South Point Inc. v. Agin Ex Rel. Bankruptcy Estate of Kurak

433 B.R. 52, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70807
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMay 11, 2010
DocketCivil Action 09-cv-11441-DPW
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 433 B.R. 52 (South Point Inc. v. Agin Ex Rel. Bankruptcy Estate of Kurak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South Point Inc. v. Agin Ex Rel. Bankruptcy Estate of Kurak, 433 B.R. 52, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70807 (D. Mass. 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

DOUGLAS P. WOODLOCK, District Judge.

This appeal arises out of an adversary proceeding filed by the Chapter 7 Trustee of a bankruptcy estate, Warren E. Agin (the “Trustee”), seeking a determination that South Point, Inc., the assignee of the original mortgage lender, does not have a valid mortgage lien against the Debtor’s property. The United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Massachusetts found the mortgage was not valid against the Debtor’s interest in the real property and granted the Trustee’s motion for summary judgment. South Point now appeals.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background 1

On May 21, 2008, Debra A. Kurak (the “Debtor”) filed a voluntary Chapter 7 petition, on which she listed her address as 37-39 Falmouth Street, Attleboro, Massachusetts (the “Property”). While she listed an ownership interest in the Property on “Schedule A-Real Property,” she noted that it was “subject to a lien in the amount of $361,250.00 [for] which the Debtor has no contractual liability.”

On May 30, 2008, before the first meeting of creditors, South Point, as serviced by Wilshire Credit Corporation, sought to enforce its rights under a note and mortgage encumbering the Property by filing a Motion for Relief from the Automatic Stay. In that motion, South Point claimed that, on September 22, 2006, Manuel Lopes executed a $361,250 note in favor of First Franklin, a Division of National City Bank (“First Franklin”), and that the Debtor and Lopes simultaneously executed and delivered a mortgage to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nominee of First Franklin. South Point maintained that First Franklin recorded the mortgage in the Bristol County Registry of Deeds, and that South Point, as the assignee of the note and mortgage, was owed $389,719.72.

The closing for the Property was conducted on September 22, 2006 by J. Daniel Lindley, Esq., the attorney representing First Franklin, at the residence eo-owned by Lopes and the Debtor. Lopes executed the note to First Franklin, and both Lopes and the Debtor signed the last page of the *54 mortgage, which Lindley notarized. Lind-ley testified that he took the mortgage to his office and made, or caused to be made, three copies for distribution: one for Lopes, one for Lindley’s file, and one for First Franklin.

Four versions of the mortgage were produced to the Bankruptcy Court by the Trustee, in support of his summary judgment motion, as Exhibits C through F. On the first page of each version, Manuel Lopes is identified as the “Borrower,” which is defined as “the mortgagor under this Security Instrument.” Exhibit D, a copy of the mortgage produced by Lopes’ counsel and given to the Trustee, included only the first page identifying Lopes as the sole Borrower and had no signature page.

The other versions, however, include the twelfth page of the mortgage which contains both Lopes’ and the Debtor’s signatures above the word “Borrower” and beneath the following language: “BY SIGNING BELOW, Borrower accepts and agrees to the terms and covenants contained in pages 1 through 12 of this Security Instrument and in any Rider executed by Borrower and recorded with it.” That is precisely how the last page of Exhibit E appears. 2 However, on the signature page of Exhibit C, 3 the word “Borrower” below the Debtor’s signature is crossed out with five typed x’s and replaced with the word “witness.” The recorded mortgage, Exhibit F, unlike the other versions, has the phrase “ & Debra Kurak” added to the “Borrower” term on the first page, thereby identifying both Lopes and the Debtor as Borrowers, and contains both of their signatures as Borrowers on the last page.

Based on its review of the several versions of the mortgage, the Bankruptcy Court concluded that “[tjhere is no question that the Debtor signed a mortgage and that Lindley notarized her signature. Additionally, she and Lopes initialed each page of the mortgage, and Lindley’s notarization appears” on the last page. That notarization is both handwritten and typed as follows: 4

On this 22nd day of September, 2006, before me personally appeared MANUEL LOPES and Debra Kurak to me known to be the person (or persons) described in and who executed the foregoing instrument, and acknowledged that he/she/they executed the same as Ms/her4heir free act and deed.
/s/ J. Daniel Lindley Notary Public My commission expires: 06/H/1S

As noted by the Bankruptcy Court, in his deposition, Lindley explained why multiple versions of the mortgage exist:

Apparently — I spoke to Lindsay [MacPhee, Lindley’s assistant], who has no memory of this closing at all, but apparently when we faxed the executed mortgage to the lender, the lender called back and asked that Debra Kurak’s name be included on the front page of the mortgage. And I believe — And Lindsay thinks she may have done that. *55 And that’s where that “and Debra Ku-rak” came from on the front page.
... I noticed on page 12 someone had X’d out the word “borrower” and typed in the word “witness.” That doesn’t appear on my documents or the Registry of Deeds’ documents, so I can only figure that someone at the lender’s office did that.
Now this exhibit [Exhibit E] doesn’t show the ampersand Debra Kurak on the first page that the others do, so I’m — it’s my opinion that this is a copy of the mortgage as my paralegal faxed it to the lender. And, based on that, the lender instructed her to add the ampersand Debra Kurak.
Later, someone seeing that Debra Ku-rak’s name was not on there struck out the word “borrower” and put in the word “witness,” but she was — I know from having done closings that even though only one owner may be the borrower, all owners have to sign the mortgage. Otherwise, nobody can foreclose on it.
And that’s why I had Debra sign and initial all of the documents having to do with the mortgage. She was signing in the capacity as a — as a mortgagor, not as a borrower, because she wasn’t on the loan but as a mortgagor.

Relying upon the fact that “Debtor initialed every page of the mortgage and signed it as Borrower,” the Bankruptcy Court “accepted] Lindley’s testimony that he or someone in his law office subsequently added the Debtor’s name [as a Borrower] to the first page of the mortgage (‘ & Debra Kurak’) after he or his employees had sent copies to both Lopes and First Franklin.” The Bankruptcy Court concluded that it had “insufficient information to determine when or why the word ‘Borrower’ was crossed out and replaced [on the last page] with the word ‘Witness’ on the copy [of the mortgage] with the notation ‘Certified True Copy.’ ”

B. Procedural History and the Bankruptcy Court Decision

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Related

Braunstein v. Akillian (In Re Akillian)
448 B.R. 113 (D. Massachusetts, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
433 B.R. 52, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 70807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-point-inc-v-agin-ex-rel-bankruptcy-estate-of-kurak-mad-2010.