PER CURIAM.
Plaintiffs Marie Payen and Yves-Carmes Renelique appeal from the entry of summary judgment dismissing their claims of predatory lending, consumer fraud and breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing against their mortgage lender, defendant Impac Funding (Impac) and its servicer, Bank of America (BofA).
We recount the facts in the light most favorable to plaintiffs.
In 2007, Payen was employed full-time, earning approximately $1000 a month after taxes. Wishing to purchase a home to reduce the portion of her monthly budget consumed by rent, Payen was referred to Topdot by her daughter. There she engaged Wright to assist her in obtaining a mortgage loan. Payen found a suitable townhouse in Orange and provided her financial information, including paystubs, to Wright.
Topdot advised Payen that she could qualify for a loan but needed a co-signor. Although Payen was living with her husband and three grown daughters, none of them could provide the needed credit. Payen tuned to her niece, Renelique, who worked at a Cinnabon restaurant in a local mall earning approximately $350 per week after taxes. Although living with her husband and having no intention of living with Payen or assisting to pay her mortgage, Renelique agreed to co-sign the loan.
Plaintiffs signed a loan application, which Wright had prepared, which represented, falsely, that they had a combined income of just under $8000 a month and that they would hold the property as joint tenants for use as their primary residence. Although neither plaintiff could recall signing the document or being aware of its contents, both acknowledged their signatures and the legend just above which stated: "We fully understand that it is a Federal crime punishable by fine or imprisonment, or both, to knowingly make any false statements concerning any of the above facts." Topdot and Wright submitted the application to Impac for the purpose of securing plaintiffs a mortgage loan.
The purchase price of the townhouse was $299,000. Impac made two loans to plaintiffs to fully fund the purchase. Plaintiffs borrowed $224,250 on a thirty-year adjustable rate note at an initial rate of 7.5% interest with a five-year interest-only feature. That loan, on which interest was capped at 13.5%, was secured by a purchase money mortgage. Impac provided a second secured fixed rate loan to plaintiffs in the sum of $74,750, in effect funding the down payment. Plaintiffs signed a fifteen-year balloon note for that loan which bore interest at a rate of 12.59%. No disclosure documents relating to this loan were produced in discovery and none exist to plaintiffs' knowledge. Payen's monthly payments for both loans at inception totaled $2,370.99. She testified at deposition that prior to this purchase, she had been paying $1200 a month in rent. In addition to the two monthly loan payments, plaintiffs were also made responsible for the payment of taxes and insurance which were not included in their monthly payments.
Fees and costs paid by plaintiffs at closing exceeded $12,000. Although they were represented at the closing by a lawyer assigned to them by Topdot, he did not review any of these charges with them, some of which appear exorbitant. In addition, the fees and costs actually charged significantly exceeded those disclosed in Topdot's good faith estimate of settlement costs (required by federal law). The lawyer did not explain any of the documents and did not tell Payen that taxes and insurance were not included in her monthly mortgage payments.
Although Payen apparently managed the monthly payments for a time with the assistance of her husband, she ran into difficulties after he fell ill and ceased working. When she lost her own job, she stopped making payments on both loans and sought a loan modification from BofA. BofA initially denied Payen's request for a modification under the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) because it had not been given the contractual authority to modify the loan by the "investor or group of investors" on whose behalf BofA serviced the loan. Three months later, BofA sent another letter saying the denial was because plaintiffs had not provided all of the documents it deemed necessary in order to consider a modification.
Plaintiffs sued Impac and BofA, as well as Topdot and Wright, alleging that defendants were each other's agents or joint venturers, or that they had aided and abetted or conspired with one another in fraudulently dealing with plaintiffs.
At the end of the extended period of discovery, Impac and BofA moved again for summary judgment arguing that plaintiffs had failed to muster any proof of their allegation that Topdot or Wright were agents or employees of Impac or BofA. Plaintiffs countered that documents produced by Impac list it as the broker of the loan and Wright as the contact. Counsel for Impac and BofA pointed to an unrefuted certification by an employee of Impac that Topdot was not affiliated with, nor an agent of, Impac but instead brokered loans to Impac under an independent broker agreement. The same employee certified that Wright was never employed by Impac. The Law Division judge granted summary judgment to Impac and BofA citing plaintiffs' misstatements on their loan application. Impac and BofA subsequently dismissed their counterclaim against plaintiffs. This appeal followed.
Summary judgment is only appropriate where there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Relying on our cases,
Plaintiffs contend that it is this principle on which they rely in arguing that "[d]efendants should never have extended the Mortagage, Adjustable Rate Loan, and Balloon Note to the [p]laintiffs. To fund $299,000 to the Plaintiffs via a mortgage at a 100% loan to value ratio to borrowers making less than $4,000 a month combined was unconscionable on its face."
Plaintiffs may be correct that the loan was unconscionable. The fault underlying their claims, however, is the failure to have developed evidence that Impac and BofA knew the information on which plaintiffs ground their claim of unconscionability, that plaintiffs' combined income was less than $4000 a month. There is no question that Wright and Topdot were aware of plaintiffs' combined income; plaintiffs provided their paystubs to Wright, and it was he who prepared the loan application that falsely inflated their incomes.
The evidence plaintiffs uncovered that they claim puts in issue whether Wright was an employee or agent of Impac are two Impac documents,
Plaintiffs did not counter Impac's certification and offer nothing to question the competency of that evidence. As the evidence in the record is insufficient to permit a fair-minded jury to conclude that Topdot or Wright were agents or employees of Impac or BofA, summary judgment was properly granted on plaintiffs' claims of predatory lending and consumer fraud.
Plaintiffs have not briefed the basis of their claim for breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Their complaint asserts that defendants "fail[ed] to perform loan servicing functions," failed to supervise its agents including collection personnel and foreclosure attorneys, demanded repetitive information from plaintiffs, inaccurately denied a HAMP adjustment, and "unreasonably delay[ed] the extension of offers for permanent modifications" to plaintiffs' loan.
Plaintiffs do not explain why Impac and BofA would be obligated to modify plaintiffs' loan. Federal case law suggests that modifications are not mandatory under HAMP, and that there is no private cause of action for violation of the program's guidelines in any event.
Affirmed.