ELLINGTON, J.
¶ 1 A condominium homeowners' association enjoys a statutory super priority lien for certain delinquent assessments. Where such a lien is foreclosed, Washington's redemption statute offers no safe haven to mortgage lenders who ignore the proceedings. Here, the trial court properly ruled the lender is not a proper redemptioner. We affirm.
¶ 2 In November 2006, Dawn Roughley purchased a condominium in the Summerhill Village complex. She financed the purchase with a loan from Homecomings Financial LLC secured by a deed of trust in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registrations Systems (MERS).
¶ 3 Roughley became delinquent on her condominium association assessments. The Summerhill Village Condominium Association filed an action to foreclose its statutory lien, recorded a lis pendens, and served MERS. MERS forwarded the summons and complaint
¶ 4 Summerhill obtained a default judgment on September 24, 2009 and proceeded with a foreclosure sale. On December 18, 2009, Plumbline Profit Sharing Plan purchased Roughley's unit at a sheriff's sale for $10,302 — the amount of the default judgment plus $100.
¶ 5 Shortly thereafter, MERS assigned its beneficial interest in the Roughley deed of trust to Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas (Deutsche Bank). Deutsche Bank appointed a successor trustee, LSI Title Agency, Inc. Both instruments were returnable to Executive Services LLC after recording. Plumbline notified both LSI and Executive Services about the sheriff's sale and requested information about their intentions concerning the property. Plumbline received no response.
¶ 6 Meanwhile, Roughley was also delinquent on her loan payments. GMAC, as loan servicer and attorney-in-fact for Deutsche Bank, instituted foreclosure proceedings and thereby learned of Summerhill's foreclosure action in July 2010, apparently for the first time.
¶ 7 GMAC moved to intervene in Summerhill's foreclosure action, seeking either vacatur of Summerhill's year-old default judgment and declaration of Deutsche's lien priority or confirmation of its right to redeem. The court allowed GMAC to intervene, but refused to vacate the judgment and ruled that GMAC was not a qualified redemptioner.
¶ 8 GMAC appeals.
¶ 9 As a general rule, the priority of competing lien claims depends on the order in which those claims attached to the encumbered property, subject to recording requirements.
The term "mortgage" includes a deed of trust.
¶ 10 The official comments to RCW 64.34.364 reveal the expectation of the legislature: "As a practical matter, mortgage lenders will most likely pay the assessments demanded by the association which are prior to its mortgage rather than having the association foreclose on the unit and eliminate the lender's mortgage lien."
¶ 11 Therefore, under the statute,
¶ 12 Washington's redemption statute permits a borrower or mortgage lender to redeem foreclosed property for the price paid at the sale.
¶ 13 RCW 6.23.010 identifies qualified redemptioners:
To qualify as a redemptioner, the holder of a lien by deed of trust must have acquired that lien "subsequent in time" to the one being foreclosed.
¶ 14 Deutsche Bank's 2006 deed of trust was not subsequent in time to Summerhill's 2008 super priority assessment lien, so GMAC/Deutsche Bank is not a proper redemptioner
¶ 15 Statutory interpretation is a question of law, reviewed de novo.
¶ 16 GMAC contends the legislature actually intended to protect all junior lienholders, and that the reference to a lien subsequent in time merely means a lien subsequent in priority:
¶ 17 GMAC also contends a literal reading leads to absurd consequences such as those here, where a stranger to the property is allowed a windfall, the mortgage debtor is left with a deficiency, and the secured lender is punished. GMAC urges this court to interpret the provision to grant redemption rights to a creditor having a lien junior to that on which the property was sold.
¶ 18 The problem with this argument is that the language of the statute is unambiguous, and the expressed legislative intent is consistent with the language. The legislature created the super priority lien and did not amend the redemption statute. There is no sign of legislative confusion as to the difference between a lien subsequent in time and a lien prior in time but junior in priority. And it is evident from the official comment that the consequences of that difference were intentional: "As a practical matter, mortgage lenders will most likely pay the assessments... rather than having the association foreclose on the unit and eliminate the lender's mortgage lien."
¶ 19 Nor does a literal reading lead to unlikely, absurd, or strained consequences. GMAC had both notice and opportunity to protect its interests and failed to do so.
¶ 20 This is a highly technical statutory scheme, not for casual tinkering by courts. We will not rewrite the redemption statute because a lienholder's lack of diligence has had unexpected consequences.
¶ 21 Affirmed.
WE CONCUR: DWYER, C.J., and BECKER, J.