Lisa G. Lilly v. The Huntington National Bank

CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 2023
Docket22-553
StatusPublished

This text of Lisa G. Lilly v. The Huntington National Bank (Lisa G. Lilly v. The Huntington National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lisa G. Lilly v. The Huntington National Bank, (W. Va. 2023).

Opinion

FILED November 17, 2023 EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS

Lisa G. Lilly, Defendant Below, Petitioner

vs.) No. 22-553 (Harrison County 22-C-AP-2-3)

The Huntington National Bank, Plaintiff Below, Respondent

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Petitioner Lisa G. Lilly appeals two orders of the Circuit Court of Harrison County related to her appeal of a magistrate court order. 1 The first, entered March 17, 2022, is an interlocutory order finding petitioner’s request for a jury trial in magistrate court untimely and setting the appeal for a de novo bench trial. The second, entered June 1, 2022, is the final order of the circuit court based on its de novo bench trial, granting possession of real property to Respondent Huntington National Bank and ordering petitioner to vacate the property. Upon our review, finding no substantial question of law and no prejudicial error, we determine that oral argument is unnecessary and that a memorandum decision affirming the circuit court’s order is appropriate. See W. Va. R. App. P. 21.

Respondent filed a civil complaint for unlawful detainer in the Magistrate Court of Harrison County, West Virginia against petitioner and her husband Christopher Brent Lilly, deceased, seeking possession of real property that respondent purchased through a trustee foreclosure sale. 2 The parties have a lengthy history related to the foreclosure on this real property, which is petitioner’s long-time home. 3 Petitioner, initially self-represented, timely filed her answer in December 2021. She subsequently obtained counsel. In addition, the magistrate court record includes an “(Optional) Notice of Election” form requesting a jury trial (“notice of election”)

1 Petitioner appears by counsel Jeffrey V. Mehalic. Respondent appears by counsel Jason E. Manning and David M. Asbury. 2 Although identified as a party in the magistrate court proceeding, it is undisputed that Mr. Lilly died prior to the institution of the proceeding. 3 Issues related to the underlying foreclosure were before this Court and decided in Christopher Brent Lilly and Lisa G. Lilly v. The Huntington National Bank, No. 19-1134, 2021 WL 2023514 (May 20, 2021)(memorandum decision).

1 signed by petitioner with a handwritten date of December 7, 2021. However, it is date-stamped February 2, 2022, at 3:06 p.m., after the magistrate court conducted a bench trial. On January 26, 2022, the magistrate court conducted a bench trial and, on that same day, granted judgment to respondent. Petitioner timely appealed to the circuit court.

Soon after the notice of appeal was filed in circuit court, petitioner’s counsel filed a motion to withdraw, which was granted. 4 The following day, the circuit court held a previously scheduled hearing pursuant to West Virginia Code § 50-5-12(c)(5) 5 to address the issue of the timeliness of petitioner’s request for a jury trial in the underlying matter. At that hearing, petitioner appeared on her own behalf. She testified that she filed the notice of election contemporaneously with her answer in magistrate court, but that only the first page of the answer was date-stamped. Petitioner presented an affidavit from her mother, who testified consistently with that affidavit at the hearing, stating she accompanied petitioner to magistrate court to file documents, including the notice of election, on December 7, 2021. 6 A deputy magistrate clerk in the Harrison County Magistrate Clerk’s office also testified. In relevant part, she stated that petitioner provided the notice of election form for the first time when she filed her notice of appeal and that this was unusual. The deputy clerk testified that she reviewed the entire file on her computer and the form was not previously scanned in the computer or scanned in with petitioner’s answer. Documentary evidence was also considered, including the notice of election and a notice of mediation in another case involving petitioner, both date-stamped February 2, 2022, at 3:06 p.m.

After considering the conflicting testimony and documentary evidence, the circuit court entered an order on March 17, 2022, finding that petitioner did not submit the notice of election to the magistrate court until February 2, 2022, and it was therefore untimely and void. The circuit court noted that it gave “great significance” to the relevant documents in the magistrate and circuit

4 By agreement, the representation of petitioner’s counsel was limited to the magistrate court proceeding. 5 West Virginia Code § 50-5-12(c)(5) provides as follows:

If the circuit court finds that a record for appeal is deficient as to matters which might be affected by evidence not considered or inadequately developed, the court may proceed to take such evidence and make independent findings of fact to the extent that questions of fact and law may merge in determining whether the evidence was such, as a matter of law, as to require a particular finding. If the party appealing the judgment is also a party who elected to try the action before a jury in the magistrate court, and if the circuit court finds that the proceedings below were subject to error to the extent that the party was effectively denied a jury trial, the circuit court may, upon motion of the party, empanel a jury to reexamine the issues of fact, or some part or portions thereof. 6 Only the first page of the documents was date-stamped. Both petitioner and her mother contend the document was incorrectly stamped as filed December 8, 2021, instead of December 7, 2021. Under either date, the answer was timely filed.

2 court files, dated February 2022. 7 Citing to the periods of time within which an election of a jury trial must be made under Rule 6A of the Rules of Civil Procedure for the Magistrate Courts of West Virginia 8 and West Virginia Code § 50-5-8, 9 it concluded that petitioner did not make a timely election for a jury trial. Further, the circuit court found that petitioner’s participation in the magistrate court bench trial with the assistance of counsel effectively waived any right to a jury trial, had one been timely requested. Consequently, the circuit court concluded that the petitioner was not entitled to a jury trial on appeal.

Thereafter, the circuit court conducted a de novo bench trial. Petitioner was self- represented. Documentary evidence, including a certified copy of the foreclosure deed, was admitted without objection and testimony was heard. Over respondent’s objection to its relevance based on prior rulings, petitioner testified that she believes the foreclosure is illegal. Petitioner also referenced a lawsuit against her former counsel related to the foreclosure. The circuit court advised her that the property had been foreclosed on and conducted its own examination regarding the last time she made a payment on the mortgage. Petitioner could not recall. The court noted that there was no challenge made to the sale and the issue before it was whether the respondent had demonstrated legal title. The circuit court ultimately concluded that respondent had legal title to the subject real property, and it granted respondent possession of that property in its June 1, 2022, order. That order has been stayed by agreed order pending this appeal.

Petitioner appeals both the March 17, 2022, order and the June 1, 2022, order. Petitioner’s first assignment of error is that the circuit court erred in holding that she did not timely file, or waived, her request for a jury trial in magistrate court, which resulted in a denial of a jury trial in her appeal from the magistrate court. 10 In her second assignment of error, she seeks to vacate the

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Bluebook (online)
Lisa G. Lilly v. The Huntington National Bank, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lisa-g-lilly-v-the-huntington-national-bank-wva-2023.