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Wednesday, 30 December 2015 16:00

Freedom Mortgage Corporation v. Las Vegas Development Group, LLC

U.S. District Court of Nevada

Freedom Mortgage Corporation v. Las Vegas Development Group, LLC

Freedom Mortgage Corporation, Plaintiff v. Las Vegas Development Group, LLC, Maria Teresa Castro, Tierra de las Palmas Owners Association, Defendants.

United States District Court, D. Nevada.

May 19, 2015.

Order Granting Motion to Dismiss [##13, 20]

JENNIFER A. DORSEY, District Judge.

In the years following Las Vegas's real estate crash, lenders and investors were at loggerheads over the legal effect of a homeowners association's (HOA's) nonjudicial foreclosure of a superpriority lien on a lender's first trust deed. The Nevada Supreme Court settled the debate last September in SFR Investments Pool 1, LLC v. U.S. Bank, holding that "NRS 116.3116(2) gives an HOA a true superpriority lien, proper foreclosure of which will extinguish a first deed of trust." The SFR decision made 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.

Freedom Mortgage Corporation is one of these lenders. Its first-trust-deed interest in Maria Castro's Tierra de las Palmas Village home was extinguished when the HOA foreclosed on its liens after Castro defaulted on her HOA assessments. Freedom Mortgage brings this action to challenge the extinguishment of its interest in the Castro property. It alleges that, because its loan to Castro was insured by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the federal government has an interest in the property, and permitting the lender's security interest to be extinguished under NRS 116.3116(2) as clarified in SFR violates the Property and Supremacy Clauses of the United States Constitution. The investors who bought the Castro property from the HOA move to dismiss Freedom Mortgage's claims as legally unsound.

I find that Freedom Mortgage lacks standing to assert HUD's rights under the Property Clause and, regardless, HUD has no property interest in the Castro property. I also conclude that the Supremacy Clause does not preempt NRS 116.3116(2)'s application to HUD-insured mortgaged properties because Nevada's HOA superpriority lien law is consistent with HUD's single-family mortgage-insurance program.

Background

A. The Castro Property

Castro purchased her home at 2119 Spanish Town Avenue in North Las Vegas, Nevada in 2009 with a $98,188 loan from Freedom Mortgage, secured by a note and first deed of trust. The loan was insured through the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) by HUD. The property is subject to a 1997 Declaration of Covenants, Conditions, and Restrictions of the Tierra de las Palmas Owners Association (CC&Rs) that obligates homeowners in the Tierra de las Palmas neighborhood to pay certain dues and assessments for the HOA's operation and its common-area maintenance.

B. The HOA Foreclosure on the Castro Property

Castro defaulted on her HOA assessment payments, and the HOA conducted a proper, nonjudicial foreclosure sale in August 2011 at which it bought the property on a credit bid. The HOA then sold the property to Las Vegas Development Group (LVDG) for $3,000 by quitclaim deed.

C. HOA Liens under Nevada's Chapter 116

"NRS 116.3116(1) gives an HOA a lien on its homeowners' residences" for unpaid assessments and fines, and NRS 116.3116(2) gives that lien priority over all other liens and encumbrances with limited exceptions. NRS Chapter 116 permits HOAs to enforce those liens through nonjudicial foreclosure.

As the Nevada Supreme Court explained in SFR, Nevada's HOA statutory-lien scheme, codified as NRS Chapter 116, "is a creature of Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act of 1982. . . (UCIOA), which Nevada adopted in 1991." After an extensive discussion of UCIOA history and Nevada's adoption in Chapter 116 of many of the UCIOA's provisions, the Nevada Supreme Court concluded in SFR that "NRS 116.3116(2) establishes a true superpriority lien" that is "senior to" a lender's first deed of trust. The SFR court explained the importance of this enforcement tool for property owners in common-interest communities:

[T]he recent foreclosure crisis . . . created [incentives] for first security holders to strategically delay foreclosure. . . . An HOA's sources of revenues are usually limited to common assessments. This makes an HOA's ability to foreclose on the unpaid dues portion of its lien essential for common-interest communities. Otherwise, when a homeowner walks away from the property and the first deed of trust holder delays foreclosure, the HOA has to either increase the assessment burden on the remaining unit/parcel owners or reduce the services the association provides (e.g. by deferring maintenance on common amenities). To avoid having the community subsidize first security holders who delay foreclosure, whether strategically or for some other reason, [the UCIOA provision on which NRS 116.3116 is based] creates a true superpriority lien. . . .

Thus, the court concluded, an HOA lien is much like "other inchoate liens such as real estate taxes and mechanics liens": proper foreclosure on these liens extinguishes the lien of the otherwise first mortgagee.

D. This Lawsuit and the Defendants' Motions to Dismiss

On November 19, 2014, two months after the SFR decision was handed down and more than three years after the foreclosure on the Castro property, Freedom Mortgage filed this complaint. It sues Castro, the HOA, and LVDG for declaratory and injunctive relief, quiet title, and an equitable lien. All claims hinge on the theory that its first trust deed on Castro's property could not have been extinguished by the HOA's foreclosure because the loan was insured by HUD, HUD thus "holds a mortgage interest in the Property," and the Constitution's Supremacy and Property Clauses preempt NRS 116.3116 from being "applied to loans insured by HUD."

LVDG and the HOA now move to dismiss all claims. LVDG argues that SFR is squarely dispositive because it supplies the rule that the lender's mortgage interest was extinguished by the HOA's foreclosure sale, and Freedom's claims fail because it no longer has any interest in the property as a matter of law. The HOA joins in LVDG's motion and additionally contends that Freedom Mortgage's claims against it are unripe because the lender failed to first bring them before the Nevada Real Estate Division (NRED) under NRS 38.310 and also failed to provide the affidavit required by NRS 116.760. Because I grant LVDG's motion and dismiss Freedom Mortgage's claims as legally unsound, I decline to reach the HOA's additional arguments.

Discussion

A. The Property Clause

The Property Clause provides that "Congress shall have Power to dispose of and make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the Territory or other Property belong[ing] to the United States." In simple terms, it precludes states and private individuals from divesting the federal government — through state laws or otherwise — of title to property without congressional consent. As the Supreme Court explained in Wilcox v. Jackson, a "state has an undoubted right to legislate as she may please in regard to the remedies to be prosecuted in her Courts, and to regulate the disposition of the property of her citizens by descent, devise, or alienation. But [when the property is] part of the public domain of the United States: Congress is invested by the Constitution with the power of disposing of, and making needful rules and regulations respecting it." "If a state were able to pass laws that could dispose of federal lands . . . the practical result . . . would be, by force of state legislation to take from the United States their own land, against their own will, and against their own laws."

Freedom Mortgage contends that NRS 116.3116(2) is precisely that type of law and that allowing it to extinguish first trust deeds securing federally insured lender loans violates the Property Clause. Freedom Mortgage's argument fails for two reasons: (1) it lacks standing to assert the federal government's Property Clause challenge and (2) the foreclosure on the Castro property deprived the federal government of no property interest.

1. Freedom Mortgage lacks standing to raise a Property Clause challenge.

For this court to have jurisdiction over any case, "the party bringing the suit must establish standing." There are two aspects to standing: Article III standing, which requires a case or controversy, and prudential standing, which "encompasses `the general prohibition on a litigant's raising another person's legal rights, the rule barring adjudication of generalized grievances more appropriately addressed in representative branches, and the requirement that a plaintiff's complaint fall within the zone of interests protected by the law invoked.'" "The question of prudential standing is often resolved by the nature and source of the claim. `Essentially, the standing question in such cases is whether the constitutional . . . provision on which the claim rests properly can be understood as granting persons in the plaintiff's position a right to judicial relief.'"

"The Supreme Court's reasons for the general rule against third-party standing counsel against" granting Freedom Mortgage standing "to enforce the federal government's property rights" in the Castro property. As the Tenth Circuit expressed en banc in The Wilderness Society v. Kane County, Utah:

We "must hesitate before resolving a controversy on the basis of the rights of third persons not parties to the litigation" for two reasons. "First, the courts should not adjudicate such rights unnecessarily, and it may be that in fact the holders of those rights do not wish to assert them." . . . "Second, third parties themselves usually will be the best proponents of their own rights. The courts depend on effective advocacy, and therefore should prefer to construe legal rights only when the most effective advocates of those rights are before them."

In short, "the federal government is the best advocate of its own interests."

The federal government is not a party to this case. Its rights are being championed by private lender Freedom Mortgage, which acknowledges it is "neither attempting to sue under HUD's name nor asserting HUD's rights, because Freedom is the real party in interest." Because HUD is the best proponent of its interests and has not sought to raise the challenge Freedom Mortgage brings, it would be imprudent for the court to recognize Freedom Mortgage's standing to pursue Property Clause claims in this case. I thus decline to recognize Freedom Mortgage's prudential standing to challenge the HOA's foreclosure on the Castro property under the Property Clause.

2. Freedom Mortgage's Property Clause theory lacks merit because the foreclosure did not dispose of property belonging to the United States.

A lack of standing would typically end my analysis. But because there can be disagreement about how to apply prudential-standing principles, I also consider the merits of Freedom Mortgage's Property Clause challenge. Even assuming that this private lender could stand in HUD's shoes to challenge the extinguishment of the bank's first trust deed under the Property Clause, it cannot state a plausible claim because it can identify no federal-government-owned property disposed of by the HOA's foreclosure on the Castro property. Freedom Mortgage contends that "HUD's insurance of the mortgage, by itself, created a federal property interest that is protected by the Property Clause" because "Ninth Circuit law . . . provides that the guarantee of a mortgage, by itself, is sufficient to create a federal property interest for purposes of the Property Clause." Freedom Mortgage overstates the law.

The Ninth Circuit has not held that a HUD insurance policy on a bank loan gives the federal government a property interest protected by the Property Clause. It has held that a deed of trust securing a purchase-price mortgage is a protected interest. And lower courts in this circuit have held that an HOA's foreclosure on property owned by a federal agency violates the Property and Supremacy Clauses.

The key to a successful Property Clause challenge is that the federal government either held a deed of trust against, or owned, the property. Freedom Mortgage has not demonstrated that HUD had, has, or will ever acquire a constitutionally protected interest in the Castro property. At oral argument, despite pointed questions from the bench, counsel for Freedom Mortgage was unable to identify any HUD property interest at the time of the foreclosure or since. This is unsurprising when Freedom Mortgage makes clear in its opposition brief that it is "neither attempting to sue under HUD's name nor asserting HUD's rights, because Freedom is the real party in interest." And it stresses that, "[a]s the holder and beneficiary of the mortgage, Freedom owns the associated property and contract rights pursuant to Nevada law."

Counsel also conceded at oral argument that the only way that HUD could become financially impacted by this foreclosure would be for Freedom Mortgage to make a claim against the HUD mortgage-insurance policy. But that occurrence is now improbable. A lender must make a claim under a HUD policy within 30 days of the foreclosure. This foreclosure occurred nearly four years ago, and Freedom Mortgage never made a claim. The policy also terminated upon foreclosure. Thus, HUD's status with respect to this property will likely never be anything more than a former insurer of the Castro loan, which collected premium payments but never incurred a claim-payment obligation. That interest is far too attenuated to reasonably consider the HOA's foreclosure as disposing of "[p]roperty belong[ing] to the United States" in contravention of the Property Clause.

B. The Supremacy Clause

I also cannot conclude that enforcing NRS 116.3116 against a property with a HUD-insured mortgage violates the Supremacy Clause. Federal law can preempt state law under the Supremacy Clause in three ways: express, field, or conflict preemption. Freedom Mortgage's theory that HUD's mortgage-insurance program preempts the application of NRS 116.3116(2) as interpreted by SFR against properties carrying a HUD-insured mortgage is purely a conflict-preemption one. This lender argues that permitting HUD's interest to be extinguished by an HOA foreclosure would have two results. First, it "would undermine — in fact, eliminate — HUD's ability to obtain title after foreclosure and resell the Property (or to receive an assignment of the mortgage and foreclose in its own name)," thus "imped[ing] the purpose of the program, which is `to make decedent [sic] housing available to all citizens.'" Second, it would make "HUD subject to the vagaries of different states' laws [and] would impede the purpose of the Single Family Mortgage Insurance Program[] to enable low-income borrowers to obtain loans with the least risk of loss upon foreclosure." Freedom Mortgage's apocalyptic predictions are unsupportable, and permitting a lender to lose its security interest when it fails to protect its collateral by satisfying HOA liens is not just consistent with — but contemplated by — HUD's program.

1. No conflict preemption

Conflict preemption occurs where "there is an actual conflict between state and federal law" because "(1) compliance with both federal and state regulations is a physical impossibility, or . . . (2) state law stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives of Congress." Neither circumstance exists here because the lender controls its ability to comply with both state law and the federal program, and because Nevada's superpriority law for HOA-assessment foreclosures is no obstacle to the purpose and objective of HUD's program.

As HUD's website and various publications explain, the single-family mortgage-insurance "program provides mortgage insurance to protect lenders against the risk of default on mortgages to qualified buyers." The federal regulations governing the program are contained in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Title 24.

When a HUD-insured mortgage goes into default, the lender may make a claim for the remaining principal amount owed under the loan. Typically, the lender must assign the mortgage to HUD and certify that the mortgage is "prior to all liens and encumbrances, or defects which may arise except such liens or other matters as may have been approved by the Commissioner." Alternatively, the lender may foreclose, acquire title, and make a claim for the deficiency. The insurance contract "shall be terminated" if "[t]he property is bid in and acquired at a foreclosure sale by a party other than the mortgagee" — which is to say, any party except the lender. In short, a lender has two primary ways to obtain benefits under the program: (1) assign the first-position mortgage interest to HUD before foreclosure or (2) initiate foreclosure and make a claim for the deficiency.

Nothing prevents a lender from simultaneously complying with HUD's program and Nevada's HOA-foreclosure laws. Freedom Mortgage's argument that "[a]llowing HUD's interest to be extinguished pursuant to Nevada law would undermine — in fact, eliminate — HUD's ability to obtain title after foreclosure and resell the [p]roperty (or to receive an assignment of the mortgage and foreclose in its own name)" mischaracterizes the effect of NRS 116.3116 in this case by skipping a crucial step in the claim process. The lender's interest is extinguished by the foreclosure, not HUD's. And the lender's inability to convey good and marketable title to HUD results in a loss to the lender, not to HUD.

The lender gets itself into this predicament only by ignoring HUD's directives. To ensure that it remains able to make a claim, a participating lender has an affirmative obligation to protect its security so it can convey good and marketable title to HUD along with its claim. The lender must ensure that all taxes and all other assessments are paid to prevent liens from attaching to the property. This obligation specifically includes HOA fees and assessments. The lender must negotiate a release of outstanding HOA fees and assessments and ensure that liens are removed from title, and HUD will reimburse the lender for these amounts.

Lenders "must consider the comparative effects of their elective servicing actions, and must take those appropriate actions which can reasonably be expected to generate the smallest financial loss to the Department." HUD has specifically directed its participating lenders "to (a) implement procedures that will result in them being notified when mortgagors default on HOA fees; and/or (b) establish escrows for HOA fees."

In superpriority lien states, the HUD-insured lenders' obligation to prevent foreclosure by satisfying HOA liens is not an aspirational goal: it's a requirement. A 2002 HUD publication sent to participating mortgagees — and in effect at the time of the foreclosure on the Castro property — warned lenders that, in states where unpaid HOA assessments are deemed a priority lien, lenders had an obligation to satisfy those liens. HUD took the risk away by making those expenditures "100 percent reimbursable to the lender":

At this time, condominium and homeowners' association (HOA) fees are not required escrow items for FHA-insured single-family mortgages. Therefore, payment of condo/HOA fees as they become due is the mortgagor's responsibility. When the mortgagor defaults and foreclosure action becomes necessary, lenders must name and properly serve HOAs and condominium associations in the foreclosure proceedings in order to eliminate or reduce HUD's responsibility for unpaid condominium/HOA fees. Further, lenders must take any action necessary to protect HUD's interest in the property against foreclosure actions brought by a condominium/HOA.For those states where unpaid condo/HOA assessments constitute a priority lien against the property, lenders must first attempt to negotiate with the condo/HOA to waive or accept reduced payments for delinquent fees. Should the negotiations prove unsuccessful, lenders should pay all condominium/HOA fees prior to conveyance, whether or not the association has filed a lien.Also, in non-priority states, HUD may request that the lender voluntarily pay delinquent condo/HOA fees to ensure the viability of the homeowner's association, which in turn will assist in maintaining property values and may also reduce future mortgage insurance claims. For these same reasons, HUD will not object if lenders voluntarily pay delinquent condo/HOA fees that were the responsibility of the former borrower to pay.Condominium/HOA fees paid by the lender are 100 percent reimbursable to the lender in accordance with 24 CFR 203.402(j). Lenders may also claim reimbursement for penalties, interest, and/or late fees incurred by the former mortgagor and paid by the lender. . . .

This directive is entirely consistent with Nevada's superpriority law for unpaid HOA assessments. The drafters of the UCIOA (on which NRS 116.3116 is modeled) recognized that, "As a practical matter, secured lenders will most likely pay the . . . nine . . . months' assessments demanded by the association rather than having the association foreclose on the unit." The Nevada Supreme Court cited this easy fix in SFR in response to the banks' lament that allowing a nominal lien to extinguish often hundreds of thousands of dollars in security would be unfair:

[A]s a junior lienholder, [the bank] could have paid off the [HOA] lien to avert loss of its security; it also could have established an escrow for [HOA] assessments to avoid having to use its own funds to pay delinquent dues. The inequity [the bank] decries is thus of its own making. . . .

The First Circuit relied on similar considerations in Chicago Title Insurance v. Sherred Village Associates in rejecting a Supremacy Clause challenge to Maine's statute that gives mechanics' liens priority over a HUD-insured mortgage interest. The panel reasoned:

[E]ven if HUD holds the mortgage, if a contractor seeks to enforce a mechanics' lien, in most cases the mortgagee will decide that it is better off advancing the money to pay off the mechanics' lien so that the project can continue than allowing the property to be sold, even if the mortgagee is entitled to the bulk of the proceeds.The result of allowing state law to govern in this case, then, would not be to establish two different sets of priorities for disposition of sale proceeds, but only to allow a contractor to force HUD, or someone to whom HUD has passed the risk, to make sure that the contractor gets paid for all work done with the consent of the owner. A contrary rule .. . would mean that a contractor would have no way of forcing recovery for work performed with the consent of the owner, or even with the consent of HUD, unless he could file his lien prior to the recording of the mortgage.

Applying Nevada's superpriority HOA-lien law here simply recognizes that the HOA has a right to payment of the dues and assessments it requires to maintain the community's common areas and homeowners' property values. By choosing not to satisfy those obligations, prevent foreclosure, and preserve its collateral, Freedom Mortgage has only itself — not a conflict of laws — to blame for its loss.

2. Allowing NRS 116.3116 to apply to HUD-insured mortgaged properties comports with Kimbell Foods.

Allowing Nevada's HOA-lien superpriorty law to extinguish a lender's first trust deed, despite the lender's participation in HUD's single-family mortgage-insurance program, is also consistent with the United States Supreme Court's decision in United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc. In Kimbell Foods, the high court noted that federal law governs questions involving the rights of the United States arising under nationwide federal programs, but even "[c]ontroversies directly affecting the operations of federal programs, although governed by federal law, do not inevitably require resort to uniform federal rules." "Whether to adopt state law or to fashion a nationwide federal rule is a matter of judicial policy `dependent upon a variety of considerations always relevant to the nature of the specific governmental interests and to the effects upon them of applying state law.'"The court articulated three factors for a federal court to consider "in determining whether federal law should adopt a state rule of decision to govern federal programs": (1) "the likelihood that application of state law would frustrate specific objectives of the federal program," (2) "the need for a nationally uniform body of law," and (3) "the extent to which application of a federal rule would disrupt commercial relationships predicated on state law." Analyzing HUD's mortgage-insurance program and NRS 116.3116 in light of these factors also compels the conclusion that federal law would adopt the state law here.

a. NRS 116.3116(2) does not frustrate specific objectives of the single-family mortgage-insurance program.

Freedom Mortgage's main preemption argument is that allowing NRS 116.3116(2) to extinguish its first trust deed "would impede the purpose of the Single Family Mortgage Insurance Program, to enable low-income borrowers to obtain loans with the least risk of loss upon foreclosure." Freedom Mortgage does not explain how requiring a lender to protect its collateral from an HOA foreclosure by satisfying unpaid HOA assessments would, in fact, impede the program's goals, and I find no support for this conclusion.

The policy behind the program is to boost "housing production and related community development sufficient to remedy the serious housing shortage, the elimination of substandard and other inadequate housing through the clearance of slums and other blighted areas, and the realization as soon as feasible of a decent home and a suitable living environment for every American family." As part of that policy, Congress directed HUD to exercise its "powers, functions, and duties" to "encourage and assist . . . the increase of efficiency in residential construction and maintenance" and "the development of well-planned, integrated, residential neighborhoods and the development and redevelopment of communities."

Nevada's HOA laws — and NRS 116.3116(2) in particular — are entirely consistent with these goals of improving residential community development, eliminating blight, and preserving property values. "The tight restrictions on home design and maintenance, and the overall conformity required by homeowner associations, tends to preserve the character of the community and enhance the value of the property." HOAs require budgets to operate and, as the Nevada Supreme Court explained in SFR:

an HOA's ability to foreclose on the unpaid dues portion of its lien [is] essential for common-interest communities. Otherwise, when a homeowner walks away from the property and the first deed of trust holder delays foreclosure the HOA has to "either increase the assessment burden on the remaining unit/parcel owners or reduce the services the association provides (e.g., by deferring maintenance on common amenities)."

The superpriority lien created by NRS 116.3116(2) is a powerful tool for an HOA "[t]o avoid having the community subsidize first security holders who delay foreclosure."

Giving the HOAs a superpriority lien also helps keep homebuyers in their homes. It incentivizes banks to satisfy liens to avoid HOA foreclosure on the homeowners, enhancing the federal policy of keeping people in their homes. Thus, NRS 116.3116(2) furthers Congress's goals for the HUD program.

b. Freedom Mortgage has shown no need for national uniformity, and homebuyers and HOAs should be able to rely on Nevada's superpriority rule to maintain common-interest communities.

Freedom Mortgage has demonstrated no need for a nationally uniform body of HOA lien priority law. It contends (without evidence) that it is "doubtful . . . that Congress in enacting the Single Family Mortgage Insurance Program, intended `the outcome to depend upon varying characterizations of state law.'" But the HUD program has the built-in flexibility for individual state priority rules to operate symbiotically with the program's requirements. This flexibility exists because HUD puts the burden on participating lenders to ensure that taxes, fees, and other assessments are paid so that liens do not attach and states' various lien-priority rules are never triggered. It also takes the economic risk away from lenders by promising to reimburse their expenditures. Thus, Nevada's superpriority-lien law allows HUD's mortgage-insurance program to function in exactly the way federal law contemplates.

Nevada's legislature has developed a rich body of law for common-interest communities in this state, and superpriority status for HOA liens is a key means of enforcing those laws. If private lenders could earn an exemption from those laws merely by buying mortgage insurance from the federal government, lenders would be disincentivized to ensure their mortgagors' HOA dues and assessments are paid so that common areas and property values can be maintained. This result is inharmonious with Congress's intent to help stabilize the housing market. Nevadans who purchase homes in these common-interest neighborhoods should have the certainty of knowing that they will not have to subsidize the private lenders who fund mortgages in their communities but make the strategic choice not to satisfy the related HOA obligations.

Just like the First Circuit panel in Chicago Title was "not persuaded that Congress has spoken on the need for a federal rule of priority in all disputes involving HUD mortgages," neither am I. As the Supreme Court reasoned — when concluding in Kimbell Foods that a uniform, federal mechanics' lien priority rule is not "necessary to ease program administration or to safeguard the Federal Treasury from defaulting debtors" — Nevada law "furnish[es] convenient solutions in no way inconsistent with adequate protection of the federal interests," and "the prudent course is to adopt the readymade body of state law as the federal rule of decision until Congress strikes a different accommodation."

Conclusion

Neither the Property Clause nor the Supremacy Clause barred Tierra de las Palmas's nonjudicial foreclosure sale of the Castro property nor NRS 116.3116(2)'s extinguishment of Freedom Mortgage's security interest in that property. Freedom Mortgage's interest in the property was wiped out at the time of that sale, and it no longer has any cognizable interest in the Castro property. Because all of Freedom Mortgage's claims are predicated on the assertion that it retained a legal interest in the property despite the foreclosure — a premise that fails as a matter of law — all of its claims must be dismissed with prejudice. The dismissal of all claims on this basis moots the HOA's motion for summary judgment.

Accordingly, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that Las Vegas Development Group, LLC's Motion to Dismiss, in which the Tierra de las Palmas Owners Association has joined, [Doc. 13] is GRANTED. Plaintiff's claims are dismissed with prejudice.

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the HOA's Motion to Dismiss [Doc. 20] is DENIED as moot.

The Clerk of Court is instructed to enter judgment accordingly and close this case.

Additional Info

  • Court:: U.S. District Court
  • State/Country:: Nevada
  • Type: Court Cases
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