Tommy Joe Stutzka v. James P. McCarville ( 2005 )


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  •                     United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 04-2208
    ___________
    Tommy Joe Stutzka, Guardian and        *
    Conservator for Carol A. Gibilisco,    *
    *
    Plaintiff/Appellant,     *
    *
    v.                               *
    *
    James P. McCarville, as Conservator    *
    and Guardian of Cheryl A. Nord-        *
    McCarville; James Walters, doing       *   Appeal from the United States
    business as Prestige Mortgage; Popular *   District Court for the
    Financial Services, L.L.C., a Delaware *   District of Nebraska.
    limited liability company,             *
    *
    Defendants/Appellees.    *
    *
    _______________________          *
    *
    Popular Financial Services, L.L.C.,    *
    a Delaware limited liability company, *
    *
    Third Party Plaintiff,   *
    *
    v.                               *
    *
    Lunnar Title & Escrow, doing           *
    business as LTS Title Services, Co.,   *
    a Nebraska corporation,                *
    *
    Third Party Defendant.   *
    ___________
    Submitted: December 14, 2004
    Filed: August 23, 2005
    ___________
    Before WOLLMAN, ARNOLD, and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    WOLLMAN, Circuit Judge.
    Tommy Joe Stutzka, guardian and conservator for Carol Gibilisco, appeals
    from the district court’s judgment with respect to his claims against Popular Financial
    Services, L.L.C. (Popular). We affirm in part and reverse in part.
    I.
    Gibilisco is a widow in her sixties. She has been blind since birth and is
    developmentally disabled. Although she is articulate and capable of recollecting
    names, places, times, and events, she lacks a basic understanding of arithmetic and
    financial transactions. The district court described her as “very trusting and eager to
    please.”
    Gibilisco and her husband, Sam, who was also visually and developmentally
    impaired, lived in Sam’s mother’s house on Hickory Street in Omaha, Nebraska (the
    Hickory Street property). Carol and Sam were listed on the title of the house. Sam’s
    mother handled all financial matters until her death in 1994 or 1995, at which point
    Sam took over those responsibilities.
    In 1993, the Gibiliscos purchased insurance and annuities from James
    McCarville. Thereafter, the Gibiliscos met McCarville’s wife, Cheryl Nord-
    McCarville, and the two couples became social acquaintances. McCarville also
    helped prepare the Gibiliscos’ income taxes. After Sam’s mother died, the
    -2-
    McCarvilles and Gibiliscos spent more time together. The McCarvilles persuaded the
    Gibiliscos to join them as informal business associates in a custom embroidery
    business they owned in O’Neill, Nebraska, some 300 miles from the Gibiliscos’
    home. The Gibiliscos earned little, if any, income from the business.
    In 1999, McCarville asked Sam to obtain a home equity loan on the Hickory
    Street property to purchase equipment for the embroidery business. McCarville
    referred Sam to James Walters, a mortgage broker with whom McCarville had a prior
    business relationship. The Gibiliscos applied for and received a loan from U.S. Bank
    in the amount of $55,000. The following year, Sam and Nord-McCarville opened
    several lines of credit at U.S. Bank with approved credit of $25,000. The Gibiliscos
    believed that the McCarvilles were obligated to pay back these debts and that the
    McCarvilles were making payments with income received from the embroidery
    business. Within a few months, however, U.S. Bank informed the Gibiliscos that the
    mortgage was in default.
    In February 2001, Sam contacted Walters to ask about refinancing his lines of
    credit to obtain a lower interest rate and lower payments. Walters advised Sam to
    refinance the U.S. Bank mortgage and tie the lines of credit into the refinanced loan.
    Sam died on April 3, 2001. Shortly thereafter, Walters contacted Carol Gibilisco
    (now the sole owner of the Hickory Street property) and obtained her consent to
    process the loan refinancing. He then prepared a loan application with Popular that
    listed Nord-McCarville as the borrower and Carol Gibilisco as the co-borrower. In
    preparing and processing the loan, Walters: (1) included numerous misstatements in
    the application;1 (2) processed the loan with a fixed rate but closed it with a variable
    1
    These included: (1) that Walters had interviewed Carol Gibilisco (he had in
    fact interviewed only Sam); (2) that Carol Gibilisco received $1,257 per month in
    social security disability payments (Walters had a copy of her social security award
    letter that showed a monthly income of $359); (3) that Nord-McCarville was
    unmarried; (4) that Carol Gibilisco had worked for the McCarvilles’s embroidery
    -3-
    rate capped at 15.875%; (3) failed to disclose the changed interest rate in the good
    faith estimate or in the truth-in-lending statement; (4) failed to provide any pre-
    closing disclosures to Gibilisco; and (5) facilitated a loan that required monthly
    payments approximately $300 higher than Gibilisco’s payments on the U.S. Bank
    mortgage.
    On May 11, 2001, Gibilisco and Nord-McCarville closed on the refinanced
    loan in the amount of $85,000. The Popular mortgage stipulated a repayment over
    thirty years, with monthly payments of $877 (including hazard insurance and real
    estate tax payments) that could rise as high as $1,135 if the variable rate increased to
    its maximum percentage. The closing documents were not printed in Braille, and
    McCarville guided Gibilisco’s hand to ensure that her signature would fall on the
    appropriate lines. Gibilisco also signed a deed conveying the Hickory Street property
    to herself and Nord-McCarville jointly.
    At closing, $79,380 of the Popular mortgage was used to pay off the U.S. Bank
    mortgage and the lines of credit. Walters received a $4,059 broker fee from the title
    company and an $850 yield spread premium payment from Popular. Walters, in turn,
    paid McCarville $1,250 for his assistance with the closing.
    Stutzka, a family friend of the Gibiliscos who became Carol’s conservator in
    February 2002, subsequently learned of the transaction and brought suit against
    McCarville, Nord-McCarville, Walters (doing business as Prestige Mortgage), and
    Popular, alleging unspecified violations of the Truth in Lending Act (TILA), 15
    U.S.C. § 1601 et seq.; unspecified violations of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures
    Act (RESPA), 12 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq.; and civil conspiracy. Stutzka also sought:
    (1) rescission of the deed, promissory note, and deed of trust connected to the
    business for five years and earned $300 monthly; (5) that Nord-McCarville had a
    monthly income of $4,166 from the business; and (6) that Carol Gibilisco was male.
    -4-
    Popular mortgage for lack of capacity, undue influence, and fraud; (2) to quiet title
    to the Hickory Street property in Gibilisco; and (3) a temporary restraining order.
    Popular cross-claimed for judgment against Walters and filed a third-party claim
    against the title company that oversaw the closing of the mortgage. The district court
    subsequently entered a default judgment against McCarville and Nord-McCarville,
    dismissed Stutzka’s TILA claims and one aspect of his RESPA claims, and dismissed
    Popular’s third-party claim.
    In analyzing the circumstances of the Popular mortgage transaction, the district
    court found that:
    Carol did not understand the effect of her signature on the loan
    documents. She thought the purpose of the transaction was to help the
    McCarvilles continue the embroidery business and to change banks . .
    . she never viewed herself as bearing responsibility for repaying the sum
    borrowed on the Popular loan. Carol thought that Nord-McCarville was
    obligated to repay the loan and that she would do so. At trial, Carol did
    not know how much the McCarvilles had paid on the loan. Neither did
    she understand that Walters earned money from the transaction. The
    Court specifically finds that whatever general understanding Carol may
    have had about the nature of the loan transaction and mortgage, she did
    not have the intellectual capacity to resist the direction of the
    McCarvilles, nor to appreciate the consequences of her actions.
    D. Ct. Order of May 21, 2004, at 12.
    Thereafter, the district court issued an amended judgment that rescinded the
    Popular mortgage; declared null and void the deed that transferred ownership of the
    Hickory Street property to Gibilisco and Nord-McCarville; quieted title to the
    Hickory Street property in Gibilisco; reformed the promissory note and deed of trust
    to remove Gibilisco as a borrower; ordered Walters to remit $4,059 to Gibilisco and
    $850 to Popular; denied Popular’s cross-claim against Walters; and ordered Gibilisco
    -5-
    to remit $85,000 (the amount of the loan without interest) to Popular. Stutzka appeals
    from this final aspect of the judgment, from the district court’s denial of his RESPA
    claims (the remainder of which were dismissed in the district court’s May 21, 2004,
    order), and from the district court’s dismissal of his TILA claims.
    On October 7, 2004, the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of
    Nebraska issued an order for default judgment in a related case brought by Popular
    against the McCarvilles. See Popular Financial Services, LLC v. James P.
    McCarville, Order for Default Judgment, Case No. BK 02-41760, Chapter 7,
    Adversary No. 04-04076 (Bankr. D. Neb. 2004).2 This judgment requires the
    McCarvilles to pay Popular $116,813.28, plus interest of $22.96 per day, beginning
    on September 29, 2004, until the judgment is collected, together with Popular’s costs.
    II.
    Stutzka contends that the district court erred by failing to relieve Gibilisco of
    the burden to make restitution for the $85,000 Popular mortgage. We review the
    district court’s application of Nebraska law de novo, its denial of equitable relief for
    abuse of discretion, and its findings of fact for clear error. Lincoln Benefit Life Co.
    v. Edwards, 
    243 F.3d 457
    , 461 (8th Cir. 2001) (per curiam) (citations omitted).
    Under Nebraska law, an action to rescind a written instrument is an equity
    action. Kracl v. Loseke, 
    461 N.W.2d 67
    , 69 (Neb. 1990). Rescission is intended “to
    place the parties in a status quo, that is, return the parties to their position which
    existed before the rescinded contract.” 
    Id. at 75.
    Accordingly, “[i]n ordering
    Rescission, a court must require all parties to return whatever they gained under the
    2
    Stutzka moved to enlarge the record on appeal to include a copy of this
    judgment. Because we may take judicial notice of judicial opinions and public
    records, see, e.g., United States v. Eagleboy, 
    200 F.3d 1137
    , 1140 (8th Cir. 1999), we
    include the judgment in our consideration of this case.
    -6-
    rescinded document.” See 
    Edwards, 243 F.3d at 461
    (citing Gnuse v. Garrett, 
    261 N.W. 143
    , 144 (Neb. 1935)).
    Here, Stutzka (as Gibilisco’s conservator) requested that the district court
    rescind the Popular mortgage, and the district court granted Stutzka the exact relief
    he prayed for. A necessary consequence of the rescission remedy, however, was that
    the district court was obligated to require Gibilisco to return everything she had
    “gained” under the Popular mortgage. Because Gibilisco received benefits from the
    Popular mortgage in the form of relief from the U.S. Bank mortgage and from her
    husband’s debts (i.e., the lines of credit), she was required by Nebraska law to make
    restitution to Popular in order to return both parties to the status quo.
    Stutzka’s argument that Gibilisco should not be required to return the $85,000
    due to the invalidity of the underlying U.S. Bank obligations is unavailing. Stutzka
    contends that the U.S. Bank mortgage was void due to Gibilisco’s lack of capacity to
    enter into it and that the lines of credit were obligations of Sam Gibilisco and thus
    could not be imputed to Carol. Whatever potential merit these assertions might have
    in a direct challenge to the underlying obligations, the fact remains that, at the time
    of the Popular mortgage, the U.S. Bank mortgage was valid and enforceable against
    Gibilisco and the lines of credit were valid and enforceable against her husband’s
    estate because none of the obligations had been judicially challenged or set aside.3
    Because Nebraska law makes clear that rescission seeks a return to the status quo ex
    ante the challenged instrument, 
    id. (rescission dissolves
    the instrument at issue and
    3
    Because the record lacks any evidence pertaining to Sam’s will, it is unclear
    whether any assets currently possessed by Gibilisco would have been reachable by
    U.S. Bank had it attempted to collect on the lines of credit. Nonetheless, by satisfying
    Sam’s debts, the Popular mortgage relieved Gibilisco from any potential liability for
    the lines of credit and from the burden of defending against any collection action
    brought by U.S. Bank, as well as removed a claim against her late husband’s estate.
    -7-
    renders it a nullity), the district court did not abuse its discretion in ordering that
    Gibilisco repay the $85,000 to Popular.
    III.
    Stutzka next challenges the district court’s dismissal of his TILA claims on
    Popular’s motion for summary judgment. We review de novo the district court’s
    grant of summary judgment. Tolen v. Ashcroft, 
    377 F.3d 879
    , 882 (8th Cir. 2004).
    Summary judgment is proper if there are no disputed issues of material fact and the
    moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Employers Mut. Cas. Co. v.
    Wendland & Utz, Ltd., 
    351 F.3d 890
    , 893 (8th Cir. 2003); Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). We
    view the evidence and the inferences that may reasonably be drawn therefrom in the
    light most favorable to the nonmoving party. 
    Wendland, 351 F.3d at 893
    .
    Stutzka alleged two TILA violations in the district court: (1) that Popular failed
    to disclose material terms at the closing; and (2) that Popular failed to provide
    Gibilisco notice of her right to cancel the loan. Stutzka requested damages and
    attorney’s fees for both alleged violations and rescission based upon the second.
    The testimony of the closing agent for the Popular mortgage established that
    all material terms were disclosed at the closing (including the right to cancel) and that
    Gibilisco signed documents attesting to that fact. Gibilisco’s signature on the
    documents created a rebuttable presumption that the proper disclosures had been
    delivered to her. 15 U.S.C. § 1635(c). In an attempt to overcome that presumption,
    Stutzka submitted an affidavit signed by Gibilisco in which she stated that she “never
    received any papers, documents, or letters of any kind regarding the mortgage.” The
    district court noted that:
    . . . crucial to the Plaintiff’s argument that the mortgage violated the
    disclosure provision of the TILA is the assertion that Gibilisco was
    never provided with copies of the right to cancel or other documents
    -8-
    relating to the mortgage. The Plaintiff supports this statement with an
    affidavit of Carol Gibilisco stating that, among other things, she never
    received copies of any mortgage documents. [Citation omitted.]
    Although the affidavit states that she has personal knowledge of the
    facts in the affidavit[,] noticeably absent is a statement that she is
    competent to testify to the facts stated in her affidavit. The absence of
    a statement of competency in Gibilisco’s affidavit is consistent with the
    assertion in another Plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment in
    which it is argued that Gibilisco was subject to undue influence. The
    Plaintiff argues that Gibilisco is legally incompetent, yet relies on her
    statements in support of facts crucial to these motions for partial
    summary judgment. The Court cannot rely on Gibilisco’s affidavit.
    D. Ct. Order of March 26, 2004 (Doc. 272), at 4-5.
    The district court erred in equating Gibilisco’s lack of competency to close on
    the Popular mortgage with a lack of ability to testify to the general fact that she had
    not received the documents at the closing. This conclusion was inconsistent with
    general evidentiary principles, see Fed. R. Evid. 601, and with the district court’s
    factual findings that Gibilisco “displays good recollection of names, places, times and
    events.” D. Ct. Order of May 21, 2004, at 4. Because Gibilisco’s affidavit, at the
    very least, would have rebutted the presumption of delivery, the district court also
    erred in granting summary judgment on the TILA claims. This is especially true
    given the district court’s specific finding that Gibilisco was not given her copies of
    the closing documents. 
    Id. at 12.
    Furthermore, even assuming, arguendo, that Gibilisco’s affidavit was
    unreliable, the district court also had before it an affidavit from Stutzka that was not
    considered due to an apparent problem with the district court’s electronic case filing
    system. Stutzka’s affidavit stated that he had done Gibilisco’s record keeping since
    Sam’s death, that he would have known if Gibilisco received loan papers, that he was
    present almost immediately when Gibilisco returned from the closing, and that he was
    -9-
    unaware of the existence of any documents at that time. These assertions, apart from
    Gibilisco’s affidavit, are sufficient to surmount the rebuttable presumption of delivery
    and create a fact issue for trial.
    Finally, these claims are not moot, because Stutzka may be entitled to statutory
    damages and attorney’s fees if he prevails on them, see 15 U.S.C. § 1640,
    notwithstanding the district court’s order rescinding the Popular mortgage on other
    grounds. See Dryden v. Lou Budke’s Arrow Fin. Co., 
    661 F.2d 1186
    , 1191 (8th Cir.
    1981) (“TILA plaintiffs who are otherwise entitled to recover need not show that they
    sustained actual damages stemming from the TILA violations before they may
    recover the statutory damages provided.”).4
    The district court’s grant of summary judgment with respect to Stutzka’s TILA
    claims is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings with respect to
    those claims. All other aspects of the district court’s judgment are affirmed. The stay
    of execution entered by this court on November 4, 2004, is vacated.
    ______________________________
    4
    In addition, the district court properly concluded that both the $850 yield
    spread premium and the $1,250 fee that Walters paid to McCarville were reasonably
    related to services that Walters and McCarville performed, see 12 U.S.C. § 2607 (fees
    may be shared or split in exchange for services actually performed), and that Stutzka
    failed to present evidence that either fee was unreasonable. Accordingly, we affirm
    the district court’s denial of Stutzka’s RESPA claims. Stutzka’s remaining arguments
    are without merit.
    -10-