SUSAN RICHARD NELSON, District Judge.
This matter is before the court on the motion for summary judgment by Plaintiff Residential Funding Company, LLC ("Residential" or "RFC") (Doc. No. 22). For the reasons stated below, this Court grants the motion.
On May 18, 1994, Residential entered into a "Seller/Servicer Contract" with Defendant Terrace Mortgage Company to purchase residential mortgage loans underwritten by Terrace on the condition that those loans met certain specified requirements. (Doc. No. 1, Ex. A., at 8.) Terrace concedes it was its responsibility to underwrite the loans "consistent with any conditions" placed on that loan by RFC. (Doc. No. 28, Ex. 1, at 43, 144.) The Contract expressly incorporated "the Residential Funding Seller and Servicer Guides" that Residential published and amended from time to time (collectively, the "agreement"). (Id.) Terrace, as "the `Seller/Servicer,'" acknowledged "that it has received and read the Guides." (Id.) The Contract provided that "[a]ll provisions of the Guides are incorporated" into the agreement. (Id.) It further provided that it "may not be amended or modified orally, and no provision of [it] may be waived or amended except in writing," but that "the Guides may be amended or supplemented by Residential Funding from time to time." (Id.)
The Contract also included specified representations and warranties, including that "the Seller/Servicer makes the representations, warranties and covenants set forth in the Guides." (Id.) Finally, the agreement provided that "[i]f an Event of Seller Default or an Event of Servicer Default shall occur, Residential Funding may, at its option, exercise one or more of those remedies set forth in the Guides," including, as relevant here, a demand that Terrace repurchase a loan or otherwise make Residential whole. Id.
As contemplated by the agreement, Residential amended and supplemented the Guides during the relevant time-frame. It appears that four versions of the Guides are implicated here: (1) Version 1-05-G03, dated July 22, 2005; (2) Version 1-06-G01, dated March 13, 2006; (3) Version 1-06-G02, dated June 12, 2006; and (4) Version 1-06-G04, dated December 11, 2006. But for present purposes, it appears that none of the variations is relevant here.
The parties engaged in a successful ongoing business relationship involving a substantial volume of loans for several years before the events in question here took place. (Doc. No. 28, Ex. 1, at 109.) Initially, when Residential notified Terrace that a particular loan needed to be repurchased by Terrace, the parties generally worked out the issue without strict adherence to the terms of the agreement, much less recourse to litigation. As the real estate market began to sour, however, Residential required repurchase of an increasing number of loans and the parties were unable to work out Residential's objections to the loans at issue here. Sometime before February 14, 2008, Residential terminated its business relationship with Terrace. (Doc. No. 28, Ex. 1, at 93.)
Residential filed this action in December 2009, alleging that Terrace was obligated, but refused, to repurchase thirteen loans Residential had purchased from Terrace.
The movant is entitled to summary judgment if it "shows that 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). Here, Plaintiff seeks summary judgment on its own claims. Accordingly, Terrace, as the non-movant, is entitled to any factual inferences being drawn in its favor, at least with respect to the elements of Residential's claims for breach of contact and indemnification. And Residential, as the party seeking summary judgment on its own claims, bears the burden of proof on those claims.
But Terrace's opposition is not confined to just the argument that Residential has failed to prove the elements of its claims. As noted above, Terrace's Answer included several "affirmative and other defenses." (Doc. No. 4, ¶¶ 24-32.) Terrace, however, has not moved for summary judgment, based either on any of its affirmative defenses or otherwise. And, of course, Terrace bears the burden of proof with respect to any affirmative defense. Lackawanna Chapter of the Ry. & Locomotive Hist. Soc'y, Inc. v. St. Louis County, Missouri, 606 F.3d 886, 888 (8th Cir.2010) (affirmative defense of statute of limitations); Fields Eng'g & Equip., Inc. v. Cargill, Inc., 651 F.2d 589, 593 (8th Cir.1981) (affirmative defense of waiver). Yet in opposing Residential's motion for summary judgment, Terrace argues that Residential "must demonstrate that, as a matter of law, Terrace cannot prove its defenses at trial." (Doc. No. 34, at 2.) Terrace contends that many of Residential's individual claims are "subject to defenses that RFC has not demonstrated will fail, as a matter of law, at trial." (Id. at 5.) Furthermore, Terrace claims that all of the "factual issues must be construed against RFC as the movant on summary judgment." (Doc. No. 42, at 8.)
With respect to its affirmative defenses, Terrace thus improperly attempts to shift the burden to Residential. "A party resisting summary judgment cannot expect to rely on the bare assertions or mere cataloguing of affirmative defenses." Harper v. Delaware Valley Broadcasters, Inc., 743 F.Supp. 1076, 1090 (D.Del. 1990), aff'd 932 F.2d 959 (3d Cir.1991) (table). Where the non-movant has alleged affirmative defenses but has not based any summary judgment motion of its own on such defenses, it nevertheless must still "come forward with evidence to support [its] affirmative defenses" in its opposition to the movant's motion. Id. at 1090-91. In such a situation, it is "incumbent" upon the non-moving defendant "to respond by, at the very least, raising in their opposition papers any and all arguments or defenses [it believes] precluded judgment in Plaintiffs' favor." Johnson v. Bd. of Regents of the Univ. Of Georgia, 263 F.3d 1234, 1264
Rather, "one who relies upon an affirmative defense to defeat an otherwise meritorious motion for summary judgment must adduce evidence which, viewed in the light most favorable to and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-moving party, would permit judgment for the non-moving party on the basis of that defense." Id. at 65. Where, as here, the plaintiff moves for summary judgment on liability, "the nonmovant is thereby placed on notice that all arguments and evidence opposing a finding of liability must be presented to properly resolve that issue." The Pantry, Inc. v. Stop-N-Go Foods, Inc., 796 F.Supp. 1164, 1167 (S.D.Ind.1992) (emphasis in original). "A summary judgment on the issue of liability encompasses all affirmative defenses and implicitly challenges the non-movant to establish a basis for finding that the defenses are both applicable and supported by sufficient facts." Id. Because the moving plaintiff need not disprove the non-movant's affirmative defenses, the "defendant must support its affirmative defenses in the response to a plaintiff's motion for summary judgment." Id. (emphasis in original).
Of the eight "affirmative and other" defenses Terrace raised in its Answer, it now pursues only four: (1) failure to mitigate damages, (2) lack of consideration, (3) the prior breach doctrine, and (4) waiver and estoppel. With respect to its defenses of waiver and estoppel, Terrace asserts that "[t]here are issues of material fact for a jury to decide." (Doc. No. 42, at 5.) But "[t]he requirements of pointing to specific contested facts in opposing a motion for summary judgment are particularly elevated where the nonmoving party would bear the burden of proof at trial on the affirmative defense of waiver." Security Pacific Mortgage and Real Estate Services, Inc. v. Canadian Land Co. Of America, 690 F.Supp. 1214, 1219 (S.D.N.Y.1988), aff'd, 891 F.2d 447 (2d Cir.1989).
Residential identifies various types of contractual breaches for the thirteen loans at issue and delineates its damages with respect to each. In support of its motion, Residential provides the various contractual materials, deposition transcripts and correspondence between the parties regarding the individual loans.
Terrace, however, does not contest that certain types of borrower misrepresentations or appraisal errors would not constitute a breach of the agreement — an "event of default" in the terms of the agreement. And with respect to damages, Terrace does not proffer any alternative figures, or calculations. Rather, Terrace premises its opposition with respect to liability largely on the admissibility of the evidence on which Residential relies, frequently challenging that evidence as inadmissible hearsay. And with respect to damages, Terrace also rests on the argument that Residential's case is based entirely on hearsay.
Terrace first takes issue with Residential's view of the contractual terms for underwriting loans and repurchasing non-conforming loans. Terrace argues that (1) Residential has no unilateral right to require Terrace to repurchase loans, and (2) if such right does validly exist, the agreement is unenforceable for lack of consideration. (Doc. No. 42, at 2-4.) Terrace further claims that the non-waiver provision does not preclude an argument that Residential waived its right to enforce its repurchase remedy. (Id. at 4-5 (yet contending that it "is not claiming that, by
Residential observes that courts will not rewrite unambiguous contract language, which it asserts here provided that "RFC had the exclusive discretion to determine if an Event of Default occurred." (Doc. No. 38, at 2, 7.) Under the terms that Terrace agreed to, Terrace was obligated "to repurchase or make RFC whole on a loan with 30 days of RFC's demand, unless Terrace appealed in writing" and prevailed, and even then RFC had the authority under the agreement to determine "in its sole discretion whether the appeal was meritorious." (Id. at 7.)
As discussed above, Terrace expressly acknowledged in the "Seller/Servicer Contract" that it had received and read the Guides, which were incorporated into the parties' agreement. That Contract also provided that Residential "may, at its option, exercise [any of the] remedies set forth in the Guides" if "an Event of ... Default shall occur." (Doc. No. 1, Ex. A, at 9.) The Client Guides delineate six particular events of default, including the following:
(Doc. No. 29, Ex. 6, § A208, at 6312.) Here, the alleged events of default include misrepresentations by the borrowers (regarding income, debt, and use of the property as primary residence) and excessive appraisals.
The relevant Client Guides uniformly provide that if Residential "determines that an
The Guides also provide Terrace with the right to appeal Residential's demand
Terrace argues that the Guides do "not state that, if Terrace does not appeal [Residential's] determination that a default has occurred, Terrace cannot later dispute RFC's claim in a court of law," because "the option to appeal is permissive." (Doc. No. 42, at 2-3 (emphasis in original).) But the permissive nature of the contractual appeal right says nothing, one way or the other, about any right or ability of Terrace to challenge Residential's repurchase determinations in a legal action.
As noted above, Terrace further claims that the non-waiver provision does not foreclose its argument that Residential waived its right to enforce its repurchase remedy. (Doc. No. 42, at 4-5.) The Client Guides (uniformly) include several non-waiver provisions regarding Residential's contractual right to demand and obtain repurchase of non-conforming loans. The Guides provide that Residential (1) "may waive any default by" Terrace "only by a written waiver"; and (2) "is not required to demand repurchase within any particular period of time, and may elect not to require immediate repurchase," such that "any delay in making this demand does not constitute a waiver by [Residential] of any of its rights or remedies." (E.g., Doc. No. 29, Ex. 6, § A209(B) & § A210(A), at RFC 06313-14.)
As discussed above, the parties' agreement provides a means for Terrace to "appeal" any initial determination by Residential that Terrace must repurchase a particular loan. Terrace's failure to take advantage of the contractually-provided procedure for Residential to reconsider its initial determinations precludes any right now to challenge Residential's original determinations. Accordingly, Residential is entitled to a judgment of liability with respect to the loans taken by Cabrera (two loans), Moore (two loans), Park, Perez (two loans), and Rizo.
With respect to the five loans for which Terrace did pursue an "appeal" of Residential's initial determination that the loans must be repurchased by Terrace, the Court ultimately comes to the same conclusion. The fact that Terrace took advantage of the contractually-provided right to appeal an initial determination that Terrace must repurchase a particular loan does not permit it to now seek judicial review of the merits of Residential's initial or "appellate" determinations that the loans must be repurchased. The parties' agreement gave Residential the sole and essentially unreviewable authority to determine if a particular loan must be repurchased because it failed to meet the underwriting criteria provided in the Client Guides.
The agreement did provide for a right of appeal of an initial repurchase determination, but again, Residential — under the explicit contractual terms — had the "sole discretion" to "determine the validity of any appeal filed by [Terrace]. If [RFC's] decision remains firm following an appeal, [Terrace] shall repurchase the Loan and its servicing (if the Loan was sold servicing released)." (Doc. No. 29, Ex. 6, § A210(H), at RFC 06318.)
In essence, Terrace agreed that Residential had the sole right to determine whether a loan must be repurchased, both initially and upon "appeal." Terrace argues, however, that Residential in effect waived any right to now seek enforcement of the agreement because it previously did not immediately and always enforce its rights under the agreement. Craig Page, Terrace's President and principal owner, declares that, before the present dispute arose, "RFC rarely, if ever, demanded that Terrace repurchase loans, even when those loans may have violated purported representations and warranties in the Client Guide." (Doc. No. 36, ¶ 4.) Page further asserts that "[f]or years, RFC treated the provisions of the Client Guide as a `guide' only, and did not insist that those `guidelines' were a part of the parties' actual contract." (Id.)
Even assuming this to be true, any such course of conduct by Residential does not undermine its contractual rights, which are indisputably clear in the parties' agreement. And one party's breach of a contract generally does not obligate the other party to immediately and always file suit to enforce the contract where the contract itself includes a non-waiver provision such as is the case here. And Terrace freely concedes that during the time the parties
Accordingly, the only issues regarding breach that must be decided by this Court are (1) whether Residential notified Terrace that an Event of Default had occurred such that the loan must be repurchased or Residential made whole, and (2) whether Terrace refused to comply with such a notification. There is no dispute that Residential notified Terrace that it must repurchase the thirteen loans at issue. (E.g., Doc. No. 4 (Answer), ¶ 12 ("Defendant admits that Plaintiff has sent demand letters to Defendant alleging that certain loans that Defendant sold to Plaintiff had to be repurchased by Defendant."), ¶ 13 (same).) Nor is there any genuine dispute, in light of this action, that Terrace did not comply with the notifications regarding the thirteen loans.
Nevertheless, Terrace asks this Court to review and evaluate whether there was, in fact, an Event of Default under the terms of the parties' agreement. Terrace, however, may not contractually agree to give that authority solely to Residential and then seek to have this Court independently review the validity of Residential's determinations. The Court's exercise of such authority to review Residential's determinations would deprive Residential of part of the benefit of the bargain it obtained from Terrace and for which Terrace was well compensated.
This result is not inequitable. Terrace expressly acknowledged "that it has had the opportunity to obtain the advice of experienced counsel of it own choosing in connection with the negotiation and execution of the Client Contract and this Client Guide." (Doc. No. 29, Ex. 6, § 103, at RFC 06277.) Both parties are sophisticated business entities. In fact, Terrace "acknowledge[d] that it is experienced with respect to the transactions contemplated by this Client Guide." (Doc. No. 29, Ex. 6, § 103, at RFC 06277; accord Doc. No. 28, Ex. 1, at 137.) The parties willingly agreed on the procedure by which Residential could unilaterally demand repurchase based solely on its determination that an Event of Default had occurred. Residential paid Terrace a premium for the loans it purchased from Terrace under this agreement. (Doc. No. 28, Ex. 1, at 76-77.) In exchange, Terrace took the risk of Residential determining that particular loans did not meet the stated criteria. See SMFC Funding Corp. v. United Financial Mortgage Corp., 24 F.Supp.2d 858, 862 (N.D.Ill.1998) (explaining that where contract shifts risk to seller of non-conforming loans in exchange for seller being paid a premium, seller should bear the risk of a loan not meeting the contract's requirements).
Finally, Residential's exercise of its unilateral right to require Terrace to repurchase a particular loan simply rescinds that particular transaction, leaving the parties in the positions they occupied before Terrace sold the loan to Residential. Terrace agreed that it bore the contractual obligation to ensure that the loans it sold to Residential met the underwriting requirements Residential had disclosed to Terrace in the Client Guides. (Doc. No. 1, Ex. A ("Seller/Servicer Contract"), at 8 ("[T]he Seller/Servicer makes the representations, warrants and covenants set forth in the Guides.")); (Doc. No. 29, Ex. 6, § 203 ("The Client must ensure that Loans sold to [RFC] meet the eligibility and underwriting guidelines as outlined in the Client Guide. [Terrace] represents and warrants such compliance."); Id. ("[Terrace] is responsible for credit and property underwriting performed by it or by entities other than [Terrace] which have been retained by [Terrace] to perform such underwriting on [Terrace's] behalf."); id.
In any event, even if the contractual terms had not provided Residential with the sole authority to determine if a loan must be repurchased, such that this Court could appropriately review Residential's repurchase decisions, the Court does not agree that Residential's determinations were not consistent with the Client Guides. Residential has supported its position with extensive documentary and testimonial evidence.
Terrace, in contrast, conceded that it did not communicate "with any of the borrowers." (Doc. No. 28, Ex. 1 (Shortridge Depo.), at 185, 199.) Nor did it contact any of the original appraisers or the review appraisers. (Id. at 178.) In fact, it appears that Terrace did little, if anything, to investigate the bases for repurchase that Residential cited with respect to particular loans. (Id. at 197, 235, 249, 255, 260, 273, 283, 284, 304, 311, 314-16, 317-18, 322.)
With respect to the Almeida loan, Terrace bases its defense on the argument that RFC waived its right to demand repurchase because RFC knew, "[s]hortly after the loan was made," that Almeida, contrary to his loan application, did not intend to reside at the property but rather to rent it out. (Doc. No. 34, at 8.) But Terrace premises this argument on the allegation that Almeida told the servicer of the loan of his intent. (Id.) The loan servicer, however, was not Residential, but Homecomings Financial, LLC. And although Terrace alleges that the two entities are affiliates, the fact remains that Residential and Homecomings are separate legal entities. (Doc. No. 35, Ex. 17 (RFC's R. 30b)(6) depo., at 10-15.) Terrace provides no evidence that the knowledge of Homecomings was in fact relayed to Residential or could be imputed to it.
For the same reasons, Terrace's "prior breach" argument also fails. Terrace contends that Residential failed to meet its contractual obligation "to `notify [Terrace] of any material Loan deficiencies' after discovery of a deficiency." (Doc. No. 34, at 10.)
With respect to the Altemeyer loan, Terrace argues that RFC cannot prove that the borrowers did not disclose certain debts in their loan application. (Doc. No. 34, at 11.) Terrace challenges both the admissibility of the publicly filed mortgage instruments on which RFC relies and their relevance. (Id.) Terrace contends that the documents "only show that, on the date of those instruments, the Altemeyers had granted a mortgage on certain pieces of property to secure debts they owed," not either "the balance of the debts" when they filled out the application or "that the prior loans were not released." (Id.) Thus, as Terrace tellingly contends, "it is possible that the loans" that Residential claims were undisclosed had been paid off by the time they applied for the loan at issue. (Id.)
The Court agrees with Residential that this argument is "unsupported speculation" without any evidentiary support. (Doc. No. 38, at 6.) The mere possibility of such events is insufficient to defeat Residential's summary judgment motion.
With respect to the Simms loans, Terrace contends that it cannot now be held accountable for the claim that the original appraisals over-valued the two properties at issue. (Doc. No. 34, at 21.) Terrace does not object, however, to Residential's reliance on "review appraisals" in general. As Residential notes, Terrace itself has relied upon them. (Doc. No. 28, Ex. 1, at 263.) And Terrace did not contact RFC's review appraiser when RFC demanded that Terrace repurchase the loan in question. (Doc. No. 28, Ex. 1, at 178, 306.) Rather, Terrace takes issue with the alleged deficiencies of the particular review appraiser at issue here. Terrace challenges the testimony of the person who conducted the review appraisal for RFC on several grounds: (1) that she is an expert paid by RFC, (2) that it is her practice when conducting review appraisals to assume a problem with the original appraisal, (3) that she did not personally observe the interiors of the properties, and (4) that she did not spend sufficient time evaluating one of the properties. (Doc. No. 34, at 21-23 (relying on appraiser's deposition testimony).)
This Court's review of the transcript of her deposition discloses, however, nothing upon which a reasonable jury could dispute her appraisal. She is a professional appraiser assigned by an appraisal firm — and paid by that firm — and does not know the arrangement between that firm and RFC. Her practice of assuming a problem with the original appraisal is neither surprising nor suspicious in light of the nature of a "review appraisal." Terrace does not establish that the fact that she did not personally observe the interiors of the properties undermines her conclusions. And nothing suggests that the time spent evaluating the second property was inadequate, particularly in light of the fact that her appraisal of the property's value
Terrace also contends that RFC failed "to ensure that the foreclosure sales on the Sims loans were confirmed pursuant to Georgia law," thereby precluding the ability to recover the balance owed on both loans. (Doc. No. 34, at 23.) Terrace further contends that "RFC did not demand that Terrace repurchase the Sims loan until May of 2009, after the foreclosure sales." (Id. (emphasis in original).) Terrace thus argues that Residential has waived, or is estopped from pursuing, any right to demand repurchase of the loan. (Id. at 23-24.)
But RFC's contractual remedies include requiring Terrace to either (1) repurchase the loan, if the loan is still outstanding, or (2) "make whole" Residential for its losses, if the property has been foreclosed on. Insofar as Terrace is arguing that RFC demanded that Terrace actually repurchase a loan after foreclosure, the demand letters both request that Terrace make RFC whole. (Doc. No. 32, Ex. 5, Doc. No. 33, Ex. 1.) Insofar as Terrace is contending that RFC failed, by not complying with local law, to preserve the ability to recover any outstanding balance, Terrace identifies nothing in the agreement obligating RFC to do so.
With respect to the Wilson loan, Terrace argues that because it was a "stated income" loan, Terrace may not may held accountable for any misinformation Wilson provided about her income, particularly in light of her credit score. (Doc. No. 34, at 24.)
The Court notes that the basis for RFC demanding repurchase was apparently confined to the determination of an "income misrepresentation," that is, the fact that the application indicated that the "borrower is a self-employed owner of Tammies' Cleaning with a monthly income of $6,000," while her bankruptcy filing "reflect[s] a monthly income of $445." (Doc. No. 33, Ex. 55 (April 10, 2007 repurchase demand letter).) Terrace contends that "an RFC employee agreed that Ms. Wilson's subsequent statement in a bankruptcy filing that her income was substantially less than what she stated in her loan application did not make sense." (Doc. No. 34, at 24.) However, regardless of whether her claimed amount of monthly income was a sufficient basis on which to premise breach, Wilson's deposition discloses numerous red flags regarding her income, employment history, and debts, each of which could serve as a valid basis for a demand for repurchase.
In sum, RFC is entitled to summary judgment with respect to the eight loans for which Terrace did not pursue an appeal of RFC's repurchase demands, and the five loans for which Terrace did pursue an appeal.
Having concluded that Terrace must repurchase the thirteen loans at issue, the Court turns to the issue of Residential's damages. Residential has supported its position with extensive documentary and other evidence.
Terrace, however, again argues only that Residential has failed to prove its case, largely because the documents on which it relies are hearsay and not business records. (Doc. No. 34, at 5-8.) Terrace contends that "RFC relies exclusively on the affidavits" of two individuals "who are not RFC employees," but rather employed by GMAC Mortgage, LLC, an entity affiliated with RFC. (Id. at 5 & n. 2.) Terrace also contends that the documents on which RFC relies "are not the business records that documented the damages or charges RFC alleges it has incurred," but rather documents that "purport to summarize information gathered from other documents." (Id. at 5-6.) Terrace argues that RFC's documents are inadmissible unless RFC can establish that they were made in the regular course of business so as to comply with the business records exception to the hearsay rule. (Id. at 6.) But Terrace contends RFC can not satisfy the requirements of the business records exception because the documents were made within the past year, not at or near the time of the event purportedly recorded. It also argues that the two individuals who created the documents lacked any personal knowledge of the information recorded in those documents because they "both admit that they reviewed other documents or computer systems to either prepare the" documents or confirm their accuracy.
One of the individuals at issue, John Larson, is a repurchase risk analyst for GMAC Mortgage, LLC. (Doc. No. 26, ¶ 1.) "RFC's repurchase operations are now overseen
In any event, Larson stated, in his sworn affidavit, that he has "direct access to RFC accounting business records necessary to verify repurchase, indemnity and make whole losses for RFC" and "direct access to services business records." (Id. ¶ 4.) Larson explains that his predecessor originally computed eleven of the thirteen damages calculations and he computed the remaining two, as well as having "updated and verified the damages calculations using the RFC and servicer business records directly available to" him. (Id. ¶ 5.) In making the calculations at issue, he had "computer access to information and business records made available directly by loan servicers" and considers "these systems and the business records directly communicated to [him] reliable in calculating" the damages. (Id.)
As he further explained in his supplemental affidavit, "[a]ll of these records were made at or near the time of the occurrence of the underlying matter," either by his predecessor or by himself. (Doc. No. 39, ¶ 2.) Because RFC employees no longer calculate damages, it is presently solely his function to calculate damages. (Id. ¶ 3.) The calculations were kept by his predecessor in the course of regularly conducted business activity, and are now so kept by him "at [GMAC Mortgage] on behalf of RFC." (Id. ¶ 4.)
Accordingly, the Court rejects Terrace's hearsay and other evidentiary objections to the documents supporting RFC's damages.
In Count II of the Complaint, Residential asserts a claim for contractual indemnification. The parties' agreement provided that Terrace "shall indemnify [RFC] from all losses, damages, penalties, fines, forfeitures, courts costs and reasonable attorneys' fees, judgments, and any other costs, fees and expenses resulting from any
Here, Residential seeks the attorneys' fees and costs it has incurred in this action. (Doc. No. 24, at 22-23.) Terrace, apparently resting its strategy entirely on its argument that it is not liable for breach under Count I, does not expressly oppose Count II. Residential shall, as it has proposed, submit an affidavit setting forth such expenses.
Based on the foregoing, and all the files, records and proceedings herein,
1. Plaintiff's motion for summary judgment [Doc. No. 22] is
2. Plaintiff shall file within twenty days of the date of this Order an affidavit detailing
3. Defendant may file any response within ten days thereafter.
(Doc. No. 29, Ex. 6, § 402, at RFC 06395.) But it is not established that Residential acquired such knowledge as part of any "Underwriting Review."