RENDERED: SEPTEMBER 1, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
ORDERED PUBLISHED BY SUPREME COURT: MARCH 8, 2024
(FILE NO. 2023-SC-0456-D)
Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals
NO. 2021-CA-1370-MR
JERRY KEY AND MIRANDA KEY APPELLANTS
APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
v. HONORABLE ANNIE O’CONNELL, JUDGE
ACTION NO. 14-CI-402274
CITIMORTGAGE, INC.; CAPITAL
ONE BANK (USA), NA; KENTUCKY
DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE,
COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY;
KENTUCKY TELCO FEDERAL
CREDIT UNION; AND MONEY
NOW, KENTUCKY, INC. APPELLEES
OPINION
AFFIRMING
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE: ACREE, CALDWELL, AND CETRULO, JUDGES.
CALDWELL, JUDGE: Jerry and Miranda Key (“the Keys”) challenge the trial
court’s granting a protective order and summary judgment in favor of Appellee
CitiMortgage, Inc. (“CitiMortgage”) in a foreclosure action. We affirm.
FACTS
In late 2008, the Keys obtained a mortgage loan. Jerry Key signed a
note promising to repay the lending bank $140,000 plus interest. The Keys
executed a mortgage on their residence on Red Cedar Way in Louisville to secure
the note. The Keys made monthly payments for a while. But there appears to be
no dispute that they stopped making payments on or around August 1, 2012.
In November 2014, CitiMortgage filed a complaint for foreclosure.
CitiMortgage asserted it was the holder of the note and had been assigned the
mortgage by the lending bank. It attached to the complaint copies of the mortgage
and a mortgage assignment from the lending bank to CitiMortgage notarized in
May 2014.
It also attached to the complaint a copy of the note with an allonge.1
The allonge stated the $140,000 principal balance, identified Jerry Key as the
borrower and listed the property address.2 The first indorsement was signed by a
1
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).
2
Compare Acuff v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 460 S.W.3d 335, 340 (Ky. App. 2014) (“[T]he blank
endorsement on the note is contained on a separate page, not numbered in correspondence to the
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lending bank official directing that payment be made to the order of CitiMortgage.
The second indorsement was signed by a CitiMortgage official and stated: “pay to
the order of ______________ without recourse on us CitiMortgage, Inc.” In other
words, the second indorsement was in blank.3
The complaint noted the Keys had obtained a Chapter 7 discharge in
bankruptcy court. A copy of an October 2014 bankruptcy court’s order
discharging the Keys’ debts was attached.
CitiMortgage stated in the complaint that it was not seeking a “money
debt” against the Keys.4 It also stated it sought judgment for $114,186.00 in
principal due plus interest since August 1, 2012, and other fees under the note in its
prayer for relief. But the prayer for relief also asserted that if the Keys had been
discharged in bankruptcy, CitiMortgage did not seek a “personal money judgment”
but only an in rem judgment.5
note itself, and contains no identifying information that establishes that it is indeed related to the
note.”).
3
A blank indorsement is: “An indorsement that names no specific payee, thus making the
instrument payable to the bearer and negotiable by delivery only.” Indorsement, BLACK’S LAW
DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019).
4
No recordings of any trial court hearings were included in the record on appeal as reflected in
the circuit clerk’s certification of the record. Thus, we have been unable to review any oral
discussions of any matters in trial court hearings.
5
An in rem judgment or a judgment in rem is: “A judgment that determines the status or
condition of property and that operates directly on the property itself. • The phrase denotes a
judgment that affects not only interests in a thing but also all persons’ interest in the thing.”
Judgment, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019).
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According to the appellate briefs, CitiMortgage first requested
discovery from the Keys in 2016 and the Keys first sent out discovery requests to
CitiMortgage in early 2017. New counsel for the Keys had recently entered an
appearance in early 2017 after prior counsel withdrew due to serious illness.
CitiMortgage sent responses to interrogatories and requests for admissions within
several weeks of the Keys’ sending out discovery requests. But the Keys complain
that CitiMortgage objected to and/or refused to answer several questions.
In early June 2017, CitiMortgage filed a Motion for Summary
Judgment6 and tendered an In Rem Judgment and Order of Sale. It attached as an
exhibit a bankruptcy schedule of the Keys’ debts. The schedule listed the
mortgage loan obligation on the Keys’ home – stating that $114,186.00 was the
principal amount of the claim due without deducting the value of the collateral and
indicating the home’s value was $130,000. No agreement to reaffirm the home
loan debt was noted. Also attached to the summary judgment motion was an
affidavit of a CitiMortage business operations analyst and business records relating
to the Keys’ home mortgage loan.
6
It also sought a Default Judgment against Miranda Key, who had not filed an answer to the
complaint. Jerry Key, on the other hand, had filed an answer by counsel in late 2014. Within his
answer, Jerry Key also asserted counterclaims against CitiMortgage. However, the parties have
not raised substantive arguments about the trial court’s handling of the counterclaims in their
appellate briefs, so we need not discuss the counterclaims further.
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The Keys sought to inspect the note, which CitiMortgage allowed
later that summer.7 The Keys also sought to take the deposition of the business
operations analyst or other CitiMortgage representative. They filed a notice of
deposition shortly after CitiMortgage filed its motion for summary judgment.
CitiMortgage filed a motion for a protective order to block the deposition and for a
stay of discovery until the trial court ruled on the summary judgment motion.
The Keys requested and were granted additional time to respond to
the motion for a protective order and summary judgment order. They filed a
response objecting to the requests for a protective order and stay of discovery later
that summer. But they did not file a response to the summary judgment motion
that summer.
Meanwhile, the trial court had signed the tendered In Rem Judgment
and Order of Sale in late June 2017. Keys filed a motion to vacate or set aside that
judgment – and the parties tendered an agreed order to vacate or set aside the
judgment as well. In mid-July 2017, the trial court entered an order stating it was
granting CitiMortgage’s motion for a protective order and a stay of discovery with
the handwritten notation “at this time.”
7
CitiMortgage’s then-counsel filed a supplemental affidavit stating that counsel for the Keys
inspected the original promissory note in mid-August 2017. (Record (“R.”), p. 409). The Keys
have not disputed that their counsel inspected the note.
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In late July 2017, the trial court initially refused to sign and enter the
agreed order to vacate or set aside the In Rem Judgment and Order of Sale –
apparently because no parties or counsel were present on the hearing date set.
In August 2017, the Keys filed a petition for a writ of prohibition. But the Keys
did not file a response to the summary judgment motion before filing the writ
petition.
After the writ petition was filed, the trial court entered an agreed order
vacating and setting aside the judgment and order of sale. It also ordered the Keys
would have additional time to file a response to the summary judgment motion and
it placed the case in abeyance pending resolution of the writ proceedings. Several
weeks later, this Court denied the requested writ. The Keys then appealed to our
Supreme Court.
Our Supreme Court affirmed. It stated it agreed with our assessment
that there was an adequate remedy by appeal because: “[i]f the trial court grants
the motion for summary judgment, then the Keys will be able to raise the issue of
the denial of discovery on appeal. If the trial court denies the motion for summary
judgment, then the issue of discovery can be revisited.” Key v. Morris, No. 2017-
SC-000642-MR, 2018 WL 6567101, at *2 (Ky. Dec. 13, 2018) (unpublished).8
8
Several different judges presided over this case in the trial court. Judge James Shake originally
signed an In Rem Judgment and Order of Sale in late June 2017. Judge Geoffrey Morris entered
the order staying discovery “at this time” in mid-July 2017 so he was the judge named in the
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Trial court proceedings then resumed in early 2019. Following
additional briefing, the trial court referred the matter to a Special Master
Commissioner. The Special Master Commissioner recommended the trial court
grant the summary judgment and enter an In Rem Judgment and Order of Sale.
The trial court entered an In Rem Judgment and Order of Sale in
October 2021. The Keys timely filed this appeal, claiming the trial court erred in
granting the protective order and summary judgment in CitiMortgage’s favor.9
Further facts will be discussed as needed.
ANALYSIS
Trial Court Did Not Abuse its Discretion in Granting Protective Order
CR 26.03 states that a trial court may, upon motion and good cause
shown, enter an order not allowing or placing limits on a requested deposition or
other discovery request “which justice requires to protect a party or person from
caption of the petition for a writ of prohibition. Other orders were entered by other Jefferson
Circuit Court judges. The written record indicates that, following resolution of the writ appeal,
Judge Annie O’Connell presided over this case until the present appeal was filed.
9
The Keys stated they were appealing from the trial court’s October 2021 In Rem Judgment and
Order of Sale – as well as the July 2017 protective order staying discovery – in their Notice of
Appeal. Although the Keys attached a copy of the October 2021 judgment to their Notice of
Appeal, the appendix to their red brief contains a copy of the late June 2017 In Rem Judgment
and Order of Sale instead. We presume this error is inadvertent and that the Keys still intend to
appeal from the October 2021 judgment instead of the July 2017 judgment which was set aside
by the trial court several years ago. We elect to impose no sanctions under these facts. But we
remind counsel for future reference that Kentucky Rule of Appellate Procedure (“RAP”)
32(E)(1)(a) requires the first item in an appendix to an appellant’s brief to be “the judgment,
opinion, or order under review . . . .” See also former Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure (“CR”)
76.12(4)(c)(vii) (in effect when the red appellant brief was filed). Obviously, the judgment
under review here is from 2021, not 2017.
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annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense . . . .” “A
protective order is within the full discretion and authority of the trial court and is
appropriate only to prevent a party from ‘annoyance, embarrassment, oppression,
or undue expense or burden.’” Richmond Health Facilities-Madison, LP v. Clouse,
473 S.W.3d 79, 83 (Ky. 2015) (quoting Ewing v. May, 705 S.W.2d 910, 913 (Ky.
1986)). We review this issue for abuse of discretion. See Clouse, 473 S.W.3d at
84 (stating our Supreme Court was unwilling to conclude the trial court abused its
discretion in granting the protective order at issue).
The trial court’s granting of the motion for a protective order and stay
of discovery was subject to the judge’s handwritten qualification “at this time.”
CitiMortgage had explicitly requested a stay of discovery only until the trial court
ruled on the summary judgment motion. And the Keys had not yet filed their
response to the summary judgment motion when the trial court ruled on the motion
for protective order and stay of discovery.
In its motion for a protective order and stay of discovery,
CitiMortgage pointed to the evidence of the Keys’ obligation, CitiMortgage’s
being the holder of the note and assignee of the mortgage, and the Keys’ default,
which it submitted with its summary judgment motion. It also noted it sought only
an in rem judgment and not a personal judgment and that a CitiMortgage
representative could only testify based on business records. It asserted that its
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analyst’s affidavit and supporting documentation showed it was entitled to
summary judgment and that further discovery would only result in undue expense
and delay.
The Keys’ response argued that CitiMortgage’s discovery responses
were deficient and that CitiMortgage did not show good cause for a protective
order but was simply trying to impede the search for the truth. They argued that
Kentucky discovery rules were liberal and that delays in discovery might result in
loss of evidence due to dimmed memories or witness unavailability. They also
contended they were seeking information about CitiMortgage’s authority and
standing to sue, details about the debt and a complete accounting, communications
between the parties and alleged violations of law in servicing the loan. But they
did not specifically identify what they hoped to gain through the requested
deposition or how it might help them to defeat the summary judgment motion. Nor
had they yet filed their response to the summary judgment motion to identify
potential genuine issues of material fact.
Despite any lack of risk of embarrassment or annoyance, the record
before the trial court at that time supports an inference that a deposition and further
discovery would simply result in unnecessary expense and delay under the facts
and circumstances of this case. Therefore, though another court may have allowed
the deposition to proceed, we discern no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s
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2017 protective order staying further discovery. See Clouse, 473 S.W.3d at 83-84.
This is especially true given the limited effect of the trial court’s protective order
staying discovery “at this time”10 – in granting CitiMortgage’s request for such a
stay until the trial court ruled on its summary judgment motion.
Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in Ruling on Summary Judgment
Motion in 2021 Despite Arguments of Prematurity and Lack of Adequate
Opportunity to Conduct Discovery
Although the substance of the summary judgment grant is reviewed de
novo as we later discuss, the reviewing court must also consider whether there was
a sufficient opportunity to conduct discovery before the ruling. “The trial court’s
determination that a sufficient amount of time has passed and that it can properly
take up the summary judgment motion for a ruling is reviewed for an abuse of
discretion.” Blankenship v. Collier, 302 S.W.3d 665, 668 (Ky. 2010).
The Keys point out that CitiMortgage filed its summary judgment
motion just a few days after submitting responses to discovery requests – an event
occurring in 2017. They complain that CitiMortgage did not fully answer
10
Clearly, this 2017 order was not a final and appealable order which resolved all the rights and
claims of the parties in the action. See CR 54.01. Nor was it an order which stated there was “no
just reason for delay” and contained language indicating the trial court’s intent to issue a final
judgment concerning less than all claims or parties in the action. See CR 54.02(1). Thus, this
order was “interlocutory and subject to revision at any time before the entry of judgment
adjudicating all the claims and the rights and liabilities of all the parties.” CR 54.02(1). Yet the
Keys do not point to any efforts they made to ask the trial court to set aside or revise the 2017
order in the period between the early 2019 resumption of trial court proceedings and the late
2021 final judgment.
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discovery requests and refused to make a representative available for deposition.
They assert CitiMortgage has not fully cooperated with discovery requests and that
the record is incomplete and insufficient to allow the trial court to properly decide
the case. But they do not point to any efforts to set aside the 2017 protective order
or to obtain or compel discovery after trial court proceedings resumed in 2019.
The Keys argue on appeal that the trial court ruled on the summary
judgment motion prematurely without affording them an adequate opportunity to
conduct discovery. We disagree.
The trial court granted the appealed-from summary judgment in 2021.
This case was filed in the trial court in 2014. The Keys have stated that they first
sent out discovery requests in early 2017 – over two years after this case was filed.
The case was removed from abeyance in the trial court in early 2019 following
resolution of the writ appeal. The Keys do not point to any motions to compel
discovery or to vacate or set aside the protective order issued in 2017. Under these
circumstances, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the
Keys had adequate opportunity to conduct discovery and that sufficient time had
passed for it to rule on the summary judgment motion in 2021. See id. at 668.
Trial Court Did Not Err in Determining that CitiMortgage Met Standard for
Obtaining Summary Judgment
CR 56.03 provides in pertinent part that summary judgment shall be
granted “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, stipulations, and
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admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no
genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a
judgment as a matter of law.” We review a trial court’s grant of summary
judgment de novo – to consider whether the trial court correctly determined there
were no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party was entitled to
judgment as a matter of law. In making this determination, the evidence must be
viewed in the light most favorable to the party opposing judgment. Cubar v. Town
& Country Bank and Tr. Company, 473 S.W.3d 91, 92 (Ky. App. 2015); Furlong
Development Co., LLC v. Georgetown-Scott Cnty. Planning and Zoning
Commission, 504 S.W.3d 34, 37 (Ky. 2016).
The Keys argue the trial court erred in granting summary judgment
because, in their view, there are disputed factual issues including: whether some
payments were omitted from an accounting or were not properly credited to the
mortgage loan account, whether some account charges were unauthorized and
whether CitiMortgage sent a notice of default. They contend the summary
judgment must be reversed and the case remanded to permit further discovery. We
disagree.
Even assuming some factual disputes exist, not every factual dispute
reflects a genuine issue of material fact sufficient to defeat a motion for summary
judgment. Steelvest, Inc. v. Scansteel Service Center, Inc., 807 S.W.2d 476, 481
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(Ky. 1991). Instead, the party opposing summary judgment must show there are
“genuine issues of material fact” – meaning that the factual dispute actually affects
whether the party moving for summary judgment is entitled to judgment in his/her
favor. For example, a factual dispute about a matter which one is not required to
prove in order to obtain a foreclosure judgment cannot defeat a summary judgment
motion supported by evidence showing that all requirements for foreclosure have
been met. See Croushore v. BAC Home Loans Servicing, L.P., 381 S.W.3d 331,
332 (Ky. App. 2012) (any factual dispute or denial of discovery concerning
irrelevant matter of how much consideration was paid for mortgage assignment did
not defeat well-supported motion for summary judgment showing holder was
entitled to enforce the note).
Despite Any Ancillary Factual Disputes, CitiMortgage Proved It was Entitled
to Enforce the Note
CitiMortgage submitted affidavit and documentary evidence showing
it was in physical possession of the note, which contained both a specific
indorsement to CitiMortgage and a blank indorsement by CitiMortgage. The Keys
were also permitted to inspect the note. Thus, CitiMortgage showed that it was a
holder of the note and entitled to enforce it. Augenstein v. Deutsche Bank National
Tr. Company as Tr. for Certificateholders of Soundview Home Loan Tr. 2005-
OPT4, Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2005-OPT4, 647 S.W.3d 857, 861 (Ky.
App. 2021), discretionary review denied (Aug. 10, 2022).
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As we recently explained:
“Generally, in foreclosure cases, the real party in interest
is the current holder of the note and/or mortgage.” Acuff,
460 S.W.3d at 339. A holder of a note is entitled to
enforce the obligations secured thereby. Stevenson v.
Bank of America, 359 S.W.3d 466, 470 (Ky. App. 2011).
A “holder” is defined as someone “in possession of a
negotiable instrument that is payable either to bearer or to
an identified person that is the person in possession[.]”
KRS [11] 355.1-201(2)(u)1. “When indorsed in blank, an
instrument becomes payable to bearer and may be
negotiated by transfer of possession alone until specially
indorsed.” KRS 355.3-205(2); see also KRS 355.3-
201(1). Accordingly, if a party is in possession of the
original note, it is entitled to enforce the obligations
secured by it and is the real party in interest. Stevenson,
359 S.W.3d at 470.
Id.
Furthermore, in the absence of evidence supporting a reason to doubt
the authenticity of documents, CitiMortgage’s business records accompanied by
the analyst’s affidavit were credible evidence of its being the holder of the note and
the Keys’ default:
KRE 803 [12] explains that records of regularly conducted
activity “if kept in the course of a regularly conducted
business activity” and the testimony of the records
custodian “or other qualified witness” concerning those
records are not excluded by the hearsay rule “unless the
source of information or the method or circumstances of
preparation indicate lack of trustworthiness.” Here,
11
Kentucky Revised Statutes.
12
Kentucky Rules of Evidence.
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Augenstein offered no evidence that Ms. Belcher’s
affidavit or the documents themselves lack
trustworthiness.
Id. at 861-62. Similarly, the Keys offered no evidence showing the analyst’s
affidavit or the documents themselves were untrustworthy.
January-July 2009 Payment History Was Not Required to Allow
CitiMortgage to Enforce the Note Under the Facts Here
The Keys argue CitiMortgage was required to provide a detailed
accounting demonstrating the basis for the amount sought in the lawsuit on a
defaulted debt obligation, citing Bruner v. Discover Bank, 360 S.W.3d 774 (Ky.
App. 2012). Therefore, they claim that CitiMortgage’s lack of account history
from January through July 2009 should defeat the motion for summary judgment.
But CitiMortgage produced the note and mortgage and a history of the
default beginning in August 2012. And it is undisputed that the account was up to
date through July 2009. Furthermore, Bruner concerned credit card debt rather
than foreclosure on a mortgage loan and the plaintiff’s failure to offer any evidence
of its having standing to sue. See id. at 778. The Keys do not cite any binding
precedent indicating that a complete history of every payment made on a mortgage
loan is required to allow a foreclosure judgment and order of sale.
Though the Keys point to the lack of account history regarding the
first several months of 2009 in these documents, this was irrelevant to the basic
points of CitiMortgage’s possession of the note or the fact of the Keys’ default –
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which did not take place until 2012. The Keys have not disputed their failure to
make further payments from August 2012 onwards. The missing account history
about the 2009 months did not establish a genuine issue of material fact about the
key issues of CitiMortgage’s possessing the note or the Keys’ default or defeat
CitiMortgage’s well-supported summary judgment motion showing it was entitled
to judgment in its favor. See Croushore, 381 S.W.3d at 332.
Furthermore, especially in light of the Chapter 7 discharge and
CitiMortgage’s not seeking a personal judgment against the Keys but only an in
rem judgment, the Keys’ arguments about being entitled to further credit based on
2009 payments or allegedly improper charges made on the account have no effect
on whether CitiMortgage is entitled to a foreclosure judgment and order of sale.
Instead, as CitiMortgage pointed out in its reply to the Keys’ response to the
summary judgment motion, such issues would only be relevant in the unlikely
event that the property sold for an amount well in excess of its estimated value
such that the Keys would potentially be entitled to a portion of the purchase price.
CitiMortgage asserts the Keys admitted to the principal amount due
being $114,186.00 in the bankruptcy proceedings. In their reply brief, the Keys
contend that their listing their mortgage loan obligation in the bankruptcy schedule
as a claim for $114,186.00 in principal due plus interest does not mean they admit
that a principal amount of that value is due. But regardless of whether or not the
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Keys admitted to this being the principal amount due in the bankruptcy proceeding,
CitiMortgage came forward with the requisite proof showing it was a holder
entitled to enforce the note – especially with business records and supporting
affidavit showing that $114,186.00 was the principal amount due on the loan.
Furthermore, the matter of any possible proceeds beyond the principal, interest and
other obligations coming from the sale could be raised to the trial court later after
the foreclosure sale occurs.
Under the terms of the order of sale, the proceeds would be applied
first to the costs of the action, then to state and local taxes, then to liens for
inspection or permits or licenses, then to satisfy CitiMortgage’s lien, and then to
any junior liens. After these obligations are satisfied, any remaining proceeds of
the sale would be held by the Special Master Commissioner until further order of
the trial court. In other words, should the purchase price exceed the total of all of
these obligations with priority, the Keys could raise their entitlement to excess
proceeds in further proceedings before the trial court.13
But regardless of the Keys’ potential entitlement to any excess
proceeds from the sale after satisfaction of obligations with superior priority, there
is no genuine issue of material fact based on any dispute about payment history
13
We do not address hypothetical questions of law, so we decline to explore what impact the
Keys’ bankruptcy would have on their entitlement to receive any sales proceeds which exceed
the amount they owe, plus legally recoverable costs and fees.
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details. CitiMortgage is entitled to the In Rem Judgment and Order of Sale in its
favor.
Trial Court Correctly Determined There are No Genuine Issues of Material
Fact and CitiMortgage is Entitled to Judgment in its Favor Despite Factual
Dispute About Whether the Keys Actually Received the Default Notice
Paragraph 22 of the Mortgage required that notice be given to the
Borrower(s) prior to acceleration. Paragraph 22 required that this notice specify
the default and identify what must be done to cure the default and state a date at
least 30 days after the date of the notice by which the action must be taken. Lastly,
Paragraph 22 required that this notice state that failure to cure the default by that
date may result in acceleration of the sums secured by the mortgage followed by
judicial foreclosure proceedings and a sale of the property. CitiMortgage offered
the analyst’s affidavit testimony that it sent a letter, attached as an exhibit to the
affidavit, to Jerry Key informing him that the loan was in default and that failure to
pay the past due amount plus late charges and deficiency-related expenses would
result in the loan’s acceleration.
The Keys point out that CitiMortgage does not claim to have sent out
a notice of default to Miranda Key. And they also point out that Jerry Key denied
receiving the notice of default in his 2019 affidavit attached to the Keys’ response
to the summary judgment motion. But unfortunately for the Keys, these points do
not defeat CitiMortgage’s entitlement to the judgment and order of sale.
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Paragraph 15 of the Mortgage states: “Notice to any one Borrower
shall constitute notice to all Borrowers unless Applicable Law expressly requires
otherwise.” The Keys have cited no applicable law requiring they both receive
notices in contravention of Paragraph 15. So, CitiMortgage’s not sending a notice
to Miranda Key individually does not defeat summary judgment.
Paragraph 15 also states: “Any notice to Borrower in connection with
this Security Instrument shall be deemed to have been given to Borrower when
mailed by first class mail or when actually delivered to Borrower’s notice address
if sent by other means.” There is no indication the default letter was sent by means
other than regular first-class mail; therefore, the affidavit testimony stating the
default notice was sent by CitiMortgage is sufficient – despite Jerry Key’s denial
of receiving the notice.14 Furthermore, the default notice complies with the
requirements for notice of acceleration in Paragraph 22 of the Mortgage, including
14
See Louthan v. Dollar Bank, FSB, No. 2018-CA-000820-MR, 2020 WL 2298431, at *6 (Ky.
App. May 8, 2020)(unpublished) (“regarding the issue of notice the applicable provisions in the
note and mortgage required Dollar Bank to send a notice of default by first-class mail to the
address listed in those documents or to another address provided by the borrower. Contrary to
Ms. Louthan[’s] assertions, those provision[s] do not condition the effectiveness of a notice on
the borrower actually receiving it. In other words, all Dollar Bank needed to do to comply with
the notice provisions was to send the notice of default to the appropriate address by first-class
mail. Dollar Bank presented copies of the notices it sent by first class mail to Ms. Louthan’s
address in Kentucky, which is the address listed in the note and mortgage, and to the address that
it had on file for her in Florida. Because those documents demonstrate that Dollar Bank
complied with the notice provisions in the note and mortgage, Ms. Louthan’s assertions to the
contrary lack all merit.”). Though this unpublished case is not binding authority, we find its
reasoning persuasive and cite it in the absence of binding Kentucky authority on this issue. See
RAP 41(A) (effective January 1, 2023); see also former CR 76.28(4)(c) (in effect, when initial
appellant brief was filed in December 2022).
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specifying the default, how to cure the default, giving a date at least 30 days from
the date of notice by which the default must be cured and stating that failure to
cure by that date may result in acceleration.
Notwithstanding these factors, the Keys argue the notice of default
was suspiciously sent out before the mortgage assignment occurred. The notice of
default is dated August 12, 2013. And the mortgage assignment was notarized in
May 2014. But it was not the assignment of the mortgage which transferred the
right to enforce the note to CitiMortgage. Instead, the undated transfer of
possession of the note to CitiMortgage and CitiMortgage’s indorsement of the note
in blank made CitiMortgage a holder entitled to enforce the note regardless of the
date of notarization on the mortgage assignment – which may have been “solely
for the purpose of memorializing the transaction and updating the public records.”
See Stevenson, 359 S.W.3d at 470. Accord, Acuff, 460 S.W.3d at 339-40.
The Keys failed to show the existence of a genuine issue of material
fact concerning the sending of the default notice. CitiMortgage was entitled to the
In Rem judgment and order of sale based on the record before us. Further
arguments or issues raised in the briefs which are not discussed herein have been
determined to lack merit or relevancy to our resolving this appeal.
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CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the Jefferson Circuit Court’s
judgment.
ALL CONCUR.
BRIEFS FOR APPELLANTS: BRIEF FOR APPELLEE
CITIMORTGAGE, INC.:
Zachary L. Taylor
Louisville, Kentucky Jeffrey M. Hendricks
Cincinnati, Ohio
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