Bank of America NA v. Kirby Westheimer

683 F. App'x 145
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 20, 2017
Docket14-4765 & 15-3562
StatusUnpublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 683 F. App'x 145 (Bank of America NA v. Kirby Westheimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of America NA v. Kirby Westheimer, 683 F. App'x 145 (3d Cir. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION ***

FUENTES, Circuit Judge.

In this mortgage foreclosure appeal, defendant-appellant Kirby Westheimer argues that the District Court erred in granting a foreclosure judgment in favor of the plaintiffs-appellees (collectively, along with their predecessors, “BoA”) over his affirmative defenses and counterclaims, and erred further in denying his Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(2) motion for relief from the judgment. Detecting no error warranting remand, we will affirm.

I.

a) Background

This case arises out of a construction loan that Westheimer intended to use to renovate and rebuild parts of his home in Princeton, New Jersey. After hiring an architect, whom he also retained as construction manager, Westheimer began work on the project in the mid-to-late 2000s. During this period, Westheimer paid the various contractors using his own personal funds. It proved to be quite an expensive undertaking; by late summer of 2008, he had already sunk more than a million dollars into the ongoing renovations.

In order to complete the work, Westh-eimer mortgaged his property in September 2008 and entered into a construction loan agreement (the “Agreement”) with BoA for an aggregate principal amount of $1.6 million. The Agreement contemplated a construction period ending in March 2010, about a year and half later; requests for extensions of this deadline were subject to BoA’s approval.

Several sections of the Agreement pertained to BoA’s right to conduct inspections of the property during the pendency of the construction. For instance, Section 2.4(a)(4) premised the disbursement of funds on BoA’s “conducting] such inspections as it may require” with results proving satisfactory to BoA. 1 Section 2.5(b) *147 further conditioned each scheduled disbursement on the successful completion of a scheduled inspection; Section 2.5(c) required Westheimer to pay for the various inspections. Section 2.5(d), meanwhile, disclaimed any obligation on BoA’s part to supervise construction or conduct inspections for Westheimer’s benefit, while emphasizing that the inspections were not to be viewed as an endorsement of project’s pace, progress, or quality:

[BoA] is under no obligation to supervise construction of the Improvements. [BoA’s] inspection of the construction of the Improvements is for the sole purpose of protecting and preserving the security of [BoA]. No inspection is to be construed as a representation or endorsement that the construction of the improvements is in fact in compliance with Plans and Specifications, that the construction will be free of defective material or workmanship, or that the construction is in compliance with limitations or requirements imposed by covenants and restrictions of record or by governmental authority. 2

Section 7 of the Agreement contained an integration clause and a subsection entitled “Borrower-Lender Relationship,” which said that BoA “will not be considered ... a partner, agent or joint venturer.” 3

b) Foreclosure Action; Pleadings

In 2012, BoA filed a verified foreclosure complaint in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey. Invoking the New Jersey Fair Foreclosure Act, N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2A:50-53 et seq., and the District Court’s diversity jurisdiction, BoA alleged that Westheimer had defaulted on the Agreement and mortgage note by failing to complete the improvements to his home by the agreed-upon date, and had subsequently failed to correct his defaults. BoA sought a final judgement of foreclosure.

Westheimer countered with an answer containing twenty-five affirmative defenses and thirteen state-law counterclaims, all of which “ar[ose] out of the [allegedly] negligent and otherwise improper manner and means by which [BoA] inspected and/or failed to inspect the [construction project] as a precondition of its disbursement of the Loan proceeds.” 4 Westheimer alleged that, lacking any experience with construction projects or lending, he was induced by BoA to believe that its agents were assuming the responsibility to oversee and monitor the loan and underlying construction project, which it would do via the inspections tied to the disbursement of funds— despite the language in the Agreement to the contrary. Due in part to BoA’s representations, its use of “draw affidavits,” and its requirement that he invest additional money in the construction, it was Westh-eimer’s understanding that the procedures of the Agreement existed to ensure the timely completion of the construction project at or under cost. In reality, Westheimer alleged, BoA conducted what were essentially “sham” inspections and did not adequately monitor the project, somehow failing to notice that the project was grievously behind schedule and plagued with disruption, delay, and deficiencies. For instance, while refusing to provide Westh-eimer with the relevant inspection reports, BoA told him through its representatives that progress was “fine” and “looking good.” 5

Westheimer charged that, through these inducements and subsequent negligence, *148 BoA had created a special relationship with him giving rise to a duty of care under the law—a duty BoA had subsequently breached. BoA was therefore “complicit in the events giving rise to the alleged default,” flowing from its “gross negligence” in failing to conduct appropriate inspections “before authorizing disbursements under the” Agreement. 6 Westheimer sought, among other things, a judicial declaration that he was not in breach and/or default, a rescission of the foreclosure notice, an injunction against the foreclosure, refund of all moneys paid to BoA, and damages,

c) Motions Practice and Decisions

BoA filed a combined motion to dismiss Westheimer’s counterclaims and motion for summary judgment on its foreclosure claim. Westheimer opposed. Determining that Westheimer had failed to plead any counterclaims upon which relief could be granted, and that the undisputed issues of material fact otherwise fell in BoA’s favor, the District Court dismissed Westheimer’s counterclaims and granted summary judgment in favor of BoA. 7 About three months later, BoA moved for final judgment of foreclosure, which the District Court granted over Westheimer’s opposition. Westheimer appealed (case number 14-4765) and obtained a stay of foreclosure pending the outcome of his appeal.

Then, in August 2015, Westheimer filed a Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(2) motion for relief from the District Court’s summary judgment/dismissal decision. The 60(b)(2) motion was premised on BoA’s inspection reports, which had been belatedly obtained as part of a separate state-court proceeding against Westheimer’s contractors.

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Bluebook (online)
683 F. App'x 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-america-na-v-kirby-westheimer-ca3-2017.