Janice Geary, V Ing Bank, Fsb

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 22, 2014
Docket43712-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Janice Geary, V Ing Bank, Fsb (Janice Geary, V Ing Bank, Fsb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Janice Geary, V Ing Bank, Fsb, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED COURT O APP LS 1' 31ONT. 20l JUL 22. P1 E0: 22 STME 3 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHIN,

DIVISION II

JANICE GEARY (Formerly Known as No. 43712 -1 - II Valli),

Appellant,

v.

ING BANK, FSB, a Delaware corporation; AURORA LOAN SERVICES LLC, a Washington Limited Liability Company; QUALITY LOAN SERVICE CORPORATION OF WASHINGTON, a Washington Corporation; ONE OR MORE INDIVIDUALS OR ENTITIES YET UNKNOWN, Consolidated with

Respondents. ING BANK, FSB, a Delaware corporation, No. 44619 -7 -II

Respondent,

JANICE VALLI; All Occupants and Persons in Possession, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

WoRSwICK, J. — In this consolidated case, Janice Geary appeals from orders entered in

two separate matters following nonjudicial foreclosure on her property. In the first matter,

Geary sued INC: Bank FSB, Aurora Loan Services LLC, Quality Loan Service Corp., and

unknown defendants. Geary argues that the trial court erred by denying her motion for partial

summary judgment and granting the defendants' cross -motions for summary judgment No. 43712 -1 - II Cons. wi No. 44619 -7 -II

dismissing her claims of (1) quiet title, ( 2) violations of the Deed of Trust Act,' ( 3) fraud in the

2 inducement, and ( 4) violations of the Consumer Protection Act. Geary further claims that the

trial court erred by ( 5) dismissing her claims in light of Geary' s allegation that ING and Aurora

fraudulently evaded the excise tax. In the second matter, ING brought an unlawful detainer

action to evict Geary. Geary argues ( 6) the trial court erred by entering summary judgment for

ING in the unlawful detainer action. We disagree with each of Geary' s arguments and affirm the

trial court in both matters. We further grant LNG' s request for attorney fees on appeal, but we

deny Aurora' s request.

FACTS

A. Substantive Facts

Under a promissory note executed in February 2005, Janice Geary borrowed $620, 000

from Pierce Commercial Bank to finance the purchase of residential property in Buckley,

Washington.3 The adjustable -rate note obligated Geary to pay only interest for 10 years,

followed by 20 years of payments of interest and principal.

The parties recorded a deed of trust listing Geary as borrower, Pierce as lender and

beneficiary, and Transnation Title Insurance Co. as trustee holding title to the property. In the

1 Chapter 61. 24 RCW.

2 Chapter 19. 86 RCW. 3 At the time of the purchase, Janice Geary was known as Janice Valli. ING later asserted that the purchase was not an arms -length transaction. Three months after the purchase, Janice Geary married the seller of the property, James Geary. After the purchase, both James Geary and Janice Geary lived in the property. Further, ING asserted that Janice Geary acted as the real estate agent on the purchase, and both she and her employer received commissions for the sale.

2 No. 43712 -1 - II Cons. wi No. 44619 -7 -I1

event of Geary' s default on the note, the deed of trust provided for a trustee' s sale of the property

to effect a nonjudicial foreclosure.

Both the deed of trust and the note authorized Pierce and its successors to assign the note

together with the deed of trust to another party. Pierce recorded an assignment of the note and

the beneficial interest in the deed of trust to Lehman Brothers Bank, FSB. In turn, Lehman

recorded an assignment of the note and the beneficial interest in the deed of trust to Mortgage

Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS).

The deed of trust authorized the lender to designate the loan servicer. Pierce designated

Aurora Loan Services, Inc. as the loan servicer.

Geary was current on her payments in November 2008, when she called Aurora to tell

them she could not keep up with the payments and to inquire about a loan modification.

According to Geary' s affidavit, an Aurora representative advised that Aurora had authority to

modify the loan, but it would do so only if she were 60 to 90 days late on her payments. At a

deposition Geary testified that, based on this advice, she stopped making payments in December

2008. She has never resumed payments.

Aurora repeatedly denied Geary' s requests to modify her loan in three separate letters,

each dated in December 2008. First, Aurora wrote Geary that it would deny her loan

modification request because it lacked proof of Geary' s income. Geary then submitted proof of

her income from rent and child support. Second, Aurora denied Geary' s request because she was

fJinancially unable to afford monthly payments" even on modified terms. Clerk' s Papers ( CP)

No. 43712 -1) at 721. Aurora then denied a third request because it lacked Geary' s most recent

pay stubs.

3 No. 43712 -1 - II Cons. wi No. 44619 -7 -II

Nonetheless, Geary averred that Aurora denied her request by telephone in March 2009

because she did not meet the loan holder' s standards for modifications, and that this reason

contradicted Aurora' s earlier representation that Aurora had authority to modify the loan. Geary

also submitted a declaration from a former Aurora loan officer. The loan officer averred that

Aurora' s loan officers were instructed to tell all customers that Aurora had no authority to alter a

loan' s interest rate. But the loan officer' s declaration was dated May 2006, well before Geary

attempted to modify her loan.

In March 2009, a notice of default was issued by Quality Loan Service Corp., acting as

the agent of the beneficiary, MERS. Days later, MERS appointed Quality as trustee of the deed 4 of trust, succeeding Transnation. Then in April 2009, MERS recorded - n assignment of the a

note and the beneficial interest in the deed of trust to Aurora.

Quality gave Geary notice of a trustee' s sale scheduled for July 2009. In two letters,

Geary denied Quality' s authority to act as trustee. But Geary did not seek an injunction

restraining the trustee' s sale. After four continuances, the trustee' s sale occurred in November 5 2009.

At the trustee' s sale ING Bank, FSB purchased the property for $668, 991, the amount

Geary then owed on the note. Accordingly, Aurora directed Quality to, take title in the name of

4 The beneficiary of a deed of trust may replace the trustee. RCW 61. 24. 010( 2).

5 The parties agree that before the trustee' s sale, a series of unrecorded conveyances purportedly transferred the beneficial interest in the deed of trust from one bank to another. But an unrecorded conveyance of the beneficial interest in a deed of trust is void against any subsequent purchaser who acquires the interest via a recorded conveyance. RCW 65. 08. 070. Thus we ignore the unrecorded assignments and consider only the chain of title established by the recorded assignments of the beneficial interest in the deed of trust.

4 No. 437124 -II Cons. wi No. 44619 -7 -II

ING. But in December 2009, Quality recorded a trustee' s deed upon sale that named Aurora as

the grantee of the property.

Five months later, in May 2010, Quality recorded a " corrective trustee' s deed upon sale"

naming ING as the grantee of the property. CP ( No. 43712 -1) at 185. Also in May 2010, Aurora

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