Deutsche Bank National Trust Company,as Trustee v. Rodriguez et al
Filing
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ORDER. Deutsche Bank is ordered to submit a proposed final judgment by 11/12/2020. (Signed by Judge George C Hanks, Jr) Parties notified.(gclair, 4)
United States District Court
Southern District of Texas
ENTERED
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
HOUSTON DIVISION
DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL TRUST §
COMPANY,AS TRUSTEE,
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Plaintiff,
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VS.
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JOSE RODRIGUEZ, et al,
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Defendants.
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November 04, 2020
David J. Bradley, Clerk
CIVIL ACTION NO. 4:17-CV-2483
ORDER
This is a judicial foreclosure case in which the dispositive issue is lien priority.
Before this case was reassigned to the undersigned judge, Judge Hanen granted the
plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment. (Dkt. 29) Currently before the Court is a late
response to the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment that was filed by one of the
defendants, Ramesh Kapur d/b/a AIC Management (“Kapur”), with the Court’s
permission. (Dkt. 41; Dkt. 46) Kapur is pro se, and he represented to the Court at a status
conference that he did not receive notice of the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment
before Judge Hanen issued his order. (Dkt. 41) The Court has considered Kapur’s
response and will not vacate Judge Hanen’s order. Accordingly, the Court will render
judgment for the plaintiff and close this case.
JUDGE HANEN’S ORDER
As Judge Hanen thoroughly explained in his order, the plaintiff, Deutsche Bank
National Trust Company, as Trustee for Long Beach Mortgage Loan Trust 2004-3, AssetBacked Certificates, Series 2004-3 (“Deutsche Bank”), holds a home equity loan taken
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out by Defendant Jose Rodriguez (“Rodriguez”) in 2004. (Dkt. 29 at p. 3) The deed of
trust associated with Rodriguez’s loan was recorded in the real property records of Harris
County, Texas on April 27, 2004, and the loan was assigned to Deutsche Bank on
February 3, 2013. (Dkt. 29 at p. 3) The property at issue is a condominium located in the
Arbor Green Condominiums complex (“the Property”). (Dkt. 29 at p. 2)
Rodriguez defaulted on the monthly assessments that he was required to pay to the
Arbor Green Condominium Association (“the Association”), and the Association
imposed and foreclosed on a lien against the Property. (Dkt. 29 at p. 3) Defendant
Ameriventure, Ltd. (“Ameriventure”) bought the Property. (Dkt. 29 at p. 3) When
Ameriventure also defaulted on the monthly assessments, the Association foreclosed on
the Property a second time. (Dkt. 29 at p. 4) At the second foreclosure sale, Defendant
RNM Real Estate, LLC (“RNM”) bought the Property. (Dkt. 29 at p. 4) RNM then sold
the Property to Kapur. (Dkt. 29 at p. 4)
Through all of these changes in purported ownership, no one ever paid Deutsche
Bank. (Dkt. 29 at p. 4) Rodriguez’s home equity loan went into default in December of
2014. (Dkt. 29 at p. 4) Deutsche Bank’s loan servicer sent a notice of default to the
Property in 2015, and later that year Deutsche Bank followed that notice with a notice of
acceleration. (Dkt. 29 at p. 4)
Deutsche Bank then filed this judicial foreclosure lawsuit, naming Rodriguez,
Ameriventure, RNM, and Kapur as defendants. In granting Deutsche Bank’s motion for
summary judgment, Judge Hanen held that the record evidence shows that “[Deutsche
Bank’s] lien was senior to the Association’s lien at the time of foreclosure and,
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accordingly, could not have been extinguished by the foreclosure sale.” (Dkt. 29 at p. 6)
Judge Hanen based his holding on the Association’s bylaws regarding the priority of liens
and Texas caselaw discussing the doctrine of equitable subrogation. (Dkt. 29 at pp. 6–8)
When Judge Hanen granted Deutsche Bank’s motion, Rodriguez had not been
served and had not appeared; Ameriventure had settled with Deutsche Bank; RNM had
been served but had not appeared; and Kapur had filed an answer but had not filed a
response to Deutsche Bank’s motion. (Dkt. 29 at p. 1) Since then, Kapur has, with the
Court’s permission, filed a late response to Deutsche Bank’s motion (Dkt. 41; Dkt. 46),
and the Court has entered a default judgment against Rodriguez and RNM. (Dkt. 55)
RNM filed an answer (Dkt. 53) just before the Court entered its written order
memorializing the default judgment but has not filed either a motion to vacate the default
judgment or a response to Deutsche Bank’s motion. Regardless of whether the default
judgment against RNM can stand, Deutsche Bank’s claims against RNM were resolved
in Deutsche Bank’s favor by Judge Hanen’s summary judgment ruling.
KAPUR’S ARGUMENTS
Kapur, who did not attach any evidence to his late response, has not provided any
reason for the Court to reconsider Judge Hanen’s conclusions.
A. Identity
Kapur first argues that there is a triable fact issue as to whether Deutsche Bank’s
deed of trust actually covers the Property because the Arbor Green complex is apparently
known by two addresses, 5000 Milwee Street and 5001 Lamonte Street, only one of
which (the Milwee address) is listed on Deutsche Bank’s deed of trust. (Dkt. 46 at pp. 3–
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4) The Court disagrees with Kapur. The quitclaim deed under which Kapur claims
ownership of the Property lists both addresses for the Property. (Dkt. 27-11) More
importantly, Deutsche Bank’s deed of trust includes the legal description of the
Property—the same legal description, the Court notes, as Kapur’s quitclaim deed. (Dkt.
27-2 at p. 14; Dkt. 27-11 at p. 2) Under Texas law, “the legal description of a property
will control over a common description or street address.” White v. Harrison, 390 S.W.3d
666, 678–79 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2012, no pet.). There is no question that Deutsche
Bank’s deed of trust covers the Property.
B. Evidentiary objections
Kapur next argues that Deutsche Bank did not present any admissible evidence.
(Dkt. 46 at pp. 4–5) The Court disagrees. Deutsche Bank’s evidence consists of a
combination of judicially noticeable property records and properly authenticated business
records. See Morlock, L.L.C. v. JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., 587 Fed. App’x 86, 87 &
n.3 (5th Cir. 2014) (“We may consider the deed of trust, the assignment of the deed of
trust, and the Declaration in deciding the motion to dismiss since they . . . are matters of
public record.”); see also Fed. R. Evid. 803(6) (setting out business-records exception to
hearsay rule). Deutsche Bank’s evidence was admissible, and Judge Hanen properly
considered it.
C. The Association’s lien
Kapur next argues that his purchase of the Property extinguished Deutsche Bank’s
lien because the Association’s lien “was established in 1978[.]” (Dkt. 46 at pp. 5–6)
There is no evidence showing that the Association’s lien predates Rodriguez’s home
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equity loan, let alone evidence showing that the Association’s lien stems from
assessments due and owing in 1978. To the contrary, as Judge Hanen pointed out, “[t]he
summary judgment evidence establishes that [Deutsche Bank’s] lien was recorded on or
around April 2004; that the [Association] assessments due and owing at that time were
made current as of the [home equity loan’s] closing; and that the Association did not
foreclose on the Property until 2014.” (Dkt. 29 at p. 6) Deutsche Bank’s lien was superior
to the Association’s lien and remains intact. No evidence in the record shows otherwise.
D. Kapur’s counterclaim
Finally, Kapur argues that his counterclaim for “undue enrichment”—by which
Kapur presumably means unjust enrichment or quantum meruit—is “still alive[.]” (Dkt.
46 at pp. 6–7) The Court again disagrees. Deutsche Bank moved for summary judgment
on not only its claims but on Kapur’s counterclaim. (Dkt. 27 at pp. 11–12) Judge Hanen
unreservedly granted Deutsche Bank’s motion. (Dkt. 29)
The Court will not disturb Judge Hanen’s ruling. Kapur only pled in his
counterclaim that he made improvements to the Property; he did not plead any improper
conduct on the part of Deutsche Bank. (Dkt. 17 at p. 2) Whether he calls his counterclaim
unjust enrichment or quantum meruit, it fails. Under Texas law, “[a] party may recover
under the unjust enrichment theory when one person has obtained a benefit from another
by fraud, duress, or the taking of an undue advantage.” Heldenfels Bros., Inc. v. City of
Corpus Christi, 832 S.W.2d 39, 41 (Tex. 1992). “Unjust enrichment is not a proper
remedy merely because it might appear expedient or generally fair that some recompense
be afforded for an unfortunate loss to the claimant, or because the benefits to the party
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sought to be charged amount to a windfall.” Id. at 42 (quotation marks omitted).
“Quantum meruit is an equitable remedy that is based upon the promise implied by law to
pay for beneficial services rendered and knowingly accepted.” In re Kellogg Brown &
Root, Inc., 166 S.W.3d 732, 740 (Tex. 2005) (quotation marks omitted). No one took
advantage of Kapur, and if he made improvements to the Property, those improvements
were for his own benefit, not Deutsche Bank’s.
Kapur’s failure to plead or provide evidence of improper conduct on Deutsche
Bank’s part was fatal to his counterclaim when Judge Hanen issued his order and remains
fatal to that counterclaim now.
CONCLUSION
The Court will not vacate Judge Hanen’s well-reasoned order. Deutsche Bank’s
claims against the four defendants have therefore now been resolved as follows:
(1) The Court entered a default judgment against Rodriguez, who was served but
never answered. (Dkt. 55)
(2) Deutsche Bank settled with Ameriventure. (Dkt. 29 at p. 1; Dkt. 12)
(3) The Court entered a default judgment against RNM. (Dkt. 55). Just before the
Court entered its written order memorializing the default judgment, RNM filed
an answer. (Dkt. 53) RNM has not filed either a motion to vacate the default
judgment or a response to Deutsche Bank’s motion. Regardless of whether the
default judgment can stand, Deutsche Bank’s claims against RNM were
resolved in Deutsche Bank’s favor by Judge Hanen’s summary judgment
ruling.
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(4) Deutsche Bank’s claims against Kapur were resolved in Deutsche Bank’s favor
by Judge Hanen’s summary judgment ruling.
In addition, Kapur’s counterclaim against Deutsche Bank was dismissed by Judge
Hanen’s summary judgment ruling.
No claims by any party remain in this case, and the Court will render judgment for
Deutsche Bank. Deutsche Bank is ORDERED to submit a proposed final judgment by
the close of business on November 12, 2020.
SIGNED at Houston, Texas, this 4th day of November, 2020.
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GEORGE C. HANKS, JR.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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