Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation v. Norman D. Anchrum, Jr. ( 2019 )


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  •          Case: 18-10786   Date Filed: 07/23/2019   Page: 1 of 15
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 18-10786
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 2:14-cv-02129-AKK
    FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE CORPORATION,
    Plaintiff – Counter Defendant - Appellee,
    WELLS FARGO BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
    Counter Defendant,
    versus
    NORMAN D. ANCHRUM, JR.,
    ANDREA S. ANCHRUM,
    Defendants – Counter Claimants - Appellants.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Alabama
    ________________________
    (July 23, 2019)
    Case: 18-10786       Date Filed: 07/23/2019      Page: 2 of 15
    Before ROSENBAUM, BRANCH, and HIGGINBOTHAM, * Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation sued to eject Norman and
    Andrea Anchrum after foreclosing on their home. The Anchrums responded with
    several counterclaims against Freddie Mac and Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., the loan
    servicer, including that the foreclosure was void due to Wells Fargo’s failure to
    comply with notice requirements. The district court granted Freddie Mac and
    Wells Fargo summary judgment, held a bench trial on damages, and awarded
    Freddie Mac $104,400 in lost rent damages in its ejectment action and $40,659.88
    in attorney’s fees. We affirm.
    I
    In 2003, Norman and Andrea Anchrum purchased a new home in Alabaster,
    Alabama. They made a down payment and took out a mortgage from Wells Fargo
    to cover the remaining balance. While both Anchrums signed the mortgage, only
    Norman Anchrum executed the promissory note.
    The mortgage and note listed the property address as “552 N. Grande View
    Trail, Alabaster, Alabama 35007.” In contrast, the warranty deed listed the mailing
    address for tax notice purposes as “552 N. Grande View Trail, Maylene, Alabama
    *
    Honorable Patrick E. Higginbotham, United States Circuit Judge for the Fifth Circuit,
    sitting by designation.
    2
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    35114.”1 When closing the mortgage, Norman Anchrum executed a Property
    Insurance Disclosure Form that listed his “correct mailing address” as the Maylene
    address, along with a Subterranean Termite Contract listing the Maylene address.
    The loan was eventually transferred and assigned to Freddie Mac, with
    Wells Fargo continuing to service the loan and stand as the document custodian.
    Wells Fargo’s business records reflect that in 2005, Norman Anchrum called to say
    that he had not received a requested monthly statement. Around the same time, it
    received a return mail statement indicating that a letter to the Anchrums was sent
    to a faulty mailing address. The Anchrums’ address was updated to the Maylene
    address. The Anchrums deny having spoken to Wells Fargo about the address or
    having updated their mailing address with Wells Fargo.
    The Anchrums fell behind on their mortgage payments in 2010, and Wells
    Fargo mailed a notice of default to the Maylene address and zip code. The
    Anchrums cured their default prior to acceleration. When they again fell behind in
    April 2011, Wells Fargo mailed another notice of default to the Maylene address,
    and the Anchrums cured their default the next month. Norman Anchrum testified
    in his deposition that he did not remember receiving any notices of default from
    Wells Fargo and that the Anchrums had cured the defaults independently. Wells
    Fargo’s customer service logs indicate that in May and June 2011, Norman
    1
    Maylene is a community within southern Alabaster.
    3
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    Anchrum had two telephone conversations with Wells Fargo representatives where
    he confirmed that his mailing address was “552 North Grande View Trail,
    Maylene, Alabama 35114.”
    Wells Fargo sent another notice of default to the Maylene address in August
    2011. When the Anchrums failed to cure the default, Wells Fargo commenced
    foreclosure proceedings, notifying the Anchrums by letter to both the Alabaster
    and Maylene addresses and publishing three notices of foreclosure sale in a local
    newspaper. On November 29, 2011, Freddie Mac purchased the property at the
    foreclosure sale. Foreclosure counsel sent the Anchrums a demand for possession
    the next day.
    Although the Anchrums ceased to live in the property and moved some of
    their belongings out, they left other personal belongings behind. Freddie Mac’s real
    estate agent posted a notice on the property on January 9, 2012, that if they did not
    arrange to pick up their possessions within fifteen days, Freddie Mac would
    dispose of the items as deemed appropriate. The Anchrums did not retrieve their
    belongings, and Norman Anchrum continued to visit the property periodically to
    retrieve mail and cut the grass. Between the foreclosure sale and August 2014,
    however, Freddie Mac did not take steps to remove the Anchrums’ possessions or
    to prepare the house for sale or rental. Its real estate agent testified that as a matter
    4
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    of practice, he would not do so when personal property was visible through the
    windows of a house.
    In August 2014, Freddie Mac filed an ejectment action in Alabama state
    court. The Anchrums responded by arguing that the foreclosure sale was void, and
    asserted several counterclaims against Freddie Mac and Wells Fargo. 2 Freddie Mac
    removed the case to the Northern District of Alabama.
    On motion by Freddie Mac and Wells Fargo, the district court dismissed
    several of the Anchrums’ counterclaims for failure to state a claim. It then granted
    Freddie Mac and Wells Fargo summary judgment on the remaining counterclaims
    and on Freddie Mac’s ejectment claim. After a bench trial on damages, the district
    court found that Freddie Mac was entitled to the fair monthly market rental value
    of the property from December 2012 to October 2017—$1,800 per month, totaling
    $104,400.3 The court also awarded Freddie Mac $40,659.88 in attorney’s fees
    based on fee-shifting provisions in the mortgage and promissory note.
    II
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo,
    “viewing all of the facts in the record in the light most favorable to the non-
    2
    The Anchrums also asserted claims against United Guaranty Residential Insurance
    Company of North Carolina, which is no longer a party to this case after the district court
    dismissed all claims against it.
    3
    The district court started the clock for damages in December 2012, as opposed to
    immediately after the 2011 foreclosure sale, to account for the fact that Freddie Mac would have
    needed to make repairs to the property before renting it.
    5
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    movant.”4 Summary judgment is appropriate where there is “no genuine dispute of
    material fact such that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”5 “A
    genuine issue of material fact does not exist unless there is sufficient evidence
    favoring the nonmoving party for a reasonable jury to return a verdict in its
    favor.”6
    As for the damages assessment arising from the bench trial, we review the
    district court’s conclusions of law and application of law to the facts de novo, and
    evaluate its findings of fact for clear error.7
    III
    The Anchrums make two arguments on appeal. First, they argue that Wells
    Fargo did not comply strictly with the terms and conditions of the promissory note
    and mortgage, voiding the foreclosure. Second, they argue that the district court
    erred in assessing attorney’s fees and damages against Andrea Anchrum because
    she did not sign the promissory note.
    A
    4
    E.g., Hillcrest Prop., LLP v. Pasco Cty., 
    915 F.3d 1292
    , 1297 (11th Cir. 2019). We
    review the district court’s treatment of a magistrate judge’s report and recommendation for abuse
    of discretion. See, e.g., Stephens v. Tolbert, 
    471 F.3d 1173
    , 1175 (11th Cir. 2006) (per curiam).
    Here, where the relevant R&R addressed whether to grant Wells Fargo and Freddie Mac
    summary judgment and the Anchrums objected to the R&R on the same grounds they argue on
    appeal, this collapses into our de novo review of the summary judgment itself.
    5
    
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted); see Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
    6
    E.g., Haves v. City of Miami, 
    52 F.3d 918
    , 921 (11th Cir. 1995).
    7
    See, e.g., U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Comm’n v. S. Trust Metals, Inc., 
    894 F.3d 1313
    , 1322 (11th Cir. 2018).
    6
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    The Anchrums first argue that the foreclosure was void because Wells Fargo
    failed to comply strictly with a requirement that it send all notices to the “property
    address” listed on the mortgage and promissory note. It is settled that under
    Alabama law, anything less than strict compliance with a mortgage’s notice
    requirements can void a foreclosure. 8 But we are not persuaded that Wells Fargo
    failed to comply strictly with the mortgage and promissory note when it sent the
    Anchrums the required notice of default and intent to accelerate.
    1
    Paragraph 22 of the Anchrums’ mortgage provided for an acceleration notice
    that “shall specify: (a) the default; (b) the action required to cure the default; (c) a
    date, not less than 30 days from the date the notice is given to Borrower, by which
    the default must be cured; and (d) that failure to cure the default on or before the
    date specified in the notice may result in acceleration of the sums secured by [the
    mortgage and sale of the property].” Paragraph 6(C) of the promissory note
    similarly provided that if the Anchrums were in default, “the Note Holder may
    send [them] a written notice telling [them] that if [they did] not pay the overdue
    amount by a certain date, the Note Holder may require [them] to pay immediately
    8
    See Ex parte Turner, 
    254 So. 3d 207
    , 212–13 (Ala. 2017); Jackson v. Wells Fargo
    Bank, N.A., 
    90 So. 3d 168
    , 172–73 (Ala. 2012).
    7
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    the full amount of Principal which has not been paid and all the interest that [they]
    owe on that amount.” 9
    Both documents established that Wells Fargo could comply with these
    notice requirements by mailing the notice to the Anchrums’ notice address by first-
    class mail. 10 Both documents also specified that the “Property Address” would
    serve as the default notice address unless the Anchrums designated a substitute
    address. Specifically, Paragraph 15 of the mortgage established that:
    The notice address shall be the Property Address unless
    Borrower has designated a substitute notice address by
    notice to Lender. Borrower shall promptly notify Lender
    of Borrower’s change of address. If Lender specifies a
    procedure for reporting Borrower’s change of address,
    then Borrower shall only report a change of address
    through that specified procedure. There may be only one
    designated notice address under this Security Instrument
    at any one time.
    Paragraph 7 of the promissory note more straightforwardly required that “any
    notice that must be given [to the borrower] under this Note will be given by
    delivering it or by mailing it by first class mail to . . . the Property Address above
    9
    The report and recommendation adopted by the district judge interpreted this to mean
    that if Wells Fargo sent the Anchrums a notice of intent to accelerate, then it must have given
    them 30 days to cure the default—not that the foreclosure was void under the note if Wells Fargo
    failed to send the Anchrums proper notice of intent to accelerate. We need not address this in
    full, as it is not disputed that at least the mortgage required the mortgagee to send the Anchrums
    proper notice of default and intent to accelerate.
    10
    Paragraph 15 of the mortgage provided that “[a]ny notice to Borrower in connection
    with this Security Instrument shall be deemed to have been given to Borrower when mailed by
    first class mail or when actually delivered to Borrower’s notice address if sent by other means.”
    Paragraph 7 of the promissory note featured similar language.
    8
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    or at a different address if [the borrower gives] the Note Holder a notice of [a]
    different address.”
    2
    As we have explained, in 2005 Wells Fargo changed the Anchrums’ mailing
    address from “552 N. Grande View Trail, Alabaster, Alabama 35007” to “552 N.
    Grande View Trail, Maylene, Alabama 35114.” When it sent the Anchrums the
    notice of default in August 2011, that notice went to the Maylene address, not the
    Alabaster address. The Anchrums argue that the mortgage and promissory note
    established that all notices, including the required notices of default and intent to
    accelerate, must be sent to the “Property Address” listed on those documents—the
    Alabaster address and zip code.
    The district court correctly concluded that based on the undisputed facts in
    the summary judgment record, notice of default and intent to accelerate was
    properly given. Although the August 2011 notice of default was not mailed to the
    property address identified in the mortgage and promissory note, Wells Fargo and
    Freddie Mac presented extensive—and essentially unrefuted 11—evidence that
    11
    In their opposition to Wells Fargo’s and Freddie Mac’s motion for summary judgment,
    the Anchrums stated, “Norman Anchrum did not provide the new address to Wells Fargo in
    writing. Norman Anchrum did not provide the new address to Wells Fargo orally.” They cited
    nothing in the summary judgment record to support this assertion. Indeed, it appears that the
    closest the summary judgment record comes to supporting this proposition is in Norman
    Anchrum’s deposition statement that he did not recall telling Wells Fargo to change the mailing
    address, which was not enough on this record to generate a genuine issue of material fact for
    summary judgment purposes.
    9
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    Norman Anchrum had notified Wells Fargo that his mailing address was the
    Maylene address. The Maylene address was listed as the property or mailing
    address on multiple documents completed at closing; a statement mailed to the
    Alabaster address was returned undelivered in 2005 around the same time Norman
    Anchrum told Wells Fargo that he had not received the statement he requested; and
    a person identifying himself as Norman Anchrum reconfirmed the Maylene
    address as the correct mailing address via phone in 2011 and 2015. Norman
    Anchrum had also received bank statements at the Maylene address throughout
    2011.
    The Anchrums suggest that even if Norman Anchrum told Wells Fargo of a
    change in mailing address over the phone, he did not provide Wells Fargo with
    written notice as required by the mortgage’s requirement that “[a]ll notices given
    by Borrower or Lender in connection with this Security Instrument must be in
    writing.” There are several problems with this argument. First, it ignores the fact
    that Norman Anchrum signed documents at closing indicating that the mailing
    address for the property was in Maylene; Wells Fargo therefore had in its
    possession written documents, signed by the mortgagor, stating that the Anchrums’
    mailing address—and therefore their notice address for the purposes of first-class
    mail—was in Maylene. It also ignores that the Anchrums were affirmatively
    required by the mortgage to “promptly” update the lender about any change to their
    10
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    notice address. Based on undisputed facts in the summary judgment record,
    Norman Anchrum treated the Maylene address as his mailing address in his
    dealings with Wells Fargo by 2011. While we do not rest on this point, it bears
    mention that if verbal confirmation of this change was insufficient, then the
    Anchrums were in breach of their own contractual obligation to notify Wells Fargo
    of any changes to the notice address.
    Further, the Anchrums’ argument warps Alabama caselaw holding that
    lenders must comply strictly with the terms of mortgages in order to foreclose. The
    Anchrums rely on Jackson v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. and Ex parte Turner, which
    concerned deficiencies in the notice provided by the lenders to the borrowers.12
    The Alabama Supreme Court established that in such cases, it will strictly apply a
    mortgage’s notice provisions to ensure that borrowers get the notice to which they
    are entitled. Jackson and Turner—designed to protect borrowers from improper or
    deficient notices—do not translate well into this context, which involves a
    borrower’s apparent failure to comply strictly with the terms of a mortgage and a
    lender’s subsequent reliance on the borrower’s statements. Again, the Anchrums
    do not argue that the notices sent to the Maylene address were otherwise deficient.
    12
    See 
    Turner, 254 So. 3d at 209
    –13 (holding that while notice was given, it was deficient
    because it failed to inform the mortgagors of their right to bring a court action challenging the
    foreclosure—as required by the terms of the mortgage); 
    Jackson, 90 So. 3d at 172
    –73 (holding
    that a lender failed to comply strictly with the terms of a mortgage when it only provided notice
    that it was accelerating a loan, contravening the mortgage’s requirement that it first provide
    notice of intent to accelerate).
    11
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    Nor do they offer any reason to doubt that Norman Anchrum verbally told Wells
    Fargo representatives multiple times that his mailing address was the Maylene
    address. Instead, they argue that even though the mortgage and note expressly
    authorize the lender to send notices by first-class mail to a designated notice
    address other than the property address, Wells Fargo was not entitled to send the
    notices to the address Norman Anchrum verbally confirmed as his mailing address,
    because the Anchrums had failed to comply strictly with the requirement that they
    place all notices to Wells Fargo in writing. Jackson and Turner do not sustain this
    argument.
    Wells Fargo did not fail to comply strictly with the notice requirements laid
    out in the mortgage and promissory note when it sent a notice of default and intent
    to accelerate to the Anchrums at the Maylene mailing address. We therefore affirm
    the district court’s grant of summary judgment on this issue.
    B
    12
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    The Anchrums also argue that because Andrea Anchrum did not sign the
    promissory note, the district court erred in holding her liable for attorney’s fees. 13
    Both the promissory note and mortgage provided for the lender to receive
    attorney’s fees as part of costs and expenses incurred in enforcing the loan
    agreement. The Anchrums argue that the trial court erred in assessing attorney’s
    fees against Andrea Anchrum because “[t]he attorneys’ fee [award] was based on
    the promissory note which was not signed by Andrea Anchrum.” Although Wells
    Fargo argued for attorney’s fees based on the fee-shifting provision in the
    promissory note, the district court explicitly stated that it was basing the fee award
    against the Anchrums on “the mortgage agreement and the contract in this case.”
    While the Anchrums argue that Andrea Anchrum was not a party to the note, they
    make no effort to show that the mortgage’s fee-shifting provision does not apply. 14
    They have therefore not shown that the district court erred in assessing fees against
    Andrea Anchrum.
    C
    13
    The Anchrums also argue that Andrea Anchrum could not be liable for damages as a
    non-signatory to the note, which ignores the fact that Freddie Mac’s entitlement to damages
    stemmed from the Anchrums’ liability under Alabama’s ejectment statute, not any contractual
    provisions within the promissory note or mortgage. See Ala. Code § 6–6–280.
    14
    The Anchrums concede in their briefing that Andrea Anchrum executed the mortgage.
    13
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    In addition to these two arguments, the Anchrums persistently gestured at a
    third point throughout their briefing and at oral argument: whether the district court
    erred in finding that they were liable for $104,400 in lost rent damages for Freddie
    Mac’s ejectment claim. Alabama’s ejectment statute allows “[a]n action for the
    recovery of land or the possession thereof” where the plaintiff “alleges that the
    plaintiff was possessed of the premises or has the legal title thereto . . . and that the
    defendant entered thereupon and unlawfully withholds and detains the same.” 15
    The district court found that although the Anchrums left the house within days of
    receiving the notice to vacate, they left personal possessions inside and Norman
    Anchrum continued to visit the property to mow the lawn and retrieve mail. The
    Anchrums do not appear to argue that the district court clearly erred in any factual
    findings. Rather, they at points suggest that because they had otherwise vacated the
    property, they could not be liable—as a legal matter—for damages in Freddie
    Mac’s ejectment suit.16
    It is unclear from the face of the ejectment statute whether the Anchrums’
    failure to remove their personal belongings from the property, and Norman
    Anchrum’s continued returns to the property to mow the lawn and collect mail,
    15
    Ala. Code § 6–6–280(b).
    16
    It is not wholly clear whether the Anchrums challenge the grant of summary judgment
    on their liability in Freddie Mac’s ejectment suit, or whether they instead challenge the district
    court’s ultimate damages award. Our analysis here applies to both possibilities.
    14
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    constituted an “unlawful[ ] withhold[ing] and [detention]” of the property, even
    where the Anchrums no longer resided at the property. Because the Anchrums
    raised this issue only obliquely both in the district court and on appeal, they have
    not presented any caselaw supporting their argument that they surrendered
    possession of the property. The Anchrums have not adequately briefed the issue
    and have therefore waived it.17 We will not address it further.
    VI
    We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Wells Fargo
    and Freddie Mac, along with its award of damages.
    Affirmed.
    17
    See Sapuppo v. Allstate Floridian Ins. Co., 
    739 F.3d 678
    , 681 (11th Cir. 2014).
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 18-10786

Filed Date: 7/23/2019

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 7/23/2019