THIS
OPINION HAS NO PRECEDENTIAL VALUE. IT SHOULD NOT BE CITED OR RELIED ON AS
PRECEDENT IN ANY PROCEEDING EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY RULE 268(d)(2), SCACR.
THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
In The Court of Appeals
MIA Funding,
LLC, Respondent,
v.
P. Sizer both
individually and as Trustee of Land Trust 112, Jerome Brunson, CityScape
Corporation, Bureaus Investment Group #5, LLC, East Richland County Public
Service District, Richland County Finance Department, The Winter Group, GTI
Investments, Nathaniel Brunson, Jr., Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Defendants,
Of Whom Wells Fargo
Bank, N.A., is the Appellant.
Appeal From Richland County
Joseph M. Strickland, Master-in-Equity
Unpublished Opinion No. 2010-UP-443
Heard March 2, 2010 Filed October 14,
2010
REMANDED
Brendan P. Langendorfer, of Charleston, for Appellant.
Weston Adams, III, C. Edward Rawl, Jr., and Helen F. Hiser, all of
Columbia, for Respondent.
PER CURIAM: In
this foreclosure action, Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., (Wells Fargo) challenges
findings by the master-in-equity that (1) a purported assignment of its
first-priority mortgage lien on the subject property was valid and enforceable
and (2) the lien was capped at $12,531. We
remand this matter to the master for further proceedings.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On
December 17, 1999, Nathaniel Brunson, Jr., executed a promissory note to First
Union Mortgage Corporation (FUMC) for $67,000, plus yearly interest of 9.75
percent. "FUMC Loan No. 8784100" appeared on the face of the
document. Brunson also executed a mortgage on property located in Richland
County to secure the note. The mortgage was a first-priority lien on the
subject property and was recorded on December 23, 1999, in deed book 371 at
page 560. On October 29, 2001, FUMC assigned the note and mortgage to Wells
Fargo for valuable consideration. The assignment was recorded on November 26,
2001, in deed book 593 at page 1293.[1]
Brunson purportedly
executed another promissory note on December 17, 1999, the same date that he
executed the FUMC note and mortgage. This note was in favor of GTI Investments
(GTI) for a credit line of $67,000, plus yearly interest of six percent. "GTI
Loan No. 2572881" appeared on the face of the document. According to language
in this note, if Brunson did not use the entire credit line within two years,
the credit line would close and the balance then owing at that time would
operate as a cap. Although this note was purportedly secured by a mortgage on
the subject property and there were boilerplate references to a mortgage in the
note, no corresponding mortgage was introduced into evidence at trial. Furthermore,
the record does not include any evidence that either this note or any
corresponding mortgage was ever recorded.
According to
information recorded at the Richland County Register of Deeds on December 15,
2003, Wells Fargo assigned its note and mortgage on the subject property to
GTI. According to the recorded document evidencing the assignment, Wells Fargo
conveyed its interest to GTI on April 11, 2003, but the assignment had become
effective on February 1, 2003. The document also indicated that "Pete
Wessinger" as "Vice President" acted on Wells Fargo's behalf in
executing the assignment, which was in turn attested to by "Mark O'man"
as secretary. It further recited that consideration for the assignment was ten
dollars "and other good valuable and sufficient consideration paid."
The only recording reference in the document is to deed book 371 at page 560, where
the lien granted by Brunson to FUMC was recorded.
On April 2, 2004, Brunson executed a note to
Greenlight Financial Services (Greenlight) for $90,000, plus yearly interest of
8.1250 percent. The note was secured by a mortgage dated April 2, 2004, on the
same subject property.[2]
On
April 2, 2004, Greenlight assigned its mortgage to MIA Funding, LLC (MIA). The
assignment was recorded March 23, 2006.[3]
It was MIA's understanding at the time of the assignment that it had acquired a
first-loan priority position; however, it subsequently learned there was a
senior lien on the property. MIA received this information from an
investigative summary report prepared at Greenlight's request by First American
Credco. The report is dated March 17, 2004, before MIA took the assignment
from Greenlight; however, it is not clear when MIA received it.
On September 9, 2005, Wells Fargo brought a
foreclosure action against Brunson. The action was dismissed on January 3,
2006. Neither the case file, which counsel sent in response to a request from
this court, nor the present record on appeal indicates the reason for the
dismissal.
On May 2, 2006, MIA Funding filed a lis pendens and
summons and amended complaint in the present action for foreclosure of its
mortgage. Brunson filed an answer in which he asserted neither he nor "P.
Sizer Land Trust" had any interest in the MIA mortgage, but acknowledged
an obligation on the first mortgage with Wells Fargo for $67,000. In its
responsive pleadings, Wells Fargo maintained it had a first mortgage on the
subject property and denied its mortgage had been capped. It attached copies
of the FUMC note, a copy of the closing statement, and a copy of the mortgage
as exhibits to its answer.[4]
On May 21 and 22,
2008, the Richland County Master-in-Equity conducted a foreclosure hearing in
the matter. The record on appeal contains testimony from Brunson and Michael
O'Donovan Murphy, III, an account manager for a servicing company hired by MIA.
In
addition to identifying MIA's note and mortgage, Murphy discussed the
circumstances surrounding MIA's discovery that there was a prior mortgage on
the subject property. Based on Murphy's identification, a note that GTI provided
to Greenlight was entered into evidence. Murphy also identified the investigative
summary report prepared in 2004 and testified that the report showed the
balance due on the GTI note was $12,530. The note, however, on its face states
that the lender is GTI, designates the obligation as GTI Loan No. 2572881, and
is devoid of references to the number that FUMC assigned to the loan that it
had made to Brunson.[5]
Brunson,
who appeared pro se, was called by counsel for MIA. He denied ever having a credit
relationship with GTI and stated he only borrowed money from Wells Fargo. He
also denied signing MIA's note and mortgage; however, the master rejected his
contention, citing extensive evidence presented by MIA that Brunson executed
the note, mortgage, and related loan documentation.
On June 11, 2008,
the master issued an order and judgment of foreclosure. The master ruled the
foreclosure sale was subject to, among other items, "the senior lien of
that mortgage first recorded by First Union Mortgage Corporation in the
original principal amount of $67,000.00, dated December 17, 1999, and recorded
in said RMC's office on December 23, 1999, . . . but said lien shall be capped
at the amount of $12,530.00" As to the identity of the senior lien holder,
however, the master expressly declined to determine the present holder of
"that first mortgage given by First Union Mortgage Corporation in the
original principal amount of $67,000.00 dated December 17, 1999 . . . ."
Wells Fargo moved
to alter or amend the judgment, and the master heard the motion on June 27,
2008. At the hearing, Wells Fargo submitted two affidavits. In the first
affidavit, Mark Oman, a Senior Executive Vice President at Wells Fargo, stated
(1) the signature purporting to attest the assignment was not his, (2) he did
not witness the execution of the assignment by any agent or employee of Wells
Fargo, (3) he never authorized anyone else at Wells Fargo to execute the GTI
assignment on his behalf or on behalf of Wells Fargo, (4) he had never been
"Secretary" of Wells Fargo as indicated on the purported assignment,
and (5) no one spelling his name as "Pete Wessinger" had ever been a
Vice President of Wells Fargo. In the second affidavit, Lorrie Phelps, another
vice president at Wells Fargo Bank, stated that Wells Fargo acquired its
interest in the subject property through an assignment from FUMC dated October
29, 2001, and recorded November 26, 2001, in deed book 593 at page 1293.
Phelps also asserted that Wells Fargo never transferred the note and mortgage.
Over MIA's objection, the master admitted the affidavits and a letter from the
law office representing Wells Fargo showing the payoff amount claimed by Wells
Fargo on its loan. Nevertheless, the master ruled from the bench that he was
denying Wells Fargo's motion to alter or amend, and a written order to this
effect was filed July 2, 2008. Wells Fargo then filed this appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
A
mortgage foreclosure is an action in equity. Hayne Fed. Credit Union v.
Bailey, 327 S.C. 242, 248, 489 S.E.2d 472, 475 (1997). For cases heard by
a master-in-equity who enters a final judgment, an appellate court may
determine facts according to its own view of the preponderance of the evidence;
however, it does not disregard the findings of the master, "who saw and
heard the witnesses and was in a better position to evaluate their
credibility." Tiger, Inc. v. Fisher Agro, Inc., 301 S.C. 229, 237,
391 S.E.2d 538, 543 (1989).
LAW/ANALYSIS
1. We first address an argument by
MIA Funding that Wells Fargo lacks standing to bring this appeal because it is
no longer the record lien holder. We hold Wells Fargo still has a stake in
this litigation and standing to pursue this appeal. See Ex parte
Morris, 367 S.C. 56, 62, 624 S.E.2d 649, 652 (2006) ("As a general
rule, to have standing, a litigant must have a personal stake in the subject
matter of the litigation."). Here, the master expressly declined to
identify the present holder of the mortgage that Brunson granted to FUMC in
1999. Even more important, the question of whether Wells Fargo did in fact
assign its lien is one of the questions presented in this appeal.
2. Wells Fargo contends there was
insufficient evidence supporting the master's finding that the purported
assignment of its interest in the subject property to GTI was valid and
enforceable. We remand this issue to the master for additional proceedings.
The
master found Wells Fargo offered insufficient evidence to support its proffered
position that the purported assignment of its interest to GTI was a forgery. At
the hearing on Wells Fargo's motion to alter or amend, the master admitted
affidavits attesting that (1) no one from Wells Fargo authorized the assignment
and (2) the signatures on the instrument were not genuine, but he ultimately
declined to amend his prior ruling. We recognize MIA objected to these
affidavits; however, the master's decision to admit them was tantamount to his reopening
the matter, a discretionary call that this court will disturb only in
exceptional cases. See Brenco v. S.C. Dep't of Transp., 377 S.C.
124, 127, 659 S.E.2d 167, 169 (2008) ("The decision whether to reopen a
record for additional evidence is within the trial court's sound discretion and
will not be disturbed on appeal absent an abuse of that discretion."); Hardaway
Concrete Co. v. Hall Contracting Corp., 374 S.C. 216, 233, 647 S.E.2d 488,
497 (Ct. App. 2007) (" 'A judge may not, after all testimony has been
taken, receive additional contested evidence without reopening the case.'
") (quoting Johnson v. Johnson, 288 S.C. 270, 274, 341 S.E.2d 811,
814 (Ct. App. 1986)).
Nevertheless,
two deficiencies remain in the proceedings that prevent a determination
regarding whether the purported assignment from Wells Fargo to GTI was valid
and enforceable. First, the master explicitly declined to make any finding as
to the identity of the present holder of the FUMC note and mortgage. Second,
considering the posture of the case in view of the admission of additional
evidence, MIA should have had the opportunity to respond to the affidavits
after they were admitted. Cf. Brown v. La France Indus., 286
S.C. 319, 325, 333 S.E.2d 348, 351 (Ct. App. 1985) (holding in a workers'
compensation case that the single commissioner did not err in reopening a case
for additional testimony from the claimants and noting the employer "was
expressly authorized to present rebuttal testimony and failed to do so").
We therefore remand this issue to the master for further proceedings consistent
with this opinion.
3. Finally, Wells Fargo alleges error
in the finding by the master that the only lien that was determined to have
priority over MIA's encumbrance on the subject property had been capped at
$12,530. We remand this matter for further proceedings.
According
to the appealed order, "the note corresponding to the mortgage held by
GTI, a copy of which is part of the Court's record, provided that if the full
credit line of said note was not used within the first two years, the amount
used/ending balance would become a cap or limit on the amount owed and the
credit line would then discontinue." The master also found the amount
used, i.e., the ending balance, was capped at $12,530.
As
we have noted, the record indicates Brunson executed two notes encumbering the
subject property on December 17, 1999. FUMC held one note and assigned that
note to Wells Fargo in 2001. It is undisputed that this note had no cap
provision and that the mortgage securing this note was recorded several days
after it was executed. According to public records, although disputed by Wells
Fargo, Wells Fargo assigned this note to GTI in 2003, and the recorded
assignment references the deed book and page number of the mortgage that
Brunson had granted to FUMC. Regardless of whether the 2003 assignment was
valid, the record suggests the FUMC note and mortgage should have been
recognized as having priority over any interest held by MIA.
The
second note, which was offered into evidence by MIA, contained the cap
provision that, according to the master, limited the amount owed. There is no
evidence, either in the note itself or elsewhere in the record, that GTI
obtained this second note through an assignment from Wells Fargo; rather, it
was executed by Brunson directly to GTI. Furthermore, there is no evidence
that this note was ever recorded. It is difficult to reconcile what appears on
the face of this second note with the master's finding that it represented the
same interest that Wells Fargo allegedly assigned to GTI. Because we have
remanded the issue of the validity of the GTI assignment to the master, we
believe that a remand of this issue is appropriate as well.
CONCLUSION
We hold Wells Fargo
has standing to pursue this appeal and remand this case to the master for the
necessary findings pursuant Rule 71, SCRCP.[6]
REMANDED.
FEW,
C.J., HUFF and THOMAS, JJ., concur.
[1] The master's order states the assignment took place
February 28, 2001; however, an affidavit included in the record indicates
November 26, 2001, as the date of the assignment. The assignment document does
not appear in the record. The loan number on the mortgage matches that
appearing in the note.
[2] Exhibit A of the mortgage document suggests Brunson
was record owner of the property by virtue of a conveyance from "Trustee
P. Sizer of Land Trust 112" by deed recorded December 1, 2002, and
recorded December 4, 2003. According to the master's order, by deed dated
December 2, 2002, and recorded May 19, 2004, Brunson conveyed the subject
property back to Trustee P. Sizer. "P. Sizer," according to Brunson,
is Brunson's wife.
[3] The only documentation of these transactions in the
record on appeal is in the master's order, which also noted that Greenlight had
also assigned the mortgage to another entity, but the assignment was recorded
in error.
[4] According to MIA's amended complaint, Wells Fargo
was made a party by virtue of its prior foreclosure action on the subject
property and because it had alleged in its complaint in the prior action that
"it has interest in the subject property pursuant to an unrecorded
assignment from GTI investments."
[5] In its brief and during oral argument, counsel for
MIA argued the note to FUMC was only attached to Wells Fargo's pleadings and
therefore could not be viewed as evidence supporting any findings of fact. We
disagree. See Rule 201(b)(2) and (c), SCRE (giving courts discretion to
take judicial notice of facts "capable of accurate and ready determination
by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned").
Here, the FUMC note was a recorded document, and no allegation has been raised
in this appeal that the copy attached to Wells Fargo's answer was different
from the document that was recorded at the Register of Deeds.
[6] The South Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure require
that the presiding judge or master in a foreclosure "compute the amounts
due the plaintiff and any other claimants, which amounts when determined
shall be the total debt due to each." Rule 71, SCRCP.