Futuri Real Estate v. Atlantic Trustee Services

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 27, 2019
Docket181501
StatusPublished

This text of Futuri Real Estate v. Atlantic Trustee Services (Futuri Real Estate v. Atlantic Trustee Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Futuri Real Estate v. Atlantic Trustee Services, (Va. 2019).

Opinion

PRESENT: Lemons, C.J., Mims, Powell, Kelsey, McCullough, and Chafin, JJ., and Lacy, S.J.

FUTURI REAL ESTATE, INC. OPINION BY v. Record No. 181501 SENIOR JUSTICE ELIZABETH B. LACY November 27, 2019 ATLANTIC TRUSTEE SERVICES, LLC, ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY David Bernhard, Judge

In this appeal, we consider, as a matter of first impression, whether a subordination

agreement between a senior lienholder and a lienholder in third priority, which addresses only

the priority of the parties to the agreement, should be construed as a complete or partial

subordination of the senior lienholder’s priority position.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Milton Cortez and Armida Cortez owned real property which was encumbered by three

separate lines of credit: (1) Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., successor-in-interest to Wachovia Bank,

N.A., in the amount of $415,000 secured by a deed of trust recorded September 23, 2005 (“2005

Wells Fargo lien”); (2) SunTrust Bank in the amount of $220,000 secured by a deed of trust

recorded September 30, 2005 (“SunTrust lien”); and (3) Wells Fargo in the amount of

$252,007.33 secured by a deed of trust recorded October 25, 2006 (“2006 Wells Fargo lien”).

On October 26, 2006, a Subordination Agreement (“the Agreement”) was recorded, which

provided in pertinent part that “Lender [Wells Fargo] has been requested to and has agreed to

subordinate the lien of the Original Security Instrument [the 2005 Wells Fargo lien] to the lien of

the Subsequent Security Instrument [the 2006 Wells Fargo lien].”

In 2016, the Cortezes defaulted on the SunTrust lien and the property went into

foreclosure. In January 2017, Atlantic Trustee Services, L.L.C., Substitute Trustee (“Trustee”), sold the property at a public auction to Futuri Real Estate, Inc. (“Futuri”) for $468,000. Trustee

submitted its final accounting of the foreclosure sale to the commissioner of accounts for the

County of Fairfax, which stated that from the $468,000 sale fund it disbursed $44,772.50 in

applicable taxes, fees and costs and $224,579.56 to SunTrust in full satisfaction of its lien with

interest and late charges, leaving a surplus of $201,647.94 for other disbursements.

A dispute arose between Futuri and Wells Fargo concerning the disbursal of the surplus

fund. Trustee filed an interpleader with the circuit court seeking an order to pay the surplus fund

to the Clerk of Court pending judicial determination of the proper recipient(s). As relevant here,

Futuri filed a cross-claim against Wells Fargo seeking a declaratory judgment that the 2006

Subordination Agreement ousted the 2005 Wells Fargo lien from its first priority position and

put it in line behind the 2006 Wells Fargo lien, and therefore, the SunTrust lien was moved into

first priority over the 2005 and 2006 Wells Fargo liens. Futuri sought an order that the

foreclosure on the SunTrust lien was of a First Deed of Trust loan and that the foreclosure

extinguished both Wells Fargo liens. 1

Wells Fargo moved to dismiss the cross-claim, arguing that the language in the

Agreement clearly demonstrated it was by, between and only for the benefit of the two Wells

Fargo loans. Relying on foreign cases interpreting similar subordination agreements, Wells

Fargo submitted that the Agreement was a partial subordination agreement which did not alter

the priority position of the 2005 Wells Fargo lien, but put the 2006 Wells Fargo lien in a first

priority position as to the 2005 Wells Fargo lien, only for purposes of being satisfied first. In Re

Price Waterhouse, Ltd., 46 P.3d 408 (Ariz. 2002); ITT Diversified Credit Corp. v. First City

1 Futuri also filed a counter-claim against Atlantic Trustee Services, LLC and a third- party claim against SunTrust Bank and TRSTE INC, trustees.

2 Capital Corp., 737 S.W.2d 803 (Tex. 1987); Wells Fargo Bank v. Neilsen, 100 Cal. Rptr. 3d 547

(2009). Accordingly, argued Wells Fargo, the Agreement had no effect as to SunTrust’s priority

status and therefore the 2005 Wells Fargo lien survived the foreclosure and continued to

encumber the property at issue.

The circuit court determined there were no issues of fact generally in dispute. The court

next considered whether the Agreement resulted in partial or complete subordination.

Acknowledging the issue was one of first impression in this jurisdiction, the court reviewed the

jurisprudence of states adopting the complete subordination rule, the minority rule, and those

adhering to the partial subordination rule, the majority rule. Following that review, the circuit

court issued an opinion letter on January 10, 2018, in which it determined that Virginia law is in

harmony with the partial subordination rule because it does not interfere with the rights or

position of intervening lienors not parties to the subordination agreement, does not create a

windfall to the intervening lienors by elevating their priority positions as the complete

subordination rule does, and, that where the intent of the parties to the subordination agreement

is clear, less than perfect drafting of the agreement should not defeat that intent. Concluding that

the plain language of the Agreement demonstrated that Wells Fargo intended to impact only the

two loans it referenced, the 2005 and 2006 Wells Fargo Loans, the court held that the Agreement

was a partial subordination agreement. On February 8, 2018, the circuit court entered judgment

dismissing Futuri’s cross-claim.

Futuri filed a motion for reconsideration arguing that discovery, which was completed

subsequent to the circuit court’s opinion letter, required the court to conduct a trial because the

Agreement was ambiguous on its face and evidence produced during discovery raised genuine

issues of material fact. After hearing arguments on the motion, the circuit court entered an order

3 on February 27, 2018, in which it (i) vacated its January 10, 2018 opinion letter and February 8,

2018 judgment order, (ii) denied Futuri’s motion for reconsideration, stating that the discovery

material did not raise “genuine and relevant issues of fact materially in dispute,” (iii)

incorporated a new opinion letter dated February 27, 2018, and (iv) dismissed Futuri’s cross-

claim and request for declaratory judgment with prejudice. This appeal followed. 2

ANALYSIS

In its first assignment of error, Futuri argues that the circuit court should have adopted the

complete subordination rule of construction because it is a simpler, more straightforward

interpretation of recorded instruments, thereby enhancing reliability on such instruments.

The complete subordination rule relies primarily on the definition of the term

“subordination,” which contemplates a reduction, not an elevation in priority. It provides that in

the absence of any language in the subordination agreement to the contrary, a lienholder “who

holds a first lien and subordinates it to a third lien makes his lien inferior or subordinate to both

the second and third liens.” McConnell v. Mortgage Investment Co. of El Paso, 292 S.W.2d 636,

638 (Tex. Civ. App.

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