MARSHA J. PECHMAN, District Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on Defendants' motion for summary judgment. (Dkt. No. 383.) Having reviewed the motion, the response (Dkt. No. 414), the reply (Dkt. No. 426), the surreply (Dkt. No. 431), and all related papers, and having heard oral argument on July 12, 2012, the Court DENIES the motion. The matter also comes before the Court on Defendants' three motions to exclude (Dkt. Nos. 406, 428, 435.) Having reviewed the motions, the responses (Dkt. Nos. 424, 439, 444), the replies (Dkt. Nos. 437, 442, 446), and all related papers, the Court DENIES all three motions. (Dkt. Nos. 406, 428, 435.)
Plaintiffs pursue claims under Section 11 of the Securities Act that Defendants made false and misleading statements in the offering documents of a series of mortgage-backed securities ("MBS") issued by Washington Mutual Bank ("WMB") and its two subsidiaries (collectively "WaMu"). The Court previously summarized the active allegations as follows:
(Dkt. No. 195 at 10.) Plaintiffs premise their claims on two statements in the offering documents: (1) that "[WMB's] underwriting guidelines generally are intended to evaluate the prospective borrower's credit standing and repayment ability and the value and adequacy of the mortgaged property as collateral"; and (2) that exceptions to WaMu's guidelines were made on a "case-by-case basis if compensating factors are present." (Dkt. No. 414 at 40.)
The Court reviews the facts Plaintiffs present to oppose Defendants' motion for summary judgment before addressing the facts Defendants claim entitle them to summary judgment.
Plaintiffs claim that WaMu not only lowered its underwriting guidelines, but also applied them in an uneven and improper manner that caused the offering documents' disclosures to be false or misleading.
Starting in at least, 2006 WaMu appeared to dramatically lower its underwriting guidelines in an effort to increase loan production. By May 2006, Cheryl Feltgen, the Chief Risk Officer for the Home Loans group, confirmed "[w]e are going through a dramatic shift in our credit approach in Home Loans and all across Washington Mutual." (Dkt. No. 415-2 at 154.) She proclaimed "[w]e are shifting from a `risk minimization' approach to `risk and return optimization.'" (
Key tools in WaMu's effort to increase loan sales were reduced documentation and stated-income/stated-asset ("SISA") loans, where the borrower's income and assets were not necessarily verified. In an email dated May 20, 2006, the Home Loans Chief of Credit Policy, Michelle Joans, laid bare the problem with SISA loans: "a stated income loan is nothing but a liar loan." (Dkt. No. 415-2 at 156.) She went on to explain that "[l]oan consultants and definitely brokers, coach a borrower on the income to use on the 1003" to fudge their actual income and/or assets. (
Plaintiffs assert the underwriters at WaMu had substantial authority to deviate from the already lowered underwriting guidelines, making them nearly advisory. Every underwriter at WaMu had "what they called a certain level of RLA, which is residential lending authority." (Brown Dep. at 119.) For example, an underwriter with "the highest level of exception authority could do just about any kind of kind of exception" although there were "very few people that had that kind of limit." (
The guidelines allowed exceptions to be granted where adequate compensating factors were present, and Plaintiffs criticize both the adequacy of those factors and the consistency in their application. Plaintiffs contend that no factors could compensate for the increased potential for fraud in SISA loans, where income and assets were not verified. They point out that Feltgen agreed the low documentation loans have higher risk for fraud, and that fraud cannot be priced for with compensating factors. (Feltgen Dep. at 96.) Without knowing whether the assets or income are reasonable or true, there is no way to accurately price the exceptions. (
Plaintiffs also highlight that some of WaMu's top loan producers were known to have engaged in fraud in violation of the underwriting guidelines and that this may have impacted the loans at issue. Two LFCs in California, Downey and Montebello, were the subject of a serious fraud inquiry in late 2005. Thomas Ramirez and Luis Fragosa led Downey and Montebello, and in 2005, Ramirez was WaMu's top loan consultant, and Fragosa the tenth highest, based on loan origination. (Pl. Ex. 52 at 086.) An August 2005 internal investigation revealed "an extremely high incidence of confirmed fraud" at these two LFCs, showing 58% for Ramirez and 83% for Fragosa. (Pl. Ex. 50 at 525.) This conclusion came from a review of 83 loans from Ramirez constituting $15 million, and 48 loans from Fragosa totaling $8.7 million. (
Plaintiffs attempt to confirm the systematic deviations from the guidelines by pointing to WaMu's internal assessment of the error rates in its loan portfolio. Plaintiffs rely heavily on the fact that as of July 2006, WaMu's internal risk assessment found 20.7% of loans had "medium" events, meaning that there was "collateral, credit and document errors considered non-critical in isolation but [which] have the potential to cause a material impact when combined with other risk factors." (Dkt. No. 415-2 at 1018 (Pl. Ex. 20).) By January 2007, 44.2% of all retail home loans were found to be less than satisfactory. (Dkt. No. 426 at 12.) And an internal review in February 2007 concluded that only 40 to 60 percent of loans were underwritten on a satisfactory basis. (Pl. Ex. 39 at 856.) Plaintiffs note that Hugh Boyle, the Chief Credit Officer through the middle of 2006, believed the lending error rates at WaMu were unacceptable during his tenure. Boyle testified "you should not have. . . more than a couple of percent error rate on underwriting . . . [a]nd when you are engaging in higher risk activities, the one thing you absolutely need to be confident in is that when you underwrite a higher risk loan it's being — underwriting [sic] consistent with policy and procedure." (Boyle Dep. at 139.) Boyle testified the error rates in 2006, whether medium or high, were "higher than where they should be, just period." (
Plaintiffs' underwriting and statistical experts, Ira Holt and Dr. Charles Cowan, buttress the above information, concluding the loans in the relevant offerings materially deviated from the underwriting guidelines. Dr. Cowan selected a purportedly random sample of 2,387 loans from the full pool of 13,425 loans in the six offerings and then passed them to Holt, who performed a full re-underwriting of 424 loans out of the 2,387. In his March 2, 2012, report, Holt found 37.1% of the 424 loans he reviewed were materially defective. (Dkt. No. 415-2 at 25, 76-77.) A "materially defective" loan is one that should not have been made based on the underwriting guidelines in place at the time of origination. (
Defendants present a far different view of the relevant facts of this case. First, they contend that the underwriting guidelines were created and disseminated in a clear manner to all underwriters. Underwriting usually began with an automated underwriting system that measured objective metrics to determine whether a loan could be sold. This, Defendants claim, limited the amount of manual underwriting and ensured consistency in the lending practices. Second, if any loans were given exceptions, the underwriters followed the guidelines to approve loans only where there were adequate compensating factors. This system, Defendants contend, was well disclosed in the offering documents. Third, the offering documents explained that WaMu sold SISA and other low-documentation loans, such that Plaintiffs cannot claim their inclusion in the MBS was misleading. Fourth, Defendants point out that many loans in 2006 were denied outright, and it cannot be said WaMu made loans to nearly any applicant. Fifth, Defendants point to internal risk analysis and outside oversight of the underwriting that they claim shows only slight numbers of deviations from the underwriting guidelines were material and that Plaintiffs misleadingly rely on errors that were not deemed material. Lastly, Defendants dispute the accuracy and validity of both Dr. Cowan's and Holt's expert opinions. Based on these arguments, Defendants ask the Court to find it impossible for Plaintiffs to sustain their claims the offering documents contained false and misleading statements.
Defendants also argue they have satisfied the affirmative defense of negative loss causation, which is an alternative basis on which to grant summary judgment. Defendants rely primarily on a statement from Plaintiffs' expert Scott Hakala, which they claim shows that the information about WaMu's purportedly defective underwriting was not made public until after Plaintiffs' first lawsuit was filed in August, 2008.
Defendants premise their summary judgment motion on both arguments.
In three separate motions, Defendants move exclude information relevant to their summary judgment motion. Because the motions bear on the Court's decision on summary judgment, the Court first resolves the motions to exclude. First, Defendants ask the Court to exclude the reports of Holt and Dr. Cowan on the theory they have employed a flawed methodology rendering their opinions unreliable. (Dkt. No. 406.) Second, Defendants ask the Court to exclude two declarations from Holt and Dr. Cowan that were submitted in Plaintiffs' opposition to the
The Court finds no basis on which to exclude either Holt's or Dr. Cowan's reports.
With regard to experts, the Court acts as a gatekeeper. An expert qualified by "knowledge, skill, experience, training or education may testify" so long as:
Fed. R. Evid. 702. The court must assess the reliability of the methods employed and determine whether the testimony would aid the trier of fact.
Defendants attack Dr. Cowan's selection of the 2,387 loans as not being properly random. Defendants do not argue that systematic sampling, which Dr. Cowan used, is unaccepted or junk science. Rather, they point out that Dr. Cowan's application of the method led to the exclusion of some loans from ever being part of his potential sample. Defendants calculate that roughly 11% of the overall pool of loans had no possibility of being included in Dr. Cowan's sample, and that the selection of 2,387 loans was biased. Dr. Cowan admits that he did exclude some loans, but that he did so out of a choice between two tradeoffs. He claims his chosen method avoided counting duplicates and Defendants have not shown any bias in his sample. The Court does not find it proper to exclude Dr. Cowan's report. Defendants have not shown that the creation of the random sample of 2,387 is biased or that the statistical method employed by Dr. Cowan is unacceptable. The Court is not convinced that the flaws Defendants claim render Dr. Cowan's expert opinion unreliable to the point it must be excluded. This is not a case where the analytical gap is simply too great between the data and the opinion offered.
Defendants also take issue with how Dr. Cowan selected the 424 loans for Holt to review. That sample was selected from a pool of only 2,387 loans across 303 strata. Dr. Cowan has explained that the distribution of loans fairly reflects the overall loan population, and that he weighted the results of Holt's re-underwriting in order to correct for bias. (Dkt. No. 425-2 at 16.) The Court cannot discern any defect in the method Dr. Cowan employed to render his opinion unreliable. Again, it is up to the jury to determine whether there is some reason to distrust his opinion.
The Court is also unconvinced that Holt's report should be excluded. Defendants argue that Holt improperly applied WaMu's underwriting guidelines in his efforts to re-underwrite the 424 loans. Defendants have raised some question as to whether Holt properly applied each of the guidelines. But this hardly requires exclusion of his report, particularly where both sides seem to agree that application of the underwriting guidelines requires some discretionary decision-making. It is up to a jury to determine whether the purported flaws in Holt's analysis renders his opinion unworthy of merit. The Court DENIES the motion. (Dkt. No. 404.)
Defendants move to exclude the declarations of Holt and Dr. Cowan submitted in opposition to the
Rule 26(a)(2) requires an expert to disclose a "complete statement of all opinions the witness will express and the basis and reasons for them." Section 26(a)(2)(B) "contemplates that the expert will supplement, elaborate upon, explain and subject himself to cross-examination upon his report."
The Court finds the use of the declarations to respond to the
To the extent Holt has reviewed yet more loans and offered his view on whether they materially comply with the underwriting guidelines, the Court finds this to be an untimely supplementation of his expert report. The Court agrees with Defendants that Holt's continued re-underwriting is the equivalent of offering new opinions, not just an amplification of his early conclusion. His review of each loan and conclusion as to whether it complied with the underwriting guidelines requires him to make a new expert opinion as to each loan. The supplemental report, however, is not properly excluded. Defendants and Plaintiffs unilaterally altered the case schedule without leave of Court to engage in depositions of experts well after the deadline. Defendants have thus mooted their own claim of prejudice or harm, as they can depose Holt on the question of his supplemental report. The Court finds no basis to exclude this portion of Holt's declaration.
The Court thus DENIES the motion to exclude in full. (Dkt. No. 435.)
Defendants seek to exclude 206 witnesses they claim were untimely disclosed. Of the 206 individuals, Plaintiffs ask only to use six at trial: Michelle Joans, Timothy Bates, Teresa Bondurant, Karen Fridley, Denise Luedtke, and Diana Jeanty. (Dkt. No. 439 at 5.)
Rule 26(a) requires the parties to disclose the identity of individuals likely to be used to support claims or defenses. Rule 26(e) requires a party to supplement these initial disclosures if it "learns that in some material respect the information disclosed is incomplete or correct and if the additional and corrective information has not otherwise been made known to the other parties during the discovery process or in writing." If a party fails to timely supplement the disclosures, the party is not allowed to use the witnesses at trial unless it can show that the failure was substantially justified or is harmless. Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(c)(1).
First, the Court agrees with Plaintiffs that Defendants were aware of Joans and Bates as possible witnesses well in advance of Plaintiffs' disclosure. Both were senior corporate officers known to Defendants Beck and Schneider, and their knowledge about the matters of this case are well known to Defendants. Their inclusion in Plaintiffs' case is no surprise and the Court finds no basis to exclude them. Second, the Court finds the disclosure of Jeanty, Luedtke, Bondurant, and Fridley to have been timely. Plaintiffs explain that they learned of these witnesses through diligent review of the volumes of documents Defendants produced and through the use of a private investigator. The Court finds this evidence of diligence sufficient to show the disclosure was timely. To remedy any harm of which Defendants complain, the Court grants Defendants leave to depose the four individuals should they feel compelled. Any deposition must be completed within 20 days of entry of this order. The Court does not find it necessary to await the results of those depositions to rule on Defendants' motion for summary judgment. Defendants have provided substantial countervailing facts and the outcome of the summary judgment is not dependent on Luedtke and Jeanty. The Court DENIES the motion. Given Plaintiffs' assertion that none of the remaining 200 witnesses will be called, the Court finds the remainder of Defendants' motion moot.
The Court shall grant summary judgment if no genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). The moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law when the nonmoving party fails to make a sufficient showing on an essential element of a claim in the case on which the nonmoving party has the burden of proof.
Both parties ask the Court to strike certain declarations filed in relation to the motion for summary judgment. The Court GRANTS Plaintiffs' request and DENIES Defendants'.
In a surreply, Plaintiffs ask the Court to strike a declaration from one of Defendants' attorneys who claims to have divined exactly how many loans in the offerings were originated at Downey and Montebello. Plaintiffs point out that Beck testified the loans could not be tracked to specific loan centers, and Defendants' attorney has not fully contradicted that fact. The Court agrees with Plaintiffs that the declaration relies on a certain amount of speculation and is not properly accepted as a conclusive fact on this issue. The Court thus STRIKES the portion of the declaration that claims a definitive number of loans were originated at these two LFCs. The exact number of loans within the offerings that came from Downey and Montebello remains in dispute.
Defendants ask the Court to strike the Permanent Subcommittee of Investigations' Report (PSI Report) conducted on "Wall Street and the Financial Collapse." The report is presumed to be admissible under FRE 803(8)(A)(iii), as the PSI is a report containing factual findings from a legally authorized investigation. Defendants thus bear the burden to prove the source of information or other circumstances shows it to be untrustworthy. Fed. R. Evid. 803(8)(B). Defendants suggest that because the report is politicized, it is inherently untrustworthy. The Court does not find this argument adequate to sustain the motion. Defendants have not pointed to anything specific to this report that suggests it is untrustworthy. The Court DENIES this request to strike.
The Court finds it inappropriate to grant summary judgment in favor of Defendants where the facts remain hotly contested as to whether the offering documents contain false or misleading statements about the underwriting guidelines at WaMu.
As an initial matter, the Court clarifies the burden Plaintiffs face to prove their claim. Defendants repeatedly contend Plaintiffs have to show the underwriting guidelines ceased to exist in order to prevail in this case. This is an inaccurate reading of the Court's previous ruling. The Court has held that only Plaintiffs need show that Defendants "mask[ed] the extent to which the sponsor's underwriting guidelines were disregarded." (Dkt. No. 195 at 10.)) The Court distilled the allegations in the complaint as essentially alleging "the underwriting guidelines ceased to exist." (
Plaintiffs have successfully raised a dispute of fact as to whether WaMu systematically deviated from its underwriting guidelines so as to render the statements in the offering documents false or misleading. While some of the practices were disclosed in the offering documents, there is a sufficient dispute as to whether those disclosures were adequate. The starting point of Plaintiffs § 11 claim is that WaMu's loosened its underwriting guidelines and granted underwriters greater authority to deviate from the guidelines in a manner that far exceeded any disclosures. Pressured to approve more loans, underwriters used their increased authority to grant exceptions based on their subjective review of a loan application. Exceptions to the objective underwriting metrics appear to have become the norm. At the same time, WaMu sold far more SISA and low-documentations loans, for which adequate pricing of exceptions could not be performed, as Feltgen herself confirmed. WaMu's biggest loan producers were known to be engaged in fraud and material deviations in underwriting, and yet it appears WaMu executives looked the other way. Luedtke, Jeanty and Melby confirm this trend existed outside of the Montebello and Downey. Plaintiffs further point out that WaMu's internal risk management concluded there were substantial deviations in loan quality that far exceeded the benchmarks. Hugh Boyle testified the rates were "higher than where they should be, just period." (Boyle Dep. at 139.) Whether the internal error rate showed material deviations in underwriting or not turns on a dispute of material fact that cannot be resolved at summary judgment. Plaintiffs' expert reports finding that 37.1% of the loans sampled suffered from material defects seems to support WaMu's internal reports showing substantial deviations in underwriting. The facts Plaintiffs present are sufficient to sustain the § 11 claims, and, as explained below, Defendants contrary arguments do not entitle them to summary judgment.
Defendants urge the Court to find the disclosures in the offering documents preclude Plaintiffs' claims. The Court is not persuaded, and finds the disclosures merely highlight the dispute of fact between the parties. Defendants point out the offering documents disclosed that WaMu used reduced documentation loans where the borrower's income and assets "either are not required to be obtained or are obtained but not verified." The offering documents even disclosed the FICO scores and other details about the individual loans. (Dkt. No. 426 at 14.) These facts preclude Plaintiffs from arguing that SISA loans alone are evidence the disclosures about WaMu's underwriting guidelines were misleading or false. Yet, Plaintiffs claim is not so narrowly premised. Plaintiffs claim the use of the SISA loan allowed WaMu to deviate from its underwriting guidelines in a material way that led to the offering documents' disclosures to be false or misleading, particularly since any price-based exceptions were inadequate to cover the fraud inherent in SISA loans. Even Feltgen has agreed that the inherent fraud in those loans could not have been priced for with compensating factors. (Feltgen Dep. at 96.) Plaintiffs have also shown a dispute of fact as to whether the disclosures regarding exceptions were accurately reported to investors. And Plaintiffs have shown that exceptions were granted for reasons other than those disclosed in the offering documents. The Court finds that these disclosures do not foreclose Plaintiffs' § 11 claims.
Defendants wrongly suggest that WaMu's internal risk management reviews cannot possibly show violations of the underwriting guidelines. Plaintiffs provide evidence that internal reviews throughout 2006 showed high rates of deviation from the underwriting guidelines. While WaMu did not deem many loans to have material defects, that judgment was subjective. Plaintiffs are not precluded from arguing the WaMu internal reviews show substantial deviations from the underwriting guidelines. Indeed, Boyle, the Chief Credit Officer, found these numbers objectively too high and well beyond the benchmarks. Plaintiffs have also pointed to evidence that the assignment of these ratings was hotly disputed within WaMu, with underwriters and loan consultants taking pains to have "high" events re-categorized as "medium." Defendants have thus not shown why Plaintiffs cannot rely on this evidence.
Defendants' attack to the evidence of fraud does not convince the Court it is irrelevant. First, Defendants indulge themselves by arguing that because the offering documents revealed the loans were issued with reduced documentation "the inherent risk of borrower fraud was known." (Dkt. No. 426 at 17.) That is a stretch and accepting the argument would require the Court to incorrectly construe the facts in Defendants' favor. For example, the disclosures did not necessarily explain that WaMu knew its top loan consultants were engaged in fraud and material deviations from the underwriting guidelines. Second, Defendants argue Plaintiffs have not shown any specific evidence there was actual fraud in any of the loans backing the MBS at issue. That question remains to be presented at trial, and Plaintiffs have provided sufficient facts supporting their contrary view. Third, Defendants also take issue with internal finding of fraud at Montebello and Downey, arguing that the sample of loans reviewed was too small to make any grand conclusion. That is not something that negates the overall finding that Montebello and Downey were operating in derogation of the underwriting guidelines and it raises yet one more issue for a jury to sort out. At best Defendants have presented conflicting evidence about whether fraud existed at WaMu and whether it affected the loans at issue in the offerings.
Defendants argue that because Luedkte and Jeanty were "low-level" employees, their testimony is not enough to raise a genuine issue of material fact. This is speculative and not a basis for their exclusion. Both worked as underwriters and were aware of and reported large deviations from the underwriting guidelines. This is probative evidence that joins the other anecdotal evidence Plaintiffs have put together to sustain their claim. The unpublished Ninth Circuit case Defendants rely on is also distinguishable, given that the low-level employee's statements were contradicted by undisputed facts showing the board members relied on statements from senior engineering personnel.
The facts Defendants separately marshal also do not preclude Plaintiffs' claims. Defendants point to five facts they claim preclude Plaintiff's claims: (1) WaMu denied a substantial number of loans outright; (2) the automotive underwriting system had programmed requirements from which deviations could not be made; (3) underwriters were trained and only received incentive income if they met quality thresholds; (4) the procedures for exceptions were "clearly delineated" and underwriters had "defined levels of Exception Authority," and (5) the Capital Group re-underwrote the loans in the MBS and found only three percent outside the underwriting guidelines. These are merely countervailing facts that a jury might consider in reaching a verdict in Defendants' favor. They do not negate the extensive evidence Plaintiffs present. The Court cannot grant summary judgment based largely on Defendants' self-serving facts.
Taking the facts in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, the court finds a dispute of material fact as to Plaintiffs' § 11 claim. The Court DENIES the motion.
The Court does not find it proper to grant summary judgment on Defendants' affirmative defense of loss causation.
In order to state a securities fraud claim, a plaintiff must allege that there was "loss causation," which is "a causal connection between the material [omission] and the loss."
Defendants claim they have met their burden "based on Plaintiffs' and their expert's admissions about the lack of information in the marketplace regarding WMB's alleged deficient underwriting." (Dkt. No. 426 at 26.) This is neither accurate nor sufficient to obtain relief. Plaintiffs' expert has not admitted that there was no information released to the public prior to the filing of the first complaint in August 2008 about WaMu's purported defective underwriting. Defendants quote the following portion of Dr. Scott Hakala's report filed in support of class certification: "[I]nformation regarding deficient underwriting practice specific to the prime, Alt-A mortgage loans representing the collateral in this case did not come to light until August 2008 through April 2010." (Def. Ex. 117 at ¶ 25.) This ignores the full paragraph from the report:
(
Defendants also argue that Plaintiffs cannot show loss causation because Plaintiffs' own witnesses testified to the losses being caused by other factors. (Def. Motion at 45.) This argument shows that the decline in the overall MBS market is potentially one of many proximate causes for the losses in the certificates at issue. It does not show that the disregard for the underwriting guidelines at WaMu was not also a cause of Plaintiffs' losses. The Court rejects this argument.
The Court DENIES Defendants' motion on the issue of loss causation.
The Court DENIES Defendants' motion for summary judgment. The facts, construed in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, are sharply disputed. The Court is not persuaded that Plaintiffs cannot prove their § 11 claim. Similarly, the Court does not find it proper to dismiss this case on the basis of a loss causation defense where the record on this issue is in dispute.
The Court DENIES Defendants' motion to exclude the reports of Holt and Dr. Cowan. Defendants have not raised questions as to these experts' reliability. It is up to jury to weigh the value of their opinions. The Court finds no basis to exclude the reports. The Court agrees that the supplemental report within Holt's declaration is untimely, but DENIES Defendants' motion to exclude because Defendants have given themselves an opportunity to depose Holt on this issue. The Court does not exclude the remainder of Holt's declaration or any of Dr. Cowan's and DENIES this portion of the motion. Lastly, the Court DENIES Defendants' motion to exclude the use of six witnesses that they claim were untimely disclosed. The Court accepts the six contested witnesses as timely disclosed, but permits Defendants to depose them within 20 days of this order.
The clerk is ordered to provide copies of this order to all counsel.