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holding that FDCPA claim could have been brought in the underlying foreclosure action and therefore is barred by the entire controversy doctrine
Summary of this case from Lopaz v. Stern & Eisenberg, P.C.Opinion
Civil No. 07-4040 (JBS/JS).
May 19, 2009
MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter is before the Court upon Defendants' motions for summary judgment [Docket Items 29 and 30]. THIS COURT FINDS AS FOLLOWS:
1. Plaintiff Patricia Venner, proceeding pro se, filed this action on August 23, 2007 against Defendants Bank of America ("BOA") and Judith Jennings, Esq., asserting that Defendants violated the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act ("FDCPA"), 15 U.S.C. § 1692, et seq.
In her Complaint, Plaintiff describes Defendants' alleged FDCPA violation as follows:
Using deceptive practices and misrepresentation of a federal property lien tax against Plaintiff's property, that was not owed, but used federal tax lien as a tool for bank to make a wrongful payment to attorney Judith Jennings in the amount of $19,400.00, by fraudulent means to sell Plaintiff's property . . .
The Defendant breached its agreement with Plaintiff under federal Fair Debt Collection Practices, by using false claims of Plaintiff owing federal property taxes that were not being paid by the Plaintiff but was being paid by the Defendant from an escrow account set up by the Defendant, that was known to the Defendant in order for the bank to foreclose on Plaintiff's property.
(Compl. at 1-2.)
2. According to the evidence in the record, Plaintiff obtained a mortgage loan from Pulte Mortgage Corporation ("PMC") on December 9, 1999 in the amount of $65,500.00, which PMC assigned to BOA on June 1, 2000. (Docket Item 9 Ex. A at 1.) The mortgaged premises is an apartment in a complex known as the Summerhill Condominium Association ("SCA"). (Id.) Defendant Jennings is an attorney who represents the SCA. (Jennings Br. Ex. 8 at 1.)
3. The mortgage's "condominium rider" provides:
If Borrower does not pay condominium dues and assessments when due, then Lender may pay them. Any amounts disbursed by Lender under this paragraph [] shall become additional debt of Borrower secured by the Security Instrument. Unless Borrower and Lender agree to other terms of payment, these amounts shall bear interest from the date of disbursement at the Note rate and shall be payable, with interest, upon notice from Lender to Borrower requesting payment.
(Hanusek Cert. Ex. A at 2.)
4. Pursuant to the condominium rider, BOA made $19,349.53 in such condominium payments which Plaintiff failed to pay, and, upon Plaintiff's failure to make her mortgage payments, instituted a foreclosure action in the Superior Court of New Jersey (the "BOA action"). (Hanusek Cert. Ex. C at 1.) Plaintiff asserted a counterclaim in the BOA action, in which, like in this case, she argued that she had not, in fact, failed to make the $19,349.53 in payments to her condominium association because "[she] did not owe[] the $19,349.53 in taxes stated by [BOA] that caused [her] to be short in [her] escrow account," (Hanusek Cert. Ex. B at 2); as in this case, Ms. Venner argued that BOA's payment of the condominium dues was the product of an arrangement between BOA and Ms. Jennings to achieve the foreclosure of her property. (Hanusek Cert. Ex. D at 1.)
5. BOA moved for summary judgment in the BOA action, which the Hon. Ronald E. Bookbinder granted in an order dated November 16, 2006. (Hanusek Cert. Ex. C at 1.) Judge Bookbinder thereafter denied Ms. Venner's motion seeking to oppose the entry of final judgment of foreclosure, and entered such final judgment in an order dated August 22, 2007. (Hanusek Cert. Ex. D at 1.) Ms. Venner did not file an appeal from Judge Bookbinder's order.
Plaintiff filed this action the day after the final judgment in the BOA action was entered. The day she filed her Complaint, Plaintiff filed a motion seeking an emergency stay of the foreclosure judgment [Docket Item 2]. The Court determined that, pursuant to the Rooker-Feldman doctrine, it lacked jurisdiction to entertain Plaintiff's motion for an emergency stay. (Docket Item 19 at 3) (explaining that "a district court does not have jurisdiction over the claims of `state-court losers' which complain of `injuries caused by a state-court judgment rendered before the district court proceedings commenced and inviting district court review and rejection of that judgment'") (quotingExxon Mobil Corp. v. Saudi Basic Industries Corp., 544 U.S. 280, 284 (2005)).
6. On November 27, 2006, Plaintiff commenced a separate action against Defendant Jennings in the Superior Court of New Jersey (the "Jennings action"). (Jennings Br. Ex. 23 at 1.) In the sole claim asserted in her Complaint, Plaintiff alleged:
Judith Jennings committed fraud against Plaintiff causing her property to be foreclosed upon for misrepresentation of fees. She took $19,349.53 from a bank with false statements of taxes[.] Plaintiff['s] property is being foreclosed on by the bank. Her credit [went] . . . from good to bad. The fraud has caused stress and hardship upon Plaintiff."
(Id. at 2.) Ms. Jennings moved for summary judgment in the suit Ms. Venner had commenced against her. In opposing Ms. Jennings' motion for summary judgment, Ms. Venner argued that "Ms. Jennings has wrongfully and knowingly under false intents collected money she [should] not have received from the bank." (Jennings Reply Br. Ex. F at 5.) The Hon. Marc M. Baldwin granted Ms. Jennings' motion for summary judgment in an order entered May 8, 2008, although the basis for his ruling is not evident from the evidence in the record. (Jennings Br. Ex. 24 at 1.)
7. For the reasons now discussed, the Court will grant BOA's motion for summary judgment, finding that New Jersey's Entire Controversy Doctrine bars Plaintiff's claim against it. Additionally, as is explained below, the Court will dismiss Defendant Jennings' motion for summary judgment without prejudice to refiling.
Summary judgment is appropriate when the materials of record "show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). In deciding whether there is a disputed issue of material fact, the court must view the evidence in favor of the non-moving party by extending any reasonable favorable inference to that party; in other words, "the nonmoving party's evidence `is to be believed, and all justifiable inferences are to be drawn in [that party's] favor.'" Hunt v. Cromartie, 526 U.S. 541, 552 (1999) (quoting Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 255 (1986)).
8. As an initial matter, the Court recognizes that it "must give to a state-court judgment the same preclusive effect as would be given that judgment under the law of the State in which the judgment was rendered." Walker v. Horn, 385 F.3d 321, 337 (3d Cir. 2004) (citation omitted). Among the preclusive doctrines that apply to judgments rendered by New Jersey courts are the Entire Controversy Doctrine and the doctrine of collateral estoppel. See In re Mullarkey, 536 F.3d 215, 225 (3d Cir. 2008);Rycoline Products, Inc. v. C W Unlimited, 109 F.3d 883, 886 (3d Cir. 1997).
9. The Court concludes that the Entire Controversy Doctrine forecloses Plaintiff's claim against BOA relating to BOA's allegedly fraudulent payment of Ms. Venner's condominium fees to Ms. Jennings and the SCA. New Jersey's Entire Controversy Doctrine "is essentially New Jersey's specific, and idiosyncratic, application of traditional res judicata principles." Rycoline, 109 F.3d at 886.
The Entire Controversy Doctrine embodies the notion that the adjudication of a legal controversy should occur in one litigation in only one court; accordingly, all parties involved in a litigation should at the very least present in that proceeding all of their claims and defenses that are related to the underlying controversy. The Doctrine thus requires a party to bring in one action all affirmative claims that it might have against another party, including counterclaims and cross-claims . . . or be forever barred from bringing a subsequent action involving the same underlying facts.Id. at 885 (internal quotations and citations omitted).
10. The application of the Entire Controversy Doctrine turns on three criteria: "(1) the judgment in the prior action must be valid, final, and on the merits; (2) the parties in the later action must be identical to or in privity with those in the prior action; and (3) the claim in the later action must grow out of the same transaction or occurrence as the claim in the earlier one." Stolinski v. Pennypacker, No. 07-3174, 2008 WL 5136945, at *13 (D.N.J. Dec. 4, 2008) (quoting Watkins v. Resorts Int'l Hotel and Casino, Inc., 124 N.J. 398, 412 (1991)). Importantly, the doctrine "bars not only claims that were brought in a previous action, but also claims that could have been brought." Mullarkey, 536 F.3d at 225; cf. Cieszkowska v. Gray Line New York, 295 F.3d 204, 205 (2d Cir. 2002) (under traditional res judicata principles, "[e]ven claims based upon different legal theories are barred provided they arise from the same transaction or occurrence").
11. The Entire Controversy Doctrine bars Plaintiff's claim against BOA, because Plaintiff had the opportunity to raise her FDCPA claim in the BOA action but did not exercise the opportunity. See Mullarkey, 536 F.3d at 225. First, the judgment in the BOA action was "valid, final, and on the merits." Watkins, 124 N.J. at 412. In that action, Judge Bookbinder entered a final foreclosure judgment in an order dated August 22, 2007, (Hanusek Cert. Ex. D at 1), dismissing the argument raised in Ms. Venner's counterclaim that she did not owe $19,349.53 in unpaid condominium payments. (Hanusek Cert. Ex. B at 2.) Second, Ms. Venner and BOA are the identical parties to the judgment in the BOA action. Watkins, 124 N.J. at 412.
Claims premised upon the FDCPA, which "provides for concurrent state-federal jurisdiction," Peterson v. United Accounts, Inc., 638 F.2d 1134, 1135 (8th Cir. 1981), may be pursued in state or federal court.
12. Finally, Plaintiff's claim herein — that BOA made a "wrongful payment to attorney Judith Jennings in the amount of $19,400.00 . . . [as a] fraudulent means to sell Plaintiff's property," (Compl. at 1-2) — "grow[s] out of the same transaction or occurrence" as the counterclaim Ms. Venner asserted in the BOA action. Watkins, 124 N.J. at 412. Specifically, Ms. Venner asserted a counterclaim in the BOA action, which the Court dismissed, in which she sought to challenge the foreclosure based upon the same "wrongful payment" by BOA to Ms. Jennings that underlies her FDCPA claim herein. (Hanusek Cert. Ex. B at 2.) In this matter, Plaintiff has formulated a new legal theory upon which her approach to the controversy is based, but the same transaction — BOA's allegedly wrongful payment of Plaintiff's delinquent condominium fees — underlies her claim herein and her counterclaim in the BOA action. Because the Entire Controversy Doctrine requires litigants "to bring in one action all affirmative claims that it might have against another party, including counterclaims," Rycoline, 109 F.3d at 885 (citation omitted), and because Plaintiff could have pursued her FDCPA claim against BOA in the state court action, see Note 4, supra, the Court agrees with BOA that she is barred from bringing the claim in this later-filed suit. The Court will thus grant BOA's motion for summary judgment.
As an additional, independent basis for its grant of summary judgment, the Court agrees with BOA that Plaintiff's FDCPA claim against it is barred by the statute of limitations. The FDCPA requires that civil actions be filed "within one year from the date on which the violation occurs." 15 U.S.C. § 1692k(d). By Plaintiff's own admission, the allegedly wrongful acts underlying Plaintiff's FDCPA claim took place in 2005. (Pl.'s Opp'n Br. at 2-3.) Plaintiff commenced this action on August 23, 2007, well after the one-year statute of limitations had expired. See 15 U.S.C. § 1692k(d). Indeed, Plaintiff does not address BOA's challenge to the timeliness of her claim in her opposition to its motion. Finding no material fact in dispute as to the timeliness of Plaintiff's claim, the Court grants BOA's motion for summary judgment on this basis as well.
13. Defendant Jennings has also moved for summary judgment, arguing that Plaintiff is collaterally estopped from asserting her FDCPA claim against Jennings because Plaintiff asserted a similar claim against Jennings in Superior Court, as to which Judge Baldwin granted Jennings' motion for summary judgment. In support of her motion, Jennings submitted nearly forty exhibits, but did not submit "a statement which sets forth material facts as to which there does not exist a genuine issue, in separately numbered paragraphs citing to the affidavits and other documents submitted in support of the motion," as Local Civil Rule 56.1 requires. L. Civ. R. 56.1(a). The Rule further provides that "[a] motion for summary judgment unaccompanied by a statement of material facts not in dispute shall be dismissed." Id.
Unlike Plaintiff's claim against BOA, the Entire Controversy Doctrine does not bar Plaintiff's claim against Ms. Jennings. As New Jersey courts have recognized, "the entire controversy doctrine only precludes successive suits involving related claims," and "does not require dismissal when multiple actions involving the same or related claims are pending simultaneously."Kaselaan D'Angelo Associates, Inc. v. Soffian, 290 N.J. Super. 293, 299 (App.Div. 1996) (citations omitted, emphasis added). While this action was filed after judgment was entered in the BOA action, Plaintiff's Superior Court lawsuit against Ms. Jennings was "pending simultaneously" with this lawsuit. Id.
Courts in this District have recognized that "conformity with the [Local Civil] Rules is compulsory for both counsel and pro se litigants." Davis v. UPS, No. 07-5923, 2008 WL 4104680, at *2 n. 2 (D.N.J. Sept. 4, 2008). This is particularly true in the case of Ms. Jennings, who, although not represented by counsel in this lawsuit, is herself an attorney. (Jennings Br. Ex. 8 at 1.)
The provision of Rule 56.1 providing for the dismissal of motions unaccompanied by statements of undisputed facts was included in the amendment to the Rule which became effective on September 4, 2008, prior to the filing of Jennings' motion.
14. Ms. Jennings' motion, with its collection of approximately forty unidentified exhibits, demonstrates the important purpose served by Rule 56.1 statements. Jennings' motion is premised upon the argument that Plaintiff is collaterally estopped from litigating in this case the propriety of Jennings' acceptance of the $19,349.53 payment from BOA because this very issue was litigated and decided in the Superior Court action. In order to prevail on such an argument, Jennings would have to prove, inter alia, that the determination of this issue "was essential to the prior judgment [of the Superior Court]," Mullarkey, 536 F.3d at 225 (quoting Twp. of Middletown v. Simon, 937 A.2d 949, 954 (2008)) — i.e., that it was "necessary to support the judgment rendered in the prior action."Matter of Estate of Dawson, 136 N.J. 1, 20 (1994) (citation omitted). Whether Judge Baldwin's grant of summary judgment decided the very issue before this Court, and whether the determination of that issue was "necessary to support" the judgment, id., is not apparent from Ms. Jennings' submissions, and the Court declines to comb through the nearly forty exhibits she submitted in order to arrive at an answer to this question.See Comose v. New Jersey Transit Rail Operations, Inc., No. 98-2345, 2000 WL 33258658, at *1 (D.N.J. Oct. 6, 2000) (Rule 56.1 statements "save this court from having to drudge through . . . [the evidence] to determine the facts").
15. The Court will thus dismiss Ms. Jennings' motion pursuant to Local Civil Rule 56.1(a), without prejudice to her right to refile a motion for summary judgment accompanied by a proper Rule 56.1 statement within ten (10) days of the entry of the Order accompanying this Opinion. The accompanying Order is entered.