GUILD MORTGAGE COMPANY, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. JACK H. HELLER et al., Defendants and Respondents.
No. B022174
Second Dist., Div. Two.
Aug. 5, 1987.
August 31, 1987
1505
Dorazio, Barnhorst & Bonar, Joel L. Incorvaia and Martha O. Anderson for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Landels, Ripley & Diamond, Bruce W. Hyman, Harvey L. Leiderman and Susan T. Taylor as Amici Curiae on behalf of Plaintiff and Appellant.
Nordman, Cormany, Hair & Compton and Glen M. Reiser for Defendants and Respondents.
OPINION
COMPTON, J.---Plaintiff Guild Mortgage Company appeals from a judgment dismissing its complaint for breach of contract, fraud, and conspiracy after the trial court sustained without leave to amend the demurrer of defendants Jack and Kathleen Heller. We reverse.
On appeal from a judgment entered after the sustaining of a general demurrer, this court must assume the truth of all properly pleaded allegations of the complaint. (Loehr v. Ventura County Community College Dist. (1983) 147 Cal.App.3d 1071, 1076-1077 [195 Cal.Rptr. 576].) Moreover, the allegations must be liberally construed with a view to attaining substantial justice among the parties. (
For purposes of this appeal, a brief recital of the facts is all that is required. In September 1983, defendants agreed to purchase a single-family residence in Agoura Hills from Arthur and Francene Johnson for $129,500. The parties opened escrow and defendants applied to Guild Mortgage for a $108,300 loan to be secured by a first trust deed on the property. Although the escrow instructions were amended on several different occasions, they essentially provided that defendants would make a cash down payment of $21,200 and pay the usual closing costs and charges. Defendants further represented to Guild that the property would be retained as an investment and that they alone would be responsible for making the monthly mortgage payments. Based upon these various representations, the loan was made in December 1983. Escrow closed shortly thereafter without defendants being required to make a down payment or paying closing costs. Unaware that defendants had assumed ownership without complying with the escrow instructions, Guild Mortgage sold the note on the secondary mortgage market to the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC).1
In urging us to affirm the trial court‘s order sustaining their demurrer without leave to amend, defendants make the same contention they made below, that is, that the cause of action plaintiff attempted to set forth is barred by the provisions of
In sustaining the demurrer the trial court relied in great part on First Federal Sav. & Loan Assn. v. Lehman (1984) 159 Cal.App.3d 537 [205
In California, as in most states, a creditor‘s right to enforce a debt secured by a mortgage or deed of trust on real property is restricted by statute. Under California law “the creditor must rely upon his security before enforcing the debt. (
The purpose of the antideficiency legislation was to protect debtors in certain situations from personal liability for large deficiency judgments after their property had been taken by the creditor through foreclosure proceedings, thereby preventing the aggravation of the economic downturn which would result if defaulting purchasers lost their land and in addition were burdened with personal liability (Bargioni v. Hill (1963) 59 Cal.2d 121, 123 [28 Cal.Rptr. 321, 378 P.2d 593].) The antideficiency statutes further served to prevent creditors in private sales from buying in at deflated prices and realizing double recoveries by holding debtors for large deficiencies. (Cornelison v. Kornbluth (1975) 15 Cal.3d 590, 601 [125 Cal.Rptr. 557, 542 P.2d 981]; Spangler v. Memel (1972) 7 Cal.3d 603, 612 [102 Cal.Rptr. 807, 498 P.2d 1055]; see also Hetland, Secured Real Estate Transactions (Cont.Ed.Bar 1974) § 9.3, pp. 183-184.) The Supreme Court also has observed that “section 580d was enacted to put judicial enforcement on a parity with private enforcement. This result could be accomplished by giving the debtor a right to redeem after a sale under the power. The right to redeem, like proscription of a deficiency judgment, has the effect of making the security satisfy a realistic share of the debt. [Citation.] By choosing instead to bar a deficiency judgment after private sale, the Legislature achieved its purpose without denying the creditor his election of remedies. If the creditor wishes a deficiency judgment, his sale is subject to statutory redemption rights. If he wishes a sale resulting in nonredeemable title, he must forego the right to a deficiency judgment. In either case the debtor is protected.” (Roseleaf Corp. v. Chierighino, supra, 59 Cal.2d at pp. 43-44.)
As can be seen, the antideficiency statutes embrace a complete legislative scheme for foreclosure for defaulted debts. It has long been recognized, however, that those statutes do not preclude a suit for fraud. (Glendale Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn. v. Marina View Heights Dev. Co. (1977) 66 Cal.App.3d 101 [135 Cal.Rptr. 802]; Kass v. Weber (1968) 261 Cal.App.2d
Section 725a specifically refers to recovery on a “debt” while section 580d specifically refers to judgments on a deficiency on a “note.” There is, therefore, nothing in the express language of the statutes which precludes an action not involving recovery on a debt or note. (See Kass v. Weber, supra, 261 Cal.App.2d at pp. 422-423, see also Manson v. Reed (1986) 186 Cal.App.3d 1493 1500-1502 [231 Cal.Rptr. 446].) A suit for fraud obviously does not involve an attempt to recover on a debt or note. As such, it stands separate and apart from any action which the antideficiency legislation seeks to preclude.
Neither the purpose nor intent of the antideficiency statutes is frustrated by allowing a creditor to recover damages for fraud in the inducement of a loan. We cannot believe that the Legislature intended to immunize a mortgagor from liability for any and all misrepresentations concerning his financial stability or plans for the property made in obtaining a loan in the first instance. Nor do we read Lehman as being that pervasive.
Allowing plaintiff here to prosecute its claim and receive compensation for its damages will not result in a downward spiral of land values, double recovery, or overvaluation of security. The risk inherent in secured land transactions will remain with the mortgagee, but that risk should not be expanded to include the assumption of damages resulting from a mortgagor‘s fraud. (See Brown v. Critchfield (1980) 100 Cal.App.3d 858, 870-871 [161 Cal.Rptr. 342].)
The financial qualifications of the mortgagor and the use to which the property is to be put are vital considerations in extending credit and are appropriate gauges of the probability of default.
In 1985, the Legislature, intending to curtail fraud in the real estate market and to vitiate the holding in Lehman enacted
The legislative history10 of these various enactments makes clear the Legislature‘s disapproval of the judicial use of the antideficiency statutes to insulate mortgagors from liability in fraudulently induced loan transactions. We also think it obvious that the public policies served by the antideficiency statutes are in no way frustrated by permitting a lender to pursue a separate action against a borrower for fraud. The statutes essentially allow an action for fraud in those situations where a creditor-mortgagee would have been able to obtain a deficiency judgment following a judicial foreclosure. The damages recoverable in such actions remain a matter of proof and will be
tion is based on fraud under
“(b) The provisions of this section shall not apply to loans secured by single-family, owner-occupied residential real property, when the property is actually occupied by the borrower as represented to the lender in order to obtain the loan and the loan is for an amount of one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) or less, as adjusted annually commencing on January 1, 1987, to the Consumer Price Index as published by the United States Department of Labor.
“(c) Any action maintained under this section for damages shall not constitute a money judgment for deficiency or a deficiency judgment within the meaning of
In light of the foregoing, we are convinced that plaintiff may prosecute its action for fraud in the inducement of the loan even though the purported misrepresentations did not directly relate to the value of the property securing the debt.
Defendants nonetheless argue that such an action may not be maintained in the absence of any allegation that the property was sold at auction for less than the amount of the outstanding debt. Their argument is premised on the notion that a lender may not seek damages for fraud, whether or not that fraud relates to the valuation of the property held as security, where it has made a “full credit bid” at the trustee‘s sale. According to defendants, such a bid establishes as a matter of law that the value of the underlying security has not been impaired and results in the total satisfaction of the secured obligation. (Cornelison v. Kornbluth, supra, 15 Cal.3d 590, 607-608; Sumitomo Bank v. Taurus Developers, Inc. (1986) 185 Cal.App.3d 211, 218-220 [229 Cal.Rptr. 719].)11
Although the respective briefs devote considerable time to the the legal and practical effect of a full credit bid on plaintiff‘s cause of action,12 we need not resolve that issue on this appeal. Regardless of whether the FHLMC purchased the property by making a full credit bid, the complaint avers that plaintiff Guild Mortgage and not the FHLMC was damaged in an amount exceeding $50,000 when it was required to repurchase and sell the property on the open market. The complaint further alleges that the repurchase was necessitated by defendants’ fraud and that the loan would not have been made in the absence of the purported misrepresentations. Even under the rule articulated in Lehman, these allegations are sufficient to establish a clear causal connection between defendants’ alleged fraudulent conduct and the damages sustained.
Even were we to hold that plaintiff could not maintain a separate cause of action for fraud against defendant-buyers, we would nonetheless conclude that the lender is entitled to proceed against defendants under the conspiracy allegation. That allegation essentially avers that the buyer, seller, broker, escrow company, and transferee conspired among themselves to secure the
The judgment is reversed and the matter is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed herein. Plaintiff to recover its costs on appeal.
Roth, P. J., concurred.
GATES, J.---I wholeheartedly concur in my colleagues’ decision to reverse the judgment upon the pleadings entered in this particular action. I write here only to caution against too broad an interpretation being given to our holding.
Accepting as true, as we must, the allegations of appellant‘s complaint, respondents, acting in the role of “dummy” purchasers, joined with others in a conspiracy to perpetrate a deliberate fraud which could conceivably have caused injury even to a lender who had exercised reasonable care in the conduct of its business affairs.
This state‘s antideficiency statutes were never designed to allow such persons to escape the consequences stemming from their part in this joint tort while their cohorts yet remained liable. Nevertheless, I trust this fact will not be mistakenly construed by our various lending institutions and their counsel, or by our trial courts themselves, as indicating we believe the careful limitations imposed upon fraud actions by our Legislature (see
Our present extremely limited record, of course, reveals virtually none of the determinative events surrounding appellant‘s alleged loss and, as jurists, we have little pragmatic experience in this arcane field of mortgage financing. Appellant‘s counsel, however, did advise us at oral argument that at one point her client actually had held title to the very property which, presumably after an appropriate investigation and appraisal, it had agreed to accept, at least in the absence of a judicial foreclosure, as full satisfaction for its loan. She further stated that this period of ownership had occurred
Were these facts not disturbing enough, counsel further informed us that thereafter, by means of some unknown private transaction that lacked even the protection provided by a trustee sale, appellant had unilaterally fixed its losses at $50,000. This sum it now seeks to recover together with an additional $50,000 by way of punitive damages. Such a scenario obviously has the potential for the gravest of abuses. (How any company can rationally expect to remain solvent when it accepts as security property worth only one-half the amount it lends, is a question we did not pose.)
Radio, television, and the newspapers, to say nothing of one‘s daily “junk mail,” are replete with the importunities of various lenders and mortgage brokers. They assure any who will harken to their siren call that, since they are concerned solely with the ownership of property, to them it matters not that a potential borrower has been turned down by banks and savings and loan associations, that he cannot verify his income, that his credit is not established, etc., etc. In addition, it is at least rumored that certain real estate salesmen eager for a commission have been known to urge prospective purchasers to adopt “creative-financing” schemes which, should they collapse, might readily provide a superficially firm foundation for an assertion of fraud.
Rare indeed is the attorney intellectually incapable of dictating a complaint setting forth any cause of action known to the law. Although, hopefully, an inappropriately accused borrower would ultimately prevail at trial, or upon a motion for summary judgment, or even after a succession of demurrers had forced a sufficient specificity of pleading, nonetheless, such counsel provided defenses would be of little significance to a defendant too impoverished to make his mortgage payments.
In sum, while we must be ever alert to foil the type of gross fraud allegedly perpetrated here, not every factual inaccuracy or piece of “puffing” by a borrower, unrelated to the value of the security the lender has voluntarily agreed to accept, will sustain an action for fraud brought by a lender who is not a bank, savings and loan, or credit union, or even by one of these institutions upon an indebtedness of less than $150,000 incurred in connection with a single-family, owner occupied residence.
To hold otherwise would completely emasculate our long honored antideficiency statutes and render meaningless the restricted exceptions thereto our Legislature has so recently promulgated. It would also cause individual borrowers who are not, as here alleged, engaged in a conspiracy, either
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 31, 1987.
COMPTON
J.
