ROBERT S. LASNIK, District Judge.
This matter comes before the Court on the "Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) Motion of Defendant Northwest Trustee Services, Inc." Dkt. # 16. Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit against a number of lenders, loan servicers, trustees, and other banking institutions alleging technical errors and illegal acts that delayed plaintiffs' ability to modify their home loan and caused damage. Northwest Trustee Services ("NWTS") seeks dismissal of five of the claims asserted, arguing that they are not plausible based on the facts alleged. Having reviewed the complaint, the attached exhibits, and the memoranda submitted by the parties (including plaintiffs' sur-reply), the Court finds as follows:
In March 2006, plaintiff Robin Hartley executed a promissory note for $500,800.00, payable to the order of First Magnus Financial Corp. Decl. of Douglas A. Johns (Dkt. # 9), Ex. 2.
Plaintiffs began having trouble making their mortgage payments in 2008. At the time, Countrywide Home Loans Servicing LP was servicing plaintiffs' mortgage and communicated with them regarding amounts past due and its intent to accelerate the loan.
Plaintiffs made their last payment on the loan in July 2009.
In April 2012, MERS purportedly assigned its interests as beneficiary of the deed of trust to Bank of New York Mellon, as trustee for certain certificate holders (hereinafter, "BNYM"). In January 2013, a law firm acting on behalf of an unidentified "Deed of Trust Beneficiary" notified plaintiffs that they were in default. The notice identified BNYM as the owner of the note and Bank of America as the servicer. Plaintiffs requested mediation, and the matter was referred by the Washington Department of Commerce. Months passed while Bank of America decided whether or not it wanted to pursue the notice of default, pursue mediation, and/or offer a loan modification.
In July 2014, BNYM appointed Northwest Trustee Services, Inc., ("NWTS") as the successor trustee. NWTS issued another Notice of Default, which caused plaintiffs' counsel to file another request for mediation. Despite the first and second mediation requests, NWTS took the next step toward foreclosure by issuing a Notice of Trustee's Sale on September 4, 2014.
NWTS seeks dismissal of plaintiffs' claims of quiet title, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing, negligence, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and violations of the Washington Lending and Homeownership Act. The question for the Court in this context is whether the facts alleged in the complaint or shown by the attached exhibits present a "plausible" ground for relief.
Plaintiffs allege that any action to foreclose their deed of trust is barred by the applicable statute of limitations and that they are therefore entitled to quiet title under RCW 7.28.300. Dkt. # 1 at ¶ 111. NWTS has no ownership or possessory interest in the property, however, nor does it claim such an interest. It is therefore not a proper defendant to a quiet title action.
Plaintiffs allege that NWTS violated the Mortgage Lending and Homeownership Act ("MLHA") by making misstatements, misrepresentations, or omissions regarding the outstanding loan balance and terms based on an improper loan modification.
Despite acknowledging that they are not the correct parties to pursue a claim under the MLHA, plaintiffs request that NWTS' motion be denied and that the Court compel the Director of the Department of Financial Institutions to pursue the claim (or to determine whether plaintiffs should be deputized to pursue it on behalf of the Director). Plaintiffs cite to Rule 21 as support for this extraordinary application, but this is not a matter of misjoinder or nonjoinder. Plaintiffs do not have standing to assert the claim in the first instance. The government's participation is not, therefore, necessary to the grant of complete relief as to any claim that plaintiffs can pursue. Plaintiffs simply have no claim under the MLHA. They may bring the facts of their case to the Director in the hopes that she will pursue an MLHA claim against NWTS, but they may not initiate and/or pursue a claim that belongs to someone else.
Plaintiffs have not asserted a breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing claim against NWTS and/or have not opposed its dismissal.
Plaintiffs' negligence claim is based in part on an alleged "general duty of care to Plaintiffs in servicing their loan in such a way as to prevent foreclosure and prevent emotional distress." Dkt. # 1 at ¶ 169. There is no such duty under Washington law. NWTS was bound to exercise its powers as trustee pursuant to the grant of authority from the beneficiary and the governing statutes. To impose upon a trustee an obligation to enforce the deed of trust in a way that prevents default/foreclosure and the emotional distress that arises therefrom would give plaintiffs a benefit not specified in their bargain and would likely put the trustee in breach of its contractual and statutory obligations to the beneficiary. Plaintiffs have not identified, and the Court has not found, any Washington authority that supports the proposition that a trustee has a general duty to prevent foreclosure and emotional distress.
Plaintiffs also allege that NWTS failed to comply with applicable state and federal laws regarding mortgage foreclosure proceedings. Dkt. # 1 at ¶ 170. The "existence of a duty may be predicated upon statutory provisions or on common law principles" (
Plaintiffs have not asserted an outrage claim against NWTS and/or have not opposed its dismissal.
For all of the foregoing reasons, NWTS' motion to dismiss (Dkt. # 16) is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. Plaintiffs' quiet title, MLHA, good faith and fair dealing, and emotional distress claims are DISMISSED as to this defendant. Plaintiffs' negligence claim may proceed.