Sims v. Carrington Mortgage Services, L.L.C.

440 S.W.3d 10, 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 588, 2014 Tex. LEXIS 396, 2014 WL 1998397
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 2014
DocketNo. 13-0638
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 440 S.W.3d 10 (Sims v. Carrington Mortgage Services, L.L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sims v. Carrington Mortgage Services, L.L.C., 440 S.W.3d 10, 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 588, 2014 Tex. LEXIS 396, 2014 WL 1998397 (Tex. 2014).

Opinion

Chief Justice HECHT

delivered the opinion of the Court.

To avoid foreclosure, homeowners and lenders often try to restructure underwater home mortgage loans that are in default by capitalizing past-due amounts as principal, lowering the interest rate, and reducing monthly payments, thereby easing the burden on the homeowners. But home equity loans are subject to the requirements of Article XVI, Section 50 of the Texas Constitution. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has asked whether those requirements apply to such loan restructuring.1 We answer that as long as the original note is not satisfied and replaced, and there is no additional extension of credit, as we define it, the restructuring is valid and need not [12]*12meet the constitutional requirements for a new loan.

I

’ Frankie and Patsy Sims obtained a 30-year home equity loan in 2003. In 2009, the Simses, behind on their payments, reached what was entitled a “Loan Modification Agreement” with Carrington Mortgage Services, L.L.C. The agreements involved capitalizing past-due interest and other charges, including fees and unpaid taxes and insurance premiums, and reducing the interest rate and monthly payments. Two years later, the Simses were again behind, and this time CMS sought foreclosure. The Simses resisted, asserting that the 2009 restructuring violated constitutional requirements for home equity loans. The parties then reached a second “Loan Modification Agreement”, further reducing the interest rate and payments. The following chart summarizes the loan data at the outset and after the two restructurings:

_Principal_Amt. Cap’d New Prin. Rate Payment Appraisal

2003 Loan ' $76,000.00 —_—_9% $611.51 $96.000

2009 Mod. $72,145.50 $2,200,00_$74,345.50 6.5% $511.16 $72,300

2011 Mod. $72,655.61 $7,368.44$80,023.95 4.75% $492,34 $73,000

The original note required the Simses to pay principal, interest, and late charges.2 The security agreement echoed that requirement and added an obligation for the Simses to make payments for “Escrow Items”, such as taxes, assessments, and insurance premiums.3 The security agreement also authorized the lender to “do and pay for whatever is reasonable or appropriate” to protect its interest in the property and its rights under the agreement and provided that any amount the lender disbursed to that end “shall become additional debt of Borrower secured by this Security Instrument.” The 2009 and 2011 “Loan Modification Agreements” provided that all the Simses’ obligations and all the loan documents remained unchanged.4

Two months after the 2011 agreement, the Simses brought this class action [13]*13against CMS in the United States District Court, alleging that CMS’s loan modifications for them and other similárly situated borrowers violated Article XVI, Section 50 of the Texas Constitution. Before considering certification, the court dismissed the case under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for failure to state a cause of action,5 and the Simses appealed. After oral argument, the Fifth Circuit certified the following four questions to us:

1. After an initial extension of credit, if a home equity lender enters into a new agreement with the borrower that capitalizes past-due interest, fees, property taxes, or insurance premiums into the principal of the loan but neither satisfies nor replaces the original note, is the transaction a modification or a refi-nancé for purposes of Section 50 of Article XVI of the Texas Constitution?
If the transaction is a modification rather than a refinance, the following questions also arise:
2. Does the capitalization of past-due interest, fees, property taxes, or insurance premiums constitute an impermissible “advance of additional funds” under Section 153.14(2)(B) of the Texas Administrative Code?
8. Must such a modification comply with the requirements of Section 50(a)(6), including subsection (B), which mandates that a home equity loan have a maximum loan-to-value ratio of 80%?
4. Do repeated modifications like those in this case convert a home equity loan into an open-end account that must comply with Section 50(t)?

II

As we have more fully explained in prior decisions, because of Texas’ strong, historic protection of the homestead, home equity loans are regulated, not by statute as one might suppose, but by the “elaborate, detailed provisions” of Article XVI, Section 50 of the Texas Constitution.6 To provide guidance to lenders, the Finance Commission and the Credit Union Commission have been authorized by the Constitution and by statute to interpret these provisions, subject to judicial review,7 and the Commissions have done so in Chapter 158 of the Texas Administrative Code.8 “A lender’s compliance with an agency interpretation of Section 50, even a wrong interpretation, is compliance with Section 50 itself.”9 Thus, in answering the certified questions, we look to the constitutional text and the Commissions’ interpretations. However, those interpretations “can do no more than interpret the constitutional text, just as a court would.”10 The issue is not whether a lending practice or policy is advisable, something the Commissions would decide in exercising their regulatory functions; the issue is what the Constitution requires.11

A

The certified questions assume a distinction between a loan modification and a refinancing that, if understood in financial [14]*14circles,12 is not clear in the text of Section 50. Neither concept is defined in Section 50. The word “refinance” is used eleven times in Section 50, and “refinancing” once.13 In each instance, the reference seems to be to a redone transaction. A form of the word “modify” is used in three places in Section 50. In one, lenders are authorized to “modify” previously provided documentation at closing in exigent circumstances.14In the other two, lenders can correct noncompliance with Section 50 by sending a borrower “notice modifying any ... amount, percentage, term, or other provision prohibited by this section”,15 or, if noncompliance cannot be cured under the other provisions, by offering the borrower a $1,000 credit and “the right to refinance the extension of credit” for the remaining term at no cost “with any modifications necessary to comply” or that the parties agree will comply.16 In these two instances, if not also in the first, a modification could substantially alter the loan; indeed, in the last situation, modifications can shape the refinancing.17

The modification-refinancing distinction is one drawn by the Commissions in interpreting Section 50(a)(6)(M)(iii). The effect of that provision is to prohibit a second home equity loan within a year of the first, with certain exceptions. As interpreted by the Commissions, the provision prohibits a “refinancing” like a “new equity loan” but not a “modification”.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
440 S.W.3d 10, 57 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 588, 2014 Tex. LEXIS 396, 2014 WL 1998397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sims-v-carrington-mortgage-services-llc-tex-2014.