Many cases present lender force-placed insurance (LFPI) claims based on alleged recent LFPI practices. In these cases, homeowners are successful in alleging at least some claims that their lenders and the lenders' servicers and force-placed insurance carriers add kickbacks and other unauthorized, unnecessary charges to the homeowners' monthly mortgage payments. See, e.g., Alpert v. Nationstar Mort. LLC, Case No. C15-1164 RAJ, 2019 WL 1200541, at *2 (W.D. Wash. March 14, 2019) (alleged LFPI policies from July 2012 through July 2016); Hibbs v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., No. 17-615-SDD-RLB, 2018 WL 3245050, at *2 (M.D. La. July 3, 2018) (lender force-placed flood insurance in 2016).
Some of these successful claims include alleged bad faith and unfair dealing. E.g., Gray v. CIT Bank, N.A., No. 18-1520 (RMB/AMD), 2018 WL 6804273, at *1-*2 (D.N.J. Dec. 27, 2018) (alleged LFPI practices from 2011 through 2017); cf. Wieck v. CIT Grp., Inc., 308 F. Supp. 3d 1093, 1120 n. 14 (D. Haw. 2018) (dismissing bad faith claims because there is no independent tort of "bad faith" in a "non-insurance" context under Hawaii law, but granting leave to amend breach-of-contract claim to include same allegations of bad faith and unfair dealing; case concerned allegedly unnecessary hurricane insurance placed in 2013 and backdated to 2011-2013).
The author is currently at work on an article about "'Quiet in the Courts!' Concealed Evidence and Secret Settlements: The Lender Force-Placed Insurance Model."
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