Tal Realty Inc. v. Mobley

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 2018
DocketA-1-CA-35696
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tal Realty Inc. v. Mobley (Tal Realty Inc. v. Mobley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tal Realty Inc. v. Mobley, (N.M. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

This memorandum opinion was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Appellate Reports. Please see Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished memorandum opinions. Please also note that this electronic memorandum opinion may contain computer-generated errors or other deviations from the official paper version filed by the Court of Appeals and does not include the filing date.

1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC,

3 Plaintiff,

4 v. NO. A-1-CA-35696

5 DANIEL CHENOWETH , a/k/a 6 DANIEL L. CHENOWETH, TAMMY 7 CHENOWETH, AUTOMATED RECOVERY 8 SYSTEMS OF NEW MEXICO, INC., CAVALRY 9 SPV I LLC AAO HSBC BANK NEVADA N.A., 10 ORCHARD BANK, and MORTGAGE 11 ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, 12 INC., AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICAN 13 MORTGAGE EXPRESS FINANCIAL d/b/a 14 MILLENNIUM FUNDING GROUP,

15 Defendants,

16 ____________________________________

17 TAL REALTY, INC.,

18 Petitioner-Appellant,

19 v.

20 CODY C. MOBLEY, LARRY K. MOBLEY, 21 and VEDA J. MOBLEY,

22 Respondents-Appellees. 1 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SAN JUAN COUNTY 2 Sandra A. Price, District Judge

3 Marrs Griebel Law Ltd. 4 Clinton W. Marrs 5 Albuquerque, NM

6 for Appellant

7 The Risley Law Firm P.C. 8 Gary Risley 9 Farmington, NM

10 Lorenz Law 11 Alice T. Lorenz 12 Albuquerque, NM

13 for Appellees

14 MEMORANDUM OPINION

15 VANZI, Chief Judge.

16 {1} TAL Realty, Inc. (TAL Realty) appeals the district court’s entry of judgment

17 against it in this foreclosure redemption case. On appeal, TAL Realty argues that the

18 assignees of the first priority right of redemption, who were also the foreclosure sale

19 purchasers, did not timely exercise their redemption right because they did not record

20 the assignment evidencing the redemption with the county clerk’s office, contrary to

21 NMSA 1978, Section 39-5-23 (2013), within the one-month redemption period. We

22 affirm and also conclude, under the facts of this case, that TAL Realty was not

2 1 divested of its right to appeal when it withdrew the funds it deposited in the district

2 court’s registry, pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section 39-5-18(A)(2) (2007).

3 BACKGROUND

4 {2} The following facts are not disputed. Nationstar Mortgage LLC filed a

5 complaint for foreclosure against property owners, Daniel and Tammy Chenoweth

6 (the Chenoweths) and various other junior lienholders, including Automated Recovery

7 Systems of New Mexico, Inc. (ARSNM), which held a subordinate judgment lien

8 against the subject real property located in San Juan County. On March 6, 2015, the

9 district court entered a stipulated and default judgment for foreclosure and order of

10 sale. The court ordered the property sold at a special master’s sale and stated that,

11 pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section 39-5-19 (1965) and paragraph twenty-four of the

12 mortgage agreement, the redemption period after judicial sale was one month.

13 {3} On April 15, 2015, Cody Mobley, acting as designee of his parents Larry and

14 Veda Mobley (the Mobleys), successfully bid $235,998 at the special master’s sale,

15 and the property was conveyed to the Mobleys by a special master’s deed subject to

16 the one-month right of redemption. The order confirming sale was entered on May 7,

17 2015. The one-month redemption period was thus set to expire June 7, 2015. See § 39-

18 5-18(A), (E) (providing that the running of the redemption period starts the date the

19 district court enters the order confirming the special master’s sale). Also on May 7,

20 2015, the Chenoweths assigned their first priority right of redemption to the Mobleys.

3 1 See § 39-5-18(A)(3) (stating that the former defendant homeowner has the first

2 priority right of redemption). Cody Mobley filed the assignment with the district court

3 that same day; however, he did not deliver it to the San Juan County Clerk’s Office

4 until over seven months later, on January 14, 2016, at which point he also recorded

5 a formal notice of exercise of the redemption right.

6 {4} On May 28, 2015, ARSNM assigned its junior lien on the subject property to

7 TAL Realty. The assignment included any subordinate rights of redemption. See id.

8 (stating that junior lienholders hold a right of redemption only if the former owner

9 defendant does not exercise their first priority right of redemption). On Monday, June

10 8, 2015, the first business day following June 7, TAL Realty filed a petition for

11 redemption in the district court pursuant to Section 39-5-18(A)(2). See generally U.S.

12 Bank Nat’l Ass’n v. Martinez, 2003-NMCA-151, ¶¶ 3, 8, 134 N.M. 665, 81 P.3d 608

13 (holding that a petition for certificate of redemption was timely filed when the

14 redemption period expired on a Saturday and the petition was filed on the first

15 business day following that Saturday). TAL Realty also moved for authorization to

16 deposit funds into the court registry in the amount the Mobleys paid at the special

17 master’s sale, plus statutory interest. The district court granted TAL Realty’s petition

18 and motion until the parties’ rights could be determined by further order of the court,

19 and TAL Realty deposited the funds. The Mobleys responded to TAL Realty’s

20 petition arguing that it should be denied because the Mobleys “purchased the property

4 1 at [the] foreclosure sale and purchased the primary [r]edemption [r]ights” and that

2 they had “exercised these rights and provided notice.”

3 {5} TAL Realty subsequently moved for summary judgment on the grounds that

4 “there [was] no genuine dispute as to any fact material to the redemption petition and

5 TAL Realty is entitled to judgment in its favor as a matter of law.” Specifically, TAL

6 Realty argued that it timely exercised its right of redemption, as an assignee of a

7 junior lienholder, by petitioning the district court for redemption and depositing the

8 redemption amount in the court registry. TAL Realty further argued that the Mobleys

9 failed to exercise the right of redemption the Chenoweths assigned to them because

10 the Mobleys never recorded the assignment in the San Juan County Clerk’s Office,

11 which was true as of the date TAL Realty moved for summary judgment.

12 {6} The Mobleys responded to TAL Realty’s motion for summary judgment after

13 they recorded the assignment and formal notice of their exercise of the redemption

14 right with the San Juan County Clerk’s Office. They argued that they exercised the

15 right of redemption by filing the Chenoweths’ assignment of their first priority right

16 of redemption with the district court within the one-month redemption period.

17 Moreover, “[a] court-certified version of the assignment ha[d] also been filed in the

18 deed of records of San Juan County.” The Mobleys maintained that they outbid TAL

19 Realty for the Chenoweths’ first priority right of redemption and that TAL Realty

20 therefore had notice of the Mobleys’ intention to redeem. Thus, the Mobleys argued

5 1 that summary judgment should be denied because they complied with the redemption

2 process and TAL Realty had actual notice that they exercised the right of redemption,

3 or in the alternative, that they substantially complied with the redemption process.

4 {7} After a hearing the district court denied TAL Realty’s motion for summary

5 judgment.

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Tal Realty Inc. v. Mobley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tal-realty-inc-v-mobley-nmctapp-2018.