COURT OF APPEALS DECISION DATED AND FILED June 10, 2008 David R. Schanker Clerk of Court of Appeals |
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This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See Wis. Stat. § 808.10 and Rule 809.62. |
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APPEAL
from an order of the circuit court for
Before
¶1 PER CURIAM. Randall Sobjeck[1] appeals an amended order reaffirming a sale of mortgaged property, granting a petition for a deficiency judgment, and establishing a deficiency amount after applying funds from a deposit account at Peoples State Bank toward the deficiency.[2] Sobjeck argues Peoples Bank was not entitled to a deficiency judgment, which was filed nearly two years after the order confirming the sheriff’s sale. Sobjeck also argues the funds in the deposit account were exempt from the claims of creditors. We disagree and affirm the amended order.
¶2 Peoples Bank filed a foreclosure action against Sobjeck on May 29, 2003. A default judgment, together with findings of fact and conclusions of law, was granted on October 28. That document did not mention the mortgaged property. An amended judgment, together with findings and conclusions, was filed on December 3, which ordered that the mortgaged property be sold at public auction by the sheriff and provided for a money judgment of $172,665.79. A second amended judgment was filed on January 28, 2004, providing the right to dispose of personal property left in the mortgaged premises. Amended findings of fact and conclusions of law stated, among other things, that in the event the premises were sold and the proceeds were insufficient to pay the amount due, Peoples Bank “may apply to this Court for Judgment and Execution for the deficiency unpaid.”
¶3 The property was sold to a third-party purchaser for $138,500 at a sheriff’s sale on May 25, 2004, and a notice of hearing to confirm the sheriff’s sale was filed on June 15, 2004. The notice did not state that a deficiency judgment was requested against Sobjeck. The court issued an order on July 1, 2004, confirming the sale and discharging a lis pendens. On June 26, 2006, Peoples Bank filed a petition to apply toward the deficiency certain funds frozen in Sobjeck’s demand deposit account at Peoples Bank. An order entitled “Deficiency Judgment Authorizing Application of Demand Deposit Account Proceeds Toward Deficiency” was subsequently issued. This order found a deficiency of $34,165.79, resulting from the sheriff’s sale price of $138,500 subtracted from the amended judgment amount of $172,665.79. The court also concluded Peoples Bank had a contractual and common law right to apply the balance of $7,122.40 in the demand deposit account toward the deficiency.
¶4 Sobjeck first appeared, by counsel, on July 5, 2006. A notice of appearance was filed, together with a motion to vacate the order authorizing the set-off of the demand deposit proceeds. The court vacated the order and scheduled a hearing on Sobjeck’s motion. The court subsequently issued a decision and an amended order reaffirming the confirmation of the sale and its previous finding that the mortgage note and account agreement permitted Peoples Bank to apply the demand deposit proceeds toward the deficiency. Sobjeck filed a motion for reconsideration claiming the procedural requirements for a confirmation of the sheriff’s sale were not met and the petition for deficiency was untimely. Sobjeck also claimed for the first time in an affidavit that the demand deposit account proceeds were traceable to a retirement account, which was exempt from execution from creditors’ claims. The court did not issue a decision on the reconsideration motion and this appeal followed.
¶5 Sobjeck first argues the notice regarding the July 1, 2004 confirmation
of sale improperly failed to indicate a deficiency would be sought. However, Wis.
Stat. § 846.165[3]
provides, “no sale on a judgment of mortgage foreclosure shall be confirmed
unless five days notice is given to all
parties who have appeared in the action.”
(Emphasis added). It is
undisputed Sobjeck never appeared in the action until after the circuit court
issued its decision authorizing the application of the demand deposit amounts
toward the deficiency. In his reply
brief, Sobjeck concedes his default would have relieved Peoples Bank of the
requirement to comply with the statutory notice requirements “if they had
chosen not to provide notice of the confirmation of the sheriff’s sale to the
parties in the case.” However, Sobjeck
insists that, because the notice was sent, “at best the notice was misleading.” Sobjeck’s argument in this regard is
unsupported by citation to legal authority and therefore will not be
considered. See Kruczek v. DWD, 2005
WI App 12, ¶32, 278
¶6 Sobjeck next argues there was no factual basis for the court’s determination of the property’s fair value, in contravention of Wis. Stat. § 846.165(2). The circuit court concluded in its written decision:
Any defect arising from a lack of proof concerning the fair market value of the property has now been cured by the plaintiff’s submission of the February 2004 appraisal showing an appraised value of $129,000.00 – well below the $138,500.00 price at which the property sold.
¶7 Sobjeck insists the defect was not cured, but Sobjeck again
fails to provide citation to legal authority in support of his position and his
argument will therefore not be considered.
See Kruczek, 278
¶8 Sobjeck next argues the order confirming the sale was a
final, appealable order and the request for deficiency judgment and application
for set-off required Peoples Bank to seek relief from judgment under Wis. Stat. § 806.07. Because the order confirming sale did not provide
for a deficiency, and Peoples Bank did not petition for a deficiency for almost
two years after the order confirming sale was entered, Sobjeck contends the
requirements of § 806.07 could not be met. In support of his argument, Sobjeck relies
upon Anchor
S&L Ass’n v. Coyle, 148
¶9 We are unpersuaded. In
Anchor
Savings, the circuit court contemplated the order to be a final order
at the time it was entered; the order granted a deficiency judgment, confirmed
the sheriff’s sale and calculated a deficiency amount.
¶10 Sobjeck next argues the proceeds from the demand deposit
account were traceable to his retirement account and thus exempt from the claims
of creditors. Peoples Bank responds that
Sobjeck waived any claim of exemption by failing to timely follow the
procedures for claiming an exemption under Wis.
Stat. § 815.18(6). As the
circuit court noted in its decision authorizing the set‑off, “The court
finds the mortgage note and account agreement permit the requested set-off, and
that, in any event, the defendant has admitted the propriety of the set-off by
failing to argue against it.” In his
reply brief, Sobjeck does not refute that he failed to raise the issue until
his motion for reconsideration.
Arguments not refuted are deemed admitted. Charolais Breeding Ranches, Ltd. v. FPC
Secs. Corp., 90
¶11 Sobjeck does not explain how his exemption claim, even if
properly and timely made, could trump Peoples Bank’s security interest in the
accounts at the bank. At the time Peoples
Bank froze the assets, they were in the demand deposit account subject to the account
agreement between the parties; the assets were not in a retirement
account.
¶12 Finally, Sobjeck insists that it would be inequitable to allow Peoples Bank to enforce the deficiency judgment in this case. Sobjeck claims the delay in asserting the claim for a deficiency “induced him to maintain his account with Peoples State Bank, and to deposit the proceeds from his retirement account at the bank at a time when Randall Sobjeck needed access to the funds to pay necessary living expenses.” However, this argument ignores the equities of leaving Peoples Bank with a substantial deficiency and also Sobjeck’s failure to argue against the set-off until his motion for reconsideration. It was not inequitable for the circuit court to conclude that the mortgage note and account agreement permitted the requested set-off, especially where Sobjeck admitted the propriety of the set-off by failing to contest it.
By the Court.—Order affirmed.
This opinion will not be published. See Wis. Stat. Rule 809.23(1)(b)5.
[1] By order dated January 10, 2008, Debra K. Regan, special administrator of the estate of Randall S. Sobjeck, was substituted for Sobjeck as the defendant-appellant. We will refer to the defendant-appellant as “Sobjeck.”
[2] In his notice of appeal, Sobjeck purports to appeal from “the final decision entered on October 13, 2006.” The court filed an amended order on November 17, 2006. On November 20, 2006, Sobjeck filed a motion for reconsideration, which was not ruled on.
[3] References to Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2003-04 version unless otherwise noted.