Plaza Home Mortgage v. North American Title Co. CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 19, 2013
DocketD059727
StatusUnpublished

This text of Plaza Home Mortgage v. North American Title Co. CA4/1 (Plaza Home Mortgage v. North American Title Co. CA4/1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plaza Home Mortgage v. North American Title Co. CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 4/19/13 Plaza Home Mortgage v. North American Title Co. CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

PLAZA HOME MORTGAGE, INC., D059727

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v. (Super. Ct. No. 37-2007-7512-CU- CO-CTL) NORTH AMERICAN TITLE COMPANY, INC.,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Judith F.

Hayes, Judge. Affirmed.

In April 2010, we reversed the judgment in favor of escrow holder and settlement

agent North American Title Company, Inc. (North American) and remanded with

instructions for the trier of fact to determine whether North American breached the

closing instructions contract between it and wholesale residential mortgage lender Plaza

Home Mortgage, Inc. (Plaza), after North American distributed $53,853 to the attorney in

fact of the buyer of real property that was neither authorized by the closing instructions nor disclosed to Plaza before North American made the distribution. (See Plaza Home

Mortgage, Inc. v. North American Title Co., Inc. (2010) 184 Cal.App.4th 130.) On

remand, the court sitting as trier of fact found North American breached the closing

instructions contract with Plaza and awarded Plaza $313,205.56 plus interest.

In this proceeding, North American challenges Plaza's entitlement to, and award

of, damages. North American contends the award of all the funds North American was

holding when it received the last-minute escrow instruction from the seller was premised

on a finding that is unsupported by the record, namely that had North American advised

Plaza of the amended instruction, Plaza could have unwound the loan transaction and

recouped the funds in North American's possession/account. North American

alternatively contends that, as a matter of law, Plaza's damages should be limited to

$53,853—the amount unlawfully distributed by North American to the buyer's attorney

in fact. We disagree with both contentions and affirm the judgment entered in favor of

Plaza.

BACKGROUND

Following a two-day bench trial, the court issued the following detailed statement

of decision:

"I. STATEMENT OF FACTS

"Plaintiff, Plaza, a Wholesale Residential Mortgage Lender, borrows money from

warehouse lenders to make loans on residential properties. When the loan is funded,

Plaza then sells its loans to investors. In March, 2007, Plaza loaned $1.1 Million Dollars

2 to a Corrections Officer named Oliver Aleta to finance the purchase of a home in

Northridge, California. Mr. Aleta's attorney-in-fact, Edward Peregrino, signed most of

the loan documents, presumably on behalf of his client. On March 1, 2007, Plaza funded

the purchase money loans by way of an $880,000.00 first trust deed and a $220,000.00

second trust deed and wired those funds to the title company, Investors Title. On March

2, 2007, after the new deed of trust was recorded at 8:00 a.m., the title company sent one

wire to Wells Fargo in the amount of $769,788.05 to pay off the existing lien [on the

subject real property], and a second wire to the escrow, defendant [North American], in

the amount of $313,204.56, to make disbursements in accordance with Plaza's closing

instructions. Plaza's closing instructions specified that [North American] would make

disbursements from escrow only in amounts and to people whom Plaza had pre-

approved: "Attention Settlement Agents:

"Plaza Home Mortgage will not [disburse] funds to cover borrower fees that either do not appear on the Estimated HUD-1 or fees that were not verified by a Closer employed by Plaza Home Mortgage. . . .

"Please thoroughly review the fees listed on our Truth-in-Lending Itemization and verify that these fees match those on the final HUD-1 Settlement Statement. The settlement agent cannot change fee amounts after the final documents have been signed by the borrower. . . .

"[Beneath the acknowledgment signature by the [North American] settlement agent it says:] 'By signing, the settlement agent certifies that there are no additional payoffs or fees that were not disclosed to the lender either verbally or on an Estimated HUD-1.' [¶] (Exhibit 34.)

"At 10:40 a.m. on March 2, [North American] received, by fax, a new instruction

from the seller to pay the sum of $53,853.00 to the buyer's attorney, Edward Peregrino

3 (Exhibit 40). The court finds that Plaza was unaware of this proposed disbursement,

which was not on the estimated HUD-1, and there was no evidence that [North

American] made any effort to inform Plaza of this disbursement. Although escrow

officers at [North American] had available a business form called a Proceeds Instruction

Form, which escrow officers used to obtain the concurrence of buyer, seller and lender,

such a form was not used. On March 5, 2007, [North American] made the payment to

Mr. Peregrino in the amount of $53,853.00. The payment was recorded on the final

HUD-1 which was sent to Plaza three days later, on March 8th, when Plaza requested it.

(Exhibit 39.)

"The Court herein finds that [North American] had a contractual duty to inform

Plaza of the payment to Peregrino that [it] learned about during the escrow but before the

loan closed. The Court finds the testimony of plaintiff's witnesses credible that, had [it]

known of this payment, [it] would not have made the Aleta loans. It was the obligation

of North American to disclose to Plaza any additional payoffs or fees that were not

included in the estimated HUD-1.

"In terms of proximate cause, this Court finds that, although the failure to disclose

the payment to Peregrino was not the only cause of plaintiff's loss that it was a legal

cause of plaintiff's injury.

"If Plaza had been alerted by [North American] to the instruction to pay

$53,853.00 to the borrower's agent, Plaza would have taken steps to protect itself from a

potentially fraudulent payoff. The Peregrino payment would have raised red flags that

4 the property was over-valued and the appraisal was inflated, or that the loan was not an

arm's length transaction, or that the seller's credits to the buyer exceeded FNMA

Guidelines. This was especially true in light of the fact that the seller had previously

agreed to pay $10,000 towards the buyer's closing costs. Because [North American]

failed to advise Plaza about the proposed payment to Mr. Peregrino, Plaza remained

ignorant of this payout and Plaza allowed the loans to close without taking the steps

necessary to protect itself. Had Plaza known of the payment, [it] would have taken steps

to unwind the deal and recover the payouts which had already occurred.

"While Plaza was trying to sell the Aleta loans, Mr. Aleta defaulted on his third

loan payment. Even if Plaza had been able to sell the loan to an investor, because of

industry practices and explicit contractual terms in the sale agreement, it would have had

to repurchase the loans because the borrower defaulted after only two payments.

"Plaza mitigated its loss by taking back from Mr.

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Plaza Home Mortgage v. North American Title Co. CA4/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plaza-home-mortgage-v-north-american-title-co-ca41-calctapp-2013.