Supreme Court
No. 2022-331-Appeal.
(KC 21-798)
PennyMac Loan Services, LLC :
v. :
Roosevelt Associates, RIGP, et al. :
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision
before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers
are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme
Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence,
Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone (401) 222-3258 or
Email opinionanalyst@courts.ri.gov, of any typographical
or other formal errors in order that corrections may be
made before the opinion is published.
Supreme Court
No. 2022-331-Appeal.
(KC 21-798)
PennyMac Loan Services, LLC :
v. :
Roosevelt Associates, RIGP, et al. :
Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and Long, JJ.
OPINION
Justice Long, for the Court. The plaintiff, PennyMac Loan Services, LLC
(plaintiff), appeals from a Superior Court decision granting summary judgment in
favor of the defendants Coventry Fire District; Roosevelt Associates, RIGP
(Roosevelt); Linda Murray, Only in Her Capacity as Partner of Roosevelt
Associates, RIGP; Coventry Fire District 5-19, RIGP; Douglas Smith, Only in His
Capacity as Partner of Coventry Fire District 5-19, RIGP; Clarke Road Associates,
RIGP; Title Investment Co., RIGP; and Stephen Smith, Only in His Capacity as
Partner of Clarke Road Associates, RIGP and Title Investment Co., RIGP;
(collectively, defendants), in the plaintiff’s action to challenge (1) the adequacy of
notice of a prior petition to foreclose the right of redemption from a title conveyed
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by a tax collector’s deed pursuant to G.L. 1956 § 44-9-24;1 and (2) the prior tax sale,
as well as subsequent conveyances of property previously owned by the plaintiff, as
voidable transfers pursuant to G.L. 1956 chapter 16 of title 6, the Uniform Voidable
Transactions Act (the act).2
1
General Laws 1956 § 44-9-24 provides the following:
“The title conveyed by a tax collector’s deed shall be
absolute after foreclosure of the right of redemption by
decree of the superior court as provided in this chapter.
Notwithstanding the rules of civil procedure or the
provisions of chapter 21 of title 9, no decree shall be
vacated except in a separate action instituted within six (6)
months following entry of the decree and in no event for
any reason, later than six (6) months following the entry
of decree. Furthermore, the action to vacate shall only be
instituted for inadequacy of notice of the petition
amounting to a denial of due process or for the invalidity
of the tax sale because the taxes for which the property
was sold had been paid or were not due and owing because
the property was exempt from the payment of such taxes.
The superior court shall have exclusive jurisdiction of the
foreclosure of all rights of redemption from titles
conveyed by a tax collector’s deed, and the foreclosure
proceedings shall follow the course of equity in a
proceeding provided for in §§ 44-9-25 – 44-9-33.”
2
The plaintiff’s amended complaint sought declaratory and injunctive relief in an
effort to vacate the foreclosure decree for the following reasons: (1) Roosevelt
lacked the capacity to file a foreclosure petition based on its status as a general
partnership; (2) the foreclosure citation failed to provide plaintiff with adequate
notice and this failure denied plaintiff of its right to procedural due process; and (3)
the tax sale and later conveyances of the subject property constituted fraudulent
behavior pursuant to the act. The plaintiff has abandoned its first theory of relief on
appeal.
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This case came before the Supreme Court pursuant to an order directing the
parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be
summarily decided. After considering the parties’ written and oral submissions and
reviewing the record, we conclude that cause has not been shown and that we may
decide this appeal without further briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth in
this opinion, we affirm the amended judgment of the Superior Court.
Facts and Procedural History
The relevant facts in this matter are undisputed. The plaintiff held a mortgage
interest in property located at 24 Clarke Road in Coventry, Rhode Island (property),
pursuant to an assignment of mortgage dated July 9, 2015. The mortgagor,
defendant Domenico Companatico (Mr. Companatico), executed the mortgage when
he obtained title to the property in 2010. Unfortunately, however, Mr. Companatico
failed to pay 2018 fire district taxes in the amount of $622.51; consequently, the
Coventry Fire District conducted a tax sale auction on October 11, 2019, and
conveyed a one hundred percent interest in the property to Roosevelt for the sum of
$1,213.54, subject to a right of redemption under the Rhode Island General Laws.
Additionally, plaintiff referred to the “Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act” in its
Superior Court filings. In 2018 the General Assembly amended the name of this act
to the Uniform Voidable Transactions Act. See P.L. 2018, ch. 141, § 1; P.L. 2018,
ch. 236, § 1.
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One year later, Roosevelt filed a petition to foreclose any right of redemption
pursuant to § 44-9-25, 3 and the Superior Court clerk issued a citation notifying
interested parties of the proceedings. The citation provided a metes and bounds
description of the property, but did not include a street address for the property. The
citation also specified that the property was located in Coventry, Rhode Island;
provided the name and contact information of the attorney for Roosevelt; and warned
that failure to file a written appearance and answer would lead to default and,
ultimately, a permanent bar against any future attempt to challenge the petition or
final decree foreclosing the right of redemption. Roosevelt served the citation via
certified mail to plaintiff’s business address and plaintiff certified receipt of the
citation via signature.
The plaintiff nevertheless failed to respond and was defaulted. A justice of
the Superior Court entered a final decree foreclosing the right of redemption on
March 5, 2021, and Roosevelt thereafter sold the property to Coventry Fire District
3
Section 44-9-25(a) provides, in relevant part, as follows:
“After one year from a sale of land for taxes, * * * whoever
then holds the acquired title may bring a petition in the
superior court for the foreclosure of all rights of
redemption under the title. The petition shall set forth a
description of the land to which it applies, with its assessed
valuation, the petitioner’s source of title, giving a
reference to the place, book, and page of record, and other
facts as may be necessary for the information of the court.”
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5-19, RIGP, a general partnership 4 which subsequently conveyed the property to
Clarke Road Associates, RIGP, for $166,500.
On September 3, 2021, plaintiff filed the instant action (1) to challenge the
March 5, 2021 decree of the Superior Court on multiple grounds, including the
adequacy of notice of Roosevelt’s petition to foreclose all rights of redemption,
pursuant to § 44-9-24; and (2) to seek to void the tax sale and subsequent
conveyances of the property pursuant to the act. The parties filed cross-motions for
summary judgment, and in a written decision dated July 21, 2022, a second trial
justice concluded that plaintiff had received adequate notice of the petition to
foreclose all rights of redemption; that the fire district taxes constituted a superior
lien on the property and that plaintiff is statutorily barred from asserting a violation
of the act; and that defendants were otherwise entitled to judgment as a matter of
law.
Following the entry of final judgment, plaintiff filed a timely notice of appeal
to this Court. 5
4
While this general partnership shares its name with the Coventry Fire District, it
has no apparent municipal affiliation.
5
On April 25, 2023, this Court remanded the case for entry of an amended judgment
as to all parties. The Superior Court then entered an amended judgment against
plaintiff and Mr. Companatico and in favor of the remaining defendants.
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Standard of Review
We review a trial justice’s decision to grant summary judgment de novo.
Newport and New Road, LLC v. Hazard, 296 A.3d 92, 94 (R.I. 2023). Moreover,
this Court employs a de novo standard of review when evaluating a trial justice’s
denial of a litigant’s request to vacate a final decree foreclosing a right of redemption
in a subject property. Izzo v. Victor Realty, 132 A.3d 680, 685 (R.I. 2016).
Discussion
The plaintiff raises three issues on appeal. First, plaintiff asks the Court to
consider whether the failure of a citation to reference the street address of a property
subject to a petition to foreclose the right of redemption violates the Due Process
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Second,
plaintiff asks the Court to consider whether a tax sale of property without the
exchange of reasonably equivalent value violates the act as an involuntary transfer
from an insolvent party. Finally, plaintiff argues that the decision of the trial justice
conflicts with the recently issued opinion of the United States Supreme Court in
Tyler v. Hennepin County, Minnesota, 598 U.S. 631 (2023).
For the reasons set forth in the following analyses, under none of these issues
does plaintiff prevail.
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A. Due Process
At a minimum, due process requires that a litigant provide notice that is
reasonably calculated, when considering all circumstances, to inform interested
parties about a pending legal proceeding while also providing an opportunity for
them to raise any objections to that proceeding. See Izzo, 132 A.3d at 688. Further,
due process is both flexible and pragmatic. See Chongris v. Board of Appeals of
Town of Andover, 811 F.2d 36, 41 (1st Cir. 1987). It does not require parties to
engage in overly formalistic or hypertechnical communications with one another in
an effort to avoid violating the Fourteenth Amendment. Id. (“Substance governs over
form. So long as a ‘T’ is clearly portrayed as a ‘T,’ the Constitution does not
mandate that it be crossed in some mythic fashion.”). When evaluating a challenge
to the adequacy of notice in a proceeding to foreclose the right of redemption, courts
assess “the efforts undertaken by the foreclosing party to determine whether those
efforts are intended to actually inform the recipient about the pending matter.”
Suncar v. Jordan Realty, 276 A.3d 1274, 1279-80 (R.I. 2022) (Long, J., concurring)
(citing Jones v. Flowers, 547 U.S. 220, 238 (2006)).
Section 44-9-27 lists the notice requirements for petitions to foreclose all
rights of redemption from titles conveyed by tax-collector deed and mandates that
the citation include: (1) the name of the petitioner; (2) the names of all known
respondents; (3) a description of the land; and (4) a statement of the nature of the
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petition. See § 44-9-27(b). Moreover, this provision requires that the citation set
forth a time when an interested party may enter an appearance while also informing
an interested party that, unless that party appears within the fixed time frame, the
court will record a default and that party’s right of redemption will be forever
barred.6 Id.
Upon receipt of a citation, an interested party may contest the validity of a tax
title pursuant to § 44-9-31:
“If a person claiming an interest desires to raise any
question concerning the validity of a tax title, the person
shall do so by answer filed in the proceeding on or before
the return day, or within that further time as may on motion
be allowed by the court, providing the motion is made
prior to the fixed return date, or else be forever barred
from contesting or raising the question in any other
proceeding. He or she shall also file specifications setting
forth the matters upon which he or she relies to defeat the
title; and unless the specifications are filed, all questions
of the validity or invalidity of the title, whether in the form
of the deed or proceedings relating to the sale, shall be
deemed to have been waived. Upon the filing of the
specifications, the court shall hear the parties and shall
enter a decree in conformity with the law on the facts
found.” (Emphasis added.)
This provision, similar to § 44-9-27(b), underscores the finality of the
proceedings after an interested party has an opportunity to be heard.
6
Section 44-9-46 provides a model form for this notice procedure but provides no
particulars regarding the description of the land. See § 44-9-46.
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After examining the undisputed facts in the record, we are satisfied that the
failure of the citation to reference the street address of the subject property did not
constitute a denial of due process in the circumstances of this case. The citation
contained each of the requisite components mandated by § 44-9-27(b), as well as the
name and address of the attorney for Roosevelt, the fact that the property was located
in Coventry, Rhode Island, a return date for objections, and the location of the
proceeding. Moreover, plaintiff acknowledges having received, through certified
mail, a citation that contained an accurate metes and bounds description of the
property; the property’s correct street name, town, and state; and the correct plat and
lot number for the property.
Notwithstanding this acknowledgment, plaintiff asserts that it could not have
received meaningful notice in this matter because: (1) a layperson could not have
deciphered the “archaic directional coordinates” of a metes and bounds description
that omits a street address; (2) plaintiff’s status as a California-based entity with an
interest in thousands of different properties hindered it from ascertaining whether to
respond; and (3) Roosevelt intended to obscure the property’s location because
several other documents describing the land provided a street address.
Although the metes and bounds description created some amount of confusion
for plaintiff upon receipt of the citation, we cannot conclude that it failed to provide
meaningful notice of the then-pending proceedings. The plaintiff—a sophisticated
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and publicly traded mortgage company—clearly did not immediately ascertain the
property’s location from the citation, but it also did not contact the attorney listed on
the citation to seek clarification. In fact, plaintiff’s status as an entity that owns
thousands of properties throughout the country undercuts its assertion that it could
not readily ascertain the location of the subject property from a metes and bounds
description. Upon receipt of the citation, plaintiff undoubtedly could have sought
further information, rather than failing to respond to the citation or to appear at the
foreclosure proceeding. This Court therefore declines the invitation to speculate on
Roosevelt’s motives for omitting the street address when drafting the language
included in the citation. The means employed—providing a metes and bounds
description, including the correct street name and town, as well as contact
information for the attorney for Roosevelt—were such that plaintiff could and
should have investigated the pending matter further. See Mullane v. Central
Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306, 315 (1950) (“The reasonableness and
hence the constitutional validity of any chosen method may be defended on the
ground that it is in itself reasonably certain to inform those affected, * * * or, where
conditions do not reasonably permit such notice, that the form chosen is not
substantially less likely to bring home notice than other of the feasible and customary
substitutes.”).
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Therefore, although the citation lacked a street address for the property at
issue in the petition to foreclose the right of redemption, the omission does not
amount to a due-process violation under the circumstances of this case. See Murray
v. Schillace, 658 A.2d 512, 514 (R.I. 1995) (concluding that a litigant received
adequate notice, despite a typographical error, based on the fact that a failure to
respond to that notice could result in the deprivation of property and the party could
have overcome the defect with ordinary diligence). The language of the citation was
reasonably calculated, when considering all circumstances, to inform plaintiff about
the pending petition to foreclose all rights of redemption from the title conveyed by
the tax collector’s deed to the property, while also providing an opportunity for
plaintiff to contest the validity of the tax title. Mullane, 339 U.S. at 314.
We conclude that plaintiff has failed to demonstrate that the failure of the
citation to reference the street address of the property at issue in the petition to
foreclose the right of redemption violated due process under the circumstances of
this case. The plaintiff’s challenge pursuant to § 44-9-24 fails and, in accordance
with § 44-9-31, plaintiff is barred from contesting the validity of the March 5, 2021
decree of the Superior Court.
B. Uniform Voidable Transactions Act
The plaintiff urges this Court to reverse the Superior Court judgment in favor
of defendants because, plaintiff asserts, the October 11, 2019 tax sale must be voided
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as a fraudulent transfer pursuant to the act. However, our conclusion that plaintiff
failed to demonstrate inadequacy of notice of the petition to foreclose the right of
redemption prevents this Court from reviewing any claim of error regarding the prior
tax sale.
As was previously discussed, § 44-9-31 requires an objecting party to raise all
objections at the foreclosure proceeding; if the objecting party fails to do so, “all
questions of the validity or invalidity of the title, whether in the form of the deed or
proceedings relating to the sale, shall be deemed to have been waived.” Section
44-9-31. Based on plaintiff’s failure to raise any objection during the foreclosure
proceeding, any claim of error regarding the prior tax sale is deemed to have been
waived.7 See id.
C. Tyler v. Hennepin County, Minnesota, 598 U.S. 631 (2023)
In plaintiff’s supplemental Rule 12A statement, filed on June 9, 2023, it
argues that the Supreme Court’s May 2023 decision in Tyler v. Hennepin County,
7
During oral argument, plaintiff’s counsel suggested that we should allow its claim
under the act to proceed because plaintiff initiated that action within the act’s statute
of limitations; doing so, counsel argued, would constitute a harmonious reading of
the act and § 44-9-31’s prohibition on raising additional claims. However,
§ 44-9-31’s prohibition on additional claims after the foreclosure period ends is
analogous to a statute of repose that bars all subsequent claims, regardless of their
compliance with any applicable statute of limitations. See Salazar v. Machine Works,
Inc., 665 A.2d 567, 568 (R.I. 1995) (“In other words, ‘a statute of limitations’ bars
a right of action unless the action is filed within a specified period after an injury
occurs whereas a ‘statute of repose’ terminates any right of action after a specific
time has elapsed irrespective of whether there has as yet been an injury.”).
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Minnesota, 598 U.S. 631 (2023), alters the outcome of this case. Although parties
may not ordinarily raise on appeal issues not argued before the trial justice, we
recognize a narrow exception when the alleged error is more than harmless and
implicates an issue of constitutional dimension derived from a new rule of law that
a party could not expect to know at the time of trial. See Decathlon Investments v.
Medeiros, 252 A.3d 268, 270 (R.I. 2021).
However, even were this Court to assume that plaintiff’s argument falls within
this narrow exception to the raise-or-waive rule, Tyler does not control the outcome
of this case. The majority in Tyler held that the government possessed the authority
to sell the plaintiff-homeowner’s property to recover unpaid taxes, but that it could
not retain the excess value in the home without violating the Takings Clause of the
Fifth Amendment. Tyler, 598 U.S. at 638-39. The record before this Court reveals
that the town of Coventry sold the subject property exclusively for unpaid taxes and
fees in the amount of $1,213.54 and did not retain any excess value in the property.
As a result, the Supreme Court’s holding in Tyler v. Hennepin County, Minnesota,
fails to alter the outcome of this matter.
Therefore, we conclude that the plaintiff failed to demonstrate that the citation
provided inadequate notice of the foreclosure proceedings in violation of the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and
that the citation contained the components required to inform the plaintiff of its
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obligations should it have wished to contest the validity of the tax title. Accordingly,
we determine that no genuine issues of material fact are in dispute and that Roosevelt
is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Conclusion
Based on the foregoing, we affirm the amended judgment of the Superior
Court and remand the record in this case.
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND
SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
Licht Judicial Complex
250 Benefit Street
Providence, RI 02903
OPINION COVER SHEET
PennyMac Loan Services, LLC v. Roosevelt
Title of Case
Associates, RIGP, et al.
No. 2022-331-Appeal.
Case Number
(KC 21-798)
Date Opinion Filed April 10, 2024
Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Robinson, Lynch Prata, and
Justices
Long, JJ.
Written By Associate Justice Melissa A. Long
Source of Appeal Kent County Superior Court
Judicial Officer from Lower Court Associate Justice Brian Van Couyghen
For Plaintiff:
Carl E. Fumarola, Esq.
Attorney(s) on Appeal For Defendants:
Arthur M. Read, II, Esq.
Douglas H. Smith, Esq.
SU-CMS-02A (revised November 2022)