Secured Guaranties and Third Party Deeds of Trust 2010
Secured Guaranties and Third Party Deeds of Trust 2010
Secured Guaranties and Third Party Deeds of Trust 2010
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MCLE Self-Study Article: When Real Property Can Mean Real (Prison) Time:
A Brief Overview of the Federal Prosecution of Real Estate-Related
White Collar Crimes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
By Jeffrey Rabkin
This article provides a broad overview of the basic statutory framework for the federal prosecution of white collar cases, briefly describes
emerging trends in fraudulent real estate schemes and finally reviews several federal cases involving real estate-related crimes recently
charged in the Northern District of California.
Very likely yes. If the third party executes a separate guaranty, and the deed of trust secures that guaranty rather than the
borrowers underlying obligation, then the borrowers obligation
is not secured by real property (assuming that the borrower itself
has not provided real property collateral). The limitations triggered by real property collateral will not apply to enforcement
of the borrowers obligation.
That conclusion assumes, of course, that securing the guaranty with real property does not somehow cause the underlying
obligation to be considered secured by that real property. Passing
comments in dicta in two California Supreme Court cases,
Security Pacific National Bank v. Wozab34 in 1990 and Bayless v.
Ames35 in 1929, are consistent with that assumption, although,
as discussed in Q7 below, those cases were focused on a different issue.36
One might argue to the contrary that a guaranty should
be conceived of as obligating the guarantor with the principal
obligor on the underlying obligation, rather than constituting
a truly separate obligation, and therefore that security for the
guaranty also effectively secures the underlying obligation. The
Nevada Supreme Court took that view in a 1985 case, applying
what the court believed to be California law to conclude that
the personal guaranties and the underlying corporate debts are
to be treated as one obligation.37
However, reported California cases have very consistently
treated guaranty and surety obligations as separate from the
principal obligation for purposes of the one-action and antideficiency rules.38 With the exception of a 1995 Court of Appeal
opinion subsequently depublished by the California Supreme
Court,39 the cases uniformly reflect the view, in holding or in
dicta, that if a borrowers real property secures the borrowers
obligation, the one-action and antideficiency rules do not
directly protect a guarantor of that obligation.40 So, conversely,
it seems highly unlikely that a California court would hold that
if the guarantors real property secures the guarantors obligation,
the one-action and antideficiency rules protect the borrower. No
reported California case appears to have taken the approach of,
and none has mentioned, the Nevada case.41
As a result, absent a significant change in the law in
California, the secured guaranty structure offers greater flexibility to a lender than a third party deed of trust directly securing
the borrowers obligation, because the secured guaranty preserves
more enforcement options against the borrower. If the intent is
that the third party will have no personal liability beyond the
real property collateral, that can be accomplished by simply
including a non-recourse provision in the guaranty.
Q7: IN THE SECURED GUARANTY STRUCTURE, DO
THE ONE-ACTION AND ANTIDEFICIENCY RULES
APPLY TO THE THIRD PARTY?
Code of Civil Procedure section 726(a), with its one-action,
security-first and one-form-of-action rules, clearly applies by its
express terms to a guaranty secured by real property, because
it governs the recovery of any debt or the enforcement of any
right secured by mortgage upon real property. That was the case
in Security Pacific National Bank v. Wozab,42 in which a guaranty
was secured by a deed of trust. The bank took a setoff against
the guarantors deposit account. The California Supreme Court
held that this violated the security-first rule, which requires that
the creditor first proceed against the real property security before
enforcing the debt personally against the borrower.
In Bayless v. Ames,43 the California Supreme Court held to
similar effect in 1929 that when a creditor obtained a judgment
on the secured guaranty, omitting the guarantors real property
collateral from the action, the one-action rule prohibited subsequent foreclosure. This is an application of what is referred to
as the sanction aspect of the one-action rule, discussed further
in Q8 below.44
Although section 726(a) clearly applies to a secured guaranty, the guarantor may not be protected by the antideficiency
rule of section 580d, which normally precludes recovery of a
deficiency after nonjudicial foreclosure. Unlike section 726(a),
which applies to any debt or right secured by real property,
section 580d by its terms applies only to a note secured by
real property.45 No reported case appears to have addressed the
applicability of section 580d to a secured guaranty in actual
holding. In Union Bank v. Gradsky,46 the Court of Appeal commented in dicta that an action on a guaranty would not constitute an action on a note within the meaning of section
580d, even though the underlying obligation was evidenced by
a note.47 A few cases in other contexts have held section 580d
inapplicable to non-note obligations.48
Because of the note limitation in section 580d, a creditor
might be able to foreclose nonjudicially under a deed of trust
securing a guaranty, then obtain a deficiency judgment against
the guarantor. If that is the case, however, the fair-value rule of
Code of Civil Procedure section 580a clearly would apply.49
Section 580a, unlike section 580d, applies to any obligation
secured by real property, not just a note. Under section 580as
fair-value rule, recovery of a deficiency judgment against the
guarantor would be limited to the difference between the guarantors total obligation and the greater of the foreclosure sale
price and the propertys fair market value. In addition, under
section 580a the action must be brought within three months
after the foreclosure sale.
To the extent that one-action and antideficiency rules apply
directly to a guarantor by virtue of its deed of trust securing the
guaranty, they are not waivable by the guarantor, just as they are
not waivable by a borrower when the underlying obligation is
secured by real property.50 Civil Code section 2856(a)(3), the
broad authorization of one-action and antideficiency waivers by
a guarantor or surety, is by its terms inapplicable. It applies to
[a]ny rights or defenses the guarantor or other surety may have
because the principals note or other obligation is secured by real
property.51 Here it is the guaranty, not the principals obligation, that is secured by real property. The normal prohibitions
on one-action and antideficiency waivers apply.
Q8: IF THE THIRD PARTYS DEED OF TRUST
DIRECTLY SECURES THE BORROWERS
OBLIGATION, RATHER THAN A SEPARATE
GUARANTY, DO THE ONE-ACTION AND
ANTIDEFICIENCY RULES BENEFIT THE THIRD
PARTY?
As discussed in Q5 above, a third party deed of trust
securing the borrowers obligation triggers application of the
one-action and antideficiency rules with respect to enforcement
of the obligation against the borrower. The question here is
real property security, so long as it secures the principals obligation. Such a waiver would apply only to the third partys protection from section 726(a), of course, not to the borrowers.
In addition to that possibility for direct application of section 726(a), two potential indirect applications, arising out of
suretyship law, might be relevant to a third party deed of trust.
First, under Civil Code section 2845, one of the Codes
suretyship provisions, the third party as surety has the right to
require that the creditor proceed first against the borrower as
principal obligor,58 unless the third party has waived that right.
However, because the third partys deed of trust secures the
borrowers obligation, thereby making the protections of section 726(a)s security-first rule applicable to the borrower (Q5
above), the creditor cannot proceed against the borrower without
first proceeding against the third partys real property collateral.
As a result, it is impossible for the creditor to comply with both
section 2845 and section 726(a).
That conundrum was addressed by the California Supreme
Court in the 1898 Kershner case mentioned above. Although
not citing section 2845 specifically, the court made clear that
the creditors compliance with the security-first rule was not
excused by the need to protect the third partys mortgage,
that in any event the third party who encumbers property to
secure the borrowers obligation is charged with knowledge of
section 726(a), and that the creditor should have prosecuted a
foreclosure action under the mortgage rather than taking a judgment against the borrower on the debt.59 Effectively, then, the
security-first rule trumps the third partys section 2845 right to
require first pursuit of the principal obligor. The creditors duty
to comply with the security-first rule is inherent in what the
third party agreed to when it encumbered its property to secure
the borrowers obligation.
A second possible indirect effect of section 726(a) arises
from the impact it might have on the third partys ability
to recover reimbursement from the borrower if the creditor
forecloses on the third partys real property. Such a reimbursement right clearly exists under suretyship law, because the sale
proceeds of the third partys property at foreclosure go toward
payment of the borrowers obligation.60 However, reimbursement in one-action and antideficiency contexts in California is
uncertain.
Under one view, associated most prominently with the
1968 Court of Appeal opinion in Union Bank v. Gradsky,61 if a
creditor is precluded from recovering an amount from the borrower by an antideficiency rule, a guarantor or surety who pays
that amount is also precluded from recovering reimbursement
for it from the borrower.62 Antideficiency rules are not directly
at issue in the present context (because the third party has no
liability for a deficiency), but section 726(a)s security-first rule
might be considered to have similar effect: Because the creditor
cannot recover from the borrower personally amounts that must
be recovered first from the third partys collateral, the third party
might also be precluded from obtaining reimbursement from
the borrower for those amounts.63 If that is indeed the law,
however, it does not provide a defense to enforcement of the
deed of trust. As with the third partys inability to exercise the
section 2845 right, discussed above, the inability to obtain reimbursement would be an inherent consequence of the creditors
compliance with the security-first rule, which the third party is
ENDNOTES
1 California suretyship law is set out primarily in Cal. Civ.
Code 2787-2856. See also Restatement (Third) of
Suretyship and Guaranty (1996), and UCC Committee
of the Business Law Section of the State Bar of California,
California Commentary on the Restatement of the Law Third,
Suretyship and Guaranty, 34 Loy. L.A. L. Rev. 231 (2000).
2 This Article uses the phrase one-action and antideficiency
rules as shorthand for several interrelated statutes applicable to obligations secured by real property: Cal. Civ. Proc.
Code 726(a), which, as judicially interpreted, includes
a one-action rule, precluding multiple actions on a debt
secured by real property, a security-first rule, requiring
that the creditor proceed first against the real property
security before enforcing the debt as a personal liability of
the borrower, and a one-form-of-action rule, mandating
judicial foreclosure as the method to judicially enforce a
debt secured by real property; id. 580b, an antideficiency
rule applicable to specified purchase-money transactions;
id. 580d, an antideficiency rule triggered by nonjudicial
foreclosure; and id. 726(b) and 580a, fair-value rules
applicable after judicial and nonjudicial foreclosure, respectively, which limit a deficiency judgment to the difference
between the total obligation and the greater of the foreclosure sale price and the propertys fair value (in 726(b))
or fair market value (in 580a).
3 Cal. Civ. Code 2787 (emphasis added). This section
was amended in 1939 to define guarantor and surety the
same, as quoted in text, and to abolish the prior statutory
distinction between guarantors and sureties. See 2 Roger
Bernhardt, California Mortgages, Deeds of Trust
and Foreclosure Litigation 9.88A, 9.88C (4th ed.
2010).
4 See also Restatement (Third) of Suretyship and
Guaranty 1(1)(a), 1(2)(b)(ii), and 1 cmt. g & illus. 6
(1996).
5 See, e.g., Garretson Inv. Co. v. Arndt, 144 Cal. 64, 65-66
(1904); Carson v. Reid, 137 Cal. 253, 255 (1902); see also
Cal. Civ. Code 2928 (A mortgage does not bind the
mortgagor personally to perform the act for the performance of which it is a security, unless there is an express
covenant therein to that effect.).
6 The hypothecation of property to secure the debt of
another is sometimes referred to as real suretyship, as
distinguished from the personal suretyship that arises
from a promise to pay the debt. See Stearns, The Law of
Suretyship 1.3 (James L. Elder rev., 5th ed. 1951). But
even in the real suretyship context, the principles governing personal suretyship are applied. Id.; see also infra note
20 and accompanying text.
7 Cal. Civ. Code 2792; see also Restatement (Third) of
Suretyship and Guaranty 9 (1996).
8 Cal. Civ. Code 2792.
9 See, e.g., Cal. Bank v. Kenoyer, 2 Cal. App. 2d 367 (1934);
see 2 Bernhardt, supra note 3, 9.88L.
10 Everts v. Matteson, 21 Cal. 2d 437, 447 (1942); see also
Restatement (Third) of Suretyship and Guaranty
1(1) (1996).
10
22 Id. 2856(a)(3).
23 Id. 2856(a)(2).
24 See, e.g., Cal. Civ. Proc. Code 726(a) (applicable to
the recovery of any debt or the enforcement of any right
secured by mortgage upon real property or an estate for
years therein); id. 580a (applicable to an obligation for
the payment of which a deed of trust or mortgage with
power of sale upon real property or any interest therein
was given as security); id. 580d (applicable to a note
secured by a deed of trust or mortgage upon real property
or an estate for years). The purchase-money antideficiency
rule of 580b, however, is only triggered with respect to
an obligation of the purchaser secured by the purchased
property, either in favor of the vendor or, in the case of an
owner-occupied dwelling, a lender.
25 See Cal. Civ. Code 2953; DeBerard Props., Ltd. v. Lim,
20 Cal. 4th 659 (1999); Freedland v. Greco, 45 Cal. 2d 462,
467-68 (1955); 1 Bernhardt, supra note 3, 4.60-4.66,
5.64-5.70.
26 See, e.g., W. Fuel Co. v. Sanford G. Lewald Co., 190 Cal. 25,
27 (1922); Pac. Valley Bank v. Schwenke, 189 Cal. App. 3d
134, 142 (1987).
27 162 Cal. 181 (1912).
28 Id. at 184 (citations omitted). Gnarini cited only Commercial
Bank of Santa Ana v. Kershner, 120 Cal. 495 (1898), for the
proposition that a third partys mortgage has this effect on
enforcement against the borrower. However, in Kershner,
the mortgage was also executed by the borrower, on property jointly owned with the third party. Thus, there was
no occasion in Kershner to consider, and the court did not
discuss, whether a third partys mortgage would trigger the
security-first rule as to the borrower.
29 51 Cal. 3d 991, 999, 1003 (1990). Wozab is discussed infra
notes 34, 36 and 42 and accompanying text.
30 189 Cal. App. 3d 134 (1987).
31 Id. at 142. See also Pajaro Dunes Rental Agency, Inc. v.
Spitters (In re Pajaro Dunes Rental Agency, Inc.), 156 B.R.
263, 268 (N.D. Cal. 1993), aff d, 46 F.3d 1143 (9th Cir.
1995) (unpublished table decision).
32 40 Cal. App. 3d 456 (1974).
33 See, e.g., Cal. Civ. Proc. Code 483.010(b) (precluding pre-judgment attachment where claim is secured by
real property, except to some extent where the security
has become valueless or decreased in value to less than the
claim, without fault of the creditor).
However, if the loan is secured by the third partys deed
of trust and a security interest in personal property of the
borrower, the lender will be able to exercise its remedies
against the personal property collateral in accordance with
the mixed-collateral rules of Cal. Com. Code 9604(a).
Section 9604(a) is triggered when an obligation secured
by a security interest in personal property or fixtures is also
secured by an interest in real property of an estate therein.
That language does not distinguish based upon whether the
personal and real property collateral both came from the
same source. Regarding operation of the mixed-collateral
rules, see 2 Bernhardt, supra note 3, 9.12-9.23.
34 51 Cal. 3d 991 (1990).
35 207 Cal. 54 (1929).
36 In Wozab, guarantors of a line of credit secured their guaranty with a deed of trust. The bank set off against the borrowers bank accounts and the guarantors bank accounts.
The court commented that [the borrowers] line of credit
with the bank was not secured by real property, and the
banks setoff against [the borrowers] deposit accounts is not
at issue in this appeal. 51 Cal. 3d at 996, n.1.
Bayless also involved a secured guaranty. The court observed
that it would have been permissible for the plaintiff creditors to sue the underlying obligor without proceeding on
the guaranty (and thus on the mortgage securing the guaranty): [T]he [guarantors] would not have been necessary
parties to said action, and the prosecution of said action
against [the principal obligor] alone might not have been a
bar to a subsequent action brought by plaintiffs against [the
guarantors] on their agreement to answer for [the principal
obligors] default. 207 Cal. at 58.
Thus, in both Wozab and Bayless, the court viewed the
underlying obligation as unsecured, notwithstanding that
security had been given for the guaranties. At issue in
both cases, however, was the impact of the creditor having
proceeded against the guarantors (see Q7), not against the
principal obligors.
37 Component Sys. Corp. v. Eighth Judicial Dist. Ct., 692 P.2d
1296, 1301 (Nev. 1985). The guaranties included California
choice-of-law provisions. Real property collateral was located
in Nevada. Some of the several deeds of trust secured the
underlying debt directly, another secured only a guaranty,
and another secured both the underlying debt and a guaranty. The court applied what it believed to be California
law to determine the relationship between the guaranties
and the underlying debt, then applied Nevadas one-action
rule to hold that an action against the underlying borrowers
on the debt extinguished the encumbrances. Given . . . the
fact that pursuant to Cal. Civ. Code 2787 the personal
guarantors are co-obligors of the corporate borrowers, all
the transactions under review should be treated as one loan
for the purposes of the one action rule. 692 P.2d at 1300.
The two California cases cited by the court in support of its
conclusion are discussed infra note 41.
38 See, e.g., Everts v. Matteson, 21 Cal. 2d 437, 444 (1942);
Loeb v. Christie, 6 Cal. 2d 416, 420 (1936); Talbott v.
Hustwit, 164 Cal. App. 4th 148, 151 (2008); Mariners Sav.
& Loan Assn v. Neil, 22 Cal. App. 3d 232, 235 (1971); Katz
v. Haskell, 196 Cal. App. 2d 144, 154-55 (1961).
39 Bank of S. Cal. v. Dombrow, 39 Cal. App. 4th 1457 (1995)
(ordered depublished Mar. 14, 1996) (applying Cal. Civ.
Proc. Code 580a to a guarantor); see also Talbott v.
Hustwit, 164 Cal. App. 4th 148, 154 (2008) (Sills, J., concurring).
40 See 2 R. Bernhardt, supra note 3, 9.88Z-9.89 (collecting and discussing cases); see, e.g., Talbott v. Hustwit, 164
Cal. App. 4th 148, 152 (2008) (case law is uniform in
holding section 580a does not apply to guarantors).
It has been argued that the 1939 statutory abolition of the
distinction between sureties and guarantors (see supra note
3) undermined the principle that guarantors are not directly
protected by the one-action and antideficiency rules when
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
11
12
that the third party would have been fully protected by the
court if she was only a surety by the sale first of [the borrowers] interest in the property. Id., citing Cal. Civ. Code
2850, quoted supra note 58. Of course, if the sale first of
the borrowers interest left a remaining deficiency, sale of the
third partys interest would then be required before a deficiency
judgment could be taken and enforced against the borrower.
The potential statutory conflict between Cal. Civ. Code
2845 and Cal. Civ. Proc. Code 726(a) was noted
by the district court in Pajaro Dunes Rental Agency, Inc. v.
Spitters (In re Pajaro Dunes Rental Agency, Inc.), 156 B.R. 263,
269 (N.D. Cal. 1993), affd, 46 F.3d 1143 (9th Cir. 1995)
(unpublished table decision), but the court found that the
conflict was not actually present on the facts of the case and
did not address its resolution, noting that it is a problem
better addressed by the California legislature. In its unpublished opinion on appeal, however, the Ninth Circuit considered the issue to have been resolved by Kershner: That case
holds that a surety in California is charged with knowledge
of the one-action rule. Pajaro Dunes Rental Agency, Inc. v.
Spitters (In re Pajaro Dunes Rental Agency, Inc.), 1995 U.S.
App. LEXIS 734, at *5-6 (9th Cir. 1995).
60 See Cal. Civ. Code 2847 (If a surety satisfies the
principal obligation, or any part thereof, . . . the principal
is bound to reimburse what he has disbursed, including
necessary costs and expenses . . . .). By application of the
foreclosure sale proceeds to the debt, the third party has
satisfied the borrowers obligation to at least that extent.
(Alternatively, the third party might pay the debt to free its
property from the encumbrance.)
Similar to section2847, Restatement (Third) of Suretyship
and Guaranty 23(1) (1996) articulates a general rule for
the measure of a suretys reimbursement right as the reasonable cost of performing the secondary [i.e., suretyship] obligation, including incidental expenses. A comment observes:
Performance of the secondary obligation may
involve, among other things, the payment of
money, the performance of a nonmonetary
obligation, or realization by the obligee from
property of the secondary obligor in which the
obligee has a security interest or lien. The secondary obligors reasonable cost of performance
includes the amount of money paid (including
any interest or other charges imposed on the
secondary obligor as a result of the principal
obligors default), the reasonable cost of performing the nonmonetary obligation, or the
value of the property lost to the obligees realization as to collateral.
Id. 23 cmt. a.
61 265 Cal. App. 2d 40 (1968).
62 Id. at 46 (applying Cal. Civ. Proc. Code 580d):
It makes no difference to [the borrowers] purse
whether the recovery is by the original creditor
in a direct action following nonjudicial sale of
the security, or whether the recovery is in an
action by the guarantor for reimbursement of
the same sum.
....
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14
81
82
83
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