America's Moneyline, one of the first mortgage brokerages to be
The brokerage, which alleges UWM is seeking to monopolize the wholesale mortgage lending industry, outlines in its motion to file a supplemental counterclaim that developments such as
In late March, Michigan-based U.S. District Judge Laurie J. Michelson initiated the tossing of AML's countersuit, using a previous decision by a federal judge in Florida as the premise. That decision
Despite Michelson siding with Florida's U.S. Magistrate Judge Laura Lothman Lambert, she left the door open for AML to submit more evidence.
Additionally, the Hunterbrook story said that the number of brokers sending 99% or more of their mortgage to UWM doubled since its ultimatum. That is "specific evidence of actions against interest," which Michelson said was lacking in AML's complaint, the company said.
Regarding Fairway's exit from wholesale, the brokerage argues this is "directly relevant to both the issue of competitive effects as well as whether the impact of the boycott was sufficient to justify per se illegality."
"The exit is evidence that the boycott did 'cut off access to a supply, facility or market necessary to enable [Fairway] to compete,'" the complaint reads.
UWM did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
AML could not be contacted at the time of publication. The broker's website is no longer functioning and it currently sponsors only one loan officer, per the Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System.
Meanwhile, Mortgage Moneyline, an entity created two years ago by AML's owner Shawn Nevin and Dean Lob, the company's former chief operating officer, has an active website and over a dozen AML employees registered. Mortgage Moneyline was created in May 2022, three months after UWM filed its $2.8 million suit, documents show.