Bank of New York Mellon v. Tope ( 2023 )


Menu:
  • ***********************************************
    The “officially released” date that appears near the be-
    ginning of each opinion is the date the opinion will be pub-
    lished in the Connecticut Law Journal or the date it was
    released as a slip opinion. The operative date for the be-
    ginning of all time periods for filing postopinion motions
    and petitions for certification is the “officially released”
    date appearing in the opinion.
    All opinions are subject to modification and technical
    correction prior to official publication in the Connecticut
    Reports and Connecticut Appellate Reports. In the event of
    discrepancies between the advance release version of an
    opinion and the latest version appearing in the Connecticut
    Law Journal and subsequently in the Connecticut Reports
    or Connecticut Appellate Reports, the latest version is to
    be considered authoritative.
    The syllabus and procedural history accompanying the
    opinion as it appears in the Connecticut Law Journal and
    bound volumes of official reports are copyrighted by the
    Secretary of the State, State of Connecticut, and may not
    be reproduced and distributed without the express written
    permission of the Commission on Official Legal Publica-
    tions, Judicial Branch, State of Connecticut.
    ***********************************************
    THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON v.
    ACHYUT M. TOPE ET AL.
    (SC 20592)
    Robinson, C. J., and McDonald, D’Auria,
    Mullins and Alexander, Js.
    Syllabus
    The plaintiff bank, N. Co., sought to foreclose a mortgage on certain real
    property owned by the named defendant, T, following T’s default on a
    promissory note secured by the mortgage. The note originally was exe-
    cuted in favor of H Co., but, subsequently, it was specially endorsed to
    J Co., and H Co. assigned its rights under the mortgage to N Co. The
    trial court rendered the first judgment of foreclosure by sale in 2014.
    Thereafter, T filed, and the trial court granted, multiple motions to open
    the judgment and to extend the sale date. In 2016, the trial court again
    rendered a judgment of foreclosure by sale. In response, T filed, among
    other motions, several unsuccessful motions to dismiss, claiming that
    N Co. lacked standing to bring the foreclosure action because it was
    not the holder of the note, thus depriving the trial court of jurisdiction.
    T again moved to open the judgment and to extend the sale date, and,
    in 2017, the trial court again rendered a judgment of foreclosure by sale
    and extended the sale date. Approximately three months later, T filed
    a motion to open and vacate the judgment, again arguing that N Co.
    lacked standing to commence the action and that the court therefore
    lacked jurisdiction. The trial court denied the motion, finding, on the
    basis of an affidavit of debt filed by N. Co., that N Co. was the holder
    of the note and the mortgage. The Appellate Court upheld the trial
    court’s denial of T’s motion to open and vacate the judgment, concluding
    that that motion was an impermissible collateral attack on the judgment
    of foreclosure by sale that the trial court had rendered in 2016. Accord-
    ingly, the Appellate Court declined to consider T’s challenge to the trial
    court’s subject matter jurisdiction, affirmed the judgment of foreclosure,
    and remanded the case for the setting of a new sale date. On the granting
    of certification, T appealed to this court. Held:
    1. The Appellate Court incorrectly concluded that T’s motion to open and
    vacate the judgment constituted a collateral attack on the trial court’s
    2016 judgment of foreclosure by sale and, accordingly, improperly
    declined to consider T’s challenge to the trial court’s subject matter
    jurisdiction:
    Although this court has recognized that an impermissible collateral attack
    on a judgment may occur within the same action or proceeding in which
    it was obtained if the judgment has become final and the court that
    rendered the judgment no longer has jurisdiction to open it, a court that
    renders a judgment of foreclosure by sale retains jurisdiction to modify
    the judgment until the foreclosure sale is approved, and, when a court
    opens a judgment of foreclosure by sale to change the sale date or
    otherwise to modify the terms of the sale and then renders a new judg-
    ment, a new, statutory ((Supp. 2022) § 52-212a) four month limitation
    period for opening the judgment begins.
    In the present case, the 2016 judgment of foreclosure by sale was not
    a final judgment because the foreclosure sale had not been approved,
    that judgment was timely opened and modified several times, including
    in 2017, which triggered a new, four month limitation period under § 52-
    212a during which the modified judgment could be opened, insofar as
    T filed his motion to open and vacate the judgment within four months
    of the 2017 judgment, the trial court had jurisdiction to open the judgment
    at that time, and, accordingly, T’s motion was not a collateral attack on
    the trial court’s 2016 judgment.
    2. The judgment of the Appellate Court could not be affirmed on the alterna-
    tive ground that the trial court properly had denied T’s motion to open
    and vacate the judgment on the basis that N Co. had standing to enforce
    the note:
    In order to establish that N Co. had standing to enforce the note and to
    foreclose the mortgage, N Co. was required to prove that it was either
    the holder of the note or otherwise entitled to enforce the note, and this
    court concluded that N Co. was not the holder of the note because,
    contrary to the findings of the trial court, the affidavit of debt indicated
    only that the loan servicer was in possession of the note and not that
    N Co. was the holder of the note.
    Accordingly, as a nonholder in possession of the note, which had been
    specially endorsed to J Co., N Co. was required to prove that it had
    acquired the rights of the holder to enforce the instrument by way of
    transfer, which, in turn, required a showing that the transferor delivered
    the note to N Co. intending to vest in N Co. the right to enforce the
    instrument.
    In the present case, because the question of N Co.’s standing turned on
    questions of fact, namely, whether it had been vested with the right to
    enforce the note, the trial court, instead of denying T’s motion to open
    and vacate the judgment, should have conducted an evidentiary hearing
    to determine whether N Co. had standing to bring the foreclosure action,
    and, accordingly, this court reversed the Appellate Court’s judgment and
    remanded the case for further proceedings.
    Argued September 9—officially released December 20, 2022*
    Procedural History
    Action to foreclose a mortgage on certain of the
    defendants’ real property, and for other relief, brought
    to the Superior Court in the judicial district of New
    Haven, where the defendants were defaulted for failure
    to appear; thereafter, the named defendant was
    defaulted for failure to plead; subsequently, the case
    was tried to the court, Hon. Thomas J. Corradino, judge
    trial referee, who, exercising the powers of the Superior
    Court, rendered judgment of foreclosure by sale; there-
    after, the court, Hon. Thomas J. Corradino, judge trial
    referee, denied the named defendant’s motion to open
    and vacate the judgment, and the named defendant
    appealed to the Appellate Court, Elgo and Cradle, Js.,
    with Devlin, J., dissenting, which affirmed the trial
    court’s judgment, and the named defendant, on the grant-
    ing of certification, appealed to this court. Reversed;
    further proceedings.
    Thomas P. Willcutts, for the appellant (named defen-
    dant).
    Willaim R. Dziedzic, with whom, on the brief, was
    Joseph R. Dunaj, for the appellee (plaintiff).
    Opinion
    MULLINS, J. The named defendant, Achyut M. Tope,1
    appeals from the judgment of the Appellate Court,
    which affirmed the trial court’s denial of his motion to
    open and vacate the judgment of foreclosure by sale
    rendered by the trial court in favor of the plaintiff, The
    Bank of New York Mellon.2 In this certified appeal, the
    defendant claims that the Appellate Court incorrectly
    concluded that his motion to open and vacate the judg-
    ment of foreclosure by sale constituted a collateral
    attack on an earlier judgment. The defendant further
    claims that the trial court improperly denied his motion
    to open, which alleged that the plaintiff did not have
    standing to bring the foreclosure action.3
    We agree with the defendant that the Appellate Court
    incorrectly concluded that his motion to open consti-
    tuted a collateral attack on an earlier judgment. We
    also reject the alternative ground that the trial court
    properly denied the defendant’s motion to open, in
    which he claimed that the trial court lacked subject
    matter jurisdiction. Accordingly, we reverse the judg-
    ment of the Appellate Court and remand the case to
    that court with direction to remand to the trial court
    for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    The record reveals the following relevant factual and
    procedural history. ‘‘On October 31, 2003, the defendant
    executed a promissory note in the amount of $134,000,
    payable to HSBC Mortgage Corporation (USA) (HSBC).
    To secure that note, the defendant mortgaged property
    located at 387 Sherman Avenue in New Haven (prop-
    erty) to HSBC. The note was later endorsed to ‘JPMor-
    gan Chase Bank, as Trustee.’ On January 15, 2014, HSBC
    assigned the mortgage to the plaintiff.
    ‘‘On July 17, 2014, the plaintiff filed the present action
    seeking to foreclose on the mortgage. The defendant
    filed his appearance [as a self-represented party] on
    October 9, 2014, and, on October 28, 2014, he was
    defaulted for failing to plead. On November 10, 2014, the
    court, Hon. Thomas J. Corradino, judge trial referee,
    [rendered] a judgment of foreclosure by sale, with a
    sale date set for February 7, 2015.
    ‘‘On January 20, 2015, the defendant filed his first
    motion to open and extend the sale date. The court
    granted the motion and set a new sale date for June 20,
    2015. The defendant subsequently filed three additional
    motions to open the foreclosure judgment—on March
    9, 2015, August 31, 2015, and January 6, 2016—resulting
    in further extensions of the sale date. [The sale date
    was extended to September 26, 2015, February 27, 2016,
    and April 30, 2016, respectively.] On March 8, 2016, the
    defendant filed a fifth motion to open, claiming that
    there was more than $100,000 of equity in the property
    and [that] he had applied for a loan modification. On
    April 11, 2016, the court granted the defendant’s motion
    and vacated the foreclosure judgment.
    ‘‘On June 17, 2016, the plaintiff filed a motion for a
    judgment of strict foreclosure. On November 21, 2016,
    the court, Avallone, J., [rendered] a judgment of foreclo-
    sure by sale and set a sale date for February 11, 2017.
    ‘‘On January 3, 2017, the defendant filed a motion to
    open and stay the judgment on the ground that he had
    obtained a financial audit that ‘provides strong support-
    ing documentation that the plaintiff does not have
    standing to pursue a foreclosure action with respect to
    the property in this action.’ The defendant sought to
    stay this action ‘to preserve his rights’ because he filed
    a new action involving additional properties that he
    owns, which, he claimed, was being removed to fed-
    eral court.
    ‘‘On January 4, 2017, the defendant filed a motion for
    summary judgment alleging, inter alia, that the plaintiff
    lacked standing to bring this action because the plaintiff
    failed to show ‘the proper chain of ownership, assign-
    ment and control of the note and mortgage and property
    with affidavits from persons with knowledge . . . .’ At
    the February 6, 2017 hearing on the defendant’s motion
    to open, the defendant represented to [Judge Avallone]
    that the arguments in his motion to open and motion
    for summary judgment were ‘generally’ the same.
    Accordingly, the court allowed the defendant, at his
    request, to argue his motion for summary judgment
    at that hearing. Following extensive argument by the
    defendant, the court denied both of his motions. The
    court expressly rejected the defendant’s challenge to
    the plaintiff’s standing, stating: ‘I’ve given you sufficient
    opportunity to make your arguments. I don’t believe
    that they hold water.’ On March 1, 2017, the defendant
    filed a motion to reargue both motions, which the court
    summarily denied.
    ‘‘On February 10, 2017, the defendant filed a motion
    to dismiss, again alleging lack of subject matter jurisdic-
    tion on the ground that the plaintiff did not have stand-
    ing to commence this action. On February 27, 2017, the
    defendant filed another motion to dismiss the action
    for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, [relying on] the
    arguments that he previously [had] raised in his motion
    for summary judgment. On March 24, 2017, the defen-
    dant filed a third motion to dismiss, ‘in addition to
    and [in] further [support of]’ his prior two motions to
    dismiss and his motion for summary judgment, for lack
    of subject matter jurisdiction.
    ‘‘On April 17, 2017, [Judge Avallone] held a hearing
    on the defendant’s motion to dismiss dated February
    27, 2017. At the hearing, the defendant argued that he
    had two copies of the note [that] were irreconcilably
    different, thereby proving that the plaintiff was not the
    holder of the note and therefore did not have standing.
    The defendant presented those two copies to the court.
    The defendant argued: ‘[T]he original note that I signed
    . . . which I have asked [for] over and over and over
    in . . . court, docketed in many times, many motions,
    many pleadings, has not been shared. And I don’t know
    whether . . . the first time when the court approved
    . . . the foreclosure sale and the second time when it
    did, the court must have looked at the two original
    documents.’ In response, the plaintiff presented the
    original note to the defendant. The defendant acknowl-
    edged that his signature was on the original note.
    ‘‘The court then asked the defendant how the two
    copies of the note that he had presented were relevant
    [when] the foreclosure judgment was [rendered] on the
    basis of the original note. The defendant ‘object[ed] [to]
    whether Judge Corradino had possession of the original
    note’ when he [rendered] the foreclosure judgment in
    2014. The court explained to the defendant that it had
    already heard the defendant’s arguments a ‘multitude’
    of times . . . but agreed to review the proceedings that
    occurred before Judge Corradino in 2014. The court
    recessed briefly to do so.
    ‘‘Upon resuming the hearing, the court stated that it
    had listened to the recording of the proceeding before
    Judge Corradino in 2014 and explained that ‘[t]here is
    nothing out of order . . . in Judge Corradino’s actions
    in the court that day that would lead me to believe that
    there is any evidence, that there is anything improper
    as to the documents that were . . . filed.’ The court
    explained to the defendant: ‘I’ve listened to your argu-
    ments consistently. You’ve made an argument about
    the notes. I don’t accept your argument that there is
    anything inappropriate by there being copies, multiple
    copies of a note.’ The defendant pressed his argument
    regarding his claimed improprieties with the assign-
    ments, and the court responded: ‘I have looked at the
    original note. That’s what . . . I’m concerned with.
    And I’m satisfied that there is nothing inappropriate
    . . . by this court’s action or by the actions of Judge
    Corradino. And you’ve presented nothing to me that
    . . . would . . . make me think otherwise. And so I’ve
    denied your motion to dismiss.’ The court set a new
    sale date of August 19, 2017. On April 24, 2017, [Judge
    Avallone] marked off the defendant’s motion to dismiss
    that was filed on February 10, 2017. On May 1, 2017,
    the defendant filed another motion to dismiss challeng-
    ing the plaintiff’s standing to pursue this action.
    ‘‘On May 30, 2017, the court, Pittman, J., held a hear-
    ing on the defendant’s February 10, 2017 motion to
    dismiss. At that hearing, the defendant again was afforded
    the opportunity to present his arguments challenging
    the plaintiff’s standing, the same arguments that he
    made in his previous motion to dismiss dated February
    27, 2017, and his motion for summary judgment. The
    defendant summarized his argument by again asserting
    that the plaintiff was not the holder of the note. The
    court told the parties that it would consider all of the
    prior filings regarding standing and indicated that it
    would issue a written decision. On June 6, 2017, [Judge
    Pittman] issued a written order denying the February
    10, 2017 motion to dismiss. The court explained: ‘This
    motion, [docket entry] #162, was previously considered
    by Judge Avallone in open court on April 24, 2017. At
    that time, Judge Avallone marked this motion off, hav-
    ing determined that it raised the same issues as [docket
    entry] #164, which was denied by Judge Avallone on
    April 17, 2017 . . . . The court will not continue to
    revisit issues that have been previously decided and that
    constitute the law of the case. Moreover, a judgment
    has [been rendered] in this matter and a motion to
    dismiss is not properly before the court in the absence
    of an order granting a motion to open the judgment.’
    ‘‘On June 28, 2017, the defendant filed a motion to
    open and to extend the sale date on the ground that
    he was making progress in his efforts to sell the subject
    property. The court extended the sale date to October
    21, 2017.
    ‘‘On September 28, 2017, the defendant filed a motion
    to open and to vacate the judgment of foreclosure by
    sale, [in which] he again argued that the plaintiff lacked
    standing to commence this action and [that], conse-
    quently, the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction
    over it, and asked that the action be dismissed ‘in its
    entirety with prejudice.’ On October 16, 2017, [Judge
    Corradino] held a hearing on the defendant’s motion,
    at which the defendant again presented his argument
    to the court. On October 17, 2017, [Judge Corradino]
    issued an order denying the defendant’s motion to open
    and vacate the foreclosure judgment.’’ (Footnotes omit-
    ted.) Bank of New York Mellon v. Tope, 
    202 Conn. App. 540
    , 542–47, 
    246 A.3d 4
     (2021).
    The defendant appealed to the Appellate Court from
    the trial court’s October 17, 2017 denial of his motion
    to open and vacate the foreclosure judgment. 
    Id., 547
    .
    On appeal to that court, the defendant claimed that the
    trial court incorrectly had denied his motion because
    the plaintiff lacked standing to pursue foreclosure on
    the note, and, thus, the trial court lacked subject matter
    jurisdiction over this action. 
    Id.,
     547–48.
    The Appellate Court majority concluded that the
    defendant’s motion to open constituted an impermissi-
    ble collateral attack on the foreclosure judgment and,
    therefore, declined to consider the defendant’s chal-
    lenge to the court’s subject matter jurisdiction on the
    merits.4 
    Id., 552
    . Therefore, the Appellate Court affirmed
    the judgment of foreclosure and remanded the case for
    the setting of a new sale date. 
    Id.
     This appeal followed.
    On appeal to this court, the defendant claims that
    the Appellate Court improperly declined to consider his
    challenge to the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction
    because the Appellate Court incorrectly had concluded
    that the motion to open filed in September, 2017, consti-
    tuted a collateral attack on the judgment of foreclosure
    by sale that the trial court had rendered in November,
    2016. The plaintiff responds that, pursuant to General
    Statutes (Supp. 2022) § 52-212a,5 because the defen-
    dant’s motion to open was not filed within four months
    of the November, 2016 judgment of foreclosure by sale,
    the trial court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the motion.
    As a result, the plaintiff contends, the Appellate Court
    properly declined to consider the merits of the defen-
    dant’s motion to open because it correctly concluded
    that the defendant’s motion to open was a collateral
    attack on the judgment of foreclosure by sale. We agree
    with the defendant.
    It is undisputed that ‘‘[a] collateral attack on a judg-
    ment is a procedurally impermissible substitute for an
    appeal.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Joe’s
    Pizza, Inc. v. Aetna Life & Casualty Co., 
    236 Conn. 863
    , 876, 
    675 A.2d 441
     (1996). Generally, there are two
    types of impermissible collateral attacks on a judgment.
    First, ‘‘[a] collateral attack is an attack [on] a judgment,
    decree or order offered in an action or proceeding other
    than that in which it was obtained, in support of the
    contentions of an adversary in the action or proceeding
    . . . .’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Warner v.
    Brochendorff, 
    136 Conn. App. 24
    , 32 n.7, 
    43 A.3d 785
    ,
    cert. denied, 
    306 Conn. 902
    , 
    52 A.3d 728
     (2012); see also
    Gennarini Construction Co. v. Messina Painting &
    Decorating Co., 
    15 Conn. App. 504
    , 511, 
    545 A.2d 579
    (1988). Second, this court has also recognized that an
    attack on a judgment within the same action or proceed-
    ing in which it was obtained can be a collateral attack
    if the judgment has become final and the court that
    rendered the judgment no longer has jurisdiction to
    open it. See, e.g., Sousa v. Sousa, 
    322 Conn. 757
    , 763,
    789, 
    143 A.3d 578
     (2016) (denying defendant’s motion to
    open and vacate modified marital dissolution judgment
    four years after modification as impermissible collateral
    attack); In re Shamika F., 
    256 Conn. 383
    , 398–99, 408,
    
    773 A.2d 347
     (2001) (rejecting father’s challenge to
    order of temporary custody that had been issued three
    years prior as impermissible collateral attack); Vogel v.
    Vogel, 
    178 Conn. 358
    , 360, 364, 
    422 A.2d 271
     (1979)
    (rejecting plaintiff’s challenge to nineteen year old mari-
    tal dissolution judgment as impermissible collateral
    attack); Monroe v. Monroe, 
    177 Conn. 173
    , 174, 181–82,
    
    413 A.2d 819
     (rejecting plaintiff’s challenge to five year
    old marital dissolution judgment as impermissible col-
    lateral attack), appeal dismissed, 
    444 U.S. 801
    , 
    100 S. Ct. 20
    , 
    62 L. Ed. 2d 14
     (1979).
    Neither party asserts that the defendant’s motion to
    open is a collateral attack because it was brought in
    a separate action or proceeding. Instead, the parties’
    disagreement centers around whether the trial court
    had jurisdiction over the July, 2017 judgment pursuant
    to § 52-212a at the time the motion to open was filed on
    September 28, 2017. The defendant argues that, because
    title had not passed, the judgment of foreclosure by sale
    rendered in November, 2016, was not a final judgment.
    Therefore, the trial court had jurisdiction under § 52-
    212a to address his motion to open for four months
    after it opened, modified and rendered the judgment
    on July 3, 2017. Given that he filed his motion to open
    in September, 2017, which was within four months of
    the July 3, 2017 judgment, the defendant claims that
    the trial court still had jurisdiction over the judgment.
    In response, the plaintiff contends that the operative
    judgment is the judgment of foreclosure by sale that
    the trial court rendered on November 21, 2016, not the
    judgment rendered on July 3, 2017. The plaintiff asserts
    that, because the July 3, 2017 judgment only modified
    or altered incidental terms of the judgment, it is not the
    proper judgment from which to determine the court’s
    jurisdiction pursuant to § 52-212a. As a result, the plain-
    tiff argues, the November, 2016 judgment of foreclosure
    by sale was final and the trial court retained jurisdiction
    for only four months thereafter. Therefore, because the
    defendant’s motion to open was not filed within that
    four month period, the trial court no longer had jurisdic-
    tion to open or modify the judgment of foreclosure
    by sale. Thus, the plaintiff claims, the Appellate Court
    correctly concluded that the defendant’s motion to open
    was an impermissible collateral attack on the Novem-
    ber, 2016 judgment.
    It is important to recognize that the trial court in the
    present case rendered a judgment of foreclosure by
    sale. In a foreclosure by sale, the court retains jurisdic-
    tion to modify the judgment until the foreclosure sale
    is approved. See, e.g., Wells Fargo Bank of Minnesota,
    N.A. v. Morgan, 
    98 Conn. App. 72
    , 79, 
    909 A.2d 526
    (2006) (‘‘[g]enerally, once a court has approved the fore-
    closure sale and the applicable appeal period has
    elapsed, the mortgagor’s right of redemption is extin-
    guished and the court’s jurisdiction to modify that judg-
    ment ends’’); see also D. Caron & G. Milne, Connecticut
    Foreclosures (4th Ed. 2004) § 9.01B, p. 203 (‘‘[a]bsent
    the possibility of an appeal from [the court’s] determina-
    tion, the approval of the sale generally operates to divest
    the owner of his equity of redemption and consequently
    places the property beyond the power of the court’’).
    Notwithstanding this well established law, the plain-
    tiff, in support of its claim that the November, 2016
    judgment is the operative, final judgment and that the
    trial court thus lost jurisdiction four months thereafter,
    relies on RAL Management, Inc. v. Valley View Associ-
    ates, 
    278 Conn. 672
    , 690, 
    899 A.2d 586
     (2006). The plain-
    tiff’s reliance on RAL Management, Inc., is misplaced.
    In RAL Management, Inc., this court considered
    whether an appeal from a judgment of strict foreclosure
    had become moot because, while the appeal was pend-
    ing, the judgment was opened and certain terms were
    modified. See 
    id., 674
    . In considering the issue, this
    court reiterated the principle ‘‘that the opening and
    modification of a judgment triggers a new [limitation]
    period under which the modified judgment may be
    opened.’’ 
    Id., 689
    ; see also Union & New Haven Trust
    Co. v. Taft Realty Co., 
    123 Conn. 9
    , 15–16, 
    192 A. 268
    (1937) (each opening and modification of judgment to
    change sale dates was new judgment for purposes of
    trial court’s jurisdiction); Coxe v. Coxe, 
    2 Conn. App. 543
    , 546–48, 
    481 A.2d 86
     (1984) (concluding that modifi-
    cations to judgment ordering partition by sale of certain
    real property triggered new, four month period under
    § 52-212a to file motion to open judgment).
    The plaintiff seizes on our statement in RAL Manage-
    ment, Inc., that, for purposes of whether the opening
    and modification of a judgment has rendered a previous
    judgment void and the appeal therefrom moot, there is
    ‘‘a substantive distinction between opening a judgment
    to modify or to alter incidental terms of the judgment,
    leaving the essence of the original judgment intact, and
    opening a judgment to set it aside. Under the latter
    circumstances, the original judgment necessarily has
    been rendered void and any appeal therefrom would
    be rendered moot.’’ RAL Management, Inc. v. Valley
    View Associates, 
    supra,
     
    278 Conn. 690
    . Under the for-
    mer circumstances, when a trial court has made an
    incidental modification pursuant to a motion to open,
    the essence of the judgment has not changed and the
    pending appeal is not moot. Contrary to the plaintiff’s
    contentions, RAL Management, Inc., addresses the
    effect of a motion to open on a pending appeal; 
    id.,
    684–85; it does not address the effect of modifying a
    judgment on the limitation period contained in § 52-
    212a.
    Thus, although we agree with the plaintiff that the
    difference between a modification of incidental terms
    of a judgment and setting the judgment aside is relevant
    to whether an appeal has become moot, we disagree
    that the distinction has any impact on whether a new
    limitation period under § 52-212a has begun. Indeed,
    ‘‘[i]t is settled law in Connecticut that when a court
    opens a judgment of sale to change the sale date or
    otherwise modify the terms of sale, the modified judg-
    ment completely replaces the original judgment and
    becomes the only valid judgment in the case. William
    G. Major Construction Co. v. DeMichely, 
    166 Conn. 368
    , 374–75, 
    349 A.2d 827
     (1974); Union & New Haven
    Trust Co. v. Taft Realty Co., [supra, 
    123 Conn. 15
    –16].
    The modified judgment is ‘in essence and substance a
    new judgment.’ [Union & New Haven Trust Co. v. Taft
    Realty Co., supra] 16. Thus, each time the judgment is
    modified, ‘the case [stands] as though [the] judgment
    as originally entered had never been rendered.’ Milford
    Trust Co. v. Greenberg, 
    137 Conn. 277
    , 279, 
    77 A.2d 80
    (1950) [overruled on other grounds by RAL Manage-
    ment, Inc. v. Valley View Associates, 
    278 Conn. 672
    ,
    
    899 A.2d 586
     (2006)]; [see also] State v. Phillips, 
    166 Conn. 642
    , 645–46, 
    353 A.2d 706
     (1974).’’ Coxe v. Coxe,
    supra, 
    2 Conn. App. 547
    . Therefore, when a court opens
    a judgment of foreclosure by sale to change the sale
    date or otherwise to modify the terms of the sale and
    renders a new judgment, a new limitation period begins
    under § 52-212a.
    In the present case, we conclude that the November,
    2016 judgment was not final because the sale had not
    been approved and that judgment had been timely
    opened and modified several times up until July 3, 2017.
    As a result, when the court rendered the July, 2017
    judgment, a new, four month limitation period was trig-
    gered, under which the modified judgment could be
    opened. Therefore, at the time the defendant filed his
    motion to open the judgment on September 28, 2017,
    the trial court had jurisdiction to open the judgment
    under § 52-212a. We thus conclude that the Appellate
    Court incorrectly concluded that the defendant’s motion
    to open was a collateral attack.
    Having concluded that the trial court had jurisdiction
    to consider the defendant’s motion to open, which he
    filed on September 28, 2017, we now consider whether
    the judgment of the Appellate Court can be affirmed
    on the alternative ground that the trial court properly
    denied the defendant’s motion to open, which chal-
    lenged the subject matter jurisdiction of the court. Spe-
    cifically, the defendant asserts that the plaintiff does
    not have standing to enforce the note because the note
    is specially endorsed to ‘‘JPMorgan Chase Bank, as
    Trustee,’’ and the bank has not proven that it has the
    authority to enforce the note.6
    ‘‘We have long held that because [a] determination
    regarding a trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction is a
    question of law, our review is plenary. . . . Moreover,
    [i]t is a fundamental rule that a court may raise and
    review the issue of subject matter jurisdiction at any
    time. . . . Subject matter jurisdiction involves the
    authority of the court to adjudicate the type of contro-
    versy presented by the action before it. . . . [A] court
    lacks discretion to consider the merits of a case over
    which it is without jurisdiction . . . .’’ (Citation omit-
    ted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Peters v. Dept. of
    Social Services, 
    273 Conn. 434
    , 441, 
    870 A.2d 448
     (2005).
    ‘‘The issue of standing implicates [the] court’s subject
    matter jurisdiction.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) AvalonBay Communities, Inc. v. Orange, 
    256 Conn. 557
    , 567, 
    775 A.2d 284
     (2001). ‘‘Standing is the
    legal right to set judicial machinery in motion. One
    cannot rightfully invoke the jurisdiction of the court
    unless he [or she] has, in an individual or representative
    capacity, some real interest in the cause of action, or
    a legal or equitable right, title or interest in the subject
    matter of the controversy. . . . When standing is put
    in issue, the question is whether the person whose
    standing is challenged is a proper party to request an
    adjudication of the issue . . . .’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) Tremont Public Advisors, LLC v. Con-
    necticut Resources Recovery Authority, 
    333 Conn. 672
    ,
    688, 
    217 A.3d 953
     (2019). ‘‘The plaintiff has the burden
    of proving standing.’’ Fink v. Golenbock, 
    238 Conn. 183
    ,
    199, 
    680 A.2d 1243
     (1996).
    ‘‘[S]tanding to enforce [a] promissory note is [estab-
    lished] by the provisions of the Uniform Commercial
    Code . . . . [See] General Statutes § 42a-1-101 et seq.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Equity One, Inc.
    v. Shivers, 
    310 Conn. 119
    , 126, 
    74 A.3d 1225
     (2013).
    Under the Uniform Commercial Code, a ‘‘ ‘[p]erson enti-
    tled to enforce’ an instrument means (i) the holder of
    the instrument, (ii) a nonholder in possession of the
    instrument who has the rights of a holder, or (iii) a
    person not in possession of the instrument who is enti-
    tled to enforce the instrument pursuant to section 42a-
    3-309 or 42a-3-418 (d).’’ General Statutes § 42a-3-301.
    The Uniform Commercial Code defines ‘‘holder’’ as
    ‘‘(A) [t]he person in possession of a negotiable instru-
    ment that is payable either to bearer or to an identified
    person that is the person in possession’’; ‘‘(B) [t]he
    person in possession of a negotiable tangible document
    of title if the goods are deliverable either to bearer or
    to the order of the person in possession’’; or ‘‘(C) [t]he
    person in control of a negotiable electronic document
    of title.’’ General Statutes § 42a-1-201 (b) (21).
    General Statutes § 42a-3-205 further provides in rele-
    vant part: ‘‘(a) If an endorsement is made by the holder
    of an instrument, whether payable to an identified per-
    son or payable to bearer, and the endorsement identifies
    a person to whom it makes the instrument payable, it
    is a ‘special endorsement’. When specially endorsed, an
    instrument becomes payable to the identified person
    and may be negotiated only by the endorsement of that
    person. . . .
    ‘‘(b) If an endorsement is made by the holder of an
    instrument and is not a special endorsement, it is a ‘blank
    endorsement’. When endorsed in blank, an instrument
    becomes payable to bearer and may be negotiated by
    transfer of possession alone until specially endorsed.
    . . .’’
    As we explained previously, under § 42a-3-301, ‘‘[a]
    person may be a person entitled to enforce the instru-
    ment even though the person is not the owner of the
    instrument . . . .’’ General Statutes § 42a-3-301. In J.E.
    Robert Co. v. Signature Properties, LLC, 
    309 Conn. 307
    ,
    
    71 A.3d 492
     (2013), we explained that ‘‘[t]he [Uniform
    Commercial Code’s] official comment underscores that
    a ‘person entitled to enforce an instrument . . . is not
    limited to holders. . . . A nonholder in possession of
    an instrument includes a person that acquired rights of
    a holder . . . under [General Statutes § 42a-3-203 (a)].’
    . . . Under § 42a-3-203 (b), ‘[t]ransfer of an instrument
    . . . vests in the transferee any right of the transferor
    to enforce the instrument . . . .’ ‘An instrument is
    transferred when it is delivered by a person other than
    its issuer for the purpose of giving to the person receiv-
    ing delivery the right to enforce the instrument.’ General
    Statutes § 42a-3-203 (a). Thus, there are two require-
    ments to transfer an instrument under § 42a-3-203 (a):
    (1) the transferor must intend to vest in the transferee
    the right to enforce the instrument; and (2) the trans-
    feror must deliver the instrument to the transferee so
    that the transferee has either actual or constructive
    possession.’’ (Citation omitted; emphasis omitted.) J.E.
    Robert Co. v. Signature Properties, LLC, supra, 319–20.
    Accordingly, to establish standing to foreclose on the
    defendant’s property, the plaintiff needed to prove that
    it was the holder of the note or one who was otherwise
    entitled to enforce the note.
    In the present case, in its complaint, the plaintiff
    alleged that the defendant and Geeta A. Joshi-Tope
    owed HSBC $134,000, as evidenced by a promissory
    note dated October 31, 2003. The note was not attached
    to the complaint. The plaintiff also alleged in the com-
    plaint that the defendant secured the note by mortgag-
    ing the premises known as 387 Sherman Avenue, New
    Haven, to HSBC. The plaintiff did not attach the mort-
    gage, which was recorded in the New Haven land
    records, to the complaint. The plaintiff further alleged
    that HSBC assigned the mortgage ‘‘to the Bank of New
    York Mellon, [formerly known as] The Bank of New
    York, as Successor to JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., as
    Trustee for Structured Asset Mortgage Investments II,
    Inc., Bear Stearns ALT-A Trust, Mortgage Pass-Through
    Certificates, Series 2004-3, by an assignment dated Janu-
    ary 15, 2014, and recorded January 23, 2014, in volume
    9103 at page 136 of the New Haven land records.’’ The
    only exhibit that the plaintiff attached to the complaint
    was the description of the property.
    Thereafter, the plaintiff filed an affidavit of debt on
    November 7, 2014. In that affidavit of debt, Brian Boisen,
    an assistant vice president of PHH Mortgage Corpora-
    tion (servicer), averred that the servicer was in posses-
    sion of the original promissory note for the loan and
    that payments were due and owing on the note. The
    plaintiff attached the note as an exhibit to the affidavit
    of debt. The note was endorsed to ‘‘JPMorgan Chase
    Bank, as Trustee.’’ The plaintiff also attached the corpo-
    rate assignment of mortgage as part of the exhibit to
    the affidavit of debt.7
    In denying the defendant’s motion to open challeng-
    ing the plaintiff’s standing, the trial court reasoned:
    ‘‘The affidavit filed by the servicer of the loan [that]
    was taken out in 2003 and on which no payments have
    been made since 2013 clearly states that the plaintiff
    is the holder of the note and the mortgage—this affidavit
    was filed under oath in September of 2014. It was filed
    under oath by a party who would have no apparent
    interest in falsifying its report. . . . [A]s holder of the
    note, the plaintiff has standing.’’
    After reviewing the affidavit of debt, we disagree with
    the trial court that the affidavit of debt states that the
    plaintiff is the holder of the note. Instead, in the affidavit
    of debt, Boisen averred merely that the servicer is in
    possession of the note. As we have explained herein,
    being in possession of the note does not make one a
    ‘‘holder’’ of a note when the note has a special endorse-
    ment to a different party. See General Statutes § 42a-
    1-201 (b) (21). The note in the present case had a special
    endorsement to JPMorgan Chase Bank, as trustee.
    Therefore, the plaintiff is not the holder of the note.
    Accordingly, the plaintiff can enforce the note only if
    it can demonstrate that it is a nonholder in possession
    of the note with the rights of a holder. See General
    Statutes § 42a-3-301. To do so, the plaintiff must prove
    that the transferor delivered the note to the plaintiff
    intending to vest in it the right to enforce the instrument.
    See General Statutes §§ 42a-3-203 (a) and 42a-3-301. In
    other words, as the assignee of the mortgage with a
    note specially endorsed to another entity, in order to
    have standing to foreclose, the plaintiff must demon-
    strate that it is the holder of the note that has been
    vested with the right to enforce the note.
    As this court has recognized, ‘‘[w]ith respect to the
    plaintiff’s ultimate burden, however, we note our agree-
    ment with other courts that have recognized that [i]t is
    a fundamental precept of the law to expect a foreclosing
    party to actually be in possession of its claimed interest
    in the note, and have the proper supporting documenta-
    tion in hand when filing suit, showing the history of
    the note, so the defendant is duly apprised of the rights
    of the plaintiff. . . . Therefore, in cases in which a
    nonholder transferee seeks to enforce a note in foreclo-
    sure proceedings, if the [defendant] dispute[s] the plain-
    tiff’s right to enforce the note, the plaintiff must prove
    that right.’’ (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks
    omitted.) J.E. Robert Co. v. Signature Properties, LLC,
    supra, 
    309 Conn. 325
    –26 n.18.
    Moreover, ‘‘[a]ffidavits are insufficient to determine
    the facts unless, [as with] summary judgment, they dis-
    close that no genuine issue as to a material fact exists.
    . . . In almost every setting [in which] important deci-
    sions turn on questions of fact, due process requires
    an opportunity to confront and cross-examine adverse
    witnesses. . . . When issues of fact are necessary to
    the determination of a court’s jurisdiction, due process
    requires that a trial-like hearing be held, in which an
    opportunity is provided to present evidence and to
    cross-examine adverse witnesses.’’ (Citations omitted;
    internal quotation marks omitted.) Standard Tallow
    Corp. v. Jowdy, 
    190 Conn. 48
    , 56, 
    459 A.2d 503
     (1983);
    see also 1 E. Stephenson, Connecticut Civil Procedure
    (2d Ed. Cum. Supp. 1982) § 108 (d), p. S73.8
    Because the question of the plaintiff’s standing to
    bring the foreclosure action in the present case turns
    on questions of fact, namely, whether the plaintiff has
    been vested with the right to enforce the note, the trial
    court should not have denied the motion to open but
    should have conducted an evidentiary hearing to deter-
    mine whether the plaintiff had standing to bring the
    foreclosure action in the present case. Accordingly, we
    conclude that the judgment of the Appellate Court can-
    not be upheld on this alternative ground.
    The judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed and
    the case is remanded to that court with direction to
    remand the case to the trial court for further proceed-
    ings consistent with this opinion.
    In this opinion the other justices concurred.
    * December 20, 2022, the date that this decision was released as a slip
    opinion, is the operative date for all substantive and procedural purposes.
    1
    Geeta A. Joshi-Tope also was named as a defendant in the underlying
    foreclosure action, but she is not a party to this appeal. In the interest of
    simplicity, we hereinafter refer to Achyut M. Tope as the defendant.
    2
    The full name of the plaintiff is The Bank of New York Mellon, formerly
    known as The Bank of New York, as Successor to JPMorgan Chase Bank,
    N.A., as Trustee for Structured Asset Mortgage Investments II, Inc., Bear
    Stearns Alt-A Trust, Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2004-3.
    3
    We originally granted the defendant’s petition for certification to appeal
    from the judgment of the Appellate Court limited to one issue, namely,
    whether the Appellate Court correctly concluded that the defendant’s motion
    to open constituted a collateral attack on the judgment of foreclosure by
    sale. See Bank of New York Mellon v. Tope, 
    336 Conn. 950
    , 
    251 A.3d 618
    (2021). Thereafter, we superseded our previous order and certified two
    issues for appeal: ‘‘1. Did the Appellate Court correctly conclude that the
    . . . defendant’s challenge to the plaintiff’s standing to prosecute this action,
    and, thus, the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate the
    matter, represented an improper collateral attack on one or more of the
    earlier judgments rendered by the trial court in favor of the plaintiff?’’ And
    ‘‘2. [i]f the answer to the first certified question is ‘no,’ should the judgment
    of the Appellate Court be affirmed on the alternative ground that the trial
    court properly had denied the . . . defendant’s motion to open, in which
    the . . . defendant claimed that the trial court lacked subject matter juris-
    diction?’’ Bank of New York Mellon v. Tope, 
    339 Conn. 901
    , 
    260 A.3d 483
    (2021).
    4
    Judge Devlin dissented, concluding that the defendant’s motion to open
    challenging the plaintiff’s standing was not an impermissible collateral attack
    and should be considered on the merits. Bank of New York Mellon v. Tope,
    supra, 
    202 Conn. App. 557
    –58 (Devlin, J., dissenting). Judge Devlin further
    reasoned that, because the trial court did not make any findings of fact on
    the record regarding the plaintiff’s right to enforce the note, the case should
    be remanded to the trial court for further proceedings to determine the
    jurisdictional issue. 
    Id., 563
     (Devlin, J., dissenting).
    5
    General Statutes (Supp. 2022) § 52-212a provides in relevant part: ‘‘Unless
    otherwise provided by law and except in such cases in which the court has
    continuing jurisdiction, a civil judgment or decree rendered in the Superior
    Court may not be opened or set aside unless a motion to open or set aside
    is filed within four months following the date on which the notice of judgment
    or decree was sent. . . .’’
    Although § 52-212a has been amended since the events at issue in this
    appeal; see Public Acts 2021, No. 21-104, § 44; those amendments have no
    bearing on the merits of this appeal. In the interest of simplicity, we refer
    to the current version of the statute.
    6
    Generally, ‘‘[i]n the context of an appeal from the denial of a motion to
    open [a] judgment, [i]t is well established in our jurisprudence that [when]
    an appeal has been taken from the denial of a motion to open, but the
    appeal period has run with respect to the underlying judgment, [this court]
    ha[s] refused to entertain issues relating to the merits of the underlying
    case and ha[s] limited [its] consideration to whether the denial of the motion
    to open was proper. . . . When a motion to open is filed more than twenty
    days after the judgment, the appeal from the denial of that motion can test
    only whether the trial court abused its discretion in failing to open the
    judgment and not the propriety of the merits of the underlying judgment.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Connecticut Housing Finance Author-
    ity v. McCarthy, 
    204 Conn. App. 330
    , 340, 
    253 A.3d 494
     (2021).
    However, ‘‘[t]his court has often stated that the question of subject matter
    jurisdiction, because it addresses the basic competency of the court, can
    be raised by any of the parties, or by the court sua sponte, at any time.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Peters v. Dept. of Social Services, 
    273 Conn. 434
    , 441–42, 
    870 A.2d 448
     (2005). Therefore, because the defendant’s
    appeal from the denial of his motion to open raises an issue of subject
    matter jurisdiction, we address the merits of his subject matter jurisdiction
    claim. See, e.g., Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. v. 
    Thompson, 163
     Conn.
    App. 827, 831, 
    136 A.3d 1277
     (2016) (addressing question of subject matter
    jurisdiction raised for first time on appeal).
    7
    On the basis of the foregoing, the plaintiff established through its plead-
    ings that it was in possession of the mortgage and that the mortgage had
    been assigned to it. Nevertheless, it is the holder of the note that has the
    right to foreclose on the property.
    8
    Although this court previously has presumed from a silent record that
    the trial court acted properly and examined the documentation in the record
    to ensure that the plaintiff had standing to enforce the note; see, e.g., Equity
    One, Inc. v. Shivers, supra, 
    310 Conn. 132
    ; because establishing standing
    in the present case would require the plaintiff to present additional evidence
    that is not contained in the record before the trial court—namely, that the
    specially endorsed note was transferred to the plaintiff with the intent that
    it be vested with the right to enforce it—such a presumption is not applicable
    in the present case.