Nature's Sunshine Products, Inc. v. Watson

2007 UT App 383, 174 P.3d 647, 592 Utah Adv. Rep. 40, 2007 Utah App. LEXIS 396, 2007 WL 4259255
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedDecember 6, 2007
Docket20060534-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2007 UT App 383 (Nature's Sunshine Products, Inc. v. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nature's Sunshine Products, Inc. v. Watson, 2007 UT App 383, 174 P.3d 647, 592 Utah Adv. Rep. 40, 2007 Utah App. LEXIS 396, 2007 WL 4259255 (Utah Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

ORME, Judge:

T1 Wayne B. Watson appeals the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Nature's Sunshine Products, Inc. The appeal raises an important issue about the extent to which a trust deed's dragnet clause will secure new indebtedness. We affirm.

BACKGROUND 1

112 On November 23, 1987, Watson gave a promissory note to First Security Bank memorializing a home equity line of credit in the amount of $75,000. The promissory note was secured by a trust deed (the First Trust Deed) and constituted a lien against valuable property (Hobble Creek) owned by Watson. The First Trust Deed was recorded on November 24, 1987.

3 The First Trust Deed contains both a dragnet clause 2 and a modification clause. The dragnet clause provides, with our emphasis, that the First Trust Deed was given

FOR THE PURPOSE OF SECURING (1) payment of all obligations now or hereafter arising pursuant to or otherwise related or connected to that certain "First Security Home Equity Line Agreement, Note, and Disclosure Statement" of even date herewith executed by the Trustor (the "Agreement"), which Agreement evidences a revolving credit line in the maximum principal sum of SEVENTY FIVE THOUSAND AND 00/100 Dollars ($75,000.00) together with interest, costs, and expenses, as therein provided, payable to the order of Beneficiary at the times, and in the manner and with interest as therein set forth, together with any extensions, renewals, modifications, and future advances thereof or thereunder; (2) the performance of each agreement of Trustor herein contained; (38) the payment of all sums expended or advanced by Beneficiary under *649 or pursuant to the terms of this Trust Deed and/or the Agreement, together with interest thereon as provided therein.

The modification clause, contained in paragraph 10, provides in part as follows:

At any time, and from time to time upon written request of Beneficiary, ... Trustee may ... grant any extension or modifications of the terms of the Agreement[.]

{4 On September 28, 1994, Watson borrowed $775,815 from Nature's Sunshine Products (NSP). The loan was memorialized in a promissory note and secured by a trust deed on Hobble Creek (NSP Trust Deed), which was recorded on October 4, 1994. The NSP Trust Deed was subordinate to the First Trust Deed. In 1998, First Security Bank assigned the First Trust Deed to Carlos Watters. On October 22, 2008, Watters further assigned the First Trust Deed to MoneyCode, Inc. Also on October 22, 2008, Watson and MoneyCode, purporting to "modify" the First Trust Deed pursuant to the paragraph 10 modification clause, entered into an agreement whereby Watson borrowed $1,230,000 from MoneyCode, which was to be secured by the First Trust Deed. This agreement recited:

Come now the parties, Beneficiary and Trustor, of that certain Home Equity Line Note dated the 28rd Day of November, 1987 and [the First Trust Deed] of same date and agree to modify them pursuant to and in accordance with the language of the Note and Paragraph 10 of the [First] Trust Deed.[ 3 ]

T5 On October 23, 2003, the day after Watson and MoneyCode entered into the modification agreement, NSP's trustee held a nonjudicial foreclosure sale under the NSP Trust Deed, Watson having previously defaulted on his obligation secured by the NSP Trust Deed. NSP, the successful bidder, thereby acquired Watson's interest in Hobble Creek, subject to the rights of any senior Henholders of record.

'I 6 On November 16, 2008, Watson executed a deed in favor of MoneyCode in lieu of foreclosure of the First Trust Deed. That same day, MoneyCode leased Hobble Creek to Watson, and he remained in possession. A few days later, NSP filed an unlawful detainer action against Watson to secure his removal from Hobble Creek. In that action, the trial court found that, inter alia, "Money-Code was not entitled to collect the rents on [Hobble Creek] as [NSP], as the holder of the possessory interest in the property, was entitled to those rents until that possessory interest was extinguished by foreclosure."

17 In March 2004, MoneyCode recorded a notice of default under the First Trust Deed. NSP then filed this action in district court, seeking a declaratory judgment regarding the parties' rights and priorities in Hobble Creek, including the amount MoneyCode was properly owed under the First Trust Deed.

T8 A few weeks later, NSP filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that Watson and MoneyCode

have attempted to unilaterally modify [the First Trust Deed] from the maximum amount of $75,000 to $1,230,000 with a new Note entered into between MoneyCode and Watson. This attempt was made one day prior to [NSP]'s trustee's sale of [the NSP Trust Deed], and without notice and the consent of [NSP]. This purported attempt is highly prejudicial to the ownership rights of [NSP].

NSP requested "an Order that elevates [NSP]'s ownership interest to a senior status to that of MoneyCode's for that amount above the maximum $75,000 pledged originally and ... a full accounting as to what Mon-eyCode claims is due and owing from Watson under the [First Trust Deed]."

19 The trial court granted NSP's motion for summary judgment. In its ruling, it noted that "the modification [of the First Trust Deed] is so extreme, so out of the ordinary and so unlike the other ministerial *650 actions which paragraph 10 authorizes a trustee to make." It then concluded that Money-Code and Watson's modification of the First Trust Deed "cannot have a priority over the former lien and now ownership interest of [NSP]" because the modification materially prejudiced the junior lienholder, NSP. The trial court reasoned that "[NSP]'s ownership position (acquired at [the] foreclosure sale the day after the MoneyCode modification) is severely impacted if the [Flirst [TJrust [Dieed is changed from securing a revolving credit agreement with a maximum principal of $75,000 to a $1,23[01,000 loan" because NSP, "the new owner of the property," would be "holding property that would have little, if any, equity." After ruling that the First Trust Deed "d[id] not have a priority in the amount of $1,23[0],000" over the NSP Trust Deed, the trial court also granted NSP's request for an accounting from MoneyCode in order to determine whether the original $75,000 under the First Trust Deed had priority over the NSP Trust Deed.

10 In May 2005, Watson filed a motion for reconsideration, which the trial court denied. A few days later, MoneyCode filed an accounting as required by the summary judgment order. 4 Nearly a year later, NSP filed its "Motion to Approve Payment of the 1987 First Security Note, to Reconvey the 1987 Trust Deed and to Cancel MoneyCode's Notice of Default." The trial court granted NSP's motion, stating:

[The payoff amount for the 1987 First Security Note is $80,479.51. Upon payment of the stated amount, together with interest to the date of payment, by [NSP] to MoneyCode, the 1987 First Security Note will be satisfied and paid in full; ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 UT App 383, 174 P.3d 647, 592 Utah Adv. Rep. 40, 2007 Utah App. LEXIS 396, 2007 WL 4259255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/natures-sunshine-products-inc-v-watson-utahctapp-2007.