ANDREA K. JOHNSTONE, Magistrate Judge.
In an amended complaint, the plaintiffs, Jacques and Sabine Elias, allege that the defendant, Specialized Loan Servicing ("SLS"), mishandled their mortgage, thereby forcing their property into foreclosure. Doc. no. 20. SLS moves for summary judgment, doc. no. 30, and the plaintiffs object, doc. no. 35.
Summary judgment is appropriate where "there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a);
"A party moving for summary judgment must identify for the district court the portions of the record that show the absence of any genuine issue of material fact."
On September 8, 2006, Sabine Elias executed a promissory note, which was secured by a mortgage on property located in Amherst, New Hampshire. Doc. no. 30-3, at 9-12. Sabine Elias alone signed the note and was named as sole borrower under the mortgage.
On May 19, 2012, the plaintiffs entered into a loan modification with Bank of America, which was the servicer of the mortgage at that time ("2012 modification").
At some point after the 2012 modification was executed, Bank of America informed the plaintiffs that they qualified for better modification terms under a federal program (the "federal modification"). Elias Aff. ¶ 6 (doc. no. 35-1). Bank of America informed the plaintiffs that in order to qualify for the federal modification, they would have to be two months behind on their payments under the 2012 modification.
On November 1, 2012, Bank of America transferred service of the plaintiffs' loan to SLS. Doc. no. 30-3, at 31. At this time, the plaintiffs had not received the federal modification from Bank of America. On November 9, 2012, SLS sent the plaintiffs a statement informing them of the transfer and instructing them to send all future payments to SLS at an address provided.
In the summer of 2014, SLS offered the plaintiffs a new loan modification ("2014 modification" or "2014 modification agreement").
The 2014 modification agreement indicated that an amount of $102,535.12 had been deferred in a previous modification, which would not accrue interest, but would remain due and owing at the end of the loan and was "not a forgiveness of a partial debt . . . ."
There is no dispute in the record that the plaintiffs signed the 2014 modification agreement on August 30, 2014, and that they mailed at least one copy of that agreement to SLS that day. There are two versions of the 2014 modification agreement in the record, however,
Both versions of the 2014 modification agreement contain the same typed agreement language and both are signed by the plaintiffs and dated August 30, 2014.
The plaintiffs alternatively contend that they only sent the notated version of the 2014 modification agreement to SLS or that they sent SLS both the notated and non-notated versions of the agreement. SLS contends that it only received the nonnotated version. The only version of this document in the plaintiffs' records is the version with the notation.
Though they dispute the issue of loan forgiveness, both parties agree that the 2014 modification agreement went into effect, and the plaintiffs do not bring a claim challenging the validity of this agreement. The plaintiffs were unable to remain current under this agreement. Facing the prospect of foreclosure, the plaintiffs filed the instant action.
The plaintiffs originally filed suit against SLS and Bank of America in state court. Doc. no. 1-1, at 4-12. The defendants removed this action here (doc. no. 1) and Bank of America moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim (doc. no. 13). The plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed Bank of America (doc. no. 15) and were granted leave to amend their complaint. The plaintiffs filed a three-count amended complaint against SLS on January 4, 2016. Doc. no. 20.
SLS moved for summary judgment on all three counts. Doc. no. 30. In reviewing this motion, the plaintiffs' objection (doc. no. 35) and SLS's reply (doc. no. 37) the court determined that a hearing was appropriate and additional briefing was necessary. On February 2, 2017, the court issued a procedural order scheduling a hearing and directing the parties to brief three discrete issues.
The plaintiffs bring claims against SLS for violations of 12 C.F.R. § 1024.38(b)(4) ("Count I"), for negligent misrepresentation ("Count II"), and for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing ("Count III"). SLS moves for summary judgment on all three counts.
At the hearing, plaintiffs' counsel conceded, notwithstanding arguments to the contrary in the plaintiffs' supplemental briefing, that no private right of action exists under 12 C.F.R. § 1024.38(b)(4) and that SLS was entitled to summary judgment on this claim. SLS's motion for summary judgment is accordingly granted as to Count I.
SLS argues that there is no genuine dispute of material fact in the record from which a reasonable trier of fact could conclude that SLS made negligent misrepresentations to the plaintiffs. SLS further argues that this claim is barred by the economic-loss doctrine.
The court turns first to the economic-loss doctrine. Under this doctrine, the contractual relationship between a lender and a borrower typically precludes recovery in tort.
This court has held on several occasions that the economicloss doctrine generally bars negligent misrepresentation claims brought by mortgagors against loan servicers/lenders related to a mortgage.
Even if the economic-loss doctrine did not apply, however, SLS would still be entitled to summary judgment on the plaintiffs' negligent misrepresentation claim. The elements of a common-law negligent misrepresentation claim are (1) a negligent misrepresentation of a material fact by the defendant, and (2) justifiable reliance by the plaintiffs.
The plaintiffs' objection and supplemental briefing fail to meet this burden. In their objection, the plaintiffs state that their "negligent misrepresentation claim is grounded on the argument that [SLS] signed them up for another modification with worse terms when they had been approved for a previous modification." Doc. no. 35, at 7. They contend in their supplemental briefing that the two versions of the 2014 modification agreement in the record support a claim for negligent misrepresentation because they "put[] [SLS] on actual notice that the [plaintiffs] w[ere] under the impression that a modification ha[d] occurred . . . ." Doc. no. 47, at 3. Neither of these statements identifies, or points to evidence demonstrating, any misrepresentation of a material fact on the part of SLS.
The plaintiffs also contend in their supplemental briefing that "[t]he issue of the loan being forgiven directly supports the elements to show a negligent misrepresentation" because SLS "knew or should have known that the loan had in fact been forgiven by Bank of America." Doc. no. 35, at 7. These assertions similarly fail to identify any misrepresentation on the part of SLS. Additionally, plaintiffs' counsel conceded at the hearing that no forgiveness actually occurred "as a matter of law," and that his clients merely held the belief that this amount had been forgiven by Bank of America. In so conceding, plaintiffs' counsel necessarily abandoned any argument that SLS made a negligent misrepresentation in this regard.
In light of this lack of identifiable misrepresentations in the plaintiffs' written filings, the court pressed plaintiffs' counsel at the hearing to identify an actionable misrepresentation attributable to SLS. Plaintiffs' counsel was unable to do so.
First, plaintiffs' counsel appeared to argue that SLS misrepresented having not received payments from the plaintiffs when in fact the plaintiffs had sent these payments to Bank of America. It is undisputed that SLS sent the plaintiffs a statement on November 9, 2012, informing them that Bank of America had transferred service of the plaintiffs' loan to SLS, that all future payments must be sent to SLS at the address provided, and that as of November 1, 2012, Bank of America ""w[ould] not accept payments from [the plaintiffs]." Doc. no. 30-3, at 32. The plaintiffs have not pointed to any evidence in the record supporting a conclusion that, despite this language, payments sent to Bank of America after November 1, 2012, would be considered received by SLS. Thus, no reasonable trier of fact could conclude that SLS made a misrepresentation in this regard.
Plaintiffs' counsel also appeared to contend that SLS made a misrepresentation by failing to take into consideration the plaintiffs' lack of sophistication. This assertion, when assumed true, once again fails to identify any misrepresentation on the part of SLS.
Finally, plaintiffs' counsel contended that SLS made misrepresentations to the plaintiffs by offering the plaintiffs the 2014 loan modification when they were pursuing the federal modification offered by Bank of America. This argument appears to largely be a reiteration of the contentions raised in the plaintiffs' objection and supplemental briefing. As discussed above, this argument fails to identify any misrepresentation of a material fact attributable to SLS. It is accordingly insufficient to defeat summary judgment.
In sum, the court concludes that the plaintiffs' negligent misrepresentation claim is barred by the economic-loss doctrine. And even if it were not, the plaintiffs have pointed to no evidence demonstrating that a trier of fact could reasonably resolve this claim in their favor at trial. Accordingly, SLS's motion for summary judgment is granted as to Count II.
The plaintiffs' specific theory as to how SLS breached the covenant of good faith and fair dealing has been difficult to pin down. Initially, the plaintiffs appeared to allege that SLS either fraudulently altered the modified version of the 2014 agreement to create the version without the notation, or forged the version without the notation. At the hearing, however, plaintiffs' counsel expressly disclaimed any allegation of fraud on the part of SLS and instead relied more generally on the existence in the record of the two versions of the 2014 modification in support of the plaintiffs' good faith and fair dealing claim. The court will focus its analysis accordingly.
"In every agreement, there is an implied covenant that the parties will act in good faith and fairly with each other."
This case plainly does not involve the termination of an at-will employment agreement. And the plaintiffs have not contended anywhere in their summary judgment filings (or, indeed, argued at the hearing) that SLS was conferred discretion under an agreement with the plaintiffs, that SLS abused this discretion, and that this abuse somehow damaged the plaintiffs.
In the context of contract formation, the covenant of good faith and fair dealing is "tantamount to the traditional duties of care to refrain from misrepresentation and to correct subsequently discovered error, insofar as any representation is intended to induce, and is material to, another party's decision to enter into a contract in justifiable reliance upon it."
SLS has again met its burden of showing an absence of any genuine issue of fact in the record as to this claim.
The plaintiffs appear to contend that, before entering into the 2014 modification, SLS had an obligation to correct the plaintiffs' mistaken belief that $102,535.12 had been forgiven under the 2012 modification. This argument is premised on plaintiffs' counsel's hypothesis at the hearing that the plaintiffs sent both the notated and non-notated versions of the 2014 modification agreement to SLS, thereby putting SLS on notice of their mistaken belief. Even assuming SLS received both copies, however, this does not create a triable good faith and fair dealing claim. The above precedent only contemplates a party being obligated to correct an error when that party is somehow responsible for causing that error in the first place.
In sum, there is no genuine dispute of material fact in the record that would allow the plaintiffs to go to trial on their good faith and fair dealing claim. SLS's motion for summary judgment is accordingly granted as to Count III.
A trier of fact might reasonably conclude, based on the record, that the plaintiffs harbored certain mistaken beliefs when they entered into the 2014 modification. But a party's mistaken belief alone does not establish a triable claim for negligent misrepresentation or breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Here, despite the plaintiffs' beliefs, the undisputed facts in the record fail to sustain either claim. SLS's motion for summary judgment, doc. no. 30, is accordingly granted.
In light of this determination, SLS's motion to amend its answer to the amended complaint (doc. no. 45) is denied as moot. The clerk of the court shall enter judgment in accordance with this order and close the case.
SO ORDERED.
Additionally, at the hearing plaintiffs' counsel characterized the notated version of the 2014 modification agreement as a "counteroffer," which he conceded he had no evidence SLS ever accepted. This effectively negated any allegation in the plaintiffs' written filings that the notated version of 2014 modification agreement was the operative version based on the plaintiffs' understanding as to forgiveness of the $102,535.12.