Solon State Bank v. Liberty View Mall, L.L.C., Lien T. Vu a/k/a Lien Thi Vu, and Sankar Baruah
This text of Solon State Bank v. Liberty View Mall, L.L.C., Lien T. Vu a/k/a Lien Thi Vu, and Sankar Baruah (Solon State Bank v. Liberty View Mall, L.L.C., Lien T. Vu a/k/a Lien Thi Vu, and Sankar Baruah) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 23-1672 Filed January 9, 2025
SOLON STATE BANK, Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
LIBERTY VIEW MALL, L.L.C., LIEN T. VU a/k/a LIEN THI VU, and SANKAR BARUAH, Defendants-Appellants, ________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Sean W.
McPartland, Judge.
Mortgagors in a foreclosure proceeding appeal the district court’s grant of
summary judgment for the mortgagee. AFFIRMED.
Thomas B. Read of Read & Roemerman, PLC, Cedar Rapids, for
appellants.
Siobhan Briley and Ryan J. Prahm of Pugh Hagan Prahm PLC, Coralville,
for appellee.
Considered by Schumacher, P.J., and Ahlers and Langholz, JJ. 2
LANGHOLZ, Judge.
Three mortgagors—Lien Vu, Sankar Baruah, and Liberty View Mall, L.L.C.
(collectively “Liberty View”)—defaulted on three promissory notes executed with
Solon State Bank. As a result, Solon State Bank initiated foreclosure proceedings
and moved for summary judgment. Liberty View resisted summary judgment by
arguing that it had entered into a forbearance agreement with Solon State Bank.
And because it upheld its end of the purported agreement by making partial
payments each month, foreclosure was improper. Solon State Bank disputed the
existence of any forbearance agreement. And the district court agreed that Liberty
View failed to show the existence of any such agreement. So it granted summary
judgment for Solon State Bank. Liberty View appeals.
We agree that Liberty View failed to generate a dispute of material fact over
whether the parties entered into a forbearance agreement. Liberty View’s
summary-judgment evidence does not show any mutual intent to cabin Solon State
Bank’s foreclosure rights, instead resting exclusively on its own subjective—and
unilateral—understanding of the circumstances. And Liberty View cannot rely on
Solon State Bank’s course of conduct leading up to foreclosure to infer the
existence of an agreement, as Solon State Bank could accept partial payments
without waiving its foreclosure rights and indeed acted to enforce its rights,
including accelerating all three notes. Thus, because Liberty View agrees it was
in default and we find no evidence showing the parties entered into a forbearance
agreement, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment. 3
I.
Vu and Baruah are a married couple who purchased real estate through a
limited liability company, Liberty View Mall, L.L.C. Liberty View Mall, L.L.C.
executed two promissory notes with Solon State Bank—a $2.2 million note in
August 2016 and a $485,000 note in December 2020. Vu and Baruah also
individually executed a promissory note with Solon State Bank for $236,000 in
August 2017. These notes are secured by mortgages on various properties, and
the combined monthly payment was $19,375. Vu paid Solon State Bank each
month on behalf of herself, Baruah, and Liberty View Mall, L.L.C.
In February 2022, Solon State Bank notified Liberty View that it was in
default on the first note and gave twenty days to cure. In response, Vu made a
$50,000 catch-up payment. Vu then paid nothing in March. In April, Solon State
Bank notified Liberty View that it was in default on the second note and again gave
twenty days to cure. Five days later, Vu deposited $14,000. And between May
and December, Vu continued to pay roughly $14,000 a month.1 Meanwhile, Solon
State Bank accelerated all three notes in September, demanding payment of the
full $2.9 million balance within fourteen days.2 Vu did not pay the accelerated sum.
At the end of December, Solon State Bank initiated foreclosure
proceedings, alleging Liberty View was in default. Solon State Bank later moved
1 The actual payments varied—$13,975 in May, $17,070 in June, $14,000 in July,
$18,945 in August, $14,000 in October, $14,000 in November, and $14,000 in December. But none were the full $19,375 owed to Solon State Bank each month on the notes. 2 Each mortgage provided, subject to certain limitations, that Solon State Bank
“may accelerate the Secured Debt and foreclose this Mortgage in a manner provided by law if [Liberty View] is in default.” 4
for summary judgment, showing it held the mortgages on the identified properties
and that Liberty View was in default of their payment obligations. Liberty View
resisted, arguing that Solon State Bank “agreed to a forbearance of a foreclosure
action” if Liberty View “continued to make certain payments on the notes, which
they did.” In support, Vu authored an affidavit claiming it was her “understanding”
that if she “made payments to the Bank each in the amount of $14,000 per month
the Bank wouldn’t foreclose.” The district court granted summary judgment for
Solon State Bank, reasoning that Liberty View did not generate a dispute of
material fact over whether a forbearance agreement existed.
Liberty View appeals.
II.
Summary judgment is required when “there is no genuine issue as to any
material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.”
Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.981(3). To overcome a well-supported motion for summary
judgment, the nonmoving party “must set forth specific facts showing that there is
a genuine issue for trial.” Id. r. 1.981(5). Indeed, nonmoving parties must “go
beyond generalities” and “show what evidence it has that would convince a trier of
fact to accept its version of the events.” Feeback v. Swift Pork Co., 988 N.W.2d
340, 348 (Iowa 2023) (cleaned up). Without that quantum of evidence, summary
judgment properly “weed[s] out paper cases and defenses in order to make way
for litigation which does have something to it.” Id. (cleaned up). We review a grant
of summary judgment for correction of legal error. Freedom Fin. Bank v. Est. of
Boesen, 805 N.W.2d 802, 806 (Iowa 2011). 5
The parties agree that Liberty View did not pay in full each month, nor did it
pay its total balance once Solon State Bank accelerated the notes, and that the
mortgages’ written terms allow Solon State Bank to foreclose. Yet Liberty View
insists Solon State Bank cannot foreclose because the parties entered into a
separate forbearance agreement. And because the parties dispute whether a
forbearance agreement exists, Liberty View argues that dispute should have
precluded summary judgment. But Liberty View overstates its summary-judgment
evidence.
Vu’s affidavit never asserts that the parties entered into a forbearance
agreement. Instead, Vu merely offered her own “understanding” that if Liberty
View paid “14,000 per month the Bank wouldn’t foreclose.” One party’s unilateral
understanding does not create a binding foreclosure agreement—there must be a
meeting of the minds. See First Am. Bank v. Urbandale Laser Wash, LLC, 874
N.W.2d 650, 654–57 (Iowa Ct. App. 2015) (affirming summary judgment on
foreclosure action because mortgagor did not show mutual intent to enter into a
forbearance agreement); Jewell v. Logsdon, 206 N.W. 136, 137–38 (Iowa 1925)
(finding mortgagor’s testimony alone failed to prove existence of forbearance
agreement).
On appeal, Liberty View tries to bolster Solon State Bank’s assent to a
forbearance agreement by pointing to nine monthly payments of around $14,000
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Solon State Bank v. Liberty View Mall, L.L.C., Lien T. Vu a/k/a Lien Thi Vu, and Sankar Baruah, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/solon-state-bank-v-liberty-view-mall-llc-lien-t-vu-aka-lien-thi-iowactapp-2025.