Nichols v. Home Point Financial Corp.

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedJune 19, 2020
Docket5:19-cv-05048
StatusUnknown

This text of Nichols v. Home Point Financial Corp. (Nichols v. Home Point Financial Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nichols v. Home Point Financial Corp., (W.D. Ark. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF ARKANSAS FAYETTEVILLE DIVISION

SHARON NICHOLS PLAINTIFF/COUNTER DEFENDANT

v. No. 5:19-cv-05048

HOME POINT FINANCIAL CORP. DEFENDANT/COUNTER CLAIMANT/ THIRD-PARTY PLAINTIFF v.

TAMRA HIXON, et al. THIRD-PARTY DEFENDANTS

OPINION AND ORDER This case arises out of a mortgage dispute between Dallas and Sharon Nichols and Home Point Financial Corp. (“Home Point”). The procedural posture in this case is unconventional and the Court will outline the relevant facts below, but for now will note the Nicholses defaulted on their mortgage and Home Point now seeks judicial foreclosure of the property. Home Point filed what is essentially a joint motion (Doc. 28) for default judgment against Third-Party Defendants Tamra Hixon, Dallas Nichols, and the State of Arkansas Office of Child Support Enforcement. The motion is joint because Home Point, Sharon Nichols, and Separate Third-Party Defendant the State of Arkansas, Department of Finance and Administration (of which the Office of Child Support Enforcement is an arm) agreed to and submitted by email a consent order for the Court’s consideration. Having reviewed the record in full and made additional factual findings as is required before entering a default judgment, the Court will GRANT the motion in part. 1. On July 22, 2016, Sharon Nichols and her ex-husband, Dallas Nichols, purchased the following tract of real property from RC Quarry Trace, LLC: Lot 73A, Quarry Trace Addition, Phase II, to the City of Fayetteville, as per plat filed for record in the Office of the Circuit Clerk and Ex-Officio Recorder for Washington County, Arkansas. This property is more commonly known as 1198 S. Spritz Drive, Fayetteville, AR, 72701 (the “Property”). In accordance with Arkansas law, the warranty deed was acknowledged and filed with the Circuit Clerk and Ex-Officio Recorder for Washington County, Arkansas on July 25, 2016 as Instrument Number 2016-00021070. (Doc. 13, pp. 8-10). In connection with this purchase, Dallas Nichols executed a promissory note (the “Note”) in favor of Priority Bank, FSB in the

principal amount of $137,273.00. (Doc. 13, pp. 11-13). Sharon Nichols did not sign the Note. 2. To secure this payment, Dallas and Sharon Nichols executed a mortgage (the “Mortgage”) on the Property in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (“MERS”), as nominee for Priority Bank, FSB. (Doc. 13, pp. 14-29). The Mortgage was acknowledged and filed with the Circuit Clerk and Ex-Officio Recorder for Washington County, Arkansas on July 25, 2016 as Instrument Number 2016-00021071. (Id.). The Mortgage includes a waiver of all rights of redemption. In the event of a default, the Mortgage allows the lender to declare the entire unpaid balance of the debt, plus interest, to be immediately due and payable. 3. The Note required monthly payments of $626.04 to be paid on the first day of each

month. The Nicholses failed to make scheduled payments due on or about June 1, 2018, and thereafter. Based on the facts in the record, Sharon and Dallas Nichols are in default under the terms of the Mortgage. 4. On July 31, 2018, MERS assigned all interest in the Mortgage and Note to Home Point. (Doc. 13, p. 30). Home Point exercised its rights under the Mortgage to declare the entire unpaid balance of the debt due. Home Point is owed the principal sum of $132,697.76, plus interest, and reasonable attorney’s fees, title expenses, late charges, and costs as provided under the Mortgage. As a result, Home Point initiated a statutory foreclosure and a sale was scheduled for February 26, 2019. 5. On February 20, 2019, prior to the scheduled foreclosure sale, Sharon Nichols initiated this action in Washington County Circuit Court, Case No. 72CV-19-372, seeking an injunction enjoining the statutory foreclosure, alleging that Home Point failed to comply with the statutory foreclosure process under Arkansas law. The complaint further demanded that the Circuit Court order Home Point to allow Sharon to cure the outstanding default pursuant to Ark.

Code Ann. § 18-50-114. Specifically, Sharon alleged that she “attempted on several occasions to work with [Home Point] to assume payments, but ha[d] been rebuffed and told that she was not able to make payments” because she had not signed the Note. (Doc. 3, p. 2, ¶ 6). On February 25, 2019, the Circuit Court of Washington County entered a temporary restraining order enjoining the foreclosure sale. 6. Based on the parties’ representations to this Court, shortly after the Circuit Court’s injunction, the parties attempted settlement via private sale. 7. When those efforts proved unsuccessful, Home Point removed the case to this Court and filed a counterclaim for foreclosure against Sharon Nichols and a third-party complaint for

foreclosure against Tamra Hixon, Dallas Nichols, the State of Arkansas, Office of Child Support Enforcement, and the State of Arkansas, Department of Finance and Administration. 8. Home Point properly served all third-party defendants with the third-party complaint, but only the State of Arkansas, Department of Finance and Administration filed a responsive pleading. As a result, Home Point filed affidavits in support of the default of Tamra Hixon, Dallas Nichols, and the State of Arkansas, Office of Child Support Enforcement.1

1 The Arkansas Office of Child Support Enforcement is a department within the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration. Ark. Code Ann. § 25-8-107. Naming both that Office and the Department of Finance and Administration is redundant and without legal effect. They are the same party, and the Office of Child Support Enforcement has not defaulted. 9. On December 13, 2019, before the Clerk entered the default of the defaulting parties under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 55(a),2 Home Point filed its motion for default judgment, seeking a judicial foreclosure on the Property and a declaration of the priority of competing liens on the Property. Home Point named each of the third-party defendants (except Dallas Nichols) as defendants because they hold, or possibly hold, liens against the Property. The specifics of those

(potential) liens are described in next two paragraphs. 10. Tamra Hixon and the State of Arkansas, Office of Child Support Enforcement, are named as defendants due to a Decree of Divorce between Hixon and Dallas Nichols, entered on November 6, 2014, in Case No. DR2014-1532-2. The Decree requires Dallas Nichols to pay Hixon certain amounts for the support of their minor children. (Doc. 13, pp. 31-36). The Decree was modified on August 13, 2018. (Doc. 13, pp. 37-40). Home Point alleges that because the Mortgage is a purchase money security interest, it has priority over any and all rights held by Hixon or the Office of Child Support Enforcement in the Property by virtue of any lien due to outstanding child support obligations.

11. Home Point names the Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration as a defendant due to a Certificate of Indebtedness against both Sharon and Dallas Nichols. (Doc. 13, p. 41). This certificate appears to have been filed in accordance with Arkansas law with the Circuit Clerk and Ex-Officio Recorder for Washington County, Arkansas as Instrument Number L141- 00000642. (Id.). Home Point alleges that because the Mortgage is a purchase money security interest and was filed on December 6, 2018, it has priority over any and all rights held by the

2 The Clerk’s delay in entering default following the filing of affidavits on December 2, 2019 resulted from Home Point’s confusing decision to seek default against the Office of Child Support Enforcement, which (as the Court explains in the previous footnote) is an answering party.

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