Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Thunder Properties, Inc

CourtDistrict Court, D. Nevada
DecidedSeptember 29, 2020
Docket2:17-cv-00713
StatusUnknown

This text of Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Thunder Properties, Inc (Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Thunder Properties, Inc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nevada primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Thunder Properties, Inc, (D. Nev. 2020).

Opinion

1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 2 DISTRICT OF NEVADA 3 4 Nationstar Mortgage, LLC, Case No. 2:17-cv-00713-JAD-NJK 5 Plaintiff 6 v. Order Granting in Part Motion for Summary Judgment and Directing 7 Thunder Properties, Inc., Further Briefing

8 Defendants [ECF No. 39]

10 This is one of the hundreds of lawsuits in this district in which the holder of a deed of 11 trust seeks a declaration that a homeowner’s association’s non-judicial foreclosure sale did not 12 extinguish its security interest. Here, Nationstar Mortgage, LLC sues foreclosure-sale purchaser 13 Thunder Properties, Inc., seeking a declaration that Thunder purchased a property subject to a 14 deed of trust held by Nationstar’s affiliate, Champion Mortgage Company.1 Nationstar, which 15 services the mortgage for its affiliate Champion, moves for summary judgment, arguing 16 primarily that the HOA’s failure to provide Champion the statutorily required notices renders the 17 foreclosure sale void.2 I find that Nationstar has established that Champion did not receive 18 notice, but because it has offered no evidence that Champion suffered prejudice as a result, I 19 cannot void the sale on summary judgment. However, that lack of notice plus the undisputed 20 evidence of the gross inadequacy of the foreclosure-sale price makes this a classic claim for 21 22

23 1 ECF No. 36 (amended complaint). 2 ECF No. 39. I find this motion suitable for disposition without oral argument. L.R. 78-1. 1 equitable relief under Shadow Canyon, so the sale is voidable. I thus grant the motion in part and 2 direct further briefing on the proper remedy in light of this holding. 3 Background 4 Robert Flowers took out a nearly $500,000 home-equity line of credit on the home he 5 owned at 3433 Skyline Boulevard in Reno, Nevada,3 in 2006, secured by a deed of trust.4 The

6 home is located within the Skyline Villas planned-unit development community and subject to 7 the governing documents for its homeowners’ association.5 The Nevada Legislature gave 8 homeowners’ associations a superpriority lien against residential property for certain delinquent 9 assessments and established in Chapter 116 of the Nevada Revised Statutes a non-judicial 10 foreclosure procedure for them to enforce that lien.6 When the assessments became delinquent 11 on the Flowers property, the Skyline Villas Association (HOA)—through its agent Hampton & 12 Hampton Collections, LLC—commenced foreclosure proceedings by sending a notice of 13 delinquent assessment dated February 28, 2013.7 The HOA ultimately sold the property at 14 foreclosure to Thunder Properties, Inc. for just $9,359.01 that November.8

15 As the Nevada Supreme Court held in SFR Investments Pool 1 v. U.S. Bank in 2014, 16 because NRS 116.3116(2) gives an HOA “a true superpriority lien, proper foreclosure of” that 17 lien under the non-judicial foreclosure process created by NRS Chapters 107 and 116 “will 18 19

3 ECF No. 39-1 (original 2004 grant deed). 20 4 ECF No. 39-2 at 2 (home equity conversion deed of trust). 21 5 Id. at 12. 22 6 Nev. Rev. Stat. § 116.3116; SFR Inv. Pool 1 v. U.S. Bank (“SFR I”), 334 P.3d 408, 409 (Nev. 2014). 23 7 ECF No. 48-2. 8 ECF No. 39-13. 1 extinguish a first deed of trust.”9 Nationstar, which does business as Champion Mortgage 2 Company, claims that Champion is the beneficiary of the deed of trust on the Flowers property 3 today, just as it was when the HOA sent the foreclosure notices to twice-since-superseded 4 beneficiary Seattle Mortgage Company. Nationstar brings this quiet-title action against 5 foreclosure-sale purchaser Thunder Properties to save that deed of trust from extinguishment. It

6 primarily claims that the HOA never gave lienholder Champion the statutorily required notices 7 and that failure of notice renders the sale void, so Thunder Properties purchased the home subject 8 to the deed of trust.10 That quiet-title claim is the type recognized by the Nevada Supreme Court 9 in Shadow Wood Homeowners Association, Inc. v. New York Community Bancorp—an action 10 “seek[ing] to quiet title by invoking the court’s inherent equitable jurisdiction to settle title 11 disputes.”11 The resolution of such a claim is part of “[t]he long-standing and broad inherent 12 power of a court to sit in equity and quiet title, including setting aside a foreclosure sale if the 13 circumstances support” it.12 14 Discovery has closed,13 and Nationstar moves for summary judgment in its favor.14

15 Nationstar argues that the sale is void due to the HOA’s failure to send Champion the notices 16 required by statute or, alternatively, that the sale must be set aside as void based on equity. 17 Thunder responds that, when the HOA sent the foreclosure notices to Seattle Mortgage, 18 19

9 SFR I, 334 P.3d at 419. 20 10 ECF No. 36 (amended complaint). 21 11 Shadow Wood Homeowners Ass’n, Inc. v. New York Cmty. Bancorp, 366 P.3d 1105, 1110–11 (Nev. 2016). 22 12 Id. at 1112. 23 13 ECF No. 27 (scheduling order with a discovery cutoff of 11/13/2019). 14 ECF No. 39. 1 Champion likely received them. Regardless, it contends, the sale is presumed valid based on 2 conclusive recitals in the foreclosure deed.15 I consider each argument in turn. 3 Discussion 4 A. There is no genuine issue that Champion held the deed of trust at the time the 5 notices were mailed.

6 Nationstar has established through recorded documents and the affidavits of its employee 7 Stephen Craycroft16 that Nationstar, doing business as Champion Mortgage,17 is the record 8 beneficiary of the deed of trust, and it held that distinction when the foreclosure-related notices 9 were dispatched in 2013. Seattle Mortgage Company was the first beneficiary of the deed of 10 trust.18 Seattle assigned the security instrument to Bank of America, N.A. in 2007,19 who then 11 assigned it to Champion in 2012.20 Nationstar, dba Champion, has been the servicer of that 12 mortgage since November 2012.21 There is no genuine dispute that the HOA did not mail the 13 statutorily required foreclosure notices to Champion—the HOA mailed them to Seattle Mortgage 14 instead.22 15 16 17

18 15 ECF No. 48. 19 16 ECF Nos. 39-8, 56-1. 17 ECF No. 39-7 (dba registration). 20 18 ECF No. 39-2. 21 19 ECF No. 39-3. 22 20 ECF No. 39-6. 21 ECF No. 39-8, ¶ 6(c). 23 22 See ECF Nos. 56-1 (Craycroft affidavit); 39-10 at 10–11 (Hampton 36(b)(6) witness, testifying at deposition that there was no mailing to Champion); 48-8 at 2, 7 (certificates of mailing). 1 So Thunder attempts to show that Champion received notice some other way.23 Thunder 2 argues that the record of just who was entitled to such notice is clouded by a later assignment— 3 dated August 29, 2013—by which Champion “as attorney in fact for Bank of America,” assigned 4 the deed of trust back to Seattle.24 Thunder contends that Champion and Nationstar therefore 5 must have been acting as an agent of Bank of America, which had the same mailing address as

6 Seattle Mortgage. So, when the foreclosure notices were mailed to Seattle Mortgage, Champion 7 was either on notice, or there is an issue of fact whether the HOA’s mailing of the notices to 8 Seattle Mortgage put Champion on notice.25 9 But an analysis of the evidence in this case26 disproves Thunder’s theory because 10 Champion was not Bank of America’s agent for notice purposes. Thus, even if I could make the 11 illogical leap that mail to Seattle Mortgage would have gotten to Bank of America, Bank of 12 America’s knowledge of that notice can’t be imputed to Champion. The questioned assignment 13 document states in bold that it was being “recorded to connect the break in the chain of 14

15 16

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Nationstar Mortgage LLC v. Thunder Properties, Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nationstar-mortgage-llc-v-thunder-properties-inc-nvd-2020.