U.S. Bank, N.A. v. Duane C. Beedle ( 2020 )


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  • MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                                   Reporter of Decisions
    Decision:    
    2020 ME 84
    Docket:      Ken-19-144
    Submitted
    On Briefs: October 24, 2019 and May 12, 2020
    Decided:     June 9, 2020
    Panel:       MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, and HUMPHREY, JJ., and HJELM, A.R.J.*
    U.S. BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE FOR BANC OF AMERICA
    FUNDING 2008-FTI TRUST, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES,
    SERIES 2008-FTI
    v.
    DUANE C. BEEDLE et al.
    JABAR, J.
    [¶1] U.S. Bank, National Association, as Trustee for Banc of America
    Funding 2008-FTI Trust, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates Series 2008-FT1
    (“U.S. Bank”) appeals from a District Court judgment (Waterville,
    Montgomery, J.) entered in favor of Duane Beedle following a bench trial in
    this foreclosure action. The judgment was based on the court’s conclusion
    that U.S. Bank did not prove that it owns the mortgage and therefore does not
    have standing to file a foreclosure action. Because the evidence establishes, as
    *
    Justice Hjelm participated in the initial conference while he was an Associate Justice and, on
    order of the Senior Associate Justice, was authorized to continue his participation in his capacity as
    an Active Retired Justice. Justice Alexander participated in the initial conference but retired before
    this opinion was certified.
    2
    a matter of law, that the 2012 assignment of the mortgage was enforceable,
    we vacate the judgment and remand the matter to the District Court with
    instructions to consider the evidence on the remaining aspects of U.S. Bank’s
    foreclosure claim.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A.       Mortgage and Assignment History
    [¶2] On September 18, 2003, Duane and Julie Beedle executed a note
    and mortgage in favor of lender Fleet National Bank for the purchase of
    property located in Belgrade.
    [¶3]    In 2012, the mortgage was assigned to U.S. Bank, National
    Association, as trustee for the certificate-holders of the Banc of America
    Funding Corporation 2008-FTI Trust, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates,
    Series 2008-FTI (“Assignee #1”).1 Although the assignment provided that
    “Fleet National Bank . . . hereby assigns to [Assignee #1] all Assignor’s right,
    title and interest in and to the [Beedle] mortgage,” it was signed by an agent of
    Bank of America, N.A. (“BOA”), as Fleet’s successor by merger. The signature
    for the assignor reads “Bank of America, N.A. SBM to Fleet National Bank.”
    The names of the first assignee and the plaintiff, U.S. Bank, are strikingly similar. For clarity,
    1
    we refer to the first assignee as “Assignee #1.”
    3
    [¶4] Julie and Duane Beedle divorced in 2012. On April 13, 2014,
    Duane Beedle executed a “Home Affordable Modification Agreement” to
    “amend and supplement” the note and the mortgage. Not long after, Duane
    Beedle stopped making mortgage payments and, in November 2016, the
    servicer of the mortgage sent Beedle a notice of default. Beedle did not cure
    the default, and U.S. Bank declared the entire principal amount outstanding.
    [¶5] A second assignment was executed on April 17, 2017, by which
    U.S. Bank claims that Assignee #1 assigned its interest in the mortgage to U.S.
    Bank.2 U.S. Bank commenced this action soon after.
    B.       The Foreclosure Action
    [¶6] A bench trial was held on August 16, 2018. Among other things,
    Beedle objected to U.S. Bank’s introduction of the 2012 assignment to
    Assignee #1. Pointing to BOA’s signature as Fleet’s successor by merger on
    the 2012 assignment, Beedle’s attorney stated:
    I assume the Court is aware successor by merger, which would
    indicate that in 2012, when this was assigned [by] Fleet Bank,
    Fleet National Bank did not exist, and while the signature is done
    by Bank of America successor by merger, the assignment itself is
    by Fleet National Bank, which didn’t exist, which could not have
    Given its conclusion that U.S. Bank did not own the mortgage because the first assignment was
    2
    ineffective, the court did not reach Beedle’s assertion that the second assignment was
    unenforceable.
    4
    assigned anything at that point. Therefore, the assignment is not
    valid and I don't think it should be admitted.
    Counsel for U.S. Bank responded by explaining, inter alia, that “Fleet National
    Bank is the entity named in the mortgage, Bank of America has authority, as
    successor by merger to Fleet National Bank, and is therefore the one that
    executed the assignment. . . . Bank of America, as successor by merger, has the
    authority to execute assignments on an assumed entit[y’s] behalf.” Beedle’s
    attorney disagreed, stating:
    Well, there’s no evidence of any of that, Your Honor. What this is,
    is an assignment from Fleet National Bank to [Assignee #1] . . . .
    Fleet National Bank did not own the mortgage at the time because
    it became part of Bank of America, as is evidenced by the signature.
    If it’s required for the signature, it’s required for the assignor. It’s
    not the proper assignor, therefore this transfers nothing.[3]
    (Emphasis added.) The court reserved ruling on the admissibility of the 2012
    assignment, as well as certain other evidence introduced by U.S. Bank. The
    record was left open, but U.S. Bank did not present any additional evidence
    relating to BOA’s merger with Fleet.
    [¶7] In an order entered on January 16, 2019, after the parties filed
    written summations, the District Court found that U.S. Bank “failed [to] meet
    3 It appears Beedle’s argument was that the assignment was invalid based solely on the fact that
    it states “Fleet National Bank . . . hereby assigns to [Assignee #1] all Assignor’s right, title and
    interest in and to the [Beedle] mortgage,” instead of reading “Bank of America hereby assigns . . . .”
    5
    its burden of proving ownership of the mortgage due to a faulty [2012]
    assignment.” The court explained:
    In the first assignment [of] record in this case, Bank of America’s
    agent as successor by merger would have authority to assign
    right, title and interest in the mortgage only if the assignor
    actually owned the right, title, and interest it purported to assign.
    Without any evidence establishing the occurrence of the merger
    and what interests, if any, in the mortgage were actually
    transferred, there is a break in the chain of ownership of the
    mortgage. . . . Proof of the merger is the missing link in the
    ownership chain because without it, the court cannot conclude
    what right, title or interest, if any, in the mortgage was transferred
    from Fleet National Bank to [Assignee #1].
    (Emphases in original.) As a result, the court concluded that U.S. Bank failed
    to prove ownership of the mortgage and therefore lacked standing to
    foreclose on the property. The court entered judgment in favor of Beedle.4
    [¶8] U.S. Bank filed a motion to reconsider, see M.R. Civ. P. 59, arguing
    that the court should have taken judicial notice of Fleet’s merger with BOA or,
    alternatively, dismissed the complaint without prejudice. U.S. Bank attached
    two documents to its motion as proof of the merger, including an affidavit
    signed by an assistant secretary of BOA stating that Fleet had merged into
    BOA on June 13, 2005, and a copy of Fleet National Bank’s institution history
    4   See infra note 5.
    6
    page from the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council’s website,
    which also showed that Fleet had merged into BOA.
    [¶9] The court denied U.S. Bank’s motion to reconsider on April 4,
    2019, and U.S. Bank timely appealed. M.R. App. P. 2B(c)(2)(D).
    II. DISCUSSION
    [¶10] U.S. Bank contends that the District Court erred when it found
    that U.S. Bank failed to carry its burden of proving ownership of the mortgage
    and accordingly lacked standing to foreclose on the property.5 “We review the
    facts underlying a determination of standing for clear error, and we review
    the court’s ultimate determination of standing de novo as an issue of law.”
    Bank of Am., N.A. v. Greenleaf, 
    2014 ME 89
    , ¶ 6, 
    96 A.3d 700
     (citations
    omitted).
    5 U.S. Bank raises three alternative arguments. First, U.S. Bank contends that the District Court
    should have taken judicial notice of the merger even though U.S. Bank did not ask the court to do so
    until after the record was closed. See M.R. Evid. 201. Next, U.S. Bank contends that the court should
    have concluded that Beedle was statutorily barred from challenging the validity of the assignment.
    Finally, U.S. Bank contends that the court erred by entering judgment for Beedle instead of
    dismissing the complaint without prejudice for lack of standing. Because we hold that U.S. Bank
    proved that the 2012 assignment was effective—an issue that is relevant to standing but also
    separately to the merits of its foreclosure claim, see Bank of Am., N.A. v. Greenleaf, 
    2014 ME 89
    , ¶¶ 9,
    18, 
    96 A.3d 700
    —we do not address these remaining arguments. But see, e.g., Homeward
    Residential, Inc. v. Gregor, 
    2015 ME 108
    , ¶ 24, 
    122 A.3d 947
     (vacating judgment and remanding for
    an entry of a dismissal without prejudice in foreclosure action where plaintiff lacked standing).
    7
    A.   Standing Requirements
    [¶11]   “Because foreclosure regards two documents—a promissory
    note and a mortgage securing that note—standing to foreclose involves the
    plaintiff’s interest in both the note and the mortgage.”    Id. ¶ 9.   “[T]he
    mortgage portion of the standing analysis requires the plaintiff to establish
    ownership of the mortgage.” Id. ¶ 12 (emphasis in original); see 14 M.R.S.
    § 6321 (2020).    The plain language of section 6321 requires “that the
    mortgagee ‘produce evidence’ of various documents and transactions,”
    including those establishing ownership of the mortgage. Bank of Am., N.A. v.
    Cloutier, 
    2013 ME 17
    , ¶ 13, 
    61 A.3d 1242
     (quoting 14 M.R.S. § 6321). Because
    an assignee’s interest in a mortgage cannot exceed the interest possessed by
    the assignor, see Greenleaf, 
    2014 ME 89
    , ¶ 16, 
    96 A.3d 700
    , U.S. Bank needed
    to establish the validity of the 2012 and 2017 assignments in order to prove
    that it owned the mortgage.
    [¶12] The court concluded that U.S. Bank failed to carry its burden of
    proving the chain of ownership of the mortgage because the 2012 assignment
    was ineffective and U.S. Bank therefore lacked standing. We disagree and
    address the evidence relating only to the 2012 assignment because that was
    8
    the dispositive aspect of the court’s judgment and the court did not reach the
    effectiveness of the second assignment.
    B.    Evidence of the Merger
    [¶13] With regard to the 2012 assignment, the court properly found
    that BOA, as Fleet’s successor by merger, would have the “authority to assign
    right, title and interest in the mortgage only if the assignor actually owned the
    right, title, and interest it purported to assign.”
    [¶14] Mergers of national banks are governed by The National Bank
    Act, which provides, in part:
    The corporate existence of each of the merging banks or banking
    associations participating in such merger shall be merged into and
    continued in the receiving association and such receiving
    association shall be deemed to be the same corporation as each
    bank or banking association participating in the merger. All rights,
    franchises, and interests of the individual merging banks or
    banking associations in and to every type of property (real,
    personal, and mixed) and choses in action shall be transferred to
    and vested in the receiving association by virtue of such merger
    without any deed or other transfer.
    12 U.S.C.S. § 215a(e) (LEXIS through Pub. L. No. 116-140) (emphases added).
    [¶15] Similarly, 9-B M.R.S. § 357 (2020) governs the effect of bank
    mergers in Maine. That statute provides that, upon a merger,
    [e]ven though the charter of any participating or converting
    institution has been terminated, the resulting institution shall be
    deemed to be a continuation of the entity of the participating or
    9
    converting institution such that all property of the participating or
    converting institution, including rights, titles and interests in and
    to all property of whatsoever kind . . . shall immediately by act of
    law and without any conveyance or transfer and without further act
    or deed be vested in and continue to be that property of the
    resulting institution; and such institution . . . shall continue to have
    and succeed to all the rights, obligations and relations of the
    participating or converting institution.
    9-B M.R.S. § 357(1) (emphases added).
    [¶16] Accordingly, Fleet’s right, title, and interest in the mortgage
    continued in BOA, the receiving entity, automatically upon the merger, as a
    matter of both state and federal law. See 12 U.S.C.S. § 215a(e); 9-B M.R.S.
    § 357(1); Nat’l City Mortg. Co. v. Tidwell, 
    749 S.E.2d 730
    , 733 (Ga. 2013)
    (“[F]ederal banking law provides that the corporate existence of merging
    banks shall continue in the ‘receiving association,’ which is considered the
    same corporation as its predecessor.”); see also White v. Bank of Am., N.A., 597
    F. App’x 1015, 1019-20 (11th Cir. 2014) (holding that, under federal law and
    the applicable state law, “when [Bank #1] merged with and into [Bank #2], the
    rights and interests [Bank #1] had in the Security Deed were transferred to
    and vested in [Bank #2] without any further deed or transfer” and Bank #2
    was therefore authorized to institute foreclosure proceedings).
    [¶17] The signature on the 2012 assignment signifies that BOA signed
    as a successor entity to Fleet. Beedle did not deny that Fleet was acquired by
    10
    and merged into BOA. Indeed, Beedle’s objection to the admission of the 2012
    assignment was predicated on the very fact of that merger. Beedle claimed
    that, because of the merger, Fleet no longer existed, rendering BOA’s signature
    as successor to Fleet ineffective.             BOA, however, as Fleet’s successor by
    merger, is statutorily “deemed to be a continuation of [Fleet].” 9-B M.R.S.
    § 357(1).      The signature on the notarized document, reading “Bank of
    America, N.A. SBM [successor by merger] to Fleet National Bank,” is itself
    evidence establishing that there was a merger between Fleet and BOA, and
    Beedle does not contend otherwise.6 Thus, the court misapprehended the
    nature of Beedle’s objection and consequently erred when it concluded that
    “proof of the merger is the missing link in the ownership chain.”
    [¶18] BOA’s signature as Fleet’s successor by merger on the 2012
    assignment was enough to establish BOA’s ownership and authority to
    execute the assignment to Assignee #1 because Fleet’s interest in the
    mortgage vested in and was transferred to BOA automatically upon the
    merger by operation of law.
    As Beedle’s attorney asserted at trial, “Fleet National Bank did not own the mortgage [in 2012]
    6
    because it became part of Bank of America, as is evidenced by the signature.” Additionally, in his
    opposition to U.S. Bank’s motion for reconsideration of the judgment, Beedle stated that he was not
    challenging U.S. Bank’s standing. Because, to have standing, a plaintiff in a foreclosure action must
    own the mortgage, see Greenleaf, 
    2014 ME 89
    , ¶ 12, 
    96 A.3d 700
    , this must be seen as an additional
    acknowledgment by Beedle that U.S. Bank is the mortgagee.
    11
    III. CONCLUSION
    [¶19] Fleet’s interest in and ownership of the mortgage vested in and
    transferred to BOA automatically upon the merger by operation of law. BOA’s
    signature as Fleet’s successor by merger on the 2012 assignment was enough
    to establish BOA’s ownership and authority to execute the assignment to
    Assignee #1. With respect to that assignment, there was no need for U.S. Bank
    to present additional evidence showing that Fleet’s interests transferred to
    BOA. We therefore remand this action for the District Court to adjudicate
    whether, on this record, U.S. Bank also proved the effectiveness of the 2017
    assignment, see supra n.2, and the remaining elements of its claim.
    The entry is:
    Judgment vacated. Remanded to the District
    Court for further action consistent with this
    opinion.
    William C. Sandelands, Esq., and Frank E. De Grim, Esq., Sandelands Eyet LLP,
    Bedminster, New Jersey, for appellant U.S. Bank
    Joshua Klein-Golden, Esq., Clifford & Golden, PA, Lisbon Falls, for appellee
    Duane C. Beedle
    Waterville District Court docket number RE-2017-45
    FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY