PEDRO U. DIAZ and NOEMI C. DIAZ v. BBVA USA, Fka COMPASS BANK ( 2022 )


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  •                                      IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION TWO
    PEDRO U. DIAZ AND NOEMI C. DIAZ,
    HUSBAND AND WIFE,
    Plaintiffs/Appellants,
    v.
    BBVA USA,
    FKA COMPASS BANK, A CORPORATION,
    Defendant/Appellee.
    No. 2 CA-CV 2021-0046
    Filed January 7, 2022
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Pinal County
    No. S1100CV202001239
    The Honorable Steven J. Fuller, Judge
    AFFIRMED
    COUNSEL
    Denny & Boulton P.C., Phoenix
    By G. Michael Denny
    Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellants
    Akerman LLP
    By Erin E. Edwards, Chicago, Illinois
    Counsel for Defendant/Appellee
    DIAZ v. BBVA USA
    Opinion of the Court
    OPINION
    Judge Brearcliffe authored the opinion of the Court, in which Presiding
    Judge Eppich and Chief Judge Vásquez concurred.
    B R E A R C L I F F E, Judge:
    ¶1     Pedro and Noemi Diaz appeal from the trial court’s dismissal of their
    action to quiet title. The Diazes contend the court erred by concluding that
    the six-year statute of limitations to enforce the subject deed of trust would
    not begin to run until the earlier of its maturity date or the creditor’s
    acceleration of the underlying debt. The Diazes contend that the limitations
    period began, at the latest, when their debt was discharged in bankruptcy.
    For the following reasons, we affirm.
    Factual and Procedural Background
    ¶2             The Diazes’ complaint to quiet title to their home was
    dismissed by the trial court under Rule 12(b)(6), Ariz. R. Civ. P., for failure
    to state a claim. “When a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim is
    granted, review on appeal necessarily assumes the truth of facts alleged in
    the complaint.” Airfreight Express Ltd. v. Evergreen Air Ctr., Inc., 
    215 Ariz. 103
    , ¶ 2 (App. 2007) (quoting Logan v. Forever Living Prods. Int’l, Inc., 
    203 Ariz. 191
    , ¶ 2 (2002)). Documents attached to, or incorporated by reference
    in a complaint, are similarly considered. See Belen Loan Invs., LLC v. Bradley,
    
    231 Ariz. 448
    , n.8 (App. 2012) (citing Strategic Dev. & Constr., Inc. v. 7th &
    Roosevelt Partners, LLC, 
    224 Ariz. 60
    , ¶¶ 10, 14 (App. 2010) (documents
    referenced but not attached are considered when they are central to
    complaint)). The facts below are drawn from both the Diazes’ complaint
    and the deed of trust cited in, and central to, the complaint.
    ¶3             In April 2005, the Diazes executed a note for a home equity
    line-of-credit (“HELOC”) with Compass Bank, now BBVA, for the principal
    amount of $145,000. The Diazes secured the note with a deed of trust on
    their home, for the benefit of BBVA. As described in the deed of trust, the
    credit agreement was a revolving line of credit, allowing the Diazes to
    borrow funds at their discretion, repeatedly, up to a limit of $145,000 while
    they made monthly payments. Each payment on the balance would
    replenish the amount available to the Diazes. The deed of trust’s maturity
    date is April 9, 2040.
    2
    DIAZ v. BBVA USA
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶4            The Diazes’ last payment to BBVA under the note was made
    before March 2012 and they have made no payments since then. In March
    2012, the Diazes filed for bankruptcy relief, under chapter 7 of the
    bankruptcy code, and were granted a discharge of debts in August 2012.1
    The Diazes’ then-existing debt to BBVA under the note was included in the
    bankruptcy discharge. BBVA and the Diazes did not enter a reaffirmation
    agreement.2 We assume for the purposes of this decision that the entirety
    of the outstanding debt to BBVA was discharged in the bankruptcy action.
    ¶5            Under the deed of trust, the Diazes’ failure to “meet the
    repayment terms” of the HELOC after March 2012 was an event of default.
    Upon an event of default, BBVA could elect “one or more” of identified
    remedies, including acceleration (as lender, by declaring “the entire
    indebtedness immediately due and payable”) and foreclosure (as trustee,
    “by notice and sale,” or as lender, “by judicial foreclosure”). The Diazes
    agreed in the deed of trust that BBVA does “not give up any of [its] rights
    under [the] Deed of Trust unless [it] does so in writing,” and that “[t]he fact
    that [BBVA] delays or omits to exercise any right will not mean that [BBVA]
    has given up that right.” They further agreed that the deed of trust would
    secure any obligation to BBVA “whether the obligation to repay such
    amounts may be or hereafter may become otherwise unenforceable.” It is
    undisputed that BBVA had not, as of the date of the complaint, exercised or
    attempted to exercise either acceleration or foreclosure under the deed of
    trust.
    ¶6            Eight years after receiving the bankruptcy discharge, in
    August 2020, the Diazes filed this quiet title action to preemptively bar
    BBVA “from having or claiming any right or title” to their home adverse to
    theirs, and a “[j]udgment extinguishing” the deed of trust. They asserted
    that more than six years had passed since both their first uncured, missed
    1See   
    11 U.S.C. §§ 524
    , 727.
    2“A   reaffirmation agreement is one in which a debtor agrees to pay
    all or part of the dischargeable debt after a bankruptcy petition has been
    filed.” 9D Am. Jur. 2d Bankruptcy § 3659, Westlaw (database updated
    November 2021). A bankruptcy petitioner may enter into a reaffirmation
    agreement with a secured creditor to prevent foreclosure on the collateral.
    See 9D Am. Jur. 2d Bankruptcy § 3513, Westlaw (database updated
    November 2021) (“The debtor can avert foreclosure in such a situation . . .
    by . . . a reaffirmation of the mortgage debt which preserves the debtor’s
    personal liability in spite of discharge . . . .”).
    3
    DIAZ v. BBVA USA
    Opinion of the Court
    payment in March 2012, and the date of their “last payment owed,” which
    is, effectively, the date of the bankruptcy discharge in August 2012.
    Consequently, they argued, because BBVA had failed to enforce the deed
    of trust within Arizona’s six-year limitations period, it was forever barred
    from doing so. A.R.S. § 12-548(A)(1); see A.R.S. § 33-816 (statute of
    limitations for contract applies to deed of trust securing contract). BBVA
    filed a motion to dismiss, arguing the statute of limitations had not run, and
    would not begin to run until either April 2040—the maturity date of the
    deed of trust—or its election to accelerate the underlying debt. The trial
    court granted BBVA’s motion, dismissing the complaint with prejudice,
    and this appeal followed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to A.R.S. §§ 12-
    120.21(A)(1) and 12-2101(A)(1).
    Analysis
    ¶7             In granting BBVA’s Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, the trial
    court determined that BBVA was not barred by the statute of limitations
    and that the Diazes had therefore failed to state a claim upon which the
    relief they sought could be granted. On appeal, the Diazes argue that the
    trial court erred by: (1) applying precedent that requires a creditor to
    accelerate a debt to commence the six-year statute of limitations and (2)
    “applying legal precedent without regard to the legal significance of [their]
    bankruptcy discharge.” We review the dismissal of a complaint under Rule
    12(b)(6), de novo. Coleman v. City of Mesa, 
    230 Ariz. 352
    , ¶ 7 (2012).
    Dismissal is only appropriate under Rule 12(b)(6) if “as a matter of law . . .
    plaintiffs would not be entitled to relief under any interpretation of the facts
    susceptible of proof.” Id. ¶ 8 (quoting Fid. Sec. Life Ins. Co. v. State Dep’t of
    Ins., 
    191 Ariz. 222
    , ¶ 4 (1998)). “The accrual of the cause of action and the
    interpretation of a statute of limitations are legal questions, which we
    review de novo.” Mertola, LLC v. Santos, 
    244 Ariz. 488
    , ¶ 8 (2018).
    Navy Federal, Webster and Miller versus Mertola
    ¶8             In support of their claim that the trial court erroneously
    dismissed their complaint, the Diazes cite to Mertola, 
    244 Ariz. 488
    . In
    Mertola, a couple entered into a consumer credit card agreement with a
    bank and the agreement contained an optional acceleration clause upon
    default. Id. ¶ 2. The borrowers defaulted for the first time in 2008 and the
    creditor did not sue for the unpaid balance of the credit card debt until 2014.
    Id. ¶¶ 3-4. The court concluded that, when a credit card agreement contains
    an optional acceleration clause, the statute of limitations for a creditor to
    collect the entire outstanding debt begins to accrue upon the first defaulted
    payment. Id. ¶ 21. Consequently, the creditor’s claim for the unpaid debt
    4
    DIAZ v. BBVA USA
    Opinion of the Court
    was barred by the six-year statute of limitations of A.R.S. § 12-548(A)(2). Id.
    ¶¶ 1, 21-22.
    ¶9             The Diazes similarly assert that BBVA was obliged to
    foreclose on the home either within six years of the first missed payment,
    or, at the latest, within six years of the last payment due just before their
    bankruptcy discharge. BBVA argues in response, as it did below, that it
    was entitled to wait to foreclose (or exercise any other available remedy
    under the deed of trust) until the April 2040 maturity date of the deed of
    trust. Any applicable statute of limitations, it argues, does not begin to run
    any sooner than that maturity date unless it affirmatively takes some earlier
    remedial action such as acceleration. It argues, also as it did below, that—
    as we held recently in Webster Bank N.A. v. Mutka, 
    250 Ariz. 498
    , ¶ 12 (App.
    2021)— Mertola applies only to unsecured credit card debt, not secured debt
    such as that involved here.
    ¶10           In Webster, the debtor, Mutka, entered a thirty-year HELOC,
    with a borrowing limit of $73,000, secured by a deed of trust on his home.
    Id. ¶ 2. During the first fifteen years of the loan, Mutka was required to
    make monthly interest payments, but was not obligated to make principal
    payments until the second fifteen years. Id. Four years after taking out the
    loan, Mutka failed to make a monthly interest payment, and, thereafter,
    made no further payments under the loan. Id. ¶ 3. Six and a half years after
    that default, the lender bank accelerated the debt under the optional
    acceleration clause in the loan agreement, and sued to collect the balance.
    Id. In response to the suit, Mutka moved for summary judgment, arguing
    that the six-year statute of limitations barred the bank’s suit. Id. ¶ 4. The
    trial court denied the motion and, after a trial, the bank secured judgment
    against Mutka. Id.
    ¶11            On appeal, this court recited the rule that “[w]hen a fixed debt
    is payable in installments, the statute of limitations ‘commences on the due
    date of each matured but unpaid installment and, as to unmatured future
    installments, the period commences on the date the creditor exercises the
    optional acceleration clause.’” Id. ¶ 7 (quoting Navy Fed. Credit Union v.
    Jones, 
    187 Ariz. 493
    , 494 (App. 1996)). Mutka had argued that, because his
    debt was akin to credit card debt, Mertola applied, not Navy Federal, and that
    the “cause of action to collect the entire outstanding [credit card] debt
    accrues upon default: that is, when the debtor first fails to make a full,
    agreed-to minimum monthly payment.” Id. ¶ 8 (quoting Mertola, 
    244 Ariz. 488
    , ¶ 21). Consequently, Mutka argued, the bank’s claim—filed six years
    and eight months after he first failed to make an interest payment—was
    5
    DIAZ v. BBVA USA
    Opinion of the Court
    barred. 
    Id.
     We disagreed with Mutka, recognizing that our supreme court
    in Mertola, in declining to apply the Navy Federal rule to credit card debt,
    had also “expressly declined” to determine whether that rule applied to
    other types of debt. Id. ¶ 9. We concluded that the Navy Federal rule applied
    to any secured HELOC with a defined maturity date, and that the statute of
    limitations to enforce the debt does not begin to run on future, unmatured
    installments due until the lender accelerates the debt. Id. Consequently,
    the bank’s suit against Mutka, undertaken simultaneously with
    acceleration, was within the six-year statute of limitations. Id. ¶¶ 3-4, 13,
    15.
    ¶12            We see no cogent reason to go beyond Webster. See Castillo v.
    Indus. Comm’n, 
    21 Ariz. App. 465
    , 471 (1974) (we should consider a prior
    court of appeals decision binding unless it is “based upon clearly erroneous
    principles, or conditions have changed so as to render these prior decisions
    inapplicable.”). Because Webster limits the application of Mertola to credit
    card debt, or, at least, does not extend it to HELOCs, Mertola is not
    applicable in this case.3 And because Navy Federal and Webster control, the
    trial court did not err in rejecting the application of Mertola.4
    Effect of the Bankruptcy Discharge
    ¶13           The Diazes further point out that the cases on which we and
    the trial court rely did not involve a bankruptcy discharge. The Diazes
    argue that, even if the statute of limitations did not begin to run when they
    stopped making payments under the note, it was certainly triggered by the
    discharge of their debt in bankruptcy. They argue that discharge is the
    equivalent of maturation of the debt. We disagree.
    3The  trial court here did not have the benefit of Webster, which was
    filed several months after the court’s order of dismissal. The court,
    nonetheless, reached the same conclusion relying on Andra R Miller Designs
    LLC v. US Bank NA, 
    244 Ariz. 265
     (App. 2018) (“Miller”).
    4The  Diazes also argue that A.R.S. § 33-816 “prohibits a distinction
    between secured and unsecured debt for purposes of determining the
    appropriate statute of limitations when a deed of trust is involved,” and
    therefore the trial court should not have refused to follow Mertola solely
    based on the security status of the debt. We see no such prohibition in that
    statute.
    6
    DIAZ v. BBVA USA
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶14            As an initial matter, the United States Bankruptcy Code
    controls the legal effect of a bankruptcy discharge. See Stewart v. Underwood,
    
    146 Ariz. 145
    , 147 (App. 1985). Under non-bankruptcy law, the payment or
    discharge of an underlying debt extinguishes any lien or other right or
    interest in property securing the debt. See Deming Nat. Bank v. Walraven,
    
    133 Ariz. 378
    , 379 (App. 1982) (“There can be no quarrel with the general
    principle that ordinarily when the secured obligation is discharged in full,
    any mortgage securing that obligation is extinguished and ceases to exist.”).
    A debtor can no longer be sued on the note or security agreement.
    ¶15           Similarly, the discharge of a debt in bankruptcy expressly
    relieves the debtor of the underlying obligation, from risk of in personam
    suit on the debt, and even a personal judgment. 
    11 U.S.C. § 524
    (a)(1)-(3);
    see Stewart, 
    146 Ariz. at 148
     (discharge under the Code is “a bar to
    enforcement of the debt as a personal obligation of the debtor”); see also
    Tonnemacher v. Touche Ross & Co., 
    186 Ariz. 125
    , 129 (App. 1996) (action in
    personam is action seeking personal judgment). But a bankruptcy discharge
    does not extinguish a lien or other security agreement associated with the
    underlying obligation or bar an in rem suit to enforce it. 
    11 U.S.C. § 524
    (j)
    (discharge “does not operate as an injunction against an act by a creditor
    that is the holder of a secured claim”); see Stewart, 
    146 Ariz. at 146
    ;
    Transamerica Ins. Co. v. Trout, 
    145 Ariz. 355
    , 359 (App. 1985); Tonnemacher,
    
    186 Ariz. at 129
     (action in rem seeks control over property).
    ¶16          Consequently, while the Diazes received relief of their
    personal obligation to BBVA when their debt was discharged in
    bankruptcy, the deed of trust they executed to secure that personal
    obligation was not extinguished. Therefore, unless its claim is indeed
    barred by the statute of limitations as the Diazes contend, BBVA retains
    whatever rights arise under the deed of trust in rem against the subject
    home, including foreclosure.
    ¶17             Nonetheless, the Diazes argue that, because the underlying
    debt was discharged, any acceleration of the debt by BBVA would be
    “illegal and meaningless.” Therefore, they maintain, “[t]he [bankruptcy]
    discharge has the same legal effect as a maturation of the loan.” The Diazes
    assert that, at a minimum, “[n]othing in § 12-548(A)(1) denies the possibility
    that a bankruptcy discharge can trigger the statute of limitations.” In its
    ruling, the trial court did not address the Diazes’ bankruptcy discharge.
    ¶18            The Diazes rely, as they did below, on an unpublished federal
    district court case, Jarvis v. Fed. Nat’l Mortg. Ass’n, No. C16-5194-RBL, 
    2017 WL 1438040
     (W.D. Wash. Apr. 24, 2017), affirmed by an unpublished
    7
    DIAZ v. BBVA USA
    Opinion of the Court
    federal appellate case, Jarvis v. Fed. Nat’l Mortg. Ass’n, 726 F. App’x 666 (9th
    Cir. 2018), to support their argument. They assert we should follow these
    cases and “turn to Washington State law,” because “[t]here is no law on
    point in Arizona.” In Jarvis, the facts were very similar to those here, and
    that court determined that the limitations period begins to run from the due
    date of the payment “owed immediately prior to the discharge of a
    borrower’s personal liability in bankruptcy, because after discharge, a
    borrower no longer has forthcoming installments that he must pay.” Jarvis,
    
    2017 WL 1438040
    , at *2. As a result, it barred the lender from enforcing its
    rights under the deed of trust due to the passing of the statute of limitations
    following a bankruptcy discharge. Id., at *3-4. Although Jarvis would
    certainly command that BBVA’s in rem action here is similarly barred, Jarvis
    is not binding. See Skydive Ariz., Inc. v. Hogue, 
    238 Ariz. 357
    , ¶ 29 (App.
    2015). And, because our decision in Stewart v. Underwood is on point, Jarvis
    is not persuasive.
    ¶19            In Stewart, Underwood executed a promissory note payable
    to Stewart, secured by Underwood’s home under a deed of trust. 
    146 Ariz. at 146
    . Underwood filed for bankruptcy and the debt owed to Stewart was
    ultimately discharged. 
    Id.
     During the bankruptcy proceedings, Stewart did
    not file a proof of claim, nor did she accept an offer to reaffirm the debt. 
    Id.
    Over a year after the discharge, Stewart commenced an action to foreclose
    on Underwood’s residence under the deed of trust. 
    Id.
     The trial court
    found the deed of trust to be “null and void, presumably because of” the
    bankruptcy discharge. 
    Id.
     On appeal, Underwood argued that the
    bankruptcy discharge “superseded the six year limitations period [under
    A.R.S. §§ 12-548 and 33-816] and immediately enjoined any further action
    on the contract.” Id. at 149-150. We concluded, however, that the discharge
    was “not an extinguishment of the debt, but only a bar to enforcement of
    the debt as a personal obligation of the debtor.” Id. at 148. We wrote:
    A.R.S. § 12-548 sets out a precise period of
    limitation, six years. There is no indication that
    our legislature intended to create some type of
    sliding scale in which enforcement of the lien is
    precluded if some fortuitous circumstance
    prevents an action on the contract. Neither is
    there any indication that Congress intended the
    bankruptcy discharge to interfere with state
    statutes of limitation. In fact, . . . the intent was
    to recognize the continued existence of the debt
    8
    DIAZ v. BBVA USA
    Opinion of the Court
    for purposes not inconsistent with the discharge
    of personal liability.
    Id. at 150. Indeed, we determined that “a valid pre-bankruptcy lien that is
    not avoided during the bankruptcy proceedings survives those
    proceedings unaffected.” Id. at 146.5
    ¶20            Arizona courts, therefore, have not adopted the Jarvis
    reasoning that the debtor is freed of his obligation for all purposes, thus
    necessarily triggering the statute of limitations as a consequence. As
    discussed above, Arizona requires that the lender take affirmative steps to
    accelerate the debt to trigger the statute of limitations. Failing that, a
    secured lender has until the maturity of the note or deed of trust to exercise
    his remedies in enforcing his secured interest. BBVA took no such
    affirmative steps to accelerate the debt. Although certainly, as a practical
    matter, the bankruptcy discharge bars BBVA from accelerating that debt by
    deeming it “immediately due and owing” and obtaining a money
    judgment, that remedy was lost only by the Diazes’ unilateral action of
    seeking bankruptcy protection. We see no statutory command that the
    practical loss of the remedy of acceleration by operation of the bankruptcy
    laws should also affect the other remedies available to BBVA under the
    deed of trust, namely judicial and non-judicial foreclosure. Indeed, as
    stated above, the Diazes expressly agreed that the deed of trust would
    continue to secure their obligation to BBVA “whether the obligation to
    repay” the debt “may be or hereafter may become otherwise
    unenforceable.” And, although the Diazes do not ask us to depart from
    Stewart, we see no reason to do so. Therefore, the trial court did not err in
    refusing to apply the reasoning of Jarvis.
    Attorney Fees and Costs
    ¶21            BBVA requests its attorney fees and costs under Rule 21(a),
    Ariz. R. Civ. App. P., and A.R.S. § 12-341.01(A). In our discretion, we grant
    BBVA, as the prevailing party on appeal, its reasonable attorney fees and
    costs upon its compliance with Rule 21. See Modular Mining Sys., Inc. v.
    Jigsaw Techs., Inc., 
    221 Ariz. 515
    , ¶ 27 (App. 2009). The Diazes have also
    requested their attorney fees and costs on appeal, but they are not the
    5The Diazes did not allege below or here, that the bankruptcy court
    expressly nullified the deed of trust. Indeed, the Diazes acknowledge the
    continued post-discharge existence and, but for their limitations defense,
    enforceability of the deed of trust.
    9
    DIAZ v. BBVA USA
    Opinion of the Court
    successful party and therefore, we deny their request. See Doneson v.
    Farmers Ins. Exch., 
    245 Ariz. 484
    , ¶ 12 (App. 2018).
    Disposition
    ¶22         For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s grant of
    BBVA’s motion to dismiss.
    10