MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
Frаnk and Deana Dixon (collectively “the Dixons”) bring this cause of action against Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. (“Wells Fargo”), seeking (1) an injunction prohibiting Wells Fargo from foreclosing on their home; (2) specific performance of an oral agreement to enter into a loan modification; and (3) damages. Wells Fargo, having removed the action from state court, now moves for dismissal of the Dixons’ complaint under Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), arguing that the allegations are insufficient to invoke the doctrine of promissory estoppel and that, to the extent the Dixons have stated a state-law claim, it is preempted by the Home Owners’ Loan Act (“HOLA”), 12 U.S.C. §§ 1461-1700, and its implementing regulations, 12 C.F.R. §§ 500-99.
A. Procedural History
On January 6, 2011, the Dixons initiated this civil action in the Massachusetts Superior Court sitting in and for the County of Plymouth, Civil Docket No. PLCV201100015, by filing a “Verified Complaint for Injunctive Relief, Specific Performance and Damages.” Compl., Ex. A, ECF No. 1-1; Summons & Order Notice, Ex. D, ECF No. 1-M. They also filed an ex parte motion for a temporary restraining order. TRO, Ex. B, ECF No. 1-2. After an initial continuance, the hearing on that motion was held on February 14, 2011, and the Superior Court issued a preliminary injunction, enjoining Wells Fargo from prosecuting the foreclosure action it had filed against the Dixons until further order of the court. Sup. Ct. Civ. Dkt. 3-4, Ex. C, ECF No. 1-3; Order Prelim. Inj., ECF No. 4. At the present time, the preliminary injunction remains in effect. Mem. Opp’n Pis.’ Mot. Remand 1, ECF No. 13.
On March 4, 2011, Wells Fargo removed the action to the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. Notice Removal, ECF No. 1. Wells Fargo filed its motion to dismiss the Dixons’ complaint on April 11, 2011. Def.’s Mot. Dismiss, ECF No. 5; Mem. Supp. Def.’s Mot. Dismiss (“Def.’s Mem. Supp.”), ECF No. 7. The Dixons opposed Wells Fargo’s motion and moved to remand the case. Mem. Opр’n Def.’s Mot. Dismiss (“Pis.’ Mem. Opp’n”), ECF No. 12; Pis.’ Mot. Remand, ECF No. 9; Mem. Supp. Pis.’ Mot. Remand, ECF No. 10.
After a hearing on May 9, 2011, this Court denied the Dixons’ motion to remand and granted Wells Fargo’s motion to dismiss the Dixons’ contract claim as insufficiently pleaded. The Court took under advisement the two remaining issues: (1)
B. Facts Alleged
The Dixons reside at their home in Scituate, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. Compl. ¶2. Wells Fargo is a corporation doing business in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Id. ¶ 3. Wells Fargo alleges that it is the holder of a mortgage on the Dixons’ home. Id. ¶ 6.
On or about June 8, 2009, the Dixons orally agreed with Wells Fargo to take the steps necessary to enter into a mortgage loan modification. Id. ¶ 7. As part of this agreement, Wells Fargo instructed the Dixons to stop making payments on their loan. Id. It was contemplated that the unpaid payments would be added to the note as modified. Id. In addition, Wells Fargo requested certain financial information, which the Dixons promptly supplied. Id.
Notwithstanding the Dixons’ diligent efforts and reliance on Wells Fargo’s promise, Wells Fargo has failed, and effectively refused, to abide by the oral agreement to modify the existing mortgage loan. Id. ¶ 8.
On or about December 8, 2010, the Dixons received notice from the Massachusetts Land Court that Wells Fargo was proceeding with a foreclosure on their hоme. Id. ¶ 9. The return date on the order of notice in the Land Court was January 10, 2011, and so the Dixons sought a temporary restraining order in the Superior Court to prevent the loss of their home. See Procedural History, supra.
The Dixons state that, on information and belief, the fair market value of their home is in excess of the mortgage loan balance and any arrearage. Compl. ¶ 10.
II. ANALYSIS
The Dixons seek to enforce Wells Fargo’s alleged promise to engage in negotiating a loan modification. See Pis.’ Supplemental Mem. Opp’n 1-2. Arguing that the bank’s initiation of foreclosure proceedings without warning shows its promise to consider their eligibility for a modification was insincere, the Dixons ask not only that the foreclosure be halted but also that Wells Fargo be returned to its place at the bargaining table. See Id.; see also Pls.’ Mem. Opp’n 7-8, 11-12. Wells Fargo contends that (1) any promise it made to consider the Dixons for a loan modification was not sufficiently definite as to be binding, see Def.’s Supplemental Mem. Supp. 1; (2) the Dixons’ reliance on its promise was neither reasonable nor detrimental, see Def.’s Mem. Supp. at 17-19; and (3) in any event, the claim for promissory estoppel is preempted by federal law, see Id. at 8-14.
A. Legal Standard
To survive a motion to dismiss, a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to “state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.”
Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly,
Although the Court must accept as truе all of the factual allegations contained in the complaint, that doctrine is not applicable to legal conclusions.
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
B. Promissory Estoppel
The gravamen of the Dixons’ complaint is that Wells Fargo promised to engage in negotiations to modify their loan, provided that they took certain “steps necessary to enter into a mortgage modification.” Compl. ¶ 7. On the basis of Wells Fargo’s representation, the Dixons stopped making payments on their loan and -submitted the requested financial information — only to learn subsequently that the bank had initiated foreclosure proceedings against them. They contend that Wells Fargo ought have anticipated their compliance with the terms of its promise to consider them for a loan modification. Not only was it reasonable that they would rely on the promise, but also their reliance left them considerably worse off, for by entering into default they became vulnerable to foreclosure.
The question whether these allegations are sufficient to state a claim for promissory estoppel requires a close look at the doctrine’s evolution in the law of Massachusetts. In
Loranger Const. Corp. v. E.F. Hauserman Co.,
“An essential element in the pleading and proof of a contract claim is, of course, the ‘promise’ sought to be enforced.”
Kiely v. Raytheon Co.,
In addition to demonstrating a firm commitment, the putative promise, like any offer, must be sufficiently “definite and certain in its terms” to be enforceable.
Moore v. Lar-Z-Boy, Inc.,
The longstanding reluctance of courts to enforce open-ended “agreements to agree” reflects a belief that, unless a “fail-back standard” exists to supply the missing terms, there is no way to know what ultimate agreement, if any, would have resulted. E. Allan Farnsworth,
Precontractual Liability and Preliminary Agreements: Fair Dealing and Failed Negotiations,
87 Colum. L.Rev. 217, 255-56 (1987). It is the vague and indefinite nature of that potential final agreement-not the preliminary agreement to agree — that troubles courts.
See Armstrong v. Rohm & Haas Co., Inc.,
Moreover, parties ought be allowed to step away unscathed if they are unable to reach a deal.
Cf. R.W. Int’l Corp. v. Welch Food, Inc.,
Wells Fargo would have this Court end its inquiry here. The complaint plainly alleges that the parties had an “agreement to enter into a loan modification agreement,” but as matter of law “[a]n agreement to reach an agreement is a contradiction in terms and imposes no obligations on the parties thereto.”
Rosenfield,
During the course of opposing Wells Fargo’s motion to dismiss, however, the Dixons have made clear that they do not seek specific performance of a promised loan modification.
See
Pis.’ Supplemental Mem. Opp’n 1-2. They admit that there was no guarantee of a modification by Wells Fargo, only a verbal commitment to determine their eligibility for a modification if they followed the bank’s prescribed steps. Thus, the Dixons’ request that Wells Fargo be held to its promise to consider them for a loan modification is not a covert attempt to bind the bank to a final agreement it had not contemplаted. There is no risk that this Court, were it to uphold the promissory estoppel claim, would be “trapping” Wells Fargo into a vague, indefinite, and unintended loan modification masquerading as an agreement to agree.
Teachers Ins. & Annuity Ass’n of Am. v. Tribune Co.,
Furthermore, because the parties had not yet begun to negotiate the terms of a modification, the Court questions whether Wells Fargo’s promise ought even be characterized as a preliminary agreement to agree. Instead, it more closely resembles an “agreement to negotiate.”
See
Farnsworth,
supra
at 263-69;
cf. Aceves v. U.S. Bank, N.A.,
To be sure, Massachusetts courts have tended to treat agreements to negotiate as variants of open-ended agreements to agree. The view that “[a]n agreement to negotiate does not create a binding contract,”
Sax,
In this case, Wells Fargo and the Dixons had not yet contemplated the terms of a loan modification, but they had
Promissory estoppel has developed into “an attempt by the courts to keep remedies abreast of increased moral consciousness of honesty and fair representations in all business dealings.”
Peoples Nat’l Bank of Little Rock v. Linebarger Constr. Co.,
Admittedly, the courts of Massachusetts have yet to formally embrace promissory estoppel as more than a consideration substitute.
See, e.g., Varadian,
Massachusetts’s continued insistence that a promise be definite — at least to a degree likely not met in the present case— is arguably in tension with its adoption of the Restatement’s more relaxed standard. This tension is not irreconcilable, however. Tracing the development of promissory estoppel through the case law reveals a willingness on courts’ part to enforce even an indefinite promise made during preliminary negotiations where the facts suggest that the promisor’s words or conduct were designed to take advantage of the promisee. The promisor need not have acted fraudulently, deceitfully, or in bad faith.
McLearn v. Hill,
[I]t is not essential that the representations or conduct giving rise to [the doctrine’s] application should be fraudulent in the strictly legal significance of that term, or with intent to mislead or deceive; the test appears to be whether in all the circumstances of the case conscience and duty of honest dealing should deny one the right to repudiate the consequence of his representations or conduct; whether the author of a proximate cause may justly repudiate its natural and reasonably anticipated effect; fraud, in the sense of a court of equity, properly including all acts, omissions, and concealments which involve a breach of legal or equitable duty, trust, or confidence, justly reposed, and are injurious to another or by which an undue and unconscientious advantage is taken of another.
Id.
at 525,
Typically, where the Massachusetts courts have applied the doctrine of promissory estoppel to enforce an otherwise unenforceable promise, “there has been a pattern of conduct by one side which has dangled the other side on a string.”
Pappas Indus. Parks, Inc. v. Psarros,
The circumstances of the
McLearn
case, quoted from above, are also instructive.
See
One final case, the core allegations of which mirror those presented in the Dixons’ complaint, merits mention. In
Cohoon v. Citizens Bank,
No. 002774,
In the present case, Wells Fargo convinced the Dixons that to be eligible for a loan modification they had to default on their payments, and it was only because they relied on this representation and stopped making their payments that Wells Fargo was able to initiate foreclosure proceedings. While there is no allegation that its promise was dishonest, Wells Fargo distinctly gained the upper hand by inducing the Dixons to open themselves up to a foreclosure action. In specifically telling the Dixons that stopping their payments and submitting financial information were the “steps necessary to enter into a mortgage modification,” Wells Fargo not only should have known that the Dixons would take these steps believing their fulfillment would lead to a loan modification, but also must have intended that the Dixons do so. The bank’s promise to consider them for a loan modification if they took those steps necessarily “involved as matter of fair dealing an undertaking on [its] pаrt not to [foreclose] based upon facts coming into existence solely from” the making of its promise.
McLearn,
As the cases reveal, where, like here, the promisor opportunistically has strung along the promisee, the imposition of liability despite the preliminary stage of the negotiations produces the most equitable result. This balancing of the harms “is explicitly made an element of recovery under the doctrine of promissory estoppel by the last words of [section 90 of the Restatement], which make the promise binding only if injustice can be avoided by its enforcement.” Metzger & Phillips,
supra
at 849. Binding the promisor to a promise made to take advantage of the promisee is also the most efficient result.
Cf.
Richard Craswell,
Offer, Acceptance, and Efficient Reliance,
48 Stan. L.Rev. 481, 538 (1996). In cases of opportunism, “[the] willingness to impose a liability rule can be justified as efficient since such intervention may be the most cost-effective meаns of controlling opportunistic behavior, which both parties would seek to control ex ante as a means of maximizing joint gains. Because private control arrangements may be costly, the law-supplied rule may be the most effective means of controlling opportunism and maximizing joint gain.” Juliet P. Kos
There remains the concern that, by imposing precontractual liability for specific promises made to induce reliance during preliminary negotiations, courts will restrict parties’ freedom to negotiate by reading in a duty to bargain in good faith not recognized at common law. While this concern does not fall on deaf ears, it can be effectively minimized by limiting the promisee’s recovery to his or her reliance expenditures. See Farnsworth, supra at 267 (remarking that, where relief involves an award of reliance damages only, courts need not be troubled by “the indefiniteness of the concept of fair dealing”); Metzger & Phillips, supra at 853-54 (commenting that “reliance-based damage awards may sometimes be preferable in promissory estoppel eases” because, where the promise is indefinite, specific performance or expectation damages are not possible); Schwartz & Scott, supra at 667 (stating that, while the emerging legal rule requiring parties to bargain in good faith but not requiring them to reach an agreement is “a step in the right direction,” “efficiency would be enhanced if the law were simply to protect the promisee’s reliance interest”); see also Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 90 (“The remedy granted for breach may be limited as justice requires.”). See generally L.L. Fuller & William R. Perdue, Jr., The Reliance Interest in Contract Damages (Part I), 46 Yale L.J. 52 (1936). “Because promissory estoppel allows a reliance-based damage recovery in appropriate cases, it provides courts an alternative to forcing an unjustly terminated party into an unpromising relationship.” Metzger & Phillips, supra at 888; see Bebchuk & Ben-Shahar, supra at 451-52 (contending that, by imposing “an interim measure of liability, extending only to reliance investments,” courts need not “make the contract for the parties”).
Moreover, because the promisee’s reliance must be not only reasonable and foreseeable but also detrimental, such that injustice would result if the promise were not binding, “the doctrine renders the motive of the promisor a secondary consideration in deciding whether to award relief.” Metzger & Phillips,
supra
at 888. Although some sense that the promisor has acted to take unfair advantage of the promisee is typically what prompts courts to enforce promises made during preliminary negotiations, the foreseeability and injustice requirements of section 90 render inquiry into whether the promisor acted in bad faith unnecessary, which, in turn, obviates any need to impose a precontractual duty to negotiate in good faith.
1
See Id.
at
Finally, contrary to the conventional wisdom that precontractual liability unduly restricts the freedom to negotiate, a default rule allowing recovery but limiting it to reliance expenditures may in fact promote more efficient bargaining. See Bebchuk & Ben-Shahar, supra at 457; Schwartz & Scott, supra at 690. “[T]he existence of liability does not chill the parties’ incentives to enter negotiation,” Bebchuk & Ben-Shahar, supra at 457, as “[r]ational parties will pursue efficient projects and abandon inefficient projects .... disagreeing], if at all, over whether a party should be compensated for a reliance expense,” Schwartz & Scott, supra at 667. It is only under the current regime of either no liability or strict liability that negotiating parties are discouraged from making early and “exploratory investments that are a necessary precondition to the later writing of efficient final contracts.” Id. at 690; see Bebchuk & Ben-Shahar, supra at 457; Katz, supra at 1267. In contrast, a scheme of reliance-only precontractual liability makes negotiations more desirable by inducing optimal-level commitment from each party. See Bebchuk & Ben-Shahar, supra at 457. Certainly, enforcement of specific promises made to induce reliance during preliminary negotiations “might sometimes work an injustice on promisors.” Metzger & Phillips, supra at 851; see Katz, supra at 1273. But reliance-based recovery in such instances offers the most equitable and efficient result without “distorting] the incentives to enter negotiations” in the first place. Bebchuk & Ben-Shahar, supra at 457.
This Court, therefore, holds that the complaint states a claim for promissory estoppel: Wells Fargo promised to engage in negotiating a loan modification if the Dixons defaulted on them payments and provided certain financial information, and they did so in reasonable reliance on that promise, only to learn that the bank had taken advantage of their default status by initiating foreclosure proceedings. Assuming they can prove these allegations by a preponderance of the evidence, them damages appropriately will be confined to the value of their expenditures in reliance on Wells Fargo’s promise. 2
Having concluded that the Dixons’ complaint states a claim for promissory estoppel, the Court now turns to Wells Fargo’s contention that this state-law cause of action is preempted by the federal statutory and regulatory scheme of HOLA.
Pursuant to the Supremacy Clause of Article VI, clause 2, of the United States Constitution, federal law preempts state law where Congress has “enact[ed] a regulatory scheme ‘so pervasive as to make reasonable the inference that Congress left no room for the States to supplement it.’ ”
SPGGC, LLC v. Ayotte,
In 1933, Congress enacted HOLA as “a radical and comprehensive response” to the devastating effect of the Great Depression on the national housing market.
Id.
at 159-60,
Through HOLA, Congress created the Office of Thrift Supervision (the “OTS”)
6
and gave its director plenary authority to regulate and govern “the powers and operations of every Federal savings and loan association from its cradle to its corporate grave.”
7
de la Cuesta,
Pursuant to this broad mandate, the OTS has promulgated extensive regulations, including two that preempt state statutory and common-law causes of action that otherwise would regulate the operations of federal savings associations.
See
12 C.F.R. § 545.2 (stating that the OTS’s exercise of its regulatory authority “is preemptive of any state law purporting to address the subject of the operations of a Federal savings association”);
Id.
§ 560.2 (“[The] OTS hereby occupies the entire field of lending regulation for federal savings associations. [The] OTS intends to give federal savings associations maximum flexibility to exercise their lending powers in accordance with a uniform federal scheme of regulation. Accordingly, federal savings associations may extend credit as authorized under federal law, including this part, without regard to state laws purporting to regulate or otherwise affect their credit activities, except to the extent provided in paragraph (c) of this section....”). That OTS regulations are “preemptive of any state law purporting to address the subject of the operations of a Federal savings association” has been recognized by the First Circuit.
SPGGC,
The regulations set forth an analytical framework for courts to follow in determining whether a specific state law is preempted by HOLA. See 12 C.F.R. § 560.2; Lending and Investment, 61 Fed. Reg. 50951, 50966-67 (Sept. 30, 1996) (codified at 12 C.F.R. pts. 545, 560, 563, 566, 571, 590). First, a court must decide whether the law in question appears in section 560.2(b)’s illustrative list of types of state laws that are definitively preempted. 61 Fed.Reg. at 50966. These include “[t]he terms of credit, including ... adjustments to the interest rate, balance, payments due, or term to maturity of the loan;” “[disclosure and advertising;” and “[processing, origination, servicing, sale or purchase of, or investment or participation in, mortgages.” 12 C.F.R. § 560.2(b)(4), (b)(9), (b)(10). If the law is not of a type appearing in paragraph (b) of section 560.2, the court must analyze whether the law “affects lending.” 61 Fed.Reg. at 50966. If so, then it presumptively is preempted, rebuttable only if the law clearly is shown to fit within the purview of paragraph (c). Id.
Paragraph (c) lists state laws that HOLA is not presumed to preempt, including contract and commercial law, real property law, homestead laws, tort law, and criminal law. 12 C.F.R. § 560.2(c). Any other law that, in the estimation of the OTS, promotes a vital state interest and either has only an incidental effect on lending or is not otherwise contrary to the regulatory intent to “occupy the field” is also not preempted.
Id.
Courts, however, are to interpret paragraph (c) narrowly, with any doubt resolved in favor of preemption. 61 Fed.Reg. at 50966. As the OTS has said, “the purpose of paragraph (c) is to preserve the traditional infrastructure of basic state laws that undergird commercial transactions, not to open the door to state regulation of lending by federal savings associations.”
Id.
A plaintiffs
The Eighth and Ninth Circuits have interpreted the OTS’s analytical framework to mean that any “state law that either on its face or as applied imposes requirements regarding the examples listed in § 560.2(b) is preempted.”
Casey v. Federal Deposit Ins. Corp.,
While the Sixth Circuit has addressed express preemption under paragraph (b),
see State Farm Bank v. Reardon,
Suppose [a savings and loan association] signs a mortgage agreement with a homeowner that specifies an annual interest rate of 6 percent and a year later bills the homeowner at a rate of 10 percent and when the homeowner refuses to pay institutes foreclosure proceedings. It would be surprising for a federal regulation to forbid the homeowner’s state to give the homeowner a defense based on the mortgagee’s breach of contract. Or if the mortgagee(or a servicer like Ocwen) fraudulently represents to the mortgagor that it will forgive a default, and then forecloses, it would be surprising for a federal regulation to bar a suit for fraud. Some federal laws do create such bars, notably ERISA, but this is recognized as exceptional. Enforcement of state law in either of the mortgage-servicing examples above would complement rather than substitute for the federal regulatory scheme.
Id.
at 643-44 (internal citations omitted). If states could not provide protection to consumers through traditional state-law causes of action with only incidental effect on lеnding, then federal savings associations effectively could “use preemption as a shield to avoid adherence” to the commitments they make to their customers.
McAnaney v. Astoria Fin. Corp.,
At the same time, courts must be wary of artfully pleaded attempts to use common-law claims as a clandestine way of imposing requirements on lenders that states otherwise could not enact through legislation or regulation.
McAnaney,
Here, the only claim sufficiently pleaded to survive the motion to dismiss is that of promissory estoppel. The allegations that form the basis of this claim are that (1)
Wells Fargo argues that the Dixons’ claim seeks to impose substantive requirements regarding several expressly preempted categories, specifically (1) the terms of the loan; (2) the lender’s disclosure obligations; and (3) the processing, origination, servicing, or investment or participation in mortgages. Def.’s Mem. Supp. 11 (citing 12 C.F.R. § 560.2(b)(4), (b)(9), (b)(10)). The Dixons, however, do not assert that they were entitled to a loan modification; nor do they demand that their loan be modified in a particular way. They acknowledge that, at most, Wells Fargo promised to negotiate a modification, but argue that, because they took the steps that Wells Fargo instructed them to take, Wells Fargo cannot now deny its promise to consider their eligibility. This has no bearing on the terms of any modification that the parties might negotiate in the future.
There is some suggestion in the complaint that Wells Fargo failed to notify the Dixons that their loan modification application had been denied before it initiated foreclosure proceedings. This is tangential to the promissory estoppel issue, however, and thus the Court need not address whether the allegations that touch on Wells Fargo’s disclosure obligations are preempted by HOLA.
Undoubtedly, the claim that Wells Fargo failed to uphold a promise to consider the Dixons for a loan modification relates to Wells Fargo’s “servicing” of the mortgage.
See
12 C.F.R. § 560.2(b)(10). But the standard for express preemption is more than “relates to.”
See Coffman,
Turning to paragraph (c) of section 560.2, the Dixons’ promissory estoppel claim “affect[s] lending businesses, just as [it would] affect any other business that enters into contracts or makes representations during the course of its operations.”
Gibson,
With the national housing market once again rattled by an overwhelming number of foreclosures, other federal courts have been grappling recently with the preemption issue in cases factually indistinguishable from the present one. Yet, no consensus has emerged with respect to HOLA’s reach. In
DeLeon v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.,
No. 10-CV-01390-LHK,
Without guidance from another court within the First Circuit and without clear direction from other federal and state courts across the nation, this Court agrees with Judge Posner’s conclusion that, especially because HOLA does not give a private right of action, Congress could not have intended to deny all traditional state-law avenues of recourse to consumers who are harmed by the unseemly conduct of lenders. This Court, therefore, holds that the Dixons’ promissory estoppel claim, rooted in the common law and with no ambition of regulating lending, is not barred by HOLA.
III. CONCLUSION, SCHEDULING ORDER, and SOME RUMINATIONS
For the reasons discussed, the Court DENIES Wells Fargo’s motion to dismiss, ECF No. 5. The facts as alleged in the complaint are sufficient to invoke the doctrine of promissory estoppel, and this common-law claim, as applied, is not preempted by federal law.
“Courts across the country are being saddled with a rapid escalation of foreclosure filings due to the fallout from the subprime mortgage crisis. Millions of homeowners stand to lose their homes in the United States ..., and hundreds of billions of dollars in home equity will be lost as a result by all homeowners, not just those in default on their mortgages.” Raymond H. Brescia, Beyond Balls and Strikes: Towards a Problem-Solving Ethic in Foreclosure Proceedings, 59 Case W. Res. L.Rev. 305, 305 (2009).
Instead of abating, the foreclosure crisis has turned into an economic crisis. Today, job loss now pushes many homeowners with prime mortgages into foreclosure, while continuing market decline leaves others owing more on their mortgages than their homes are worth. Current estimates have twenty-five percent of houses ‘underwater,’ and some analysts predict as much as forty-eight percent of all residential properties nationwide will have a negative equity between their mortgage balances and their property values before the housing market recovers.
Robin S. Golden, Building Policy Through Collaborative Deliberation: A Reflection on Using Lessons from Practice to Inform Responses to the Mortgage Foreclosure Crisis, 38 Fordham Urb. L.J. 733, 734 (2011) (footnotes omitted).
It is said that talk is cheap. The Dixons’ allegations are easy to make, yet until their veracity is put to the test, foreclosure is inappropriate. But just as the homeowner ought not suffer a wrongful foreclosure, so too the bank has an equal and proper interest in realizing on its mortgage security by putting the home on the market at a foreclosure sale, selling it to a viable buyer, and lending the funds derived to other potential home buyers. This case is but a microcosm of much larger economic issues; to a significant extent, our national economy may depend upon promptly sorting out the issues raised here. Clogging the operation of the mortgage foreclosure system with court delay simply will not work. Either individual rights will be submerged, and people will lose their homes unlawfully, or home mortgage liquidity will atrophy, the larger economy will suffer, and potential home buyers will be denied homeowner-ship, although financially able to support mortgage payments.
A prompt trial of this case is thus absolutely crucial. Here in Massachusetts, this federal district court — one of the most productive in the country,
United States v. Massachusetts,
Civil Action No. 09-11623-WGY,
Accordingly, this case is ordered placed
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. While the law does not recognize a duty to negotiate in good faith, at least one scholar has argued that, where the parties to an agreement take it upon themselves to negotiate a modification of that agreement, "they are bound by a duty of fair dealing imposed by their existing agreement and do not enjoy the freedom of the regime of negotiation." Farnsworth,
supra
at 244;
see also
Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 205, comment (c).
But see
Burton & Andersen,
supra
§ 8.5.4, at 384 (stating that most courts have “decline[d] to impose obligations concerning revision or renewal merely because the parties already have a contract between them”). Furthermore, Massachusetts law imposes on mortgage holders seeking to foreclose an obligation to "act in good faith and ... use reasonable diligence to protect the interests of the mortgagor."
U.S. Bank Nat’l Ass’n
v.
The Dixons have not alleged that a duty of good faith governed their negotiations with Wells Fargo over a loan modification, and thus this Court need not address the issue. The fact that the parties already were bound to the special contractual relationship of mortgagor-mortgagee, however, lends support to today’s conclusion that Wells Fargo’s conduct, at a minimum, was “shabby and doubtless would not be followed by conscientious mortgagees.”
Williams,
417 Mass, at 385,
. The Court need not decide at this early juncture whаt the measurement of the Dixons' reliance damages would be were they to prevail at trial. A balancing of the equities, however, would seem to weigh in favor of limiting recovery to the detriment sustained. As the Texas Supreme Court said in
Wheeler v. White,
Where the promisee has failed to bind the promisor to a legally sufficient contract, but where the promisee has acted in reliance upon a promise to his detriment, the promisee is to be allowed to recover no morethan reliance damages measured by the detriment sustained. Since the promisee in such cases is partially responsible for his failure to bind the promisor to a legally sufficient contract, it is reasonable to conclude that all that is required to achieve justice is to put the promisee in the position he would have been in had he not acted in reliance upon the promise.
Id. at 97. The Dixons allege that, before Wells Fargo’s promise induced them to stop making their payments, they were not in default. Returning their loan to non-default status would put them back in their previous position. By the same reasoning, they would be required to resume their mortgage payments in their original amount, with the missed payments being added into the loan balance amortized over the life of the loan. If the Dixons were unable to resume their payments, Wells Fargo could then proceed in foreclosure. But all of this remains speculative; assuming liability, the evidence presented at trial will no doubt illuminate the proper measure of reliance damages that the Court ought fashion. See Fuller & Perdue, supra at 53 (commenting that, “when courts work on the periphery of existing dоctrine,” it becomes "obvious” that the "the process of 'measuring' and 'determining' [damages] is really a part of the process of creating them”).
. In
In re Bank of Am. Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) Contract Litig.,
No. 10-md-02193-RWZ,
Pursuant to HAMP, BAC entered into a standard agreement with some of the plaintiffs for a temporary trial modification of their loan. Id. at *1-2. Under this Temporary Period Plan ("TPP”), each homeowner made reduced mortgage payments based on his or her financial eligibility. Id. at *1. The TPP promised that, by complying with its terms for three months, the homeowner would receive a permanent HAMP modification on those same terms. Id. Despite the plaintiffs' compliance with all of the TPP’s terms, they never received a permanent loan modification or a written notice that their request for a permanent modification had been denied. Id. at *2.
As to these plaintiffs, the court upheld their claims for breach of contract or, in the alternative, promissory estoppel as sufficiently alleged. Id. at *3-4. With respect to the promissory estoppel claim in particular, the court rejected the defendant's argument that "no plaintiff could reasonably have relied on a promise in the TPP to modify his or her loan because the TPP contained numerous conditions precedent which plaintiffs failed to perform.” Id. at *4. Not only had the plaintiffs "meticulously” alleged their compliance with all of the conditions precedent, but also the existence of conditions had no effect on the reasonableness of the plaintiffs’ reliance. Id.
Similarly, in
Bosque v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.,
Finally, in
Durmic
v.
J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, NA,
No. 10-CV-10380-RGS,
These three cases are distinct from the present one, in that they each concerned the TPP under HAMP, which at least looks like a contract. But, as Bosque indicated, the TPP is not necessarily clear as to a loan servicer’s obligations under it. Must the servicer give the homeowner a permanent modification, or has it simply promised to review the homeowner’s eligibility for a permanent modification if certain conditions are met? The latter scenario is analogous to the Dixons’ alleged situation, even though their complaint makes no mention of the TPP or HAMP.
In addition, my colleagues in these three cases refused to dismiss the plaintiffs' alternative claims for promissory estoppel. This suggests that even if the TPP is proved not to be an enforceable contract, relief might still be available under the theory of detrimental reliance on the promise contained in the TPP. That the exact contours of the promise were not clearly defined by the TPP was not a bar to letting these claims for promissory estoppel go forward. The Court applies this same reasoning to allow the Dixons’ complaint to survive Wells Fargo’s motion to dismiss.
.
See In re Harris,
No. 10-39586,
. A federal district court may certify a question for decision by the Supreme Judicial Court "if there are involved in any proceeding before it questions of law of [the Commonwealth of Massachusetts] which may be determinative of the cause then pending in the certifying court and as to which it appears to the certifying court there is no controlling precedent in the decisions of [the Supreme Judicial Court].” Mass. S.J.C. Rule 1:03, § 1 (2010). This Court has elected not to certify the question whether the Dixons' allegations are sufficient to state a claim for promissory estoppel, but acknowledges that, with the exception of
McLearn,
. HOLA initially established the Federal Home Loan Bank Board to regulate the conduct of federal savings associations. Congress replaced the Board with the OTS when it amended HOLA in 1989. See 12 U.S.C. § 1462a.
. Federal savings banks are federal savings associations and, as such, are subject to HOLA. 12 U.S.C. § 1464(a)(1). National banks, on the other hand, are subject to the National Bank Act ("NBA”). 12 U.S.C. § 1 et seq. The preemption analysis under both statutes is similar, although not identical. Compare 12 C.F.R. § 560.2, with 12 C.F.R. § 34.4. Here, any differences are irrelevant because, while Wells Fargo is a national bank, the conduct at issue in this lawsuit was undertaken by Wachovia Mortgage, which was a federal savings bank, before it merged into Wells Fargo. See Aff. Steven Chandler, Ex. F, ECF No. 1-6; Aff. Lisa Szargowicz, Ex. G, ECF No. 1-7.
. In reaching similar conclusions with respect to the preemptive effect of HOLA on state law, the Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth Circuits all relied on an OTS opinion letter, in which the agency's chief counsel concluded that an Indiana statute prohibiting deceptive acts and practices in the course of commerce was exempt from preemption under section 560.2(c).
Casey,
. For other cases finding no preemption of common-law claims, see, for example,
Sato,
. For other cases finding preemption of common-law claims, see, for example,
Copeland-Turner v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.,
No. CV-11-37-HZ,
. In light of the national mortgage crisis (and the implosion of state judiciaries due to budgetary constraints, see, e.g., Michael Levenson & Noah Bierman, Judges Vow to Shut 11 Courts, Boston Globe, July 13, 2011, at Al), it is simply inconceivable that the United States Judicial Conference, an unelected body that meets in private without any public input, has chosen this moment to attempt to impair the access of the citizens of Massachusetts to their federal district court, see Judicial Conference of the United States, Preliminary Report: Judicial Conference Actions 4 (March 15, 2011), in the face of a direct congressional mandate to the contrary, see 28 U.S.C. § 133 (setting number of Massachusetts federal district court judges at thirteen).
I am not the only one to point out the wrongheadedness of this policy.
See
Lee Hammel,
Panel Recommends Cutting Judge,
Worcester Telegram & Gazette, July 10, 2011, at B1;
see also United States v. Jones,
Can anyone explain to me how impairing the access to justice of Massachusetts citizens improves the quality of justice nationwide? There is not a scintilla of evidence to support such a preposterous suggestion.
. This Court’s use of a "running” trial list is analyzed fully in William G. Young, Vanishing Trials, Vanishing Juries, Vanishing Constitution, 40 Suffolk U.L. Rev. 67, 90 (2006).
