- 1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 2 FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 3 EFRAIN MUNOZ, individually and on 4 behalf of all others similarly situated, 5 et al., No. 1:08-cv-00759-MMB-BAM 6 7 Plaintiffs, ORDER RESPECTING 8 DEFENDANTS’ MOTION 9 v. IN LIMINE #4 10 11 PHH MORTGAGE CORPORATION, 12 et al., 13 14 Defendants. 15 Defendants’ fourth motion in limine (ECF 472) requests an order “to pre- 16 clude any argument, evidence, or testimony regarding a 2009 internal ‘compli- 17 ance audit’ of Atrium Insurance Corporation.” ECF 472, at 1. They argue that 18 evidence about the audit is irrelevant because documents “indicate that the 19 audit did not concern Defendants’ compliance with the Real Estate Settlement 20 Procedures Act of 1974—which is the only issue for trial in this case.” Id. (“de- 21 fined term” omitted). Defendants also express concern that documents about 22 the audit use similar terminology to that which the parties will use at trial but 23 that the context for that terminology was compliance with accounting princi- 24 ples, not RESPA, such that introducing the evidence risks confusing the jury. 25 Id. 26 Specifically, Defendants assert that “the risk transfer discussion in the 27 2009 Internal Audit documents concerns compliance with Statement of 1 Statutory Accounting Principles 62, a separate statement that establishes stat- 2 utory accounting principles for property and casualty reinsurance. Even more 3 specifically, the 2009 Internal Audit documents concern compliance with SSAP 4 62’s documentation requirements. Compliance (or not) with these requirements 5 is not the same as compliance (or not) with RESPA’s safe harbor.” Id. at 4 (“de- 6 fined term,” quotation marks, and citation omitted). 7 Plaintiffs’ response calls Defendants’ arguments “fallacious” and con- 8 tends that the documents address “the evaluation of risk transfer with respect 9 to the company’s captive reinsurance arrangements and identify a number of 10 weaknesses in PHH’s evaluation of risk transfer.” ECF 483, at 1. Plaintiffs 11 contend that their experts analyzed risk transfer by referring to actuarial and 12 accounting standards, including SSAP 62, and that the court already consid- 13 ered the relevance of those reports in the course of its summary judgment rul- 14 ing, in which the court denied Defendants’ motion to strike them. Id. at 3–4 15 (citing Munoz v. PHH Mortg. Corp., 478 F. Supp. 3d 945, 965 (E.D. Cal. 2020) 16 (ECF 417)). Plaintiffs are correct that the court explained that the experts ap- 17 plied actuarial and accounting standards “in reaching the conclusion that the 18 CRAs exhibited a ‘lack of real transfer of risk,’ ” which the court then noted is 19 directly relevant to the HUD Letter’s requirement that there be a “real transfer 20 of risk.” 478 F. Supp. 3d at 965. Plaintiffs explain that their expert witnesses 21 reviewed and discussed the “internal audit” documents Defendants now seek 1 to exclude, and they essentially argue that because the court found the expert 2 testimony relevant, it would be inappropriate to exclude the documents on 3 which the experts based their analyses. ECF 483, at 4–7. 4 Defendants reply that Plaintiffs’ argument does not respond to Defend- 5 ants’ contention that the internal audit documents do not involve RESPA, in- 6 volve only internal documentation requirements relating to accounting stand- 7 ards, and that such documentation requirements are irrelevant to compliance 8 with RESPA’s safe harbor. ECF 494, at 2. They argue that the documents “do 9 not address the question of whether or not risk was actually transferred. In- 10 stead, the documents address the separate and distinct question of whether 11 Atrium provided the auditors sufficient documentation of that risk transfer de- 12 termination.” Id. at 3 (emphasis in original). 13 Federal Rule of Evidence 703 resolves the issue. Plaintiffs are correct 14 that the court found the experts’ testimony relevant, but that does not by itself 15 mean the evidence on which the experts relied is automatically relevant or ad- 16 missible as well. Rule 703 provides as follows: 17 An expert may base an opinion on facts or data in the case that the 18 expert has been made aware of or personally observed. If experts 19 in the particular field would reasonably rely on those kinds of facts 20 or data in forming an opinion on the subject, they need not be ad- 21 missible for the opinion to be admitted. But if the facts or data 22 would otherwise be inadmissible, the proponent of the opinion may 23 disclose them to the jury only if their probative value in helping 24 the jury evaluate the opinion substantially outweighs their preju- 25 dicial effect. 1 Fed. R. Evid. 703. Here, while the court found the experts’ testimony relevant, 2 the court’s discussion did not address whether the underlying facts and data 3 are themselves admissible evidence. The court can see no reason why internal 4 discussions concerning whether an auditor had been provided with sufficient 5 documentation to use in a risk transfer analysis under accounting standards 6 would be relevant to proving whether risk transfer actually occurred for 7 RESPA purposes. 8 Accordingly, the question then becomes whether Plaintiffs have demon- 9 strated that the documents’ probative value “substantially” outweighs their 10 prejudicial effect. Plaintiffs focus on analyzing whether prejudice significantly 11 outweighs probativity in the standard Rule 403 analysis, but, as explained 12 above, Rule 703 inverts the equation when an expert relies on inadmissible 13 evidence. The extent of Plaintiffs’ argument on prejudice versus probativity is, 14 “There is no reason to believe that a jury would not be able to understand the 15 purpose of this evidence or that it should be denied the opportunity to hear and 16 properly weigh this indisputably relevant evidence regarding an issue central 17 to this case on which they will be asked to render a verdict.” ECF 483, at 8–9. 18 That argument is not enough to satisfy Plaintiffs’ burden under Rule 703. De- 19 fendants, on the other hand, express concern that introduction of evidence re- 20 garding compliance with accounting documentation standards might confuse 21 the jury into equating compliance, or lack thereof, with RESPA’s risk transfer 1 requirements. ECF 472, at 9–10; ECF 494, at 5–6. That concern is legitimate 2 and is sufficient reason, under Rule 703, to exclude the evidence in the absence 3 of a more compelling showing of probativity. 4 To be clear, the court will not preclude Plaintiffs’ experts from testifying 5 about their conclusions, as Rule 703 clearly provides that an expert may base 6 an opinion on inadmissible facts or data in forming an opinion and Defendants 7 have not demonstrated that experts in the relevant field would not have relied 8 on the sort of facts and data at issue here. Rather, the court will only preclude 9 Plaintiffs’ experts from discussing the 2009 “internal compliance audit.” 10 Accordingly, it is hereby ORDERED that Defendants’ motion in limine 11 #4 is GRANTED, and it is further ORDERED that Plaintiffs may not intro- 12 duce any argument, evidence, or testimony regarding a 2009 internal “compli- 13 ance audit” of Atrium Insurance Corporation. 14 Dated: January 14, 2022 /s/ M. Miller Baker 15 M. Miller Baker, Judge1 1 Judge of the United States Court of International Trade, sitting by designation.
Document Info
Docket Number: 1:08-cv-00759
Filed Date: 1/14/2022
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 6/19/2024