Winnecour v. Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC (In re Ransom)

599 B.R. 791
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 28, 2019
DocketCase No. 15-10886-TPA; Case No. 15-10895-TPA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 599 B.R. 791 (Winnecour v. Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC (In re Ransom)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winnecour v. Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC (In re Ransom), 599 B.R. 791 (Pa. 2019).

Opinion

Thomas P. Agresti, Judge

This matter concerns an Order to Show Cause ("OTSC") that was issued in both of the above cases against Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC ("Ocwen") and three individuals regarding a failure to comply with a number of Court orders requiring the production of complete mortgage loan histories in several bankruptcy cases. For reasons that will be discussed in detail below, the Court finds that Ocwen materially disobeyed a number of valid orders and is liable in civil contempt to pay compensatory *794damages in an amount still to be determined, though it will be "capped" at a maximum of $ 70,000. There is a lengthy procedural history to this matter which must be understood to fully grasp the situation presented, and the Court therefore begins with a review of that history.

PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The present matter ultimately stems from a seemingly routine hearing that was held some 22 months ago, on May 24, 2017.1 Approximately one year prior to that, and pursuant to Fed.R.Bankr.P. 3002.1(c) , Ocwen had filed Notices of Postpetition Mortgage Fees, Expenses, and Charges ("Notices") in both the Randolph and Ransom cases seeking $ 400 in attorney fees in each, allegedly incurred by Ocwen in connection with the bankruptcies of those Debtors. In mid-March 2017, the Trustee filed Objections to those Notices,2 raising a number of issues, including that the attorney fees being sought by Ocwen were for the services of a law firm - Robertson, Anschutz & Schneid, P.L. ("RAS") - that was not licensed to practice law in Pennsylvania. Ocwen filed a response to the Objections in which it indicated that the Notices with the RAS fees had been filed as a result of a "technical error." A day prior to the scheduled hearing on the Objections, the Trustee and Ocwen filed a proposed consent order indicating that they had reached a resolution of the matter pursuant to which Ocwen agreed to waive the fees and provide the Trustee with proof that any reference to the fees had been removed from the accounts of these Debtors.

At the May 24th hearing the Court indicated that it was not prepared to sign the consent order until a significant concern was first addressed. Specifically, the Court inquired as to whether these two cases were just isolated instances in which improper RAS fees had been charged by Ocwen, or whether the same thing had been done in other cases that had perhaps slipped through the system undetected and unchallenged. When neither the Trustee nor Ocwen could provide any information to answer that question, the Court decided to schedule an evidentiary hearing to explore the matter further. An Order was issued on May 31, 2017 scheduling an evidentiary hearing at which representatives of Ocwen and RAS were directed to appear and respond to a number of questions that were listed in the Order.

On July 17, 2017, a week before the evidentiary hearing,3 the Trustee filed Trustee's Supplemental Report for the Court. See Ransom Doc No. 60, Randolph Doc No. 139. This Report stated that the Trustee had reviewed her records and found a total of 30 cases in which Ocwen had filed Notices seeking attorney fees for similar legal work done by RAS. The Court's concern that the problem was more extensive than just the Randolph and Ransom cases was thus realized. The Trustee's July 17thReport , further stated that the Trustee had filed objections to the Notices in a number of those cases (including *795Ransom and Randolph ) and had actually obtained default orders in some of them. Accompanying this Memorandum Opinion at Appendix "B" is a list of cases identified in the Trustee's Report referred to hereinafter as "the Affected Cases"4 for purposes of this Opinion.5 Appendix "B" also identifies the subset of Affected Cases in which default orders had been entered on objections by the Trustee.

At the July 24, 2017 evidentiary hearing, Attorney Steven Eisenberg, outside counsel for Ocwen ("Eisenberg"), began by stating that RAS had done administrative work for Ocwen from June 2015 through June 2016, but RAS was no longer doing such work for Ocwen, and therefore no further Notices for RAS work would be filed in this District. He also reported that the Notices in the Affected Cases had been filed due to a "manual mistake"6 explaining that RAS was supposed to indicate on each billing invoice it submitted to Ocwen for a particular loan whether the legal work done by RAS was "recoverable" or not, depending on the jurisdiction where the bankruptcy case was pending. Eisenberg indicated that in the invoices for the Affected Cases, RAS had mistakenly indicated the charges were in fact recoverable in these matters, which mistake was not detected by Ocwen prior to the filing of the Notices.

The Court inquired of Eisenberg whether, as of then, Ocwen had turned over loan histories of the Affected Cases to the Trustee, something that was part of the proposed "settlement" that had been presented at the May 24th hearing. Eisenberg represented that the loan histories had not yet been provided but completion of this task was "in process."7 The Court expressed some surprise about that failure on Ocwen's part, and in a colloquy with James Broome ("Broome"), the "Team Lead" in Ocwen's Legal Department of the Bankruptcy Contested Group, stressed in blunt language how important it was that Ocwen quickly supply the Trustee with loan histories. Indeed, the Court went so far as to preemptively state that if the loan histories were not timely provided there would be sanctions imposed.8 This is an appropriate place to make a brief detour for the purpose of setting forth what the *796Court's understanding at that point in time was regarding the meaning of a "loan history" because, as will soon become apparent, that is one of the major issues raised by the OTSC.

Stated plainly, the Court was operating from the premise that, unless otherwise qualified by an additional limiting term such as "partial" or "post-petition," a loan history meant a record of the loan from the date of its inception up to the present. That was consistent with the language in the various default orders directed against Ocwen that had previously been issued by the Undersigned and other members of the Court in some of the other Affected Cases. See Appendix "B," cases underlined and with double asterisks. Those default orders provided that Ocwen was to provide "full and comprehensible loan histories from the inception of the loan." See, e.g., Shreffler , Case No. 15-10722-TPA at Doc. No. 57, issued May 30, 3017. Indeed, the proposed order that accompanied the Trustee's Objections to the Notices in Ransom and Randolph included that same language. See, Ransom Doc No. 43, Ransom Doc. No. 123. The expanded phrase "complete loan history" could only reinforce the comprehensive nature of what was required. The Court now turns back to the main flow of the discussion.

Following the July 24th

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Bluebook (online)
599 B.R. 791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winnecour-v-ocwen-loan-servicing-llc-in-re-ransom-pawb-2019.