Jelinis, LLC v. S. Bruce Hiran and Hung N. Yi

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 31, 2018
Docket14-17-00220-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jelinis, LLC v. S. Bruce Hiran and Hung N. Yi (Jelinis, LLC v. S. Bruce Hiran and Hung N. Yi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jelinis, LLC v. S. Bruce Hiran and Hung N. Yi, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Reversed and Rendered in Part, Affirmed in Part, and Majority and Concurring Opinions filed May 31, 2018.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-17-00220-CV

JELINIS, LLC, Appellant V.

S. BRUCE HIRAN AND HUNG N. YI, Appellees

On Appeal from the 151st District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 2017-06257

OPINION

Jelinis, LLC appeals a temporary injunction order in favor of appellees S. Bruce Hiran and Hung N. Yi. Jelinis argues that the trial court erred by enjoining it from (1) evicting Hiran and Yi because they pleaded no cause of action against Jelinis; and (2) taking legal action in the justice court to evict Hiran and Yi because they failed to show that “the justice court was without jurisdiction to determine possession.” We reverse and render in part and affirm in part. BACKGROUND

Hiran signed a Texas Home Equity Note on June 6, 2006, in the amount of $800,000 payable to Long Beach Mortgage Company. On the same day, Hiran and his wife Yi signed a Texas Home Equity Security Instrument confirming that the loan was secured by residential real property located at 4132 Lehigh Avenue in Houston, Texas. The note and deed of trust were later transferred to Deutsche Bank National Trust Company. Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc. acted as the loan servicer.

Appellees defaulted on their loan in October 2012. Select Portfolio sent notices of default in December 2012 and May 2013. Appellees ignored the notices Select Portfolio sent them. Deutsche Bank, as trustee, in trust for registered holders of Long Beach Mortgage Loan Trust 2006-10, filed an Application for Home Equity Foreclosure Order pursuant to Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 736 on January 22, 2014. Deutsche Bank nonsuited the action and filed suit in the 270th District Court on September 8, 2014, seeking a declaratory judgment and an order authorizing foreclosure.

Deutsche Bank filed a traditional summary judgment motion, contending that (1) it is entitled to a declaration of its right to foreclose on appellees’ home and to an order authorizing foreclosure because its summary judgment evidence established that a debt exists, the debt is secured by a lien for a home equity loan, a default under the note and deed of trust exists, and the requisite notices to cure the default have been provided to appellees; and (2) appellees should not be allowed to deny executing the loan documents because Hiran refused to testify at his deposition regarding “any issues relating to whether he signed the applicable loan documents and refused to provide any handwriting exemplars, based on his assertion of the Fifth Amendment.”

The 270th District Court granted Deutsche Bank’s summary judgment motion 2 and signed a Final Judgment for Declaratory Relief and Order Authorizing Foreclosure on December 3, 2015. This judgment (1) disposed of all claims; (2) awarded “an in rem Judgment” against appellees authorizing a non-judicial foreclosure sale of appellees’ home “pursuant to the terms and conditions of the subject Texas Home Equity Security Instrument and TEX. PROP CODE §51.002;” and (3) ordered that the final judgment “serves as an Order of Foreclosure of a Home Equity Lien.”

Deutsche Bank sold the home at a foreclosure sale to Jelinis on December 6, 2016. Jelinis filed a forcible detainer suit regarding the home on January 12, 2017.

Appellees filed suit in the 151st District Court on January 30, 2017, naming as parties Long Beach Mortgage Company, Deutsche Bank, and Jelinis, and alleging that the “actions committed by Long Beach Mortgage Company” constitute statutory fraud and breach of contract, and that the “actions committed by Deutsche Bank” constitute common law fraud and breach of contract. Appellees alleged that, “although their signatures appear to be valid, certain pages of the Note and Deed of Trust must have been switched by representatives of Long Beach Mortgage Company . . . because [appellees]’ Home Equity Loan was a fixed rate of 2% interest and, instead, the Note and Deed of Trust attached as exhibits to the Foreclosure Lawsuit are purported to be an adjustable rate note at 7.975% interest.”

Appellees further alleged that “the exhibits which are the legal basis for Deutsche Bank’s being awarded a judgment authorizing them [sic] to sell [appellees]’ Property at a foreclosure sale are fraudulent; therefore, the foreclosure sale of [appellees]’ Property should be deemed void and rescinded. Moreover, [appellees] allege[d] that the Home Equity Loan itself was fraudulent as a result of Long Beach Mortgage’s representatives switching the loan documents unbeknownst

3 to [appellees]; therefore, [appellees]’ home equity loan should be deemed void ab initio.”

Appellees requested that the trial court (1) issue a temporary restraining order and then a temporary injunction enjoining Jelinis from selling appellees’ home “as well as from taking any legal action to evict [appellees];” (2) enter a judgment in favor of appellees “to rescind the foreclosure sale of” appellees’ home and “to declare the home equity loan dated June 06, 2006 between [appellees] as well as Long Beach Mortgage Company as void ab initio;” and (3) enter a judgment against Long Beach Mortgage Company and Deutsche Bank for actual and exemplary damages and attorney’s fees.

Attached to appellees’ petition was Hiran’s affidavit in which he stated in pertinent part:

2. The subject matter of this lawsuit is the real property and the improvements thereon located at 4132 Lehigh Avenue, Houston, TX 77005 (the “Property”). 3. The Property was owned by my wife Hung N. Yi and I on June 06, 2006 on which date we entered into a Home Equity Loan. During the process of entering into the Home Equity Loan, we executed a Texas Home Equity Note (“Note”) in the amount of $800,000 which was payable to Long Beach Mortgage Company (“Long Beach”). In addition, we executed a Texas Home Equity Security Instrument (“Deed of Trust”). 4. . . . the Note and Deed of Trust were subsequently transferred to Deutsche Bank National Trust . . . . 5. During the term of the Note, we began to receive notices that we were past due on the payments of the Note. We did not understand how that could be true since we were making our payments on the Note in full and in a timely manner. Accordingly, we expected that the notices must be a clerical error which will be remedied in due course. As such, we ignored the delinquency notices which we received from SPS.

4 6. Due to the nature and extent of Plaintiffs’ perceived delinquency, Deutsche Bank filed an Application for Home Equity Foreclosure . . . [i]n the 270th Judicial District Court of Harris County, Texas (the “Foreclosure Lawsuit”). 7. The Foreclosure Lawsuit culminated in a Final Judgment for Declaratory Relief and Order Authorizing Foreclosure and the Property was sold by Deutsche Bank to Jelinis, LLC (“Jelinis”) at a foreclosure sale on December 06, 2016. 8. During the course of investigating this lawsuit, I informed my legal counsel that we did not execute the Note and Deed of Trust which were attached as exhibits to the Foreclosure Lawsuit. Instead, I assert that, although our signatures appear to be valid, certain pages of the Note and Deed of Trust must have been switched by representatives of Long Beach Mortgage Company (“Long Beach Mortgage”) because our Home Equity Loan was a fixed rate of 2% interest and, instead, the Note and Deed of Trust attached as exhibits to the Foreclosure Lawsuit are purported to be an adjustable rate note at 7.975% interest. The trial court granted appellees’ request for a temporary restraining order and set a hearing on appellees’ temporary injunction request. Appellees nonsuited their claims against Deutsche Bank without prejudice on February 22, 2017.

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Jelinis, LLC v. S. Bruce Hiran and Hung N. Yi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jelinis-llc-v-s-bruce-hiran-and-hung-n-yi-texapp-2018.