After Pam Ragland lost her home through foreclosure, she sued defendants U.S. Bank National Association (U.S. Bank), the successor in interest to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as the receiver for Downey Savings and Loan Association (Downey Savings); DSL Service Company (DSL), the trustee under the deed of trust; and DSL's agent, FCI Lender Services, Inc. (FCI). (We refer to U.S. Bank, DSL, and FCI collectively as Defendants.) She asserted causes of action for negligent misrepresentation, fraud, breach of oral contract, violation of Civil Code section 2924g, subdivision (d) (section 2924g(d)), intentional and negligent infliction of
The FDIC took control of Downey Savings in November 2008 and later assigned its assets, including Ragland's loan, to U.S. Bank. For the sake of clarity, we continue to use the name "Downey Savings" up through December 17, 2008, the date of the foreclosure sale.
In June 2002, Ragland refinanced her home mortgage through Downey Savings. She obtained the refinance loan through a mortgage broker. The loan was an adjustable rate mortgage with an initial yearly interest rate of 2.95 percent, and the initial monthly payment was $1,241.03.
Ragland thought that Downey Savings had offered her a fixed rate loan and claimed her mortgage broker forged her name on certain loan documents. In July 2002, she sent a letter to the escrow company, asserting her signature had been forged on the buyer's estimated closing statement and on the lender's escrow instructions, and, in September 2002, she notified Downey Savings of the claimed forgery. A handwriting expert opined that Ragland's signature had been forged on those two documents, and on a statement of assets and liabilities, an addendum to the loan application, a provider of service schedule, and an itemization of charges. By August 2002, Ragland had consulted two attorneys about the forged documents, one of whom wanted to file a class action lawsuit on her behalf, and the other of whom
By April 2008, the yearly interest rate on Ragland's loan had increased to 7.022 percent and her monthly payment had increased to over $2,600. On April 13, Ragland spoke with a Downey Savings representative named John about modifying her loan. John told Ragland her loan was not "behind" but he would work with her to modify it. He told Ragland not to make the April 2008 loan payment because "the worst thing that's going to happen is you are going to have a late fee, we will get this done for you." When Ragland asked if there was a chance the loan modification would not "go through," John replied, "usually not, you are pre-qualified."
John told Ragland a $1,000 fee would be charged to modify the loan, and Downey Savings would not waive that fee. She replied that Downey Savings should waive the fee because her "loan was forged and nothing was done about it." John said he would check with his supervisor about waiving the fee.
John did not call back, and on April 16, 2008, the last day to make a timely loan payment for April, Ragland, who was nervous about a late payment, called him. John told her nothing could be done about the loan, so she asked to speak to his supervisor. The supervisor told Ragland, "[i]f you have one document in your packet that's forged, you may not be responsible for anything in your loan, at all, you may not have to even pay your loan." When Ragland said she had 13 to 15 forged documents, the supervisor checked her record and told her, "I can see that you reported ... this to us. We are going to have to put it in legal." The supervisor told Ragland that Downey Savings could not collect from her while its legal department investigated the forgery. Ragland had planned to make her April 2008 loan payment but, based on what John and the supervisor told her, manually cancelled the automatic payment from her checking account.
In late April 2008, Downey Savings sent Ragland a notice that her loan payment was delinquent. On April 29, 2008, Ragland spoke with Downey Savings representatives named Joseph and Claudia and made notes on the delinquency notice of her conversations with them. Ragland noted that Claudia or Joseph told her: "Can't do modi[fication] while investigat[e]
No one from Downey Savings further discussed a loan modification with Ragland or requested financial information from her. Ragland testified in her deposition, "once it went into legal, that was it. It was like the legal black hole."
In May 2008, a withdrawal was made from Ragland's checking account and transmitted to Downey Savings as the May 2008 loan payment. Downey Savings refused to accept the payment.
On May 5, 2008, Downey Savings sent Ragland a letter entitled "Notice of Intent to Foreclose" (some capitalization omitted). According to the letter, the amount required to reinstate the loan was $5,487.80. On May 9, Ragland called Downey Savings in response to this letter. Her notes for this conversation indicate she spoke with "Reb," who transferred her to "Jasmine," who transferred her to "Lilia," who said the loan was in Downey Savings's legal department and "they[']ll C/B."
Nobody from Downey Savings called Ragland back. In early July 2008, Ragland received a letter from Downey Savings's collection department, informing her that foreclosure proceedings on her home had begun. On July 15, Ragland had a telephone conversation with each of three Downey Savings representatives, identified in her notes of the conversations as Eric, Gail, and Leanna. Ragland spoke first with Eric, who told her the account was in foreclosure and transferred her to the foreclosure department. Ragland next spoke with Gail, who said she could not speak to her because the account was in foreclosure. Gail transferred Ragland to Leanna. Leanna told Ragland that the legal department failed to put a red flag in the computer to indicate the loan was being investigated and that the loan should never have been placed in foreclosure. Leanna told Ragland that Downey Savings was "waiting for legal," and Ragland's attorney needed to "write the letter to legal and ask them ... for a status update on the investigation, and that we had time, because it had just been referred in June and the sale wasn't set for quite a while." Ragland's notes from the conversation include, "[f]oreclosure on hold."
On July 18, 2008, Downey Savings instructed DSL, the trustee under the deed of trust, to initiate foreclosure proceedings on Ragland's home. DSL assigned its agent, FCI, to take the actions necessary to foreclose the deed of trust on Ragland's home.
Ragland attempted to make payments on her loan in September, October, and November 2008 through transfers from her checking account. Downey Savings rejected the payments.
On October 30, 2008, FCI recorded a notice of trustee's sale, stating the foreclosure sale of Ragland's home would be held on November 20. Ragland filed this lawsuit against Downey Savings on November 7, 2008. Several days later, Ragland's attorney, Dean R. Kitano, spoke with general counsel for Downey Savings, Richard Swinney, about Ragland's allegations of fraud and forgery in connection with the origination of her loan. Swinney agreed to postpone the foreclosure sale until December 9, 2008.
By letter dated November 12, 2008, Swinney informed Kitano that until Downey Savings received certain documentation from Ragland, it would not consider modifying her loan. The letter stated that any loan modification would require that she bring the loan current and described as "not credible" Ragland's contention that a Downey Savings representative told her to skip a monthly payment. The forgery issue, according to the letter, "has no impact on this loan" because Ragland did not claim her signatures on the disclosure statement, note, or deed of trust were forged.
Later in November 2008, the Office of Thrift Supervision closed Downey Savings, and the FDIC was appointed as its receiver. U.S. Bank acquired the assets of Downey Savings from the FDIC. Ragland's loan was among those assets acquired by U.S. Bank.
On November 12, 2008, Ragland filed an ex parte application for a temporary restraining order to enjoin the foreclosure sale scheduled for
Following the ex parte hearing, Downey Savings provided Ragland a statement showing the amount necessary to reinstate her loan was $24,804.57, of which about $4,074 was for late charges, interest on arrears, property inspection and foreclosure costs. Kitano sent Downey Savings a letter, dated December 2, 2008, stating that "[c]urrently, my client is unable to pay the arrearage to make the loan current" and proposing that (1) $12,000 of the reinstatement amount be "tacked onto the back end of the loan" and (2) Downey Savings forgive the remaining amount.
In advance of the hearing on Ragland's motion for a preliminary injunction, the trial court issued a tentative decision that stated, in part: "The court's order of November 26, 2008, conditions the TRO [(temporary restraining order)] on plaintiff's bringing her payments current as of November 26, 20[08] by no later than December 16, 2008. According to defendant, t[he] amount necessary to bring the loan current is $24,804.57. Plaintiff does not dispute that she owes regular monthly mortgag[e] payments on the loan, and therefore whether or not she is likely to prevail on the merits is not at issue insofar as her responsibilit[ies] to bring the loan payments current [are] concerned. If plaintiff fails to bring her payments current by the hearing date, there is no reason to issue a preliminary injunction, since the injunction would serve no purpose but to prolong the inevitable to no good purpose.... [¶] If plaintiff does bring her payments current by the hearing date, then there is no basis for a foreclosure sale because the arrears would have been cured. Hence there would seem to be no need for the issuance of a preliminary injunction under such circumstances."
Ragland did not pay the amount demanded by Downey Savings to reinstate the loan by December 16, 2008. She had sufficient funds to make the backpayments due under the note, but not to pay the additional fees.
On December 16, 2008, the trial court denied Ragland's motion for a preliminary injunction, and the foreclosure sale was conducted the next day. Ragland's home was sold at the sale for $375,000.
Ragland's third amended complaint asserted causes of action against U.S. Bank for negligent misrepresentation, breach of oral contract, and fraud, and
In December 2010, Defendants moved for summary judgment and, in the alternative, for summary adjudication of each cause of action. In May 2011, the trial court granted the motion for summary judgment on the ground Ragland could not pay the full amount demanded by Downey Savings to reinstate her loan. The trial court ruled: "A valid and viable tender of payment of the indebtedness owing is essential to an action to cancel a voidable sale under a deed of trust.... [Citation.] [¶] This rule ... is based upon the equitable maxim that a court of equity will not order a useless act performed ... if plaintiffs could not have redeemed the property had the sale procedures been proper, any irregularities in the sale did not result in damages to the plaintiffs. [¶] [Citation.] [¶] The defendants have shown that all of plaintiff's damages under each cause of action were suffered as a result of the foreclosure sale of her property.... Plaintiff alleges that the foreclosure sale occurred six days too early in violation of Civil Code § 2924g. Even if this were true, plaintiff's damages are not recoverable because plaintiff was incapable of reinstating her loan.... This was made clear by plaintiff's counsel in his letter to Downey Savings' counsel two weeks before the foreclosure sale (December 2, 2008). Plaintiff's counsel stated that `... my client is unable to pay the arrearage to make the loan current....'... Plaintiff's failure to reinstate the loan by the December 16, 2008 preliminary injunction hearing confirmed as much, and plaintiff also admitted this in her deposition."
As to the contention that Ragland could have made the past due loan payments but not the added fees, the trial court ruled: "Plaintiff claims that she indicated in her deposition that she had the money to make up the back payments, but not enough money to also make up the fees. Plaintiff's Separate Statement, page 6, lines 16-18. The referenced deposition testimony amounts to a claim that plaintiff had only part of the money necessary to reinstate the loan." The court also rejected the contention that Ragland was prepared to file bankruptcy to delay the foreclosure sale, stating, "[t]his is a further admission that plaintiff was incapable of reinstating her loan even if the foreclosure sale had been delayed an additional six days."
Ragland timely filed a notice of appeal from the judgment entered in Defendants' favor.
Ragland requests that we take judicial notice of 18 discrete facts concerning the financial condition of Downey Savings from 2005 to the time of its acquisition by U.S. Bank, the nature of Downey Savings's assets in that timeframe, the resale of Ragland's home, and the condition of the Orange County housing market. She argues those 18 facts are relevant to show "when Downey Savings' disastrous financial condition beg[a]n showing in late 2007, and bec[ame] clear by April, 2008, Downey's desperate need for cash explains its unusual behavior." She concedes, "[t]he matters concerning which judicial notice is requested were not presented to the trial court." We deny the request for judicial notice.
In addition, Ragland has not shown exceptional circumstances justifying judicial notice of facts that were not part of the record when the judgment was entered. (Vons Companies, Inc. v. Seabest Foods, Inc. (1996) 14 Cal.4th 434, 444, fn. 3 [58 Cal.Rptr.2d 899, 926 P.2d 1085]; Duronslet v. Kamps (2012) 203 Cal.App.4th 717, 737 [137 Cal.Rptr.3d 756].)
Defendants move to strike (1) six passages from Ragland's opening brief that are supported by citations to the exhibits attached to the request for judicial notice or by citations to Web sites outside the record on appeal, and (2) three passages accusing Downey Savings of trying to swindle Ragland to generate cash.
We have denied Ragland's request for judicial notice; we therefore decline to consider those passages of the appellant's opening brief, noted in the margin, which are supported solely by citations to exhibits attached to that request or to Web sites outside the appellate record.
"A trial court properly grants summary judgment where no triable issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. [Citation.] We review the trial court's decision de novo, considering all of the evidence the parties offered in connection with the motion (except that which the court properly excluded) and the uncontradicted inferences the evidence reasonably supports. [Citation.]" (Merrill v. Navegar, Inc. (2001) 26 Cal.4th 465, 476 [110 Cal.Rptr.2d 370, 28 P.3d 116].) We liberally construe the evidence in support of the party opposing summary judgment and resolve all doubts about the evidence in that party's favor. (Hughes v. Pair (2009) 46 Cal.4th 1035, 1039 [95 Cal.Rptr.3d 636, 209 P.3d 963].)
In the first cause of action, for negligent misrepresentation, Ragland alleged: "On or about April 29, 2008, Downey [Savings] represented to Plaintiff that Downey [Savings] could modify Plaintiff's current loan during the time that the legal department was investigating the fraud allegation on Plaintiff's loan. However, in order to do a modification of Plaintiff's loan, Plaintiff would have to be in arrears on her current loan. Downey[Savings]'s representative then told Plaintiff not to pay April's mortgage payment. Upon ... Downey[Savings]'s representations Plaintiff did not pay April's mortgage payment. Thereafter, Downey [Savings] informed Plaintiff that Downey [Savings] could not accept any further mortgage payments from Plaintiff until the legal department investigated the alleged fraud on the initial mortgage."
In opposition to Defendants' motion for summary judgment, Ragland presented evidence that John or his supervisor represented (1) her loan was not "behind" but he would work with her to modify the loan; (2) she should
Ragland presented evidence that in reliance on the representations made by John or his supervisor, she did not make her April 2008 loan payment. Defendants assert Ragland was already in default when she first spoke with John on April 13, 2008, because she failed to make her payment due April 1, 2008. The note stated Ragland's monthly payment was due on the first day of each month, but that the monthly payment would be deemed timely if paid by the end of the 15th day after the due date. In addition, Ragland presented evidence that John told her on April 13, 2008, she was not "behind" but he would work with her to modify the loan. The payments made by Ragland for September and October 2008, which were rejected by Downey Savings, were dated the 16th of the month, and the rejected payment for November 2008 was dated the 14th. At the very least, there is a triable issue of fact whether Ragland was in default when she spoke with John on April 13.
Defendants argue Ragland did not rely on the misrepresentations because she tried to make her loan payments in May, September, October, and November 2008. Ragland made her loan payment by automatic transfer from her checking account. She manually prevented or undid the automatic payments for April, June, July, and August 2008. As Ragland argues in her reply brief, an inference could be drawn that she inadvertently did not stop the May 2008 payment. We draw all reasonable inference in favor of the party against whom the summary judgment motion was made. (Crouse v. Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison (1998) 67 Cal.App.4th 1509, 1520 [80 Cal.Rptr.2d 94].)
Defendants argue Ragland's reliance was not justified because she was told her loan was in the foreclosure department and nobody at Downey Savings ever told her she could stop making loan payments. The evidence presented by Ragland created a triable issue of fact whether her reliance was justified. On April 29, 2008, Ragland spoke with Joseph and Claudia at Downey Savings, and they told her Downey Savings was initiating an investigation of her forgery claim; during the investigation, Downey Savings would not accept loan payments; and collection activity was frozen. In May 2008, on receiving a letter stating her loan was in foreclosure, Ragland called Downey
Defendants point to the December 2, 2008 letter from Ragland's attorney as undermining her claim she could make the past due monthly loan payments. In that letter, the attorney stated that Ragland could not pay the full amount required to bring the loan current and proposed $12,000 of the reinstatement amount be "tacked onto the back end of the loan." Defendants ask, if Ragland could have made all of the past due monthly loan payments, why did she not offer to pay them? The question is rhetorical: If she had offered to pay the past due monthly loan payments, Downey Savings certainly would have rejected the offer, just as now Defendants vigorously argue a tender must be unconditional and offer payment of additional fees.
Defendants argue Ragland's declaration is inconsistent with her deposition testimony because, in her deposition, Ragland could not identify precisely the people from whom she asked to borrow money to make the past due monthly loan payments. Her declaration is consistent with her deposition testimony. Ragland testified, under oath, in her deposition that as of the date of the foreclosure sale, she "could have covered the back payments but not the
In her second cause of action, for breach of oral contract, Ragland alleged Downey Savings breached its promise to investigate her allegations of forgery. On appeal, she does not attempt to support a claim of breach of oral contract and argues instead, "[t]he second cause of action for breach of oral promise to investigate should have been labeled as a cause of action for promissory estoppel." While conceding the second cause of action does not include the required allegation of detrimental reliance (Kajima/Ray Wilson v. Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (2000) 23 Cal.4th 305, 310 [96 Cal.Rptr.2d 747, 1 P.3d 63]), she argues a detrimental reliance allegation may be extrapolated from the fraud cause of action.
The second cause of action did not incorporate by reference the allegations of the fraud cause of action. Ragland argues we must ignore labels, but however labeled, the second cause of action does not allege promissory estoppel. On remand, Ragland may seek leave to amend her complaint to allege a promissory estoppel cause of action.
In the third cause of action, for fraud, Ragland alleged Downey Savings "falsely and fraudulently" made the representations alleged in the negligent misrepresentation cause of action.
Defendants argue U.S. Bank was entitled to summary adjudication of the fraud cause of action because no evidence was presented of "a misrepresentation, reliance or damages." As explained in part I. of the Discussion on negligent misrepresentation, Ragland presented evidence in opposition to the motion for summary judgment that was sufficient to create triable issues as to misrepresentation, reliance, and damages.
Defendants do not argue lack of evidence of elements two (knowledge of falsity) and three (intent to deceive) and did not seek summary adjudication of the fraud cause of action on the ground of lack of evidence of either of those elements.
In the fourth cause of action, Ragland alleged Defendants violated section 2924g(d) by selling her home one day after the expiration of the temporary restraining order.
Section 2924g(d) reads, in relevant part: "The notice of each postponement and the reason therefor shall be given by public declaration by the trustee at the time and place last appointed for sale. A public declaration of postponement shall also set forth the new date, time, and place of sale and the place of sale shall be the same place as originally fixed by the trustee for the sale. No other notice of postponement need be given. However, the sale shall be conducted no sooner than on the seventh day after the earlier of (1) dismissal of the action or (2) expiration or termination of the injunction, restraining order, or stay that required postponement of the sale, whether by entry of an
On November 26, 2008, the trial court issued an order stating: "Plaintiff shall be entitled to a temporary restraining order enjoining the foreclosure sale on December 9, 2008; upon bringing the loan current by Dec[ember] 16. Current is as of Nov[ember] 26, 2008." The foreclosure sale was conducted on December 17, 2008.
In Mabry, supra, 185 Cal.App.4th at page 214, our colleagues concluded Civil Code section 2923.5 may be enforced by private right of action. Section 2923.5 requires a lender to contact the borrower in person or by telephone before a notice of default may be filed to "`assess'" the borrower's financial situation and "`explore'" options to prevent foreclosure. (Mabry, supra, at pp. 213-214.) Section 2923.5, though not expressly creating a private right of action, impliedly created one because there was no administrative mechanism to enforce the statute, a private remedy furthered the purpose of the statute and was necessary for it to be effective, and California courts do not favor constructions of statutes that render them advisory only. (Mabry, supra, at p. 218.)
There is no administrative mechanism to enforce section 2924g(d), and a private remedy is necessary to make it effective. While the Attorney General might be responsible for collective enforcement of section 2924g(d), "the Attorney General's office can hardly be expected to take up the cause of every individual borrower whose diverse circumstances show noncompliance with section [2924g(d)]." (Mabry, supra, 185 Cal.App.4th at p. 224.)
The Mabry court also concluded Civil Code section 2923.5 was not preempted by federal law because the statute was part of the foreclosure process, traditionally a matter of state law. Regulations promulgated by the
Defendants argue the foreclosure sale did not violate section 2924g(d) on the ground the trial court's November 26, 2008 order was not a temporary restraining order because it conditioned injunctive relief on Ragland bringing her loan current by December 16, 2008. That condition was not met, and, therefore, Defendants argue, a temporary restraining order was never issued.
We disagree with Defendants' interpretation of the November 26 order. The foreclosure sale had been scheduled for December 9, 2008. The November 26 order was for all intents and purposes a temporary restraining order subject to section 2924g(d) because the effect of that order was to require postponement of the sale at least to December 16, 2008. The requirement that Ragland bring the loan current by that date was not a condition precedent to a temporary restraining order, which in effect had been issued, but a condition subsequent, the failure of which to satisfy would terminate injunctive relief.
Defendants argue they were entitled nonetheless to summary adjudication of the fourth cause of action because Ragland could not have brought her loan current within seven days of December 16, 2008. Although Ragland submitted evidence that she could pay back amounts due, she did not present evidence she could bring the loan current, including payment of additional fees, as required by the trial court's November 26 order.
The purpose of the seven-day waiting period under section 2924g(d) was not, however, to permit reinstatement of the loan, "but to `provide sufficient time for a trustor to find out when a foreclosure sale is going to occur following the expiration of a court order which required the sale's postponement' and `provide the trustor with the opportunity to attend the sale and to ensure that his or her interests are protected.' [Citation]." (Hicks v. E.T. Legg &
Thus, in obtaining relief under section 2924g(d), the issue is not whether Ragland could have reinstated her loan within the seven-day waiting period but whether the failure of Downey Savings to comply with the statute impaired her ability to protect her interests at a foreclosure sale. Defendants did not raise that issue as ground for summary adjudication of the fourth cause of action.
In the fifth cause of action, Ragland alleged that in December 2008, Defendants intentionally caused her severe emotional distress by selling her home in a foreclosure sale.
Ragland argues Downey Savings engaged in outrageous conduct by inducing her to skip the April loan payment, refusing later to accept loan payments, and selling her home at foreclosure. She likens this case to Spinks, supra, 171 Cal.App.4th 1004, in which the appellate court reversed summary adjudication in the defendants' favor of a cause of action for intentional infliction of emotional distress. The defendants in Spinks were landlords of an apartment complex in which the plaintiff resided under a lease entered into by her employer. (Id. at p. 1015.) When the plaintiff's employment was terminated following an industrial injury, the defendants, at the employer's direction, changed the locks on the plaintiff's apartment, causing her to leave her residence. (Ibid.) The Court of Appeal rejected the contention the defendants' conduct was not outrageous as a matter of law: "First, as a general principle, changing the locks on someone's dwelling without consent to force that person to leave is prohibited by statute. [Citation.] Though defendants' agents were polite and sympathetic towards plaintiff, they nevertheless caused her to leave her home without benefit of judicial process.... `While in the present case no threats or abusive language were employed, and no violence existed, that is not essential to the cause of action. An eviction may, nevertheless, be unlawful even though not accompanied with threats, violence or abusive language. Here the eviction was deliberate and intentional. The conduct of defendants was outrageous.'" (Id. at pp. 1045-1046.) In addition, the defendants' onsite property manager had expressed concern over the legality of changing the locks, and the plaintiff was particularly vulnerable at the time because she was recovering from surgery. (Id. at p. 1046.)
This argument assumes Downey Savings had the right to foreclose, an issue at the heart of the case. Ragland created triable issues of fact on her causes of action for negligent misrepresentation, fraud, and violation of section 2924g(d). Defendants do not argue Downey Savings would have had the right to foreclose if any of those causes of action were meritorious. Ragland's treatment by Downey Savings, if proven, was at least as bad as the conduct of the defendants in Spinks and was so extreme as to exceed all bounds of decency in our society.
In the sixth cause of action, Ragland alleged that in December 2008, Defendants negligently caused her severe emotional distress by selling her home in a foreclosure sale. As explained above, Ragland cannot recover under her cause of action for negligent infliction because Defendants' conduct resulted only in injury to property. In addition, she cannot recover for negligent infliction of emotional distress because she cannot prove a relationship giving rise to a duty of care.
Ragland argues a relationship between her and Defendants, sufficient to create a duty of care, arose by virtue of (1) the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing in the loan documents and (2) financial advice rendered by John or Joseph during the telephone calls in April 2008.
The plaintiffs followed the third suggestion, and their corporation merged with another one. The merging corporation soon could not make the payments on the loans. (Barrett, supra, 183 Cal.App.3d at pp. 1365-1366.) The assignee of the loans enforced them against the plaintiffs and instituted foreclosure proceedings against their home. (Id. at p. 1366.) The plaintiffs sued the bank for various causes of action, including constructive fraud and intentional infliction of emotional distress. (Ibid.) The jury returned a verdict in favor of the bank. (Id. at pp. 1366-1367.)
The issue on appeal was whether the trial court erred by refusing to instruct the jury on constructive fraud. (Barrett, supra, 183 Cal.App.3d at p. 1368.) The Court of Appeal, reversing, concluded substantial evidence supported a constructive fraud theory of recovery. (Id. at p. 1369.) Constructive fraud usually arises from a breach of duty in which a fiduciary relationship exists. (Ibid.) The court reasoned the bank acted as the plaintiffs' fiduciary because one plaintiff perceived his relationship with the loan officer as "very close," relied on the loan officer's financial advice, shared confidential financial information with the loan officer, and relied on the loan officer's advice about mergers. (Ibid.) In addition, a consultant for the merging corporation testified the loan officer assured him the plaintiffs would not be released from their guarantees. (Ibid.)
The evidence presented in opposition to the motion for summary judgment did not create a triable issue of Ragland's relationship with Downey Savings. In contrast with the extensive financial and legal advice given by the loan officer in Barrett, John or his supervisor at Downey Savings told Ragland not to make her April 2008 loan payment in order to be considered for a loan modification. This advice was directly related to the issue of loan modification and therefore fell within the scope of Downey Savings's conventional role as a lender of money.
Ragland concedes her seventh cause of action, for rescission, is no longer viable ("a dead letter") because her home was resold after the foreclosure sale to a bona fide purchaser for value. For that reason too, she states she is no longer asserting claims against DSL and FCI.
Ragland concedes her attempt to halt the foreclosure sale, like her rescission cause of action, is a "dead letter" and she is not seeking to set aside the November 26 order or the order denying a preliminary injunction. She argues, "the denial of due process at the application for temporary restraining order was a substantial factor in [the] trial court's decision to grant summary
The judgment in favor of DSL and FCI, and summary adjudication of the causes of action for breach of oral contract, negligent infliction of emotional distress, and rescission are affirmed. Ragland may seek leave to amend in the trial court, as explained in this opinion. In all other respects, the judgment is reversed and the matter remanded for further proceedings. Ragland shall recover costs incurred on appeal.
Aronson, Acting P. J., and Ikola, J., concurred.