SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-2424-95T2
FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE
COMPANY,
Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-
Respondent,
-v-
VISION MORTGAGE CORPORATION, INC.,
Defendant-Respondent/Cross-
Appellant.
_________________________________________________________________
Argued November 20, l996 - Decided February
25, 1997
Before Judges Long, Skillman and Cuff.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Middlesex County.
Dennis M. Gonski argued the cause for
appellant/cross-respondent.
Michael Chazkel argued the cause for
respondent/cross-appellant (Chazkel &
Associates, attorneys; Mr. Chazkel, of
counsel; Jeffrey Zajac, on the brief).
Joseph M. Clayton, Jr. submitted a brief
amicus curiae on behalf of the New Jersey Land
Title Association.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
LONG, P.J.A.D.
In August, l989, James Saunders, a realtor, along with Kenneth
J. Levenson, an attorney, and Sant P. Chima, the owner of property
at l9 West Amherst St. in East Brunswick, masterminded a scheme to
defraud the defendant, Vision Mortgage Corporation. They applied
to Vision for a loan in the name of Gregory Zarifian to purchase
Chima's house. Zarifian was unaware of the transaction.
As a result of the documents submitted establishing Zarifian's
financial status (tax returns, bank statements, etc.) and an
independent appraisal, Vision approved the loan. Title insurance
was purchased from plaintiff, First American Title Insurance
Company, which drafted and issued a "Closing Protection Letter" to
Vision. The Closing Protection Letter named Levenson as the
"Approved Attorney" and contained the following provision:
When title insurance of First American Title Insurance
Company is specified for your protection in connection
with closings of real estate transactions in which you
are to be the lender secured by a mortgage (including any
other security instrument) of an interest in land, the
Company, subject to the Conditions and Exclusions set
forth below, hereby agrees to reimburse you for actual
loss incurred by you in connection with such closings
when conducted by an Issuing Agent (an agent authorized
to issue title insurance for the Company) or an Approved
Attorney (an attorney upon whose certification of title
the Company issues title insurance) and when such loss
arises out of:
. . . .
2. Fraud or dishonesty of the Issuing Agent
or Approved Attorney in handling your
funds or documents in connection with
such closing.
On August 28, 1989, a real estate closing took place. It appears that Levenson, Saunders, and Chima were present. Chima signed a deed which conveyed the property to Gregory Zarifian in exchange for $220,000. Vision advanced $198,000 of the purchase price in exchange for a first mortgage on the property. Someone forged Zarifian's signature, and Levenson notarized the forged
signature. At the closing, Vision did not have a separate attorney
present in addition to Levenson, who represented First American's
interests as the Approved Attorney.
On August 30, 1989, Vision assigned the mortgage to
Residential Funding Corporation (RFC). Under its contract with
RFC, Vision was obligated to make good on missed mortgage payments
in the event of a default and to repurchase the mortgage from RFC
in the event of fraud.
As might be expected, no mortgage payments were ever made,
leading Vision to realize that a fraud had occurred. In a letter
to First American dated November 20, 1989, Vision notified First
American that the mortgage was in foreclosure, that the mortgagor
was expected to raise fraud or forgery as a defense and that Vision
intended to look to First American as the insurer for
reimbursement. Purportedly relying on Levenson's representation
that Zarifian executed the mortgage, First American took the
position that the mortgage was valid and refused to reimburse
Vision during the pendency of the foreclosure action. Vision sent
a subsequent letter, dated March 5, 1990, informing First American
that Vision had determined that the mortgage insured by First
American was a forgery and that a second appraisal of the property
suggested that its foreclosure sale would not garner sufficient
funds to satisfy the outstanding amount due on the mortgage.
Vision notified the prosecutor that it had been swindled. On
June 6, 1990, a ninety-eight count indictment was filed against
Levenson, Saunders, and Chima, among others, alleging numerous
fraudulent real estate transactions. Levenson eventually pled
guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit commercial bribery
pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2C:21-10 and N.J.S.A. 2C:5-2. That plea did
not involve this transaction. All other counts against him were
dismissed. Levenson was sentenced and consented to disbarment. In
the Matter of Kenneth J. Levenson, an Attorney at Law,
127 N.J. 270
(1992).
Vision again demanded reimbursement from First American by
letter dated August 16, 1990. Again, First American refused,
claiming that title insurance did not guarantee a mortgaged
property's value.
RFC, still the mortgagee at that point, then foreclosed on the
property and filed suit to have it sold. On December 19, 1991,
Judge Paul Levy ordered the property to be sold and granted RFC a
final judgment of default in the amount of $244,183.64,
together with interest at the contract rate of 12" on
$203,638.06, being the principal sum in default
(including any advances, if any) from May 9, 1991 to
December 19, 1991 and lawful interest thereafter on the
total sum due plaintiff together with costs of this suit
to be taxed including a counsel fee of $2591.84 raised
and paid in the first place out of the mortgaged
premises.
On May 6, 1992, RFC bought the property at a sheriff's sale and
Vision repurchased the property from RFC in accordance with their
agreement.
On October 28, 1992, Vision sold the property for $135,000 to
Linda Sue and Bruce Garahan. In January, l993, Vision again wrote
to First American seeking reimbursement for its loss calculated as
follows:
Loan Balance $198,000.00
ESCROW DEFICIT 9,991.63
INTEREST UNTIL 63,533.67
SHERIFF SALE
PROPERTY DISPOSITION 7,119.86
------------
Total Loss $278,645.16
Sales Price $135,000.00
Less SETTLEMENT CHARGES (7,673.65)
------------
Net Proceeds from Sale $127,326.35
Total Loss $278,645.16
Less Net Proceeds (127,326.35)
from Sale ------------
$151,318.81
The matter was not resolved and on April 11, 1994, First American
filed a complaint seeking a declaratory judgment adjudicating its
rights vis-á-vis Vision. Vision filed a counterclaim for breach of
contract, bad faith denial of insurance coverage, and consumer
fraud, seeking compensatory, consequential, punitive, and treble
damages, in addition to counsel fees.
Both parties moved for summary judgment on the issue of
Vision's entitlement to recovery from First American. Judge
Nicholas J. Stroumtsos, Jr. granted Vision's motion as to liability
only and set the case down for a damages trial. Judge Joseph C.
Messina presided over a bench trial after which he dismissed
Vision's counterclaim for consumer fraud treble damages and
punitive damages. He found that Vision's losses were related to
Levenson's misconduct and awarded Vision $l76,l55.93See footnote 1 in damages
and $20,000 in counsel fees.
First American appeals, contending that fraud and dishonesty
on the part of the Approved Attorney was not proved; that, in any
event, Vision's losses did not arise out of a covered event; and
that Vision did not prove its damages. Vision cross-appeals,
claiming that the trial judge erred in refusing to award punitive
damages; in denying recovery of treble damages under the Consumer
Fraud Act; in calculating prejudgment interest; and in awarding an
inadequate counsel fee.
Initially, we turn to First American's appeal. Because First
American conceded the fraud of the Approved Attorney on the motion
for summary judgment, it is foreclosed from arguing the contrary on
this appeal. Misani v. Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp.,
44 N.J. 552,
555-56 (l965). See State v. Atlantic City Elec. Co.,
23 N.J. 259,
264 (l957) (defendant should not be permitted upon appeal to alter
its interpretation of the facts upon which the issue was framed and
which was legitimately relied upon by the adversary in its conduct
of the case). Whatever else occurred, it is undisputed that
Levenson notarized the forged signatures at least three times and
took money from Vision on the pretext that it was being borrowed by
Zarifian. Thus, there is no question but that there was fraud or
dishonesty by the Approved Attorney in handling the closing
documents and funds within the meaning of the Closing Protection
Letter.
First American next argues that, even if Levenson's fraud was
proven, Vision's loss did not arise out of an event covered by the
policy. The gravamen of this argument is that the focus of the
Closing Protection Letter is to secure first lien status for the
lender's mortgage, backed up by a title insurance policy, and that
that is exactly what Vision received. According to First American,
any loss Vision sustained was the result of its overvaluation of
the property in the first place. This argument has superficial
appeal but will not withstand scrutiny.
To be sure, not every case in which an Approved Attorney
commits a fraud and a lender sustains a loss will trigger title
policy coverage under the Closing Protection Letter. For example,
if an Approved Attorney notarized documents, thus falsely attesting
that they were signed in his presence when this was not the case,
but the signatures nonetheless were bona fide, a later loss by the
lender would not be insured. The reason for this is that the
lender would have received what it bargained for - a bona fide
mortgagor with the financial capacity to make the mortgage
payments; a first lien on the property subject to foreclosure, if
necessary; and the right to seek recovery of a deficiency after
foreclosure from the mortgagor. If, despite exhaustion of these
remedies, the lender still sustained a loss (for example, as a
result of a real estate market trough), that loss would not be
related to the Approved Attorney's misconduct and would thus fall
outside the scope of the Closing Protection Letter.
That is not the case here. Here Vision did not get what it
bargained for. While it is true that Vision had first lien status,
despite Levenson's fraud, and that the validity of its mortgage was
not affected by that fraud, this was a sham transaction from the
outset. Levenson and his cohorts stole Vision's money by falsely
using the name and financial credentials of Zarifian, a stranger to
the transaction. This guaranteed an immediate default because
there was no bona fide mortgagor to make the mortgage payments. It
also eliminated the possibility of Vision recouping a foreclosure
loss through a deficiency proceeding against the mortgagor. Thus,
of the three remedies for which a lender bargains in a bona fide
transaction (payment, foreclosure and recovery of any deficiency),
only one was available to Vision (foreclosure) as a direct result
of Levenson's fraud. While technically it is possible that Vision
might have recouped its investment through foreclosure if it had
placed a more realistic value on the property at the time of the
transaction, this does not insulate First American from liability.
By making Levenson an Approved Attorney, First American put him in
the position to steal from Vision by creating this sham
transaction. As such, Vision's losses, even those related to the
careless valuation of the property, fell well within the expansive
coverage of the title insurance policy. See Sears Mortgage Corp.
v. Rose, l
34 N.J. 326, 349-52 (l993); Clients' Sec. Fund of the Bar
of New Jersey v. Security Title and Guar. Co., l
34 N.J. 358, 369-70
(l993). Here, as in those cases, the title insurance company was
in the best position to prevent the loss created by the fraud and
defalcation of the Approved Attorney. We thus affirm Judge
Stroumtsos' grant of summary judgment against First American. We
also affirm Judge Messina's damages calculation as adequately
supported by the evidence of record.
As to the cross-appeal, we affirm as to all issues presented.
Judge Messina's determinations denying punitive damages as well as
damages under the Consumer Fraud Act were fully supported by the
record and legally unexceptionable. His calculation of prejudgment
interest accorded with R. 4:42-ll, and his award of counsel fees
was well within his discretion. In sum, we have rejected all of
the issues raised on the appeal and cross-appeal.
Affirmed.
Footnote: 1 The difference between Vision's calculations and the final order is due to the judge's disallowance of the $l,l28 insurance component of the escrow deficit and the addition of interest subsequent to the sheriff's sale pursuant to R. 4:42-ll(a).