Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp. v. DB Structured Products, Inc.

33 Misc. 3d 720
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 25, 2011
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 33 Misc. 3d 720 (Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp. v. DB Structured Products, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp. v. DB Structured Products, Inc., 33 Misc. 3d 720 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Shirley Werner Kornreich, J.

This action arises from an insurance and indemnity agreement (the I&I) between plaintiff Assured Guaranty Municipal Corp.1 (Assured) and various other parties to a securitization transaction of residential mortgage loans. These parties were: defendants DB Structured Products, Inc. (DBSP) and ACE Securities Corp. (ACE); third-party defendant GreenPoint Mortgage Funding, Inc. (GreenPoint); and ACE Home Equity Loan Trust, Series 2006-GP1 (the Trust), which is a nonparty to this action.

In the complaint, Assured alleges, inter alia, that defendants breached certain representations and warranties contained in the I&I.2 In its third-party complaint, defendant and third-party plaintiff DBSP alleges that if the representations and warranties made by DBSP to Assured have been breached, then Green-Point must indemnify DBSP under an indemnification provision contained in a “Master Revolving Credit Loan Purchase and Servicing Agreement” (the PSA) between GreenPoint and DBSP

GreenPoint moves to dismiss the third-party complaint. DBSP opposes the motion.

[723]*723I. Background

The following facts are drawn from the complaint and the third-party complaint unless otherwise indicated.

A. The Securitization Transaction

DBSP and GreenPoint entered into the PSA on February 1, 2006. (See Potter aff, exhibit D.) Pursuant to this agreement, DBSP purchased 6,293 residential mortgage loans (the HELOCs)3 from GreenPoint, an originator of such loans. (See Potter aff, exhibit C 1Í 5.) DBSP resold the HELOCs to ACE pursuant to a “HELOC Purchase Agreement.” (See Potter aff, exhibit C If 7; Kelly-Najah aff, exhibit C.) ACE, in turn, deposited the HELOCs in the Trust pursuant to a “Sale and Servicing Agreement” (the SSA). (See Goldfarb aff, exhibit L.) The outstanding principal balance on the HELOCs received by the Trust was in excess of $352 million. The Trust issued securities backed by the cash flow from the HELOCs (the notes). (Id.) The notes were sold to investors. (Id.) DBSP received through ACE the proceeds from the sale of the notes. (Id.) Pursuant to the I&I, Assured insured certain payments to be made to investors under the terms of the notes. (See Kelly-Najah aff, exhibit D.)

B. Assured’s Complaint

On June 23, 2010, Assured filed a complaint against DBSP and ACE. In the complaint, Assured alleges that the HELOCs “have failed miserably.” (See Potter aff, exhibit A II 42.) Specifically, according to Assured, “[a]s of May 26, 2010 . . . cumulative pool losses are already more than $122 million.” (Id.) Assured’s resulting claim payments to the insured noteholders, as of the date of the complaint, exceeded $93.5 million. (Id.)

In late 2007, Assured engaged third-party consultants “to review the files created during the origination of several hundred of the securitized HELOCs that had defaulted.” (See Potter aff, exhibit A H 43.) The consultants “reviewed 640 defaulted HELOCs.” (Id.) According to the complaint, the consultants found:

[724]*724“(1) rampant fraud, primarily involving misrepresentation of the borrower’s income, assets, employment, or intent to occupy the property as the borrower’s residence (rather than as an investment), and subsequent failure to so occupy the property;
“(2) failure by the borrower to accurately disclose his or her liabilities, including multiple other mortgage loans taken out to purchase additional investment property; and
“(3) pervasive violations of GreenPoint’s own underwriting guidelines and prudent mortgage-lending practices, including loans made to borrowers (i) who made unreasonable claims as to their income, (ii) with multiple, unverified social security numbers, (iii) with credit scores below the required minimum, (iv) with debt-to-income and/or loan-to-value ratios above the allowed maximum, or (v) with relationships to GreenPoint or other non-arm’s length relationships.” (See Potter aff, exhibit A 11 44 [emphasis supplied].)

Based on these findings, Assured contends that defendants breached their representations and warranties contained in section 6 of the HPA and section 2.01 of the I&I. (See Potter aff, exhibit A 1i 44.)

1. Breach of Representations and Warranties in Section 6 of the HPA

In the complaint, Assured identifies the following representations and warranties in section 6 of the HPA as breached:

“HPA § 6 (ii): No error, omission, misrepresentation, negligence, fraud or similar occurrence with respect to a HELOC has taken place on the part of any person, including without limitation the Mortgagor, any appraiser, any builder or developer, or any other party involved in the origination of the HELOCs or in the application of any insurance in relation to such HELOC; . . .
“HPA § 6 (xiv): There is no material default, breach, violation event or event of acceleration existing under the mortgage or the Credit Line Agreement and no event which, with the passage of time or with notice and the expiration of any grace or cure period, would constitute a material default, breach, violation or event of acceleration, and the Seller [DBSP] has not, nor has its predecessors, waived [725]*725any material default, breach, violation or event of acceleration; . . .
“HPA § 6 (xxiii): The HELOCs were underwritten in accordance with the originators’s [GreenPoint’s] underwriting guidelines in effect at the time the HELOCs were originated (the ‘Applicable Underwriting Guidelines’), except with respect to certain of those HELOCs which had compensating factors permitting a deviation from the Applicable Underwriting Guidelines; . . .
“HPA § 6 (xxx): The Loan File contains an appraisal of the related Mortgaged Property which was made prior to the approval of the HELOC by a qualified appraiser, duly appointed by the related originator and was made in accordance with the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989;. . .
“HPA § 6 (lii): The information set forth in the Closing Schedule is true and correct in all material respects as of the Cut-Off Date[4] . . .
“HPA § 6 (lxiii): As of the Cut-Off Date, no HELOC had a Combined Loan to Value Ratio of more than 100%.” (See Potter aff, exhibit A II 26 [emphasis supplied].)

2. Breach of Representations and Warranties in Section 2,01 of the I&I

In the complaint, Assured identifies the following representations and warranties in section 2.01 of the I&I as breached:

“I&I § 2.01 (i): None of the Transaction Documents[5] contain any statement of a material fact with respect to [DBSP or ACE] or the Transaction Documents or HELOCs that was untrue or misleading in any material respects when made.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Misc. 3d 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/assured-guaranty-municipal-corp-v-db-structured-products-inc-nysupct-2011.