BRYAN, Judge.
Edith Cooper ("Edith") appeals from a summary judgment in favor of the Federal National Mortgage Association ("Fannie Mae") in an ejectment action. We affirm.
On November 24, 2003, Edith's father, Mason Dee Cooper ("Mason"), a widower who owned a house located on Dartmouth Avenue in Bessemer ("the house"), mortgaged the house to Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, Inc. Mason was the sole owner of the house when he executed the mortgage, and he was the only person named as a "Borrower" in the mortgage. Subsequent to the execution of the mortgage, Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. ("the lender"), became the successor by merger to Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, Inc.
The mortgage is a reverse mortgage. Reverse mortgages are designed to enable elderly homeowners to convert the equity in their homes to monthly streams of income or lines of credit. See U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Home Equity Conversion Mortgage Handbook, Dir. No. 4235.1 REV-1 (Nov. 18, 1994) ("HUD Handbook") at ch. 1-2. "Unlike a traditional `forward' residential mortgage, which is repaid in periodic payments, a reverse mortgage is repaid in one payment, after the death of the borrower, or when the borrower no longer occupies the property as a principal residence." HUD Handbook at ch. 1-3B. Consequently, Paragraph 9 of the mortgage provided:
Although the mortgage required the lender to give Mason notice of default if his title in the house were sold or otherwise transferred, it did not require the lender to give anyone notice of default if Mason died and the house was no longer the principal residence of at least one surviving borrower.
On April 10, 2008, Mason executed a quitclaim deed with respect to the house, which named Edith, who is his sole heir, as the grantee. However, Mason continued to live in the house until he died on May 6, 2008. After Mason's death, Edith began living in the house.
On January 9, 2009, the lender held a foreclosure sale at the Jefferson County Courthouse in Birmingham. Fannie Mae was the highest bidder at the foreclosure sale, and the auctioneer who conducted the sale executed a foreclosure deed conveying the house to Fannie Mae.
Fannie Mae moved for a summary judgment on the ground that it owned legal title to the house by virtue of the foreclosure deed. Opposing the summary-judgment motion, Edith asserted, among other things, that Fannie Mae was not entitled to possession of the house because, she said, the foreclosure was wrongful because, she said, (1) the lender had failed to give her the notice of default required by Paragraph 9 of the mortgage and (2) the foreclosure notice published in the newspaper stated that the foreclosure sale would be held at the Jefferson County Courthouse in Birmingham rather than the Jefferson County Courthouse in Bessemer. In addition, she asserted that Fannie Mae was not entitled to a summary judgment because, she said, a genuine issue of material fact existed regarding whether Fannie Mae was entitled to possession of the house.
Following a hearing, the trial court entered a summary judgment in favor of Fannie Mae with respect to its claim against Edith and dismissed the claim against Mason. Thereafter, Edith moved to vacate the judgment, and the trial court denied that motion. Edith then timely appealed to this court. Due to lack of jurisdiction, we transferred the appeal to the supreme court, which transferred the appeal back to this court pursuant to § 12-2-7(6), Ala.Code 1975.
Potter v. First Real Estate Co., 844 So.2d 540, 545 (Ala.2002).
Edith first argues that the trial court erred in entering a summary judgment in favor of Fannie Mae because, she says, the trial court held that she lacked standing to challenge the propriety of the foreclosure sale. First, we note that the trial court did not hold that she lacked standing to challenge the propriety of the foreclosure sale; rather, the trial court held that, because she was not a party to the mortgage, the mortgage did not require the lender to send her the individual notice of the foreclosure sale that the mortgage required the lender to send a borrower who was a
(Emphasis added.)
Second, we find no error in the trial court's holding that, because Edith was not a party to the mortgage, the mortgage did not require the lender to send her the individual notice of the foreclosure sale that the mortgage required the lender to send a borrower who was a party to the mortgage. In pertinent part, Paragraph 20 of the mortgage provides that, "[i]f Lender invokes the power of sale, Lender shall give a copy of a notice to Borrower in the manner provided in Paragraph 16." It is undisputed that Edith was not named as a borrower in the mortgage. Accordingly, we find no merit in Edith's first argument.
Edith also argues that the trial court erred in entering a summary judgment in favor of Fannie Mae because, she says, Fannie Mae failed to prove that the lender gave either Mason's estate or Edith notice of Mason's default as required by Paragraph 9 of the mortgage. Fannie Mae contends that, before invoking its power of sale, the lender properly delivered a letter dated October 3, 2008 ("the October 3 letter"), to the house notifying Mason's estate that Mason was in default because he had died, which had resulted in the house not being the principal residence of at least one borrower. Edith contends that the October 3 letter was not delivered to the house. However, Fannie Mae was entitled to a summary judgment regardless of whether the lender delivered the October 3 letter to the house because (1) the default upon which the lender based its acceleration of the debt and its invoking of the power of sale was Mason's death, which resulted in the house not being the principal residence of at least one Borrower and (2) Paragraph 9 of the mortgage does not require the lender to give the borrower notice of such a default. Paragraph 9(a)(I) of the mortgage provides that the lender could require immediate payment of all sums secured by the mortgage if "[a] Borrower dies and the [house] is not the principal residence of at least one surviving Borrower." However, Paragraph 9(d) of the mortgage does not require the lender to give the borrower notice of a default under Paragraph 9(a)(I). Paragraph 9(d), which states in pertinent part that "Lender shall notify the ... Borrower whenever the loan becomes due and payable under Paragraph 9(a)(ii)...." (emphasis added), requires the lender to give the borrower notice of a default under Paragraph 9(a) only if the default was
(Emphasis added.)
Accordingly, because the default upon which the lender based its acceleration of the mortgage and its invoking of the power of sale was Mason's death, the lender was not obligated to give Mason's estate notice of that default pursuant to Paragraph 9, and, therefore, Fannie Mae was entitled to a summary judgment regardless of whether the lender delivered the October 3 letter to the house.
Edith next argues that Fannie Mae failed to prove that the October 3 letter was delivered to the house. However, this argument has no merit because, as explained above, Fannie Mae was entitled to a summary judgment regardless of whether the October 3 letter was delivered to the house because (1) the lender based its acceleration of the mortgage and its invoking of the power of sale on Mason's death, which resulted in the house not being the principal residence of at least one borrower, and (2) Paragraph 9 of the mortgage did not require the lender to give the borrower notice of such a default.
Edith also argues that the trial court erred in entering a summary judgment in favor of Fannie Mae because, she says, the foreclosure sale was held at the Jefferson County Courthouse in Birmingham rather than the Jefferson County Courthouse in Bessemer. She argues that, because the house was located in the Bessemer Division of Jefferson County rather than the Birmingham Division, the foreclosure sale had to be held at the Jefferson County Courthouse in Bessemer rather than the Jefferson County Courthouse in Birmingham. Rejecting that argument, the trial court stated in its judgment:
We agree with the trial court's analysis; therefore, we hold that, given the facts of the present case, the trial court did not err in concluding that the foreclosure sale was not invalid due to its being conducted at the Jefferson County Courthouse in Birmingham rather than the Jefferson County Courthouse in Bessemer.
Finally, Edith argues that the trial court erred in entering a summary judgment in favor of Fannie Mae because, she says, the evidence was in conflict regarding whether the October 3 letter was delivered to the house. However, this argument has no merit because, as explained above, Fannie Mae was entitled to a summary judgment regardless of whether the October 3 letter was delivered to the house because (1) the lender based its acceleration of the mortgage and its invoking of the power of sale on Mason's death, which resulted in the house not being the principal residence of at least one borrower, and (2) Paragraph 9 of the mortgage did not require the lender to give the borrower notice of such a default.
AFFIRMED.
THOMPSON, P.J., and PITTMAN and MOORE, JJ., concur.
THOMAS, J., concurs in the result, without writing.