurrected by the expungement affidavit, the assignment to Wilmington was “voidable because the legal description was incorrect and thus not properly recorded.” Wilmington timely removed the action to the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan and then moved to dismiss the Wuoris’ complaint for failure to state a claim. Magistrate Judge Timothy P. Greeley granted the motion to dismiss and entered judgment for Wilmington, holding that the expungement affidavit was valid under Michigan law and thus prevented the Wuoris from establishing a prima facie claim for quiet title, and that the scrivener’s error in the property description did not invalidate either the 2004 mortgage or Wilmington’s sheriffs deed. Having reviewed Magistrate Judge Greeley’s ruling de novo, we now affirm.

Ill

To prevail on a claim for quiet title under Michigan law, a plaintiff must “show that he has title to the property superior to claims by others with an interest in the property.” Connolly v. Deutsche Bank Nat’l Trust Co., No. 12-12517, 2013 WL 4084742, *7 (E.D. Mich. Aug. 13, 2013) (citing Beulah Hoagland Appleton Qualified Pers. Residence Trust v. Emmet Cty. Rd.

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Bluebook (online)
666 F. App'x 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frederick-wuori-v-wilmington-savings-fund-ca6-2016.