Court Opinion

ID: 9953655
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-22 16:09:22.998246+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:01:39.509409
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA

                                    No. 102A20-3

                                 Filed 22 March 2024
 CHESTER TAYLOR III, RONDA and BRIAN WARLICK, LORI MENDEZ, LORI
 MARTINEZ, CRYSTAL PRICE, JEANETTE and ANDREW ALESHIRE,
 MARQUITA PERRY, WHITNEY WHITESIDE, KIMBERLY STEPHAN, KEITH
 PEACOCK, ZELMON MCBRIDE
              v.
 BANK OF AMERICA, N.A.

      Appeal pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2) (2021) from the decision of a divided

panel of the Court of Appeals, 287 N.C. App. 358, 882 S.E.2d 605 (2022), reversing an

order entered on 3 October 2019 by Judge Lisa C. Bell in Superior Court,

Mecklenburg County, and remanding to the trial court for further proceedings. Heard

in the Supreme Court on 2 November 2023.

      Robinson Elliott & Smith, by William C. Robinson and Dorothy M. Gooding;
      Aylstock, Witkin, Kreis, & Overholtz, PLLC, by Samantha Katen, Chelsie
      Warner, pro hac vice, and Caitlyn Miller, pro hac vice; and Robert F. Orr, for
      plaintiffs-appellees.

      McGuireWoods LLP, by Bradley R. Kutrow and Dylan M. Bensinger; and
      Goodwin Procter, LLP, by Keith Levenberg, pro hac vice, and James W.
      McGarry, pro hac vice, for defendant-appellant.

      NEWBY, Chief Justice.

      North Carolina law has long recognized that a plaintiff must initiate an action

within the statutorily prescribed period to avoid dismissal of his claim. These statutes

of limitations strike a balance between one party’s right to assert a claim and another

party’s right to be free from a stale claim. Here plaintiffs’ claims arise from
                             TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                    Opinion of the Court

defendant’s alleged scheme to fraudulently deny mortgage modifications to plaintiffs

and then foreclose on their homes. The complaint reveals that each plaintiff knew, or

reasonably should have known, of his or her injuries and the alleged fraud at least

four to seven years before filing the complaint. As a result, plaintiffs’ claims are

time-barred by the applicable statutes of limitations. Accordingly, we reverse the

decision of the Court of Appeals.

      Plaintiffs are citizens of North Carolina, California, Wisconsin, Arizona,

Michigan, or Nevada.1 Their claims arise from defendant’s alleged misadministration

of the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP). HAMP was a federal

mortgage relief program “implemented in March of 2009 to assist the millions of

American homeowners facing foreclosure” after the 2008 recession. Under the

program, homeowners, including plaintiffs, were given the opportunity to modify the

terms of their mortgages after submitting an application and completing a brief trial

payment period.

      Each plaintiff elected to participate in HAMP through his or her mortgage

servicer, defendant. Plaintiffs alleged they were each a victim of defendant’s

“fraudulent scheme” to “intentionally prevent thousands of eligible applicants from

receiving permanent HAMP modifications.” Specifically, plaintiffs alleged that

      1 Because we must assume that plaintiffs’ allegations are true when considering this

matter, see Turner v. Hammocks Beach Corp., 363 N.C. 555, 559, 681 S.E.2d 770, 774 (2009),
the following recitation of facts is taken from plaintiffs’ amended complaint.

                                            -2-
                            TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                  Opinion of the Court

defendant collected plaintiffs’ HAMP trial period payments while simultaneously

delaying their permanent mortgage modifications in order to “set [p]laintiff[s] up for

foreclosure.”

      For example, one of the plaintiffs, Chester Taylor III, contacted defendant

seeking a HAMP modification in February 2010. According to the complaint,

defendant’s loan representative advised Taylor “to refrain from making his regular

mortgage payments” because he “had to be two to three months behind on his

mortgage loan” to qualify for HAMP. Taylor later learned that this statement was

false, but at the time, he relied on this statement and defaulted on his mortgage so

that he could participate in HAMP.

      About one month later, Taylor submitted a “properly completed” HAMP

application to defendant. Taylor received a letter approving him for a HAMP trial

period and requesting that he make three “trial payments” to receive a permanent

modification to his mortgage terms. Taylor then began making trial payments to

defendant hoping that he would receive a permanent modification and “save his

home” from foreclosure.

      Over the course of the next two years, however, defendant collected Taylor’s

trial period payments while also purposefully delaying Taylor’s permanent loan

modification. Defendant delayed the modification process by repeatedly telling Taylor

there were problems with his application and requesting that he resubmit certain

paperwork. For example, defendant would tell Taylor that his documents were “not

                                          -3-
                             TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                  Opinion of the Court

current,” “incorrect,” or “missing” even though defendant had already received all

necessary documents. Taylor alleges that defendant’s representatives made these

false statements “for the specific purpose of frustrating the HAMP application process

to ensure a modification was ultimately denied, resulting in foreclosure.” Continuing

to rely on these statements, Taylor resubmitted his application and documentation

more than thirty times between 2010 and 2012. Ultimately, defendant never

approved Taylor for a permanent HAMP modification and foreclosed on Taylor’s home

in September 2012. By the time defendant foreclosed on Taylor’s home, Taylor had

made fourteen trial period payments to defendant. Defendant retained the money but

never applied these payments to Taylor’s account.

      All plaintiffs allege that they experienced a similar pattern of conduct after

applying with defendant for a HAMP modification. The complaint reveals that each

plaintiff lost his or her home to foreclosure between April 2011 and January 2014.

Plaintiffs further allege that defendant “fraudulently concealed the facts giving rise

to” their claims and that, as a result, they “could not have reasonably discovered the

facts that formed the basis of their fraud claims against [defendant] until they

retained their attorneys.”

      As alleged in their complaint, plaintiffs are not the only purported victims of

defendant’s fraudulent misadministration of HAMP. Homeowners filed numerous

lawsuits “across the country” in state and federal courts alleging claims based on the

exact same conduct. See, e.g., In re Bank of Am. Home Affordable Modification

                                          -4-
                            TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                     Opinion of the Court

Program (HAMP) Cont. Litig., M.D.L. No. 10-2193-RWZ, 2013 WL 4759649 (D. Mass.

Sept. 4, 2013). Defendant’s scheme was so widespread that in March 2012, the federal

government and forty-nine state attorneys general sued defendant for conduct

“involv[ing] identical issues in fact and law” as those alleged by plaintiffs. Under a

consent judgment entered in that lawsuit in April 2012, defendant agreed to pay over

$2 billion to homeowners to “remediate harms” resulting from its HAMP misconduct.

These lawsuits were ongoing during the time that plaintiffs were seeking their own

HAMP modifications from defendant, and plaintiffs acknowledged the existence of

these lawsuits in their complaint.

      Plaintiffs filed their complaint in this case on 1 May 2018 and their amended

complaint on 13 March 2019. The complaint alleged claims based on common law

fraud, fraudulent concealment, intentional misrepresentation, promissory estoppel,

conversion, unjust enrichment, unfair and deceptive trade practices, and, in the

alternative, negligence. On 11 April 2019, defendant filed a motion to dismiss the

amended complaint. The trial court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss on the

grounds that all plaintiffs’ claims were barred by the applicable three-year and

                                             -5-
                               TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                     Opinion of the Court

four-year statutes of limitations.2 See N.C.G.S. §§ 1-52(9), 75-16.2 (2021). Plaintiffs

appealed to the Court of Appeals.

       In a 29 December 2022 opinion, the Court of Appeals majority held that the

trial court erred in dismissing plaintiffs’ claims as barred by the statute of limitations.

Taylor v. Bank of Am., N.A., 287 N.C. App. 358, 361, 882 S.E.2d 605, 608 (2022). The

Court of Appeals majority reasoned that because the complaint “suggest[s] [p]laintiffs

remained unaware of [d]efendant’s alleged fraudulent scheme for many years,”

plaintiffs had pled sufficient facts to avoid dismissal of their claims on statute of

limitations grounds. Id. at 360, 882 S.E.2d at 607. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals

reversed the trial court’s ruling and remanded the matter for further proceedings. Id.

at 361, 882 S.E.2d at 608.

       The dissent would have affirmed the trial court and held that all plaintiffs’

claims were barred by the statute of limitations. Id. at 361, 882 S.E.2d at 608 (Dillon,

J., dissenting). The dissent concluded that, at the very latest, the statute of

limitations began to run when defendant foreclosed on each of plaintiffs’ homes. Id.

The dissent reasoned that “the statute of limitations ceased to be tolled” at that time

because “each plaintiff became aware of his/her injury” at that moment. Id.

Accordingly, because the foreclosures occurred “more than three years before the

complaint was filed,” the dissent concluded that all plaintiffs’ claims were

       2 The trial court concluded that plaintiffs’ claims were also barred by res judicata

and collateral estoppel.

                                             -6-
                              TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                    Opinion of the Court

time-barred. Id. Defendant appealed to this Court based on the dissent. See N.C.G.S.

§ 7A-30(2) (2021).3

       Here we must determine whether the trial court erred in dismissing plaintiffs’

claims as time-barred by the applicable statutes of limitations. We review dismissals

under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Rules of Civil Procedure de novo. Kirby v. N.C. Dep’t of

Transp., 368 N.C. 847, 852, 786 S.E.2d 919, 923 (2016). In doing so, we “treat the

plaintiff[s’] factual allegations as true” and view them “in the light most favorable to

plaintiffs.” Turner, 363 N.C. at 559, 681 S.E.2d at 774. Dismissal pursuant to Rule

12(b)(6) is “proper when the complaint ‘fail[s] to state a claim upon which relief can

be granted.’ ” Christenbury Eye Ctr., P.A. v. Medflow, Inc., 370 N.C. 1, 5, 802 S.E.2d

888, 891 (2017) (quoting Arnesen v. Rivers Edge Golf Club & Plantation, Inc., 368

N.C. 440, 448, 781 S.E.2d 1, 7 (2015) (alteration in original)). “When the complaint

on its face . . . discloses facts that necessarily defeat the claim,” the complaint must

be dismissed. Arnesen, 368 N.C. at 448, 781 S.E.2d at 8 (citing Wood v. Guilford

County, 355 N.C. 161, 166, 558 S.E.2d 490, 494 (2002)). Specifically, dismissal is

appropriate when a complaint alleges “uncontroverted facts” demonstrating that the

cause of action is barred by the statute of limitations. Latham v. Latham, 184 N.C.

55, 61, 113 S.E. 623, 626 (1922).

       3 See N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2) (2021), repealed by Current Operations Appropriations Act

of 2023, S.L. 2023-134, § 16.21(d), https://www.ncleg.gov/EnactedLegislation/SessionLaws/
PDF /2023-2024/SL2023-134.pdf. The repeal of N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2) only applies to cases filed
with the Court of Appeals on or after 3 October 2023. See Current Operations Appropriations
Act § 16.21(e).

                                            -7-
                              TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                    Opinion of the Court

       This Court has “long recognized that a party must initiate an action within a

certain statutorily prescribed period after discovering its injury to avoid dismissal of

a claim.” Christenbury, 370 N.C. at 5, 802 S.E.2d at 891. Statutes of limitations are

intended to “afford security against stale demands, not to deprive anyone of his just

rights by lapse of time.” Id. at 5−6, 802 S.E.2d at 891 (quoting Shearin v. Lloyd, 246

N.C. 363, 371, 98 S.E.2d 508, 514 (1957), superseded by statute, N.C.G.S. § 1-15(b)

(1971), as enacted by An Act to Provide that a Cause of Action Accrues When Injury

Is Or Should Have Been Known, ch. 1157, § 1, 1971 N.C. Sess. Laws 1706, 1706, on

other grounds as recognized in Black v. Littlejohn, 312 N.C. 626, 630−31, 325 S.E.2d

469, 473 (1985)). This protection is strictly enforced because “[w]ith the passage of

time, memories fade or fail altogether, witnesses die or move away, [and] evidence is

lost or destroyed.” Estrada v. Burnham, 316 N.C. 318, 327, 341 S.E.2d 538, 544

(1986), superseded by statute, N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rule 11(a) (Cum. Supp. 1988), as

enacted by An Act . . . to Make Changes in Rule[ ] . . . 11(a) of the Rules of Civil

Procedure, ch. 1027, § 55, 1985 N.C. Sess. Laws (Reg. Sess. 1986) 617, 639, on other

grounds as stated in Turner v. Duke Univ., 325 N.C. 152, 163−64, 381 S.E.2d 706,

712−13 (1989).

       A three-year statute of limitations applies to all of plaintiffs’ claims, N.C.G.S.

§ 1-52(1), (4), (5), (9), (16) (2021), except for their unfair and deceptive trade practices

                                            -8-
                               TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                      Opinion of the Court

claim, which is subject to a four-year statute of limitations, id. § 75-16.2.4 Generally,

a statute of limitations runs from the moment a plaintiff is injured. Shearin, 246 N.C.

at 367, 98 S.E.2d at 511 (“In general a cause or right of action accrues, so as to start

the running of the statute of limitations, as soon as the right to institute and maintain

a suit arises.”). For claims sounding in fraud, however, “the cause of action shall not

be deemed to have accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts

constituting the fraud or mistake.” N.C.G.S. § 1-52(9). This Court has repeatedly held

that the statute of limitations for fraud claims is tolled until “discovery of the facts”

constituting the fraud “or from the time when they should have been discovered in

the exercise of proper diligence or reasonable . . . prudence.” Latham, 184 N.C. at 64,

113 S.E. at 627; see also Feibus & Co. (N.C.) v. Godley Constr. Co., 301 N.C. 294,

304−05, 271 S.E.2d 385, 392 (1980).

       This discovery rule tolls the statute of limitations for fraud claims because

fraud involves intentional deception and, therefore, may not always be readily

discoverable at the moment a plaintiff’s injury is complete. See Forbis v. Neal, 361

       4 Because plaintiffs are from six different states, we must first decide which states’

statutes of limitations apply to plaintiffs’ claims—the statutes of limitations where plaintiffs’
homes were located (the situs of the claims) or North Carolina’s statutes of limitations (the
forum of the suit). Generally, matters affecting substantive rights of the parties are
determined by the law of the situs of the claim, while matters relating to procedure are
governed by the laws of the forum state. Howle v. Twin States Express, Inc., 237 N.C. 667,
671−72, 75 S.E.2d 732, 736 (1953). This Court has generally held that “statutes of limitation
are clearly procedural” because they “affect[ ] only the remedy” available to a party “and not
the right to recover.” Boudreau v. Baughman, 322 N.C. 331, 340, 368 S.E.2d 849, 857 (1988).
Therefore, North Carolina’s statutes of limitations apply to plaintiffs’ claims.

                                              -9-
                             TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                   Opinion of the Court

N.C. 519, 526−27, 649 S.E.2d 382, 387 (2007). Nevertheless, a plaintiff is not

permitted “to close his eyes to facts observable by ordinary attention” and thereby to

toll the statute of limitations indefinitely. Latham, 184 N.C. at 64, 113 S.E. at 627

(quoting In re Will of Johnson, 182 N.C. 522, 525, 109 S.E. 373, 375 (1921)). “[A]s soon

as the injury becomes apparent to the [plaintiff] or should reasonably become

apparent, the cause of action is complete and the limitation period begins to run.”

Pembee Mfg. Corp. v. Cape Fear Constr. Co., 313 N.C. 488, 493, 329 S.E.2d 350, 354

(1985).

      The discovery rule is an objective standard, not a subjective one. It tolls the

statute of limitations only until a reasonable person should have discovered the fraud

under the circumstances and in the exercise of reasonable prudence. The particular

moment that a specific plaintiff alleges he actually discovered the fraud is irrelevant.

See Latham, 184 N.C. at 66, 113 S.E. at 627 (citing In re Will of Johnson, 182 N.C. at

525−27, 109 S.E. at 375).

      Here we must determine when the statutes of limitations began to run for

plaintiffs’ claims. As for plaintiffs’ non-fraud claims, the allegations of the complaint

reveal that each plaintiff’s injuries were complete—at the very latest—when they lost

their homes. It is clear that by that point in time plaintiffs knew they would not

receive a permanent HAMP modification, that defendant would not apply their trial

period payments to their mortgage accounts, and that plaintiffs could not save their

                                          -10-
                             TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                   Opinion of the Court

homes from foreclosure. Thus, the statutes of limitations that apply to plaintiffs’

non-fraud claims began to run on the date that each plaintiff lost his or her home.

       As for plaintiffs’ fraud claims, the complaint makes clear that the statute of

limitations also began to run—at the very latest—by the date they lost their homes.

At that point in time, each plaintiff knew, or reasonably should have known, of the

“facts constituting [defendant’s] fraud,” N.C.G.S. § 1-52(9), that is, defendant’s

wrongful delay and denial of plaintiffs’ HAMP applications and the resulting

foreclosures on plaintiffs’ homes. By the time plaintiffs lost their homes, they were

clearly aware of all facts regarding their prior interactions with defendant during the

HAMP application process. Thus, on the dates that plaintiffs lost their homes,

plaintiffs knew all the facts from which their fraud claims arise, and therefore, the

statute of limitations for those fraud claims began to run.

      Accordingly, all plaintiffs’ claims accrued and the statutes of limitations began

to run at the latest by the date that each plaintiff lost his or her home. Each plaintiff

lost his or her home sometime between April 2011 and January 2014. Thus, the latest

point in time any plaintiff could have filed a complaint was January 2017, or in the

case of an unfair and deceptive trade practices claim, January 2018. Plaintiffs did not

file their original complaint until May 2018. Therefore, their claims are time-barred.

      Plaintiffs argue that the discovery rule tolls the statute of limitations for their

fraud claims beyond the dates of their foreclosures because they could not have

discovered defendant’s fraud until they consulted their current counsel. Plaintiffs’

                                          -11-
                            TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                  Opinion of the Court

own allegations foreclose this argument, however, because their alleged experiences

during the HAMP application process should have put a reasonable person on notice

that something was wrong. The complaint reveals that each plaintiff “contacted

[d]efendant repeatedly” during the application process “to ensure proper compliance

with HAMP.” Defendant, however, repeatedly asked plaintiffs to resubmit the same

application materials numerous times without ever advancing the application

process. Some plaintiffs complied with these resubmission requests fifteen, nineteen,

or even thirty times over the course of several years.

      Simultaneously, defendant told each plaintiff he or she could receive a

permanent mortgage modification after making three trial payments. Defendant,

however, collected as many as fourteen trial payments from plaintiffs without ever

modifying their mortgages. All the while, defendant continued to delay approval of

plaintiffs’ applications and eventually, foreclosed on their homes. Even if plaintiffs

did not understand the full extent of defendant’s misconduct at the time of their

foreclosures, their own alleged frustrations with the HAMP application process were

sufficient to put them on notice that defendant had not acted in good faith and that

they needed to investigate further.

      Additionally, the complaint makes clear that had plaintiffs investigated

further, they could have easily discovered the ongoing, nationwide litigation involving

defendant’s similar mistreatment of homeowners throughout the country. They also

would have discovered the settlement to which defendant agreed in response to a

                                         -12-
                             TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                   Opinion of the Court

2012 lawsuit brought by the federal government and forty-nine state attorneys

general for the exact same conduct underlying plaintiffs’ claims. Plaintiffs’ complaint

alleges no facts suggesting that defendant fraudulently concealed any of this public

information from plaintiffs. Even when viewed in the light most favorable to

plaintiffs, these facts indicate that plaintiffs either knew of defendant’s fraud or

“should have [ ] discovered [it] in the exercise of ordinary diligence” by the time they

lost their homes. Latham, 184 N.C. at 64, 113 S.E. at 627 (quoting In re Will of

Johnson, 182 N.C. at 526, 109 S.E. at 375). Thus, the statute of limitations for

plaintiffs’ fraud claims began to run on the date that each plaintiff lost his or her

home and was not tolled beyond that point in time.

      While civil causes of action exist to provide remedies to aggrieved parties,

statutes of limitations operate inflexibly and without reference to the merits of a

cause of action. Even in the case of fraud, a plaintiff cannot avoid the statute of

limitations by “sit[ting] on [his] rights,” Pembee Mfg. Corp., 313 N.C. at 493, 329

S.E.2d at 354, or “clos[ing] his eyes to facts observable by ordinary attention,”

Latham, 184 N.C. at 64, 113 S.E. at 627 (quoting In re Will of Johnson, 182 N.C. at

525, 109 S.E. at 375). Plaintiffs’ complaint reveals that they had notice of their

injuries and defendant’s alleged fraud at least four to seven years before filing their

complaint. Whatever injuries plaintiffs suffered, they lost the right to pursue a

remedy for those injuries by failing to exercise ordinary diligence within the statutory

limitations period. Because plaintiffs failed to timely file their action before the

                                          -13-
                            TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                  Opinion of the Court

statutes of limitations expired, their claims are time-barred, and the trial court did

not err in dismissing their complaint. Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the

Court of Appeals.

        REVERSED.

        Justice BERGER did not participate in the consideration or decision of this

case.

                                         -14-
      Justice RIGGS dissenting.

      I do not agree with the majority’s application of the discovery rule to the

plaintiffs’ fraud claims because the majority’s analysis does not fully align with our

discovery rule jurisprudence. The majority anchors its conclusion that the discovery

rule does not toll the statute of limitations for plaintiffs’ fraud claims beyond the date

of foreclosure to two facts or perceptions: (1) that plaintiffs encountered numerous

difficulties during the HAMP application process; and (2) that plaintiffs “could have

easily discovered” Bank of America’s widespread mistreatment of homeowners

through the nationwide litigation and a consent judgment entered in that litigation.

Relying on these facts and perceptions, the majority concludes that the statute of

limitations “began to run—at the very latest—by the time [plaintiffs] lost their

homes.” This conclusion disregards portions of the complaint and gives the news

coverage of problems with the HAMP program more legal significance than the

allegations and record support. After considering the complaint and the allegations

therein, especially the implications of the consent judgment in earlier Bank of

America HAMP program litigation, I would hold that the statute of limitations should

be equitably tolled for the fraud claims of those plaintiffs who lost their homes after

Bank of America executed the consent judgment. I respectfully dissent.

                                    I.   Analysis

      Broadly speaking, our discovery rule jurisprudence demonstrates that

                                          -15-
                             TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                    Riggs, J., dissenting

foreclosure itself is insufficient to cause the fraud claims to accrue. That is because

the foreclosure process itself does not represent an act constituting fraud nor do the

facts surrounding a foreclosure give rise to an inference of fraud. Indeed, the facts

that the majority wants us to believe would put a reasonable person on notice to look

for fraud—the HAMP application process and news coverage of litigation related to

Bank of America’s administration of the HAMP program—are not nearly as

informative to a reasonable person as the majority would suggest. I dissent because,

while I recognize that our jurisprudence requires us to apply an “objective” reasonable

person standard to the discovery of fraud, I do not believe we are required to filter

every fact through a lens least sympathetic to regular citizens trying to navigate

complex bureaucracies.

      Under N.C.G.S. § 1-52(9), a cause of action in fraud “shall not be deemed to

have accrued until the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts constituting the

fraud or mistake.”    N.C.G.S. § 1-52(9) (2023).            This Court has interpreted this

discovery rule “to set accrual at the time of discovery regardless of the length of time

between the fraudulent act or mistake and plaintiff's discovery of it.” Feibus & Co.

N.C., v. Godley Constr. Co., 301 N.C. 294, 304 (1980). Typically, however, a duty of

inquiry begins “when an event occurs to ‘excite [the aggrieved party’s] suspicion or

put [that party] on such inquiry as should have led, in the exercise of due diligence,

to a discovery of the fraud.’ ” Forbis v. Neal, 361 N.C. 519, 525 (2007) (first alteration

in original) (quoting Vail v. Vail, 233 N.C. 109, 117 (1951)). Significantly, and what

                                            -16-
                             TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                   Riggs, J., dissenting

the majority does not address is that this Court has held “[e]quity will deny the right

to assert the defense of the statute of limitations when delay has been induced by

acts, representations, or conduct, the repudiation of which would amount to a breach

of good faith.” Duke Univ. v. Stainback, 320 N.C. 337, 341 (1987) (citing Nowell v.

Great Atl. & Pac. Tea Co., 250 N.C. 575 (1959)).

      Applying this principle, we have held that “discovery rules are capable of being

construed broadly to comport with the policy of fairness to plaintiffs who are unaware

that they have been injured in a legal sense.” Black v. Littlejohn, 312 N.C. 626, 645

(1985). To determine when these fraud claims would accrue in this complex and

allegedly dishonest mortgage assistance program scenario, it is instructive to

consider this Court’s application of the discovery rule in a different context. In Black

v. Littlejohn this Court considered the discovery rule in the context of a medical

malpractice matter, in which actions accrue when the plaintiff knew or should have

known of a latent injury.     Id. at 628.     In that case the plaintiff underwent a

hysterectomy after being told by her doctor that nothing else would resolve her

endometriosis. Id. at 627. After the statute of limitations had run, using the date of

the surgery as the date from which the action accrued, plaintiff learned of an FDA-

approved medication that may have resolved her condition without requiring a

hysterectomy. Id. The Court clarified that an injury only triggers the statute of

limitations when the plaintiff “discovers, or in the exercise of reasonable care, should

have discovered, that she was injured as a result of defendant’s wrongdoing.” Id. at

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                            TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                  Riggs, J., dissenting

642 (emphasis added). The Court concluded that the removal of the reproductive

organs was not the injury from which the action accrued; instead, the action accrued

only once the plaintiff learned that the defendant was negligent by failing to advise

her of the alleged alternative treatment. Id. at 637, 646–47.

      Similarly, here, the facts constituting the fraud are not the foreclosure or loss

of the home, but instead the fraudulent business practices Bank of America allegedly

employed in each plaintiff’s HAMP application process. The majority’s assertion that

the frustrating HAMP application process itself should have put plaintiffs on notice

of fraud conflates what many Americans struggle with daily—navigating financial

bureaucracies—with evidence of fraud. Here, in concluding that having to contact

Bank of America repeatedly, resubmitting the same application materials numerous

times, and making trial payments should have put the plaintiffs on notice of the fraud

dramatically expands the investigatory burdens placed on harmed citizens in seeking

justice in a court of law, and imposes those burdens earlier. I agree that plaintiffs

are not permitted “to close [their] eyes to facts observable by ordinary attention,”

thereby tolling the statute of limitations indefinitely. Latham v. Latham, 184 N.C.

55, 64 (1922) (quoting In re Will of Johnson, 182 N.C. 522, 525 (1921)). But the

majority’s “discovery” inference from plaintiffs’ allegations that a complex,

bureaucratic loan modification process was difficult to navigate just undercuts the

equity inherent in the discovery rule, particularly when there is a power imbalance

between the harmed citizen and the sophisticated business perpetrating fraud.

                                          -18-
                            TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                  Riggs, J., dissenting

Beyond that, submitting application information, contacting Bank of America, and

making trial payments are also part of the normal HAMP servicing guidelines. The

line between a HAMP application process that aligns with the servicing guidelines

and a fraudulent process is not so bright a line as the majority believes.

      This Court has noted that “[t]he presence of fraud, when resorted to by an

adroit and crafty person, is at times exceedingly difficult to detect. Indeed, the more

skillful and cunning the accused, the less plainly defined are the badges which

usually denote it.” Standard Oil Co. v. Hunt, 187 N.C. 157, 159 (1924). In identifying

characteristics of the HAMP application process that—according to the majority—

should have put plaintiffs on notice of fraud, the majority overlooks the numerous

tactics that plaintiffs allege, and we must assume are true, Bank of America

employed to hide, deny, and normalize these deceptive processes. For example, while

plaintiffs contacted Bank of America repeatedly during the application process to

ensure their compliance with servicing guidelines, the plaintiffs did not know until

2017 that Bank of America was trying to “prevent as many homeowners as possible

from obtaining permanent HAMP loan modification while leading the public and the

government to believe that it was making efforts to comply with HAMP.”

Additionally, while each plaintiff was aware that he or she had resubmitted the

application material numerous times, the plaintiffs did not know until 2017 that

Bank of America purposefully delayed HAMP applications by telling customers that

documents were incomplete or missing when, in actuality, the documents were

                                          -19-
                            TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                  Riggs, J., dissenting

routinely shredded without review. Finally, the plaintiffs did not have access until

2017 to the declaration from a Bank of America home retention specialist

documenting its practice of not providing permanent modifications and of sending

foreclosure notices to borrowers who were current on their temporary modification

payments.

      Because of the nature of these fraud claims, the facts constituting the fraud

reside primarily within the files of Bank of America, its computer systems, and the

memories of its employees. As such, “a jury must decide when fraud should have

been discovered in the exercise of reasonable diligence under the circumstances.”

Forbis, 361 N.C. at 524. The notions of fundamental fairness underpinning the

discovery rule contradict an argument that the statute of limitations can bar

plaintiffs’ claims before plaintiffs are aware of defendant’s tortious conduct—

especially when the defendant’s deceptive denials delayed or interfered with the

plaintiffs’ discovery of the conduct. Misenheimer v. Burris, 360 N.C. 620, 626 (2006).

In the context of a complex federal mortgage modification program, when the

plaintiffs are not experienced or trained financial experts and are simply trying to

navigate what are undoubtedly challenging processes, the majority’s cramped

application of the discovery rule rewards Bank of America’s deceptive behaviors.

      Next, in its focus on what plaintiffs might have “easily discovered” based on

widespread litigation related to Bank of America’s activities during the mortgage

crisis, the majority misses the forest for the trees. It seems to me to be a dangerous

                                          -20-
                            TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                  Riggs, J., dissenting

path to tread—looking to news coverage or public understanding of complicated

financial operations or litigation surrounding that—to make assumptions about what

an average, “reasonable” person would derive from the existence of widespread

litigation. I would not adopt this approach at all, but to the extent we credit the

“easy” discovery of Bank of America’s alleged misdeeds, there was also available in

the public domain the “easy” discovery of Bank of America’s denials and repudiation

of any malfeasance. In early 2012, Bank of America publicly affirmed in a consent

judgment—without admitting prior fraudulent behavior—that it would properly

administer the HAMP program per the servicing guidelines moving forward from

2012. This assurance coincided with an agreement to pay more than two billion

dollars in penalties to reimburse Bank of America customers “whose homes were

finally sold or taken in foreclosure between and including January 1, 2008, and

December 31, 2011.”      Plaintiffs who experienced difficulties with the HAMP

application process after entry of the 2012 consent judgment might expect, rightfully,

that any shortcomings in the administration of the process had been remediated

based on Bank of America’s own binding representations in a settlement with the

federal government.

      The majority’s rule—focused on what plaintiffs “should have known” based on

news reports or the existence of litigation about Bank of America’s problems

administering HAMP—invites the question that follows logically: how are we to treat

Bank of America’s public denials of fraud and assurances that no such fraud would

                                          -21-
                             TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                   Riggs, J., dissenting

occur going forward? We addressed the impact of denials of wrongdoing on this

equitable calculus in Misenheimer v. Burris, in which the plaintiff suspected tortious

conduct and asked the defendant—more than three years before the claim was filed—

if he was engaging in criminal conversation.          360 N.C. at 621.   The defendant

responded with a denial leading us to expressly hold that failure to apply the

discovery rule in the face of the defendant’s deceptive denial had “the unacceptable

consequence of rewarding” the defendant’s deception. Id. at 626.

      In short, the majority’s approach here perpetuates the problem we sought to

curtail in Misenheimer. Although the statute of limitations is generally only tolled

until “an event occurs to excite the aggrieved party’s suspicion or put [that person]

on such inquiry as should have led, in the exercise of due diligence, to a discovery of

the fraud,” Forbis, 361 N.C. at 525, (cleaned up) Bank of America’s signature on the

consent judgment is conduct concealing any continuing fraud. Although I would be

hesitant to follow the majority down the road of “what would a reasonable person

know or have reason to suspect” based on news coverage or just the existence of

litigation, to the extent this Court’s jurisprudence takes that path, we must then

grapple with why a reasonable person could not rely upon a consent judgment signed

by Bank of America, an associate Attorney General of the United States, and

representatives of forty-nine states for the proposition that fraudulent activity, if it

existed, had ceased.

      Beyond Bank of America’s public and legally binding denials, many people

                                           -22-
                             TAYLOR V. BANK OF AM., N.A.

                                   Riggs, J., dissenting

experience frustration when attempting to modify a mortgage even under the best of

circumstances, and especially when they face imminent default. But that frustration

does not necessarily put them on notice of fraud. The discovery of ongoing fraudulent

business practices designed to keep homeowners from a HAMP modification should

trigger the accrual of the fraud action. Given the conflicting evidence in the complaint

about when these homeowners should reasonably have been on notice of the

fraudulent schemes—which Bank of America represented were ameliorated—is a

question for a finder of fact at trial. See Forbis, 361 N.C. at 523–24; Feibus, 301 N.C.

at 305.

                                 II.   Conclusion

      In sum, I would hold that Bank of America’s public affirmations to properly

administer the HAMP modification program after entry of the consent judgment

equitably toll the statute of limitations for homeowners who lost their homes after

Bank of America signed the consent judgment. Therefore, I would affirm the holding

of the Court of Appeals reversing the trial court’s dismissal of the complaint asserting

fraud claims of plaintiffs who lost their homes after Bank of America signed the

consent judgment. For these reasons, I respectfully dissent.

      Justice EARLS joins in this dissenting opinion.

                                           -23-