NEIL V. WAKE, District Judge.
The parties' recent filings have raised questions that should be addressed ahead of the final pretrial conference. Certain issues will require a status conference as soon as reasonably possible.
M&I's trial brief (Doc. 200) asks this Court to reconsider certain issues relating to damages. This is a motion for reconsideration, and it is forfeited because not filed within 14 days of the original ruling. LRCiv 7.2(g)(2). It will also be denied on its merits.
In the process of resolving Defendants' motion for judgment on the pleadings (in M&I's favor), the Court addressed certain issues related to credit bids. See M & I Bank, FSB v. Coughlin, 805 F.Supp.2d 858, 865-68 (D. Ariz. 2011). The Court explained, among other things, that
Id. at 868.
At summary judgment (granted in M&I's favor as to the liability of certain defendants), it became clear that M&I nonetheless continued to assert damages based on the difference between the outstanding indebtedness and the amount for which M&I resold the property after taking it through a credit bid at the trustee's sale. The Court therefore repeated the above-quoted passage and noted that M&I's damages "must be calculated with respect to its credit bid, not the resale price." (Doc. 163 at 14.)
In its recently submitted trial brief, M&I now asserts the this ruling "should be reconsidered." (Doc. 200 at 5.) Specifically, M&I believes that it should be able to hold non-borrowers liable for the outstanding indebtedness minus the resale value, irrespective of the credit bid. The following passages from the trial brief illustrate M&I's reasoning:
M&I's arguments display certain misconceptions. Credit bids are not fictions. Credit bids reflect economic reality. It is the secured lender's election to bid cash or credit at a trustee's sale, and a cash bid would create pointless round trip transactions. See M & I Bank, 805 F. Supp. 2d at 865. The secured creditor's credit bid is economically identical to any other bidder's cash in the same amount. A secured lender has the property and value in the amount the lender itself attributed to the property. M&I's request for reconsideration is in error and will be denied.
The joint proposed pretrial order (Doc. 199) is rejected. It raises various issues that are not suitable for jury determination. However, before requiring a new proposed pretrial order, the Court will hold a status conference to discuss various topics, including:
Court staff will contact counsel by e-mail shortly to establish a time at which such a status conference can be held.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the request for consideration in M&I's trial brief (Doc 200), treated as a motion for reconsideration, is DENIED.