Deutsche Bank National Trust Company v. Wilson ( 2024 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 21-1629
    DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY, as Trustee for IXIS Real
    Estate Capital Trust 2006-HE3 Mortgage Pass Through
    Certificates, Series 2006-HE3,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.
    LISA M. WILSON; DUNKIN ENGINEERING SOLUTIONS, LLC,
    Defendants, Appellees,
    SABRINA PETRARCA; VNA CARE OF NEW ENGLAND; MASON P. WILSON III,
    Defendants.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND
    [Hon. John J. McConnell, Jr., U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Kayatta, Lynch, and Howard,
    Circuit Judges.
    Krystle Guillory Tadesse, with whom Jeffrey C. Ankrom and
    Locke Lord LLP were on brief, for appellant.
    Paul DeMarco, with whom Geremia & DeMarco, Ltd. was on brief,
    for appellee Lisa M. Wilson.
    Patricia A. Buckley, with whom Bengtson & Jestings, LLP,
    Thomas J. Cronin, and Nowlan Brunero Cronin & Ferrara, LTD were on
    brief, for appellee Dunkin Engineering Solutions, LLC.
    September 17, 2024
    HOWARD, Circuit Judge.             Lisa Wilson has resided at her
    home in Coventry, Rhode Island since her late husband, Mason P.
    Wilson III, purchased it in 2006.            A labyrinthine series of sales
    and adjudications saw title in her home pass from the Wilsons, to
    certain   third    parties,      and     finally     to    Dunkin       Engineering
    Solutions,   LLC    ("Dunkin").         Along     the     way,    a    court   order
    extinguished a mortgage lien on the property held by Deutsche Bank
    National Trust Company ("Deutsche Bank").
    Alleging that Lisa and Mason breached the covenants in
    the mortgage agreement, Deutsche Bank sued Lisa, Mason, and Dunkin.
    The district court granted summary judgment to Lisa and Dunkin.
    Because we agree that none of Deutsche Bank's claims present a
    material issue of fact, we affirm.
    I.
    A.
    The     winding   string      of     transactions      underlying     this
    appeal began in June 2006 when Mason financed the purchase of the
    Wilsons' home with a $150,000 home mortgage. The original mortgage
    lender required execution of two documents: a promissory note,
    obligating   repayment      of   the    $150,000        loan,    and    a   mortgage
    agreement, pledging the Wilsons' home as security.                    Only Mason and
    the lender signed the note, but both Wilsons signed the mortgage
    agreement.
    - 3 -
    The mortgage agreement contained covenants purporting to
    obligate "Borrowers" to (1) "defend generally the title of the
    Property against all claims and demands" in the best interest of
    the lender; (2) "pay all taxes, assessments, charges, fines and
    impositions attributable to the Property[;]" and (3) "discharge
    any lien which obtains priority" over the lender's mortgage lien.
    The agreement also provided, however, that any "Borrower" who does
    not sign the underlying note was a "co-signer" to the agreement.
    A co-signer, it stated, agreed "only to mortgage, grant, and convey
    the co-signer's interest in the Property" and "is not personally
    obligated to pay the sums secured" by the agreement.
    In   September   2007,    Deutsche     Bank   acquired   both   the
    mortgage and the note from the original lender.             Meanwhile, one
    year into the mortgage agreement, Mason was beginning to default
    on the mortgage payments.    He would continue to miss payments for
    the next seven years, but Deutsche Bank never foreclosed.              During
    that time, the Wilsons also failed to pay property taxes owed to
    the Hopkins Hill Fire District, and the Fire District eventually
    scheduled a tax sale of the property for September 2014.           Although
    Deutsche Bank and the Wilsons admit that the Fire District properly
    notified them of the tax sale, these parties did not appear at or
    contest the sale.
    Instead,   Birdsong      Associates,    an    unaffiliated   third
    party, bought the property and commenced foreclosure proceedings
    - 4 -
    against the Wilsons.       And, as at the tax sale, neither Deutsche
    Bank nor the Wilsons appeared at the proceedings, despite having
    been properly notified.         Birdsong then sought and received in
    January    2016   a   decree   from    the    Rhode   Island   Superior    Court
    "foreclos[ing] and barr[ing]" "all rights of redemption" held
    prior to the tax sale and vesting "legal and equitable title to
    the property" in Birdsong.
    With the property now free and clear of Deutsche Bank's
    mortgage lien, Birdsong conveyed the property to an assignee,
    Coventry IV-14, RIGP ("Coventry").             In June 2016, Deutsche Bank
    inquired    about     purchasing      the    property   from   Coventry,    but
    negotiations ceased the following January.1
    A month later, Coventry initiated eviction proceedings
    against the Wilsons.      The proceedings prompted Mason's father and
    stepmother to contact Coventry in March 2017 and offer to buy the
    property.    Coventry agreed to sell the property for $75,000 but
    only to a third party, not Lisa and Mason.              For that reason, the
    parents' attorney formed a limited liability company, Dunkin,
    which bought the property from Coventry on May 31, 2017.             Lisa and
    1 Deutsche Bank paid taxes and insurance on the property at
    issue from October 2014 to July 2016. The bank also paid to Mason
    insurance proceeds that it had received in connection with a claim
    filed by Mason for damage to the property incurred in September
    2016. Dunkin and Lisa do not dispute these facts.
    - 5 -
    Mason had no legal interest in Dunkin at its formation; Mason's
    parents were Dunkin's sole shareholders.
    A year later, the elder Wilsons transferred their shares
    in Dunkin to the newly-created Wilson Family Revocable Trust, which
    provided that Mason would inherit the shares upon        the elder
    Wilsons' deaths.    In July 2018, Mason's father died; then, in May
    2019, Mason died.     Mason's stepmother subsequently updated the
    trust to provide that, upon her own death, "[a]ll the [parents']
    interest" in Dunkin "[should] be distributed to Lisa Wilson."   So,
    when Mason's stepmother died in November 2019, Lisa became the
    sole owner and beneficiary of the Wilson Family Revocable Trust
    and effectively reacquired the property.
    B.
    In February 2019, shortly before Mason's death, Deutsche
    Bank sued Lisa, Mason, and Dunkin in the United States District
    Court for the District of Rhode Island.2   In Count One of Deutsche
    Bank's amended complaint, the bank alleged that the mortgage
    agreement was enforceable as a contract between the bank and both
    of the Wilsons.     Thus, it claimed, the Wilsons were liable to
    Deutsche Bank for the damages caused by their breaches of the
    mortgage covenants.   In Counts Three, Four, and Six, Deutsche Bank
    2 The original complaint also named two other interested
    parties as defendants, but Deutsche Bank amended its complaint to
    drop those parties.
    - 6 -
    asserted equitable claims against the Wilsons and Dunkin, seeking
    relief    under   theories   of   constructive   trust   (Count   Three),
    equitable lien (Count Four), and unjust enrichment (Count Six).3
    After discovery, Deutsche Bank, Lisa, and Dunkin brought
    cross-motions for summary judgment.        The district court denied
    Deutsche Bank's motion and granted the defendants' motions on all
    counts.    Deutsche Bank Nat'l Tr. Co. ex rel. IXIS Real Est. Cap.
    Tr. 2006-HE3 Mortg. Pass Through Certificates, Series 2006-HE3 v.
    Wilson, 
    552 F. Supp. 3d 230
    , 235 (D.R.I. 2021).
    In ruling for Lisa on the breach-of-contract claim, the
    district court reasoned that the agreement had been "extinguished"
    by the Rhode Island Superior Court's 2016 decree.            
    Id. at 234
    .
    Thus, Deutsche Bank could not recover under the agreement unless
    there was a basis to set aside the tax sale.      
    Id.
        And, under Rhode
    Island law, setting aside is appropriate only when the parties to
    the mortgage have not been properly notified of the sale.         Id.; 
    44 R.I. Gen. Laws Ann. § 44-9-24
    .         Because Deutsche Bank and the
    Wilsons had been properly notified of the foreclosure proceeding,
    3 Deutsche Bank also sought a declaratory judgment that the
    transfer of the property to Dunkin effectuated a redemption of the
    tax sale deed (Count Two) and brought a contractual claim against
    Mason alleging that he breached the terms of the promissory note
    (Count Five). Although its brief appears to challenge the district
    court's ruling on Count Five, counsel for Deutsche Bank clarified
    at oral argument that it does not appeal from either count. Only
    Dunkin and Lisa moved for summary judgment, not Mason. The claims
    as to Mason have not been pursued by Deutsche Bank.
    - 7 -
    the district court concluded that Deutsche Bank had no remaining
    contractual rights against either of the Wilsons.               Wilson, 552 F.
    Supp. 3d at 234.
    The district court next rejected the equitable claims
    for constructive trust and equitable lien, reasoning that Deutsche
    Bank provided no evidence that the elder Wilsons had "devised a
    scheme" to give the property to Mason and Lisa.                Id.    Similarly,
    with respect to the unjust-enrichment claim, the court found that
    no benefit had accrued to Dunkin or to Lisa from the payments that
    Deutsche Bank had made in connection with the property.                  Id. at
    235.       Thus, neither defendant could owe Deutsche Bank restitution.
    Id.
    Dissatisfied with this outcome, Deutsche Bank timely
    appealed.
    II.
    Deutsche Bank challenges the district court's grant of
    summary judgment in favor of Lisa Wilson on the breach-of-contract
    claim,       in   favor   of    Dunkin     on    the   constructive-trust    and
    equitable-lien        claims,     and      in    favor    of   both     on   the
    unjust-enrichment claim.4         We address each challenge in turn.
    Deutsche Bank also appeals from the district court's denial
    4
    of its own summary-judgment motion on the breach-of-contract
    claim. Because we conclude that Lisa and Dunkin were entitled to
    summary judgment on that claim, that conclusion disposes of that
    argument by Deutsche Bank.
    - 8 -
    A.
    We review a district court's order granting summary
    judgment de novo.    See Pac. Indem. Co. v. Deming, 
    828 F.3d 19
     (1st
    Cir. 2016).    We affirm a grant of summary judgment when there is
    "no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law."       Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
    We need not adopt the district court's reasoning, "but, rather,
    may affirm an order of dismissal on any ground made manifest by
    the record."     Burt v. Bd. of Trs. of Univ. of R.I., 
    84 F.4th 42
    ,
    50 (1st Cir. 2023).
    B.
    We     begin   with   Deutsche   Bank's   contractual   claim.
    Deutsche Bank argues that Lisa breached, and continues to breach,
    certain covenants in the mortgage agreement and that her breaches
    caused Deutsche Bank to "los[e] its entire security interest in
    the Property."    We explain why the language of the instruments at
    issue, which was drafted by Deutsche Bank's predecessor, is at
    best ambiguous and why, because of those ambiguities, Rhode Island
    law dictates that summary judgment be entered in Lisa's favor.
    Understanding the novel nature of Deutsche Bank's claim
    requires some familiarity with mortgage financing.       "A mortgage is
    a conveyance or retention of an interest in real property as
    security for performance of an obligation."         Restatement (Third)
    of Property (Mortgages) § 1.1 (Am. L. Ins. 1997).      In most mortgage
    - 9 -
    transactions, that obligation is the performance of a promissory
    note.    See id. cmt. a.    The lender loans to a prospective homebuyer
    a sum of money to purchase some property, and the homebuyer
    promises to repay that sum under the terms of the note, mortgaging
    the property as security.        Id.   This arrangement confers to the
    lender    two   distinct    rights.    The   note   gives    the   lender   a
    contractual right to repayment, and the mortgage gives the lender
    a right to foreclose should the buyer default on the obligations
    imposed by the note.       See LaPorte v. Ramac Assocs., Inc.¸ 
    395 A.2d 719
    , 720 (R.I. 1978).       Although mortgage agreements often contain
    covenants of their own, a mortgage is generally only enforceable
    insofar as the underlying note is enforceable.              See Restatement
    (Third) of Property (Mortgages) § 1.2 cmt. a (recognizing that a
    mortgage is "generally enforceable only to the extent that the
    underlying obligation is enforceable" except that a lender may
    still enforce a mortgage "if no one has personal liability for the
    obligation" or if the mortgage "secure[s] promised gifts").
    The lender's dual rights provide it with at least two
    methods of enforcing a buyer's obligations.           The lender can sue
    the homebuyer under the promissory note, "and, to the extent that
    the judgment is not satisfied, foreclose the mortgage on the real
    estate for the balance."       Id. § 8.2.    Or the lender can exercise
    its right to foreclose on the property, "and to the extent that
    the proceeds of the foreclosure sale do not satisfy the obligation,
    - 10 -
    obtain a judgment for the deficiency against any person who is
    personally liable on the obligation."        Id.; see also LaPorte, 
    395 A.2d at 720
     ("[I]n Rhode Island foreclosure on a mortgage does not
    bar a subsequent suit on the secured note for any deficiency.").
    Here, Deutsche Bank cannot enforce the promissory note
    against Lisa because she signed only the mortgage agreement.            Nor
    can   it   initiate   foreclosure    proceedings   because   the   Superior
    Court's 2016 decree extinguished all liens on the property.           With
    these traditional remedies unavailable, Deutsche Bank resorts to
    a more inventive contractual theory: that certain covenants in the
    mortgage agreement create separate contractual obligations binding
    Lisa to the mortgage covenants.         Deutsche Bank contends that it
    can require Lisa to specifically perform those covenants, and
    thereby "cause her company, Dunkin, to make its interest in the
    Property subject to the Mortgage," or recover from Lisa the damages
    that Deutsche Bank suffered from her breach of those covenants --
    the "[a]mounts due under the Note/Mortgage" plus additional costs.
    We focus on these arguments.5
    5 The district court did not address these questions,
    concluding that "there was undoubtably an agreement between the
    parties here." We are not so sure. While Lisa admits to signing
    the mortgage agreement, she denied being subject to the agreement
    covenants and to the note in the district court. Lisa's appellate
    brief further contended that "Lisa did not have any obligation
    under the note . . . ."      So, not only did she not concede
    application to her of the obligations; she expressly argued that
    they did not apply.
    - 11 -
    "[T]he     intention         of     the     parties"     governs    the
    interpretation of a written contract, so long as "that intention
    can be clearly inferred from its terms."                   Woonsocket Teachers'
    Guild, Local 951 v. Sch. Comm. of Woonsocket, 
    367 A.2d 203
    , 205
    (R.I. 1976). When inquiring into the parties' intent, Rhode Island
    courts consider "the agreement . . . in its entirety" and give the
    agreement's words "their ordinary meaning."                 Petrolex II LLC v.
    Bailey   Grp.   LLC,       
    290 A.3d 1288
    ,    1293    (R.I.     2023)    (quoting
    Sturbridge Home Builders, Inc. v. Downing Seaport, Inc., 
    890 A.2d 58
    , 62-63 (R.I. 2005)).          When the terms are ambiguous -- that is,
    when "the document's language is susceptible to more than one
    reasonable interpretation" -- then "the language will be strictly
    construed   with     all    ambiguities       decided    against    the    drafter."
    Monahan v. Girouard, 
    911 A.2d 666
    , 672 (R.I. 2006).
    Deutsche Bank accuses Lisa of breaching three mortgage
    agreement covenants: (1) "to defend generally the title to the
    Because Lisa's dispute of this allegation by Deutsche Bank
    amounts to an assertion of law, not merely a statement of fact,
    its argument at the pleadings stage sufficiently lodges it in the
    record irrespective of whether she reiterated it later on. See
    Doe v. Trustees of Bos. Coll., 
    892 F.3d 67
    , 88 (1st Cir. 2018)
    ("[W]here 'the evidentiary foundation for determining the
    formation of the parties' contract . . . consist[s] of writings,'
    contract formation is instead a question of law for the court."
    (first and third alterations in original) (quoting TLT Constr.
    Corp. v. RI, Inc., 
    484 F.3d 130
    , 135 (1st Cir. 2007))).
    Accordingly, exercising our discretion to affirm based on any
    ground apparent in the record, we evaluate whether Deutsche Bank
    can establish that the covenants it relies on bind Lisa. See Burt,
    84 F.4th at 50.
    - 12 -
    property[;]" (2) to "pay all taxes" on the property; and (3) to
    "discharge any lien which obtains priority" over Deutsche Bank's
    mortgage lien. The agreement imposes these duties on "Borrower[,]"
    defined earlier in the document as Mason and Lisa.
    We review the document in its entirety, and the agreement
    later outlines the unique duties of "any Borrower who co-signs
    this Security Instrument but does not execute the note."6                     Unlike
    a Borrower who executed the note, a co-signer agrees "only to
    mortgage,    grant,     and    convey    the     co-signer's    interest    in   the
    Property under the terms of this Security Instrument."                     Further,
    a co-signer "is not personally obligated to pay the sums secured
    by"   the   mortgage,    and    the     lender    can   agree   with   "any   other
    Borrower" to modify the terms of the mortgage agreement "without
    the co-signer's consent."             Other language also reinforces these
    limitations on a co-signer's duties as a borrower.                 For instance,
    one covenant states that "Borrower shall pay when due the principal
    of, and interest on, the debt evidenced by the note."                   But Lisa,
    as a co-signer, "is not personally obligated to pay" the debt
    evidenced by the note, and thus the parties could not have intended
    that she be subject to that covenant.
    The ordinary meaning of its terms suggests that the co-
    signer language also exempts Lisa from the covenants which Deutsche
    6The mortgage agreement refers to itself as the "Security
    Instrument."
    - 13 -
    Bank now attempts to enforce.     Lisa's promise "only to mortgage,
    grant and convey" her interest in the property "under the terms of
    the   Security   Instrument"   seemingly   limits   her   contractual
    commitment to conferring a mortgage lien.7
    Although "the terms of this Security Instrument" cannot
    refer to all of the Borrower's covenants, it could refer to the
    covenants which Deutsche Bank now attempts to enforce.       The co-
    signer language does not expressly prohibit the lender from binding
    a co-signer to additional covenants like it prohibits the lender
    from holding a co-signer liable for the balance of the note.
    Deutsche Bank, however, does not attempt to explain why
    that interpretation is reasonable, and it does not explain why a
    reasonable co-signer would have understood the relevant language
    as Deutsche Bank proffers.8    Nor is such a conclusion evident from
    7The other covenants would then apply only to Mason, the
    party to the underlying obligation secured by the mortgage. By
    co-signing, Lisa simply agreed that, if Mason breached his
    covenants, the lender could foreclose on her interest in the
    property.   Indeed, that Mason and the lender could bilaterally
    modify the covenants, without notifying Lisa or securing her
    consent, indicates that the parties did not intend to bind Lisa to
    those obligations.
    Below, Deutsche Bank did make such an argument, warning that
    8
    if the covenants did not apply to co-signers, Lisa "could cause
    the destruction of the Property, receive insurance proceeds for
    the damage, leave a Lender with an environmental disaster, and be
    immune from any monetary recovery." In that situation, however,
    Mason would still be obligated to maintain his own property
    insurance, notify the insurer and the lender in the event of a
    loss, and apply "any insurance proceeds . . . to restoration and
    repair of the property." And, "if the restoration or repair is
    not economically feasible or Lender's security interest would be
    - 14 -
    context in the record.          Of course, the lender must have demanded
    some assurances to protect its security interest in the property.
    But even if Lisa were not subject to the three covenants at issue,
    the    lender   would   still    have   recourse   against   Mason   whenever
    property taxes went unpaid, whenever a superior lien was not
    discharged, and whenever the title was not otherwise defended.
    And Deutsche Bank presents nothing beyond the ambiguous language
    quoted earlier to       suggest that Lisa intended to accept such
    responsibility.     The agreement expressly states that, with respect
    to the note balance, Lisa did not guarantee Mason's debt.
    The lender could have drafted the mortgage agreement to
    make clear that the co-signer was contractually obligated to
    perform all covenants in the agreement except for those related to
    repaying the balance on the note, but the lender chose not to.
    Hence, the mortgage agreement does not unambiguously show that the
    parties intended for the relevant covenants to apply to Lisa, and
    Deutsche Bank runs headlong into Rhode Island's well-established
    practice of construing ambiguous contractual provisions against
    the drafter, here the original lender.             See Monahan, 
    911 A.2d at 672
    .
    lessened," then the agreement states that Mason shall apply the
    proceeds to "the sums secured by" the mortgage -- the note balance.
    Thus, to the extent that Lisa could "leave [Deutsche Bank] with an
    environmental disaster," Mason would compensate Deutsche Bank for
    its losses.
    - 15 -
    Our   conclusion    is   reinforced   by    Deutsche   Bank's
    inability to provide any reported decision in which mortgage
    agreement covenants were found to impose independent contractual
    obligations on a co-signer.    To that end, Deutsche Bank's reliance
    on Dovenmeuhle Mortgage, Inc. v. Antontelli, 
    790 A.2d 1113
     (R.I.
    2002), is misplaced.   In Dovenmeuhle, a lender assigned to a third
    party a promissory note and related mortgage agreement after the
    mortgaged property was sold at a tax sale.           
    Id. at 1114
    .   The
    assignee sued the original buyer "to recover the balance due on
    the promissory note[,]" and the Rhode Island Superior Court granted
    summary judgment to the assignee.    
    Id.
       On appeal, the Rhode Island
    Supreme Court affirmed, rejecting the buyer's argument that the
    lender had an implied obligation to mitigate its damages by paying
    taxes on the property.       
    Id. at 1114-15
    .    Because the mortgage
    agreement "specifically provide[d] that although [the lender] may
    protect its rights in the property by clearing up any lien, it has
    no obligation to do so[,]" the court declined to impliedly impose
    such a duty on the lender.     
    Id. at 1115
    .
    Dovenmeuhle is distinguishable from the instant case
    because the assignee there sued to recover the balance due on the
    note, not to recover damages for breached covenants in the mortgage
    agreement.   The Rhode Island Supreme Court merely reiterated a
    basic principle of contract law that a written contract is governed
    - 16 -
    by the plain meaning of its terms.        Its holding does not affect
    our interpretation of the mortgage agreement here.
    C.
    We now turn to the constructive-trust and equitable-lien
    claims against Dunkin and the unjust-enrichment claim against Lisa
    and Dunkin.     We address the former two claims together before
    reaching the unjust-enrichment claim.
    "We review a district court's decision to grant or
    withhold equitable relief for abuse of discretion, even when, as
    here, the equitable relief is [withheld] through a motion for
    summary judgment."     Wilmington Sav. Fund Soc'y, FSB v. Collart,
    
    980 F.3d 210
    , 214 (1st Cir. 2020).       "This standard is deferential
    but 'not unbridled.'"    
    Id.
     (quoting Corp. Techs., Inc. v. Harnett,
    
    731 F.3d 6
    , 10 (1st Cir. 2013)).          "[W]ithin [this standard],
    abstract legal rulings are scrutinized de novo, factual findings
    are assayed for clear error, and the degree of deference afforded
    to issues of law application waxes or wanes depending on the
    particular circumstances."     
    Id.
     (quoting T-Mobile Ne. LLC v. Town
    of Barnstable, 
    969 F.3d 33
    , 38 (1st Cir. 2020)).             Like the
    contractual claim, Deutsche Bank's equitable claims are governed
    by Rhode Island law.    
    Id.
    i.
    Constructive trusts and equitable liens are "remedies by
    which   a   claimant    may   obtain   restitution   from   property."
    - 17 -
    Restatement of Restitution (Third) § 56 cmt. a (Am. L. Inst. 2011).9
    Rhode Island courts will award these remedies "in situations in
    which legal title to property was obtained by fraud or in violation
    of a fiduciary or confidential relationship.”       Dellagrotta v.
    Dellagrotta, 
    873 A.2d 101
    , 111 (R.I. 2005) (quoting Renaud v.
    Ewart, 
    712 A.2d 884
    , 885 (R.I. 1998)).    "[T]he party seeking" an
    equitable lien or "a constructive trust must prove by clear and
    convincing evidence . . . [(1)] the existence of a fiduciary or
    confidential relationship between the parties and [(2)] either a
    breach of a fiduciary duty or fraud resulting from the parties[']
    confidential association."   
    Id.
     (emphasis in original)
    Deutsche Bank cannot satisfy the first element because
    it has not provided evidence of a fiduciary or confidential
    relationship between itself and Dunkin.       Deutsche Bank's sole
    argument on this point is that the "covenants in the Mortgage . . .
    imposed a type of fiduciary duty on" Lisa and that Dunkin is
    responsible for her breach of those duties.
    Preliminarily, we doubt that Lisa and Deutsche Bank were
    in a fiduciary relationship and that we can impute any such
    9 Deutsche Bank's constructive-trust claim seeks to impose an
    obligation on Dunkin to convey the property to Deutsche Bank, and
    the equitable-lien claim seeks to re-impose the mortgage lien on
    the property.   See Darr v. Muratore, 
    143 B.R. 973
    , 976 (D.R.I.
    1992) (providing that a constructive trust "imposes [a personal]
    obligation on one party to convey real estate to the other party,"
    whereas an "equitable lien . . . is a proceeding against the
    property itself to enforce an equitable interest in the property").
    - 18 -
    relationship to Dunkin.         We do not see, nor has Deutsche Bank
    attempted to explain, how a standard mortgage arrangement requires
    a degree of confidence and trust beyond that inherent in a typical
    contractual relationship.          See EDC Inv., LLC v. UTGR, Inc., 
    275 A.3d 537
    , 544 (R.I. 2022).         And we find it highly unlikely that a
    Rhode Island court would disregard Dunkin's corporate structure,
    even if Lisa did have any fiduciary obligation, to impose those
    obligations on Dunkin.        See R&B Elec. Co. v. Amco Const. Co., 
    471 A.2d 1351
    , 1354 (R.I. 1984) ("It is well settled that the corporate
    entity should be disregarded . . . only when the facts of a
    particular case render it unjust and inequitable to consider the
    subject corporation a separate entity.").
    We   need   not   decide    either   issue,     however,   because
    Deutsche Bank's argument fails for a more obvious reason: As we
    explained   above,      Deutsche    Bank's    claims   as   to   the   mortgage
    agreement covenants fail.          The covenants could not have created a
    fiduciary relationship between Deutsche Bank and Lisa,10               and thus
    no reasonable jury could find that Dunkin breached confidential or
    fiduciary duties to Deutsche Bank.
    10 Of course, Mason may have been a fiduciary of Deutsche
    Bank, but Deutsche Bank does not make that argument on appeal, and
    we thus consider it waived.    See United States v. Zannino, 
    895 F.2d 1
    , 17 (1st Cir. 1990) ("[I]ssues adverted to in a perfunctory
    manner, unaccompanied by some effort at developed argumentation,
    are deemed waived.").
    - 19 -
    Further, we would hesitate to require the district court
    to grant Deutsche Bank an equitable remedy here, because Deutsche
    Bank explicitly slept on its rights at least twice.     See Sloat v.
    City of Newport ex rel. Sitrin, 
    19 A.3d 1217
    , 1222 (R.I. 2011)
    (“[T]he granting of equitable relief is extraordinary relief and
    will not be applied unless the equities clearly must be balanced
    in favor of the party seeking that relief . . . .”    (quoting Ocean
    Rd. Partners v. State, 
    612 A.2d 1107
    , 1111 (R.I. 1992))); DiLuglio
    v. Providence Auto Body, Inc., 
    755 A.2d 757
    , 774 (R.I. 2000)
    ("[W]hen parties sit idly on their known rights, equity will follow
    their example.").   Deutsche Bank failed to make an appearance and
    assert its interests at the tax sale of the property in September
    2014, despite having received proper notice of the proceedings.
    And it again failed to appear at the 2016 foreclosure proceedings
    that resulted in the Rhode Island Superior Court decree.    Deutsche
    Bank is a sophisticated commercial entity that is well aware of
    its rights and obligations under the mortgage agreement, and yet
    it "s[at] idly on [its] known rights," DiLuglio, 
    755 A.2d at 774
    ,
    missing multiple opportunities to defend them.       Accordingly, we
    will not now reward it by requiring an equitable remedy.11
    11Because Deutsche Bank cannot prevail on the merits of these
    two equitable claims, we need not decide whether Rhode Island's
    tax title foreclosure statute, R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 44-9-31, otherwise
    precludes them.
    - 20 -
    ii.
    Deutsche Bank's unjust-enrichment claim against Lisa and
    Dunkin is narrower in scope than the other two equitable claims.
    It seeks to recover only the sums it paid after the tax sale and
    foreclosure for taxes and insurance payments on the property.
    Nonetheless, Deutsche Bank fares no better on this count.
    "Recovery for unjust enrichment is predicated upon the
    equitable principle that one shall not be permitted to enrich
    himself at the expense of another by receiving property or benefits
    without making compensation for them."   Narragansett Elec. Co. v.
    Carbone, 
    898 A.2d 87
    , 99 (R.I. 2006).    Accordingly, a plaintiff
    must prove as a threshold matter "that he or she conferred a
    benefit upon the party from whom relief is sought."   Dellagrotta,
    
    873 A.2d at 114
    .
    Deutsche Bank has not provided any evidence that Dunkin
    or Lisa were unjustly enriched by the sums that it now seeks to
    recover from them. Deutsche Bank paid property taxes and insurance
    premiums on the property during a period from October 2014 to July
    2016.   But, as Deutsche Bank's counsel conceded at oral argument,
    Birdsong and Coventry owned the property throughout that entire
    period.   Dunkin did not acquire the property until 2017, and Lisa
    did not inherit the shares of Dunkin until 2021.   Deutsche Bank's
    payments during that period could have benefitted only Birdsong or
    Coventry, not Dunkin or Lisa.
    - 21 -
    Deutsche Bank rejects this straightforward reading of
    the record, claiming that "if [Deutsche Bank] had not paid the
    intervening taxes, Dunkin would still owe those outstanding taxes
    when it became the owner of the Property."                   In doing so, it
    overlooks that Dunkin would only owe the outstanding taxes if both
    Birdsong and Coventry failed to pay them.             And even viewing the
    evidence in the light most favorable to Deutsche Bank, there is no
    indication that Birdsong or Coventry would have so failed.
    Deutsche    Bank   does    claim   to    have   made   one    payment
    directly to Lisa.     It points to funds that Deutsche Bank received
    in response to a claim that the Wilsons made under their property
    insurance policy, which the bank claims to have disbursed to Lisa
    in September 2016.    The record, however, indicates otherwise.              An
    invoice reveals that Deutsche Bank in fact disbursed the funds to
    Mason alone.   Deutsche Bank presents no evidence to the contrary,
    and we cannot divine from the record how sums given to Mason and
    related to an insurance payout on property owned by a third party
    could have benefitted Lisa, who did not have any legal interest in
    the property at the time, or Dunkin, which was not formed until
    the following May.
    We   thus   conclude      that   the    district    court    properly
    granted summary judgment to Dunkin and Lisa.
    - 22 -
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the district court's judgment
    is affirmed.
    - 23 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 21-1629

Filed Date: 9/17/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/17/2024