Moon v. Milestone Financial, LLC

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California
DecidedJanuary 31, 2022
Docket20-03117
StatusUnknown

This text of Moon v. Milestone Financial, LLC (Moon v. Milestone Financial, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moon v. Milestone Financial, LLC, (Cal. 2022).

Opinion

EDWARD J. EMMONS, CLERK (9 □ □□ □□□ ONG U.S. BANKRUPTCY COURT □□ NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA le ay Sal □□ 1 . □□□ □ □□ Signed and Filed: January 31, 2022 □□□□ OL 2 Grin J 2 4 Vin An 0 5 DENNIS MONTALI U.S. Bankruptcy Judge 6 7 UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT 8 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 9 In re ) Bankruptcy Case No. 20-30711-DM 10 ) 11 MARK E. MOON, ) Chapter 11 ) 12 ) Debtor. ) 13 ) 14 E. MARK MOON and LORI MOON, ) Adversary Case No. 20-03117-DM ) 15 Plaintiffs, ) ) 16 V. ) 17 ) MILESTONE FINANCIAL, LLC, et ) 18 ) ) 19 Defendants. ) ) 20.) Om" 21 MEMORANDUM DECISION REGARDING CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT 22 23 I. INTRODUCTION 24 The following decision deals with the complex world of 25 ||California’s usury law and its piecemeal exemptions. 26 ||Incongruous as a result may be, “. . . we must take the usury 27 ||law as we find it. Indeed, the usury law is complex and is 28 |}riddled with so many exceptions that the law's application =- 1 =-

1 itself seems to be the exception rather than the rule.” Ghirardo 2 v. Antonioli, 8 Cal.4th 791, 807 (Cal. 1994) (“Ghirardo”). 3 This appears to be both a case of first impression and one of 4 the rare instances in which application of usury law must apply 5 with no applicable exemptions. 6 II. THE LOAN AND EXTENSION 7 On June 23, 2015, Plaintiffs Mark E. Moon and Lori Moon 8 (“Moons” or “Plaintiffs”) entered into a hard money loan 9 agreement (the “Original Loan”) with Defendant Milestone 10 Financial, LLC (“Milestone”) secured by the Moons’ residence. 11 At that time, Milestone did not have either a real estate broker 12 license or a mortgage loan originator license and had been 13 warned by the State of California about its lack of appropriate 14 licenses.1 The Moons were represented by licensed real estate 15 broker Marc Fournier. 16 One of the loan documents signed by the Moons was a 17 certification that the loan was a business or investment purpose 18 loan, meaning the protection found in the Truth in Lending Act 19 or other California laws meant to protect residential home loan 20 borrowers would not apply.2 The Original Loan was for $759,000 21 22 1 In March and April of 2015, the California Department of Real Estate issued Cease and Desist Orders to Milestone and related 23 parties. These Orders demanded in part that Milestone “desist and refrain from soliciting borrowers and/or performing services 24 for borrowers or lenders in connection with loans secured 25 directly or collaterally on real property” until such licenses were obtained. See Plaintiffs’ RJN, Dkt. 40. 26 2 Milestone makes much of the Moons’ alleged misstatement of the 27 purpose of the loans, and Moons make much of Milestone’s alleged 28 last-minute insertion of documents to make a residential loan 1 with an interest rate of 11.3%, a default interest rate of 17.3% 2 plus late fees, and interest-only payments of over $7,000 per 3 month until the balance came due in July 2017. 4 The Moons signed the Promissory Note. (Dkt. 1-26). 5 Paragraph 2, titled “Payments,” makes clear that the Original 6 Loan is payable in full on the Maturity Date, and will include 7 the entire principal, unpaid interest, and any other costs at 8 that time.3 Paragraph 4(a), titled “Late Charges; Default Rate” 9 states that should the Moons fail to make a monthly payment 10 within 10 days of the due date, a late charge (the “Late 11 Charge”) equal to 10% of the monthly payment will be assessed as 12 a late charge, and “it is extremely difficult and impractical to 13 ascertain the extent of such damages and that the Late Charge 14 represents a fair and reasonable estimate, considering all of 15 the circumstances on the date of the Execution of this Note, of 16 the costs the Holder will incur by reason of such late payment” 17 (emphasis added). 18 Paragraph 4(b) reiterates the difficulty of ascertaining 19 the damages associated with the loss of timely payments as the 20 reason for the default interest rate set by the Promissory Note. 21 22 appear to be a business loan on paper. Ultimately, the dispute over which party misled the other regarding the purpose of the 23 loan is a matter waived by terms of the Extension.

24 3 Paragraph 2(a) says, in part: “The entire unpaid Principal 25 Balance, plus accrued interest and other amounts payable under the Loan Documents, shall be due and payable in full on the 26 Maturity Date.” Paragraph 2(c) says, in part: “THIS LOAN IS PAYABLE IN FULL ON THE MATURITY DATE SET FORTH HEREIN.” 27 (Emphasis in original). It goes on to state that a substantial portion of the original principal sum will be due at maturity 28 “IN THE FORM OF A BALLOON PAYMENT” (emphasis in original). 1 Nowhere in Paragraph 4 is there any language regarding a late 2 charge on the balloon payment itself. 3 Paragraph 14, titled “Usury”, contains a usury savings 4 clause that limits the interest charged to the applicable 5 statutory rate in the event that a court holds the amount of 6 interest charged “is in excess of applicable law.” 7 The Moons began to struggle with payments almost 8 immediately. At some points, Milestone advanced the taxes and 9 insurance on the residence. About one year after the making of 10 the Original Loan, on August 26, 2016, the Moons and Milestone 11 entered into an agreement titled “Settlement Agreement, 12 Indemnity, and First Amendment to Promissory Note Secured by 13 Deed of Trust” (the “Extension”) (Dkt. 1-27, 28)4. The Extension 14 supplemented and amended the Original Loan. It did not replace 15 it. 16 Milestone still did not have its own real estate broker or 17 loan originator license, and this time the Moons were not 18 represented by Mr. Fournier or any licensed real estate broker 19 in the making of the Extension. The Extension states that the 20 unpaid principal balance of the loan is $902,525.34 in no fewer 21 than three parts of the document. The Extension extended the 22 Maturity Date of the loan to July 2019, slightly lowered the 23 initial interest rate to 11.05% and increased the monthly 24 25 26 4 At that time there was no real dispute between the parties, so it is unclear why Milestone chose to call the agreement a 27 “Settlement”. Perhaps calling it the “Forbearance” that it was invites invocation of the usury law that ultimately doomed its 28 strategy. 1 payments and default interest rate. Paragraph 8 of the 2 Extension, titled “Late Charges,” stated: 3 Should any payment due hereunder not be 4 received on or before the TENTH (10th) day 5 after its due date (the ‘Grace Period’), 6 Borrower shall immediately pay to Lender, 7 without notice or demand by Lender, a late 8 charge calculated at TEN PERCENT (10.00%) of 9 any payment then due, including the final 10 (balloon) payment.” 11 Dkt. 1-28, p. 2 (emphasis in original). 12 The charge on the final balloon payment was a new addition 13 to the Extension, not part of the Original Loan. Within the 14 same paragraph, the basis for these late charges was made clear: 15 Borrower agrees that Lender will incur 16 administrative costs and other damages not 17 compensated by payment of interest as a result 18 of any payment not being made when due and 19 acknowledges that calculation of actual 20 damages is extremely difficult and 21 impracticable and that the foregoing amount is 22 a reasonable estimate of those damages. 23 After executing the Extension, the Moons promptly began 24 missing loan payments, though some payments were tendered at 25 various times. 26 In March 2019, the Moons sought to refinance their 27 residence with a different lender and requested a payoff amount 28 from Milestone. Milestone provided a payoff quote of 1 $1,288,792.28, which included what was initially called a 2 “prepayment penalty” of $115,615.06. In later filings Milestone 3 notes the phrase “prepayment penalty” was in error, and the 4 amount represents a late charge on the principal balance in 5 accordance with the Extension.

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