Lewis Lubar, Trustee of the Clover Trust v. Frederick W. Connelly

2014 ME 17, 86 A.3d 642, 2014 WL 536998, 2014 Me. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 11, 2014
DocketDocket Yor-13-198
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 2014 ME 17 (Lewis Lubar, Trustee of the Clover Trust v. Frederick W. Connelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis Lubar, Trustee of the Clover Trust v. Frederick W. Connelly, 2014 ME 17, 86 A.3d 642, 2014 WL 536998, 2014 Me. LEXIS 23 (Me. 2014).

Opinion

ALEXANDER, J.

[¶ 1] Frederick W. Connelly appeals from a judgment of foreclosure and order of sale of his residence entered in the Superior Court (York County, Fntzsche, J.) upon the grant of a summary judgment, pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 56(j) and 93, to Lewis Lubar, as trustee of The Clover Trust, on Lubar’s complaint for foreclosure.

[¶ 2] Connelly argues that the court erred in entering a summary judgment because (1) there are genuine disputes of material fact relating to affirmative defenses that Connelly asserts under fair lending and consumer protection statutes, primarily the Maine Consumer Credit Code, 9-A M.R.S. §§ 1-101 to 12-107 (2008), including whether the Trust was a creditor as defined in 9-A M.R.S. § 1-301(17); 1 (2) Connelly is entitled to a trial on his equitable defenses; (3) there are genuine disputes of material fact regarding sums due on the note; and (4) Lubar did not produce admissible evidence necessary to support the entry of a summary judgment in a residential foreclosure action.

[¶ 3] Because review of the summary judgment record demonstrates that genuine issues of material fact remain to be resolved before judgment may be entered on Lubar’s complaint, we vacate the judgment of foreclosure and order of sale and remand for further proceedings.

I. CASE HISTORY

[¶ 4] The following facts, which are supported by the summary judgment record, are presented in the light most favorable to Connelly as the nonprevailing party. See Trott v. H.D. Goodall Hosp., 2013 ME 33, ¶ 2, 66 A.3d 7.

*645 [¶ 5] Frederick W. Connelly was born in 1930. He resided in Massachusetts until he retired in 1983, at which time he became a full-time resident of Maine. He has lived in a house in Wells (the Wells Property) since 1990. He lives on a fixed annual income of $25,476. It appears from the record that, prior to the mortgage at issue here, the Wells property was not encumbered by any mortgage.

[¶ 6] Connelly and his late wife have five children who are now adults. One of Connelly’s sons, Charles, is or was married to Susan Paratore Connelly. 2 Charles, Susan, and Susan’s mother lived together in a house on Ivy Road in Belmont, Massachusetts (the Belmont Property). In April 2007, the Belmont Property was titled in Susan’s name, with a life estate to her mother. 3 Connelly has never resided at the Belmont Property.

[¶ 7] Charles and Susan were apparently having financial difficulties. Without Connelly’s consent or knowledge, (1) Susan and her mother transferred the Belmont Property—purportedly for $750,000 — to Connelly by deed dated June 25, 2007; (2) Charles, or someone acting in concert with him, forged a power of attorney (POA) dated June 27, 2007, that authorized Charles to purchase the Belmont Property on Connelly’s behalf and to encumber that property with a mortgage loan of $480,000 in Connelly’s name alone; (3) pursuant to the POA, Charles secured a mortgage loan, obligating only Connelly, from an entity called “Homecomings Financial, LLC”; and (4) Charles apparently retained the loan proceeds for his own use. The record does not specify how many, if any, payments were made, but Connelly began receiving collection calls just months after Charles obtained that loan. Charles assured Connelly that he would remedy the situation.

[¶ 8] At Charles’s request, Connelly signed a piece of paper on January 22, 2008, which was the signature page of a quitclaim deed transferring the Belmont Property from Connelly back to Susan for one dollar. The first page of that deed incorrectly states that Connelly was a resident of Belmont, Massachusetts. Connelly does not recall having seen the first page of the deed when he signed the second page. When Connelly signed the document, he identified himself by his Maine driver’s license to the notary who witnessed his signature. That notary was an individual named “Lot Bates.” The record does not indicate why Charles arranged to have the Belmont Property transferred to Susan at this time.

[¶ 9] A “Uniform Residential Loan Application,” which purportedly initiated the mortgage loan at issue in this foreclosure matter, was prepared the same day that the quitclaim deed was executed or sometime thereafter. The copy of that loan application in the record that was before the Superior Court, designated “Lubar Exhibit B,” is of extremely poor quality, with the typed and handwritten entries heavily shaded and, consequently, it is difficult to read. For example, although the date handwritten on the application appears to be February 27, 2008, it could be the 22nd, 24th, or 27th of January or February of 2008. 4

*646 [¶ 10] The application purports to be by Connelly, listed as “Borrower,” and Charles, listed as “Co-borrower.” The first page of the application states that the borrowers seek a loan to purchase, rather than to refinance, the Belmont Property, and states that the Belmont Property will be a “Secondary Residence,” contrary to Lubar’s assertions as to the purpose of the loan. However, the application also reports, inconsistently, that Connelly already owned the Belmont Property — and that Connelly resided at that location — and lists the Wells Property as other property owned. Lubar’s affidavit, filed in support of the motion for summary judgment, describes the Wells Property as a vacation home. 5

[¶ 11] There are additional discrepancies in the loan application. 6 The “Borrower,” referring to Connelly, is reported as being married; an alternative box for indication of widower status is left blank. The application also lists Connelly’s monthly income as $2500, rather than his actual monthly income of approximately $2120. The value of the Belmont Property is listed as $970,000, with a $491,000 mortgage, and the value of the Wells Property is listed as $500,000 with no mortgages or liens. The loan amount sought is $600,000.

[¶ 12] Only Charles’s signature appears on the loan application. Connelly never signed it. The loan application is not notarized. The document indicates that the application was taken by telephone and that the name of the interviewer is “Lot Bates,” the same name as the person who had witnessed the January 22, 2008, quitclaim deed transferring the Belmont Property from Connelly to Susan. If the two persons named “Lot Bates” are one and the same, as the record suggests, he or she would or should have been aware that, as of the time of application preparation, Con-nelly had no ownership interest in the Belmont Property. Bates’s name was typed, not signed, on the application. The loan application also indicates that Bates was a representative of “Beechwood Mortgage,” a mortgage broker that would later be paid a $12,000 fee as part of the closing on the mortgage loan. The fifth page of the five-page loan application is not in the record.

[¶ 13] By sworn affidavit, Lubar asserted, “I personally handled the taking of the loan application and the underwriting of the loan made to Frederick W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 ME 17, 86 A.3d 642, 2014 WL 536998, 2014 Me. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-lubar-trustee-of-the-clover-trust-v-frederick-w-connelly-me-2014.