Daniels v. PennyMac Loan Services, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedJune 7, 2023
Docket4:22-cv-00199
StatusUnknown

This text of Daniels v. PennyMac Loan Services, LLC (Daniels v. PennyMac Loan Services, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniels v. PennyMac Loan Services, LLC, (S.D. Tex. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT June 07, 2023 SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS Nathan Ochsner, Clerk HOUSTON DIVISION

DAVID LEE DANIELS, III § § Plaintiff, § VS. § CIVIL ACTION NO. 4:22-CV-199 § PENNYMAC LOAN SERVICES, LLC, et § al., § § Defendants. §

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

This is a wrongful foreclosure case in which Plaintiff David Lee Daniels, III (“Daniels”), proceeding pro se and in forma pauperis, originally sued 13 defendants. The Court dismissed six of the defendants under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). (Dkt. 95). The remaining seven defendants have now filed a total of five motions for summary judgment, to which Daniels has responded. The Court has considered the briefing, the record, and the applicable law. All of the pending motions for summary judgment (Dkt. 101; Dkt. 102; Dkt. 103; Dkt. 113; Dkt. 114) are GRANTED. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND As the Court discussed in its opinion granting six defendants’ motions to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), this lawsuit involves two distinct matters: (1) a nonjudicial foreclosure proceeding initiated against Daniels’s home by Defendant Pennymac Loan Services, LLC (“Pennymac”); and (2) a judicial foreclosure action brought against Daniels in Texas state court by Cypresswood Lake Community Association, Inc. (“Cypresswood Lake”) on the basis of unpaid homeowner association (“HOA”) dues. However, no party has requested severance under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 21, and the Court has kept the claims together under this cause number in the interest of judicial economy. The following facts are established by uncontroverted evidence in the summary judgment record.

—The Pennymac foreclosure In August of 2016, Daniels took out a mortgage loan1 with Defendant SWBC Mortgage Corporation (“SWBC”). (Dkt. 114-2; Dkt. 114-7). Daniels executed a note and a deed of trust; the deed of trust stated that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (“MERS”), acting as SWBC’s nominee, was the beneficiary of the deed of trust. (Dkt. 114-

7 at p. 2). The loan was secured by Daniels’s home, which was located at 19922 Cypresswood Square in Spring, Texas. (Dkt. 114-7 at pp. 2–3). In 2018, Pennymac bought Daniels’s loan. (Dkt. 114-6). Pennymac began servicing Daniels’s loan in November of 2018; and MERS recorded an assignment of the deed of trust to Pennymac in the real property records of Harris County, Texas in April of 2019.

(Dkt. 114-6 at p. 3; Dkt. 114-8). Pennymac sent two letters to Daniels in November of 2018 informing Daniels of the sale of the loan and notifying him that he should begin making loan payments to Pennymac. (Dkt. 113-1 at pp. 24–31, 33–34). Shortly after Pennymac took over servicing responsibility for Daniels’s loan, Daniels fell behind on his payments; and Pennymac sent him a notice of default and intent

to accelerate in December of 2018 and another such notice in January of 2019. (Dkt. 113- 1 at pp. 78, 106). In response to the default notices, Daniels made a partial payment to

1 Daniels’s ex-wife took out the loan with him; but she relinquished her interest in the subject property after she and Daniels divorced, and she is not a party to this action. (Dkt. 101-12). Pennymac and began, but did not complete, two applications for a loan modification program. (Dkt. 113-1 at pp. 100, 118, 132). In May of 2019, Pennymac sent Daniels a notice of acceleration and nonjudicial foreclosure sale. (Dkt. 113-1 at pp. 137–140).

After receiving the foreclosure notice, Daniels submitted a complete application for a loan modification program. (Dkt. 113-1 at pp. 147–57). In a written statement attached to the loan modification application and addressed to “Pennymac Modification Assistance,” Daniels explained that he had been laid off in July of 2018 and again in March of 2019 but had gotten another job in April of 2019. (Dkt. 113-1 at p. 157). Daniels made

another partial payment to Pennymac in July of 2019, and Pennymac informed him later that month that his loan modification application had qualified him for a loan modification trial payment plan. (Dkt. 113-1 at pp. 164, 167). In order to successfully complete the loan modification trial payment plan, Daniels was required to make three monthly payments. (Dkt. 113-1 at p. 168). Successful

completion of the trial payment plan would qualify Daniels for a permanent loan modification plan. (Dkt. 113-1 at pp. 167–68). Daniels sent Pennymac a check for his first payment, but Pennymac sent a letter to Daniels notifying him that the check bounced. (Dkt. 113-1 at p. 176). After Daniels failed to tender his first payment by the due date, Pennymac informed Daniels by letter that he did not qualify for a permanent loan modification plan

because he had not made his trial plan payments as required. (Dkt. 113-1 at p. 179). Pennymac then sent Daniels another notice of acceleration and nonjudicial foreclosure sale in November of 2021. (Dkt. 113-1 at pp. 184–88). The foreclosure sale was scheduled for January 4, 2022. (Dkt. 113-1 at pp. 184–88). On January 3, 2022, Daniels sent Pennymac a United States Postal Service money order in the amount of $1.00 on which Daniels had handwritten “Accept for value tendered of $274,906.00”:

a SINE ORY AEST BS □□□ eS: OEY A oa Cc var =P □□□ □□ LQ □□ Sefamanber EE ete oy “setae us.potsanttens □□ “27351871020 ets ERE $1.90 Br eg ede, RL Delt and 0000 arson | Peseta i: Leon □□□ [005829 Secs Accom: for value rendered of 796 □□□ hoon * oe GCE SETS good Feu out □□□□□□□□□ IPENAIVMACL page SE) VEE ES Holle Fin die caurie) © es

thesiee 19, 48 Slat 12 HORI OTE He 31S & Hos 2) WEE 3-30, 3-3Y RCE 3-104 □

Dkt. 113-1 at pp. 196—200. Daniels apparently believed, or somehow hoped that Pennymac would believe, that the money order would pay off his loan and stave off foreclosure. In a letter that accompanied the money order, Daniels wrote, “This document instructs PENNYMAC LOAN SERVICES as the HOLDER IN DUE COURSE to accept and enforce this POSTAL MONEY ORDER as a negotiable instrument for value of $274,906.00[.]” (Dkt. 113-1 at p. 199). Daniels further wrote in the letter that his loan was now “paid in full showing a final balance of ‘0’ (zero)” and that “[t]he auction set to take place on the real property of 19922 Cypresswood Square, Spring, TX 77373 on 01/04/2022” could “not take place or proceed” without his consent. (Dkt. 113-1 at p. 199). Pennymac returned the $1.00 payment and moved forward with the foreclosure sale. (Dkt. 113-1 at pp. 202, 207). Defendant ZLOS Investment Trust (“ZLOS”) bought

4/24

Daniels’s house at the foreclosure sale. (Dkt. 113-1 at p. 207). Defendant Sam Sorour (“Sorour”) is a trustee for ZLOS. (Dkt. 103-1 at p. 1). Daniels refused to vacate the property, and ZLOS filed a forcible detainer action

against him in Texas state court. (Dkt. 103-8; Dkt. 103-9). ZLOS prevailed in its forcible detainer suit; and the Texas state court awarded possession of the home, along with $10,000.00 for rent and $2,500.00 for attorney’s fees, to ZLOS. (Dkt. 103-9). —The HOA lawsuit In addition to missing mortgage payments, Daniels fell behind on his HOA dues

beginning in 2019. (Dkt. 101-5). Cypresswood Lake sent Daniels a letter in March of 2019 notifying him that his HOA account was in arrears; that “the account w[ould] continue to accrue interest and administrative cost[s] monthly[;]” and that Cypresswood Lake would commence collection proceedings if Daniels did not either bring his account current or make a minimum payment within 30 days. (Dkt. 101-4 at pp. 3–4). The letter included an

itemized account statement. (Dkt. 101-4 at p. 5). There is no response from Daniels in the record.

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Daniels v. PennyMac Loan Services, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniels-v-pennymac-loan-services-llc-txsd-2023.