Deysi R. Santos v. Yellowfin Loan Servicing Corp., as Successor in Interest to First Franklin ( 2022 )


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  • Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed July 12, 2022.
    In The
    Fourteenth Court of Appeals
    NO. 14-21-00151-CV
    DEYSI R. SANTOS, Appellant
    V.
    YELLOWFIN LOAN SERVICING CORP., AS SUCCESSOR IN INTEREST
    TO FIRST FRANKLIN, Appellee
    On Appeal from the 295th District Court
    Harris County, Texas
    Trial Court Cause No. 2020-35442
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    After appellant Deysi R. Santos defaulted on a promissory note, the note’s
    owner accelerated all payments due under the note and, when Santos still did not
    pay, sued to recover the balance owed. Appellee Yellowfin Loan Servicing Corp.
    owned the note and moved for summary judgment on its breach of contract claim
    against Santos. The trial court granted the motion and awarded Yellowfin its
    claimed damages.
    Santos appeals and raises nine numbered issues, many of which overlap.
    Boiled down, Santos (1) challenges Yellowfin’s ownership of the note, (2) asserts
    a limitations defense, and (3) contends that Yellowfin failed to meet its summary
    judgment burden. After considering the parties’ arguments and the record before
    us, we overrule each of Santos’s issues and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    Background
    On April 28, 2005, Santos executed two loans to purchase a residential
    property: one for $97,592.00 (the “First Loan”) and the second for $24,398.00 (the
    “Second Loan”). The Second Loan is at issue in today’s case and consists of a
    promissory note (the “Note”), secured by a deed of trust. Santos obtained both
    loans from First Franklin, a division of National City Bank of Indiana. Under the
    Note, Santos agreed to pay, in monthly installments, the principal balance as well
    as all interest and other amounts due at the time of the final payment.
    Santos defaulted on her payment obligations. The mortgagee1 foreclosed on
    the First Loan in November 2007. The property sold for $104,745.76.                       The
    proceeds from the foreclosure satisfied the First Loan and extinguished all junior
    liens, including the lien underlying the Note.
    In 2019, Yellowfin purchased the outstanding Note and became the putative
    current owner and holder of the Note. Santos contests Yellowfin’s ownership,
    which we discuss below. Yellowfin sent Santos notice of the purchase. Yellowfin
    then sent a notice of intent to accelerate the payments due under the Note, as a
    result of Santos’s default. Per the notice, Santos had thirty days to cure the default;
    if she did not, Yellowfin intended to accelerate the Note. Santos did not timely
    1
    The original mortgagee was First Franklin, and the mortgagee at the time of foreclosure
    was National City Bank.
    2
    cure, and Yellowfin accelerated all payments due under the Note. Santos did not
    remit payment.
    Yellowfin sued Santos for breach of the promissory note and alleged that the
    amount owed under the Note was $21,023.13. This amount did not include any
    amount owed but not paid prior to June 1, 2019; Yellowfin waived its right to
    collect those amounts. Santos counterclaimed for fraud and violation of the Texas
    Debt Collection Practices Act (“TDCPA”).2
    Yellowfin moved for summary judgment on its claim. Santos responded and
    raised the arguments she again raises on appeal, which we discuss in more detail
    below.     The trial court granted Yellowfin’s motion, awarded $21,023.13 in
    damages, and awarded trial and conditional appellate attorney’s fees, costs of
    court, and post-judgment interest. Santos appeals.
    Issues Presented
    Santos presents nine numbered issues for review, which we copy verbatim
    here. We address overlapping issues together, when appropriate.
    1. Did any court have jurisdiction to hear Yellowfin’s claim where
    Yellowfin could not prove it was the owner of the non-negotiable
    instrument it wanted to enforce?
    2. Was there just a single transaction between First Franklin as the lender
    and Ms. Santos as the borrower when both simultaneous loans between
    the parties were contractually included in the one loan agreement to
    finance just one house?
    3. Is the two-year limitations period in Tex. Prop. Code § 51.003 for
    collecting a mortgage deficiency applicable to the Note when there was
    only one lender who financed the purchase of the property and the
    foreclosure of the related First Loan by that lender voided the lender’s
    lien for the Note, leaving it with only an unsecured deficiency claim?
    2
    Santos non-suited her fraud claim, and the trial court disposed of the TDCPA claim in
    the final judgment.
    3
    4. Is the four-year limitations period for debt in Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.
    Code § 16.004 applicable to the Note when the lender’s cause of action
    contractually accrued no later than the date of foreclosure of the linked
    First Loan in 2007?
    5. Was the summary judgment below void because it failed to meet the
    standards in Tex. R. Civ. P. 166a and failed to follow relevant precedent?
    6. Where there are no servicing records for a 2005 loan, does a 2019 guess
    by the alleged fourth owner of the loan since a 2007 foreclosure, meet the
    summary judgment standard in Tex. R. Civ. P. 166a to establish the
    amount that might be owed by the original borrower?
    7. Was the Note still an obligation “secured by a real property lien” when it
    was acquired by a buyer of defaulted debt more than twelve years after
    the lien against the property was voided by foreclosure of the First Loan?
    8. Does public policy require the owner of a defaulted loan to sue before
    twelve years after its claim contractually accrued?
    9. Is the right to sue on a debt waived if no action is taken on it for more
    than twelve years after the right contractually accrued?
    Analysis
    A.    Ownership of the Note
    In her first issue, Santos argues that the Note was a non-negotiable
    instrument and that Yellowfin had no standing to enforce it.
    In Texas, negotiable instruments are governed by the Uniform Commercial
    Code (“UCC”), as adopted by the Texas Legislature and codified in the Texas
    Business and Commerce Code. See Amberboy v. Societe de Banque Privee, 
    831 S.W.2d 793
    , 793 (Tex. 1992); Tex. Bus. & Com. Code tit. 1, §§ 1.101-12.004
    (“Uniform Commercial Code”). “Negotiable instrument” means an unconditional
    promise or order to pay a fixed amount of money, with or without interest or other
    charges described in the promise or order, so long as the promise or order does not
    state any other undertaking or instruction by the person promising or ordering
    payment to do any action in addition to the payment of money. Tex. Bus. & Com.
    4
    Code § 3.104(a). A promise or order is unconditional unless it states an express
    condition to payment, that the promise or order is subject to or governed by
    another record, or that rights or obligation with respect to the promise or order are
    stated in another record. Id. § 3.106(a).
    Santos does not dispute that the Note is a promise to pay. However, Santos
    argues that the Note violates section 3.106 because the promise is governed by
    another record or because the rights or obligation with respect to the promise to
    pay are stated in another record. Specifically, Santos points to sections 11 and 15
    of the Note, and those sections’ references to other documents.         Section 11,
    governing default and remedies, provides that Santos will be in default if she fails
    to keep any of her agreements “under this Note or under any other agreement with
    [the lender].” (Emphasis added.) Section 15, governing signatures, states: “You
    have read and agree to all provisions of this Note including those on pages 1
    through 3 and in the Disclosure Statement which are incorporated herein by
    reference. . . . See pages 1, 2 and 3 and the Disclosure Statement for additional
    important terms and conditions.”            (Emphasis added.)    The Note defines
    “Disclosure Statement” as “the separate federal truth-in-lending disclosure
    statement of even date provided to you, the terms of which are incorporated by
    reference in this Note.” Disclosures in the Disclosure Statement “are contract
    terms,” according to the Note.
    We agree with Santos that the Note is rendered non-negotiable by its
    statement that the terms of the Disclosure Statement are incorporated by reference.
    A mere “reference to another record does not of itself make the promise or order
    conditional.”   Id. § 3.106(a).    But when a note specifically incorporates by
    reference the terms of other documents, the promise is no longer conditional
    5
    because one must examine those other documents to determine if they place
    conditions on payment.
    For instance, in FFP Marketing Co. v. Long Lane Master Trust IV, 
    169 S.W.3d 402
    , 409 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2005, no pet.), a note stated that “[a]ll of
    the terms of the Loan Agreement and the Indenture are incorporated into this Note
    by reference, with the same effect as if they were reprinted here in full.” Because
    the note was governed by the terms of another writing, requiring one to look
    outside the note to determine if payment was conditional or if the terms of that
    document altered the rights with respect to payment, the court concluded that the
    note was not a negotiable instrument. 
    Id.
     This court has held similarly. See
    Guniganti v. Kalvakuntla, 
    346 S.W.3d 242
    , 249 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
    2011, no pet.) (language in note stating that “[a]dditional advances will be made in
    accordance with the terms and conditions of the Loan Agreement, reference to
    same being here made for all purposes” burdened the note with the conditions of
    the other document and rendered the note non-negotiable); Mitchell v. Riverside
    Nat’l Bank, 
    613 S.W.2d 802
    , 803 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1981, writ
    ref’d n.r.e.) (language in note that it “is subject to and governed by said contract,
    which is hereby expressly referred to, incorporated herein and made a part hereof”
    destroyed the negotiability of the instrument and rendered the instrument burdened
    by the terms within the extrinsic contract). These holdings state the law in Texas.
    See Cont’l Nat’l Bank of Fort Worth v. Conner, 
    214 S.W.2d 928
    , 931 (Tex. 1948)
    (indicating that an otherwise negotiable instrument can be rendered non-negotiable
    if it is burdened with the conditions of another agreement); Great N. Energy, Inc.
    v. Circle Ridge Prod., Inc., 
    528 S.W.3d 644
    , 661 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2017,
    pet. denied) (language that “Deed of Trust, Security Agreement and Financing
    6
    Statement are incorporated herein by this reference for all purposes as if fully set
    forth at length herein” rendered note non-negotiable).
    It does not matter whether the terms of the Disclosure Statement actually
    placed conditions on Santos’s payment. As the commentary to section 3.106
    explains, “It is not relevant whether any condition to payment is or is not stated in
    the writing to which reference is made. The rationale is that the holder of a
    negotiable instrument should not be required to examine another document to
    determine rights with respect to payment.” Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 3.106
    cmt. 1.
    Because the Note expressly incorporates the terms of the Disclosure
    Statement, the Note is burdened by those terms and rendered non-negotiable.
    Accordingly, the Business and Commerce Code does not govern enforcement of
    the Note; contract law does. See FFP Mktg., 
    169 S.W.3d at 409
    .
    A party not identified in a note who is seeking to enforce it as the owner or
    holder must prove the transfer by which it acquired the note. See Leavings v.
    Mills, 
    175 S.W.3d 301
    , 309 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2004, no pet.). Under
    Texas law, the transfer of a note may be proved by testimony or documentation.
    See 
    id. at 312
    . An unexplained gap in the chain of title creates a genuine issue of
    material fact. See 
    id. at 309
    .
    Yellowfin’s records custodian, Matt Miller, testified by affidavit that
    Yellowfin acquired the Note in August 2019 as part of a pool of mortgages sold by
    RCS Recovery Services, LLC, and that Yellowfin lawfully held the Note. Miller
    also attached a copy of the Note, to which a series of putative indorsements and
    allonges were affixed.3       The first two indorsements show that First Franklin
    3
    An indorsement is the placing of a signature, sometimes with an additional notation, on
    the back of a negotiable instrument to transfer or guarantee the instrument or to acknowledge
    7
    indorsed the Note to First Franklin Financial Corporation, which then indorsed it to
    Dreambuilder Investments, LLC. Dreambuilder then executed an allonge to RCS
    Recovery Services, LLC, which then sold the Note and also executed an allonge to
    Yellowfin. Even though the Note is not governed by the Business and Commerce
    Code, the indorsements and allonges on the Note, as well as the purchase and sale
    agreement between RCS and Yellowfin, “constitute more than a scintilla of
    evidence of the assignments of title, and therefore ownership,” from the original
    owner, First Franklin, to the ultimate owner, Yellowfin. Diversified Fin. Sys., Inc.
    v. Hill, Heard, O’Neal, Gilstrap & Goetz, P.C., 
    99 S.W.3d 349
    , 357 (Tex. App.—
    Fort Worth 2003, no pet.) (even though indorsements on note did not create a
    presumption of ownership upon transfer, as they would have under the UCC, they
    nonetheless constituted probative evidence of assignment of ownership). Thus,
    Yellowfin met its initial summary judgment burden to establish that it owned the
    Note. Santos did not offer any controverting evidence that would raise a fact issue
    on Yellowfin’s ownership.
    Although we agree with Santos that the Note is a non-negotiable instrument,
    because Yellowfin otherwise established ownership, we nonetheless overrule her
    first issue challenging Yellowfin’s ownership of, and standing to enforce, the Note.
    B.     Statute of Limitations
    In her second, third, fourth, and seventh issues, Santos argues that
    Yellowfin’s claim was time-barred.
    According to Santos, the Note was part of a single loan agreement, which
    included the First Loan; the lender’s foreclosure on the First Loan in 2007
    payment. See “Indorsement,” Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). An allonge is “[a] slip of
    paper sometimes attached to a negotiable instrument for the purpose of receiving further
    indorsements when the original paper is filled with indorsements.” “Allonge,” Black’s Law
    Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
    8
    extinguished all junior liens; and any right to enforce the Note accrued at that
    point. Thus, Santos contends, the statute of limitations expired two years after
    foreclosure, in 2009 or 2011. Because Yellowfin did not file suit until 2020,
    Santos argues that the suit is time-barred.
    Santos and Yellowfin disagree on when Yellowfin’s claim accrued and
    which statute of limitations applies to Yellowfin’s claim. Yellowfin posits that its
    claim did not accrue until it accelerated the note, and the six-year limitations
    period found in the UCC applies. See Tex. Bus. & Com. Code § 3.118 (providing
    statute of limitations to sue on negotiable instruments is six years). Santos believes
    that Yellowfin’s claim accrued at the point of foreclosure, and the two-year
    limitations period for deficiency claims applies. See Tex. Prop. Code § 51.003(a)
    (if sale price from foreclosure is less than unpaid balance of indebtedness, action to
    recover deficiency must be brought within two years of foreclosure sale).
    If the limitations period for deficiency claims applies, then Yellowfin’s suit
    is time-barred. Whenever a borrower is sued after real property is sold at a
    foreclosure sale, and judgment is sought against the borrower because the
    foreclosure sales price is less than the amount owed, “then (1) the suit is for a
    ‘deficiency judgment,’ (2) the suit must be brought within two years of the
    foreclosure sale, and (3) the suit is governed by § 51.003.” PlainsCapital Bank v.
    Martin, 
    459 S.W.3d 550
    , 555 (Tex. 2015). But when a senior lienholder forecloses
    on its lien, and the proceeds of that sale do not satisfy the debt from a junior lien,
    section 51.003 does not apply to the junior lienholder’s suit to recover the value of
    its note. This is because the junior lienholder has not foreclosed on its lien; only
    the senior lienholder has.
    Two cases are illustrative. In Mays v. Bank One, N.A., 
    150 S.W.3d 897
    , 898
    (Tex. App.—Dallas 2004, no pet.), the appellant executed two different promissory
    9
    notes to different lenders. When the appellant defaulted, the senior lienholder
    foreclosed but was only able to satisfy the first debt. 
    Id.
     No proceeds were left for
    the junior lienholder, so that holder sued for the value of its promissory note. 
    Id.
    The appellant aimed to use the property’s fair market value to offset the claimed
    deficiency under Texas Property Code section 51.005, which only applies after a
    foreclosure sale results in a deficiency. See 
    id. at 899
    ; Tex. Prop. Code § 51.005.
    However, the court found the statute inapplicable, noting that “the only foreclosure
    was of the lien held by” the senior lienholder. Mays, 
    150 S.W.3d at 900
    . Because
    the second lien remained wholly unsatisfied and the second lien was extinguished
    by the foreclosure, the court held that the statute did not apply. 
    Id.
    The First Court of Appeals held similarly in Mandarino v. Sherwood Lane
    Investments, LLC, No. 01-15-00192-CV, 
    2016 WL 4034568
     (Tex. App.—Houston
    [1st Dist.] July 26, 2016, no pet.) (mem. op.). There, appellants purchased a third
    party’s ownership interest in an apartment complex and signed a promissory note
    with the third party as payee. Id. at *1. The third party still owed a portion of the
    principal from its original purchase of the apartment complex (the “First Lien
    Principal”), which it incorporated into the new promissory note. Id. The original
    note on the First Lien Principal was designated the “wrapped note” and the note
    signed by appellants was named the “wraparound note.” Id. The senior lienholder,
    who had possession of the wrapped note, foreclosed on its lien after appellants
    defaulted on their obligations to both notes. Id. at *8. However, the proceeds of
    that sale did not satisfy any of the debt from the junior lien, which was the
    wraparound note. Id. The junior lienholder sued to recover the unpaid balance of
    its note, and appellants argued that section 51.003 applied to time-bar the suit. Id.
    at *2, 7. But the court of appeals held that the section did not apply: “Just as there
    was no foreclosure by the junior lienholder in Mays, so was there no foreclosure by
    10
    Sherwood Lane in the instant case.” Id. at *8. Because the court concluded that
    the junior lienholder was not seeking a deficiency judgment when it sued on its
    promissory note, it was not subject to the statute of limitations for deficiency
    judgments. Id.
    Yellowfin is not seeking a deficiency judgment from the 2007 foreclosure
    sale. Yellowfin (or its predecessor-in-interest) did not foreclose on the Note.
    Rather, a separate lender foreclosed on the First Loan, and the proceeds from that
    sale did not satisfy the debt owing under the Note. Thus, section 51.003 does not
    apply to Yellowfin’s suit. See id.; Mays, 
    150 S.W.3d at 900
    .
    Rather, Yellowfin’s suit is subject to a four-year limitations period. The
    statute of limitations on a suit for debt is four years after the cause of action
    accrues.     See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 16.004(a)(3).                  The statute of
    limitations on foreclosure of a real estate lien similarly is four years from the date
    of accrual of the cause of action, but “the four-year limitations period does not
    begin to run until the maturity date of the last note, obligation, or installment.” Id.
    § 16.035(a), (e). The question becomes whether Yellowfin’s claim accrued more
    than four years before it filed suit.
    If a promissory note contains an optional acceleration clause, limitations
    does not automatically start to run upon default; an action accrues “only when the
    holder actually exercises its option to accelerate” the entire note. See Holy Cross
    Church of God in Christ v. Wolf, 
    44 S.W.3d 562
    , 566 (Tex. 2001).
    It is undisputed that the Note contains an optional acceleration clause4 and
    that Yellowfin accelerated the Note on March 25, 2020, which was three months
    4
    The Note provides:
    You will be in default under this Note if . . . you fail to make any payment or pay
    other amounts owing under this Note when due[.] . . . If you are in default, in
    11
    before filing suit. Santos did not present any controverting evidence, such as
    evidence that some other party accelerated the Note at an earlier date.
    Accordingly, Santos did not raise a fact issue regarding her defense that
    Yellowfin’s claim accrued outside the applicable limitations period.5 See, e.g.,
    Ocean Transp., Inc. v. Greycas, Inc., 
    878 S.W.2d 256
    , 267 (Tex. App.—Corpus
    Christi 1994, writ denied) (when note provided that lender, at its option, could
    declare note immediately due and payable upon default of any installment, date of
    acceleration triggered limitations period).
    We overrule Santos’s second, third, fourth, and seventh issues.
    C.     Propriety of Summary Judgment
    In her fifth and sixth issues, Santos argues that Yellowfin failed to meet its
    summary judgment burden under rule 166a.
    Santos first argues that the trial court failed to make reasonable inferences
    and resolve any doubts in Santos’s favor, which we construe to mean that the trial
    court failed to correctly apply the summary judgment standard. For instance,
    Santos asserts that “[l]imitations on the Note began to run when First Franklin, the
    original lender, acquired the right to declare all amounts due and payable” and that
    “[t]he default on the First Loan caused the accrual of the cause of action to enforce
    both the First Loan and the Note.” Santos continues, “[i]f the trial court had just
    addition to any other rights and remedies we have under law and subject to any
    right you may have to cure your default, we may do any of the following:
    (aa) accelerate the entire balance owing under this Note after any demand or
    notice which is required by law, which entire balance will be immediately due and
    payable . . . .
    5
    When a plaintiff moves for summary judgment on its cause of action, the defendant may
    respond by raising the affirmative defense of limitations, as Santos did here. In that
    circumstance, the defendant is not required to prove its defense as a matter of law to defeat the
    plaintiff’s summary judgment; it is simply required to raise a fact issue about its defense. See
    Brownlee v. Brownlee, 
    665 S.W.2d 111
    , 112 (Tex. 1984) (affirmative defense of modification).
    12
    upheld even a few of the points, as it was required to, then the issue of the special
    two year limitations period for a suing on a deficiency . . . and the four years for
    debt . . . would have immediately precluded summary judgment in favor of a
    plaintiff who filed suit in 2020, more than twelve years after the cause of action
    contractually accrued in 2007.” But these are legal arguments, not facts from
    which inferences may be made or doubts to be resolved.            Further, they are
    premised on Santos’s contention that Yellowfin’s claim accrued upon Santos’s
    foreclosure in 2007. As already explained, limitations does not bar Yellowfin’s
    suit. The trial court did not err as Santos contends.
    Santos also argues that Yellowfin did not offer competent summary
    judgment proof of the amount of damages claimed. According to Santos, the
    amount sought by Yellowfin was “a naked guess by someone with no knowledge.”
    Yellowfin’s records custodian, Martin, testified:
    According to Plaintiff’s records, Defendant owes a balance of
    $21,023.13. Plaintiff is not accruing pre-judgment interest. The
    balance owed was calculated by conducting an amortization of the
    original principal amount of the Note in accordance with the terms
    prescribed by the Note (ie: an amortization of $24,398.00 over twenty
    years with interest accruing at a rate of 11.25 %, and a final balloon
    payment of $17,263.03) then assuming that each and every payment
    was timely made through May 1, 2019. To the extent any payment
    was not made prior to June 1, 2019, Yellowfin waives its right to
    collect that payment and is not seeking to recover any portion of that
    payment through this lawsuit.
    This uncontroverted evidence is sufficient to establish the amount owed.
    See FFP Mktg., 
    169 S.W.3d at 411
     (“Generally, an affidavit that sets forth the total
    balance due on a note is sufficient to sustain an award of summary judgment.
    Detailed proof of the balance is not required.”); Das v. Deutsche Bank Nat’l Tr.
    Co., No. 05-12-01612-CV, 
    2014 WL 1022385
    , at *2 (Tex. App.—Dallas Mar. 5,
    13
    2014, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (accepting affidavit testimony from an employee of
    the “loan . . . servicing agent” as valid evidence of the balance due and owing on
    the note, given the employee’s testimony that he had verified and researched the
    loan’s history and current account information on behalf of the holder, Deutsche
    Bank); Albright v. Regions Bank, No. 13-08-262-CV, 
    2009 WL 3489853
    , at *4
    (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi Oct. 29, 2009, no pet.) (mem. op.) (“An affidavit
    made on personal knowledge of the bank officer, which identifies the notes and
    guaranty and recites the principal and interest due . . . is sufficient to support a
    summary judgment motion.”); Greene v. Deutsche Bank Nat’l Tr. Co., No. 01-04-
    00483-CV, 
    2005 WL 1244604
    , at *1, 3 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] May 26,
    2005, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (accepting the affidavit of a manager for the “loan
    servicing agent” as a person sufficiently situated to testify on the balance owed,
    based on synthesis of eleven records related to the loan’s account history). Santos
    did not present any evidence that she owed a different amount of money or that she
    was entitled to any credits or offsets (beyond the default amounts excused through
    June 2019). E.g., Sandhu v. Pinglia Invs. of Tex., L.L.C., No. 14-08-00184-CV,
    
    2009 WL 1795032
    , at *5 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] June 25, 2009, pet.
    denied) (mem. op.) (“Moreover, Sandhu has not presented any controverting
    evidence raising a fact issue as to Pinglia Investments’s method of computation
    and the accuracy of its figures.”).
    We conclude that Yellowfin carried its summary judgment burden to show
    its entitlement to the damages awarded. We overrule Santos’s fifth and sixth
    issues.
    D.    Remaining Issues
    In her eighth and ninth issues, Santos asks whether public policy requires the
    owner of a defaulted loan to sue before twelve years after its claim contractually
    14
    accrued and whether the right to sue on a debt is waived if no action is taken on it
    for more than twelve years after the right contractually accrued. These issues are
    premised on Santos’s mistaken contention that Yellowfin’s claim to enforce the
    Note accrued upon Santos’s foreclosure in 2007. We have already explained why
    Santos’s position is unmeritorious. We overrule Santos’s eighth and ninth issues.
    Conclusion
    We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
    /s/     Kevin Jewell
    Justice
    Panel consists of Justices Jewell, Zimmerer, and Hassan.
    15