Tadehara v. Ace Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust Series 2007-HE4

492 F. App'x 834
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJuly 5, 2012
Docket11-4176
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 492 F. App'x 834 (Tadehara v. Ace Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust Series 2007-HE4) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tadehara v. Ace Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust Series 2007-HE4, 492 F. App'x 834 (10th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

MICHAEL R. MURPHY, Circuit Judge."

In the underlying action, Lari Kei Tade- *835 hara and Julia Kay Tadehara sought to quiet title to property on which they had given a mortgage to secure a loan. They also brought a claim seeking rescission of the loan based on alleged violations of the Truth in Lending Act (TILA), 15 U.S.C. §§ 1601-1667Í, and they asserted state-law claims for fraud and wrongful disclosure. The district court dismissed their action, and the Tadeharas appealed. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and affirm.

I. Background

On February 8, 2007, the Tadeharas obtained a loan secured by a mortgage on their house in Murray, Utah. They gave a promissory note secured by a Deed of Trust to defendant DB Home Lending. The beneficiary of the Deed of Trust was identified as defendant Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS), “(solely as nominee for Lender and Lender’s successors and assigns) and the successors and assigns of MERS.” R. at 141. The Deed of Trust gave MERS the power to foreclose and sell the property.

Thereafter, two separate assignments of the Deed of Trust were recorded in the Salt Lake County Recorder’s Office. The assignments transferred MERS’s interest to materially identical assignees. In the first, which had an execution date of February 5, 2009, and a recordation date of August 5, 2009, MERS assigned the Deed of Trust to “HSBC Bank USA, N.A. [ (HSBC) ], as trustee on behalf of Ace Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust, Series 2007-HE4 [ (Ace Loan Trust) ], and for the registered holders of Ace Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust, Series 2007-HE4, Asset Backed Pass-Through.” Id. at 43 (capitalization omitted). HSBC and the Ace Loan Trust are defendants here. The second assignment had an execution date of November 17, 2009 (although it stated in the body that it was entered into on April 30, 2007). It was recorded on November 30, 2009, and assigned the Deed of Trust from MERS, as nominee for DB Home Lending, to HSBC “as trustee on behalf of [ACE Loan Trust] and for the registered holders of Ace Securities Corp. Home Equity Loan Trust, Series 2007-HE4, Asset Backed Pass-Through Certificates.” Id. at 45 (capitalization omitted).

With regard to the loan, the Tadeharas alleged that prior to April 30, 2007, DB Home Lending sold its interest in the promissory note to either DB Structured Products, (a defendant here), or another buyer that sold the note to DB Structured Products. The Tadeharas also alleged that DB Structured Products then sold its rights in the loan to defendant Ace Securities Corp., 1 as evidenced by a Mortgage Loan Purchase Agreement executed on April 30, 2007. Further, the Tadeharas alleged that Ace Securities Corp. transferred all of its interest in the note to HSBC, as trustee for the Ace Loan Trust, via a pooling and service agreement created on or about April 30, 2007, among Ace Securities Corp.; defendant Ocwen Loan Servicing; HSBC; DB Structured Products; and other, unidentified parties.

On August 27, 2009, the Tadeharas sent a notice of rescission to all defendants, *836 claiming that DB Lending failed to provide required disclosures under TILA. Defendants took no action. The Tadeharas apparently stopped paying their mortgage, and the trustee sent them a Notice of Default, which was recorded on March 18, 2010, and an Amended Notice of Default, which was recorded on June 4, 2010.

Through counsel, the Tadeharas filed an action in federal court on September 16, 2010, raising a number of claims against some of these same defendants, including a request for declaratory judgment that they had a right to rescind under TILA and properly exercised that right. 2 Defendants filed a motion to dismiss. The court scheduled a hearing on the motion for May 8, 2011. The Tadeharas fired their attorney and appeared at the hearing pro se. At the hearing, the district court orally dismissed the action without prejudice, and a written order of dismissal was filed on May 16, 2011, stating that the action was dismissed for the reasons stated in the defendants’ motion.

On May 9, 2011, less than a week after the hearing in the first case, the Tadehar-as filed the present suit in Utah state court through new counsel. Defendants removed the action to the United States District Court for the District of Utah. The Tadeharas raised four claims: quiet title/declaratory judgment; fraud; wrongful foreclosure; and TILA rescission/monetary damages. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss, which the district court granted. Because the Tadeharas have appealed only the district court’s dismissal of their quiet title and TILA claims, we limit our discussion to those claims.

In their quiet title/declaratory judgment claim, the Tadeharas asserted that none of the defendants had any right in the note, the Deed of Trust, or their property. According to the Tadeharas, MERS and DB Home Lending had no interest in the property to assign to HSBC in 2009 because HSBC claimed that it acquired “such interest,” id. at 18, from Ace Securities Corp., not DB Home Lending, on April 30, 2007, and at that time no agency existed between Ace Securities Corp. and MERS. Further, the Tadeharas maintained that no written assignment was ever executed from DB Home Lending to DB Structured Products or an intervening buyer, or from an intervening buyer to DB Structured Products. Also, they asserted that no written assignment from DB Structured Products to Ace Securities Corp. was ever executed and recorded prior to either of the assignments from MERS to HSBC in 2009.

In their TILA claim, the Tadeharas asserted that their loan was a consumer credit transaction subject to TILA’s rescission remedy, 15 U.S.C. § 1635, and that they had timely asserted their right to rescission when they sent their notice of rescission on August 27, 2009.

For relief, the Tadeharas asked for a declaration “that none of the Defendants have a claim on the Real Estate, that none of the Defendants are creditors of Defendants [sic] under the Note, and that Title to the Real Estate is quieted against defendants in favor of Plaintiffs, and that the 1st Trust Deed is a nullity.” Id. at 22-23. They also sought an order voiding the Deed of Trust, an injunction directing defendant to take actions necessary for rescission under § 1635, and damages, penalties, and costs.

In their motion to dismiss, defendants argued that the quiet title/declaratory judgment claim should be dismissed because the Tadeharas had failed to allege *837 they held title to the property, instead focusing on alleged weaknesses in defendants’ title interests.

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Bluebook (online)
492 F. App'x 834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tadehara-v-ace-securities-corp-home-equity-loan-trust-series-2007-he4-ca10-2012.