STEVEN D. MERRYDAY, District Judge.
A decade ago, the Treasury Department introduced the Home Affordable Modification Program, which allegedly requires a participating bank to use "reasonable efforts" to modify the mortgage of a person in default or reasonably likely to default.
In June 2017, Adonis Rodriguez and 118 other plaintiffs sued Bank of America in a single action.
Before resolving the motion to dismiss, the presiding judge observed that the complaint, which alleged neither each plaintiff's citizenship nor the amount in controversy between each plaintiff and Bank of America, failed to invoke diversity jurisdiction. (Doc. 15 in case no. 17-cv-1534) Ordered to amend the complaint to invoke diversity jurisdiction, Rodriguez and the other plaintiffs submitted a 403-page complaint. (Doc. 16 in case no. 17-cv-1534) For the second time, Bank of America moved to dismiss the complaint and repeated the arguments from the earlier motion. The presiding judge in that action found misjoinder, severed the plaintiffs' claims, and ordered the plaintiffs to sue separately.
The plaintiffs heeded the presiding judge's command. Between October 30, 2017, and November 3, 2017, more than a hundred plaintiffs sued Bank of America in the Middle District of Florida in eighty actions and alleged fraud under Florida common law. Excepting names, dates, addresses, and the like, the complaints are identical. The actions are distributed among eight district judges in the Middle District of Florida. In two actions, the presiding judges found the claims barred by the four-year limitation.
In Rodriguez's third complaint (but the first complaint in this case), Rodriguez alleges (Doc. 1) four misrepresentations by Bank of America. First, Bank of America allegedly failed to mention that a reasonably foreseeable danger of default might qualify a mortgagor for a modification; second, Bank of America stated that the mortgagor failed to provide Bank of America with the documents necessary to complete the modification; third, Bank of America orally notified the mortgagor that the bank approved the requested modification; and fourth, Bank of America charged a "fraudulent" inspection fee. For the third time, Bank of America moved (Doc. 12) to dismiss the complaint. Rodriguez has not — in any motion, pleading, or other paper — moved at any moment in this action for leave to amend the complaint.
A February 1, 2018 order (Doc. 15) dismisses each fraud claim except the claim that Bank of America omitted to mention that a reasonably foreseeable likelihood of default might qualify a mortgagor for a modification. In this claim, Rodriguez alleges that Bank of America instructed him on October 19, 2011, to "refrain from making his regular mortgage payments" in order to qualify for a modification. (Doc. 1 at ¶ 37) Bank of America allegedly omitted to mention that a reasonably foreseeable likelihood of default can qualify a mortgagor for a modification. (Doc. 1 at ¶ 37) Confusingly, Rodriguez alleges elsewhere in the complaint that a modification requires not a reasonably foreseeable likelihood of default but rather an "eminent [sic] default." (Doc. 1 at ¶ 38) In either event, unaware of his option not to default, Rodriguez allegedly "refrained from" paying his mortgage and, as a result, "fell into default status." (Doc. 1 at ¶ 39) As a "direct result" of Bank of America's alleged omission, Rodriguez allegedly suffered the loss of both his home and the equity in his home. (Doc. 1 at ¶ 39)
Moving (Doc. 25) for summary judgment, Bank of America observes that Rodriguez defaulted in March 2010, a year and a half before Bank of America's alleged omission. In an affidavit that accompanies his response, Rodriguez affirms that he defaulted on the mortgage "due in part to the state of the economy and my own personal financial obligations." (Doc. 30 at 7) Two paragraphs later, Rodriguez swears that, when he called Bank of America on October 19, 2011, he "was capable of and intended to start making my mortgage payments." (Doc. 30 at 7) Rodriguez affirms that Bank of America advised him not to cure the default and that he suffered a foreclosure after relying on Bank of America's advice. (Doc. 30 at 8) Objecting to Rodriguez's maintaining two putatively irreconcilable sets of factual assertions (that is, "I was not in default" and "I was in default"), Bank of America replies (Doc. 34) that Rodriguez cannot in effect amend his complaint by responding to a motion for summary judgment with facts that conflict with the allegations in the complaint. Bank of America argues that the record reveals no genuine dispute of material fact about the fraud claim alleged in the complaint.
As Bank of America correctly observes, the fraud claim in the complaint appears to conflict irreconcilably with the argument in the response to Bank of America's motion for summary judgment. In the complaint, Rodriguez alleges:
(Doc. 1 at ¶ 39) In the response to Bank of America's motion for summary judgment, Rodriguez argues:
(Doc. 30 at 3-4) In other words, in responding to the motion for summary judgment Rodriguez tacitly concedes that he defaulted before the October 19, 2011 omission and asserts a new theory — that he "intended" to cure the default but that Bank of America's omission misled him into permitting the default to persist.
For more than a year, Rodriguez has evaded Bank of America's repeated efforts to confront the merits of the fraud claim. Responding to a motion for summary judgment that refutes the fraud claim in the complaint, Rodriguez attempts to prolong this litigation by asserting a new and different theory. Although the protracted history of this litigation suggests an unwillingness or an inability by the plaintiff to articulate specifically the perceived wrong, Rodriguez may amend the complaint a final time and no later than
After Bank of America moved to dismiss this action and the other eighteen actions on this docket,