Background
Leonard Machulas, proceeding pro se, sued Shell Point Mortgage Company alleging violations of 15 U.S.C. Sections 1639g and 1639f. He claimed Shell Point increased a mortgage balance after he tried to pay it off, double charged fees, failed to credit extra payments, and refused to provide mortgage statements or account information. His filings said he had agreed to take over payments on a trailer house mortgage owned by someone else in exchange for title, and attached correspondence and checks. The district court construed the complaint as raising federal claims under Sections 1639g and 1639f, found federal-question jurisdiction, and dismissed with prejudice for failure to state a claim. It later denied reconsideration.
The court’s reasoning
The Eleventh Circuit gave two reasons for affirmance. First, it said Machulas’s appellate briefing did not challenge the district court’s actual basis for dismissal, so the issue was abandoned. Second, the panel agreed on the merits that the complaint failed to state a claim under either statute. Section 1639g requires an accurate payoff balance after a written request from or on behalf of the borrower, and Section 1639f concerns crediting payments to the consumer’s loan account. Based on the complaint and attached documents, the court concluded Machulas was never a party to the loan Shell Point serviced.
What it means going forward
The decision leaves the dismissal with prejudice in place and underscores that a plaintiff invoking these home-loan provisions must plausibly allege rights tied to the borrower or consumer on the loan account. It also shows that an appellant must directly challenge the district court’s stated grounds for dismissal.