FEBRUARY 2016 n NO. 2
Consumer Finance Litigation
CA Supreme Court Unanimously Holds that a Mortgage Loan Borrower Has
Standing to Sue for Wrongful Foreclosure due to Allegedly Void Assignments
Action Item: In a ruling last week, the California Supreme
Court supported Glaski and issued a narrow holding
that, post-foreclosure, borrowers have standing to
assert wrongful foreclosure based on allegations that an
underlying assignment is void. Servicers should be prepared
for additional wrongful foreclosure claims by borrowers
asserting that assignments of the mortgage were void.
On February 18, 2016, the California Supreme Court resolved
a split in the Courts of Appeal and unanimously held that a
mortgage loan borrower has standing to sue for wrongful
foreclosure, based on an allegedly void assignment. Tsvetana
Yvanova v.
New Century Mortgage Corp. et al., Case No.
S218973 (Cal. Feb.
18, 2016).1 The court reasoned that the
foreclosure itself is sufficient prejudice for standing purposes.
The opinion did not extend to pre-foreclosure claims, did not
address whether a borrower must allege tender to state a
cause of action for wrongful foreclosure, did not address what
facts render an assignment void, and explicitly limited its ruling
to void—not voidable—mortgage assignments.
Summary of Facts and Case Background
Plaintiff-borrower Tsvetana Yvanova sued her mortgage
lender, New Century Mortgage Corporation (“New Century”),
and others for various foreclosure-related causes of action,
with a single cause of action for quiet title remaining in her
second amended complaint. Yvanova alleged that in 2006, she
obtained a $483,000 loan from New Century, for which she
provided a deed of trust as security. In 2007, New Century filed
for bankruptcy and was liquidated in August 2008.
In December
2011, the servicer on behalf of New Century, executed an
assignment, transferring the Deed of Trust to Deutsche Bank
National Trust Company (“Deutsche Bank”) as the trustee for
a securitized trust. The closing date for the securitized trust
was in January 2007. In August 2012, Western Progressive LLC
recorded (1) a substitution of the trustee, substituting itself
for Deutsche Bank, and (2) a notice of the trustee’s sale.
On
September 14, 2012, the property was sold at a public auction
by Western Progressive LLC to a third-party.
© 2016, Blank Rome LLP. All rights reserved. Please contact Blank Rome for permission to reprint.
Notice: The purpose of this update is to identify select developments that may be of interest
to readers. The information contained herein is abridged and summarized from various sources, the accuracy and completeness of which cannot be assured. This update should not be
construed as legal advice or opinion, and is not a substitute for the advice of counsel.
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Consumer Finance Litigation n Page 2
Yvanova alleged the December 2011 Assignment of the
Deed of Trust from New Century to Deutsche Bank was void
because: (1) New Century lacked the authority to transfer the
Deed of Trust in 2011, because its assets were transferred
to the bankruptcy trustee in 2008, and (2) the investment
trust was closed in 2007. The superior court sustained the
defendants’ demurrer without leave to amend.
The court explicitly noted that its holding was limited to the
issue of standing in post-foreclosure cases. The court did not
determine whether the defects alleged by Yvanova would
render an assignment void, and declined to address what facts
must be alleged to demonstrate a void assignment. The court
further declined to extend its analysis of prejudice beyond the
standing context.
The Court of Appeal affirmed the judgment, concluding
that Yvanova could not state a claim for quiet title, because
Yvanova had not alleged the tender of the amount due.
The
Court of Appeal also determined that Yvanova could not, on
the facts alleged, amend her complaint to state a claim for
wrongful foreclosure because, as a third-party unrelated to the
assignment at issue, Yvanova was not affected by any alleged
deficiencies in the assignment and, therefore, lacked standing
to enforce the terms of the agreements allegedly violated. In
so ruling, the Court of Appeal declined to follow the holding
of Glaski v. Bank of America, 218 Cal.App.4th 1079 (2013).
Yvanova petitioned for review before the California Supreme
Court, which granted review on August 27, 2014.
Yvanova v.
New Century Mortg. Corp., 331 P.3d 1275 (Cal. 2014).
Conclusion
California Supreme Court Decision
The California Supreme Court limited its review to the
following: “In an action for wrongful foreclosure on a deed of
trust securing a home loan, does the borrower have standing
to challenge an assignment of the note and deed of trust on
the basis of defects allegedly rendering the assignment void?”
Yvanova, 331 P.3d at 1275.
The court found in the affirmative,
following the reasoning in Glaski, supra, and rejecting the
holding in Jenkins v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. (2013) 216
Cal.App.4th 497, to the extent that those cases addressed
a borrower’s standing to assert a post-foreclosure claim of
wrongful foreclosure based on a void assignment.
Specifically,
the court found that an entity foreclosing following a void
assignment of the deed of trust, as opposed to a merely
voidable assignment, acts without legal authority to do so.
Under such circumstances, a borrower has standing to state a
claim for wrongful foreclosure, because he or she has suffered
the loss of ownership of the property.
The Yvanova opinion will likely embolden aggrieved borrowers
to assert wrongful foreclosure claims based on allegedly void
assignments, which may result in extended briefing at the
pleading and/or summary judgment stage on whether an
assignment is void, voidable, or valid. However, the limitations
of the court’s holding still permit defendants to challenge the
borrower’s failure to tender, whether the underlying facts
regarding the assignment render it void and whether the
borrower has sufficiently alleged prejudice as an element of
wrongful foreclosure. — © 2016 BLANK ROME LLP
Mr. Streibich would like to thank Todd Boock and Shawnda
Grady for their assistance in preparing this alert.
1. http://www.courts.ca.gov/opinions/documents/S218973.PDF
For more information, please contact:
Wayne Streibich
215.569.5776 | WStreibich@BlankRome.com
Francis X.
Crowley
215.569.5627 | Crowley@BlankRome.com
Laura E. Vendzules
215.569.5307 | LVendzules@BlankRome.com
Edward W. Chang
215.569.5342 | EChang@BlankRome.com
Todd A.
Boock
424.239.3409 | TBoock@BlankRome.com
Shawnda M. Grady
424.239.3456 | 415.416.8186 | SGrady@BlankRome.com
www.blankrome.com
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