M & T Mortgage Corp. v. Foy
This text of 20 Misc. 3d 274 (M & T Mortgage Corp. v. Foy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
[275]*275OPINION OF THE COURT
Equity abhors discrimination.
Equity will not enforce discriminatory practices.
This court holds, for reasons set forth below, that a mortgage granted to a minority buyer for the purchase of property in a minority area which carries an interest rate that exceeds nine percent creates a rebuttable presumption of discriminatory practice.
This court further holds that the lender who has brought this proceeding to foreclose the mortgage must demonstrate by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the mortgage was not the product of unlawful discrimination.1 If the lender is unable to do so, the foreclosure proceeding will be dismissed and the lender left to its remedies at law.
Major Jahn K. Foy, a reserve officer, was engaged on active duty when foreclosure proceedings were initiated against her property, 517 Rogers Avenue in Brooklyn, which is located within a minority neighborhood.2 The 30-year note and mortgage dated July of 2000 carried an interest rate of 972%.
Previously, Major Foy moved to reform the mortgage pursuant to New York Military Law claiming, in essence, that her ability to comply with the terms of the 9½% mortgage was materially affected by her deployment on several tours of active duty over the course of the past several years. This court granted a hearing. (See M&T Mtge. Corp. v Foy, 15 Misc 3d 1148[A], 2007 NY Slip Op 51199[U] [June 14, 2007].)3
[276]*276Review of the posthearing submissions and additional research suggested that the defendant may have been the victim of a process called “reverse redlining.”4 Accordingly, on December 6, 2007, this court informed the parties that it intended to continue the hearing and placed the burden on the defendant to demonstrate that she was a victim of discriminatory lending.5
Thus, the court now modifies that decision so as to place the burden of proof upon the plaintiff to demonstrate that the loan in question is not a “higher priced loan” which is the product of discriminatory practices.6 In so doing this court is mindful of the effect of discrimination upon the larger population. Research has revealed that when minorities subjected to discrimination represent a very small percentage of the population, the cost of discrimination falls mainly upon the minority; however, when they represent a larger segment of society, the cost of discrimination falls upon both the minorities and the majority as currently evidenced by the worldwide subprime mortgage meltdown.7
In shifting the burden of proof this court will use the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) definition of “higher priced loan”8 to determine whether the loan is one that may require [277]*277further investigation for possible discriminatory practices. A loan is deemed
“ ‘higher priced’[9]. . . [if its] rate spread . . . [for a first tier loan] is three percentage points above the Treasury security of comparable maturity .... [Moreover,] [t]hough the price data [in and of itself does not] support definitive conclusions [with respect to the issue of unlawful discrimination, it provides] a useful screen, previously unavailable, to identify lenders, products, applicants, and geographic markets where price differences among racial or other groups are sufficiently large to warrant further investigation.” {Frequently Asked Questions About the New HMDA Data, Price Data on “Higher-Priced Loans” [Federal Reserve Bank Apr. 2006]; see also Proposed Rules, Regulation Z, 73 Fed Reg 1673.)
“In fall 2005, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System published its first study of the new HMDA interest-rate data.” (Julia Read, HMDA, New Pricing Data [Federal Reserve Bank of Boston spring 2006].) HMDA data is used by government agencies to identify, inter alia, loans, institutions or geographic markets that
[278]*278Extensive national analyses of mortgage pricing patterns across racial and ethnic groups revealed that “[traditionally under-served minority groups were more likely than other populations to pay higher prices for mortgages. ” (HMDA, New Pricing Data [emphasis added].)
[277]*277“show disparities in loan applications or originations by race, ethnicity, or other characteristics that may warrant further investigation under ECOA or FHA. With the addition of price data for higher-priced loans, the agencies are also able to identify in the HMDA data price disparities that may warrant further investigation.”10 (Frequently Asked Questions, General Background.)
[278]*278The mortgage in the instant matter and indeed most 30-year mortgages written after the year 2000, which call for an interest rate of nine percent, would constitute “higher priced loans” under these criteria.11 Thus, this court holds that an interest rate exceeding nine percent evidences the existence of a higher priced loan and creates a rebuttable presumption of discrimination. (See also McGlawn v Pennsylvania Human Relations Commn., 891 A2d 757 [Pa Commw Ct 2006] [Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission relied upon expert testimony indicating that an interest rate three percent beyond that which exists in the general market is predatory and thus discriminatory].)
Equity, which abhors unconscionable and unjust results, mandates a shift in the burden of proof to the plaintiff lender to demonstrate that the loan is not discriminatory.12 Indeed, our decisional law has long since recognized that a litigant “seeking affirmative judicial action in equity . . . may not succeed if [the litigant] is asking [for] an inequitable or unconscionable result.” [279]*279(Monaghan v May, 242 App Div 64, 66 [2d Dept 1934],)13 Moreover,
“[i]n the absence of legislation, courts of equity have exercised jurisdiction in suits for the foreclosure of mortgages to fix the time and terms of sale and to refuse to confirm sales upon equitable grounds where they were found to be unfair or inadequacy of price was so gross as to shock the conscience.” (Home Building & Loan Assn. v Blaisdell, 290 US 398, 446 [1934].)
“As we have seen, equity will intervene in individual cases where it is palpably apparent that gross unfairness is imminent. That is the law of New York.” (Gelfert v National City Bank of N. Y., 313 US 221, 233 [1941].) Indeed, in our current climate where — this court takes judicial notice — there are substantial amounts of undefended foreclosure proceedings in minority neighborhoods, the placement of the burden of proof upon the borrower14 who is very much in a distaff position when it comes to protecting his or her rights, renders illusory the possibility of meaningful legal redress. (See e.g. EquiCredit Corp. of N.Y. v [280]*280Turcios,
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