Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc. v. Blevins

494 S.W.3d 510, 2016 Ky. App. LEXIS 115, 2016 WL 3667909
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 8, 2016
DocketNO. 2015-CA-000807-MR
StatusPublished

This text of 494 S.W.3d 510 (Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc. v. Blevins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc. v. Blevins, 494 S.W.3d 510, 2016 Ky. App. LEXIS 115, 2016 WL 3667909 (Ky. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

CLAYTON, JUDGE:

In the case before us, a trustee for a mortgage-backed securitized trust executed a limited power of attorney (“LPOA”) to a master servicer. In that LPOA, the trustee granted the piaster servicer authority to issue LPOAs to subservicers so the subservicers have authority to act and sign for loans held in the mortgage-backed securitized trust. These second LPOAs are colloquially called “piggy-back” powers of attorney. Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc. (hereinafter “SPS”) is a subservicer operating under a “piggy-back” power of attorney.

SPS attempted to file a mortgage release in the Fayette County Clerk’s office, but it was rejected. According to the Fay-ette County Clerk’s office, SPS needed the trustee, not the master servicer (which itself only had authority pursuant to an LPOA), to grant SPS a LPOA. SPS then .sought declaratory judgment against Don-[512]*512aid W. Blevins; Jr., the Fayette County Clerk. SPS filed for summary judgment. The Fayette" Circuit Court held a hearing then denied SPS’s motion. SPS appeals.

FACTS

In their briefs to this Court, Blevins accepts SPS’s statement of the case. Accordingly, as both, parties agree to the facts, we .adopt SPS’s Statement of the Case in part and quote the relevant portions for our review as follows, with record citations omitted: ■

[SPS] is a mortgage loan servicer that' frequently deals with mortgage loans held in mortgage-backed securitized trusts, and in such cases, acts on behalf ■ of the trustee of such mortgage-backed securitized trusts, including recording documents related to the mortgages held in such trusts, such as deeds of release. A mortgage loan servicer oversees the management of the loan accounts on the mortgages held in such mortgage-backed securitized trusts, including, critically for this case, recording documents related to the mortgages .held in the trust in the real property records of the various states where they aré recorded. ' ■ --
'Frequently with loan servicing bn mortgage loans held in mortgage-backed sec-uritized trusts, there is a “master servi-cer’^ ] that has contractual ties directly with the trustee for "said trusts, which master servicer may subcontract with companies to do the actual “day-to-day” loan servicing for the individual mortgage loans held in such trusts. This relationship where the master .servicer hires a company to do the actual loan servicing is known as “subservicing,” and the entity that does the actual loan servicing is known as the “subservi-cer.”[] In the below-described limited power of attorney that. is the subject matter of this ease, Bank of America, N.A. (“Bank of America”) was acting as ■ master servicer for the mortgage-backed securitized trust, and SPS was acting as the subservicer for said trust.
So that subservicers like SPS herein can perform the loan servicing duties re- ■ quired of them, trustees for mortgage-backed securitized trusts frequently execute limited powers of attorney in favor of their master servicers, which, limited powers of attorney include provisions that specifically contemplate and authorize the master servicer to subsequently execute separate limited powers of at- • torney in favor -of their subservicers, that transfer on to the subservicers the trustee’s authorization to act and sign on behalf- of said mortgage-backed securi-tized trusts.
In other words, the trustee transfers authority to act and sign for the loans held in the mortgage-backed securitized trust on to the master servicer by an initial power of attorney, and the master servicer, with the express "and written authorization of the trustee per the terms of the initial power of attorney, passes on some or all of 'this same authority to the subservicer by a second limited power of attorney. Upon information and belief, this scenario is sometimes referred to as a “piggy back” power of attorney.
II. Specific facts of this case
On or about July 7, 2013, [Blevins] received from SPS the limited power of attorney from master servicer Bank of America to subservicer SPS (“LPOA”), ... along with a deed of release for the underlying mortgage-backed securitized trust that held the mortgage to be released . . and the required recording fee. The LPOA conveyed from master servicer Bank of America to subservicer SPS the power to act and sign mortgage [513]*513documents, including deeds of release, for U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee, (“US Bank”) which authority was previously granted to Bank of America by U.S. Bank in a separate “Trustee Limited Power of Attorney” that was attached as Exhibit A to .the LPOA. . . '
In the above-described Exhibit A to the LPOA, just before the schedule of the numerous mortgage-backed securitized trusts covered by the “Trustee Limited Power of Attorney,” the. following provision appears at the bottom of page 6 in an unnumbered paragraph, in which trustee U.S. Bank-grants master servi-cer Bank of America the following am thority:
Servicer has the power to execute additional limited powers of attorney and delegate the authority .given to it by U.S. Bank National'Association, as Trustee, under the related servicing agreements listed on Schedule A, attached.
Despite the above-quoted express authority in Exhibit A to the LPOA, the Fayette Co. Clerk refused to record the LPOA, and sent it back to- SPS along with the deed of release, the recording fee, and the Correction' Request ... [T]he handwritten reason on said,Correction Request appears to state: “One POA cannot appoint another to be POA. You would need to file a single POA document for U.S. Bank NA as trustee appointing Select Portfolio Servicing.” Hence, the-Fayette Co. Clerk directly contradicted, and refused to acknowledge as valid, the written authority the trustee U.S. Bank explicitly extended to master servicer Bank of America in Exhibit A to the LPOA, demanding instead that U.S. Bank directly appoint subser-vicer SPS as its attorney-in-fact in a single power of attorney.
After the Fayette Co. Clerk subsequently rejected two -(2) similar limited powers of attorney between a trust, master servicer, and subservicer on an unrelated loan in November 2013 on which SPS was again -the subservicer, representatives of SPS contacted representatives in the Recording Department at. the Fayette Co. Clerk’s office to explain the nature of the subservicing structure and the multiple powers of attorney that usually accompany it, and SPS’s representatives were told that the Fayette Co. Clerk’s interpretation of Kentucky Law was that, for any document to be recorded in Kentucky that contains a signature via power of attorney, a power of attorney must be recorded in the same county that contains both the person/entity receiving authority to sign the document to be recorded (attorney-in-fact) and the person/entity granting that authority (principal); there cannot be a separate power of attorney that transfers the authority via an intermediary.
... [Bjecause of the nature of the Sub-servicing contractual structure and the way the trustee for the mortgage-backed securitized trust (U.S. Bank) has chosen to delegate authority to master servicer Bank of America, the “direct” power of attorney demanded by the Fayette Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
494 S.W.3d 510, 2016 Ky. App. LEXIS 115, 2016 WL 3667909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/select-portfolio-servicing-inc-v-blevins-kyctapp-2016.