PER CURIAM:
Appellant Mattie Stephens appeals the district court's dismissal of her motion for declaratory judgment.
Stephens is a South Carolina homeowner who is currently delinquent on her mortgage payments. Appellee HSBC Mortgage Services, Inc. is the assignee of the lender's rights to Stephens's mortgage contract, and Appellee Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. holds a security interest as mortgagee and nominee for the lender.
Stephens alleges that due to financial distress, she has made only partial mortgage payments for approximately two years. She seeks a declaration that her mortgage contract is void ab initio because it includes an improper waiver of the appraisement rights granted by South Carolina Code § 29-3-680 to homeowners whose mortgages have been foreclosed and against whom a deficiency judgment has been sought. She also seeks to enjoin Appellees from foreclosing on her property or seeking a deficiency judgment pursuant to the allegedly void mortgage contract. Finally, Stephens seeks to represent a class of similarly situated South Carolina homeowners whose mortgage contracts include the allegedly improper waiver. Stephens does not contend that either Appellee has threatened or initiated foreclosure proceedings.
Stephens filed this action for declaratory and injunctive relief in South Carolina state court on January 25, 2013. On March 14, 2013, Appellees removed the case to the District of South Carolina. Appellees moved to dismiss Stephens's action for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction on March 21, 2013. The district court granted Appellees' motion to dismiss on June 24, 2013. Stephens timely appealed.
"We review de novo the issue of whether a district court possessed jurisdiction in a declaratory judgment proceeding."
The district court held that Stephens's cause of action was not ripe, and therefore not justiciable, because it is uncertain whether her right to appraisement will ever be asserted or challenged. The court found that because Stephens's ability to exercise her right was subject to multiple unpredictable future contingencies, a declaration would not be useful and the lack of a declaration would not impose any significant hardship on the parties.
Article III, § 2 of the United States Constitution limits our jurisdiction to cases and controversies. A claim satisfies the case or controversy requirement "if the `conflicting contentions of the parties ... present a real, substantial controversy between parties having adverse legal interests, a dispute definite and concrete, not hypothetical or abstract.'"
Stephens contends that her declaratory judgment action is ripe because all of the relevant facts are before the court, she has already been injured by the formation of the illegal clause in the contract, the parties have taken adverse positions on the enforceability of the contract, and the Appellees have a present right to foreclose on Stephens's property.
Stephens's arguments are unavailing. We have previously held that a challenge to a lender's ability to foreclose on a mortgage contract is not ripe when there has been "no attempt to foreclose."
Stephens cannot overcome the fact that no foreclosure has been threatened or initiated by the Appellees in this case. Like the plaintiff in
For the reasons stated above, the district court's dismissal of Stephens's action for declaratory relief is