Billingham v. Dornemann

771 N.E.2d 166, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 166, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 821
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJune 13, 2002
DocketNo. 98-P-2259
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 771 N.E.2d 166 (Billingham v. Dornemann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Billingham v. Dornemann, 771 N.E.2d 166, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 166, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 821 (Mass. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Perretta, J.

In 1994, Dale Mathias was in arrears on the second and third mortgages on his property. However, neither holder of those mortgages had threatened him with foreclosure. Sometime in December of that year or early 1995, the second [167]*167mortgagee returned a payment made by Mathias to him and informed him that Peter Domemann, doing business as Argo Financial Services (Argo), had purchased the second mortgage. Soon thereafter, Domemann telephoned Mathias and set up a meeting to discuss the possibility of foreclosure and the means by which to avoid it. Mathias met with Domemann and entered into various agreements with him which he, Mathias, claimed caused him to lose his house in fairly short order. On behalf of Mathias’s estate, the trustee in bankruptcy1 brought an action against Domemann, alleging fraud, misrepresentation, breach of contract, and violations of G. L. c. 93A. The Superior Court judge construed Mathias’s complaint as being based exclusively on c. 93A, treated the jury’s special verdicts in favor of Mathias as advisory rather than binding, and ordered judgment for Domemann. Concluding that because of the parties’ assent the judge was not bound by the special verdicts but that he erred in failing to consider all the circumstances of the transactions between Mathias and Domemann in deciding the c. 93A action, we reverse the judgment.

1. The evidence. After reading a magazine advertisement for National Property Associates (NPA), an investment advisory training company, Domemann became interested in becoming an NPA associate and obtained an NPA brochure. As stated in the brochure, NPA’s “prime interest is in the acquisition of real estate at prices far below ‘Fair Market Value.’ ” Its basic concept: “Identify the property, evaluate it, take control of it and sell it at a profit.”2

His interest piqued, Domemann, who holds a master’s degree in business administration and marketing from the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania, enrolled in a three-day training program conducted by NPA. Upon [168]*168completion of the program, Dornemann created Argo. He chose the name of his business (Argo Financial Services) because he intended to offer financial services to lending institutions and, in some instances, homeowners. Doing business as Argo, Dome-mann purchased mortgages and structured contracts with owners of “distressed” property.3

Prior to Dornemann’s arrival on the scene, Mathias had owned his house for about thirteen years. The property was encumbered by three mortgages, which had a total outstanding balance of about $62,500, and which required total monthly payments of over $900. A high school graduate who earned his livelihood as a truck driver, Mathias’s weekly net pay was $335. He juggled his monthly mortgage payments by breaking them into two-week periods. Although he was in arrears on the second and third mortgages, neither mortgagee had threatened him with foreclosure.

In November, 1994, Dornemann, who previously had sought out mortgages for sale from Lenders, Inc., of Massachusetts (Lenders),4 Mathias’s second mortgagee, examined Lenders’s file on Mathias. At that time, the outstanding balance on the second mortgage was nearly $15,000, and the amount in arrears was over $1,600. Dornemann purchased the mortgage. His decision to do so was based upon the fact that Mathias “fit the profile” of a candidate attractive to him. Although the evidence does not expressly disclose the contents of Lenders’s file, Dornemann testified that the most important reason for his selection of Mathias’s mortgage was Mathias’s payment history, the market value of the property (about $74,000), the equity in the property, and his understanding that foreclosure by Lenders was “imminent.”

Mathias first learned that Dornemann had purchased his second mortgage in early December, 1994, when Lenders returned his payment and informed him of the change of mortgagees. About a week later, Dornemann called Mathias and arranged a meeting to discuss the possibility of foreclosure on [169]*169the mortgage and proposals by which Mathias could salvage his credit and property. They met at Mathias’s home on December 17. Domemann presented Mathias with a written notice of acceleration that contained a demand for past due payments and late charges, $2,036.77, within ten days. Mathias testified that he told Domemann that there was no way possible for him to “come up with that type of money in that short [a] time.”5 The notice also provided that failure to pay the past due amount would cause the entire unpaid balance, $17,369.57, to be due immediately and that failure to pay that amount would trigger foreclosure and a public auction.6

Three days after the meeting, Domemann sent Mathias a letter in which he again warned that if he did not receive the past due amount owed within seven days of the date of the letter, December 20, he would foreclose on the mortgage. Domemann went on in this letter to offer Mathias a plan by which Mathias could prevent foreclosure: “We can offer you a Plan (let’s call it Plan 1) which stops the foreclosure procedure and lends you money to cover all currently past due payments while you sell your home at a price that is fully acceptable to you.” Dome-mann characterized his plan as a “Purchase and Sell Back Agreement” in that it required Mathias to deed his home to Domemann for one year, during which time Mathias would attempt to sell the property while also making monthly payments of $1,020.34. Domemann would use Mathias’s monthly payments to make payments on the three mortgages, insurance, and taxes. Once Mathias found a buyer for the property, Domemann would sell it back to Mathias who, in turn, would pay Dome-mann the money Domemann lent Mathias to cover the current past due amount on the second mortgage, plus a service fee equal to one-half that current past due amount.

According to Mathias’s testimony, he had no intention of selling his home before he met Domemann. Nonetheless, Mathias engaged in further conversations with Domemann [170]*170which led him to enter into three agreements with him, all dated January 28, 1995: a purchase and sale agreement, a quitclaim deed conveying the property to Domemann, and an agreement for sale of real estate. The three documents consist of eleven single-spaced, typewritten pages.

The purchase and sale agreement set the purchase price for the property at $62,516, that is, the amount of the balance due on the outstanding mortgages. The agreement for sale of real estate provided that if Domemann had not sold the property within one year, Mathias would buy it back for $67,516. The agreement also required Mathias, as of February 17, 1995, to make monthly payments to Domemann in the amount of $1,024.34.7 In turn, Domemann would forebear from foreclosure. Any failure by Mathias to make the required monthly payments would result in an acceleration of the total amount due and trigger Domemann’s right to take possession of the property and sell it of his own accord.

Twice, at their first meeting in December and at the time of the signing of the documents on January 28, Mathias told Domemann that he could not afford the monthly payment required by Domemann’s plan, which exceeded the total amount of the three mortgage payments he was already attempting to meet by juggling biweekly payments.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
771 N.E.2d 166, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 166, 2002 Mass. App. LEXIS 821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billingham-v-dornemann-massappct-2002.