Ocwen Loan Servicing LLC v. Summit Bank, N.A. (In Re Francis)

750 F.3d 754, 2014 WL 1644171, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 7767
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 25, 2014
Docket13-1615
StatusPublished

This text of 750 F.3d 754 (Ocwen Loan Servicing LLC v. Summit Bank, N.A. (In Re Francis)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ocwen Loan Servicing LLC v. Summit Bank, N.A. (In Re Francis), 750 F.3d 754, 2014 WL 1644171, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 7767 (8th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

LOKEN, Circuit Judge.

GMAC Mortgage Corporation, the predecessor in interest of appellant Ocwen Loan Servicing LLC, refinanced a first mortgage loan on a home and surrounding twenty two acres of land owned by Ray and Rhonda Francis. In preparing a mortgage securing GMAC’s loan, its agents described an adjacent eleven acres as the mortgaged property and filed the flawed mortgage in the recorder’s office. See Ark.Code Ann. § 18-40-102. Ray Francis brought this error to GMAC’s attention, but GMAC failed to correct it. Some months later, appellees Summit Bank, N.A., and Southern State Bank (later renamed Farmers Bank & Trust) made additional loans to the Francises secured by recorded mortgages on portions of the twenty-two-acre parcel. The Francises filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection in November 2007. GMAC filed this adversary proceeding, claiming it is entitled to a first-priority hen by operation of the *756 Arkansas doctrine of equitable subrogation, or to reformation correcting the mutual mistake in its mortgage. The district court 1 denied both forms of relief. Ocwen appeals the denial of equitable subrogation. We affirm.

I.

Southern State made the first mortgage loan on the twenty-two-acre property in Hot Spring County, Arkansas. The Fran-cises refinanced the loan in October 2005. GMAC agreed to pay off the Southern State loan in exchange for a note and a first-priority mortgage on the property. In preparing the mortgage documents, GMAC hired an independent company to prepare title reports, identifying the land by street address. The title reports mistakenly described by metes and bounds an adjacent eleven-acre plot previously sold by the Francises’ company, Francis Construction Corporation. GMAC incorporated that description in the mortgage documents. Ray Francis, a former Hot Spring County tax assessor, noticed the smaller acreage when a notary brought him the mortgage documents to sign. The notary knew nothing about it. The mortgage was signed and filed in that mistaken form. GMAC’s loan proceeds repaid Southern State, which then recorded a satisfaction of its first mortgage. See Ark.Code Ann. § 18-40-104.

At trial, Ray Francis testified that he later realized the documents described his neighbor’s land and attempted to bring the error to GMAC’s attention. When GMAC did not respond, Francis commissioned a survey that divided the land into 10.5- and 11.5-acre parcels (“Parcel A” and “Parcel B”), so that correct mortgage documents could be prepared. GMAC advised that it only worked from tax parcel numbers. Francis then obtained new tax parcel cards from the county tax assessor, but GMAC still did not modify the loan and mortgage documents. The bankruptcy court found “that the debtor’s testimony at trial regarding his communication with GMAC was credible.” Like the district court, we defer to this finding. See In re Quality Processing, Inc., 9 F.3d 1360, 1364 (8th Cir.1993).

In February 2006, the Francises mortgaged Parcel A to Summit Bank to secure a new loan. Ray Francis told Summit that he intended to grant GMAC a first mortgage on the entire twenty-two-acre property, but GMAC had not corrected its flawed mortgage. Summit’s loan officer initially assumed that Summit obtained a second mortgage lien on Parcel A. The Francises requested an extension of the loan’s maturity in April 2007. In reviewing the mortgage documents, Summit noted that its title insurance policy showed a GMAC lien “on another parcel of property.” Summit therefore concluded that it held a first mortgage on Parcel A and extended the loan’s maturity in May 2007 and again in May 2009.

Later in 2007, the Francises mortgaged all twenty two acres to Southern State to secure two additional loans, first, a mortgage on Parcel A in October 2007, and the following month, a mortgage on Parcel B *757 to refinance another loan. The Francises told Southern State that GMAC had no apparent intent to correct its flawed mortgage. Southern State concluded that GMAC had no mortgage lien on the property; therefore, Southern State would have a first mortgage lien on Parcel B, and its lien on Parcel A would be second to the lien of Summit.

II.

Under Arkansas law, “subrogation is an equitable remedy that rests upon principles of unjust enrichment and attempts to accomplish complete and perfect justice among the parties.” St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Murray Guard, Inc., 343 Ark. 351, 37 S.W.3d 180, 183 (2001). Equitable subrogation, which arises by operation of law, “is broad enough to include every instance in which one person, not acting voluntarily, has paid a debt for which another was primarily liable and which that other party should have paid.” Id.

Ocwen argues it is entitled to equitable subrogation because GMAC satisfied the prior first mortgage of Southern State in a transaction in which the Fran-cises intended GMAC to have a first mortgage lien. This is a claim of equitable subrogation in a well-known context. The doctrine applies when a lender advances money to pay off an incumbrance on realty at the request of the landowner with the understanding that the advance will be secured by a first lien on the property; “in the event the new security is, for any reason, not a first lien on the property, the holder of such security, if not chargeable with culpable and inexcusable neglect, -will be subrogated to the rights of the prior [lienholder], and to this end equity will set aside a cancellation of such security, and revive the same.” Newberry v. Scruggs, 336 Ark. 570, 986 S.W.2d 853, 857-58 (1999) (quotation omitted). As a leading treatise explains:

In this setting the subrogee [the new lender, here, GMAC] wants more than a lien; he or she wants a lien with the priority of the original mortgage, and this is precisely what subrogation gives. The holders of intervening interests can hardly complain about this result, for they are no worse off than before the senior obligation was discharged.

Restatement (Third) of Property: Mortgages § 7.6 cmt. a (1997). But equity will only intercede “provided it can be done without working hardship or injustice to innocent parties.” Wooster v. Cavender, 54 Ark. 153, 15 S.W. 192, 192 (1891). The fundamental purpose of the doctrine is “the doing of complete and perfect justice between the parties without regard to form.” Newberry, 986 S.W.2d at 857.

The situation in this case is unlike the facts in these prior Arkansas cases. The Francises did intend that GMAC have a first mortgage lien on the twenty-two-acre property after satisfying Southern State’s prior first mortgage. But GMAC did not end up with a “new security” that was “not a first lien on the property.” Newberry, 986 S.W.2d at 857. It ended up with no security by reason of its own negligence in preparing and filing a new mortgage that described other property.

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Related

Stern v. Marshall
131 S. Ct. 2594 (Supreme Court, 2011)
In Re Quality Processing, Inc.
9 F.3d 1360 (Eighth Circuit, 1993)
St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance v. Murray Guard, Inc.
37 S.W.3d 180 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2001)
Newberry v. Scruggs
986 S.W.2d 853 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1999)
Killam v. Texas Oil & Gas Corp.
798 S.W.2d 419 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1990)
Troyer v. Bank of Dequeen
281 S.W. 14 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1926)
McLain v. Jordan
298 S.W. 10 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1927)
Drew County Bank & Trust Co. v. Sorben
28 S.W.2d 730 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1930)
Wooster v. Cavender
15 S.W. 192 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1891)

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Bluebook (online)
750 F.3d 754, 2014 WL 1644171, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 7767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocwen-loan-servicing-llc-v-summit-bank-na-in-re-francis-ca8-2014.