Schaefer v. IndyMac Mortgage Services, et al
Filing
OPINION issued by Juan R. Torruella, Appellate Judge; Timothy Belcher Dyk, Appellate Judge and William J. Kayatta , Jr., Appellate Judge. Published. [12-2388]
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 1
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 12-2388
MARK E. SCHAEFER,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
INDYMAC MORTGAGE SERVICES,
ONE WEST BANK, FSB,
FEDERAL NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSOCIATION,
and HARMON LAW OFFICES, P.C.,
Defendants, Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
[Hon. Joseph A. DiClerico, Jr., U.S. District Judge]
Before
Torruella, Dyk,* and Kayatta,
Circuit Judges.
Walter L. Maroney for appellant.
Thomas R. Lavallee, with whom Harmon Law Offices, P.C., was on
brief, for appellees.
October 2, 2013
*
Of the Federal Circuit, sitting by designation.
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
DYK, Circuit Judge.
Page: 2
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
Plaintiff Mark E. Schaefer appeals from
the decision of the United States District Court for the District
of New Hampshire dismissing his suit against defendants IndyMac
Mortgage Services; OneWest Bank, FSB; the Federal National Mortgage
Association
(“Harmon”).
(“Fannie
Mae”);
and
Harmon
Law
Offices,
P.C.
Schaefer’s complaint sought an injunction barring his
impending eviction; an order nullifying the March 2012 foreclosure
sale of his home and requiring the defendants to allow him to
modify or reinstate his mortgage; and monetary damages.
The district court found that Schaefer’s claims were barred by
the economic loss doctrine, and dismissed his complaint for failure
to state a claim.
See Schaefer v. IndyMac Mortg. Servs., No. 12-
cv-159,
4929094,
2012
WL
at
*3-*6
(D.N.H.
Oct.
16,
2012),
reconsideration denied, 2012 WL 6113973 (D.N.H. Dec. 10, 2012). We
affirm.
I.
A.
The
following
facts,
which
are
alleged
in
Schaefer’s
complaint, are accepted as true for purposes of the motion to
dismiss.
See Mass. Ret. Sys. v. CVS Caremark Corp., 716 F.3d 229,
231, 237 (1st Cir. 2013).
In November 2007, Schaefer refinanced his home mortgage, and
entered into a refinancing loan and mortgage agreement with IndyMac
Bank, FSB.
Under the terms of the loan and mortgage agreement,
-2-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 3
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
Schaefer was required to make regular monthly payments, and IndyMac
Bank was allowed to accelerate the principal and to foreclose on
the
mortgage
payments.1
in
the
event
that
Schaefer
fell
behind
on
his
The mortgage agreement also gave Schaefer the right to
reinstate the mortgage before foreclosure upon payment of past due
amounts, penalties, interest, and fees.
Schaefer
alleges
that
IndyMac
or
its
In this litigation,
successors
subsequently
undertook two additional duties beyond the scope of the contract
that restricted their right to foreclose: (1) a duty to provide him
with a reinstatement amount in the event that he fell into arrears,
and (2) a duty to process an application for loan modification
before foreclosure.
At some time after November 2007, IndyMac Bank assigned the
mortgage to its corporate parent, OneWest Bank.
The mortgage was
serviced by IndyMac Mortgage Services, which, like IndyMac Bank, is
now
a
subsidiary
of
OneWest
Bank.
We
refer
to
all
three
entities—IndyMac Bank, IndyMac Mortgage Services, and OneWest
Bank—as “OneWest.”
1
The mortgage document was not attached to the complaint
but was submitted to the district court by the appellees. While
documents not attached to the complaint are ordinarily excluded
from consideration on a motion to dismiss, see Fed. R. Civ. P.
12(d), they may be consulted if “the[ir] authenticity . . . [is]
not disputed by the parties,” they are “central to [the]
plaintiff[‘s] claim,” or they are “sufficiently referred to in the
complaint,” Watterson v. Page, 987 F.2d 1, 3-4 (citing cases). See
generally 5B Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal
Practice and Procedure § 1357 (3d ed. 2004). The mortgage document
falls into this category.
-3-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 4
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
Schaefer defaulted on the loan in 2009, after which OneWest
agreed to modify the loan.
In late 2011, Schaefer again fell behind on his mortgage
payments.
On January 19, 2012, Schaefer received a letter from
OneWest (“the January 19 letter”) informing him that his loan
account was “6 [p]ayments [p]ast [d]ue.” See Schaefer Br. addendum
27. The letter specified a “[t]otal [a]mount [d]ue” of $12,519.25,
and indicated that after February 16, a “[f]ee [a]ssessment” would
be added, bringing the total to $12,572.46.
Id.
The letter did
not refer to either amount as a “reinstatement amount,” and did not
include specific line items for “further accruing interest, costs,
attorney’s
fees,”
or
other
items
that
Schaefer
alleges
are
“typically included as additions to an arrearage to establish an
actual reinstatement amount.”
Schaefer
downloaded
from
Id. at 6-7.
OneWest’s
mortgage modification application.”
Around the same time,
website
a
“comprehensive
Id. at 6.
On January 30, Schaefer received a letter from Harmon, counsel
to OneWest, informing him that Harmon had been “instructed to bring
a foreclosure” because Schaefer was “in breach of the conditions of
the loan documents.”
loan
was
“hereby
See id. at 21.
accelerated,”
with
This letter stated that the
“the
entire
balance”
of
$246,992.57 “due and payable forthwith and without further notice.”
Id. The letter also informed Schaefer that “[e]ven though the note
has been accelerated, [he] may still have the right to reinstate
-4-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 5
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
the loan.” Id. The letter did not include a reinstatement amount,
but directed Schaefer to the firm’s website or telephone number in
order “to request a reinstatement [amount].”
Schaefer
requested
a
reinstatement
Id.
amount
website on February 6 and again on February 16.
from
Harmon’s
On each occasion,
he received the following (seemingly automated) notice:
Your request has been received. We will forward the
reinstatement . . . information to you when it is
obtained from your lender or servicer or the lender or
servicer will send this information to you directly.
. . . .
Unless there is an imminent sale, please wait 5
business
days
before
following
up
with
us
on
reinstatements . . . . You may follow up by contacting
us at . . . .
We will get back to you within 24 hours with a
status of your pending request.
Id. at 24, 25.
Schaefer alleges that neither Harmon nor OneWest
ever contacted him with a reinstatement amount; Schaefer did not
attempt to follow up on his requests for a reinstatement amount by
contacting OneWest.
On February 14, Schaefer received a foreclosure notice from
Harmon, informing him that a foreclosure sale would occur on March
12.2
2
The notice identified Fannie Mae as the "present holder
of [the m]ortgage." Id. at 28. According to documents filed by
the defendants before the district court, Fannie Mae received the
mortgage by assignment from OneWest on January 26, 2012, while
retaining OneWest as the mortgage servicer. The identity of the
mortgage holder is not at issue in this appeal. See Schaefer, 2012
WL 4929094, at *3 n.4.
-5-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 6
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
Two days later, Schaefer faxed OneWest a completed application
for
a
loan
modification.
He
telephoned
OneWest
three
days
thereafter, and was told by a OneWest representative to resend part
of his application, which he promptly did.
On February 23, a OneWest representative contacted Schaefer
and asked for additional information regarding Schaefer’s partner,
Kathryn Russell, whom Schaefer had listed as a future contributor
to his mortgage payments. Schaefer was instructed to fax Russell’s
financial information to (866) 235-2366 (“the ’235 fax number”).
At
about
the
same
time
that
the
OneWest
representative
instructed Schaefer to send Russell’s information to the ’235 fax
number,
Schaefer
received
a
letter
from
a
“customer
contact
manager” at OneWest named Elizabeth Milian (“the Milian letter”).
Id. at 32.
which
The Milian letter stated that Milian and her “team,”
included
“loan
modification
underwriters,”
would
“be
[Schaefer’s] point of contact throughout this process,” and that
“either [Milian], or a representative from [her] team, [would] be
available to answer any questions [he] may have while [his] loan
[was] being reviewed.”
Id.
The letter provided Milian’s contact
information, including a fax number: (866) 435-7643 (“the ’435 fax
number”).
Id.
The letter closed by expressing Milian’s intent to
“provide timely and accurate communication between [Schaefer] and
[OneWest],”
and
by
indicating
that
once
he
had
submitted
a
“completed application,” Milian’s team would “initiate the review
-6-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
of [his] loan.”
Page: 7
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
Id.
On February 28, Schaefer faxed Russell’s financial information
to OneWest.
Acting in reliance on the Milian letter, he sent the
information to the ’435 fax number, rather than to the ’235 fax
number previously provided by the OneWest representative.
Several
days
from
later,
Schaefer
received
a
telephone
call
a
representative inquiring about the submission of the financial
information. Schaefer explained that he had faxed the materials to
the ’435 number, and was told by the representative to disregard
the Milian letter and resend the materials to the ’235 number.
did so on March 9.
He
Schaefer heard nothing further from OneWest.
The foreclosure sale took place, as scheduled, on March 12.
On March 15, Fannie Mae notified Schaefer that it had purchased his
house at the foreclosure sale,3 and eleven days later Harmon served
him with an eviction notice.
B.
In early April 2012, Schaefer filed suit against OneWest,
Fannie Mae (the current mortgage holder), and Harmon (OneWest’s
counsel) in New Hampshire state court.
In his verified complaint,
Schaefer alleged the facts recited above, and asserted two causes
of action: negligence, arising from the defendants’ failure to
provide him a reinstatement amount and alleged mishandling of his
3
While Schaefer’s complaint states that this notification
took place on February 15, that appears to be an error. It is
undisputed that the notification took place on March 15, as
reflected in the exhibits to the complaint.
-7-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 8
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
modification application, and negligent misrepresentation, arising
from the allegedly misleading Milian letter.4
sought
an
injunction
against
the
pending
As relief, Schaefer
eviction,
an
order
nullifying the foreclosure sale and requiring the defendants to
allow him to modify or reinstate his mortgage, and compensatory
damages for “the loss of his home of 28 years and any and all
equity therein.”
Id. at 11-13, 18.
In other words, Schaefer’s
central claim was that OneWest and Fannie Mae could not exercise
their right to foreclose under the mortgage contract.
The defendants removed the case to the United States District
Court for the District of New Hampshire on the basis of diversity
of citizenship. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332, 1441. The defendants filed
motions to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure, arguing both that Schaefer’s tort claims were
barred by the economic loss doctrine and that the claims failed
because
the
defendants
had
not
breached
any
duties
owed
to
Schaefer.
The district court granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss.
The court first rejected Schaefer’s argument that the economic loss
4
Schaefer also asserted a claim for intentional
misrepresentation, arising from the same facts as the negligent
misrepresentation claim, and a claim for breach of the contractual
duty of good faith and fair dealing, arising from the defendants'
failure to delay the foreclosure while reviewing his request for
modification. Neither of these claims is presented on appeal.
Schaefer has abandoned his contract claim, and he offers no
developed
argumentation
with
respect
to
his
intentional
misrepresentation claim, which we deem to be abandoned. See, e.g.,
In re Redondo Constr. Corp., 678 F.3d 115, 126 n.7 (1st Cir. 2012).
-8-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 9
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
doctrine does not apply to claims seeking injunctive relief,
holding
that
because
the
harm
alleged
in
the
complaint
“is
economic,” consisting of “the loss of his property and the equity
he held in the property,” the doctrine applies without regard to
the form of relief sought. Schaefer, 2012 WL 4929094, at *3 & n.5.
The court went on to find that none of the tort claims fell within
any exception to the economic loss doctrine recognized by the New
Hampshire courts. Id. at *4-5. The court dismissed the negligence
claim, holding that “Schaefer [had not] alleged facts or developed
an argument sufficient to establish that OneWest assumed duties
based on Harmon’s [January 30] letter or the Milian Letter.”
at *4.
Id.
Regarding the negligent misrepresentation claim, the court
concluded that the subject matter of the Milian letter “relate[d]
entirely to [the] defendants’ attempts to collect [Schaefer’s]
mortgage debt,” and that any claim related to that letter was
therefore “barred by the economic loss doctrine.”
(second
and
third
alterations
in
original,
Id. at *4-*5
quotation
marks
omitted).
Schaefer appealed.
§ 1291.
We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.
We review de novo an order dismissing a claim under Rule
12(b)(6).
See Mass. Ret. Sys., 716 F.3d at 237.
II.
The economic loss doctrine is a common-law doctrine according
to which parties bound by a contract may not “‘pursu[e] tort
-9-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 10
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
recovery for purely economic or commercial losses associated with
the contract relationship.’”
See Plourde Sand & Gravel Co. v. JGI
E., Inc., 917 A.2d 1250, 1253 (N.H. 2007) (quoting Tietsworth v.
Harley-Davidson, Inc., 677 N.W.2d 233, 241 (Wis. 2004), further
proceedings at 735 N.W.2d 418 (Wis. 2007)).
The purpose of the
doctrine is “to prevent tort law’s unreasonable interference with
principles of contract law.”
In
its
broadest
form,
See id. at 1254.
the
doctrine
reaches
beyond
the
contractual context, and provides that “a plaintiff may not . . .
recover in a negligence claim for purely ‘economic loss.’” See id.
at 1253-54 (quoting Border Brook Terrace Condo. Ass’n v. Gladstone,
622 A.2d 1248, 1253 (N.H. 1993)); see also Kelleher v. Marvin
Lumber & Cedar Co., 891 A.2d 477, 495 (N.H. 2005) (“We have . . .
recognized that a plaintiff may not ordinarily recover damages for
purely economic loss in tort . . . .”).
In other words, the
doctrine holds that, in the absence of a specific duty, no general
duty exists to avoid negligently causing economic loss.
version of the doctrine has been adopted in New Hampshire.
This
As the
New Hampshire Supreme Court has stated, “[i]n New Hampshire, the
general rule is that persons must refrain from causing personal
injury and property damage to third parties, but no corresponding
tort duty exists with respect to economic loss.”
A.2d at 1254 (quotation marks omitted).
-10-
See Plourde, 917
However, this broad
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 11
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
doctrine has exceptions.5
The gravamen of Schaefer’s argument is that “New Hampshire law
. . . recognizes an exception to the economic loss doctrine for
[voluntarily] assumed duties extrinsic to the central issues of a
contract,” and that the defendants assumed such a gratuitous,
extra-contractual duty to provide him a reinstatement amount and
consider his application to modify the mortgage following his
default.
See Schaefer Br. 18-21.
The New Hampshire Supreme Court has long followed the guidance
of
the
Restatement
generally.6
of
Torts
concerning
issues
of
tort
law
The Second Restatement of Torts does not discuss the
5
One such exception, recognized in New Hampshire and
discussed below, applies to certain claims for negligent
misrepresentation. See id. at 1254, 1257-58; Wyle v. Lees, 33 A.3d
1187, 1191-92 (N.H. 2011).
Another exception applies to
malpractice-like claims based on the breach of extra-contractual
duties arising from the qualifications of licensed professionals.
See Congregation of the Passion v. Touche Ross & Co., 636 N.E.2d
503, 514-15 (Ill. 1994); Farmers Alliance Mut. Ins. Co. v. Naylor,
452 F. Supp. 2d 1167, 1174 (D.N.M. 2006); see also Mehigan v.
Sheehan, 51 A.2d 632 (N.H. 1947) (discussing the relationship
between malpractice and contract law, in a case involving
non-economic losses). New Hampshire also recognizes an exception
for negligence claims brought against defendants who bear a
"special relationship" to the plaintiff, such as the relationship
between an attorney drafting a will and the intended beneficiary of
that will. See Plourde, 917 A.2d at 1254-55. No such special
relationship was alleged to exist in this case.
6
See, e.g., Remsburg v. Docusearch, Inc., 816 A.2d 1001,
1009 (N.H. 2003) (adopting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652C
(1977)); Valenti v. NET Props. Mgmt., 710 A.2d 399, 401 (N.H. 1998)
(adopting Restatement (Second) § 425); Long v. Long, 611 A.2d 620,
623 (N.H. 1992) (adopting Restatement (Second) § 682); Spherex,
Inc. v. Alexander Grant & Co., 451 A.2d 1308, 1312 (N.H. 1982)
(adopting Restatement (Second) § 552); Buttrick v. Arthur Lessard
& Sons, Inc., 260 A.2d 111, 113-14 (N.H. 1969) (adopting
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 402A (1965)).
-11-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 12
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
question of a defendant’s liability for economic loss resulting
from the breach of an assumed duty, but does recognize that under
certain circumstances, “[o]ne who undertakes, gratuitously . . . ,
to render services to another . . . is subject to liability . . .
for physical harm resulting from his failure to exercise reasonable
care to perform his undertaking.”
Torts
§
323
(1965)
(emphasis
See Restatement (Second) of
added);
see
also
(addressing third-party harm in similar terms).
id.
§
324A
The New Hampshire
Supreme Court follows this rule in physical-injury cases.7
While the Restatement does not explicitly address whether
economic losses, as opposed to losses resulting from physical
injury, are recoverable for the breach of a voluntarily assumed
duty, courts in a large number of jurisdictions have read the
references
to
“physical
harm”
in
§
323
and
§
324A
of
the
Restatement as affirmatively precluding recovery for economic
losses in such cases.8
A smaller number of courts, by contrast,
7
See, e.g., Trull v. Town of Conway, 669 A.2d 807, 810
(N.H. 1995); Walls v. Oxford Mgmt. Co., 633 A.2d 103, 105 (N.H.
1993); Corson v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 265 A.2d 315, 318-19 (N.H.
1970); Tullgren v. Amoskeag Mfg. Co., 133 A. 4, 5-6 (N.H. 1926);
see also § 323 illus. 1 & reporter’s notes (citing Tullgren as
illustrating the Restatement’s rule).
8
See, e.g., Shaner v. United States, 976 F.2d 990, 994
(6th Cir. 1992); Love v. United States, 915 F.2d 1242, 1248 (9th
Cir. 1989); Fieldwork Bos., Inc. v. United States, 344 F. Supp. 2d
257, 264 (D. Mass. 2004); Ass’n of Wash. Pub. Hosp. Dists. v.
Philip Morris, Inc., 79 F. Supp. 2d 1219, 1228 (W.D. Wash. 1999);
Or. Laborers-Emp’rs Health & Welfare Trust Fund v. Philip Morris,
Inc., 17 F. Supp. 2d 1170, 1182-1183 (D. Or. 1998); Felton v.
Schaeffer, 229 Cal. App. 3d 229, 237-38 (1991); Rojas Concrete,
Inc. v. Flood Testing Labs., Inc., 941 N.E.2d 940, 946-47 (Ill.
App. Ct. 2010); Theisen v. Covenant Med. Ctr., 636 N.W.2d 74, 82-83
-12-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 13
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
have held that § 323 and § 324A do not limit liability for the
breach of an assumed duty, and that economic losses are recoverable
in such cases as well, at least under some circumstances.9
The law in New Hampshire is not entirely clear on this
question.
Restatement
In one case predating the adoption of the current
of
Torts,
Brunelle
v.
Nashua
Building
and
Loan
Association, 64 A.2d 315 (N.H. 1949), the New Hampshire Supreme
Court held that the defendant, a seller of real estate, could be
held liable in tort for breaching its agent’s “separate oral
undertaking” to “see to it that [the plaintiffs] received a good
title,” even though the defendant’s contractual obligations did not
extend so far.
(opinion).
Id. at 317 (syllabus); see also id. at 318
More recently, in Seymour v. New Hampshire Savings
Bank, 561 A.2d 1053 (N.H. 1989), the court referred to “the
prevailing rule” according to which “no [tort] duty is imposed upon
a lender . . . to exercise reasonable care in its inspection of the
(Iowa 2001); Long v. Niles Co., 2010 Mass. App. Div. 43, 46 n.5
(Mass. Dist. Ct. App. Div. 2010); Northfield Ins. Co. v. St. Paul
Surplus Lines Ins. Co., 545 N.W.2d 57, 62-63 (Minn. Ct. App. 1996);
Carlotti v. Emps. of GE Fed. Credit Union No. 1161, 717 A.2d 564,
566-67 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1998) (citing conflicting authority); King
v. Graham Holding Co., 762 S.W.2d 296, 299-300 (Tex. App. 1988);
Hatleberg v. Norwest Bank Wis., 700 N.W.2d 15, 23-24 (Wis. 2005).
9
See, e.g., Rudolph v. First S. Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass'n,
414 So. 2d 64, 71 (Ala. 1982); Lloyd v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.
Co., 860 P.2d 1300, 1303 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1992); City & Cnty. of
S.F. v. Philip Morris, Inc., 957 F. Supp. 1130, 1143-44 (N.D. Cal.
1997); Blackmon v. Nelson, Hesse, Cyril, Weber & Sparrow, 419 So.
2d 405, 406 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1982) (per curiam); Runde v. Vigus
Realty, Inc., 617 N.E.2d 572, 575 (Ind. Ct. App. 1993); Schwartz v.
Greenfield, Stein & Weisinger, 396 N.Y.S.2d 582, 584-85 (N.Y. Sup.
Ct. 1977).
-13-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 14
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
borrower’s premises . . . unless the lender voluntarily undertakes
to perform such inspection . . . for the benefit of the borrower,”
see id. at 1056-57 (emphasis added, quotation marks omitted), thus
perhaps suggesting that a defendant may be held liable for economic
losses resulting from the failure to conduct such inspections if
the defendant had in fact voluntarily assumed a duty to conduct
them.
Even if we were to assume that the holding in Brunelle and the
dictum in Seymour place New Hampshire in the camp of states that
extend § 323 and § 324A to economic losses resulting from the
breach of an assumed duty in some circumstances, we would still
conclude that Schaefer has not stated a negligence claim on which
relief may be granted.
The parties appear to agree on what is apparent from the face
of the mortgage agreement—that Schaefer was obligated to make
regular monthly payments and that, if he failed to do so, OneWest
and Fannie Mae had a right to accelerate the loan and foreclose on
the mortgage.
The parties also agree that Schaefer did not make
the required payments.
The mortgage agreement provided as well
that in the event of Schaefer’s default OneWest would discontinue
foreclosure proceedings and reinstate the mortgage if Schaefer paid
his
arrears
plus
any
expenses
prescribed period of time.
incurred
by
OneWest
within
a
Schaefer alleges that the defendants
additionally undertook two duties: (1) to provide him with a
-14-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 15
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
reinstatement amount if Schaefer fell into arrears and (2) if
Schaefer applied to modify his mortgage, to process his application
before foreclosure. Schaefer alleges that the defendants failed to
perform
or
negligently
performed
these
undertakings
and
are
therefore subject to tort liability.
We conclude that New Hampshire’s economic loss doctrine bars
Schaefer from recovering in tort for a breach of either of these
alleged undertakings.
With respect to the alleged duty to provide
a reinstatement amount, it is true that OneWest’s agreement to
allow reinstatement necessarily included a promise to provide
Schaefer with a reinstatement amount upon request.
But if OneWest
assumed a contractual duty to provide a reinstatement amount,
Schaefer’s tort claims here must fail because the essence of the
economic loss doctrine is that a party to a contract may not
“‘pursu[e] tort recovery for purely economic or commercial losses
associated with the contract relationship.’”
1253 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Plourde, 917 A.2d at
See also Tietsworth, 677
N.W.2d at 241 (“The doctrine generally requires transacting parties
. . . to pursue only their contractual remedies when asserting an
economic
loss
claim.”)
(internal
quotation
marks
omitted).
Although Schaefer claimed in the breach of contract count of his
complaint that he “was denied critical information in the form of
a
reinstatement
quote,
thereby
denying
[him]
any
realistic
opportunity to reinstate his loan,” Schaefer Br. addendum 12, as
-15-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 16
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
explained previously, Schaefer has abandoned his breach of contract
claim on appeal, see supra n.4.
Nor can Schaefer recover in tort for the breach of an alleged
duty that contradicts the terms of the contract.
The mortgage
agreement specifically granted OneWest the right to accelerate
payments and foreclose in the event that Schaefer fell into default
and failed to reinstate.
It is clear, then, that the second duty
Schaefer alleges the defendants assumed—the duty to process his
mortgage modification application before foreclosure—is not merely
an additional duty, coming on top of the obligations the defendants
assumed under the contract, but rather a duty that contradicts the
terms of the contract by restricting the defendants’ right to
foreclose.
So far as we are able to discern, none of the cases,
from New Hampshire or elsewhere, has enforced in tort a duty of
this kind, which contradicts the terms of a contract.10
10
In Brunelle, for example, the duty assumed gratuitously
by the defendant to ensure the plaintiffs “would receive a clear
title” came on top of the duties spelled out in the land sale
contract. See Brunelle, 64 A.2d at 317. See also, e.g., Rudolph,
414 So. 2d at 71 (holding that a construction lender may
voluntarily assume a duty “to inspect the [construction project]
for the [borrower’s] benefit,” in addition to the lender’s
“independent [contractual] right [to] inspect[ the project] for its
[own] exclusive benefit”); Runde, 617 N.E.2d at 573, 575-76
(holding that a home inspector and a real estate broker may have
assumed a duty to the buyer to notify the seller on the buyer’s
behalf of property defects found in the course of the inspection,
even though the defendants’ service contracts were apparently
silent as to any such duty to notify); Lloyd, 860 P.2d at 1303-04
(holding that an insurance company may have assumed a duty to
defend a customer against a tort claim falling outside the scope of
the customer’s insurance contract where a “claims person . . . told
[the customer] over the telephone that [the insurer] would ‘take
-16-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 17
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
In New Hampshire, “[p]arties generally are bound by the terms
of an agreement freely and openly entered into, and courts cannot
make better agreements than the parties themselves have entered
into or rewrite contracts merely because they might operate harshly
or inequitably.”
See Mills v. Nashua Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n, 433
A.2d 1312, 1315 (N.H. 1981).
cannot
be
modified
by
a
In general, the terms of a contract
later
agreement
in
the
absence
of
consideration. See Kendall v. Flanders, 54 A. 285, 285 (N.H. 1903)
(“If [a subsequent agreement was] offered for the purpose of
modifying the contract evidenced by the note in suit, to have been
admissible it must have been supported by a consideration.”).
If
we were to recognize a duty, enforceable in tort, to modify
Schaefer’s mortgage after Schaefer had defaulted on his performance
under the contract, we would not merely be imposing an additional
duty on the defendants, but would instead be altering the rights
and duties specifically addressed in the mortgage contract.
This
would allow tort law to “unreasonabl[y] interfere[] with principles
of
contract
law”—the
precise
outcome
that
the
economic
loss
care of it’ and [the insurer] shortly thereafter hir[ed a lawyer]
to represent the [customer]”); Blackmon, 419 So. 2d at 405-06
(holding that by assisting its employees in obtaining group health
insurance, an employer assumed an extra-contractual duty to make
accurate representations to an employee about her insurance
coverage); McDonald, 621 P.2d at 656-59 (holding that an escrow
agent and title insurer may have voluntarily assumed a duty to
“advis[e the buyers] on the[ir potential] legal liability for . . .
subcontractors’ liens” on the property, in addition to the
defendant’s ordinary contractual and professional duties as an
escrow agent and title insurer).
-17-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
doctrine seeks to avoid.
Page: 18
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
See Plourde, 917 A.2d at 1254; see also
id. at 1256 (“‘[Where] the defendant and its partner have allocated
the risks and benefits of performance in their contract, . . . the
court upsets that allocation when it imposes [tort] liability on
the defendant.’” (alterations in original) (quoting Jay M. Feinman,
The Economic Loss Rule and Private Ordering, 48 Ariz. L. Rev. 813,
814 (2006)).11
For this reason, the district court correctly held
that the economic loss doctrine bars Schaefer’s negligence claim.
Schaefer
also
claims
that
“New
Hampshire
law
provides
mortgagees who have fallen behind on their mortgages with a
statutory
opportunity
to
reinstate
the
mortgage
foreclosure,” citing § 479:18 of the New Hampshire code.
Br. 20.
prior
to
Schaefer
We have not found any authority from New Hampshire
recognizing
a
statutory
or
common-law
(as
distinct
from
contractual) right to reinstate a mortgage, however.12
11
Although Harmon was not in a contractual relationship
with Schaefer, Schaefer’s negligence claims against Harmon arise
from duties that Harmon allegedly “assumed as an agent of” OneWest
and Fannie Mae. See Schaefer Br. 21.
As such, any liability
imposed on Harmon, as the other defendants’ agent, would
effectively modify the terms of the other defendants’ contract with
Schaefer. While Schaefer contends in his brief that Harmon owed
him duties independently arising from its status as a debt
collector, we decline to address that contention because he fails
to present any developed argument on the issue. See In re Redondo,
678 F.3d at 126 n.7.
12
Section 479:18 merely provides that “[a]ll lands conveyed
in mortgage may be redeemed by the mortgagor . . . by the payment
of all demands and the performance of all things secured by the
mortgage and the payment of all damages and costs sustained and
incurred by reason of the nonperformance of its condition . . .
before foreclosure.”
N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 479:18 (emphasis
added). The right secured by the statute to redeem a mortgage by
-18-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 19
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
Schaefer also appeals the district court’s dismissal of his
claim for negligent misrepresentation, which focuses on the Milian
letter’s alleged misrepresentations regarding Milian’s availability
to assist with his claim and its suggestion that Schaefer use the
’435 fax number to communicate with OneWest.
There is no question
that New Hampshire recognizes an exception to the economic loss
doctrine for certain negligent misrepresentation claims.
See Wyle
v. Lees, 33 A.3d 1187, 1190-93 (N.H. 2011); Plourde, 917 A.2d at
1257-58.
Schaefer’s claim, however, falls outside the scope of
this exception.
As an initial matter, there is language in Plourde to suggest
that
the
negligent
misrepresentation
exception
is
limited
to
defendants “who [are] in the business of supplying information.”
paying off the outstanding debt in its entirety is distinct from
the right, invoked by Schaefer, to reinstate the mortgage by paying
only the delinquent portion of the debt.
See Black’s Law
Dictionary 1548 (9th ed. 2009) (defining “statutory right of
redemption” as the right “of a mortgagor in default to recover
property after a foreclosure sale by paying the principal,
interest, and other costs that are owed, together with any other
measure required to cure the default”); id. at 1399 (defining
“reinstatement” as “place[ment] again in a former state or
position”); see also 17-4 New Hampshire Practice: Real Estate
§ 4.05 (Matthew Bender & Co. 2013) (“[A] mortgagor has a statutory
right to ownership free of the mortgage after meeting the loan and
mortgage obligations.” (citing § 479:18)); Fed. Home Loan Mort.
C o r p . ,
L e a r n i n g
C e n t e r
G l o s s a r y ,
http://www.freddiemac.com/learn/lo/glossary/ (last visited Aug. 13,
2013) (defining the “redemption period” as “[t]he time . . . during
which a borrower may reclaim foreclosed property by paying the full
amount of the foreclosure sales price,” and “reinstatement, full”
as the process of “restor[ing] a delinquent mortgage to active
status by paying . . . the total amount delinquent” (emphases
added)).
-19-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 20
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
See Plourde, 917 A.2d at 1254.
Schaefer does not claim that any of
the
this
defendants
professionals
fall
such
investment brokers.
as
into
category,
“accountants,
which
appraisers,
.
includes
.
.
and
See Pitts v. Farm Bureau Life Ins. Co., 818
N.W.2d 91, 112 (Iowa 2012).
But at the same time, the court in
Plourde relied for its formulation of the exception on § 552 of the
Second Restatement of Torts, which imposes liability for negligent
misrepresentation more broadly on defendants who supply false
information “‘in the course of [their] business, profession or
employment, or in any other transaction in which [they have] a
pecuniary interest, . . . for the guidance of others in their
business transactions.’”
See id. at 1257 (quoting Restatement
(Second) of Torts § 552 (1977)).
In Wyle, decided after Plourde,
the court applied the negligent misrepresentation exception to
defendants who were not professional suppliers of information, but
rather homeowners who made representations regarding their property
prior to its sale.
See Wyle, 33 A.3d at 1189-92.
Courts in other states are divided over whether § 552 is
limited to professional suppliers of information, or applies more
broadly to parties who “profit by supplying the information.”
Compare, e.g., Pitts, 818 N.W.2d at 111-12 (“[O]nly those who are
in the business of supplying information to others can be liable
for negligent misrepresentation.” (quotation marks omitted)) with
State ex rel. Bronster v. U.S. Steel Corp., 919 P.2d 294, 307-12
-20-
Case: 12-2388
Document: 00116591131
Page: 21
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
Entry ID: 5768622
(Haw. 1996) (holding that § 552 does not require that defendants
“be in the business of supplying information,” but only that
“[t]hey . . . profit by supplying the information”).
But the New Hampshire Supreme Court in Wyle made clear that
the scope of liability against those who are not professional
suppliers of information is limited.
In Wyle, a property seller
misrepresented, both in a property disclosure statement included in
the property listing and in a conversation with the buyer “prior to
[the] purchase,” that the seller had all the necessary permits for
improvements made to the property.
also
Restatement
(Second)
of
See Wyle, 33 A.3d at 1190; see
Torts
§
552
cmt.
h,
illus.
4
(describing a similar scenario involving a misrepresentation in a
real estate listing).
The court “distinguished those negligent
misrepresentation claims that center upon an alleged inducement to
enter into a contract from those that focus upon performance of the
contract.”
former
See Wyle, 33 A.3d at 1191.
class
of
misrepresentations
The court held that the
(which
by
definition
must
predate the formation of the contract), but not the latter class,
may form the basis of a negligent misrepresentation claim, at least
where the defendant is not a professional supplier of information.
Id. at 1191-92.
Schaefer argues that Wyle does not bar his claims.
unpersuaded.
We
read
Wyle
as
holding
that
the
We are
negligent
misrepresentation exception reaches only those representations that
-21-
Case: 12-2388
precede
Document: 00116591131
the
formation
of
Page: 22
the
Date Filed: 10/02/2013
contract
or
that
Entry ID: 5768622
relate
to
a
transaction other than the one that constitutes the subject of the
contract; representations made during the course of the contract’s
performance and related to the subject matter of the contract, by
contrast, are so bound up in “the performance of the contract” as
to be barred by the economic loss doctrine.
See id. at 1191-92.
Here, the representations were made during the course of the
contract’s performance, and related to the subject matter of the
contract.
Specifically, they concerned the process by which the
lenders would decide whether or not to exercise their contractual
right to foreclose on the mortgage; boiled down to its essentials,
Schaefer’s complaint alleges that the lenders misrepresented the
circumstances
under
contractual right.
which
they
would
agree
to
forego
that
Such a claim, in Wyle’s terms, “focus[es] upon
performance of the contract,” id. at 1191, and is barred by the
economic loss doctrine.
Therefore, the district court correctly
dismissed Schaefer’s negligent misrepresentation claim.
III.
We
therefore
affirm
the
decision
of
the
district
court
dismissing Schaefer’s negligence and negligent misrepresentation
claims.
AFFIRMED
Costs to appellees.
-22-
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?