LAURA TAYLOR SWAIN, District Judge.
Before the Court is a motion by Defendants JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A., JPMorgan Chase & Co., and Chase Home Finance, LLC (collectively, "Chase" or "Defendants"), to dismiss counts four through nine of the operative Third Amended Complaint (docket entry no. 67 ("TAC")). (
The following facts relevant to the disposition of the instant motion are drawn from the TAC and are assumed to be true for the purposes of this motion to dismiss.
Plaintiffs Mortgage Resolution Servicing, LLC ("MRS"), S&A Capital Partners, Inc. ("S&A"), and 1st Fidelity Loan Servicing, LLC ("1st Fidelity" and, collectively with MRS and S&A, "Plaintiffs"), are in the business of purchasing from financial institutions and servicing portfolios of nonperforming residential mortgage loans. (TAC ¶¶ 11-12.) All three companies are Florida corporations whose president is Laurence Schneider. (TAC ¶¶ 2-4.) S&A and Chase entered into a Master Mortgage Loan Sale Agreement (the "MMLSA") in approximately April 2005. (TAC ¶¶ 13-14.) S&A and 1st Fidelity bought loans from Chase pursuant to the MMLSA from 2005 through 2010. (TAC ¶¶ 14-17.)
In 2008, Eddie Guerrero, a Loss Recovery Supervisor at Chase, contacted Schneider to discuss Chase's interest in selling a portfolio of first-lien residential mortgage loans. (TAC ¶ 19.) Guerrero represented that this set of loans included mortgages on low-value properties in areas experiencing a significant housing crisis as well as some more valuable loans that had erroneously been charged off by Chase. (TAC ¶¶ 19-20.) Schneider provided Chase with an application to purchase the pool of loans. (TAC ¶ 21.)
In October 2008, Guerrero sent Schneider preliminary information on the loan portfolio, but the information was incomplete. (TAC ¶ 22.) A more complete spreadsheet (though one still missing some information) was sent to Schneider in November 2008. The November 2008 spreadsheet indicated that the portfolio included 5,785 first-lien mortgages with an aggregate balance of approximately $230 million. (TAC ¶ 24.) Chase represented that the reason for the missing information in the November spreadsheet was that Chase was still processing information it received during its acquisition of Washington Mutual, Inc. (TAC ¶ 26.)
In December 2008, Schneider told Guerrero that he would not make an offer to purchase the mortgage portfolio. (TAC ¶ 29.) In response, Guerrero offered to sell the portfolio for $200,000. (TAC ¶ 30.) Based on an analysis of the November data set, which included several loans Schneider believed to be valuable, Schneider agreed to purchase the portfolio for $200,000. (
On February 4, 2009, Chase sent Schneider a Mortgage Loan Purchase Agreement (the "MLPA"), which contract would govern the sale of the mortgage portfolio. (TAC ¶ 35.) The February 4 draft of the MLPA contained a placeholder for "Exhibit A", which was to list the mortgages being sold. (
The final version of the MLPA, signed by Chase and MRS, was sent to Schneider on February 25, 2009. (TAC ¶¶ 37-38.) The final MLPA provided for the sale of 3,529 mortgages with an aggregate balance of $156,324,399.24 (per the nomenclature used by the TAC, the "MRS Loans"). (TAC ¶ 38.) The TAC alleges that Chase included an additional $56 million in mortgages above Schneider's $100 million purchase offer, without requesting any additional consideration, was that Chase knew that the MRS Loans had been serviced in violation of state and federal law, and Chase was therefore transferring to MRS a significant set of liabilities. (TAC ¶¶ 40-41.) The TAC alleges that this represented a violation of the MLPA's representations and warranties, which provided that the mortgages complied with applicable laws. (TAC ¶¶ 41-43.) The TAC alleges that the allegedly false statements made by Chase prior to the signing of the MLPA represent both fraudulent inducement and negligent misrepresentation. (TAC ¶¶ 176-192.)
On February 25, 2009, after the MLPA had been fully executed, Chase sent Schneider the list of mortgages that was Exhibit A to the agreement. (TAC ¶ 46.) The version of Exhibit A Schneider received was missing significant data, however, including the outstanding balance of the loans and the addresses of the mortgaged properties. (TAC ¶ 46.) Chase represented to Schneider that the missing information was due to Chase's difficulty in converting information from Washington Mutual's system, as had been the case with the November 2008 data set. (TAC ¶ 47.) MRS was forced to spend its own resources to complete the information for the Exhibit A mortgages. (TAC ¶ 49.)
The TAC alleges that the list of mortgages contained in Exhibit A violated multiple provisions, representations, and warranties contained in the MLPA. As relevant to the instant motion to dismiss, the TAC alleges:
In addition to these allegations, which also form the basis of Plaintiffs' claims for conversion, tortious interference, and slander of title, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants and the debt collection and loan servicing agencies that Defendants used in connection with the forgiveness letters and lien releases, formed an enterprise within the meaning of the civil RICO statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c), whose purpose was to fraudulently represent to the government that Chase had fulfilled the terms of the NMS. (TAC ¶¶ 204-206.)
"To survive a motion to dismiss [under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6)], a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face."
Under New York law, which the parties agree applies to the state-law claims asserted in the TAC, tort "causes of action . . . based on the same facts as the cause of action to recover damages for breach of contract" should be dismissed as duplicative of the contract claim.
Defendants seek dismissal of the five claims that sound in tort (conversion, tortious interference, fraudulent inducement, negligent misrepresentation, and slander of title), arguing that they are improperly duplicative of the Plaintiffs' claim for breach of contract, and fail to state a claim. To avoid dismissal of their tort claims as duplicative, Plaintiffs must identify either a duty owed by the Defendants distinct from the contract, or tortious conduct "separate and apart" from Defendants' obligations under the MLPA.
The facts underlying the conversion, tortious interference, and slander of title claims are identical to those alleged in support of the breach of contract claim. In connection with the three claims, Plaintiffs allege only that Chase improperly wrote forgiveness letters and/or released liens relating to mortgages that had been sold to MRS. (
Plaintiffs' claim for conversion (count four) also fails to allege facts supporting an essential element of that claim under New York law. Conversion requires that a plaintiff "demonstrate legal ownership or an immediate superior right of possession to a specific identifiable thing."
Plaintiffs' claim for slander of title (count eight) also fails to allege facts supporting all of the necessary elements of that claim under New York law. Claims for slander of title require a particularized allegation of special damages: "the loss of something having economic or pecuniary value" that "must flow directly from the injury to reputation" caused by the slander.
As to Plaintiffs' claims for fraudulent inducement and negligent misrepresentation, however, Plaintiffs have sufficiently identified underlying facts separate and apart from those on which their breach of contract claims are based. Under New York law, a plaintiff may plead fraud claims alongside contract claims if they "allege misrepresentations of present fact, not merely misrepresentations of future intent to perform under the contract."
The federal RICO statute makes it unlawful "for any person employed by or associated with any enterprise ... to conduct or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise's affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity." 18 U.S.C.S. § 1962(c) (LexisNexis 2010);
The alleged RICO enterprise described in the TAC consists of "Defendants and their officers" allegedly working alongside "the various debt collection agencies that the Defendants utilized in connection with the loans sold to the Plaintiffs, the outside services involved in sending out the thousands of debt forgiveness letters to borrowers whose loans had been sold to Plaintiffs or other third parties, and the persons employed by other entities who assisted the Defendants in releasing liens on collateral that had been transferred to the Plaintiffs or other third parties." (TAC ¶ 204.) This allegation does not, however, suffice to identify a RICO enterprise; as described, these entities "are no more united in an enterprise than any vendor and its customers."
Plaintiffs have also failed to plead facts plausibly framing the requisite closed-or open-ended continuity of a RICO enterprise. By statute, a civil RICO plaintiff must allege a "pattern of racketeering activity." 18 U.S.C.S. §§ 1961(5), 1962(c). The Supreme Court has interpreted this requirement to mean that a civil RICO plaintiff demonstrate the continuity of the enterprise over time; if the continuity is closed-ended, the plaintiff must plead "a series of related predicates extending over a substantial period of time."
Here, the alleged goal of the enterprise was to falsely establish fulfillment of consumer relief obligations under settlements concluded with government authorities in 2012 and —. (TAC ¶ 210.) The mailing of loan forgiveness letters and release activity in aid of the alleged scheme occurred, according to Plaintiffs, in those same years. (TAC ¶¶ 212(h), (i).) Plaintiffs' allegations of fraudulent activity pre-dating the settlements have no non-speculative connection to the alleged settlement-related goal of the enterprise and therefore cannot function to demonstrate that the alleged RICO enterprise was in existence for a longer period of time. The 15-month period of settlement-related activity is insufficient to established closed-ended continuity.
Nor does the TAC allege facts sufficient to demonstrate the existence of an openended conspiracy. Plaintiffs' allegation that liens were released in — does not demonstrate the threat of ongoing activity in aid of the alleged scheme to falsify compliance with the consumer relief requirements of the settlements.
Plaintiffs have therefore failed to allege an enterprise, and the continuity of such an enterprise, as required to state a civil RICO claim, and count nine of the TAC is dismissed accordingly.
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants' motion to dismiss is denied with respect to counts six and seven of the TAC, and is granted with respect to counts four, five, eight, and nine is granted. Plaintiffs may move for leave to amend by
This Memorandum Opinion and Order resolves docket entry no. 76. The case remains referred to Magistrate Judge Francis for general pre-trial management.
SO ORDERED.