Peters v. The Bank of New York Mellon

227 So. 3d 175, 2017 WL 2304263, 2017 Fla. App. LEXIS 7646
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 26, 2017
DocketCase 2D15-2222
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 227 So. 3d 175 (Peters v. The Bank of New York Mellon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peters v. The Bank of New York Mellon, 227 So. 3d 175, 2017 WL 2304263, 2017 Fla. App. LEXIS 7646 (Fla. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

WALLACE, Judge.

Hazel N. Peters, a/k/a Hazel N. Johnson (Ms. Peters), challenges a final judgment of foreclosure in favor of The Bank of New York Mellon (the Bank) entered after a bench trial. Because the Bank failed to prove its ownership of the lost note that it attempted to reestablish and enforce, we reverse.

I. THE FACTS AND THE PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On March 13, 1998, Ms. Peters and Leo Johnson executed a note in favor of Conti-Mortgage Corporation as the Lender. The note was secured by a standard residential mortgage on real property in Lee County, Florida. The mortgage also named Conti-Mortgage Corporation as the Lender.

On January 28, 2013, the Bank filed the underlying action to foreclose the mortgage and for the reestablishment of the note, which the Bank alleged had been lost. The Bank’s complaint alleged September 18, 2008, as the date that the note went into default. The Bank filed a lost note affidavit dated on October 31, 2006, and executed on behalf of EMC Mortgage Corporation (EMC), a prior holder of the mortgage. In the affidavit, the affiant merely asserted that the note “was lost and has not been paid, satisfied, assigned, pledged, transferred or hypothecated in any way.” The affidavit did not provide any details regarding the date or circumstances of the asserted loss of the note. A copy of the note was attached to the affidavit. The copy of the note did not reflect any indorsements or allonges. The Bank subsequently filed another lost note affidavit executed on behalf of Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc. (SPS), the current servicer for the loan. The copy of the note attached to the SPS affidavit was identical to the copy attached to the EMC affidavit.

Ms. Peters filed an answer and affirmative defenses to the complaint. In her answer, Ms. Peters denied the material allegations of the complaint and asserted numerous affirmative defenses. In pertinent part, Ms. Peters denied that the Bank had standing to enforce the note and mortgage, asserted that the Bank’s action to reestablish the lost note was barred by the applicable statute of limitations, and claimed that the Bank had failed to comply with a condition precedent to foreclosure because it had not notified the borrower of the claimed assignment of the loan within thirty days of the assignment in accordance with section 559.715, Florida Statutes (2012).

The lost note was payable to ContiMort-gage Corporation; it had not been indorsed in blank or payable to the order of the Bank. At trial, the Bank sought to establish its ownership of the lost note with a series of four assignments of mortgage. The first assignment, dated April 8, 1998, was from ContiMortgage Corporation to ContiWest Corporation. The second *177 assignment, dated April 7, 1998, was from ContiWest Corporation to Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company. Although the second assignment was dated one day before the first one, it was recorded after the recording of the first one. The third assignment, dated June 28, 2010, was from Manufacturers and Traders Trust Company to EMC. Each of the first three assignments expressly assigned both the mortgage and the note that was secured by it.

The fourth assignment, dated December 7, 2012, was from EMC to the Bank. In pertinent part, the fourth assignment assigned “all of Assignor’s right, title and interest all beneficial interest under a certain Mortgage, dated March 13, 1998, made and executed by Leo Johnson and Hazel N. Johnson fka Hazel N. Peters to ContiMortgage Corporation ....” 1 At trial, Ms. Peters argued that the fourth assignment was insufficient to establish the Bank’s ownership of the lost note because it assigned only the mortgage, not the note. The trial court ruled that the fourth assignment was sufficient to assign the note as well as the mortgage and rejected Ms. Peters’ argument. The trial court admitted the certified copies of the four assignments into evidence over Ms. Peters’ objection.

Counsel for the Bank conceded that the note and mortgage at issue had been the subject of two prior foreclosure actions filed in the Lee County Circuit Court. The first action was filed in 2001; the second was filed in 2004. Notably, both actions, which were subsequently dismissed, included a count for the reestablishment of a lost note. Based on the filing of the prior actions and the first lost note affidavit executed in 2006, Ms. Peters argued that the Bank’s action to reestablish the lost note was barred because it had not been brought within the bar of the five-year statute of limitations set forth in section 95.11(2)(b), Florida Statutes (1997). The trial court rejected this argument, reasoning as follows:

The purpose of the statute of limitations is to try to prevent stale claims, okay, but my belief—and this is going to be the ruling of the Court—that the loss or discovery of the lost instrument is not a claim. It’s an event. It’s nothing that gives rise to a claim that would give rise to [a] cause of action. The only time that there’s going to be a claim resulting from a lost instrument is when it needs to be enforced and that is when it goes into default. So the ruling of the Court ... is going to be that there is no need once a lost negotiable instrument is discovered as being lost, that they have to file a cause of action to reestablish that note when that note is not being sought to be enforced.

Upon inquiry by counsel as to the effect of the filing of the two prior actions to enforce the lost note on the accrual of the cause of action, the trial court reiterated its ruling that the statute of limitations had not run so as to bar the current action to reestablish the lost note.

The Bank called a single witness at trial, Cynthia Stevens. At the conclusion of the presentation of Ms. Stevens’s testimony, the trial court rejected all of Ms. Peters’ other arguments, including those based on the Bank’s asserted lack of standing and noncompliance with the requirements of section 559.715. The trial court entered the final judgment of foreclosure on April 17, 2015. This appeal followed.

*178 II. MS. PETERS’ APPELLATE : ARGUMENTS

On appeal, Ms. Peters raises three points. First, she argues that the Bank failed to prove its standing to' enforce the lost note. Second, Ms. Peters contends that the Bank’s claim to reestablish the lost note is barred by the applicable statute of limitations. Third, she asserts that the Bank failed to prove that it gave Ms. Peters written notice of the assignment of the. loan at least thirty days before the filing of the underlying action as required by section 559.715.

Ms,.Peters’ third point is without merit. See Brindise v. U.S. Bank Nat’l Ass’n, 183 So.3d 1215, 1219-20 (Fla. 2d DCA), review denied, No. SC16-300, 2016 WL 1122325 (Fla. Mar. 22, 2016); Nationstar Mortg., LLC v. Summers, 198 So.3d 1162, 1162 (Fla. 1st DCA 2016) (per curiam affirmance citing Brindise with approval); cf. Bank of Am., N.A. v. Siefker, 201 So.3d 811, 817-18 (Fla. 4th DCA 2016) (holding that section 559.715 was applicable to the mortgage foreclosure action brought by Bank of America, but that the statute did not operate as a. condition precedent to bringing a mortgage foreclosure action). Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
227 So. 3d 175, 2017 WL 2304263, 2017 Fla. App. LEXIS 7646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peters-v-the-bank-of-new-york-mellon-fladistctapp-2017.