WILMINGTON SAVINGS FUND SOCIETY, FSB VS. PATRICIA E. DAW (F-007259-16, OCEAN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2021 )


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  •                  NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0829-19
    WILMINGTON SAVINGS
    FUND SOCIETY, FSB, d/b/a
    CHRISTIANA TRUST, not
    individually but as trustee for
    PRETIUM MORTGAGE                            APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    ACQUISITION TRUST,                                 October 22, 2021
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    PATRICIA E. DAW and
    RICHARD C. DAW,
    Defendants-Appellants,
    and
    TD BANK, N.A., and STATE
    OF NEW JERSEY,
    Defendants.
    __________________________
    Argued October 4, 2021 – Decided October 22, 2021
    Before Judges Sabatino, Rothstadt, and Natali.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Chancery Division, Ocean County, Docket No.
    F-007259-16.
    Joseph Albanese argued the cause for appellants.
    Gene R. Mariano argued the cause for respondent
    (Parker McCay, PA, attorneys; Gene R. Mariano, on the
    brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    SABATINO, P.J.A.D.
    When a mortgaged residence is damaged by a storm and the homeowners'
    property or flood insurer pays benefits for the storm damages, how should the
    mortgage company determine whether to use those insurance funds to pay down
    the delinquent mortgage principal and interest, or, alternatively, use the funds
    to repair the property, as provided by the loan agreement?
    More specifically, if the loan agreement states the lender may choose to
    apply the funds to the outstanding debt if either repairs are "economically
    infeasible" or if such expenditures would impair the lender's security interest,
    does the lender have an obligation to the borrower to make that decision
    promptly and in good faith?
    In the present case, the lender's assignee held the storm insurance proceeds
    for over three years before ultimately applying them to the homeowners'
    outstanding debt. During that lengthy interval, an estimated sum of $40,000 in
    mortgage interest accrued. Negotiations to modify the terms of the loan failed
    when the assignee demanded that two thirds of the insurance funds be applied
    A-0829-19
    2
    to the debt upfront as a condition of the loan modification, which the
    homeowners contend would have left them with insufficient funds to complete
    all the repairs and disqualify them for a state grant that they had conditionally
    received.
    Relying on two unpublished federal district court cases and other
    authorities, the homeowners contend the assignee acted unfairly by purposely
    stalling the process to drive up the interest owed on the mortgage, while
    allegedly never intending to apply the insurance funds to repairs. Therefore,
    they contend the insurance funds should have been applied to the mortgage
    principal and interest earlier, and the amount of the final judgment of foreclosure
    should be reduced accordingly. The assignee counters that it acted in good faith
    and made generous efforts to propose a loan modification that was requested by
    the delinquent borrowers in an effort to enable them to keep their home. The
    assignee contends the mortgage interest during the three-year interval was
    appropriately charged until a final decision was made about the use of the
    insurance proceeds.
    Consistent with principles of fairness and reasonableness expressed in the
    Restatement (Third) of Property (Mortgages) (1997), we hold the mortgage
    lender (or its assignee) in such situations owes the borrower an implied covenant
    A-0829-19
    3
    of good faith and fair dealing in determining the disposition of the property or
    insurance funds.
    Once the lender is provided with adequate information to determine how
    the insurance funds should be used—such as the estimated costs of repairs and
    market values—the lender is obligated to clearly advise the borrower within a
    reasonable period of time as to whether the requested use of insurance monies
    for repairs is economically infeasible or will impair its security in the property.
    The time to notify the borrower of the disposition may be extended if the parties
    mutually undertake good-faith negotiations to modify the loan terms. If the
    lender unreasonably delays making a decision to approve the proposed use of
    the insurance funds for repairs, the court has the equitable power to abate the
    mortgage interest that has accumulated in the meantime. Additionally, the
    lender must place the insurance funds in an interest-bearing, segregated account
    until the proper use of those funds is resolved.
    Having announced these governing principles, we remand this matter to
    the trial court to develop the record more fully and evaluate whether the lender's
    assignee breached the implied covenant and, if so, to fashion an appropri ate
    remedy such as a reduction of the amount of the final judgment of foreclosure.
    A-0829-19
    4
    Lastly, we affirm the trial court's rejection of the borrowers' separate claim
    that they have a right to be reimbursed by the lender for costs they incurred in
    making immediate repairs to the residence after the storm.
    I.
    At the relevant times, defendants1 Patricia E. Daw and Richard C. Daw
    owned a house on Laurel Drive in Point Pleasant. They occupied the house as
    their primary residence.
    In February 2007 the Daws obtained a $350,000 mortgage loan from
    Commerce Bank, with a term of thirty years and a yearly interest rate of 6.125%.
    Through a series of assignments, the note and mortgage were eventually
    assigned to plaintiff 2 Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB, d/b/a Christiana
    Trust, Not Individually but as Trustee for Pretium Mortgage Acquisition Trust.
    Superstorm Sandy and Its Aftermath
    On October 29, 2012, Superstorm Sandy battered the Jersey Shore. As
    described by the Daws, the storm caused the ocean to break through the dunes
    1
    The two other defendants named in the foreclosure complaint have not
    participated in the litigation.
    2
    For ease of discussion, we generally will use the term "plaintiff" to refer to not
    only the named plaintiff, the mortgage assignee, but also its loan servicer,
    Rushmore Loan Management Services ("Rushmore"), unless a specific
    reference to Rushmore is warranted.
    A-0829-19
    5
    near their Point Pleasant home and rush into the bay. The residence was flooded
    with over two feet of water, destroying much of the first floor and requiring it
    to be gutted.
    Using their savings, the Daws quickly made a host of emergency repairs
    to the house in the wake of the storm. Among other things, they replaced
    flooring, doors, drywall, the boiler and water heater, several appliances, and
    various other items. Those immediate repairs cost the Daws more than $42,000.
    After the storm, in mid-November 2012, the parties entered into a loan
    modification agreement, which reduced the annual mortgage interest rate to
    4.625% and extended the maturity date from March 1, 2037 to November 1,
    2052.     At the time of the 2012 modification, the principal balance was
    $368,016.21.
    In the months following the storm, the Daws' income declined and they
    became unable to make their monthly mortgage payments.            Mr. Daw was
    collecting Social Security and temporary disability due to an injury that limited
    his ability to work as a carpenter. As the housing market crashed, Mrs. Daw
    stopped working as a realtor and she obtained part-time work as an office
    manager. She became eligible for Social Security in March 2015.
    By February 2014, the Daws defaulted on the mortgage.
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    6
    The $150,000 RREM Grant
    Meanwhile, the Daws attempted to muster the funds to complete the
    restoration of their house. They applied for a grant from the New Jersey
    Department of Community Affairs ("DCA") through its Reconstruction,
    Rehabilitation, Elevation and Mitigation ("RREM") program. 3
    In September 2014 the Daws were awarded a RREM grant in the amount
    of $150,000. The grant was conditional on the Daws elevating the house one
    foot above base flood elevation and residing in the premises long-term. Further,
    if the mortgage lender foreclosed on the premises, the State had the right to
    terminate the RREM grant and seek recoupment of the grant funds already paid
    to the homeowners.
    By signing the RREM Agreement, the Daws also "agree[d] to the scope
    of work (Total Development Cost . . .) as prepared by a RREM program
    manager." The Total Development Cost for their home was calculated by the
    3
    RREM was established after Superstorm Sandy to help New Jersey individuals
    and communities make repairs to their homes and small businesses. See Exec.
    Order No. 128 (Mar. 15, 2013), 45 N.J.R. 781(a) (Apr. 15, 2013). The United
    States Department of Housing and Urban Development, through the Community
    Development Block Grant program, provided funds to DCA, which allocated
    those funds to programs including RREM. See Dep't of Cmty. Affs., No.
    2.10.36, Reconstruction, Rehabilitation, Elevation, and Mitigation (RREM)
    Program Policies and Procedures.
    A-0829-19
    7
    agency to be $292,287.09. 4 In accepting the RREM money, the Daws promised
    to complete all the repairs detailed in the "Total Development Cost."
    The $150,000 Flood Insurance Proceeds
    Concurrently, the Daws filed a storm damage claim with their flood
    insurance company. The flood insurer approved the claim and in mid-May 2015
    issued two checks totaling $149,847.71. 5 Pursuant to the terms of the mortgage
    and the insurance policy, the funds were paid to the mortgage company's
    servicer, Rushmore.
    In a letter dated September 25, 2015, Rushmore notified the Daws it had
    received the insurance proceeds.        Rushmore requested the Daws provide
    information, including copies of the insurance adjuster's report, a contra ctor's
    bid or estimate, and the contractor's license. Upon receipt of these documents,
    they placed the funds in a restricted escrow account controlled by Rushmore. 6
    Although the appellate record appears incomplete as to what exactly was
    4
    We will round up this figure to $300,000 for ease of discussion.
    5
    We likewise round up this figure to $150,000 for ease of discussion.
    6
    Plaintiff's counsel represented to us during oral argument that this escrow
    account apparently was not interest-bearing, although the Daws' counsel
    believed that it was.
    A-0829-19
    8
    supplied, the Daws provided various documents to Rushmore, including
    documentation of the RREM grant.
    The Mortgage Provisions Concerning Insurance Proceeds
    The disposition of the insurance proceeds was governed by several
    provisions within the mortgage. These provisions apparently are common or
    standard terms that have been discussed in other mortgage cases.
    The key provision, Section 5, titled "Property Insurance," focuses upon
    whether repairs are "economically feasible" and whether using the insurance
    proceeds for repairs would "lessen the lender's security" in the premises.
    Section 5 reads in pertinent part as follows:
    In the event of loss, Borrower shall give prompt notice
    to the insurance carrier and Lender . . . any insurance
    proceeds, whether or not the underlying insurance was
    required by Lender, shall be applied to restoration or
    repair of the Property, if the restoration or repair is
    economically feasible and Lender's security is not
    lessened.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    Section 5 then addresses the lender's right to hold the insurance proceeds
    during the repair and restoration period, pending a "prompt" inspection of the
    repair work:
    During such repair and restoration period, Lender shall
    have the right to hold such insurance proceeds until
    A-0829-19
    9
    Lender has had an opportunity to inspect such Property
    to ensure the work has been completed to Lender's
    satisfaction, provided that such inspection shall be
    undertaken promptly.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    Section 5 goes on to address the alternative scenario in which repairs
    either would not be economically feasible or where using the insurance funds to
    perform them would lessen the lender's security:
    If the restoration or repair is not economically feasible
    or Lender's security would be lessened, the insurance
    proceeds shall be applied to the sums secured by this
    Security Instrument, whether or not then due, with the
    excess, if any, paid to Borrower. Such insurance
    proceeds shall be applied in the order provided for in
    Section 2.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    The above-referenced Section 2 of the mortgage contract, titled
    "Application of Payments or Proceeds," prescribes the order of payment for
    applying the insurance funds:
    Except as otherwise described in this Section 2, all
    payments accepted and applied by Lender shall be
    applied in the following order of priority: (a) interest
    due under the Note; (b) principal due under the Note;
    (c) amounts due under Section 3. Such payments shall
    be applied to each Periodic Payment in the order in
    which it became due. Any remaining amounts shall be
    applied first to late charges, second to any other
    A-0829-19
    10
    amounts due under this Security Instrument and then to
    reduce the principal balance of the Note.
    ....
    Any application of payments, insurance proceeds, or
    Miscellaneous Proceeds to principal due under the Note
    shall not extend or postpone the due date, or change the
    amount of, the Periodic Payments.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    The Foreclosure Litigation and Other Events
    As the loan remained in default, plaintiff filed a mortgage foreclosure
    complaint against the Daws in March 2016, which the Daws did not answer.
    Consequently, default judgment was entered against them in June 2016.
    Despite the plaintiff's filing of the foreclosure complaint, the Daws
    requested another loan modification to enable them to keep the house. Plaintiff
    denied the request because the Daws had insufficient income to be eligible.
    The Daws continued to urge plaintiff to release the funds, in hopes of
    using a combination of the $150,000 RREM grant and the $150,000 in flood
    insurance proceeds to repair the house. In addition to the previously supplied
    RREM documentation, the Daws provided plaintiff with an itemized list of
    repairs needed to complete the home's restoration and their estimated costs.
    A-0829-19
    11
    Concurrently, Rushmore obtained in October 2016 a broker's price
    opinion ("BPO"). The BPO stated that the house was "in average condition" and
    that "as-is," in the next 90 to 120 days, the probable sale price of the house was
    $440,000, compared to $450,000 if the proposed repairs were completed. The
    BPO estimated the "as-is" list price of the home was estimated as $459,900,
    compared to $469,900 if the property were repaired. The BPO stated it was
    "unknown" if the property needed emergency repairs, and only noted the
    property needed exterior repairs costing slightly over $6,000.
    In November 2016, the Daws filed opposition to plaintiff's first motion
    for entry of final judgment on the foreclosure, disputing the amount plaintiff
    alleged to be due on the mortgage.
    Plaintiff's December 12, 2016 Letter to the Daws ("Repairs Not
    Economically Feasible")
    While the motion for judgment was pending, the Daws received on
    December 12, 2016 an unsigned letter from Rushmore's Loan Mitigation
    Department. The letter advised the Daws that Rushmore had "determined" that
    using the insurance proceeds to repair the house was not a viable option. The
    letter read, in pertinent part:
    Based on one or more of the following facts, as stated
    below, Rushmore has determined that application of
    these insurance proceeds toward restoration or repair of
    A-0829-19
    12
    the real property is not economically feasible and/or
    would result in an impairment of its security interest in
    the subject real property:
    • [Y]ou have vacated the real property,[7] or
    • [Y]ou have made no alternative arrangements
    with Rushmore.
    The letter continued:
    . . . Rushmore may in it's [sic] sole discretion and
    without further notice to you, apply the insurance
    proceeds toward the outstanding loan balance on the
    above referenced loan, and either:
    • Conclude it's [sic] foreclosure process on the
    real property and apply the sale proceeds to
    further reduce the loan balance;
    • Write off the remainder of the loan balance
    and release its security interest in the real
    property; or
    • Retain a security        interest   in   the   real
    property.[8]
    [(Emphasis added).]
    [7]
    The basis for this perception is unclear, and plaintiff has not argued on appeal
    that the Daws had, in fact, vacated the premises.
    [8]
    The letter does not contain a signature or identify who at Rushmore issued or
    authorized it. The letter does provide a toll-free number to contact Rushmore
    with questions.
    A-0829-19
    13
    Despite the December 12 letter's declaration of economic infeasibility, the
    Daws continued to resist the entry of final judgment and the loss of their home.
    The January 30, 2017 Kops Certification ("Not Declared Economically
    Unfeasible")
    Plaintiff responded to the Daws' motion opposition with a certification
    dated January 30, 2017 from Jared Kops, Assistant Vice President of Rushmore.
    In that certification, Kops attempted to explain the sequence of events and justify
    his company's position about the mortgage and the repair issues.
    Oddly, in paragraph 16, Kops made the following sworn assertion:
    16. Plaintiff has not declared these repairs
    economically unfeasible. Plaintiff is entitled to retain
    the insurance proceeds held in escrow to apply to the
    repairs that are needed to the subject property, starting
    with its elevation, and Defendants are not entitled to a
    credit.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    Notably, the Kops certification omits any reference to his company's
    contradictory letter from the previous month.
    The Court's March 3, 2017 Ruling
    On March 3, 2017, the trial court issued an order granting in part and
    denying in part the Daws' objection to the entry of final judgment . The court
    found the Daws had adequately identified a discrepancy in the amount due on
    A-0829-19
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    the mortgage at time of foreclosure, because the $150,000 of insurance proceeds
    had not been deducted from the debt. Additionally, the judge noted that plaintiff
    had not approved the repairs, and therefore violated the contract by not carrying
    out either of the two specified options for the insurance proceeds. By granting
    in part the Daws' objection to the entry of final judgment, the court directed that,
    "if the . . . insurance proceeds are not applied to a repair, [] they're to be
    represented at [a foreclosure] sale as an available extra collateral or substitute
    collateral to go along with the sale of the property."
    Further Negotiations, But No Agreement
    Following the court's March 3, 2017 decision, the parties explored
    whether yet another loan modification agreement could be achieved. As those
    discussions were pursued, the court dismissed the foreclosure complaint in May
    2018 for lack of prosecution.
    The loan modification discussions in 2017 and 2018 ultimately were not
    fruitful. Although plaintiff was willing to extend the term of the mortgage,
    lower the interest rate, and make other concessions, it insisted on holding back
    $100,000 of the insurance proceeds as part of the deal. The Daws asserted the
    $100,000 holdback was unacceptable, as they needed the full $300,000 (the
    $150,000 RREM grant + the $150,000 insurance proceeds) to finance all the
    A-0829-19
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    necessary repairs and not lose eligibility for the grant. Despite this entreaty,
    plaintiff held to its position.
    Final Motion Practice
    Once the loan modification negotiations failed in the summer of 2018,
    plaintiff moved to reinstate the foreclosure complaint and for the entry of final
    judgment. The Daws opposed the motions, providing the court with a general
    contractor's slightly higher estimate of the costs of repairs, in the sum of
    $321,308. The Daws cross-moved for discovery and an evidential hearing to
    develop the record more fully. Their cross-motion also sought reimbursement
    of the $42,000 they had expended in emergency repairs following the
    Superstorm.
    The Daws argued that plaintiff had unfairly held the $150,000 in insurance
    proceeds without a disposition of them for over three years. They calculated
    that if, hypothetically, plaintiff had promptly applied the insurance proceeds t o
    the outstanding principal and interest when it received the funds in October
    2015, the final balance due on the mortgage loan would have been about $40,000
    less.
    A-0829-19
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    More Contradictory Correspondence from Plaintiff
    In the meantime, the Daws received more inconsistent communications
    from plaintiff. On January 7, 2019, Rushmore's Loss Draft Department sent the
    Daws an unsigned letter about beginning the repair process, which appeared to
    clash with the pending motion for final judgment and how events had been
    actually unfolding. The letter stated:
    As Rushmore Loan Management Services has a
    security [interest] in your property, we want to ensure
    repairs to your property are completed in a timely
    manner. We are here to work with you to facilitate the
    repair process. As the property owner, it is your
    responsibility to keep us informed as to the status of
    those repairs.
    Please contact us today at [tel. number omitted] to
    update us on the status of your repairs, to request an
    inspection if you are ready, or to discuss what is needed
    to release funds for repairs.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    On March 7, 2019, Rushmore sent the Daws another unsigned letter,
    identical to the January 7 letter, seeking to facilitate the repairs of the premises
    and the release of the necessary funds.
    Then, on March 26, 2019, Rushmore sent a letter to the Daws "formally
    retract[ing]" the March 7 letter about beginning the repair process, asserting it
    was sent "in error":
    A-0829-19
    17
    This letter was sent in error and is hereby formally
    retracted. The Loss Draft Department was not aware
    that the repairs to the subject property exceeded
    $321,000.00, an amount that is more than double that
    being held by Rushmore Loan Management Services,
    and that a Motion for Final Judgment was pending in
    foreclosure action under docket F-7529-16 applying the
    funds as a credit against Final Judgment pursuant to
    Court Order.9
    [(Emphasis added).]
    This correspondence did not reference the January 7 letter, which presumably
    was also sent "in error."
    The Trial Court's Denial of the Daws' Claims for Reduction
    of the Final Judgment
    After hearing oral argument, the trial court entered final judgment on
    September 9, 2019 in the full amount of $360,168.31 sought by plaintiff. The
    final judgment applied the $150,000 in insurance proceeds to reduce the
    principal debt and interest, but not retroactive to the date when those proceeds
    had been received by plaintiff over three years earlier.
    9
    Plaintiff's brief on appeal and its submissions to the trial court contained in the
    appendix do not explain why or how this error occurred.
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    18
    In its oral opinion, the court rejected the Daws' arguments concerning
    both: (1) the disposition of the insurance proceeds; and (2) their claim for
    reimbursement for the $42,000 in emergency repairs.
    As to the first issue, the court found the mortgage contract did not allow
    insurance proceeds to be applied to reduce the outstanding principal amount due
    on the loan during the period of time when the Daws were in default. Nor had
    the Daws sufficiently proven an equitable basis for such relief. The court
    pointed out that the Daws' long-standing expressed desire "to restore the
    property and to try to remain living there" was at odds with their current
    argument that the insurance funds should have been used to reduce the principal
    and interest at a much earlier date.
    The court rejected the Daws' contention that plaintiff had acted unfairly.
    In this regard, it commented that plaintiff had taken "extraordinary steps" by
    offering a loan modification that might have enabled the Daws to remain at the
    property. The court was not troubled by plaintiff's demand in negotiations that
    $100,000 of the $150,000 in insurance proceeds be used to reduce the principal,
    as part of the overall terms of the loan modification.
    As to the Daws' second claim, the court discerned no legal or equitable
    basis to justify compelling plaintiff to reimburse them for performing emergency
    A-0829-19
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    repairs of the property after the storm. The court found "nothing in the mortgage
    documents" authorized such reimbursement. In addition, the court noted the
    restorative post-storm improvements made by the Daws could potentially
    increase the price that the property might garner at a future sheriff's sale, that,
    in turn, would either increase any net equity in the property or reduce the amount
    owed in a final judgment.
    The Appeal
    This appeal by the Daws ensued. They continue their theme that plaintiff
    treated them unfairly.      The Daws neither disclaim their liability for the
    delinquent debt, nor do they seek to vacate the foreclosure itself. Instead, they
    argue the final judgment must be reduced to take into account the substantial
    monetary adjustments for which they have advocated and which the trial court
    rejected.
    Plaintiff opposes the appeal on both procedural and substantive grounds.
    Procedurally, it argues the Daws' objections to the amount of the final judgment
    are beyond the scope of challenges permitted under Rule 4:64-1(d)(3) because
    they go beyond the correctness of the amount due on the mortgage.10
    10
    We are satisfied that the Daws' arguments contesting the correctness of the
    judgment calculations, and their claims for offset relating to the accrued interest
    A-0829-19
    20
    Substantively, plaintiff maintains that the trial court correctly denied the Daws
    any reduction in the amount of the judgment.
    II.
    A.
    We first address the Daws' arguments concerning the disposition of the
    insurance proceeds and the delay of over three years in applying them to reduce
    the mortgage principal and interest. In essence (albeit without labeling it as
    such), they assert a mortgage lender owes an implied covenant of good faith and
    fair dealing to the borrower when deciding how to apply such insurance
    proceeds. We adopt that legal premise.
    It is well settled that "an implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing"
    inheres in "every contract in New Jersey." Sons of Thunder, Inc. v. Borden,
    Inc., 
    148 N.J. 396
    , 420 (1997); see also Restatement (Second) of Contracts §
    205 (Am. Law Inst. 1981) ("Every contract imposes upon each party a duty of
    good faith and fair dealing in its performance and its enforcement."). The
    implied covenant signifies that "neither party shall do anything which will have
    the effect of destroying or injuring the right of the other party to receive the
    and emergency repairs, are sufficiently germane and not procedurally barred
    under Rule 4:64-1(d)(3). Accordingly, we will devote our analysis to the
    substantive issues.
    A-0829-19
    21
    fruits of the contract." Sons of Thunder, Inc., 
    148 N.J. at 420
     (quoting Palisades
    Props., Inc. v. Brunetti, 
    44 N.J. 117
    , 130 (1965)). A party breaches the implied
    covenant when it exercises its contractual functions "arbitrarily, unreasonably,
    or capriciously" and with an "improper motive." Wilson v. Amerada Hess Corp.,
    
    168 N.J. 236
    , 251 (2001). “Without bad motive or intention, discretionary
    decisions that happen to result in economic disadvantage to the other party are
    of no legal significance.” 
    Ibid.
    These general principles sensibly extend to how a mortgage lender or its
    assignee exercises its control over insurance proceeds received after a
    borrower's home has been damaged by a storm. The borrower is typically
    required under the mortgage contract, as in this case, to obtain property
    insurance and pay the premiums for that coverage. The insurance protects both
    the lender's security in the premises as well as the borrower's interests as a
    homeowner. The contract also typically specifies, as here, that if the insurer
    approves a borrower's claim for damage to the residence, the proceeds are to be
    held by the mortgage company. The mortgage company then decides if the
    insurance funds are to be used to repair the premises or instead used to pay down
    the mortgage debt. See Restatement (Third) of Property (Mortgages) ("The
    Third Restatement") §§ 4.7 to 4.8 (1997).
    A-0829-19
    22
    As we have already described, Section 5 of the mortgage contract in this
    case identifies two considerations that govern the lender's decision. If the lender
    concludes that repairs are (1) "economically feasible" and (2) will not lessen its
    security in the premises, then it must apply the insurance proceeds to fund those
    repairs. If, conversely, repairs are not economically feasible or performing them
    will diminish the lender's security, then the insurance funds should be applied
    to pay down the mortgage principal and interest. The decision is made by the
    lender, not by the homeowner. Yet, in making that critical decision, the lender
    cannot breach the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing it owes to the
    borrower.
    Section 5 does not delineate any factors to guide the lender's assessment
    of economic feasibility. The mortgage contract does not define the term. Even
    so, logic and common sense suggest that the economic feasibility and security
    impairment analyses must turn upon an objective consideration of facts,
    including but not limited to: (1) the estimated cost of repairs; (2) the
    reasonableness of the prices and quantities used in the estimate; (3) the market
    value of the premises in its present state before repairs are performed; (4) the
    projected increase, if any, in market value after such repairs are made; (5) the
    A-0829-19
    23
    length of time it will take to complete repairs; and (6) the existence and extent
    of any default by the borrowers and whether it was caused by the storm event .
    The old adage, "Don't throw good money after bad," pertains. In some
    instances, it will be unreasonably expensive for certain repairs to be made with
    the insurance money, even if contrary to what the homeowner desires.11
    The mortgage contract does not specify in Section 5 a time limit for the
    lender to make the decision about how to use the insurance funds. Obviously,
    the lender can't be required to decide whether to authorize repairs until it has
    been provided with the relevant information, such as market values and
    estimated repair costs.   Upon receiving that data, a lender must make the
    decision within a reasonable time frame and not leave the homeowner in the
    dark. Significantly, Section 5 does instruct that if repairs are performed, the
    lender must inspect them "promptly." That language bespeaks a time imperative
    that logically applies to the whole decisional process.
    11
    In this regard, comment b to the Third Restatement § 4.7 expresses an
    objective test. The comment describes the impairment of a mortgage company's
    security interest in property as being "the amount needed to return the
    mortgagee's loan-to-value ratio to the scheduled level—that is, the level that
    would have existed if all debt payments had been made when due and the real
    estate's original value had remained constant." Ibid.
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    Apart from these obligations of objectivity and promptness, the implied
    covenant of good faith and fair dealing also connotes that the lender will not act
    arbitrarily or capriciously, or purposely deprive the borrower of fair use of the
    insurance funds.
    For example, if it were shown that the lender deliberately rejected a
    reasonable repair proposal as a means to reap for itself greater accrued interest,
    or as a scheme to wipe out a borrower's equity in the premises, such bad -faith
    conduct might justify a remedy by a court of equity. On the other hand, a lender
    should be free to protect its security and other business interests within th e zone
    of fair competition.
    We would expect and hope that instances of abuse will be rare. But the
    implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing can provide a mechanism to
    prevent injustice in such instances. In particular, a court of equity has the power
    to abate the accrued mortgage interest if the borrower proves the lender or its
    agent acted in bad faith with respect to the disposition of the insurance proceeds.
    Another element of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing in
    this context is transparency and clear communication with the homeowners. We
    recognize the financial and emotional impact the uncertainty over how the
    insurance funds will be used is likely to have on many homeowners.
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    Accordingly, lenders and their assignees must convey their decisions and
    reasons concerning the disposition of insurance proceeds to homeowners with
    clarity and consistency.
    Our application of the implied covenant in this setting comports with
    principles expressed in the Third Restatement as well as case law in a few courts
    that have pondered the subject.
    Section 4.7(b) of the Third Restatement explains that:
    Unless the mortgage effectively provides the contrary,
    if restoration of the loss or damage [of the mortgaged
    real estate] is reasonably feasible within the remaining
    term of the mortgage with the funds received by the
    mortgagee, together with any additional funds made
    available by the mortgagor, and if after restoration the
    real estate's value will equal or exceed its value at the
    time the mortgage was made, the mortgagee holds the
    funds received subject to a duty to apply them, at the
    mortgagor's request and upon reasonable conditions,
    toward restoration.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    This passage importantly reflects that the lender has a "duty" to act appropriately
    in its handling of the insurance proceeds, and that conditions it may impose on
    the use of the funds for repairs must be "reasonable." Ibid.
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    Comment a to Section 4.7 discusses the lender's interests in deciding
    whether the insurance proceeds will be used for repairs or to pay down the
    mortgage balance:
    Such funds are viewed as substitute collateral, and the
    mortgagee's claim on them is sometimes described as
    an “equitable lien.” This means simply that the
    mortgagee is entitled to recover the funds to the extent
    necessary to compensate for the impairment of security
    that results from the loss or damage, with a maximum
    recovery equal to the balance owing on the mortgage
    debt. This result is required to avoid unfairness to the
    mortgagee through devaluation of the real estate as a
    consequence of the loss or damage.
    [Third Restatement § 4.7 cmt. a (1997) (Emphasis
    added).]
    This comment appropriately recognizes the lender's own interests in the proper
    use of the insurance proceeds. Even so, the protection of those interests is to be
    guided by objective considerations of economic feasibility and lender security.
    Comment d to Section 4.7 explains the policy underlying the economic
    feasibility condition in the mortgage contract and the "temptation" of lenders to
    take undue advantage of a borrower who may be in a vulnerable situation:
    The principle of this [] is that the mortgagee must
    cooperate with the mortgagor in restoration of the real
    estate if it is feasible to do so. It is common for real
    estate lenders to refuse such cooperation, particularly
    when market interest rates are higher than the rate on
    the mortgage loan in question. In this context, lenders
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    27
    are often tempted to seize upon the casualty loss or
    governmental taking as a basis for compelling a
    prepayment of the loan. Such a position may be
    extremely harsh from the borrower's viewpoint. Often
    the borrower cannot continue to occupy the real estate
    without first restoring the damage; hence, if the lender
    retains the funds paid in compensation for the damage,
    the borrower will have to find alternative financing for
    the property's restoration, either by way of a junior
    mortgage loan or by refinancing of the existing
    mortgage. Either of these alternatives will often result
    in a much higher interest cost to the borrower than use
    of the funds held by the lender. If restoration is feasible
    and involves no impairment of the lender's security, it
    is unreasonable for the lender to refuse to cooperate.
    [Third Restatement § 4.7 cmt. d (1997) (Emphasis
    added).]
    The Restatement therefore stresses the importance of the lender acting
    "reasonably" and "cooperatively" if repairs are feasible. This comment also
    underscores a concern about what may be "extremely harsh" consequences for
    the borrower whose home has been damaged. In that vein, we note the New
    Jersey Legislature's declaration in the foreclosure context of "the public policy
    of this State that homeowners should be given every opportunity to pay their
    home mortgages, and thus keep their homes." N.J.S.A. 2A:50-54.
    Like the drafters of the Third Restatement, we similarly endorse principles
    that promote fairness and reasonableness, and which guard against potential
    lender abuse. To advance these objectives, the implied covenant of good faith
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    and fair dealing may be invoked by a borrower in appropriate circumstances to
    obtain redress.
    Defendants cited to the trial court, and again on this appeal, two
    unpublished opinions from federal district courts of other jurisdictions, which
    have recognized similar principles in this setting, one of which expressly adopts
    the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Although we refrain from
    citing those unpublished opinions in accordance with Rule 1:36-3, we note that
    plaintiff has not cited any contrary cases—published or unpublished—that
    renounce them.
    We do find instructive a published appellate opinion from the New York
    courts on this subject. In Federal National Mortgage Association v. Azoulay,
    
    93 N.Y.S.3d 423
    , 424 (App. Div. 2019), homeowner Azoulay executed a
    mortgage in 1998. In June 2007, the property was damaged by a fire, and
    Azoulay stopped making his mortgage payments a month later. 
    Ibid.
     The
    insurance company issued two checks which were placed in a restricted escrow
    account and Azoulay obtained estimates of how much the repairs would cost.
    
    Ibid.
     By 2010, the repairs had not been completed, and the City of New York
    demolished the property. 
    Ibid.
     In July 2008, Fannie Mae filed for foreclosure,
    and the foreclosure judgment was entered in March 2014. 
    Ibid.
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    The appellate court in Azoulay agreed with the lender's determination that
    it was "not economically feasible to make the repairs or restoration, as the
    estimated costs of repair ranged from approximately 2.5 to 5 times the amount
    of the insurance proceeds, and the structure on the property was ultimately
    demolished." 
    Id. at 425
    . Because of this, the court held that the insurance
    proceeds should "be applied to [Azoulay's] mortgage debt at or around the time
    of default." 
    Ibid.
     This remedy resulted in a substantial seven-year reduction of
    interest, because Azoulay stopped making his mortgage payments right after the
    fire, in July 2007, and foreclosure did not ultimately occur until seven years
    later, in 2014. 
    Ibid.
    Although we concur with the New York court's provision of retroactive
    interest relief to Azoulay, we do not believe that the borrower's date of default
    is necessarily the proper date to use for determining when insurance proceeds
    should be applied to the mortgage balance. We instead hold that if repairs are
    objectively shown to be economically infeasible or would impair the lender's
    security, then the insurance proceeds must be applied promptly to the mortgage
    balance, unless otherwise agreed upon by the parties. "Promptly" in this context
    could mean at the end of the next billing cycle, or some other reasonable time
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    frame, consistent with the overall implied covenant of good faith and fair
    dealing.
    In addition, a mutual agreement of the parties to engage in loan
    modification negotiations should justify an extension of the lender's deadline to
    apply the insurance funds being held in escrow. If those discussions fail to
    produce an agreement, then the lender should act promptly.
    As a final general point, it seems fair and appropriate for the insurance
    funds to be placed in an interest-bearing account until their disposition is finally
    determined.    See R. 4:57-2(a) (analogously prescribing that escrow funds
    deposited in court shall be placed in an interest-bearing account, unless
    otherwise ordered). Such opportunity for the funds to grow, even at a modest
    interest rate, is preferable to the funds remaining dormant, because if the funds
    appreciate, that growth can be applied to either the resources available to finance
    repairs or to pay down the debt.
    B.
    Plaintiff does not argue against the recognition of an implied covenant of
    good faith and fair dealing in this insurance proceeds context . Instead, plaintiff
    contends that the record in this case cannot be construed to support a theory that
    it breached any such covenant here.
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    31
    We appreciate the fact that plaintiff engaged in loan modification
    discussions with the Daws in 2018 after holding the insurance proceeds for
    several years, and that plaintiff reportedly offered the Daws substantial
    concessions in its proposal(s). On the other hand, it is not self-evident—either
    way—whether plaintiff's demand for the $100,000 holdback was fair, or whether
    it was patently unrealistic to believe that the Daws could do the necessary repairs
    to salvage their home without those funds and without violating the conditions
    of the RREM grant. The trial court should expressly consider whether the
    holdback demand was, as the Third Restatement discusses, an "unreasonable"
    condition. See Third Restatement § 4.7(b).
    In addition, the repeated inconsistencies reflected in plaintiff's zig-zag
    communications we have quoted from above, and which were neither analyzed
    nor mentioned in the trial court's oral opinions, raise legitimate concerns for
    further exploration. The dissonance between the December 2016 letter declaring
    that repairs are not economically feasible, and Kops' contrary assertion in his
    certification a month later, has yet to be adequately reconciled. Similarly, the
    series of letters in January and March of 2019 from plaintiff encouraging the
    Daws to undertake repairs and then the sudden repudiation of that
    correspondence is also concerning, as an arguable pattern of mishandling and
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    32
    miscommunication within the company. On remand, the trial court should
    review with a fuller record whether these were excusable bureaucratic lapses or
    instead persuasive evidence of a lack of fair dealing.
    The trial court should also review whether the economic feasibility
    analysis ever occurred before the loan modification negotiations commenced,
    and, if it did, whether it was sufficient. The thoroughness and timeliness of the
    analysis should be examined by the court to determine if it comported with the
    implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
    Additionally, the remand should explore whether or how the October 2016
    BPO obtained by Rushmore bears upon the lender’s economic feasibility
    analysis. In particular, the parties and the court should address the reliability of
    the BPO’s opinion that the proposed repairs would only have marginally
    increased the property’s “as-is” market value. The remand should also address
    whether that opinion should be treated as dispositive, given the ensuing passage
    of time and changes in the real estate market occurring after the Jersey Shore
    area recovered from the Superstorm. We also cannot tell from the present record
    whether plaintiff actually relied upon the BPO in whatever economic feasibility
    analysis it conducted before ultimately advising the Daws definitively that it
    would not approve the use of the insurance proceeds for repairs .
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    We are likewise mindful that the Daws themselves changed their minds at
    the end of the process and asked for the insurance funds to be applied
    retroactively to the mortgage principal and interest—after years of demanding
    to use those funds for repairs. This about-face by the borrowers, perhaps
    induced by plaintiff's insistence on retaining the $100,000, likewise must be
    factored into an overall assessment of the comparative equity between the
    parties within the totality of circumstances.
    Rather than attempting on an incomplete record to apply the new standards
    we have announced today, we elect to remand the issue of the disposition of the
    insurance funds to the trial court. Further discovery must be allowed at the
    court's discretion to delve into what exactly occurred behind the scenes of the
    decision-making process, including but not limited to plaintiff's assessment of
    the economic feasibility of repairs and its security in the premises.
    At the close of that discovery, the trial court shall conduct an evidentiary
    hearing to make credibility assessments and more specific fact-finding,
    consistent with the principles expressed in this opinion.
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    III.
    We need not say much about the Daws' separate claim for reimbursement
    of the money they spent on emergency repairs immediately after the Superstorm.
    In brief, we agree with the trial court that the Daws have not provided a sound
    contractual, legal, or equitable basis to warrant being paid those sums by their
    mortgage lender. A mortgagor's duty to avoid waste does not carry with it a
    right to be paid for expenses incurred in restoring or preserving the property
    damaged by natural causes. See Third Restatement § 4.6 (noting the borrower's
    duty to avoid waste but not prescribing reimbursement by the lender).
    In addition, we reject the Daws' assertions of their right to reimbursement
    under the doctrines of quantum meruit and unjust enrichment because their
    rights were already dealt with in the mortgage contract, see Kas Oriental Rugs,
    Inc. v. Ellman, 
    394 N.J. Super. 278
    , 286 (App. Div. 2007) (quoting Weichert
    Co. Realtors v. Ryan, 
    128 N.J. 427
    , 437 (1992)), and also because, as the trial
    court aptly noted, the emergency repairs they performed may have a positive
    impact on the sale price at an auction, which is potentially beneficial to the
    borrowers.
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    35
    All other points raised on appeal, insofar as we have not discussed them,
    lack sufficient merit to warrant comment. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded in part. We do not retain
    jurisdiction.
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