Janice Potter v. Wilmington Savings

682 F. App'x 408
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 14, 2017
Docket16-2160
StatusUnpublished

This text of 682 F. App'x 408 (Janice Potter v. Wilmington Savings) 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
Janice Potter v. Wilmington Savings, 682 F. App'x 408 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs Janice and David Potter brought a quiet-title suit against Wilmington Savings Fund and Bank of America, the current and former mortgagees, respectively, of the Potters’ home. The Potters faced foreclosure in 2010. Their house was sold at a sheriffs sale and their mortgage was extinguished. However, in 2014 Bank of America recorded an affidavit under Michigan law, purporting to expunge the sheriffs sale and reinstate the mortgage, thereby setting aside the foreclosure. The Potters now argue that this affidavit succeeded in expunging the sheriffs sale but failed to reinstate the mortgage. Therefore, the Potters contend, they now own the house outright, unencumbered by a mortgage.

The district court dismissed the Potters’ quiet-title claim, concluding that the affidavit both expunged the sale and reinstated the mortgage, such that the Potters own the property encumbered by a mortgage. As the court further reasoned, even if the affidavit were invalid, the affidavit would be invalid in its entirety, neither expunging the sale nor reinstating the mortgage, such that the Potters would now be living *409 on the property with no title at all. The district court’s reasoning was correct: in either event, no quiet-title relief was warranted.

Janice and David Potter recorded a mortgage for their home in February 2007. A few years later, the Potters ran into financial difficulty. They defaulted on their mortgage in March 2009 and filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in June 2009. As a result of the bankruptcy, the Potters’ personal obligations for their mortgage were discharged, although the property remained encumbered by the mortgage.

After the bankruptcy, the original mortgagee assigned its interest in the property to BAC Home Loans Servicing, L.P. BAC initiated foreclosure proceedings against the Potters’ property. BAC ended up purchasing the property itself by sheriffs deed in March 2010. The Potters did not redeem the property. BAC then transferred title of the property to Fannie Mae by quitclaim deed. Fannie Mae, in turn, transferred title to Bank of America, also by quitclaim deed. Bank of America is therefore the successor by merger to BAC, as well as the first defendant in this case.

Around 2012, the Potters allegedly sought rescission of the sheriffs deed, which would have reinstated the mortgage but also allowed them to be reviewed for a loan modification or another loss-mitigation alternative. To this end, in April 2012, Bank of America executed an “Affidavit Expunging Sheriffs Deed on Mortgage Filed Pursuant to MCLA 565.451a.” Through this affidavit, Bank of America declared:

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4. That MORTGAGEE will not rely on said foreclosure sale and will treat such sale as having not been held and void.
5. That MORTGAGEE wishes this Affidavit to be recorded in order to correct record title and to show that the Sheriffs Deed dated March 31, 2010 ... is hereby expunged, and that the mortgage recorded on February 2, 2007 ... is in full force and effect.

Section 565.451a of the Michigan Compiled Laws allows “any person having knowledge of the facts” to record an affidavit “stating facts relating to ,.. [knowledge of the happening of any condition or event which may terminate an estate or interest in real property.” M.C.L. § 565.451a(b). As will be discussed in greater detail below, it is the practice in Michigan to use M.C.L. § 565.451a to record affidavits that expunge a previous foreclosure sale and reinstate a mortgage. Thus, Bank of America’s affidavit under M.C.L. § 565.451a was intended to restore the status quo before the March 2010 sheriffs sale, with the Potters again as mortgagors but Bank of America as the new mortgagee. The Potters apparently did not make any payments on their reinstated mortgage and continued to live in the house.'

In March 2014, Bank of America assigned its interest in the property to the Wilmington Savings Fund, as a trustee of the Primestar-H Fund 1 Trust. Wilmington Savings is the second defendant in this case.

Wilmington Savings initiated another foreclosure on the property in October 2014. In response, the Potters filed a quiet-title complaint in Michigan state court against Wilmington Savings Fund, launching this litigation. The Potters also joined Bank of America, which, as a citizen of North Carolina for diversity purposes, removed the case to federal court. After discovery, both defendants moved for summary judgment.

*410 In opposition to the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the Potters made the legal argument they now make on appeal. The Potters argued that the sheriffs sale by BAC in March 2010 extinguished their mortgage. Therefore, BAC, as the purchaser of the property as well as the mortgagee, took unencumbered title to the property. BAC then transferred this title to Bank of America. Thus, when Bank of America declared in Paragraph Four of the affidavit that it “will not rely on said foreclosure sale and will treat such sale as having not been held and void,” it was in effect giving title back to the Potters. However, although the Potters accept the validity of Paragraph Four of the affidavit expunging the sale, they deny the validity of Paragraph Five’s reinstatement of the mortgage, arguing that Bank of America cannot unilaterally declare that the mortgage is “in full force and effect.” The Potters contend that because Paragraph Four of the affidavit is valid but Paragraph Five is not, Bank of America gave the Potters back their property but failed to reinstate the mortgage, such that the Potters now own the property free of any mortgage.

The district court rejected the Potters’ argument. Although the court acknowledged some problems with the use of M.C.L. § 565.451a affidavits to reinstate mortgages, it concluded that the affidavit was at most voidable by the benefited party—Bank of America—and in any event, could not be “split up” so that it succeeded in giving the Potters back the property but failed in. reinstating the mortgage. The court concluded that “[a]ny other result means that the Potters get a free house, which I think is just not saleable.”

The Potters now appeal, but their argument lacks merit.

Michigan case law demonstrates that that a mortgagee can use an affidavit filed pursuant to M.C.L. § 565.451a to both expunge a sheriffs sale and revive a mortgage, returning two parties to the status quo before a sale. For example, this case is on all fours with Freund v. Trott & Trott, P.C., where a mortgagee foreclosed on a piece of property, but then executed an “Affidavit Expunging Sheriffs Deed on Mortgage Sale” asserting that it “will not rely on said foreclosure sale and will treat such sale as having not been held and void ab initio.” No. 299011, 2011 WL 5064248, *2 (Mich. Ct. App. Oct. 25, 2011) (per curiam). Based on this affidavit, the Michigan Court of Appeals concluded that foreclosure had been set aside, in effect both expunging the sale and reinstating the mortgage. Id. It apparently did not even' occur to the court to give effect to the provision of the affidavit expunging the sale but not the provision reinstating the mortgage.

Freund is not an isolated case. In Cordes v. Great Lakes Excavating & Equip.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
682 F. App'x 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janice-potter-v-wilmington-savings-ca6-2017.