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HSBC Bank United States, Nat'l Ass'n v. Stewart-Martin
¶1 Patricia R. Stewart-Martin appeals the judgment in favor of HSBC Bank USA, National Association as Trustee for Structured Asset Securities Corporation, Management Pass-Through Certificate, Series 2004-SCI (HSBC).1 The trial court granted HSBC’s motion for summary judgment on its foreclosure claims and it converted HSBC’s motion to dismiss Stewart-Martin’s counterclaims to a motion for summary judgment and dismissed her counterclaims.
¶2 Stewart-Martin argues that the trial court erred because it concluded that HSBC had established a prima facie case for foreclosure and because, without notice, it converted HSBC’s motion to dismiss her counterclaims to a motion for summary judgment. We conclude that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on the foreclosure claims because HSBC did not establish a prima facie case that it possesses the note. Therefore, we reverse the trial court’s judgment of foreclosure and dismissal of Stewart-Martin’s counterclaims and remand for further proceedings.
The complaint
¶3 On August 31, 2017, HSBC filed this action seeking a judgment of foreclosure and a sheriff’s sale of Stewart-Martin’s mortgaged residential rental property in Milwaukee. HSBC also sought the entry of a deficiency judgment if the proceeds from the sale of the property were insufficient to pay the balance due on the note. HSBC alleged that in late July 1998 Stewart-Martin had entered into a note and mortgage with Ameriquest Mortgage Company. It also alleged that it obtained the mortgage by assignment, that it was the holder of the note and mortgage, and that Stewart-Martin had defaulted on her payments under the note and mortgage.
The answer, affirmative defenses, and counterclaims
¶4 Stewart-Martin, an attorney representing herself in this action and on appeal, answered the complaint and asserted nineteen affirmative defenses and nineteen counterclaims. The counterclaims included, in part, lack of standing on the ground that HSBC was not the holder of the note, an issue regarding payment of property taxes, breach of the terms of the note and mortgage, breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing, accord and satisfaction, and equitable estoppel. The counterclaims allege that the mortgage loan servicer for the mortgage account, Nationstar Mortgage d/b/a Mr. Cooper (Nationstar), without notice, "secretly paid" the full balance of the 2016 property taxes that Stewart-Martin had been paying in installments. The counterclaims further allege that thereafter, Nationstar imposed a tax escrow account on Stewart-Martin, which significantly increased the monthly payments. Nationstar then refused to remove the escrow requirement.
The motion for summary judgment and motion to dismiss
¶5 On February 16, 2018, HSBC filed a motion for summary judgment of foreclosure and a motion to dismiss Stewart-Martin’s counterclaims for failure to state a claim, a supporting brief, and two affidavits2 with attached exhibits. The exhibits included requests to admit that HSBC had served on Stewart-Martin on or about December 8, 2017. In seeking summary judgment, HSBC argued that Stewart-Martin’s responses to the requests to admit served upon HSBC on January 26, 2018, were untimely and that, therefore, Stewart-Martin should be deemed to have admitted the matters on which an admission had been requested.
Motions to accept affidavit and to withdraw admissions
¶6 On March 30, 2018, Stewart-Martin filed a motion seeking an order accepting as timely her affidavit and attached exhibits opposing HSBC’s motion for summary judgment. She argued that she had filed her affidavit on March 12, 2018, the last day to timely file an affidavit opposing summary judgment, but the e-filing system rejected the affidavit on March 13, 2018.
¶7 On March 30, 2018, Stewart-Martin also filed a motion seeking an order allowing her to withdraw her admissions. She stated that her failure to answer the requests to admit by the statutory deadline was "totally inadvertent" and that she was "severely" prejudiced by the matters deemed admitted. Stewart-Martin also stated that her responses to the requests to admit were mailed on January 24, 2018, pursuant to an agreement that she had with HSBC’s attorney.
The hearing on the parties' motions
¶8 At an April 3, 2018 hearing on the parties' motions, the trial court began by addressing Stewart-Martin’s motion seeking an order accepting as timely her affidavit in opposition to HSBC’s motion for summary judgment. Stewart-Martin explained the e-filing rejection of the affidavit and then asked if the trial court would accept the affidavit at the hearing. The trial court then went through an analysis and explanation of Stewart-Martin’s failure to comply with the statutes for e-filing and correcting errors in e-filing, and admonished her for waiting until the hearing date to seek any relief. It commented on the fact that Stewart-Martin is an attorney licensed in Wisconsin and should have been able to follow the statutes. The trial court then stated it would not be able to provide Stewart-Martin with any relief.
¶9 Next, the trial court addressed HSBC’s summary judgment motion on the foreclosure claim. It stated that HSBC had made a prima facie case and that there were no issues of disputed material fact. The trial court stated that it reviewed the briefs and affidavits and all of the exhibits, which were all admissible under the rules of evidence. The trial court found that Nationstar ultimately became the servicer of the mortgage loan account in 2012 and, as servicer of the loan, it had possession of the note that was the subject of this action. It found that Stewart-Martin defaulted under the terms of the note and mortgage by failing to make payments that included the tax escrow account. The trial court specifically found that the mortgage allowed HSBC to establish the escrow account. It also found that by letters in November 2016 and December 2016, Stewart-Martin was notified of the escrow advances and that they were additional debts that she owed. Further, it stated,
¶10 With respect to HSBC’s requests to admit and Stewart-Martin’s response to those requests, the trial court concluded that ultimately, the requests to admit were not dispositive since HSBC was not relying on the answers or lack of answers as the sole support for its summary judgment motion. The trial court went on to state that it was not going to rule on Stewart-Martin’s motion to withdraw the responses to the requests for admissions or to find them timely.
¶11 The trial court then addressed HSBC’s motion to dismiss Stewart-Martin’s counterclaims. It asked Stewart-Martin if she had filed anything in opposition to the motion to dismiss the counterclaims. Stewart-Martin responded, "You have my affidavit, Judge, in opposition to summary judgment."
HSBC’s attorney responded, "Well, I think this is probably in the alternative, but to the extent that the [c]ourt granted summary judgment to [HSBC] on the foreclosure action, in large part that disposes of all of the issues with regard to the counterclaim[.]" The trial court responded, "Right." HSBC’s attorney then went on to say, "it probably should have ... been properly framed as a motion for summary judgment on the counterclaim." The trial court went on to state, "I'm not going to grant a motion to dismiss the counterclaims, but I am going to grant their dismissal as part of the summary judgment because I don't think there’s any disputed issue of material fact."
¶13 Stewart-Martin then stated that to the extent that there was a breach of any terms of the note or mortgage the counterclaims could operate to preclude the foreclosure judgment. The trial court responded that it thought that all the evidence was to the contrary. Stewart-Martin then raised the issue of the accounting of her payments stating that, for example, about eight years were missing—the accounting did not begin in 1998 and continue to the present. She stated that she could challenge the accounting if given the opportunity to do so by way of a trial. She also raised the issue that HSBC was not responding properly to her discovery requests to be able to find out the complete history of the accounting. She stated that she only received responses shortly before the hearing and that all the responses were evasive. Stewart-Martin also pointed out a problem with multiple late payments assessed against a single payment. She then asked for more time to complete discovery.
¶14 The trial court denied the request and then went on to explain, "in granting summary judgment to [HSBC], I also effectively deny the counterclaim for breach of contract, and breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing and all other counterclaims." The trial court then stated,
Subsequent filings
¶15 On April 5, 2018, HSBC filed a proposed written order regarding the trial...
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