Wallace v. Midwest Financial & Mortgage Services, Inc.

714 F.3d 414, 2013 WL 1729587, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 8111
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 23, 2013
Docket12-5208
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 714 F.3d 414 (Wallace v. Midwest Financial & Mortgage Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallace v. Midwest Financial & Mortgage Services, Inc., 714 F.3d 414, 2013 WL 1729587, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 8111 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

COLE, Circuit Judge.

This is a subprime mortgage case brought by the borrower, Harold Wallace, *416 against the lender, MortgagelT, Inc. (“MortgagelT”), the mortgage broker, Midwest Financial & Mortgage Services, Inc. (“Midwest Financial”), the broker’s two principals, David Schlueter and Bryan Bates, and several other now-dismissed parties. Wallace alleges that the defendants fraudulently inflated an appraisal of his home as part of a scheme to push him into a high-cost, adjustable-rate mortgage from which he now seeks relief. He made several claims below, only three of which are relevant here—two claims arising under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”) and one arising under Kentucky conspiracy law. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants on each of these claims. On appeal, Wallace argues that the district court erred in concluding he did not sufficiently demonstrate that the allegedly fraudulent appraisal proximately caused his financial injuries. We agree. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s grant summary of judgment in favor of the defendants based on a lack of proximate causation, affirm its grant of summary judgment in favor of MortgagelT on the state law claim on other grounds, and remand for further proceedings.

I.

Because this appeal arises from a motion for summary judgment, we accept as true Wallace’s version of the facts. Grawey v. Drury, 567 F.3d 302, 310 (6th Cir.2009). The relevant ones reach back to October 2004, when Wallace purchased a newly built home in Florence, Kentucky. He financed the home with an adjustable-rate mortgage in the amount of $272,316— though not the one at issue here. Wallace later took out a second mortgage on the home in the amount of $164,500 to complete certain improvements and to pay down credit card debt. He made regular payments on both loans without incident.

In June 2006, Wallace hatched the ill-fated idea of building out his basement. The estimated cost of the project came in at $42,500, which Wallace intended to cover using the proceeds of a cash-out refinancing of both of his existing loans. By this point, Wallace had reduced the aggregate balance to slightly less than $380,000, meaning he was in the market for a refinance loan in the amount of approximately $422,500. Enter Shane Soard, a loan officer at Midwest Financial. Soard arranged to meet with Wallace to discuss his options for borrowing. Wallace claims Soard expressed familiarity with home values in the immediate neighborhood and “talked very positively about the increased value of [Wallace’s] home.” Wallace also claims Soard expressed confidence that he could secure a favorable refinance loan at a lower interest rate than Wallace paid on his existing loans. Their meeting left Wallace with the impression that he was on track to get a new fully amortizing mortgage with equal monthly payments.

After Wallace turned over some financial information and signed a few forms, Soard informed him that a home appraisal would be needed. For this, Midwest Financial turned to Accupraise, as it had for many of its other appraisals. Accupraise is a now-defunct company that performed real estate appraisals in parts of Ohio and Kentucky under the direction of a de-li-censed appraiser named Andrew Brock, an erstwhile party to this litigation. A former employee of Accupraise explained that Midwest Financial would routinely “sen[d] a fax to Accupraise with certain information, including the ... requested appraisal value,” and Brock would send back a tailor-made appraisal. Brock often did so without setting foot on the property he purported to appraise. Instead, he made a *417 habit of forging the signature of a licensed appraiser to make his appraisals appear legitimate. In this instance, Accupraise and Brock provided Midwest Financial with a Uniform Appraisal Report valuing Wallace’s home at $500,000. Soard called Wallace with the news that his home had been appraised at nearly twice the amount he had paid just two years prior. Based on the value of the appraisal, Soard told Wallace he was eligible for a $500,000 loan. Wallace declined and reiterated his desire only to borrow enough to build out his basement. The next day Soard responded by offering Wallace a $425,000 loan. They agreed on the terms of the loan during the course of the same telephone conversation—though Wallace maintains that Board continued to misrepresent the nature of the payment schedule—and set a time to close.

Midwest Financial then submitted Wallace’s completed loan application to Mort-gagelT for approval. MortgagelT reviewed the application to determine the level of risk involved in lending to Wallace. The appraisal factored significantly into this process: it substantiated the value of the asset used to secure the loan and produced a favorable loan-to-value ratio of eighty-five percent. The appearance of remarkable appreciation notwithstanding, the appraisal raised no red flags among the underwriters at MortgagelT. Wallace’s loan application was ultimately approved. Closing went ahead as scheduled, at which point Wallace signed several documents disclosing the final terms of his cash-out refinance loan.

Unbeknownst to Wallace, those terms were consistent with a type of financial product called an option adjustable-rate mortgage (“option ARM”). The hallmark of an option ARM is its flexibility. In general, it gives the “borrower[] the option of skipping the principal payment and some of the interest payment for an introductory period of several years. The unpaid balance[ ] [is then] added to the body of the loan.” David Streitfeld, Big Banks Easing Terms on Loans Deemed as Risks, N.Y. Times, July 3, 2011, at Al. An option ARM thus allows for the possibility of negative amortization. Once the introductory period ends or the maximum limit on negative amortization is reached, the amortization schedule resets and the borrower is left with potentially unaffordable minimum payments that reflect the capitalization of unpaid interest, as well as a principal balance that potentially exceeds the value of the real estate used as security. Here, Wallace was offered a teaser rate of two percent that quickly multiplied into something much higher under the terms of his loan. For securing a high long-term interest rate, Midwest Financial received a yield spread premium from MortgageIT in excess of $14,000. See generally Lee v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., 692 F.3d 442, 445-46 (6th Cir.2012) (explaining that a yield spread premium is the amount paid to a broker for securing a loan with a higher interest rate).

The refinance loan has since created insurmountable financial problems for Wallace in the form of fees, interest costs, and other expenses related to his inability to meet its terms. Wallace has also learned that the true value of his home at the time of the appraisal was approximately $375,-000—or $125,000 less than he was led to believe during the course of negotiations with Midwest Financial. With no equity left in his home, Wallace could not sell it for enough to repay the loan. Wallace’s financial problems recently forced him to declare bankruptcy and ultimately surrender the home.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
714 F.3d 414, 2013 WL 1729587, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 8111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-midwest-financial-mortgage-services-inc-ca6-2013.