Maria Ferrer v. Janet Yellen

659 F. App'x 982
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 2016
Docket14-15325
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 659 F. App'x 982 (Maria Ferrer v. Janet Yellen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maria Ferrer v. Janet Yellen, 659 F. App'x 982 (11th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This case arises out of administrative enforcement actions by federal banking agencies against various mortgage servi-cers, including U.S. Bank, N.A., following the mortgage foreclosure crisis of 2009 and 2010. These enforcement actions led to consent orders between the federal agencies and the mortgage servicers, which required the servicers to take action to correct their deficient residential mortgage servicing and foreclosure practices and to *984 provide some compensation for borrowers injured by the deficient practices.

Plaintiffs-AppeUants Maria Ferrer and Armando Aluart (collectively, “Plaintiffs”), represented by court-appointed counsel on appeal, are both eligible borrowers who received some compensation as a result of the consent orders. Believing that they had been shortchanged on the amount they were owed, Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit, proceeding pro se throughout the district court proceedings. The district court dismissed Plaintiffs’ claims after concluding that 12 U.S.C. § 1818(i)(l), a judicial-review provision in the Financial Institutions Supervisory Act, which authorized the enforcement actions against the mortgage servicers, precluded the district court from hearing and resolving Plaintiffs’ claims. After careful review, we agree with the district court that it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction, and we therefore affirm.

I.

We briefly recount some of the historical background to give context to Plaintiffs’ specific allegations on appeal. In April 2011, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 1 (collectively, the “Federal Regulators”) announced consent cease-and-desist orders (“consent orders”) against several large mortgage ser-vicers, including U.S. Bank, pursuant to 12 U.S.C. § 1818(b). The consent orders, in broad terms, sought to correct unsafe and unsound practices related to residential mortgage loan servicing and foreclosure processing and to provide some remediation for borrowers injured by those practices.

The consent orders required the mortgage servicers to take a number of corrective actions, including retaining an independent consultant to conduct a comprehensive review of foreclosure actions from 2009 and 2010. See, e.g., April 13, 2011 Consent Order against U.S. Bank (“U.S. Bank Consent Order”) (Doc. 77-1, Exh. I). 2 Eligible borrowers—those who had a pending or completed foreclosure on their primary residence during that time—could request an independent review of their file and receive compensation identified financial injury. This process was known as Independent Foreclosure Review (“IFR”).

In June 2012, the Federal Regulators published the “Financial Remediation Framework” (the “IFR Framework”) to help independent consultants recommend remediation for financial injury identified during the IFR. 3 The IFR Framework provides examples of situations where compensation or other remediation, such as correction of credit records, is required, and it specifies the remedies applicable to each situation. The servicers were to develop remediation plans, subject to approv *985 al by the Federal Regulators, based on the recommendations of the independent consultants.

In February 2013, the Federal Regulators issued amendments to the consent orders that significantly changed the remediation process. 4 The amendments were based on agreements reached one month earlier between the Federal Regulators and the servicers, including U.S. Bank. The participating servicers agreed to pay $9.3 billion to eligible borrowers, including $3.6 billion in direct cash payments and $5.7 billion in other assistance, such as loan modifications and forgiveness of deficiency judgments. The $3.6 billion was to be paid out to eligible borrowers from a Qualified Settlement Fund (the “Settlement Fund”) by a paying agent, Rust Consulting, Inc.

The amendments terminated the case-by-case IFR process and, in its place, outlined a more streamlined process to provide remediation to eligible borrowers. See, e.g., Amendment to April 13, 2011 Consent Order against U.S. Bank (“2013 Amendment”), Art. I, § (1) (Doc. 77-1, Exh. 2). Servicers would place eligible borrowers into categories, based on loan-file characteristics as determined by the Federal Regulators, id., Art. II, § (1), and Federal Regulators would develop a distribution plan, in their sole discretion, specifying the amounts applicable to each borrower category, id., Art. II, §§ (2) & (3). Based on the distribution plan and the servicers’ categorization of borrowers, Rust Consulting would distribute payments from the Settlement Fund to individual eligible borrowers. Id. Plaintiffs have submitted with their amended complaint a table specifying the standard payout amounts for various categories of borrowers from the Settlement Fund (the “Settlement Fund Table”). See Amended Compl., Exh. 2 (Doc. 69 at 17). 5

Notably, the cash payments to eligible borrowers were not meant to “reflect specific financial injury or harm that may have been suffered by borrowers receiving payments.” 2013 Amendment at 2-3. Nor was remediation from the Settlement Fund intended to displace any independent claims a borrower may have against his or her servicer. See id., Art. V, § (3) (“In no event shall the Bank request or require any borrower to execute a waiver of any claims against the Bank (including any agent of the Bank) in connection with any payment or Foreclosure Prevention assistance pursuant to this Amendment to the Consent Order.”).

With this general background in mind, we tqrn to Plaintiffs’ specific allegations in this case.

II.

Ferrer and Aluart are both eligible borrowers under the terms of the U.S. Bank Consent Order and 2013 Amendment. They both received a cash payment from Rust Consulting. They allege, however, that they received less than they were owed under the IFR Framework and the Settlement Fund Table, which we collectively, though loosely, refer to as the “payout plans.” 6

*986 According to the operative amended complaint, Ferrer and U.S. Bank reached a loan-modification agreement after U.S. Bank had filed to foreclose Ferrer’s mortgage. Under the agreement, U.S. Bank promised to give Ferrer a permanent loan modification and to withdraw the foreclosure action if she successfully completed a six-month trial modification period. While Ferrer completed the trial modification period, U.S. Bank did not convert her trial modification into a permanent one, though it did withdraw the foreclosure action.

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Bluebook (online)
659 F. App'x 982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maria-ferrer-v-janet-yellen-ca11-2016.