Ben Barry, United States Bankruptcy Judge.
Tracy Ivy [Ivy or the debtor] filed his chapter 7 case on April 8, 2016, and received his discharge on July 20, 2016. On August 2, 2017, the debtor filed this adversary proceeding against U.S. Bank National Association [US Bank or the bank]. In his complaint, the debtor seeks a determination of the validity, priority, and extent of US Bank's lien on the debtor's property located at 15078 Gann Ridge Road, Garfield, Arkansas, 72732 [the property]. The debtor argues that US Bank's mortgage on the property is void because it contains an incorrect legal description and, according to the debtor, if a lien in favor of US Bank exists at all, it is voidable under 11 U.S.C. § 522(f) as a cloud on the debtor's superior title. On August 18, 2016, US Bank filed its answer. Also on August 18, 2016, US Bank filed a motion asking this Court to abstain from deciding the adversary proceeding until litigation pending in the Circuit Court of Benton County, Arkansas [state court], had been concluded by the entry of a final order.
On December 8, 2017, the state court issued its final order in the form of a foreclosure decree in favor of US Bank.
On May 8, 2018, US Bank filed a motion for summary judgment in the instant adversary proceeding based upon the state court's findings in the foreclosure decree. The debtor opposed the motion, acknowledging that the state court had found that US bank was entitled to foreclose on the real estate described in the mortgage but that because "the mortgage description of real estate is different than the actual freehold of Tracy Ivy, the mortgage merely clouds the title to Tracy Ivy's homestead." Therefore, according to the debtor, US Bank's lien is "less a mortgage and more in the species of a judgment lien and is avoidable" under § 522(f).
On July 13, 2018, the Court denied US Bank's motion for summary judgment because it found that factual questions remained regarding the identity of the property upon which US Bank could foreclose under the state court's decree. Specifically, the Court stated in its July 13 order that
The Court subsequently scheduled the trial for April 4, 2019. Stanley Bond and Emily Henson appeared on behalf of the debtor. Teaven Stamatis appeared on behalf of US Bank. At the conclusion of the trial, the Court took the matter under advisement. For the reasons stated below, the Court finds that US Bank introduced evidence sufficient to identify the property subject to the state court's foreclosure decree and denies the relief sought by the debtor pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 522(f).
At the April 4 trial, the debtor testified that he has lived at 15078 Gann Ridge Road, Garfield, Arkansas, since his birth in 1976. The debtor's mother, Darla Nix [Nix], testified that her father gave her the property in 1976, which she then owned until 2006. Nix also testified that the property has had the same address-15078 Gann Ridge Road, Garfield, Arkansas, 72732-since 1978.
On April 19, 1995, the Wendell E. Jones Trust [the trust] transferred the property by warranty deed to Nix.
Stip. Ex. 6. At the April 4 trial, the debtor's attorney referenced the property described by the complete legal description as "the rectangle." Nix testified that the rectangle's boundaries consist of a road on one side-Wendell Jones Road-and a fence on the other three sides.
On October 26, 2004, Nix executed a mortgage on the property in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. [MERS] as nominee for United Financial Mortgage Corporation [UFMC]-the lender-and UFMC's successors and assigns. The mortgage referenced the street address of 15078 Gann Ridge Road, Garfield, Arkansas, and parcel ID number: 18-05437-000. Exhibit A to the mortgage from Nix to MERS contained an incomplete legal description:
At the April 4 trial, the debtor's attorney referenced the property described by the incomplete legal description as the "two sides." Nix testified that she did not know at the time she executed the mortgage that the document contained an incomplete legal description. Nix subsequently defaulted on her loan obligations
On November 23, 2005, the property was transferred by mortgagee's deed to EMC. The mortgagee's deed referenced the same incomplete legal description that had appeared in Nix's 2004 mortgage to MERS. The deed also referenced the street address of 15078 Gann Ridge Road, Garfield, Arkansas, and the parcel number of 18-05437-000.
On November 1, 2006, EMC transferred the property by quitclaim deed to Homecomings Financial Network, Inc. [Homecomings Financial]. The quitclaim deed contained the incomplete legal description.
On August 31, 2006, Homecomings Financial transferred the property by special warranty deed to Tracy Ivy (the debtor). The special warranty deed contained the incomplete legal description.
On January 11, 2007, Angela Martin, an attorney with Wilson & Associates, PLLC, filed a notarized document entitled Attorney's Affidavit in the records of Benton County, Arkansas.
On June 26, 2007, the debtor and his wife obtained a loan from Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. [Countrywide].
On January 28, 2014, Bank of America assigned the mortgage to Christiana Trust. Exhibit A to the assignment referenced the incomplete legal description but stated the correct street address of 15078 Gann Ridge Road, Garfield, Arkansas, 72732. In 2017, Christiana Trust assigned the mortgage to US Bank, the defendant in this adversary proceeding. The assignment to US Bank referenced the street address of 15078 Gann Ridge Rd, Garfield, Arkansas, 72732-9478 as well as the 2007 mortgage from Tracy Ivy and his wife to Countrywide.
At the April 4 hearing, Grieve (the assessor) testified that the debtor owns only one piece of real property in Benton County-the parcel assigned number 18-05437-000. Grieve also testified that a parcel ID number is an unique identifier for a parcel of land, explaining by way of example that if a twenty-acre parcel of land were split into two ten-acre parcels, the split would generate the creation of a new parcel ID number. Grieve testified that there is only one parcel in Benton County with the number 18-05437-000 and that there is only one address of 15078 Gann Ridge Road in Benton County. The Benton County rural property card for parcel number 18-05437-000 lists Tracy Ivy as the owner, 15078 Gann Ridge Road, Garfield, Arkansas, 72732 as the property's address and describes the property as consisting of a home, two polesheds, and 9.97 acres. Grieve testified that the Benton County rural property cards contain abbreviated-but not full-legal descriptions and the cards reference the six most recent transfers of the property by grantor/grantee and the book and page number on which the related deed may be found in the Benton County Circuit Clerk's records. The transfer from the trust to Nix in 1995 is one of the transfers listed on the rural property card for parcel number 18-05437-000.
Relying upon the Attorney's Affidavit filed after he and his wife took title
In response, US Bank argues that the Attorney's Affidavit had no effect upon title and did not change the fact that the debtor took title to the property by a deed containing the incomplete legal description and, as a result, the debtor cannot claim that he owns the "rectangle" but that US Bank—who took title by an assignment that referenced the same incomplete legal description —has a mortgage on nothing but the "two sides." In addition, US Bank contends that the debtor warranted in his mortgage to Countrywide that he would defend title to the property and he is therefore estopped from asserting that he has an interest in the property superior to that of US Bank. Although US Bank does not dispute that the mortgage contains an incomplete legal description, it argues that in Arkansas, the function of a legal description is merely to furnish a key by which the property may be identified and that the extrinsic evidence introduced at trial is sufficient for that purpose. US Bank also argues that the debtor cannot employ § 522(f) to avoid US Bank's lien because that subsection specifically excludes judgments arising out of mortgage foreclosures.
As this Court recognized in a previous opinion and reiterated in its order denying US Bank's motion for summary judgment in this case, "if the language describing the property is too vague and indefinite to identify the property, the mortgage may be held void for uncertainty." In re Savage, 504 B.R. 921, 925 (Bankr. W.D. Ark. 2014) (citing Bunch v. Crowe, 134 Ark. 241, 203 S.W. 584, 585 (1918) and Corning Bank v. Bank of Rector, 265 Ark. 68, 576 S.W.2d 949, 953-54 (1979)). An exception concerning the sufficiency of a description was stated succinctly by the Arkansas Supreme Court:
Caraway Bank v. U.S., 258 Ark. 858, 529 S.W.2d 351, 351-52 (1975) (quoting United States v. Westmoreland Manganese
As the Court stated above in the background section, the complete legal description for "the rectangle" appeared in the April 19, 1995 deed transferring the property from the Wendell E. Jones Trust to Nix. The incomplete legal description describing the "two sides" was referenced in every document affecting title to the property after the 1995 deed—beginning with Nix's mortgage in 2004. However, Nix testified that she did not know that the legal description was incomplete when she mortgaged the property to MERS in 2004— and there is no evidence that Nix intended to mortgage anything other than her entire ten-acre parcel of land encompassed by the 1995 deed from the trust to Nix. See American Inv. Co. v. Gleason, 181 Ark. 739, 28 S.W.2d 70, 72 (1930) (mortgage cannot be held void for uncertainty if it is possible to "ascertain from the description, aided by extrinsic evidence, what property is intended to be conveyed.") (emphasis added); see also Argent v. Mortgage Co., LLC v. Drown (In re Bunn) 578 F.3d 487, 489-90 (6th Cir. 2009) (finding it reasonable to assume that an ambiguous mortgage covers the entire residential parcel unless the mortgage documents indicate that the parties intended the mortgage to cover only part of the parcel). Likewise, the debtor testified that he did not realize that the legal description was incomplete in the mortgage documents that he and his wife executed in favor of Countrywide in 2007 until his attorney in the state court foreclosure action against him brought it to his attention more than five years after the fact. As a result, this Court finds that the debtor, like his mother, intended to mortgage the entire parcel of property.
In addition, although a parcel or tax ID number is not a substitute for a legal description, the Court finds that the number supplied a consistent point of reference
Here, the Court finds no such issue regarding the amount of land covered by US Bank's mortgage because both the parcel number of 18-05437-000 and the street address of 15078 Gann Ridge Road, Garfield, Arkansas, 72732 have historically and consistently been tied to the same ten-acre parcel of land that was correctly described in the 1995 deed from the trust to Nix. Although a portion of the legal description was omitted from the deeds and assignments recorded after the deed to Nix, even the incomplete description retained the reference to "10 acres, more or less" and the record reflects that the ten acre parcel has never been subdivided or otherwise separated from the street address of 15078 Gann Ridge Road. In fact, both Nix and the debtor testified that the property consists of the house, outbuildings, and ten acres. In addition, the debtor testified that he has lived on the property—including the ten acres—since he was born. It is clear to the Court—and for that matter, it appears to be clear to the debtor—that the land and buildings that constitute "the property" have not changed since Nix—his mother— took title to the property by virtue of a deed containing the complete legal description. By his own admission, the debtor made no payments to Countrywide after signing the mortgage documents in 2007 and, based on the evidence introduced at trial, the Court finds that the debtor is not entitled to void the mortgage now held by US Bank for "uncertainty" when none seems to exist. Finally, the Court finds that the debtor is not entitled to avoid US Bank's lien under § 522(f), which unambiguously provides that "[t]his paragraph shall not apply with respect to a judgment arising out of a mortgage foreclosure." 11 U.S.C. § 522(f)(2)(C). The state court's foreclosure decree is precisely such a judgment.
For the reasons stated above, the Court denies the relief sought by the debtor under 11 U.S.C. § 522(f) and finds that the extrinsic evidence introduced at trial furnished the information necessary to identify the property upon which US Bank may direct its foreclosure pursuant to the state court's decree, specifically:
IT IS SO ORDERED.