Freeman v. JP Morgan Chase Bank and Co.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 30, 2022
Docket1:20-cv-00087
StatusUnknown

This text of Freeman v. JP Morgan Chase Bank and Co. (Freeman v. JP Morgan Chase Bank and Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freeman v. JP Morgan Chase Bank and Co., (D.R.I. 2022).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND

__________________________________________ ) WILLIAM R. FREEMAN, ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) No. 1:20-cv-00087-MSM-PAS ) J. P. MORGAN BANK & CO., ) a/k/a J. P. MORGAN CHASE BANK, N.A. ) Defendants. ) __________________________________________)

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

Mary S. McElroy, United States District Judge.

The Mortgage Foreclosure Crisis of 2007-20081 left its mark on thousands, no doubt hundreds of thousands, or even millions of homeowners. Some in its wake were lucky or resourceful or financially stable enough, despite an economic recession, to continue to afford their mortgage payments or to secure loan modifications; either way, they remained in their homes. Others were not so fortunate. This Plaintiff is one of the latter. At one point in time, Mr. Freeman owned two properties, one in Tiverton and one in Little Compton, both in Rhode Island. They were worth enough

1 “Report to Congress on the Root Causes of the Foreclosure Crisis,” by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Policy Development and Research, at vi (January 2010), citing the “extremely high levels of defaults and foreclosures” that were so pervasive as to “draw[] comparisons to the levels of distress experienced in the Great Depression.” to serve as collateral for loans in the aggregate of $804,925 ($595,000 on the property at 39 Side Road, Little Compton, and $209,925 on the property at 135 Randolph Avenue, Tiverton).2 Mr. Freeman has been litigating continuously for a decade,

repetitively in state courts, in the federal bankruptcy court, and now in this Court in an attempt to hold onto these properties against foreclosure. He contends, in short,3 that dozens of people and entities – some named as defendants, some not; some served, some not – were responsible for, in the first instance, fraudulently misleading him to believe that he could afford these mortgages and, at the end, unlawfully declaring him in default and moving to foreclosure. He names 28 persons and

entities4 in the caption to this lawsuit who, in one way or another in his view, played some role in manipulating him, falsifying documents, cutting corners, misusing the foreclosure process, and otherwise unlawfully seeking to deprive him of his property.5

2 The Court takes judicial notice of the Judgment entered in C.A. NC 2021-0214. declaring J.P.Morgan Chase, N.A. the holder of two promissory notes executed in 2005 in these amounts relative to these two properties. (ECF No. 54-5.) In addition, ECF No. 54-3 is a Joint Statement of Undisputed Facts entered in that case, signed by both Mr. Freeman’s then-counsel and counsel for J. P. Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., reciting many of the early facts associated with this case. Those facts appear not to be in dispute here.

3 There is, actually, nothing “short” about Mr. Freeman’s claims. He filed a 61-page Amended Complaint including 185 numbered paragraphs. Since that filing, he has sought five restraining orders and filed so many motions that, on August 25, 2021, this Court restrained him from filing any additional paperwork without prior approval.

4 In addition to 28 named persons and entities, he added: “All Chase alleged attorneys—None have standing, authorizations, POA, or any right to Freeman information.” (ECF No. 6.)

5 The Court borrows freely from the Fannie Mae Response to the Motion to Dismiss to describe the Complaint: “Count I appears to be a demand for acceptance of a With respect to his claims relating to lawful ownership of these properties, the holders of the notes and mortgages relating to them, and the lawfulness of foreclosure on them, he has worn out his welcome in the state court.6 In his first Superior Court

action,7 the trial judge refused to permit him to voluntarily withdraw his complaint, mid-trial, without prejudice: in order to preclude him from re-filing and starting over, she offered only a dismissal with prejudice or a continuation of the trial to its conclusion. Opting for the latter, he lost the case on its merits. His appeal was dismissed. No. 17-154A (ECF No. 54-7.) His third Superior Court case8 was dismissed with a warning against attempting to

continue to litigate the same claims. In bankruptcy court, he filed two adversary proceedings, contesting J. P. Morgan’s creditor claim. The bankruptcy judge entered

modification proposal (¶¶ 83-97); Count II pursues a violation of the Sherman Act (¶¶ 98-103); Count III pursues breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing in the commencement of foreclosure (¶¶ 104-110); Count IV seeks injunctive relief until mortgage loan documents are produced (¶¶ 111-118); Counts V, VI and VIII pursue claims of fraud and misrepresentation (¶¶ 119-163, 169-170); Count VII seeks declaratory relief (¶¶ 164-168); and Count IX pursues a claim to set aside foreclosures on the Properties (¶¶171-187). (ECF No. 58, at 3.)

6 In the Rhode Island Superior Court, Van Couyghen, J., issued an Order on May 25, 18, warning Mr. Freeman that any filings embodying the same challenges as had twice been rejected could result in an Order enjoining him from further filings without court permission and/or sanctions. (ECF No 65-12, at 12-13.)

7 NSC 2012-0214.

8 NSC 2017-0371 was dismissed on grounds. In the interim between the first and third Newport Superior Court cases, Mr. Freeman filed NSC 2017-0253, but according to the state court docket, of which this Court takes judicial notice, little action has occurred since 2018, and the named defendant as well as some others were dismissed. relief from what would otherwise have been an automatic stay (ECF No. 54-19) and permitted the foreclosure to proceed, declaring J. P. Morgan the holder of the notes. Ultimately, the adversary proceedings were dismissed.9

Having exhausted his attempts to gain relief in two other courts, Mr. Freeman has turned to this Court. His claims, however, find no purchase here. For a variety of reasons discussed below, the Motions to Dismiss filed by Jones Moving and Storage Co., LLC (“Jones”) (ECF No. 45), Fidelity National Financial, Inc. (“Fidelity”) (ECF No. 48), Harmon Law Offices, P.C. (“Harmon”) (ECF No. 50), J. P. Morgan Chase Bank, N.A.(“Chase”) (ECF No. 54), Wilmington Savings Fund Society, FSB

(“Wilmington”) jointly with Carrington Mortgage Services, LLC (“Carrington”) (ECF No. 55), Federal National Mortgage Assn. (“Fannie Mae”) (ECF No. 57), Cliff Ponte (“Ponte”) (ECF No. 62) and Morgan Lewis & Bockius, LLP (“Morgan Lewis”) (ECF No. 65) are GRANTED. As discussed in Part II(C)(2), below, the Court DISMISSES the Complaint against the remaining defendants for want of service.10

I. JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

9 docket Bankruptcy BR No. 18-11609, Adversary Proceedings 11-19-AP-01019 and ECF Nos 54-23 and 24, of which the Court takes judicial notice.

10 These defendants, as they are named in the Caption, are: FDIC, Keller Williams, Lynn Freeland, Jacquie Algier, Little Compton Police, Little Compton Town Clerk, Safeguard Properties (named twice), Orlans PLC, CMG Financial, Mgt24, Ryan Murphy, REO1, Lender Live, FIRST Data, RI DBR, HAMP Programs (US TREASURY) Rolanda Jones, Mr. Gerald Coyne, State Police, FBI and U.S. Department of Justice. There is no jurisdictional statement in the plaintiff’s Amended Complaint (ECF No. 6.)11 Cognizant of its obligation to construe paperwork liberally, and with appreciation of the difficulty faced by laypersons in navigating the complex

network of rules that comprise the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the Court has examined the content of the document and discerned that among myriad state and federal laws Mr.

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