Yanagi v. Bank of America. ( 2023 )


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  •  ***   FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAIʻI REPORTS AND THE PACIFIC REPORTER   ***
    Electronically Filed
    Supreme Court
    SCCQ-XX-XXXXXXX
    08-MAR-2023
    09:03 AM
    Dkt. 65 OP
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAI‘I
    ---oOo---
    ________________________________________________________________
    IN RE: JASPER CESAR MANUEL, Debtor,
    Plaintiff-Appellee.
    (Case No. 11-02712 (RJF))
    (Chapter 7)
    -------------------------------------------------------
    RICHARD A. YANAGI, Chapter 7 Trustee,
    vs.
    BANK OF AMERICA, N.A.,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    (Adv. No. 21-90001)
    ________________________________________________________________
    SCCQ-XX-XXXXXXX
    CERTIFIED QUESTION FROM THE UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF HAWAIʻI
    (Case No. 11-0712 (RJF) (Chapter 7); Adv. No. 21-90001)
    MARCH 8, 2023
    RECKTENWALD, C.J., McKENNA, WILSON, AND EDDINS, JJ., AND
    CIRCUIT JUDGE OCHIAI, IN PLACE OF NAKAYAMA, J., RECUSED
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY McKENNA, J.
    I.   Introduction
    The United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of
    Hawaiʻi (“bankruptcy court”) certified two questions to this
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    court, which we have determined are amenable to answer.              Those
    questions are
    1. Whether an action alleging a wrongful nonjudicial
    foreclosure of Land Court property that seeks only money
    damages against the foreclosing lender, and does not seek
    to avoid the foreclosure sale or affect title to the
    property, is an action that “directly impeach[es] . . . any
    foreclosure proceedings affecting registered land” within
    the meaning of Haw. Rev. Stat. section 501-118(c), and is
    time barred if filed after the issuance of a certificate of
    title to the buyer at a foreclosure sale.
    2. Whether a putative class action asserting wrongful
    foreclosure claims extends the time during which a class
    member may commence an individual action under Haw. Rev.
    Stat. section 501-118(c), where the putative class action
    was commenced before the issuance of a certificate of title
    to the buyer at the foreclosure sale; and, if there is such
    an extension, how long does it last?
    The bankruptcy court explains that if we “answer[] the [first]
    question in the affirmative, the second question will become
    relevant.”     We answer the first question in the negative.
    Although the bankruptcy court would then consider the second
    question irrelevant, we provide a brief answer to that question,
    to the extent the answer continues to bear on the timeliness of
    Plaintiff-Appellee1 Jasper Cesar Manuel’s (“Manuel”) wrongful
    foreclosure claims.
    First, an action alleging a wrongful nonjudicial
    foreclosure of Land Court property that seeks only damages
    against the foreclosing lender is not an action that “directly
    impeaches” any foreclosure proceedings affecting registered land
    1
    Initially, Manuel’s bankruptcy trustee, Richard A. Yanagi, was the
    plaintiff-appellee in these proceedings. By order dated August 8, 2022, this
    court granted the trustee’s motion to substitute Manuel as the plaintiff-
    appellee.
    2
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    within the meaning of Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes (“HRS”) § 501-118
    (2018); therefore, the action is not barred by the entry of a
    transfer certificate of title (“TCT”) to the buyer at a
    foreclosure sale.      Second, our cases hold generally that the
    pendency of a putative class action tolls the time during which
    a class member may commence an individual action.             The time for
    commencing an individual action is tolled until a clear denial
    of class certification.
    II.   Background
    The following factual and procedural background is not
    reasonably undisputed.       Manuel owned a condominium unit
    registered in the Land Court of the State of Hawaiʻi.             The
    property was encumbered by a mortgage through BAC Home Loans
    Servicing, the predecessor-in-interest to Defendant-Appellant
    Bank of America, N.A. (“BANA”).            Manuel defaulted on his
    mortgage.
    On June 14, 2010, BAC Home Loans Servicing conducted a
    public foreclosure auction of the property and acquired the
    property itself.      It then conveyed the property to Federal
    National Mortgage Association (“Fannie Mae”) by Mortgagee’s
    Quitclaim Deed recorded in Land Court on July 28, 2010.              Fannie
    Mae then sold the property to Christopher Yukio Ichiki by a
    Limited Warranty Apartment Deed recorded in Land Court on April
    1, 2011.     The Land Court certified the new TCTs on November 10,
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    2015 (certifying the TCT for the transfer from BAC Home Loans
    Servicing to Fannie Mae) and November 29, 2016 (certifying the
    TCT from Fannie Mae to Ichiki).
    Manuel filed a chapter 7 bankruptcy petition on October 12,
    2011.    Neither the property nor his wrongful foreclosure claim
    against BANA were listed in his original bankruptcy schedules.
    Manuel was discharged in bankruptcy in January 2012 and his case
    closed.
    In September 2012, a putative wrongful foreclosure class
    action, Degamo v. Bank of America, N.A., was filed in state
    court and removed to the United States District Court for the
    District of Hawaiʻi (“district court”).          Manuel was a member of
    the plaintiff class.       On March 19, 2019, the district court
    dismissed the case on the basis that the class representatives
    lacked standing because their prior bankruptcy cases made their
    wrongful foreclosure claims property of their bankruptcy
    estates, not property of the class representatives themselves.
    On appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth
    Circuit (“Ninth Circuit”), the district court’s order was
    affirmed in all respects but one:          it was vacated and remanded
    for the district court to consider a motion to intervene filed
    by the trustees of the bankruptcy estates of the putative class
    representatives.      On remand, the district court denied the
    motion as moot on September 29, 2021.           Degamo v. Bank of
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    America, N.A., Civil No. 13-00141 (D. Haw. Sept. 29, 2021).
    This is because “the proposed intervenors’ counsel represented
    [to the district court at a status conference] that the
    intervenors are no longer inclined to intervene. . . .”              Degamo,
    Civil No. 13-00141 at 2.        Plaintiffs did not appeal.
    In the meantime, in December 2020, Manuel reopened his
    bankruptcy case to amend his schedules to include the wrongful
    foreclosure claims against BANA.           The trustee of Manuel’s
    bankruptcy estate filed a complaint against BANA on January 14,
    2021 alleging wrongful foreclosure in violation of HRS § 667-5
    (Supp. 2008) (Hawaiʻi’s former nonjudicial foreclosure statute)
    and HRS Chapter 480 (2008) (specifically, Hawaiʻi’s unfair and
    deceptive acts and practices and unfair methods of competition
    statutes).     For example, one of the specific allegations was
    that the mortgagee postponed the foreclosure auction without
    publishing the change of date, as required under the power of
    sale and the nonjudicial foreclosure statute in effect at the
    time.    The complaint sought only money damages against BANA.              It
    did not seek return of title and possession of the property to
    Manuel.
    III.   Certified Questions
    Under HRS § 602-5(2) (2016), this court “shall have the
    jurisdiction and power[]” to “answer, in its discretion, . . .
    any question or proposition of law certified to it by a federal
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    district[2] or appellate court if the supreme court shall so
    provide by rule. . . .”        Hawaiʻi Rules of Appellate Procedure
    (“HRAP”) Rule 13(a) (2000) provides the following:
    When a federal district or appellate court certifies to the
    Hawaiʻi Supreme Court that there is involved in any
    proceeding before it a question concerning the law of
    Hawaiʻi that is determinative of the cause and that there is
    no clear controlling precedent in the Hawaiʻi judicial
    decisions, the Hawaiʻi Supreme Court may answer the
    certified question by written opinion.
    Questions of law certified by the federal courts are reviewable
    de novo under the right/wrong standard of review.             Hancock v.
    Kulana Partners, LLC, 145 Hawaiʻi 374, 380, 
    452 P.3d 371
    , 377
    (2019) (citation omitted).
    IV.   Discussion
    The first certified question centers upon the
    interpretation of HRS § 501-118 (the “Foreclosure” section of
    our Land Court statutes found in HRS chapter 501).             HRS § 501-
    118 states the following:
    In case of foreclosure by exercising the power of sale
    without a previous judgment, the affidavit required by
    chapter 667 shall be recorded with the assistant registrar.
    The purchaser or the purchaser’s assigns at the foreclosure
    sale may thereupon at any time present the deed under the
    power of sale to the assistant registrar for recording and
    obtain a new certificate. Nothing in this chapter shall be
    construed to prevent the mortgagor or other person in
    interest from directly impeaching by action or otherwise,
    any foreclosure proceedings affecting registered land,
    prior to the entry of a new certificate of title.
    2
    The bankruptcy court “constitute[s] a unit of the district court” under
    
    28 U.S.C. § 151
     (1984) (“In each judicial district, the bankruptcy judges in
    regular active service shall constitute a unit of the district court to be
    known as the bankruptcy court for that district.”).
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    HRS § 501-118(c) (emphasis added).            The question is whether a
    wrongful nonjudicial foreclosure claim seeking only money
    damages from the foreclosing lender is an action “directly
    impeaching . . . any foreclosure proceedings affecting
    registered land,” and, if so, whether such a proceeding must be
    initiated “prior to the entry of a new certificate of title.”
    A.    The parties’ arguments
    1.   BANA’s opening brief
    In its opening brief, BANA first argues that the
    overarching purpose of the Land Court system in Hawaiʻi is to
    “conclusively establish title to land through the issuance of a
    certificate of title,” citing Wells Fargo v. Omiya, 142 Hawaiʻi
    439, 446, 
    420 P.3d 370
    , 377 (2018).           BANA states that the TCT
    notes any encumbrances or claims adverse to the title of the
    registered owner and that the holder of the TCT holds it free
    from all encumbrances except those noted on the TCT.              BANA
    asserts HRS § 501-118 bars wrongful foreclosure claims after the
    Land Court certifies a new TCT, pointing to the plain language
    of the statute.
    BANA next explains that two Hawaiʻi appellate cases, Aames
    Funding Corp. v. Mores, 107 Hawaiʻi 95, 
    110 P.3d 1042
     (2005), and
    Omiya, 142 Hawaiʻi 439, 
    420 P.3d 370
    , both held that HRS § 501-
    118(c) bars a challenge to a foreclosure proceeding after the
    Land Court certifies a new TCT.            BANA states that Aames barred a
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    challenge to a foreclosure (based on alleged violation of the
    federal Truth in Lending Act) because the Land Court had already
    certified a new TCT.       BANA states that Omiya affirmed that “HRS
    § 501-118 specifies ‘entry of a new certificate of title’ as the
    determinative point when foreclosure proceedings may no longer
    be impeached.”
    BANA argues that the remedy Manuel seeks (money damages
    against the foreclosing lender) does not change the result
    because claims for money damages still “directly impeach the
    foreclosure” under HRS § 501-118(c).          To support its argument,
    BANA cites to cases from the Hawaiʻi district court and the Ninth
    Circuit:     Fergerstrom v. PNC Bank, N.A., 
    342 F. Supp. 3d 1029
    (D. Haw. 2018), aff’d, 802 F. App’x. 268 (9th Cir. 2020); and
    Seegers v. CIT Bank N.A., Civil 17-00399 LEK-KSC, 
    2018 WL 1558550
     (D. Haw. Feb. 28, 2018), which barred similar claims for
    money damages from the foreclosing lenders in wrongful
    nonjudicial foreclosure and Hawaiʻi UDAP/UMOC actions brought
    after the entry of new TCTs for the properties.             BANA quotes the
    Fergerstrom court as holding that “because the action attacks
    (i.e., impeaches) the foreclosure proceeding, the particular
    form of remedy . . . does not remove these claims impeaching
    title from the proscription imposed by HRS § 501-118 and Aames.”
    Fergerstrom, 
    342 F. Supp. 3d at 1045
    .           The Fergerstrom court
    continued, “[I]t is the action itself that impeaches the prior
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    foreclosure proceeding, not the measure or type of damages
    sought.”     
    Id.
    BANA then notes that the Fergerstrom court rejected the
    plaintiffs’ assertion that tort claims are preserved under
    another section of the Land Court chapter, HRS § 501-212 (2018),
    notwithstanding HRS § 501-118.         HRS § 501-212 is titled “Actions
    for compensation for fraud, mistake, etc.,” and it provides the
    following:
    Any person who, without negligence on the person’s part,
    sustains loss or damage, or is deprived of land or of any
    estate or interest therein, after the original registration
    of land under this chapter, by the registration of any
    other person as owner of such land, or of any estate or
    interest therein, through fraud, or in consequence of any
    error, omission, mistake, or misdescription in any
    certificate of title or in any entry of memorandum in the
    registration book, may prosecute a contract claim in the
    circuit court for the recovery of compensation for such a
    loss or damage or for such land or estate, or interest
    therein; provided that when the person deprived of land or
    of any estate, or interest therein, in the manner above
    stated has a remedy for the recovery of the land or of the
    estate, or interest therein, the person shall exhaust this
    remedy before resorting to the contract claim herein
    provided. Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to
    deprive the plaintiff of any tort claim which the plaintiff
    may have against any person for loss or damage, or
    deprivation of land, or of any estate or interest therein.
    BANA quotes the Fergerstrom court as stating that HRS § 501-212
    “on its face, does not touch HRS § 501-118.”            Fergerstrom, 
    342 F. Supp. 3d at 1044
    .       The Fergerstrom court reasoned, “Whereas
    [section 501-212] preserves pre-existing tort claims, [section
    501-118] does not deprive a plaintiff of any tort claim – it
    simply reinforces the conclusive and unimpeachable nature of
    Land Court certificates of title after entry.”            
    Id.
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    BANA notes that the Ninth Circuit affirmed the Fergerstrom
    court’s order as follows:        “The district court correctly
    determined that section 501-118’s time bar applied to
    [plaintiffs’] tort claim for money damages.            [Plaintiffs’]
    claims were based on defects in the non-judicial foreclosure
    sales of their properties and ‘directly impeach[ed] . . . the
    foreclosure proceedings.”        Fergerstrom, 802 F. App’x at 270.
    BANA also quotes the district court’s observation in
    Seegers that “[the] legislative intent [of HRS § 501-118] would
    be thwarted if the conclusive and unimpeachable character of
    certificates of title could be easily ‘sidestepped’ by suing the
    seller of registered land for money damages as a substitute for
    suing the current owner of registered land for title and
    possession.”     Seegers, Civil 17-0399 LEK-KSC, 
    2018 WL 1558550
     at
    *5. BANA ends its opening brief by asking this court to answer
    the first certified question in the affirmative to hold that HRS
    § 501-118 bars wrongful nonjudicial foreclosure claims that seek
    only money damages against the foreclosing lender after the
    entry of a new TCT.
    2.   Manuel’s answering brief
    In his answering brief, Manuel first points out that that
    Land Court chapter, HRS chapter 501, permits him to bring a
    wrongful foreclosure claim, which sounds in tort.             Specifically,
    HRS § 501-212 states, in relevant part, “Nothing in this chapter
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    shall be construed to deprive the plaintiff of any tort claim
    which the plaintiff may have against any person for loss or
    damage, or deprivation of land, or of any estate or interest
    therein.”
    He then argues that HRS § 501-118 itself contains no
    express time limitation to bringing a wrongful foreclosure
    claim.    Rather, he states that the “bar to ‘impeaching’ a
    foreclosure proceeding emanates from HRS § 501-88.”              That
    statute is titled “Certificate as evidence,” and it provides the
    following:
    The original certificate in the registration book, and any
    copy thereof duly certified under the signature of the
    registrar or assistant registrar, and the seal of the
    court, shall be received as evidence in all the courts of
    the State and shall be conclusive as to all matters
    contained therein, except as otherwise provided in this
    chapter.
    HRS § 501-88 (2018).       Manuel contends that the Aames court read
    HRS §§ 501-118 and 501-88 together to conclude that a
    mortgagor’s claim directly impeaching a foreclosure proceeding
    must be brought before the TCT is given conclusive effect to all
    matters contained therein, which is upon the entry of a new TCT
    following the foreclosure sale.         To Manuel, this means that a
    claim challenging the contents of the new TCT (specifically, the
    identification of the registered owner) is barred by the entry
    of the new TCT.
    Manuel reads Aames and Omiya as supporting his
    interpretation of HRS § 501-118 because the former mortgagors in
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    both cases challenged foreclosures and claimed title to their
    respective properties.       As such, Manuel continues, the former
    mortgagors in both Aames and Omiya raised claims “directly
    impeaching” the ownership interests listed on the new TCTs.                In
    Aames and Omiya, this court concluded that HRS § 501-118 barred
    challenges to title after the entry of the new TCT.              By
    contrast, Manuel argues that his wrongful foreclosure claim does
    not call into question the new owner’s title.            Specifically,
    Manuel points out that the new owner’s TCT will not reflect “how
    a foreclosure sale was performed or whether the foreclosure was
    wrongful”; therefore, his wrongful foreclosure claim does not
    “directly impeach” the TCT to the property.            Further, Manual
    emphasizes that the remedy he seeks is tort damages for the
    wrongful foreclosure, not return of title and possession.
    Manuel supports his position with the plain language of the
    statute.     He asserts that the plain meaning of “directly
    impeach” in HRS § 501-118 is to “exactly; completely,”
    “absolute[ly],” “or “unconditional[ly]” “dispute, disparage,
    deny, or contract” another’s title and right of possession of
    property lost in foreclosure, citing WEBSTER’S NEW WORLD DICTIONARY
    389 (3d college ed. 1988), and BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY, 459, 753 (6th
    ed. 1990), respectively.        Looking to the rest of the Land Court
    chapter, Manuel notes that the legislature has included the term
    “impeach” without the modifier “directly,” for example, in HRS §
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    501-144 (2018), which is titled “New certificate after
    enforcement of lien; tax sale,” and which states, in relevant
    part, “At any time prior to the entry of a new certificate the
    registered owner may pursue all the registered owner’s remedies
    to impeach or annul proceedings under executions or to enforce
    liens of any description.”        (Emphasis added.)      Therefore, Manuel
    argues, the term “directly” must carry independent significance
    when it modifies the word “impeach.”          He interprets “directly
    impeaching” a TCT to mean “an unqualified attack on or challenge
    to the title and right of possession lost to foreclosure.”
    Manuel notes that the bankruptcy court questioned whether
    the last sentence of HRS § 501-118 would bar a claim for money
    damages against a foreclosing lender.           That sentence states,
    “After a new certificate of title has been entered, no judgment
    recovered on the mortgage note for any balance due thereon shall
    operate to open the foreclosure or affect the title to
    registered land.”      The bankruptcy court reasoned that the
    phrases “directly impeaching . . . any foreclosure proceedings”
    and “open the foreclosure or affect the title to registered”
    land could not mean the same thing, otherwise the legislature
    would have used the same phrasing.          Manuel, however, argues that
    differently phrased portions of a statute could nevertheless
    mean the same thing.       Further, if the last sentence does mean
    something different from “directly impeaching any foreclosure
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    proceeding,” Manuel reads it as pertaining to an action for a
    deficiency judgment following a foreclosure sale, where the
    mortgagor raises foreclosure defects as a defense to deficiency
    liability; in such an instance, raising the defense does not re-
    open the foreclosure or affect title, citing HawaiiUSA Fed.
    Credit Union v. Monalim, 147 Hawaiʻi 33, 
    464 P.3d 821
     (2020).
    Manuel next posits that the federal courts in Fergerstrom
    and Seegers interpreted the term “directly impeach” to prohibit
    wrongful foreclosure claims seeking only money damages unless
    the plaintiff would also have been entitled to return of title
    and possession of the property.         Manuel argues this reading is
    contrary to our case law recognizing that a remedy for wrongful
    foreclosure could be damages alone, where the foreclosed-upon
    property has passed into the hands of an innocent purchaser for
    value, citing Delapinia v. Nationstar Mortg. LLC, 150 Hawaiʻi 91,
    
    497 P.3d 106
     (2021); Mount v. Apao, 139 Hawaiʻi 167, 
    384 P.3d 1268
     (2016); and Santiago v. Tanaka, 137 Hawaiʻi 137, 
    366 P.3d 612
     (2016).
    Manuel next opines that an in pari materia reading of HRS §
    501-118 and other Land Court statutes also supports his position
    that HRS § 501-118 does not bar money damage claims against a
    foreclosing lender.       Manuel reiterates that Land Court property
    owners may sue in tort pursuant to HRS § 501-212.             Manuel then
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    points to HRS § 501-81 (2018), which is titled “Legal incidents
    of registered land” and states, in relevant part
    Registered land, and ownership therein, shall in all
    respects be subject to the same burdens and incidents which
    attach by law to unregistered land. Nothing in this
    chapter shall in any way be construed to . . . change or
    affect in any way any other rights or liabilities created
    by law and applicable to unregistered land; except as
    otherwise expressly provided in this chapter.
    Manuel argues that nothing in HRS § 501-118 expressly provides
    that Land Court property owners cannot recover money damages
    from foreclosing lenders, when that remedy is available to non-
    Land Court property owners.
    Next, Manuel contends that BANA’s reading of HRS § 501-118
    to preclude money damages claims after the entry of a new TCT
    improperly abrogates a wrongful foreclosure plaintiff’s common
    law right to sue for damages, where no express legislative
    intent to do so appears.        Manuel notes that the common law right
    to sue for wrongful foreclosure damages originated in Johnson v.
    Tisdale, 
    4 Haw. 605
     (Haw. Kingdom 1883), and continues to be
    recognized in our recent cases, such as Delapinia, 150 Hawaiʻi
    91, 
    497 P.3d 106
    ; Mount, 139 Hawaiʻi 167, 
    384 P.3d 1268
    ; and
    Santiago, 137 Hawaiʻi 137, 
    366 P.3d 612
    .
    Manuel asserts that the legislative history of HRS § 501-
    118 validates his reading of the statute.           He notes that when
    the Land Court statute was enacted in 1903, HRS § 501-118’s
    predecessor stated the following:           “Nothing contained in this
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    Act shall be construed to prevent the mortgagor or other person
    in interest from directly impeaching, by bill in equity or
    otherwise, any foreclosure proceedings affecting registered
    land, prior to the entry of a new certificate of title.”               1903
    Haw. Sess. Laws Act 56, § 63 at 307.          Manuel explains that, at
    the time, a bill in equity was the vehicle by which a wrongful
    foreclosure plaintiff would seek to set aside a sale and,
    therefore, “directly impeach” the foreclosure proceedings.                 By
    contrast, at the time, money damages were a form of legal
    relief.     With the promulgation of the Hawaiʻi Rules of Civil
    Procedure, and the merger of law and equity in Hawaiʻi courts,
    the “bill in equity” language in HRS § 501-118 was replaced with
    “action.”     Manuel asserts that HRS § 501-118 may reasonably be
    read today to time-bar those claims that would have been
    originally filed as bills in equity.
    Manuel then argues that structural issues arise under
    BANA’s reading of HRS § 501-118 as setting a time bar as “the
    entry of the new TCT.”       Under BANA’s interpretation of the
    statute, the time a plaintiff has for bringing a wrongful
    foreclosure damages claim depends upon how quickly the Land
    Court can certify and enter a new TCT.           Manuel points out that
    the Land Court was once able to certify TCTs on the same day
    they were presented, Hon. Gary W.B. Chang, Land Court:
    Demystifying an Enigma, HAWAII BAR JOURNAL 4, 10 (2017); within
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    months, see Aames, 107 Hawaiʻi at 96 n.2, 97, 
    110 P.3d at
    1043
    n.2, 1044; and currently, after years, see Omiya, 142 Hawaiʻi at
    452, 
    420 P.3d at 383
     (discussing the Land Court’s backlog).                In
    any event, Manuel argues that “foreclosed Land Court homeowners
    risk having their damages remedies further curtailed by the
    speed with which the Land Court enters new TCTs,” which could
    lead to severe and unjust results.
    Lastly, Manuel asserts that the fraud exception to HRS §
    501-118 applies to his case.         See HRS § 501-106 (2018) (“[I]n
    all cases of registration procured by fraud the owner may pursue
    all the owner’s remedies against the parties to the fraud,
    without prejudice however to the rights of any innocent holder
    for value of a certificate of title.”).           He argues that BANA
    committed constructive fraud upon Manuel due to the
    confidential relationship between a self-dealing mortgagee bank,
    who occupies a superior position in a nonjudicial foreclosure,
    and the mortgagor, citing Hungate v. Law Off. of David B. Rosen,
    139 Hawaiʻi 394, 409, 
    391 P.3d 1
    , 16 (2017).
    Manuel urges this court to answer the first certified
    question in the negative to hold that an action alleging
    wrongful nonjudicial foreclosure of Land Court property that
    seeks only money damages is not time-barred by the entry of a
    new TCT because such an action does not “directly impeach”
    foreclosure proceedings under HRS § 501-118.
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    3.   BANA’s reply brief
    In its reply, BANA emphasizes that the plain language of
    HRS § 501-118 precludes a mortgagor from bringing a wrongful
    foreclosure claim, regardless of the remedy sought, after entry
    of a new TCT.      With respect to the Manuel’s argument that BANA’s
    reading of HRS § 501-118 abrogates the common law right to sue
    for wrongful foreclosure, BANA counter-argues that HRS § 501-118
    merely sets a time limit for bringing the claim.             With respect
    to Manuel’s reading of the legislative history of HRS § 501-118,
    BANA counter-argues that the statute’s prohibition on bringing,
    past the entry of a new TCT, proceedings directly impeaching a
    foreclosure “by bill of equity or otherwise” encompasses the
    money damages claim Manuel asserts, as that statute is phrased
    now (“any action or otherwise”) and when the statute was
    originally enacted (“by bill of equity or otherwise.”).              In any
    event, BANA states that resort to legislative history is
    unnecessary where the plain language of the statute is clear.
    As to Manuel’s allegation that BANA committed constructive
    fraud, BANA counter-argues (1) that the argument is irrelevant
    to the certified question presented to this court; and (2)
    mortgagor and mortgagee are generally not in a confidential
    relationship that would give rise to a constructive fraud claim.
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    B.    Analysis
    The first certified question asks this court to engage in
    statutory interpretation of the word “directly” in HRS § 501-
    118’s phrase “directly impeaching by action or otherwise, any
    foreclosure proceedings affecting registered land.”             Statutory
    interpretation is guided by established rules:
    First, the fundamental starting point for statutory
    interpretation is the language of the statute itself.
    Second, where the statutory language is plain and
    unambiguous, our sole duty is to give effect to its plain
    and obvious meaning. Third, implicit in the task of
    statutory construction is our foremost obligation to
    ascertain and give effect to the intention of the
    legislature, which is to be obtained primarily from the
    language contained in the statute itself. Fourth, when
    there is doubt, doubleness of meaning, or indistinctiveness
    or uncertainty of an expression used in a statute, an
    ambiguity exists.
    Rees v. Carlisle, 113 Hawaiʻi 446, 452, 
    153 P.3d 1131
    , 1137
    (2007) (citations omitted).
    In construing an ambiguous statute, “the meaning of the
    ambiguous words may be sought by examining the context,
    with which the ambiguous words, phrases, and sentences may
    be compared, in order to ascertain their true meaning.” HRS
    § 1–15(1) (1993). Moreover, the courts may resort to
    extrinsic aids in determining legislative intent. One
    avenue is the use of legislative history as an interpretive
    tool.
    Gray v. Admin. Dir. of the Court, 84 Hawaiʻi 138, 148, 
    931 P.2d 580
    , 590 (1997) (cleaned up).
    1.    HRS § 501-118’s phrase “directly impeaching . . . any
    foreclosure proceedings” contains an ambiguity.
    The plain meaning of “directly” in HRS § 501-118 is not
    obvious.     We look to the rest of the Land Court chapter for
    guidance in construing the word.            We agree with Manuel that the
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    term “directly” must have independent significance in modifying
    the word “impeach” because the only statute within Chapter 501
    concerning “impeaching” a TCT is HRS § 501-144.             That statute is
    titled “New certificate after enforcement of lien; tax sale,”
    and it states, in relevant part, “At any time prior to the entry
    of a new certificate the registered owner may pursue all the
    registered owner’s remedies to impeach or annul proceedings
    under executions or to enforce liens of any description.”                  The
    phrase “directly impeach” in HRS § 501-118 must have a meaning
    different from “impeach” in HRS § 501-144.            We have held that
    where the legislature “uses different terms in different parts
    of a statute, we must presume this was intentional, and that the
    legislature means two different things.”           Peer News LLC v. City
    & Cnty. of Honolulu, 138 Hawaiʻi 53, 67-68, 
    376 P.3d 1
    , 15-16
    (2016) (citing Agustin v. Dan Ostrow Constr. Co., 
    64 Haw. 80
    ,
    83, 
    636 P.2d 1348
    , 1351 (1981).
    2.    Legislative history provides no guidance on
    interpreting the phrase “directly impeaching . . . any
    foreclosure proceedings.”
    The legislative history of both HRS §§ 501-118 and -144 is
    silent as to the difference in meaning, however.             Further, the
    legislative history of HRS § 501-118 itself provides no insight
    into the meaning of “directly impeach.”           We disagree with Manuel
    that there is meaning to be found in the evolution of the
    statutory language from 1903’s verbiage, “directly impeaching,
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    by bill in equity or otherwise, any foreclosure proceedings
    affecting registered land” to the current verbiage, “directly
    impeaching, by action or otherwise, any foreclosure proceedings
    affecting registered land.”         Manuel argues that the 1903
    predecessor to HRS § 501-118 barred only actions in equity
    (i.e., those seeking to void title and return possession of the
    property) after the entry of a new TCT; therefore, the statute
    did not bar actions at law for money damages after the entry of
    a new TCT.     We agree with BANA that the phrase “or otherwise”
    could have referred to actions at law.
    3.    Our precedent interpreting HRS § 501-118 has not yet
    examined wrongful foreclosure complaints seeking only
    money damages against foreclosing lenders.
    Our state appellate court precedent interpreting HRS § 501-
    118 has also never dealt with the issue of whether the entry of
    a new TCT would bar a wrongful foreclosure claim seeking only
    money damages.      Our key cases, Aames, 107 Hawaiʻi 95, 
    110 P.3d 1042
    ; Bank of New York Mellon v. Onaga, Inc., 140 Hawaiʻi 358,
    
    400 P.3d 559
     (2017); and Omiya, 142 Hawaiʻi 439, 
    420 P.3d 370
    ;
    have all held that HRS § 501-118 bars wrongful foreclosure
    claims seeking to affect title to property after the entry of a
    new TCT.
    In Aames, a mortgagee bank foreclosed upon mortgagors, the
    Moreses.     Aames, 107 Hawaiʻi at 97, 
    110 P.3d at 1044
    .          After the
    Land Court issued the mortgagee a TCT to the property, the
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    Moreses refused to surrender possession, and the mortgagee filed
    an action for ejectment against them.           
    Id.
       The district court
    granted judgment for possession and writ of possession in favor
    of the mortgagee and against the Moreses.             
    Id.
    On appeal, the Moreses argued that the district court did
    not have jurisdiction over the case because their case involved
    a dispute over title to real property, which, pursuant to HRS §
    604-5(d), the district courts do not hear.            Aames, 107 Hawaiʻi
    98, 
    110 P.3d 1045
    .       In addition to holding that the Moreses did
    not sufficiently assert the source, nature, and extent of their
    title claims, this court applied HRS § 501-118 to hold that
    “defenses to mortgages foreclosed upon by exercise of the
    mortgagee’s power of sale must be raised ‘prior to the entry of
    a new certificate of title.’”         Aames, 107 Hawaiʻi at 102, 
    110 P.3d at 1049
    .
    In reaching this holding, we first explored the “sparse”
    legislative history of Chapter 501, noting that the Land Court
    system was intended to “provide[] an economic and convenient
    manner of recording land titles, which . . . will do away with
    the present cumbersome plan of records and largely reduce the
    expense of land transfers.”         Aames, 107 Hawaiʻi at 101, 
    110 P.3d at 1048
    .     The purpose of the Land Court system, we stated, was
    to “conclusively establish title to land through the issuance of
    a certificate of title.”        
    Id.
     (citation omitted).       We then held
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    that HRS § 501-118 directs that [a mortgagor’s right to
    challenge a foreclosure proceeding] is to be exercised ‘prior to
    the entry of a new certificate of title.’”            Id.   We “buttressed”
    this holding with HRS § 501-88, which “provides that the matters
    stated in the certificate are to be given conclusive effect in
    the courts.”     Id.   As the Moreses brought their title defense to
    the ejectment proceeding after the entry of the TCT listing the
    mortgagee as title holder, we held that the mortgagee’s title to
    the subject property became “conclusive and unimpeachable.”
    Aames, 107 Hawaiʻi at 102-03, 
    110 P.3d 1049
    -50.             Thus, Aames
    interpreted the “entry of a new TCT” limit in HRS § 501-118 to
    protect a TCT’s conclusivity of title.
    Similarly, in Onaga, we did not allow a junior creditor to
    “undo” a judicial foreclosure once good faith purchasers had
    entered their TCT with the Land Court.           Onaga, 140 Hawaiʻi at
    368, 
    400 P.3d at 569
    .       In that case, the junior creditor
    appealed a judicial foreclosure proceeding but did not post a
    supersedeas bond.      Onaga, 140 Hawaiʻi at 362, 
    400 P.3d at 563
    .
    While the case was on appeal, the foreclosed upon property was
    sold to good faith purchasers, who moved to intervene in the
    appeal and dismiss it as moot, presenting as evidence the new
    TCT issued to them.       Onaga, 140 Hawaiʻi at 363, 
    400 P.3d at 564
    .
    We noted that “title to the Property has already passed to the
    [good faith purchasers]”; therefore, “[a]llowing [the junior
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    creditor] to undo or otherwise hinder the sale of the Property
    to the [good faith purchasers] would be inconsistent with the
    purposes underlying our Land Court statute.”            Onaga, 140 Hawaiʻi
    at 368, 
    400 P.3d at 569
    .        In so ruling, we cited both HRS § 501-
    88 and the policy reasons explored in Aames, further
    underscoring that the time limit to bring claims under HRS §
    501-118 is intended to protect the conclusivity of the new TCT.
    Onaga, 140 Hawaiʻi at 368-69, 
    400 P.3d at 569-70
    .
    Lastly, in Omiya, this court held that a mortgagee was
    entitled to bring an action seeking to “restore title” to it,
    including “cancellation of a Transfer Certificate of Title,”
    where the action was brought prior to the entry of a TCT to a
    third-party purchaser.       Omiya, 142 Hawaiʻi at 443, 456, 
    420 P.3d 374
    , 387.       In Omiya, Wells Fargo foreclosed on its mortgage lien
    in a nonjudicial foreclosure, then the Association of Apartment
    Owners of the Ilikai Apartment Building foreclosed on the
    property for nonpayment of maintenance fees.            Omiya, 142 Hawaiʻi
    at 443, 
    420 P.3d at 374
    .        The property was then sold to a third
    party.    
    Id.
        The Land Court had recorded the quitclaim deed for
    the conveyance to the third party, but it had not yet certified
    a new TCT for the third party.         
    Id.
       We held that Wells Fargo’s
    action was not barred by HRS § 501-118, as its challenge to
    title was brought prior to the entry (which we defined as
    “certification”) of the new TCT to the third party.              Omiya, 142
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    Hawaiʻi at 455, 
    420 P.3d at 386
    .            Thus, Wells Fargo could
    directly impeach and seek to undo the foreclosure proceedings
    because the certification of the new TCT had not occurred at the
    time suit was brought.
    In sum, the parties challenging foreclosures in Aames,
    Onaga, and Omiya each sought to undo foreclosures, which does
    affect the conclusivity of the matters stated within an entered
    TCT (namely, the identification of the title owner).              Aames, 107
    Hawaiʻi 95, 
    110 P.3d 1042
    ; Onaga, 140 Hawaiʻi 358, 
    400 P.3d 559
    ;
    Omiya, 142 Hawaiʻi 439, 
    420 P.3d 370
    .            These parties did not seek
    money damages against a foreclosing mortgagee, which does not
    affect the conclusivity of matters stated within an entered TCT.
    Aames, 107 Hawaiʻi 95, 
    110 P.3d 1042
    ; Onaga, 140 Hawaiʻi 358, 
    400 P.3d 559
    ; Omiya, 142 Hawaiʻi 439, 
    420 P.3d 370
    .            These cases tend
    to support Manuel’s contention that to “directly impeach”
    foreclosure proceedings, an action must threaten the
    conclusivity of a new TCT, entered after the foreclosure sale.
    4.    The federal cases interpreting HRS § 501-118 are not
    persuasive.
    BANA urges us to look to the district court and Ninth
    Circuit cases holding that HRS § 501-118 bars wrongful
    foreclosure claims, seeking only money damages, brought after
    the entry of a new TCT.        See Seegers, Civil 17-00399 LEK-KSC,
    
    2018 WL 1558550
    ; Fergerstrom, 
    342 F. Supp. 3d 1029
    ; and
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    Fergerstrom, 802 F. App’x. 268.         We are not bound by these
    courts’ interpretations of Hawaiʻi law, and we in fact disagree
    with them.     Each of these cases seem to read “directly” out of
    the phrase “directly impeach” in HRS § 501-118 and is,
    therefore, not useful to us in answering the first certified
    question.
    First, in Seegers, the district court dismissed the
    Plaintiff’s quiet title and wrongful foreclosure damages claims
    by applying Aames to hold that the claims were barred by the
    entry of new TCTs following the foreclosure sale.             Seegers, 2018
    Civil 17-00399 LEK-KSC, WL 1558550 at *2.           As to the wrongful
    foreclosure money damages claim in particular, the district
    court stated, “Plaintiff’s claimed entitlement to money damages
    for loss of title and possession impeaches the foreclosure
    proceeding and contradicts the Land Court’s issuance of new
    certificates of title.”        Seegers, Civil 17-00399 LEK-KSC, 
    2018 WL 1558550
     at *4 (emphasis added).          This statement, however,
    does not interpret the word “directly,” modifying the word
    “impeach” in HRS § 501-118.         The district court went on to state
    that the plaintiff would be entitled to money damages for loss
    of title and possession “only if he was legally entitled to
    title and possession of the Property,” but because new TCTs had
    already been entered, he was not.           Id.   Finally, the district
    court stated that the legislative intent behind the Land Court
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    chapter “would be thwarted if the conclusive and unimpeachable
    character of certificates of title would be easily ‘sidestepped’
    by suing the seller of registered land for money damages as a
    substitute for suing the current owner of registered land for
    title and possession.”       Seegers, Civil 17-00399 LEK-KSC, 
    2018 WL 1558550
     at *5.
    The Fergerstrom court borrowed heavily from Seegers in
    holding, “As a matter of Hawaiʻi law, the Land Court’s entry of
    Certificates of Title is conclusive and unimpeachable evidence
    of the subsequent owners’ title to the properties, and
    Plaintiff’s [wrongful foreclosure] claims, which seek to impeach
    the foreclosure proceedings, and demand damages to compensate
    for the loss of title and possession, are statutorily precluded”
    Fergerstrom, 
    342 F. Supp. 3d at
    1032 (citing Aames, 107 Hawaiʻi
    at 101, 
    110 P.3d at 1048
    ; HRS § 501-118) (emphasis added).                 Like
    the Seegers court, the Fergerstrom court did not interpret the
    word “directly,” modifying the word “impeach” in HRS § 501-118.
    To the Fergerstrom court, the plaintiffs’ wrongful foreclosure
    action “attacks (i.e., impeaches) the foreclosure proceeding”
    “regardless of how the remedy is styled.”           
    342 F. Supp. 3d at 1045
     (omitting the modifier “directly” in interpreting HRS §
    501-118).     Moreover, the Fergerstrom court viewed a wrongful
    foreclosure claim praying only for money damages as an attempt
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    to “plead around Aames by requesting equitable damages
    equivalent to restoring title.”         
    342 F. Supp. 3d at 1042-43
    .
    The Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s Fergerstrom
    order in a two-page memorandum opinion that stated only, “The
    district court correctly determined that section 501-118’s time
    bar applied to Appellants’ tort claims for money damages.
    Appellants’ claims were based on defects in the non-judicial
    foreclosure sales of their properties and ‘directly impeach[ed]
    . . . the foreclosure proceedings.”          Fergerstrom, 802 F. App’x.
    at 270 (citing Aames, 107 Hawaiʻi 95, 
    110 P.3d 1042
    ).             No further
    reasoning is given.
    None of the federal cases interpreted the term “directly”
    in HRS § 501-118’s phrasing “directly impeaches any foreclosure
    proceeding.”     Further, the district court in both Seegers and
    Fergerstrom viewed wrongful foreclosure money damages claims as
    “equivalent” to claims for the return of title and possession,
    when our precedent has not explicitly stated that.
    5.    Our recent precedent on the remedies available
    following wrongful foreclosure do not foreclose the
    possibility that a money damages claim could be
    brought following the entry of a new TCT to a third-
    party purchaser.
    In fact, our precedent contemplates wrongful foreclosure
    actions seeking only money damages where return of title is not
    practicable (or, in this case, requested) and has not
    necessarily framed the remedies as equivalents.             First, in
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    Santiago, we held that a mortgagee’s nonjudicial foreclosure
    upon mortgagors’ property was unlawful because it did not
    proceed pursuant to a power of sale (the mortgage document had
    omitted a power of sale clause, which was required by law).                137
    Hawaiʻi at 156, 
    366 P.3d at 631
    .            Return of title and possession
    of the property was not practicable, as the property had already
    been resold to an innocent purchaser for value after the
    foreclosure.     137 Hawaiʻi at 158, 
    366 P.3d at 633
    .          Therefore, we
    ruled that the mortgagors were “entitled to restitution of their
    proven out-of-pocket losses from [the mortgagee’s] wrongful
    foreclosure of the Mortgage and subsequent sale of the
    [property].”     
    Id.
       We did not measure damages as the equivalent
    of title and possession.
    Next, in Mount, we held that a mortgagor wrongfully
    foreclosed upon mortgagees’ property by failing to provide
    information on reinstating the mortgage loan within five days of
    a request.     139 Hawaiʻi at 169, 
    384 P.3d at 1270
    .          The property
    had already been sold to a third party, whose status as an
    innocent purchaser for value was not determined at the time of
    appeal and certiorari.       139 Hawaiʻi at 180, 
    384 P.3d at 1281
    .
    Therefore, the case was remanded to the circuit court to
    determine whether the third party was an innocent purchaser for
    value, in order to determine which remedy under Santiago
    applied:     rendering the foreclosure sale voidable and returning
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    title and possession to the mortgagors (where the third party
    was found not to be an innocent purchaser for value) or damages
    only (where the third party was found to be an innocent
    purchaser for value).       
    Id.
    In Hungate, we held that a mortgagee wrongfully foreclosed
    upon a mortgagee by failing to give proper notice of a
    foreclosure auction date and postponements of that date pursuant
    to the mortgage’s power of sale and the non-judicial foreclosure
    statute in effect at the time.         139 Hawaiʻi at 402, 
    391 P.3d at 9
    .    We noted that “the mortgagor can protect its interests
    through filing a claim against the mortgagee for wrongful
    foreclosure,” and reiterated that, “[w]hen voiding the
    foreclosure is not possible, the mortgagor is entitled to
    ‘restitution of their proven out-of-pocket losses’ through a
    wrongful foreclosure claim.”         139 Hawaiʻi at 407, 
    391 P.3d at 14
    (quoting Santiago, 137 Hawaiʻi at 158-59, 
    366 P.3d at 633-34
    ).
    Lastly, in Delapinia, we summarized the state of our
    jurisprudence on remedies for wrongful foreclosure as follows:
    Hawaiʻi law has moved unmistakably towards the conclusion
    that sales pursuant to a wrongful foreclosure are voidable,
    regardless of whether the violation of statutory of
    contractual, substantial or a mere irregularity. This
    policy protects the interests accrued by innocent
    purchasers and avoids forfeiture if possible, while
    deterring the conduct of the party that wrongfully
    foreclosed through a damage remedy.
    150 Hawaiʻi at 104, 497 P.3d at 119.          Thus, Delapinia noted that
    Hawaiʻi’s wrongful foreclosure remedies are twofold and
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    alternative (and not necessarily equivalent) to each other:                (1)
    return of title and possession; or (2) money damages.              Id.
    We acknowledge that these rules developed in the context of
    nonjudicial foreclosures of properties registered in the Bureau
    of Conveyances.      See Santiago, CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX, ICA Dkt. 28:38;
    Mount, 139 Hawaiʻi at 170, 
    384 P.3d at 1271
    ; Hungate, 139 Hawaiʻi
    at 399, 
    391 P.3d at 6
    ; Delapinia, CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX, ICA Dkt.
    16:32.3    Although Santiago, Mount, Hungate, and Delapinia all
    involved regular system property, Land Court property is
    “subject to the same burdens and incidents which attach by law
    to unregistered land.”       HRS § 501-81.
    We next consider whether HRS 501-118’s “entry of a new TCT”
    limitation bars each type of remedy in the specific context of
    foreclosures upon Land Court property.           A complaint, filed after
    the entry of a new TCT and seeking the first remedy (return of
    title and possession), does “directly impeach” foreclosure
    proceedings because it challenges the matters contained within a
    new TCT (i.e., the identification of the owner of the property).
    A complaint, filed after the entry of a new TCT and seeking the
    second remedy (money damages against a wrongfully foreclosing
    mortgagee), does not “directly impeach” foreclosure proceedings
    3
    We take judicial notice of the records filed in our appellate docket that
    the foreclosed properties at issue in Santiago and Delapinia were registered
    in the regular system. Hawaiʻi Rules of Evidence Rule 201.
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    because it does not challenge the matters contained within the
    new TCT (i.e., the identification of the owner of the property).
    6.    HRS § 501-118 does not bar a wrongful foreclosure
    complaint seeking only money damages from the
    foreclosing mortgagee, even when the complaint is
    brought after the entry of a TCT to a third-party
    purchaser.
    In short, reading HRS § 501-118 in harmony with (1) our
    precedent and (2) the purpose and policy behind the Land Court
    chapter to protect the conclusivity of the matters contained
    within a TCT, we hold that a wrongful foreclosure claim, seeking
    only money damages against the foreclosing lender, where the
    property has passed on to a third party, does not “directly
    impeach” a foreclosure proceeding because it does not affect the
    matters contained within the new TCT.           Manuel’s case illustrates
    that point:     his wrongful foreclosure claim is based upon
    alleged irregularities committed by the mortgagee in auctioning
    his property.      He seeks money damages caused by those
    irregularities.      He does not seek to affect any matter contained
    within the new TCT (namely, the identification of the third
    party owner of the property).
    B.     The Degamo putative class action tolled the limitations
    periods for bringing a wrongful foreclosure claim.
    As the entry of the new TCTs in this case did not bar
    Manuel’s January 14, 2021 complaint for wrongful foreclosure
    money damages, the next question is whether the complaint was
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    timely.      Manuel states that his Complaint was timely filed4 only
    if the time for bringing it was tolled by the Degamo putative
    class action.       Manuel was a putative member of the plaintiff
    class.
    In Levi v. Univ. of Hawaiʻi, we adopted the United States
    Supreme Court’s holdings on “class-action tolling.”               
    67 Haw. 90
    ,
    93, 
    679 P.2d 129
    , 132 (1984).          The United States Supreme Court
    held first that “the commencement of a class action suspends the
    applicable statute of limitations as to all asserted members of
    the class who would have been parties had the suit been
    permitted to continue as a class action.”            Am. Pipe & Constr.
    Co. v. Utah, 
    414 U.S. 538
    , 554 (1974).            The Court next clarified
    that, “[o]nce the statute of limitations has been tolled, it
    remains tolled for all members of the putative class until class
    certification is denied.         At that point, class members may
    choose to file their own suits or to intervene as plaintiffs in
    the pending action.”        Crown, Cork & Seal Co. v. Parker, 
    462 U.S. 345
    , 354 (1983).       We have also held that class action tolling
    ends upon entry of (1) “an order expressly denying a motion for
    class certification (or expressly denying the last such motion,
    if there is more than one motion)”; (2) where there is no such
    express order, upon entry of final judgment dismissing the class
    4
    We express no opinion as to whether this statement is true.
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    action, or (3) upon a putative class member’s decision to opt
    out of the class.       Patrickson v. Dole Food Co., 137 Hawaiʻi 217,
    230, 
    368 P.3d 959
    , 972 (2015) (ruling specifically on cross-
    jurisdictional class action tolling).
    In its opening brief, BANA argues that the Degamo class
    action did not toll Manuel’s claims for two reasons.               First,
    BANA argues the plain language of HRS § 501-118 does not extend
    the time to directly impeach foreclosure proceedings beyond the
    entry of a new TCT.        Second, BANA argues that HRS § 501-118 is a
    statute of repose, whose outer time limit is the entry of a new
    TCT.     BANA states that, unlike statutes of limitations, statutes
    of repose are not subject to class-action tolling, citing Cal.
    Pub. Emps’. Ret. Sys. v. ANZ Secs. Inc., 
    137 S.Ct. 2042
    , 2051-52
    (2017).
    Manuel argues that HRS § 501-118 is not a statute of
    repose, pointing out that Hawaiʻi appellate courts have held so
    far that only the following statutes are statutes of repose:
    HRS §§ 657-5, 657-8, 657-7.3(a), and 514B-94(b).              Further,
    Manuel points out that Hawaiʻi appellate courts have allowed
    challenges to title in cases of fraud even after a new TCT has
    been entered, citing Aames, 107 Hawaiʻi at 103, 
    110 P.3d at 1050
    ,
    and Fukunaga v. Fukunaga, 
    8 Haw. App. 273
    , 280-81, 
    800 P.2d 618
    ,
    622 (1990).
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    BANA replies that if putative class actions are allowed to
    toll challenges to title beyond the entry date of the TCT, the
    purpose of the Land Court system, in general, and of HRS § 501-
    118, in particular, would be defeated.
    In answering the first certified question, we held that HRS
    § 501-118 did not preclude Manuel from filing his wrongful
    foreclosure complaint after the entry of the new TCT to the
    third party.     Therefore, HRS § 501-118 is not the statute under
    which the complaint’s timeliness is measured.            Hence, whether
    HRS § 501-118 is a statute of limitation or repose is not
    necessary to decide.       Rather, the statutes of limitations for
    wrongful foreclosure and Chapter 480 claims apply.
    In this case, the pendency of the Degamo putative class
    action tolled the time for Manuel to file an individual action.
    Class action tolling began on September 12, 2007, with the
    filing of the Degamo putative class action complaint.              It
    clearly ended on September 29, 2021.          Although the district
    court had dismissed the putative class action on March 14, 2019,
    the dismissal was appealed to the Ninth Circuit.             Therefore,
    March 14, 2019 does not mark the date that denial of class
    certification became clear.         The Ninth Circuit remanded the case
    to the district court to consider the motion to intervene filed
    by the class representatives’ bankruptcy trustees.             At a status
    conference, the trustees informed the district court that they
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    no longer sought to intervene.         Degamo, Civil No. 13-00141 at 2.
    Therefore, on September 29, 2021, the district court filed its
    order denying the motion to intervene as moot.            Id.    On that
    date, the denial of class certification became clear.
    V.   Conclusion
    First, an action alleging a wrongful nonjudicial
    foreclosure of Land Court property that seeks only damages
    against the foreclosing lender is not an action that “directly
    impeaches” any foreclosure proceedings affecting registered land
    within the meaning of HRS § 501-118(c); therefore, the action is
    not barred by the entry of a TCT to the buyer at a foreclosure
    sale.    Second, the pendency of a putative class action asserting
    wrongful foreclosure claims tolls the time during which a class
    member may commence an individual action.           The time for
    commencing an individual action is tolled until a clear denial
    of class certification.        In this case, the filing of the
    putative class action on September 7, 2012 tolled the time for
    filing an individual wrongful foreclosure claim until September
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    29, 2021, when the district court’s denial of class
    certification became clear.
    Patricia J. McHenry and                     /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
    Allizon Mizuo Lee
    for defendant-appellant                     /s/ Sabrina S. McKenna
    Van-Alan H. Shima,                          /s/ Michael D. Wilson
    James J. Bickerton, and
    Bridget G. Morgan-Bickerton                 /s/ Todd W. Eddins
    for plaintiff-appellee
    /s/ Dean E. Ochiai
    37