In re: Allana Baroni

Court: United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Ninth Circuit
Date filed: 2015-11-10
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Combined Opinion
                                                              FILED
 1                         NOT FOR PUBLICATION                 NOV 10 2015
                                                           SUSAN M. SPRAUL, CLERK
 2                                                           U.S. BKCY. APP. PANEL
                                                             OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
 3                  UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY APPELLATE PANEL
 4                            OF THE NINTH CIRCUIT
 5   In re:                        )      BAP No.      CC-14-1578-KuDTa
                                   )
 6   ALLANA BARONI,                )      Bk. No.      12-10986
                                   )
 7                  Debtor.        )      Adv. No.     13-01069
     ______________________________)
 8                                 )
     ALLANA BARONI,                )
 9                                 )
                    Appellant,     )
10                                 )
     v.                            )      MEMORANDUM*
11                                 )
     NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE, LLC,     )
12                                 )
                    Appellee.      )
13   ______________________________)
14                 Argued and Submitted on September 24, 2015
                              at Malibu, California
15
                           Filed – November 10, 2015
16
                 Appeal from the United States Bankruptcy Court
17                   for the Central District of California
18            Honorable Alan M. Ahart, Bankruptcy Judge, Presiding
19
     Appearances:     Louis J. Esbin argued for appellant Allana Baroni;
20                    Bernard Kornberg of Severson & Werson argued for
                      appellee Nationstar Mortgage, LLC.
21
22   Before: KURTZ, DUNN and TAYLOR, Bankruptcy Judges.
23
24
25
26        *
           This disposition is not appropriate for publication.
27   Although it may be cited for whatever persuasive value it may
     have (see Fed. R. App. P. 32.1), it has no precedential value.
28   See 9th Cir. BAP Rule 8024-1.
 1                               INTRODUCTION
 2        The debtor Allana Baroni1 commenced an adversary proceeding
 3   against Nationstar Mortgage LLC challenging Nationstar’s proof of
 4   secured claim, and the bankruptcy court granted summary judgment
 5   in favor of Nationstar.    The bankruptcy court determined that
 6   there was no genuine factual dispute that Nationstar possessed
 7   the original promissory note indorsed in blank, so Nationstar
 8   qualified as a person entitled to enforce the note and hence had
 9   standing to file the proof of claim.    Allana asserts that
10   Nationstar demonstrated neither that it had a right to enforce
11   the note and the deed of trust nor that it had an agency
12   relationship with someone else who did.
13        Our resolution of this appeal largely hinges on our answer
14   to a single question: when a creditor, in the process of
15   supporting a proof of claim based on a promissory note, presents
16   the bankruptcy court with two materially different copies of the
17   indorsements supposedly accompanying the note, can the court on
18   summary judgment correctly determine that there is no genuine
19   dispute that the note has been duly indorsed in blank?    We answer
20   this question in the negative.    While the bankruptcy court’s
21   summary judgment against Allana on one of Allana’s four claims
22   for relief can be affirmed on alternate grounds, summary judgment
23   on the other three claims for relief must be reversed.
24        Accordingly, we AFFIRM IN PART, REVERSE IN PART AND REMAND
25   FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.
26
27
          1
           For the sake of clarity, we refer to Allana and her husband
28   James Baroni by their first names. No disrespect is intended.

                                       2
 1                                   FACTS
 2        In February 2004, Allana’s husband James refinanced a parcel
 3   of residential real property located in Carmel, California.
 4   According to several of Allana’s filings in her bankruptcy case,
 5   the Baronis did not actually reside in the Carmel property but
 6   instead used it as a rental property.      In furtherance of the
 7   refinancing, James executed a note in the amount of $1,430,000.00
 8   and a deed of trust securing repayment of the note.
 9        At the time of the refinancing, James owned the Carmel
10   property as his sole and separate property.      But shortly after
11   the refinancing, James executed a grant deed conveying the Carmel
12   property to himself and Allana as husband and wife as joint
13   tenants.    Allana does not dispute that she took her interest in
14   the Carmel property subject to the deed of trust and in that
15   sense has admitted that she might be obliged to repay the Carmel
16   note in order to prevent foreclosure of her real property
17   interest.   On the other hand, Allana claims that she is not
18   certain who she is obliged to pay.      She also claims that the
19   Carmel note and the Carmel deed of trust have been irrevocably
20   split, which has rendered the deed of trust unenforceable.
21        In February 2012, Allana commenced her bankruptcy case by
22   filing a voluntary chapter 132 petition.     Later that same month,
23   she voluntarily converted her case from chapter 13 to chapter 11.
24
25        2
           Unless specified otherwise, all chapter and section
26   references are to the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 101-1532, and
     all "Rule" references are to the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy
27   Procedure. All “Civil Rule” references are to the Federal Rules
     of Civil Procedure, and all “Evidence Rule” references are to the
28   Federal Rules of Evidence.

                                       3
 1   In September 2012, Nationstar filed a proof of claim asserting a
 2   claim in Allana’s bankruptcy case in the approximate amount of
 3   $1,480,000.00.   Nationstar attached to the proof of claim copies
 4   of a promissory note and a deed of trust both apparently executed
 5   by James in February 2004 (respectively, the “POC Note Copy” and
 6   the “POC Trust Deed Copy”).   The POC Note Copy identifies James
 7   as the borrower and Platinum Capital Group as the lender.    The
 8   principal amount stated in the POC Note Copy is $1,430,000.00.
 9        The POC Note Copy also contains on the signature page what
10   appears to be James’ signature.   The page immediately following
11   the signature page is blank, with the exception of what appear to
12   be three indorsements.3   Reading from left to right, the first
13   indorsement appears to be signed by an “assistant secretary” of
14   Platinum Capital Group and appears to make the note payable to
15   “Lehman Brothers Bank FSB.”   Immediately to the right of the
16   first indorsement is another indorsement apparently signed by an
17   “authorized signatory” of Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.    The
18   “pay to the order” line of that indorsement is blank.
19   Immediately beneath the Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.
20   indorsement is a third indorsement apparently signed by a “Vice
21   President” of Lehman Brothers Bank, FSB and apparently making the
22   note payable to Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.4
23
24        3
           A copy of this indorsements page is attached as Appendix A
     to this decision.
25
          4
26         Of course, reading these undated indorsements in this order
     makes no sense except for the purpose of describing their
27   relative positions on the indorsements page. The three
     indorsements only can be understood sensibly in the following
28                                                      (continued...)

                                       4
 1        The POC Trust Deed Copy identifies James as the borrower,
 2   Platinum Capital Group as the lender, and MERS as the
 3   beneficiary, but solely as the nominee of the lender and the
 4   lender’s successors and assigns.       The recording information on
 5   the first page of the POC Trust Deed Copy indicates that the
 6   trust deed was recorded in the Monterey County Recorder’s Office
 7   in March 2004.   The POC Trust Deed Copy further reflects the
 8   transfer of an interest in the Carmel property to secure the
 9   repayment of the Carmel note.
10        In April 2013, over Nationstar’s objection, Allana obtained
11   an order confirming her second amended reorganization plan.       In
12   relevant part, Allana set forth in her disclosure statement and
13   plan that she disputed and objected to Nationstar’s proof of
14   claim but that, to the extent the bankruptcy court ultimately
15   allowed any claim secured by the Carmel property, she would pay
16   the holder of that allowed claim in accordance with the terms of
17   her plan.
18        That same month, Allana filed her complaint against
19   Nationstar.   In the complaint, Allana pointed out that neither
20   the Carmel note nor the Carmel deed of trust identify Nationstar
21   in any way.   Therefore, Allana posited, nothing in Nationstar’s
22   proof of claim established that Nationstar was entitled to
23   enforce either the Carmel note or the Carmel deed of trust.
24
          4
           (...continued)
25   order: (1) the indorsement by Platinum Capital Group (the
26   original payee identified in the note) making the note payable to
     Lehman Brothers Bank; (2) the indorsement by Lehman Brothers Bank
27   making the note payable to Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.; and
     (3) the indorsement in blank by Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.
28   making the note payable to the bearer.

                                        5
 1   Allana also included in her complaint copies of a number of
 2   communications she received from third parties.   These
 3   communications opine (without actually proving) that the Carmel
 4   note was sold to a mortgage securitization trust and that the
 5   trust owns the note.   The complaint then proceeds to conflate the
 6   concept of note ownership with the concept of being a “holder” of
 7   the note.    The complaint asserts that Nationstar only could prove
 8   its standing to file the proof of claim if it demonstrated its
 9   title to the Carmel note within the “chain of ownership.”
10   According to the complaint, Allana would be unjustifiably exposed
11   to the risk of having to pay the amount due on the Carmel note
12   multiple times unless the bankruptcy court determined who was the
13   “holder” of the Carmel note and hence had standing to file a
14   proof of claim based on the Carmel note.
15        In addition, Allana’s complaint pointed out that there was
16   no documentation indicating that Nationstar is the beneficiary
17   under the deed of trust or an assignee of the beneficiary.
18        Based on the allegations set forth above, Allana’s complaint
19   included a claim for declaratory relief seeking a judicial
20   determination as to whether Nationstar’s proof of claim should be
21   allowed or disallowed and whether that claim was secured or
22   unsecured.   The complaint also included a claim for relief
23   alleging that Nationstar would be unjustly enriched if its claim
24   were allowed in the absence of proof that Nationstar was
25   entitled to enforce the Carmel note and deed of trust.    The
26   complaint’s third claim for relief under the Fair Debt Collection
27   Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1692, et seq., alleged that Nationstar
28   falsely represented that it was entitled to enforce the Carmel

                                       6
 1   note and deed of trust by filing the proof of claim.5   Allana’s
 2   fourth and final claim for relief, based on all of the same
 3   allegations, set forth a claim under California’s unfair
 4   competition law, Cal. Bus. & Profs. Code § 17200, et seq.
 5        Nationstar sought dismissal of Allana’s complaint under
 6   Civil Rule 12(b)(6), but the bankruptcy court denied Nationstar’s
 7   dismissal motion.   Nationstar then filed an answer to Allana’s
 8   complaint in November 2013, and close to a year later, in
 9   September 2014, Nationstar filed its summary judgment motion.
10   Even though Nationstar did not so indicate in its proof of claim,
11   Nationstar identified itself in the summary judgment motion as
12   the servicing agent for the owner of the note, Wells Fargo Bank,
13   as trustee of the securitization trust referenced in Allana’s
14   complaint.
15        In order to prove up Wells Fargo’s interest in the Carmel
16   note, Nationstar submitted the declaration of Edward Hyne.    Hyne
17   identified himself as a “Litigation Resolution Analyst” employed
18   by Nationstar.   By virtue of his employment, Hyne claimed
19   familiarity with the manner in which Nationstar’s business
20   records are prepared and maintained.   Hyne further claimed that
21   Nationstar’s records are “prepared” by Nationstar employees and
22   agents with personal knowledge of the facts set forth therein or
23   with information supplied by others with personal knowledge.
24
          5
           The FDCPA claim also alleged that Nationstar has
25   misrepresented the amount due on the note and has falsely failed
26   to credit Allana for all of the payments she has made. Allana
     has abandoned these issues for appeal purposes by not addressing
27   them in her opening appeal brief. Christian Legal Soc'y v. Wu,
     626 F.3d 483, 487–88 (9th Cir. 2010); Brownfield v. City of
28   Yakima, 612 F.3d 1140, 1149 n.4 (9th Cir. 2010).

                                      7
 1        In a bit of a disconnect, Hyne stated that the facts set
 2   forth in his declaration were based on “the files and records for
 3   [Allana’s] loan,” but he does not identify those loan files and
 4   records as Nationstar’s business records.   Nor would it seem
 5   accurate to characterize them as Nationstar’s business records.
 6   There is no reason to suspect let alone conclude that anyone at
 7   Nationstar “prepared” any of the documents pertaining to the
 8   origination or sale of the Carmel loan.   In fact, nothing in the
 9   summary judgment record suggests that Nationstar played any role
10   in the origination or sale of that loan, so it makes no sense
11   that Nationstar would have prepared any documents pertaining to
12   the origination or sale of the loan.
13        Based on the above description of the source of his
14   knowledge, Hyne asserted that the note attached as Exhibit A to
15   his declaration was a true copy of the Carmel note and that
16   Exhibit C to his declaration – a mortgage loan sale & assignment
17   agreement between Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc. as seller and
18   Structured Asset Securities Corp. as buyer – evidences the
19   transfer of the Carmel note to Wells Fargo as Trustee for the
20   Structured Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loan Trust Mortgage Pass-
21   Through Certificates, Series 2004-5.
22        Unfortunately, Hyne did not specify what was purportedly
23   transferred to Wells Fargo: possession of the note, beneficial
24   ownership of the note, mere legal title to the note, or the right
25   to payment under the note.   Moreover, the sale and assignment
26   agreement attached as Exhibit C does not evidence or even
27   reference any such transfers to Wells Fargo.
28        Meanwhile, attached to Exhibit C is a single page on which

                                      8
 1   everything is redacted, except for the following single line of
 2   information: “17362807       3 Carmel       CA   93923 1430000 1430000.”6
 3   Hyne and Nationstar presumably claim that this redacted page
 4   attached to Exhibit C evidences the inclusion of the Carmel note
 5   in the mortgage pool covered by the sale and assignment
 6   agreement.       Immediately preceding the redacted page are two
 7   schedules that are supposed to identify the loans covered by the
 8   sale and assignment agreement, but both of those schedules are
 9   blank, except for a type-written notation on the face of each
10   schedule indicating that the actual listing of covered loans is
11   “on file” in the Philadelphia offices of Morgan, Lewis & Bockius
12   LLP.       There is no explanation in the sale and assignment
13   agreement of the relationship between the blank schedules and the
14   redacted page immediately following the blank schedules.             Nor did
15   Hyne attempt to explain the relationship.             More importantly, no
16   one who arguably might have had personal knowledge of what
17   actually is in the completed schedules supposedly held by Morgan,
18   Lewis & Bockius attempted to explain the significance of the
19   redacted page.
20          Finally, Hyne stated that Nationstar is Wells Fargo’s
21   servicing agent for purposes of the Carmel note.             In support of
22   this statement, Hyne referenced the limited power of attorney
23   attached to his declaration as Exhibit D.             The power of attorney,
24
            6
           The significance of the number “17362807" is equivocal. It
25   is not the loan number assigned to the Carmel refinancing loan at
26   the time the loan was made. That loan number apparently is
     11101490. The summary judgment record reflects that “17362807"
27   was handwritten onto some copies of the Carmel note but not onto
     others. Who wrote that number on some copies and what that
28   number purportedly signifies never was addressed by either party.

                                             9
 1   apparently executed by Wells Fargo as the trustee of certain
 2   designated securitization trusts, identified Nationstar as the
 3   assignee of Aurora Loan Services LLC’s loan servicing rights and
 4   duties and granted Nationstar the authority to, among other
 5   things, execute on Wells Fargo’s behalf “all documents and
 6   instruments necessary in appearance and prosecution of bankruptcy
 7   proceedings . . . .”   The limited power of attorney listed the
 8   Structured Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loan Trust Mortgage Pass-
 9   Through Certificates, Series 2004-5, as one of the securitization
10   trusts covered.   But nothing in the limited power of attorney
11   established that ownership of the Carmel note had been
12   transferred to that particular securitization trust, any more
13   than the sale and assignment agreement had.
14        Nationstar further supported its summary judgment motion by
15   filing the declaration of one of its attorneys, Adam Barasch.     In
16   relevant part, Barasch stated that, on behalf of his client
17   Nationstar, he was in possession of the original note and
18   original deed of trust executed by James.   Barasch further stated
19   that the copy of the Carmel note attached as Exhibit A to the
20   Hyne declaration is a true copy of the original note in his
21   possession.
22        In October 2014, Allana filed her opposition to Nationstar’s
23   summary judgment motion.   Allana principally argued that a
24   genuine issue of material fact existed as to whether there were
25   two different original Carmel notes memorializing the same
26   obligation.   Allana pointed out that the copy of the Carmel note
27   attached to the Hyne declaration differs in several respects from
28   the POC Note Copy.   Most importantly, the indorsements page in

                                     10
 1   each copy is significantly different.       As described above, in the
 2   POC Note Copy, the Platinum Capital Group indorsement and the
 3   Lehman Brothers Holdings indorsement are side by side and the
 4   Lehman Brothers Bank indorsement is beneath the Lehman Brothers
 5   Holdings indorsement.       In the Hyne declaration copy of the Carmel
 6   note, the Lehman Brothers Bank indorsement and the Lehman
 7   Brothers Holdings indorsement are side by side and the Platinum
 8   Capital Group indorsement is above the Lehman Brothers Bank
 9   indorsement.7
10          In support of her opposition, Allana submitted a declaration
11   of a questioned-documents expert by the name of Meredith DeKalb
12   Miller.       Miller explained in her declaration that she examined in
13   2011 several different copies of the Carmel note and deed of
14   trust that Allana had provided to her as well as an original note
15   and an original deed of trust, which she examined in person in
16   June 2011 in the Chicago offices of McGinnis Tessitore Wutcher
17   LLP.       Miller observed that some of the note copies she examined
18   had marks indicative of hole punches and fasteners while others
19   did not.       Miller further observed that some of the note copies
20   she examined had the hand-printed notation “kahrl” and “17362807"
21   in the upper right hand corner while others did not.       Meanwhile,
22   one of the four note copies included a stamped notation stating
23   that the copy was certified to be a true and correct copy.
24          Notwithstanding these and other differences, Miller also
25   stated that all of the copies provided to her were
26
27
            7
           A copy of the indorsements page accompanying the Hyne
28   declaration is attached as Appendix B to this decision.

                                         11
 1   “representative copies of the same adjustable rate note” and that
 2   the signatures of James’ she observed on the original note and on
 3   all of the note copies “are consistent.”   Miller Decl. at ¶¶ 20,
 4   26.
 5         In her summary judgment opposition, Allana claimed that a
 6   2011 report attached to Miller’s declaration as Exhibit 2 (on
 7   which Miller’s 2014 declaration was based) demonstrated that the
 8   POC Note Copy and the Hyne declaration note copy are not copies
 9   of the same original note.8   However, neither the 2011 Miller
10   report nor the 2014 Miller declaration demonstrate what Allana
11   claims they do.   At most, Miller’s declaration and report observe
12   certain minor differences between various copies of the note
13   provided to her long before either Nationstar’s 2012 proof of
14   claim or Hyne’s 2014 declaration even existed.9
15         In addition to her claim that there appeared to exist two
16   different original Carmel notes, Allana asserted that the Hyne
17   declaration and the Barasch declaration did not contain competent
18   evidence regarding who owned the Carmel note and who was the
19   holder of the Carmel note.    In conjunction with this assertion,
20   Allana formally made several different evidentiary objections to
21   both declarations, which the bankruptcy court never addressed.
22
           8
23         The summary judgment opposition stated at page 9: “As
     described in the Forensic Examiner’s report attached as
24   “Exhibit 2,” the Note Mr. Barasch apparently has in his
     possession, and attached as Exhibit A to Mr. Hyne’s declaration
25   is not the same Note attached to Claim 9-1 . . . .”
26         9
           The indorsement pages included with the note copies
27   provided to Miller are a different matter. Miller duly noted
     that the indorsement signatures on some copies were “configured
28   differently” than other copies.

                                      12
 1        Allana further contended that she was not given adequate
 2   opportunity to conduct discovery.      In support of this contention,
 3   Allana referenced certain examinations and document requests she
 4   had sought under Rule 2004 from Nationstar, Wells Fargo and
 5   others before she filed her adversary proceeding against
 6   Nationstar.    According to Allana, none of the responding parties
 7   fully complied with her Rule 2004 examination and document
 8   requests.    Allana did not identify what efforts, if any, she had
 9   made to conduct or compel discovery during the roughly 18 months
10   that elapsed between the filing of her complaint and the filing
11   of her summary judgment opposition.
12        After holding a hearing at which both parties submitted
13   without argument, the bankruptcy court entered an order granting
14   summary judgment to Nationstar.    The order set forth the court’s
15   reasoning.    According to the court, Allana lacked standing to
16   challenge Nationstar’s proof of claim because only James executed
17   the Carmel note and deed of trust.
18        Alternately, the bankruptcy court explained, Nationstar had
19   established that it had possession of the original Carmel note,
20   indorsed in blank, so Nationstar was a “person entitled to
21   enforce” the Carmel note under Uniform Commercial Code § 3-301
22   and hence had standing to file a proof of claim based on the
23   Carmel note.   Even if Nationstar had not qualified as the holder
24   of the note, the court reasoned, Nationstar had established that
25   it possessed the note on behalf of Wells Fargo as trustee of a
26   securitization trust and that Wells Fargo owned the Carmel note
27   as trustee of that trust.    Thus the court held that, as Wells
28   Fargo’s servicing agent, Nationstar had alternately established

                                       13
 1   that it was “a nonholder in possession of the instrument who has
 2   the rights of a holder” under Uniform Commercial Code § 3-301.
 3        Based on its analysis of Nationstar’s and Wells Fargo’s
 4   rights in relation to the Carmel note, the bankruptcy court
 5   concluded that, as a matter of law, Allana could not prevail on
 6   any of her claims for relief.    As an additional ground for
 7   denying relief on Allana’s unjust enrichment claim, the
 8   bankruptcy court held that Allana’s action was an action based on
 9   contract and that unjust enrichment was not available in an
10   action based on contract.   As additional grounds for denying
11   relief on Allana’s Fair Debt Collection Practices Act claim, the
12   bankruptcy court held that Nationstar was not a debt collector
13   within the meaning of the Act, that the Act only applied to
14   consumer debts and that the debt secured by the Carmel property
15   was not consumer debt.
16        On December 15, 2014, Allana timely filed her notice of
17   appeal from the bankruptcy court’s summary judgment.
18                               JURISDICTION
19        The bankruptcy court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
20   §§ 1334 and 157(b)(2)(B) and (C).      We have jurisdiction under
21   28 U.S.C. § 158.
22                                   ISSUES
23        Did the bankruptcy court correctly grant summary judgment in
24   favor of Nationstar?
25                            STANDARD OF REVIEW
26        We review de novo the bankruptcy court’s summary judgment
27   ruling.   Wank v. Gordon (In re Wank), 505 B.R. 878, 886 (9th Cir.
28   BAP 2014).

                                       14
 1                       SUMMARY JUDGMENT STANDARDS
 2        Because we review summary judgment rulings de novo, we
 3   utilize the same summary judgment standards as other federal
 4   courts use.   Kelly v. Okoye (In re Kelly), 182 B.R. 255, 258 (9th
 5   Cir. BAP 1995), aff'd, 100 F.3d 110 (9th Cir. 1996).      Pursuant to
 6   Civil Rule 56(a), which is made applicable in adversary
 7   proceedings by Rule 7056, summary judgment may be appropriate "if
 8   the movant shows that there is no genuine issue as to any
 9   material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter
10   of law."   In re Wank, 505 B.R. at 886.     In considering summary
11   judgment, the court is not permitted to weigh the evidence;
12   instead, it only may determine whether a genuine and material
13   factual issue remains for trial.     Id.   An issue is genuine if
14   there is enough evidence for a reasonable trier of fact to make a
15   finding in favor of the non-moving party, and an issue is
16   material if it might affect the outcome of the case.      Far Out
17   Prods., Inc. v. Oskar, 247 F.3d 986, 992 (9th Cir. 2001) (citing
18   Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248–49 (1986)).
19        The initial summary judgment burden rests on the moving
20   party.   In re Wank, 505 B.R. at 886.      Once the moving party has
21   presented facts as undisputed and has presented admissible
22   evidence in support of those facts, the non-moving party may be
23   deemed to have admitted those facts for summary judgment purposes
24   unless he or she specifically challenges those facts and presents
25   controverting evidence in support of his or her position.      See
26   Beard v. Banks, 548 U.S. 521, 527 (2006); see also 10A Charles A.
27   Wright, Arthur R. Miller, et al., FED. PRAC. & PROC. CIV. § 2727
28   (3d ed. 2015) (“If the movant presents credible evidence that, if

                                     15
 1   not controverted at trial, would entitle him to a Rule 50
 2   judgment as a matter of law that evidence must be accepted as
 3   true on a summary-judgment motion.”).
 4                                 DISCUSSION
 5   A.   Allana’s Standing
 6        We first address the bankruptcy court’s ruling that Allana
 7   lacked standing to pursue her adversary proceeding against
 8   Nationstar.    Standing typically is jurisdictional.
 9   Employers-Teamsters Local Nos. 175 & 505 Pension Trust Fund v.
10   Anchor Capital Advisors, 498 F.3d 920, 923 (9th Cir. 2007)
11   (citing Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 561
12   (1992)).    It is a threshold requirement that must be satisfied in
13   every federal case.    Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. 490, 498 (1975).
14        The three core components necessary for constitutional
15   standing are: (1) injury in fact, (2) causation, and
16   (3) redressability.    See Sprint Commc'ns Co. v. APCC Servs.,
17   Inc., 554 U.S. 269, 273–74 (2008).     Even if the the core
18   constitutional components are present, the plaintiff also may
19   need to address certain prudential standing concerns.     Veal v.
20   Am. Home Mortg. Servicing, Inc. (In re Veal), 450 B.R. 897,
21   906-07 (9th Cir. BAP 2011).    These prudential standing concerns
22   are “‘judicially self-imposed limits on the exercise of
23   jurisdiction.’”    Id. (quoting Sprint Commc'ns Co., 554 U.S. at
24   289).   One of the more common prudential standing concerns is
25   known as third party standing.    Sprint Commc'ns Co., 554 U.S. at
26   289-90.    This means that “a plaintiff must assert its own legal
27   rights and may not assert the legal rights of others.”     In re
28   Veal, 450 B.R. at 907.    In the context of both constitutional and

                                       16
 1   prudential standing issues, the plaintiff bears the burden of
 2   proof to establish its standing as to each claim for relief
 3   asserted.   Id. at 907 n.11.
 4        We disagree with the bankruptcy court’s ruling that Allana
 5   lacked standing.   Allana’s adversary proceeding was filed in
 6   response to the proof of claim Nationstar filed in her bankruptcy
 7   case, pursuant to which Nationstar sought to perfect its right
 8   (or Wells Fargo’s right) to share in any distributions made by
 9   Allana to her creditors in accordance with her proposed
10   reorganization plan.    The potential impact of Nationstar’s proof
11   of claim on her plan distributions amply satisfies the core
12   constitutional standing components of injury in fact, causation
13   and redressability.    Cf. In re Veal, 450 B.R. at 906 (holding
14   that creditor had satisfied constitutional standing requirements
15   in light of the effect of bankruptcy claim allowance procedures
16   on the creditor’s ability to obtain a distribution on its claim).
17        Nor do we perceive the third party standing doctrine as an
18   impediment to Allana’s entitlement to sue Nationstar.    While the
19   bankruptcy court indicated that Nationstar’s proof of claim was
20   based on a debt for which only James was personally liable, the
21   debt was secured by property of Allana’s bankruptcy estate, and
22   in light of the clear impact of Nationstar’s proof of claim on
23   both Allana’s property and on her chapter 11 plan, we hold that
24   she was asserting and protecting her own rights and interests and
25   not those belonging to James.
26        Allana’s position is no different than that of any debtor
27   whose property is encumbered by a non-recourse debt.    While she
28   might not be personally liable for repayment of the Carmel note,

                                      17
 1   her interest in the Carmel property is directly and adversely
 2   affected pecuniarily by Nationstar’s claim.     Nationstar has not
 3   cited any authority to us indicating that a person whose interest
 4   in real property is encumbered by a non-recourse debt lacks
 5   standing to challenge both the validity of the lien and the
 6   validity of the underlying debt.     Nor are we aware of any such
 7   authority.   To the contrary, as indicated by one of our prior
 8   decisions, a debtor whose property is subject to a lien securing
 9   non-recourse debt may object to a claim filed in his or her
10   bankruptcy case based on that debt.     See Simpson v. Deutsche Bank
11   Nat. Trust Co. (In re Simpson), 2013 WL 2350967 (9th Cir. BAP
12   May 29, 2013) (Mem. Dec.).
13        Furthermore, the fact that Allana’s standing arose after
14   James incurred the debt – when James conveyed an interest in the
15   Carmel property to Allana subject to the Carmel deed of trust –
16   does not alter or impair her standing to challenge the lien and
17   the underlying debt.   As noted in Sprint Commc'ns Co., 554 U.S.
18   at 290, a party with standing may confer standing on a third
19   party by transferring a property interest to that third party.
20        Accordingly, the bankruptcy court’s standing ruling does not
21   support the court’s summary judgment in favor of Nationstar.
22   B.   Nationstar’s Standing
23        Having concluded that Allana had standing to challenge
24   Nationstar’s proof of claim and to assert the claims for relief
25   set forth in her complaint, we next turn our attention to
26   Nationstar’s standing to file its proof of claim, an issue on
27   which resolution of this appeal largely turns.
28        Allana sometimes refers to this as a problem of standing and

                                     18
 1   sometimes as a problem of who qualifies as the real party in
 2   interest under Civil Rule 17(a).      In In re Veal, this Panel
 3   explained that who has standing and who is the real party in
 4   interest are legally distinct issues.      See In re Veal, 450 B.R.
 5   at 907-08.   At the same time, in the context of a proof of claim
 6   based on a promissory note, we effectively held in In re Veal
 7   that the distinction between the two issues is irrelevant because
 8   a claimant who is a person entitled to enforce the note satisfies
 9   both the standing and real party in interest requirements, and a
10   claimant who is not a person entitled to enforce the note
11   satisfies neither requirement.   Id. at 920.
12        1.   Applicable Law
13        Similar standing and real party in interest issues have been
14   addressed in a number of published and unpublished Panel
15   decisions over the last several years.      See, e.g., Allen v. U.S.
16   Bank, N.A. (In re Allen), 472 B.R. 559, 565 (9th Cir. BAP 2012);
17   In re Veal, 450 B.R. at 897; see also Rivera v. Deutsche Bank
18   Nat'l Trust Co. (In re Rivera), 2014 WL 6675693, at *6-7 (9th
19   Cir. BAP Nov. 24, 2014) (Mem. Dec.); Green v. Waterfall Victoria
20   Master Fund 2008–1 Grantor Trust Series A (In re Green), 2012 WL
21   4857552, at *6-7 (9th Cir. BAP Oct. 15, 2012) (Mem. Dec.); cf.
22   Edwards v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. (In re Edwards), 454 B.R. 100,
23   105 (9th Cir. BAP 2011) (focusing on creditor standing issue in
24   the context of a relief from stay motion).      In In re Allen and in
25   In re Veal, we generally held that a party is entitled to file a
26   proof of claim based on a secured promissory note if that party
27   is a “person entitled to enforce” the note under § 3–301 of the
28

                                      19
 1   Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”).10   In re Allen, 472 B.R. at 565;
 2   In re Veal, 450 B.R. at 902.   There are several ways a party may
 3   become a person entitled to enforce the note under UCC § 3–301,
 4   but one common way is for the person to become a "holder" of the
 5   note, as defined in UCC § 1–201(b)(21)(A).    In re Allen, 472 B.R.
 6   at 565; In re Veal, 450 B.R. at 910–11.   As set forth in UCC
 7   § 1–201(b)(21)(A), a “holder” includes a “person in possession of
 8   a negotiable instrument that is payable . . . to bearer . . . .”
 9   And a negotiable instrument is payable to the bearer when it is
10   indorsed in blank.   See UCC § 3–205(b) (“If an indorsement is
11   made by the holder of an instrument and it is not a special
12   indorsement, it is a ‘blank indorsement.’    When indorsed in
13   blank, an instrument becomes payable to bearer and may be
14   negotiated by transfer of possession alone until specially
15   indorsed.”); see also In re Allen, 472 B.R. at 567.11
16
17        10
           Because the Carmel note and deed of trust apparently were
     signed in California, the real property securing the note is
18
     located in California and Allana at all relevant times has
19   resided in California, California’s version of the UCC applies
     for purposes of determining the parties’ rights and duties with
20   respect to the note. See UCC § 1-301(b); Barclays Discount Bank
     Ltd. v. Levy, 743 F.2d 722, 725 (9th Cir. 1984); see also
21   In re Veal, 450 B.R. at 921 n.41 (applying Arizona's counterpart
22   to UCC § 1-301(b) under similar circumstances). For purposes of
     resolving this appeal, there is no material difference between
23   the uniform version of the UCC and California’s version of the
     UCC. Meanwhile, the deed of trust identifies federal law and the
24   law of the jurisdiction in which the Carmel property is located
     as the governing law. Thus, California law also governs
25   interpretation and enforcement of the deed of trust. Id.
26   Moreover, the parties’ papers assume that California law applies.
          11
27         The reasoning of the bankruptcy court and the arguments of
     both parties have at all times assumed that the Carmel note
28                                                      (continued...)

                                     20
 1        2.    Nationstar’s Alleged Possession of the Original Note
                Indorsed in blank
 2
 3        Nationstar claims to have possession of the Carmel note
 4   indorsed in blank and thereby claims to be a holder of the note
 5   and hence a person entitled to enforce the note.      Allana claims
 6   that Nationstar’s possession of the Carmel note indorsed in blank
 7   would be insufficient by itself to support the assertion that
 8   Nationstar is entitled to enforce the note.      According to Allana,
 9   Nationstar also must establish who owns the note and whether
10   Nationstar is the owner’s agent.      Allana is incorrect.   As the
11   plain language of UCC § 3-301 provides, “[a] person may be a
12   person entitled to enforce the instrument even though the person
13   is not the owner of the instrument or is in wrongful possession
14   of the instrument.”
15        As we explained at length in In re Veal, so long as Allana
16   knows that, if she pays Nationstar she has satisfied the debt,
17   Allana should be indifferent as to who ultimately is determined
18   to be the owner of the note and whether Nationstar is the owner’s
19   agent.    In re Veal, 450 B.R. at 910, 912 & n.27; see also id. at
20   913, 919 (holding that alleged servicer can establish entitlement
21   to payment and to file proof of claim by showing that it is a
22   person entitled to enforce the note or that it is the agent of a
23   person entitled to enforce the note).      Put another way, if
24
25        11
           (...continued)
26   qualifies as a negotiable instrument     within the meaning of UCC
     § 3-104(a). Consequently, any issue      regarding whether UCC
27   Article 3 applies to the Carmel note     has been forfeited. See
     Golden v. Chicago Title Ins. Co. (In     re Choo), 273 B.R. 608, 613
28   (9th Cir. BAP 2002).

                                      21
 1   Nationstar has established it is a person entitled to enforce the
 2   note, then Nationstar has provided Allana with the requisite
 3   assurance that her plan payments on account of Nationstar’s claim
 4   will satisfy the debt, in accordance with UCC § 3-602.   See
 5   In re Veal, 450 B.R. at 910.
 6        Allana argues that there is a triable issue of fact
 7   regarding whether there exist two originals of the Carmel note.
 8   We disagree.   We have reviewed all of the note copies in the
 9   summary judgment record as well as the declaration and expert
10   report of Meredith DeKalb Miller and none of these items support
11   the notion that two original notes exist.   Rather, the summary
12   judgment record indicates that there is only one original Carmel
13   note and that Nationstar’s attorney Adam Barasch is in possession
14   of it.   Having studied all of the note copies, we agree with
15   Miller’s statement that all of the note copies are representative
16   copies of the same note and that James’ signature on each of the
17   note copies is consistent.
18        Allana attacked Adam Barasch’s declaration on a number of
19   evidentiary grounds including hearsay, lack of foundation and
20   lack of personal knowledge, but these grounds are meritless to
21   the extent Allana seeks to challenge Barasch’s assertion that he
22   is in possession of the original of the Carmel note.   Barasch is
23   competent to employ his powers of personal observation to assess
24   whether he is in possession of an original document.   See
25   Evidence Rule 602 and accompanying Advisory Committee Notes.
26   Barasch also is competent to compare the original in his
27   possession to the copy attached to the Hyne declaration and to
28   declare whether the Hyne declaration note copy is identical to

                                     22
 1   the original.   Id.   Barasch cannot attest to the authenticity of
 2   James’s signature on the Carmel note, but he does not need to.
 3   Signatures on negotiable instruments are presumed to be authentic
 4   and authorized, and Allana has not presented any evidence to
 5   overcome that presumption.    See In re Stanley, 514 B.R. 27, 39
 6   (Bankr. D. Nev. 2012)(citing UCC §§ 1–206 & 3–308).
 7        On the other hand, the authenticity of the indorsements is a
 8   different matter.     Like James’ signature on the note, indorsement
 9   signatures on a negotiable instrument typically are self-
10   authenticating.   Id.   And yet, here, there are genuine and
11   material issues regarding whether the original of the Carmel note
12   was duly indorsed in blank.
13        Barasch indicated in his declaration that the indorsement
14   page attached to the Hyne declaration note copy is identical to
15   the original.   However, Barasch did not specify whether the
16   indorsements appear on the back of the note’s signature page or
17   whether they appear on a separate piece of paper attached to the
18   note, which would make the page containing the indorsements an
19   allonge.   See In re Veal, 450 B.R. at 911 & n.24.   Either way,
20   when as here the debtor legitimately contests the validity of the
21   indorsements, the bankruptcy court is obliged to physically
22   inspect them.   Id.
23        Here, Nationstar itself created a genuine issue of material
24   fact by presenting with its proof of claim a copy of the note
25   containing a materially different indorsements page than that
26   contained in the Hyne declaration note copy.    As we explained
27   above, the indorsements are configured differently in the POC
28   note copy and in the Hyne declaration note copy.     In spite of the

                                       23
 1   statement in the Barasch declaration that the Hyne declaration
 2   note copy is identical to the original, the contents of the
 3   indorsements page in the POC note copy is controverting evidence
 4   that could permit a reasonable trier of fact to discredit
 5   Barasch’s statement regarding what the original Carmel note looks
 6   like (at least regarding what the indorsements page accompanying
 7   the original note looks like).   More importantly, a reasonable
 8   trier of fact also might infer from the divergent indorsements
 9   pages that the original Carmel note never was properly indorsed;
10   rather, an indorsements page might have been placed with the
11   original note by some unknown third party without authority to
12   indorse the Carmel note.
13        As a result, there is a genuine issue of material fact
14   regarding whether the Carmel note was duly endorsed in blank and
15   made payable to the bearer and hence there also is a genuine
16   issue of material fact as to whether Nationstar qualifies as a
17   holder of the note and a person entitled to enforce the note.
18        3.    Wells Fargo as Non-holder in Possession of Note with
                the Rights of a Holder; Evidentiary Problems
19
20        Alternately, Nationstar claims that it possesses the Carmel
21   note on Wells Fargo’s behalf and that Wells Fargo therefore
22   qualifies as nonholder in possession of the note with the rights
23   of holder, which is another means of qualifying as a person
24   entitled to enforce the note under UCC § 3-301.   See In re Veal,
25   450 B.R. at 911.   This alternate claim depends upon Nationstar’s
26   dual contentions that Wells Fargo, as trustee of a securitization
27   trust, owns the Carmel note and that Nationstar is Wells Fargo’s
28   agent.    As indicated in In re Veal, proving a non-holder claim of

                                      24
 1   this type is harder than proving holder status because the
 2   claimant must demonstrate not only possession of the original
 3   note but also the transfer of some form of interest in the note –
 4   either to the party in possession of the note or to a party on
 5   whose behalf the possessor has taken possession of the note.    Id.
 6   at 911-12.
 7        To support these contentions, Nationstar largely relies on
 8   the Hyne declaration.   But Hyne’s critical declaration testimony
 9   lacks adequate foundation as to his personal knowledge of key
10   factual matters, and many of his statements appear to be based on
11   inadmissible hearsay contained in documents attached as exhibits.
12        Generally speaking, in order to establish the admissibility
13   of his declaration testimony, Hyne needed to satisfy the
14   foundational requirement of demonstrating his personal knowledge
15   of the facts set forth in his declaration.   Evidence Rule 602;
16   see also United States v. Lopez, 762 F.3d 852, 863 (9th Cir.
17   2014) (“Personal knowledge means knowledge produced by the direct
18   involvement of the senses.”).   To the extent Hyne did not
19   properly lay a foundation regarding his personal knowledge or
20   based his testimony on inadmissible hearsay statements contained
21   in documents attached to his declaration as exhibits, his
22   testimony is inadmissible.   See Medina v. Multaler, Inc.,
23   547 F.Supp.2d 1099, 1105 n.8 (C.D. Cal. 2007); see also United
24   States v. Snodgrass, 635 F.3d 324, 329 (7th Cir. 2011) (affirming
25   exclusion of witness testimony that was based on inadmissible
26   hearsay).
27        From an evidentiary standpoint, of most concern to us is
28   Hyne’s statement indicating that ownership of the Carmel note was

                                     25
 1   transferred to Wells Fargo as trustee of a securitization trust
 2   in April 2004.   There is no specific explanation as to how Hyne
 3   came by this information.   His generic statement that he relied
 4   on Nationstar’s books and records in preparing his declaration
 5   does virtually nothing to assure us of his personal knowledge
 6   regarding ownership of the Carmel note.   Nor is there any
 7   reliable indication that anyone else at Nationstar had personal
 8   knowledge regarding the sale of the Carmel note to Wells Fargo or
 9   that anyone at Nationstar prepared business records regarding the
10   sale based on information received from persons known to have
11   personal knowledge.
12        To corroborate his statement regarding Wells Fargo’s
13   ownership of the Carmel note, Hyne apparently relied on the
14   document attached to his declaration as Exhibit C: the mortgage
15   loan sale & assignment agreement between Lehman Brothers
16   Holdings, Inc. as seller and Structured Asset Securities Corp. as
17   buyer.   But the statements in Exhibit C that Hyne seems to be
18   relying upon to corroborate his declaration testimony qualify as
19   inadmissable hearsay.   For instance, in a passing reference, the
20   sale and assignment agreement refers to Wells Fargo as trustee of
21   certain mortgage note securitization trusts.   While Hyne
22   attempted to establish that the contents of the sale and
23   assignment agreement were excepted from the rule against hearsay
24   by the business records exception set forth in Evidence
25   Rule 803(6), Hyne failed to demonstrate that he qualified as the
26   custodian of the sale and assignment agreement or as “another
27   qualified witness” competent to testify regarding the
28   prerequisites for application of the business records exception.

                                     26
 1   See Evidence Rule 803(6)(D).
 2        If Allana had not objected to this particular portion of
 3   Hyne’s declaration testimony on foundation, lack of personal
 4   knowledge, hearsay and similar grounds, we might have concluded
 5   that Allana had forfeited these evidentiary objections.    But
 6   Allana did make the requisite evidentiary objections, and the
 7   bankruptcy court ignored these objections.   Under the
 8   circumstances presented here, the bankruptcy court committed
 9   reversible error in doing so.
10      Even if Nationstar somehow could overcome Allana’s evidentiary
11   objections, the sale and assignment agreement’s passing reference
12   to Wells Fargo’s role as trustee of certain securitization trusts
13   does not contain admissible evidence that would permit the
14   bankruptcy court to conclude for summary judgment purposes that
15   the Carmel note was included in any of the securitization trusts
16   for which Wells Fargo allegedly serves as trustee.
17      As for Nationstar’s contention that it is Wells Fargo’s
18   servicing agent, Hyne’s statement to that effect appears at first
19   blush to be corroborated by the limited power of attorney
20   attached as Exhibit D to Hyne’s declaration.   Nonetheless, even
21   if we were to assume that Allana’s evidentiary objections to this
22   statement are not well taken, the limited power of attorney does
23   not demonstrate that it covers the Carmel note.   Nowhere in the
24   limited power of attorney is the Carmel note listed.     The limited
25   power of attorney does list the securitization trust that
26   Nationstar asserts included the Carmel note: the Structured
27   Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loan Trust Mortgage Pass-Through
28   Certificates, Series 2004-5.

                                     27
 1        But there is a critical gap in Nationstar’s evidence.
 2   Nowhere in the Hyne declaration or in the exhibits attached
 3   thereto is there any competent evidence demonstrating that
 4   ownership of the Carmel note was transferred to the above-
 5   referenced securitization trust.     In the absence of such
 6   evidence, Nationstar did not establish, for summary judgment
 7   purposes or otherwise, that Wells Fargo owned the Carmel note and
 8   that Nationstar was Wells Fargo’s agent for purposes of servicing
 9   the Carmel note.
10        In short, Nationstar did not meet its summary judgment
11   burden to establish that it qualified as a person entitled to
12   enforce the Carmel note under either of its alternate theories
13   pursuant to UCC § 3-301.   This means that the bankruptcy court
14   erred when it granted Nationstar summary judgment with respect to
15   Allana’s declaratory relief claim and her California unfair
16   competition law claim, which rulings wholly relied on
17   Nationstar’s status as a person entitled to enforce the note.
18   C.   Alternate Theories in Support of Summary Judgment
19        The bankruptcy court offered an alternate theory for its
20   summary judgment ruling with respect to Allana’s unjust
21   enrichment claim.   According to the court, Allana’s complaint
22   against Nationstar sounded in contract, and unjust enrichment
23   does not apply to actions based in contract.     See Klein v.
24   Chevron U.S.A., Inc., 202 Cal. App. 4th 1342, 1388 (2012).
25        We are perplexed by the bankruptcy court’s unjust enrichment
26   ruling.   We are not aware of any contract between Nationstar and
27   Allana.   At most, the summary judgment record reflects that
28   Allana obtained an interest in the Carmel property subject to the

                                     28
 1   lien securing repayment of the Carmel note.    We simply don’t
 2   perceive any contractual relationship between Allana and
 3   Nationstar, nor do we perceive any contract-based claim in
 4   Allana’s complaint against Nationstar.
 5        Some California courts have held that unjust enrichment is a
 6   remedy and is not an independent cause of action.    See, e.g.,
 7   Jogani v. Superior Court, 165 Cal.App.4th 901, 911 (2008);
 8   Melchior v. New Line Prods., Inc., 106 Cal.App.4th 779, 794
 9   (2003).   Even so, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals recently
10   interpreted California law on this point and held that, when
11   faced with a claim for relief alleging unjust enrichment,
12   district courts ordinarily should treat the claim for relief “as
13   a quasi-contract claim seeking restitution.”    Astiana v. Hain
14   Celestial Grp., Inc., 783 F.3d 753, 762 (9th Cir. 2015).    Astiana
15   further held that courts should not dismiss such claims as
16   duplicative or superfluous of other claims.    Id.
17        As for Allana’s fourth and final claim – her Fair Debt
18   Collection Practices Act (“FDCPA”) claim – the bankruptcy court
19   also offered an alternate theory for its summary judgment ruling
20   on that claim.   The bankruptcy court held that, as matter of law,
21   the FDCPA did not apply because Nationstar was not a “debt
22   collector” within the meaning of the FDCPA.    The Act provides a
23   specialized and narrow definition of the term “debt collector,”
24   which states in relevant part as follows:
25        (6) The term “debt collector” means any person who uses
          any instrumentality of interstate commerce or the mails
26        in any business the principal purpose of which is the
          collection of any debts, or who regularly collects or
27        attempts to collect, directly or indirectly, debts owed
          or due or asserted to be owed or due another. . . .
28        The term does not include–

                                     29
 1        *   *     *
 2                (F) any person collecting or attempting to collect
                  any debt owed or due or asserted to be owed or due
 3                another to the extent such activity (i) is
                  incidental to a bona fide fiduciary obligation or
 4                a bona fide escrow arrangement; (ii) concerns a
                  debt which was originated by such person;
 5                (iii) concerns a debt which was not in default at
                  the time it was obtained by such person; or
 6                (iv) concerns a debt obtained by such person as a
                  secured party in a commercial credit transaction
 7                involving the creditor.
 8   15 U.S.C.A. § 1692a (West).
 9        The bankruptcy court did not explain its reasoning for this
10   holding, but it seems to be based on the notion that mortgage
11   servicers generally are not considered debt collectors under the
12   FDCPA, so long as their role as mortgage servicer arose before
13   the borrower defaulted.     Perry v. Stewart Title Co., 756 F.2d
14   1197, 1208 (5th Cir. 1985); see also Lal v. Am. Home Servicing,
15   Inc., 680 F.Supp.2d 1218, 1224 (E.D. Cal. 2010) (quoting Perry
16   and stating: “[t]he law is well settled that FDCPA's definition
17   of debt collector ‘does not include the consumer's creditors, a
18   mortgage servicing company, or any assignee of the debt.’”);
19   Mansour v. Cal-Western Reconveyance Corp., 618 F.Supp.2d 1178,
20   1182 (D. Ariz. 2009) (same).
21        Assuming without deciding that Perry, Lal and Mansour have
22   correctly interpreted the FDCPA, we still cannot affirm the
23   bankruptcy court’s ruling on the FDCPA claim on this basis.
24   There are a number of disputed material factual issues that
25   prevent us from doing so, including but not limited to the
26   following: (1) whether the Carmel loan is in default; (2) if so,
27   when that default occurred; (3) whether Nationstar is the
28   mortgage servicer for the Carmel note; and (4) if so, when it

                                       30
 1   became the servicer for that note.     The parties contested all of
 2   these issues in the adversary proceeding, and the bankruptcy
 3   court incorrectly attempted to decide them on summary judgment.
 4        As a second alternate theory for granting summary judgment
 5   against Allana on her FDCPA claim, the bankruptcy court held that
 6   the Carmel refinancing loan was not a “debt” covered by the
 7   FDCPA.    We agree.   Under the FDCPA, a “debt” is defined as:
 8        any obligation or alleged obligation of a consumer to
          pay money arising out of a transaction in which the
 9        money, property, insurance, or services which are the
          subject of the transaction are primarily for personal,
10        family, or household purposes. . . .
11   15 U.S.C. § 1692a(5) (emphasis added); see also Miller v.
12   McCalla, Raymer, Padrick, Cobb, Nichols, & Clark, L.L.C.,
13   214 F.3d 872, 874-75 (7th Cir. 2000); Bloom v. I.C. Sys., Inc.,
14   972 F.2d 1067, 1068 (9th Cir. 1992).
15        Here, the summary judgment record establishes that the
16   Carmel loan was used to refinance the Carmel property, and in her
17   bankruptcy filings, Allana repeatedly admitted that the Carmel
18   property was not used as the Baronis’ residence, but
19   rather was used as a rental property to generate income.12       Under
20   these circumstances, we hold that the bankruptcy court correctly
21   determined that the Carmel refinancing loan was not a debt
22   covered by the FDCPA.     Cf. Miller, 214 F.3d at 874-75 (indicating
23   that a loan used to refinance property that at the time of the
24
25        12
           The loan documentation for the Carmel refinancing loan
26   further supports the notion that the Carmel property was not used
     as the Baronis’ residence at the time James entered into the
27   transaction. The Carmel deed of trust included an assignment of
     rents rider that, among other things, relieved James from the
28   obligation of occupying the Carmel property as his residence.

                                       31
 1   transaction is used as a rental property to generate income is
 2   not covered by the FDCPA).   Thus, on this basis, the bankruptcy
 3   court correctly granted Nationstar summary judgment on Allana’s
 4   FDCPA claim.13
 5   D.   Other Arguments and Issues
 6        We also must address Allana’s argument that the Carmel note
 7   and the Carmel deed of trust have been irrevocably split and,
 8   therefore, that the Carmel deed of trust is invalid, so the claim
 9   based on the Carmel note should be treated as unsecured.     This
10   argument fails because, under California law, the right to
11   enforce the deed of trust automatically follows the note.     See
12   Cal. Civ. Code § 2936 (“The assignment of a debt secured by
13   mortgage carries with it the security.”); Cockerell v. Title Ins.
14   & Trust Co., 42 Cal.2d 284, 291 (1954) (“Assuming for the moment
15   that the assignment of the note, secured by the third trust deed,
16   was a valid assignment, no further assignment of the deed of
17   trust was necessary.”); see also Carpenter v. Longan, 83 U.S.
18   271, 275 (1872) (“The transfer of the note carries with it the
19   security, without any formal assignment or delivery, or even
20   mention of the latter.”).
21        Allana additionally argued that the bankruptcy court erred
22   by not giving her more time to conduct discovery before ruling on
23   Nationstar’s summary judgment motion.   In support of this
24
          13
           Allana did not attempt to address this issue regarding the
25   application of the FDCPA until she filed her reply brief on
26   appeal. Her failure to address this issue in her opening appeal
     brief provides a separate and independent basis for rejecting her
27   belated contention that the Carmel refinance loan is covered by
     the FDCPA. Christian Legal Soc'y, 626 F.3d at 487–88;
28   Brownfield, 612 F.3d at 1149 n.4.

                                       32
 1   argument, Allana contends that Nationstar, Wells Fargo and others
 2   never fully complied with the discovery requests she made
 3   pursuant to Rule 2004 before she filed her adversary proceeding.
 4   Allana further contends that Nationstar violated Civil Rule 26 by
 5   not disclosing its alleged servicer role and Wells Fargo’s
 6   alleged ownership of the Carmel note.
 7        In light of our disposition of this appeal, we decline to
 8   resolve Allana’s discovery-related issues.    However, we do note
 9   that there is no evidence in the summary judgment record that
10   Allana took any affirmative action to conduct or compel discovery
11   during the entire time her adversary proceeding was pending.    Nor
12   did she comply with the applicable procedures for requesting
13   additional time to conduct discovery.   See Civil Rule 56(d); see
14   also Brae Transp., Inc. v. Coopers & Lybrand, 790 F.2d 1439, 1443
15   (9th Cir. 1986).
16                              CONCLUSION
17        For the reasons set forth above, we AFFIRM IN PART, REVERSE
18   IN PART AND REMAND FOR FURTHER PROCEEDINGS.
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28

                                    33
Case 1:12-bk-10986-AA
        Case: 14-1578, Document:
                        Claim 9-1 29-4,
                                  Part 2 Filed:
                                            Filed05/12/2015
                                                  09/17/12 Desc
                                                             Page
                                                                Exhibit
                                                                  12 of 41Page 7 of
                                        36




              Appendix A
Case 1:13-ap-01069-AA
        Case: 14-1578, Document:
                        Doc 50-2 29-14,
                                   Filed 09/24/14
                                          Filed: 05/12/2015
                                                     Entered 09/24/14
                                                               Page 1211:42:47
                                                                        of 41    Desc
                           Exhibit A-Note Page 7 of 9




               Appendix B




                                    Exhibit A