Case Information
*1 Before MURPHY, BRIGHT, and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges.
___________
GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.
*2 Gary and Jill Cox (“homeowners”) filed this lawsuit in Minnesota state court against Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and Aurora Loan Services, Inc. (collectively “lender”) seeking legal and equitable relief from the lender’s foreclosure and sale of their home. The lender removed the case to federal court, invoking jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332, and subsequently moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted or alternatively for summary judgment. The district court dismissed the suit, and the homeowners [1]
appeal. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
In January 2004, the homeowners obtained $472,500 for a home purchase through a mortgage agreement with the lender. In February 2009, the homeowners were experiencing financial hardship and contacted the lender to explore potential financial accommodations. They subsequently applied to the lender for a loan modification pursuant to the United States Department of the Treasury’s Home Affordable Mortgage Program (“HAMP”). In September 2009, the lender notified the homeowners that they “potentially qualified for a modification” and would be put on a trial modification plan with monthly payments of $2,779.38 to demonstrate their capacity to make the payments if the loan was permanently modified. The homeowners submitted the trial payments in October, November, and December. On December 28, 2009, Terry Martin, one of the lender’s employees, “instructed [the homeowners] to discontinue payment pursuant to the Trial Payment Plan, as [they] had already demonstrated [their] ability to make payments pursuant to the modification, and could expect to receive notice of the modification approval shortly.” In reliance on Martin’s statements, the homeowners discontinued making their trial payments and awaited notification of a permanent modification.
On February 4, 2010, the lender denied the homeowners’ modification application because the ratio of the loan to the home value was too high. The denial letter informed the homeowners that “[i]f you do not bring your loan current immediately, any foreclosure action will resume from the point at which it was suspended without further notice.” The letter also stated that the homeowners “may *3 be eligible for other alternatives to foreclosure.” On March 8, 2010, the lender informed the homeowners that they “may not be eligible” for a HAMP modification but that the loan had been placed in a thirty-day review period. The lender also stated that the homeowners should continue to make monthly payments under the trial plan, that they would “continue to be eligible for HAMP consideration,” and that they would “receive an additional written communication of the status of [the] modification” at the end of the thirty-day review period. On March 24, 2010, before the end of the thirty-day review period, the lender served the homeowners with notice of a foreclosure sale, which indicated that the homeowners needed to pay $31,846.30 to “bring your mortgage up to date.” The lender purchased the property at the foreclosure sale on October 4, 2010, for $511,941.78.
On November 4, 2010, the homeowners initiated the present lawsuit and attached the February 4 letter, the March 8 letter, and the March 24 foreclosure notice to the complaint. In Count I, the homeowners sought “a detailed accounting of [the lender’s] activities relating to [the homeowners’] request for a forbearance or loan modification.” The homeowners next alleged four counts under which they sought to recover damages. In Count II, they alleged that the lender violated a duty of good faith and fair dealing imposed by Minnesota Statute section 580.11. In Count III, the homeowners alleged that the lender breached the implied duty of good faith and fair dealing arising from their mortgage agreement. In Counts IV and V, respectively, the homeowners alleged fraudulent and negligent misrepresentation. Finally, in Count VI, the homeowners requested injunctive relief staying the foreclosure proceedings. Upon the lender’s motion, the district court dismissed the suit pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure because “[the homeowners’] claims are entirely based on the loan modification request under HAMP” and HAMP creates no private right of action. The district court also held in the alternative that the homeowners did not plead plausible claims under Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly , 550 U.S. 544 (2007). The homeowners appeal, contending that HAMP does not preempt *4 their state-law claims and that they pled the claims with sufficient particularity to state a claim.
II. DISCUSSION
We review
de novo
the district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss under Rule
12(b)(6).
Carter v. Arkansas
,
The parties agree that Minnesota law governs our analysis of the homeowners’
state-law claims.
See Kaufmann v. Siemens Med. Solutions USA, Inc.
,
A. Count I: Accounting
In Count I, the homeowners requested “a detailed accounting of [the lender’s]
activities relating to [the homeowners’] request for a forbearance or loan
*5
modification, including . . . an Order releasing the entire contents of [the
homeowners’] loan file from [the lender’s] custody.” The district court dismissed
Count I, concluding that an accounting is an extraordinary equitable remedy that is
unwarranted here because there is an adequate remedy available at law through
normal discovery requests. We agree that the information the homeowners seek is
available through discovery if they can plead any valid claim, and the existence of
this legal remedy renders an accounting unwarranted.
See Border State Bank, N.A.
v. AgCountry Farm Credit Servs., FLCA
,
B. Count II: Violation of Section 580.11 Minnesota’s foreclosure-by-advertisement statute provides that the sheriff or sheriff’s deputy sell the premises foreclosed upon to the highest bidder at a public venue. Minn. Stat. § 580.06, subdiv 1. The statute specifically authorizes “[t]he mortgagee, the mortgagee’s assignee, or the legal representative of either or both [to purchase the premises] fairly and in good faith” at the sale. Minn. Stat. § 580.11. The district court dismissed Count II, concluding that any duty imposed under section 580.11 applies only to the fairness of the purchase itself and that the homeowners did not allege that the lender acted unfairly or in bad faith in purchasing the home at the foreclosure sale. The homeowners do not contend on appeal that the lender acted unfairly or in bad faith in making the purchase itself, but they contend that the lender violated a duty imposed under section 580.11 by acting unfairly and *6 in bad faith “while foreclosing.” The homeowners contend that the lender breached this duty by first informing them that it would work with them to “resolve [their] minor deficiency on the Mortgage,” and then later failing to respond to status requests and refusing to release their loan file. The homeowners also contend that the lender breached this duty by stating that they would have a permanent modification if they made the trial payments.
Section 580.11 imposes on a mortgagee a “duty to act ‘fairly and in good faith’
when it purchase[s] the property at the foreclosure sale.”
Sprague Nat’l Bank v.
Dotty
, 415 N.W.2d 725, 726-27 (Minn. App. 1987). The homeowners cite no
persuasive authority establishing that section 580.11 imposes a general fiduciary duty
on foreclosing lenders beyond conduct that has a material impact on the fairness of
the foreclosure sale itself. “When the language of a statute is plain and unambiguous,
it is assumed to manifest legislative intent and must be given effect.”
Beardsley v.
Garcia
,
The homeowners argue that the Minnesota Court of Appeals spoke generally
of the “fiduciary duty as a mortgagee to act fairly and to deal in good faith with the
mortgagor
when foreclosing
” while citing section 580.11 and
Sprague
in an
*7
unpublished opinion.
See Resolution Trust Corp. v. River Props. of St. Paul Ltd.
P’ship.
, No. C7-94-2547,
Having concluded that the lender’s obligation under section 580.11 does not reach conduct that has no material impact on the fairness of the sale itself, we must now consider whether the homeowners’ complaint states a claim for relief under the statute. Here, the homeowners pled only that the lender said it would work with them to resolve their loan delinquency, failed to respond to their status requests on these efforts, and refused to give them its files regarding the loan modification. Because *8 the homeowners allege no connection between these actions and the fairness of the foreclosure sale itself, we affirm the dismissal of Count II.
C. Count III: Breach of the Duty of Good Faith and Fair Dealing
The district court dismissed Count III because the homeowners did not assert
an independent breach of contract claim, relying on the proposition that “a cause of
action for good faith and fair dealing cannot exist independent of the underlying
breach of contract claim.”
Orthomet, Inc. v. A.B. Med., Inc.
,
Nevertheless, dismissal of Count III was proper because the homeowners failed
to plead adequately a claim for breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing. The
homeowners contend that the lender abused its power under the mortgage agreement
by informing the homeowners that it “would work with [them] to provide a mortgage
modification” and by then failing to respond to their repeated requests for status
updates on the modification and refusing to release the homeowners’ loan file. It may
be true that a party’s “abuse of a power to specify terms” in an existing contract
violates the duty of good faith and fair dealing.
See
Restatement (Second) Contracts
§ 205, cmt. d;
Hennepin Cnty.
,
The homeowners also contend that the lender breached the duty of good faith
and fair dealing by unjustifiably hindering their performance under the mortgage
agreement. Minnesota law provides that “contract performance is excused when it
is hindered or rendered impossible by the other party.”
Zobel & Dahl Constr. v.
Crotty,
In this case, the homeowners did not adequately plead a claim for breach of the
duty of good faith and fair dealing by unjustified hindrance. With respect to the
lender’s alleged failure to respond to status requests on the loan modification and
refusal to release the loan file, the homeowners alleged that they suffered damages,
but they never alleged that the lender’s actions prevented them from performing their
responsibilities under the mortgage agreement, thereby causing their damages.
Minnesota law requires a claim for breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing
to allege “a causal link between the alleged breach and the party’s claimed damages.”
LaSociete Generale Immobiliere v. Minneapolis Cmty. Dev. Agency
,
With respect to the lender’s instruction to discontinue payments and its
requests that the homeowners submit documents that they had already submitted, the
homeowners similarly failed to adequately plead a causal connection between the
*11
lender’s actions and their damages. The homeowners did not plead plausible factual
allegations indicating that they would have been able to pay the mortgage absent their
reliance on the instructions.
Cf. Zobel
,
D. Counts IV and V: Fraudulent and Negligent Misrepresentation
“To succeed in a fraudulent misrepresentation claim under Minnesota law, a
plaintiff must prove ‘(1) there was a false representation by a party of a past or
existing material fact susceptible of knowledge; (2) made with knowledge of the
falsity of the representation or made as of the party’s own knowledge without
knowing whether it was true or false; (3) with the intention to induce another to act
in reliance thereon; (4) that the representation caused the other party to act in reliance
*12
thereon; and (5) that the party suffer[ed] pecuniary damage as a result of the
reliance.’”
Trooien v. Mansour
,
The homeowners alleged that the lender (1) falsely told them via Martin’s statement that they should cease making payments under the trial plan and (2) falsely stated in the March 8 letter that the loan had been placed in a thirty-day review period. The district court held that the homeowners failed to adequately plead that they relied on these misrepresentations and that this reliance caused their damages. The homeowners contend that they adequately pled reliance and causation because they alleged that they ceased making payments in reliance on the instructions, the modification was rejected less than a month later based on this failure to make the payments, and the lack of a modification played a central role in the foreclosure of the mortgage. They also contend that their “belief that the[] application for the mortgage modification was again under review and anticipat[ion of] word from the *13 lender at the close of the 30-day review period” constituted detrimental reliance because it occurred “as a result of [the lender’s] March 8, 2010 letter.”
The homeowners’ misrepresentation claims fail because they again did not
plead “sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is
plausible on its face.’”
Iqbal
,
could not offer a modification because the ratio of the loan to the home value was too *14 high. Because the homeowners’ factual allegations do not support a reasonable inference that their reliance on the lender’s statements caused the modification denial and the subsequent foreclosure, the homeowners have failed to state a claim based on Martin’s statement. See Iqbal , 556 U.S. at 678. Similarly, the homeowners’ allegation that they relied on the March 8 letter promising a thirty-day review period simply by “believing [they were] in a review period” provides no plausible connection between this belief and the modification denial and resulting foreclosure. The homeowners offer no explanation as to why delaying the foreclosure notice by fourteen days would have prevented the foreclosure.
The homeowners also contend that they adequately pled detrimental reliance based on other misrepresentations in that they alleged: (1) making three trial payments in reliance on a promise of a permanent modification; (2) providing documents requested by the lender for the modification application; and (3) complying with the lender’s requests to submit and sign documents which the homeowners had already submitted and signed. However, the homeowners did not adequately plead that the foreclosure was caused by these actions. With respect to the trial payments, the homeowners admit that they were merely informed that they “potentially qualified for a modification” before being asked to make the trial payments, not that payment would ensure a permanent modification. With respect to document submission, the homeowners did not allege that the lender misrepresented which documents it had received or which documents were required for the application. The homeowners instead merely alleged that they provided all requested documents, including those that they had previously submitted. Thus, the homeowners’ arguments regarding these alleged misrepresentations also fail to create a viable cause of action.
E. Count VI: Preliminary Injunction
The district court dismissed Count VI because it dismissed Counts II through V and therefore concluded that the impossibility of success on the merits of those claims made a preliminary injunction unwarranted. See Dataphase Sys., Inc. v. C.L. Sys., Inc. , 640 F.2d 109, 114 (8th Cir. 1981) (en banc) (listing the factors to be considered in a preliminary injunction analysis). The homeowners contend that the lender “offered no legal authority . . . that an independent cause of action loses legal significance and merit simply because other counts of a complaint are dismissed.” However, the homeowners pled in Count VI that they had no adequate remedy at law for the “interference” with their property rights alleged in the previous Counts. Count VI thus depends on the viability of Counts II through V. Because Counts II through V were properly dismissed, Count VI was also properly dismissed.
F. Leave to Amend the Complaint
The homeowners argue for the first time in their reply brief that we should
grant them leave to file a motion with the district court for leave to amend the
complaint. This argument was perhaps foreshadowed by a heading located only in
the table of contents of their opening brief, which otherwise contains no explanation
of the argument or citation to relevant authority. The homeowners waived this issue
by failing to provide a meaningful explanation of the argument and citation to
relevant authority in their opening brief.
See United States v. Stanko
,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm. [4]
_____________________________
Notes
[1] The Honorable David S. Doty, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
[2] The homeowners also rely on Minnesota Statute section 58.13, which details standards of conduct for mortgage originators and service-providers, but they do not explain how these standards of conduct expand the duties imposed on mortgagees in section 580.11 beyond the fairness of the foreclosure-sale purchase itself. Furthermore, the district court refused to address this argument because the homeowners did not plead a cause of action under section 58.13 in the complaint. The homeowners do not contend on appeal that they pled any cause of action in the complaint arising under section 58.13.
[3] The homeowners contend that the district court erroneously considered evidence submitted by the lender that the lender informed the homeowners in January that they must continue making their trial payments and that the homeowners did in fact submit their trial payments for the months of January and February. Although the lender submitted this evidence into the record before the district court, we can find no indication that the district court relied on it. We similarly decide this case without relying on material outside the complaint and its attachments.
[4] While the district court’s analysis of HAMP preemption in this case may be questionable, we need not address this issue because we find that the complaint fails to meet the Twombly pleading standards.
