Joel Karnitz v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. , 572 F.3d 572 ( 2009 )


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  •                     United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ________________
    No. 08-2100
    ________________
    Joel Karnitz; Tanya Karnitz,              *
    *
    Appellees,                   *
    *      Appeal from the United States
    v.                                  *      District Court for the
    *      District of Minnesota.
    Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.,                   *
    *
    Appellant.                   *
    ________________
    Submitted: February 12, 2009
    Filed: July 17, 2009
    ________________
    Before WOLLMAN, HANSEN, and BYE, Circuit Judges.
    ________________
    HANSEN, Circuit Judge.
    Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. (Wells Fargo) appeals from the district court's award
    of summary judgment in favor of Joel and Tanya Karnitz, who brought this action
    seeking a declaration that the mortgage held by Wells Fargo on their residence is
    invalid under Minnesota Statute § 507.02. We agree with Wells Fargo that given the
    undisputed facts of this case, the Karnitzes should be estopped from relying on
    § 507.02 to challenge the validity of the mortgage. We therefore reverse the district
    court's judgment and remand with instructions to enter judgment in favor of Wells
    Fargo.
    I.
    In 2001, the Karnitzes built their home on land they purchased in LaPorte,
    Minnesota. They financed construction of the house through a short-term construction
    loan from Centennial National Bank. Both Joel and Tanya signed the loan documents
    and a mortgage in favor of Centennial. Upon completion of the house, the Karnitzes
    sought to pay off the construction loan with a traditional 30-year mortgage loan,
    which Centennial arranged through Wells Fargo. Joel signed a note for $136,800
    payable to Wells Fargo and executed a mortgage on the property in favor of Wells
    Fargo. The Karnitzes used the Wells Fargo loan proceeds to pay off the construction
    loan, thereby securing a release of the Centennial mortgage.
    Tanya did not sign the Wells Fargo loan documents or the new mortgage
    because Wells Fargo never asked her to sign any of the documents. Tanya testified
    in her deposition that she knew Joel was seeking a loan and mortgage from Wells
    Fargo to pay off the Centennial construction loan; that she knew the loan would result
    in a mortgage in favor of Wells Fargo; that she approved of Joel obtaining the loan
    and granting the mortgage to Wells Fargo; and that she wanted to obtain the loan in
    exchange for the mortgage.
    On April 17, 2005, the Karnitzes filed for bankruptcy protection under Chapter
    7 of the United States Bankruptcy Code. They listed their house as secured by a first
    mortgage in favor of Wells Fargo and listed the Wells Fargo loan as a joint obligation.
    The Karnitzes received a discharge in bankruptcy on August 8, 2005. Shortly
    thereafter, they fell behind on their mortgage payments to Wells Fargo. Wells Fargo
    initiated foreclosure proceedings and foreclosed on the house on January 17, 2007.
    In the meantime, Joel learned that Minnesota law requires a mortgage on a
    married couple's homestead to be signed by both spouses under Minnesota Statute
    § 507.02. The Karnitzes took the position during the foreclosure proceedings that the
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    mortgage in favor of Wells Fargo was invalid because Tanya had not signed it. They
    brought this action in Minnesota state court seeking a declaration to that effect, and
    Wells Fargo removed the case to federal court based on diversity jurisdiction. The
    district court concluded that the unambiguous language of § 507.02 required Tanya's
    signature on the mortgage, and without her signature, the mortgage was void ab initio.
    The district court rejected Wells Fargo's estoppel arguments and granted summary
    judgment in favor of the Karnitzes.
    II.
    We review de novo both the district court's grant of summary judgment as well
    as its interpretation of state law. MSK EyEs Ltd. v. Wells Fargo Bank, 
    546 F.3d 533
    ,
    540 (8th Cir. 2008). The parties agree that the underlying facts are undisputed. Under
    Minnesota law, "[t]he application of equitable estoppel presents a question of law."
    Minnesota v. Ramirez, 
    597 N.W.2d 575
    , 577 (Minn. Ct. App. 1999).
    With exceptions not here relevant, § 507.02 of the Minnesota Statutes provides:
    "If the owner is married, no conveyance of the homestead . . . shall be valid without
    the signatures of both spouses." A conveyance under § 507.02 includes a mortgage.
    See 
    Minn. Stat. § 507.01
    . A conveyance that fails to meet these statutory
    requirements is void and cannot be ratified. See Dvorak v. Maring, 
    285 N.W.2d 675
    ,
    677 (Minn. 1979) (explaining that "there cannot be a ratification of a contract for the
    sale of a homestead that is void due to the lack of a spouse's signature" because of the
    interplay with 
    Minn. Stat. § 519.06
     concerning when a spouse can and cannot act as
    the other spouse's agent).
    Despite the plain and unequivocal language of the statute, the Minnesota
    Supreme Court has "recognized that, even though great importance is attached to the
    homestead right, under certain circumstances a party may be estopped from denying
    a sale of the homestead even if the statutory requirements are not met." 
    Id.
     The
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    purpose behind the statute is to "'ensur[e] a secure homestead for families,'" Wells
    Fargo Home Mortg., Inc. v. Newton, 
    646 N.W.2d 888
    , 895 (Minn. Ct. App. 2002)
    (quoting Dvorak, 285 N.W.2d at 677), and to protect against "the alienation of the
    homestead without the willing signature of both spouses," Dvorak, 285 N.W.2d at
    678. In certain circumstances when the purpose of the statute is not at risk, the
    Minnesota courts have applied estoppel to prevent a party from challenging the
    validity of a conveyance of a homestead. In its most recent discussion of the equitable
    estoppel doctrine in this specific context, the Minnesota Supreme Court stated, in
    addressing whether a nonsigning spouse should be estopped from asserting the
    protections of § 507.02 to void a conveyance by her spouse, that estoppel applies
    where (1) the nonsigning spouse consents to and has prior knowledge of the
    transaction, (2) the nonsigning spouse retains the benefits of the transaction, and (3)
    the party seeking to invoke estoppel has sufficiently changed its position to invoke the
    equities of estoppel. See Dvorak, 285 N.W.2d at 677-78 (discussing Seitz v. Sitze,
    
    10 N.W.2d 426
     (1943); Fuller v. Johnson, 
    165 N.W. 874
     (1917)). All three factors
    must be present, cf. Anderson v. First Nat'l Bank of Pine City, 
    228 N.W.2d 257
    , 260
    (Minn. 1975) (estoppel not appropriate where husband did not learn that wife forged
    his signature until after the transaction was complete (such that the first factor was not
    met), even though he did retain the benefits of the mortgage), and the third factor is
    critical, Dvorak, 285 N.W.2d at 678 ("[D]etrimental reliance by the party seeking
    relief is critical to a finding of estoppel.").
    Although the Minnesota Supreme Court refused to apply estoppel to the facts
    of the case in Dvorak because the purported transferee would not be substantially
    prejudiced by voiding the conveyance, see id. (noting that the only performance on
    the buyers' part was payment of $1,000 in earnest money, which was returned; the
    buyers had not sold their own home or taken possession of the disputed property), we
    read Dvorak as definitive authority on the factors necessary to apply equitable
    estoppel under Minnesota law to preclude a party from relying on § 507.02 to avoid
    a conveyance. See also Bullock v. Miley, 
    158 N.W. 244
    , 245 (Minn. 1916) (applying
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    estoppel where both spouses intended to alienate the homestead and gave expression
    to that intent and the party to whom the improper conveyance was made acted in
    reliance on the validity of the conveyance such that the denial of its validity four years
    later would work a manifest injustice to him).
    Applying the equitable estoppel factors articulated in Dvorak, it is undisputed
    that Tanya knew of and intended to mortgage the homestead to Wells Fargo prior to
    its execution; she retained the benefit of that mortgage by using the proceeds to pay
    off the construction loan (which she had signed and was obligated to repay) and to
    obtain a release of the construction loan's accompanying mortgage; and Wells Fargo
    significantly changed its position in reliance on the validity of its mortgage by lending
    over $130,000 in exchange for a lien on the property. The Karnitzes do not dispute
    the existence of these facts. Further, they did not dispute the validity of the mortgage
    until four years after it was executed and they were facing foreclosure because they
    could not keep up with the obligations of the accompanying note. Under these facts,
    the Karnitzes should be estopped from now claiming that the mortgage is void in order
    to keep their home, on which they both intended to grant Wells Fargo a valid
    mortgage, without paying for it.1 Strict compliance with the statute in these
    circumstances does not further the policy behind the statute; rather, it flaunts it by
    converting what the Legislature intended as a shield into a sword. See Dvorak, 285
    N.W.2d at 677 n.3 ("'The doctrine [of equitable estoppel] is not invoked to render
    valid a contract which is void under . . . statutes for the benefit and protection of the
    homestead claimants, but it is invoked to prevent the successful perpetration of fraud
    by preventing wrongdoers from urging the provisions of such statutes to shield them
    in their tortious conduct.'" (quoting Engholm v. Ekrem, 
    119 N.W. 35
    , 38 (N.D.
    1908)).
    1
    According to the parties, if the mortgage is invalid, the resulting unsecured
    note to Wells Fargo for the balance owed on the house would be discharged as part
    of a reopened bankruptcy estate.
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    The district court in this case recognized that a party may be estopped from
    asserting the invalidity of the conveyance based on the lack of a spouse's signature,
    but rejected the estoppel defense based on a line of Minnesota cases holding that "an
    oral promise to give a mortgage on a couple's homestead by one spouse does not give
    rise to estoppel." (Add. at 5 (citing Kingery v. Kingery, 
    241 N.W. 583
    , 584-85 (Minn.
    1932); Butler Bros. Co. v. Levin, 
    207 N.W. 315
    , 316 (Minn. 1926)). The district
    court's reliance on this line of cases is misplaced. The point of the holding in Butler
    Bros. was that estoppel could not be based on a promise of future conduct. In that
    case, a bank tried to foreclose on a homestead where only the husband signed the
    mortgage. The wife promised to make sure the husband's debt would be paid, and, if
    it was not, she would then sign the mortgage. Butler Bros., 207 N.W. at 316. When
    the wife failed to make good on the debt and still refused to sign the mortgage, the
    creditor argued estoppel based on its agreement to stop collections against the husband
    in detrimental reliance on the wife's promise. The court rejected the estoppel
    argument because the wife's promise "related wholly to the intention of the promisor
    with respect to future action. It did not relate to present or past conditions or rights.
    The law is that a promise, representation, or concealment, in order to constitute an
    estoppel, even when relied upon, must 'have reference to a present or past state of
    things.'" Id. (emphasis added) (quoting Bigelow on Estoppel, 636). The case at bar
    does not involve a promise at all, oral or otherwise. Further, there is no indication in
    Butler Bros. that the wife had prior knowledge or had otherwise acquiesced in the
    contested mortgage that lacked her signature. In fact, the court noted that estoppel
    may be held against a nonsigning spouse in the case of a homestead, distinguishing
    Osman v. Wisted, 
    80 N.W. 1127
     (1899), on the basis that estoppel was proper there
    where the wife acquiesced in and ratified the designation of the homestead. Butler
    Bros., 207 N.W. at 316. The district court here erred in focusing on the effect of a
    nonexistent oral promise without considering the factors described in Dvorak.
    We recognize that the doctrine of equitable estoppel generally involves some
    type of misrepresentation or at least negligent culpability on the part of the person
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    against whom it is claimed. See, e.g., Birch Publ'ns, Inc. v. RMZ of St. Cloud, Inc.,
    
    683 N.W.2d 869
    , 873-74 (Minn. Ct. App. 2004) (describing equitable estoppel as
    arising "when 'one by his acts or representations, or by his silence when he ought to
    speak, intentionally or through culpable negligence, induces another to believe certain
    facts to exist, and such other rightfully acts on the belief so induced'" such that he is
    prejudiced (quoting Transam. Ins. Group v. Paul, 
    267 N.W.2d 180
    , 183 (Minn.
    1978))). Despite this general statement of the equitable estoppel doctrine, the
    Minnesota cases that apply estoppel in the specific context of the homestead signature
    requirement of § 507.02 have found such a "culpability" requirement satisfied by the
    nonsigning spouse's prior knowledge and agreement of the conveyance coupled with
    the retention of the benefits of the conveyance. For example, in Seitz, a son took care
    of his mother for several years in exchange for his father's promise that he would
    receive their homestead upon their deaths. When the father's other heirs challenged
    the conveyance to the son for failure to comply with the homestead signature
    requirement, the Minnesota Supreme Court used the doctrine of equitable estoppel to
    hold that § 507.02 "cannot now be invoked after full performance of the contract by
    [the son] and after acceptance of the benefits of such performance by his parents with
    full knowledge of the agreement." Seitz, 
    10 N.W.2d at 429
    . In Bullock, a husband
    was estopped from claiming title to the homestead he had sold where the original
    conveyance lacked his wife's signature. The Minnesota Supreme Court applied
    estoppel because "both plaintiff and his wife intended to convey the homestead . . .
    and believed that they had done so; [] no offer to return the consideration received for
    the homestead or any part thereof has ever been made; and [] plaintiff is seeking to
    recover the homestead without returning any part of such consideration." Bullock,
    158 N.W. at 245. The Minnesota Supreme Court applied estoppel in these cases
    despite the absence of any type of misrepresentation or inducement.
    The facts of Bullock are strikingly similar to the facts here. Both of the
    Karnitzes intended to convey a mortgage to Wells Fargo; they have made no offer to
    return the consideration received; and they now seek–several years later–to retain their
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    homestead without paying for it. Fulfilling our duty to apply state law as we believe
    the highest court of the state would apply it, see Leonard v. Dorsey & Whitney LLP,
    
    553 F.3d 609
    , 612 (8th Cir. 2009), we are bound to follow the Minnesota Supreme
    Court cases most directly on point, particularly Seitz, Bullock, and Dvorak. Equitable
    estoppel is appropriate under the facts of this case, and the district court erred in
    concluding otherwise.
    III.
    The district court's judgment granting summary judgment to the Karnitzes is
    reversed, and the case is remanded for entry of summary judgment in favor of Wells
    Fargo.
    Bye, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    Because the majority fails to explain how Wells Fargo relied to its detriment
    on Tanya Karnitz’ misconduct or silence, I dissent.
    The majority correctly notes that “detrimental reliance by the party seeking
    relief is critical to a finding of estoppel.” Dvorak v. Maring, 
    285 N.W.2d 675
    , 678
    (1979); ante at 4. The majority fails, however, to explain how Wells Fargo relied to
    its detriment on anything said or done by the Karnitzes. Instead, the majority simply
    states that Wells Fargo relied “on the validity of its mortgage by lending over
    $130,000 in exchange for a lien on the property.” Ante at 5. The problem with such
    an analysis is that Minnesota case law requires reliance on the conduct of the party
    seeking to disavow the transaction, not merely reliance on the validity of the
    transaction itself. See Ridgewood Dev. Co. v. State, 
    294 N.W.2d 288
    , 292 (1980)
    (“As a general rule, for equitable estoppel to lie, the plaintiff must demonstrate that
    the defendant, through his language or conduct, induced the plaintiff to rely, in good
    faith, on this language or conduct to his injury, detriment or prejudice.”) (emphasis
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    added). Here, Wells Fargo admits it had no contact with Tanya Karnitz prior to
    closing, and that nothing the Karnitzes did, said, or did not say caused Wells Fargo
    to lend the money or forego obtaining her signature on the necessary documents.
    Thus, Wells Fargo did not rely to its detriment on conduct by either of the Karnitzes
    in choosing to lend $135,000.
    Tanya Karnitz did remain silent after the money was lent, which positioned
    Wells Fargo to operate for four years under the mistaken assumption its lien on the
    property was valid. While this conduct could form the basis for equitable estoppel,
    Wells Fargo did not rely to its detriment on Tanya Karnitz’s continued silence. Thus,
    this case is materially different from the cases upon which the majority relies. In
    Bullock v. Miley, a case which the majority asserts is “strikingly similar” to the
    present case, the non-signing spouse allowed the purchaser to take possession of the
    property for several years without objection, and the purchaser relied to his detriment
    on the seller’s silence by making improvements to the property. 
    158 N.W. 244
    , 263-
    64 (1916). Notably, the purchaser had “paid all the taxes thereon, and ha[d] placed
    improvements of the value of more than $1,000 upon the [property], and ha[d] also
    placed improvements of the value of more than $1,000 upon the remainder of the farm
    which he would not have placed thereon had he not believed that he was the owner of
    [the property].” 
    Id. at 263-64
    . Moreover, the Minnesota Supreme Court was
    persuaded because the seller “knew that [the purchaser] was making improvements
    upon the homestead in the belief that he was the owner thereof, but made no claim
    thereto.” 
    Id. at 264
    . Thus, detrimental reliance on the spouse’s alleged consent to the
    transaction was met not, as the majority contends, because the spouse knew of the
    transaction beforehand and accepted its benefits, but because the spouse “without
    objection permitted [the buyer] to occupy it for four years and expend large sums for
    improvements and taxes.” 
    Id.
    Bullock demonstrates that the defense of equitable estoppel in cases involving
    Minnesota Statute § 507.02 requires more than the non-signing spouse’s silence and
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    apparent consent prior to the transaction; in addition, the buyer must continue to rely
    to his detriment on the non-singing spouse’s post-transaction consent. This
    requirement was further elucidated in Sietz v. State, 
    10 N.W.2d 426
     (1943). In Sietz,
    a man entered into an agreement to care for his mother and father for the remainder
    of their lives and, in return, his parents agreed to transfer the property to him upon
    their deaths. 
    Id. at 427
    . After they passed, other family members challenged the
    agreement because the son’s mother was not a party to the contract. In applying
    equitable estoppel, the Minnesota Supreme Court focused on more than the mother’s
    knowledge and apparent consent to the transaction. Critically, the court focused on
    the mother’s post-contract silence during which time the son continued to perform his
    part of the contract. The son relied on his mother’s after-the-fact silence and apparent
    consent to the contract by continuing to perform his obligations under the contract.
    See 
    id. at 428
     (“During all this time plaintiff purchased all food and clothing for his
    mother, paid all her medical expenses, paid all fuel bills, paid all taxes, and furnished
    repairs and improvements to the premises of the reasonable value of $804.”). As in
    Bullock, the critical reason for applying equitable estoppel was not, as the majority
    asserts, that a non-singing spouse was aware of a transaction and would have
    consented to the transaction, but that the other party took some post-contract action
    in reliance upon the non-signing spouse’s continued silence and consent.
    This requirement is not met in the present case. Unlike the purchaser in Bullock
    – who relied on the non-signing spouse’s post-contract silence and consent to possess
    the property for four years while making significant improvements – or the son in
    Sietz – who relied on his mother’s post-contract silence and consent in continuing to
    perform his contractual obligations – Wells Fargo did not do anything after the
    transaction was completed which worsened its position, either in terms of money
    expended or legal rights forfeited. Wells Fargo tendered the full amount of the loan
    in 2002, and, though Tanya Karnitz remained silent for four years, Wells Fargo took
    no further action during such time frame. Thus, Wells Fargo is unable to identify any
    action it took to its detriment in the four years during which the Karnitzes did not
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    object to the validity of the mortgage. Because Minnesota cases require a party
    seeking to invoke estoppel in this context to demonstrate detrimental reliance on a
    transferor’s post-contract conduct, Wells Fargo’s estoppel claim necessarily fails. The
    majority adulterates this principle by holding that equitable estoppel is met whenever
    a non-signing spouse would have consented to the transaction and a buyer, even one
    who never met the non-signing spouse, believed the transaction to be valid. Because
    Minnesota cases require more, I disagree with the majority’s analysis.
    While I am not unmindful of the inequities of allowing the Karnitzes to
    foreswear a security interest in their home they voluntarily gave to Wells Fargo, it is
    important to note that the fault in this case lies with Wells Fargo, not the Karnitzes.
    Wells Fargo failed to obtain Tanya Karnitz’s signature because of its own negligence,
    not, most importantly, in reliance on anything said or done by the Karnitzes. While
    we can fault the Kartnitzes for accepting the benefit of the mortgage and remaining
    silent for four years, the die was solidly cast; Wells Fargo had already tendered an
    unsecured loan because of its own negligence, and the Karnitzes' actions or inactions
    for four years did not cause them to lend additional money or take any other action to
    its detriment. Therefore, I would affirm the district court and hold Wells Fargo’s
    equitable estoppel claim fails. Because the court concludes otherwise, I respectfully
    dissent.
    ______________________________
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