Mitchell v. Yacko

161 A.3d 14, 232 Md. App. 624, 2017 WL 2351499, 2017 Md. App. LEXIS 563
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 31, 2017
Docket0200/16
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 161 A.3d 14 (Mitchell v. Yacko) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Yacko, 161 A.3d 14, 232 Md. App. 624, 2017 WL 2351499, 2017 Md. App. LEXIS 563 (Md. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Leahy, J.

The unscrupulous mortgage transaction in this case unfolded when Rene Mitchell (“Appellant”) sought a fixed rate loan for the purchase of a residential property and executed a sales contract specifying the same. At the closing a month later, Ms. Mitchell, to her surprise, realized that the loan documents she had just executed were actually for an adjustable rate mortgage. She halted the closing, had the word “VOID” stamped on all executed documents, and informed the lender of the error and requested acknowledgment of cancellation in writing. Several days and notices later, the lender sent Ms. Mitchell a notice stating that her loan had been modified to a fixed rate loan at 6.2% interest. Ms. Mitchell was apparently satisfied with this and made payments on the loan for nearly eight years after moving into the residence. No new loan documents were executed.

Ms. Mitchell defaulted in January 2018, and in August 2015, substitute trustees for the current loan servicer, Keith M. Yacko, Robert E. Frazier, Thomas J. Gartner, Jason L. Hamlin, Glen H. Tschirgi, and Gene Jung (“Appellees” or “Substitute Trustees”), filed an order to docket a foreclosure in the Circuit Court for Prince George’s County. Ms. Mitchell filed a motion to stay the sale and dismiss the action, arguing, inter alia, that the order to docket did not contain copies of a valid and enforceable note or deed of trust. After her motion was denied without a hearing, Ms. Mitchell appealed.

A close examination of the documents in the record reveals that on July 14, 2005—three days after Ms. Mitchell terminated the closing—the adjustable rate deed of trust was filed in the land records for Prince George’s County with the “VOID” marks excised. This document, devoid of all “VOID” marks, *627 was attached as an exhibit to the 2015 order to docket filed 10 years later. Also, appearing for the first time was a copy of the Adjustable Rate Note that Ms. Mitchell signed at the closing, with the “VOID” stamps removed. In place of the “VOID” stamps, both documents donned new stamps reading simply “REDACTED.”

Ms. Mitchell raises four questions in her appeal, but the first is dispositive: “Did the Circuit Court err in failing to dismiss the foreclosure action because the Note and Deed of Trust in the Order to Docket are not valid and enforceable?” 1 We hold that a foreclosure proceeding cannot be instituted upon forged documents. The aforementioned documents— clearly false and materially altered to look genuine—suggest forgery, 2 and equitable relief is not available to a party with unclean hands. Ms. Mitchell’s Rule 14-211 motion to stay the sale and dismiss the action stated a facially valid defense to the foreclosure. As such, the circuit court erred in denying the motion without a hearing. We vacate the court’s order and remand for a hearing.

BACKGROUND

A. Closing the Closing

In June 2005, Rene Mitchell decided to purchase residential property located at 9003 Harness Way in the City of Bowie, Maryland (“the Property”) from Maria and Harold J. Moxley. *628 On June 8, 2005, Ms. Mitchell signed a sales contract, listing the purchase price at $555,900.00.

Ms. Mitchell desired to finance the purchase with a fixed rate 80-year mortgage from Fremont Investment and Loan (“Fremont”). 3 According to an affidavit she filed in the underlying foreclosure action, Ms. Mitchell and Fremont had agreed to a conventional fixed rate loan, as documented by the terms of the sales contract. However, at the closing on July 11, 2005, Ms. Mitchell noticed, contrary to her expectations and much to her surprise, that the promissory note contained an adjustable interest rate and the deed of trust contained an adjustable rate rider.

Ms. Mitchell then informed her realtor and the settlement agents of the error, requested that the closing be terminated, and refused to sign any further documents. She also requested the return of all documents that she had signed up to that point. E. 34. Although the settlement agents, Barbara Licon and Philip Sardelis, agreed to terminate the closing, they told Ms. Mitchell that they had to keep the documents and shred them. Consequently, Ms. Mitchell requested that they stamp a “VOID” mark on each page of each document that she signed. Ms. Licon complied. Ms. Mitchell also wrote a note on the adjustable rate note which read: “I requested this copy of Voided documents with Barbara Licon signature of Void [sic]. My Realtor is present to witness. We are to come back tomorrow to execute corrected documents. I have requested Fremont provide me a letter acknowledging cancellation of this debt loan, Deed + promissory note. RM[.]”

*629 Ms. Mitchell followed-up on the same day with the following letter to Fremont:

I am requesting that you immediately cancel my loan and return all monies due back to me based on the Loan Documents, executed by Sandler Title & Escrow, LLC on behalf of Fremont Investment & Loan, not reflecting my sales contract!.]
Upon my review of the signed loan documents prepared by Barbara Licon from Sandler Title & Escrow, LLC ... [t]he loan package was not explained very well and was rushed. I saw many errors in the loan package mid way through the closing and stopped the closing. Ms. Licon stated that they would correct the documents and I must immediately contact Fremont Investment & Loan directly and cancel the original loan documents, which she kept in her possession, claiming she would have to shred. I kept the blank documents and requested her to draw a void line across each one. None of the second copy documents have my signature and I am very uncomfortable with leaving the original documents for her to shred but she states this is a normal procedure. My realtor Paula Haynes was a witness to this conversation between Ms. Licon and me as was the notary Mr. Phillip Sardelis who also signed the documents as we went through them. Both can also verify that I requested the documents to this loan be destroyed.
... The loan terms are:
1st Mortgage 30 year conventional firm fixed at an interest rate of 6.200%
2nd Mortgage 30 year conventional firm fixed at an interest rate of 9.125%
Please advise me on what the next course of action is to provide new accurate loan documents for review and signatures.
Again, this is my official notice to cancel the original Adjustable Rate loan documents that I did not agree to purchase and were not accurate based on the attached documents for the property at 9003 Harness Way, Bowie[.]

*630 Fremont responded by letter on July 12, 2005, acknowledging receipt of Ms. Mitchell’s request to cancel her loan.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 A.3d 14, 232 Md. App. 624, 2017 WL 2351499, 2017 Md. App. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-yacko-mdctspecapp-2017.