ANDREW P. GORDON, District Judge.
Plaintiff Jeffrey Neeman borrowed money to purchase a home in 2005. He stopped making his mortgage payments, and, when the defendants threatened to foreclose, Neeman filed this lawsuit. Neeman does not dispute that he has been living in his house for over seven years without paying his mortgage; instead, he claims that he can rescind his mortgage and acquire free and clear title because the defendants made procedural mistakes in how they handled his loan and default. The defendants move to dismiss, arguing that Neeman's various claims lack any factual or legal basis. ECF No. 10. I agree.
Neeman does not oppose the defendants' motion as to most of his claims, such as his Truth in Lending Act and fraud claims. Thus, Neeman is deemed to have consented to the defendants' motion on these points. Neeman's opposition mostly consists of challenges based on standing and the statute of limitations, arguing that the defendants have no right to foreclose on the house. Neeman concludes that he can quiet title in his name because the defendants are barred from foreclosing. But none of Neeman's challenges to the defendants' foreclosure rights has any merit. I therefore dismiss Neeman's claims.
In 2005, Neeman purchased his home with a $535,600 loan from GreenPoint Mortgage Funding, Inc.
Neeman filed this case in state court against the banks and servicers that were involved with his mortgage. He alleges various claims for quiet title, slander of title, declaratory relief, injunctive relief, violation of the Truth in Lending Act ("TILA"), violations of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act ("RESPA"), rescission, and fraud.
A properly pleaded complaint must provide "a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief."
Preliminarily, Neeman does not oppose the defendants' motion as to several of his claims. Under our local rules, that means that he consents to dismissal of those claims.
I thus turn to the claim for which Neeman provides an opposition: his claim that the defendants have no right to foreclose. The thrust of his argument is that if the defendants have no right to the property because of procedural defects in the chain of title or how the defendants handled Neeman's default, then he can quiet title in his own name.
Neeman's claim for quiet title fails right out of the gate. The Supreme Court of Nevada has explained that unless plaintiffs allege "that they paid off the[ir] loan or . . . [were] not in default on that loan, they [have] no basis upon which to maintain an action for quiet title."
But I still address Neeman's arguments about the defendants' rights to foreclose because of his request for declaratory relief. On this point, Neeman argues that the defendants (1) are judicially estopped, (2) are barred by a statute of limitations, (3) are barred by the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act ("FIRREA"), and (4) have improperly securitized his loan.
Neeman points out that the defendants filed a judicial foreclosure action in Nevada state court and then voluntarily dismissed it without prejudice. He concludes that by agreeing to dismiss their prior foreclosure action, the defendants have implicitly "relinquished" their rights to the property.
Setting aside that Neeman offers no authority and little analysis to support this argument, judicial estoppel clearly does not apply. Judicial estoppel requires that a party took a "clearly inconsistent" position in a prior proceeding, that the party persuaded that prior court of that position, and that the party seeking to later assert an inconsistent position would "derive unfair advantage" over the opposing party.
Neeman offers no authority suggesting that any of the statutes he points to applies to a non-judicial foreclosure like the one that the defendants apparently plan to bring.
Congress enacted the FIRREA in the wake of the savings and loan crisis of the 1980s. It primarily created new regulations for failing banks and set out new rules for home appraisals. Neeman relies on FIRREA's statute of limitations for "conservators or liquidating agents."
Neeman offers no authority suggesting that the defendants here fall under the FIRREA's definition of conservators or liquidating agents. Nor is there any indication in the statute that they would. FIRREA mainly regulates the liquidation of failed banks. It does not appear to have any applicability to the defendants foreclosing on Neeman's home.
Courts have routinely rejected conclusory challenges to non-judicial foreclosure sales premised on the improper securitization of mortgage loans. Indeed, because he remains in default, Neeman has no standing to challenge the securitization process.
Some courts have allowed borrowers to challenge a foreclosure even if they remain in default.
Neeman has thus not properly alleged any defects in securitization from which he could be entitled to relief. Because Neeman's complaint does not otherwise state any plausible claims, I dismiss it.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the defendants' motion to dismiss