Nell C. Dysart v. Trustmark National Bank ( 2018 )


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  •                Case: 15-14690       Date Filed: 03/30/2018      Page: 1 of 13
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 15-14690
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 2:13-cv-02092-KOB
    NELL C. DYSART,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    versus
    TRUSTMARK NATIONAL BANK,
    a corporation,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Alabama
    ________________________
    (March 30, 2018)
    Before WILLIAM PRYOR, JILL PRYOR and CLEVENGER *, Circuit Judges.
    *
    Honorable Raymond C. Clevenger III, United States Circuit Judge for the Federal
    Circuit, sitting by designation.
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    PER CURIAM:
    Plaintiff Nell Dysart, proceeding pro se, brought a state law breach of
    contract claim against Trustmark National Bank, alleging that it breached the terms
    of her mortgage when it accelerated her loan without providing her with the notice
    the mortgage required. The district court granted summary judgment to Trustmark.
    The court determined that Trustmark fulfilled its notice obligations under the
    mortgage as a matter of law, even though it failed to disclose some of the
    information required by the mortgage, because Dysart had actual knowledge of the
    omitted information.
    This appeal requires us to consider whether, under Alabama law, a bank
    breaches the terms of a mortgage when it accelerates the loan—without disclosing
    to the borrower all the information that the mortgage requires the bank to disclose
    before acceleration—if the bank can show that the borrower was otherwise aware
    of the omitted information. We conclude that under these circumstances the bank
    has breached the terms of the mortgage agreement. Accordingly, we reverse the
    district court’s grant of summary judgment to Trustmark on Dysart’s breach of
    contract claim.
    I.      BACKGROUND
    Dysart borrowed money from Trustmark secured by a mortgage on her
    home. The mortgage, which was based on a form agreement, obligated Dysart to
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    make monthly payments to Trustmark, pay taxes attributable to the property, and
    keep the property insured, among other things. If Dysart defaulted on any of these
    obligations, the mortgage permitted Trustmark to accelerate the loan, foreclose on
    the property, and sell it in a foreclosure sale.
    The mortgage dictated the notice that Trustmark had to provide to Dysart
    before it could accelerate the loan.1 The notice had to identify:
    (a) the default; (b) the action required to cure the default; (c) a date,
    not less than 30 days from the date the notice is given to Borrower, by
    which the default must be cured; and (d) that failure to cure the
    default on or before the date specified in the notice may result in
    acceleration of the [loan] . . . .
    Mortgage at ¶ 22 (Doc. 1-1).2 The mortgage also required Trustmark to “inform
    Borrower of the right to reinstate after acceleration and the right to bring a court
    action to assert the non-existence of a default or any other defense of Borrower to
    acceleration and sale.” Id.
    The mortgage provided that if Trustmark accelerated the loan, Dysart could
    cure the default and return to the original terms of the mortgage. The original
    terms would be reinstated if Dysart paid all sums that were currently due under the
    mortgage, cured any default of other covenants or agreements, paid Trustmark’s
    1
    The mortgage established different notice requirements if Dysart was in default because
    she sold an interest or transferred her interest in the property without first obtaining Trustmark’s
    consent. Because Trustmark does not contend that it accelerated the loan on this basis, these
    requirements are not at issue.
    2
    Citations to “Doc. #” refer to numbered docket entries in the district court record in this
    case.
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    expenses in enforcing the mortgage including its reasonable attorney’s fees, and
    took any other action that Trustmark reasonably required.
    The parties’ dispute arose after Dysart defaulted on the mortgage by failing
    to maintain property insurance and pay the property taxes. In a series of several
    communications, Trustmark notified Dysart of the default, identified the actions
    that Dysart needed to take to cure the default, 3 and directed that the loan would be
    accelerated if Dysart failed to cure the default. But there is no evidence that
    Trustmark communicated to Dysart that she had a right to reinstatement after the
    loan was accelerated or to bring an action to assert the non-existence of a default or
    any other borrower’s defense to acceleration and sale. When Dysart failed to cure
    the default, Trustmark accelerated the loan, foreclosed on the property, and sold it
    to a third party.
    After the home was sold, Dysart, proceeding pro se, brought this lawsuit in
    state court, suing Trustmark for breach of contract.4 Dysart alleged that the bank
    breached the terms of the mortgage by failing to give the required notice before
    accelerating the loan. Trustmark removed the lawsuit to federal district court on
    3
    In the letter identifying the actions Dysart needed to take to cure the default regarding
    the property taxes, Trustmark gave Dysart seven days to say whether she would cure the default,
    but it never set a deadline for Dysart to cure the default before it accelerated the loan.
    4
    Dysart previously sued Trustmark and others in three separate lawsuits alleging claims
    arising out of the foreclosure. Additionally, in this lawsuit Dysart originally brought other
    claims against the bank and its attorneys. The issues before us in this appeal are limited to her
    breach of contract claim; they do not implicate Dysart’s earlier lawsuits or her other claims in
    this action.
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    the basis of diversity jurisdiction. Trustmark then moved for summary judgment,
    arguing that it had not breached the contract because it had satisfied its disclosure
    obligations before accelerating the loan (1) by substantially complying with those
    obligations or (2) because Dysart was actually aware of the non-disclosed rights
    from prior dealings between the parties. The district court granted Trustmark’s
    summary judgment motion. Although there was no evidence that Trustmark had
    informed Dysart of her rights to reinstatement or to bring a separate action to assert
    the non-existence of a default, the court found that Trustmark had fulfilled its
    obligations because Dysart had actual knowledge of these rights. This is Dysart’s
    appeal.
    II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
    Hamilton v. Southland Christian Sch., Inc., 
    680 F.3d 1316
    , 1318 (11th Cir. 2012).
    Summary judgment is appropriate when there is “no genuine dispute as to any
    material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 56(a). A genuine dispute of material fact exists when “the evidence is such
    that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.” Likes v.
    DHL Express (USA), Inc., 
    787 F.3d 1096
    , 1098 (11th Cir. 2015) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
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    III.     LEGAL ANALYSIS
    Dysart asserts that Trustmark breached the terms of the mortgage by failing
    to give proper notice before accelerating her loan. She argues that before
    Trustmark accelerated the loan, it failed to notify her of the right to reinstatement
    or to bring a court action asserting the non-existence of a default; therefore, it
    breached the mortgage. Trustmark admits that it failed to notify Dysart of these
    particular rights, but it contends that there was no breach because Trustmark
    substantially complied with the notice requirements and because Dysart was aware
    of the non-disclosed rights from the parties’ prior dealings, when Dysart was in
    default previously. We agree with Dysart that Trustmark breached the mortgage
    by failing to provide the requisite notice before accelerating the loan because
    Alabama law is clear that a bank must strictly comply with a mortgage’s notice and
    disclosure requirements. 5
    The Alabama Supreme Court has recognized that if a lender fails to give
    notice that strictly complies with the requirements of the mortgage before
    accelerating the loan, the borrower has a breach of contract claim against the
    lender. Jackson v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 
    90 So.3d 168
     (Ala. 2012). In Jackson,
    after borrowers fell behind on their mortgage payments, they received a notice
    from their loan servicer informing them that their loan had been accelerated and a
    5
    The parties agree that in this diversity action Alabama law governs the breach of
    contract claim.
    6
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    foreclosure sale was imminent. 
    Id. at 170
    . After the foreclosure sale, the
    homeowners brought a breach of contract claim against the owner and servicer of
    the loan, seeking damages because the owner and servicer failed to give notice
    before accelerating the loan. 
    Id. at 171
    . After the trial court granted summary
    judgment to the owner and servicer, the Alabama Supreme Court reversed, holding
    that the defendants breached the mortgage by failing to give the borrowers proper
    notice of their intent to accelerate the debt, as required under the terms of the
    mortgage. 
    Id. at 173
    . The Court, quoting from earlier cases, explained that “strict
    compliance” with the mortgage’s notice provisions was required. 
    Id. at 173
    (quoting Dewberry v. Bank of Standing Rock, 
    150 So. 463
    , 469 (Ala. 1933)).
    In a recent decision, the Alabama Supreme Court, relying on Jackson,
    reiterated that a lender must strictly comply with a mortgage’s notice provision
    before accelerating the loan. See Turner, 
    2017 WL 3821270
    . In Turner, after
    homeowners defaulted on their mortgage, their bank notified them that they were
    in default, that they had 30 days to cure the default before the bank accelerated the
    loan, and that they had the rights to reinstate the loan after acceleration and to
    assert in the foreclosure proceeding the non-existence of the default as a defense to
    the acceleration and foreclosure. Id. at *2. The bank then accelerated the loan,
    sold the property at a foreclosure sale, and filed an action to eject the homeowners
    from the property. Id. In the ejectment action, the homeowners asserted that the
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    bank had failed to give proper notice before acceleration by failing to disclose that
    the homeowners could bring a separate action to assert the non-existence of the
    default and that this failure to give notice rendered the foreclosure sale a nullity.
    Id. at *3. The Alabama Supreme Court agreed, relying on Jackson and holding that
    substantial compliance was insufficient to satisfy the bank’s notice obligation
    because Alabama law “requires strict compliance” before a bank may accelerate a
    loan. Id. Because the bank had not strictly complied with all of the mortgage’s
    notice requirements, the Court concluded that the mortgage sale was void and the
    homeowners could not be ejected. Id. at *6.
    Jackson and Turner dictate that Trustmark was required to comply strictly
    with the mortgage’s notice requirements, meaning it had to disclose to Dysart,
    among other things, that she had a right to reinstatement and to bring a court action
    asserting the non-existence of a default. Because Trustmark failed to do so, it
    breached the terms of the mortgage.
    Trustmark argues that it was excused from strict compliance with the
    mortgage’s notice requirement because Dysart had actual knowledge of the
    information that Trustmark failed to disclose. We acknowledge that neither
    Jackson nor Turner directly addressed whether proof that a borrower actually knew
    about her rights excuses a lender from fulfilling its notice obligations under a
    mortgage because this issue was not raised in either case. But it would be
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    inconsistent with the strict compliance requirement set forth in Turner and Jackson
    to conclude that because the borrower learned the information in some other way
    that the lender is relieved from its disclosure obligations such that it did not breach
    the agreement. We are concerned that permitting a lender to prove that it did not
    breach the mortgage by relying on proof that the borrower was actually aware of
    the information that the lender failed to disclose would run counter to a mortgage’s
    requirement that the lender give specific notice after a default occurs before
    accelerating the loan. Allowing substitute proof of actual knowledge could, as a
    practical matter, eliminate a lender’s responsibility to inform the borrower of her
    rights upon default because the mortgage itself notifies the borrower of these
    rights.
    We also acknowledge Alabama case law holding that if a lender provides
    proof that it sent proper notice but the borrower denies ever receiving the notice,
    the court may consider whether the borrower had actual knowledge of the
    information that the lender was required to disclose. See Redman v. Fed. Home
    Mtg. Corp., 
    765 So.2d 630
     (Ala. 1999). In Redman, before accelerating the loan
    on a divorced couple’s home, the lender fulfilled its disclosure obligations by
    sending, through certified mail, a notice of default to the home’s address. 
    Id. at 634
    . In an ejectment and wrongful foreclosure action, the ex-wife claimed that the
    bank failed to provide proper notice of the default because although she lived at the
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    home she never received the notice. 
    Id.
     The Alabama Supreme Court, after
    finding that the bank had fulfilled its disclosure obligations, rejected the ex-wife’s
    argument. Instead, the Court relied on the fact that the ex-wife had actual
    knowledge of the information that the bank was required to disclose, explaining
    that she could not “close[] [her] eyes to avoid ‘discovery’ of the truth that was
    reasonably apparent.” 
    Id. at 635
    .
    The district court in this case treated Redman as permitting Trustmark to rely
    on evidence that Dysart received constructive notice in lieu of proving that it had
    strictly complied with the mortgage’s notice requirements. But nothing in Redman
    directly addressed the question before us in this case—whether a lender breaches a
    mortgage when it fails to comply with a mortgage’s pre-acceleration disclosure
    requirements if it can show that the borrower already knew the information that the
    lender was required to disclose. This issue necessarily was not decided in Redman
    because it was undisputed that the lender had sent proper notice before accelerating
    the loan.
    We recognize that in a different context the Alabama Supreme Court has
    adopted a harmless error standard, holding that when a lender fails to provide the
    public with notice required under an Alabama statute before conducting a
    foreclosure sale, the borrower may rely on this error to invalidate the foreclosure
    sale only if the error prejudiced the borrower. See Perry v. Fed. Nat’l Mortg.
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    Assoc., 
    100 So. 3d 1090
     (Ala. Civ. App. 2012). In Perry, after a homeowner
    defaulted on his mortgage, EverHome Mortgage Company published a notice in a
    local newspaper that it was the assignee of the mortgage and would be selling the
    property in a foreclosure sale. 
    Id. at 1092
    . Alabama law requires that before
    conducting a foreclosure sale, a lender must give the public notice of the “time,
    place, and terms” of the sale through a notice published in a local newspaper. 
    Ala. Code § 35-10-13
    . EverHome failed to comply with the statute’s notice
    requirement because its description of the terms of the sale was inaccurate: it was
    not the assignee of the mortgage at the time the notice was published. Instead,
    EverHome was assigned the mortgage one week later. 
    Id. at 1098
    . When the
    purchaser at the foreclosure sale brought an action to eject the homeowner, the
    homeowner argued that the foreclosure sale was null and void because
    EverHome’s notice inaccurately identified EverHome as the assignee of the
    mortgage. See 
    Ala. Code § 35-10-13
    . The Alabama Court of Civil Appeals
    rejected the homeowner’s argument, holding that only errors in a required notice
    that prejudice the borrower will invalidate an otherwise valid foreclosure sale.
    Perry, 
    100 So. 3d at 1099
    .
    Although Perry did not require the lender to strictly comply with the
    statutory requirements governing notice to the public before a foreclosure sale,
    nothing in the opinion addressed whether this harmless error standard also applies
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    when a lender fails to comply with a mortgage’s notice requirements before
    accelerating a loan. We conclude that it would be inappropriate to extend the
    reasoning in Perry from the context of a lender failing to comply with statutory
    public disclosure requirements to that of a lender failing to comply with a
    mortgage’s disclosure requirements because to do so would be inconsistent with
    the Alabama Supreme Court’s Turner and Jackson decisions requiring strict
    compliance with mortgage disclosure obligations. See Turner, 
    2017 WL 3821270
    ,
    at *6; Jackson, 
    90 So.3d at 173
    .
    Finally, we note that although Trustmark breached the terms of the mortgage
    by failing to give Dysart proper notice before accelerating the loan, if Dysart had
    independent knowledge of the information that Trustmark was required to disclose,
    she may have suffered no actual damages. But this would not defeat Dysart’s
    claim because even without actual damages Alabama law permits the recovery of
    nominal damages in breach of contract actions. See Knox Kershaw, Inc. v.
    Kershaw, 
    552 So. 2d 126
    , 128 (Ala. 1989) (“It is well settled, however, that once a
    breach of contract has been established, as it was in this case, the nonbreaching
    party is entitled to nominal damages even if there was a failure of proof regarding
    actual damages.”).
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    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons set forth above, we reverse the district court’s grant of
    summary judgment to Trustmark. We remand for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
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