KAYATTA, Circuit Judge.
Harold French borrowed money from Countrywide Financial ("Countrywide") and secured the loan with a mortgage on a parcel of land he owned. Having failed to make payments on his loan, French seeks to enjoin foreclosure by Countrywide's assignee, Bank of New York Mellon ("BONY"). French argues that: (1) the description of his property in the mortgage he signed does not satisfy New Hampshire's statute of frauds; and, (2) Countrywide's unilateral addition of a more precise legal description of the property to the copy of the mortgage filed with the registry of deeds was an act of fraud that should bar Countrywide's assignee, BONY, from foreclosing. In ruling on a motion by BONY to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted, the district court rejected both of French's arguments. We affirm.
Because this case comes to us on an appeal of a dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6), we "take the complaint's well-pled (i.e., non-conclusory, non-speculative) facts as true, drawing all reasonable inferences in the pleader's favor." Schatz v. Republican State Leadership Comm., 669 F.3d 50, 55 (1st Cir.2012).
French signed a promissory note with Countrywide in 2005, securing the loan with a mortgage on a parcel of land in Warner, New Hampshire. The mortgage he signed described the property simply as "74 Route 127, Warner, NH, 03278," its street address. The parties left blank a page called "Appendix A — Description of the Property." After the closing and without French's knowledge, Countrywide replaced the blank Appendix A with a version containing a description of the property as follows:
Importantly, French's complaint does not allege that the more precise description in the substitute Appendix A fails to describe precisely the property he agreed to mortgage. Indeed, his complaint describes the land on which BONY is attempting to foreclose under the mortgage containing the substitute Appendix A as "Mr. French's land and residence located at 74 Route 127, Warner, New Hampshire."
Countrywide recorded the mortgage containing the substitute Appendix A with the Merrimack County Register of Deeds. The recorded mortgage, including the substitute Appendix A, was subsequently assigned to the Bank of New York Mellon which also holds the note on French's property. When French was unable to make payments on the mortgage, BONY began judicial foreclosure proceedings. French filed suit to enjoin the foreclosure.
In Count I of his amended complaint, French alleged that the original mortgage was invalid under New Hampshire's statute of frauds, N.H.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 506:1, and that the recorded mortgage was fraudulent and therefore invalid. Either defect, he argued, entitled him to an injunction barring BONY from foreclosing. Counts II and III are derivative of Count I, in that they allege that a foreclosure relying on an invalid mortgage violates, respectively,
If French's allegations are true, Countrywide acted in a sloppy and cavalier manner. Demonstrating that Countrywide was either sloppy or cavalier in its record generation, however, provides insufficient cause for French to prevail. To survive a motion to dismiss he must show, on de novo review, that he plausibly pled facts which, if true, state a claim that entitles him to relief. Mass. Ret. Sys. v. CVS Caremark Corp., 716 F.3d 229, 237 (1st Cir.2013). In arguing that he has stated such a claim, French relies on two theories for why BONY's mortgage is invalid: first, that the mortgage was insufficiently definite to satisfy the New Hampshire statute of frauds; second, that the insertion of the substitute Appendix A invalidated or voided the mortgage held by BONY. We discuss each theory in turn.
The parties agree that mortgages are subject to New Hampshire's statute of frauds. Under New Hampshire law, "[a] memorandum is sufficiently definite to satisfy the statute of frauds if it is `reasonably certain from the contract itself and the acts of the parties in performance of it what land was intended.'" Jesseman v. Aurelio, 106 N.H. 529, 532, 214 A.2d 743 (1965) (quoting White v. Poole, 74 N.H. 71, 65 A. 255 (1906)). To enforce a contract for the sale of land, "[r]easonable certainty" about what land the parties intended to transact "is all that is demanded and that requirement is fulfilled if the meaning of the contract, as a whole, is intelligible to the court." Cunningham v. Singer, 111 N.H. 159, 160, 277 A.2d 318 (1971).
In Jesseman, the principal defendant agreed to sell to the plaintiff a portion of the defendant's land "at the intersection of Route 11 and 11B...." 106 N.H. at 530, 214 A.2d 743. The written memorandum described the portion in rough and imprecise metes and bounds (e.g. "approximately 300 feet from the Westerly point near the beach to an open sand pit ...") and was materially incorrect in some of its estimated measurements. Id. After observing the imprecision caused by the absence of "designations frequently used in formal conveyances of real estate," the court found that, because the writing was nevertheless sufficiently certain as to what land the parties intended to transfer, parol evidence could fill in the gaps and resolve the lack of detail and precision in the original document. Id. at 532-33, 214 A.2d 743; see also Cunningham, 111 N.H. at 160, 277 A.2d 318.
Similarly, in Gilbert v. Tremblay, 79 N.H. 431, 111 A. 314, 315 (1920), the Supreme Court of New Hampshire held that a description of a property as "234 Union Ave & lot" was sufficiently definite to satisfy the statute of frauds where there was only one plot of land corresponding to that address in the town the parties resided in. Here, any imprecision in the written description in the document signed by French and Countrywide is similarly eliminated by unambiguous and undisputed
The purpose of the New Hampshire's statute of frauds is to "promote certainty and to protect from frauds and perjuries in land transactions." Weale v. Mass. Gen. Hous. Corp., 117 N.H. 428, 431, 374 A.2d 925 (1977). New Hampshire courts recognize that "a strict enforcement of the statute can produce frustration on the one hand, and unethical conduct on the other" and "equitable considerations" may militate against its application in a particular case. Id. Because the parties agreed before the district court on precisely what the written description of the property in the document they signed means, certainty will be promoted by, and equitable considerations support, enforcing the agreement that both parties intended to enter into — a mortgage covering the land described informally as "74 Route 127, Warner, New Hampshire" as detailed more precisely and accurately in the substitute Appendix A. We therefore agree with the district court that the written agreement, in light of the surrounding circumstances as alleged in the complaint, was not so imprecise as to be unenforceable under the New Hampshire statute of frauds.
French also advances several unconvincing theories under which Countrywide's unilateral substitution of Appendix A for the original blank version renders the mortgage held by BONY invalid or void. French first suggests that Countrywide committed fraud by making this substitution. In so arguing, French fails to explain how altering a writing in a way that indisputably causes it to better reflect the intentions of the parties constitutes fraud. In New Hampshire, "[t]he essence of fraud is a fraudulent misrepresentation." Jay Edwards, Inc. v. Baker, 130 N.H. 41, 46, 534 A.2d 706 (1987). Fraudulent misrepresentation, in turn, must be "made with knowledge of its falsity...." Tessier v. Rockefeller, 162 N.H. 324, 332 (2011); Ed Peters Jewelry Co., Inc. v. C & J Jewelry Co., Inc., 215 F.3d 182, 191 (1st Cir.2000) ("The hallmarks of fraud are misrepresentation or deceit."). Here, in contrast, the description of the property in the substitute Appendix A was correct.
French also suggests that allowing BONY to foreclose is a form of equitable relief to which BONY is not entitled because it has unclean hands due to its predecessor's unilateral substitution of Appendix A. His theory that the district court provided equitable relief relies on the district court's statement that "even if the final page of the mortgage document is excised, the description on the document's third page is sufficient to satisfy the statute of frauds." This, French argues, means the district court reformed the mortgage. But we read the district court as using "excised" to mean "ignored," simply
All three counts of French's complaint ultimately rest on the two theories we have discussed and rejected. Accordingly, we affirm the district court's ruling.
So ordered.