Lincoln Savings Bank v. Debra D. Emmert

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 24, 2023
Docket20-1663
StatusPublished

This text of Lincoln Savings Bank v. Debra D. Emmert (Lincoln Savings Bank v. Debra D. Emmert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lincoln Savings Bank v. Debra D. Emmert, (iowa 2023).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA

No. 20–1663

Submitted January 19, 2023—Filed February 24, 2023

LINCOLN SAVINGS BANK,

Appellee,

vs.

DEBRA D. EMMERT,

Appellant,

and

SIMPSON FURNITURE COMPANY, EMMERT MANAGEMENT, LLC, DALE T. EMMERT, IOWA DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE and BERGEN PLUMBING, INC.,

Defendants.

On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Black Hawk County, Linda M.

Fangman, Judge.

A defendant seeks further review of the court of appeals decision that

affirmed a default judgment in a foreclosure case. DECISION OF COURT OF

APPEALS VACATED; DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT REVERSED AND

REMANDED.

McDermott, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which all participating

justices joined. McDonald and May, JJ., took no part in the consideration or

decision of the case. 2

Gregg A. Geerdes (argued), Iowa City, for appellant.

David T. Bower (argued), Jeffrey W. Courter, and Roy R. Leaf of Nyemaster

Goode, P.C., Des Moines, for appellee. 3

McDERMOTT, Justice.

The initial steps in a typical lawsuit are straightforward. A plaintiff files a

petition with the court that alleges a claim against a defendant and then serves

the defendant with the petition. The defendant, in turn, files an answer or other

document responding to the petition within a specified time. If the defendant

fails to file any response by the deadline, the plaintiff may apply for a default

judgment against the defendant.

But the law favors resolution of disputes on their merits, not through

procedural defaults. And to help ensure that defaults are entered based on

informed choice, not oversight, our rules of civil procedure require an extra step

in the process. The court will not give a default judgment unless the plaintiff first

sends, in writing, a “notice of intent” to file an application for default judgment.

The notice serves as a move-it-or-lose-it warning that the plaintiff intends to ask

for a default judgment unless the defendant files a response within ten days.

When a defendant is known to be represented by a lawyer, our rules

require the plaintiff to send a copy of the notice of intent to the lawyer. The

question in this appeal—one that this court has never been presented with in

any previous case—is whether the plaintiff must send a copy of the notice of

intent to the defendant in addition to the defendant’s lawyer.

I. The Foreclosure Lawsuit and Entry of the Default Judgment.

Debra Emmert and her then-husband owned and operated a furniture

store and a related management company. The furniture store and management

company took out about $5 million in loans from Lincoln Savings Bank. As 4

security for the loans, the bank took mortgages on two properties, security

interests in certain business and personal property, and a personal guaranty

from Emmert. When loan payments failed to arrive, the bank filed a petition to

foreclose the mortgages and security interests.

The bank served the foreclosure lawsuit on an attorney named Phillip

Brooks. The parties dispute the scope of Brooks’s representation of Emmert in

this matter. Emmert argues that Brooks had represented her on a matter

unrelated to the bank’s foreclosure lawsuit (a replevin action), while the bank

argues that Brooks was communicating and holding himself out as Emmert’s

lawyer in the foreclosure lawsuit. Putting aside for the moment questions about

the scope of Brooks’s representation, the record shows that Brooks filed an

acceptance of service of the foreclosure petition on Emmert’s behalf and that

neither Brooks nor Emmert, nor anyone else acting on Emmert’s behalf, filed

any response to the petition.

After the deadline to file a responsive pleading had passed, the bank

mailed a written notice of intent to file for a default judgment to Brooks. The

bank did not separately mail any notice of intent to Emmert. A few months later,

the bank filed its application for default judgment. The district court promptly

entered a default judgment against Emmert and the other defendants.

Some months later, the bank asked the court for permission to amend the

petition against the defendants (even though the court had already entered a

default judgment) based on the bank’s purchase of a senior mortgage on one of

the foreclosed properties. The district court granted the bank permission to 5

amend, and the bank refiled its petition against Emmert and the other

defendants. The bank sent Brooks a copy of the newly-amended petition by

certified mail.

The ensuing events began to unfold just as before. No one filed any

response to the petition by the deadline. The bank mailed a written notice of

intent to file for a default judgment to Brooks (but not to Emmert). The bank

timely filed its application for default judgment, which the district court again

promptly granted. The bank thereafter provided information to the district court

for entry of a detailed foreclosure judgment that reflected the updated amount of

the debt and other particulars.

But while that foreclosure judgment remained outstanding, lawyer Gregg

Geerdes filed an appearance in the case on Emmert’s behalf. Geerdes filed no

other documents with his appearance. About three weeks later, the court entered

the foreclosure judgment against Emmert and the other defendants. Within a

couple of hours, Geerdes filed a motion asking the court not to enter the

foreclosure judgment (too late, as it turned out) or, in the alternative, to set aside

the foreclosure judgment.

The district court took no action on Geerdes’s motion not to enter, or to

set aside, the foreclosure judgment. Two weeks later, Emmert (represented by

Geerdes) appealed the foreclosure judgment. Nearly two months after filing the

appeal, she moved in the district court to set aside the default judgment and to

enlarge and reconsider the foreclosure judgment. We transferred the appeal to

the court of appeals. The court of appeals correctly concluded that the district 6

court lacked the power to rule on the motions filed after her notice of appeal

because her appeal divested the district court of jurisdiction. See State v. Mallett,

677 N.W.2d 775, 777 (Iowa 2004). On Emmert’s other claims, the court of

appeals determined that the bank satisfied the notice rule by mailing the notice

of intent only to Brooks and affirmed the district court’s default judgment.

Emmert applied for further review, which we granted.

Emmert is the only defendant challenging the notice and the resulting

default judgment. She makes two arguments relevant to our resolution of this

appeal, both centered on the “notice of intent” that the bank was required to

send. First, she argues that notice to Brooks was improper because Brooks was

not her attorney and had never been the attorney of record in this matter.

Second, she argues that even if Brooks had been serving as her lawyer in this

matter, sending notice to Brooks alone wasn’t enough—the bank needed to send

the notice of intent to her in addition to her lawyer.

II. Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.972 and Whether the Bank Was Required to Send a Copy of the Notice of Intent to Emmert.

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Related

State v. Mallett
677 N.W.2d 775 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2004)
Dolezal v. Bockes Bros. Farms, Inc.
602 N.W.2d 348 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1999)

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Lincoln Savings Bank v. Debra D. Emmert, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lincoln-savings-bank-v-debra-d-emmert-iowa-2023.