Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC v. SFR Investments Pool 1, LLC ( 2019 )


Menu:
  • 1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 2 DISTRICT OF NEVADA 3 4 Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, Case No.:2:17-cv-01757-JAD-VCF 5 Plaintiff 6 v. Order Granting Summary Judgment 7 SFR Investments Pool 1, LLC; and Sundance in Favor of Plaintiffon Federal at the Shadows Homeowners’ Association, Foreclosure Bar, Dismissing Remaining 8 Claims, and Closing Case Defendants 9 [ECF Nos. 56, 57] 10 ALL OTHER CLAIMS AND PARTIES 11 12 Nevada law holds that a properly conducted nonjudicial foreclosure sale by a 13 homeowners’ association to enforce a superpriority lien extinguishes the first deed of trust. But 14 when that deed of trust belongs to government-sponsored lender Freddie Mac, and the 15 foreclosure sale occurs while Freddie Macis under the conservatorship of the Federal Housing 16 Finance Agency (FHFA) and without the agency’s consent, federal law shields that security 17 interest from extinguishment. That shield is known as the Federal Foreclosure Bar. 18 Freddie Mac’s loan servicer,Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC,brings this quiet-title action to 19 determine the effect of a 2013nonjudicial foreclosure sale on the deed of trust securing the 20 mortgage on a home. Because Ocwen hasshown that the Federal Foreclosure Bar prevented that 21 sale from extinguishing the deed of trust,and that this suit is not time-barred, I grant summary 22 judgment in its favor on thequiet-title claim that is based on that theory. But because Ocwen’s 23 secondaryquiet-title theory—that Nevada’sstatutoryforeclosure scheme was unconstitutional— 1 fails as a matter of law, I grant the foreclosure-purchaser defendant’s motion for summary 2 judgment onthat claim and close this case. 3 Background 4 The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, better known as Freddie Mac, whichhas 5 been under the conservatorship of the FHFA since 2008, purchased the mortgage on the home 6 located at 5858 Hollingshed Street in North Las Vegas, Nevada, in 2007, along with the deed of 7 trust that was securing that mortgage.1 The deed of trust has been assigned several times to 8 various servicing agents as Freddie Mac’s nominees, and Ocwen is currently servicing the loan.2 9 The home is located in the Shadows common-interest community and subject to the Sundance at 10 the Shadows Homeowners’Association’s codes, covenants, and restrictions (CC&Rs), which 11 require the owners of property within this planned development to pay certain assessments.3 12 The Nevada Legislature gave homeowners associations (HOAs) a superpriorty lien 13 against residential property for certain delinquent assessments and established in Chapter 116 of 14 the Nevada Revised Statutes a non-judicial foreclosure procedure for HOAs to enforce that lien.4 15 When the owners of this homefell behind on assessments,the Sundance at the Shadows HOA 16 sold it toSFR Investments Pool 1, LLC in such a nonjudicial foreclosure sale on August 2, 17 2013.5 The sale recorded five days later.6 18 19 1 ECF No. 56-1 at 4, ¶ 5(h). 20 2 Id. at ¶ 5(k). 21 3 ECF No. 5-3 at 23 (planned-unit-development rider). 22 4 Nev. Rev. Stat. § 116.3116; SFR Invs.Pool 1 v. U.S. Bank, 334 P.3d 408, 409 (Nev. 2014). 5 ECF No. 5-10 (Notice of Default and Election to Sell); ECF No. 5-11 (Notice of Trustee’s 23 Sale). I take judicial notice of all recorded documents in the record. 6 ECF No. 5-12 at 2. 1 As the Nevada Supreme Court held in SFR Investments Pool 1 v. U.S. Bank in 2014, 2 because NRS 116.3116(2) gives an HOA “a true superpriority lien, proper foreclosure of” that 3 lien under the non-judicial foreclosure process created by NRS Chapters 107 and 116 “will 4 extinguish a first deed of trust.”7 But the Federal Foreclosure Bar in 12 U.S.C. § 4617(j)(3) 5 creates an exception to that rule.8 This safeguard is contained in the Housing and Economic 6 Recovery Act (HERA, codified at 12 U.S.C. §4511 et seq.), which went into effect in 2008, 7 established the FHFA, and placed Freddie Macunder that agency’s conservatorship.9 Under 8 HERA’s Federal Foreclosure Bar, when Freddie Macis the beneficiary of the deed of trust at the 9 time of the foreclosure sale and Freddie Macis under the conservatorship of the FHFA, the deed 10 of trust is not extinguished and instead survives the sale unless the agency affirmatively 11 relinquishedthat interest.10 12 Ocwen filed this action11 against the foreclosure-sale buyerand the HOA, asserting quiet- 13 title claims based on two independent theories: (1) the Federal Foreclosure Bar prevented the 14 foreclosure sale from extinguishing the deed of trust, and (2) the sale did not extinguish the deed 15 of trust because Nevada’s HOA foreclosure scheme was unconstitutional as a Ninth Circuit panel 16 17 18 7 SFR, 334 P.3d at 419. 8 See Berezovsky v. Moniz, 869 F.3d 923, 927n.1(9th Cir. 2017). 19 9 Berezovsky, 869F.3d at 925. 20 10 Id. at 933; Saticoy Bay LLC Series 9641 Christine View v. Fed. Nat’l Mortg. Ass’n, 417 P.3d 363, 368 (Nev. 2018) (“Because Fannie Mae was under the FHFA’s conservatorship at the time 21 of the homeowners’ association foreclosure sale, the Federal Foreclosure Bar protected the deed of trust from extinguishment.”). 22 11 Both the Nevada Supreme Court and the Ninth Circuit have held that loan servicers have standing to assert the Federal Foreclosure Bar. See Nationstar Mortg., LLC v. SFR Invs.Pool 1, 23 LLC, 396 P.3d 754, 758 (Nev. 2017); Bank of Am., N.A. v. Arlington W. Twilight Homeowners Ass’n, 920 F.3d 620, 624 (9th Cir. Apr. 3, 2019). 1 held in Bourne Valley Court Trust v. Wells Fargo Bank.12 As I found when denying the 2 defendants’ motions to dismiss last year, these claims are the typeof quiet-title claim recognized 3 by the Nevada Supreme Court in Shadow Wood Homeowners Association, Inc. v. New York 4 Community Bancorp—actions “seek[ing] to quiet title by invoking the court’s inherent equitable 5 jurisdiction to settle title disputes.”13 The resolution of such a claim is part of “[t]he long- 6 standing and broad inherent power of a court to sit in equity and quiet title, including setting 7 aside a foreclosure sale if the circumstances support” it.14 8 SFR crossclaims against Ocwen, asserting claims entitled “declaratory relief/quiet title” 9 and “preliminary and permanent injunction.”15 Because injunctive relief is a remedy and not an 10 independent cause of action, I find that SFR’s claims are properly construed as a single equitable 11 claim for quiet title of the same sort as Ocwen’s. 12 Ocwen moves for summary judgment,contending that the Federal Foreclosure Bar saved 13 Freddie Mac’s deed of trust on this property from extinguishment.16 SFR opposes thatmotion 14 and moves for summary judgment in its own favor, arguingthat Ocwen’s claims are time-barred, 15 that Freddie Mac’s interest is unenforceable because it was not recorded, that Ocwenhas not 16 17 12 ECF No. 8(Bourne Valley Court Trust v. Wells Fargo Bank, 832 F.3d 1154 (9th Cir. 2016)). I 18 have already held that, although each of these theories spans multiple claims—nested under quiet title, declaratory relief, and injunctive relief captions—because the majority of these “claims” are 19 more appropriately construed as requests for remedies, I construe Ocwen’s amended complaint to contain just two quiet-title claims: one based on the Federal Foreclosure Bar, and the other 20 based on Bourne Valley. SeeECF No. 35 at 6–7. 13 Shadow Wood Homeowners Ass’n, Inc. v. New York Cmty.Bancorp,366 P.3d 1105, 1110– 21 1111 (Nev. 2016). 22 14 Id. at 1112; see also ECF No. 35 (Order Denying Motions to Dismiss and for Leave to Amend). 23 15 ECF No. 36. 16 ECF No. 56. 1 sufficiently proventhat Freddie Mac owns the deed of trust and that Ocwen has a servicing 2 relationship with it, and that the claims founded ondue process fail because Bourne Valley is no 3 longer good law.17 4 Discussion 5 A. Standards for crossmotions for summary judgment 6 The principal purpose of the summary-judgment procedure is to isolate and dispose of 7 factually unsupported claims or defenses.18 The moving party bears the initial responsibility of 8 presenting the basis for its motion and identifying the portions of the record or affidavits that 9 demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.19 If the moving party satisfies its 10 burden with a properly supported motion, the burden then shifts to the opposing party to present 11 specific facts that show a genuine issue of material fact for trial.20 12 Who bears the burden of proof on the factual issue in question is critical. When the party 13 moving for summary judgment would bear the burden of proof at trial (typically the plaintiff), “it 14 must come forward with evidence [that] would entitle it to a directed verdict if the evidence went 15 uncontroverted attrial.”21 Once the moving party establishes the absence of a genuine issue of 16 fact on each issue material to its case, “the burden then moves to the opposing party, who must 17 18 19 17 ECF Nos. 57, 61. 20 18 Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323–24 (1986). 21 19 Celotex, 477 U.S. at 323; Devereaux v. Abbey, 263 F.3d 1070, 1076 (9th Cir. 2001) (en banc). 20 Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e); Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248(1986); Auvil v. CBS 22 60 Minutes, 67 F.3d 816, 819 (9th Cir. 1995). 21 C.A.R. Transp. Brokerage Co. v. Darden Restaurants, Inc., 213 F.3d 474, 480 (9th Cir. 2000) 23 (quoting Houghton v. South, 965 F.2d 1532, 1536 (9th Cir.1992) (citation and quotations omitted)). 1 present significant probative evidence tending to support its claim or defense.”22 When instead 2 the opposing party would have the burden of proof on a dispositive issue at trial, the moving 3 party (typically the defendant) doesn’t have to produce evidence to negate the opponent’s claim; 4 it merely has to point out the evidence that shows an absence of a genuine material factual 5 issue.23 The movant need only defeat one element of the claim to garner summary judgment on 6 it because “a complete failure of proof concerning an essential element of the nonmoving party’s 7 case necessarily renders all other facts immaterial.”24 8 B. Ocwen’s claims are timely. 9 Last year, in response to SFR’s motion to dismiss, I held that Ocwen’s claims are 10 governed by the four-year statute of limitations in Nevada’s catch-all statute, NRS 11.220. And 11 because those claims were filed just short of that four-year deadline, they are timely.25 SFR 12 returns to its timeliness challenge, arguing that Ocwen’s quiet-title claims are subject to the 13 three-year deadline for tort claims under HERA and that I should reconsider and reverse my 14 prior ruling based on its “additional reasoning.”26 15 Section 4617(b)(12) of HERA, entitled “Statute of limitations for actions brought by 16 conservator or receiver,” provides “the applicable statute of limitations with regard to any action 17 brought by the Agency as conservator or receiver” but identifies only two categories of claims: 18 19 20 22 Intel Corp. v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co., 952 F.2d 1551, 1558 (9th Cir.1991)(citation omitted). 21 23 See, e.g., Lujan v. National Wildlife Fed’n, 497 U.S. 871, 885 (1990); Celotex, 477 U.S. at 323–24. 22 24 Celotex, 477 U.S. at 322. 23 25 ECF No. 35 26 ECF No. 57 at 9–13. 1 contract and tort.27 The limitations period for “any contract claim” is the longer of six years or 2 “the period applicable under State law”; and for “any tort claim,” thedeadline is the longer of 3 three years or any applicable state-law period.28 4 It would appear at first blush that HERA’s limitations periods couldnot apply here 5 because Ocwen’s claims are neither tort nor contract claims—they’re equitable quiet-title claims. 6 But courts interpreting HERA have held that § 4617(b)(12) applies to any claim brought by the 7 FHFA as conservator “and supplants any other time limitations that otherwise might have 8 applied.”29 So, as I explained in FHFAv. LN Management LLC, Series 2937 Barboursville, the 9 courts must perform “the square-peg-in-round-hole task of sorting []equitable quiet-title claims 10 into the contract or tort bucket” when HERA’s limitations periods apply. 11 Assuming without deciding30 that HERA’s limitations periods would apply to Ocwen’s 12 claims, theywould still be timely. SFR argues that Ocwen’s claims can’t be deemed contract- 13 based, so they must fall into the tort bucket and would be subject to HERA’s three-year deadline, 14 making them untimely. But § 4617(b)(12)(A)(ii) says that tort claims are governed by “the 15 longer of” three years or “the period applicable under State law.” As I have already held that the 16 period applicable under state law is four years,31 Ocwen would still get the benefit of NRS 17 11.220’s longer four-year window, making its claims timely even if HERA’s statutes of 18 limitations apply. 19 20 27 12 U.S.C. §4617(b)(12)(A). 28 Id. 21 29 SeeFed. Hous. Fin. Agency v. LN Mgmt. LLC, Series 2937 Barboursville, 369 F. Supp. 3d 22 1101, 1108–09 (D. Nev. March 11, 2019) (the analysis from which I incorporate herein). 30 No court has yet held that HERA’s statutes of limitations apply to loan servicers, and the 23 statute expressly states that these periods govern claims brought by the Agency. 31 ECF No. 35 at 8–10. 1 SFR asks me to reconsider my conclusion that these claims are subject to that four-year 2 statute,adding to its prior timeliness challenge that, because these claims would not exist but for 3 NRS 116’s foreclosure provisions, they are subject to the three-year limitations period in NRS 4 11.190(3)(a).32 That statute governs actions “upon a liability created by statute, other than a 5 penalty or forfeiture.”33 Ocwen’s claim, however,is not an action upon a liability created by 6 statute; it is an equitable action to determine adverse interests in real property, as codified in 7 NRS 40.010.34 Section 40.010 does not create liability, and a party cannot impose liability upon 8 another party through that statute. Rather, the statute merely allows for a proceeding to 9 determine adverse claims to property. Even if I interpret Ocwen’s quiet-title claims as ones 10 under NRS 116.3116, that still would not trigger NRS 11.090(3)(a) because Ocwendoes not 11 seek to impose liability under that statute.35 I thus maintain that Ocwen’s claims are governed 12 by the four-year statute of limitations in NRS 11.220, and they are timely. 13 C. The Federal Foreclosure Bar saved the deed of trust from extinguishment. 14 With the timeliness of Ocwen’s claims now twice established, I turn to its motion and 15 consider whether Ocwen has shownthat it is entitled to summary judgment on its quiet-title 16 17 32 ECF No. 57 at 10–13. SFR also suggests that I should not assume there is no limitations 18 period for these claims and instead borrow the period from other foreclosure-related provisions. Id. at 12–13. I did not merely assume that no period applies—I reached that conclusion after a 19 detailed analysis. SeeECF No. 35. And SFR merely states without providing persuasive reasoning that other provisions would be more applicable. SFR has not persuaded me that I 20 should reconsider—let alone retreat from—my original holding. 21 33 Nev. Rev. Stat. § 11.190(3)(a). 34 SeeECF No. 35 at supra at p.5; Shadow WoodHOA, 366 P.3d at 1111 (recounting that “NRS 22 40.010 essentially codified the court’s existing equity jurisprudence” (comma omitted)). 35 To the extent that Ocwen argues that its claims are governed by five-year statutes of limitation, 23 ECF No. 63 at 3–8, Ialready rejected that argument, seeECF No. 35 at 8–10, and Ocwen has not persuaded me to reconsider. 1 claim based on the Federal Foreclosure Bar.36 In Berezovsky v. Moniz, the Ninth Circuit held 2 that “the Federal Foreclosure Bar supersedes the Nevada superpriority lien provision,”37 3 preventing a non-judicial foreclosure sale under NRS Chapter 116 from extinguishing a Freddie 4 Macdeed of trust while this lender is under FHFA conservatorship. So, the question is whether 5 Ocwenhas shown that a Freddie Macinterest in this property was protected from the legal effect 6 of NRS 116.3116 by the Federal Foreclosure Bar. The record supports that conclusion,leaving 7 no genuine issueof material fact. 8 There is no dispute that Freddie Mac was under the FHFA’s conservatorship in 2013, nor 9 is there any legitimate dispute that the agency did not consent to wiping out Freddie Mac’s deed 10 of trust through this foreclosure.38 SFR does challenge, however, whether Ocwenhas 11 established that the deed of trust belonged to Freddie Macat the time of the foreclosure saleand 12 that Ocwen is the servicer. Ocwenoffers the affidavit of Freddie Mac’s Loss Mitigation Senior, 13 Jeffrey K. Jenkins,and corroborating documents to show that Freddie Machad a valid and 14 enforceable deed of trust on the property at the time of thesale and that Ocwen is its loan 15 servicer now and since August 2013.39 Those documents include printouts of computer 16 36 Although Ocwen does not state that its motion seeks only a partial judgment on its Federal 17 Foreclosure Bar-based claim, I presume that is its intention because the motion is silent as to Ocwen’s Bourne Valley based due-process theory. See generally ECF No. 56. 18 37 Berezovsky, 869 F.3d at 931. 19 38 Indeed, the FHFA issueda statement dated April 21, 2015,“confirm[ing] that it has not consented, and will not consent in the future, to the foreclosure or other extinguishment of any 20 Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac lien or other property interest in connection with HOA foreclosures of super-priority liens.” ECF No. 56-3 at 2; Federal Housing Finance Agency, Statement on 21 HOA Super-Priority Lien Foreclosures (Apr. 21, 2015), https://www.fhfa.gov/Media/ PublicAffairs/Pages/Statement-on-HOA-Super-Priority-LienForeclosures.aspx(last visited 22 8/22/19). 39 SeeECF No. 56-1. SFR’s assertionthat Jenkins and the documents were not disclosed is 23 belied by Ocwen’s second supplemental disclosures served on April 27, 2018. ECF No. 64-1, with eight months left in the discovery period. See ECF No. 55. 1 records,40 which Jenkins explains in detail, and relevant portions of Freddie Mac’s publicly 2 available Servicer Guide.41 3 I find that Jenkins’s declaration sufficiently establishes his familiarity with Freddie Mac’s 4 recordkeeping system and the authenticity of the printouts to lay the foundation required by 5 Federal Rule of Evidence 902(11). And it establishes—with no contradictory evidence from 6 SFR—that the security interest on this property belonged to Freddie Macat the time of the 2013 7 foreclosure sale, as it does today. Although the deed of trust is now held in Ocwen’s name,42 8 Freddie Mac’s documents (including theServicer Guide) also showthat Ocwenis merely its 9 agent for loan-servicing purposes and that the beneficial interest belongs to Freddie Mac.43 The 10 Nevada Supreme Court found a similar record sufficient to support summary judgment in favor 11 of Freddie Mac based on the Federal Foreclosure Barjust last month in Daisy Trust v. Wells 12 Fargo Bank, N.A.44 13 Contrary to SFR’s suggestion, Ocwen need not produce a copy of the actual loan- 14 servicing agreement. As the en banc Nevada Supreme Court held in Daisy Trust, declarations 15 confirming the servicer’s status, “combined with authorizations in the Guide that aregenerally 16 17 40 SFR argues that these printouts are “irrelevant” because they were printed recently and thus tell nothing about the time period surrounding the foreclosure sale. These documents, as 18 explained by Jenkins,contain information relevant tothe time periods at issue here, so they are relevant. 19 41 Id. at 9–164. 20 42 ECF No. 5-8 at 2. 43 See also Berezovsky, 869 F.3d at 932 (recognizing that “Nevada law thus recognizes that, in an 21 agency relationship, a note owner remains a secured creditor with a property interest in the collateral even if the recorded deed of trust names only the owner’s agent,” and concluding that 22 “[a]lthough the recorded deed of trust here omitted Freddie Mac’s name, Freddie Mac’s property interest is valid and enforceable under Nevada law”). 23 44 Daisy Trust v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.,__ P.3d __, 2019 WL 3366241, *5 (Nev. July 25, 2019). 1 applicable to Freddie Mac’s loan servicers . . . [a]re sufficient to show that” Ocwen is “in fact 2 Freddie Mac’s loan servicer with authority to assert the Federal Foreclosure Bar on Freddie 3 Mac’s behalf.”45 Nor must Ocwenprovide “the original,wet-ink signature promissory note.”46 4 “Producing the actual note or having” Jenkins attest that he “inspected the note would not help 5 establish when Freddie Mac obtained ownership of the loan or that it retained such ownership as 6 of the date of the foreclosure sale, as there is no legal requirement that an endorsement on a 7 promissory note be dated.”47 Ocwen satisfied its burdens of proof and production on this point 8 with the computer records and Jenkins’s declaration explaining them. 9 SFR’s additional argument that “to assert” the Federal Foreclosure Bar against SFR, “the 10 deed of trust must be recorded in Freddie’s name” was also expressly rejected in Daisy Trust. 11 Like SFR, the foreclosure-sale purchaser in Daisy Trust argued “that Nevada’s recording statutes 12 required Freddie Mac to record its interest in the loan.”48 But the Court disagreed. It reasoned 13 that, although the recording statutes currently require deed-of-trust assignments to be recorded, 14 the version in effect in 2007 when Freddie Mac acquired this one was permissive, not 15 mandatory, as it stated only that such an assignment “may be recorded.”49 Thus, the Court held, 16 “Nevada’s recording statutes did not require Freddie Mac to publicly record its ownership 17 interest as a prerequisite for establishing that interest.”50 Freddie Mac acquired the instant deed 18 of trust in 2007, just like the one in Daisy Trust, so it was not required to record its interest. 19 20 45 Id. at *4. 21 46 ECF No. 61 at 3. 47 Daisy Trust,2019 WL 3366241, *4. 22 48 Id. at *3 23 49 Id. 50 Id. 1 SFR’s contentionthat the sale is “presumed valid” against Freddie Macby operation of 2 NRS 116.3116651 fails under the Nevada Supreme Court’s holding in Shadow Wood. It is true 3 that NRS 116.31166 states thatcertain“recitals in a deed. . . are conclusive proof of the matters 4 recited.”52 But in Shadow Wood, the Court explained that “the recitals made conclusive by 5 operation of NRS 116.31166 implicate compliance only with the statutory prerequisites to 6 foreclosure”53 like timely mailing, posting, and recording of notices of sale. Nothing in NRS 7 116.31166 addresses the Federal Foreclosure Bar; if it did, it would likely be preempted just as 8 NRS 116.3116 is. 9 The remainder of SFR’s arguments against the application of the Federal Foreclosure Bar 10 require me to ignore or pervert the holding of Berezovsky, which I decline to do. I conclude that 11 Berezovsky provides the applicable legal principles for Ocwen’s Federal ForeclosureBar theory, 12 that I am bound by those principles, and that Ocwenhas shown through evidence not subject to 13 genuine dispute that it is entitled to summary judgment on its quiet-title claim based on this 14 theory. So, I grant summary judgment in favor of Ocwenonits Federal Foreclosure Bar claim 15 and declare that 12 U.S.C. § 4617(j)(3) prevented the 2013foreclosure sale from extinguishing 16 Freddie Mac’s deed of trust. 17 D. SFRis entitled to summary judgment on Ocwen’s Bourne Valley claim. 18 SFR has demonstrated that Freddie Mac’s otherquiet-title theory—that the statutory 19 foreclosure scheme was unconstitutional—fails as a matter of law. SFR pleads this theorybased 20 onaNinth Circuit panel’s 2016 ruling in Bourne Valley Court Trust v. Wells Fargo Bank that the 21 22 51 ECF No. 57at 17–20. 23 52 Nev. Rev. Stat. § 116.31166. 53 Shadow Wood, 366 P.3d at 1112. 1 version of Chapter 116 under which this foreclosure sale was conducted “facially violated 2 mortgage lenders’ constitutional due process rights.”54 But Bourne Valley assumed an 3 interpretation of Chapter 116 that the Nevada Supreme Court has since rejected,55 and the Ninth 4 Circuit has expressly acknowledged that Bourne Valley is no longer good law.56 Ocwen’s claim 5 based on this due-process-violation theory thus fails as a matter of law, and Chapter 116 as it 6 existed at the time of this foreclosure sale did not violate Freddie Mac or Ocwen’s due process 7 rights. Ithus grant SFR’s motion for summary judgment in its favor on this second quiet-title 8 claim and dismiss that claim. But because I am declaring thatthe deed of trust was not 9 extinguishedduring the foreclosure salebased on the Federal Foreclosure Bar, the net result is 10 that Ocwen obtains the declaratory relief it seeks despite the failure of its due-process theory. 11 Conclusion 12 IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED thatOcwen Loan Servicing, LLC’s Motion for 13 Summary Judgment [ECF No. 56] is GRANTED. Summary judgment is entered in favor of 14 Ocwen on its Federal Foreclosure Bar-based quiet-title claims and on SFR’s counterclaims. 15 Because 12 U.S.C. § 4617(j)(3) prevented the extinguishment of the deed of trust during the 16 2013 HOA foreclosure sale, Ocwen is entitled to a declaration that SFR took the property subject 17 to that interest. 18 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that SFR Investments Pool 1, LLC’s Motion for Summary 19 Judgment [ECF No. 57] is GRANTED in part: Ocwen’s remaining claims are DISMISSED. 20 21 22 54 ECF No. 5at ¶ 6(quotingBourne Valley, 832 F.3d at 1160). 23 55 SFR Invs.Pool 1, LLC v. Bank of New York Mellon, 422 P.3d 1248, 1253 (Nev. 2018). 56 Arlington W. Twilight Homeowners Ass’n, 920 F.3d at 624. ] And with good cause appearing and no reason to delay, IT IS FURTHER ORDERED 2|| that the Clerk of Court is directed to ENTER FINAL JUDGMENT in favor of Ocwen, 3] DECLARING that 4 the deed of trust for the property located at 5858 Hollingshed Court, North Las Vegas, Nevada 89086, recorded as Instrument 5 # 20050927-002361 in the real property records of Clark County, Nevada, on 9/27/05 was not extinguished by the 8/2/13 foreclosure 6 sale, so foreclosure-sale purchaser SFR Investments Pool 1, LLC , took the property subject to the deed of trust CLOSE THIS CASE. 9 Dated: August 25, 2019 ° US. District JudgNen nifer A.J orsey 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 14

Document Info

Docket Number: 2:17-cv-01757

Filed Date: 8/26/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/25/2024