Mason v. Wells Fargo Bank N.A
Filing
12
///ORDER granting 4 Motion to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim; denying 8 Motion to Certify Questions to the New Hampshire Supreme Court. The defendant's partial motion to dismiss is GRANTED. Motion to Certify Question denied as outlined. So Ordered by Chief Judge Joseph N. Laplante.(jb)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Jennean Mason and Estate
of David C. Mason
v.
Civil No. 14-cv-77-JL
Opinion No. 2014 DNH 136
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
MEMORANDUM ORDER
In recent years, this court has seen an influx of cases in
which defaulted mortgagors assert various theories of relief in
an attempt to stave off foreclosure.
This action to enjoin a
foreclosure presents a variation on that theme.
The plaintiffs,
Jennean Mason and the estate of her late husband, allege that the
defendant, Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., is attempting to foreclose on
a mortgage on their property even though it “has not produced”
the promissory note which that mortgage secures.
The plaintiffs
further assert that foreclosure would deprive Mason of her
homestead right, in violation of N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 480:1,
and argue that Wells should be estopped from foreclosing because
it promised them “that they could engage in loss mitigation to
avoid foreclosure.”
This court has jurisdiction over this matter
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332 (diversity), because Mason and the
estate are New Hampshire citizens, Wells is a citizen of South
Dakota, and the amount in controversy exceeds $75,000.
Wells has moved to dismiss the complaint in part,1 see Fed.
R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), arguing that Mason has no homestead right in
the property, that the allegations that it does not hold the Note
are too speculative to state a claim to relief, and that the
plaintiffs cannot premise a claim to enjoin foreclosure upon
Wells’ alleged promise.
After careful consideration, the court
grants the motion for precisely those reasons.
I.
Applicable legal standard
To survive a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), the
plaintiff’s complaint must allege facts sufficient to “state a
claim to relief that is plausible on its face.”
Ashcroft v.
Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009) (quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v.
Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 570 (2007)).
In ruling on such a motion,
the court must accept as true all well-pleaded facts set forth in
the complaint and must draw all reasonable inferences in the
plaintiff’s favor.
See, e.g., Martino v. Forward Air, Inc., 609
F.3d 1, 2 (1st Cir. 2010).
The court “may consider not only the
complaint but also facts extractable from documentation annexed
to or incorporated by reference in the complaint and matters
susceptible to judicial notice.”
Rederford v. U.S. Airways,
Inc., 589 F.3d 30, 35 (1st Cir. 2009).
1
With the facts so
Wells has not moved to dismiss the plaintiffs’ claims for
fraudulent and negligent misrepresentation, so the court does not
address those claims here.
construed, “questions of law [are] ripe for resolution at the
pleadings stage.”
2009).
II.
Simmons v. Galvin, 575 F.3d 24, 30 (1st Cir.
The following background summary adopts that approach.
Background
On March 17, 2006, David Mason and Jennean Oehme executed a
warranty deed conveying property they jointly owned in Windham,
New Hampshire to Mason alone.
Later that day, Mason executed a
promissory note in the amount of $288,750, payable to World
Savings Bank, FSB.
The note was secured by a mortgage, also in
World Savings Bank’s favor, on the Windham property.
In
executing the mortgage, Mason agreed to “waive all rights and
benefits of homestead exemption in the Property.”
(document no. 4-2) ¶ 34.
Mortg.
The warranty deed and mortgage were
recorded together in the Rockingham County Registry of Deeds a
week later.
After Mason had executed the mortgage, on March 17,
2006, he also executed a second warranty deed conveying the
property back to Oehme and himself, as tenants in common; that
deed was also recorded in Registry of Deeds, albeit roughly a
month after the first.
Mason and Oehme later married, and she took his last name.
Mr. Mason passed away in 2012, and Mrs. Mason continued to reside
at the Windham property and to make payments on the mortgage.
May 2013, however, she became unemployed and was unable to make
In
further payments.
She immediately contacted Wells–-which, the
complaint alleges, “claims to be the successor by merger to
Wachovia Mortgage, FSB, which was formerly known as World Savings
Bank, FSB”–-to “inquire about loss mitigation options.”
Wells
allegedly promised the plaintiffs “that they could engage in loss
mitigation to avoid foreclosure,” and “started the process of
working on an unemployment modification.”
Although Wells made
numerous requests of Mrs. Mason in connection with this process,
and at one point informed Mrs. Mason that she “had successfully
completed the unemployment modification process,” the parties’
“loss mitigation” efforts ultimately went nowhere.
Despite Mrs. Mason’s repeated entreaties to various Wells
representatives, Wells scheduled a foreclosure sale for January
2014.
That prompted the plaintiffs to file the present action in
Rockingham County Superior Court, which granted the plaintiffs’
motion to preliminarily enjoin the foreclosure.
Wells then
removed the action to this court, see 28 U.S.C. § 1441, and filed
the motion at bar.
In accordance with the Superior Court’s
injunction, which remains in effect following removal, see id.
§ 1450, no foreclosure sale has taken place.
III.
Analysis
As mentioned at the outset, Wells moves to dismiss three of
the plaintiffs’ five claims:
(1) a claim that foreclosure would
wrongfully deprive Mrs. Mason of her homestead right in the
subject property; (2) a claim for wrongful foreclosure premised
on the allegation that Wells has not produced the note; and (3) a
claim for promissory estoppel premised on Wells’ alleged promise
that the plaintiffs “could engage in loss mitigation to avoid
foreclosure.”
The court addresses these claims in turn, and
concludes that none has merit.
A.
Denial of homestead right
Under N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 480:1, “[e]very person is
entitled to $100,000 worth of his or her homestead, or of his or
her interest therein, as a homestead.”
This homestead right “is
exempt from attachment during its continuance from levy or sale
on execution, and from liability to be encumbered or taken for
the payment of debts.”
N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 480:4.
In arguing
that Wells may not foreclose because to do so would deny Mrs.
Mason her homestead right in the subject property, the plaintiffs
rely upon this exemption.
The exemption, however, is not
absolute; as Wells points out, under N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann.
§ 480:4, III, “mortgages which are made a charge thereon
according to law” are not subject to it.
That provision is fatal
to the plaintiffs’ claim, because, as noted in Part II, supra,
the mortgage contains an explicit waiver of the homestead right.
In an effort to overcome section 480:4, III, the plaintiffs
cite venerable case law for the proposition that a husband cannot
waive his wife’s homestead interest by executing a mortgage to
which she is not also a party.
See Smith v. Hall, 67 N.H. 200
(1892); Norris v. Moulton, 34 N.H. 392 (1857).
That rule has
been codified in N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 480:5-a, which provides
that “[n]o deed shall convey or encumber the homestead right
. . . unless it is executed by the owner and wife or husband, if
any, with the formalities required for the conveyance of land.”
The plaintiffs contend that this principle bars Wells from
foreclosing because Mrs. Mason did not herself execute the
mortgage and associated promissory note.
The fundamental problem
with this argument is that, as the New Hampshire Supreme Court
recently explained, a wife cannot invoke § 480:5-a to exempt her
homestead right from her husband’s mortgage when “the mortgage
deed was executed before the [wife] acquired her homestead right
in the property.”
Walbridge v. Estate of Beaudoin, 163 N.H. 804,
806 (2012).
That happened here.
Although Mrs. Mason had an ownership
interest in the property at one time prior to the execution of
the mortgage (when she was not yet married, and still known by
her maiden name), she later conveyed that interest to Mr. Mason
by way of warranty deed.
It was only after this conveyance had
occurred that Mr. Mason mortgaged the property.2
2
Mrs. Mason’s
Although they gloss over this fact in their opposition to
Wells’ motion to dismiss, the plaintiffs concede in their motion
to certify certain questions to the New Hampshire Supreme Court
that Mrs. Mason deeded her property interest to her late husband
before he executed the mortgage, and that she did not reacquire
an interest in the property until after he had done so. See
Memo. in Supp. of Mot. to Certify (document no. 8-1) at 2.
conveyance to her husband extinguished any homestead right she
may have had in the property, because ownership is “essential to
the assertion of” a homestead right.3
257 (1895).
Beland v. Goss, 68 N.H.
Although Mrs. Mason later reacquired an interest in
the property by way of a second warranty deed from Mr. Mason, he
had already executed the mortgage by that time, so she took the
property subject to it.
See Cadle Co. v. Bourgeois, 149 N.H.
410, 417 (2003) (a mortgage survives the transfer of property).
Under Walbridge, she cannot invoke her homestead right as a
defense to enforcement of the mortgage.
Her claim for denial of
the homestead right is accordingly dismissed.
B.
Wrongful foreclosure
The plaintiffs’ claim for wrongful foreclosure is premised
on the theory that, “[i]n New Hampshire, the burden is on the
foreclosing party to prove that it has the authority to enforce
3
The plaintiffs resist this conclusion. They assert that
even after conveying ownership to Mr. Mason, Mrs. Mason continued
to occupy the property, and argue that, for her homestead right
in the property to be extinguished, she needed to both convey
ownership of the property and cease occupying it. The plaintiffs
misapprehend New Hampshire law. Both ownership and occupancy are
necessary for invocation of the homestead right; neither one is,
by itself, sufficient. See, e.g., Walbridge, 163 N.H. at 805
(homestead right not created by ownership of property and intent
to occupy it in the future; only ownership together with actual
occupation will suffice). That ownership is as equally (if not
more) essential to the maintenance of a homestead right as
occupancy is obvious from the nature of the right itself:
because property that one does not own is not subject to
attachment, it would make no sense to exempt that property from
attachment for a non-owner’s debts.
the Note.”
Compl. ¶ 46.
The plaintiffs allege that Wells “has
not produced the original Note for inspection,” and assert that
“until it does, it cannot show that it has the power and
authority to foreclose.”
Id.; see also id. ¶ 40.
Wells does not
challenge the proposition that, in order to foreclose on a
mortgage, the party must hold the note which that mortgage
secures, so the court assumes, without deciding, that New
Hampshire law requires possession of the note.
The court will
also assume that a claim for wrongful foreclosure can lie where
the foreclosure sale has yet to take place.
But cf. Worrall v.
Fed. Nat’l Mortg. Ass’n, 2013 DNH 158, at 8 (“[A] necessary
element of a wrongful foreclosure claim . . . is that a
foreclosure sale must have occurred.”).
Even indulging those
assumptions, the plaintiffs have not stated a plausible
entitlement to relief.
As Wells correctly argues, a plaintiff cannot mount a
challenge to a defendant’s authority to foreclose “simply by
raising the possibility that the defendant lack[s] possession of
the note secured by the mortgage they have tried to foreclose,”
because the pleading standard set forth in Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 8(a) requires “more than a sheer possibility that a
defendant has acted unlawfully.”
Pro Mod Realty, LLC v. U.S.
Bank Nat’l Ass’n, 2014 DNH 069, at 10 (quoting Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009)); see also Worrall, 2013 DNH 158, at 7,
12 (dismissing wrongful foreclosure claim premised on allegation
that defendant had “not shown that it holds the original Note”;
“speculation is insufficient to cast doubt on [defendant’s]
authority to enforce the note”).
Rather, to successfully state a
claim challenging a defendant’s standing to foreclose (assuming,
again, that possession of the note is a necessary prerequisite to
foreclosure), a plaintiff must affirmatively allege–-after “an
inquiry reasonable under the circumstances,” Fed. R. Civ. P.
11(b), and under threat of sanction for misrepresentation, see
id. 11(c)--that the defendant lacks possession of the note.
Pro
Mod Realty, 2014 DNH 069, at 10.
The plaintiffs have not done so.
Their lukewarm allegation
that Wells “has not produced the original Note” does not fit the
bill.
See Worrall, 2013 DNH 158, at 7.
It does not follow from
Wells’ alleged non-production of the note that the note is not in
Wells’ possession.
So the plaintiffs have failed to raise more
than “a sheer possibility” that Wells does not possess the note.4
Because the plaintiffs have not plausibly alleged that Wells
lacks possession of the promissory note associated with the
4
As the defendants have also noted, the complaint expressly
alleges that Wells Fargo “claims to be the successor by merger
to” World Savings Bank, the original holder of the note. The
plaintiffs do not question that claim in either their complaint
or their memorandum in opposition to Wells Fargo’s motion. In
light of this allegation, it is implausible to infer that Wells
Fargo is not, in fact, the present holder of the note.
mortgage on which it is attempting to foreclose, their claim for
wrongful foreclosure is dismissed.
C.
Promissory estoppel
Under the New Hampshire doctrine of promissory estoppel, “a
promise reasonably understood as intended to induce action is
enforceable by one who relies on it to his detriment or to the
benefit of the promisor.”
Panto v. Moore Bus. Forms, Inc., 130
N.H. 730, 738 (1988) (citing Restatement (Second) of Contracts §
90 (1981)).
Promissory estoppel thus protects only “reasonable
reliance” on the part of the promisor.
Marbucco Corp. v. City of
Manchester, 137 N.H. 629, 633 (1993); see also Rockwood v. SKF
USA Inc., 758 F. Supp. 2d 44, 57 (D.N.H. 2010), aff’d, 687 F.3d 1
(1st Cir. 2012).
In support of their promissory estoppel claim,
the plaintiffs allege that Wells promised that they “could engage
in loss mitigation to avoid foreclosure.”
They further allege
that Wells instructed Mrs. Mason to apply for an unemployment
modification, and later told her that she needed to assume the
loan in order to qualify for a modification.
They assert that
despite these communications, Wells referred the mortgage to
foreclosure.
As Wells points out, notably absent from these allegations
is any hint that Wells promised the plaintiffs that its loss
mitigation options would successfully stave off foreclosure.
To
the contrary, Wells’ representations to Mrs. Mason that she would
need to apply for a modification suggest that success in avoiding
foreclosure was not guaranteed.
The plaintiffs’ expectation that
engaging in loss mitigation would prevent foreclosure, then, was
unreasonable, as were any actions they took in reliance upon that
expectation.
See Worrall, 2013 DNH 158, at 17 (the defendant’s
statement that the plaintiffs “could engage in loss mitigation to
avoid foreclosure, if it were construed to be a promise, did not
promise that the [plaintiffs’] efforts toward loss mitigation
would be successful in avoiding foreclosure,” so the plaintiffs
“could not reasonably expect [the mortgagee] not to foreclose”
based upon that alleged promise); cf. Pro Mod Realty, 2014 DNH
069, at 4 (“a promise to ‘consider’ taking a specified course of
action in response to the promisee’s request does not commit the
promisor to that course of action, nor justify any expectation
that the promisor will, in fact, take that course of action”).
Attempting to salvage their promissory estoppel claim, the
plaintiffs point to allegations that Wells (1) at one point told
Mrs. Mason that she had “successfully completed the unemployment
modification process and that the loan was in good standing,” and
(2) at a later date, told her that “she was on a ‘short-term’
program.”
The “reasonable inference from those representations,”
the plaintiffs allege, is that Wells “would not foreclose.”
The plaintiffs also allege, however, that the representative
of Wells who allegedly told Mrs. Mason that she was on a “short-
term program” also told her, at the same time, that he “did not
understand the notes” on the file and, furthermore, that he could
not explain what a “short-term program” was.
The plaintiffs
could not have reasonably relied on that person’s representation
that Mrs. Mason “was on a ‘short-term’ program”–-whatever that
might be–-as a promise that Wells would not foreclose.
While
Wells’ alleged statements that Mrs. Mason “had successfully
completed the unemployment modification process and that the loan
was in good standing” may have provided a more substantial basis
for the plaintiffs to believe that Wells would not proceed with a
foreclosure, the complaint also alleges that, about two weeks
after those statements, Wells disavowed them and told Mrs. Mason
that the loan was still “under review for short-term assistance.”
The plaintiffs do not allege that, during this two-week period,
they took any actions to their detriment in reliance upon the
expectation that Wells would not foreclose on the mortgage.
So,
even if it would have been reasonable to infer from these various
statements that Wells would not foreclose, the plaintiffs have
not alleged any detrimental reliance and, therefore, not made out
a claim for promissory estoppel.
See Pro Mod Realty, 2014 DNH
069, at 7 (citing MacKenzie v. Flagstar Bank, FSB, 738 F.3d 486,
497 (1st Cir. 2013)).
That claim is dismissed.
IV.
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, Wells Fargo’s partial
motion to dismiss5 is GRANTED.
Because the issues presented by
this motion did not involve any novel issues of New Hampshire law
requiring interpretation by the New Hampshire Supreme Court, the
plaintiffs’ motion to certify questions to that court6 is DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
Joseph N. Laplante
United States District Judge
Dated:
cc:
June 17, 2014
Stephen T. Martin, Esq.
Michael R. Stanley, Esq.
5
Document no. 4.
6
Document no. 8.
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