Fenske-Buchanan v. Bank of America NA, et al
Filing
50
ORDER granting in part and denying in part 13 Motion to Dismiss; signed by Judge Marsha J. Pechman.(SC)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON
AT SEATTLE
8
9
10
PK FENSKE-BUCHANAN,
11
12
13
14
Plaintiff,
CASE NO. C11-1656 MJP
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS
RE: COMPLAINT
v.
BANK OF AMERICA N.A., et al.,
Defendant.
15
16
The Court, having received and reviewed:
17
1. Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (Dkt. No. 13)
18
2. Plaintiff’s Opposition to Motion to Dismiss (Dkt. No. 17)
19
3. Defendants’ Reply in Further Support of Motion to Dismiss (Dkt. No. 18)
20
4. Surreply in Opposition to Motion to Dismiss (Dkt. No. 24)
21 and all attached declarations and exhibits, makes the following ruling:
22
IT IS ORDERED that the motion to dismiss is PARTIALLY GRANTED and
23 PARTIALLY DENIED, as follows:
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 1
1 Count I (RESPA)
PARTIALLY GRANTED/PARTIALLY DENIED
2 Count II (FCRA)
DENIED
3 Count III (TILA)
DENIED
4 Count IV (MLSA)
GRANTED
5 Count V (WLHA)
GRANTED
6 Count VI (WCLA)
DENIED
7 Count VII (WCPA)
GRANTED
8 Count X (Fid. duty)
GRANTED
9 Count XI (Defamation)
PARTIALLY GRANTED/PARTIALLY DENIED
10 Count XII (Conversion)
GRANTED
11 Count XIII (Unjust enrichment)
GRANTED
12 Count XIV (Neglig. misrep.)
GRANTED
13 Count XV (Fraud)
DENIED
14 Count XVI (Infl.emot.distr.)
GRANTED
15 Count XVII (Tax liability)
GRANTED
16 Count XVIII (Usury)
DENIED
17
18 Background (all citations are to Plaintiff’s Original Complaint; Dkt. No. 1 1)
19
Plaintiff executed a Note and Deed of Trust w/ Defendant Bank of America, N.A.
20 (BANA), in the amount of $1,212,000, with interest-only payments for the first 120 months. ¶¶
21 11-12. The Note included a Borrower’s Right to Prepay which permitted Plaintiff to make
22
1
Plaintiff has since filed an Amended and a Supplemental Complaint. Dkt Nos. 35 and
23 36. A review of the amended complaint reveals no change in any of the causes of action except
Count XVII, which has been converted to a “Negligence” claim. This order will apply with
24 equal force to the unaltered counts of the amended complaint.
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 2
1 payments of principle before they were due. ¶ 14. In addition to the Deed and the Note,
2 Plaintiff was also provided with a Federal Truth in Lending Disclosure Statement (“TILA
3 Statement”) which stated that no prepayment penalty would be charged for paying off the loan
4 early. ¶ 16.
5
Between March 2010 and January 2011, Plaintiff made several sizeable principal
6 prepayments. ¶ 19. With one exception, she alleges that the prepayments were not properly
7 applied to the principal. The complaint charts the following timeline:
8 3/22/10
BANA delayed eight days before applying the payment, then applied only $184
9
of the $199 she had submitted (Plaintiff alleges that this $15 deduction has never
10
been explained). ¶ 21.
11 4/7/10
A $1263 prepayment was properly applied.
12 4/14/10
Only $1564.09 of a $9500 prepayment was credited to principal; the remaining
13
$7935.91 was treated as a periodic payment; BANA reversed this error on May
14
11, 2010 and credited the full amount to reducing the principal (but without a
15
corresponding interest reduction for the amount the principal should have been
16
reduced by April 14). Despite repeated requests, BANA refused to send out
17
routine monthly loan history statements. ¶ 24.
18 7/6/10
Unaware of BANA’s previous errors, Plaintiff made a $9999.50 prepayment.
19
BANA applied $2306.05 towards the principal and treated the remaining
20
$7963.45 as a periodic payment. Because Plaintiff had already made a periodic
21
payment on July 1, 2010, BANA treated the remainder as a future periodic
22
payment (i.e., forcing Plaintiff to pay for interest not yet accrued). ¶ 25.
23
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 3
1 7/13/10
BANA applied $1998.48 of a $9950 prepayment toward principal and treated the
2
remainder as a periodic payment. ¶ 26.
3 8/2/10
Plaintiff made another prepayment of $9975.75, of which BANA applied
4
$2035.05 towards the principal and treated the remaining $7939.80 as another
5
“future periodic payment.” ¶ 27.
6 1/18/11
Plaintiff made a $100,000 prepayment -- this was initially properly applied. ¶ 30.
7 Jan 2011
Plaintiff received a loan history statement and discovered the misapplication of
8
prepayments. She called customer service to report the errors and alleges that
9
BANA commenced a “convoluted and complex series of over 70 account
10
adjustments” to correct the problem. However, the bank reversed the $100,000
11
prepayment to principal which had been correctly applied and did not correct that
12
error until February 28, 2011. ¶¶ 31-33.
13 1/31/11
Plaintiff sent BANA a qualified written request (QWR) letter demanding her
14
complete loan profile. BANA’s response (February 18, 2011) did not answer
15
Plaintiff’s questions or provide her the information she requested. The letter did
16
include the following statement:
17
Please note that a credit block was placed while the issues in your letter
were addressed. However, as of the date of this letter, the block has been
removed. Further as a member of the credit granting community, Bank of
America, like most creditors, relies on the accuracy and validity of the
information obtained from the various reporting agencies. Therefore, we will not
remove the negative credit reporting from your credit file.
18
19
20
Plaintiff alleges on info and belief that the effect of the negative credit reporting
21
was to reduce her overall credit score. ¶¶ 39-41.
22
Plaintiff obtained a copy of her credit report, which contained the inflated balance
23
on her loan created by BANA’s failure to properly apply her prepayments. ¶ 43.
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 4
1 5/5/11
Loan history statement reflects an outstanding balance of $1,086,772.14 – with
2
principal prepayments totaling $140,887.25, the amount should be $1,071,112.75
3
(not counting the further reductions in interest which would have occurred had the
4
principal been reduced correctly in accordance with the prepayments). BANA
5
has “refused to account for the $15,659.39 discrepancy.” ¶¶ 34-35.
6 Jan-Mar 2011Plaintiff received three separate 1098 mortgage interest statements for 2010, each
7
reflecting different amounts of mortgage interest paid for the year. None of the
8
amounts listed equates to 12 monthly payments of $7,070. ¶¶ 59-62.
9 Feb-Aug 2011Plaintiff sent four additional QWRs to BANA. BANA’s responses (10 different
10
letters) neither reflected a correction of the loan nor an explanation of their failure
11
to do so. Receipt of none of the four QWRs was acknowledged within five days
12
(which Plaintiff alleges is a requirement of RESPA), nor did any of the letters
13
identify an individual representative whom Plaintiff could contact for further
14
assistance. ¶¶ 45-49.
15 9/23/11
BANA’s final response to Plaintiff’s last (8/10/11) QWR failed to address her
16
concerns (“your inquiry does not appear to be specifically related to a servicing
17
concern related to your loan”). Additionally, in response to Plaintiff’s request for
18
a loan payoff amount, BANA provided a Payoff Demand Statement, but advised
19
Plaintiff that “a $30.00 fee will be assessed for the payoff.” ¶¶ 54-55; Ex. G.
20
Defendants have moved, pursuant to FRCP 12(b)(6), to dismiss the bulk of Plaintiff’s
21 complaint.
22
23
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 5
1 Standard of review
2
Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), a defendant may seek dismissal of
3 a complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. To survive a motion to
4 dismiss, a complaint need not provide detailed factual allegations. Bell Atlantic v. Twombly, 550
5 U.S. 544, 555-56 (2007) (alteration in original) (citation omitted). However, it must contain
6 “more than labels and conclusions” or “a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of
7 action.” Id. at 555. In considering a motion to dismiss, the Court must accept as true all the
8 factual allegations in the complaint. Id. A complaint must proffer “enough facts to state a claim
9 for relief that is plausible on its face.” Id. at 570. “A claim has facial plausibility when the
10 plaintiff pleads factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the
11 defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 129 S. Ct. 1937, 1949 (2009)
12 (citing Twombly, 550 U.S. at 556).
13
When the district court reviews the sufficiency of a complaint at the procedural stage of
14 a motion to dismiss, “before the reception of any evidence either by affidavit or admissions, its
15 task is necessarily a limited one. To survive a motion to dismiss, a plaintiff’s burden is limited to
16 setting forth factual allegations sufficient to “raise the right to relief above the speculative level.”
17 Twombly, 550 U.S. at 545. A plaintiff need only plead “enough facts to raise a reasonable
18 expectation that discovery will reveal evidence.” Id. at 556. That is, a plaintiff must allege facts
19 that, taken as true, are “suggestive of illegal conduct.” Id. at 564 n.8.
20 Discussion/Analysis
21
Defendants are not challenging the claims for breach of contract (Count VIII) and breach
22 of duty of good faith and fair dealing (Count IX) – they do seek dismissal of all remaining
23 counts, and the Court will address those claims count by count.
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 6
1 Count I: Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA)
2
3
Plaintiff alleges the following RESPA violations:
1. Deficient responses to QWRs: BANA failed to include a written explanation and a
contact person, as required by the statute.
4
Defendants claim that BANA did make corrections to Plaintiff’s account in response to
5
the letters and that all the letters directed her to its customer service department. This is
6
not sufficient to support a dismissal of this count -- the statute requires that the responses
7
to the QWR notify the borrower of the correction and include the contact information for
8
a representative with whom the borrower can speak. 12 USC § 2605(e)(2)(C). Plaintiff
9
adequately alleges that all the responses failed to indicate that corrections had been made
10
or provide the contact information for a representative of the bank whom Plaintiff could
11
contact. ¶¶ 39, 46. Additionally, BANA concedes that its response to Plaintiff’s August
12
8, 2011 QWR was past the statutory deadline. Response, pp. 2-3. DENIED.
13
14
2. Untimely acknowledgement: BANA failed to acknowledge receipt of the QWRs within
five days as required by the Dodd-Frank amendment to RESPA.
15
The Dodd-Frank amendment to RESPA (which includes the five-day acknowledgement
16
requirement) states that “a section, or provision thereof, of this title shall take effect on
17
the date which final regulations implementing such section, or provision, take effect” or
18
that “[a] section… for which regulations have not been issued [takes effect] on the date
19
that is 18 months after the designated transfer date…” Pub.L. 111-203 at § 1400(c)(2),
20
(3), 124 Stat. 1376 (July 21, 2010). July 21, 2011 was set as the “designated transfer
21
date,” therefore the earliest date that the amendment could take effect is November 21,
22
2012. Plaintiff cites no authority for her argument that this portion of the amendment
23
took effect immediately upon passage -- it is not apparent from the face of the statute and
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 7
1
was rejected in Patton v. Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, 2011 WL 3236026 at *4 (M.D.
2
Fla. July 28, 2011). GRANTED.
3
3. “Negative credit reporting:” RESPA forbids a lender from providing to a credit reporting
4
agency any information that is related to a payment dispute contained in a QWR for 60
5
days. 12 USC § 2605(e)(3). The only allegation supporting Plaintiff’s assertion that a
6
“negative credit reporting” was made based on just such a dispute is her claim that she
7
received a letter from BANA indicating that the bank would “not remove the negative
8
credit reporting from [her] credit file.” ¶ 40. The letter says nothing about providing
9
negative information to a credit reporting agency. Plaintiff alleges that she received a
10
copy of her credit report (¶ 43), yet cites no negative information from that report (except
11
that she disputed the loan balance). 2 GRANTED.
12
4. Defendants also attack Plaintiff’s pleadings as failing to adequately allege a basis for
13
either actual or statutory damages. Regarding actual damages, claims of mental anguish
14
and time spent pursuing the dispute have been held sufficient to establish actual damages
15
under 12 USC § 2605(f) of RESPA (Johnstone v. Bank of America, N.A., 173 F.Supp.2d
16
809, 817 (N.D. Ill., 2001). 3 And RESPA permits statutory damages (not to exceed
17
$1000) for violations representing a “pattern or practice of noncompliance with the
18
requirements of this section” (12 USC § 2605(f)(1)(B)) – Plaintiff’s allegations of 13
19
20
21
22
23
24
2
Plaintiff does allege, “on information and belief,” that “the effect of the negative credit
reporting was to reduce Plaintiff’s overall credit score,” (¶ 41) but this is nothing more than
speculation, especially given that she received a copy of her credit report and alleges no actual
evidence of credit score reduction due to BANA’s actions.
3
Defendants cite to unpublished Ninth Circuit authority that “[a]llegations of legal fees
and the costs related to this suit are insufficient to constitute actual damages under RESPA,”
(Solan v. Everhome Mortgage Co., 2011 WL 456013 at *3 [S.D. Cal., Feb. 3, 20111]), but the
Court does not find this persuasive -- Plaintiff is alleging more than “legal fees and costs” as her
damages.
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 8
1
non-responsive letters from BANA creates a plausible inference of a “pattern or
2
practice.” DENIED.
3 Count II (Fair Credit Report Act [FCRA])
4
This statute requires furnishers of information to consumer reporting agencies to conduct
5 an investigation with respect to any disputed information and, if the information is found to be
6 inaccurate, to report that information to the agencies. 15 USC § 1681s-2(b). Defendants seek
7 dismissal on the grounds that the bank investigated the dispute and determined that no error was
8 made and no further corrections would be made. Response, p. 10. But Plaintiff clearly alleges
9 otherwise, and she states a proper FCRA claim with her allegation that BANA reported an
10 inaccurate loan balance to the credit reporting agencies then refused to correct it when she
11 disputed it. The fact that BANA disputes that it made a mistake doesn’t entitle the bank to
12 dismissal of the claim. DENIED.
13 Count III (Truth in Lending Act [TILA])
14
Defendants first attack this claim on limitations grounds: TILA has a “one year from the
15 date of the violation” limitations period, and Defendants argue that the “violation” (failure of the
16 loan documents to mention a prepayment penalty) dates from the execution of the agreement
17 (September 7, 2007). But the Court finds that Plaintiff is entitled to equitable tolling of the
18 limitations period on the grounds that she has adequately alleged could not discover Defendants’
19 fraud until she was finally provided with a copy of the loan history statement in January 2011
20 (re: the alleged misapplication of the prepayment amounts), or until she received the payoff
21 statement in September 2011 (re: the alleged improper assessment of a prepayment penalty).
22 Equitable tolling applies in situations “where the complainant has been induced or tricked by his
23 adversary’s misconduct into allowing the filing deadline to pass.” O’Donnell v. Vencor, Inc.,
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 9
1 465 F.3d 1063, 1068 (9th Cir. 2008). The standard is not (as Defendants claim) “active
2 concealment or misrepresentation” (Reply, p. 5), nor does their cited authority (Woods v.
3 Gibbons, 38 Wn.App. 343, 3486 (1993)) support that argument.
4
The Court disagrees that the statutory clock started ticking when the mortgage papers
5 were executed. The violation which is alleged here occurred at the time that the bank allegedly
6 failed to correctly apply Plaintiff’s prepayments, so the clock did not begin running until the
7 bank began applying her principal prepayments to its unearned interest instead of reducing her
8 principal; i.e., sometime in early 2010. And Plaintiff’s allegations that BANA refused to provide
9 her with a loan history statement (despite repeated requests) until May 2011 makes a plausible
10 case for an “inducement” to continue making prepayments in the hope/belief that they were
11 being properly applied to the principal. On these bases, the Court finds that Plaintiff’s equitable
12 tolling argument has merit and will not dismiss this claim on limitations grounds.
13
The Court does not agree, however, with Plaintiff’s position that the misapplication of the
14 prepayments constitutes a “prepayment penalty.” Plaintiff has alleged some damage due to the
15 fact that she paid interest on principal which should have been reduced by the amount of her
16 prepayments, but the Court does not find that such damage qualifies as a “prepayment penalty”
17 as that term is commonly understood. 12 CFR § 226.32 defines a “prepayment penalty” to
18 include “computing a refund of unearned interest by a method that is less favorable than the
19 actuarial method,” which does not (even by analogy) fit the facts of this case.
20
Nevertheless, Plaintiff succeeds in pleading a violation of TILA, which directs that “no
21 servicer shall fail to credit a payment to the consumer’s loan account as of the date of receipt,
22 except when a delay in crediting does not result in any charge to the consumer…” 15 U.S.C. §
23 1639f(a). The Court agrees that having to pay “extra” interest on principal that should have been
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 10
1 reduced by a prepayment constitutes a “charge to the consumer,” and that the limitations clock
2 does not begin ticking on this violation until Plaintiff receives her first loan history statement and
3 discovers the error.
4
Finally, the Court is not prepared to find that BANA’s indication that it would charge a
5 $30 prepayment penalty in the event that the loan was paid off early constitutes an adequate
6 allegation of a TILA violation. Plaintiff did not pay off her entire loan, the $30 “payoff fee” was
7 not assessed and she has no damages (nor does she request any form of declaratory judgment in
8 her prayer for remedies).
9
As indicated above, however, her complaint does state a claim for a TILA violation.
10 DENIED.
11 Count IV (Mortgage Loan Servicing Act [MLSA])
12
This statute concerns the obligation of lending institutions to notify borrowers when the
13 servicing for a loan is sold, transferred or assigned. RCW 19.148.101 et seq. Plaintiff appears to
14 misread the statute and claims that BANA’s failure to inform her of a prepayment penalty and to
15 apply her prepayments properly are violations of this statute. In fact, the statute penalizes failure
16 to “[i]nform the mortgagor of changes made regarding the servicing requirements” only in the
17 event that “servicing of a loan is sold, assigned, transferred, or otherwise acquired by another
18 person.” RCW 19.148.030(2)(a)(iii). Similarly, the requirement of a 15-day response to any
19 written request for information (which Plaintiff alleges in the context of all of BANA’s responses
20 to her correspondence; ¶ 86) is violated only in the event of requests for information regarding a
21 sale, assignment, etc. (which Plaintiff does not allege that she made).
22
Furthermore, BANA claims that BAC Home Loan Servicing (BACHLS), as a wholly-
23 owned subsidiary of BANA, is not covered by the MLSA and no “transfer” within the meaning
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 11
1 of the statute ever took place. 4 Plaintiff seeks leave to amend to include an allegation that she in
2 fact received a notice of transfer to BACHLS. The Court will permit her to amend her
3 complaint, but cautions Plaintiff that the MLSA is a very narrow statute and any violations she
4 alleges must be solely concerned with actions (or inactions) related to the transfer. GRANTED.
5 Count V (Washington Lending and Home Ownership Act[LHA])
6
Plaintiff concedes that the violations which form the basis of her complaint were imposed
7 prior to the time the LHA went into effect, and concedes to dismissal of this count. GRANTED.
8 Count VI (Washington Consumer Loan Act [CLA])
9
This statute requires “residential mortgage loan servicers” to assess fees within 45 days
10 of their being incurred and explain them in a statement to the borrower; to credit all amounts
11 received immediately or notify the borrower within 10 business days if the payment has not been
12 credited; and to respond within 15 days to any written request from the borrower. The response
13 must include the contact information for a service representative “with the information and
14 authority to answer questions and resolve disputes.” RCW 31.04.290.
15
The parties’ dispute concerning this claim centers around Defendant BACHLS. As a
16 national bank which did not voluntarily license itself under this statute, BANA is exempt. RCW
17 31.04.025. Plaintiff argues that BACHLS is a “loan servicer” as defined by the statute and thus
18 not exempt. But BANA claims that BACHLS’s status as a “wholly-owned subsidiary” entitles it
19 to the same exemption that BANA enjoys, and cites Supreme Court authority that a national
20 bank’s mortgage business is entitled to same exemption as the bank, even if it exists as an
21 “operating subsidiary” of the bank. Watters v. Wachovia Banks, H.A., 550 U.S. 1, 7 (2007).
22
23
4
See Count VI analysis for Plaintiff’s motion to strike the assertion that BACHLS is a
24 “wholly-owned subsidiary” of BANA.
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 12
1
Plaintiff moves to strike Defendants’ allegations regarding BACHLS as facts alleged (1)
2 outside of the scope of the complaint (and thus not properly considered in a 12(b)(6) motion) and
3 (2) unsupported by any sworn testimony or other admissible evidence. The Court agrees and
4 strikes BANA’s allegations regarding the status of BACHLS for purposes of this motion.
5 DENIED.
6 Count VII (Washington Consumer Protection Act [CPA])
7
8
9
10
Plaintiff must sufficiently allege five elements to adequately state a CPA claim:
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
an unfair or deceptive act or practice that
occurs in trade or commerce,
impacts the public interest,
and causes injury to the plaintiff in her business or property, and
the injury is causally linked to the unfair or deceptive act.
11 Hangman Ridge Training Stables, Inc. v. Safeco Title Ins. Co., 105 Wn.2d 778, 780 (1986).
12
Plaintiff’s claim fails under this statute because she cannot allege an impact on the public
13 interest. She admits that the practices of which she complains have “immediately only affected
14 [herself],” (Response, p. 14), but argues that because BANA is a “significant presence in the
15 mortgage lending industry,” the Court should permit the CPA claim to proceed because the
16 practices “all have the capacity to impact the public interest.” Id. (emphasis supplied). She cites
17 no authority for this proposition and she cannot prosecute this claim on the conclusory
18 speculation that the practice might be widespread. GRANTED.
19 Count X (Breach of Fiduciary Duty)
20
Typically, lenders owe no fiduciary duty to borrowers unless there is evidence of a
21 “special relationship.” Miller v. U.S. Bank of Washington, 72 Wn.App. 416, 426-27 (1994).
22 Miller indicates that “a quasi-fiduciary relationship may exist where the lender has superior
23 knowledge and information, the borrower lacks such knowledge or business experience, the
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 13
1 borrower relies on the lender’s advice, and the lender knew the borrower was relying on the
2 advice.” Id. at 427.
3
There are no allegations that Defendants offered any “advice” to Plaintiff, and no
4 allegations which would serve to distinguish the relationship at issue here as anything other than
5 a garden variety borrower-lender relationship. The fiduciary standard governing this relationship
6 is found in the duty of good faith and fair dealing. GRANTED.
7 Count XI (Defamation and Retaliation)
8
Defamation requires an allegation that the defamation was communicated to someone
9 other than the person defamed; i.e., it must be “published.” Pate v. Tyee Motor Inn, Inc., 77
10 Wn.2d 819, 821 (1970). All Plaintiff alleges is that she received a letter that a “negative credit
11 reporting” would not be removed from her “file.” Furthermore, she alleges that she saw the
12 credit report and then alleges no specifics from that report that would support her allegation that
13 “negative credit reporting” equals “publication to a credit reporting agency.” Under these
14 circumstances, it is not plausible to infer that this “negative information” appeared in her credit
15 report. GRANTED.
16
Regarding her retaliation claim, Plaintiff alleges that the “negative credit reporting” was
17 placed in her file in retaliation for her “good-faith” inquiry concerning the application of her
18 principal prepayments. ¶ 126. Defendants’ only rejoinder to this is that “[t]he facts as alleged
19 illustrate that any inaccuracies… [were] the result of ‘unintentional error’ which BANA has
20 sought to remedy.” Motion, p. 16. Plaintiff alleges that the misapplication of her funds was
21 systematic and deliberate, as was the placing of the “negative credit reporting.” Defendants have
22 not interposed a solid argument for dismissing this portion of the claim. DENIED.
23
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 14
1 Count XII (Conversion)
2
Plaintiff’s theory is that Defendants’ inability to account for the more than $15,000 by
3 which her principal should have been reduced amounts to conversion of her funds. This is an
4 unsupportable claim under the facts as alleged. Washington law is clear that, where an express
5 contract exists, no tort claims based on implied contractual theory will be permitted. Chandler v.
6 Washington Toll Bridge Auth’y, 17 Wn.2d 591, 604 (1943). The case which Plaintiff cites for
7 her argument that “improper use” of funds in violation of limited authority amounts to
8 “conversion” (Davenport v. WEA, 147 Wn.App. 704, 722-23 (2008)) is not a case involving
9 parties to a contractual relationship and so must be distinguished. Plaintiff must look to her
10 contractual remedies regarding the missing money. GRANTED.
11 Count XIII (Unjust enrichment)
12
This cause of action fails on the same grounds as Plaintiff’s conversion claim: no implied
13 contractual remedies are available where the complainant is a party to an express contract.
14 GRANTED.
15 Counts XIV – XVI (Economic loss rule/independent duty doctrine)
16
Defendants attack these three counts (negligent misrepresentation, fraud and
17 negligent/intentional infliction of emotional distress) as a group on the basis of the “economic
18 loss” rule, which precludes tort recovery for a purely economic loss within a contractual
19 relationship unless an independent duty can be established. Eastwood v. Horse Harbor Fdn.,
20 Inc., 170 Wn.2d 380, 393 (2010).
21
The Court cannot agree that the economic loss rule suffices to dispose of these claims.
22 First of all, as the Eastwood court pointed out, “economic loss rule” is a misnomer in the sense
23 that the existence of economic loss does not in and of itself mandate dismissal of any tort claims
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 15
1 just because a contractual relationship exists. “Economic losses are sometimes recoverable in
2 tort, even if they arise from contractual relationships.” Id. at 1261. The list of torts which may
3 successfully be plead in a contract case include those which Defendants challenge here.
4
Nor is it, as Defendants argue, fatal to Plaintiff’s tort claims that she relies on the same
5 set of facts from which her contractual claims are drawn. The issue is whether Defendants’
6 behavior in the course of discharging their contractual duties to Plaintiff invokes tort duties
7 independent of their contractual obligations. “[T]he existence of a duty is a question of law and
8 depends on mixed considerations of logic, common sense, justice, policy, and precedent.” Id. at
9 1262 (citations omitted). There is unquestionably precedent for Plaintiff’s tort claims. See
10 Eastwood at 1261 for a list of the Washington cases which have upheld claims for fraud,
11 negligent misrepresentation and infliction of emotional distress.
12 Count XIV/XV (Negligent misrepresentation/fraud)
13
Questions of independent duty aside, Plaintiff’s negligent misrepresentation count will be
14 dismissed as a matter of law; Plaintiff’s allegations do not give rise to a plausible inference of
15 “negligence.” Plaintiff herself argues that “Defendants’ failure to apply her payment to principal
16 or to apply the funds at all is a pattern and practice of willful conduct that is and was intended to
17 bring gain to the Defendants.” Response, p. 19 (emphasis supplied). Since one of the elements
18 of the tort of negligent misrepresentation is that the defendant was “negligent in obtaining or
19 communicating false information” (Lawyers’ Title Ins. Co. v. Baik, 147 Wn.2d 536, 545 (2002);
20 emphasis supplied), this claim fails as a matter of law. GRANTED.
21
The Court finds that Plaintiff’s fraud claim, however, is adequately plead (i.e, Plaintiff
22 alleges the specifically misleading portions of the contract, alleges that Defendants acted with
23 intent to mislead, alleges that she was mislead and alleges her damages with sufficient
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 16
1 particularity). Further, “logic, justice and policy” dictate that if Plaintiff can prove that
2 Defendants acted with fraudulent intent in misapplying her prepayments of principal, then that
3 would constitute the violation of a duty independent of Defendants’ contractual obligations to
4 her. DENIED.
5 County XVI (Negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress)
6
Like her negligent misrepresentation claim, Plaintiff’s “infliction of emotional distress”
7 claims fail as a matter of law. These causes of action require allegations of conduct that is “so
8 outrageous in character, so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of decency,
9 and to be regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized community.” Kloepfel v.
10 Bokor, 149 Wn.2d 192, 195 (2003). While Plaintiff does plead that she spent “countless,
11 stressful hours” trying to get BANA to correct their errors (¶ 154), that she has endured “great
12 mental anguish” and is “overwrought with concern and worry that the payments will never be
13 accurately applied” (¶ 155), this behavior and these circumstances do not rise to a level of
14 “atrocity,” indecency, and “utter intolerability.”
15
To quote Judge Robart of this district, the bank’s actions “may be problematic, troubling,
16 or even deplorable, but these actions do not involve physical threats, emotional abuse, or other
17 personal indignities aimed at [Plaintiff].” Vawter v. Quality Loan Service Corp. of Washington,
18 707 F.Supp.2d 1115, 1128 (W.D.WA 2010). By extension, neither logic nor justice dictate that
19 the Defendants’ actions should subject them to allegations of violating a duty independent of
20 their contractual responsibilities to Plaintiff in this particular regard. GRANTED.
21 County XVII (Tax fraud liability)
22
Defendants assert that there is no recognized cause of action for “exposure to tax fraud
23 liability.” Furthermore, Plaintiff does not allege that she was audited or that she even filed a
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 17
1 false tax return. Plaintiff concedes that she has not adequately plead this claim and intends to
2 amend the complaint. GRANTED.
3 Count XVIII (Usury)
4
5
6
7
The elements of usury at common law require the allegation of:
1.
2.
3.
4.
a loan (express or implied),
the subject matter of which is money;
a mutual understanding that the principal shall be absolutely repayable;
“the exaction of something in excess of what is allowed by law for the use of the
money loaned;” and
5. “an intent to exact more than the legal maximum for the loan”
8
Stevens v. Security Pacific Mortgage, 53, Wn.App. 507, 514 (1989).
9
Plaintiff’s allegation that Defendants utilized her prepayment funds to pay off interest
10
which had not yet accrued satisfies the definition of “an exaction… in excess of what is allowed
11
by law.” Defendants’ argument to the contrary notwithstanding (see Mtn., pp. 23-24), Plaintiff
12
has in fact plead that Defendants’ actions reflected the requisite intent. See ¶¶ 35, 57 and 70.
13
Plaintiff further argues that, as a “loan servicer,” BACHLS is subject to requirements of
14
the Consumer Loan Act, one of which prohibits loan servicers from charging “interest… in
15
advance or compounded.” RCW 31.04.015(28). Plaintiff contends that the use of the
16
prepayment funds for “future periodic payments” constitutes the payment of “interest in
17
advance” and thus “in excess of what is allowed by law.” The Court finds that this allegation
18
describes a practice which falls under the definition of “usury.” DENIED.
19
Conclusion
20
The following counts will be dismissed: Count IV (MSLA), Count V (LHA), Count VII
21
(CPA), Count X (fiduciary duty), Count XII (conversion), Count XIII (unjust enrichment), Count
22
XIV (negligent misrepresentation), Count XVI (infliction of emotional distress) and Count XVII
23
(tax fraud liability).
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 18
1
Where noted in the order, the Court grants Plaintiff leave to amend her complaint.
2
3
The clerk is ordered to provide copies of this order to all counsel.
4
Dated April 11, 2012.
5
7
A
8
Marsha J. Pechman
United States District Judge
6
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS RE:
COMPLAINT- 19
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?