O'Sullivan v. Kimmett

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 30, 2021
Docket0699/20
StatusPublished

This text of O'Sullivan v. Kimmett (O'Sullivan v. Kimmett) 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
O'Sullivan v. Kimmett, (Md. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Laura H.G. O’Sullivan, et al. v. Joan Kimmett, et al., No. 0699, September Term, 2020. Opinion by Salmon, James P. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned).

APPEAL – An immediate appeal may be taken when a circuit court vacates an enrolled judgment ratifying a foreclosure sale.

APPEAL – An immediate appeal is not allowed when a circuit court order vacates an unenrolled order ratifying a foreclosure sale.

APPEAL – COLLATERAL ORDER DOCTRINE – The fourth element of the collateral order doctrine (that the issue would be effectively unreviewable if the appeal had to await the entry of a final judgment) cannot be satisfied unless an appellant can prove that he or she has a well established right to avoid trial such as when forcing a party to go through a trial would violate a federal or state right to avoid double jeopardy. Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County Case No. C-02-CV-16-003932

REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 699

September Term, 2020

______________________________________

LAURA H.G. O’SULLIVAN, ET AL.,

v.

JOAN KIMMETT, ET AL.

Leahy, Reed, Salmon, James P. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Salmon, J. ______________________________________

Filed: September 30, 2021

* Ripken, Laura S., J., did not participate in the Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act Court’s decision to designate this opinion for (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic. publication pursuant to Maryland Rule 8-605.1 2021-10-08 16:47-04:00

Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk The appellees in this case are Jonathan Kimmett and his wife, Joan Kimmett. They

reside at property in Anne Arundel County located at 1160 St. Stephens Church Road,

Crownsville, MD (“the Property”). The Property is encumbered by a deed of trust. The

appellants are Laura H.G. O’Sullivan and three other substitute trustees named by Ocwen

Loan Servicing, LLC (“Ocwen”), the servicer of the Kimmetts’ loan, acting as attorney for

an entity that claims to be the holder of the deed of trust Note (“the Note”). As will be

explained, infra, the Kimmetts contend that Ocwen had no authority to appoint the

substitute trustees.

The substitute trustees have filed an appeal from an order, dated August 10, 2020,

signed by Anne Arundel Circuit Court Judge Robert J. Thompson that: 1) granted

appellees’ exceptions to the report of sale of the Property; 2) struck an order that had

previously ratified the sale of the Property; 3) granted the appellees’ motion to strike the

deed that conveyed the Property to the foreclosure sale purchaser; 4) struck a motion filed

by the foreclosure sale purchaser for possession of the Property; and 5) ordered “a Full

Evidentiary Hearing pursuant to Rule 14-211.” In this appeal, the substitute trustees raise

one issue which they phrase as follows:

Whether the Circuit Court erred in granting the Appellees’ Rule 14-305 post- sale Exceptions and Ordering a Rule 14-211 Hearing where Appellees’ Rule 14-305 Exceptions consisted of the same Rule 14-211 pre-sale challenges to [appellants’] standing that the Circuit Court had previously dismissed.

The Kimmetts have filed a motion to dismiss this appeal based on their contention

that the August 10, 2020 order is not a final judgment as defined by Md. Rule 2-602 and none of the exceptions to the rule (that this Court has no jurisdiction to consider a non-final

judgment) is applicable.

I.

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On April 20, 2007, Jonathan Kimmett took out a $550,000 loan from America

Brokers Conduit, the terms of which were included in the Note. Joan Kimmett initialed

the Note below her husband’s signature, although she was not named in the Note as a

borrower. To secure the Note, Mr. and Mrs. Kimmett executed a deed of trust that

encumbered the Property. The deed of trust named Andrew Valentine as trustee and

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (“MERS”) as nominee for the beneficiary

of the Note – American Brokers Conduit. Thereafter, according to the substitute trustees,

a deed from MERS (solely as nominee for American Brokers Conduit) transferred its

beneficial interest in the Note to Deutsche Bank National Trust Company as trustee for

American Home Mortgage Asset Trust 2007-4, Mortgage-Backed pass-through Certificate

Series 2007-4 (“Deutsche Bank”).

Mr. and Mrs. Kimmett defaulted on the loan secured by the deed of trust on May 2,

2009. They subsequently filed for bankruptcy. After a bankruptcy stay was lifted, Ocwen,

the loan servicer, executed a “deed of substitution trustee,” on September 23, 2016, which

appointed Laura H.G. O’Sullivan, Rachel Kiefer, Jana M. Gantt and Chasity Brown as

On December 28, 2016, the substitute trustees began a foreclosure action against

the Property by filing an order to docket in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County.

2 Attached to the Order to Docket were documents indicating that Deutsche Bank was (and

currently is) the holder of the Note secured by the Property; an affidavit certifying

ownership of debt instrument, default and indebtedness; and a deed of substitution of

trustee. On that same date, the substitute trustees sent a Notice of Intent to Foreclose to

Mr. and Mrs. Kimmett.

The substitute trustees, on June 12, 2017, filed a final loss mitigation affidavit after

which the Kimmetts, on July 5, 2017, filed a request for mediation. Foreclosure mediation

was held on August 23, 2017, but no agreement was reached.

The Property was advertised for sale with the sale set to take place on November 7,

2018. Two days before the sale, on November 5, 2018, the Kimmetts filed a pro se

emergency motion to shorten time and to stay foreclosure. The Kimmetts, however, did

not ask that the foreclosure action be dismissed. That motion was untimely because Md.

Rule 14-211(a)(2)(A)(iii)(a) requires, insofar as is here pertinent, that such a motion be

filed, at the latest, within 15 days after the date the “postfile mediation was held.” In the

subject case, the “postfile” mediation hearing was held more than fourteen months prior to

the date that the Kimmetts filed their motion to shorten time and to stay foreclosure. Aside

from being late, the motion was not under oath nor was it supported by an affidavit as

required by Md. Rule 14-211(a)(3)(A); nor did the Kimmetts provide any excuse for the

late filing. The motion to shorten time and to stay foreclosure asserted, inter alia, that the

loan servicer, Ocwen, had proceeded in the foreclosure action using fraudulent

documentation.

3 No stay was entered and the substitute trustees went forward with the sale of the

Property on November 7, 2018. The Property was purchased by Deutsche Bank, the only

bidder, for $482,000. Thereafter, on November 27, 2018, the circuit court entered an order,

which had been signed on November 9, 2018; the order noted that the Kimmetts’ Md. Rule

14-211 motion did not comply with Md. Rule 1-204. That last-mentioned Rule requires,

inter alia, that in order for the court to shorten or extend time, the movant must show that

the failure to act in a timely manner was the “result of excusable neglect.” Md. Rule 1-

204(a).1 The order docketed on November 27, 2018 also stated that the motion was moot

because the sale had already taken place.

On November 26, 2018, one of the substitute trustees filed a report of sale. The

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O'Sullivan v. Kimmett, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osullivan-v-kimmett-mdctspecapp-2021.