Petitioner Simon Lavi was a guarantor for a commercial real
estate loan when real party in interest Branch Banking and Trust
Company (BB&T) purchased the loan. On October 13, 2009, after the
borrowers defaulted on the loan, BB &T filed a complaint seeki ng full
recovery of the loan's balance from Lavi and others. While the complaint
was pending, BB&T foreclosed on the property and took ownership
through a credit bid at a February 11, 2010 trustee sale.
On January 31, 2011, BB&T moved for partial summary
judgment regarding Lavi's liability for the remaining loan balance. In
response, Lavi filed an opposition and countermotion for summary
judgment, asserting that he was not liable for any deficiency and BB&T
could not obtain a judgment due to its failure to comply with NRS 40.455.
The district court determined NRS 40.455 did not bar BB&T's claims and
Lavi had sufficient notice that BB&T intended to seek a deficiency
judgment. Accordingly, the district court denied Lavi's countermotion for
summary judgment and granted BB&T's motion for partial summary
judgment."
Lavi filed this petition for a writ of mandamus or, in the
alternative, a writ of prohibition, challenging the district court's order.
Lavi asserts that BB&T is barred from recovering a deficiency judgment
because BB&T did not apply for a deficiency judgment within six months
after the February 2010 trustee's sale, as required by NRS 40.455(1).
'The parties are familiar with the facts, so we do not recount them
further except as pertinent to our disposition.
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This court has the "power to issue writs of mandamus . . .
[and] prohibition. . ." in a proper case. Nev. Const. art. 6, § 4. This court
can issue a writ of mandamus to compel the performance of an act which
the law requires as a duty resulting from an office, trust or station."
Harvey L. Lerer, Inc. v. District Court, 111 Nev. 1165, 1168, 901 P.2d 643,
645 (1995); NRS 34.160. This court may issue a writ of prohibition to stop
a "district court [from] exercising its judicial functions," when the district
court is acting outside its jurisdiction. Lerer, 111 Nev. at 1168, 901 P.2d
at 645; NRS 34.320. This court has sound discretion in granting writ
relief; however, this court will only grant writ relief when the petitioner
has no "plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law." Id. (quotations
omitted); NRS 34.170; 34.330. Generally, this court will not consider
petitions challenging the district court's denial of a summary judgment
motion, "unless summary judgment is clearly required by [law], or an
important issue of law requires clarification." ANSE, Inc. v. Dist. Ct., 124
Nev. 862, 867, 192 P.3d 738, 742 (2008). Where an action is barred by
statutory constraints and no issue of material fact exists, mandamus it a
proper remedy to compel entry of summary judgment., Ash Springs Dev. v.
O'Donnell, 95 Nev. 846, 847, 603 P.2d 698, 699 (1979)
Ordinarily, an appeal from the final judgment would provide
Lavi with an adequate legal remedy. See, International Game Tech. v.
Dist. Ct., 124 Nev. 193, 197, 179 P.3d 556, 558 (2008). However, we
conclude the appeal in this instance would not be adequate. Accordingly,
we will exercise our discretion to consider this petition.
Under NRS 40.455(1) a judgment creditor must apply for a
deficiency judgment "within 6 months after the date of the foreclosure sale
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or the trustee's sale . . . ." (emphasis added). 2 An application for a
deficiency judgment must be in writing, "set forth in particularity the
grounds for the [deficiency] application, set forth the relief sought" and be
filed within six months after the foreclosure sale. Walters v. Dist. Ct., 127
Nev. „ 263 P.3d 231, 234 (2011).
In Walters, we considered whether a guarantor who waived
the one-action rule (as set forth in NRS 40.430) was entitled to mandamus
relief requiring the district court to grant the guarantor's motion for
partial summary judgment. Id. at , 263 P.2d at 232. The guarantor
argued that the lender "failed to apply for a deficiency judgment within six
months" after the date of the foreclosure sale or the trustee's sale held
pursuant to NRS 40.455(1). Id. at , 263 P.2d at 233. We concluded
that the trustee's sale, "[u]nder the clear and unambiguous language of
NRS 40.455(1), an application must be made within six months . . . ." Id.
at , 263 P.2d at 234. We further concluded that the lender complied
with the six month limitation period. Id.
BB&T argues that its complaint satisfied the statutory time
requirement because the complaint notified Lavi that BB&T would seek a
deficiency judgment and it was filed prior to the foreclosure sale; thus,
before the NRS 40.455(1) six month statute of limitations expired. We
disagree . 3
2 The deficiency judgment statutes are applicable to actions on
guaranty contracts. See, First Interstate Bank v. Shields, 102 Nev. 616,
730 P.2d 429 (1986).
3 We find no support for the dissent's interpretation of NRS
40.495(2). No authority states that claims filed under NRS 40.495(2) are
exempt from NRS 40.455(1)'s requirements. Further, NRS 40.495(3)
explicitly states: "[i]f an obligee maintains an action to foreclose or
continued on next page...
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BB&T's complaint failed to meet the NRS 40.455(1)
requirements because it did not particularize its reasons for the deficiency
application and it was filed before the foreclosure sale. Further, BB&T's
summary judgment motion did not satisfy the NRS 40.455(1)
requirements because it was filed 11 months after the foreclosure sale;
therefore, it was untimely. Accordingly, we
ORDER the petition GRANTED AND DIRECT THE CLERK
OF THIS COURT TO ISSUE A WRIT OF MANDAMUS instructing the
district court to vacate its partial summary judgment in favor of BB&T,
and instead deny BI3&T's motion for partial summary judgment and grant
Lavi's countermotion for summary judgment. 4
Gibbons
Saitta
...continued
otherwise enforce a mortgage or lien and the indebtedness or obligations
secured thereby, the guarantor . . . may assert any legal or equitable
defenses provided pursuant to the provisions of NRS 40.451 to 40.4639,
inclusive." (emphasis added).
4In light of this order we deny as moot the alternative request for a
writ of prohibition. Further, we lift the stay of district court proceedings
entered by this court on August 25, 2011.
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cc: Hon. Valerie Adair, District Judge
Marquis Aurbach Coffing
Baker & Hostetler LLP
Sylvester & Polednak, Ltd.
Eighth District Court Clerk
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PICKERING, C.J., with whom HARDESTY, J., agrees, dissenting:
I respectfully dissent.
The written guaranty that Lavi signed states that "Guarantor
waives: . . . (b) Any right it may have to require Bank to proceed against
Borrower, proceed against or exhaust any security held by Borrower or
Bank, or pursue any other remedy in Bank's power to pursue; [and] (h) To
the extent permitted in paragraph 40.495(2) of the Nevada Revised
Statutes ("NRS"), the benefits of the one-action rule under NRS Section
40.430." These waivers gave the bank the authority, under NRS
40.495(2), to sue Lavi on the guaranty "separately and independently
from" the proceedings, if any, the bank might initiate against the borrower
on the note and deed of trust. NRS 40.495(2) expressly so provides:
[A] guarantor . . . may waive the provisions of NRS
40.430. If a guarantor . . . waives the provisions of
NRS 40.430, an action for the enforcement of that
person's obligation to pay, satisfy or purchase all
or part of an indebtedness or obligation secured by
a mortgage or lien upon real property may be
maintained separately and independently from:
(a) An action on the debt;
(b) The exercise of any power of sale;
(c) Any action to foreclose or otherwise
enforce a mortgage or lien and the indebtedness or
obligations secured thereby; and
(d) Any other proceeding against a
mortgagor or grantor of a deed of trust.
(Emphasis added.)
The bank's suit against Lavi was properly brought under NRS
40.495(2). Having properly brought the suit, the bank was entitled to
"maintain[ ]" the action "separately and independently from" the
proceedings, if any, it might take against the borrower on the note and
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proceedings, if any, it might take against the borrower on the note and
deed of trust. If the bank had recovered all of the debt by judgment
against Lavi, then Lavi would have succeeded to the bank's position vis-à-
vis the note and deed of trust. See NRS 40.475. Here, however, because
the bank sued Lavi on the guaranty and thereafter foreclosed, without
first reducing its claim against Lavi to judgment, the majority exonerates
Lavi from his obligations on the guaranty. This effectively reads
"separately and independently" out of NRS 40.495(2). Indeed, Lavi
recognized the bank's entitlement to proceed as it did when, anticipating
an eventual foreclosure of the deed of trust, he asserted offset as an
affirmative defense. The bank is not entitled to a double recovery,
Elyousef v. O'Reilly & Ferrario, LLC, 126 Nev. „ 245 P.3d 547, 549
(2010), and Lavi is entitled to the offset he pleaded. What he is not
entitled to, given his waiver of the one-action rule and its associated
protections, is to escape the obligation he contractually undertook.
At oral argument, Lavi conceded that the pleadings as framed
would have entitled the bank to proceed against Lavi had they been filed
within 6 months after, instead of before, the foreclosure sale. This
anomaly of a suit being adequate in every way except that it was brought
too early could be avoided by recognizing that the waiver in this case puts
the proceeding under NRS 40.495(2) and takes it outside NRS 40.455, on
which the majority relies. This reading also fits with NRS 40.495(4)
which, although added to the NRS after the proceedings in this case, 2011
Nev. Stat., ch. 311, § 5.5, at 1743-44, addresses the precise situation
presented here of a suit against a guarantor being filed before or in the
absence of proceedings against the security, making "the date of the
commencement of the action" the date on which the fair market value of
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the security is to be determined for purposes of establishing offset. This
provision makes no sense if, as the majority holds, NRS 40.455(1) controls
suits against guarantors who, like Lavi, waived the protections of NRS
40.430 pursuant to NRS 40.495(2).
Lavi does not meet the bank on the merits of its waiver
argument. He quotes language from NRS 40.453 to the effect that, "It is
hereby declared by the Legislature to be against public policy for any
document relating to the sale of real property to contain any provision
whereby a mortgagor or the grantor of a deed of trust or a guarantor or
surety of the indebtedness secured thereby, waives any right secured to
the person by the laws of this state." However, he omits the lead-in
language to NRS 40.453: "Except as otherwise provided in NRS 40.495."
(Emphasis added.) Here, in permitting waivers by guarantors of NRS
40.430 and providing for suits against them to be maintained "separately
and independently" from the proceedings, if any, against the borrower,
NRS 40.495(2) "otherwise provide[s]." Thus, NRS 40.453 does not apply.
Our decision in Walters v. District Court, 127 Nev. , 263
P.3d 231 (2011), does not control. Walters expressly did not decide waiver,
since the case was able to be resolved, favorably to the lender, without
reaching the issue. Id. at n.4, 263 P.3d at 233 n.4. While the majority
notes that Walters was a guarantor who waived the one-action rule, it is
clear that the fact of his waiver was not essential to our determination
that the lender satisfied the 6-month requirement. In a footnote, the
majority offers criticism for the dissent's interpretation of NRS 40.495(2),
but the order offers no explanation for the application of the provision in
NRS 40.430(1) that a waiver of the one-action rule under NRS 40.495(2)
terminates the application of NRS 40.455(1)'s 6-month rule. Given the
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reservation of the waiver issue in Walters and the absence of any analysis
by the majority of the relationship between NRS 40.495(2), NRS 40.430(1)
and NRS 40.455(1), I believe this Courts' Internal Operating Procedures
require that this case be resolved as an opinion. See Internal Operating
Procedures Rule 9(a).
Mandamus ordinarily does not lie to review partial summary
judgment determinations, particularly where, as here, the legal issue
presented is not deemed sufficiently significant to merit disposition by
published opinion. Cf. Friedman v. Dist. Ct., 127 Nev. , 264 P.3d
1161, 1169, 127 Nev. (2011); Round Hill Gen. Imp. Dist. v.
Newman, 97 Nev. 601, 604, 637 P.2d 534, 536 (1981). If we are going to
entertain this petition for a writ of mandamus at all, I would reach the
waiver question reserved in Walters, and resolve it as outlined above.
1 , C.J.
Pickering
I concur:
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