Anthony Sheely, Jr. v. Bank of America, N.A. ( 2018 )


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  •              Case: 17-14511   Date Filed: 05/30/2018   Page: 1 of 15
    [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 17-14511
    Non-Argument Calendar
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 1:15-cv-01109-TCB
    ANTHONY SHEELY, JR.,
    FELICIA A. BOYD-SHEELY,
    Plaintiffs - Appellants,
    versus
    BANK OF AMERICA, N.A.,
    THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON,
    f.k.a. The Bank of New York, as Trustee For the Certificate-Holders of CWALT,
    Inc.,
    Alternative Loan Trust 2007-19 Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2007-
    19,
    Defendants - Appellees.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Georgia
    ________________________
    (May 30, 2018)
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    Before WILSON, JORDAN, and ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    Anthony Sheely and Felicia Boyd-Sheely (collectively, the “Sheelys”)
    appeal the grant of summary judgment on their complaint against Bank of
    America, N.A. (“BANA”) and the Bank of New York Mellon (“BNY”) arising out
    of their attempts to obtain a modification of their mortgage loan. The Sheelys
    maintain that summary judgment was inappropriate because they presented
    sufficient evidence that BANA committed fraud during the modification process
    and that both BANA and BNY breached a provision of the security deed requiring
    notice of default and acceleration of the debt. Because we agree with the district
    court that no genuine issue of material fact exists in the record, we affirm.
    I. Background
    A.    Factual Background
    The Sheelys own a home in Ball Ground, Georgia.              On May 7, 2007,
    Anthony took out a $461,000 loan from Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.
    (“Countrywide”), to refinance their mortgage. At the same time, the Sheelys
    executed a security deed, which was later assigned to BANA and then to BNY.
    The security deed allows the non-judicial foreclosure sale of the property in the
    event of an uncured default.
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    Soon after refinancing their home loan, the Sheelys began experiencing
    financial hardship. Anthony lost his entire trucking business when the automotive
    industry crashed in late 2007. When they contacted Countrywide in October 2007
    about their financial difficulties, they were told they needed to be 90 days behind
    on their mortgage to qualify for assistance. So they stopped making their monthly
    payments, defaulted, and then called back in January 2008. Countrywide said they
    were eligible for modification but should wait to receive a letter and, in the
    meantime, could begin an interim repayment plan to avoid foreclosure.          The
    repayment plan called for the Sheelys to make higher monthly payments over five
    months to make up the past-due amounts.
    BANA began servicing the loan after Countrywide merged with BANA in
    early 2008. The Sheelys could not make the higher payments under the repayment
    plan, so they contacted BANA, which, like Countrywide, told them they needed to
    be 90 days behind to qualify for assistance. BANA also said that, because their
    past payments had been suspended by the repayment plan, the relevant 90-day
    period would not begin to run until the end of February 2008.
    Because the Sheelys did not comply with the repayment plan, Countrywide
    sent them a notice of default and acceleration of the debt in January 2008. BANA
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    sent another notice of default and acceleration in April 2008.1 To stave off the
    threatened foreclosure, the Sheelys attempted to make their normal payments a few
    times, but the payments were returned as insufficient. They have not made any
    payment on the loan since May 2008.
    From 2008 to 2013, the Sheelys diligently attempted to obtain a loan
    modification. But, they maintain, BANA made it impossible for them to do so by
    repeatedly misrepresenting the status of their modification applications, losing
    documents, or otherwise stymying their efforts. BANA, for its part, asserts that it
    evaluated the Sheelys’ loan for modification in good faith, and that it in fact
    approved the Sheelys for modification multiple times. However, according to
    BANA, modification was denied because the Sheelys failed to make the trial
    payments, failed to return documentation, or otherwise did not qualify for
    modification.
    BANA supported its contentions before the district court with a declaration
    from Ryan Dansby, Operations Team Manager on the Mortgage Resolution Team
    for BANA, along with supporting documents.                     This evidence showed the
    following: BANA approved the Sheelys for a modification in July 2008 and sent
    1
    The Sheelys’ brief asserts repeatedly that they did not receive these notices, but that
    claim is at least partly contradicted by Felicia’s own declaration, see Doc. 35 ¶¶ 11–12 (stating
    that they were sent the January 2008 letter by Countrywide and that they “attempted to make
    payments on April 9, 2008 and May 27, 2008 due to the threatening of foreclosure letters from
    Countrywide and BANA”). In any event, we find that this fact is not material to our resolution
    of the Sheelys’ claims, as explained more fully below.
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    them an approval letter. BANA declined the modification in September 2008 after
    the Sheelys failed to return certain documents. Then, in March 2010, BANA
    approved the Sheelys for a trial modification under the Home Affordable
    Modification Program (“HAMP”) and sent a letter stating that they needed to make
    three trial mortgage payments and return certain documents. Again, BANA denied
    the modification when the Sheelys did not make the trial payments or return the
    documents. Finally, in July 2012, BANA approved the Sheelys for a modification
    under a new program—through which they could obtain a principal reduction of
    over $250,000—created as a result of Department of Justice litigation against
    BANA and other servicers. In an approval letter dated July 11, 2012, BANA
    offered the modification and directed them to make three trial payments. BANA
    denied the modification when the Sheelys did not make any trial payments.
    The Sheelys deny receiving any of this correspondence, and they claim that
    BANA never intended to grant them a modification. Pointing to several years of
    phones calls and other correspondence with BANA, as relayed by Felicia in a
    declaration, they assert that BANA strung them along with false hope for a
    modification and so prevented them from taking other actions to save their home.
    According to the Sheelys, BANA represented that the Sheelys were eligible for
    modification, only to defer a decision repeatedly by claiming it needed more time
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    to process their application or that the Sheelys needed to resubmit their materials or
    restart the process altogether.
    At some point, BANA referred the Sheelys’ loan to a law firm to conduct a
    non-judicial foreclosure sale. In December 2012, the Sheelys received a notice of
    acceleration and foreclosure sale and a notice of sale under power from McCurdy
    & Candler, LLC. The notices identified BANA as the servicer and BNY as the
    secured creditor. Before the foreclosure sale occurred, however, another servicer
    took over from BANA, and it does not appear from the record that any foreclosure
    sale has since occurred.
    B. Procedural History
    In February 2015, the Sheelys sued BANA for breach of contract, fraud,
    wrongful foreclosure, and intentional infliction of emotional distress and BNY for
    breach of contract and wrongful foreclosure. The Sheelys also sought punitive
    damages, attorney’s fees and costs, and injunctive relief against foreclosure. After
    removal of the complaint to federal court, the district court dismissed the claim for
    wrongful foreclosure and the request for injunctive relief.
    In moving for summary judgment, the defendants relied mainly on Dansby’s
    affidavit and supporting documentation.          The Sheelys relied on Felicia’s
    declaration. A magistrate judge issued a report and recommendation (“R&R”)
    recommending that summary judgment be granted on the claims for fraud and
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    intentional infliction of emotional distress but denied on the claim for breach of
    contract. After both parties submitted objections to the R&R, the district court
    granted the defendants summary judgment in full. The Sheelys now appeal.
    II. Standard of Review
    We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, viewing
    the evidence and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-moving
    party. Haynes v. McCalla Raymer, LLC, 
    793 F.3d 1246
    , 1249 (11th Cir. 2015).
    “Summary judgment is proper where there is no genuine dispute as to any material
    fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” 
    Id.
     (quotation
    marks omitted). There is no genuine issue for trial “unless there is sufficient
    evidence favoring the nonmoving party for a jury to return a verdict for that party.”
    Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 249 (1986). But “[i]f the evidence
    is merely colorable, or is not significantly probative, summary judgment may be
    granted.” 
    Id.
     at 249–250 (citations omitted). We may affirm the district court’s
    judgment on any ground supported by the record, even if that ground was not
    relied upon by the district court. Kernel Records Oy v. Mosley, 
    694 F.3d 1294
    ,
    1309 (11th Cir. 2012).
    III. Discussion
    The Sheelys challenge the grant of summary judgment on their claims for
    breach of contract and fraud. We address each in turn. They have abandoned their
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    claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress by failing to address it in their
    appellate briefs. See Sapuppo v. Allstate Floridian Ins. Co., 
    739 F.3d 678
    , 680–81
    (11th Cir. 2014) (issues not raised on appeal are abandoned).
    A. Breach of Contract
    The district court concluded that the Sheelys’ breach-of-contract claim failed
    because the defendants sent notices of default and acceleration in 2008 that
    complied with their obligations under the security deed. The Sheelys respond that
    the 2008 notices—which they deny receiving—are irrelevant and that the notices
    in late 2012 and early 2013 are non-compliant. We affirm the grant of summary
    judgment on this claim, but for different reasons than the district court.
    To prove a claim for breach of contract under Georgia law, a plaintiff must
    show (1) a valid contract, (2) a material breach of its terms, and (3) resultant
    damages to the party who has the right to complain about the breached contract.
    Bates v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA, 
    768 F.3d 1126
    , 1130 (11th Cir. 2014).
    In Bates, we explained that “a violation of a condition precedent to the
    power to accelerate and power of sale cannot, in and of itself, create contractual
    liability.” Id. at 1132. Instead, for a mortgagor to succeed on a claim for breach of
    contract, “she must show that the premature or improper exercise of some power
    under the deed (acceleration or sale) resulted in damages that would not have
    occurred but for the breach.” Id. at 1132–33. Put differently, where the defendant
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    has yet to exercise the power of sale, the plaintiff must trace back the harm to the
    allegedly unauthorized acceleration of the note. Id. at 1133.
    We recognized in Bates that an unauthorized acceleration of the note “might
    give rise to damages in some circumstances,” but we ultimately held that any such
    claim by Bates (the plaintiff) was negated by the security deed’s “generous
    reinstatement provision.” Id. That provision stated that the plaintiff had the right
    to be reinstated upon paying all amounts due, even after foreclosure proceedings
    had been initiated. Id. Thus, we held that because Bates could simply pay her
    outstanding debt, the defendant’s “exercise of the power to accelerate the note
    could not have caused her harm, and therefore, she ha[d] failed to substantiate two
    important elements of her claim for breach of contract: causation and damages.”
    Id. We therefore affirmed the grant of summary judgment against Bates. Id.
    Bates controls here. Because there is no evidence that the power of sale has
    been exercised, the Sheelys must trace their harm back “to the allegedly
    unauthorized acceleration of the note.” See id. But, like the plaintiff in Bates, the
    Sheelys “ha[ve] not set forth any contractual damages that could have been caused
    by the mere threat of exercising the power of sale.” See id. at 1133 n.8. Moreover,
    the security deed in this case contains a reinstatement provision that is materially
    similar to the provision in Bates, which “negate[s]” the Sheelys’ claim arising from
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    the allegedly unauthorized acceleration of the note. 2 See id. at 1133. Because the
    Sheelys could, even now, return to a pre-acceleration position by paying all
    outstanding payments and associated fees, the “exercise of the power to accelerate
    the note could not have caused [them] harm, and therefore, [they] ha[ve] failed to
    substantiate two important elements of [their] claim for breach of contract:
    causation and damages.” See id.
    Accordingly, summary judgment was properly granted against the Sheelys
    on their breach-of-contract claim.          Because we affirm the grant of summary
    judgment on an alternative ground, we need not and do not address the Sheelys’
    arguments about whether the defendants can rely on the 2008 notices, whether
    those notices were actually sent or received, or whether evidence in the record
    establishes a legal relationship between BANA, BNY, and Countrywide.
    B. Fraud
    The Sheelys argue that a reasonable jury could find that BANA committed
    fraud based on “the long history of mixed-message communications from BANA,
    culminating in BANA’s misrepresentation that it was considering the Sheelys’
    application for modification with principal-forgiveness in July 2012 when it had no
    apparent present intention to do so.” Sheelys’ Initial Br. at 14. They maintain that
    2
    Before the district court, the Sheelys asserted that Bates was not controlling because
    their deed did not have a “generous reinstatement provision” like the deed in Bates. But for that
    assertion, they cited only the December 2012 foreclosure notice sent by McCurdy & Candler, not
    the deed itself. And a comparison between the two provisions at issue shows that they are
    materially similar. Compare Bates, 768 F.3d at 1133, with Doc. 1-3 at 8, ¶19.
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    a jury could find that “BANA never intended to give the Sheelys’ modification
    application due consideration but instead intended to lure them so deep into default
    that foreclosure would be their only option.” Id. According to the Sheelys, BANA
    did so by “advising them to fall further behind on their payments, misrepresenting
    the status of their modification applications of its review thereof, and continually
    and repeatedly deferring decision on those applications, until the arrears became
    too astronomical to cure.” Id. at 17.
    “Under Georgia law, which applies in this diversity action, the tort of fraud
    consists of five elements: (1) false representation by defendant; (2) scienter;
    (3) intent to induce the plaintiff to act or refrain from acting; (4) justifiable reliance
    by the plaintiff; and (5) damage to the plaintiff.” Next Century Commc’ns Corp. v.
    Ellis, 
    318 F.3d 1023
    , 1027 (11th Cir. 2003) (quotation marks omitted). For a false
    representation by a defendant to be actionable, it “must relate to an existing fact or
    a past event. Fraud cannot consist of mere broken promises, unfilled predictions or
    erroneous conjecture as to future events.”            
    Id.
     (quotation marks omitted).
    Nevertheless, a promise made without a present intent to perform can be a material
    misrepresentation sufficient to support a cause of action for fraud. Lumpkin v.
    Deventer N. Am., Inc., 
    672 S.E.2d 405
    , 408 (Ga. Ct. App. 2008).
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    We conclude that the district court properly granted summary judgment on
    the Sheelys’ fraud claim. 3 The Sheelys’ contention that BANA induced them to
    default through fraud—by instructing them that they needed to be 90 days behind
    to qualify for modification—is not supported by the record. There is no evidence
    that these statements were false or misleading. See Ellis, 
    318 F.3d at 1027
    . Nor
    were the statements coupled with a promise of modification, such that it could be
    inferred from BANA’s later actions that it made a promise without a present intent
    to perform. See 
    id.
     Rather, the instructions, as recounted in Felicia’s declaration,
    were that the Sheelys would be eligible for modification after three months, not
    that they were guaranteed modification if they failed to pay for three months. In
    sum, no reasonable jury could conclude that BANA committed fraud by inducing
    the Sheelys to default.
    As for the other evidence of misrepresentations, miscommunications, delays,
    lost documents, and the like, we agree with the district court that, even assuming
    these facts are true and drawing all reasonable inferences in the Sheelys’ favor, “a
    fact-finder would have to rely on speculation and unfounded conjecture to find in
    favor of the Sheelys” on the fraud claim. Doc. 53 at 18.
    3
    In reaching this conclusion, we assume, as the Sheelys contend, that the conversations
    with BANA representatives that are recounted in Felicia’s declaration are fully admissible as
    statements of a party opponent. See Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2)(D). We therefore need not consider
    whether the district court improperly excluded some of this evidence as inadmissible hearsay.
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    Significantly, the Sheelys’ fraud claim, as presented on appeal, rests on an
    inference that BANA never intended to grant a loan modification and that its
    various communications with the Sheelys about a loan modification were, in
    essence, all for show.     But BANA presented evidence that it reviewed and
    approved the Sheelys for modification multiple times. BANA showed that it
    mailed letters notifying the Sheelys that they were approved to begin trial
    modifications on three separate occasions—in July 2008, March 2010, and July
    2012—but that it denied the modifications when the Sheelys failed either to make
    the trial payments or to return the required documentation. BANA also presented
    evidence that it reviewed the Sheelys for modification in 2013 but that it
    determined that it could not alter the terms of their loan within allowable limits.
    In response to this evidence, the Sheelys have not produced any
    “significantly probative” evidence of their own to support their belief that BANA
    misrepresented its willingness to consider them for a modification or that these
    modification offers were not genuine. See Anderson, 
    477 U.S. at
    249–50; Sec. &
    Exch. Comm’n v. Monterosso, 
    756 F.3d 1326
    , 1333 (11th Cir. 2014) (“Speculation
    or conjecture cannot create a genuine issue of material fact, and a mere scintilla of
    evidence in support of the nonmoving party cannot overcome a motion for
    summary judgment.” (quotation marks omitted)).
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    First, although the Sheelys “vehemently deny” receiving BANA’s
    modification offers, that denial does not create a genuine issue of fact about
    whether such correspondence was in fact sent. And whether or not the Sheelys
    received these letters does not bear on BANA’s intent in sending them.
    Second, while Felicia’s declaration states that on July 20, 2012, during one
    of the purported trial periods, a BANA representative told them they needed to
    restart the application process, this evidence does not create a genuine issue of
    material fact.    To be sure, the July 20 statements are inconsistent with the
    statements in the July 11 approval letter. But without some additional information,
    and even against the backdrop of previous communications, it’s not reasonable to
    infer that the inconsistency is because BANA either lied about the prior approval
    or “lied . . . about the need to re-start the application process in order to cause them
    to become ineligible for the highly favorable modification program.” Sheelys’
    Initial Br. at 38. On the current record, these inferences are much too speculative
    to create a genuine issue of material fact as to BANA’s intent to deceive in
    misrepresenting the status of their modification. See Monterosso, 756 F.3d at
    1333.
    Finally, the Sheelys’ attempt to bolster their claim by reference to the
    “public record” is unavailing. The Sheelys cite the declarations of six former
    BANA employees that were prepared for litigation in another case. Although these
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    declarations were attached to the complaint, they were not offered as evidence in
    this case, nor, even if they were, are they directly relevant to the Sheelys’
    interactions with BANA. Though these declarations may have given the Sheelys
    reason to suspect that BANA was not dealing with them fairly and in good faith,
    the Sheelys have not sufficiently supported that belief with evidence from which a
    reasonable jury could conclude that BANA strung them along with no intent to
    grant a permanent loan modification.
    In sum, we cannot conclude that genuine issues of material facts exist as to
    whether BANA committed fraud as alleged by the Sheelys. We therefore affirm
    the district court’s grant of summary judgment on this claim.
    IV. Conclusion
    For the reasons stated, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment on the Sheelys’ complaint against BANA and BNY.
    AFFIRMED.
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