McNeill Family Trust v. Centura Bank

2003 WY 2, 60 P.3d 1277, 2003 Wyo. LEXIS 2, 2003 WL 57908
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 2003
Docket02-43, 02-44, 02-59
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 2003 WY 2 (McNeill Family Trust v. Centura Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McNeill Family Trust v. Centura Bank, 2003 WY 2, 60 P.3d 1277, 2003 Wyo. LEXIS 2, 2003 WL 57908 (Wyo. 2003).

Opinion

KITE, Justice.

[¶ 1] Centura Bank commenced a foreclosure by power of sale proceeding on a first mortgage which was in default with $87,320.82 due. Centura’s attorneys apparently intended to cancel or postpone the sale because they had failed to notify a second mortgagee but did not do so. No bank representative attended the sale, and Bob G. McNeill, on behalf of the McNeill Family Trust (McNeill Trust), made the only bid in the amount of $20,000. The district court found the McNeill Trust’s bid price so low as to be unconscionable, and that finding, together with Centura’s mistakes, justified the exercise of equitable power to set the sale aside. In an effort to return all parties to the positions they held prior to the sale, the district court ordered Centura to pay the McNeill Trust’s attorney fees and costs. We reverse both the decision to set aside the original foreclosure sale and the award of attorney fees and remand to the district court.

ISSUES

[¶ 2] We rephrase the issues as follows:

I. Did the district court err when it found an unconscionably low sale price required the foreclosure sale be set aside?

II. Was the award of attorney fees and costs to the McNeill Trust supported by law?

FACTS

[¶ 3] On March 27, 1996, the Shoshone First Bank loaned Robert and Sandra Dvors-cak $89,625 and took a first mortgage on their Cody residence which had an appraisal value of $119,500. In September of 1996, U.S. Bank, formerly First Bank, made a $30,000 home equity loan to the Dvorscaks and took a second mortgage on the property. The first mortgage was assigned to Centura in March of 1997.

[¶ 4] The Dvorscaks filed a petition for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection on November 12, 1997, listing the debts on the real property and provided notice to Centura and U.S. Bank. Pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 362(a), an automatic stay went into effect when the bankruptcy was filed which precluded any creditor from taking legal action against the Dvorscaks or their bankruptcy estate property without first obtaining an order for relief from stay from the federal bankruptcy court. In March of 1998, Centura referred the Dvorscaks’ mortgage to the Colorado law firm of Meinhold, Stawiarski, Shapiro & Co-dilis, LLP (Centura’s attorneys) for foreclosure proceedings. Centura’s attorneys obtained a title report, which did not reflect U.S. Bank’s second mortgage, and began a foreclosure by power of sale proceeding pursuant to Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§ 34-A-101 through 34-4-113 (LexisNexis 2001) by notifying interested parties and publishing the notice of foreclosure in the Powell Tribune. Centura’s attorneys did not obtain relief from the bankruptcy stay prior to commencing the foreclosure process. U.S. Bank subsequently advised Centura’s attorneys of the second mortgage, and the attorneys apparently intended to cancel or postpone the scheduled foreclosure sale to allow notification of U.S. Bank and a restarting of the process. However, they failed to do so.

[¶ 5] Mr. McNeill, trustee of the McNeill Trust, saw the published foreclosure sale notice and attended the June 24, 1998, sale. The only other person in attendance was Richard Moser, a deputy sheriff who was there to conduct the sale. Mr. McNeill bid $20,000, and Deputy Moser accepted the bid. Either Deputy Moser or the sheriffs office support staff telephoned Centura’s law firm *1281 for instructions regarding the appropriate payee of the check. Deputy Moser informed Mr. McNeill that Centura was the appropriate payee. Mr. McNeil went to the bank, obtained a certified check for $20,000 in the name of Centura Bank as the payee, returned it to the sheriffs office, and obtained a certificate of purchase. When Mr. McNeill returned home, his wife advised him an attorney for Centura had left a telephone message. Mr. McNeill returned the telephone call, and the parties discussed the validity of the foreclosure sale as well as the possible exchange of money for Mr. McNeill’s surrender of the certificate of purchase. A Juné 25, 1998, letter from the law firm to Mr. McNeill documented the telephone call and cautioned that litigation could follow if the “erroneous” sale was not resolved.

[¶ 6] Centura’s attorneys filed a lawsuit 1 on July 27, 1998, naming Mr. McNeill, the Dvorscaks, 2 the Park County sheriff, and U.S. Bank 3 as defendants and asserting:

10. As a result of mistake and the Sheriffs failure to ascertain the status of Centura’s bid and inquire into the absence of a Centura representative [at the foreclosure sale]; as a result of lack of notification to [U.S.] Bank of the sale as required to protect its due process rights; and as a result of Centura’s mistake in not withdrawing or postponing the sale, the Mortgagors, Centura, and [U.S.] Bank have all been deprived of their rights to obtain reasonable value for the property, to bid in the amounts of their liens, and/or to redeem the amounts of their liens from the sale in order to fully protect their interests.
11. Because of the sale, Defendant McNeill has received an improper and inequitably huge windfall.

The prayer for relief requested the sale be declared void and of no effect, the $20,000 payment be returned to Mr. McNeill, and a new sale be held. In October of 1998, Centu-ra’s attorneys filed a motion to dismiss contending they had just learned the Dvorscaks’ Chapter 7 bankruptcy was filed prior to the foreclosure sale and, therefore, the sale was void because it was conducted in violation of the automatic stay. The district court stayed the action pending resolution of these issues by the bankruptcy court. Centura filed a motion for relief from stay in the bankruptcy court asking that the sale in violation of the stay be held void and the stay be lifted to allow Centura’s state court action to proceed. The McNeill Trust and Mrs. Dvorscak filed objections. After a hearing, the bankruptcy court granted the motion for relief thereby permitting the state court proceedings to go forward and validating the foreclosure sale because “[t]o hold otherwise would unfairly reward Centura.” Centura filed a motion for reconsideration which was denied; however, it did not appeal the bankruptcy court’s holding that the automatic stay did not void the sale.

[¶ 7] Thereafter, in the state court action, the sheriff was dismissed, the McNeill Trust was substituted for Mr. McNeill as a defendant, and Centura filed an amended complaint making the same claim — the sale was void for violation of the automatic stay — -that had been unsuccessful in the bankruptcy court. Centura’s attorneys then filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings requesting that the district court declare the foreclosure sale void for unilateral mistakes, lack of notice to U.S. Bank, unjust enrichment by the McNeill Trust, irregularity of the sale, and unconscionability. The district court converted the motion to one for summary judgment and granted it ordering that all the parties be returned to their presale status. The court also directed Centura to pay the McNeill Trust’s attorney fees and costs of $82,458 in order to fully restore the parties to the presale circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
2003 WY 2, 60 P.3d 1277, 2003 Wyo. LEXIS 2, 2003 WL 57908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcneill-family-trust-v-centura-bank-wyo-2003.