Bullock v. Wells Fargo Bank, na

CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedApril 18, 2024
Docket4:23-cv-00017
StatusUnknown

This text of Bullock v. Wells Fargo Bank, na (Bullock v. Wells Fargo Bank, na) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bullock v. Wells Fargo Bank, na, (D. Alaska 2024).

Opinion

1 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

2 FOR THE DISTRICT OF ALASKA

4 FREDERICK BULLOCK & RENEE BULLOCK, 5 Plaintiffs, 6 v. Case No. 4:23-cv-00017-SLG-KFR 7 WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A. aka WELLS 8 FARGO HOME MORTGAGE,

9 Defendant.

11 REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION RE MOTION TO DISMISS

12 Before the Court is a Motion to Dismiss (“Motion”) filed by Defendant Wells

13 Fargo Bank, N.A. aka Wells Fargo Home Mortgage.1 Plaintiffs Frederick and Renee

14 Bullock, who represent themselves in this matter, filed a Response opposing the

15 Motion,2 to which Defendant replied.3 Oral argument on the Motion was not

16 requested and was not necessary for the Court’s recommendation. The Court finds

17 that Plaintiffs’ claims are barred by the doctrine of claim preclusion and that

18 amendment would be both futile and unduly prejudicial to Defendant. The Court

19 therefore recommends that the Motion be GRANTED and that Plaintiffs’ claims be

20 DISMISSED with prejudice.

21 I. BACKGROUND

22 In November 1994, Frederick Bullock obtained a loan from a mortgage

23 company to purchase residential property located in North Pole, Alaska (“North Pole

24 Property”).4 The loan was secured by a deed of trust on the property in favor of the 25 mortgage company.5 Through various assignments, Defendant became the 26 1 Doc. 23. 2 Doc. 24. 27 3 Doc. 25. 4 Doc. 6-1 at 10. 28 5 Id. 1 beneficiary of the deed of trust and began administering the loan.6 In January 2010,

2 Defendant initiated a foreclosure on the North Pole Property, and in December 2010,

3 Defendant acquired the property following a foreclosure sale.7

4 A. First Action

5 In December 2013, Plaintiffs, initia lly representing themselves, commenced 6 an action in Alaska state court against Defendant and several other entities.8 The 7 defendants removed the action to federal district court based on diversity 8 jurisdiction.9 Plaintiffs subsequently retained counsel and filed an amended 9 complaint, which named Defendant as the sole defendant.10 In their amended 10 complaint, Plaintiffs alleged that they fully paid off the North Pole Property loan 11 several years before the foreclosure sale.11 Plaintiffs suggested that their mortgage 12 payments were improperly credited toward another mortgage on a different 13 property, also owned by Frederick Bullock, that was located in Anchorage 14 (“Anchorage Property”).12 Plaintiffs further alleged that they had “acquiesced in 15 demands by [Defendant] and paid far in excess of the amounts required to discharge 16 the mortgages on both the North Pole Property and the Anchorage Property.”13 17 Plaintiffs sought to recover damages, to set aside the foreclosure on the North Pole 18 Property, and to compel an accounting of the mortgages on the North Pole Property 19 and the Anchorage Property.14 20 Defendant moved for summary judgment, asking the District Court to dismiss 21 Plaintiffs’ claims and quiet title to the North Pole Property.15 Plaintiffs’ counsel 22 6 Id. at 19. 23 7 Id. at 21. 8 Case No. 3:14-cv-00010-TMB, Doc. 3-1. The Court takes judicial notice of court filings in 24 Plaintiffs’ first action that are referenced in this report and recommendation and that have not already been judicially noticed. See Khoja v. Orexigen Therapeutics, Inc., 899 F.3d 988, 25 999 (9th Cir. 2018). 9 Case No. 3:14-cv-00010-TMB, Doc. 1. 26 10 Case No. 3:14-cv-00010-TMB, Docs. 34, 35. 11 Case No. 3:14-cv-00010-TMB, Doc. 35 at 2, ¶¶ 7, 9. 12 Id. at 2, ¶ 6. 27 13 Id. at 3, ¶ 16. 14 Id. at 4, ¶¶ a–d. 28 15 Case No. 3:14-cv-00010-TMB, Doc. 52. 1 withdrew from the case and Plaintiffs, on their own behalf, responded in opposition

2 to Defendant’s motion.16 In their response and in an additional document Plaintiffs

3 later filed in support of their response, Plaintiffs insisted that they satisfied the

4 North Pole Property loan in 2000 and that Defendant committed “fraud [in] how

5 they attached themselves to [Plaintiffs’] [f]inancial [c]redit report statements and 6 [b]anking accounts.”17 Plaintiffs explained that Defendant wrongly applied 7 Plaintiffs’ payments toward the Anchorage Property loan instead of toward the North 8 Pole Property loan because the two loans shared the same account number.18 9 Plaintiffs further alleged that Defendant “mishandl[ed]” and acted with “extreme 10 negligence” with respect to Frederick Bullock’s personal information, that Defendant 11 mailed relevant documents to the “wrong address,” and that there were 12 discrepancies between information Defendant used and information in a credit 13 report for Frederick Bullock.19 All told, according to Plaintiffs, Defendant’s actions 14 constituted “servicing abuse, poor debt collection practices, misappropriation of 15 funds, and abuse of credit.”20 16 In April 2016, the District Court granted Defendant’s motion for summary 17 judgment.21 In its order, the District Court rejected Plaintiffs’ contention that they 18 paid off the mortgage on the North Pole Property in 2000,22 concluding that this 19 contention lacked any evidentiary support and that Defendant’s uncontradicted 20 evidence established that the mortgage “was not paid off in 2000, or at any other 21 time.”23 The District Court further considered the other issues Plaintiffs raised and 22 “f[ound] them to be inapplicable or without merit.”24 Accordingly, the District Court 23 issued a judgment dismissing Plaintiffs’ claims and declaring that title to the North 24 16 Case No. 3:14-cv-00010-TMB, Docs. 57, 58, 60. 25 17 Case No. 3:14-cv-00010-TMB, Doc. 60 at 2. 18 Case No. 3:14-cv-00010-TMB, Doc. 63 at 8. 26 19 Case No. 3:14-cv-00010-TMB, Doc. 60 at 2–4. 20 Case No. 3:14-cv-00010-TMB, Doc. 63 at 1. 21 Case No. 3:14-cv-00010-TMB, Doc. 67. 27 22 Id. at 9. 23 Id. at 10. 28 24 Id. at 16. 1 Pole Property was vested in Defendant free and clear of any interests of Plaintiffs.25

2 Plaintiffs did not appeal.

3 B. Second Action

4 In May 2023, Plaintiffs commenced a second action against Defendant in

5 Alaska state court.26 In August 2023, D efendant removed the action to federal 6 district court based on diversity jurisdiction.27 Defendant then filed a motion to 7 dismiss Plaintiffs’ complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), 8 and a request for judicial notice of various documents, including court documents 9 from the prior action.28 Plaintiffs filed a response in opposition to the motion to 10 dismiss, in which Plaintiffs also sought leave to amend and supplement their 11 complaint.29 Plaintiffs also filed an Amended Complaint,30 which Defendant moved 12 to strike on timeliness and other procedural grounds.31 Plaintiffs subsequently filed 13 a motion to accept their late-filed Amended Complaint.32 14 In December 2023, the District Court issued an order (1) granting Plaintiffs’ 15 request for leave to amend their initial complaint, (2) granting Plaintiffs’ motion to 16 accept the late-filed Amended Complaint, (3) granting Defendant’s request for 17 judicial notice, (4) denying Defendant’s motion to strike the Amended Complaint, 18 and (5) denying Defendant’s motion to dismiss without prejudice and with leave to 19 file a renewed motion addressing the Amended Complaint.33 20 Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint asserts claims for (1) violations of the Fair 21 Credit Reporting Act34 (“FCRA”) and (2) breach of contract.35 In support of these 22 claims, Plaintiffs allege that they did not default on the North Pole Property loan, 23 25 Case No. 3:14-cv-00010-TMB, Doc. 68. 24 26 Doc. 1-1. 27 Doc. 1. 25 28 Doc. 5. 29 Doc. 11. 26 30 Doc. 13. 31 Doc. 14. 32 Doc. 18. 27 33 Doc. 22. 34 15 U.S.C. §§

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