Bardasian v. Bank of America CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 2013
DocketC072378
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bardasian v. Bank of America CA3 (Bardasian v. Bank of America CA3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bardasian v. Bank of America CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 12/11/13 Bardasian v. Bank of America CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sacramento) ----

BRENDA BARDASIAN, C072378

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. 34201000082041CUORGDS) v.

BANK OF AMERICA, N.A. et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

The facts of the operative complaint in this case are all bollixed up. In the complaint, plaintiff Brenda Bardasian sued defendants Bank of America, N.A. and Recontrust Company, N.A., among others, for the consequences of two mortgage loans for her house (loan 1) and an adjacent house (loan 2) both that she could not afford. The trial court sustained the demurrer of Bank of America and Recontrust without leave to amend and entered judgment in their favor. On Bardasian’s appeal, we conclude the trial court got it right. After we untangle the factual allegations of the complaint, the following facts appear: Bank of America and

1 Recontrust were involved only in loan 1; other defendants (not before us) were involved in loan 2. As to loan 1, American Home Mortgage was the original lender. Bank of America acquired loan 1 from American Home Mortgage and became the trustee and owner of the note and the deed of trust. Recontrust issued a notice of default on loan 1. Bardasian never alleged that American Home Mortgage committed fraud against her and did not name American Home Mortgage as a defendant. So even if Bank of America and Recontrust were liable for the torts of the original lender, they are not liable here where the facts of the complaint did not allege wrongdoing by the original lender and Bardasian has refused to amend the complaint to address this deficiency because she does not believe it is deficient in this regard. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A Bardasian’s Theory Of The Case As Set Forth In The Complaint In October 2005, mortgage broker Scott David Sutch telephoned Bardasian and said he could obtain a home mortgage loan for her. The two met at Sutch’s office, where Sutch asked for and received Bardasian’s financial documents. Sutch told her that he would find her a mortgage loan “with the best terms and best interest rates available to [her] on the market.” In mid-October 2005, Sutch told Bardasian that the only loan she qualified for was a “5.5% interest only to adjust in five years” and when the loan adjusted she would be able to refinance at no charge. Sutch then overstated Bardasian’s income on her loan application that he prepared and did not tell her. Sutch also did not tell her that he and “his company” would earn $17,000 in fees because of this loan and that if the loan were a fixed rate loan, they would have earned only $10,000. In truth, Bardasian also qualified for a fixed rate loan, and there was no basis for Sutch to represent that she would qualify for a refinance in five years.

2 At the end of October 2005, believing Sutch’s false representations to be true, Bardasian entered into loan 1 for her house. At the closing of loan 1, Bardasian received a stack of loan documents and was “merely shown where to sign.” Had Bardasian known the truth, she would not have entered into loan 1. Bardasian executed a deed of trust for loan 1 that listed the lender as American Home Mortgage.1 Around January 2007, Bardasian sought to buy the property adjacent to her house and telephoned Sutch for another mortgage loan. Sutch told Bardasian he was now a broker employed by Santa Clara Partner’s Mortgage Corporation, he could easily obtain another mortgage loan for her, and he did not need her financial information because he had the information he needed from loan 1. Around the same time, Sutch also told Bardasian that the best and only loan available to her was an adjustable rate mortgage, she did not qualify for a fixed rate loan, she had nothing to worry about because the loan would begin adjusting only in five years, and she could easily refinance the loan before it adjusted and that he would do that for her. Sutch overstated Bardasian’s income to obtain loan 2 without her knowledge and failed to inform her that he and his company would earn about $6,000 more in fees for this loan than they would for a fixed rate loan. In truth, Bardasian qualified for a fixed rate loan, the note did not adjust in five years, during the five year period the note could not easily be refinanced, and the note did not have fixed payments for five years. Had Bardasian known the truth, she would not have entered into loan 2. At the closing of loan 2, Bardasian received a stack of loan documents and was “merely shown where to sign.” American Brokers Conduit and Santa Clara Partner’s Mortgage Corporation knowingly inflated the value of both properties on both loan applications. They also

1 As we explain later, the introduction of the complaint incorrectly listed American Brokers Conduit as the original lender of loan 1.

3 knowingly overstated Bardasian’s employment income and said it was $14,500 per month, to meet the underwriting guidelines of American Brokers Conduit. B More On Bardasian’s Theory Of The Case In The Complaint, And The Contents Of The Relevant Exhibits The introduction to the complaint alleged the lender of loan 1 was American Brokers Conduit. The body of the complaint, however, stated that as to loan 1, the “ ‘Lender is American Home Mortgage.’ ” The body of the complaint quoted the deed of trust for loan 1, which was attached as an exhibit to the complaint. The attached deed of trust stated, “ ‘Lender’ is American Home Mortgage.” The deed of trust was recorded on November 3, 2005. The complaint alleged that Bardasian “entered into [l]oan 1, in or about the end of October 2005.” The introduction to the complaint alleged that the trustee and owner of the note and deed of trust on loan 1 was Bank of America and that the entity that issued the notice of default on loan 1 as the agent of the beneficiary was Recontrust. The body of the operative complaint alleged in the first cause of action that “A[urora][2] on loan 2 and B[ank] of A[merica] on loan 1 are liable for the fraud . . . solely based on the theory of successor liability.” In the second cause of action, which was breach of fiduciary duty, Bardasian named Aurora “as successor on [l]oan 2.” Then, “incorporat[ing] by reference the allegations set forth above,” Bardasian in the third cause of action for aiding and abetting breach of fiduciary duty named “A[urora] as successor on [l]oan 1; and B[ank] of A[merica] as successor on [l]oan 2.” In the fifth cause of action (which was the next involving Bank of America), Bardasian alleged negligence. She alleged that “[t]he law imposes a duty on the original lender, here A[merican] B[rokers] C[onduit],” and that

2 Aurora Loan Services, LLC, was the trustee and owner of the note and deed of trust on loan 2.

4 “A[merican] B[rokers] C[onduit] is liable for negligence based on the principal/agency relationship . . . and [B]ank of A[merica] and A[urora] are liable thereon based on successor liability. . . .” In the sixth cause of action (against all defendants), a violation of the unfair competition law (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200 et seq.), Bardasian “incorporate[d] by reference the allegations set forth above . . .” and argued that “[d]efendants’ acts, as alleged herein, constitute unlawful, unfair and/or fraudulent business practices. . . .”3 The complaint also contained a section on the notes and deeds of trust and recorded documents.

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Bluebook (online)
Bardasian v. Bank of America CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bardasian-v-bank-of-america-ca3-calctapp-2013.