United States Ex Rel. K & R Limited Partnership v. Massachusetts Housing Finance Agency

530 F.3d 980, 382 U.S. App. D.C. 67, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 14499, 2008 WL 2651088
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJuly 8, 2008
Docket07-7014
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 530 F.3d 980 (United States Ex Rel. K & R Limited Partnership v. Massachusetts Housing Finance Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Ex Rel. K & R Limited Partnership v. Massachusetts Housing Finance Agency, 530 F.3d 980, 382 U.S. App. D.C. 67, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 14499, 2008 WL 2651088 (D.C. Cir. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge BROWN.

BROWN, Circuit Judge:

Forty years ago Jimi Hendrix trilled his plaintive query: “Is this love, baby, or is it ... [just] confusion?” Jimi Hendrix, Love or Confusion, on Are You Experienced (Reprise Records 1967). In this False Claims Act case, we face a similar question involving a mortgage subsidy program initiated in that era: Is this fraud, or is it ... just confusion? K & R Limited Partnership says it is the former, alleging that during the last 15 years, MassHousing 1 has knowingly submitted excessive claims for subsidy payments to the federal government. The district court granted summary judgment for MassHousing, United States ex rel. K & R Ltd. P’ship v. Mass. Hous. Fin. Agency, 456 F.Supp.2d 46 (D.D.C.2006), and we affirm because there is no genuine issue as to whether Mass-Housing knew its claims were false.

Under § 236 of the National Housing Act, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), subsidizes mortgage payments for owners of low-income rental housing. 12 U.S.C. § 1715z-1(a). The owner makes monthly payments to its lender as if the yearly interest rate was 1%, and the lender applies to HUD for the difference. Id. § 1715z-l(c). Mass-Housing, which is such a lender, sells tax-exempt bonds to investors and uses the proceeds to finance housing projects as part of its public mission to support affordable housing for low- and moderate-income Massachusetts residents.

In 1993, MassHousing used proceeds from new bonds to “refund” (i.e. redeem or retire) mostly higher interest bonds it used to finance loans, including loans for which MassHousing received interest reduction payments from HUD under § 236. Although MassHousing reaped substantial savings on its debt service, it did not pass along those savings to HUD by reducing its claims for payments. That is the nub of this case.

In relevant part, the False Claims Act (FCA), 31 U.S.C. §§ 3729-3731, imposes liability on “[a]ny person who” “knowingly presents” “a false or fraudulent claim for payment or approval” “to an officer or employee of the United States Government,” id. § 3729(a)(1). MassHousing concedes it is a “person who” presented “claim[s] for payment” to HUD employees. It denies those claims were “false or fraudulent,” but agrees that depends on the correct interpretation of the mortgage notes for the loans at issue. On each claim, MassHousing’s representative “certifie[d] to the best of his knowledge and belief’ that “each interest reduction payment ... ha[d] been calculated in accordance with” the applicable agreement. J.A. 122. Such agreements required that the “interest reduction payments” reflect the owners’ interest rates on their permanent loans- — -rates the mortgage notes established. Thus, if the mortgage notes varied the interest rate with MassHousing’s *982 debt service, then MassHousing has been over-billing HUD on those loans since 1993. K & R’s 2003 estimate of the running total was $28 million, making Mass-Housing’s potential liability around an eye-popping $100 million, see 31 U.S.C. §§ 3729(a), 3730(d) (authorizing civil fines, treble damages and, for qui tam plaintiffs, expenses including attorneys’ fees).

Over the years, MassHousing used several types of notes when financing § 236 housing projects. Each type phrased the payment calculation differently and somewhat awkwardly. Thus, the parties and the district court have spilt much ink in explaining the meaning of these notes, each parsing different language supporting its own “unambiguous” interpretation. K & R insists the notes clearly vary the interest rate, while MassHousing, with which the district court agreed, maintains that the notes plainly fixed the interest rate once MassHousing financed the loans with long-term bonds. The district court also found that even if unclear, other evidence of the intended meaning is so one-sided no reasonable person could conclude otherwise.

We disagree with the parties and the district court that the mortgage notes are unambiguous. Notes from the '70s calculate mortgage payments using “the net interest cost which [MassHousing] is required to pay from time to time on bonds to fund, or refund the loan.” E.g., J.A. 253 (emphasis added). Those notes also provide “if the rate of interest ... shall change from time to time as provided above, the amount of such monthly payments shall be adjusted upward or downward, as the case may be.” E.g., J.A. 200. 2 While the parties agree the trigger for changing the interest rate is when Mass-Housing “refund[s] the loan,” they are at a stalemate over the meaning of this phrase.

K & R claims the 1993 bond refund was a loan refund that lowered MassHousing’s “net interest costs,” requiring MassHousing to reduce mortgage payments. But in MassHousing’s view, a bond refund is different from a loan refund. A loan refund supposedly occurs not when MassHousing redeems bonds it used to finance the loans, but when it designates bonds to “refund the loan” and recalculates the owner’s payments accordingly. Here, MassHousing did not designate the 1993 bonds to refund any of the loans at issue, nor did it recalculate any mortgage payments.

K & R questions the distinction because during a project’s construction MassHousing temporarily “fund[ed] and refunded] the loan[s]” with short-term bonds it paid periodically with the proceeds from new short-term bonds. In that way, the new bonds “refunded] the loan[s].” Similarly, using proceeds from the 1993 bonds, Mass-Housing redeemed the long-term bonds with which it “fund[ed] ... the loans.” K & R concludes the 1993 bonds must “refund the loan” like the short-term bonds. But the similarity of these transactions does not undermine the distinction since MassHousing designated which short-term bonds refunded the loans, and did not so designate the 1993 bonds.

Next, K & R argues that MassHousing’s interpretation makes nonsense of the payment calculation. Because Mass-Housing refunded the bonds it used to finance the loans, those bonds no longer exist. Therefore, MassHousing’s “net interest cost” on them is zero, resulting in payments with no interest component. That can’t be correct, says K & R, so MassHousing’s interpretation must be wrong. However, *983 Mass-Housing claims to have “fund[ed] ... the loan[s]” only once and so the payment calculation applied one time only. Mass-Housing takes the same position on mortgage notes from the '80s and '90s, which calculate payments using the “interest cost incurred by [MassHousing] on the Funding Bonds” — “bonds issued by [Mass-Housing] and designated by it to fund” a loan. J.A. 247-48 (emphasis added).

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Bluebook (online)
530 F.3d 980, 382 U.S. App. D.C. 67, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 14499, 2008 WL 2651088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-k-r-limited-partnership-v-massachusetts-housing-cadc-2008.