Gober v. Chase Manhattan Bank

918 So. 2d 840, 2005 WL 2210210
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedSeptember 13, 2005
DocketNos. 2003-CP-01323-COA, 2002-CA-00038-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 918 So. 2d 840 (Gober v. Chase Manhattan Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gober v. Chase Manhattan Bank, 918 So. 2d 840, 2005 WL 2210210 (Mich. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

BARNES, J.,

for the Court.

¶ 1. This is the second appearance before the Court of Appeals of this suit filed by the Chase Manhattan Bank (Chase Manhattan), holder of a deed of trust, to set aside a tax sale and reinstate the deed of trust. On January 7, 2003, we reversed the grant of default judgment in favor of Chase Manhattan and remanded the case to the Chancery Court of Madison County with instructions to give the tax sale purchaser, Howard Gober, three days’ notice prior to a hearing on the motion for default judgment. We recognized that Chase Manhattan “properly requested and received the entry of default under Rule 55(a)” and that upon remand the trial court “may still find that default judgment is proper, but Gober is entitled to three days’ notice prior to the hearing.” Williams a/k/a Gober v. Chase Manhattan Bank, 834 So.2d 718, 720-21 (¶¶ 6, 11-12) (Miss.Ct.App.2003).

¶ 2. On remand, Gober was given notice of the hearing in accordance with our opinion, appeared pro se, and participated. The chancellor subsequently granted Chase Manhattan a default judgment, held void the tax sale at which Gober received his tax deed, reinstated the deed of trust and ruled inter alia that Chase Manhattan is the record owner of the property pursuant to a substituted trustee’s deed, free and clear of any and all claims of Gober or anyone claiming by and through him. From this decision, Gober filed his pro se appeal.

¶ 3. Finding no error, we affirm.

STATEMENT OF FACTS AND COURSE OF PROCEEDINGS

¶ 4. At a tax sale held on August 31, 1998, certain property in Madison County was purchased by “P. Williams.” The Chancery Clerk of Madison County issued a tax deed to “P. Williams” on September 13, 2000. Subsequently, Chase Manhattan, which held a $204,000 deed of trust on the property dated November 10, 1997, discovered that the tax sale had occurred. The bank then filed suit to set aside the sale, naming several defendants involved in the sale, including the borrowers, tax and court officials and P. Williams a/k/a Howard Gober.1 Gober was served with [842]*842process on May 2, 2001, but did not timely file an answer. After receiving no response, Chase Manhattan filed an application for entry of default on June 12, 2001, which the chancery clerk entered that same day. Gober filed an untimely pro se answer to the bank’s complaint on July 19, 2001. A final judgment was issued in favor of Chase Manhattan on August 10, 2001, without notice to Gober or a hearing. On November 6, 2001, Gober filed a motion seeking to set aside the default judgment. After his motion was denied, Gober initiated his first appeal to this Court.

¶ 5. In the first appeal, we interpreted Rule 55(b) of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure to hold that an untimely pleading filed after entry of default, but prior to the entry of default judgment,, constitutes an appearance and entitles the defaulting party to three days’ notice prior to a hearing on the default application. Williams v. Chase Manhattan Bank, 834 So.2d 718, 720-21 (¶¶ 11-12). We thus remanded with instructions to give Gober a hearing upon three days’ notice. Williams, 834 So.2d at 721 (¶ 13). However, we also stated that Chase Manhattan properly requested and received the entry of default under Rule 55(a) and that upon remand the trial court “may still find that default judgment is proper.” Williams, 834 So.2d at 720-21 (¶¶ 11-12).

¶ 6. On remand, Gober was given notice in accordance with our opinion and appeared pro se at a February 25, 2003 hearing in the Chancery Court of Madison County before Chancellor William Lutz. At no time during the remand hearing did Gober offer competent proof showing why the default judgment should not' be entered against him. Out of an abundance of caution, the chancellor left the record open for an additional two weeks after the hearing for Gober to provide evidence.- While Gober supplied no competent evidence, he did place into the record twenty-three documents which were unauthenticated, contained hearsay, lacked relevancy and had upon the face .of the documents various unidentified handwritten annotations. Included among the documents were annotated copies of various chancery clerk records, none of which were certified, and various documents downloaded from the Internet. Chase Manhattan moved to strike Gober’s offer of proof, and while there is no order in the record striking the documents, the chancellor’s ruling indicates that he rejected all of Gober’s purported evidence.

¶ 7. Chase Manhattan offered proof that the default judgment was proper and proved the elements of its complaint that the tax sale was void. The chancellor ruled that Gober failed to respond timely to Chase Manhattan’s complaint since his answer was filed outside the thirty-day time limit for response, and ruled that Chase Manhattan had properly applied for and received the default judgment. Further, the chancellor held that the tax sale at which Gober received his tax deed was void because of the failure to provide notice of the sale to Chase Manhattan as required by law under Mississippi Code Section 27-43-1 et seq. (Rev.2002). Specifically, the chancellor found that the chancery clerk had no authority to execute a tax deed extinguishing Chase Manhattan’s rights due to the failure to address the notice correctly. He found that the notice was erroneously directed to “Chase Bank of Texas” at the address of “Chase [843]*843Bank Tower, 220 Ross Avenue, Dallas, Texas,” when the notice should have been sent to Chase Manhattan’s true address of “Chase Bank of Texas, f/k/a Texas Commerce Bank, 600 Travis, 10th Floor, Houston, Texas 77002.”

¶ 8. Because Chase Manhattan did not receive notice of the tax sale, the chancellor voided the tax sale and Gober’s resulting tax deed, and confirmed title to the property to Chase Manhattan free and clear of any claims and clouds on its title held by Gober. It is from this decision that Gober files pro se this second appeal.

ISSUE AND ANALYSIS

¶ 9. We note at the outset that Gober’s brief is incoherent, and his issues and arguments are hard to discern. His apparent argument, however, is that his .tax deed cannot be set aside because none of the bases to invalidate a sale, as identified in section 27-45-23 of the Mississippi Code, are present.2

¶ 10. We can summarily dispatch this argument. It is long settled that a tax sale in which a lienor fails to receive notice is void as to that lienor. Lamar Life Ins. Co. v. Billups, 175 Miss. 771, 783, 169 So. 32, 35-36 (1936). In Lamar Life Ins. Co., the Mississippi Supreme Court held that the predecessor of section 27-45-23 “must be construed in connection with other sections of the Code, and notably [the predecessor to section 27-43-11 of the Mississippi Code] in which it is provided that failure to give notice to the lienors ... renders the tax sale void as to the lienors.” Lamar Life Ins. Co., 175 Miss. 771, 169 So. 32 at 35-36.3 Thus, we must read. the notice statutes together with the statutes governing validity; they must be merged into the same analysis. However, Gober requests that we don judicial blinders. He asks that we look to section 27-45-23 in isolation, wholly ignoring the notice requirements provided elsewhere in the Code. This is something we cannot do. The undisputed evidence which we will discuss further infra

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918 So. 2d 840, 2005 WL 2210210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gober-v-chase-manhattan-bank-missctapp-2005.