Nat. City Mortgage v. Dorrin CA4/1
Nat. City Mortgage v. Dorrin CA4/1
Opinion
Filed 2/3/15 Nat. City Mortgage v. Dorrin CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION ONE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
NATIONAL CITY MORTGAGE, D066477 Plaintiff and Respondent, v. (Super. Ct. No. RIC531351) ARTHUR DORRIN, Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Riverside County, Daniel A.
Ottolia, Judge. Affirmed in part and dismissed in part.
Arthur Dorrin, in pro. per., for Defendant and Appellant.
Chuck Birkett Tsoong, Stephen C. Chuck, Tiffany M. Birkett and Victoria J.
Tsoong for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Defendant Arthur Dorrin obtained a loan from National City Mortgage, a division of National City Bank of Indiana (NCM), and secured the loan with a deed of trust in favor of NCM encumbering certain real property. Approximately two years later, Dorrin stopped making payments on the loan, and in July 2009 NCM filed this action seeking, among other things, a declaration that its lien interest was superior to the potential claims of a number of others who purportedly obtained some interest in the real property, and for judicial foreclosure of its deed of trust. After granting NCM's motion for summary judgment, the court entered judgment in favor of NCM on January 14, 2013, and NCM served Dorrin with a notice of entry of judgment on January 15, 2013.
Dorrin did not immediately appeal from the January 2013 judgment. Instead, in February 2013, Dorrin filed a motion to vacate the judgment under Code of Civil Procedure 1 section 473, subdivision (d), asserting the judgment was void because NCM had ceased to exist before its action had been commenced, and therefore the court did not have jurisdiction over the parties. On May 20, 2013, the court entered an order denying Dorrin's motion, and on June 3, 2013, Dorrin filed his notice of appeal.
I FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Facts The relevant facts are largely undisputed. In 2001, Dorrin acquired certain real property (the property) located in Riverside County. In early 2006, Dorrin obtained a loan from, and signed a promissory note (the Note) in favor of, NCM. In early 2007, Dorrin executed a loan modification agreement that, among other things, modified the
As security for the Note, Dorrin signed a deed of trust (DOT) in favor of NCM encumbering the property. The DOT included a power of sale clause permitting the lender to sell the property in the event of an uncured default. By early 2008, Dorrin was in default because he had had stopped making payments on the Note.
In May 2008 a notice of default and election to sell under the DOT was recorded, and in August 2008 a notice of trustee's sale under the DOT was recorded. However, the trustee was unable to proceed with the nonjudicial foreclosure because a series of deeds, which NCM's subsequent lawsuit asserted were "wild" deeds that should be canceled,2 raised issues about whether Dorrin owned the property at the time the loan was made and the DOT was recorded.
B. The Lawsuit and Summary Judgment Motion NCM filed this action seeking a judgment declaring its claim to title in the property under the DOT was superior to any conflicting claims to title created by the wild deeds, and seeking judicial foreclosure under the DOT. NCM subsequently moved for summary judgment. NCM's showing apparently established that, at the time of the loan and recordation of the DOT, Dorrin owned the property, and Dorrin did not dispute that
The trial court granted NCM's motion for summary judgment, finding there was no triable issue of material fact that (1) Dorrin was the sole owner of the property as of the date the DOT recorded, (2) NCM's DOT was valid, enforceable and in first and senior position against the property, and (3) the Allen deed was a wild deed and therefore the Allen deed and its progeny were void and should be set aside and canceled. The court entered judgment in favor of NCM on January 14, 2013, !Ct 515-518)! and NCM served Dorrin with a notice of entry of judgment on January 15, 2013. Dorrin did not file a notice of appeal from that judgment prior to March 15, 2013.
C. The Motion to Vacate the Judgment On February 26, 2013, Dorrin filed a motion to vacate the judgment. 3 He asserted relief was properly available under section 473, subdivision (d), because Dorrin had just discovered a document from the Secretary of State of Ohio showing that, as of October 1,
2008, an entity known as National City Mortgage Co. had "merged out of existence." Dorrin contended this rendered the judgment void and permitted him to collaterally attack the judgment.
NCM opposed the motion, arguing the power under section 473, subdivision (d), to set aside as void a judgment is limited to cases in which the court lacked personal or subject matter jurisdiction, or granted relief the court had no power to grant and the error appears on the face of the record without resort to extrinsic evidence. NCM argued that because Dorrin's motion to vacate was not limited to the face of the record, but instead hinged on extrinsic evidence, the motion was simply a disguised motion for reconsideration that was both untimely and procedurally deficient.
The court denied Dorrin's motion to vacate the judgment, and entered its order on May 20, 2013. On June 3, 2013, Dorrin filed a notice of appeal from the order denying his motion to vacate the judgment, and also purported to appeal from the January 14, 2013, judgment in favor of NCM.
II ANALYSIS A. The Purported Appeal from the January 14, 2013, Judgment Is Untimely Dorrin purports to appeal from the January 14, 2013, judgment, and devotes a substantial part of his opening brief to arguing summary judgment was improper because triable issues of fact existed on whether the present action had been prosecuted by the real party in interest. Dorrin claims on appeal that it was disputed whether the named plaintiff in the action--National City Mortgage, a division of National City Bank of Indiana--had ceased to exist by reason of a merger occurring before the present lawsuit was filed.4 A notice of appeal must be filed within 60 days after a party's service of notice of the entry of judgment. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.104(a)(2).) Because NCM served a notice of the entry of the court's January 14, 2013, judgment on January 17, 2013, the deadline for filing a notice of appeal from the summary judgment expired on March 17, 2013, several months before Dorrin filed his notice of appeal. Unless the deadline was extended, Dorrin's notice of appeal from the January 14, 2013, judgment was untimely and requires dismissal of that appeal. (Starpoint Properties, LLC v. Namvar (2011) 201 Cal.App.4th 1101, 1107 [" 'Compliance with the requirements for filing a notice of appeal is mandatory and jurisdictional,' and an appellate court therefore must dismiss an appeal that is untimely."]; Van Buerden Ins. Services, Inc. v. Customized Worldwide Weather Ins. Agency, Inc. (1997) 15 Cal.4th 51, 56 ["The time for appealing a judgment is jurisdictional; once the deadline expires, the appellate court has no power to entertain the appeal."].)
The time for filing a notice of appeal can be extended when the appellant has filed "a valid notice of intention to move--or a valid motion--to vacate the judgment . . . ."
Were we to begin saving untimely appeals by allowing procedurally invalid posttrial motions to be deemed entirely different motions, we would be subverting the carefully drawn jurisdictional scheme. Such mischief is strictly forbidden. 'In the absence of
B. Dorrin's Appeal from the May 20, 2013, Order Is Timely But Unmeritorious Although Dorrin's purported appeal from the underlying judgment is untimely, his notice of appeal also appealed the order denying his motion to vacate under the authority provided to a court by section 473, subdivision (d). 8 Because the notice of appeal was
A motion to vacate a judgment under section 473, subdivision (d), is limited to "set[ting] aside any void judgment," and a trial court has no statutory power under section 473, subdivision (d), to set aside a judgment unless the judgment is void. (Talley v. Valuation Counselors Group, Inc. (2010) 191 Cal.App.4th 132, 146.) However, there is a marked distinction between void judgments, which are subject to collateral attack under section 473, subdivision (d), and voidable judgments, which may only be attacked on direct appeal from the judgment. Our Supreme Court explained that distinction in In re Marriage of Goddard (2004) 33 Cal.4th 49, 56, in which it stated that "[a] court can lack fundamental authority over the subject matter, question presented, or party, making its judgment void, or it can merely act in excess of its jurisdiction or defined power, rendering the judgment voidable." Thus, a judgment "is void if the court lacked jurisdiction over the subject matter or parties, for example, if the defendant was not validly served with summons. [Citation.] In contrast, a judgment is valid but voidable if it is the result of the court's failure to follow proper procedure." (Johnson v. E-Z Ins.
Brokerage, Inc. (2009) 175 Cal.App.4th 86, 98.)
Because invocation of the court's authority under section 473, subdivision (d), is limited to setting aside void judgments (cf. Manson, Iver & York v. Black (2009) 176
judgment. Instead, we will limit our evaluation to those arguments that may properly be asserted in a postjudgment collateral attack under section 473, subdivision (d), seeking to vacate an allegedly void judgment.
The Strathvale court simply (and we believe erroneously) cited Walker for the proposition that any motion under section 473 is a "direct attack" (Strathvale, at p. 1249), that would permit extrinsic evidence to be considered, without recognition of the limited application of Walker. We conclude neither Walker nor Strathvale provides convincing authority for Dorrin's argument that a party seeking to vacate a judgment under section 473, subdivision (d), is entitled to introduce extrinsic evidence showing nonjurisdictional errors. v. City and County of San Francisco (1944) 25 Cal.2d 37, 40 ["A mere erroneous decision . . . does not make the judgment void, if the court had jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the person of the defendant."].)
For the purpose of making a collateral attack on a final judgment, the term "jurisdiction" has been interpreted narrowly to include jurisdiction of the subject matter, personal jurisdiction over the parties, and adequate notice. (Estate of Buck, supra, 29 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1854-1856.) In Buck, the appellate court characterized these three elements as " 'fundamental jurisdiction.' " (Id. at p. 1854, fn. 7.) According to Buck, the reported cases in which courts have permitted a collateral attack based on factors other than a lack of fundamental jurisdiction have been limited to those in which the court entered a judgment it had no power to grant, as where the amount awarded in a default judgment exceeded the amount requested in the complaint or where a court granted prejudgment interest in a stipulated judgment that was contrary to statute and to a stipulation that supported the judgment. (Buck, at pp. 1855-1856.) As explained in Molen v. Friedman (1998) 64 Cal.App.4th 1149, "[a] collateral attack will lie only for a claim that the judgment is void on its face for lack of personal or subject matter jurisdiction or for the granting of relief which the court has no power to grant. [Citations.] . . . However, a collateral attack will not lie for a claim that the judgment is not supported by substantial evidence [citations]." (Id. at pp. 1156-1157, italics added.)
Here, Dorrin's claim of error as to the denial of his motion under section 473, subdivision (d), fails because he has not provided any authority to establish that the particular type of error he alleges rendered the underlying judgment void—i.e. the determination in the underlying action that NCM was the real party in interest entitled to prosecute the present action—falls within any of the recognized grounds for allowing collateral attack on the judgment under section 473, subdivision (d). Indeed, because the motion under section 473, subdivision (d), is a collateral attack on the underlying judgment, our determination of whether the order is void on its face for lack of jurisdiction must be "limited to a consideration of matters which appear in the judgment roll or are admitted by the parties." (Phelan v. Superior Court (1950) 35 Cal.2d 363, 372-373; accord, Harley v. Superior Court (1964) 226 Cal.App.2d 432, 437 ["[T]o be attackable collaterally for lack of jurisdiction the judgment must be void on its face, and it is not void on its face unless the record affirmatively shows that the court was without jurisdiction to render the judgment [citations]. The record is the judgment-roll and upon collateral attack is the only evidence that can be considered in determining the question of jurisdiction. Extrinsic evidence is wholly inadmissible, even though it might show that jurisdiction did not in fact exist [citations]."].) Nothing on the face of the judgment roll demonstrates the court lacked jurisdiction over this action because NCM was not the real party in interest entitled to prosecute this action, and therefore Dorrin's claim under section 473, subdivision (d), does not have merit.
On appeal, Dorrin makes no claim the court that entered the judgment lacked subject matter jurisdiction or lacked in personam jurisdiction over Dorrin, or that Dorrin lacked notice, or that the court's judgment granted relief beyond the power vested in the trial court, which are the limited grounds upon which a party may seek relief under
section 473, subdivision (d).10 Instead, Dorrin argues there was some extrinsic evidence raising questions whether the action should have been filed in the name of some other real party in interest. Although this claim could properly have been raised at any point during the underlying proceedings (see, e.g., Tinsley v. Palo Alto Unified School Dist. (1979) 91 Cal.App.3d 871, 883), Dorrin cites no authority holding a party may collaterally attack a judgment as void based on a claim that the action was not pursued by, and the judgment was not obtained in the name of, the real party in interest.
DISPOSITION The purported appeal from the judgment is dismissed. The order denying the motion to vacate the judgment is affirmed. NCM is entitled to costs on appeal.
McDONALD, J.
WE CONCUR:
McCONNELL, P. J.
HUFFMAN, J.
10 Where, as here, an appellant does not support a point with pertinent citations of authority, we may treat the point as waived. (Badie v. Bank of America (1998) 67 Cal.App.4th 779, 784-785.)
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.