Craig Cleveland v. Deutche Bank National Trust Company , 2016 Miss. App. LEXIS 376 ( 2016 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2014-CA-01692-COA
    CRAIG CLEVELAND                                                   APPELLANT/CROSS-
    APPELLEE
    v.
    DEUTCHE BANK NATIONAL TRUST                                         APPELLEE/CROSS-
    COMPANY, SOLELY IN ITS CAPACITY AS                                       APPELLANT
    TRUSTEE FOR GSAMP MORTGAGE LOAN
    TRUST 2002-HE2
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                          10/27/2014
    TRIAL JUDGE:                               HON. JACQUELINE ESTES MASK
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                 PRENTISS COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                    THOMAS ORVILLE COOLEY
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:                    JASON ERIC FORTENBERRY
    ANNA COLEMAN SWEAT
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                        CIVIL - OTHER
    TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION:                   GRANTED PARTIAL SUMMARY
    JUDGMENT IN FAVOR OF APPELLEE
    DISPOSITION:                               AFFIRMED - 06/14/2016
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE LEE, C.J., CARLTON AND FAIR, JJ.
    CARLTON, J., FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    This appeal stems from Craig Cleveland’s action against Sinecure Investments LLC
    (“Sinecure”) and S&S Properties LLC (“S&S”) (collectively, “Sinecure”) and Deutsche
    National Trust Company (“Deutsche Bank”) to obtain clear title to real property in Prentiss
    County, Mississippi. Cleveland appeals the Prentiss County Chancery Court’s judgment
    granting partial summary judgment in favor of Deutsche Bank and Sinecure, wherein the
    chancellor held: (1) Cleveland possessed standing to pursue the lawsuit; (2) the tax sale for
    the property at issue was invalid as to the owner, and was therefore void ab initio; (3) the lien
    of Deutsche Bank against the subject property was not extinguished for its lack of action to
    protect or enforce its lien in connection with the disputed tax sale; and (4) the motion to
    compel discovery against Sinecure was dismissed as moot.
    ¶2.    Deutsche Bank cross-appeals, arguing that the chancellor erred in failing to grant its
    motion for summary judgment on its counterclaim that the tax sale was void as to Deutsche
    Bank due to the chancery clerk’s failure to follow the statutorily prescribed procedures for
    giving and certifying notice to lienholders. Finding no error, we affirm the chancellor’s
    judgment.
    FACTS
    ¶3.    Kerrie McCarver Lewis (“Lewis”) owned the following described property located
    in Prentiss County, Mississippi (hereinafter referred to as “the Property”):
    Tract 1: INDEXING INSTRUCTIONS: NE 1/4 17-5-7
    Part of the Northeast Quarter of Section 17, Township 5 South, Range 7 East,
    Prentiss County, Mississippi, described as follows:
    Commencing at the Southwest corner of the East half of said Northeast
    Quarter and run thence North 1103.69 feet; thence West 203.63 feet to the
    Point of Beginning. Run thence South 33 degrees 53 minutes East 449.68 feet;
    thence North 84 degrees 34 minutes 25 seconds East 253.2 feet; thence North
    18 degrees 15 minutes 37 seconds West 563.89 feet; thence South 60 degrees
    18 minutes 07 seconds West 375.75 feet to the Point of Beginning. Containing
    3.53 acres.
    Tract 2: INDEXING INSTRUCTIONS: NE 1/4 17-5-7
    Part of the Northeast Quarter of Section 17, Township 5 South, Range 7 East,
    Prentiss County, Mississippi, described as follows:
    2
    Commencing at the Southwest corner of the East half of said Northeast
    Quarter and run thence North 1289.85 feet; thence East 122.77 feet to the
    Point of Beginning. Run thence South 18 degrees 15 minutes 37 seconds East
    563.89 feet; thence North 84 degrees 34 minutes 25 seconds East 52.32 feet;
    thence North 00 degrees 41 minutes 28 seconds West 656.56 feet; thence
    South 60 degrees 18 minutes 08 seconds West 254.25 feet to the Point of
    Beginning. Containing 2.01 acres.
    ¶4.    Lewis and her husband, Jerry Lee Lewis, received a warranty deed for the above
    described property.1 Lewis executed a deed of trust to Concorde Acceptance Corporation
    on February 24, 2000. On that same day, Concorde executed an assignment of the deed of
    trust. On January 20, 2010, the assignment of the deed of trust was executed by Mortgage
    Electronic Registration Systems Inc. to Deutsche Bank.
    ¶5.    Pursuant to a mortgage agreement, Lewis was responsible for the property taxes and
    was required to submit receipts where she paid the yearly property taxes. In 2009, Lewis
    failed to pay her property taxes, and the Property was sold for the unpaid taxes on August 30,
    2010, to Sinecure in the amount of $88.84. The Prentiss County Chancery Clerk issued a tax
    deed for the Property to Sinecure, and Sinecure recorded the tax deed on January 4, 2013.
    ¶6.    The record reflects that prior to the tax sale, the Prentiss County Chancery Clerk
    attempted to notify Lewis of the tax sale and the expiration of the time for redemption, but
    no notice was actually provided to her, nor was notice directed to her in Tennessee, where
    Lewis eventually moved and was living at the time of the tax sale. The record reflects that
    prior to the tax sale and prior to the expiration of the redemption period, the Prentiss County
    Chancery Clerk sent Lewis a certified letter advising her of the tax sale, and the record shows
    1
    Later, the property was deeded to Lewis only.
    3
    that the letter was returned and stamped “return to sender, not deliverable as addressed,
    unable to forward.” Cleveland conceded below that the chancery clerk failed to send the
    notice of the August 30, 2012 expiration of the redemption period to Deutsche Bank within
    the 120-day window provided by Mississippi Code Annotated section 27-43-1 (Rev. 2010).
    Section 27-43-1 states: “The clerk of the chancery court shall, within one hundred eighty
    . . . days and not less than sixty . . . days prior to the expiration of the time of redemption with
    respect to land sold, either to individuals or to the state, be required to issue notice to the
    record owner of the land sold as of 180 days prior to the expiration of the time of
    redemption[.]” See also Miss. Code Ann. § 27-43-5 (Rev. 2010) (chancery clerk possesses
    duty to provide notice of tax sale to lienholders). Due to the failure of the chancery clerk
    to comply with the required statutory notice, Deutsche Bank asserts that its lien survived the
    August 30, 2010 tax sale.
    ¶7.    On June 27, 2012, since Deutsche Bank as lienholder failed to redeem the Property
    within the two-year redemption period, the chancery clerk issued a notice of forfeiture for
    the Property to Deutsche Bank, and the notice of forfeiture was sent to Deutsche Bank on
    July 6, 2012. The record shows that Deutsche Bank received this notice of forfeiture from
    the chancery clerk on July 10, 2012, with Francis Blackshear signing for its receipt. The
    redemption period expired on August 30, 2012.
    ¶8.    In the summer of 2013, Cleveland noticed people living on the property in question,
    and contacted Lewis. Lewis was unaware of why anyone was on her property. Lewis
    transferred her right, title, and interest in the Property to Cleveland. Thereafter, Cleveland
    4
    took the steps necessary to obtain title to the Property.
    ¶9.    On September 16, 2013, Cleveland filed a petition against the purchaser of the
    property at the tax sale, Sinecure, to set aside the tax deed on the Property. Subsequently, on
    October 3, 2013, Sinecure filed a petition against Deutsche Bank to quiet and confirm its
    interest in the Property in a separate but related action. Sinecure advised Cleveland’s counsel
    that Sinecure and Deutsche Bank had reached a settlement in this separate action involving
    the Property. Sinecure admits that in exchange for reasonable payment, Sinecure agreed to
    “sign off” on any relief Deutsche Bank intended to seek to set aside the subject tax sales.
    ¶10.   Cleveland filed a petition on February 26, 2014, requesting the chancellor to quiet and
    confirm title in his name and to declare him the fee-simple owner of the Property against all
    necessary parties. On June 23, 2014, Deutsche Bank answered the petition to quiet and
    confirm and made a counter-claim for a declaratory judgment that its lien remained intact as
    to the subject property and that Cleveland must take the property, if at all, subject to
    Deutsche Bank’s lien.
    ¶11.   On June 30, 2014, Sinecure filed a motion to dismiss and sought a protective order
    in the cause. Sinecure argued that Cleveland lacked standing to challenge the tax sale based
    on his prior knowledge of the matured tax sale and the lack of the required “injury in fact.”
    Sinecure also requested that the trial court issue a protective order that discovery not be had
    as to Sinecure due to annoyance, undue burden, or expense, stating that any request for
    discovery was irrelevant based on the agreement between Sinecure and Deutsche Bank to set
    aside the tax sale.
    5
    ¶12.   Cleveland responded to the motion on July 7, 2014, and filed a memorandum of law
    in opposition. At the same time, Cleveland also filed a motion to compel due to Sinecure’s
    failure to answer discovery.
    ¶13.   Deutsche Bank moved for summary judgment on August 7, 2014. Deutsche Bank
    claimed that the 2009 tax sale was void as to Deutsche Bank because the chancery clerk
    failed to follow the statutorily prescribed procedures for giving and certifying notice to
    lienholders; specifically, the notice of the expiration of the redemption period to Deutsche
    Bank was untimely. Deutsche Bank argues that the redemption period in this case expired
    on August 30, 2012. The record reflects that the certified mail receipt for the notice sent to
    Deutsche Bank shows that the notice was mailed to Deutsche Bank on July 6, 2012, only
    fifty-five days prior to the expiration of the redemption period, rather than the statutorily
    mandated sixty days as set forth in Mississippi Code Annotated section 27-43-1. Thereafter,
    Cleveland filed his response, claiming that Deutsche Bank admitted that it did in fact receive
    notice of the tax sale and the redemption period. Cleveland cites to Deutsche Bank’s
    unanswered admissions as the basis for this assertion, claiming that unanswered admissions
    are deemed admitted. On August 14, 2014, the Prentiss County Chancery Clerk provided an
    affidavit stating: “From a review of my file, the dictates of . . . section 27-43-9 were followed
    and Deutsche Bank received sufficient notice under the law.”
    ¶14.   On September 2, 2014, the chancellor heard arguments for the motion to dismiss filed
    by Sinecure, the motion to compel filed by Cleveland, and the motion for summary judgment
    filed by Deutsche Bank. The chancellor issued a ruling on October 29, 2014, finding: (1)
    6
    Cleveland possessed standing to bring his lawsuits; (2) the tax sale was invalid as to the
    owner and therefore void ab initio; (3) Deutsche Bank’s lien remained intact; and (3) the
    motion to compel discovery against Sinecure was dismissed as moot.
    ¶15.   Cleveland filed this appeal, and Deutsche Bank also filed a cross-appeal.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶16.   When reviewing the grant or denial of a motion for summary judgment, this Court
    utilizes a de novo standard of review, and all evidence is examined in the light most
    favorable to the party against whom the motion was made. Partin v. N. Miss. Med. Ctr. Inc.,
    
    929 So. 2d 924
    , 928 (¶13) (Miss. Ct. App. 2005); see M.R.C.P. 56(c). A party is entitled to
    summary judgment if no genuine issue of material fact exists, “and the moving party is
    entitled to [a] judgment as a matter of law.” McMillan v. Rodriguez, 
    823 So. 2d 1173
    , 1177
    (¶9) (Miss. 2002) (citation omitted).
    ¶17.   We also acknowledge that we maintain “a limited review of a chancellor's findings
    of fact.” Rebuild Am. Inc. v. Norris, 
    64 So. 3d 499
    , 500 (¶7) (Miss. Ct. App. 2010). “We
    will not reverse the factual findings of the chancellor when supported by substantial evidence
    unless the Court can say that the findings are manifestly wrong, clearly erroneous, or amount
    to an abuse of discretion.” 
    Id. at 500-01
    (¶7).
    DISCUSSION
    ¶18.   Cleveland argues that the chancellor erred in finding that Deutsche Bank’s lien on the
    Property remained intact after the chancellor determined that notice to Lewis was defective.
    Cleveland maintains that Deutsche Bank failed to take any steps to protect or enforce its lien,
    7
    and as a result, the chancellor erred in finding that the lien was not extinguished.
    ¶19.   When providing notice of a tax sale to a landowner or lienor, Mississippi Code
    Annotated section 27-43-1 mandates the following:
    The clerk of the chancery court shall, within one hundred eighty (180) days
    and not less than sixty (60) days prior to the expiration of the time of
    redemption with respect to land sold, either to individuals or to the state, be
    required to issue notice to the record owner of the land sold as of 180 days
    prior to the expiration of the time of redemption[.]
    ¶20.   In addition, Mississippi Code Annotated “[s]ection 27-43-3 [(Supp. 2009)] requires
    redemption notice be given by personal service, by mail, and by publication in an appropriate
    newspaper.” Rebuild 
    Am., 64 So. 3d at 501
    (¶11) (citing DeWeese Nelson Realty Inc. v.
    Equity Servs. Co., 
    502 So. 2d 310
    , 312 (Miss. 1986)). “All three requirements must be met
    for the redemption notice to be complete and in accordance with the statute.” Id.; see also
    Tofino Holdings LLC v. Donnell & Sons LLC, 
    119 So. 3d 358
    , 360 (¶10) (Miss. Ct. App.
    2012). Section 27-43-3 specifically states the following:
    The clerk shall issue the notice to the sheriff of the county of the reputed
    owner's residence, if he is a resident of the State of Mississippi, and the sheriff
    shall be required to serve notice as follows:
    (a) Upon the reputed owner personally, if he can be found in the
    county after diligent search and inquiry, by handing him a true
    copy of the notice;
    (b) If the reputed owner cannot be found in the county after
    diligent search and inquiry, then by leaving a true copy of the
    notice at his usual place of abode with the spouse of the reputed
    owner or some other person who lives at his usual place of
    abode above the age of sixteen (16) years, and willing to receive
    the copy of the notice; or
    (c) If the reputed owner cannot be found after diligent search
    8
    and inquiry, and if no person above the age of sixteen (16) years
    who lives at his usual place of abode can be found at his usual
    place of abode who is willing to receive the copy of the notice,
    then by posting a true copy of the notice on a door of the reputed
    owner's usual place of abode.
    The sheriff shall make his return to the chancery clerk issuing the notice. The
    clerk shall also mail a copy of the notice to the reputed owner at his usual
    street address, if it can be ascertained after diligent search and inquiry, or to his
    post-office address if only that can be ascertained, and he shall note such
    action on the tax sales record. The clerk shall also be required to publish the
    name and address of the reputed owner of the property and the legal
    description of the property in a public newspaper of the county in which the
    land is located, or if no newspaper is published as such, then in a newspaper
    having a general circulation in the county. The publication shall be made at
    least forty-five (45) days prior to the expiration of the redemption period.
    We recognize that precedent requires the notice statutes to be strictly construed in favor of
    the landowners, and “[a]ny deviation from the statutorily mandated procedure renders the
    sale void.” Rebuild 
    Am., 64 So. 3d at 501
    (¶8); see also Brown v. Riley, 
    580 So. 2d 1234
    ,
    1237 (Miss. 1991); Moore v. Marathon Asset Mgmt. LLC, 
    973 So. 2d 1017
    , 1021 (¶14)
    (Miss. Ct. App. 2008) (citation omitted).2
    ¶21.   In its order partially granting summary judgment in favor of Deutsche Bank, the
    chancellor addressed the following: (1) Sinecure’s motion to dismiss Cleveland’s complaint
    against it; (2) Cleveland’s motion to compel Sinecure to respond to interrogatories and
    requests for production of documents; and (3) Deutsche Bank’s motion for summary
    judgment claiming that the tax sale was void as a result of improper notice. In so doing, the
    chancellor ruled that Cleveland indeed possessed standing to file the suit after finding that
    “it is sufficient in this instance that Cleveland obtained the interest of [Lewis], who was
    2
    See generally Carmadelle v. Custin, 
    208 So. 2d 51
    , 54-55 (Miss. 1968).
    9
    injured by the sale in dispute and would have been able to bring a suit to attack the resulting
    tax title.”
    ¶22.    In addressing the lack-of-notice claim, the chancellor cited section 27-43-3, which
    requires redemption notice be given by personal service, by mail, and by publication in an
    appropriate newspaper. The chancellor explained that all three notice requirements set forth
    in section 27-4-3 must be met for the redemption notice to be complete and in accordance
    with the statute. The chancellor, applying sections 27-4-1 and 27-4-3, held as follows:
    It is undisputed that the sheriff made his return on June 30, 2012, indicating
    he was unable to personally serve [Lewis], and noted on the return that the
    residence was “vacant.” Notice to [Lewis] was mailed by certified mail on
    June 22, 2012[,] to an address in Booneville[,] but was returned undelivered.
    All of the attempts to notify [Lewis] in Prentiss County were unsuccessful.
    Further, no affidavits were submitted which detail the clerk’s efforts to locate
    [Lewis]. It is undisputed that notice was not directed to [Lewis] in Tennessee.
    As a result, the chancellor held that “the tax deed is void because of a failure to comply with
    the statutory requirements in providing notice to [Lewis].”
    ¶23.    The chancellor then entered an order holding that notice of the tax sale was invalid
    as to Lewis, and the chancellor found the tax sale was therefore void ab initio. The
    chancellor also determined that the lien of Deutsche Bank against the subject realty was not
    extinguished for its lack of action to protect or enforce its lien in connection with the
    disputed tax sale, and that the motion to compel discovery against Sinecure was dismissed
    as moot. We now turn to review the evidence in the record herein supporting the
    chancellor’s findings regarding the tax sale.
    ¶24.    The record before us reflects that in 2009, Lewis failed to pay her property taxes, and
    10
    the Property was sold for the unpaid taxes on August 30, 2010, to Sinecure in the amount of
    $88.84. The record further reflects that although the Prentiss County Chancery Clerk
    attempted to notify Lewis of the prior sale and also the expiration of the time for redemption,
    no notice was actually provided to her. The record shows that the Prentiss County Chancery
    Clerk sent Lewis a certified letter advising her of the tax sale, and the letter was returned and
    stamped “return to sender, not deliverable as addressed, unable to forward.” The tax sale
    occurred on August 30, 2010, wherein Sinecure purchased the property. The Prentiss County
    Chancery Clerk issued a tax deed for the Property to Sinecure, and Sinecure recorded the
    deed on January 4, 2013.
    ¶25.   Regarding Cleveland’s argument that Deutsche Bank should be estopped from
    asserting its lien based on its failure to redeem the property after receiving proper notice, the
    chancellor, citing Tofino 
    Holdings, 119 So. 3d at 359
    (¶13), explained: “The general rule is
    that when there is a deficiency in notice to the record title holder, the tax sale is void and the
    tax deed should be set aside. The result is that the parties assume their positions [as] if the
    sale had not taken place.” Accordingly, the chancellor held that “even if all other interested
    persons had received timely notice of the sale or opportunity for redemption, the failure to
    provide the mandated notice to the owner invalidates the sale in its entirety as to all interested
    persons.”
    ¶26.   In Tofino 
    Holdings, 119 So. 3d at 361
    (¶13), this Court found no error in the
    chancellor’s decision to set aside a tax sale as void where “the chancery clerk failed to fully
    comply with the redemption notice requirements of sections 27-43-1 and 27-43-3.” See also
    11
    Rebuild 
    Am., 64 So. 3d at 502
    (¶¶14-17). After our review of the record and applicable law,
    we find no error in the chancellor’s determination that the tax sale is void in its entirety due
    to the chancery clerk’s failure to comply with the statutory requirements in providing notice
    to Lewis, the owner. When the owner fails to receive proper notice of a tax sale, the result
    is that “the parties are left where they [would have been]” if the sale had not taken place.
    Hammett v. Johnson, 
    624 So. 2d 58
    , 60 (Miss. 1993).
    ¶27.   Additionally, in SKL Investments Inc. v. American General Finance Inc., 
    22 So. 3d 1247
    , 1250 (¶10) (Miss. Ct. App. 2009), we held that “[i]t is clear that the failure to give
    proper notice to a lienholder renders that tax sale void as to that lienholder.” We thus
    conclude that Deutsche Bank’s lien remains unaffected by the tax sale. Jurisprudence clearly
    establishes that any deviation from the statutorily mandated procedures renders the sale void.
    See Hart v. Catoe, 
    390 So. 2d 1001
    , 1003 (Miss. 1980).
    ¶28.   Furthermore, we also find no merit in Cleveland’s argument asserting that Deutsche
    Bank should be equitably estopped from imposing its lien on the Property for failing to take
    any action to enforce the lien prior to the expiration of the redemption period. Upon review,
    we find no requirement that a lienholder under a recorded deed of trust is subject to equitable
    estoppel for merely delaying to exercise those rights. See Stribling Bros. Corp. v. Euclid
    Memphis Sales, 
    235 So. 2d 239
    , 243 (Miss. 1970) (“Since [the lender’s] lien was of record
    it had a right to remain silent.”); Davis v. Butler, 
    128 Miss. 847
    , 
    91 So. 279
    (1922).
    ¶29.   We next to turn to address Deutsche Bank’s cross-appeal claiming that the chancellor
    erred in failing to grant its motion for summary judgment on its counterclaim that the tax sale
    12
    is void as to Deutsche Bank due to improper notice. Deutsche Bank argues that the
    redemption period in this case expired on August 30, 2012. The record reflects that the
    certified-mail receipt for the notice sent to Deutsche Bank shows that the notice was mailed
    to Deutsche Bank on July 6, 2012, only fifty-five days prior to the expiration of the
    redemption period. As stated previously, the time mandated for notifying owners and lienors
    is “one hundred eighty days and not less than sixty days prior to the expiration of the time of
    redemption with respect to land sold.” Miss. Code Ann. § 27-43-1 (emphasis added); see
    also Miss. Code Ann. § 27-43-5 (chancery clerk possesses duty to provide notice of tax sale
    to lienholders). In reviewing the chancellor’s order, we find that the chancellor made no
    explicit findings regarding whether Deutsche Bank received proper statutory notice of the
    tax sale. However, the chancellor explained that “the court’s finding with regard to the
    invalidity of the sale obviates the need to address this issue.” The chancellor also stated that
    “the court finds that even if all other interested persons had received timely notice of the sale
    or opportunity for redemption, the failure to provide the mandated notice to the owner
    invalidates the sale in its entirety as to all persons.”3 At oral argument, Cleveland conceded
    that notice to both Lewis and Deutsche Bank was improper. We find no error in the
    chancellor’s determination that the tax sale was void ab initio based on the failure to provide
    3
    The supreme court has acknowledged the importance of prior notice and and the
    public policy regarding protecting landowners from loss by its sale for taxes. See 
    Brown, 580 So. 2d at 1237
    (“[T]he most important safeguard involving any person who stands to
    suffer from some official action is prior notice.”); 
    DeWeese, 502 So. 2d at 314
    ; see also
    
    Hart, 390 So. 2d at 1003
    (“The requirements of the statute as to the service and proof of
    service of the notice required to terminate an owner’s right to redeem from a tax sale [must]
    be strictly followed.”); 
    Carmadelle, 208 So. 2d at 54-55
    .
    13
    proper statutory notice to Lewis, and upon determining the tax sale void, we, like the
    chancellor, find no existing controversy regarding notice. We decline therefore to address
    this issue, finding it moot, and we decline to address the issue of whether Cleveland’s
    discovery requests to Sinecure were moot.4
    ¶30. THE JUDGMENT OF THE PRENTISS COUNTY CHANCERY COURT IS
    AFFIRMED. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO THE
    APPELLANT/CROSS-APPELLEE.
    LEE, C.J., IRVING, P.J., BARNES, ISHEE, FAIR AND GREENLEE, JJ.,
    CONCUR. GRIFFIS, P.J., DISSENTS WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION.
    JAMES AND WILSON, JJ., NOT PARTICIPATING.
    4
    Regarding the court’s duty “to decide actual controversies . . . and not to give
    opinions upon moot questions,” see Keeton v. Robinson, 
    144 Miss. 899
    , 
    110 So. 839
    , 839
    (1927).
    14