PER CURIAM.
In this mortgage foreclosure action, defendants Polly and Thurston Green appeal from the March 18, 2013 order granting summary judgment on liability to plaintiff U.S. Bank, National Association, not in its individual capacity, but solely as legal title trustee for LVS Title Trust I, and from the July 3, 2014 final judgment for foreclosure. We affirm.
On November 17, 2006, Polly Green executed and delivered a note to First NCL Financial Services, LLC, DBA The Lending Center (First NCL), in the amount of $229,500. To secure payment, defendants executed a mortgage in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems (MERS), as nominee for First NCL.
On February 6, 2009, defendants executed a loan modification agreement with CitiMortgage, Inc. (Citi). The modification agreement "amend[ed] and supplement[ed]" the note and designated Citi as "Lender." It provided that defendants
Among other things, the modification agreement reduced the interest rate charged on the loan and extended its maturity date from 2036 to 2049. Paragraph 12 further provided:
Defendants defaulted on the note by failing to pay the monthly installment due on December 1, 2010, and the monthly payments due thereafter. On March 21, 2012, plaintiff filed a complaint against defendants in the Chancery Division to foreclose on the mortgage. Defendants filed a contesting answer in May 2012, asserting plaintiff's lack of standing as an affirmative defense. Defendants also asserted various counterclaims, including common law fraud and violations of the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act (CFA),
On February 12, 2013, plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment seeking to strike defendants' answer, dismiss their counterclaims, and return the case to the Office of Foreclosure. In support of the motion, plaintiff submitted the certification of Karen L. Shoup, Assistant Vice President of plaintiff's servicing agent, BSI Financial Services (BSI). Shoup represented that plaintiff became the owner and holder of the note on July 29, 2011, and that the mortgage was assigned to plaintiff on November 8, 2011. Attached to Shoup's certification were copies of the note, recorded mortgage, and assignments of the mortgage from MERS to Citi and from Citi to plaintiff.
Defendants opposed the motion. They submitted a certification in which they alleged that the 2006 loan was predatory, that the mortgage broker had falsely represented to them that the loan would be at a fixed $1900 monthly rate that would include payment of their real estate taxes, and that the loan closer failed to explain the contents and meaning of the loan documents that they signed. Defendants admitted executing the loan documents, but did not challenge plaintiff's claimed ownership of the note and mortgage or their failure to make the loan payments.
Following oral argument, the trial court entered an order on March 18, 2013, granting plaintiff's motion. The court found plaintiff's proofs sufficient to establish its possession of the note and mortgage prior to the filing of the foreclosure complaint. The court also found no evidence linking the actions of the mortgage broker to the original lender, and dismissed defendants' counterclaim without prejudice to the filing of an action in the Law Division.
On appeal, defendants challenge plaintiff's standing and the sufficiency of the proofs plaintiff presented to establish that it owned or "held" both the note and a valid assignment of mortgage. Defendants also argue that the trial court erred in dismissing its CFA claim.
A trial court must grant a summary judgment motion if "the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact challenged and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment or order as a matter of law."
The "right to foreclose is an equitable right inherent in the mortgage."
There are limited defenses to foreclosure actions. A mortgagor opposing summary judgment has a duty to present facts that controvert the mortgagee's prima facie case.
Plaintiff's status as holder of the note was established by Shoup's certification. The trial court properly found that Shoup's knowledge was sufficient. Our foreclosure rules require that
Where, as here, the mortgage was serviced not by plaintiff but by its mortgage loan servicer, BSI, it was sufficient that Shoup, employed by BSI, attested to her "knowledge of the mortgage loan servicer's business records kept in the regular course of business."
Importantly, defendants failed to proffer any affidavit or certification contradicting the assignment of the loan documented in the properly admitted loan documents and affirmed in Shoup's certification. "[C]onclusory claims" without explanation and "[b]ald assertions are not capable of ... defeating summary judgment."
The competent proofs in the summary judgment record establish that plaintiff had physical possession of the note eight months before filing the foreclosure complaint, and that the mortgage was assigned to plaintiff four months before the complaint was filed. Thus plaintiff had standing at the time it filed the complaint.
Finally, defendants' counterclaims were properly dismissed. Even if the actions of the mortgage broker were improper, defendants failed to show that he was either an employee or agent of the plaintiff, as the trial court correctly observed. Additionally, in the 2009 loan modification agreement, defendants expressly waived and released any claims arising out of the origination or servicing of the 2006 loan.
Affirmed.