ELNEDIS A. MORONTA vs. NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE, LLC, & another.¹
No. 13-P-1805.
Appellate Court of Massachusetts
November 5, 2015.
88 Mass. App. Ct. 621 (2015)
KATZMANN, HANLON, & MALDONADO, JJ.
Norfolk. December 10, 2014. Further appellate review granted, 473 Mass. 1112 (2016).
In a civil action arising from a mortgage foreclosure claiming, inter alia, that the mortgagee and its assignee (defendants) violated the plaintiff borrower‘s rights under
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court Department on July 23, 2010.
A motion for summary judgment was heard by John P. Connor, Jr., J., and a motion for reconsideration was heard by him; a motion for summary judgment was heard by Thomas A. Connors, J.; and entry of judgment was ordered by John P. Connor, Jr., J.
Irene H. Bagdoian for the plaintiff.
Jennifer J. Normand for Nationstar Mortgage, LLC.
MALDONADO, J. Elnedis Moronta (the borrower) appeals from final judgments entered following the decisions of judges of the Superior Court granting motions for summary judgment for the defendants on the borrower‘s claims that Fremont Investment & Loan (Fremont) and its assignee, Nationstar Mortgage, LLC (Nationstar), (i) violated an injunction imposed on Fremont and later extended to Fremont‘s assignees foreclosing on his mortgage without the approval of the Attorney General, (ii) violated
Background. On July 9, 2004, the borrower purchased the home located at 152 Independence Avenue in Quincy for $348,000 financed with a mortgage loan of $330,600 from Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. (Wells Fargo). The Wells Fargo loan was an adjustable rate loan with an initial rate of 5.25 percent and an initial monthly payment of $2,137.32, including taxes and insurance. The maximum interest rate was 11.25 percent. After the rate increased to approximately eight percent and his monthly payments increased to $2,884, the borrower had difficulty making his monthly mortgage payments along with his credit card debt of approximately $630 per month. Carrying a total monthly debt of approximately $3,514, the borrower sought to refinance the loan to consolidate his debt and reduce his monthly payments. He engaged a mortgage broker, Popular Mortgage Group, which submitted his mortgage application to Fremont.
The borrower asserts that his monthly income on his loan application was inflated to $8,500 from the $6,000 figure he provided and which, he contends, was supported by documentation he submitted.2 The parties contest who bore responsibility for the $8,500 figure.
The initial monthly payment on the first loan was $2,368.59 (including taxes and insurance of $481.16) and the monthly payment on the second loan was $676.91, for a total of $3,045.90. If the borrower‘s monthly income was $6,000, even the initial payments exceeded fifty percent of his gross monthly income, and if it was $8,500, the payments constituted thirty-six percent of that income.
Presumably to keep the monthly payment low, the first note was amortized over fifty years, although the term of the loan was thirty years. This resulted in a balloon payment at the end of the
The truth in lending disclosure statement also indicates that the monthly payment on the first note would adjust upward after three years to $2,684.84 for the rest of the thirty-year term. Thus, the total monthly payment after the first three years for the two refinance loans and taxes and insurance would be $4,023. If, however, the interest rate further adjusted to the ceiling of 13.9 percent, monthly payments would be in the vicinity of $3,400, bringing the monthly payments to $4,558.6 Even accepting that the borrower‘s monthly income was $8,500, the monthly payment could exceed fifty percent of the borrower‘s income after four years, and within three years would exceed by several hundred dollars the monthly amount that the borrower had already indicated he could not handle and that had led to his desire to refinance.
It is undisputed that the refinance loans paid off the Wells Fargo loan in the amount of $322,118.83 and provided the borrower with $37,114.23 at closing. The borrower used the money to pay off his credit card debt and do repair work on the property.7 Nonetheless, the borrower admits that he was unable to make his payments because his income was reduced as a result of the decline in the economy. His last payment on the notes was made in November of 2008, and his inability to pay preceded any interest rate increase on the first loan. Nationstar foreclosed on the property in November of 2009 and purchased the property at the foreclosure sale for $260,897.06.
In July of 2007, Fremont notified the borrower that it was transferring the servicing of its notes to Nationstar. Fremont and
Discussion. “We review the disposition of a motion for summary judgment de novo . . . to determine whether all material facts have been established such that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law . . . [and] [w]e construe all facts in favor of the nonmoving party.” American Intl. Ins. Co. v. Robert Seuffer GMBH & Co. Kg., 468 Mass. 109, 112 (2014) (quotation omitted).
Because Fremont transferred the loans and servicing rights to Nationstar in 2007, prior to the imposition of any injunction, and MERS thereafter held the mortgages for Nationstar as assignee of Fremont, we agree that Nationstar did not violate the injunction against Fremont. The assignment of the notes and servicing rights preceded the injunction imposed in February of 2008 against Fremont and extended to Fremont‘s assigns in March of 2008. Thus, Nationstar was not required to notify the Attorney General prior to pursuing foreclosure against the borrower in 2009. We also agree that Nationstar‘s negotiations with Moronta to modify the loans did not violate
“[General Laws c.] 93A prohibits the origination of a home mortgage loan that the lender should recognize at the outset that the borrower is not likely to be able to repay.” Drakopoulos v. U.S. Bank Natl. Assn., 465 Mass. 775, 786 (2013), quoting from Frappier v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., 645 F.3d 51, 56 (1st Cir. 2011). While in Commonwealth v. Fremont Inv. & Loan, 452 Mass. 733, 739, 747 (2008), the court identified four characteristics that rendered the loans at issue there presumptively unfair pursuant to
Here, there are a number of factors that should have put Fremont on notice that the borrower was unlikely to have the ability to repay the refinance loans. The first two criteria articulated in Commonwealth v. Fremont Inv. & Loan, 452 Mass. at 739, are met: the loan funding eighty percent of the total amount loaned is an adjustable rate loan with an introductory period of three years or less, and the introductory rate is at least three points below the fully indexed rate. In addition, the loan funding twenty percent of the full amount is a fixed rate loan at the high interest rate of 10.5 percent.
Moreover, as we construe the record, there is at least a question of fact whether the debt to income ratio would have exceeded fifty percent of the borrower‘s gross monthly income, particularly if considered at the fully indexed rate and without ignoring, as the defendants do, the enormous balloon payment due at the end of the term. First, the borrower contends that all of the information he provided to the broker indicated that his monthly income was $6,000, and he did not notice that it had been inflated to $8,500 on the loan application when he signed it. Neither party developed the record whether the broker was solely an agent for the borrower or whether it also had an agency relationship with Fremont. Competing bald assertions that the broker was or was not an agent of Fremont cannot be resolved on this record. Moreover, even where a borrower signs a loan application listing a certain monthly income, we have allowed for the possibility that the borrower can show it was artificially inflated by the lender or, in this case, by Fremont‘s agent. Drakopoulos v. U.S. Bank Natl. Assn., 465 Mass. at 788.
Addressing the fourth Fremont criterion, it is not clear to us that the loans at issue do not at least approach the 100 per cent financing the Supreme Judicial Court deemed unfair in Commonwealth v. Fremont Inv. & Loan, 452 Mass. at 739-740. There, the Supreme Judicial Court noted that Fremont frequently financed properties 100 percent by dividing the amount financed into the two piggy-back loans representing eighty and twenty percent of the loan amount respectively. See id. at 738 n.12. Fremont used the same piggy-back loan split here. Nothing in the record explains the reason two loans were issued to the borrower instead of one. Fremont contends this was not a 100 percent finance of the property because it obtained an appraisal prior to the loan closing that indicated the property had a value of $420,000, which means the loan to value ratio was eighty-eight percent. While we agree that the borrower‘s reliance on Zillow, an Internet Web site, is inadequate to challenge the appraisal, where the piggy-back loan feature of the refinancing is otherwise unexplained, at least at the summary judgment stage, its use supports an adverse inference suggesting the loan to value ratio approached 100 percent or otherwise caused an underwriting concern that resulted in the use of two loans. If, as the trial judge noted in Commonwealth v. Fremont Inv. & Loan, supra at 740, 100 percent financing is problematic because of its impacts on the possibility of refinancing in a declining market, we conclude there is at least a question of fact as to whether eighty-eight percent refinancing via an adjustable rate loan amortized over fifty years, with resulting minimal paydown of principal and a ninety percent balloon payment at the end of thirty years, along with a 10.5 percent nonadjustable loan, also raises similar refinancing concerns.
For each of the loans, Fremont provided a “borrower benefit worksheet and certification” asserting that the refinance resulted
We are aware that the borrower benefited by being able to pay off the prior mortgage, pay off his credit cards, and make improvements to his home. In addition, there was at least a temporary reduction in his monthly bills. That reduction was to be relatively short-lived, however, and the enormous balloon payment at the end of the note casts doubt as to whether it is possible to say the monthly bills truly were reduced. Moreover, if the only test were whether the borrower benefited in some way from a refinancing loan, no loan would violate
On the record presented, even if the refinancing loans at issue do not exactly meet the criteria set forth in Commonwealth v. Fremont Inv. & Loan, supra, in terms of loan to value ratio and percentage of financing, we conclude that the additional feature of the amortization over fifty years resulting in a balloon payment approaching ninety percent of the full amount of the adjustable rate note after thirty years of payments between $1,900 and $3,400 per month, along with higher net interest paid, raises a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the loan is unfair under
Judgments reversed.
