LEAHY, J.
Foreclosures are a constant reminder of the not-so-distant financial crisis and the significantly more recent economic downturn known as the Great Recession. In an effort to stem the surge in foreclosures in Maryland, the General Assembly enacted laws obligating lenders to give borrowers information regarding opportunities to avoid foreclosure. This case interprets the legislatively prescribed notice requirements that lenders must send to borrowers before initiating a foreclosure action.
In 2009, Appellant, Ramos Granados, defaulted on a loan secured by his principal residence. Mr. Granados endeavored to participate in loan modification, but after he made a few late payments, the lender filed a notice of intent to foreclose ("Notice" or "NOI"). Shortly after filing a foreclosure action, the lender dismissed the case without prejudice. Almost one year after the NOI was issued, Jeffrey Nadel and Scott Nadel, as substitute trustees for the current noteholder ("Appellees," "Trustees," or "lender"),
During the second foreclosure action Mr. Granados filed several motions to dismiss, followed by exceptions to the foreclosure sale, in which he asserted that the Trustees failed to comply with the notice requirements of Maryland Code (1974, 2010 Repl.Vol., 2010 Supp.), Real Property Article ("RP"), § 7-105.1
We hold that once the Trustees dismissed the first foreclosure action, they were obligated to send Mr. Granados a new Notice containing the particularized information and documents prescribed by law before filing a second foreclosure action. Therefore, we reverse the circuit court on the first issue and do not reach the second.
Ramon Granados obtained a construction loan on November 20, 2006, in an amount of $688,950 from FNMC, a division of National City Bank. The loan was evidenced by a note and secured by a deed of trust recorded against real property in the city of Bowie in Prince George's County, Maryland (the "Property" or the "Bowie Property"). Under the deed of trust, Mr. Granados was to use the Property as his principal residence within 60 days of obtaining the loan and for at least one year thereafter unless otherwise agreed by the parties in writing.
On December 31, 2008, PNC Bank, National Association ("PNC") acquired National City Bank and the Granados loan. Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc. ("SPS") was a loan servicer for PNC. A loan servicer performs services for the mortgage note holder or lender, including collecting payments, modifying terms of the mortgage, releasing liens, paying property insurance and taxes, and initiating foreclosure proceedings. See Md.Code (1980, 2011 Repl.Vol., 2014 Supp.), Fin. Inst. Art. § 11-601(j); Deutsche Bank Nat. Trust Co. v. Brock, 430 Md. 714, 727-31, 63 A.3d 40 (2013).
Mr. Granados defaulted on the loan on May 2, 2009.
Thus conditioned on the premise that any pending foreclosure action would not be dismissed, the form advised that no new "notice of default, notice of intent to accelerate, notice of acceleration, or similar notice will be necessary to continue the foreclosure action, all rights to such notices being hereby waived to the extent permitted by applicable law." (Emphasis added).
Mr. Granados made payments in the correct amounts on November 24, 2009 (23 days late), December 28, 2009 (27 days late), and January 23, 2010 (22 days late). Mr. Granados made a fourth payment on February 26, 2010. On March 5, 2010, Mr. Granados received a letter from SPS, Inc. stating that SPS did not apply a check it received in an amount of $1,730.64, because "[the funds] were less than the amount that we previously advised you was necessary to stop your foreclosure." The letter did not explain why SPS considered the payment to be an incorrect amount or why it accepted three late payments but not this one. The letter advised Mr. Granados that, "if you send us $60,422.42 by 03/19/2010 we will credit the payment to your account, stop your foreclosure and set you up on a forbearance plan to accept future payments." (Emphasis added).
On March 10, 2010, a Notice of Intent to Foreclose was sent to Mr. Granados pursuant to Maryland Code (1973, 2003 Repl. Vol., 2008 Supp.), RP § 7-105.1(b)(1), and Code of Maryland Regulations ("COMAR") 09.03.12.02. The NOI announced
On April 8, 2010, SPS sent Mr. Granados a second trial period plan. The second plan required trial period payments of $2,133.64 by May 1, June 1, and July 1, 2010. Mr. Granados made a single payment of $2,133.64 on April 30, 2010, but that same day one day before the first payment was due under the second plan Bierman Geesing & Ward LLC, on behalf of the substitute trustees on the deed of trust at the time, filed the first foreclosure action. Bierman Geesing & Ward LLC later voluntarily dismissed this action without prejudice through an order entered by the circuit court on July 19, 2010. Geesing v. Granados, No. CAE10-13975, Circuit Court for Prince George's County.
Meanwhile, on May 10, 2010, Mr. Granados received yet another letter from SPS stating that SPS did not apply the check it received from him in an amount of $2,133.64. True to form, the letter provided the same reason for not crediting Mr. Granados' check as in the previous letter: "[the funds] were less than the amount that we previously advised you was necessary to stop your foreclosure."
The Granados Loan was transferred in August 2010 to Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Trustee to RMAC Pass-Through Trust, Series 2010-7T ("Wells Fargo"). Quantum Servicing Corporation ("Quantum") assumed responsibility for servicing the Loan.
The General Assembly first addressed the foreclosure crisis in 2008 with the passage of Senate Bill 216 and House Bill 365, both signed by Governor O'Malley and enacted as Chapters 1 and 2, Laws of Maryland 2008. This emergency legislation was prompted by the Maryland Homeownership Preservation Task Force, convened by
In 2010, during the time Mr. Granados was attempting to enter into a HAMP agreement to modify his loan, the General Assembly once again addressed the persistent rise in foreclosure actions in Maryland. After passage of the 2008 legislation, foreclosures continued to escalate, with total foreclosure activity increasing 67% over one year from 29,790 foreclosures in 2008 to 44,463 in 2009 and rising 13% in the last quarter of 2009. See Department of Legislative Services, Fiscal and Policy Note for House Bill 472, Revised, at 7-8, 15 (2010). House Bill 472, passed on April 7, 2010, substantially modified the content of the notice of intent to foreclose that lenders are required to provide borrowers prior to filing an order to docket foreclosure. See House Bill 472, ch. 485 (2010).
The legislation required, among other things, that lenders provide borrowers notice of loan modification programs well before initiating a foreclosure action. Specifically, amended RP § 7-105.1(c) requires lenders to send the borrower and record owner of an owner-occupied residential property an application for a loan modification or loss mitigation program along with any NOI, at least 45 days before filing a foreclosure action. This provision addresses a problem noted in the preamble to the bill as originally filed, which acknowledged that "[m]any homeowners have their home go to foreclosure while loan modification reviews are still pending or have not even begun." House Bill 472, ch. 485, 2:15-16 (first reading, 2010). Thus, the new law requires that loss mitigation applications have to include: options for loan modification or alternative loan payment plans; ways to simplify relinquishment of the property, such as through short sale or deed in lieu of foreclosure; and ways to lessen the harmful impact of foreclosure on the borrower. The new law also expands mediation opportunities for borrowers and requires lenders to perform a loss mitigation analysis. See RP § 7-105.1(c)(5), (g) (2010 Repl.Vol., 2010 Supp.). A loss mitigation analysis is an evaluation of the facts and circumstances of a loan secured by owner-occupied residential property to determine whether a mortgagor or grantor qualifies
The new law also amended the content of the NOI that lenders were required to send borrowers to include the following:
RP § 7-105.1(c)(4)(ii)(1)-(3) (2010 Repl. Vol., 2010 Supp.).
On February 24, 2011, the Trustees filed an Order to Docket Suit in the Circuit Court for Prince George's County, initiating the second foreclosure proceeding under the deed of trust against the property at 13920 Lake Meadows Dr. The Order to Docket included: 1) an Affidavit of Ownership identifying the secured party as Wells Fargo; 2) an Affidavit of Debt made by Quantum on behalf of Wells Fargo indicating that the amount due on the loan by Mr. Granados was $791,594.55; 3) an Affidavit of Default specifying that the Loan was due for the May 1, 2009 payment, and that as of January 25, 2011, the loan was more than 634 days past due; 4) copies of the Note, Deed of Trust, Deed of Removal, Appointment of Successor Trustee, and other documents required by the Commissioner of Financial Regulation; 5) information concerning loss mitigation programs and eligibility requirements; 6) a "Hardship Packet" to be completed by Mr. Granados in advance of any mediation; and 7) a copy of the March 10, 2010 Notice.
On March 23, 2011, Mr. Granados moved to dismiss the foreclosure proceeding pursuant to Maryland Rule 14-211
The Trustees responded that the foreclosure was docketed using a notice of intent that complied with the law at the time the NOI was issued. They maintained that the circuit court should read the new statutory provisions prospectively to permit NOIs issued before the new law went into effect to serve as sufficient notice prior to filing an order to docket foreclosure.
The circuit court denied Mr. Granados' motion in an order entered on April 11, 2011 without a memorandum opinion. Soon after, on April 18, 2011, Mr. Granados requested mediation, which the parties held on May 23, 2011.
On June 7, 2011, Mr. Granados filed a second motion to dismiss, relying on substantially the same arguments as in his first motion, and adding a paragraph challenging the Trustees' power of attorney to initiate the foreclosure on behalf of Wells Fargo. In opposition, the Trustees produced a document showing power of attorney. The circuit court again rejected Mr. Granados' arguments and ruled that, "simply because a prior foreclosure case was voluntarily dismissed, a previously issued Notice of Intent is not therefore invalid." The court noted that Mr. Granados had raised this very same issue in his previous motion and had "not offered any new legal basis for the granting of the requested relief."
On August 15, 2011, Mr. Granados filed a motion for reconsideration, "respectfully disagree[ing] with [the circuit court's] interpretation" of the law in the July 15, 2011 opinion denying his second motion to dismiss. In this motion, Mr. Granados further developed his argument that the Trustees could not rely on the NOI issued before the previous foreclosure action because it was out-of-date and did not comply with current law. Mr. Granados asserted that the Maryland Commissioner of Financial Regulation intended his Advisory Notice to allow secured parties to use NOIs from before the law's effective date for a reasonable amount of time, but not NOIs issued by different secured parties for different foreclosure proceedings.
Before the circuit court could rule on Mr. Granados' motion for reconsideration, Mr. Granados filed for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy in United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Maryland on August 16, 2011. The bankruptcy court stayed the Maryland circuit court proceeding on August 22, 2011, and then lifted the stay on October 18, 2011. See 11 U.S.C. § 362(d). On December 2, 2011, the bankruptcy judge discharged Mr. Granados from his debts, including the amount owed to Appellees for the loan.
The foreclosure proceeding resumed, and the Trustees filed an opposition to Mr. Granados' motion to reconsider on February 22, 2012. Mr. Granados filed a reply on March 6, 2012, this time asserting that he had met his obligations under the Second Trial Plan, but that the lender did not uphold the terms of the plan, which entitled
The Trustees proceeded with the foreclosure sale on November 16, 2012, and sold the Property to Wells Fargo, the note holder, for $315,783.29. On January 18, 2013, in one last attempt to avert the loss of his property, Mr. Granados filed a Motion Excepting to Ratification of Foreclosure. The circuit court issued an order entered on March 1, 2013, denying the motion and ratifying the foreclosure sale. On March 28, 2013, Mr. Granados noticed the instant appeal from the order ratifying the sale pursuant to Maryland Code (1973, 2013 Repl.Vol., 2013 Supp.), Courts & Judicial Proceedings Article ("CJP"), § 12-303, which allows appeals from an order for the sale or conveyance of real property. The circuit court proceeded to grant judgment in favor of the Trustees in an order dated May 1, 2013.
On appeal and in his motions to dismiss filed below, Mr. Granados contends that when the second foreclosure suit was brought almost a year after the NOI was sent, the information contained in the NOI was stale and inaccurate, and did not comply with additional notice requirements established by subsequent amendments to RP § 7-105.1 and COMAR 09.03.12.02. He maintains that because the Trustees failed to send him a new Notice, the foreclosure action should have been dismissed.
The Trustees, in one footnote and one sentence in the body of their brief, contest Mr. Granados' standing to bring this appeal because of his Chapter 7 bankruptcy. They assert that, due to Mr. Granados' discharge, any claim or cause of action belongs to the bankruptcy estate unless the estate administered it or abandoned
Before the circuit court, the Trustees' prose was much less explicit.
"Ordinarily, the appellate court will not decide any other issue unless it plainly appears by the record to have been raised in or decided by the trial court...." Md. Rule 8-131. This is true for issues of standing; when a party raises the issue of standing on appeal, this Court need not decide the issue if it was not raised and decided by the circuit court. Cnty. Council of Prince George's Cnty. v. Zimmer Dev. Co., 217 Md.App. 310, 319, 92 A.3d 601 (quoting Garner v. Archers Glen Partners, Inc., 405 Md. 43, 53, 949 A.2d 639 (2008)), cert. granted sub nom. Prince George's Cnty. v. Zimmer Dev. Corp., 440 Md. 114, 99 A.3d 778 (2014). The appellate court is not an advocate tasked with searching for each party's winning argument. Rather, the appellate court is limited ordinarily to issues preserved by the parties. Fraternal Order of Police, Montgomery Cnty., Lodge 35 v. Montgomery Cnty., 437 Md. 618, 630, 89 A.3d 1093 (2014) (quoting Frank M. Coffin, The Ways of a Judge: Reflections from the Federal Appellate Bench 52 (Houghton Mifflin 1980)) ("Deciding an appeal is not a matter of approaching the problem as if for the first time. It is determining whether another, earlier, carefully structured decision should be upheld.")); see also Troxel v. Iguana Cantina, LLC, 201 Md.App. 476, 511, 29 A.3d 1038 (2011) (declining to address an issue when the trial court neither ruled on it, nor based any portion of its decision, oral or written, on it).
We do not decide whether the Trustee in Bankruptcy or Mr. Granados has an ownership interest in the Property, but only that the foreclosure did not comply with applicable Maryland law. This appeal is from the circuit court's ratification of the foreclosure sale and denial of Mr. Granados' exceptions to that sale. Maryland Rule 14305 allows a party to the foreclosure proceeding to file exceptions to
Although we review the circuit court's denial of a foreclosure injunction for an abuse of discretion, Anderson v. Burson, 424 Md. 232, 243, 35 A.3d 452 (2011), to the extent this case involves interpretation and application of amendments to Section 7-105.1 of the Real Property Article, we review the trial court's legal conclusions de novo. Burson v. Capps, 440 Md. 328, 341-43, 102 A.3d 353 (2014), reconsideration denied, (Nov. 19, 2014); Wincopia Farm, LP v. Goozman, 188 Md.App. 519, 528, 982 A.2d 868 (2009).
Upon the recommendation of the Maryland Homeownership Preservation Task Force, the General Assembly added Section 7-105.1 in 2008 to alert distressed homeowners to a pending foreclosure action and "afford homeowners adequate time to mitigate their loss or present defenses to the foreclosure action." Shepherd v. Burson, 427 Md. 541, 544-46, 50 A.3d 567 (2012) (quoting Maryland Homeownership Preservation Task Force Report, at 36 (November 29, 2007)) (internal quotation marks omitted). In other words, the purpose of RP § 7-105.1 is to provide some advance warning of the foreclosure proceedings to the defaulting borrower, the identification of the secured party, and other specified information to allow the borrower to pursue a modification of the loan or other action to forestall foreclosure. Id. at 557, 50 A.3d 567. Before a lender may foreclose on a defaulting borrower, the lender must give a borrower notice of its intent to foreclose upon the secured property. Pursuant to Real Property Article § 7-105.1(b)(1), with exceptions not relevant here, "an action to foreclose a mortgage or deed of trust on residential property may not be filed until the later of: (i) 90 days after a default in a condition on which the mortgage or deed of trust provides that a sale may be made; or (ii) 45 days after the notice of intent to foreclose required under subsection (c) of this section is sent."
At the time the NOI was issued in this case, the NOI was required to contain the following information:
RP § 7-105.1(c) (2003 Rep. Vol., 2008 Supp.).
As discussed supra, during the 2010 legislative session, the General Assembly substantially changed the content that lenders were required to provide borrowers when sending a notice of intent to foreclose. See House Bill 472, ch. 485 (2010). For example, a Notice issued after July 1, 2010 must include the telephone numbers and internet addresses for government and nonprofit resources and a statement recommending housing counseling services. The General Assembly also mandated expanded mediation opportunities for borrowers. See RP § 7-105.1(c)(5).
Commissioner of Financial Regulation, "Interim Guidance on Implementation of House Bill 472 Compliance Relating to Notice of Intent to Foreclose," Advisory Notice, May 5, 2010 (emphasis in original) (footnote omitted). On October 25, 2011, however, the Commissioner revised the May 2010 Notice, citing critiques "that complaints and orders to docket have been filed with NOIs that were delivered more than a year ago, in some instances, two years ago." Commissioner of Financial Regulation, "Residential Mortgage Foreclosure Regulations — Notice of Intent to Foreclose, Loss Mitigation Affidavit and Related Documents," Advisory Notice, Oct. 25, 2011. The 2011 Notice instructed:
(Emphasis supplied). Based on our reading of the amendments to RP § 7-105.1(c) and the intent of the law as interpreted by the Commissioner of Financial Regulation, we hold that, under the circumstances of this case, the Trustees were required to issue a new and updated NOI between the
We decline to set an expiration date for a notice of intent to foreclose. However, when a lender institutes a foreclosure action, and then dismisses that action, the lender should issue a new NOI. Especially here, where the dismissal of the first foreclosure action coincided with legislative changes providing new protections to borrowers, the NOI issued in 2010 was clearly no longer sufficient. The NOI is not a blank check that will allow a lender to initiate a foreclosure proceeding against a borrower at any point in the future. It has a specific function to give borrowers notice of a potential foreclosure and allow them to pursue remediation of their default. It is contrary to the spirit of the law that the NOI should operate as a document providing notice to a borrower of an impending foreclosure by an uncertain lender at some unpredictable time in the future.
Appellees assert that, even if they should have issued a new NOI, the order to docket was a valid substitute because it allowed Appellant to receive all the information he would have received from an updated NOI. We disagree. Following Appellees' argument would obviate the requirement for the NOI. Its purpose is to give borrowers an opportunity for loan modification and communication with the current lender before the initiation of the foreclosure action, that is, before a trustee files an order to docket.
Having found that the circuit court erred by not requiring Appellees to issue a new NOI before filing an order to docket, we turn to whether that error warrants reversal in this appeal. Appellees assert that this case does not require reversal because Appellant was aware of his loan modification options, citing Shepherd v. Burson, supra, a Court of Appeals case interpreting RP § 7-105.1 as codified in 2008.
Id. at 544, 50 A.3d 567.
The case before us presents a different factual situation from the one in Shepherd. Here, the NOI fulfilled its purpose for the original foreclosure action because it gave notice to Mr. Granados that foreclosure proceedings were imminent and gave contact information for the loan servicer. However, the NOI did not fulfill its purpose for the second foreclosure proceeding, which is the proceeding at issue here. By the time the Trustees filed their order to docket in the second foreclosure action, the NOI was not just incomplete, it was also inaccurate. It did not name the current secured party or the loan servicer, nor did it contain contact information for someone authorized to perform loan modification as of the time the order to docket was filed. Because the Notice here was incorrect, not just incomplete as was the case in Shepherd, the error warrants vacating the sale and remanding to the circuit court for dismissal without prejudice. The Trustees, of course, can send a new notice of intent to foreclose, file their order to docket 45 days later, and complete the foreclosure sale in the new proceeding.
In his second question presented, Mr. Granados asks us to consider the circuit court's denial of a hearing on his exceptions to the sale. Because we reverse the circuit court on the first question, we need not consider this issue.
The requirements of RP § 7-105.1 must be effectuated to give borrowers an opportunity
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court must be reversed. On remand, the circuit court will set aside the foreclosure sale and dismiss the foreclosure action without prejudice.
The Trustees included almost identical language in their Opposition to Defendant's Motion Excepting to Ratification of Foreclosure.
(2010 Repl.Vol., 2010 Supp.).