Patricia A. Palladino, Plaintiff v. Carrington Mortgage Services, LLC, Defendant

2023 DNH 091
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 20, 2023
Docket23-cv-0261-SM
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 DNH 091 (Patricia A. Palladino, Plaintiff v. Carrington Mortgage Services, LLC, Defendant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patricia A. Palladino, Plaintiff v. Carrington Mortgage Services, LLC, Defendant, 2023 DNH 091 (D.N.H. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Patricia A. Palladino, Plaintiff

v. Case No. 23-cv-0261-SM Opinion No. 2023 DNH 091

Carrington Mortgage Services, LLC, Defendant

O R D E R

Pro se plaintiff Patricia Palladino originally brought this

suit in the New Hampshire Superior Court, seeking to enjoin the

planned foreclosure sale of her home. After the state court

granted her temporary injunctive relief, defendant, Carrington

Mortgage Services, removed the proceeding to this court.

Pending before the court are defendant’s Motion to Dismiss and

its Emergency Motion to Dissolve Injunction. Also pending is

plaintiff’s Motion for Preliminary Injunction.

For the reasons given, defendant’s motions are denied.

Plaintiff’s motion for injunctive relief will be treated as

including a request for a temporary restraining order and, as

such, it is granted. The court will conduct a hearing on

Wednesday, August 16, at 10:00 AM to hear argument and take evidence on plaintiff’s request for preliminary and permanent

injunctive relief. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(a)(2).

Background

Accepting the complaint’s factual allegations as true – as

the court must at this juncture – the relevant background is as

follows. 1 In or around 2014, Bank of America sold plaintiff’s

promissory note and the mortgage deed to plaintiff’s home

securing that note to Carrington Mortgage Services (“CMS”).

During that process, however, the amount held in escrow on

plaintiff’s account was not correctly reported. Neither Bank of

America nor CMS was able/willing to correct that meaningful

error and it eventually led to CMS determining, incorrectly,

that the loan was in default. According to plaintiff, this was

because when she made her regular loan payments, CMS directed a

portion of each payment to the escrow account. That, in turn,

meant that each payment she made was seen by CMS as less than

the amount she was contractually obligated to make. Eventually,

plaintiff says, she was forced to file for chapter 13 bankruptcy

protection. She says she “settled with a loan modification and

1 Given plaintiff’s pro se status, the court has drawn the relevant facts from her original state court petition to enjoin foreclosure (document no. 1-1), as well as her objection to defendant’s motion to dismiss (document no. 14), and her supplement to that objection (document no. 16).

2 the bankruptcy was dismissed.” Objection to Motion to Dismiss

(document no. 14) at 3.

In 2021, plaintiff says that she and her husband applied to

a different lender to refinance the CMS mortgage loan, but CMS’s

errors in handling their account – including CMS’s improper

failure to report plaintiff’s timely loan payments to the three

major credit reporting bureaus - thwarted those efforts.

The rates were low and our equity was high and our payment history was good (I can supply copies of my bank statements showing all our payments). The mortgage company that we applied to denied us because our mortgage did not show on any of the 3 major credit bureaus, Trans Union, Equifax or Experian. We then tried to refinance with CMS and they themselves would not refinance our mortgage because they themselves did not report our mortgage to the 3 major credit bureaus. CMS stated that we needed to “reaffirm” our mortgage from the bankruptcy in 2019. Reaffirmation is for chapter 7 not 13 and our bankruptcy was dismissed, so no reaffirmation was needed. We had to jump through hoops with CMS. They said they would refinance us (I have this statement in an email from CMS representative Lorena West, I can provide a copy of this) if we could get “nontraditional” credit applied to our credit reports (when asked what is nontraditional credit, we were told for example utilities, auto insurance, etc.). Instead of CMS just simply posting all of our payments [to the credit reporting agencies], we had to go through an arduous process.

We contacted all 3 bureaus to find out how to do this. All three said that they do not put “nontraditional” credit on reports. Then CMS stated to get a years’ worth of payment history from nontraditional entities to prove our credit worthiness. We got T-Mobile, State Farm and Comcast payment statements to them. We

3 then sent letters and copies of our bank statements with our mortgage payments highlighted and circled to TransUnion, Experian and Equifax (cc’d CMS) asking them to update our reports with the mortgage payments. Trans Union replied stating that they couldn’t update our report because CMS was not even on our report to update.

During this time we were made to believe we were being refinanced if we did all this work, so we held our payments thinking we would be signing papers. Once again we were forced to apply for a modification because we fell behind due to all this back and forth and stalling from CMS. On April 25, 2022 we were notified by mail that we were eligible for a loan modification and to begin our Trial Payment Plan 6/1/2022. First payment of $2256.70 due on June 1, 2022, second payment of $2256.70 due on 7/1/2022, and third payment of $2256.70 due 8/1/2022. We paid as agreed. . . . . We were told we would hear something before our last payment of the 3-payment series. We never received any confirmation of denial letters from CMS. We called in to CMS and were told that a packet was mailed. We NEVER received this packet. I clearly made the CMS representative aware of this.

Id. at 3-4. Plaintiff says she and her husband made all

required payments of $2,256.70 to CMS under the loan

modification trial payment plan – six in total, from May through

October of 2022. When she called CMS to make her November

payment, however, she was told that CMS would not accept the

payment because she had failed to return to CMS a signed copy of

the loan agreement, so CMS had sent the matter to its

foreclosure department. CMS has rescheduled the foreclosure

sale of plaintiff’s home to Monday, August 7, 2023.

4 According to CMS, it sent plaintiff a loan modification

agreement in late September, 2022. In the accompanying cover

letter, CMS claims to have informed plaintiff that she had to

sign and return that agreement on or before November 10, 2022.

It says plaintiff failed to do so. Plaintiff, on the other

hand, vehemently denies ever receiving that loan modification

agreement. And, given her assertion that she made regular

payments during (and beyond) the “trial period” as instructed by

CMS, it does seem odd to suggest that plaintiff would simply

neglect to return the completed loan modification agreement if

she had actually received it. After all, she pursued the loan

modification to save her home and made the requisite initial

payments.

Discussion

I. Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss.

Plainly, plaintiff’s receipt of the final loan modification

agreement for signature and return is one of several genuinely

disputed material facts. But, accepting plaintiff’s factual

allegations as true, CMS erred in declaring plaintiff’s note in

default and it erred in commencing foreclosure proceedings.

Plaintiff’s complaint and subsequent filings – again, if

credited as true - paint a decidedly unflattering picture of

5 CMS. At a minimum, those documents raise questions about

whether, during the course of its dealings with Palladino, CMS

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 DNH 091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricia-a-palladino-plaintiff-v-carrington-mortgage-services-llc-nhd-2023.