IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 15-1271
Filed August 17, 2016
BANK ONE, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, as Trustee,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
vs.
CHRISTOPHER G. DANIELS; Parties in Possession;
Unknown spouse, if any, of Christopher G. Daniels,
Defendants-Appellees.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Wright County, Christopher C. Foy,
Judge.
A mortgagee bank appeals the district court’s determination the bank’s
notice of recision of the foreclosure action was untimely. REVERSED AND
REMANDED.
Mark D. Walz of Davis, Brown, Kohen, Shors & Roberts, West Des
Moines, for appellant.
Christopher G. Daniels, Eagle Grove, for appellees.
Considered by Tabor, P.J., and Bower and McDonald, JJ.
2
TABOR, Presiding Judge.
This appeal arises from a foreclosure action filed in equity on February 6,
2003, by Bank One1 against Christopher G. Daniels2 for defaulting on an April 3,
2001 promissory note secured by a mortgage of the same date. The bank’s
petition elected to foreclose without redemption, waived its rights to a deficiency
judgment, and stated the mortgaged property is a residential dwelling. The bank
sought judgment in rem against the real estate for unpaid principal and interest,
costs, and attorney fees.3 The court foreclosed the mortgage by default decree
entered on April 8, 2003. The decree entered judgment in rem in favor of the
bank and made the judgment a lien upon the mortgaged property.
Daniels filed a chapter 13 action in bankruptcy court, which stayed the
bank’s attempt to execute on its April 8, 2003 judgment. The bankruptcy court
dismissed the action in early 2007. Thereafter, the bank filed a praecipe for
special execution with the Wright County Clerk of Court on February 15, 2007.
But for reasons not explained in our record, no sheriff’s deed was issued. On
June 3, 2015, the bank filed a notice electing “to rescind and set aside the [April
8, 2003] foreclosure decree” under Iowa Code section 654.17 (2015).4
1
Bank One brought the action as the trustee for SASCO2006—BC3 Trust Fund.
2
The bank included parties in possession as defendants.
3
The bank’s petition asked that interest be calculated from November 1, 2002, which
was the date cited in its notice to cure sent to Daniels in December 2002.
4
The statute states:
At any time prior to the recording of the sheriff’s deed, and before
the mortgagee’s rights become unenforceable by operation of the statute
of limitations, the judgment creditor . . . may rescind the foreclosure action
by filing a notice of recision with the clerk of court . . . . In addition, if the
original loan documents are contained in the court file, . . . [u]pon the
payment of [a] fee, the clerk shall . . . return the original loan documents
to the mortgagee.
Iowa Code § 654.17(1) (emphasis added).
3
On June 26, 2015, the district court ruled the bank’s notice of recision5
was void, reasoning:
Under section 654.17, a notice of recision must be filed
“before the mortgagor’s rights become unenforceable by operation
of the statute of limitations.” Here, the applicable statute of
limitations is two years from the date the decree of foreclosure was
entered, not counting any time during which execution was stayed
pending a bankruptcy action. Iowa Code § 615.1.6
After noting the April 8, 2003 entry of the foreclosure decree, the district court
ruled: “Any stay that might have been in effect due to the bankruptcy of the
mortgagor was lifted or terminated no later than February 15, 2007.” Based on
these facts, the court found the last day for the bank to “enforce its rights under
the foreclosure decree before expiration of the limitations period in section 615.1
or to file a notice of recision pursuant to section 654.17 was February 15, 2009.”
The court concluded the bank’s failure to timely file its notice of recision rendered
the notice “void and of no effect.”
On appeal, the bank claims the district court erred in holding motions to
rescind a foreclosure judgment are subject to the two-year statute of limitations in
section 615.1(1). We review de novo. Iowa R. App. P. 6.907.
5
While “rescission is the standard and etymologically preferable spelling,” according to
Bryan A. Garner, Garner’s Dictionary of Legal Usage 777 (3d ed. 2011), our legislature
used the alternative spelling—recision—in section 654.17, which we will use for
consistency in this opinion.
6
Section 615.1 sets out a “special statute of limitations” for the “purpose of aiding
judgment debtors.” See Lacina v. Maxwell, 501 N.W.2d 531, 533 (Iowa 1993). The
relevant portion provides:
After the expiration of a period of two years from the date of entry
of judgment, exclusive of [time during a bankruptcy stay] . . . a [residential
foreclosure] judgment [for a real estate mortgage executed prior to July 1,
2009,] shall be null and void, all liens shall be extinguished, and no
execution shall be issued except as a setoff of counterclaim.
Iowa Code § 615.1(1) (emphasis added).
4
After the district court’s 2015 ruling, our supreme court aided our
resolution of this appeal by harmonizing the interplay of the two statutory
provisions—section 654.17(1) and section 615.1(1)—into a “coherent whole.”
See U.S. Bank, N.A. v. Callen, 874 N.W.2d 112, 119 (Iowa 2016). The court
ruled the special statute of limitations in section 615.1(1) “relates only to
enforcing the foreclosure judgment, not recision” under section 654.17(1). Id.;
see U.S. Bank, N.A. v. Vahle, No. 12-0439, 2012 WL 5539865, at *5 (Iowa Ct.
App. Nov. 15, 2012) (“[S]ection 615.1 addresses the time for execution of a
foreclosure judgment, not the time for a mortgagee to enforce its rights under the
mortgage.”).
Although a judgment lien is “null and void” after two years from the date of
judgment under 615.1(1), nevertheless, “the mortgage indebtedness survives.”
Callen, 874 N.W.2d at 119. Accordingly, a “mortgagee’s rights” in section
654.17(1), which become “unenforceable” by the statute of limitations, are
broader rights than the “right to enforce a judgment lien” in section 615.1(1). Id.
“[M]ortgagee’s rights,” instead, are “rights arising from the underlying mortgage
that survives the two-year period.” Id. The Callen court concluded:
[W]hen a foreclosure judgment is subject to Iowa Code
section 615.1, the penalty . . . for failure to execute on the judgment
within the prescribed two-year period is that the mortgagee forfeits
the right to obtain a deficiency judgment in any subsequent
foreclosure action. It does not extinguish the mortgagee’s rights
altogether.
....
. . . We hold that the “all liens” language in Iowa Code
section 615.1(1) applies only to all judgment liens and the two-year
special statute of limitations in Iowa Code section 615.1(1) does not
limit the period of time for a mortgagee to rescind a prior
foreclosure judgment.
5
Id. at 120 (citing Iowa Code § 654.17(2)). Based on this premise, we reverse the
district court’s ruling and hold Bank One’s mortgage lien survived the two-year
period in section 615.1(1). See id.
But the question remains whether the applicable statute of limitations was
ten years under section 614.1(5) (requiring actions “founded on written contracts”
be brought within ten years of the cause of action accruing) or twenty years
under section 614.21 (barring actions to foreclose or enforce any real estate
mortgage after twenty years of the date thereon). See id. (leaving open the
question of which of these two limitations periods applied); see also Bank of Am.,
N.A. v. Schulte, 843 N.W.2d 876, 883 n.4 (Iowa 2014) (recognizing but not
deciding proper statute of limitations for recision under section 654.17).
Bank One argues we should hold “at the very least” the ten-year period
provided under section 614.1(5) governs motions for recision under section
654.17. The bank does not assert on what date it believes the ten-year statute of
limitations began to run. While the district court held the two-year period under
section 615.1 commenced on February 15, 2007, that calculation considered the
stay pending Daniels’s bankruptcy action. Iowa Code sections 614.1(5) and
614.21 do not expressly exclude time for a bankruptcy action. Accordingly, we
find it necessary to remand this case for further proceedings where the district
court should determine, in the first instance with the benefit of argument by the
parties, which statute of limitations applies to Bank One’s mortgagee’s rights and
when the limitations period commenced. We do not retain jurisdiction.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.