US Bank National Association v. David L Carswell

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 2015
Docket320416
StatusUnpublished

This text of US Bank National Association v. David L Carswell (US Bank National Association v. David L Carswell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
US Bank National Association v. David L Carswell, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, UNPUBLISHED May 5, 2015 Plaintiff / Counter-Defendant / Appellee,

v No. 320416 Wayne Circuit Court DAVID L. CARSWELL, LC No. 12-006823-CH

Defendant-Appellant, and

RATTON & WANGLER, PLC,

Defendant, and

NICOLE H. MILLER, f/k/a NICOLE H. CARSWELL,

Defendant / Counter-Plaintiff / Third-Party-Plaintiff / Appellant, v

LITTON LOAN SERVICING, LLC,

Third-Party-Defendant / Appellee.

Before: TALBOT, C.J., and MURPHY and GLEICHER, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendants-appellants David Carswell and Nicole Miller (appellants) appeal by leave granted the trial court’s order granting summary disposition in favor of plaintiff U.S. Bank

-1- National Association (UBNA) in this case involving UBNA’s effort to judicially foreclose on real property formerly owned by both appellants and currently owned solely by appellant Nicole Miller.1 We affirm.

I. HISTORY – SUBSTANTIVE AND PROCEDURAL FACTS

On November 5, 2001, appellants, who were married at that time but later divorced, executed an adjustable-rate promissory note as obligors in the amount of $325,500. The lender was New Century Mortgage Corporation (New Century). On the same day, appellants signed a 30-year mortgage in favor of New Century as security for the note. The mortgage encumbered appellants’ home and was subsequently recorded on May 1, 2002. In a week’s time, on November 12, 2001, New Century assigned the mortgage to UBNA.2 The assignment of mortgage was not recorded until March 6, 2003. On August 28, 2003, UBNA assigned the mortgage to The Provident Bank. This assignment was recorded on September 16, 2003.

In 2004, appellants’ divorce was finalized, and David Carswell quitclaimed his interest in the encumbered property to Nicole Miller, f/k/a Nicole Carswell, on October 7, 2004, ostensibly pursuant to the divorce judgment. According to filings by Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Capital 1, Inc., with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), of which we take

1 Appellants filed this appeal as if it were an appeal by right, and UBNA argued that the order granting summary disposition was not a final order appealable as of right, although an order of foreclosure that was a true final order did enter after appellants filed the appeal. This Court by order addressed the challenge, ruling “that the instant appeal shall be treated as an application for leave to appeal and that leave to appeal is GRANTED.” US Bank Nat’l Ass’n v Carswell, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered December 29, 2014 (Docket No. 320416). 2 In all of the real estate documents and court filings, UBNA is identified “as Trustee under the Pooling and Servicing Agreement [PSA] dated as of March 1, 2002, Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Capital 1 Inc., Trustee 2002-NC-1.” With respect to such PSAs, we note the following background discussion in Peterson, Foreclosure, Subprime Mortgage Lending, & The Mortgage Electronic Registration Sys, 78 U Cincinnati L Rev 1359, 1367 (2010): Typically subprime originators quickly assign their loans to a seller, which is usually a subsidiary of an investment bank. Ultimately the promissory note and mortgage are then assigned, along with many other loans, to a special purpose vehicle that usually takes the form of a trust. A special purpose vehicle is a business entity that is exclusively a repository for the loans; it does not have any employees, offices, or assets other than the loans it purchases. A pooling and servicing agreement [PSA] specifies a trustee to manage the loan assets and a servicer to collect monthly payments and interact with the homeowner. The trust then transfers the right to receive the income stream to an underwriter and then various investors such as mutual funds, hedge funds, pension funds, and insurance companies. [See also Anderson v Burson, 424 Md App 232, 237; 35 A3d 452 (2011).]

-2- judicial notice, MRE 201, on December 1, 2004, third-party defendant Litton Loan Servicing, LLC (Litton), was appointed as successor mortgage servicer with respect to mortgages held in trust under the March 2002 PSA; Provident Bank had been the servicer up to that point.3 On February 10, 2005, divorce counsel for one of the appellants, defendant Ratton & Wangler, PLC (R&W), recorded a claim of attorney lien pursuant to the divorce judgment in the amount of $3,901 with respect to the property already encumbered by the mortgage.

On October 27, 2005, Provident Bank assigned the mortgage and note back to UBNA, which assignment was recorded on November 8, 2005. Litton maintained its status as the mortgage servicer. It is this 2005 assignment to UBNA that conveyed the interest upon which UBNA sought to foreclose seven years later. One of appellants’ arguments below and on appeal is that UBNA lacked the capacity as trustee under the 2002 PSA to be an assignee of the note and mortgage in 2005 as necessary to legally and soundly accept the assignment; therefore, absent a valid conveyance of interests under the assignment, UBNA lacked standing and the capacity to later foreclose on the property. In support, appellants claim that the 2002 PSA had a March 27, 2002 closing date, precluding the transfer of mortgage interests thereafter into the PSA-created trust of which UBNA was the trustee, and thereby barring the 2005 transfer under the assignment. In a request for admissions served by appellants on UBNA early in the litigation, appellants asked UBNA to “[a]dmit that the closing date to transfer all mortgages to the Trust was March 27, 2002.” UBNA responded:

On information and belief, Plaintiff believes that the pooling and servicing agreement references a closing date of March 27, 2002[,] but denies that the relevant section of the document states that all mortgages must be transferred by that closing date. Plaintiff cannot fully admit or deny this request as Defendants did not provide the relevant portions of the document(s) necessary to respond. Plaintiff continues to investigate and will supplement this response as necessary. [4.]

There was never any follow-up or supplementation, nor did appellants ever seek production of the 2002 PSA during discovery. Again, the 2002 PSA is not part of the record.

3 While we were able to locate various SEC filings with respect to amendments of the March 2002 PSA, we could not find the 2002 PSA itself and it was never made part of the lower court record. We also note that a “mortgage servicer” is “a person that, directly or indirectly, services or offers to service mortgage loans.” MCL 445.1651a(s). 4 In other answers to the request for admissions, UBNA indicated that appellants had not presented UBNA with the referenced PSA, as if the PSA would be in the hands of or easily accessible by appellants as mortgagors. It would seem that UBNA, as trustee under the PSA, would have direct access to the PSA, and we find this aspect of the case somewhat troubling.

-3- Returning to the chronology of events, appellants started to have problems making the mortgage payments, and by 2006 they were in default.5 In May 2006, both appellants and UBNA executed a loan modification of mortgage agreement, amending and supplementing the original mortgage; the agreement was recorded on July 12, 2006. Litton prepared the agreement and continued to act as the mortgage servicer.

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US Bank National Association v. David L Carswell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/us-bank-national-association-v-david-l-carswell-michctapp-2015.