Nevada HOA Foreclosures Cannot Extinguish Deeds of Trust Held by Fannie Mae, Holds U.S. District Court

On June 25, Jon H. Patterson and R. Aaron Chastain of Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP authored an article discussing a recent decision by the U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada.

Nevada HOA Foreclosures Cannot Extinguish Deeds of Trust Held by Fannie Mae, Holds U.S. District Court

Yesterday, the U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada issued an important ruling concerning the litigation over whether homeowners’ association foreclosures under Nevada’s super-priority lien statute (NRS 116.3116) can extinguish first deeds of trust when the underlying indebtedness is owned by a Government-Sponsored Enterprise (GSE) like Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) or Federal Home Loan Mortgage Company (Freddie Mac).

In Skylights LLC v. Byron, Case No. 2:15-cv-00043-GMN-VCF, Chief Judge Gloria Navarro held that federal law prohibited a state-law HOA foreclosure from extinguishing a first deed of trust assigned to Fannie Mae. However, the Court’s decision included language indicating that its holding could be limited to the rare scenario where Fannie Mae (or Freddie Mac) is record beneficiary of the deed of trust at the time of the HOA’s foreclosure—a potential limitation that could greatly limit the extent of the Court’s ruling.

As discussed several times before on this blog, lenders and mortgage servicers doing business in Nevada have found themselves enmeshed in litigation over whether they still have a valid security interest securing loans for many of properties in the State following the Nevada Supreme Court’s opinion in September 2014 holding that a properly conducted HOA foreclosure under NRS 116.3116 would indeed extinguish all other security interests on the property—including purchase-money first deeds of trust recorded before the HOA even recorded its notice of default.

Following the Nevada Supreme Court’s ruling, one of the arguments raised by lenders is that for loans where a GSE owns the underlying indebtedness (and therefore is the party entitled to enforce the deed of trust), the federal Housing and Economic Recovery Act (HERA) prohibits a state law such as NRS 116.3116 from eliminating a property interest held by the federal government through its conservatorship of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) has intervened in several suits involving GSE loans to advance the argument.

Chief Judge Navarro’s ruling from yesterday was the first significant decision on the issue. Chief Judge Navarro sided with the lenders and FHFA, holding that the “plain meaning of [12 U.S.C. § 4617(j)] is that when FHFA is acting as a conservator, none of the property sought to be conserved by FHFA may be subject to a foreclosure without its consent.” Op. at 9.

As noted above, there is a possibility that Chief Judge Navarro’s ruling—as promising as it sounds—is limited in scope. Skylights LLC involved a unique set of facts: for reasons not explained in the opinion, CitiMortgage had assigned its deed of trust to Fannie Mae before the HOA foreclosed on the property, meaning the HOA had constructive notice that Fannie Mae had a property interest in the property at the time it conducted its foreclosure sale. Chief Judge Navarro’s analysis is not expressly limited to the facts of the case; however, it is conceivable that it will be limited just so. The opinion makes mention of the fact that Fannie Mae was the record beneficiary of the deed of trust at the time of the HOA foreclosure. See, e.g., Op. at 19 (“Based upon the recorded documents, it is undisputed that the Deed of Trust was assigned to Fannie Mae several months before the HOA conducted its foreclosure sale.”).

Indeed, the final “money line” of the order states: “Accordingly, because FHFA held Deed of Trust as conservator for Fannie Mae prior to the foreclosure, section 4617(j)(3) prevents the HOA’s foreclosure on the Property from extinguishing the Deed of Trust.” Op. at 21

The lending community will probably not have to wait long to find out the limits of Chief Judge Navarro’s ruling. Two other similar cases that were argued along with Skylights just one week ago (Williston Investment Group v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., et. al., No. 2:14-CV-02038-GMN-PAL; Elmer v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., et. al., No. 2:14-cv-01999-GMN-NJK) are still awaiting Chief Judge Navarro’s rulings. Each of those cases presents the more common fact scenario: at the time of the HOA foreclosure sales, the GSEs were not the recorded beneficiaries of the deeds of trust (though evidence in the record in both cases indicates the GSEs purchased the loans and acquired an interest in the deeds of trust prior to the HOA sales). Supplemental briefing in those two cases is due in early July. The lending community will simply have to wait and see whether that factual distinction makes all the difference.

Please click here to view the article online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the mortgage field services industry leader, preserving vacant and foreclosed properties across the U.S., Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands and Guam. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, Safeguard provides the highest quality service to our clients by leveraging innovative technologies and proactively developing industry best practices and quality control procedures. Consistent with Safeguard’s values and mission, we are an active supporter of hundreds of charitable efforts across the country. Annually, Safeguard gives back to communities in partnership with our employees, vendors and clients. We also are dedicated to working with community leaders and officials to eliminate blight and stabilize neighborhoods. Safeguard is dedicated to preserving today and protecting tomorrow.  Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

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CEO

Alan Jaffa

Alan Jaffa is the Chief Executive Officer for Safeguard Properties, steering the company as the mortgage field services industry leader. He also serves on the board of advisors for SCG Partners, a middle-market private equity fund focused on diversifying and expanding Safeguard Properties’ business model into complimentary markets.

Alan joined Safeguard in 1995, learning the business from the ground up. He was promoted to Chief Operating Officer in 2002, and was named CEO in May 2010. His hands-on experience has given him unique insights as a leader to innovate, improve and strengthen Safeguard’s processes to assure that the company adheres to the highest standards of quality and customer service.

Under Alan’s leadership, Safeguard has grown significantly with strategies that have included new and expanded services, technology investments that deliver higher quality and greater efficiency to clients, and strategic acquisitions. He takes a team approach to process improvement, involving staff at all levels of the organization to address issues, brainstorm solutions, and identify new and better ways to serve clients.

In 2008, Alan was recognized by Crain’s Cleveland Business in its annual “40-Under-40” profile of young leaders. He also was named a NEO Ernst & Young Entrepreneur Of The Year® Award finalist in 2013.

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Esq., General Counsel and EVP

Linda Erkkila

Linda Erkkila is the General Counsel and Executive Vice President for Safeguard Properties, with oversight of legal, human resources, training, and compliance. Linda’s broad scope of oversight covers regulatory issues that impact Safeguard’s operations, risk mitigation, strategic planning, human resources and training initiatives, compliance, insurance, litigation and claims management, and counsel related to mergers, acquisition and joint ventures.

Linda assures that Safeguard’s strategic initiatives align with its resources, leverage opportunities across the company, and contemplate compliance mandates. She has practiced law for 25 years and her experience, both as outside and in-house counsel, covers a wide range of corporate matters, including regulatory disclosure, corporate governance compliance, risk assessment, compensation and benefits, litigation management, and mergers and acquisitions.

Linda earned her JD at Cleveland-Marshall College of Law. She holds a degree in economics from Miami University and an MBA. Linda was previously named as both a “Woman of Influence” by HousingWire and as a “Leading Lady” by MReport.

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COO

Michael Greenbaum

Michael Greenbaum is the Chief Operating Officer of Safeguard Properties, where he has played a pivotal role since joining the company in July 2010. Initially brought on as Vice President of REO, Mike’s exceptional leadership and strategic vision quickly propelled him to Vice President of Operations in 2013, and ultimately to COO in 2015. Over his 14-year tenure at Safeguard, Mike has been instrumental in driving change and fostering innovation within the Property Preservation sector, consistently delivering excellence and becoming a trusted partner to clients and investors.

A distinguished graduate of the United States Military Academy at West Point, Mike earned a degree in Quantitative Economics. Following his graduation, he served in the U.S. Army’s Ordnance Branch, where he specialized in supply chain management. Before his tenure at Safeguard, Mike honed his expertise by managing global supply chains for 13 years, leveraging his military and civilian experience to lead with precision and efficacy.

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CFO

Joe Iafigliola

Joe Iafigliola is the Chief Financial Officer for Safeguard Properties. Joe is responsible for the Control, Quality Assurance, Business Development, Marketing, Accounting, and Information Security departments. At the core of his responsibilities is the drive to ensure that Safeguard’s focus remains rooted in Customer Service = Resolution. Through his executive leadership role, he actively supports SGPNOW.com, an on-demand service geared towards real estate and property management professionals as well as individual home owners in need of inspection and property preservation services. Joe is also an integral force behind Compliance Connections, a branch of Safeguard Properties that allows code enforcement professionals to report violations at properties that can then be addressed by the Safeguard vendor network. Compliance Connections also researches and shares vacant property ordinance information with Safeguard clients.

Joe has an MBA from The Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University, is a Certified Management Accountant (CMA), and holds a bachelor’s degree from The Ohio State University’s Honors Accounting program.

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Business Development

Carrie Tackett

Business Development Safeguard Properties