Monge v. Rojas (In Re Monge) , 826 F.3d 250 ( 2016 )


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  •     Case: 15-50180    Document: 00513547583     Page: 1   Date Filed: 06/14/2016
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    No. 15-50180                        June 14, 2016
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    In the Matter of: JOE JESSE MONGE; ROSANA ELENA MONGE,
    Debtors.
    JOE JESSE MONGE; ROSANA ELENA MONGE,
    Appellants,
    versus
    ALICIA ROJAS; FRANCISCO JAVIER JAYME,
    Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Texas
    Before SMITH, BARKSDALE, and COSTA, Circuit Judges.
    JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:
    Joe and Rosana Monge appeal the district court’s judgment that adopted
    in part the bankruptcy court’s proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.
    Finding no error, we affirm.
    This adversary matter arises out of the Monges’ Chapter 11 bankruptcy
    Case: 15-50180      Document: 00513547583        Page: 2     Date Filed: 06/14/2016
    No. 15-50180
    proceeding. 1 Aside from defunct corporations, the remaining defendants are
    Alicia Rojas and her husband, Francisco Jayme. Rojas is an attorney and
    licensed mortgage broker who, from late 2005 through 2008, was a mortgage
    broker for the Monges. Jayme is a licensed real estate agent who, during the
    same period, served as a real estate agent for the Monges. The adversary pro-
    ceeding concerns mainly the sale and leasing of a house in New Mexico known
    as the Thoroughbred Property.
    Jayme originally obtained title to the Thoroughbred Property in 2002
    through a general warranty deed filed in Dona Ana County, New Mexico.
    Almost immediately, however, he went into arrears on the property. To avoid
    foreclosure, he filed a series of four Chapter 13 bankruptcy cases in New Mex-
    ico and Texas. Each was dismissed, and Jayme’s mortgage lender, Citibank,
    foreclosed on November 1, 2005. A New Mexico state court approved the fore-
    closure sale on January 9, 2006, and a Special Master’s deed confirming the
    foreclosure (effective to November 1, 2005) was filed and recorded on Janu-
    ary 19, 2006. That deed noted that Jayme retained a one-month statutory
    right to redeem the foreclosed property.
    Sometime in late 2005, the Monges became acquainted with Rojas and
    Jayme and, in December 2005, executed a purchase agreement to buy the
    Thoroughbred Property from Rojas and Jayme for $775,000. To finance the
    purchase, the Monges obtained from America’s Wholesale Lender a mortgage
    loan for $697,000 that was arranged by Rojas as the mortgage broker. The
    closing took place on February 3, 2006. A general warranty deed conveying
    the property from Jayme to the Monges, along with the Thoroughbred mort-
    gage, was first recorded in Dona Ana County on February 6, 2006.
    1  We base our summary of the facts on the findings adopted by the district court and
    not challenged on appeal.
    2
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    Jayme used the proceeds to redeem the Thoroughbred Property from
    Citibank on February 8, 2006, just one day before his statutory right of re-
    demption was set to expire. It was not until June 27, 2006, however, that
    Citibank executed a quitclaim deed conveying the property back from Citibank
    to Jayme. The quitclaim deed was recorded in Dona Ana County on July 28,
    2006. That same day, shortly after the quitclaim deed was recorded, the gen-
    eral warranty deed from Jayme to the Monges and the Thoroughbred mortgage
    originally recorded on February 6, 2006, were re-recorded.
    In theory, the Thoroughbred Property was being sold to the Monges so
    that Rojas and Jayme could obtain an estimated $300,000 in equity from the
    sale. Rojas and Jayme planned to use that equity to purchase and develop the
    Country Cove Subdivision, a new real estate venture between them and the
    Monges. The anticipated equity, however, never materialized, because Jayme
    ended up receiving zero dollars in cash from the sale. Partially as a result, the
    Country Cove venture was a failure.
    On the same day as the closing of the sale of the Thoroughbred Property
    to the Monges, i.e., on February 3, 2006, Rojas signed a residential lease with
    an option to purchase the Thoroughbred Property. Under the terms of the
    agreement, Rojas would lease the property from the Monges for one year with
    a one-year option to purchase it. The term of the lease was from February 2,
    2006, through January 31, 2007, with the rent equal to the amount of the
    Monges’ monthly mortgage payment to America’s Wholesale Lender. Rojas
    and Jayme, however, were unable to make most of the rental payments and
    have paid no rent since April 2008, despite continuing to live on the property.
    Rojas and Jayme never exercised the option to repurchase the Thoroughbred
    Property; the option expired in January 2007.
    Because of Rojas and Jayme’s failure to pay rent, the Monges eventually
    3
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    defaulted. To avert foreclosure on the Thoroughbred Property, they filed for
    bankruptcy in 2009. They initiated the instant adversary proceeding against
    Rojas and Jayme in June 2010. After a bench trial, the bankruptcy court on
    September 5, 2014, submitted the proposed findings and conclusions (178
    pages) to the district court for de novo review. On September 18, the Monges
    timely filed objections. Rojas and Jayme did not respond. On January 27,
    2015, the district court overruled all of the objections, adopted the proposed
    findings in part, and entered a final judgment from which the Monges appeal.
    I.
    We review “the decision of a district court, sitting as an appellate court,
    by applying the same standards of review to the bankruptcy court’s findings of
    fact and conclusions of law as applied by the district court.” 2 Here, however,
    the bankruptcy court submitted only proposed findings of fact and conclusions
    of law to the district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(c)(1), so the district
    court did not sit as an appellate court. 3 Unlike the district court, then, this
    court does not review the bankruptcy court’s proposed findings of fact and
    conclusions of law de novo but, instead, we review the district court’s findings
    of fact for clear error and its conclusions of law de novo. 4
    II.
    The Monges urge that the district court should have sustained their
    2 First Nat’l Bank v. Crescent Elec. Supply Co. (In re Renaissance Hosp. Grand Prairie
    Inc.), 
    713 F.3d 285
    , 294 (5th Cir. 2013) (quoting In re Gerhardt, 
    348 F.3d 89
    , 91 (5th Cir.
    2003)).
    3 See 28 U.S.C. § 157(c)(1) (requiring district court to review bankruptcy court’s pro-
    posed findings of fact and conclusions of law de novo).
    4Cf. Tasch, Inc. v. Diamond Offshore Drilling, Inc. (In re Tasch, Inc.), No. 01-31363,
    
    2002 WL 1973464
    , at *2 (5th Cir. July 31, 2002) (reviewing, for clear error, findings of fact
    proposed by the bankruptcy court and adopted by the district court).
    4
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    No. 15-50180
    objections to the proposed findings because the objections were unopposed.
    Under Rule 9033(b) of the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, each party
    has fourteen days to file objections to the bankruptcy court’s proposed findings
    of fact and conclusions of law and another fourteen days to respond to objec-
    tions submitted by other parties. The Monges filed their objections within the
    time period, but Rojas and Jayme neither filed objections nor responded to the
    Monges’ objections. For that reason, the Monges argue, Rojas and Jayme
    waived their right to appeal the proposed findings, and the district court should
    have sustained all of the Monges’ objections.
    We disagree. In accordance with 28 U.S.C. § 157, Rule 9033(d) explicitly
    instructs the district court to “make a de novo review upon the record or, after
    additional evidence, of any portion of the bankruptcy judge’s findings of fact or
    conclusions of law to which specific written objection has been made in accord-
    ance with this rule” and authorizes the district court to “accept, reject, or
    modify the proposed findings of fact or conclusions of law.” No statute or rule
    prohibits the district court from considering or ruling on the merits of an un-
    opposed objection just because it is unopposed. By failing to file objections or
    to respond to the Monges’ objections, Rojas and Jayme have waived their right
    to appeal the proposed findings and to present any legal issues in opposition to
    them. That waiver, however, has no impact on the district court’s authority to
    consider the merits of the objections. The district court need not sustain the
    Monges’ objections merely because they are unopposed; it may overrule the
    objections if they lack merit, as the district court indeed found.
    III.
    The district court overruled the Monges’ objection to the bankruptcy
    court’s proposed finding that they must have realized there was no equity in
    the Thoroughbred Property. Of the multiple Forms HUD-1 in the record,
    5
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    several show Rojas and Jayme as receiving some equity in the property. At
    least one HUD-1 from the day of the closing, however, shows them as receiving
    no cash from the sale. Under these circumstances, we cannot say that the dis-
    trict court clearly erred in concluding that the Monges knew or should have
    known, by the closing date, that Rojas and Jayme would receive no equity in
    the Thoroughbred Property. Consequently, we affirm the district court’s adop-
    tion of the bankruptcy court’s finding.
    IV.
    The Monges maintain that the district court erred in overruling their
    objection to the bankruptcy court’s proposed finding that Rojas and Jayme did
    not misrepresent to the Monges that Rojas and Jayme expected to make their
    rental payments solely from the equity received through the sale of the Thor-
    oughbred Property. The bankruptcy court, however, never proposed such a
    finding, the district court never adopted such a finding, the Monges never
    raised this issue in the district court, and the Monges do not adequately brief
    it on appeal. The Monges’ argument is thus both meritless and waived. See
    In re Bradley, 
    501 F.3d 421
    , 433 (5th Cir. 2007).
    V.
    To qualify for financing to purchase the Thoroughbred Property and a
    separate parcel of real estate, Rojas helped the Monges complete loan applica-
    tions, to each of which were attached fictitious leases. The bankruptcy court
    declined to propose, and the district court refused to make, a finding as to
    whether the Monges signed the fictitious leases. The Monges assert that this
    was error. We disagree, because the evidence was ambiguous, and the Monges
    failed to introduce expert testimony that their signatures were forged.
    6
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    VI.
    In addition to maintaining that the district court should have found that
    the Monges did not sign the fictitious leases, the Monges claim that the district
    court erred in overruling their objection to the bankruptcy court’s proposed
    finding that it could not be determined whether Rojas and Jayme created the
    fictitious leases. The Monges, however, never raised this issue in their objec-
    tions to the proposed findings, and the district court never considered the issue.
    Consequently, it has been waived. See 
    id. at 433.
    VII.
    The district court overruled the Monges’ objection to the bankruptcy
    court’s proposed conclusion that they were not entitled to punitive damages
    based on violation of the automatic stay. In so doing, it committed no error.
    The court may award punitive damages for willful violation of an auto-
    matic stay “in appropriate circumstances,” 11 U.S.C. § 362(k)(1), which we
    have held requires “egregious conduct.”       Young v. Repine (In re Repine),
    
    536 F.3d 512
    , 521 (5th Cir. 2008). In Young, we found the violator’s conduct
    egregious because she violated a stay despite repeated warnings and bank-
    ruptcy court admonishments not to do so. 
    Id. According to
    the district court,
    Rojas and Jayme’s refusal to relinquish possession of the Thoroughbred Prop-
    erty was not egregious, because there was no evidence that the Monges ever
    notified Rojas and Jayme that their conduct violated the automatic stay as dis-
    tinguished from the lease agreement. We agree, both for this reason and be-
    cause Rojas and Jayme believed that they had the right to possess the Thor-
    oughbred Property. See Proposed Findings, Monge v. Rojas, No. 10-03019-hcm,
    at 83 (Bankr. W.D. Tex. Sept. 5, 2014).
    The Monges also assert that Rojas and Jayme willfully violated the auto-
    matic stay by attempting to “sell” the property to themselves in 2012. Like the
    7
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    district court, we find the evidence for this alleged attempted fraudulent sale
    of the Thoroughbred Property to be ambiguous. For that reason and in the
    absence of any proposed finding on the matter by the bankruptcy court, we
    refuse to award punitive damages on this basis.
    Finally, the Monges argue that they are entitled to punitive damages for
    breach of contract. Under New Mexico law, punitive damages are available for
    breach of contract where there is “evidence of . . . a culpable mental state or
    other form of overreaching, malicious, or wanton conduct.” Constr. Contracting
    & Mgmt., Inc. v. McConnell, 
    815 P.2d 1161
    , 1165 (N.M. 1991). The district
    court concluded that the Monges had failed to meet their burden of proving a
    culpable mental state. We agree. It was foolish or at least overly optimistic of
    Rojas and Jayme to think that they could make the higher rental payments to
    the Monges under the lease when they could not even make the far lower
    monthly mortgage payments to Citibank. But foolishness or over-optimism is
    not a culpable mental state, and mere breach of a contract, without more, is
    not “overreaching, malicious, or wanton conduct.” 
    Id. VIII. To
    succeed on a claim for fraud under New Mexico law, the Monges must
    prove three elements: (1) “a misrepresentation of a fact,” (2) “known to be
    untrue by the maker,” and (3) “made with an intent to deceive and to induce
    the other party to act upon it with the other party relying upon it to his injury
    or detriment.” Unser v. Unser, 
    526 P.2d 790
    , 795–96 (N.M. 1974). The district
    court determined that two of those three elements were not satisfied. There
    may not “necessarily” have been a misrepresentation of a fact, because Jayme
    possessed a statutory right of redemption, and “even if [Rojas and Jayme] did
    make a false statement, there is no indication that their intent was to deceive.”
    Order, Monge v. Rojas, No. EP-14-CV-385-PRM, at 25 (W.D. Tex. Jan. 27,
    8
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    2015). On appeal, the Monges advance numerous arguments as to why there
    was in fact a misrepresentation. We decline to consider these arguments, how-
    ever, because the district court’s finding that Rojas and Jayme did not intend
    to deceive is not clearly erroneous and, without proof of this element, the
    Monges are not entitled to recover for fraud. 5
    IX.
    The Monges maintain that the district court erred in overruling their
    objection to the bankruptcy court’s proposed conclusion that Jayme did not
    commit fraud by non-disclosure in the sale and conveyance of the Thorough-
    bred Property. Under New Mexico law, a claim of fraud by non-disclosure
    requires a showing that a party to a transaction knew of material facts, had a
    duty to disclose those material facts, and remained silent. Krupiak v. Payton,
    
    561 P.2d 1345
    , 1346 (N.M. 1977). A duty to disclose may arise from knowledge
    that the other party to a transaction is “acting under a mistaken belief” or from
    the defendant’s possession of “superior knowledge that is not within the reach
    of the other party or could not have been discovered by the exercise of reason-
    able diligence.” 
    Id. The Monges
    contend that Rojas and Jayme had a duty to
    disclose to them the fact that the Thoroughbred Property was in foreclosure
    and that Jayme had filed for bankruptcy. The district court disagreed because
    the Monges could have discovered those facts through a title search and exam-
    ination of public records.
    We agree with the district court that there was no duty to disclose and
    5  The Monges never objected to the bankruptcy court’s proposed conclusions that they
    did not rely upon Jayme’s (mis)representations concerning good title and that even if they
    did, they suffered no damages as a result, because Jayme later corrected the problems with
    title and because they had title insurance. Proposed Findings at 99–100. Consequently,
    those issues are waived, and the Monges could obtain no actual relief even if we found that
    they did satisfy the requirements for a claim for fraud.
    9
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    hence that the Monges have no claim for fraud by non-disclosure. The Monges
    cite no relevant cases in support of their position. 6 And their notion that they
    did in fact exercise “reasonable diligence” is flawed. They assert that they
    exercised reasonable diligence by having a title company perform a title search.
    They assert that the company discovered the non-disclosed information but
    failed to inform them of the results of the title search. Aside from any action
    they could bring against the title company (a matter as to which we express no
    opinion), the fact remains that the non-disclosed information was in fact dis-
    coverable through the exercise of reasonable diligence, even if it was not actu-
    ally discovered by them.
    X.
    The Monges maintain that the district court erred in overruling their
    objection to the bankruptcy court’s proposed conclusion that Rojas and Jayme
    did not breach a duty of good faith and fair dealing. Unlike Texas, 7 New Mexico
    imposes a duty of good faith and fair dealing on parties to a contract. Watson
    Truck & Supply Co. v. Males, 
    801 P.2d 639
    , 642 (N.M. 1990). To prevail on
    this claim, the Monges must show “bad faith” or that Rojas and Jayme “wrong-
    fully and intentionally used the contract to the detriment of the other party.”
    Cont’l Potash, Inc. v. Freeport-McMoran, Inc., 
    858 P.2d 66
    , 82 (N.M. 1993).
    This requirement is met if the Monges show that Rojas and Jayme entered into
    a contract without any intention of honoring it. See Romero v. Mervyn’s,
    6 The decisions in Daly v. Bernstein, 
    28 P. 764
    , 766 (N.M. 1892) and Steadman v. Tur-
    ner, 
    507 P.2d 799
    (N.M. Ct. App. 1973), are inapposite because they deal with fraud by affirm-
    ative misrepresentation. The opinion in Wirth v. Commercial Res., Inc., 
    630 P.2d 292
    (N.M.
    Ct. App. 1981), is distinguishable because it deals with failure to disclose information about
    a physical aspect of the property (the availability of water) rather than with legal title.
    7 “Texas law does not impose a generalized contractual duty of good faith and fair
    dealing and, in fact, rejects it in almost all circumstances.” Hux v. S. Methodist Univ., 
    819 F.3d 776
    , 781 (5th Cir. 2016) (citing English v. Fischer, 
    660 S.W.2d 521
    , 522 (Tex. 1983)).
    10
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    784 P.2d 992
    , 1001 (N.M. 1989).
    The district court concluded that the Monges had failed to show that
    Rojas and Jayme never intended to honor the lease agreement because Rojas
    and Jayme paid some rent during the term of the lease. 8 District Court Order
    at 29. “Had [Rojas and Jayme] subjectively intended to live on the property
    ‘rent free’ the whole time, they likely would not have paid [the Monges] any
    rent.” 
    Id. This is
    correct.
    The Monges object that the district court’s reasoning rests on an errone-
    ous factual basis, but they have waived the argument. The bankruptcy court
    proposed finding that Rojas and Jayme paid $12,568 in rent during the term
    of the lease agreement. Proposed Findings at 39. And the district court
    adopted that proposed finding, to which the Monges never objected in the dis-
    trict court. They have thus waived any challenge to this finding, which, in any
    event, we would uphold as not clearly erroneous.
    The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
    8 According to proposed findings adopted without objection, Rojas and Jayme made
    $61,134 in rental payments after the expiration of the lease.
    11