Filed: May 17, 2017
Latest Update: May 17, 2017
Summary: Order Staying Case and Denying Motion Without Prejudice [ECF No. 17] JENNIFER A. DORSEY , District Judge . In the years following Las Vegas's real estate crash, lenders and investors were at odds over the legal effect of a homeowners association's (HOA's) nonjudicial foreclosure of a superpriority lien on a lender's first trust deed. 1 The Nevada Supreme Court settled the debate in SFR Investments Pool 1, LLC v. U.S. Bank, 2 making winners out of the investors who purchased foreclosure
Summary: Order Staying Case and Denying Motion Without Prejudice [ECF No. 17] JENNIFER A. DORSEY , District Judge . In the years following Las Vegas's real estate crash, lenders and investors were at odds over the legal effect of a homeowners association's (HOA's) nonjudicial foreclosure of a superpriority lien on a lender's first trust deed. 1 The Nevada Supreme Court settled the debate in SFR Investments Pool 1, LLC v. U.S. Bank, 2 making winners out of the investors who purchased foreclosure ..
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Order Staying Case and Denying Motion Without Prejudice
[ECF No. 17]
JENNIFER A. DORSEY, District Judge.
In the years following Las Vegas's real estate crash, lenders and investors were at odds over the legal effect of a homeowners association's (HOA's) nonjudicial foreclosure of a superpriority lien on a lender's first trust deed.1 The Nevada Supreme Court settled the debate in SFR Investments Pool 1, LLC v. U.S. Bank,2 making winners out of the investors who purchased foreclosure properties in HOA sales and losers of the lenders who gambled on the opposite result, elected not to satisfy the HOA liens to prevent foreclosure, and thus saw their interests wiped out by sales that often yielded a small fraction of the loan balance.
The Nevada Supreme Court recently reaffirmed the SFR principles in Saticoy Bay v. Wells Fargo and expressly held that "the Due Process Clauses of the United States and Nevada Constitutions are not implicated in an HOA's nonjudicial foreclosure of a superpriority lien."3 But when a Ninth Circuit panel considered the same issues in Bourne Valley Court Trust v. Wells Fargo Bank, it held that Chapter 116's nonjudicial foreclosure scheme "facially violated mortgage lenders' constitutional due process rights" before it was amended in 2015.4 The losing party in Bourne Valley has filed a petition for certiorari in the United States Supreme Court,5 so the constitutionality of Nevada's non-judicial foreclosure scheme may ultimately be decided by the United States Supreme Court.6
This case concerns one of those nonjudicial foreclosure sales, and Deutsche Bank challenges that foreclosure sale as a violation of its right to due process, relying on Bourne Valley.7 Defendant Eddie Haddad now moves to dismiss Deutsche Bank's claims, relying on the Nevada Supreme Court's Saticoy Bay decision and arguing that Bourne Valley is not binding on this court.8 To save the parties from the need or inclination to invest resources further briefing the effect of the Bourne Valley and Saticoy Bay opinions before the United States Supreme Court has ruled on the petition for certiorari review in Bourne Valley, I deny the pending motion without prejudice, and I sua sponte stay all proceedings in this case.
Discussion
A district court has the inherent power to stay cases to control its docket and promote the efficient use of judicial resources.9 When determining whether a stay is appropriate pending the resolution of another case—often called a "Landis stay"—the district court must weigh: (1) the possible damage that may result from a stay, (2) any "hardship or inequity" that a party may suffer if required to go forward, (3) "and the orderly course of justice measured in terms of the simplifying or complicating of issues, proof, and questions of law" that a stay will engender.10 After weighing these considerations, I find that a Landis stay is appropriate here. I address these considerations in reverse order.
A. A stay will promote the orderly course of justice.
At the center of this case is an HOA-foreclosure sale under NRS Chapter 116 and the competing arguments that the foreclosure sale either extinguished the bank's security interest or had no legal effect because the statutory scheme violates due process. The United States Supreme Court's consideration of the petition for certiorari in Bourne Valley has the potential to be dispositive of this case or at least of discrete issues that it presents. As the jurisprudence in this area of unique Nevada law continues to evolve, the parties in the scores of foreclosure-challenge actions pending in this courthouse file new motions or move to supplement the ones that they already have pending, often resulting in docket-clogging entries and an impossible-to-follow chain of briefs in which arguments are abandoned and replaced. Staying this case pending the Supreme Court's disposition of the petition for certiorari in Bourne Valley will permit the parties to evaluate—and me to consider—the viability of the claims under the most complete precedent. This will simplify and streamline the proceedings and promote the efficient use of the parties' and the court's resources.
B. Hardship and inequity
All parties face the prospect of hardship if I resolve the claims or issues in this case before the petition for certiorari has been decided. A stay will prevent unnecessary briefing and the expenditures of time, attorney's fees, and resources that could be wasted—or at least prematurely spent—should the Supreme Court take up this case.
C. Damage from a stay
The only potential damage that may result from a stay is that the parties will have to wait longer for resolution of this case and any motions that they have filed or intend to file in the future. But a delay would also result from any rebriefing or supplemental briefing that may be necessitated if the Supreme Court grants certiorari and resolves this circuit-state split. So it is not clear to me that a stay pending the Supreme Court's disposition of the petition for certiorari will ultimately lengthen the life of this case. I thus find that any possible damage that the extension of this stay may cause the parties is minimal.
D. The length of the stay is reasonable.
Finally, I note that a stay of this case pending the disposition of the petition for certiorari in Bourne Valley is expected to be reasonably short. The petition and opposition have been filed. Because the length of this stay is directly tied to the petition proceedings in those cases, it is reasonably brief, and it is not indefinite.
Conclusion
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that this case is STAYED. Once the United States Supreme Court proceedings in Bourne Valley have concluded, any party may move to lift this stay.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the pending motion to dismiss [ECF No. 17] is DENIED without prejudice to the refiling of the motion within 20 days of the order lifting the stay.