California Court Denies Plaintiffs’ Claims for Breach of Express Agreements, Breach of Implied Agreements, Slander of Title, Wrongful Foreclosure, and Violations of California Civil Codes

The court in deciding Zapata v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 2013 U.S. Dist. (N.D. Cal. Dec., 2013) dismissed the plaintiff’s action for failure to state a claim.

This action boiled down to an attempt made by the plaintiff to avoid foreclosure by attacking the mortgage securitization process. Plaintiffs Christopher and Elaine Zapata took out a promissory note and deed of trust with Family Lending Services, Inc. The deed of trust named S.P.S. Affiliates as trustee and MERS as nominee for the lender and as beneficiary.

Plaintiffs alleged a host of violations, including the claim that the defendants allegedly violated the terms of the deed of trust by executing an invalid and false notice of default because they were not the true lender or trustee.

Plaintiffs also alleged that the defendants violated the pooling and service agreement for the ARM Trust by failing to record the assignments. Also, Wells Fargo allegedly failed to sign the loan modification agreement or provide plaintiffs with a copy Wells Fargo had signed.

According to plaintiff, defendants also allegedly recorded invalid substitution of trustee, assignment of the deed of trust, and notice of default because of various alleged recording errors and delays. Plaintiffs also allege that defendants intentionally confused them.

Plaintiffs sought declaratory relief and claim breach of express agreements, breach of implied agreements, slander of title, wrongful foreclosure, violation of California Civil Code Section 2923.5, violation of California Civil Code Section 2923.55, violation of 18 U.S.C. 1962, and violation of California Business and Professions Code Section 17200 of California’s Unfair Competition Law.

As an initial matter the court noted that, courts in this district as well as the undersigned have rejected plaintiffs’ central underlying theory. Further, the court noted that neither their court of appeals nor the California Supreme Court had ruled on whether plaintiffs may challenge the mortgage securitization process, but the undersigned has held, in agreement with persuasive authority from this district, that there was no standing to challenge foreclosure based on a loan’s having been securitized.

Accordingly, after considering the plaintiff’s litany of claims, the court ultimately granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss.

Court Dismissed Minn. Stat. § 559.01 Claims

The court in deciding Lubbers v. Deutsche Bank Nat’l Trust Co., 2013 U.S. Dist. (D. Minn., 2013) dismissed plaintiff’s claims.

Plaintiffs sought to invalidate the foreclosure of the mortgage on their home. Plaintiffs asserted three claims against defendant: (1) quiet-title, to determine adverse claims under Minn. Stat. § 559.01; (2) declaratory judgment; and (3) slander of title.

Plaintiffs alleged the following causes of action:

In count I, plaintiffs asserted a quiet title action pursuant to Minn. Stat. § 559.01, and sought a determination regarding Deutsche Bank’s adverse interest in the Property. According to plaintiffs, in a quiet title action, the burden of proof was on the mortgagee asserting an adverse interest in the property to show that both record title and legal title concur and co-exist at the same time and in the same entity to foreclose by advertisement.

In count II, plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment under Minn. Stat. § 555.02 that the various assignments of mortgage, notices of pendency, and powers of attorney were all void, and that plaintiffs remain the owner of the property in fee title.

Count III, plaintiff alleged slander of title, plaintiffs asserted that Wilford, acted at direction of Deutsche Bank, drafted and recorded documents that were false and not executed by legally authorized persons, and that Deutsche Bank knew that the documents were false because unauthorized persons executed the power of attorneys and the assignments of mortgage.

As relief, plaintiffs sought: (1) a determination of adverse interest in the Property; (2) a declaration that the sheriff’s certificate of sale, the various assignments of mortgage, notices of pendency, and powers of attorney are all void; (3) a declaration that plaintiffs remain the owner of the Property in fee title; and (4) money damages. Id., Prayer for Relief.

After considering the plaintiff’s claims, this court granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss.

Michigan District Court Dismisses Borrower’s Complaint After Failure to Redeem Property within Statutory Period

In Vollmar v. Federal National Mortgage Association, (12-cv-1119, E.D. Mich. 2012), the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss each of the plaintiff’s complaints that sought to invalidate the foreclosure sale of his property and to quiet title. The judge ruled that the plaintiff lacked standing after failing to redeem the property within the allotted period.

In the case at hand, the plaintiff took out a $128,000 mortgage on his property with Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., with Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (“MERS”) as the mortgagee. MERS assigned its interests to BAC Home Loan Servicing, L.P. (“BACHLS”) in a recorded deed on July 23, 2010. The plaintiff defaulted on his payments and BACHLS instituted foreclosure proceedings in March 2011. The property was purchased in a sheriff sale by Bank of America, N.A. (“BANA”), the successor by merger to BACHLS.

The Court addressed the plaintiff’s claims in conjunction with the defendant’s motion to dismiss.

1. The Court held that the plaintiff lacked standing to challenge the sheriff’s sale due to his failure to redeem the property within Michigan’s 6-month statutory redemption period. At the close of the statutory period, title is vested with the purchaser and the mortgagor loses standing to challenge the sale. Rather than preserving his right to challenge the foreclosure sale by remaining in the home, as the plaintiff argued, the Court held that the ownership interest “terminated at the conclusion of the sheriff’s sale,” and the plaintiff was merely an “illegal holdover.”

2. Defendant claimed that the plaintiff’s amended complaint does not contain allegations of “fraud or irregularity” that are sufficient to annul the foreclosure sale under a breach of contract claim. The plaintiff alleged that the defendants were required to demonstrate by whom the foreclosure proceedings were initiated and failed to produce evidence that BANA acquired BACHLS interest in the mortgage. The Court dismissed the plaintiff’s allegations, noting that the Defendant’s motion papers, foreclosure advertisements, and the initial collection letter to the plaintiff each established that BACHLS both received the mortgage interest from MERS and initiated the foreclosure proceedings. In regards to BANA’s role, the Court referenced Texas Business Organization Codes (Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code §10.008(a)(2)(C)), under which BACHLS and BANA merged on July 1, 2011), which established that after the merger of the two companies, BANA acquired all of BACHLS rights, titles, and interests without the need for “any transfer or assignment.”

3. The Court addressed the plaintiff’s slander of title and quiet title claims even though they were abandoned for failure to address them in the response brief. Because slander of title and quiet title “presuppose that plaintiff possesses the ability to establish title” and the Court has already established that the plaintiff’s rights to the property were extinguished at the end of the statutory period, both claims were dismissed.

4. Since the plaintiff failed to allege that the contract left the manner of performance open to the defendant’s discretion, and that the “manner of performance” of the mortgage rested in the defendants hands, an element required to raise a breach of implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing claim, the Court refused to accept the cause of action, citing Meyer v. CitiMortgage, Inc. 11-13432, 2012 WL 511995 (E.D. Mich. Feb. 16, 2012) which stated that Michigan law does not recognize an independent action for breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing when the contract cannot be construed to imply such a covenant by having left the manner of performance open to the defendant’s discretion.

5. Finally, the Court addressed the plaintiffs “seemingly abandoned” claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress to reassert that “emotional damages are not available for breach of contract” claims. Citing Kevelighan v. Orlans  Assocs., P.C., 498 F. App’x 469, 472 (6th Cir. 2012) which upheld the dismissal of an emotional distress claim in a breach of mortgage contract suit.