READ, J.
This appeal stems from a transaction involving residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS). Two certificateholders in the ACE Securities Corp., Home Equity Loan Trust, Series 2006-SL2 (the Trust) sued DB Structured Products, Inc. (DBSP), the sponsor of the transaction, for failure to repurchase loans that allegedly did not conform to DBSP's representations and warranties. The Trust later sought to substitute itself as plaintiff in place of the certificateholders. The parties dispute the timeliness of this lawsuit, whether the certificateholders or the Trust complied with a condition precedent and whether the certificateholders possessed standing to sue or, alternatively, the Trust's complaint cured any defect in the certificateholders' standing. We hold that the Trust's cause of action against DBSP for breach of representations and warranties accrued at the point of contract execution on March 28, 2006. Where, as in this case, representations and warranties concern the characteristics of their subject as of the date they are made, they are breached, if at all, on that date; DBSP's refusal to repurchase the allegedly defective mortgages did not give rise to a separate cause of action. Additionally, we hold that, even assuming standing, the two certificateholders did not validly commence this action because they failed to comply with the contractual condition precedent to suit; namely, affording DBSP 60 days to cure and 90 days to repurchase from the date of notice of the alleged non-conforming loans.
In its role as sponsor of the securitization that is at the core of this case, DBSP purchased 8,815 mortgage loans from at least three third-party mortgage originators. This pool of loans
HSBC acted as trustee for the holders of $500 million in certificates issued by the Trust, and was authorized to bring suit on the Trust's behalf. The individual mortgage loans served as collateral for the certificates, which paid principal and interest to certificateholders from the cash flow generated by the mortgage loan pool;
DBSP made over 50 representations and warranties in the MLPA regarding the credit quality and characteristics of the pooled loans "as of the Closing date," March 28, 2006. The MLPA permitted the Trust to examine each mortgage loan file and exclude from the final pool any loans that did not comply with DBSP's representations and warranties. But the MLPA also relieved the Trust and certificateholders from any obligation to verify DBSP's representations and warranties, or to conduct due diligence on the loan characteristics. Importantly, the Trust's "sole remedy" in the event DBSP "breach[ed] . . . any of the representations and warranties contained in" the MLPA was for DBSP to cure or repurchase a non-conforming loan.
A few years after the parties executed the MLPA and PSA, borrower defaults and delinquencies on individual mortgages caused the Trust and certificateholders to lose almost $330 million. Two certificate holders, RMBS Recovery Holdings 4, LLC and VP Structured Products, LLC—independent investment funds which together held 25% of the voting certificates—hired a forensic mortgage loan review firm to examine a portion of the loans in the trust. Ninety-nine percent of these loans allegedly failed to comply with at least one of DBSP's representations and warranties in the MLPA about borrowers' incomes, occupancy status or existing debt obligations.
By letter dated January 12, 2012, the two certificateholders gave notice to HSBC of "breaches of representations and warranties in the Mortgage Loans by the Sponsor, [DBSP] under the relevant [PSA] and related Trust documents." Citing "the extremely high breach rates found in loan file reviews," the certificateholders "demand[ed] that the Mortgage Loans in the Trust in their entirety be put back to [DBSP] for repurchase, including all of the individual defective loans uncovered [during their] investigation" (emphasis added). Further, the certificateholders alerted the trustee to "[t]he [u]rgent [n]eed for a Tolling Agreement . . . in light of potential expiring statute of limitations deadlines," and expressed their belief that "it [w]as imperative that the Trustee act expeditiously to request such an agreement."
When the trustee neither sought a tolling agreement nor brought suit against DBSP, the two certificateholders sued
On September 13, 2012, the trustee sought to substitute for the certificateholders, and filed a complaint on the Trust's behalf. In the complaint, the Trust alleged breaches of representations and warranties and DBSP's refusal to comply with its repurchase obligation. The Trust asserted that it had promptly notified DBSP of the breaches of representations and warranties on February 8, March 23, April 23, April 30, May 11, May 16, May 31, June 7 and July 19, 2012; and that each of these notices specified the defective or non-conforming loans, detailed specific breaches for each loan and supplied supporting documentation. The Trust suggested that the pre-suit 60- and 90-day condition precedent was satisfied because, as of the date of its complaint, DBSP had still not repurchased any loans, and "refused to recognize the [notices of breach] as sufficient to trigger [DBSP's] cure or repurchase obligations."
On November 30, 2012, DBSP moved to dismiss the complaint as untimely, arguing that the trustee's claims accrued as of March 28, 2006, more than six years before the Trust filed its complaint (see CPLR 213 [2]). Moreover, DBSP contended that the certificateholders' summons and notice was a nullity because they did not give DBSP 60 days to cure and 90 days to repurchase before bringing suit; that the certificateholders lacked standing because only the trustee was authorized to sue for breaches of representations and warranties; and that the trustee's substitution could not relate back to March 28, 2012 because there was no valid preexisting action.
Supreme Court denied DBSP's motion to dismiss (40 Misc.3d 562 [Sup Ct, NY County 2013]). The judge reasoned that DBSP could not have breached its repurchase obligations until it "fail[ed] to timely cure or repurchase a loan" following discovery or receipt of notice of a breach of a representation or warranty
The Appellate Division reversed and granted DBSP's motion to dismiss the complaint as untimely (112 A.D.3d 522 [1st Dept 2013]). The Court held that "the claims accrued on the closing date of the MLPA, March 28, 2006, when any breach of the representations and warranties contained therein occurred" (id. at 523). Further, although the certificateholders commenced their action on March 28, 2012, the last day of the applicable six-year limitations period, the 60- and 90-day periods for cure and repurchase had not by then elapsed; accordingly, the certificateholders "fail[ed] to comply with a condition precedent to commencing suit [that] rendered their summons with notice a nullity" (id.). The Appellate Division added that, in any event, the certificateholders lacked standing to commence the action on behalf of the Trust and the Trust's substitution did not cure that defect and relate back to the certificateholders' date of filing.
On June 26, 2014, we granted the Trust leave to appeal (23 N.Y.3d 906 [2014]). We now affirm.
Our statutes of limitation serve the same objectives of finality, certainty and predictability that New York's contract law endorses. Statutes of limitation not only save litigants from defending stale claims, but also "express[] a societal interest or public policy of giving repose to human affairs" (John J. Kassner & Co. v City of New York, 46 N.Y.2d 544, 550 [1979] [citations and internal quotation marks omitted]). And we have repeatedly "rejected accrual dates which cannot be ascertained
Accordingly, New York does not apply the "discovery" rule to statutes of limitations in contract actions (Ely-Cruikshank Co. v Bank of Montreal, 81 N.Y.2d 399, 403 [1993]). Rather, the "statutory period of limitations begins to run from the time when liability for wrong has arisen even though the injured party may be ignorant of the existence of the wrong or injury" (id. [citations omitted]). This is so even though the result may at times be "harsh and manifestly unfair, and creates an obvious injustice" because a contrary rule "would be entirely dependent on the subjective equitable variations of different Judges and courts instead of the objective, reliable, predictable and relatively definitive rules that have long governed this aspect of commercial repose" (id. [internal quotation marks omitted]). Indeed, "[t]o extend the highly exceptional discovery notion to general breach of contract actions would effectively eviscerate the Statute of Limitations in this commercial dispute arena" (id. at 404). We applied the same bright-line rule just three years ago in the insurance context with respect to retrospective premiums, holding that breach of contract counterclaims "began to run when [insurers] possessed the legal right to demand payment from the insured," not years later when they actually made the demand (Hahn Automotive Warehouse, Inc. v American Zurich Ins. Co., 18 N.Y.3d 765, 767 [2012] [emphasis added]).
The Trust does not dispute this precedent, but rather seeks to persuade us that its claim did not arise until DBSP refused to cure or repurchase, at which point the Trust, either through the trustee or the certificateholders, had six years to bring suit. Thus, the Trust views the repurchase obligation as a distinct and continuing obligation that DBSP breached each time it refused to cure or repurchase a non-conforming loan. Stated another way, the Trust considers the cure or repurchase obligation to be a separate promise of future performance that continued for the life of the investment (i.e., the mortgage loans).
Although parties may contractually agree to undertake a separate obligation, the breach of which does not arise until some future date, the repurchase obligation undertaken by DBSP does not fit this description. To support its contrary position, the Trust relies on our decision in Bulova Watch Co. v
We held that the guarantee "embod[ied] an agreement distinct from the contract to supply roofing materials," the breach of which triggered the statute of limitations anew (id. at 610). This was so because the defendant in Bulova Watch "did not merely guarantee the condition or performance of the goods, but agreed to perform a service" (id. at 612). That service was the separate and distinct promise to repair a defective roof—a critical component of the parties' bargain and "a special, separate and additional incentive to purchase" the defendant's product (id. at 611). Accordingly, the "agreements contemplating services . . . were subject to a six-year statute . . . running separately for the damages occasioned each time a breach of the obligation to repair the bonded roof occurred" (id.).
The remedial clause in Bulova Watch expressly guaranteed future performance of the roof and undertook a promise to repair the roof if it did not satisfy the seller's guarantee. DBSP, by contrast, never guaranteed the future performance of the mortgage loans. It represented and warranted certain facts about the loans' characteristics as of March 28, 2006, when the MLPA and PSA were executed, and expressly stated that those representations and warranties did not survive the closing date. DBSP's cure or repurchase obligation was the Trust's remedy for a breach of those representations and warranties, not a promise of the loans' future performance. In fact, nothing in the contract specified that the cure or repurchase obligation would continue for the life of the loans. Unlike the separate guarantee in Bulova Watch, DBSP's cure or repurchase obligation could not reasonably be viewed as a distinct promise of future performance. It was dependent on, and indeed derivative of, DBSP's representations and warranties, which did not survive the closing and were breached, if at all, on that date.
And it makes sense that DBSP, as sponsor and seller, would not guarantee future performance of the mortgage loans, which
If the cure or repurchase obligation did not exist, the Trust's only recourse would have been to bring an action against DBSP for breach of the representations and warranties. That action could only have been brought within six years of the date of contract execution. The cure or repurchase obligation is an alternative remedy, or recourse, for the Trust, but the underlying act the Trust complains of is the same: the quality of the loans and their conformity with the representations and warranties. The Trust argues, in effect, that the cure or repurchase
The Trust's strongest argument is that the cure or repurchase obligation was a substantive condition precedent to suit that delayed accrual of the cause of action. In that vein, the Trust claims it had no right at law to sue DBSP until DBSP refused to cure or repurchase the loans within the requisite time period; only then did the PSA permit the Trust to bring suit to enforce that distinct contractual obligation. While this argument is persuasive-sounding, we are unconvinced.
The Trust ignores the difference between a demand that is a condition to a party's performance, and a demand that seeks a remedy for a pre-existing wrong. We observed the distinction over 100 years ago in Dickinson v Mayor of City of N.Y. (92 N.Y. 584, 590 [1883]). There, we held that a 30-day statutory period during which the City of New York was free from litigation while it investigated claims did not affect accrual of the cause of action against the City. In such a case, where a legal wrong has occurred and the only impediment to recovery is the defendant's discovery of the wrong and notice to the defendant, the claim accrues immediately. We contrasted that situation, however, to one in which "a demand . . . was a part of the cause of action and necessary to be alleged and proven, and without this no cause of action existed" (id. at 591, distinguishing Fisher v Mayor of City of N.Y., 67 N.Y. 73 [1876]).
The Trust suffered a legal wrong at the moment DBSP allegedly breached the representations and warranties. This is like the situation in Dickinson, and unlike the situation in Fisher, where no cause of action existed until the demand was made.
The only cases the Trust relies on to support its position are inapposite. The court in Resolution Trust Corp. v Key Fin. Servs., Inc. (280 F.3d 12, 18 [1st Cir 2002]) specifically stated that it was not deciding the question of "[w]hether or not [the defendant] committed an independent breach by failing to repurchase" (id.). It affirmed the lower court on other grounds. The other cases the Trust cites either mistakenly rely on Resolution Trust to support the proposition that the court there expressly refrained from resolving (see LaSalle Bank N.A. v Lehman Bros. Holdings, Inc., 237 F.Supp.2d 618, 638 [D Md 2002] [citing only Resolution Trust for the assertion that "a loan seller's failure to repurchase non-conforming loans upon demand as required by a contract is an independent breach of the contract entitling the plaintiff to pursue general contract remedies for breach of contract"]; Lehman Bros. Holdings, Inc. v National Bank of Ark., 875 F.Supp.2d 911, 917 [ED Ark 2012] [same]) or rest on Supreme Court's decision in this case, which the Appellate Division subsequently reversed (see Federal Hous. Fin. Agency v WMC Mtge., LLC, 2013 WL 7144159, *1, 2013 US Dist LEXIS 184936, *2 [SD NY, Dec. 17, 2013, No. 13-Civ-584 (AKH)]).
In sum, DBSP's cure or repurchase obligation was not a separate and continuing promise of future performance; rather, it
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
Chief Judge LIPPMAN and Judges PIGOTT, RIVERA, STEIN and FAHEY concur; Judge ABDUS-SALAAM taking no part.
Order affirmed, with costs.