US Bank, N.A. v. HLC Escrow, Inc. , 888 F.3d 529 ( 2018 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 17-1121
    US BANK, N.A., AS LEGAL TITLE TRUSTEE
    FOR TRUMAN 2013 SC3 TITLE TRUST,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.
    HLC ESCROW, INC.;
    FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE COMPANY,
    Defendants, Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE
    [Hon. George Z. Singal, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Howard, Chief Judge,
    Selya and Lipez, Circuit Judges.
    Benjamin P. Campo, Jr., with whom Douglas McDaniel & Campo
    LLC PC was on brief, for appellant.
    David A. Soley, with whom Glenn Israel, James G. Monteleone,
    and Bernstein Shur were on brief, for appellee First American Title
    Insurance Company.
    Kevin P. Polansky, with whom Christine M. Kingston and Nelson
    Mullins Riley Scarborough LLP were on brief, for appellee HLC
    Escrow, Inc.
    April 25, 2018
    LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.          When Sara and Douglas Trask
    refinanced their mortgage in 2007, their new mortgage incorrectly
    identified a parcel of unimproved land, rather than the adjacent
    parcel of improved land that encompassed their residence.            The
    current holder of the 2007 mortgage -- US Bank -- sued the closing
    agent -- HLC Escrow, Inc. -- and the title insurer -- First
    American Title Insurance Company ("First American") -- in 2016.
    US Bank's complaint included causes of action for negligence and
    "duty of care" against HLC Escrow, and negligence, unilateral
    mistake,   and   violation   of   Maine's    Unfair   Claims   Settlement
    Practices Act ("UCSPA") against First American. The district court
    dismissed the complaint, declining to apply Maine's twenty-year
    statute of limitations for personal actions on certain types of
    contracts and financial instruments, and further concluding that
    Maine's six-year limitations period for civil actions barred the
    bank's claims.    See 
    Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 14, §§ 751
    , 752.
    We affirm the district court's judgment in substantial
    part, vacating only its dismissal of US Bank's UCSPA claim against
    First American.    With respect to that claim, we conclude that it
    was timely filed, as the claim had yet to accrue when First
    American denied US Bank's initial insurance claim in May 2010.
    I.
    The Trasks entered into a mortgage agreement with Sun
    Mortgage New England, Inc. in February 2005.          The parties agree
    - 2 -
    that the mortgage encumbered an improved parcel of land along
    Stream Road in Winterport, Maine.          In April 2007, the Trasks
    refinanced    their   mortgage   with   Home   Loan   Center   Inc.   d/b/a
    LendingTree Loans.     The property description in the 2007 mortgage
    identifies a far less valuable parcel of unimproved land also along
    Stream Road, and also owned by the Trasks.            HLC Escrow acted as
    the closing agent for the transaction, and First American insured
    the title of the encumbered property. First American also supplied
    the legal property description for the mortgage.               Following a
    series of assignments, US Bank took ownership of the 2007 mortgage
    in March 2014.1
    After defaulting on the 2007 mortgage, the Trasks filed
    a Chapter 7 petition for bankruptcy in December 2009. Three months
    later, the Trasks filed an adversary complaint against US Bank,
    asking the bankruptcy court to limit US Bank's mortgage lien to
    the unimproved parcel.     Subsequently, US Bank filed an insurance
    claim with First American.       The insurance claim asserted coverage
    based on the mortgage's errant identification of the unimproved
    parcel.   In its letter denying the insurance claim on May 10, 2010,
    1 The named appellant in this case is technically "US Bank,
    N.A., as Legal Title Trustee for Truman 2013 SC3 Title Trust." We
    refer to appellant as "US Bank" for simplicity's sake.
    Furthermore, we use the term "US Bank" to refer to appellant and
    its predecessors in interest when discussing the background facts
    of this case, as the transactional history of the mortgage is not
    germane to this appeal.
    - 3 -
    First American explained that the policy did not cover the improved
    parcel, and insured only the parcel actually identified by the
    mortgage -- that is, the unimproved parcel.   US Bank filed another
    insurance claim in early 2011.    First American denied this second
    claim in February of that year, offering the same explanation as
    it did in denying the first claim.
    On June 10, 2011, the bankruptcy court entered a judgment
    concluding that the trustee of the Trasks' bankruptcy estate had
    an interest in the improved parcel superior to US Bank's.       The
    Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the First Circuit affirmed that
    ruling in December 2011.   See In re Trask, 
    462 B.R. 268
     (B.A.P.
    1st Cir. 2011).     US Bank filed a foreclosure action on the
    unimproved parcel in December 2013, obtained a favorable judgment
    in December 2014, and took title to the unimproved parcel following
    a public sale in April 2015.      It then filed its third insurance
    claim with First American in February 2016.   First American denied
    the claim on May 13, 2016, noting its previous denials, and
    reasserting its prior interpretation of the policy.
    US Bank responded to First American's latest denial by
    filing suit in state court on August 9, 2016.   As noted above, the
    complaint alleges counts of negligence and duty of care against
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    HLC Escrow,2 and negligence, unilateral mistake, and violation of
    the UCSPA against First American.           The UCSPA claim asserts that
    First American "failed to effectuate prompt, fair, and equitable
    settlement" of US Bank's 2016 insurance claim, "where liability
    was reasonably clear," and "knowingly misrepresented to US Bank
    pertinent facts or policy provisions relating to coverage at
    issue."3      The complaint does not mention US Bank's earlier-filed
    insurance claims.
    HLC Escrow removed the case to federal court, and both
    defendants filed motions to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 12(b)(6).          The motions asserted, inter alia, that US
    Bank's claims were time-barred by Maine's six-year statute of
    limitations for civil actions.          See 
    Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 14, § 752
    .     First American took the position that US Bank's claims
    against it accrued no later than May 10, 2010, the date on which
    it   denied    US   Bank's    initial   insurance   claim.   Included   as
    attachments to First American's motion to dismiss were copies of
    US Bank's 2010 claim letter, First American's letter denying that
    claim, and First American's letters denying US Bank's 2011 and
    2While the issue is irrelevant to this appeal, we do not
    understand how US Bank's "duty of care" claim is in any way
    distinct from its negligence claim against HLC Escrow.
    3This terminology used in US Bank's complaint mirrors the
    terms of the UCSPA. See Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 24-A, § 2436-
    A(1)(A), (E).
    - 5 -
    2016 insurance claims.     First American did not include copies of
    US Bank's 2011 and 2016 claim letters.
    US Bank opposed the motions to dismiss by arguing that
    Maine's twenty-year limitations period for personal actions on
    certain types of contracts and financial instruments applied to
    its causes of action against both defendants, making them timely.
    See 
    Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 14, § 751
    .    As to its claims against
    First American, US Bank alternatively argued that Maine's six-year
    statute of limitations did not begin to run until First American
    denied its 2016 insurance claim. According to US Bank, its initial
    2010 insurance claim did not trigger the statute of limitations
    because that claim was premature.    The bank did not "experience[]
    damages that would demonstrate a cognizable loss" until it took
    title to the unimproved parcel in April 2015, following the
    foreclosure proceedings.     When it then filed its 2016 insurance
    claim, "the scope of US Bank's damages was realized," its insurance
    claim "was no longer hypothetical," and "the remedy of payment on
    the policy was in place."
    The district court granted the motions to dismiss.     It
    rejected US Bank's contention that Maine's twenty-year limitations
    period applied, and found all of US Bank's claims barred by the
    six-year statute of limitations.    As to the bank's claims against
    First American, the district court rejected US Bank's argument
    that its claims did not accrue until First American denied its
    - 6 -
    2016 insurance claim.      Without addressing the bank's prematurity
    argument, the court reasoned that the limitations period was not
    "tolled or extended every time US Bank filed the same claim and
    received a denial on the same basis from [First American]."                 US
    Bank, N.A. v. HLC Escrow Inc., No. 1:16-cv-00453, 
    2016 WL 7480269
    ,
    at *3 (D. Me. Dec. 29, 2016).
    On appeal, US Bank contends that the district court erred
    by failing to apply Maine's twenty-year statute of limitations.
    It   again   alternatively   argues     that   its   claims     against   First
    American were timely even under a six-year limitations period
    because those claims had yet to accrue when First American denied
    its initial insurance claim in May 2010.
    II.
    We review de novo a district court's Rule 12(b)(6)
    dismissal of a complaint for failure to state a claim based on the
    statute of limitations.      See Santana-Castro v. Toledo-Davíla, 
    579 F.3d 109
    , 113 (1st Cir. 2009).         Conducting this review requires us
    to "accept as true all well-pleaded facts in the complaint and
    draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff[]."
    Gargano v. Liberty Int'l Underwriters, Inc., 
    572 F.3d 45
    , 48 (1st
    Cir.   2009).     In   addition   to    the   complaint,   we    may   consider
    documents "incorporated into the movant's pleadings," so long as
    "they are undisputed" and are "central to" the plaintiff's claims.
    In re Citigroup, Inc., 
    535 F.3d 45
    , 52 (1st Cir. 2008); see also
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    Ironshore Specialty Ins. Co. v. United States, 
    871 F.3d 131
    , 135
    (1st Cir. 2017).4
    A. Maine's Twenty-Year Statute of Limitations
    Civil     actions   in   Maine   are   subject    to   a   six-year
    limitations period, unless otherwise provided.        See 
    Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 14, § 752
    .     One exception to this rule is section 751,
    title 14, of Maine Revised Statutes, which provides a twenty-year
    limitations   period    for    "personal    actions    on    contracts     or
    liabilities under seal, promissory notes signed in the presence of
    an attesting witness, or on the bills, notes or other evidences of
    debt issued by a bank." There is no question that the 2007 mortgage
    falls within the category of documents enumerated by section 751.
    The issue is whether this case constitutes a "personal action[]
    on" the mortgage.      
    Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 14, § 751
     (emphasis
    added).   US Bank contends that its case is "on" the mortgage
    because its claims relate to, and revolve around, that document.
    A long history of Maine case law forecloses this position.
    In Young v. Weston, the plaintiff sued to enforce a
    memorandum in which the defendant had promised to make payments on
    a note referenced in the document.          
    39 Me. 492
    , 493-94 (1855).
    The court held that the memorandum constituted a "separate promise"
    4 The district court invoked this rule when it relied upon
    the letters attached to First American's motion to dismiss. See
    US Bank N.A., 
    2016 WL 7480269
    , at *2 n.5. US Bank does not dispute
    the court's application of this rule.
    - 8 -
    from the note itself, and therefore came within neither the "spirit
    nor letter" of the twenty-year limitations provision.    
    Id. at 495
    ;
    see also Bunker v. Ireland, 
    17 A. 706
     (Me. 1889) (holding that a
    suit against a guarantor of a note was not subject to the twenty-
    year limitations period).    Likewise, in Portland Savings Bank v.
    Shwartz, the Maine Law Court held that an action against an
    endorser to a note was not an action on the note itself, making
    the twenty-year limitations period inapplicable.    
    196 A. 405
    , 406
    (Me. 1938).   The endorser's contract was "distinct from that of
    the maker of the note," causing it to "not come within the
    exception of the statute applicable to witnessed notes."    
    Id.
    A more recent Law Court case similarly declined to extend
    the state's twenty-year limitations period to cases that merely
    relate to a mortgage.   In U.S. Bank National Association v. Adams,
    a bank sought to place an equitable lien on a brother's interest
    in a property after his sister signed a mortgage encumbering her
    jointly-held interest in the same.     
    102 A.3d 774
    , 776 (Me. 2014).
    The court rejected the bank's argument that its claim was "based
    on the note and mortgage" for purposes of section 751, because the
    claim was "not an action to enforce the contested note."     
    Id.
     at
    776 n.2.   Instead, the action involved an equitable claim against
    the brother's interest in the property, and the brother was not a
    party to the note.   
    Id.
    - 9 -
    These cases make plain that US Bank's claims are not
    "on" the 2007 note and mortgage.           Its claims arise from the
    obligations created by its relationships with the closing agent
    and title insurer. Those obligations surely relate to the mortgage
    in some respects, but that is not enough.           The district court
    correctly followed over a century and a half of Maine case law
    limiting the twenty-year limitations period to personal actions to
    enforce qualifying instruments.
    We thus affirm the district court's judgment dismissing
    US Bank's claims against HLC Escrow, as US Bank does not argue
    that those claims are timely under Maine's six-year statute of
    limitations.      This leaves only the question of whether US Bank's
    claims against First American are timely under that limitations
    period.
    B. Maine's Six-Year Statute of Limitations
    The district court treated US Bank's unilateral mistake,
    negligence, and UCSPA claims against First American as a group,
    and found that all three accrued, at the latest, when First
    American denied US Bank's initial insurance claim on May 10, 2010
    -- just more than six years before US Bank filed suit on August 9,
    2016.     That group approach to the timeliness issue ignored some
    important differences in the causes of action.
    The   unilateral   mistake    and   negligence   claims   are
    unrelated to First American's denials of US Bank's insurance
    - 10 -
    claims.   Those two causes of action pertain to First American's
    alleged provision of the incorrect property description at the
    mortgage closing.   Count II of US Bank's complaint asserts that
    First American mistakenly provided the legal property description
    for the unimproved parcel of land, while Count III alleges that
    First American negligently provided that property description.        On
    the other hand, US Bank's UCSPA claim, set forth in Count I,
    derives from First American's allegedly wrongful denial of an
    insurance claim. The complaint alleges that First American "failed
    to effectuate prompt, fair, and equitable settlement" of US Bank's
    2016 insurance claim, "where liability was reasonably clear," and
    "knowingly misrepresented to US Bank pertinent facts or policy
    provisions relating to coverage at issue."           As these causes of
    action are based on different events, US Bank's UCSPA claim is
    subject to a different statute of limitations analysis than are
    its unilateral mistake and negligence claims.
    1. Unilateral Mistake and Negligence
    US   Bank's   unilateral   mistake   and    negligence   claims
    accrued on the date of the mortgage closing in 2007, or -- at the
    latest -- when US Bank discovered that the mortgage property
    description was incorrect.      The claims are untimely in either
    event.
    Negligence actions accrue under Maine law "'when the
    plaintiff sustains harm to a protected interest,' i.e., when a
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    plaintiff is 'entitled to seek judicial vindication.'"              Miller v.
    Miller, 
    167 A.3d 1252
    , 1256 (Me. 2017) (quoting McLaughlin v.
    Superintending Sch. Comm., 
    832 A.2d 782
    , 788 (Me. 2003)).                For a
    limited number of tort actions, however, Maine commences the
    statute of limitations period when the plaintiff discovered, or
    should   have    discovered,   her    injury.      See   Johnston   v.   Dow   &
    Coulombe, Inc., 
    686 A.2d 1064
    , 1066 (Me. 1996).            As for unilateral
    mistake actions, the Law Court has yet to address whether the
    limitations period runs from the time the mistake was made, or
    from the time the plaintiff discovered the mistake.5
    We do not need to determine whether the discovery rule
    applies to unilateral mistake actions under Maine law, or whether
    US Bank could somehow benefit from that rule in the negligence
    context.   US Bank could have discovered First American's allegedly
    mistaken   and    negligent    provision      of   the   mortgage    property
    description no later than March 17, 2010, when the Trasks filed
    their adversary complaint to limit US Bank's mortgage lien to the
    unimproved parcel.     As this date falls more than six years before
    US Bank filed suit on August 9, 2016, its unilateral mistake and
    5 Other jurisdictions appear to be divided on this issue. See
    generally Diematic Mfg. Corp. v. Packaging Indus., Inc., 
    412 F. Supp. 1367
    , 1373 (S.D.N.Y. 1976) (stating that under New York law,
    an action based upon mistake accrues at "the time the alleged
    mistake occurs"); State Dep't of Transp. v. Eighth Judicial Dist.
    Court, 
    402 P.3d 677
    , 683 (Nev. 2017) (en banc) (applying the
    discovery rule to a unilateral mistake action).
    - 12 -
    negligence actions are time-barred by the six year statute of
    limitations.
    2. The UCSPA
    The district court dismissed US Bank's UCSPA claim on
    the ground that the cause of action accrued when First American
    denied US Bank's 2010 insurance claim.         In challenging this
    conclusion, US Bank renews the argument that First American's
    denial of its 2010 insurance claim could not have triggered the
    statute of limitations because the bank "had not experienced
    damages that would demonstrate a cognizable loss" at that time.6
    We agree.
    Under Maine law, a cause of action ordinarily does not
    accrue until the plaintiff incurs a judicially cognizable injury.
    See, e.g., McLaughlin, 
    832 A.2d at 788
    ; Johnston, 
    686 A.2d at
    1065-
    66.       Here, the alleged injury is First American's refusal to
    indemnify US Bank for a loss covered by the bank's title insurance
    policy.     An insurer's duty to indemnify -- that is, to compensate
    its insured for a loss -- generally does not arise until the
    insured incurs a covered loss or liability.      See Cambridge Mut.
    6US Bank also argues that its 2010 claim did not trigger the
    limitations period because that claim invoked First American's
    duty to defend, while its 2016 insurance claim invoked the
    insurer's duty to indemnify. Though we agree that an insurer's
    refusal to defend and its refusal to indemnify are distinct events
    under Maine law, see, e.g., Harlor v. Amica Mut. Ins. Co., 
    150 A.3d 793
    , 801 (Me. 2016), US Bank waived this argument by failing
    to raise it before the district court.
    - 13 -
    Fire Ins. Co. v. Perry, 
    692 A.2d 1388
    , 1391 n.3 (Me. 1997).                  In
    cases    involving   a   mortgagee's    title    insurance    policy,       the
    mortgagee incurs a loss when "the security for the loan proves
    inadequate to pay off the underlying insured debt due to the
    presence of undisclosed defects."        Hodas v. First Am. Title Ins.
    Co., 
    696 A.2d 1095
    , 1097 (Me. 1997); see also 11A Steven Plitt et
    al., Couch on Insurance § 159:6 (3d ed. 2017).7         Hence, a cause of
    action based on a title insurer's refusal to indemnify a mortgagee
    will ordinarily accrue, at the earliest, when the mortgagee's
    security   "proves   inadequate,"      thus   establishing   a     loss    that
    triggers the insurer's duty to indemnify.
    The   security   for   US   Bank's   loan   had   yet    to    prove
    inadequate when First American rejected its 2010 insurance claim.
    At that point, US Bank was engaged in an adversary proceeding
    against the Trasks.      At issue in that proceeding was whether the
    bank's mortgage interest extended to the improved parcel, or was
    instead limited to the less valuable unimproved parcel.                   If US
    Bank had prevailed in arguing that the mortgage encumbered the
    improved parcel, its security would presumably have been adequate
    to cover the Trasks' debt.    US Bank thus did not incur a loss until
    7 In contrast, a property owner's title insurance policy
    "protects the value of an owner's fee interest" such that "[t]he
    presence of a title defect immediately results in a loss . . .
    since resale value will always reflect the cost of removing the
    defect." Hodas, 
    696 A.2d at 1097
    .
    - 14 -
    -- at the earliest -- the bankruptcy court rejected its position
    and entered judgment in 2011 finding that the bank's mortgage
    encumbered     only    the   unimproved        parcel.      Accordingly,   First
    American's denial of US Bank's earlier-filed insurance claim could
    not have served as the accrual date for its UCSPA cause of action.
    That cause of action accrued no earlier than the close of the
    adversary     proceeding,       which    falls     within      Maine's   six-year
    limitations period.
    We thus must vacate the district court's dismissal of US
    Bank's UCSPA claim and remand for further proceedings on that
    claim.8   In so doing, we do not need to determine the precise date
    on which the security for US Bank's loan "prove[d] inadequate,"
    thus triggering a loss.       Hodas, 
    696 A.2d at 1097
    .           US Bank's UCSPA
    claim was timely for statute of limitations purposes regardless of
    whether its loss occurred at the close of the adversary proceedings
    in 2011, or, as it argues, when it later took possession of the
    unimproved parcel.
    III.
    For the reasons discussed above, we affirm in part and
    vacate in part the district court's judgment.               We affirm as to the
    dismissal    of   US   Bank's    claims    against       HLC   Escrow,   and   its
    8 In First American's motion to dismiss and in its brief on
    appeal, the statute of limitations was the only defense it raised
    against US Bank's UCSPA claim. We take no view on the viability
    of any other defenses going forward.
    - 15 -
    unilateral mistake and negligence claims against First American.
    We vacate the dismissal, and remand for further proceedings, with
    respect to US Bank's UCSPA claim against First American.
    US Bank and First American shall bear their own costs on
    appeal.   HLC Escrow's costs shall be taxed to US Bank.
    So Ordered.
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