Trystone Capital Assets, LLC v. Dorothy T. Toulson

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 29, 2024
DocketA-1287-22
StatusUnpublished

This text of Trystone Capital Assets, LLC v. Dorothy T. Toulson (Trystone Capital Assets, LLC v. Dorothy T. Toulson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trystone Capital Assets, LLC v. Dorothy T. Toulson, (N.J. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-1287-22

TRYSTONE CAPITAL ASSETS, LLC,

Plaintiff-Respondent,

v.

DOROTHY T. TOULSON, THOMAS W. TOULSON, DEBORAH W. GRISCOM, as Executor of the Estate of DOROTHY T. TOULSON, LIVE WELL FINANCIAL, INC., UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, SOUTH JERSEY GAS, and THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY,

Defendants,

and

ALLOWAY VENTURES, LLC, RED CAT PROPERTY RESCUE, LLC, and MECUM TOULSON, LLC,

Third-Party Defendants- Respondents. _________________________________ WILMINGTON SAVINGS FUND SOCIETY, FSB, not individually but solely as trustee for Finance of America Structured Securities Acquisition Trust 2019-HB1,

Intervenor-Appellant. _________________________________

Submitted January 16, 2024 – Decided January 29, 2024

Before Judges Chase and Vinci.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Salem County, Docket No. F-3794-21.

Ashley S. Miller (Akerman LLP), attorney for intervenor-appellant.

Honig & Greenberg LLC, attorneys for respondents, Alloway Ventures, LLC, Red Cat Property Rescue, LLC, and Mecum Toulson, LLC (Adam D. Greenberg, on the brief).

Anthony Louis Velasquez, attorney for respondent Trystone Capital Assets, LLC.

PER CURIAM

Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB ("Wilmington"), appeals the

October 18, 2022 denial of its motion to set aside a sheriff's sale and December

9, 2022 denial of its motion for reconsideration. Because the trial court correctly

applied the doctrine of laches, we affirm.

A-1287-22 2 I.

In 2011, Dorothy T. Toulson secured a line-of-credit mortgage on her

home at 33 Market Street in Salem ("the property") through a note to Genworth

Financial Home Equity Access, Inc. ("Genworth"), in the amount of $165,000.

To secure payment of the note, Toulson entered into a reverse mortgage with

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. ("MERS"), and conveyed the

property to Genworth. The mortgage was properly recorded, and MERS, as

nominee for Genworth, was named the mortgagee.

Toulson passed away in 2016 and defaulted on the mortgage loan. MERS

assigned the defaulted mortgage to Live Well Financial, Inc. ("Live Well"). The

assignment was properly recorded. Live Well filed a foreclosure complaint in

September 2017.

In February 2018, the Tax Collector of the City of Salem commenced a

public tax sale of the property for unpaid 2018 taxes. The tax sale certificate

was sold and assigned to Trystone Capital Assets, LLC ("Trystone"), which

properly recorded it.

A-1287-22 3 After Trystone recorded the tax sale, Live Well recorded a lis pendens at

the end of July 2018.1 Live Well then filed a second amended complaint. Live

Well's mortgage foreclosure was dismissed in April 2019 but reinstated in June

2020 upon motion. Separately, Live Well filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in the

District of Delaware in June 2019. Although N.J.S.A. 46:16-4.1 permitted Live

Well to record its bankruptcy in the land records, it did not do so.

No redemption of the tax lien was made within two years. As such, in

April 2021, Trystone ordered a title search and mailed notices of intent to

foreclose. The title search had a "board date" of March 20, 2021, meaning it

reflected documents recorded only through that date. Trystone then served Live

Well with a thirty-day pre-foreclosure notice on June 14, 2021, pursuant to Rule

4:42-9(a)(5).

After being served with Trystone's pre-foreclosure notice, Live Well

assigned the mortgage it held to Wilmington, which recorded it on June 15,

2021. However, Wilmington did not immediately substitute in on Live Well's

reinstated mortgage foreclosure action.

1 Rule 4:64-1(a)(1) required Live Well to "receive and review a title search of the public record" to identify others with interest in the property. Although the record is devoid of any mention of the search or the required certification of compliance, Live Well would have been on constructive notice of the tax foreclosure if they complied with the Rule. A-1287-22 4 Trystone filed its tax foreclosure complaint on July 21, 2021, after the

required thirty-day notice period lapsed. The foreclosure complaint named Live

Well, not Wilmington, as the holder of the mortgage. Trystone filed its lis

pendens, which was recorded on July 22, 2021. It then conducted a rundown

search, which did not reflect Live Well's assignment of the mortgage to

Wilmington. On August 9, 2021, Wilmington substituted in for Live Well in

the mortgage foreclosure action.

Trystone's tax foreclosure proceeded, and a final judgment was entered in

Trystone's favor. A writ of execution was issued on October 14, 2021.

In December 2021, a sheriff's sale took place and resulted in the sale of

the property to a successful bidder for $23,000.2 The successful bidder at the

sheriff's sale was Andrew Dunlop who then assigned his bid to his LLCs:

Alloway Ventures, LLC, and Red Cat Property Rescue, LLC (collectively

"Alloway"). Subsequently, a sheriff's deed was issued and recorded by Alloway.

On December 29, 2021, Alloway took possession of the dilapidated

property and started a substantial rehabilitation project. The property had been

abandoned and vacant for years, was littered with trash throughout, and had been

2 Typically, the tax foreclosure initiated by Trystone would have ended at final judgment vesting title. However, because of a federal lien, the case was required to go to sheriff's sale. A-1287-22 5 damaged by fire. The interior ceilings had collapsed, the pipes had frozen and

burst, and the wood floors were extensively damaged. Alloway fully restored

the property to its current state as a historic late-1800s building. The restoration

cost approximately $150,000.

Simultaneously, in December 2021, Wilmington filed another motion in

the mortgage foreclosure action to correct the plaintiff's name. That second

substitution order was entered January 5, 2022. Wilmington then filed an

amended complaint.

Wilmington finally obtained foreclosure judgment on January 26, 2022.

When Wilmington requested its own sheriff's sale of the property on February

17, 2022, it learned of the previous sheriff's sale.

Wilmington's counsel then emailed Trystone's counsel advising Live Well

assigned the mortgage to Wilmington, which was recorded prior to the filing of

Trystone's tax foreclosure complaint, and Trystone's tax foreclosure complaint

failed to name Wilmington. Trystone's attorney responded that neither the title

search nor the rundown search showed an assignment from Live Well to

Wilmington, that the property was sold at sheriff's sale in December 2021, and

that the real party in interest was now the successful bidder, Alloway. Trystone

further provided Wilmington's counsel with Alloway's full contact information.

A-1287-22 6 However, neither Wilmington nor any of its representatives ever contacted

Alloway.

Wilmington then filed a motion to intervene in the Trystone tax

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Trystone Capital Assets, LLC v. Dorothy T. Toulson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trystone-capital-assets-llc-v-dorothy-t-toulson-njsuperctappdiv-2024.