Salois v. The Dime ( 1997 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion











    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    ____________________


    No. 97-1049

    ROBERT SALOIS AND DIANNE E. SALOIS, NINON R. L. FREEMAN, AND DAVID M.
    LEARY AND LINDA SCURINI-LEARY, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF OTHERS
    SIMILARLY SITUATED,

    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.

    THE DIME SAVINGS BANK OF NEW YORK, FSB, HARRY W. ALBRIGHT, JR., JOHN
    B. PETTIT, JR., WILLIAM J. MELLIN, WILLIAM J. CANDEE III, WILLIAM A.
    VOLCKHAUSEN, JAMES E. KELLY, RALPH SPITZER, ROBERT G. TURNER, BRIAN
    GERAGHTY, LAWRENCE W. PETERS, E. JUDD STALEY III, AND JOHN DOE
    COMPANIES,

    Defendants, Appellees.
    _____________________

    No. 97-1050

    ROBERT SALOIS, ET AL.

    Plaintiffs, Appellees,

    v.

    THE DIME SAVINGS BANK OF NEW YORK, ET AL.

    Defendants, Appellants.

    ____________________

    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Patti B. Saris, U.S. District Judge] ___________________
    ____________________























    Before
    Selya, Boudin, and Stahl,

    Circuit Judges. ______________

    ____________________


    Evans J. Carter with whom Hargraves, Karb, Wilcox & Galvani was ________________ __________________________________
    on brief for appellants.
    William S. Eggeling with whom Roscoe Trimmier, Jr., Darlene C. ____________________ _____________________ ___________
    Lynch, Jane E. Willis, and Ropes & Gray were on brief for appellees. _____ ______________ ____________




















    ____________________

    November 3, 1997
    ____________________



























    STAHL, Circuit Judge. In the mid-1980s defendant STAHL, Circuit Judge. ______________

    The Dime Savings Bank of New York, FSB ("Dime") made mortgage

    loans to plaintiffs Dianne and Robert Salois, David M. Leary

    and Linda Scurini-Leary, and Ninon R. L. Freeman. Plaintiffs

    now appeal from the district court's dismissal on statutes of

    limitations grounds of various federal and Massachusetts

    statutory claims as well as common-law contract and fraud

    claims arising from the mortgage transactions.1 Defendant

    cross-appeals from the court's denial of its motion for Fed.

    R. Civ. P. 11 sanctions against plaintiffs' attorneys. We

    affirm the district court's ruling that statutes of

    limitations barred all of plaintiffs' claims and uphold the

    district court's denial of Dime's motion for Rule 11

    sanctions because that denial was not an abuse of the court's

    discretion.



    ____________________

    1. The amended complaint alleges (1) violation of the
    Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18
    U.S.C. 1961-1968, (2) violation of the federal Truth in
    Lending Act (TILA), 15 U.S.C. 1601 et seq. and Regulation ______
    Z, 12 C.F.R. pt. 226, (3) violation of the Real Estate
    Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), 12 U.S.C. 2601-2617 and
    Regulation X, 24 C.F.R. pt. 3500, (4) violation of the
    federal Alternative Mortgage Transaction Parity Act, 12
    U.S.C. 3801-3806, (5) violation of the Massachusetts
    Consumer Credit Cost Disclosure Act, Mass. Gen. Laws ch.
    140D, (6) violation of the Massachusetts Consumer Protection
    Act, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A, (7) breach of contract, (8)
    breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair
    dealing, (9) breach of fiduciary duty, (10) fraud, deceit,
    and misrepresentation, (11) civil conspiracy, and (12)
    negligent misrepresentation, negligent hiring and
    supervision, and vicarious liability.

    -3- 3













    I. __

    BACKGROUND AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS ________________________________

    Because plaintiffs challenge the district court's

    dismissal of their claims under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), we

    recite the facts and reasonable inferences raised by the

    facts in their favor. See Aybar v. Crispin-Reyes, 118 F.3d ___ _____ _____________

    10, 13 (1st Cir. 1997).

    Dime is a federally-chartered savings bank.

    Between July 1, 1986, and December 31, 1989, Dime, through

    its wholly owned subsidiary, Dime Real Estate Services --

    Massachusetts, Inc. ("DRES-MA"), made over four thousand

    (4,000) home mortgage loans on residential homes located in

    Massachusetts, totalling over six hundred million dollars

    ($600,000,000). DRES-MA ceased to exist in 1990.2

    Dime marketed to Massachusetts residential home

    purchasers an adjustable rate loan product known as the

    Impact Loan. In evaluating applications for Impact Loans,

    Dime required only minimal verification of the employment

    status, assets, and income of prospective borrowers, basing

    its lending decisions instead on the value of the property

    subject to the mortgage. Moreover, Dime loan officers

    operated under instructions to push Impact Loans to the

    virtual exclusion of other types of mortgage loans. This


    ____________________

    2. It is unclear from the record whether DRES-MA was merged
    into Dime or whether it was dissolved.

    -4- 4













    effort was part of Dime's national campaign to expand rapidly

    its home lending business.

    A principal feature of an Impact Loan was an

    initial "teaser" interest rate of 7.5 percent for the first

    six months with a cap of 9.5 percent for the second six

    months. Thereafter, the rate would adjust to conform to the

    Cost of Funds Index plus three percent, with a cap of 13.9

    percent. This arrangement was designed to result in negative

    amortization, a situation in which monthly loan payments fall

    short of the actual monthly interest due on the loan. The

    unpaid interest, or "deferred interest," is then added to the

    principal and begins to accrue interest itself, causing the

    principal owed to increase despite the borrower's regular

    payments. The terms of the Impact Loan provided that no

    payments or portions of payments would apply to the principal

    until all "deferred interest," or negative amortization, had

    been paid. Once the principal balance reached 110 percent of

    the original principal amount, the loan contracts required

    mortgagors to make fully amortizing payments; that is,

    mortgagors were required to increase their monthly payments

    to cover the additional principal plus interest.

    Plaintiffs secured residential Impact Loans from

    DRES-MA in 1986 and 1987. To induce plaintiffs to enter the

    loan contracts, Dime downplayed the negative amortization

    feature of the Impact Loans, and discouraged plaintiffs from



    -5- 5













    hiring their own attorneys by telling them that Dime

    attorneys would "handle things" and "protect" them. Six

    months into the loans, monthly statements revealed increases

    in the owed principal, and, in the second year, deferred

    interest began to appear on the statements. Although the

    initial loan documents contained the information from which

    plaintiffs could have discovered that their loan payments

    would increase, plaintiffs contend that teasing this

    information out of the documents would have required

    computation skills, computer software, and a level of

    sophistication that they did not, and could not have been

    expected to, possess. In addition, plaintiffs argue that

    Dime charged them excessive fees for closing the loan

    contracts, serviced their loans improperly by providing

    unsatisfactory responses to their queries about negative

    amortization, and altered the Saloises' loan impermissibly by

    requesting that the Saloises sign "corrective" documents that

    lifted a two percent per month cap on the interest rate

    applicable to the loan.

    At the time of the complaint, plaintiffs Robert and

    Diane Salois continued to hold their mortgage. Plaintiffs

    David M. Leary and Linda Scurini-Leary had defaulted, and the

    mortgage on their home was foreclosed on in 1991. Plaintiff

    Ninon R. L. Freeman paid her loan in full in 1993. The

    Saloises were alerted to their potential claims when they



    -6- 6













    consulted an attorney about their financial situation in late

    September, 1994, and Ms. Freeman and the Learys were

    similarly advised in mid-1995. The Saloises filed this

    action on September 1, 1995, in the United States District

    Court for the District of Massachusetts, as a putative class

    action on behalf of all persons who secured residential

    mortgage loans from Dime in Massachusetts between July 1,

    1986, and December 31, 1989. Dime responded on October 5,

    1995, with a motion to dismiss the complaint as untimely. On

    November 10, 1995, Dime further moved for Rule 11 sanctions,

    alleging that there was no legal or factual basis for

    plaintiffs' claims. The Saloises filed an amended complaint

    on February 9, 1996, which added the Learys and Ms. Freeman

    as plaintiffs. In a margin order dated November 6, 1996, the

    district court denied the Rule 11 motion and, on November 13,

    1996, dismissed the complaint on statutes of limitations

    grounds. Because the court never acted on plaintiffs' motion

    for class certification, no class was certified. This appeal

    and cross-appeal followed.



    II. ___

    DISCUSSION __________

    A. Plaintiffs' Claims ______________________

    On appeal, plaintiffs contend that the district

    court erred in dismissing their actions on statutes of



    -7- 7













    limitations grounds, arguing that the claims are subject to

    equitable tolling and thus are timely. They further contend

    that their claims warrant relief on the merits. We begin

    with the statutes of limitations issue because, if plaintiffs

    claims in fact are time-barred, that finishes the case.

    Arguing for equitable tolling, plaintiffs draw on

    federal and Massachusetts law providing that fraud,

    fraudulent concealment, and wrongs resulting in inherently

    unknowable injuries toll limitations periods, and on

    Massachusetts law providing that limitations periods may be

    tolled by the existence of and breach of a fiduciary duty.

    The heart of plaintiffs' allegations is that Dime

    fraudulently concealed the fact that their loans would

    definitely, rather than only possibly, go into negative __________

    amortization and accrue deferred interest. Plaintiffs assert

    that this information became available only after they

    consulted a knowledgeable attorney who was able to decipher

    the meaning of the facts and figures contained in their loan

    documents. Further, plaintiffs contend that issues of fact

    relating to the propriety of tolling should have precluded

    the district court from dismissing their claims based on the

    pleadings alone. We are not persuaded.

    As an initial matter we note that plaintiffs' TILA,

    RESPA, and Parity Act claims are subject to one-year statutes





    -8- 8













    of limitations.3 Thus, these claims must have accrued no

    earlier than September 1, 1994. The claims for breach of

    fiduciary duty; fraud, deceit, and misrepresentation; civil

    conspiracy; and negligent misrepresentation, negligent hiring

    and supervision, and vicarious liability are governed by a

    three-year limitations period.4 These claims must therefore

    have accrued no earlier than September 1, 1992. Plaintiffs'

    claims under RICO and the Massachusetts Consumer Credit Cost

    Disclosure and Consumer Protection Acts are subject to four-

    year limitations periods.5 Thus, these claims must have


    ____________________

    3. The TILA states that "[a]ny action under this section may
    be brought . . . within one year from the date of the
    occurrence of the violation." 15 U.S.C. 1640(e). The
    RESPA provides that "[a]ny action pursuant to the provisions
    of section . . . 2607 . . . of [Title 12] may be brought . .
    . within 1 year . . . from the date of the occurrence of the
    violation." 12 U.S.C. 2614. The Parity Act states that
    "[a]ny violation of this section shall be treated as a
    violation of the Truth in Lending Act." 12 U.S.C. 3806(c).
    We note that one other court of appeals has held that the
    RESPA is not subject to tolling doctrines. See Hardin v. ___ ______
    City Title & Escrow Co., 797 F.2d 1037, 1041 (D.C. Cir. _________________________
    1986). We need not address the correctness of this ruling
    because, for reasons we shall explain, equitable tolling is
    not warranted on the facts of this case.

    4. Massachusetts law provides that "actions of tort . . .
    shall be commenced only within three years next after the
    cause of action accrues." Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 260, 2A.

    5. Massachusetts law provides that "[a]ctions arising on
    account of violations of any law intended for the protection
    of consumers, including but not limited to . . . chapter
    ninety-three A . . . [and] chapter one hundred and forty D .
    . . whether for damages, penalties or other relief and
    brought by any person . . . shall be commenced only within
    four years next after the cause of action accrues." Mass.
    Gen. Laws ch. 260, 5A.

    -9- 9













    accrued no earlier than September 1, 1991. Finally,

    plaintiffs' claim for breach of contract is governed by a

    six-year limitations period.6 Thus, the contract cause of

    action must have accrued no earlier than September 1, 1989.

    A cause of action generally accrues at the time of

    the plaintiff's injury, or, in the case of a breach of

    contract, at the time of the breach. See Cambridge Plating ___ _________________

    Co., Inc. v. Napco, Inc., 991 F.2d 21, 25 (1st Cir. 1993) _________ ___________

    (discussing Massachusetts law). Therefore, plaintiffs'

    claims arose when Dime allegedly induced them to sign loan

    contracts by misrepresenting and/or omitting facts about the

    terms of the mortgage, charged them excessive closing fees,

    and serviced their loans improperly by giving inadequate

    answers to telephone inquiries about negative amortization

    and by having the Saloises sign corrective documents that

    improperly altered their loan.

    The district court examined each of plaintiffs'

    claims and concluded that virtually all federal causes of

    action accrued when plaintiffs entered their respective loan

    ____________________

    With regard to RICO claims, the Supreme Court has
    held that "the federal policies that lie behind RICO and the
    practicalities of RICO litigation make the selection of the
    4-year statute of limitations for Clayton Act actions, 15
    U.S.C. 15b, the most appropriate limitations period for
    RICO actions." Agency Holding Corp. v. Malley-Duff & Assoc. ____________________ ____________________
    Inc., 483 U.S. 143, 156 (1987). ____

    6. Massachusetts law provides that "[a]ctions of contract .
    . . shall . . . be commenced only within six years next after
    the cause of action accrues." Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 260, 2.

    -10- 10













    contracts7 and, in any event, no later than mid-1988, when

    the Saloises signed the corrective documents. The district

    court also concluded that, with the exception of plaintiffs'

    claims based on Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 167E, see infra, the ___ _____

    state claims accrued no later than either the point at which

    the corrective documents were signed or the point at which

    plaintiffs called Dime and were provided inaccurate answers

    about deferred interest. Although there may be a dispute as

    to when, exactly, some of the causes of action accrued,8

    plaintiffs do not dispute that their claims accrued outside

    the relevant limitations periods. Accordingly, the viability

    of plaintiffs' claims depends on whether principles of

    equitable tolling apply.


    ____________________

    7. The Freemans and the Learys entered into their loan
    contracts with Dime no later than November 18, 1986, and
    April 15, 1987, respectively; the Saloises executed a note
    and mortgage on June 16, 1987, and executed corrective notes
    on February 29, 1988, and June 1, 1988. Plaintiffs
    telephoned Dime sometime in the second year of their loans
    when deferred interest began to appear on their monthly
    statements. This must have occurred no later than mid-1989.
    See infra note 8. ___ _____

    8. Although the district court concluded that the events
    giving rise to plaintiffs' claims all must have taken place
    no later than mid-1988, we conclude that the phone calls may
    have taken place as late as mid-1989. Construing facts in
    the light most favorable to plaintiffs, we assume that it was
    the Saloises who placed the calls, and that it was the end of ________ ___
    the "second year of their loan" when they did so, which means
    the calls may not have been made until June 16, 1989. Even
    using this later date as the benchmark, however, plaintiffs'
    causes of action accrued at least six years and almost three
    months prior to the date plaintiffs filed their original
    complaint.

    -11- 11













    1. Federal Claims __________________

    Although, under federal law, equitable tolling is

    applied to statutes of limitations "to prevent unjust results

    or to maintain the integrity of a statute," King v. ____

    California, 784 F.2d 910, 915 (9th Cir. 1986), courts have __________

    taken a narrow view of equitable exceptions to limitations

    periods, see Earnhardt v. Puerto Rico, 691 F.2d 69, 71 (1st ___ _________ ___________

    Cir. 1982). Indeed, equitable tolling of a federal statute

    of limitations is "appropriate only when the circumstances

    that cause a plaintiff to miss a filing deadline are out of

    his hands." Heideman v. PFL, Inc., 904 F.2d 1262, 1266 (8th ________ _________

    Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 1026 (1991). _____ ______

    The federal doctrine of fraudulent concealment

    operates to toll the statute of limitations "where a

    plaintiff has been injured by fraud and 'remains in ignorance

    of it without any fault or want of diligence or care on his

    part.'" Holmberg v. Armbrecht, 327 U.S. 392, 397 (1946) ________ _________

    (quoting Bailey v. Glover, 88 U.S. (21 Wall.) 342, 348 ______ ______

    (1874)); see Maggio v. Gerard Freezer & Ice Co., 824 F.2d ___ ______ __________________________

    123, 127 (1st Cir. 1987). For plaintiffs to be successful in

    their argument, we must determine that "(1) sufficient facts

    were [not] available to put a reasonable [borrower] in

    plaintiff[s'] position on inquiry notice of the possibility ___________

    of fraud, and (2) plaintiff[s] exercised due diligence in

    attempting to uncover the factual basis underlying this



    -12- 12













    alleged fraudulent conduct." Maggio, 824 F.2d at 128. Thus, ______

    allegations of fraudulent concealment do not modify the

    requirement that plaintiffs must have exercised reasonable

    diligence. See Truck Drivers & Helpers Union v. NLRB, 993 ___ ______________________________ ____

    F.2d 990, 998 (1st Cir. 1993) ("Irrespective of the extent of

    the effort to conceal, the fraudulent concealment doctrine

    will not save a charging party who fails to exercise due

    diligence, and is thus charged with notice of a potential

    claim."). In simpler terms, fraud may render reasonable a

    plaintiff's otherwise unreasonable conduct, but there are

    limits: plaintiffs must still exercise reasonable diligence

    in discovering that they have been the victims of fraud.

    In this case, the inquiry is over before it begins.

    Regardless whether negative amortization was inevitable with

    Impact Loans, the documents contained all of the information

    necessary to determine the interaction of Dime's formula with

    prevailing interest rates. It was attorney consultation,

    rather than newly-discovered information, that prompted

    plaintiffs' lawsuit. Therefore, sufficient facts -- indeed,

    all the facts -- were available to place plaintiffs on ___

    inquiry notice of fraudulent conduct. Moreover, even if we

    regard plaintiffs' consultation with an attorney as

    "discovered" information that revealed Dime's alleged

    concealment, it cannot be said that plaintiffs were

    reasonable in waiting until 1994 to consult an attorney, when



    -13- 13













    it was clear as early as 1988 that their loans had begun to

    accrue deferred interest.9 As the district court observed,

    "The loan documents notified plaintiffs of the possibility of

    negative amortization, when it would apply, and how it would

    work," so that even "[i]f [Dime] had misrepresented the

    nature of the loans, the loan documents plaintiffs signed

    would have put them on notice of the fraud." Salois v. Dime ______ ____

    Savings Bank, No. 95-11967-PBS, slip op. at 14 (D. Mass. Nov. ____________

    13, 1996).10

    Plaintiffs argue that whether they were reasonably

    diligent in ascertaining their claims is a matter of fact to

    be determined by a jury. Even if we accept all facts as

    ____________________

    9. Once deferred interest began to accrue, after the first
    year of the repayments, the bases of all of the plaintiffs'
    present claims had come to their attention. That they did
    not seek legal advice in 1988 (or, in any event, before the
    running of the relevant statutes of limitations) seems to be
    more a matter of happenstance than lack of relevant
    information. We think the district court stated the issue
    well: "No facts are alleged as to what prompted plaintiffs to
    consult an attorney, if not their loan documents and monthly
    statements. . . . If the plaintiffs' loan documents and
    statements prompted them to consult an attorney in 1994 and
    1995, unprompted by any new disclosure, there is no reason
    they could not have consulted an attorney several years
    earlier." Salois v. Dime Savings Bank, No. 95-11967-PBS, ______ __________________
    slip op. at 15 (D. Mass. Nov. 13, 1996).

    10. In addition, we note that, under Massachusetts law, "one
    who signs a writing that is designed to serve as a legal
    document . . . is presumed to know its contents." Hull v. ____
    Attleboro Savings Bank, 33 Mass. App. Ct. 18, 24 (1992); see ______________________ ___
    Lerra v. Monsanto Co., 521 F. Supp. 1257, 1262 (D. Mass. _____ _____________
    1981); Connecticut Jr. Republic v. Doherty, 20 Mass. App. Ct. ________________________ _______
    107, 110 (1985). Thus, as a matter of Massachusetts law,
    plaintiffs were on notice of their claims when they signed
    their loan documents in 1986 and 1987.

    -14- 14













    plaintiffs present them, however, nothing in the record

    supports the conclusion that plaintiffs exercised reasonable

    diligence as a matter of law. Cf. Sleeper v. Kidder, ___ _______ _______

    Peabody & Co., 480 F. Supp. 1264, 1265 (D. Mass. 1979) ______________

    (noting that although the issue of reasonable diligence is

    factually based, it may be determined as a matter of law

    where the underlying facts are admitted or established

    without dispute), aff'd mem., 627 F.2d 1088 (1st Cir. 1980). __________

    Thus, the district court's dismissal of plaintiffs' claims

    was proper.11

    2. State Claims ________________

    The foregoing analysis likewise disposes of

    plaintiffs' argument for tolling on the basis of state _____

    fraudulent concealment doctrine. Massachusetts law provides

    that, "[i]f a person liable to a personal action fraudulently

    conceals the cause of such action from the knowledge of the

    person entitled to bring it, the period prior to the

    discovery of his cause of action by the person so entitled

    ____________________

    11. Plaintiffs also contend that there are issues of fact
    regarding whether Dime was a fiduciary to plaintiffs and
    whether Dime fraudulently concealed information, and that the
    existence of such factual issues precludes dismissal. To
    this we note that, first, simply alleging fraudulent
    concealment or the existence of a fiduciary duty does not
    suffice to avoid dismissal. See General Builders Supply Co. ___ ___________________________
    v. River Hill Coal Venture, 796 F.2d 8, 12 (1st Cir. 1986). ________________________
    Second, plaintiffs' claims may be dismissed without
    determining these issues because, even if plaintiffs'
    allegations regarding fraud and fiduciary duties are true,
    plaintiffs still fail the ultimate test, that of
    reasonableness in discovering and pursuing their claims.

    -15- 15













    shall be excluded in determining the time limited for the

    commencement of the action." Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 260, 12.

    Specifically, a statute of limitations may be tolled "if the

    wrongdoer, either through actual fraud or in breach of a

    fiduciary duty of full disclosure, keeps from the person

    injured knowledge of the facts giving rise to a cause of

    action and the means of acquiring knowledge of such facts."

    Maggio, 824 F.2d at 131 (emphasis omitted) (quoting Frank ______ _____

    Cooke, Inc. v. Hurwitz, 10 Mass. App. Ct. 99, 106 (1980)). ___________ _______

    Here, an analysis of whether Dime concealed the means of

    acquiring the facts giving rise to their claims would

    parallel a reasonable diligence inquiry, which, as we have

    already concluded, plaintiffs fail. Yet we need not rely on

    that analysis because, again, Dime did not conceal from

    plaintiffs the facts themselves and therefore cannot be said

    to have kept plaintiffs from acquiring the requisite

    knowledge.

    But plaintiffs persist, focusing on the possibility

    of a fiduciary relationship between themselves and Dime and

    arguing that Massachusetts limitations periods should be

    tolled because Dime's breach of an alleged fiduciary duty to

    them is sufficient to constitute fraud. Although plaintiffs

    do not develop this line of analysis, presumably their

    argument is that, even if Dime did not actively conceal

    information, it nonetheless committed fraud because it owed



    -16- 16













    plaintiffs a special duty of disclosure. Under this theory

    as well, however, "[a] plaintiff must be able to show not

    only that crucial facts were withheld by defendants owing a

    duty of full disclosure, but also that he lacked the means to

    uncover these facts." Maggio, 824 F.2d at 131. If a ______

    plaintiff has failed to "undertake even a minimal effort to

    pursue the investigative opportunities available to him[,

    then] not even the combination of fiduciary duties and

    section 12 are sufficient to excuse a delay in bringing

    suit." Id. In this case, we need not determine whether Dime ___

    was a fiduciary to plaintiffs because, even if such a

    relationship existed, the fact remains that no revelation of

    information occurred subsequent to plaintiffs' discovery of

    negative amortization in 1988. Because plaintiffs had the

    "means to uncover" the relevant facts as early as 1988, and,

    indeed, possessed the facts themselves in 1988, their state

    law claim based on the existence of a fiduciary duty in

    combination with fraudulent concealment fails.

    Finally, the district court dismissed one of

    plaintiffs' claims based on the Massachusetts Consumer

    Protection Act, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A, on the basis that,

    although Dime may have been in violation of Mass. Gen. Laws

    ch. 167E, 2(B)(9) and (10) -- which prohibit the

    alteration of a payment amount more than once a year and the

    alteration of the interest rate more than every six months --



    -17- 17













    plaintiffs had not alleged that Dime was subject to

    regulation by the Massachusetts Commissioner of Banks.12 The

    court was correct. Dime, a federally-chartered bank, is

    regulated by the federal Office of Thrift Supervision, and

    DRES-MA, a non-bank subsidiary, was incorporated under New

    York law. The Massachusetts statutes on which plaintiffs

    rely apply only to Massachusetts-chartered banks. See Mass. ___

    Gen. Laws ch. 167E, 1.13

    B. Dime's Motion for Rule 11 Sanctions _______________________________________

    Dime argues that the district court erred in

    denying its motion for sanctions against plaintiffs'

    attorneys, and that the court should have, at a minimum,






    ____________________

    12. The district court noted that plaintiffs' ch. 93A claim
    based on Dime's alleged violation of Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 167E
    2(B)(9) was not time-barred if the owed monthly payment
    amount had changed more than once during any of the four
    years prior to the date plaintiffs brought this action.
    Plaintiffs' complaint did not foreclose this issue. The
    court observed as well that the claim based on Dime's alleged
    violation of Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 167E 2(B)(10) was not
    time-barred because the interest rate changed five times in
    1995.

    13. Plaintiffs argue in addition that DRES-MA, as a non-
    banking corporation, was prohibited under Mass. Gen. Laws ch.
    167, 37, from engaging in banking activity, regardless
    whether DRES-MA was a foreign or domestic corporation. This
    argument fails because DRES-MA was a real-estate subsidiary, ___________
    not a banking subsidiary. As such, although it would
    presently be subject to regulation under Mass. Gen. Laws ch.
    255, 2, that statute was not in force at the time
    plaintiffs' claims arose.

    -18- 18













    conducted a hearing to determine whether plaintiffs made

    reasonable inquiries prior to bringing their claims.14

    Rule 11 calls for the imposition of sanctions on a

    party "for making arguments or filing claims that are

    frivolous, legally unreasonable, without factual foundation,

    or asserted for an 'improper purpose.'" S. Bravo Sys. v. ______________

    Containment Tech. Corp., 96 F.3d 1372, 1374-75 (Fed. Cir. ________________________

    1996) (citing Conn v. Borjorquez, 967 F.2d 1418, 1420 (9th ____ __________

    Cir. 1992)). In reviewing the district court's denial of

    defendant's Rule 11 motion, we apply an abuse of discretion

    standard. See Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp., 496 U.S. 384, ___ _____________ ______________

    405 (1990). As we have noted before, our review of denials

    of Rule 11 motions "calls for somewhat more restraint than

    review of positive actions imposing sanctions and shifting

    fees." Anderson v. Boston Sch. Comm., 105 F.3d 762, 769 (1st ________ _________________

    Cir. 1997). The trial judge should be accorded not only

    "additional deference in the entire area of sanctions," but

    also "extraordinary deference in denying sanctions." Id. at ___

    768.

    It would have been preferable for the district

    court to have more extensively set forth its rationale. See ___


    ____________________

    14. The district court disposed of Dime's motion in two
    sentences: "While I agree that the action should be
    dismissed, plaintiffs amended the complaint to eliminate the
    frivolous claims. Moreover, while the claims are time-
    barred, the breach of contract claims and the [Mass. Gen.]
    Laws ch. 93A claims were colorable at least in part."

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    Figueroa-Ruiz v. Alegria, 905 F.2d 545, 549 (1st Cir. 1990). _____________ _______

    Nonetheless, "although the rationale for a denial of a motion

    for fees or sanctions under Rule 11 . . . should be

    unambiguously communicated, the lack of explicit findings is

    not fatal where the record itself, evidence or colloquy,

    clearly indicates one or more sufficient supporting reasons."

    Anderson, 105 F.3d at 769. ________

    Here, the record contains adequate rationale for

    the denial of the motion. The court noted that plaintiffs'

    breach of contract and Massachusetts Consumer Protection Act

    claims were time-barred but nonetheless "colorable at least

    in part." Although we reiterate that district courts should

    provide specific findings in support of Rule 11 rulings, we

    conclude that, in light of the record, the court did not here

    abuse its discretion by holding that plaintiffs' claims were

    not without foundation in law or in fact.

    Affirmed. ________



















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