U.S. Bank National Ass'n v. Shepherd

202 So. 3d 302
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 20, 2015
Docket1140376 and 1140450
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 202 So. 3d 302 (U.S. Bank National Ass'n v. Shepherd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
U.S. Bank National Ass'n v. Shepherd, 202 So. 3d 302 (Ala. 2015).

Opinion

STUART, Justice.

U.S. Bank National Association (“USB”), successor in interest to Bank of America, N.A., which is the successor by merger to LaSalle Bank, National Association, as trustee for Structured Asset Investment Loan Trust, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2004-4 (“the Trust”), and Bank of America, N.A. (“BOA”), separately appeal a $3,920,000 judgment entered against them by the Lamar Circuit Court on trespass and wantonness claims asserted by Chester Shepherd and Emily Faye Shepherd. USB also appeals the trial court’s judgment in favor of the Shepherds on its claims related to an alleged error in a mortgage executed by the Shepherds upon which the Trust had foreclosed. We reverse and remand.

I.

In the late 1970s, the Shepherds began receiving property in Vernon from Emily’s family, culminating in their ownership of three contiguous parcels of real estate located northeast of the intersection of Holli-day Road and Aberdeen Road. As denominated by the parties, “Parcel 1” is located at 48 Holliday Road and houses a residence built by the Shepherds in 1980, “Parcel 2” is located at 3742 Aberdeen. Road and houses a beauty parlor operated by Emily, and “Parcel 3” consists of unimproved pastureland behind and adjacent to the other two parcels.

In April 1999, the Shepherds obtained a $61,000 loan from Superior Bank. That loan was secured by a mortgage; however, the recorded mortgage did not contain a legal description of the encumbered property. In December 2001, the Shepherds secured a home-equity line of credit with Citizens State Bank with a mortgage on Parcel 2.

[304]*304In approximately October 2003, the Shepherds applied to refinance the April 1999 mortgage loan issued by Superior Bank with H & R Block, Inc. An appraisal was conducted on Parcel 1 in conjunction with that application, which reported the value of the property to be $86,000. Chester and Emily have both testified that it was their intent that the new mortgage encumber Parcel 1; however, at some point during the application process Chester noticed that the legal description of the encumbered property used in the draft documents was actually the legal description for Parcel 2. The conversation log maintained by H & R Block indicates that Chester notified it of a problem with the legal description during the application process; however, the mistake was apparently never corrected, because, when Linda Meadows, an independent notary public, brought the closing papers to the Shepherds on December 26, 2003, the mortgage indicated that the encumbered property was located at “48 Hol[l]iday Road, Vernon,” and that it was the Shepherds’ “residence,” but the attached legal description of the property described Parcel 2, on which was not located the residence but Emily’s beauty parlor. Chester testified that, when he told Meadows of the error in the legal description, she telephoned Mark Muncher, the H & R Block loan officer in charge of the Shepherds’ loan, and that, after speaking with Muncher, she told them that Muncher had instructed her to have them go ahead with the closing and that the error in the legal description would be corrected at a later time.1 Accordingly, the Shepherds executed all the documents with which they were presented, borrowing $68,800, part of which was used to pay the mortgage-transaction fees and to pay off the balance of the April 1999 Superior Bank note, and approximately $7,000 of which was disbursed to the Shepherds. Chester testified that he contacted Muncher and H & R Block repeatedly in the ensuing months trying to get the error in the legal description corrected but that they took no action regarding the error.

In April 2004, the Shepherds’ December 2003 mortgage was assigned to Option One Mortgage Corporation, a subsidiary of H & R Block. In August 2005, the December 2003 mortgage was assigned to the Trust, which had been created by Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc., in April 2004, and which was administered by LaSalle Bank, National Association, as trustee until USB replaced it as trustee on September 6, 2011.2 It appears, however, that Option One Mortgage continued to service the December 2003 mortgage even after it was assigned to the Trust, at least until Option One. Mortgage itself was acquired by Homeward Residential Holdings, Inc., in April 2008 and Homeward Residential began servicing the mortgage.3 Chester has [305]*305testified that he telephoned Option One Mortgage multiple times attempting to get the legal description of the property encumbered by the December 2003 mortgage corrected; however, he testified that it never responded to his requests.

Sometime in the early summer of 2004, Chester, who was self-employed, began having health problems that prevented him from working, and the Shepherds fell behind in their payments on the December 2003 mortgage. On August 31, 2004, Chester filed a petition for bankruptcy relief under Chapter 13 of the United States Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Alabama. In that petition, Chester listed Option One Mortgage as a secured creditor pursuant to a mortgage he alleged it held on Parcel 1. However, Chester’s bankruptcy petition was eventually dismissed after he failed to make the payments required by the court-approved repayment plan.

In a letter dated June 27, 2005, the Shepherds were contacted by Morris Schneider & Prior, LLC (“Morris Schneider”), an Atlanta law firm that had been retained to collect on the debt owed Option One Mortgage by the Shepherds.4 Morris Schneider advised the Shepherds via letter that its collection efforts could include the commencement of foreclosure proceedings on the property located at 48 Holliday Road. Chester attempted to resolve the problem with the legal description in the December 2003 mortgage with Morris Schneider also; however, he states that Morris Schneider was not responsive. In response to Morris Schneider’s collection efforts, however, Chester, on August 8, 2005, filed another Chapter 13 bankruptcy petition. That petition again listed Parcel 1 as being subject to a mortgage held by Option One Mortgage. Tim Wadsworth, the attorney handling Chester’s bankruptcy petition also contacted Morris Schneider on the Shepherds’ behalf multiple times in an attempt to correct the legal description in the December 2003 mortgage; however, he was unsuccessful. The Shepherds simultaneously began efforts to sell Parcel 1 and even brought a prospective purchaser to meet with Wadsworth; however, no sale was completed after Wadsworth advised them all of the title issues stemming from the error in the legal description of the property encumbered by the December 20,03 mortgage.

Meanwhile, on September 9, 2005, Morris Schneider, now aware of the problem with the December 2003 mortgage, filed a substitute mortgage in the Lamar County Probate Court. This substitute mortgage was the same as the December 2003 mortgage with the exception of the legal description of the encumbered property, which was now the legal description for Parcel 3.5 The Shepherds were not advised that a substitute mortgage had been filed; Morris Schneider presumably acted pursuant to the limited power of attorney executed by the Shepherds at the closing on the December 2003 mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
202 So. 3d 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/us-bank-national-assn-v-shepherd-ala-2015.