Mazzei v. the Money Store

62 F.4th 88
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 15, 2023
Docket21-2696-cv
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 62 F.4th 88 (Mazzei v. the Money Store) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mazzei v. the Money Store, 62 F.4th 88 (2d Cir. 2023).

Opinion

21-2696-cv Mazzei v. The Money Store

1 In the 2 United States Court of Appeals 3 For the Second Circuit 4 5 6 August Term, 2022 7 8 No. 21-2696 9 10 JOSEPH MAZZEI, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF THE FEE-SPLIT 11 CLASS, 12 13 Plaintiff-Appellant, 14 15 v. 16 17 THE MONEY STORE, HOMEQ SERVICING INC., TMS MORTGAGE, INC., 18 WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., 19 20 Defendants-Appellees. 21 22 23 24 25 Appeal from the United States District Court 26 for the Southern District of New York. 27 No. 21-2696 28 Analisa Torres, District Judge, Presiding. 29 (Argued September 7, 2022; Decided March 15, 2023) 30 31 Before: WALKER, PARKER, and LEE, Circuit Judges.

1 1 2 Plaintiff-appellant appeals from an order of the United States District 3 Court for the Southern District of New York (Torres, J.) granting defendants’ 4 motion to dismiss a complaint brought pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b) 5 alleging “fraud on the court.” The district court held that plaintiff-appellant 6 pled insufficient facts to sustain the claim under the test first articulated in 7 Martina Theatre Corp. v. Schine Chain Theatres, Inc., 278 F.2d 798, 801 (2d Cir. 8 1960). We agree, and accordingly, we AFFIRM. 9 10 11 PAUL STUART GROBMAN, ESQ. (Moshe 12 Horn, Christopher M. Van de Kieft, 13 Gitlin Horn and Van De Keift LLP, 14 on the brief), New York, NY, for 15 Plaintiff-Appellant. 16 17 AMY PRITCHARD WILLIAMS 18 (Mackenzie Willow-Johnson, on the 19 brief), Troutman Pepper Hamilton 20 Sanders LLP, Charlotte, N.C., for 21 Defendants-Appellees. 22 23 24 BARRINGTON D. PARKER, Circuit Judge:

25 Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b) authorizes relief from a final

26 judgment, order, or proceeding based on, among other things, “fraud on the

27 court.” Years after an adverse judgment and unsuccessful appeals in Mazzei v. The

28 Money Store, 829 F.3d 260 (2d Cir. 2016) (“Mazzei I”), plaintiff-appellant, Joseph

29 Mazzei, sought such relief in district court. He did so after a deposition in a

2 1 separate, unrelated lawsuit cast doubt on the truthfulness of certain

2 representations that defendants’ counsel made to the court in Mazzei I. Defendants

3 moved under Rule 12(b)(6) to dismiss the fraud on the court claim, which the

4 United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Torres, J.)

5 granted. Mazzei then moved for reconsideration, which was denied. Mazzei now

6 appeals these orders.

7 We hold that the district court correctly concluded that Mazzei failed

8 plausibly to plead a fraud on the court claim. The district court correctly reasoned

9 that the conduct of which he complained had not impaired the court’s ability to

10 fully and fairly adjudicate his case because the fraud alleged could have been

11 redressed in Mazzei I. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.

12 BACKGROUND

13 In 2001, Mazzei filed the complaint in Mazzei I. On behalf of himself and a

14 purported class, Mazzei claimed that the plaintiffs, who had defaulted on home

15 loans extended by The Money Store, 1 were charged attorneys’ fees that were

16 improperly split with a non-lawyer entity, Fidelity National Foreclosure Solutions.

1 In 1999, The Money Store became HomEq Servicing Inc. In 2006, HomEq sold off its loan servicing operation.

3 1 This occurred because the Money Store agreed to outsource to Fidelity the

2 necessary legal services for foreclosure, bankruptcy, and other services relating to

3 The Money Store’s loan servicing business. Fidelity then referred The Money

4 Store’s legal work to various law firms, and provided oversight, monitoring, and

5 other administrative services for those law firms. Mazzei claimed that the fee

6 splitting between Fidelity and these law firms violated the terms of the defaulting

7 borrowers’ note agreements.

8 In 2009, during discovery, Mazzei sought records of fee-splitting payments

9 on defendants’ computer systems (“Fee Payment Data”). In response to Mazzei’s

10 concerns that such information was at risk of being purged, defendants assured

11 the district court that they had placed a litigation hold to preserve the data. But in

12 2013, as the case approached trial, defendants revealed that they had not, in fact,

13 preserved the data after selling their mortgage servicing operation in 2006.

14 Mazzei then subpoenaed HomEq’s and Fidelity’s successors for the Fee

15 Payment Data. Only one of Fidelity’s successors, Lender Processing Services

16 (“LPS”), responded. It claimed that although it possessed Fee Payment Data on

17 its New Invoice System (“NIS”), the information was inaccessible and that it

18 would cost tens of millions of dollars to retrieve it in a readable format.

4 1 In October 2013, Mazzei moved to compel defendants to determine whether

2 the data could be retrieved from LPS. Defendants argued in opposition that the

3 NIS had not been housed on HomEq’s system and that the NIS data could not be

4 downloaded to HomEq’s systems. Defendants also contended that it was not

5 technically feasible for HomEq to have exported the data from the NIS to its

6 systems and that defendants were “unaware of any information on ‘fee splitting’”

7 and “have no reason to believe that any such information ever existed” on the NIS.

8 App’x at 25-26. Defendants claim that they relied on LPS’s representations to its

9 lawyers in making these statements.

10 In July 2014, Magistrate Judge Ronald L. Ellis granted Mazzei’s motion,

11 finding that defendants had been grossly negligent and willful in failing to

12 preserve the information. See Mazzei I, No. 01 Civ. 5694 (JGK) (RLE), 2014 WL

13 3610894, at *6-8 (S.D.N.Y. July 21, 2014). As a sanction, Judge Ellis ordered

14 defendants to obtain the information from LPS and required that they bear the

15 costs of determining whether the information was searchable. Id. at *8.

16 Both HomEq and Mazzei challenged Judge Ellis’s ruling. Defendants filed

17 objections, in which they represented that they never had access to information on

18 fee splitting because Fidelity did not give The Money Store access to the

5 1 information on Fidelity’s fee arrangements with the law firms it retained.

2 Defendants also contended that they had no practical ability to obtain the fee

3 splitting information at Fidelity or LPS; and that there was no information on the

4 NIS system about fee splitting. As to the last representation, defendants submitted

5 an affidavit from an LPS executive, who stated that NIS did not contain Fee

6 Payment Data, and that defendants did not have access to the servers on which

7 such data was held.

8 Mazzei responded to the ruling by moving for more punitive sanctions,

9 seeking a default judgment on liability or an adverse inference based on

10 defendants’ failure to preserve the Fee Payment Data.

11 In November 2014, during the final pretrial conference, the district court

12 affirmed Judge Ellis’s sanctions ruling and denied Mazzei’s motion for additional

13 sanctions. In affirming, the district court observed that Mazzei had not sought

14 more punitive sanctions before the Magistrate Judge, that there was no evidence

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