U.S. Bank National Assn. v. Blowers
U.S. Bank National Assn. v. Blowers
Opinion
**658
This certified appeal calls upon the court to decide whether allegations that a mortgagee engaged in a pattern of misrepresentation and delay in postdefault loan modification negotiations before and after initiating a foreclosure action-thereby adding to the mortgagor's debt and frustrating the mortgagor's ability to avoid foreclosure-can establish legally sufficient special defenses and counterclaims in that action. The defendant mortgagor, Mitchell Piper,
1
appeals from the judgment of the Appellate Court affirming the trial court's judgment of strict foreclosure in favor of the plaintiff mortgagee, U.S. Bank National Association,
2
following the trial court's decision striking the defendant's special defenses and counterclaims. See
U.S. Bank National Assn.
v.
Blowers
,
The record reveals the following undisputed background facts. In August, 2005, the defendant executed a promissory note in exchange for a loan in the original **659 principal amount of $488,000. The plaintiff subsequently became the holder of the note. The note was secured by a mortgage on the defendant's real property in Avon, and the mortgage was assigned to the plaintiff in 2010. The defendant defaulted on the note in January, 2010.
In February, 2014, the plaintiff commenced the present foreclosure action. Upon the defendant's election, the parties participated in the state's court-supervised foreclosure mediation program; see General Statutes §§ 49-31k through 49-31 o ; 3 but were unable to reach a loan modification agreement during that process. The defendant thereafter filed an answer, special defenses, and counterclaims. The special defenses sounded in equitable estoppel and unclean hands; the counterclaims sounded in negligence and violations of the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act (CUTPA), General Statutes § 42-110a et seq. 4
The defendant alleged the following facts in support of all of his special defenses and counterclaims. In early 2010, the defendant fell behind on his mortgage payments due to decreased business revenue resulting from the "Great Recession." 5 Shortly thereafter, the plaintiff, **660 through its servicing agent, 6 reached out to the defendant and offered him a rate reduction that would result in a monthly mortgage *230 payment of $1950. 7 After the defendant successfully completed a three month trial modification period, the plaintiff informed the defendant that the reduced monthly amount previously offered was too low. Thereafter, over an approximately two year period, the plaintiff similarly offered and reneged on at least four additional modifications after accepting trial payments from the defendant. Each successive modification offer sharply increased the defendant's monthly payment, rising from the initial proposal of $1950 to approximately $3445.
In April, 2012, the defendant contacted the state's Department of Banking, 8 which intervened on the defendant's behalf, "resulting in an immediate modification being received." Within months, however, the plaintiff notified the defendant that his monthly payment was increasing nearly 20 percent from that modified payment. The defendant was unable to afford the increased payments but continued to make the monthly payment set by the April modification until October, 2012, when the plaintiff rejected them as " 'partial' " payments.
**661 In late 2013, the plaintiff erroneously informed the defendant's insurance company that the Avon property was no longer being used as the defendant's residence. As a result, the defendant's insurance policy was cancelled, and the defendant was forced to replace coverage at premium costs that increased from his prior rate of $900 to $4000 per year.
The defendant also alleged that the following conduct occurred after the February, 2014 commencement of the foreclosure action, during the parties' participation in court-supervised mediation. In the course of approximately ten months of mediation, the plaintiff regularly ignored agreed upon deadlines, arrived late to mediation sessions, made duplicative, exhaustive, and ever changing requests, and provided the defendant with conflicting or incomplete information. Due to the plaintiff's tardiness, little was accomplished during mediation sessions given the time constraints of the program's scheduling. Although the plaintiff offered a modification at one point, it could not be finalized because the financial information on which it rested was more than four months out of date by the time it was presented to the defendant.
The defendant alleged that the foregoing preforeclosure and postforeclosure misconduct not only frustrated his ability to obtain a proper modification but also caused thousands of dollars in additional accrued interest, attorney's fees, escrow advances, and other costs to be added to the debt claimed by the plaintiff in the foreclosure action. In his negligence counterclaim, the defendant further alleged that the unnecessary and negligent prolonging of this process had ruined his credit score, which adversely impacted his business and personal affairs, and had caused him to incur significant expenses for legal representation and other professional services. The defendant claimed that the plaintiff should be equitably estopped from collecting the damages **662 it caused by its own misconduct and that the plaintiff's attempt to foreclose should be barred by the doctrine of unclean hands. He further sought compensatory and punitive damages, injunctive *231 relief, and attorney's fees under his counterclaims.
The plaintiff moved to strike all of the special defenses and counterclaims. It contended that they were legally insufficient because they were not related to the making, validity, or enforcement of the note, as required under appellate precedent, and also were otherwise insufficient to state a claim upon which relief may be granted. The trial court, Dubay, J. , granted the motion to strike in its entirety.
With respect to the counterclaims, the trial court explained that the proper application of Practice Book § 10-10, which dictates that counterclaims must "[arise] out of the transaction [that] is the subject of the plaintiff's complaint," requires, in the foreclosure context, consideration of whether the counterclaim has some reasonable nexus to the making, validity, or enforcement of the note. The court concluded that this test was not met in the present case because all of the misconduct alleged related to activities that took place subsequent to the execution of the note or mortgage. The court acknowledged that a foreclosure sought after a modification had been reached during mediation could have the requisite nexus to enforcement of the note, but found that there had been no such modification in the present case. In light of its conclusion that the allegations did not establish this nexus, the court did not reach the issue of whether they were otherwise legally sufficient to support the CUTPA and negligence counterclaims.
Conversely, with respect to the special defenses, the trial court found that the defendant had alleged sufficient facts to support equitable estoppel and unclean hands defenses. It cited, however, Appellate Court case law under which "[a] valid special defense at law to a
**663
foreclosure proceeding must be legally sufficient
and
address the making, validity or enforcement of the mortgage, the note or both." (Emphasis added; internal quotation marks omitted.)
TD Bank, N.A.
v.
J & M Holdings, LLC
,
The defendant appealed from the judgment of strict foreclosure to the Appellate Court, challenging the trial court's decision granting the plaintiff's motion to strike. The Appellate Court panel, with one judge dissenting, affirmed the judgment.
U.S. Bank National Assn.
v.
Blowers , supra,
The defendant's certified appeal to this court followed. The defendant challenges the propriety of the making, validity, or enforcement test, the proper scope of "enforcement" under that test if it does apply to foreclosure actions, and the sufficiency of the allegations to establish that the parties had entered into a binding modification if such allegations are necessary to seek equitable relief on the basis of postorigination conduct. 9
**665 At its essence, the defendant's position is that, given the equitable nature of a foreclosure action, a mortgagee's misconduct that hinders a mortgagor's efforts to cure a default, such as through obtaining a modification agreement, and adds to the mortgagor's debt while the mortgagor is making such good faith efforts, is a proper basis for special defenses or counterclaims in that action. Although the defendant suggests that the standard test set forth in our rules of practice should be the sole measure of legal sufficiency, he contends that such misconduct sufficiently relates to enforcement of the note or mortgage if the making, validity, or enforcement test is applied. We conclude that the Appellate Court's judgment must be reversed.
We begin with the observation that the "making, validity, or enforcement test" is a legal creation of uncertain origin, but it has taken root as the accepted general rule in the Superior and Appellate Courts over
*233
the past two decades.
10
Its scope, however, has been
**666
the subject of some debate in those courts.
11
This court has never expressly
*234
endorsed this test. Our lone reference to it was in a case in which we acknowledged that the mortgagee had argued that the mortgagor's equitable special defense did not meet this test; see
**667
Thompson
v.
Orcutt
,
In reaching our decision, we presume that the Appellate Court did not intend for the making, validity, or enforcement test to require mortgagors to meet a more stringent test than that required for special defenses and counterclaims in nonforeclosure actions. We therefore interpret the test as nothing more than a practical application of the standard rules of practice that apply to all civil actions to the specific context of foreclosure actions. See
CitiMortgage, Inc.
v.
Rey
,
I
Appellate review of a trial court's decision to grant a motion to strike is plenary. See, e.g.,
Doe
v.
Hartford Roman Catholic Diocesan Corp.
,
**668
Kumah
v.
Brown
,
The defendant's allegations are not a model of clarity. The ambiguity in the defendant's pleadings is exacerbated by the fact that the defendant has alleged the very same facts in support of various special *235 defenses and counterclaims that require different elements. On one hand, the defendant may be asserting that he satisfied all of the conditions necessary to transition from temporary modifications to permanent modifications but that no such permanent modification was executed. On the other hand, he may be asserting that, even though the plaintiff was not obligated to execute a permanent modification, it induced the defendant to believe that a permanent modification would be executed and engaged in the negotiations in bad faith because it delayed foreclosure with the purpose or effect of extracting additional funds from the defendant, or increasing the defendant's debt. 13 It is also possible **669 that the defendant may be advancing both of these arguments as alternative theories. Given the posture of the case, an early stage of litigation, and the obligation to construe the pleadings in the defendant's favor, we assume that the defendant is advancing all of these theories.
Finally, before turning to the merits of the appeal, we emphasize the narrow scope of the issue before us.
**670
The trial court concluded that the allegations in support of both special defenses of unclean hands and equitable estoppel were legally
*236
sufficient, but for the requisite direct connection to the making, validity, or enforcement of the note or mortgage. The court never decided whether the counterclaims adequately stated a claim upon which relief may be granted, resting its conclusion solely on the lack of the requisite connection to enforcement of the note or mortgage. We assume, for purposes of this opinion, that both the defenses and counterclaims would otherwise be legally sufficient and limit our review to the question of whether the allegations bear a sufficient connection to enforcement of the note or mortgage.
14
The meaning of enforcement in this context presents an issue of law over which we also exercise plenary review. See
CitiMortgage, Inc.
v.
Rey
, supra,
II
Our view of the scope of "enforcement" of the note or mortgage is informed by the following principles. An action for foreclosure is "peculiarly an equitable action ...."
Hartford Federal Savings & Loan Assn.
v.
Lenczyk,
This court previously has declined to take a narrow view of the circumstances under which equitable defenses may be asserted in a foreclosure action. In
Thompson
v.
Orcutt , supra,
Although
Thompson
is silent on precisely when the alleged misconduct occurred, appellate case law recognizes that conduct occurring after the origination of the loan, after default, and even after the initiation of the foreclosure action may form a proper basis for defenses in a foreclosure action. See
McKeever
v.
Fiore
,
This broader temporal scope is consistent with the principle that, in equitable actions, "the facts determinative of the rights of the parties are those in existence at the time of final hearing."
Greenwich Trust Co.
v.
Tyson
,
*238 This broader temporal scope is not inconsistent with a requirement that a defense sufficiently relates to enforcement of the note or mortgage. The various rights of the mortgagee under the note and mortgage (or related security instruments) are not finally or completely "enforced" until the foreclosure action is concluded. See General Statutes § 49-1 (setting forth general rule that "[t]he foreclosure of a mortgage is a bar to any further action upon the mortgage debt, note or obligation against the person or persons who are liable for the payment thereof who are made parties to the foreclosure");
**674
JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A.
v.
Winthrop Properties, LLC
,
The mortgagor's rights and liabilities thus depend not only on the validity of the note and mortgage but also on the amount of the debt. That debt will determine whether strict foreclosure or foreclosure by sale is ordered, and, in turn, whether a deficiency judgment may be recovered and the amount of that deficiency. See
Equity One, Inc.
v.
Shivers
,
These equitable and practical considerations inexorably lead to the conclusion that allegations that the mortgagee has
*239
engaged in conduct that wrongly and substantially increased the mortgagor's overall indebtedness, caused the mortgagor to incur costs that impeded the mortgagor from curing the default, or reneged upon modifications are the types of misconduct that are " 'directly and inseparably connected' ";
Thompson
v.
Orcutt , supra,
We express no opinion as to whether all of the defendant's allegations necessarily have a sufficient nexus to enforcement of the note or mortgage. Because the trial court, the Appellate Court, and the parties have generally addressed the allegations in toto, we do the same. 16
Nor do we intend to suggest, at this stage of the litigation, that the allegations in the present case are sufficient
**677
*240
to justify the remedy of withholding foreclosure or reducing the debt. Even if the defendant is able to prove all of his allegations, the trial court would have to be mindful that "[t]he equitable powers of the court are broad, but they are not without limit. 'Equitable power must be exercised equitably.'
Hamm
v.
Taylor , supra, 180 Conn. [at] 497 [
We are not persuaded that our decision today will have the adverse consequences envisioned by the plaintiff and the Appellate Court that would require a different result as a matter of public policy. On this record, we have no basis to conclude that mortgagees will be deterred from engaging in modification negotiations. Under the state's mediation program, when a mortgagor elects to participate in the program, a mortgagee is required to engage in loss mitigation review with the mortgagor before foreclosure proceedings can proceed and faces sanctions for conduct that amounts to a lack of good faith. 17 See General Statutes §§ 49-31 l and 49-31n. This statutory obligation provides an incentive for the parties to negotiate prior to the filing of a foreclosure action, as do ordinary financial incentives. Our decision serves as a deterrent to wrongful conduct only.
**678
Insofar as the mortgagee is conducting itself fairly and within the bounds of the law, we agree with the dissenting Appellate Court judge's confidence that "our trial courts will be able to discern efficiently between claims that are well pleaded and supported by specific factual allegations and those that are merely frivolous and intended only to create unneeded delay."
U.S. Bank National Assn.
v.
Blowers , supra,
The judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed and the case is remanded to that court with direction to reverse the judgment of strict foreclosure and to remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
Robin Blowers, Farmington Valley Landscape, LLC (Farmington), Land Rover Capital Group (Land Rover), C&I Solutions, LLC, and Viking Fuel Oil Company, Inc. (Viking), also were named as defendants in this foreclosure action. Farmington, Land Rover and Viking were defaulted for failure to appear, and the remaining defendants other than Piper declined to appeal from the trial court's judgment. For convenience, we refer to Piper as the defendant.
The full name of the plaintiff is U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for the Holders of the First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2005-FF10.
In 2008, the legislature established a court-administered and supervised foreclosure mediation program under which neutral mediators assist eligible homeowners facing foreclosure and their lenders or mortgage servicers to achieve a mutually agreeable resolution to a foreclosure action. See General Statutes §§ 49-31k through 49-31 o . Mediation "shall ... address all issues of foreclosure," including, but not limited to, restructuring of the mortgage debt. General Statutes § 49-31m. When a mortgagor elects to participate in the program, the mortgagee is obligated to engage in some form of loss mitigation review with the mortgagor before foreclosure proceedings can proceed. See General Statutes §§ 49-31 l and 49-31n.
Although §§ 49-31k, 49-31 l and 49-31n have been amended by the legislature since the events underlying the present case; see, e.g., Public Acts 2015, No. 15-124; those amendments have no bearing on the merits of this appeal.
The defendant also asserted an unjust enrichment special defense and counterclaim but subsequently withdrew both.
"The Great Recession began in December 2007 and ended in June 2009, which makes it the longest recession since World War II. Beyond its duration, the Great Recession was notably severe in several respects.... Home prices fell approximately 30 percent, on average, from their mid-2006 peak to mid-2009, while the S&P 500 index fell 57 percent from its October 2007 peak to its trough in March 2009." R. Rich, "The Great Recession," available at https://www.federalreservehistory.org/essays/great recession of 200709 (last visited July 23, 2019). As foreclosure actions soared; see generally
Equity One, Inc.
v.
Shivers
,
Because there is no dispute that the plaintiff's servicing agent was acting within the scope of its agency with respect to the conduct alleged, we impute all of the servicer's conduct to the plaintiff in this opinion.
Nothing in the record indicates the amount of the defendant's mortgage payment at the time of default.
The defendant alleges that he contacted the state "banking commission." Because Connecticut does not have a banking commission, we construe the defendant's allegation to mean that he contacted the state's Department of Banking.
We granted the defendant's petition for certification to appeal, limited to the following issues:
"1. Did the Appellate Court properly hold that (a) special defenses to a foreclosure action must 'directly attack' the making, validity, or enforcement of the note or mortgage, and (b) counterclaims in a foreclosure action must also satisfy the 'making, validity, or enforcement' requirement? See Practice Book § 10-10.
"2. If the Appellate Court properly addressed the issues in the first question, did it properly hold that alleged postorigination misconduct concerns a plaintiff's 'enforcement' of a note or mortgage only if the plaintiff breaches a loan modification or other similar agreement that affects the enforceability of the note or mortgage?
"3. If the Appellate Court properly addressed the issues in the first and second questions, did it properly hold that the [defendant's] allegations of the plaintiff's misconduct and breach relating to a 'received' 'immediate modification' did not amount to an allegation that the plaintiff had agreed to a 'final, binding loan modification' that affected the plaintiff's ability to enforce the note or mortgage?" U.S. Bank National Assn. v. Blowers ,328 Conn. 904 , 904-905,177 A.3d 1160 (2018).
Our research reveals that the limitation applied in the present case first appeared in Connecticut jurisprudence in a Superior Court case. In
Connecticut Savings Bank
v.
Reilly
,
It appears that this test first entered our appellate foreclosure jurisprudence in 1999. See
Southbridge Associates, LLC
v.
Garofalo
,
"There have been many and varied interpretations of the making, validity and enforcement requirement by Connecticut Superior Court decisions. There is a line of cases which interprets the phrase very strictly to mean the execution and delivery of an enforceable instrument, and not the occurrences that may arise between the parties during the course of their loan relationship.... A second line of cases, however, interprets the making, validity, and enforcement requirement less rigidly.... This court does not subscribe to the literal, chronological test of making, validity and enforcement .... [P]ostexecution actions or positions of a lender can relate to the enforcement of a note and mortgage. Each counterclaim or special defense therefore requires a case-by-case analysis, by the court acting as a court of equity, to assess the extent to which the facts alleged relate to the original transaction and not to any different or subsequent transaction." (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Bank of America, N.A.
v.
Groton Estates, LLC
, Docket No. CV-09-6001697-S,
Although the dissenting Appellate Court judge relied in part on a distinction between defenses at law and defenses in equity as a basis for a more expansive meaning of enforcement for the latter;
U.S. Bank National Assn.
v.
Blowers
, supra,
Diane E. Thompson, then counsel for the National Consumer Law Center, explains the financial incentives for a mortgage servicer to draw out a delinquency without a modification or a foreclosure. See D. Thompson, "Foreclosing Modifications: How Servicer Incentives Discourage Loan Modifications,"
The trial court found that the defendant's allegations that the plaintiff's misleading conduct was calculated to induce the defendant to believe that he was going to get a loan modification and that the defendant acted on the information provided by making payments under the May, 2012 modification were legally sufficient to satisfy the elements of equitable estoppel. The court did not explain why it distinguished the May, 2012 modification from the other modifications previously offered and withdrawn. The court also found that those same allegations, as well as further allegations that the plaintiff conducted itself in wilful or reckless disregard of the harmful consequences of its solicitations and that it failed to conduct itself in an honest and equitable manner were legally sufficient to establish the elements of an unclean hands defense.
The defendant alleged that the Department of Banking "intervened on [his] behalf, resulting in an immediate modification being received." We agree with Judge Prescott that, in light of the liberal construction that the trial court was required to give the pleadings, the defendant's allegations were sufficient to support a claim that a binding modification had been reached prior to the commencement of the foreclosure action. As such, the defendant's pleadings should not have been stricken in their entirety on that basis alone.
The only distinction that has been made focuses on allegations of conduct during the course of court-supervised mediation. The plaintiff suggested at oral argument before this court that statutory sanctions are the proper remedy to address misconduct during mediation. The mediation scheme acknowledges "an expectation" that the parties will participate in the mediation process "in good faith, but without unreasonable and unnecessary delays" in an effort to reach an agreement to avoid foreclosure or to expedite or facilitate the foreclosure with reasonable speed and efficiency. General Statutes § 49-31k (7). It authorizes the court to impose sanctions on any party or counsel for engaging in "intentional or a pattern or practice of conduct during the mediation process that is contrary to the objectives of the mediation program" and provides that available sanctions "shall include, but not be limited to, terminating mediation, ordering the mortgagor or mortgagee to mediate in person, forbidding the mortgagee from charging the mortgagor for the mortgagee's attorney's fees, awarding attorney's fees, and imposing fines." General Statutes § 49-31n (c) (2).
The present case involves an alleged pattern of misconduct that commenced long before the filing of the foreclosure action and continued during mediation. We have no occasion, therefore, to consider whether the availability of those sanctions reflects a legislative intent to occupy the field when the misconduct is limited to the mediation period. Moreover, the plaintiff has provided no analysis on the issue of whether the legislature intended these sanctions to supplant or otherwise limit the court's inherent power to impose sanctions or otherwise afford equitable relief. Cf.
Mingachos
v.
CBS, Inc.
, supra,
A litigation hold is placed on the case, during which time a mortgagee is prohibited from making any motion, request or demand of a mortgagor, except as it may relate to the mediation program; General Statutes § 49-31 l (c) (6) ; and no judgment of strict foreclosure or foreclosure by sale may be rendered against the mortgagor during the mediation period. General Statutes §§ 49-31 l (c) (6) and 49-31n (c) (9).
Reference
- Full Case Name
- U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Trustee v. Robin BLOWERS Et Al.
- Cited By
- 25 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- The plaintiff bank, as trustee, sought to foreclose a mortgage on certain real property owned by, among others, the defendant P. Following P's default on the mortgage, the plaintiff, through its loan servicing agent, initiated loan modification negotiations with P, but the parties were unable to agree on a binding modification. P then contacted the state Department of Banking, which intervened on his behalf and initiated a modification, but the plaintiff shortly thereafter increased P's monthly mortgage payment. Subsequently, the plaintiff commenced a foreclosure action, and the parties participated in mediation but were unable to reach an agreement. P then asserted special defenses sounding in equitable estoppel and unclean hands, as well as certain counterclaims, contending that the plaintiff engaged in conduct after the note had been executed that wrongfully and substantially increased P's overall indebtedness, caused P to incur costs that impeded his ability to cure the default, and reneged on loan modifications. The plaintiff moved to strike the special defenses and counterclaims, contending that they were legally insuffi- cient because they were not related to the making, validity or enforce- ment of the note or mortgage and were otherwise insufficient to state a claim on which relief could be granted. The trial court granted the motion to strike, concluding that the counterclaims did not have a reasonable nexus to the making, validity or enforcement of the note because the misconduct alleged related to activities that occurred subse- quent to the execution of the note or mortgage. The court did not reach the issue of whether P's allegations were otherwise legally sufficient to support the counterclaims. The trial court found that P had alleged sufficient facts to support his special defenses of equitable estoppel and unclean hands, but, because P did not allege that the parties had agreed to a modification of the loan postforeclosure and could not rely on postforeclosure conduct to support his special defenses, they were legally insufficient, as they did not directly relate to the making, validity or enforcement of the note or mortgage. The trial court rendered judg- ment of strict foreclosure, from which P appealed to the Appellate Court. The Appellate Court rejected P's request to abandon the making, validity or enforcement test in favor of the transactional test, set forth in the rules of practice (§ 10-10), that requires that counterclaims must arise out of the transaction that is the subject of the plaintiff's complaint. The Appellate Court affirmed the trial court's judgment, and P, on the granting of certification, appealed to this court. Held that the Appellate Court incorrectly concluded that P's allegations, made in connection with his special defenses and counterclaims, did not provide a legally sufficient basis for those defenses and counterclaims, as P's allegations involved the types of misconduct that bore a sufficient connection to the enforcement of the note or the mortgage, and to the extent that the pleadings could be construed to allege that the intervention by the Department of Banking resulted in a binding loan modification, the breach of such an agreement also provided a sufficient basis to withstand a motion to strike in a foreclosure action; accordingly, the judgment of the Appellate Court was reversed, and the case was remanded with direction to reverse the judgment of strict foreclosure and for further pro- ceedings. Argued December 11, 2018—officially released August 13, 2019