Olam v. Congress Mortgage Co.

68 F. Supp. 2d 1110, 1999 WL 909731
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedOctober 15, 1999
DocketC95-2806 WDB
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 68 F. Supp. 2d 1110 (Olam v. Congress Mortgage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District 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
Olam v. Congress Mortgage Co., 68 F. Supp. 2d 1110, 1999 WL 909731 (N.D. Cal. 1999).

Opinion

AMENDED ORDER AND OPINION RE DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO ENFORCE SETTLEMENT

BRAZIL, United States Magistrate Judge.

INTRODUCTION — MAJOR ISSUES PRESENTED

The court addresses in this opinion several difficult issues about the relationship between a court-sponsored voluntary mediation and subsequent proceedings whose purpose is to determine whether the parties entered an enforceable agreement at the close of the mediation session.

As we explain below, the parties participated in a lengthy mediation that was hosted by this court’s ADR Program Counsel — an employee of the court who is both a lawyer and an ADR professional. At the end of the mediation (after midnight), the parties signed a “Memorandum of Understanding” (MOU) that states that it is “intended as a binding document itself. ...” Contending that the consent she apparently gave was not legally valid, plaintiff has taken the position that the MOU is not enforceable. She has not complied with its terms. Defendants have filed a motion to enforce the MOU as a binding contract.

One of the principal issues with which the court wrestles, below, is whether evidence about what occurred during the mediation proceedings, including testimony from the mediator, may be used to help resolve this dispute. Before we address the merits of these issues, we must decide whose law to apply (state or federal).

Because the pertinent background facts and the procedural setting are of some moment, we discuss them with some care in the first section. Then we turn to choice of law issues. After deciding whose law governs, we address some challenging procedural and substantive questions. Thereafter, we consider the record developed at the evidentiary hearing — to determine what the factual setting is in which we apply the law. With the factual setting defined, we are positioned to explain why we have decided to grant the defendants’ motion and to enforce the settlement agreement.

THE PERTINENT FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The events in the real world out of which the current dispute arises began unfolding in 1992, when Ms. Olam applied for and received a loan from Congress Mortgage in the amount of $187,000. The 1992 loan is secured by two single-family homes located in San Francisco and owned by Ms. Olam. These properties are referred to as the “Athens Property” and the “Naples Property” because they are located on Athens Street and Naples Street, respectively.

Plaintiff states that she never read the 1992 loan documentation and that she simply signed where Congress Mortgage’s agent told her to sign. See, Declaration of Donna Conlin Olam in Support of Her Memorandum Opposing Defendants’ Motion to Compel Contract Arbitration, filed September 1,1995.

Ms. Olam contends that she could not afford the monthly payments on the 1992 loan. Eventually she defaulted. Thereafter, Congress Mortgage initiated foreclosure proceedings on both the Athens and Naples Properties.

The purported May 1993 work-out agreement

Defendants allege that on May 21, 1993, plaintiff entered a work-out agreement pursuant to which, among other things, money earmarked for renovating the property was applied to the defaulted loan — in order to bring plaintiffs payments up to date. See, Exhibit D-l, admitted at Au *1114 gust 23,1999 evidentiary hearing. 1 Defendants further contend that, at the time she signed the May 1993 agreement, plaintiff was represented by an attorney, Carl Win-dell, who reviewed both the work-out agreement and the original 1992 loan documentation. Both plaintiff and Mr. Win-dell’s signatures appear on the 1993 agreement. See, Ex. D-l

Plaintiff, in sharp contrast, asserts that Mr. Windell was not her attorney at that time. Instead, she says, Mr. Windell was “hired” by Robert Gaddis of Congress Mortgage to resolve a problem with a contractor and to review the original loan documentation. Plaintiff contends that Mr. Windell did not explain the 1993 workout agreement to her and that she did not understand it at the time she signed. See, August 28, 1998 Deposition of Donna Con-lin Olam, filed August 23, 1999 at 395-410 (hereafter “Olam Depo.”). Ms. Olam also alleges that she was under “extreme duress” at the time she signed the 1993 agreement and that she was coerced into signing it. See, Olam Depo., at 395-410; Transcript August 23, 1999 Evidentiary Hearing, WDB Tapes No. 1-3 (hereafter “E.H. Transcript”).

Plaintiff again defaulted on her loan payments. In late 1993, Congress Mortgage notified plaintiff that it would again begin foreclosure proceedings on the properties. The purported October 1994 “extension” agreement

According to defendants, the second foreclosure notice led to more negotiations between Ms. Olam and Congress Mortgage, negotiations that by October of 1994 had produced yet another written agreement. See, Exhibit D-2. Under its terms, Congress Mortgage would sell the Athens Street property, reduce the outstanding principal on the 1992 loan by the sale amount, and restructure Ms. Olam’s remaining debt so that her monthly payments would be smaller. Defendants contend that in entering this agreement Ms. Olam was represented by attorney Paul H. Melbostad. Both Mr. Melbostad and Ms. Olam signed the October 1994 agreement. See, Ex. D-2.

Ms. Olam, however, contends that the October 1994 agreement — like the 1992 original loan documentation and the 1993 workout agreement — cannot be enforced because, among other things, she did not freely consent to it. She claims that at the time she signed the October 1994 agreement she was under economic duress, imposed by the impending foreclosures. See, Olam Depo., at 413-430. Ms. Olam also asserts that she did not read the October 1994 agreement, that Mr. Melbostad did not explain the agreement to her, and that she signed it only because he told her to do so. 2 See, Olam Depo., at 413-430; E.H. Transcript. At one point plaintiff contended that, due to incapacitating medical conditions, she was incapable of understanding the nature, purpose, and effect of the 1994 agreement. See, Plaintiffs Memorandum of Law Regarding Regulation Z; Plaintiffs Statement Re: Mediation, ..., filed August 24, 1998. However, at her deposition, defense counsel asked plaintiff whether her medical incapacity contributed to the alleged duress she was experiencing at the time she signed the 1994 document — and plaintiff responded that it did not. .See, Olam Depo., at 433:1^1

It appears that defendants gave notice of a proposed sale of the Athens property in November 1994, but that an injunction prevented the sale process from going forward. That injunction was issued by a state court in which people (the Manns) who were trying to buy the Athens property from Ms. Olam had sued Ms. Olam and Congress Mortgage.

This lawsuit begins

On June 23, 1995, Donna Conlin Olam filed in state court the instant lawsuit *1115

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Bluebook (online)
68 F. Supp. 2d 1110, 1999 WL 909731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olam-v-congress-mortgage-co-cand-1999.