Nationstar Mortg. v. Thomson ( 2014 )


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  • Nationstar Mortg. v. Thomson, No. 326-8-11 Bncv (Wesley, J., Aug. 11, 2014).
    [The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the
    accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.]
    STATE OF VERMONT
    SUPERIOR COURT                                                                                                  CIVIL DIVISION
    Bennington Unit                                                                                       Docket No. 326-8-11 Bncv
    Nationstar Mortgage vs. Thomson et al
    ENTRY REGARDING MOTION
    Title:                Motion Amended Motion to Vacate Default J.O. (Motion 12)
    Filer:                Peter Thomson
    Attorney:             Christopher M. Rundle
    Filed Date:           July 7, 2014
    Response filed on 07/28/2014 by Attorney David Edwards for Plaintiff Nationstar Mortgage
    Memo in Oppo.
    Response filed on 07/28/2014 by Attorney Christopher M. Rundle for Defendant Karen O'Neill-
    Thomson
    Opinion & Order
    Granting Defendants’ Amended Motion to Vacate
    Background
    On August 31, 2011, Plaintiff sued Defendants to foreclose on property in Landgrove,
    Vermont. Plaintiff filed a motion for alternative service on January 13, 2012. Plaintiff indicated
    the sheriff unsuccessfully attempted to serve Defendants at the property. The sheriff heard
    from a neighbor that Defendants worked in the Boston area. Plaintiff stated: “After an
    exhaustive search, an alternate address for service cannot be found.” The Court granted
    Plaintiff’s motion on January 26, 2012. On May 15, 2012, after no further indication that service
    had been made, the Court notified Plaintiff that Plaintiff had thirty days to show proof of proper
    service or face dismissal. On July 16, 2012, Plaintiff filed an affidavit of service by publication.
    The affidavit contained copies of the publication notice from the Manchester Journal. The
    publication resembled a summons but was not a court order. Plaintiff did not mail a copy of the
    notice to Defendants’ address at the property.
    After Plaintiff had been granted an enlargement of time to seek default judgment, but
    then failed to file a motion for default prior to the extended deadline, the Court dismissed this
    case on January 23, 2013. Upon Plaintiff’s motion for relief from dismissal, the Court vacated
    its dismissal on February 25, 2013. The Court then granted Plaintiff’s motion, and issued a
    default judgment on July 2, 2013. The Court issued a judgment of foreclosure by judicial sale on
    September 17, 2013. After receiving an emergency motion to stay, the Court stayed a sale of
    the property on May 19, 2014. Defendants moved to vacate the default and filed an amended
    motion to vacate on July 7, 2014.
    According to the amended motion to vacate, Defendants did not receive proper service,
    because Plaintiffs had developed, or should have developed, information concerning
    Defendants whereabouts that made it improper for continued reliance on the order for service
    by publication. Defendant M. Peter Thomson owns New England County Foods, which has
    offices in Manchester, VT and Cambridge, MA. Peter Thomson’s contact information is
    available on New England County Food’s website, through its Facebook page, and on
    Amazon.com. Furthermore, Attorney William Dakin contacted Plaintiff on behalf of Defendants
    during the early stages of this proceeding, after the motion for service by publication had been
    granted but before Plaintiff’s attempt at publication. Defendants maintain they did not defend
    against this claim because they believed the Court had dismissed the case. Defendants formed
    this belief after Defendants consulted with Plaintiff through counsel in an attempt to work out
    the foreclosure dispute, which was ultimately unsuccessful. Through the resulting negotiations,
    Defendants received different information about the amount of money they owed to Plaintiff.
    During this period, a paralegal at the office of Attorney Dakin contacted the Court which
    resulted in the mistaken belief that the Court dismissed this case on May 12, 2012. Defendants
    now argue that they have a meritorious defense because Plaintiffs did not provide them with
    information regarding the amount due and the acceleration of their debt. Further, Defendants
    urge that equity requires that, at minimum, the six month period of redemption must be
    restored.
    The Court held a hearing on the motion to vacate on July 10, 2014. Attorney David
    Edwards represented Plaintiff and Attorney Christopher Rundle represented Defendants. At
    the hearing, Attorney Edwards conceded another attorney at his firm, Amber Doucette, never
    mailed a copy of the order for publication to Defendants at their last known address, as
    required by V.R.C.P. 4(g)(2). Attorney Christopher Rundle further argued that service by
    publication became improper once Plaintiff had been in talks with Defendants through Attorney
    Dakin to attempt to work out the issues raised by the foreclosure complaint, and after Plaintiff
    had previously represented to the Court that Plaintiff could not find Defendants. The Court
    questioned why neither Attorney Edwards nor Attorney Doucette informed the Court that
    Plaintiff had developed additional information about Defendants, including the fact of their
    legal representation, while still purporting to rely on the prior representations made in support
    of the motion for service by publication as to Plaintiff’s inability to locate Defendants for
    sheriff’s service. Attorney Edwards argued that providing the Court with such additional
    information would have violated his duty to zealously advocate for his client. Furthermore, he
    argued that Defendants should be entitled to no relief because they knew of the proceedings
    and should not be excused from having filed a responsive pleading based on the mistaken
    assumption that the proceedings had been dismissed.
    Following the hearing, the Court granted the parties additional time to file supplemental
    briefs. On July 28, 2014, both parties filed additional briefs. Plaintiff attached four notices of
    acceleration to show Defendants received proper notice of the acceleration and received time
    to cure the default. Defendants indicated they cured the default on several occasions and the
    letters Plaintiff submitted to the Court are incomplete and misleading. Defendants also
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    attached copies of several checks that suggest they cured the default on multiple occasions.
    The parties also filed supplemental arguments about attorney’s fees on August 4 and August 5.
    Discussion
    The Court must decide whether to vacate the foreclosure judgment due to insufficient
    service. V.R.C.P. 4(d) prefers a plaintiff to personally serve a summons on a defendant within
    Vermont. Under some circumstances, a plaintiff may serve a defendant personally out of state
    or by mail. See V.R.C.P. 4(e), (f). As a last resort, the Court can allow service by publication. See
    V.R.C.P. 4(g). The plaintiff must file a motion indicating the plaintiff cannot personally serve the
    defendant. See V.R.C.P. 4(g)(1). After the Court grants a motion allowing for service by
    publication, a plaintiff must submit a proposed order for service by publication. See V.R.C.P.
    4(g)(2). The order for service by publication must direct the order itself will be published,
    describe the action, the place of the action, and the summons. 
    Id. Further, the
    order must
    direct the plaintiff to mail a copy of the order to the defendant at a last known address 
    Id. The form
    of publication notice was defective in this case. See 
    id. Although the
    Court
    granted Plaintiff’s motion for service by publication, Plaintiff never sought or obtained the
    order for service by publication required by Rule 4(g)(2). Instead, Plaintiff created something
    that resembles a summons and placed that in the Manchester Journal. See 
    id. The summons
    published was not signed by the Court. Additionally, Plaintiff did not mail a copy of the
    summons to Defendants at the mailing address for the property. See 
    id. These defects
    alone
    justify the conclusion that the judgment must be vacated because the invalid form of service
    deprived Defendants of due process.
    The facts of this case resemble those in Brady v. Brauer, ``48 Vt. 40, 41–42 (1987), and
    the Brady holding controls the outcome here. In Brady, a defendant sought to reopen a case in
    which judgment by default had been granted following service by publication. 
    Id. at 41.
    The
    defendant did not receive actual notice despite the trial court’s allowance of publication notice
    in a Windsor county newspaper. 
    Id. at 41–42.
    The plaintiff attempted to serve the defendant at
    the former Vermont business and in Florida, but the mail was returned. 
    Id. The defendant
    resided in Massachusetts. 
    Id. at 42.
    After the trial court denied the defendant’s motion to
    vacate the judgment, the Vermont Supreme Court reversed. Although the trial court has broad
    discretion as to vacating judgments pursuant to V.R.C.P. 60(b) motions, the exercise of
    discretion is limited by due process considerations. See 
    id. at 44.
    Plaintiff must meet the burden
    of the service requirements in V.R.C.P. 4(d), (e). 
    Id. Service must
    be more than a gesture and
    notice in a local newspaper under the circumstances was not sufficient to make it likely that an
    out-of-state defendant would receive actual notice. 
    Id. at 44–45.
    The Court therefore held the
    trial court should have allowed the defendant to reopen and present defenses. See 
    id. at 47.
    Brady demands the Court vacate the foreclosure judgment. Plaintiff retains the burden
    of meeting service requirements under V.R.C.P. 4. Here, Plaintiff ignored many of the
    requirements of V.R.C.P. 4(g). Considering that service by publication is a method of last resort
    that often does not give actual notice to defendants, the defects cannot be deemed trivial or
    harmless See 
    Brady, 148 Vt. at 44
    –47. Moreover, Plaintiff was in contact with Defendants after
    Plaintiff moved for service by publication and before it attempted to perfect such service.
    Plaintiff’s counsel knew that Attorney Dakin had represented Defendants in this matter. Despite
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    Attorney Doucette’s earlier assurances to the Court that she conducted an “exhaustive search,”
    Plaintiff subsequently developed additional information that easily should have made service
    possible by one of the methods under Rule 4 more reliably likely to guarantee actual notice. It
    is doubtful that the default judgment could have been sustained even had Plaintiff already
    perfected service by publication before being contacted by Attorney Dakin. Since publication
    had not yet occurred, it is hard for the Court to fathom any basis for Plaintiff’s continued
    reliance on the Court’s entry granting publication, especially as it was made without informing
    the Court that since making its representations as to an unavailing diligent search for
    Defendants whereabouts, Plaintiff had been in contact with Defendants’ attorney to discuss
    possible resolution of the case. For Plaintiff to proceed thereafter to certify service by
    publication and seek default judgment, never giving notice to Defendant through known
    counsel of such request for relief, strikes very close to willfully misleading the Court. See,
    V.R.C.P.11(b).1 Whether or not it was reasonable for Defendant to assume that the case had
    been dismissed is irrelevant to the Court reasoning, since Plaintiff bears the burden of making
    adequate service, which never occurred here.
    Considering the gravity of the misuse of service by publication here, Defendant’s claim
    of meritorious defenses need be little more than articulable. See LaFrance Architect v. Point
    Five Dev. South Burlington, LLC, 
    2013 VT 115
    , ¶¶ 15–17. Indeed, the Court concludes that the
    expiration of the period of redemption alone, which occurred before Defendants had any actual
    notice of the foreclosure decree, would require revision of the judgment. In addition, however,
    the Court concludes that Defendants have raised a substantial issue as to the validity of
    Plaintiff’s notice of acceleration, which requires the opportunity for discovery and pre-trial
    proceedings.
    Finally, the Court rejects Defendants’ requests for attorney’s fees. Defendants have not
    pled a violation under V.R.C.P. 11, which requires a separate motion for sanctions which
    satisfies the exacting requirements of V.R.C.P. 11(c). See Agency of Nat. Res. V. Lyndonville Sav.
    Bank & Trust. Co., 
    174 Vt. 498
    , 499–500 (2002) (mem.). The Court also does not find
    Defendants have made the required of showing of bad faith to justify attorney’s fees. The
    American Rule as to attorney’s fees, which requires parties to bear their own costs, has an
    exception if a party can show exceptional circumstances and bad faith. See 
    id. at 501;
    see also
    Southwick v. Rutland, 
    2011 VT 105
    , ¶ 5, 
    190 Vt. 324
    (describing the “American Rule”). Although
    service was defective in this case, Plaintiff has a valid claim against Defendants and this case has
    not been previously resolved. See 
    Lyndonville, 174 Vt. at 501
    . Moreover, despite the Court’s
    conclusion that the gravity of the defects in service warrant relief under Rule 60, in considering
    their request for attorney’s fees based on bad faith the Court is bound to take into
    consideration Defendants’ own departure from due diligence. Knowing that a complaint for
    foreclosure had been filed, albeit never properly served, Defendants acted carelessly by
    assuming without sufficient documentation that the case had been dismissed. Under all the
    circumstances presented, the Court cannot conclude that Plaintiff’s conduct is sufficiently
    outrageous to warrant departing from the American rule. See 
    id. 1 Contrary
    to Attorney Edward’s argument, an attorney’s duty of zealous representation does not excuse deviation
    from the responsibilities established by Rule 11, which ensure that representations to the Court in support of
    judicial relief are based on accurate information “formed after an inquiry reasonable under the circumstances.”
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    WHEREFORE, it is hereby ORDERED :
    The Court GRANTS Defendants’ amended motion to vacate and VACATES the
    September 17, 2013 foreclosure judgment and the July 2, 2013 default judgment. No later than
    August 18, 2014, the parties shall consult and submit a proposed scheduling order.
    Electronically signed on August 11, 2014 at 9:32 PM pursuant to V.R.E.F. 7(d).
    ______________________________________
    John P. Wesley
    Superior Court Judge
    Notifications:
    Amber L. Doucette (ERN 3720), Attorney for Plaintiff Nationstar Mortgage
    Christopher M. Rundle (ERN 4468), Attorney for Defendant Peter Thomson
    Christopher M. Rundle (ERN 4468), Attorney for Defendant Karen O'Neill-Thomson
    wesley
    5
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 326

Filed Date: 8/11/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/23/2018