Professional Documents
Culture Documents
CITIMORTGAGE, INC.,
Defendant.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
B. DEFENDANT......................................................................................................... 7
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1. Plaintiff William T. Whiting brings this action on behalf of himself and all
similarly situated Pennsylvania homeowners who have been wrongfully denied a permanent
modification of their mortgages by CitiMortgage, Inc. (“Citi” or “Defendant”). Citi entered into
standardized written temporary loan modification contracts (TPP Contracts, as defined below)
with certain borrowers who were either pre-qualified for loan modifications under the U.S.
presumed to have been prequalified since Citi was only supposed to enter into TPP Contracts
with borrowers it pre-qualified. These TPP Contracts promised that if borrowers made the
reduced monthly loan payments set forth in the contract for a trial period of three months and
submitted the requested documentation, then their loans would be permanently modified in the
fourth month and, thereafter, they would only need to pay the reduced amount. Even though the
borrowers lived up to their end of the bargain and fulfilled all of their obligations under their
respective TPP Contracts, Citi breached its contractual obligations by failing to permanently
3. Citi accepted $45 billion in funds from the federal government as part of the
Troubled Asset Relief Program (“TARP”). By accepting these payments, Citi agreed in writing
with the Treasury Department that it would participate in one or more programs that TARP
HAMP. Lending institutions that accepted money under TARP are subject to mandatory
inclusion in HAMP as are certain classes of loans, specifically those held by Federal National
Mortgage Association (“Fannie Mae”) and Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (“Freddie
Mac”).
5. On April 13, 2009, Citi signed a Servicer Participation Agreement (“SPA”) with
the Treasury Department, which Plaintiff incorporates herein by reference, in which it agreed to
comply with HAMP’s requirements and to perform loan modification and other foreclosure
prevention services described in the program guidelines. The guidelines issued by the Treasury
Department set forth a detailed process whereby a participating servicer like Citi must:
a. Identify loans that are subject to modification under HAMP, both through
its own review and in response to requests for modification from
individual homeowners;
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6. HAMP and its associated directives also prohibit certain conduct, including: (i)
instituting or continuing foreclosures during the trial period (HAMP FAQs Q2000 at 19); (ii)
charging late fees and prepayment and other penalties during the trial period (HAMP FAQs
Q1308 at 8); and (iii) restricting the way a servicer may report the borrower to credit reporting
7. Although Citi accepted a total of $45 billion in TARP funds and entered into the
SPA on April 13, 2009, obligating itself to comply with HAMP’s directives and to extend loan
modifications for the benefit of distressed homeowners, Citi has systematically failed to comply
with HAMP’s directives and has regularly and repeatedly violated its prohibitions. Rather than
honoring its duties arising from its acceptance of billions of dollars in federal bailout funds under
TARP, Citi has intentionally set up its loan modification program to fail. It instituted the
program in order to feign compliance with TARP’s conditions, but never had any intention to
adjustments to existing mortgage obligations in order to make the monthly payments more
affordable. Servicers receive $1,000.00 for each HAMP modification and up to $4,000 if the
loan continues to perform. However, these incentives are countered by a number of financial
factors that make it more profitable for a mortgage servicer such as Citi to avoid modification
and to continue to keep a mortgage in a state of default or distress and to push loans toward
foreclosure. This is especially true in cases where the mortgage was sold by the loan originator
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and is now owned by a third-party investor and is merely serviced by a servicer such as Citi. On
information and belief, Citi does not own the majority of the loans on which it functions as a
servicer.
9. Economic factors that discourage Citi from meeting its obligations under HAMP
b. The monthly service fee that Citi, as the servicer, collects for each loan it
services in a pool of loans is calculated as a fixed percentage of the unpaid
principal balance of the loans in the pool. Consequently, modifying a loan
to reduce the principal balance reduces the unpaid principal balance of the
loans in the pool and thus results in a lower monthly fee to the servicer.
c. Fees that Citi charges borrowers that are in default constitute a significant
source of revenue to Citi. Aside from income Citi directly receives, late
fees and “process management fees” are often added to the principal loan
amount thereby increasing the unpaid balance in a pool of loans and
increasing the amount of the servicer’s monthly service fee.
10. Rather than allocating adequate resources and working diligently to reduce the
number of loans in danger of default by establishing permanent modifications, Citi has serially
strung out, delayed, and otherwise hindered the modification processes that it obligated itself to
facilitate when it accepted billions of dollars in TARP funds. Citi’s uniform pattern of delay and
obstruction tactics have resulted in homeowners with loans serviced by Citi, who are eligible for
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permanent loan modifications and who have met all of the requirements for participation in the
HAMP permanent loan modification program, who have not received the permanent loan
11. Pursuant to its SPA contract with the Treasury Department, Citi entered into a
standardized written contract with Plaintiff and thousands of homeowners for a temporary trial
modification of their existing loan. This written modification contract is titled “Home
Affordable Modification Trial Period Plan” (“TPP Contract”). Each such TPP Contract promises
that if the borrower complies with its terms and the borrower’s representations on which the TPP
Contract’s offer of a loan modification was based continue to be true in all material respects,
then the borrower will receive a permanent modification on the same terms.
12. The TPP Contract requires that the borrower make at least three monthly loan
payments of a reduced amount as set forth in a schedule in the TPP Contract. If the borrower
fulfills his or her obligation to make the payments required by the TPP Contract and submits the
required documentation, Citi must offer the borrower a permanent modification. Specifically,
Making Home Affordable Handbook version 3.0 (“HAMP Handbook”), at 77 (emphasis added).
13. The HAMP guidelines specifically state that the TPP Contract need not be signed
by the borrower and that the TPP is an offer that is accepted when the borrower makes the first
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14. Plaintiff and a similarly situated class of Pennsylvania borrowers have accepted
their TPP Contracts by making the first required modified loan payment and have complied with
their TPP Contracts in all respects by submitting all of the required documentation asked of them
and by making all of the required loan payments on time. Despite Plaintiff’s and the Class
members’ efforts, Citi has ignored its contractual obligation to permanently modify the loans.
Citi’s actions violate its contractual obligations, thwart the purpose of HAMP, and are unfair and
15. This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over this action under 28 U.S.C. §
1332(d)(2) in that the matter is a class action wherein the amount in controversy exceeds the sum
or value of $5,000,000, exclusive of interest and costs, and members of the Class are citizens of a
16. This Court also has subject matter jurisdiction over this action under 28 U.S.C. §§
1331 and 1367 in that the Plaintiff and the Class are intended, third-party beneficiaries to the
SPA contract between Citi and the U.S. Treasury that was entered into pursuant to and under the
direction of TARP.
17. This Court has personal jurisdiction over Defendant because a substantial portion
of the wrongdoing alleged herein took place in this state. Defendant is authorized to do business
in this state, has sufficient minimum contacts with this state and otherwise intentionally avails
itself of markets in this state through its promotion, marketing and servicing of loans in this state
so as to render the exercise of jurisdiction by this Court permissible under traditional notions of
18. Venue is proper pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1391(a) because at least one plaintiff
resides in this District and Defendant has hundreds if not thousands of customers in this District,
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Defendant receives substantial fees and interest from borrowers who hold mortgage loans in this
District, and a substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to the claims asserted herein
III. PARTIES
A. PLAINTIFF
19. Plaintiff William T. Whiting is and at all times mentioned herein was a resident of
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Plaintiff was and is the rightful sole owner of a home in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, which at all pertinent times has been, and continues to be, Plaintiff’s
primary residence.
B. DEFENDANT
20. Defendant Citi is a Delaware corporation and at all times relevant hereto was a
mortgage servicer that maintained its principal place of business at 1000 Technology Drive,
21. Over the last three years, the United States has been in a foreclosure crisis. In late
2009, a congressional oversight panel noted that one in eight U.S. mortgages was in foreclosure
or default.1
22. For the third quarter of 2010, foreclosure filings-default notices, scheduled
auctions and bank repossessions were reported on 930,437 properties in the 3rd quarter. One in
every 139 U.S. housing units received a foreclosure filing in this quarter.2
1
Congressional Oversight Panel, Oct. 9, 2009 report at 3. Available at
http://cop.senate.gov/reports/library/report-100909-cop.cfin.
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23. Increased foreclosures have a detrimental effect not just on the borrowers who
lose their homes, but also on the surrounding neighborhoods that suffer decreased property
24. Pennsylvania has been hard hit by this crisis. The Associated Press reported on
The number of Pennsylvania homeowners falling behind on mortgage payments and the
number of homes seized by banks hit five-year highs in August.
New figures out Thursday from foreclosure listing firm RealtyTrac Inc. showed 6,500
Pennsylvania homes received at least one foreclosure filing in August, while banks
repossessed 2,300 properties.
Both numbers are the highest recorded by RealtyTrac since it began tracking them in
2005. Pennsylvania now has seen those numbers spike in August for three straight years.
foreclosure list in the United States for February 2011, with 3110 foreclosure properties, which
stated in April 2010. Indeed, economists have predicted that interest rate resets on the riskiest of
lending products will not reach their zenith until sometime in 2011. See Eric Tymoigne,
Securitization, Deregulation, Economic Stability, and Financial Crisis, Working Paper No.
2
Reality Trac Staff, Foreclosure Activity Increases 4% in Third Quarter (October 14, 2010).
Available at http://www.realtytrac.com/content/press-releases/q3-2010-and-september-2010-
foreclosure-reports-6108.
3
http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2010/09/pennsylvania_home_foreclosure.html
4
http://www.realtytrac.com/trendcenter/
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27. Mortgage loans are generally originated with the intention of selling them to
investors. Loans can be sold in whole on the secondary market, so that a single investor owns
the entire loan or, more commonly today, the loans are securitized. In a securitization, thousands
of loans are pooled together in common ownership held by a trust. Bonds are issued to investors
based on the combined, anticipated payment streams of the pooled loans. The bonds may be
issued for different categories of payments, such as interest payments, principal payments, or late
payments, with different groups of bondholders getting paid from different categories of
payments.
28. With securitizations, loan servicers take on a more prominent and potentially
lucrative role. Loan servicers compete for the right to service loans at the time mortgages pools
are created. Once selected, loan servicers collect and process payments on mortgage loans, and
maintain records of payments. Loan servicers receive their income from direct payments from
borrowers based on the principal balance of the pool of loans, and thus, benefit from higher
29. Loan servicers are the entities through which any loan modification request must
be made. Securitization agreements (also called pooling and servicing agreements or “PSAs”)
generally identify a master servicer who receives a portion of the payments from a mortgage
pool. The PSAs provide no meaningful restrictions on individual loan modifications and, thus,
loan servicers generally have unfettered discretion to analyze and approve modifications.
Because servicers’ fees are based on the size of loan principal balances, they have an incentive to
maintain high loan balances. Servicers can keep loan principal balances high by capitalizing
arrears and unpaid fees, or by refusing loan modifications in which principal would be reduced.
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30. Servicers also receive income from fees imposed on borrowers, such as late fees,
inspection fees, and broker opinion fees, which PSAs allow servicers to collect directly from
borrowers, or in the case of foreclosures, directly from foreclosure fees. Such fees are another
31. Servicers also receive interest income on the float between the time when
payments are made by borrowers and when they are passed on to the investors. Servicers can
augment their interest income by stretching the amount of float time to turn over funds, such as
32. Servicers who fail to modify loans face few consequences. Although investors
generally do not have an interest in foreclosure, large mortgage pools may involve hundreds of
different investors who have differing views about whether foreclosure is appropriate.
Moreover, investors who hold different interests in a pool of mortgages (i.e., principal payments,
interest payments, or late fees) may be impacted differently by foreclosure because they are paid
33. Even if investors favor loan modifications, generally they lack any authority to
direct or control the servicers’ decision whether to grant a modification or pursue foreclosure.
Investors typically can only act through the trustee and only when a majority of the investors
34. Because of this lack of direct control by investors, and in light of the
compensation scheme described above, loan servicers have strong incentives to not pursue loan
modifications. Instead, loan servicers are incentivized to: (1) maintain borrowers in default and
delay decisions on modifications so that they can generate income through imposition of late fees
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and inspection fees; (2) capitalize arrears to increase principal balances; and (3) create additional
35. Congress passed the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008, 12 U.S.C. §
5201 et seq., on October 3, 2008 and amended it with the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009, Pub. L. No. 111-5, 123 Stat. 115, on February 17, 2009 (collectively, the “Act”).
36. The purpose of the Act was to grant the Secretary of the Treasury authority to
restore liquidity and stability to the financial system, and to ensure that such authority is used in
a manner that “protects home values” and “preserves homeownership.” 12 U.S.C. § 5201.
37. The Act granted the Secretary of the Treasury authority to establish TARP. See
12 U.S.C. § 5211 et seq. Under TARP, the Secretary of the Treasury may purchase or make
commitments to purchase troubled assets from financial institutions. Id. Congress allocated up
38. The Act further mandates that, with regard to any assets acquired by the Secretary
of the Treasury that are backed by residential real estate, the Secretary “shall implement a plan
that seeks to maximize assistance for homeowners” and use the Secretary’s authority over
U.S.C. § 5219. The Act grants authority to the Secretary of the Treasury to use credit
foreclosures.” Id.
39. On February 18, 2009, pursuant to their authority under the Act, the Treasury
Secretary and the Director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency created the Making Home
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their mortgages.
40. HAMP is the portion of the MHA initiative that provides mandatory directives for
implementation, and with which Citi has not complied. HAMP creates a uniform loan
modification protocol, and provides financial incentives for participating servicers to modify
loans. The Treasury Department has allocated at least $75 billion in federal funds to HAMP, of
which at least $50 billion is TARP money, to keep up to “3 to 4 million homeowners” in their
homes by 2012.
41. Because Citi accepted billions in federal funds and additional loan guarantees, it
was and is required to participate in HAMP for the loans on which it functions as a loan servicer.
Paul Ince of Citi executed the SPA, which is incorporated herein by reference, with the federal
government on April 13, 2009, making official Citi’s participation in HAMP, and binding it to
42. The SPA executed by Citi explicitly incorporates all “guidelines,” “procedures,”
Treasury, Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac in connection with HAMP. These documents together are
referred to as the “Program Documentation” (“SPA I.A.”), and are incorporated by reference
herein. The SPA mandates that a Participating Servicer “shall perform” the activities described
in the Program Documentation “for all mortgage loans it services.” SPA I.A., 2.A.5.
5
A copy of the SPA signed by Citi on April 13, 2009, as modified, can be found at
http://www.treasury.gov/initiatives/financial-stability/housing-
programs/mha/Documents_Contracts_Agreements/093010citimortgageincSPA(incltransmittal)-r.pdf (last
visited February 25, 2011).
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43. Fannie Mae issued the first “Supplemental Directive” (“SD 09-01”) in April,
2009. That Directive, together with others issued since, sets out the activities Citi must perform
includes:
• Checklist for Getting Started and Participating in HAMP for Non-GSE Loans, Guidance
Effective for Verified Trial Period Plans, Feb. 22, 2010 (“HAMP Checklist”),
https://www.hmpadmin.com/portal/programs/docs/hamp_servicer/hampchecklistverified.
pdf; and
• Home Affordable Modification Program Base Net Present Value (NPV) Model
Specifications (“NPV Overview”), June 11, 2009,
https://www.hmpadmin.com/portal/programs/docs/hamp_servicer/npvoverview.pdf.
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(all last visited February 25, 2011).6 These documents together describe the basic activities
45. First, Citi must evaluate all borrowers who are 60 or more days in default, in
“imminent default,” or who request a loan modification to see if the loan and borrower meet
basic eligibility criteria, set forth in SD 09-01, at 1-2, 3-4, which include:
• The property must be occupied, and that it be the borrower’s principal residence;
• The “borrower has a monthly mortgage payment ratio of greater than 31 percent” of the
borrower’s monthly income.
46. Next, the servicer is required to calculate whether, by applying certain successive
modification steps enumerated in the Program Documentation to the loan in the stated order of
succession, the borrower’s total monthly housing payment can be reduced to 31% of the
borrower’s monthly income. See SD 09-01 at 8-10; HAMP Checklist at 6. This process is
known as the “waterfall.” These steps include capitalizing accrued interest and escrow advances,
reducing the interest rate, extending the term and re-amortizing the loan (if necessary), and
produces terms that yield the target 31% monthly mortgage payment, the servicer must offer the
borrower a TPP Contract if the modification provides a net present value benefit to the mortgage
6
The Program Documentation has been consolidated by the U.S. Treasury Department into a single
document known as the Making Home Affordable Handbook version 3.0 (“Servicer Handbook”), which
can be found at https://www.hmpadmin.com/portal/programs/docs/hamp_servicer/mhahandbook_30.pdf
(last visited February 25, 2011).
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holder. This determination, to be performed prior to the tender of a TPP Contract and known as
the “net present value” (“NPV”) test, compares the net present value of cash flow from these
modified loan terms to the net present value of the loan without modification. See SD 09-01 at
48. If the NPV test yields a “positive” outcome (i.e., the value of a performing
modified loan exceeds the value of foreclosing on the property), the servicer is required to offer a
trial modification through aTrial Period Plan (“TPP”) under HAMP. SD 09-01 at 4, 14-15. If
the NPV test yields a “negative” outcome, the servicer is required to consider the borrower for
49. The TPP consists of a three-month period in which the homeowner makes
mortgage payments based on adjusted loan terms derived from steps followed by the servicer
50. Citi offers TPPs to eligible homeowners through theTPP Contract, which
describes the homeowner’s duties and obligations. The TPP Contract promises a permanent
HAMP modification for those homeowners who make the required payments under the plan and
51. The HAMP regulations make it clear that a servicer such as Citi must prequalify
borrowers for eligibility for a permanent mortgage loan modification under HAMP before
Servicers must verify a borrower’s eligibility for HAMP using the documentation
provided by the borrower in the Initial Package prior to offering the borrower a
TPP.
below). The actions cited in paragraphs 45-48 above, including the income test and NPV
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evaluation, are precisely the steps the HAMP rules mandate a servicer to take to prequalify a
borrower.
52. Once a borrower is prequalified as required by HAMP rules and then offered a
TPP, under the HAMP regulations the borrower need only fulfill the precise terms of the TPP
Contract, such as making reduced loan payments for the three month trial period and supplying
transition from the TPP to the permanent modification, so that the permanent modification
becomes effective on the first day of the month following the final trial period month.
53. Thus, under HAMP rules Citi is required to send TPP Contracts only to borrowers
who have been prequalified for a permanent mortgage loan modification. Specifically, the
54. If the homeowner makes all three of the TPP monthly payments and complies
with the documentation requirements, then the second stage of the HAMP process is triggered
and the homeowner must be offered a permanent modification. See SD 09-01 at 18; SD 10-01 at
9 Permanent Modification
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A servicer should prepare the Modification Agreement early enough in the trial
period to allow sufficient processing time so that the modification becomes
effective on the first day of the month following the final trial period month.
The trial period plan is considered to be successful if the borrower has made all of
the trial period plan payments no later than the last business day of the month in
which the last trial period plan payment is due, the borrower has provided all
required documentation, the borrower has complied with all other requirements of
the trial period plan and the certifications set forth in the Hardship Affidavit or the
MHA Request for Modification and Affidavit, as applicable, remain true and
correct.
55. HAMP directives mandate specific protections for borrowers applying for
modification under the program. Borrowers are protected against foreclosure both during the
time when the borrower is being evaluated for a permanent modification and during the trial
period. See SD 09-01 at 14. Servicers cannot force borrowers to waive their legal rights,
paylate fees imposed during the trial period or reimburse to Citi administrative processing costs
56. Finally, servicers are required to report a “full file” status report to credit
reporting agencies during the TPP trial period. “If the borrower is current when they enter the
trial period, the servicer should report the borrower as current but on a modified payment….”
57. HAMP rules and directives create explicit rules and rigorous timelines for the
HAMP modification program. Timing is of the essence in the servicer’s processing of borrower
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modification requests and evaluating eligibility for a permanent modification. HAMP rules
require that servicers evaluate the income documentation submitted “upon receipt” – later
clarified to within 30 days. See HAMP FAQs at 5, 15; SD-09-07 at 1. In all cases, HAMP rules
direct servicers to prepare the permanent HAMP modification agreement early enough to allow
sufficient processing time for the modification to become effective on the first day of the month
58. HAMP rules mandate that servicers “comply with HAMP requirements” and
“document the execution of loan evaluation, loan modification and accounting processes.” SD
09-01 at 25. Servicers must have adequate staffing, resources, and facilities for receiving and
processing HAMP documents and any requested information that is submitted by borrowers.
Servicers must also have procedures and systems in place to be able to respond to inquiries and
complaints about HAMP. See Id. at 13. Servicers must retain documents and keep detailed
records.
E. CITI’S PRACTICES
59. Citi has routinely failed to comply with its requirements and responsibilities under
HAMP.
60. Citi regularly fails to evaluate borrowers’ eligibility for a permanent modification
under the HAMP program in a timely manner, if at all. Despite Citi’s obligation under HAMP
rules to prequalify borrowers for loan modification prior to issuing a TPP, in some cases Citi
waits to underwrite the loan and evaluate borrowers’ eligibility until months after the
homeowner is given a TPP and begins making trial payments. Homeowners thus make months
of trial payments (and comply with stressful and burdensome documentation requirements)
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without any assurance that Citi will comply with HAMP’s guidelines and offer a permanent
modification.
61. Throughout the HAMP application process and during the trial period, Citi also
repeatedly and inappropriately demands that borrowers update their application materials, while
warning homeowners that their modification is at risk and threatening to deny the modification if
they fail to comply with these requests. Typically, Citi requests the same document(s) over and
such as W-2 forms for elderly individuals surviving on social security, or self-employment profit
and loss statements for wage-earning employees. Citi’s demands that borrowers submit
eligible borrowers for permanent modifications. The requests for documents are unnecessary,
62. Citi has routinely failed to comply with HAMP’s guidelines and offer permanent
modifications to qualifying homeowners, instead stringing them along for months in trial
63. Citi has routinely failed to comply with the requirement that it give borrowers
written notification when they are denied a HAMP modification. Within ten days of the date of
determination that a permanent HAMP modification will not be offered, Citi must send a
Borrower Notice that explains the primary reason for the denial in clear, non-technical language,
and set out any other alternatives to foreclosure to which the borrower may be eligible. See SD
09-08, at 2-3. If the borrower was not approved because the result of the NPV test was negative,
the borrower is entitled to request the NPV values used and to dispute those values if they are
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incorrect. Id. The Borrower Notice of denial letter, therefore, provides the sole formal
64. Citi’s failure to comply with its obligations under HAMP and its TPP contracts
65. A homeowner’s total unpaid principal balance increases each month that he or she
is making trial payments pursuant to a TPP. Trial payments are less than the amount ordinarily
due under the mortgage. The rest of the amount that would be due – in most cases, primarily
interest – is not waived. Instead, the remainder of the regular payment is “recapitalized” or
added to the unpaid loan balance at the end of the trial period. If the trial period lasts three
months, only three months’ worth of the difference between the trial and regular payments are
added to the unpaid balance. If the trial period continues longer than three months, however,
homeowners may find that five, six, or more months’ differential is added to the loan balance.
The more Citi delays, the more the homeowners owe. Perversely, as the loan principal balance
increases due to Citi’s failure to timely implement permanent HAMP modifications or timely
66. Although borrowers are paying all that Citi is asking them to pay – and an amount
that will match their payments under a permanent modification – their accounts are not reported
as current to credit scoring agencies. The HAMP directives require Citi to report borrowers who
were previously current when they entered the trial period as “current but on a modified
payment.” HAMP FAQs, Q2004 at 20. However, Citi improperly reports such borrowers as
delinquent. Thus, the more months a borrower spends in the trial period and in limbo, the more
months they are reported as delinquent, and the more months they suffer derogatory credit
reporting.
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67. Citi’s conduct has also run afoul of the prohibition in HAMP regulations against
proceeding with a foreclosure sale during the trial period. Any foreclosure sale must be
suspended and no new foreclosure action may be initiated during the trial period. If the borrower
fails the trial period, any foreclosure sale must be suspended and no new foreclosure action may
be initiated until the borrower has been considered and found ineligible for other available
foreclosure prevention options. HAMP FAQs, Q2000 at 19. In addition, Citi charges those TPP
68. Citi’s failure to honor its obligations under HAMP and its TPP Contracts leaves
homeowners in long-term limbo, unsure if they can save their homes, and unable to make
rational financial decisions about the future. Money that could be used to fund bankruptcy plans,
relocation costs, short sales, or other means of curing their default continue to go toward
69. Plaintiff’s experience with Citi epitomizes the foregoing problems. Plaintiff
purchased his home in 1996 for $75,000. He financed the purchase price of his home with a
mortgage loan, which he refinanced in 2004 for $199,000. He again refinanced on July 8, 2008
with Provident Funding Group, Inc. in the amount of $200,500 through a 30 year loan with an
interest rate of 6.5%. Monthly payments of interest only in the amount of $1,086.04 were due
for the first 10 years, and monthly payments of fully amortizing principal and interest in the
70. Plaintiff’s loan from Provident Funding Group, Inc. was serviced at all relevant
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71. Plaintiff was injured during his employment as a mount-maker for the University
2010, his employment was terminated. Due to Plaintiff’s financial situation, by September 2009
servicing his mortgage was becoming an increasingly difficult and uneconomical burden.
72. Plaintiff first inquired in writing about a modification of his mortgage in early
October 2009 and applied to Citi for modification shortly thereafter. Plaintiff met all of the
requirements for the HAMP program; however, Citi failed to properly process his modification
request in accordance with the HAMP guidelines and, in August 2010, rejected his permanent
73. In or around January 2010, Citi sent Plaintiff a formal TPP contract, pursuant to
which the trial period commenced on February 1, 2010. The TPP opens by stating:
74. In or around January 2010, Plaintiff signed and returned a copy of the TPP
Contract to Citi using the self-addressed Federal Express envelope that Citi provided. However,
the HAMP regulations specifically state that “Borrowers are not required to sign or return the
TPP Notice” (¶ 8.1) and that “[t]he servicer’s receipt of the first payment due under the TPP
Notice on or before the last day of the month in which the first payment is due (TPP Offer
Deadline) is evidence of the borrower’s acceptance of the TPP Notice and its terms and
conditions.” (¶ 8.3).
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75. The TPP Contract called for Plaintiff to make four (4) trial period payments of
$875.13 each, on February 1, 2010, March 1, 2010, April 1, 2010 and May 1, 2010.
76. Citi’s TPP Contract offered to Plaintiff and other Class Members a permanent
loan modification in return for making timely trial period payments and complying with Citi’s
documentation requests.
77. Plaintiff accepted Citi’s offer and made each of the four (4) trial period payments
in full prior to the date each payment was due. Citi accepted each of these payments pursuant to
the terms of the TPP. Thus, the representations Plaintiff made in Section 1 of the TPP remained
78. Plaintiff also sent Citi all requested and required documentation. Plaintiff sent
each such document to Citi several times because Citi claimed on at least several occasions that
it did not receive these documents. Plaintiff sent, inter alia, tax returns, Form 4506T, bank
statements, W-2 statements, P&L statements for freelance work and a Hardship Affidavit.
79. Despite making the four (4) required revised monthly payments under the TPP
and sending to Citi all of the requested and required documentation, Citi failed to grant Plaintiff
80. Plaintiff’s trial period payments and his additional performance, including
ability to pursue other alternatives to prevent default and foreclosure and other living
arrangements. Plaintiff and Citi therefore formed a valid and binding contract to modify his
mortgage loan.
81. After the four (4) month trial period, Plaintiff heard nothing from Citi concerning
his mortgage loan. Rather, Citi failed to comply with HAMP’s guidelines and offer Plaintiff a
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permanent modification, and instead strung him along for another three months in a trial
82. In fact, in the summer of 2010, a Citi representative phoned Plaintiff and
informed him (erroneously) that Citi had not received any of his four monthly trial period
mortgage payments. Plaintiff was then required to fax to Citi confirmations of each of those
payments, which proved he had indeed made the four monthly trial period mortgage payments
on time. Due to Citi’s incompetence and failure to follow HAMP regulations, he was forced to
83. Then, on August 12, 2010, despite making all payments required under the TPP,
Citi sent a letter to Plaintiff advising him that Citi had rejected his application for a permanent
loan modification. A copy of Citi’s August 12, 2010 letter is attached hereto as Exhibit B.
84. The reason given by Citi in its August 12, 2010 letter for denying Plaintiff’s
HAMP modification was because Plaintiff “did not provide us with the documents we
requested.” This explanation was nothing more than a pretext for denying Plaintiff’s loan
modification, and was utterly false and without any basis. In fact, Plaintiff had provided all of
85. By failing to permanently modify Plaintiff’s loan after Plaintiff performed under
the TPP contract, Citi breached the terms of the TPP contract.
86. At the end of the trial period, Plaintiff continued and has continued until this day
making his monthly mortgage loan payment of $875.13 to Citi. By continuing to make those
payments, Plaintiff has shown that he remains ready, willing and able to perform under the TPP
contract.
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87. Moreover, throughout Plaintiff’s TPP, Citi improperly instituted and/or continued
to pursue foreclosure on Plaintiff’s residence, in violation of HAMP. On August 10, 2010, two
days before Citi informed Plaintiff that Citi had rejected his application for a permanent loan
modification, Citi sent Plaintiff an Act 91 Notice (attached hereto as Exhibit C), informing
Plaintiff that Citi intended to foreclose on his property. On or around October 14, 2010, Citi
filed a Complaint in Mortgage Foreclosure Action in the Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia
County. As a result of Citi’s failure to timely grant a permanent HAMP modification and other
violations of HAMP alleged herein, the foreclosure proceedings against Plaintiff has continued
unabated.
88. Also during Plaintiff’s TPP, Citi improperly charged Plaintiff late fees in the
V. CLASS ALLEGATIONS
89. Plaintiff repeats and re-alleges every allegation above as if set forth herein in full.
90. Plaintiff brings this action pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(a), (b)(2), and (b)(3) of
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, on behalf of himself and a Class consisting of:
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Contract and complied with Citi’s requests for documentation, (ii) but
were improperly placed in foreclosure and/or charged for various
foreclosure-related fees (“Foreclosure Class”).
91. Excluded from the Class are governmental entities, Defendant, its affiliates and
subsidiaries, Defendant’s current employees and current or former officers, directors, agents,
92. Plaintiff does not know the exact size or identities of the members of the proposed
Class, since such information is in the exclusive control of Defendant. Plaintiff believes that the
Class encompasses many hundreds and perhaps thousands of individuals whose identities can be
readily ascertained from Defendant’s books and records. Therefore, the proposed Class is so
93. Based on the size of the modifications at issue, Plaintiff believes the amount in
94. All members of the Class have been subject to and affected by a uniform course
of conduct by Citi that was designed to evade the requirements of HAMP and avoid permanent
loan modifications in an effort to increase Citi’s income through, inter alia, maintaining high
service fees on larger principal balances, collecting additional late fees and process management
95. This course of conduct includes: (1) prequalifying a borrower for a permanent
loan modification under HAMP or failing to properly and timely conduct the required pre-
qualification analysis, (2) making the borrower an offer for a permanent modification by sending
him or her a TPP Contract, and then (3) failing to permanently modify the loan after the
borrower accepts the contract and makes the three required monthly modified loan payments,
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96. This course of conduct also includes: stringing out, delaying or otherwise
(1) instituting or pursuing foreclosure actions while borrowers are in the trial period or
instituting foreclosure actions after the trial period despite the fact that borrowers have fully
(2) reporting borrowers to credit agencies for delinquency while they are on the trial
period,
(3) repeatedly requesting that borrowers send the required documentation over and over
again,
(4) failing to allocate adequate resources such as sufficient trained staff to facilitate the
modification process,
(6) failing to timely notify borrowers at the end of the three month trial period that they
have been provided or have been denied a permanent HAMP modification, and
(7) denying permanent HAMP modifications for reasons that are false, untrue and/or
entirely inaccurate.
97. The claims are based on standardized written form contracts (the TPP Contracts)
and the uniform HAMP rules contained in the Servicer Handbook which govern the entirety of
the Making Home Affordable Program and all aspects of loan modification under HAMP. There
are questions of law and fact that are common to the class, and predominate over any questions
98. These questions include, but are not limited to the following:
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f. Whether the Court can order damages and enter injunctive relief.
99. The claims of the individual named Plaintiff are typical of the claims of the Class
and do not conflict with the interests of any other members of the Class in that both the Plaintiff
and the other members of the Class were subject to the same conduct, were subject to the terms
of the same agreement and were met with the same absence of a permanent modification.
100. The individual named Plaintiff will fairly and adequately represent the interests
of the Class. Plaintiff is committed to the vigorous prosecution of the Class’ claims and have
retained attorneys who are qualified to pursue this litigation and have experience in class actions
101. A class action is superior to other methods for the fast and efficient adjudication
of this controversy. A class action regarding the issues in this case does not create any problems
of manageability.
102. This putative class action meets the requirements of Fed. R. Civ. P. 23(b)(2) and
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103. Citi has acted or refused to act on grounds that apply generally to the
Class so that final injunctive relief or corresponding declaratory relief is appropriate respecting
104. Plaintiff repeats and re-alleges every allegation above as if set forth herein in full.
105. Plaintiff brings this claim on their own behalf and on behalf of each member of
106. Plaintiff and members of the Class entered into written TPP Contracts with Citi.
107. Plaintiff and members of the Class formed binding and enforceable agreements
when they executed written TPP Contracts, and/or when they made the first required payment
109. Citi failed to perform under the TPP Contracts with Plaintiff and members of the
Class. Citi’s refusal to perform its duties under the TPP Contracts were unlawful, without
justification and/or excuse, and constituted a total and material breach of the TPP Contracts
110. Citi breached the TPP Contracts with Plaintiff and members of the Class by
failing to offer Plaintiff and members of the Class permanent HAMP modifications after they
made the required TPP payments and submitted the required documentation.
111. Plaintiff and all members of the Class gave consideration that was fair and
reasonable, and have performed all conditions, covenants, and promises required to be performed
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112. As a result of Citi’s breach of the TPP Contracts, Plaintiff and members of the
Class suffered and will continue to suffer reasonable and foreseeable consequential damages
resulting from such breaches, including payment of increased interest, longer loan payoff times,
higher principle balances, deterrence from seeking other remedies to address their default and/or
unaffordable mortgage payments, damage to their credit, additional income tax liability, costs
and expenses incurred to prevent or fight foreclosure, and other damages for breach of contract.
113. Plaintiff and the Class have been damaged by Citi’s breach of the TPP Contracts
114. Plaintiff repeats and re-alleges every allegation above as if set forth herein in full.
115. Citi entered into the TPP Contracts described above with Plaintiff and the Class
that obligated Citi to provide Plaintiff and other members of the Class a permanent loan
modification under HAMP if all trial period plan payments as set forth in the TPP Contract were
116. In the alternative, under the theory of promissory estoppel, Citi is estopped from
denying the existence of an agreement between itself and Plaintiff and with other Class Members
because Citi’s TPP Contracts were intended to and did induce Plaintiff and the Class to rely,
Plaintiff’s and the Class’ reliance on the TPP Contracts was reasonable and justified, and that
117. Citi’s TPP Contracts were intended to induce Plaintiff and the Class to rely on
them and make monthly TPP payments and Plaintiff and the Class did, indeed, rely on Citi’s
118. Given the language in the TPP Contract, Plaintiff’s and the Class’ reliance was
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119. Plaintiff’s and the Class’ reliance was to their detriment. For example, those who
complied with the TPP contracts but were denied a permanent modification have been required
to pay increased interest, higher principle balances, higher service fees, and extended payoff time
periods. They have been deterred from seeking other remedies to address their default and/or
unaffordable mortgage payments, have incurred damage to their credit, costs and expenses to
prevent or fight foreclosure and other damages and have been subject to additional income tax
liability.
120. Plaintiff and the Class have been damaged by Citi’s actions and representations in
121. Plaintiff repeats and re-alleges every allegation above as if set forth herein in full.
122. Plaintiff brings this claim on his own behalf and on behalf of all other members of
123. This is a claim for violation of the Pennsylvania Unfair Trade Practices And
124. At all relevant times material hereto, Defendant conducted trade and commerce
125. Plaintiff and the Class are “persons” as defined and construed under the UTPCPL.
P.S. § 201-2(xxi), including its practice of leading borrowers to believe that Citi would offer
permanent HAMP modifications of their mortgages upon successfully completing a TPP and due
to Citi’s illegal collection of late fees and penalties in violation of HAMP regulations.
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127. Defendant’s conduct as set forth herein has been unfair in violation of the CFA
because the acts or practices violate established public policy, and because the harm they cause
to consumers in Pennsylvania greatly outweighs any benefits associated with those practices.
128. Plaintiff and the Class suffered actual and ascertainable losses of money or
including but not limited to: payment of increased interest and service fees, longer loan payoff
times, higher principle balances, deterrence from seeking other remedies to address their default
and/or unaffordable mortgage payments, damage to their credit, additional income tax liability,
costs and expenses incurred to prevent or fight foreclosure, and other damages.
a. Certify this case as a class action and appoint the named Plaintiff to be a
Class representative and his counsel to be Class counsel;
d. Order Citi to adopt and enforce a policy that requires appropriate training
of their employees and agents regarding their duties under HAMP;
f. Award actual and statutory damages to the Plaintiff and the Class in
amounts to be proven at trial;
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h. Award Plaintiff the costs of this action, including the fees and costs of
experts, together with reasonable attorneys’ fees; and
i. Grant Plaintiff and the Class such other and further relief as this Court
finds necessary and proper.
kal672285_920_2 (2).docx
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