Roark v. Rydell

881 N.E.2d 333, 174 Ohio App. 3d 186, 2007 Ohio 6873
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 21, 2007
DocketNos. C-061090 and C-070032.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 881 N.E.2d 333 (Roark v. Rydell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roark v. Rydell, 881 N.E.2d 333, 174 Ohio App. 3d 186, 2007 Ohio 6873 (Ohio Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Sylvia Sieve Hendon, Judge.

{¶ 1} These cases began as foreclosure actions against Cynthia Roark and Steven Roark and against Danyel Jones. The Roarks and Jones (“the homeowners”), claiming to have been the victims of an elaborate “property flipping” scheme, filed third-party actions against several individuals and companies, including Ashore Funding, Inc., Clifford Rydell, Airline Union’s Mortgage Company (“AUM”), and Airline Union’s Mortgage Co., Ltd. (“AUMLTD”).

{¶ 2} Ashore and Rydell now appeal the trial court’s judgment in favor of the homeowners, and the homeowners have cross-appealed.

Rydell and Ashore

{¶ 3} Clifford Rydell was the sole owner and president of Ashore, a mortgage lender that sold its loans on a secondary market. Rydell was also the sole owner of AUM, a licensed second-mortgage lender.

{¶ 4} Rydell had acquired AUM in 1995. At that time, Rydell testified, the value of a second-mortgage license was that its holder was exempt from Ohio’s requirement for a separate mortgage-broker’s license. In other words, the holder of a second-mortgage license could broker original loans without a broker’s license.

{¶ 5} Between 1995 and 2001, AUM originated second mortgages and brokered first mortgages. During that period, AUM earned far more from its brokered mortgages than from its second-mortgage accounts.

{¶ 6} In August 2001, Rydell met Jay Sullivan and Troy Clements. Sullivan told Rydell that Clements was “a big investor that he was starting to get some business from” and that Clements was going to lend him some money to acquire office space.

{¶ 7} After Rydell had hired Sullivan as a loan officer for AUM, Sullivan “brought in a lot of business.” Between August and December 2001, Sullivan brokered 415 loans, which generated $1.6 million in fees.

{¶ 8} On August 29, 2001, Rydell and Sullivan entered into an agreement that would become effective on January 1, 2002. Under the agreement, Rydell established an AUM branch office on Kemper Road in Cincinnati and named Sullivan as the operations manager of the new office. Sullivan agreed to pay *190 Rydell $8,000 per month to operate the office. The agreement purported to give Sullivan the right to any profits derived from AUM transactions, as well as the authority “to obligate [AUM] in any way he [deemed] it necessary.”

{¶ 9} According to Rydell, Sullivan lacked the requisite experience to be eligible for a mortgage broker’s license. Instead, Sullivan operated under AUM’s second-mortgage license, which allowed him to take advantage of the then existing broker exemption. Sullivan needed AUM’s second-mortgage license to broker loans.

{¶ 10} Shortly after Rydell and Sullivan had entered into the agreement, they learned that Ohio was going to revise its Mortgage Broker Act to remove the broker exemption for second-mortgage license holders. The change, effective in May 2002, required that mortgage brokers obtain a separate mortgage broker’s license. 1 So Sullivan needed his own license to continue to broker mortgages.

{¶ 11} Sullivan still wanted to use the Airline Union’s Mortgage name, so in January 2002, Rydell and Sullivan incorporated a new entity, AUMLTD. Rydell formally consented to AUMLTD’s use of a business name similar to AUM’s. In that way, Sullivan could use his newly acquired mortgage broker’s license and continue to operate under the Airline Union’s Mortgage name. Rydell testified that he had expected AUMLTD to funnel business to Ashore.

{¶ 12} Rydell acted as AUMLTD’s statutory agent. Rydell named his son, Benjamin, as a partner and 95 percent owner of AUMLTD. Sullivan was listed as its president and as a 5 percent owner.

{¶ 13} Rydell’s son never worked at the AUMLTD office. AUMLTD operated from AUM’s Kemper Road office.

{¶ 14} Rydell met with Sullivan and Clements at the Kemper Road office several times during 2002 and 2003. After one such meeting in the summer of 2002, the AUM loan officers were instructed to steer their business to Ashore.

{¶ 15} AUMLTD began referring loans to Ashore in September 2002. From that time until August 2003, AUMLTD referred 122 loans to Ashore, most of which involved Clements as the seller of the property. The AUMLTD loans were worth $17,367,920, which represented about 20 percent of Ashore’s business.

{¶ 16} In July 2003, Rydell learned that approximately ten AUMLTD loan applications to Ashore had been submitted with fraudulently inflated appraisals, but he took no steps to notify authorities.

{¶ 17} In the summer of 2003, the Kemper Road office was raided by the FBI. In an ensuing federal prosecution, Clements pleaded guilty to conspiracy to *191 commit fraud and to money laundering. Clements admitted that he and the AUM loan officers had created false documents to support loan applications.

Troy’s Deals

{¶ 18} Gary Swain worked as a loan officer for AUM from January 2000 until 2003. According to Swain, Sullivan and Clements had hired him and were his supervisors. Swain did not know that AUM and AUMLTD were separate entities.

{¶ 19} Sullivan and Clements instructed Swain and the other loan officers to use a procedure known as “Troy’s Deals.” In such a deal, Swain would advertise a house for rent. When a customer responded, Swain would obtain the customer’s credit report. Then a realtor working with AUM would try to find a house for the customer.

{¶ 20} Once the customer had selected a house, Clements would purchase it. Sullivan or Clements would tell Swain a value that the home should be appraised for so that there would be an 80 percent loan-to-value ratio when AUM processed a refinanced loan on the property.

{¶ 21} Swain would have the home appraised and would suggest the inflated value to the appraiser, which the appraiser would adopt. The home would be appraised for the inflated value.

{¶ 22} The customer would execute a mortgage to Clements for an amount that was $5,000 more than Clements had just paid for the home. And then AUM would process a refinanced loan on the property through a lender. The refinanced-loan application would show the house to be owned by the customer.

{¶ 23} At some point, Swain testified, after a meeting between Sullivan, Clements, and Rydell, AUM’s loan officers were instructed to begin sending all their loan applications to Ashore because they had been cut off by other lenders. Swain testified that AUM’s contact at Ashore was Rydell.

{¶ 24} Swain met the Roarks through a rental advertisement. After the Roarks had decided to buy a home on Windswept Lane, Clements bought the home for $80,000.

{¶ 25} Swain had the Roarks execute a note and mortgage in favor of Clements for $85,000. Swain also prepared a loan application for $104,000 to refinance the property. He admitted that he gave Cynthia Roark some of his own money to deposit into her bank account. Swain instructed Roark to obtain a Verification of Deposit (“VOD”) and then to withdraw the same sum immediately and give it to him. Swain said that he had learned this VOD technique from Sullivan and Clements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
881 N.E.2d 333, 174 Ohio App. 3d 186, 2007 Ohio 6873, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roark-v-rydell-ohioctapp-2007.