Filed: Aug. 24, 2001
Latest Update: Feb. 21, 2020
Summary: MATRIX CAPITAL BANK, AS SUBSTITUTED PARTY FOR, FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION;James Long, Jr. on brief pro se.clearly allows the mortgagee to pay taxes [i]f .balance where a legal proceeding that may significantly, affect Lenders rights in the Property is instigated.
[NOT FOR PUBLICATION–NOT TO BE CITED AS PRECEDENT]
United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 00-9007
IN RE: JAMES LONG, JR.,
Debtor,
JAMES LONG, JR.,
Debtor, Appellant,
v.
MATRIX CAPITAL BANK, AS SUBSTITUTED PARTY FOR
FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION;
NEW AMERICA FINANCIAL; HARBOR FINANCIAL,
Creditors, Appellees,
JOHN P. FITZGERALD,
Trustee.
APPEAL FROM THE BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL
OF THE FIRST CIRCUIT
[Hon. James A. Goodman, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge]
[Hon. James B. Haines, Jr., U.S. Bankruptcy Judge]
[Hon. Gerardo A. Carlo-Altieri, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge]
Before
Boudin, Chief Judge,
Selya and Lynch, Circuit Judges.
James Long, Jr. on brief pro se.
Jonathan D. White and White and White on brief for appellee
Matrix Capital Bank.
August 20, 2001
Per Curiam. After a thorough review of the record
and of the parties’ submissions, we affirm, essentially for
the reasons set out in the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel’s
decision dated March 31, 2000. We add only that with regard
to the property tax portion of the claim, the mortgage
clearly allows the mortgagee to pay taxes “[i]f . . . there
is a legal proceeding that may significantly affect Lender’s
rights in the Property.” Bankruptcy Appellate Panel Record
Appendix, p. 154. This provision is in accord with that set
out in the Restatement (Third) of Property § 2.2 (1997)
(“[A] mortgagee may expend funds reasonably necessary for
the protection of the security, and may add the sums so
expended to the principal amount secured by the mortgage.
Such expenditures may be made . . . (2) to protect against
the assertion of liens having priority over the mortgage.”).
So far as we can determine from the record, at the
time the mortgagee began paying property taxes on the
mortgagor’s behalf, the Town of Lexington had notified the
mortgagee that taxes were overdue and that a tax sale of the
property was scheduled. The contract allowed the mortgagee
to pay all taxes due and to add that amount to the loan
balance where “a legal proceeding that may significantly
affect Lender’s rights in the Property” is instigated. The
Town may have been wrong, or the information may have been
out-of-date at the time the mortgagee received it, but
clearly the mortgagee was entitled under the contract to pay
the disputed taxes. Long makes no claim that the Town’s
actions did not constitute a “legal proceeding.”
Affirmed. 1st Cir. Loc. R. 27(c).
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