McCarthy v. WPB Partners, LLC
Filing
10
///ORDER granting 5 Motion to Dismiss for Failure to State a Claim. Defendants motion to dismiss Counts III through VIII is granted. This case now consists of the claims stated in Counts I, II, and III. So Ordered by Judge Landya B. McCafferty.(gla)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Mary Hersey McCarthy
v.
Civil No. 16-cv-081-LM
Opinion No. 2016 DNH 122
WPB Partners, LLC
O R D E R
In a case that has been removed from the Strafford County
Superior Court, Mary Hersey McCarthy has sued WPB Partners, LLC
(“WPB”) in eight counts.
Her claims arise from the manner in
which WPB conducted a foreclosure sale of a property that she
had mortgaged to secure the repayment of a loan.
Before the
court is defendant’s motion to dismiss five of plaintiff’s eight
claims.
Plaintiff objects.
The court heard oral argument on
defendant’s motion on July 8, 2016.
For the reasons that
follow, defendant’s motion to dismiss is granted.
I. The Legal Standard
Under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure, the court must accept the factual allegations in the
complaint as true, construe reasonable inferences in the
plaintiff’s favor, and “determine whether the factual
allegations in the plaintiff’s complaint set forth a plausible
claim upon which relief may be granted.”
Foley v. Wells Fargo
Bank, N.A., 772 F.3d 63, 71 (1st Cir. 2014) (citation omitted).
A claim is facially plausible “when the plaintiff pleads factual
content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference
that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.”
Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 678 (2009).
Analyzing
plausibility is “a context-specific task” in which the court
relies on its “judicial experience and common sense.”
Id. at
679.
II. Background
The facts recited in this section are drawn from
plaintiff’s complaint or from court documents incorporated by
reference therein.
See Foley, 772 F.3d at 71-72 (citing
Watterson v. Page, 987 F.2d 1, 3 (1st Cir. 1993)).
On December 21, 2006, McCarthy received a loan of $350,000
from Investment Realty Funding, Inc. (“IRF”).
In a promissory
note, McCarthy agreed to repay the loan in 36 months, at an
interest rate of 16.5 percent.
The note also provides: (1) “The
Borrower represents to the Lender that the proceeds of this Note
will not be used for personal, family, or household purposes,”
doc. no. 9-1, at 5 of 15; and (2) “THIS PROMISSORY NOTE IS FOR
BUSINESS PURPOSES ONLY,” id. at 6 of 15.
McCarthy defaulted on her obligation to repay the loan.
response, WPB, which had acquired the note and the mortgage,
2
In
initiated foreclosure proceedings.
McCarthy sued WPB in state
court to enjoin the foreclosure sale.1
WPB asserted a
counterclaim for breach of contract, based upon McCarthy’s
failure to make the payments required by the promissory note.
WPB removed the case to this court, where it was assigned to
Judge McAuliffe and docketed as 11-cv-207-SM.
As McCarthy and
WPB were litigating 11-cv-207-SM, McCarthy declared bankruptcy,
and WPB’s counterclaim was stayed for about six months.
After 11-cv-207-SM was reopened,2 Judge McAuliffe dismissed
most of McCarthy’s claims and granted WPB summary judgment on
the one claim that he had not dismissed.
In addition to
granting WPB summary judgment on McCarthy’s claim, Judge
McAuliffe also granted WPB summary judgment on its counterclaim
for breach of contract and awarded $433,433.033 in liquidated
damages.
In that action, McCarthy identified herself as “Mary
Hersey.” For the sake of clarity, the court will refer to
plaintiff as “McCarthy” throughout this order.
1
Judge McAuliffe reopened 11-cv-207-SM after the Bankruptcy
Court granted WPB relief from the automatic stay for the limited
purpose of resolving the legal issues presented in that case.
2
Judge McAuliffe’s order states that the parties agreed to
liquidated damages in the amount of $443,443.03, Hersey v. WPB
Partners, LLC, No. 11-cv-207-SM, doc. no. 64 at 4, but then
awarded $433,433.03 in liquidated damages. Id. at 5. Hersey
uses both figures in her complaint. Because Judge McAuliffe
awarded $433,433.03 the court uses that number.
3
3
In its motion for summary judgment, WPB asserted that
“[t]he amount due and payable under the Promissory Note
including principal and accrued interest is currently
$558,048.49 as of July 31, 2012 with interest accruing at the
per diem rate of $186.99.”
Hersey, doc. no. 53-1, at 5.
Judge
McAuliffe characterized the amount of liquidated damages he
awarded this way:
During the pretrial conference held on February
7, 2014, the court disclosed its intention to grant
[WPB’s] motions for summary judgment. Following a
discussion with respect to the existence of any
material dispute related to calculating the liquidated
damages amount, the parties agreed that the amount of
$443,443.03, as of September 6, 2011 (a date
contemporaneous with the filing of the bankruptcy
petition) would be appropriate. That amount
represents a calculation decidedly in [McCarthy’s]
favor, and an amount based in substantial part on
[McCarthy’s] own expert’s opinion. By agreeing to
entry of judgment in that amount, less than it
reasonably could expect, [WPB] pragmatically
recognized that the property’s value is substantially
less than the judgment amount, and no useful purpose
would be served by the expenditure of additional time
and resources to arrive at a higher, more accurate,
but unimportant figure.
Hersey, doc. no. 64, at 4-5.
Next, WPB moved the Bankruptcy Court for “relief from the
automatic stay of 11 U.S.C. § 362(d)(1) and (2) [in order] to
proceed against the [mortgaged] Property.”
77-2, at 2 of 9.
Hersey, doc. no.
In her complaint in this case, McCarthy makes
4
the following allegations concerning the hearing the Bankruptcy
Court held on WPB’s motion:
20. . . . [WBP] argued that its secured claim at
the time of the November 20, 2014 hearing totaled
approximately $672,079.24, including principal,
interest, attorney’s fees, and costs, with a
continuing per diem increase of $183.30.
21. [WPB] failed to represent to the Bankruptcy
Court that its judgment in [11-cv-207-SM] on the
Plaintiff’s debt under the promissory note was limited
to $433,433.03.
. . . .
23. The Bankruptcy Court made no mention in its
Order of the . . . judgment amount [in 11-cv-207-SM]
of $433,433.03.
Doc. no. 1-1, at 4 of 14.
In his order on WPB’s motion, Judge Deasy described WPB’s
secured claim this way:
WPB’s managing member testified as to the amount
of the secured claim that WPB has against the
Property. On the day of the hearing, November 20,
2014, the claim totaled $672,079.24, including
principal, interest, attorney’s fees, and costs. The
per diem increase on this claim is $183.30, which
amounts to about $5,500 a month ($180.30 * 30 days =
$5,499). The Debtor presented no evidence to the
contrary. The Court, accordingly, accepts WPB’s
accounting of its secured claim for the purpose of the
Motion.
Hersey, doc. no. 77-2, at 4 of 9 (emphasis added).
There is
nothing in the record before this court to suggest that WPB’s
managing member disclosed to the Bankruptcy Court the amount of
the judgment WPB won in 11-cv-207-SM.
5
But, at the same time,
Judge Deasy’s statement that McCarthy offered no evidence to
counter the testimony introduced by WBP suggests that despite
having had the opportunity to do so, McCarthy did not inform the
Bankruptcy Court of the amount of WPB’s judgment against her.
At the hearing in the Bankruptcy Court, WPB’s appraiser
valued the mortgaged property at $535,000.
valued it at $900,000.
McCarthy’s appraiser
Judge Deasy pegged the fair market value
of the property at $705,000.
Taking into account both the amount of WPB’s secured claim
($672,079.24) and the value of the mortgaged property
($705,000), Judge Deasy determined that “[a]s of the [date of
the] hearing, WPB had an equity cushion of slightly less than
5%.”
Hersey, doc. no. 77-2, at 9 of 9.
On that basis, he found
that WPB had “proven that it lack[ed] adequate protection with
regard to its secured claim.”
Id.
Accordingly, he granted
WPB’s motion for relief from the stay and authorized WPB to
“pursue its remedies against the Property.”
a foreclosure sale in March of 2015.
Id.
WPB conducted
WPB was the high bidder,
and it purchased the property for $500,000.
In May of 2015, WPB filed a motion in 11-cv-207-SM asking
Judge McAuliffe to grant a post-judgment attachment on
McCarthy’s real and personal property, in order to protect its
ability to collect the difference between the $500,000 it
6
received at the foreclosure sale and the amount it claimed it
was then owed by McCarthy, $757,486.79.4
Judge McAuliffe denied
WPB’s motion, noting that the motion itself “suggest[ed] that
the foreclosure sale resulted in a monetary recovery that
exceeded the judgment amount.”
Hersey, doc. no. 91.
Judge
McAuliffe also noted that $433,433.03 was “the amount [WPB’s]
counsel specifically agreed to accept as the judgment amount in
lieu of proving up damages at the time summary judgment was
entered,” and stated that it was “far too late for counsel or
defendant to reconsider that reasonable choice.”
This action followed.
Id.
In it, McCarthy asserts claims for
breach of contract (Count I); breach of the duty of due
diligence (Count II); breach of the duty of good faith (Count
III); violation of the New Hampshire Unfair, Deceptive, or
Unreasonable Collection Practices Act (“UDUCPA”), N.H. Rev.
Stat. Ann. (“RSA”) ch. 358-C (Count IV); violation of the New
Hampshire Consumer Protection Act (“CPA”), RSA ch. 358-A (Count
V); violation of the federal Fair Debt Collection Practices Act
(“FDCPA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1692 et seq. (Count VI); negligent
That figure is made up of the $433,433.03 judgment that
WPB received in September of 2011, plus interest and the
attorney’s fees and expenses that WPB had incurred since the
date of Judge McAuliffe’s judgment against McCarthy.
4
7
misrepresentation (Count VII); and enhanced compensatory damages
(Count VIII).
III. Discussion
WPB moves to dismiss Counts IV through VII for failure to
state a claim upon which relief may be granted, and moves to
dismiss Count VIII on grounds that enhanced compensatory damages
is not a cause of action.
dismissal of Count VIII.
The parties have agreed to the
In the discussion below, the court
considers each of the claims that McCarthy asserts in Counts VI
through VII.
A. Count IV: RSA 358-C
In Count IV, McCarthy asserts that WPB violated RSA 358C:3, VII, by failing to tell the Bankruptcy Court the amount of
its judgment against her and by telling the Bankruptcy Court
that she owed it $672,079.24, rather than the $433,433.03 that
Judge McAuliffe had awarded in 11-cv-207-SM.
She further
asserts that WPB violated RSA 358-C:3, VIII, by improperly
representing “to the Bankruptcy Court that its secured claim
against [her] was subject to increase for ongoing attorney’s
fees, despite the claim in fact being limited to the discrete
amount of $443,443.03.”
Doc. no. 1-1, at 9 of 14.
Defendant
moves to dismiss Count IV, arguing that: (1) plaintiff has not
adequately alleged that it, WPB, is a debt collector, as that
8
term is defined in the UDUCPA; and (2) the statements to the
Bankruptcy Court on which plaintiff bases Count IV are not
actionable because they are subject to the litigation privilege.
Defendant’s first argument carries the day.
As Judge Laplante has explained, to recover under the
UDUCPA, a plaintiff
must show that: “(1) [she has] been the object of
collection activity arising from a consumer debt; (2)
the defendant attempting to collect the debt qualifies
as a ‘debt collector’ under the Act; and (3) the
defendant has engaged in a prohibited act or has
failed to perform a requirement imposed by the [Act].”
Moore v. Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys., Inc., 848 F. Supp. 2d
107, 124 (D.N.H. 2012) (quoting Beadle v. Haughey, No. Civ. 04272-SM, 2005 WL 300060, at *2 (D.N.H. Feb. 9, 2005); citing
Gilroy v. Ameriquest Mortg. Co., 632 F. Supp. 2d 132, 134–37
(D.N.H. 2009)).5
The UDUCPA defines the term “debt collector” to mean “[a]ny
person who by any direct or indirect action, conduct or practice
enforces or attempts to enforce an obligation that is owed or
Pertinent to McCarthy’s claims in this case, the UDUCPA
prohibits debt collectors from making: (1) “any material false
representation or implication of the character, extent or amount
of the debt, or of its status in any legal proceeding,” RSA 358C:3, VII; or (2) “any representation that an existing obligation
may be increased by the addition of attorney’s fees,
investigation fees, service fees or any other fees or charges
when in fact such fees or charges may not be legally added to
the existing obligation,” RSA 358-C:3, VIII.
5
9
due, or alleged to be owed or due, by a consumer as a result of
a consumer credit transaction.”
RSA 358-C:1, VIII(a).
The
UDUCPA defines the term “consumer” to “mean[ ] a natural person
who seeks or acquires, or is offered property, services or
credit for personal, family or household purposes.”
RSA 358-
C:1, I.
Count IV does not state a claim upon which relief may be
granted because plaintiff has failed to allege facts that, if
proven, would establish that WPB qualifies as a debt collector
under the UDUCPA.
In her complaint, plaintiff asserts that
“[a]t all times relevant, the Defendant was a ‘debt collector’
as defined by RSA 358-C:1, VIII and engaged in a debt collection
activity arising from a debt of the Plaintiff.”
at 8 of 14.
Doc. no. 1-1,
However, plaintiff alleges no facts to support that
legal conclusion.
Specifically, she does not allege that she
sought or acquired her loan from IRF for personal, family, or
household purposes, which is necessary to make her a consumer
and WBP a debt collector.
Moreover, plaintiff’s conclusory assertion that WPB was a
debt collector is squarely refuted by two separate statements in
her promissory note, which establish that she acquired her loan
from IRF “not . . . for personal, family, or household
purposes,” doc. no. 9-1, at 5 of 15 (emphasis added), but for
10
“FOR BUSINESS PURPOSES ONLY,” id. at 6 of 15.
Indeed, in his
order granting summary judgment in 11-cv-207-SM, Judge McAuliffe
stated: “There is no serious dispute on this record . . . that
[McCarthy’s] loan was a business loan made for the purpose of
funding real estate development.”
Hersey, doc. no. 64, at 3.
Thus, McCarthy was not acting as a consumer when she incurred
her debt to IRF.
Accordingly, WBC was not acting as a debt
collector when it made the representations to Judge Deasy that
are the basis for Count IV.
Because plaintiff has not
adequately alleged that WBC qualifies as a debt collector, her
UDUCPA claim necessarily fails.
Plaintiff makes several attempts to save her claim, but
none is effective.
First, she characterizes her promissory note
as a contract of adhesion that contains terms that are beyond
the comprehension of a lay person.
The relevant language of the
promissory note, quoted above, is neither technical nor
otherwise arcane; it is not beyond the comprehension of a lay
person.
As for the nature of McCarthy’s agreement with IRF, the New
Hampshire Supreme Court (“NHSC”) has “recognized the detrimental
effects that often result in transactions involving . . .
adhesion contracts.”
Mills v. Nashua Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n,
121 N.H. 722, 726 (1981) (citing Pittsfield Weaving Co. v. Grove
Textiles, Inc., 121 N.H. 344, 347 (1981)).
11
However, in Mills,
the court held that the mortgage agreement at issue was not a
contract of adhesion.
See 121 N.H. at 726.
The conclusion in
Mills would appear to apply to McCarthy’s promissory note.
Given plaintiff’s factual allegations, with all reasonable
inferences construed in her favor, see Foley, 772 F.3d at 71,
the court can discern no basis for a finding that “the imbalance
in bargaining power of the parties rendered the [promissory
note] so coercive and one-sided as to prevent [McCarthy] from
having voluntarily assented to its terms so that it constituted
a contract of adhesion.”
(citation omitted).
Pittsfield Weaving, 121 N.H. at 347
Thus, McCarthy is bound by the
representations in her promissory note concerning the way she
intended to use the proceeds of her loan from IRF.
In addition to disavowing the representations in her
promissory note, plaintiff makes two related moves.
She has
produced an affidavit in which she says that notwithstanding the
representations in her promissory note, she did, in fact, use
some of the proceeds from the loan for personal purposes, and
she seeks leave to amend her complaint to add factual
allegations to that effect.
Even if the facts in plaintiff’s
affidavit had been alleged in her complaint, or were alleged in
an amended complaint, that would not save Count IV from
dismissal.
12
At best, the facts in McCarthy’s affidavit establish one of
two things: (1) she misrepresented her intentions when she
agreed, in the promissory note, that she would use the proceeds
of the loan exclusively for business purposes; or (2) after she
received the loan, she changed her mind and used its proceeds
for purposes that ran counter to the representations she made in
the note.
One way or the other, McCarthy’s affidavit does not
establish that when IRF made the loan, it had any reason to
believe that McCarthy intended to use the proceeds from that
loan for purposes that would make it, or its successors in
interest, subject to the UDUCPA.
Accordingly, any amendment to
plaintiff’s complaint to add the facts from her affidavit would
be futile, because those facts would not establish that IRF
agreed to make a loan to McCarthy with the understanding that
she would use any of its proceeds for personal, family, or
household purposes.
Because McCarthy has not adequately alleged that WPB was a
debt collector, and has no basis for doing so, defendant is
entitled to dismissal of Count IV.
B. Count IV and V: RSA 358-A
In Count IV, McCarthy asserts that by violating the UDUCPA,
WPB also violated the CPA.
She bases her derivative CPA claim
on RSA 358-C:4, VI, which provides that “[a]ny violation of the
13
provisions of [the UDUCPA] shall also constitute an unfair and
deceptive act or practice within the meaning of RSA 358-A:2 and
may be enforced by the attorney general pursuant to RSA 358-A.”
In Count V, McCarthy asserts the following independent CPA
claim:
[b]y misrepresenting the amount and nature of [her]
debt [to the Bankruptcy Court], specifically that such
debt was $672,079.24 rather than the discrete amount
of $443,443.03 dictated by the . . . judgment [in 11cv-207-SM], the Defendant committed an unfair and
deceptive act or practice in the conduct of trade and
commerce in New Hampshire pursuant to RSA 358-A:2,
relative to its loan servicing.
Doc. no. 1-1, at 9-10 of 14.
The court considers each CPA claim
in turn.
1. Plaintiff’s Derivative CPA Claim (Count IV)
Defendant moves to dismiss plaintiff’s derivative CPA claim
on grounds that RSA 358-C:4, VI, does not create a private right
of action, and it also invokes the litigation privilege.
Defendant’s first argument appears to be correct, see Gustafson
v. Recovery Servs., No. 14-cv-305-JD, 2015 WL 5009108, at *4
(D.N.H. Aug. 21, 2015), but plaintiff’s derivative CPA claim
fails for an antecedent reason: the lack of a viable UDUCPA
claim.
2. Plaintiff’s Independent CPA Claim (Count V)
Defendant moves to dismiss plaintiff’s independent CPA
claim on grounds that the conduct on which it is based falls
14
outside the scope of the unlawful acts described in RSA 358-A:2.
WPB also invokes the litigation privilege.
The court agrees
with defendant that plaintiff has not alleged conduct that is
actionable under the CPA.
The CPA outlaws various “unfair method[s] of competition
[and] unfair or deceptive act[s] or practice[s] in the conduct
of any trade or commerce within this state.”
RSA 358-A:2.
The
statute defines trade and commerce to
include the advertising, offering for sale, sale, or
distribution of any services and any property,
tangible or intangible, real, personal or mixed, and
any other article, commodity, or thing of value
wherever situate, and shall include any trade or
commerce directly or indirectly affecting the people
of this state.
RSA 358-A:1, II.
As the NHSC has explained: “Fraudulent or
deceptive conduct can be actionable under the [CPA] only if it
occurs in a business setting involving the advertising or sale
of a commodity or service as part of the day-to-day business of
the defendant.”
Green Mtn. Realty Corp. v. Fifth Estate Tower,
LLC, 161 N.H. 78, 87 (2010) (quoting Brzica v. Trs. of Dartmouth
Coll., 147 N.H. 443, 451 (2002)).
While IRF may have engaged in trade and commerce when it
made a loan to McCarthy, this court has no difficulty concluding
that WPB was not engaged in trade or commerce when it moved the
Bankruptcy Court to grant relief from the automatic stay and
made representations concerning the amount of its secured claim.
15
At that point, WPB was seeking to collect a business debt and/or
enforce a judgment; it was not doing anything that falls under
the definition of trade and commerce articulated in RSA 358-A:1,
II.
Moreover, the alleged misrepresentations upon which Count V
is based were not directed toward a consumer, i.e., McCarthy;
they were directed to Judge Deasy.
In short, defendant is
entitled to dismissal of Count V because the conduct on which it
is based did not take place in trade and commerce.
Based upon that conclusion, it is no surprise that the
conduct on which Count V is based, making a misrepresentation in
a legal proceeding, does not appear in the list of unlawful acts
in RSA 358-A:2.
While that list is not exhaustive, “[f]or
conduct not particularized by the CPA to qualify as unfair or
deceptive, it must be of the same type as that proscribed in the
enumerated categories.”
State v. Sideris, 157 N.H. 258, 262
(2008) (citing State v. Moran, 151 N.H. 450, 452 (2004)); see
also Roberts v. Gen. Motors Corp., 138 N.H. 532, 539 (1994).
Even if WPB had misrepresented the amount and nature of
McCarthy’s debt to the Bankruptcy Court, that conduct is so
dissimilar to the acts enumerated in RSA 358-A:2 that it cannot
serve as the basis for a CPA claim, which also entitles
defendant to dismissal of Count V.
16
C. Count VI: Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (“FDCPA”)
In Count VI, McCarthy asserts that WPB violated 15 U.S.C.
§§ 1692e(2)(A), 1692e(8), and 1692e(10), by
represent[ing] to the Bankruptcy Court that its
secured claim against the Plaintiff was $672,079.24
and counting, and fail[ing] to represent to the
Bankruptcy Court that its judgment in [11-cv-207-SM]
on the Plaintiff’s debt under the promissory note, and
thus the controlling debt amount, was in fact limited
to $433,433.03.
Doc. no. 1-1, at 10 of 14.
Defendant moves to dismiss Count VI,
arguing that: (1) plaintiff has not adequately alleged that WPB
is a debt collector; (2) plaintiff has not adequately alleged
that WPB was attempting to collect a debt, as that term is
defined in the FDCPA; and (3) plaintiff’s FDCPA claim is barred
by the statute of limitations.
Defendant is entitled to
dismissal of Count VI because plaintiff’s FDCPA claim is barred
by the statute of limitations.
The FDCPA prohibits debt collectors from engaging in
various forms of conduct.6
However, actions under the FDCPA must
Pertinent to McCarthy’s claims in this case, the FDCPA
prohibits debt collectors from: (1) falsely representing “the
character, amount, or legal status of any debt,” 15 U.S.C. §
1692e(2)(A); (2) “[c]ommunicating or threatening to communicate
to any person credit information which is known or which should
be known to be false, including the failure to communicate that
a disputed debt is disputed,” 15 U.S.C. § 1692e(8); and (3)
using “any false representation or deceptive means to collect or
attempt to collect any debt or to obtain information concerning
a consumer,” 15 U.S.C. § 1692e(10).
6
17
be brought “within one year from the date on which the violation
occurs.”
15 U.S.C. § 1692k(d).
McCarthy filed her complaint against WPB in the Strafford
County Superior Court on January 13, 2016.
WPB made the
representations to the Bankruptcy Court that underpin Count VI
no later than November 20, 2014, at the hearing on WPB’s motion
for relief from the automatic stay.
Thus, those representations
were made more than one year before McCarthy filed this action,
which falls outside the one-year limitation period.
Plaintiff attempts to evade the operation of the statute of
limitations by arguing that she filed her complaint within one
year after she sustained actual damages, which was no earlier
than January 22, 2015, the date of Judge Deasy’s order granting
WPB relief from the automatic stay.
The court is not persuaded.
As a preliminary matter, plaintiff cites no authority for
the proposition that the FDCPA limitation period begins to run
only after a prospective plaintiff has suffered an actual
injury.
Her attempt to evade the statute of limitations is
further undermined by: (1) her knowledge of all the facts
necessary to assert her claim (the amount of WPB’s judgment
against her and the amount of WPB’s claim against the bankruptcy
estate) at the time of the hearing in the Bankruptcy court; and
(2) the foreseeability of the damages that might result from
WPB’s representations at the time WPB made them.
18
Application of the statute of limitations to bar
plaintiff’s FDCPA claims is further supported by Judge Rice’s
decision in Kline v. Mort. Elec. Security Sys., 659 F. Supp. 2d
940 (S.D. Ohio 2009).
In that case, two plaintiffs alleged that
one of the defendants violated their rights “under the FDCPA, by
filing a proof of claim [in their bankruptcy proceeding] which
sought fees which could not be lawfully recovered.”
Id. at 946.
In response to a motion to dismiss that invoked the FDCPA
statute of limitations, Judge Rice ruled that plaintiffs’
claim under the FDCPA . . . predicated upon the proof
of claim filed in their case under Chapter 13, must be
dismissed as barred by the statute of limitations,
since the proof of claim was filed more than one year
before this litigation was initiated.
Id. at 952.
Here, the FDCPA claim in Count VI is predicated upon WPB’s
representations at a hearing on November 20, 2014.
Plaintiff
asserted that claim in a complaint filed more than one year
later.
That claim is time barred, which entitles WPB to
dismissal of Count VI.
D. Count VII: Negligent Misrepresentation
In Count VII, McCarthy asserts that “[i]n stipulating to
liquidated damages of $433,433.03 in [11-cv-207-SM], the
Defendant negligently misrepresented that it was limiting its
damages accordingly, and that any attempts to collect its debt
19
or otherwise redeem its collateral would therefore be based upon
that amount.”
Doc. no. 1-1, at 11 of 14.
While the court is
not convinced that WPB’s stipulation to a judgment amount in 11cv-207-SM necessarily entailed or even implied a promise not to
make a claim against McCarthy’s bankruptcy estate that included
post-judgment interest and costs, the court accepts that
proposition for the purpose of ruling on WPB’s motion to
dismiss.
McCarthy further asserts:
69. The Defendant’s misrepresentation was made
for the purpose of inducing the Plaintiff to forego
her rights to put the Defendant to its burden of proof
in establishing damages.
. . . .
72. The Plaintiff justifiably relied upon the
Defendant’s misrepresentation in stipulating to an
amount of damages that gave her significant equity in
the Property, and presumably protected her from the
Defendant obtaining relief from the automatic stay and
ultimately foreclosing.
73. As a result of Defendant’s
misrepresentation, the Plaintiff sustained damages,
including, but not limited to, the loss of the
Property and her equity therein, when the Defendant
obtained relief after proceeding upon a far greater
debt amount than what it had agreed to in [11-cv-207SM].
Id. at 11, 12 of 14.
Defendant moves to dismiss Count VII, arguing that: (1) the
“statement” underlying plaintiff’s negligent misrepresentation
claim is not actionable because it is subject to the litigation
privilege; and (2) recovery on this claim is barred by the
20
economic loss doctrine.
While defendant is entitled to the
protection of the economic loss doctrine, there are three more
fundamental problems with plaintiff’s claim for negligent
misrepresentation.
Under the common law of New Hampshire, to state a claim for
negligent misrepresentation, a plaintiff must allege “that the
defendant[ ] made a representation with knowledge of its falsity
or with conscious indifference to its truth with the intention
to cause [the plaintiff] to rely upon it and that [the
plaintiff] justifiably relied upon it.”
Akwa Vista, LLC v. NRT,
Inc., 160 N.H. 594, 601 (2010) (citing Snierson v. Scruton, 145
N.H. 73, 77 (2000); see also Wyle v. Lees, 162 N.H. 406, 413
(2011) (describing the elements negligent misrepresentation as
“a negligent misrepresentation of a material fact by the
defendant and justifiable reliance by the plaintiff”).
In
addition, to prevail on a negligent misrepresentation claim, a
plaintiff must prove that the damages she claims were caused by
the defendant’s misrepresentation.
See Wyle, 162 N.H. at 414.
The first problem with plaintiff’s claim concerns the
nature of the representation on which it is based.
Assuming
that WPB’s stipulation to damages in the amount of $433,433.03
in 11-cv-207-SM was also a representation that it would not
assert a claim in excess of that amount against McCarthy’s
bankruptcy estate, that representation was not statement of
21
fact; it was a promise concerning future conduct.
“[A] promise
is not a statement of fact and hence cannot, as such, give rise
to an action for misrepresentation, [but] a promise can imply a
statement of material fact about the promisor’s intention and
capacity to honor the promise.”
Hydraform Prods. Corp. v. Am.
Steel & Alum. Corp., 127 N.H. 187, 200 (1985) (citing W.
Prosser, The Law of Torts 762–63 (5th ed. 1984)).
Here,
however, plaintiff has not alleged that when WBP stipulated to
damages of $433,433.03 in 11-cv-207-SM, it intended, at some
later date, to make a claim against McCarthy’s bankruptcy estate
in excess of that amount.
There is also a problem with reliance, which is a necessary
element of a claim for negligent misrepresentation.
See Plourde
Sand & Gravel Co. v. JGI E., Inc., 154 N.H. 791, 800 (2007)
(citing Restatement (Second) of Torts § 552 (1976); Hall v.
United Parcel Serv. of Am., Inc., 555 N.E.2d 273, 276 (N.Y.
1990)).
In her complaint, McCarthy asserts that in reliance
upon WPB’s stipulation, she gave up her right to compel WPB to
prove its damages.
However, McCarthy does not allege any facts
to suggest that WPB could not have proven at least $433,433.03
in damages.
Moreover, in his order granting summary judgment to
WPB, Judge McAuliffe stated that the stipulated amount was
“decidedly in [McCarthy’s] favor, and [was] based in substantial
part on [her] own expert’s opinion.”
22
Hersey, doc. no. 64, at 5.
Based upon Judge McAuliffe’s analysis, it seems clear that
McCarthy did not give up the opportunity to litigate a more
favorable judgment; WPB’s stipulation gave her the benefit of
any success she might have had litigating the amount of WPB’s
damages.
All that McCarthy appears to have given up, in
reliance upon WPB’s stipulation, was the opportunity to expend
even more time and money on additional litigation that had no
likelihood of resulting in a more favorable judgment.
If either
party gave up anything by stipulating to the amount of damages,
WPB gave up the opportunity to prove its entitlement to an even
larger award.
In sum, it is difficult to see how McCarthy was
harmed by her reliance upon WBP’s stipulation.
The third problem with McCarthy’s claim concerns causation,
which is also a necessary element of a claim for negligent
misrepresentation.
See Wyle, 162 N.H. at 414.
In a nutshell,
she asserts that WPB’s stipulation in 11-cv-207-SM caused her to
lose the mortgaged property and her equity in it.
assertion makes no sense.
That
WPB conducted a foreclosure sale
because the Bankruptcy Court permitted it to do so, based upon
its acceptance of WPB’s uncontested evidence concerning the
amount of its secured claim against McCarthy’s bankruptcy
estate.
Plaintiff does not explain, and the court cannot
fathom, how WPB’s stipulation in 11-cv-207-SM prevented McCarthy
from contesting the evidence WPB introduced in the Bankruptcy
23
Court.
Thus, she has not adequately alleged that WPB’s
stipulation caused the damages she seeks in Count VII.
Finally, the court agrees with WPB that even if McCarthy
had adequately alleged a claim for negligent misrepresentation,
that claim would be barred by the economic loss doctrine.
The
court of appeals for this circuit has recently described the
contours of that doctrine in New Hampshire:
The economic loss doctrine is a common-law
doctrine according to which parties bound by a
contract may not “‘pursu[e] tort recovery for purely
economic or commercial losses associated with the
contract relationship.’” See Plourde Sand & Gravel
Co. v. JGI E., Inc., 154 N.H. 791, 917 A.2d 1250, 1253
(2007) (quoting Tietsworth v. Harley–Davidson, Inc.,
270 Wis. 2d 146, 677 N.W.2d 233, 241 (2004), further
proceedings at 303 Wis. 2d 94, 735 N.W.2d 418 (2007)).
. . .
In its broadest form, 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, 137 N.H. 11, 622 A.2d 1248, 1253 (1993));
see also Kelleher v. Marvin Lumber & Cedar Co., 152
N.H. 813, 891 A.2d 477, 495 (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. This version
of the doctrine has been adopted in New Hampshire. 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.” See
Plourde, 917 A.2d at 1254 (quotation marks omitted).
24
Schaefer v. IndyMac Mortg. Servs., 731 F.3d 98, 103-04 (1st Cir.
2013).
In Schaefer, the plaintiff, who had defaulted on his
mortgage, asserted claims for negligence and negligent
misrepresentation.
Those claims were based upon post-default
conduct by his lender that, in the plaintiff’s view, prevented
him from: (1) applying for reinstatement of his delinquent loan;
and (2) submitting certain information that was required to
support an application for a loan modification.
101-02.
See 731 F.3d at
The court of appeals held that the plaintiff’s claims
were barred by the economic loss doctrine because he was seeking
monetary damages arising from the manner in which the defendant
exercised its rights, under the mortgage agreement, to remedy
the plaintiff’s default.
See id. at 109.
Like the parties in Schaefer, who were bound by a mortgage
agreement, McCarthy and WPB were bound by the promissory note
and the mortgage that McCarthy gave to IRF.
McCarthy’s claim
for negligent misrepresentation arises from the manner in in
which WPB litigated the amount to which it was entitled as a
result of McCarthy’s breach of her duties under the promissory
note and/or the mortgage agreement.
As damages, she seeks to
recover proceeds from the foreclosure sale in excess of the
$433,433.03 judgment that Judge McAuliffe granted WPB on its
claim for breach of contract.
The conclusion is inescapable
25
that McCarthy is seeking tort recovery for a purely economic
loss associated with her contractual relationship with WPB.
On
that basis, her claim is barred by the economic loss doctrine.
In so ruling, the court recognizes that “[t]here is no
question that New Hampshire recognizes an exception to the
economic loss doctrine for certain negligent misrepresentation
claims.”
Schaefer, 731 F.3d at 108 (citing Wyle, 162 N.H. at
409-12; Plourde, 154 N.H. at 799-801).
McCarthy’s claim,
however, falls outside the scope of the negligent
misrepresentation exception.
In Plourde, which involved a claim
by a gravel supplier that a company that tested its gravel
misrepresented the quality of that gravel to a purchaser, the
NHSC explained that a plaintiff may invoke the negligent
misrepresentation exception against a defendant
who, in the course of his business, profession or
employment, or in any other transaction in which he
has a pecuniary interest, supplies false information
for the guidance of others in their business
transactions, is subject to liability for pecuniary
loss caused to them by their justifiable reliance upon
the information, if he fails to exercise reasonable
care or competence in obtaining or communicating the
information.
154 N.H. at 799 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts §
552(1)).
When WPB stipulated to the amount of damages in 11-cv-207SM, it was not providing information to guide McCarthy in a
business transaction.
It was stating its position in a court
26
case in which McCarthy had become its adversary due to her
failure to pay back the loan she had received from IRF.
In
other words, the circumstances of this case bear no resemblance
to the scenario the Plourde court drew from the Restatement.
Thus, the negligent misrepresentation exception, as described in
Plourde, is inapplicable to the circumstances of this case.
In Schaefer, where the plaintiff asserted claims arising
from the foreclosure of his mortgage, the court of appeals
responded to his invocation of the negligent misrepresentation
exception by explaining that “the negligent misrepresentation
exception reaches only those representations that precede the
formation of the contract or that relate to a transaction other
than the one that constitutes the subject of the contract.”
F.3d at 109 (citing Wyle, 162 N.H. at 411-12).
731
Here, the
representation at issue was made long after the formation of the
contract between IRF and McCarthy, and it related solely to the
transaction that was the subject of that contract.
Thus,
McCarthy’s claim does not fall within the negligent
misrepresentation exception.
As a consequence, that claim is
barred by the economic loss doctrine.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons detailed above, defendant’s motion to
dismiss Counts III through VIII, document no. 5, is granted.
27
This case now consists of the claims stated in Counts I, II, and
III.
SO ORDERED.
__________________________
Landya McCafferty
United States District Judge
July 26, 2016
cc:
Sabin R. Maxwell, Esq.
James E. Higgins, Esq.
28
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