MANZANET-DANIELS, J.
This appeal concerns the propriety of the motion court's dismissal of plaintiff's (MBIA) fraudulent inducement claim and concomitant ruling that MBIA is required to prove loss causation as an element of its fraud claim.
In 2007, defendant DLJ Mortgage Capital Inc. (DLJ), as sponsor, amassed a loan "pool" comprised of over 15,000 second-lien residential mortgage loans with an aggregate outstanding principal balance of approximately $900 million, which was then transferred to a trust, known as the Home Equity Mortgage Trust 2007-2 (HEMT 2007-2), formed by defendant Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC. Credit Suisse then served as the underwriter of the mortgage loan pool, and marketed residential mortgage-backed securities to investors. Credit Suisse solicited MBIA, a monoline insurance company, to issue an irrevocable financial guaranty insurance policy guaranteeing payments of interest and principal to purchasers of the securities in the event that the pool of loans in the trust did not generate sufficient income to cover the payments.
The latter provided that "[t]he information set forth in the Mortgage Loan Schedule . . . is complete, true and correct in all material respects as of the Cut-off Date." The attached schedule contained information about the transaction loans, including debt-to-income ratio, the borrowers' credit scores, and the original principal balances.
The insurance agreement limited MBIA's remedy for breach of the pooling and service agreement's (PSA) warranties to the "repurchase protocol" set forth in section 2.03 (e) of the PSA, which makes repurchase the sole remedy as to any nonconforming loan where the loan breach materially and adversely affects the interests of the certificateholders or MBIA.
As a result of the 2008 financial crisis, loans representing 51% of the original loan balance defaulted, requiring MBIA to make over $296 million in claim payments. MBIA demanded that Credit Suisse repurchase those loans. Credit Suisse declined to repurchase them.
On December 24, 2009, MBIA initiated this action, alleging that it was fraudulently induced to participate in the transaction by defendants' false representations concerning: (1) the attributes of the securitized loans; (2) defendants' adherence to certain strict underwriting guidelines used to select the loans underlying the transaction; and (3) the due diligence conducted by defendants on the securitized loans to ensure compliance
On January 30, 2013, MBIA filed an amended complaint asserting, inter alia, fraudulent inducement, breach of the insurance agreement, and breach of the PSA's repurchase protocol, and seeking compensatory, consequential, rescissory, and punitive damages.
MBIA moved for summary judgment on the meaning of the MLS rep and the no monetary default rep, and on the standard applicable to its fraudulent inducement claim. MBIA argued that Insurance Law §§ 3105 and 3106 eliminated the common-law elements of loss causation and justifiable reliance.
Credit Suisse and DLJ (defendants) moved for summary judgment dismissing the fraudulent inducement claim, arguing that MBIA was unable to establish the element of justifiable reliance and that the fraud claim should be dismissed because the damages sought were duplicative of the damages available on the contractual "put-back" claims. They also sought a ruling that the MLS rep and the no monetary default rep should not be interpreted as tantamount to a "no-fraud representation."
The motion court granted in part and denied in part the motions for summary judgment. The court granted MBIA partial summary judgment with respect to the meaning of the MLS and no monetary default warranties. The court agreed with MBIA that the MLS warranty served to guarantee the accuracy of the information in the MLS, not merely that the information had been accurately transcribed from the loan file. The court rejected Credit Suisse's argument that so construing the warranty would in effect be tantamount to imposing a "no fraud rep," which Credit Suisse had declined to give.
With respect to the no monetary default rep, the court rejected Credit Suisse's argument that the representation merely provided assurance that borrowers were not materially delinquent on the financial obligations under the mortgages and applied only to curable defaults, finding that such an interpretation would render the "`no material event' language to be surplusage" (MBIA Ins. Corp. v Credit Suisse Sec. [USA]
The court rejected MBIA's argument that sections 3105 and 3106 of the Insurance Law altered or eliminated any of the elements or standards that would otherwise be applicable to MBIA's claim that it had been fraudulently induced to issue the financial guaranty insurance for the transaction. The motion court reasoned that
The motion court accordingly held that MBIA was foreclosed from recovering losses attributable to conforming loans, explaining that those losses "do not arise from a breach," and represent "the very risk [the insurer] assumed" (2017 NY Slip Op 50389[U], *20 [internal quotation marks omitted]). The court noted that recovery for such conforming loans was "simply a species of rescissory damages," which under precedent were not recoverable (id.).
The motion court dismissed the remainder of the fraudulent inducement claim on the basis that the available fraud damages were "entirely duplicative of what [MBIA] would recover on its contractual put-back claims" (2017 NY Slip Op 50389[U], *21). The court found that the possibility of punitive damages was not a basis for maintaining an otherwise duplicative fraud claim. Having dismissed the fraud claim on these bases, the motion court did not reach the issue of justifiable reliance.
We now modify to deny plaintiff's motion for summary judgment as to the meaning of the no monetary default rep and the MLS rep, and otherwise affirm.
MBIA seeks "Claims Payment Damages" and "Repurchase Damages." The "Claims Payment Damages" consist of "all claims payments that MBIA has made . . . [or] will likely incur," and are designed to put MBIA in the same position it would have been in had the policy never been issued. As such, they constitute rescissory damages and are not recoverable by plaintiff monoline insurer seeking redress under an irrevocable
"Repurchase Damages" represent the difference between the claims payments MBIA made or is projected to incur, and those MBIA would have made had Credit Suisse repurchased nonconforming loans, i.e., those that breached the representations and warranties.
While such repurchase damages are in theory recoverable, the fraud claim was nonetheless correctly dismissed. It has long been the rule that parties may not assert fraud claims seeking damages that are duplicative of those recoverable on a cause of action for breach of contract (see e.g. Mañas v VMS Assoc., LLC, 53 A.D.3d 451, 454 [1st Dept 2008]). As we noted in Mañas, fraud damages are meant to redress a different harm than damages on a cause of action for breach of contract. Contract damages are meant to restore the nonbreaching party to as good a position as it would have been in had the contract been performed; fraud damages are meant to indemnify losses suffered as a result of the fraudulent inducement (see id.). Where all of the damages are remedied through the contract claim, the fraud claim is duplicative and must be dismissed (see id.; see also Chowaiki & Co. Fine Art Ltd. v Lacher, 115 A.D.3d 600, 600-601 [1st Dept 2014] [dismissing fraud claim seeking duplicative damages even where, as here, the plaintiff sufficiently alleged breach of an independent duty owed them independent of the contract]; Triad Intl. Corp. v Cameron Indus., Inc., 122 A.D.3d 531, 531-532 [1st Dept 2014] [affirming dismissal of fraud claim where the damages sought on the fraud claim were duplicative, explaining that "plaintiff seeks the same compensatory damages for both claims. . . . (I)ts purported fraud damages are actually contract damages"]; Mosaic Caribe, Ltd. v AllSettled Group, Inc., 117 A.D.3d 421, 422-423 [1st Dept 2014] [fraud claim duplicative of a breach of contract claim where the fraud claim sought the same damages, namely return of the deposit paid by the plaintiff under the contract]).
MBIA's claim that a different measure of interest might apply to a judgment related to a fraud, as opposed to a contract claim, is irrelevant, as interest is not an element of compensatory
In connection with the foregoing, the court correctly determined that the fraudulent inducement claim is subject to the common-law fraud element of loss causation (see Ambac, 151 AD3d at 86-87). To the extent ever in doubt, the Court of Appeals has now conclusively ruled that the provisions of the Insurance Law cited by MBIA did not displace the common-law elements of justifiable reliance and loss causation in a cause of action for fraudulent inducement (Ambac, 31 N.Y.3d 569). The Court found that "[s]ection 3105 does not provide an affirmative, freestanding, fraud-based cause of action" and does not "`inform' a court's assessment of the longstanding common law elements of fraudulent inducement" (id. at 580).
Given the grounds for the dismissal of the fraud claim, i.e., duplicative damages, the court properly denied plaintiff's motion to supplement the record in opposition to defendant's motion with evidence that would bolster the factual allegations of fraud.
The court erred in granting MBIA's motion for summary judgment as to the meaning of the no monetary default rep and the MLS rep. In Ambac, this Court examined a materially identical no monetary default rep. We held that the motion court erred in interpreting it, as a matter of law, to include borrower misrepresentation, explaining that "[t]he better course is to hold a trial to inquire into and develop the facts to clarify the relevant legal principles and their application to [the] representations and warranties" (151 AD3d at 89 [internal quotation marks omitted]). That holding squarely applies to the no monetary default rep, which is materially identical to the one at issue in Ambac. Credit Suisse offers a compelling argument that the motion court's broad interpretation of the representation was not correct.
Similar reasoning requires denial of summary judgment as to the meaning of the MLS Rep (see Bear Stearns Mtge. Funding
Accordingly, the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Shirley Werner Kornreich, J.), entered March 31, 2017, which, insofar as appealed from as limited by the briefs, granted defendants' motion for summary judgment dismissing the fraudulent inducement claim, denied so much of plaintiff's motion for summary judgment as sought a ruling that an insurer does not have to prove loss causation in connection with a fraudulent inducement claim, granted so much of plaintiff's motion as sought a ruling on the meaning of the "No Monetary Default" representation and the "Mortgage Loan Schedule" representation in the pooling and service agreement for the subject residential mortgage-backed securitization transaction, and denied plaintiff's motion to supplement the record in opposition to defendants' motion, should be modified, on the law, to deny plaintiff's motion as to the meaning of the representations, and otherwise affirmed, without costs.
Order, Supreme Court, New York County, entered March 31, 2017, modified, on the law, to deny plaintiff's motion as to the meaning of the representations, and otherwise affirmed, without costs.