Southbridge RE, LLC v. Kiavi Funding, Inc.
Southbridge RE, LLC v. Kiavi Funding, Inc.
Opinion
United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit
No. 23-1480
SOUTHBRIDGE RE, LLC,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
KIAVI FUNDING, INC.; CHRISTIANA TRUST, a Division of Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB, not in its individual capacity but as Trustee for Victoria Capital Trust,
Defendants, Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Katherine A. Robertson, U.S. Magistrate Judge]
Before
Barron, Chief Judge, Selya and Kayatta, Circuit Judges.
Todd S. Dion for appellant.
Brian C. Linehan, with whom Reneau J. Longoria and Doonan, Graves & Longoria, LLC were on brief, for appellees.
July 25, 2024 KAYATTA, Circuit Judge. This appeal arises out of
Christiana Trust's foreclosure sales of two properties owned by
Southbridge RE, LLC. Southbridge had previously mortgaged the
properties to LendingHome, which delivered assignments of the
mortgages to Christiana Trust. Southbridge contends that
Christiana Trust nevertheless lacked the proper authority to
conduct the foreclosure sales because LendingHome had delivered
blank assignments of the same mortgages to Toorak Capital Partners
before delivering the assignments to Christiana Trust, thus
breaking the chain of title. The district court disagreed, finding
the assignments in blank to be void under Massachusetts law. For
the following reasons, we agree with the district court.
I.
A.
On September 5, 2018, Southbridge executed a promissory
note for $155,700 to LendingHome (now known as Kiavi Funding), for
the purchase of a commercial property at 103 Prospect Street,
Springfield, Massachusetts. Southbridge secured the note with a
commercial mortgage on the Springfield property, the deed to which
Southbridge acquired on September 7, 2018. The mortgage on the
Springfield property was duly recorded in the Hampden County
Registry of Deeds on September 14, 2018.
On September 19, 2018, LendingHome executed and
delivered an assignment of the mortgage on the Springfield property
- 2 - to Toorak Capital Partners, as security for a private funding
agreement between LendingHome and Toorak. The assignment left
blank the space for the assignee's name. At some point after
September 19, Toorak filled in its own name as the assignee. It
did not record the assignment in the Hampden County Registry of
Deeds until November 30, 2020.
Southbridge defaulted on the Springfield mortgage on
September 1, 2019. On December 13, 2019, LendingHome assigned the
mortgage to Christiana Trust. That assignment was recorded in the
Hampden County Registry of Deeds on December 13, 2019. On
October 14, 2020, a representative for LendingHome executed a
certification and affidavit stating that LendingHome had assigned
the mortgage to Christiana Trust, and therefore that Christiana
Trust held the Springfield mortgage.
On November 2, 2020, LendingHome served Southbridge with
a Notice of Default and Election to Sell Property. After
Southbridge failed to cure its default, Christiana Trust held a
foreclosure sale on January 21, 2021, eventually contracting to
sell the property to Ruby Realty.
B.
A similar series of transactions took place in
connection with a property located in Westfield, Massachusetts.
Southbridge purchased the property at 25 Pleasant Street,
Westfield, Massachusetts on October 4, 2018. On October 11, 2018,
- 3 - it executed a promissory note to LendingHome in the amount of
$175,000 to finance the purchase, again secured by a commercial
mortgage on the Westfield property. The mortgage was recorded on
October 11, 2018.
On October 16, 2018, LendingHome issued a blank
assignment of the Westfield mortgage to Toorak as security for the
same private funding agreement for which it had assigned the
Springfield mortgage. As with the assignment of the Springfield
mortgage, Toorak subsequently filled in its own name, and then
recorded the assignment on November 30, 2020.
After Southbridge defaulted on the Westfield property
mortgage, LendingHome assigned the mortgage to Christiana Trust on
December 16, 2019. The assignment was recorded in the Hampden
County Registry of Deeds on January 6, 2020. On February 4, 2020,
a representative for LendingHome executed an affidavit stating
that LendingHome had assigned the mortgage to Christiana Trust,
which was recorded on February 11, 2020. On October 7, 2020,
another representative for LendingHome executed a second affidavit
and certification reiterating that Christiana Trust owned the
Westfield mortgage. The Westfield property was sold to Christiana
Trust at a December 22, 2020, foreclosure auction.
- 4 - C.
On June 1, 2021, representatives of LendingHome, Toorak,
and Christiana Trust executed two affidavits (one for each
property) in accordance with Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 183, § 5B (the
"5B affidavits") explaining that the original assignments to
Toorak were invalid and that the affiants elected to void the
assignments. The affidavits explained that the assignments "were
not intended to be delivered to Toorak and recorded unless and
until LendingHome defaulted under the terms of the private funding
agreement, which did not occur." Toorak had filled in and recorded
the assignments "[d]ue to an inadvertent oversight . . .
notwithstanding the fact that it was not authorized to do so under
the terms of the private funding agreement with LendingHome."
II.
Southbridge initiated the present suit in Massachusetts
state court seeking to enjoin the foreclosure proceedings until
the alleged defects in Christiana Trust's title could be fixed.
Christiana Trust removed the case to federal court. With the
parties' consent, the district court referred the matter to a
magistrate judge. See
28 U.S.C. § 636(c); Fed. R. Civ. P. 73.
The magistrate judge denied Southbridge's motion for summary
judgment and granted defendants' cross-motion for a declaration
that Christiana Trust had the authority to sell the Springfield
and Westfield properties and therefore that the foreclosure sales
- 5 - complied with Massachusetts law.1 See Southbridge RE, LLC v. Kiavi
Funding Inc., No. 3:21-cv-30061,
2023 WL 2696496, at *17 (D. Mass.
Mar. 29, 2023). This appeal follows.
III.
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ("SJC") has
consistently rejected as invalid documents purporting to convey
interests in real estate without identifying the grantee by name
-- the exact kind of documents LendingHome conveyed to Toorak. In
U.S. Bank National Ass'n v. Ibanez, the original mortgagee, Rose
Mortgage, Inc., executed an assignment in blank and delivered it
to Option One Mortgage Corp.
941 N.E.2d 40, 46(Mass. 2011). That
assignment was later stamped with the name of Option One as the
assignee.
Id.Option One in turn executed another assignment in
blank and delivered it to Lehman Brothers Bank, which passed it
through a chain of subsequent assignments ending with U.S. Bank as
the claimed holder of the mortgage.
Id.The SJC ultimately denied
U.S. Bank's attempt to foreclose on the property, finding that
U.S. Bank had not made a sufficient showing that it had been
1 The magistrate judge also denied defendants' motion for summary judgment on their cross-claims for slander of title, unjust enrichment, and promissory estoppel. After judgment was entered, defendants agreed to dismiss those counterclaims for purposes of expediting final judgment and this appeal.
- 6 - assigned the properties in question.2
Id. at 52. In rejecting
U.S. Bank's counter-argument that the assignments in blank
executed by Option One "evidence[d] and confirm[d] the
assignments" and "[we]re effective assignments in their own
right," the SJC emphasized that "[w]e have long held that a
conveyance of real property, such as a mortgage, that does not
name the assignee conveys nothing and is void."
Id. at 53.
Southbridge seeks to avoid the holding of Ibanez by
stressing that here, Toorak -- the holder of the blank assignment
-- filled in its own name in the blank space on the assignment
before recording it. Ibanez does not definitively eliminate the
possibility that under Massachusetts law a belated designation of
the assignee might be valid if authorized by the assignor. See
id.at 52 n.19. But other cases do. See Flavin v. Morrissey,
97 N.E.2d 643, 644(Mass. 1951) (holding that "[a] deed . . .
incomplete because of failure to name the grantee . . . [i]s
invalid as a deed" even where defendant subsequently filled in the
name of the grantee); Macurda v. Fuller,
114 N.E. 366, 367 (Mass.
1916) (finding that a deed delivered without the name of the
assignee but with "direction . . . to fill the blank space with
the name of [a specific party]" was "without validity" and
2The properties at issue had allegedly been pooled into a trust and converted into a mortgage-backed security that was assigned to U.S. Bank. Ibanez,
941 N.E.2d at 46.
- 7 - "conferred . . . no legal right"). Moreover, the record in this
case is clear that Toorak did not have permission from LendingHome
to fill in Toorak's name as assignee in the absence of a default
by LendingHome that never took place.
Southbridge points to communications between LendingHome
and Toorak seeking Toorak's approval to postpone the foreclosure
sale in anticipation of obtaining a short-sale offer on the
Springfield property. As plaintiff argues, LendingHome would not
have needed Toorak's approval unless Toorak had an interest in the
property, thus contradicting defendants' insistence that the
assignment in blank was never intended to be valid. But nothing
in the communications indicates an intent to confirm a prior
pending conveyance of an interest. Rather, notice to Toorak was
entirely consistent with Toorak having a conditional interest in
the property that never ultimately vested.
Southbridge objects that allowing defendants to use
post-foreclosure affidavits to establish title to the properties
contravenes SJC precedent and falls outside the scope of Mass.
Gen. Laws ch. 183, § 5B. See Ibanez,
941 N.E.2d at 54("Nor may
a postforeclosure assignment be treated as a preforeclosure
assignment simply by declaring an 'effective date' that precedes
the notice of sale and foreclosure . . . ."). But the 5B
affidavits do not create in Christiana Trust an interest in the
properties that did not otherwise exist, nor do the 5B affidavits
- 8 - void the Toorak assignments. Rather, the Toorak assignments were
void from the beginning. Defendants proffered the affidavits
simply to confirm that Toorak had no authority to complete the
assignments delivered in blank on behalf of LendingHome. And 5B
affidavits are proper in this context where they are "limited to
facts that explain what actually occurred, and are not inconsistent
with the substantive facts contained in the original document."
Bank of Am., N.A. v. Casey,
52 N.E.3d 1030, 1038-39(Mass. 2016).
Plaintiff also contends that defendants failed to list
the Toorak assignments in their third notice of sale as required
by Massachusetts law.3 Per
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 244, § 14, a
mortgagee wishing to hold a foreclosure sale must publish notice
of the sale "once in each of 3 successive weeks." Where the
mortgagee "holds a mortgage pursuant to an assignment, no
notice . . . shall be valid unless . . . the recording information
for all recorded assignments is referenced in the notice of sale
required."
Id.But as Massachusetts law makes clear, an
assignment in blank is void (not voidable). And a void conveyance
"[is] to be considered by the law as [a] nullit[y]." Somes v.
Brewer,
19 Mass. (2 Pick.) 184, 201(1824). So an assignment in
3 The Springfield property foreclosure sale notices were published on November 17, November 24, and December 1, 2020. The Westfield property foreclosure sale notices were published on November 18, November 25, and December 2, 2020. Because the Toorak assignments were only recorded on November 30, 2020, they could only have been included in the third and final notices.
- 9 - blank is not an assignment at all. Thus as the magistrate judge
found, the most logical reading of ch. 244, § 14 is that it does
not require that a foreclosure notice mention void assignments.
See Southbridge RE, LLC,
2023 WL 2696496, at *10. And because the
Toorak assignments were void from the start, defendants had no
obligation to include them in the notice. See Sampson v. U.S.
Bank, Nat'l Assoc.,
692 F. Supp. 3d 1, 6 (D. Mass. 2023) (finding
that an assignment of a mortgage by an entity that was not the
mortgage holder was "not part of the chain of title" and therefore
did not need to be included in the "disclosure requirements of
[section] 14 and related regulations"). As such, the foreclosure
sale notices do not contravene state law.
Finally, at oral argument, counsel for plaintiff
contended for the first time that there might be a factual question
as to whether the assignments to Toorak were actually in blank or
whether they identified the assignee when delivered. But the
evidence shows otherwise and, in any event, this argument was
clearly raised too late. United States v. Zannino,
895 F.2d 1, 17(1st Cir. 1990).
IV.
We therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.
- 10 -
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