Kansa Reinsurance Co., Ltd. v. Congressional Mortg. Corp. of Texas

20 F.3d 1362, 1994 WL 173902
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 1994
Docket93-01109
StatusPublished
Cited by237 cases

This text of 20 F.3d 1362 (Kansa Reinsurance Co., Ltd. v. Congressional Mortg. Corp. of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kansa Reinsurance Co., Ltd. v. Congressional Mortg. Corp. of Texas, 20 F.3d 1362, 1994 WL 173902 (5th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

KING, Circuit Judge:

Appellants Kansa Reinsurance Company, Ltd. (“Kansa”) and United Postal Savings & Loan Association (“United Postal”) appeal from the district court’s summary adjudication of their claims against defendants Stewart Title Company and Stewart Title Guaranty Company (together referred to as “Stewart”). Finding no error, we affirm.

I. Background

A. The Scheme

In early 1983, a developer known as Tectonic Realty and its affiliate, Prestonwood Green of Dallas, Inc. (together referred to as the “developer”), converted a Dallas apartment complex into the Prestonwood Green Condominiums, marketing the units to individuals for investment purposes. The developer arranged for Congressional Mortgage Corporation of Texas (“Congressional”), one of the defendants below, 1 to provide financing for the purchase price of the individual units. The terms of the agreement were that Congressional would loan up to 90% of the purchase price of the condominiums, which would be paid directly to the developer. Apparently, however, the developer and the condominium buyers collaterally agreed to an inflated or falsified purchase price and further agreed to share the loan proceeds received by the developer through an illegal kick-back to the buyers. Additionally, the developer, despite representations to the contrary, collected no cash down payments from the unit buyers. Instead, the buyers apparently gave notes for the 10% down payments required by the mortgage company. Eighty-six units were sold according to this scheme, fifteen of which are the subject of the case presented. In each case, the buyer promptly defaulted upon his or her loan from Congressional.

As part of the closing transaction, Congressional contacted Home Guaranty Insurance Company (“HGIC”), a mortgage loan insurer, in order to acquire insurance on the loans. 2 In order to procure the insurance, Congressional sent HGIC copies of its loan files on the prospective borrowers and other information relating to the purchase. HGIC did no independent investigation of the borrowers, as it claims is customary in the industry for “review writers,” such as itself. Relying upon the documents sent by Congressional, HGIC issued commitments of mortgage insurance to Congressional for the purchases at issue.

B. The Closing Transactions

The unit purchases were closed by Stewart. Many of the investors purchased multiple units which were closed in simultaneous closings. As part of its closing instructions, Congressional directed Stewart to provide, inter alia, executed HUD-1 settlement statement forms summarizing the closing transaction. Congressional did not instruct Stewart to verify the payments of earnest money deposits, which were equal to 10% of the purchase price. Nor did it require that *1365 Stewart ensure execution of the escrow agreement. Instead, Congressional provided Stewart with executed Contracts of Sale (the “contracts”) and signed Federal National Mortgage Association Affidavits of Purchaser and Vendor (the “FNMA affidavits”) showing that the earnest money deposits equal to ten percent of the purchase price had been paid directly to the seller. These documents also specifically recited that no secondary financing had been obtained on the properties and contained an agreement that:

If this loan exceeds 80% of the appraised value of the purchase price of the property ... no hen or charge upon such property has been given or executed or has been contracted or agreed to be so given or executed by the Property Purchaser to any person, including Property Vendor, except for (1) hens disclosed in [the financial terms portion of the affidavit], or (2) hens or charges which will be discharged from the proceeds of subject mortgage.

As noted above, Congressional had agreed to finance 90% of the purchase price, and so this provision was applicable. As part of the closing instructions, Stewart was directed to notarize the FNMA vendor/purchaser affidavits and return them to Congressional.

At closing, Stewart’s escrow agent, Marilyn Baker (“Baker”), finalized the HUD-1 statements, which HGIC and United Postal claim showed that the earnest money deposits had been paid at settlement. 3 Baker followed the closing instructions given by Congressional, including notarizing the FNMA affidavits and issuing checks to HGIC for the mortgage insurance premiums, and returned the documents to Congressional for final review before disbursement of the funds, as she was directed to do. Upon receipt of the documents, Congressional then made the final distribution of funds, executed the final certificates of insurance, and, according to HGIC, submitted the executed certificates and FNMA affidavits to HGIC.

Prior to closing, the purchasers apparently executed promissory notes in favor of the developer or its subsidiary which operated as second liens. These notes represented the 10% earnest money/downpayments which had never , been paid. At various times outside of the closings, Baker was presented with these second hen deeds of trust. Baker testified at her deposition that the sales representatives and borrowers who presented the documents for notarization were also involved with other condominiums in the area which she did not close. Baker notarized the documents, and they were subsequently recorded in March of 1984, several months after the closings (the “second hens”).

Shortly after the closings, on December 21, 1983, United Postal purchased sixty-eight of the mortgages from Congressional and succeeded to the mortgage insurance provided by HGIC covering those loans. Subsequently, the buyers mass-defaulted on their first payments due under the mortgages, and United Postal made claims upon HGIC under the policies.

C. The Instant Litigation

HGIC filed suit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas in January of 1986 against Congressional, United Postal, and Stewart, alleging fraud, neghgence, neghgent misrepresentation, and breach of. fiduciary duty based upon the December 1983 closings. HGIC tendered the premiums it had received and sought reeission of the mortgage insurance pohcies issued to Congressional and assigned to United Postal. Alternatively, HGIC sought compensatory damages from Stewart to the extent HGIC was hable on the policies.

*1366 Almost five years later, on October 23, 1990, United Postal filed a cross-claim against Stewart asserting the same causes of action as had HGIC with the addition of a breach of contract claim. United Postal contended that it first learned of the second liens and corresponding lack of down payments during the May 8, 1990, deposition of Baker. United Postal also claimed that Stewart represented at closing that the purchasers had made a ten percent cash down-payment despite knowledge of the second liens and that United Postal would never have purchased the mortgages had it known about the problems.

Stewart moved to dismiss United Postal’s cross-claims as time-barred and for summary judgment on HGIC’s claims.

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Bluebook (online)
20 F.3d 1362, 1994 WL 173902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansa-reinsurance-co-ltd-v-congressional-mortg-corp-of-texas-ca5-1994.