New Fed Mortgage Corp. v. National Union Fire Insurance

543 F.3d 7, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 20695, 2008 WL 4399009
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 30, 2008
Docket07-2762
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 543 F.3d 7 (New Fed Mortgage Corp. v. National Union Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Fed Mortgage Corp. v. National Union Fire Insurance, 543 F.3d 7, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 20695, 2008 WL 4399009 (1st Cir. 2008).

Opinion

*9 LYNCH, Chief Judge.

This case involves the use of false credit information that is material to the risk of home mortgage lending transactions.

New Fed Mortgage Corporation, a mortgage originator, sued its insurer, National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, PA, in 2007, alleging that National Union had wrongfully denied it coverage under an errors and omissions (“E & 0”) policy. On cross motions, the district court granted National Union’s motion for summary judgment because it found that New Fed’s claim fell within an exclusion in the policy. The district court later denied New Fed’s motion to alter or amend the judgment. We affirm, albeit on grounds of a different policy exclusion.

I.

In reciting the facts, we draw all reasonable inferences in New Fed’s favor, as we must on summary judgment. Mellen v. Trs. of Boston Univ., 504 F.3d 21, 24 (1st Cir.2007).

New Fed is a residential mortgage originator and broker. It receives mortgage applications from prospective borrowers and presents those applications to lenders for approval. If a lender approves a mortgage, it pays New Fed a fee for arranging the loan. New Fed makes its profit on the spread between its costs in the processing, selling, and funding of the loan and the amount realized when the loan is sold to an investor.

As part of its services, New Fed provides lenders with information regarding the mortgage applications it receives, including the prospective borrower’s credit report obtained from an independent credit bureau. Lenders use the borrower’s credit history, among other factors, to assess the value and terms of a particular mortgage. They give greater value and better terms to a mortgage as the likelihood increases that the borrower will repay it. If a lender approves a mortgage believing the borrower’s credit history to be stronger than it is, the lender may well suffer a loss because the loan’s terms do not reflect the lender’s risk. Moreover, lenders often resell various interests in the mortgages they own to other financial institutions. The consequence of this reselling is that the loss incurred from a mortgage obtained on the basis of an inaccurate credit report can be far reaching.

Kevin Dunn worked under contract as a mortgage broker for New Fed starting in June 2005. New Fed’s mortgage brokers assist prospective borrowers in completing their mortgage applications. They gather information regarding the applicant’s financial history and explain to each applicant the terms of the proposed loan. New Fed paid Dunn on commission and only upon the closing of the loan, giving him incentive to have third party lenders approve the loans he prepared. The record indicates that Dunn, while working for New Fed, falsified the credit reports he had received from the independent credit bureau in several of the mortgage applications he processed by assigning higher credit scores to the prospective borrowers. 1

Decision One Mortgage Company, LLG — -now defunct — -was a mortgage lender. In November 2003, it entered into an agreement to use New Fed’s services to receive mortgage applications, including credit data. New Fed’s brokerage agreement with Decision One provided that New *10 Fed “warrant[ed] the accurateness and the truthfulness of all information, credit or otherwise,” it submitted to Decision One. New Fed also agreed to indemnify Decision One for the losses that “may be incurred by Decision One arising out of ... any breach” by New Fed of any warranty under the contract.

Between January and April 2006, Decision One approved fifteen mortgages from New Fed in which Dunn had altered the credit reports. In April 2006, Decision One through the course of an internal audit noticed discrepancies between the credit reports it had independently obtained and those New Fed had provided for the fifteen mortgages. On April 20, 2006, Decision One notified New Fed of the problem.

New Fed investigated the matter. New Fed discovered that Dunn had prepared all fifteen mortgage applications but was unable to determine exactly how Dunn had altered the applicants’ credit scores. New Fed considered it most likely that the original credit reports sent by email to Dunn from the credit bureau had been scanned into an outside computer system, altered, and published in altered form. The altered reports were then substituted for the original credit reports in the loan package submitted to Decision One. Dunn denied altering the credit reports to New Fed’s investigators. Following the conclusion of New Fed’s investigation, Dunn resigned.

Decision One resold four of the fifteen mortgages to a third party for a total price of $1,034,150. After Decision One discovered that New Fed had falsified the credit reports, the third party investor who had purchased four of the mortgages from Decision One required Decision One to repurchase each mortgage at its original price.

On August 24, 2006, Decision One orally requested indemnification from New Fed for the losses that it would incur through the repurchase and resale of those four loans. New Fed asked that Decision One make its demand in writing. On October 2, 2006, Decision One sent New Fed a demand letter, alleging that Decision One had suffered “substantial losses” relating to those four mortgages “[a]s a result of the fraudulent information included in the loan packages submitted by New Fed.” The letter requested that New Fed either purchase the four mortgages at their original price or compensate Decision One for the losses it would realize when selling the mortgages at auction. New Fed responded but did not offer to compensate Decision One.

Decision One eventually sold the four loans together at auction. On February 15, 2007, Decision One requested that New Fed pay it $233,052.75, the total loss incurred in the repurchase and resale of the four loans.

At all relevant times, New Fed carried E & O coverage through National Union. “An errors and omissions policy is intended to insure a member of a designated calling against liability arising out of the mistakes inherent in the practice of that particular profession or business.” Massamont Ins. Agency, Inc. v. Utica Mut. Ins. Co., 489 F.3d 71, 74 (1st Cir.2007). Under the policy, National Union agreed “[t]o pay on behalf of the Insured ... Damages resulting from any Claim(s) ... for any Wrongful Act of the Insured.” But the policy excluded from coverage “any Claim ... alleging fraud, dishonesty, or criminal acts or omissions on the part of the Insured.”

On June 28, 2006, New Fed sent National Union a notice of potential claim and advised it that Decision One had discovered “irregularities” in the credit reports for fifteen mortgage applications. National Union acknowledged the receipt of New *11 Fed’s claim notice and assigned the case to a claim examiner on September 1, 2006. On October 12, 2006, New Fed notified National Union of the pending repurchase of the four loans by Decision One.

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543 F.3d 7, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 20695, 2008 WL 4399009, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-fed-mortgage-corp-v-national-union-fire-insurance-ca1-2008.