PERCY ANDERSON, District Judge.
Before the Court is an appeal filed by Philip E. Koebel ("Koebel"). In the course of his Chapter 13 bankruptcy, Koebel initiated an adversary proceeding against Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation ("Freddie Mac"), Ocwen Loan Servicing LLC ("Ocwen"), and Nationstar Mortgage LLC ("Nationstar") (collectively, "Appellees"). Koebel now challenges the decision by the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California to dismiss, without leave to amend, the Complaint and First Amended Complaint in the adversary proceeding, as well as the decision to deny his Motion for Reconsideration of those rulings. Pursuant to Rule 78 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and Local Rule
On June 23, 2008, Koebel executed and delivered a promissory note for $360,000 to Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corporation ("TBW"). (Excerpt of Records ("ER") 8:758-60.) As security for the note, Koebel also executed a deed of trust against his property at 255 Robinson Road, Pasadena, California (the "Property"), naming Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. ("MERS") as the beneficiary solely as a nominee for TBW and its successors and assigns. (ER 4:281-94.) On October 27, 2011, the deed of trust was assigned to Ocwen. (ER 4:299-301.) Subsequently, on May 16, 2013, the deed of trust was assigned to Nationstar. (ER 4:374-75.)
In early 2009, Koebel applied for a loan modification from TBW. (Appellant's Opening Brief ("AOB"), 20.) When no modification agreement was reached, Koebel defaulted on his loan and a notice of default was recorded on June 1, 2009. (ER 4:296.) Koebel continued to negotiate a loan modification with Ocwen, the servicer of the loan at the time. (AOB, 20.) Koebel believed that after a series of trial payments he had entered into a permanent loan modification beginning December 1, 2010. (
On May 23, 2011, Koebel filed a complaint in Los Angeles Superior Court Case No. GC047411 (the "State Court Action"), asserting nine causes of action for: (1) Declaratory Relief; (2) Wrongful Foreclosure; (3) Fraud; (4) Unjust Enrichment; (5) Violation of California Business and Professions Code Section 17200
After the State Court Action was dismissed with prejudice, Koebel filed an action in the United States District Court for the Central District of California, under the name
On January 25, 2012, Koebel filed the Chapter 13 bankruptcy proceeding which serves as the basis for this appeal. (ER 9:766.) Before a Chapter 13 Plan was confirmed, Ocwen filed a proof of claim ("Claim 8-1") asserting a secured interest in the Property. (ER 8:737.) Koebel filed a motion for disallowance of Claim 8-1. (AER 3:26-42.) On June 26, 2013, as part of the discovery related to Claim 8-1, Appellees produced Koebel's uniform residential loan application, which Koebel averred contained a forgery of his signature and falsified occupation information (the "Forged Application"). (AOB, 21.) On April 25, 2014, the Bankruptcy Court denied Koebel's motion for disallowance on the basis that the State Court Action acted as res judicata for Claim 8-1. (ER 5:406.)
Prior to the Bankruptcy Court's decision on Claim 8-1, Koebel initiated an adversary proceeding which, on the basis of the Forged Application, asserted four claims styled as: (1) Disallow Mortgage Claim as Void Ab Initio Due to Fraud and/or Criminal Scheme; (2) Avoid Mortgage Claim as Actually Fraudulent Obligation; (3) Deem Mortgage Claim Unsecured and Disallow or Subordinate; and (4) Bifurcate Mortgage Claim. (ER 7:692.) As relief, Koebel sought a determination that the mortgage claim was void due to fraud, that any amount owed under the mortgage was unsecured or disallowed in its entirety, and to quiet title in the Property. (ER 7:706.) Appellees filed a motion to dismiss, which was granted by the Bankruptcy Court on April 23, 2014. (ER 6:419-21.) The Bankruptcy Court dismissed the first, second, and fourth causes of action with prejudice, but granted leave to amend as to the third cause of action. (
This Court possesses appellate jurisdiction over a Bankruptcy Court's final orders dismissing a complaint without leave to amend, and denying a motion for reconsideration. 28 U.S.C. § 158(a); In re Belice, 461 B.R. 564, 571 (B.A.P. 9th Cir. 2011).
The Bankruptcy Court's legal conclusions are reviewed de novo, while factual findings are reviewed for clear error.
As such, this Court reviews an order dismissing a complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) de novo.
The Bankruptcy Court's decision may be affirmed on any ground finding support in the record.
Koebel contends that the Bankruptcy Court improperly dismissed the Complaint and First Amended Complaint in the adversary proceeding because the State Court Action did not act as res judicata for the asserted claims. However, as explained below, the Bankruptcy Court did not err because both the State Court Action and the Bankruptcy Court's ruling on Claim 8-1 precluded the claims asserted in the adversary proceeding. Additionally, the Bankruptcy Court correctly concluded that Koebel's claims were barred by the three year statute of limitations for claims sounding in fraud.
In determining the preclusive effect of a state court judgment, federal courts follow the state's rules of preclusion. Kremer v. Chem. Constr. Corp., 456 U.S. 461, 481-82, 102 S.Ct. 1883, 1898, 72 L. Ed. 2d 262 (1982). A federal court "must give to a state-court judgment the same preclusive effect as would be given that judgment under the law of the State in which the judgment was rendered." Migra v. Warren City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Ed., 465 U.S. 75, 81, 104 S.Ct. 892, 896, 79 L. Ed. 2d 56 (1984); White v. City of Pasadena, 671 F.3d 918, 926 (9th Cir. 2012). "The preclusive effect of a judgment is defined by claim preclusion and issue preclusion, which are collectively referred to as `res judicata.'" Taylor v. Sturgell, 553 U.S. 880, 892, 128 S.Ct. 2161, 2171, 171 L. Ed. 2d 155 (2008).
Under California's claim preclusion doctrine, "`a valid, final judgment on the merits precludes parties or their privies from relitigating the same `cause of action' in a subsequent suit.'"
However, "the res judicata effect of a judgment of dismissal . . . after the sustaining of a demurrer is of limited scope."
In California, "a final judgment precludes further proceedings if they are based on the same cause of action." Maldonado v. Harris, 370 F.3d 945, 952 (9th Cir. 2004); Mycogen Corp. v. Monsanto Co., 51 P.3d 297, 301-02 (Cal. 2002). California law defines a "cause of action" for purposes of the res judicata doctrine by analyzing the primary right at stake.
In the State Court Action, Koebel's complaint contended that a successful loan modification prevented a foreclosure sale of the Property, and accordingly sought to quiet title and prevent a wrongful foreclosure. (
In the adversary proceeding, both the Complaint and the FAC sought to void or otherwise nullify Koebel's obligations under his mortgage for the Property, as well as a declaration that Koebel "holds quiet title to the subject real property." (ER 7:706, 5:402.) Although the adversary proceeding asserted new legal theories under which Koebel could void the mortgage and have clear title in the Property, it sought to protect the same primary rights from the same injury as in the State Court Action. Because California follows the primary rights approach, "[e]ven when multiple legal theories for recovery exist, one injury gives rise to only one claim for relief."
Although Koebel raises a plethora of colorful theories under which to avoid the obligations of his mortgage, his briefing largely fails to address the issue of res judicata until its fifty-seventh page. There, Koebel explains that he now "realizes that he would have been wiser to formally dismiss the irrelevant state court action instead of allowing it to be dismissed with prejudice, but only claims related to dual tracking were included in the state court complaint and thus only those dual tracking claims are precluded." (AOB, 58.) Therefore, Koebel concedes that the State Court Action serves, at least partially, as res judicata for his bankruptcy proceeding. His error, however, is in construing the scope of the preclusive effect as being limited to the dual tracking of the loan modification. The State Court Action precludes relitigation of any primary right implicated by the claims in the State Court Action, including the claims for quiet title and wrongful foreclosure. Accordingly, because the adversary proceeding and the State Court Action each alleged the same injuries to the same primary rights, they were based on the same "cause of action" for purposes of res judicata.
The State Court Action ended in a final judgment after a demurrer was sustained with leave to amend and Koebel proffered no amendment. "A judgment upon the facts pleaded and confessed by demurrer is no less effectual as a bar to the subsequent action than a judgment based upon a verdict."
Privity exists when there is a "mutual or successive relationship to the same rights of property, or to such an identification in interest of one person with another as to represent the same legal rights."
Because the State Court Action acted as res judicata for the claims asserted in the adversary proceeding, Koebel's only recourse was to plead new or additional facts which would bring his bankruptcy proceeding outside of the State Court Action's preclusive effect.
The primary basis for the complaint in the adversary proceeding, and the fact most heavily relied on in Koebel's oppositions to Appellee's two motions to dismiss, was the Forged Application.
Koebel's other "new facts," pleaded for the first time in his motion for reconsideration, were that Ocwen had not validly obtained its interest to the deed of trust and that Nationstar had claimed that it, rather than Freddie Mac, was the Note holder. (
The Bankruptcy Court denied Koebel's motion to disallow Claim 8-1 on April 25, 2014, and entered its rulings on the motions to dismiss the Complaint and First Amended Complaint in the adversary proceeding on May 7, 2014, and August 11, 2014. In the motion to disallow Claim 8-1, Koebel once again argued that he had successfully entered into a loan modification agreement which precluded foreclosure of the Property. As a result, the Bankruptcy Court denied the motion on the basis of res judicata. Koebel initiated an appeal of the Bankruptcy Court's ruling on Claim 8-1, but the appeal was dismissed for a lack of prosecution.
Appellees contend that the Bankruptcy Court's rulings on Claim 8-1 preclude Koebel's claims in the adversary proceeding. "The law of the case principle is analogous to, but less absolute a bar than, res judicata."
The primary relief sought in the adversary proceeding was a finding that any amount owed under the mortgage was unsecured or disallowed in its entirety. (ER 5:401-402.) In denying the motion for disallowance of Claim 8-1, the Bankruptcy Court explicitly decided that the State Court Action was res judicata for any assertion of a loan modification agreement, and concluded that Appellees could validly pursue state law remedies to collect the unpaid sum owed under the note and deed of trust. Between the Bankruptcy Court's ruling on the motion to disallow Claim 8-1 and its rulings on the motions to dismiss, Koebel did not provide any facts or advance any arguments that would have justified reconsideration of those determinations. Similarly here, Koebel, who did not file a reply brief in this appeal, has advanced no arguments as to why Claim 8-1 did not establish the law of the case. Accordingly, the Court concludes that the Bankruptcy Court's ruling on Claim 8-1 established the law of the case and was thus another reason why the claims in the adversary proceeding were precluded.
The claims asserted in the adversary proceeding, which were largely based on the Forged Application, all sound in fraud. The statute of limitations for an action grounded in fraud is three years. Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 338(d). Here, the note and deed of trust for the Property were executed on June 23, 2008, and the bankruptcy proceeding was initiated more than three years later, on January 25, 2012. The Bankruptcy Court applied the three year statute of limitations for claims sounding in fraud and concluded that Koebel's claims were time-barred. (ER 6:434.) Koebel contends that the proper statute of limitations was four years under California Code of Civil Procedure § 337(1) or, in the alternative, that the statute of limitations should not have begun to run until his discovery of the Forged Application. Neither contention is correct.
California Code of Civil Procedure § 337(1) provides a four year statute of limitations for actions based on a written instrument. However, where a borrower asserts fraud related to a mortgage, courts have consistently applied the three year statute of limitations for claims sounding in fraud rather than the four year statute of limitations for claims based on a written instrument.
Leave to amend is properly denied where "it is clear that granting leave to amend would have been futile." Thinket Ink Info. Res., Inc. v. Sun Microsystems, Inc., 368 F.3d 1053, 1061 (9th Cir. 2004). Having correctly concluded that the claims in the adversary proceeding were barred by res judicata and the statute of limitations, the Bankruptcy Court did not abuse its discretion in denying leave to amend because any further amendment would have been futile.
Similarly, the Bankruptcy Court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion for reconsideration. A motion to reconsider "may not be used to raise arguments or present evidence for the first time when they reasonably could have been raised earlier in the litigation."
For all of the foregoing reasons, the Court affirms the Bankruptcy Court's dismissal of Koebel's Complaint and First Amended Complaint, without leave to amend, and its subsequent denial of the Motion for Reconsideration.