Bonior v. Citibank

14 Misc. 3d 771
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedDecember 7, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 Misc. 3d 771 (Bonior v. Citibank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Civil Court of the City of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bonior v. Citibank, 14 Misc. 3d 771 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Philip S. Straniere, J.

Claimants, Nancy A. Bonior and Stephen Foust, commenced this small claims action against the defendants, Citibank, N.A., United Land Services Corp., and Municipal Credit Union (MCU) alleging that defendants wrongfully collected from the claimants an early closure fee when claimants refinanced their home equity line of credit. A trial was held on September 21, 2006. The caption was amended to add Stephen Foust as a claimant and to have the correct corporate name for all of the defendants. Claimants appeared without counsel. Each defendant was represented by an attorney.

Background

Claimants are the owners of the premises 123 St. Marks Place, Staten Island, New York. On October 18, 2005, they attended a home equity line of credit loan closing at a branch of defendant Citibank. The loan was secured by a mortgage on 123 St. Marks Place. Defendant United provided a person at the closing to take signatures and notarize documents. No persons other than the claimants, without counsel, and the representative of United, who was not an attorney, attended the closing. The greatest part of the proceeds from the Citibank loan was to be used to satisfy an existing home equity line of credit loan the claimants had with defendant MCU. The claimants’ current home equity line of credit was issued by MCU on August 20, 2004 and was secured by a mortgage on 123 St. Marks Place. The documents from that closing showed a prior mortgage with [773]*773MCU dated July 10, 2002 in the amount of $130,000 which had been recorded with the Richmond County Clerk on September 5, 2002. Although the July 2002 mortgage was designated as a superior lien to the 2004 loan, the testimony was that the 2002 mortgage loan was satisfied at the August 20, 2004 MCU closing.

A home equity line of credit is a loan secured by a mortgage on the borrower’s property that allows the borrower to draw down money up to a certain maximum amount. Some loans have a fixed rate of interest while others have an interest rate that fluctuates tied to a specific financial index. The parties agree that the claimants’ 2004 loan with MCU had an adjustable interest rate. One of the motivations for the claimants to refinance the loan was that the Citibank home equity line of credit was at a fixed rate so that the claimants would save money each month on their payments because the MCU loan rate at that time was fluctuating upward.

A condition of the Citibank loan was that the MCU mortgage had to be satisfied. On October 7, 2005, MCU issued a letter to the claimants notifying them that as of October 14, 2005, the principal and interest on the home equity line of credit was $177,814.67. The letter informed the claimants that the per diem interest rate was $30.12 and that the credit line was not “frozen” so that additional advances might be added into the amount due MCU. In bold capitalized type the letter further advises to “PLEASE CALL OUR MORTGAGE SERVICING AREA ... TO VERIFY ALL PAYOFF AMOUNTS.”

Included in the projected total payoff amount was an additional $5,390 designated as “reimbursement of closing costs.” The letter notified the claimants in bold capitalized type that “A SEPARATE CHECK MUST BE REMITTED FOR REIMBURSEMENT OF CLOSING COSTS.” The total due and owing as of October 14, 2005 was $183,204.67.

Submitted as an exhibit by United is a “payoff calculation” sheet. This document took the MCU figure and added 18 days of per diem interest. United directed that a check be issued in the amount of $183,746.83 which covered all sums due until November 1, 2005. In fact on October 24, 2005, United issued a check drawn on its “settlement account” to MCU in the amount of $183,746.83. In spite of the fact that the MCU letter required separate checks for the payoff and closing cost reimbursement, United ignored this instruction and improperly issued only one check ostensibly for payment of both items.

[774]*774Claimants are alleging that they were unaware that they had to repay MCU closing costs from the August 2004 transaction. They contend that at the Citibank closing the payoff amount was changed on the Citibank check issuance memorandum from $183,746.83 to $177,554 and that they initialed it. The claimants deny changing the amount as does the representative of United who also was present. There is no explanation as to the source of the $177,554 figure since it is less than the amount MCU claims was due for the loan payoff.

The defendants allege that no matter what errors occurred at the closing or what misunderstandings the claimants had about the payoff amount, the claimants had the opportunity to rescind the transaction since they were provided with a “Notice of Right to Cancel” by Citibank. This document informed the claimants as borrowers that they had until midnight October 21, 2005 to cancel this transaction. The claimants did not utilize this right and allowed the transaction to go forward.

Observation

Apparently someone has taken the advice of Dick the butcher in Shakespeare’s Henry VI, part 2 and “kill[ed] all the lawyers.”1 Nowhere in this transaction does there appear to be the participation of any lawyers. No attorney represented the claimants as borrowers. No attorney represented the lender Citibank. No attorney represented the settlement agent United. No attorney represented the prior lender MCU. The only persons present were the borrowers and a representative of United whose function was to take signatures and collect the documents. At one time a real estate transaction consisted of a deed, a note and a mortgage, took about 15 minutes to complete, and had the participation of an attorney for all parties to the transaction. The last time the court checked, we were still in the city of New York where people do not even verify the score of the Yankees game without consulting counsel, and yet, lawyers have effectively been eliminated from real estate closings involving the refinance of mortgages and secondary loans, including home equity lines of credit. One could conclude therefore that these transactions have no legal implications. That, however, would be far from the truth. The borrowing of money secured by a mortgage is often a complex transaction with serious legal implications for all of the parties involved, especially the borrowers who are pledging their home as security.

[775]*775An analysis of this transaction will lead to the conclusion that, like the adage “always put everything in writing except those things that you shouldn’t put in writing,” and its corollary “never put anything in writing except the things that you should put in writing,” “you don’t need a lawyer for this type of transaction unless of course you need a lawyer,” appears to be the new mantra of the mortgage industry as out-of-state lenders attempt to impose the rules of escrow closings on the New York market. In Frank Loesser’s “Guys and Dolls” Nathan Detroit advised Big Jule that “you cannot interpolate Chicago dice into a New York crap game.” As more and more interstate lenders enter the New York market, it appears consumers here may be playing with Big Jule’s “spotless dice.”

For some inexplicable reason, a myth has been created around . the mortgage refinance-second mortgage industry that borrowers do not need lawyers at these transactions. The industry seems to be content to paraphrase Gold Hat, one of the bandits in the film “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre,” who in the current situation might say “Lawyers!? We ain’t got no lawyers.

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Related

DeFelice v. Costagliola
25 Misc. 3d 278 (Civil Court of the City of New York, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
14 Misc. 3d 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonior-v-citibank-nycivct-2006.