Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Betit ( 2012 )


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  • Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Betit, No. 408-5-10 Rdcv (Teachout, J., Aug. 28, 2012)
    [The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the
    accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.]
    STATE OF VERMONT
    SUPERIOR COURT                                                                                   CIVIL DIVISION
    Rutland Unit                                                                               Docket No. 408-5-10 Rdcv
    WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A.
    v.
    KAREN J. BETIT, et al.
    DETERMINATION OF COMPLIANCE and ORDER
    Foreclosure Mediation
    In this foreclosure case, statutory foreclosure mediation was held on October 10,
    2011, and a Mediation Report was filed October 14, 2011. By Entry Order of February 2,
    2012, the Court scheduled a hearing to determine compliance with statutory obligations
    under 12 V.S.A. § 4633(a).
    A hearing was held on March 29 and continued on May 1, and May 29, 2012 on
    the issue of whether Plaintiff has complied with its obligations under the foreclosure
    mediation statute. Plaintiff was represented by Sheldon Katz, Esq. Defendant Richard J.
    Paquette was represented by Lisa Chalidze, Esq. The Court heard only Plaintiff’s
    evidence as well as legal arguments related to Plaintiff’s position. The Court determined
    that the hearing would continue for the purpose of hearing evidence from Defendant only
    if Plaintiff’s evidence and argument is sufficient to support a finding of compliance.
    Legal memoranda were filed by Plaintiff’s attorney on April 4, April 26, and May 29,
    2012, and by Defendant’s attorney on April 19, May 11, and June 1, 2012.
    The Mediation Report stated that no settlement was reached. The Mediator stated
    that no party failed to make a good faith effort to mediate, but that a party failed to
    “[s]upply the documentation, information or data as required by the Foreclosure
    Mediation Statute.” Specifically, the Mediator reported that “Lender’s position is that
    this FHA backed loan is ineligible for HAMP modification (because of delay in seeking
    modification) so no NPV calculation was run or provided.”
    The Court identified in its Entry Order of February 2, 2012 that a hearing was
    scheduled to determine compliance because “[i]t is not clear what the source is of the
    position that a delay caused ineligibility or whether, in taking that position, Plaintiff has
    fulfilled its obligations under the statute.”
    The HAMP-related “net present value” calculation (NPV) for purposes of
    determining eligibility for modification is a critical component of foreclosure mediation.
    12 V.S.A. § 4633 (a)(1), (c), and (d)(2)(B) and (C). The statute further provides that
    “where the mortgagee claims that a pooling and servicing or other similar agreement
    prohibits modification, the mortgagee shall produce a copy of the agreement.” 12 V.S.A.
    § 4633 (a)(3). Furthermore, the obligation is not only to consider HAMP modification
    possibilities but “the mortgagee shall use and consider available foreclosure prevention
    tools, including reinstatement, loan modification, forbearance, and short sale, and . .
    .[HAMP guidelines and calculations].” 12 V.S.A. § 4633 (a)(1).
    It was clear from the Mediator’s Report that the Mediator had not been presented
    with documentation to demonstrate ineligibility for HAMP modification due to delay
    (and thus proper grounds for not providing an NPV calculation); rather, the Mediator
    simply reported that that was the position the mortgagee was taking. The purpose of the
    hearing scheduled by the Court was to determine whether there was a defensible basis for
    such a position and whether the mortgagee had complied with its obligations under the
    mortgage foreclosure statute given that no basis was provided. The Court expected that
    the mortgagee would be able to do at the hearing what had apparently not happened at the
    mediation session: identify a proper legal basis, whether by statute, regulation, investor-
    servicer agreement or otherwise, that made the borrower ineligible for a loan
    modification, and produce a copy of such an agreement to verify that there were proper
    grounds for not running or providing an NPV calculation.
    At the hearing on March 29, 2012, Plaintiff’s counsel represented that the loan
    was owned by FHA and presented testimony from a Wells Fargo loan adjuster that:
    --FHA was the investor of the loan and Wells Fargo was the servicer;
    --“FHA backed loans” do not qualify for HAMP if the loan is 12 months past due;
    --the basis for that statement is FHA “regulations”/”guidelines” (the witness used
    or adopted both terms), which were admitted as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1; and
    --the provision she relied on from Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1 is a bullet point which
    reads “Arrearage cannot exceed 12 months PITI.”
    The Court did not find this sufficient. While the Court accepted the testimony
    that the loan was owned by FHA as an investor,1 the so-called “regulations” relied on
    were a website summary description of the FHA-HAMP program, and not accepted by
    the Court as a defensible basis for a legal conclusion of ineligibility for modification and
    exemption from the obligation to run an NPV calculation. Because this entire process
    (foreclosure mediation report followed by judicial determination of compliance or
    noncompliance with obligations) is still relatively new, the Court continued the hearing to
    give mortgagee an opportunity to supplement its position.
    1
    Defendant’s counsel argued that at mediation the loan was never identified as one owned by FHA as an
    investor. Plaintiff’s counsel stated that it was so identified, and subsequently stated that Defendant’s
    counsel should have known that because the words “FHA” appear on the note and mortgage instruments.
    The Court accepts that the loan was identified at mediation as “FHA backed” as that was stated in the
    Mediation Report. However, what that actually means in terms of the legal relationship between FHA and
    Wells Fargo is still unclear. The Court accepted the witness testimony on March 29, 2012 that the loan was
    owned by FHA and Wells Fargo was the servicer, but subsequent legal argument indicates that the
    relationship may be different than that.
    2
    Plaintiff’s counsel submitted a legal memorandum with attachments on April 4,
    2012, identifying as the basis for ineligibility a statute, 12 U.S.C. §1715u, applicable to
    modifications of HUD loans, and represented that FHA is a subdivision of HUD. Also
    relied on is a July 30, 2009 Mortgagee Letter 2009.23 and specifically an attachment
    titled “Attachment—Guidelines for the FHA –Home Affordable Modification Program.”
    Under the heading of “Eligibility—Mortgagors” is the following statement: “The
    existing FHA-insured mortgage is in default, but is not more than 12 full mortgage
    payments past due.” At the continued hearing on May 1, 2012, Plaintiff’s counsel relied
    on these as the basis of ineligibility. The hearing had to be continued on a later date due
    to lack of sufficient time to complete it.
    On May 29, 2012, Plaintiff’s counsel again relied on the statute, but this time
    clarified that FHA does not own the loan but insures it; that under the insurance program,
    insurance is only available for 12 months of delinquency, and that under the FHA version
    of HAMP, eligibility for modification is only for loans with less than 12 months of
    delinquency as set forth in Mortgagee Letter 2009.23. He also argued that the mortgagee
    met its obligations at the original mediation session because no one ever requested a copy
    of any “agreement” or document relied on for ineligibility, and that he told borrower’s
    counsel that the FHA guidelines were on the website so that she had access to them.
    As stated at the outset, the Court has so far considered only Plaintiff’s evidence
    and arguments related to Plaintiff’s position. Defendant’s lawyer represented that there
    were factual challenges and defenses she wished to present, but the Court determined it
    would first decide whether Plaintiff’s own evidence and argument supports its position
    that it met its obligations at the mediation session held on October 10, 2011.
    The Court concludes that Plaintiff Mortgagee did not comply with its obligations
    under 12 V.S.A. § 4633 (a)(1) at the time of the mediation on October 10, 2011. During
    the three sessions of the hearing and in the six legal memoranda that have been filed,
    legal issues have been raised, but the scope of judicial determination of compliance with
    obligations under 12 V.S.A. § 4633 (a)(1) is limited and does not encompass resolution
    of all legal issues that may emerge during the course of a mediation session.
    In this case, it is clear that at the session itself, the mortgagee simply stated that
    the loan was an “FHA backed” loan and that it was ineligible for modification because of
    an extended period of nonpayment, and that therefore Plaintiff declined to run or provide
    an NPV calculation. Plaintiff’s counsel correctly notes that he informed Defendant’s
    counsel and the mediator of this position a month before the mediation session in an
    email. (Exhibit C to Plaintiff’s Motion and Memoranda filed April 4, 2012.) However,
    both statements were conclusory statements of position rather than explanations
    supported by documents or statutory references. While Plaintiff’s counsel may have told
    Defendant’s counsel that the FHA guidelines were on the website, that is not a sufficient
    means of satisfying the obligation to specify and support the basis of ineligibility. It
    wasn’t until after the first hearing had been continued for further supplementation that
    Plaintiff’s counsel produced the statute and Mortgagee Letter that mortgagee ultimately
    stated it was relying on.
    3
    The Court interprets the foreclosure mediation statute as requiring the mortgagee
    to be prepared to support at the mediation session, to the mediator and the borrower, any
    claim of ineligibility or exemption from providing an NPV calculation. It is not
    sufficient to make a conclusory statement, and leave to the borrower or borrower’s
    counsel the homework of figuring out whether or not that is a defensible position. Here
    the Mediator noted in the report that documentary support for the claim of ineligibility
    and exemption was not provided at the session, and it took the scheduling of two hearings
    for it to be produced.
    The Court takes no position on the validity of Plaintiff’s position as to
    noneligibility for modification. The scope of inquiry in this context is whether Plaintiff
    met its obligations under the statute to identify the basis of its position that the loan was
    ineligible for modification.
    One issue that emerges from this experience is worthy of attention. Suppose that
    at the session, Plaintiff’s counsel produced the statute and the Mortgagee Letter as the
    basis for its position, and Defendant’s counsel disputed as a matter of law whether they
    do in fact provide a valid basis for an exemption or ineligibility. In cases requiring close
    analysis and judicial resolution, the Court would not expect the Mediator to resolve the
    issue within the context of his or her Mediation Report; it may be that a motion would
    need to be filed with the Court. That is not what occurred here, however. In this case,
    the mortgagee’s position was not sufficiently or accurately supported at the mediation
    session. The court interprets the statute as requiring the mortgagee to provide such
    support.
    For the foregoing reasons, the Court determines, pursuant to 12 V.S.A. § 4635,
    that Plaintiff did not comply with its obligations at the time of foreclosure mediation, and
    that sanctions are warranted. 12 V.S.A. § 4635 (b). Reasonable sanctions in this case
    are the imposition on Plaintiff of attorneys’ fees for all of the unnecessary work of
    Defendant’s lawyer in attending the mediation session at which the claim of ineligibility
    was inadequately supported as well as the time spent attending the three sessions of
    hearing and preparing the three memos on the issue of sufficiency of compliance with
    obligations at foreclosure mediation.
    Defendant’s counsel shall submit a request for reasonable attorneys fees for such
    work by September 14, 2012. Plaintiff’s counsel shall have 10 days to file any objection
    as to the reasonableness of the amount.
    Dated this 27th day of August, 2012.
    ________________________
    Hon. Mary Miles Teachout
    Superior Judge
    4
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 408

Filed Date: 8/28/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/24/2018