Tahir Zaman v. Barbara Felton (072128) , 219 N.J. 199 ( 2014 )


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  •                                                       SYLLABUS
    (This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the
    convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please note that, in the
    interest of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized.)
    Tahir Zaman v. Barbara Felton (A-60-12) (072128)
    Argued March 18, 2014 -- Decided September 9, 2014
    PATTERSON, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
    This appeal requires the Court to analyze an agreement for the sale of a residential property and a
    subsequent lease and repurchase agreement, and to determine whether the transactions collectively gave rise to an
    equitable mortgage, violated consumer protection statutes, or contravened this Court’s decision in In re Opinion No.
    26 of the Committee on the Unauthorized Practice of Law, 
    139 N.J. 323
    (1995) (In re Opinion No. 26).
    In 2007, defendant Barbara Felton, an experienced buyer and seller of real estate, faced imminent
    foreclosure proceedings with respect to her unfinished home when she defaulted on a $105,000 construction
    mortgage. Felton was aware that no certificate of occupancy was issued with respect to the house, and the house
    was uninhabitable. A mutual acquaintance, Joseph Richardson, introduced Felton to Tahir Zaman, a licensed real
    estate agent. On June 16, 2007, Felton, Zaman, and Richardson met at the property to discuss its potential sale.
    Zaman was unaware that the house lacked a certificate of occupancy and was uninhabitable. Felton requested a
    price of $250,000 for the property, and Zaman made a $200,000 counteroffer. Felton wanted to keep the property.
    Zaman told Felton that if she accepted his offer of $200,000, he would agree to a buy-back option and would allow
    her to remain on the property as a tenant. Felton and Zaman then executed a written land sale agreement with a
    purchase price of $200,000, and Richardson signed the agreement as a witness. The agreement provided that each
    party had the right to arrange for an attorney to review its terms within three days of its execution, that either party
    could cancel the sale during the attorney-review period, and that the agreement would be binding at the conclusion
    of that period. The agreement contained no reference to a buy-back or lease provision.
    On June 23, 2007, at a closing in which neither party was represented by counsel, Felton and Zaman
    entered into two separate agreements: a lease agreement under which Felton agreed to pay $1,000 per month in rent,
    and an agreement that gave Felton the option to repurchase the property within three months for $237,000. Felton
    signed the deed, an affidavit of title, and the buy-back agreement. The parties did not execute any mortgage
    documents. Zaman gave Felton a cashier’s check in the amount of $85,960, the balance after mortgage payoff and
    other closing expenses. Neither party exercised the right to cancel the agreement during the three-day attorney
    review period. On July 19, 2007, Zaman recorded the deed to the disputed property. For the next seventeen months,
    Felton occupied the property, but did not pay rent in accordance with the lease agreement, or exercise her
    contractual right to repurchase the property.
    In December 2008, Zaman filed the underlying complaint, claiming that he was the purchaser in an
    enforceable land sale agreement. Felton filed a counterclaim based on fraud, slander of title, violations of the
    Consumer Fraud Act (CFA), violations of the Fair Foreclosure Act (FFA), N.J.S.A. 2A:50-53 to -68, and violations
    of the federal Truth in Lending Act (TILA), 15 U.S.C.A. §§ 1601 - 1667. Felton claimed that the parties’
    transactions collectively comprised an equitable mortgage and that the transactions were voidable by virtue of an
    alleged violation of this Court’s opinion in In re Opinion No. 26. The trial court elected to hold a bifurcated trial. It
    assigned to the jury the following questions: whether Zaman had proven by a preponderance of the evidence that
    Felton knowingly agreed to sell the property to him, and if not, whether Felton had proven by clear and convincing
    evidence that Zaman obtained his deed to the property by “fraudulent actions.” The jury concluded that Zaman had
    proven by a preponderance of the evidence that Felton knowingly agreed to sell her property to him. The trial court
    then conducted the trial’s second phase, in which the trial judge was the factfinder. After hearing additional
    testimony, the trial court dismissed all of Felton’s remaining claims, including her contention that the transactions
    gave rise to an equitable mortgage and her allegation premised upon In re Opinion No. 26.
    Felton appealed, and the Appellate Division affirmed. Citing the jury’s determination that the property was
    1
    knowingly sold, the panel concluded that the trial court correctly declined to find an equitable mortgage or a valid
    claim under the CFA. In addition, the panel affirmed the trial court’s determination that In re Opinion No. 26 does
    not govern this case. The Supreme Court granted Felton’s petition for certification. 
    213 N.J. 537
    (2013).
    HELD: The Court affirms the jury’s determination that Felton knowingly sold her property to Zaman. It reverses
    the portion of the Appellate Division’s opinion that affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of Felton’s claim that the
    parties’ agreements gave rise to an equitable mortgage. The Court remands to the trial court for application of the
    eight-factor standard for the determination of an equitable mortgage set forth by the United States Bankruptcy Court
    in O’Brien v. Cleveland, 
    423 B.R. 477
    , 491 (Bankr. D.N.J. 2010) and, in the event that the trial court concludes that
    an equitable mortgage was created by the parties, for the adjudication of two of Felton’s statutory claims based on
    alleged violations of consumer lending laws, as well as several other claims not adjudicated by the trial court. The
    Court concurs with the trial court and Appellate Division that Felton has no claim under the Consumer Fraud Act,
    that this case does not implicate In re Opinion No. 26, and that Felton’s remaining claims were properly dismissed.
    1. The Court reviews the jury’s determination – that Zaman had proven by a preponderance of the evidence that
    Felton knowingly agreed to sell the property to him – in accordance with a deferential standard. An appellate court
    should not disturb the findings of the jury merely because it would have found otherwise upon review of the same
    evidence. Carrino v. Novotny, 
    78 N.J. 355
    , 360 (1979). Applying that standard, the Court affirms the Appellate
    Division panel’s determination insofar as it affirmed the jury’s determination that Zaman had proven by a
    preponderance of the evidence that Felton knowingly conveyed her property to him. (pp. 15-18)
    2. “New Jersey courts have repeatedly found that sale-leaseback arrangements made to avoid foreclosure are in fact
    equitable mortgages.” Johnson v. NovaStar Mortg., Inc., 
    698 F. Supp. 2d 463
    , 469 (D.N.J. 2010). It is the trial
    court’s task to discern whether the transaction has been labeled as a land sale in order to mask its actual objective: a
    mortgage loan secured by a deed to the property at issue. In O’Brien v. Cleveland, 
    423 B.R. 477
    (Bankr. D.N.J.
    2010), the Bankruptcy Court identified eight factors to assist trial judges in determining whether a given transaction
    gives rise to an equitable mortgage. Under the O’Brien framework, the court considers not only the form of the
    transaction itself but circumstances that can motivate a party to disguise a mortgage secured by a property as a sale
    of land and indications that both parties intend the seller to retain the land notwithstanding the purported sale. The
    Court adopts the O’Brien factors as a comprehensive and practical standard to guide trial courts as they determine
    whether a particular transaction, or series of transactions, gives rise to an equitable mortgage, and remands the
    matter to permit the trial court to apply the O’Brien test. (pp. 18-24)
    3. In In re Opinion No. 
    26, supra
    , this Court considered whether real estate brokers commit the unauthorized
    practice of law when they conduct residential real estate transactions in which the “sellers and buyers are . . .
    unrepresented by counsel.” 
    Id. at 326.
    The risk that the Court addressed in In re Opinion No. 26 – that a real estate
    broker acting in his or her own interest will promote the completion of a real estate transaction to the detriment of
    the seller, the buyer, or both – is not raised in the circumstances of this case. Nothing in the trial record suggests
    that Zaman purported to provide legal advice to Felton, or that Felton was somehow led to believe that Zaman was
    her advocate. Accordingly, the Court concurs with the trial court and the Appellate Division that In re Opinion No.
    26 is irrelevant to this case, that Zaman did not violate the principles of that decision, and that the trial court properly
    declined to void the parties’ transactions on that ground. (pp. 25-28)
    4. The trial court properly dismissed Felton’s Consumer Fraud Act (CFA) claim; the trial court should consider the
    merits of Felton’s Fair Foreclosure Act (FFA) claim if it determines on remand that the parties’ agreements gave rise
    to an equitable mortgage; and, with the exception of her claim under 15 U.S.C.A. § 1639(h), governed by a three-
    year statute of limitations, Felton’s federal Truth in Lending Act (TILA) claims were properly dismissed as time-
    barred. On remand, the trial court should ascertain whether any of the remaining claims were raised before it, and if
    so, whether such a claim gives rise to a cognizable cause of action in the circumstances of this case. Finally,
    Felton’s claim under the Foreclosure Rescue Fraud Prevention Act (FRFPA), not raised before the trial court, was
    properly dismissed by the Appellate Division. (pp. 28-36)
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is AFFIRMED IN PART and REVERSED IN PART, and the
    matter is REMANDED to the trial court for proceedings consistent with the Court’s opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, and FERNANDEZ-VINA; and
    2
    JUDGES RODRÍGUEZ and CUFF (both temporarily assigned) join in JUSTICE PATTERSON’s opinion.
    3
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-60 September Term 2012
    072128
    TAHIR ZAMAN,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    BARBARA FELTON and MR.
    FELTON, her husband,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    Argued March 18, 2014 – Decided September 9, 2014
    On certification to the Superior Court,
    Appellate Division.
    Robert B. Silverman argued the cause for
    appellants.
    I. Dominic Simeone argued the cause for
    respondent (Simeone & Raynor, attorneys; Mr.
    Simeone and Kelly A. Barse, on the briefs).
    David G. McMillin argued the cause for
    amicus curiae Legal Services of New Jersey
    (Melville D. Miller, Jr., President
    attorney; Mr. McMillin and Mr. Miller, on
    the brief).
    Barry S. Goodman argued the cause for amicus
    curiae New Jersey Association of Realtors
    (Greenbaum, Rowe, Smith and Davis,
    attorneys; Mr. Goodman and Steven B. Gladis,
    on the brief).
    JUSTICE PATTERSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
    This appeal requires the Court to analyze an agreement for
    the sale of a residential property and a subsequent lease and
    1
    repurchase agreement, and to determine whether the transactions
    collectively gave rise to an equitable mortgage, violated
    consumer protection statutes, or contravened this Court’s
    decision in In re Opinion No. 26 of the Committee on the
    Unauthorized Practice of Law, 
    139 N.J. 323
    (1995).
    In 2007, defendant Barbara Felton faced foreclosure
    proceedings with respect to her unfinished, uninhabitable home
    and the land on which it was situated.   Felton and plaintiff
    Tahir Zaman, a licensed real estate agent, entered into a
    written contract for the sale of the property.   A week later, at
    a closing in which neither party was represented by counsel,
    Felton and Zaman entered into two separate agreements:    a lease
    agreement under which Felton became the lessee of the property,
    and an agreement that gave her the option to repurchase the
    property from Zaman at a substantially higher price than the
    price for which she sold it.   For more than a year, Felton
    remained on the property, paying no rent.   She did not exercise
    her right to repurchase.
    Zaman filed this action, claiming that he was the purchaser
    in an enforceable land sale agreement, and that he therefore was
    entitled to exclusive possession of the property and to damages.
    Felton asserted numerous counterclaims, alleging fraud, slander
    of title, violations of the Consumer Fraud Act (CFA), N.J.S.A.
    56:8-1 to -195, and violations of other federal and state
    2
    consumer protection statutes.     She claimed that the parties’
    transactions collectively comprised an equitable mortgage and
    constituted a foreclosure scam, entitling her to relief under
    several theories.     She further contended that the transactions
    were voidable by virtue of an alleged violation of this Court’s
    opinion in In re Opinion No. 26.
    A jury rendered a verdict in Zaman’s favor with respect to
    the question of whether Felton knowingly sold her property to
    him.    The trial court subsequently conducted a bench trial and
    rejected Felton’s remaining claims, including her contention
    that the transactions gave rise to an equitable mortgage and her
    allegation premised upon In re Opinion No. 26.     An Appellate
    Division panel affirmed the trial court’s judgment.
    We affirm in part and reverse in part the Appellate
    Division’s determination.    We affirm, as adequately supported by
    the evidence presented at trial, the jury’s determination that
    Felton knowingly sold her property to Zaman.    We reverse the
    portion of the Appellate Division’s opinion that affirmed the
    trial court’s dismissal of Felton’s claim that the parties’
    agreements constituted a single transaction that gave rise to an
    equitable mortgage.    We adopt the eight-factor standard for the
    determination of an equitable mortgage set forth by the United
    States Bankruptcy Court in O’Brien v. Cleveland, 
    423 B.R. 477
    ,
    491 (Bankr. D.N.J. 2010).    We remand to the trial court for
    3
    application of that standard to this case, and, in the event
    that the trial court concludes that an equitable mortgage was
    created by the parties, for the adjudication of two of Felton’s
    statutory claims based on alleged violations of consumer lending
    laws, as well as several other claims not adjudicated by the
    trial court.   We concur with the trial court and Appellate
    Division that Felton has no claim under the CFA, that this case
    does not implicate In re Opinion No. 26, and that Felton’s
    remaining claims were properly dismissed.
    I.
    The trial record reveals the following information about
    the transactions in dispute in this case.
    By 2007, Felton was an experienced buyer and seller of real
    estate, who had participated in prior land sales and financing
    transactions that involved significant sums of money.       In July
    1976, Felton purchased the property at issue in this case,
    consisting of approximately fifteen acres of land in Plumsted
    Township, and commenced construction of a residence on the
    property.   According to the testimony of a municipal
    construction and zoning official, due to structural defects and
    building code violations of which Felton was aware, no
    certificate of occupancy was issued with respect to the house,
    and the house was uninhabitable.       As of 2007, a construction
    mortgage in the amount of $105,000 obtained by Felton was in
    4
    default, and Felton confronted the imminent foreclosure of her
    unfinished home.
    In 2007, Zaman worked primarily as a medical imaging
    technologist.   He conducted a “side business” in which he would
    purchase distressed residential properties, primarily from
    sheriffs’ sales, and rehabilitate and sell the homes.   Zaman
    held a real estate license, which he used primarily to avoid
    paying real estate commissions on his purchases and sales.   In
    ten years as a licensed real estate broker, Zaman acted as a
    broker for other parties’ transactions on only two occasions.
    Felton was introduced to Zaman by a mutual acquaintance,
    Joseph Richardson.   According to Zaman, during an initial
    telephone call conducted by Zaman, Felton, and Richardson, Zaman
    told Felton that his business was to purchase properties, not to
    provide mortgages.   Zaman disclosed to Felton that he had a real
    estate license.
    On June 16, 2007, Felton, Zaman, and Richardson met at the
    Plumsted Township property to discuss its potential sale.    Zaman
    inspected the property, but was unaware that the house lacked a
    certificate of occupancy and was uninhabitable.   Felton
    requested a price of $250,000 for the property, and Zaman made a
    $200,000 counteroffer.   According to the testimony of Zaman,
    Felton said that she wanted to keep the property.   In response,
    Zaman told Felton that if she accepted his offer of $200,000, he
    5
    would agree to a buy-back option and would allow her to remain
    on the property as a tenant.
    During the June 16, 2007 meeting, Felton and Zaman executed
    a written land sale agreement, and Richardson signed the
    agreement as a witness.     The agreement, a standard form obtained
    by Zaman from the real estate office with which he was
    associated, identified Zaman as the buyer and Felton as the
    seller.   It described the location of the property and set forth
    a sale price of $200,000.    The agreement provided that each
    party had the right to arrange for an attorney to review its
    terms within three days of its execution, that either party
    could cancel the sale during the attorney-review period, and
    that the agreement would be binding at the conclusion of that
    period.   On its last page, the land sale agreement warned the
    buyer and seller about the risks of proceeding without an
    attorney, the benefits of retaining an attorney, and the
    conflicting interests of the broker and title company with
    respect to a real estate sale.    The agreement contained no
    reference to a buy-back or lease provision.
    The closing took place on June 23, 2007, accelerated from a
    later date because of Felton’s concern that her property would
    be sold at a sheriff’s sale.    Felton had not arranged for a deed
    6
    to be prepared prior to closing.       She accepted Zaman’s offer to
    have a deed prepared by a local attorney at Felton’s expense.1
    On the day of the closing, Felton and Zaman executed
    documents in two stages.2   First, at a Bordentown diner, they
    signed the lease and a seller’s residency certification, which
    were not notarized.   After a brief dispute over the terms of the
    lease and buy-back agreements, Felton and Zaman agreed that
    Felton would pay Zaman $1,000 per month in rent.       They also
    agreed that Felton would have an option to repurchase her
    property within three months for $237,000, which according to
    Zaman, would have been extended to one year had Felton requested
    an extension.
    Later, at the local branch of a bank, Felton signed the
    deed, an affidavit of title, and the buy-back agreement.3      Zaman
    gave Felton a cashier’s check in the amount of $85,960, which
    was calculated by subtracting from the $200,000 purchase price
    the amount that Zaman needed to pay off the existing mortgage,
    1
    It is unclear whether the attorney contacted by Zaman spoke
    with Felton before preparing the deed on her behalf.
    2
    The record contains no evidence that Zaman learned before
    closing, or within a reasonable time thereafter, that the
    property was uninhabitable.
    3
    There was conflicting testimony at trial about the execution of
    the documents. Felton testified that she was shown only the
    signature pages of the documents that she signed. However, the
    attending notary testified that his practice is to verify that
    each individual who signs a document in his presence understands
    the terms of that document and has not been coerced into signing
    the document.
    7
    satisfy outstanding property tax obligations, and pay other
    expenses related to the sale.   Zaman also paid Richardson
    $5,000, which was characterized at trial as a finder’s fee.     The
    parties did not execute any mortgage documents.
    At trial, Zaman maintained that he did not offer a mortgage
    to Felton, and that he has never offered a mortgage to anyone.
    Felton, in contrast, testified that she understood the parties’
    transaction to be a mortgage.   By Felton’s account, she thought
    that Zaman was loaning her $200,000.   She also construed the
    $85,960 check issued to her to be the down payment on the loan,
    and understood that she would satisfy the terms of the mortgage
    loan if she paid Zaman $237,000 within three months of closing.
    Felton admitted that she never inquired about the interest rate
    applied to the purported mortgage, and that the parties never
    discussed any such interest rate.
    Neither party exercised the right to cancel the agreement
    during the three-day attorney review period.   However, one week
    after closing, while he was visiting the bank that held the
    existing construction loan, Zaman learned that Felton had told
    the bank that her transaction with Zaman was a “fraudulent
    deal,” and that she had urged the bank to reject any payment
    made by Zaman.   The mortgagee bank initially refused to suspend
    foreclosure proceedings, but reversed its position after Zaman
    filed suit to compel it to accept his payment and to cancel the
    8
    mortgage.   Felton also attempted to rescind the sale agreement
    by sending a check in the amount of $85,983.65 to Zaman, but
    Zaman refused to cash the check.       On July 19, 2007, Zaman
    recorded the deed to the disputed property.
    For the next seventeen months, Felton continued to occupy
    the property.   She did not pay rent in accordance with the lease
    agreement, or exercise her contractual right to repurchase the
    property.
    II.
    In December 2008, Zaman filed a complaint against Felton in
    the Law Division.   In the complaint, filed pursuant to N.J.S.A.
    2A:35-1 to -2, Zaman sought possession of real property and
    damages derived from Felton’s allegedly illegal use and
    occupancy of the property.4   Felton filed a counterclaim,
    asserting claims based on fraud, slander of title, violations of
    the CFA, violations of the Fair Foreclosure Act (FFA), N.J.S.A.
    2A:50-53 to -68, and violations of the federal Truth in Lending
    Act (TILA), 15 U.S.C.A. §§ 1601 - 1667.
    As requested by Felton, and by agreement of the parties,
    the trial court elected to hold a bifurcated trial.       It assigned
    to the jury only the issue of fraud and reserved the remaining
    issues for a subsequent bench trial.       After five trial days, the
    4
    Felton’s husband, who died in 1991, was also named as a
    defendant.
    9
    jury was charged to determine the following questions:        whether
    Zaman had proven by a preponderance of the evidence that Felton
    knowingly agreed to sell the property to him, and if not,
    whether Felton had proven by clear and convincing evidence that
    Zaman obtained his deed to the property by “fraudulent actions.”
    The trial court instructed the jury that if it answered the
    first question in the affirmative, it should not reach the
    second question, and that both questions called for “yes or no”
    answers.   By a vote of six to one, the jury concluded that Zaman
    had proven by a preponderance of the evidence that Felton
    knowingly agreed to sell her property to him, thus disposing of
    the only issue presented in the first phase of the bifurcated
    trial.   Felton filed a motion for a new trial under Rule 4:49-1,
    which the trial court denied.
    The trial court then conducted the trial’s second phase, in
    which the trial judge was the factfinder.     After hearing
    additional testimony during a single trial day, the trial court
    dismissed all of Felton’s remaining claims.    First, the trial
    court rejected Felton’s contention that the parties’ agreement
    was invalid because Zaman had failed to state in the contract
    that he held a real estate license.   Second, the trial court
    rejected Felton’s argument premised upon In re Opinion No. 26.
    The court concluded that the three-day attorney review period
    10
    and right of rescission had adequately protected Felton, who
    chose not to retain counsel or rescind the contract.
    Third, the trial court rejected Felton’s contention that
    her contract with Zaman was an unconscionable product of
    “grossly disproportionate bargaining power,” given Felton’s
    experience with prior real estate transactions and her awareness
    that the transaction to which she agreed constituted the sale of
    her property.   Finally, the trial court held that no equitable
    mortgage was created by the parties’ agreements.   In that
    regard, the trial court cited the jury’s finding that Felton
    intended to sell her property, as well as evidence that Felton
    understood that a sale of her property was her only alternative
    to foreclosure.   The court held that the subsequent lease and
    buy-back provisions were separate agreements that were intended
    to protect the seller after closing and permit her to remain on
    the property, and that those agreements were not components of
    the original sale.   The trial court characterized the case as an
    example of “[s]eller’s remorse,” and ruled that despite Felton’s
    equitable mortgage claim, the parties did not agree upon a loan
    secured by a deed of title.   In light of that finding, the trial
    court did not reach Felton’s remaining arguments and dismissed
    her counterclaims.
    Felton appealed, and an Appellate Division panel affirmed.
    The panel dismissed Felton’s argument that the trial court’s
    11
    jury instruction incorrectly framed the issue of whether there
    was a knowing sale of the property.    It rejected, on hearsay
    grounds, Felton’s contention that she should have been permitted
    to testify about a previous appraisal of her property.     Citing
    the jury’s determination that the property was knowingly sold,
    the panel concluded that the trial court correctly declined to
    find an equitable mortgage or a valid claim under the CFA.
    Finally, the panel affirmed the trial court’s determination that
    In re Opinion No. 26 does not govern this case.
    We granted Felton’s petition for certification.    
    213 N.J. 537
    (2013).   We also granted the motions of Legal Services of
    New Jersey (LSNJ) and New Jersey Association of Realtors (NJAR)
    to appear as amici curiae.
    III.
    Felton contends that she entered into a transaction that
    operated as an equitable mortgage and that she was the victim of
    a fraudulent mortgage scheme.   Felton challenges the jury
    verdict that she knowingly entered into an agreement to sell her
    property, and that Zaman did not commit a fraud.    She contends
    that the jury verdict does not preclude the court from
    concluding that the parties’ agreements constituted a single
    transaction that gave rise to an equitable mortgage.     Felton
    argues that the Appellate Division panel misapplied this Court’s
    opinion in In re Opinion No. 26, and that the parties’
    12
    agreements should be held void because Zaman violated the
    principles of that decision.   Felton claims that the trial court
    and Appellate Division improperly failed to enforce the CFA, the
    FFA, the TILA, the Foreclosure Rescue Fraud Prevention Act
    (FRFPA), N.J.S.A. 46:10B-53 to -68, N.J.S.A. 45:15-17(k) and
    (q), which authorize the New Jersey Real Estate Commission to
    sanction real estate brokers for certain acts in real estate
    transactions, and N.J.S.A. 2C:21-19, New Jersey’s criminal usury
    law.
    Zaman characterizes the parties’ transactions as a
    negotiated agreement for the sale of property with subsequent
    agreements that did not create an equitable mortgage.       In
    support of that contention, Zaman cites the jury’s finding that
    Felton intended to sell her land, Felton’s inability to make the
    low monthly payments on her construction loan, the sequential
    rather than simultaneous execution of the parties’ agreements,
    Felton’s experience in real estate transactions, her failure to
    object to any contract provisions, and the parties’ equivalent
    bargaining power.    Zaman contends that if the factors set forth
    in 
    O’Brien, supra
    , 423 B.R. at 491, apply, those factors weigh
    against a finding of an equitable mortgage in this case.         Zaman
    argues that In re Opinion No. 26 does not govern the parties’
    transaction because he acted as a private investor, not a real
    estate broker, in the closing at issue, and that the contract
    13
    provided sufficient protection for both parties in its provision
    authorizing a three-day period of attorney review.     Zaman argues
    that the CFA does not govern his conduct with respect to this
    transaction because he was not a seller, but a consumer, because
    he committed no unlawful practice within the meaning of N.J.S.A.
    56:8-2, and because it was he, not Felton, who was defrauded in
    this case when he was induced to purchase an uninhabitable
    residence.     He contends that the FRFPA does not apply because no
    claim based upon this statute was made before the trial court,
    that the FFA is irrelevant because no foreclosure proceedings
    were instituted, that the TILA does not govern this case because
    there was no mortgage and any TILA claims asserted are time-
    barred, and that Felton’s remaining claims are meritless or
    time-barred.
    Amicus curiae LSNJ urges the Court to apply the factors of
    
    O’Brien, supra
    , 423 B.R. at 491, and to rule that the parties’
    transaction created an equitable mortgage that violated the CFA
    and triggered an obligation on Zaman’s part to comply with the
    FFA.   LSNJ asserts that the trial court and Appellate Division
    sanctioned contractual chicanery that undermines the CFA, the
    equitable mortgage doctrine, and the FRFPA.     LSNJ contends that
    Zaman failed to meet the standards of his profession as a real
    estate broker, in violation of In re Opinion No. 26, and that
    this gave rise to a separate violation of the CFA.
    14
    Amicus curiae NJAR urges the Court not to expand the reach
    of In re Opinion No. 26 to incorporate the transaction in
    dispute.   NJAR argues that Zaman’s real estate license was
    tangential to his role in this case given that he extracted no
    commission or fee and the real estate office with which he was
    affiliated had no role in this dispute.   NJAR contends that In
    re Opinion No. 26 should not govern transactions merely where
    one of the parties has a real estate license because in such a
    setting, the individual with a real estate license is not
    providing the other party with assistance that could be mistaken
    for legal advice.   NJAR further argues that the CFA should not
    govern the parties’ agreements because Zaman acted as a private
    individual, not as a seller to consumers or a commercial lender.
    IV.
    A.
    We begin our review of this bifurcated case by considering
    Felton’s challenge to the verdict rendered by the jury following
    the first phase of the trial.   At Felton’s request, the trial
    court submitted only a limited issue to the jury:    whether the
    parties’ agreement constituted a fraudulent transfer.5   The jury
    responded in the affirmative to a single question:   whether
    5
    This limitation was sought by Felton’s attorney, who requested
    prior to trial that the trial court “limit the request for a
    jury trial to the issues raised by the Fourth Separate Defense
    (Fraud) and the first count of the Counterclaim (Fraud).”
    15
    Zaman had proven by a preponderance of the evidence that Felton
    knowingly agreed to sell the property to him.6   Felton contends
    on appeal that the jury’s verdict was against the weight of the
    evidence.
    We review the jury’s determination in accordance with a
    deferential standard.    “A jury verdict is entitled to
    considerable deference and ‘should not be overthrown except upon
    the basis of a carefully reasoned and factually supported (and
    articulated) determination, after canvassing the record and
    weighing the evidence, that the continued viability of the
    judgment would constitute a manifest denial of justice.’”     Risko
    v. Thompson Muller Auto. Grp., Inc., 
    206 N.J. 506
    , 521 (2011)
    (quoting Baxter v. Fairmont Food Co., 
    74 N.J. 588
    , 597-98
    (1977)).    A trial court should overturn a jury verdict and grant
    a new trial “only where to do otherwise would result in a
    miscarriage of justice shocking to the conscience of the court.”
    
    Ibid. (internal quotation marks
    omitted).    A reviewing court
    will not reverse a trial court’s denial of a motion for a new
    6
    Although it appears that Felton preserved her right to
    challenge the jury verdict on appeal, the record with respect to
    her applications following the verdict is incomplete. The
    Appellate Division opinion referred to a motion for a judgment
    notwithstanding the verdict, filed by Felton pursuant to Rule
    4:40-2, but no such motion appears in the record before this
    Court. The record contains a notice of motion for a new trial
    filed pursuant to Rule 4:49-1. Because of the deficiencies in
    the record, it is unclear what arguments were made by Felton in
    support of either motion.
    16
    trial “unless it clearly appears that there was a miscarriage of
    justice under the law.”     R. 2:10-1; accord 
    Risko, supra
    , 206
    N.J. at 522.    An appellate court should not disturb the findings
    of the jury merely because it would have found otherwise upon
    review of the same evidence.     Carrino v. Novotny, 
    78 N.J. 355
    ,
    360 (1979).
    Applying that deferential standard, we reject Felton’s
    challenge to the jury verdict.    There was more than sufficient
    evidence in the trial record to support the jury’s determination
    that Zaman proved by a preponderance of the evidence that Felton
    knowingly agreed to sell her property to him.     On June 16, 2007,
    Felton and Zaman executed a written land sale agreement,
    entitled “Contract for Sale of a One-to-Four Family Residential
    Property.”     The agreement described the location of the property
    and the negotiated sale price of $200,000.     Moreover, the
    property was encumbered with a construction mortgage on which
    Felton owed approximately $105,000 to the mortgagee bank.
    Felton was not able to pay the loan as it came due and was
    facing foreclosure.     She understood the sale of the property to
    be her only means of evading foreclosure.     At the June 23, 2007
    closing, Zaman took possession of the deed to the property.
    Zaman also provided Felton with a cashier’s check for $85,960,
    representing the difference between the purchase price and the
    amount needed to pay off the mortgage, back taxes, and other
    17
    expenses associated with the sale.     In short, the jury heard
    ample evidence that Felton was fully informed about the nature
    of the agreements that she signed, and that she knowingly
    executed an agreement to sell her property.
    Accordingly, we affirm the Appellate Division panel’s
    determination insofar as it affirmed the jury’s determination
    that Zaman had proven by a preponderance of the evidence that
    Felton knowingly conveyed her property to him.
    B.
    We next review the trial court’s factual findings in the
    second phase of the bifurcated trial, in which the trial judge
    acted as the factfinder on all issues other than the single
    issue considered by the jury.   Our inquiry on appeal is limited
    to whether there is “substantial, credible evidence to support
    the court’s findings.”   In re Civil Commitment of J.M.B., 
    197 N.J. 563
    , 597, cert. denied, 
    558 U.S. 999
    , 
    130 S. Ct. 509
    , 
    175 L. Ed. 2d 361
    (2009); see also State v. Johnson, 
    42 N.J. 146
    ,
    162 (1964) (“The aim of the review at the outset is . . . to
    determine whether the findings made could reasonably have been
    reached on sufficient credible evidence present in the
    record.”).   Accordingly, deference is given “to the trial
    court’s factual findings . . . ‘when supported by adequate,
    substantial and credible evidence.’”     Toll Bros., Inc. v. Twp.
    of W. Windsor, 
    173 N.J. 502
    , 549 (2002) (quoting Rova Farms
    18
    Resort, Inc. v. Investors Ins. Co. of Am., 
    65 N.J. 474
    , 484
    (1974)).    This is especially the case when those findings “are
    substantially influenced by [the judge’s] opportunity to hear
    and see the witnesses and to have the ‘feel’ of the case, which
    a reviewing court cannot enjoy.”      
    Johnson, supra
    , 42 N.J. at
    161.
    In contrast, the trial court’s conclusions of law are
    reviewed de novo.    “A trial court’s interpretation of the law
    and the legal consequences that flow from established facts are
    not entitled to any special deference.”      Manalapan Realty, L.P.
    v. Twp. Comm. of Manalapan, 
    140 N.J. 366
    , 378 (1995).      “It is a
    well-established principle of appellate review that a reviewing
    court is neither bound by, nor required to defer to, the legal
    conclusions of a trial or intermediate appellate court.”      State
    v. Gandhi, 
    201 N.J. 161
    , 176 (2010).
    We first consider the trial court’s rejection of Felton’s
    claim that the parties entered into an equitable mortgage.
    Felton claims that although her initial agreement with Zaman was
    structured as a sale, the parties’ agreements should be
    construed as a single transaction, which was effectively a high
    interest loan secured by the deed to her property.
    The doctrine of equitable mortgages “is founded upon that
    cardinal maxim in equity which regards as done that which has
    been agreed to be, and ought to have been, done.”      Rutherford
    19
    Nat’l Bank v. H.R. Bogle & Co., 
    114 N.J. Eq. 571
    , 573-74 (N.J.
    Ch. 1933); see also Humble Oil & Ref. Co. v. Doerr, 123 N.J.
    Super. 530, 551 (Ch. Div. 1973) (stating that in recognizing
    equitable mortgage, “[i]t is clear that equity looks to
    substance rather than to form, and that a guarantor or surety
    who takes property or an interest therein as security for his
    guaranty is a mortgagee thereof in equity”).   As an Appellate
    Division panel observed,
    “[i]f a transaction resolves itself into a
    security, whatever may be its form and
    whatever name the parties may choose to give
    it, it is, in equity, a mortgage. If a deed
    or contract, lacking the characteristics of
    a common law mortgage, is used for the
    purpose of pledging real property, or some
    interest therein, as security for a debt or
    obligation, and with the intention that it
    shall have effect as a mortgage, equity will
    give effect to the intention of the parties.
    Such is an equitable mortgage.”
    [Welsh v. Griffith-Prideaux, Inc., 60 N.J.
    Super. 199, 208 (App. Div. 1960) (quoting
    J.W. Pierson Co. v. Freeman, 
    113 N.J. Eq. 268
    , 270-71 (E. & A. 1933)).]
    Courts apply principles of equity to “look beyond the plain
    terms” of an agreement between the parties, and thereby
    determine whether the agreement is in effect a mortgage.
    Johnson v. NovaStar Mortg., Inc., 
    698 F. Supp. 2d 463
    , 468
    (D.N.J. 2010).   In that inquiry, the court focuses on the
    characteristics of the transaction at its inception:
    20
    The doctrine has been firmly established
    from an early day that when the character of
    a mortgage has attached at the commencement
    of the transaction, so that the instrument,
    whatever be its form, is regarded in equity
    as a mortgage, that character of mortgage
    must and will always continue.        If the
    instrument is in its essence a mortgage, the
    parties cannot by any stipulations, however
    express and positive, render it anything but
    a mortgage, or deprive it of the essential
    attributes  belonging   to  a   mortgage  in
    equity.
    [Humble 
    Oil, supra
    , 123 N.J. Super. at 544-
    45.]
    Ordinarily, the conveyance of a property accompanied or
    followed by a leaseback transaction is precisely what it
    purports to be:   a sale in which the parties separately agree
    that the seller will become the tenant, and the buyer will
    become the landlord, in accordance with the terms of a lease.
    However, “New Jersey courts have repeatedly found that sale-
    leaseback arrangements made to avoid foreclosure are in fact
    equitable mortgages.”   
    Johnson, supra
    , 
    698 F. Supp. 2d
    at 469;
    see also James Talcott, Inc. v. Roto Am. Corp., 
    123 N.J. Super. 183
    , 202 (Ch. Div. 1973) (noting that “[t]here are numerous
    authorities for the proposition that an absolute conveyance
    intended as security for an obligation will be treated as a
    mortgage”).   It is the trial court’s task to discern whether the
    transaction has been labeled as a land sale in order to mask its
    21
    actual objective:    a mortgage loan secured by a deed to the
    property at issue.
    In 
    Johnson, supra
    , the United States District Court for the
    District of New Jersey adopted a standard articulated by the
    United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Jersey in
    
    O’Brien, supra
    , 423 B.R. at 
    491. 698 F. Supp. 2d at 469-70
    .   In
    
    O’Brien, supra
    , the Bankruptcy Court scrutinized a residential
    sale that was conducted under the threat of imminent
    foreclosure, in which the parties agreed that the seller would
    remain in his home and buy the home back from the buyer in a
    series of payments over 
    time. 423 B.R. at 483-86
    .    It
    identified eight factors to assist trial judges in determining
    whether a given transaction gives rise to an equitable mortgage:
    [(1)]   Statements    by    the   homeowner   or
    representations by the purchaser indicating
    an intention that the homeowner continue
    ownership; [(2)] A substantial disparity
    between the value received by the homeowner
    and the actual value of the property; [(3)]
    Existence of an option to repurchase; [(4)]
    The homeowner’s continued possession of the
    property; [(5)] The homeowner’s continuing
    duty to bear ownership responsibilities,
    such   as   paying   real    estate   taxes   or
    performing    property     maintenance;    [(6)]
    Disparity     in    bargaining      power    and
    sophistication, including the homeowner’s
    lack of representation by counsel; [(7)]
    Evidence   showing    an    irregular   purchase
    process,   including     the   fact   that   the
    property was not listed for sale or that the
    parties did not conduct an appraisal or
    investigate title; [(8)] Financial distress
    of the homeowner, including the imminence of
    22
    foreclosure and prior unsuccessful attempts
    to obtain loans.
    [Id. at 491.]
    Under the O’Brien framework, the court considers not only
    the form of the transaction itself but circumstances that can
    motivate a party to disguise a mortgage secured by a property as
    a sale of land and indications that both parties intend the
    seller to retain the land notwithstanding the purported sale.
    We concur with the District Court that the eight factors set
    forth in O’Brien are “useful and consistent with New Jersey
    equitable mortgage jurisprudence.”     
    Johnson, supra
    , 
    698 F. Supp. 2d
    at 470.   We adopt the O’Brien factors as a comprehensive and
    practical standard to guide trial courts as they determine
    whether a particular transaction, or series of transactions,
    gives rise to an equitable mortgage.
    We remand the matter to permit the trial court to make
    findings addressing each of the eight factors that comprise the
    O’Brien test.   Because the parties presented extensive evidence
    at trial regarding Felton’s financial situation, the parties’
    respective experiences with land sale transactions, their
    negotiations, their statements about their intent to enter into
    the transactions, the terms of each agreement, and the conduct
    of each party following closing, the trial court’s findings on
    23
    remand may be based upon the existing record, without the need
    for further testimony.
    We note that in ruling that the parties’ transactions did
    not give rise to an equitable mortgage, the trial court relied
    in part on the jury’s determination that Felton intended to sell
    her property, and the absence of any indication in the parties’
    agreements that they contemplated a mortgage loan.   Consistent
    with the limitation of its inquiry to the issue of fraud, the
    jury was not instructed on the question of whether the parties
    intended to create an equitable mortgage.   The jury’s
    determination that Felton knowingly sold her property does not
    itself resolve the question of whether the parties created an
    equitable mortgage.   Its finding that Zaman had proven by a
    preponderance of the evidence that Felton knowingly entered into
    a land sale may, however, be relevant to one or more of the
    O’Brien factors in the trial court’s inquiry on remand.   Other
    considerations cited by the trial court, such as the imminent
    foreclosure proceedings, Felton’s inability to obtain a new
    mortgage or meet her obligations under her existing loan, and
    Felton’s failure to exercise her right of repurchase, may also
    be relevant to the trial court’s application of the O’Brien
    factors on remand.
    C.
    24
    Affirming the determination of the trial court, the
    Appellate Division panel rejected Felton’s claim that Zaman
    violated the rule set forth by this Court in In re Opinion No.
    
    26, supra
    , 
    139 N.J. 323
    .    We concur with the Appellate
    Division’s analysis.
    In In re Opinion No. 26, this Court considered whether real
    estate brokers commit the unauthorized practice of law when they
    conduct residential real estate transactions in which the
    “sellers and buyers are . . . unrepresented by counsel.”        
    Id. at 326.
       The Court analyzed the risks posed to an uncounseled
    residential real estate buyer or seller when a real estate
    broker, whose commission is contingent on the successful
    completion of the transaction, conducts the closing.       
    Id. at 334-35.
       The Court noted the potential conflict between the
    interests of the broker, who may choose the attorney who drafts
    the deed, and the interests of the seller, who may be under the
    mistaken impression that he or she is receiving independent
    legal advice from counsel selected by the broker.    
    Id. at 336-
    37.    The Court noted that the buyer is similarly unprotected by
    legal advice in an uncounseled closing.    
    Id. at 337.
        It
    observed that “[t]he buyer may not know if the description of
    the property is precisely that assumed to be the subject of the
    purchase,” may be unaware of whether “the title described in the
    contract is that with which he would be satisfied,” may
    25
    misunderstand the seller’s obligations and may lack “fair
    comprehension of whether all of the possible and practical
    concerns of [the] buyer have been addressed by the contract.”
    
    Id. at 335.
    The Court held that although it has the authority to
    prohibit residential real estate closings conducted without the
    assistance of counsel, “the public interest does not require
    such a prohibition.”       
    Id. at 326.
      Instead, it determined that
    if residential buyers and sellers “are informed of the true
    interests of the broker and title officer, sometimes in conflict
    with their own interests, and of the risks of not having their
    own attorney, [they] should be allowed to proceed without
    counsel.”     
    Ibid. To that end,
    the Court prescribed conditions under which
    “those participating in such transactions shall not be deemed
    guilty of the unauthorized practice of law.”        
    Ibid. It required that
    both sellers and buyers be informed in writing by the real
    estate broker about the benefits of seeking the advice of
    counsel, the risks associated with proceeding unrepresented, and
    the “conflicting interests of brokers and title companies in
    these matters.”       
    Id. at 357-59,
    362-63.   Pending recommendations
    from the Civil Practice Committee on “practical methods for
    achieving those aims,” the Court mandated a written notice
    “attached to the proposed contract of sale as its cover page,”
    26
    supplemental to the notice required to appear on the first page
    of the contract, advising the parties that the contract will be
    binding within three business days, that an attorney for either
    party may review its terms, and that the agreement may be
    cancelled within the attorney review period.     
    Id. at 357-58,
    362-63.   As drafted on an interim basis by the Court, that
    notice provided that the real estate broker represented the
    seller and not the buyer, that the title company represented
    neither party, that it is in the broker’s financial interest
    that the house be sold and the closing completed, that the
    broker is neither permitted nor qualified to provide legal
    advice, and that there are significant risks to foregoing the
    assistance of counsel.   
    Id. at 362-63.
    The risk that the Court addressed in In re Opinion No. 26 -
    - that a real estate broker acting in his or her own interest
    will promote the completion of a real estate transaction to the
    detriment of the seller, the buyer, or both –- is not raised in
    the circumstances of this case.    The Court’s concern in In re
    Opinion No. 26 was “unlearned and unskilled” legal advice.        
    Id. at 341
    (internal quotation marks omitted).     Its remedy was
    premised on a real estate broker’s authority to “guide, control
    and handle” a transaction involving unrepresented parties, who
    may erroneously believe that they are being advised by counsel.
    
    Id. at 326.
    27
    Here, in contrast to the setting addressed by the Court in
    In re Opinion No. 26, Zaman acted not in his professional
    capacity as a broker seeking to promote a successful closing but
    on his own behalf as the property’s buyer.   Nothing in the trial
    record suggests that Zaman purported to provide legal advice to
    Felton, or that Felton was somehow led to believe that Zaman was
    her advocate.   Given the parties’ relationship and Felton’s
    experience in real estate transactions, the record reveals no
    cause for concern that Zaman’s statements to Felton could have
    been misconstrued as the advice of her lawyer.   The fact that
    Zaman holds a real estate license does not deprive him of the
    right to participate in a transaction on his own behalf, or
    convert his activities in that regard to the unauthorized
    practice of law.   See In re Baker, 
    8 N.J. 321
    , 346 (1951) (Case,
    J., dissenting).
    Accordingly, we concur with the trial court and the
    Appellate Division that In re Opinion No. 26 is irrelevant to
    this case, that Zaman did not violate the principles of that
    decision, and that the trial court properly declined to void the
    parties’ transactions on that ground.
    D.
    Finally, we review the trial court’s dismissal of Felton’s
    remaining statutory claims.
    28
    In her counterclaim, Felton asserted a CFA claim premised
    upon Zaman’s alleged fraud in connection with the sale or
    advertisement of real estate, in violation of N.J.S.A. 56:8-2.
    To prevail on a CFA claim, a plaintiff must establish three
    elements:   “1) unlawful conduct by defendant; 2) an
    ascertainable loss by plaintiff; and 3) a causal relationship
    between the unlawful conduct and the ascertainable loss.”
    Bosland v. Warnock Dodge, Inc., 
    197 N.J. 543
    , 557 (2009); see
    also Int’l Union of Operating Eng’rs Local No. 68 Welfare Fund
    v. Merck & Co., 
    192 N.J. 372
    , 389 (2007).    N.J.S.A. 56:8-2
    defines an “unlawful practice” to include
    any   unconscionable   commercial   practice,
    deception, fraud, false pretense, false
    promise, misrepresentation, or the knowing,
    concealment, suppression, or omission of any
    material fact with intent that others rely
    upon   such   concealment,   suppression   or
    omission, in connection with the sale or
    advertisement of any merchandise or real
    estate, or with the subsequent performance
    of such person as aforesaid, whether or not
    any person has in fact been misled, deceived
    or damaged thereby.
    For purposes of determining whether the first element -–
    the existence of an unlawful practice -– is established, the CFA
    “defines ‘sale’ to include ‘any sale, rental or distribution,
    offer for sale, rental or distribution or attempt directly or
    indirectly to sell, rent or distribute.’”    D’Agostino v.
    Maldonado, 
    216 N.J. 168
    , 186 (2013) (quoting N.J.S.A. 56:8-
    29
    1(e)).   “Advertisement” is defined to denote “the attempt . . .
    to induce directly or indirectly any person to enter or not
    enter into any obligation to acquire any title or interest in
    any merchandise or to increase the consumption thereof or to
    make any loan.”   N.J.S.A. 56:8-1(a).   As a component of the
    definition of “merchandise” in N.J.S.A. 56:8-1(c), “services”
    offered to the public may involve an unlawful practice for
    purposes of the CFA.   See Lemelledo v. Beneficial Mgmt. Corp. of
    Am., 
    150 N.J. 255
    , 265 (1997) (holding that sale and provision
    of consumer credit constitutes “merchandise” under N.J.S.A.
    56:8-1(c)); Quigley v. Esquire Deposition Serv., LLC, 400 N.J.
    Super. 494, 505-06 (App. Div. 2008) (recognizing shorthand
    reporting services and sale of deposition transcripts as
    “merchandise” under CFA).
    Notwithstanding these broad definitions, New Jersey
    appellate courts have adopted “a limited construction of the
    [CFA]’s applicability to real estate transactions.”    539 Absecon
    Blvd., L.L.C. v. Shan Enters. Ltd., 
    406 N.J. Super. 242
    , 274
    (App. Div. 2009).   Consistent with the CFA’s limitation to
    “fraudulent, deceptive or other similar kind of selling or
    advertising practices,” Daaleman v. Elizabethtown Gas Co., 
    77 N.J. 267
    , 271 (1978), our courts have declined to impose the CFA
    remedies upon the non-professional, casual seller of real
    estate, see Strawn v. Canuso, 
    140 N.J. 43
    , 59 (1995) (limiting
    30
    “holding to professional sellers of residential housing (persons
    engaged in the business of building or developing residential
    housing) and the brokers representing them”); Byrne v. Weichert
    Realtors, 
    290 N.J. Super. 126
    , 134 (App. Div.) (“The provision
    does not apply, however, to non-professional sellers of real
    estate, i.e. to the homeowner who sells a house in the normal
    course of events.”), certif. denied, 
    147 N.J. 259
    (1996).
    Indeed, this Court has never applied the CFA against a non-
    professional, who does not advertise real estate services to the
    public, based upon his or her purchase of residential real
    estate for personal use or as an investment.
    In 
    D’Agostino, supra
    , the Court held that a foreclosure
    rescue scheme that was advertised to the public and involved the
    payment of a fee gave rise to a cognizable claim under the 
    CFA. 216 N.J. at 186-88
    .     The circumstances of this case differ
    significantly from those of D’Agostino.     There, the plaintiffs
    were prompted to contact the defendant about a foreclosure
    rescue after seeing an advertisement of the defendant’s real
    estate services on his vehicle.    
    Id. at 176,
    187.   Moreover, the
    defendant in D’Agostino demanded and collected a fee for his
    real estate services.    
    Id. at 187-88.
      By virtue of the five
    separate agreements that the defendant prepared for the
    plaintiff’s signature, the defendant obtained the plaintiff’s
    31
    property, valued at $480,000, for $10 -– a result never
    contemplated by the plaintiff.    
    Id. at 177,
    190.
    In contrast, Zaman did not advertise real estate services
    to the public, initiate contact with Felton, or demand a fee for
    real estate services.   There is no evidence that Zaman
    represented himself to the public as a source of mortgage loans,
    or that Felton was deceived with respect to the terms or
    consequences of the parties’ agreements.    The considerations
    that prompted this Court to recognize a CFA claim in D’Agostino
    are not presented by this case.
    Accordingly, regardless of whether the trial court
    determines on remand that the parties’ transactions created an
    equitable mortgage, we hold that the record does not support a
    finding that Zaman committed an “unconscionable commercial
    practice” within the meaning of N.J.S.A. 56:8-2.     Accordingly,
    the trial court properly dismissed Felton’s CFA claim.
    Felton’s FFA claim, premised upon a contention that Zaman’s
    action for possession of the property was not accompanied by the
    “notice of intention to take action” mandated by N.J.S.A. 2A:50-
    56, is contingent upon a finding that the parties’ transactions
    gave rise to an equitable mortgage.    N.J.S.A. 2A:50-56 mandates
    that, prior to taking any “legal action to take possession of
    [a] residential property which is the subject of [a] mortgage,
    [a] residential mortgage lender [must] give the residential
    32
    mortgage debtor notice of such intention at least 30 days in
    advance of such action.”   Accordingly, if the trial court
    determines on remand that there was no equitable mortgage in
    this case, it need not further consider Felton’s FFA claim.      If
    it determines that the parties’ agreements gave rise to an
    equitable mortgage, the trial court should consider the merits
    of Felton’s FFA claim.
    With the exception of one claim, we agree with the trial
    court and Appellate Division that Felton’s TILA claims were
    properly dismissed as time-barred.   Pursuant to 15 U.S.C.A. §
    1640, a TILA action
    may be brought in any United States district
    court, or in any other court of competent
    jurisdiction, within one year from the date
    of the occurrence of the violation . . . .
    Any action under this section with respect
    to any violation of [15 U.S.C.A. § 1639,
    1639b, or 1639c] may be brought in any
    United States district court, or in any
    other   court   of  competent   jurisdiction,
    before   the   end  of  the   3-year   period
    beginning on the date of the occurrence of
    the violation.
    [15 U.S.C.A. § 1640(e) (emphasis added).]
    “The violation ‘occurs’ when the transaction is
    consummated.   Nondisclosure is not a continuing violation for
    purposes of the statute of limitations.”   In re Smith, 
    737 F.2d 1549
    , 1552 (11th Cir. 1984) (internal citation omitted).     “The
    credit transaction is consummated when ‘a contractual
    33
    relationship is created between [a creditor and consumer].’”
    Williams v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., 
    504 F. Supp. 2d 176
    ,
    186 (S.D. Tex. 2007) (alteration in original) (quoting Bourgeois
    v. Haynes Constr. Co., 
    728 F.2d 719
    , 720 (5th Cir. 1984)),
    aff’d, 269 F. App’x 523 (5th Cir. 2008).
    Here, the last of the transactions giving rise to Felton’s
    TILA allegation occurred on June 23, 2007.   Even if the claims
    set forth in Felton’s amended counterclaim relate back to prior
    pleadings in accordance with Rule 4:7-1, most of her TILA claims
    are barred by the one-year statute of limitations prescribed by
    15 U.S.C.A. § 1640(e).
    One of Felton’s TILA allegations, her claim that Zaman
    engaged “in a pattern and practice of extending credit to
    consumers under mortgages . . . based on the consumers’
    collateral without regard to the consumers’ repayment ability”
    in violation of 15 U.S.C.A. § 1639(h), is not governed by the
    one-year statute of limitations, but by a three-year statute of
    limitations.   15 U.S.C.A. § 1640(e).   Accordingly, Felton’s
    claim based on that provision was timely filed.    If the trial
    court determines on remand that no equitable mortgage was
    created in this case, Felton’s claim under 15 U.S.C.A. §
    1639(h), predicated on an alleged extension of credit in
    connection with a mortgage, fails as a matter of law.   If,
    however, the trial court finds on remand that the parties
    34
    created an equitable mortgage, it should determine the merits of
    Felton’s claim under 15 U.S.C.A. § 1639(h).
    We briefly address Felton’s remaining claims.   On appeal,
    Felton asserts four claims that were not pled in her original or
    amended counterclaim:   first, that Zaman violated New Jersey’s
    criminal usury statute, N.J.S.A. 2C:21-19(a); second, that he
    violated N.J.S.A. 45:15-17(k), for paying compensation or
    commission to a person who does not possess a real estate
    license; third, that he violated N.J.S.A. 45:15-17(q), for
    failing to disclose his status as a real estate agent, and
    fourth, that the terms of the parties’ agreement were
    unconscionable pursuant to the Appellate Division’s holding in
    Howard v. Diolosa, 
    241 N.J. Super. 222
    (App. Div.), certif.
    denied, 
    122 N.J. 414
    (1990).   The record does not indicate
    whether Felton properly raised these claims before the trial
    court.   Neither the trial court nor the Appellate Division
    addressed the merits of those claims.   Accordingly, on remand,
    the trial court should ascertain whether any of those four
    claims were raised before it, and if so, whether such a claim
    gives rise to a cognizable cause of action in the circumstances
    of this case.7
    7
    If the trial court determines that there was no equitable
    mortgage, Felton’s claim under N.J.S.A. 2C:21-19(a) should be
    dismissed, even if it was properly raised below.
    35
    Felton’s claim under the FRFPA was not raised before the
    trial court and, accordingly, was properly dismissed by the
    Appellate Division.    See State v. Robinson, 
    200 N.J. 1
    , 20
    (2009) (“‘[I]t is a well-settled principle that our appellate
    courts will decline to consider questions or issues not properly
    presented to the trial court when an opportunity for such a
    presentation is available unless the questions so raised on
    appeal go to the jurisdiction of the trial court or concern
    matters of great public interest.’” (quoting Nieder v. Royal
    Indem. Ins. Co., 
    62 N.J. 229
    , 234 (1973))).
    V.
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed in part
    and reversed in part, and the matter is remanded to the trial
    court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.    We do not
    retain jurisdiction.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, and
    FERNANDEZ-VINA; and JUDGES RODRÍGUEZ and CUFF (both temporarily
    assigned) join in JUSTICE PATTERSON’s opinion.
    36
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    NO.   A-60                                    SEPTEMBER TERM 2012
    ON CERTIFICATION TO             Appellate Division, Superior Court
    TAHIR ZAMAN,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    BARBARA FELTON and MR.
    FELTON, her husband,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    DECIDED                       September 9, 2014
    Chief Justice Rabner                        PRESIDING
    OPINION BY             Justice Patterson
    CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINIONS BY
    DISSENTING OPINION BY
    AFFIRM IN PART/
    REVERSE IN
    CHECKLIST
    PART/
    REMAND
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER                     X
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA                        X
    JUSTICE ALBIN                            X
    JUSTICE PATTERSON                        X
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA                   X
    JUDGE RODRÍGUEZ (t/a)                    X
    JUDGE CUFF (t/a)                         X
    TOTALS                                   7
    1