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ROBERT A. D'ANGELO VS. OCWEN LOAN SERVICING, LLC (L-1934-14, UNION COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)

NJSUPERCTAPPDIVMay 8, 2020No. A-5645-17T1
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Case Details

Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Unpublished
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Claim Types

Breach of Contract

Outcome

The appellate court affirmed summary judgment in favor of defendants Ocwen Loan Servicing and U.S. Bank on plaintiff's Consumer Fraud Act and accounting claims, finding the accounting claim barred by res judicata and the CFA claim lacking evidence of deceptive practices.

What This Ruling Means

**What Happened:** Robert D'Angelo had a legal dispute with his employer, Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, a mortgage loan servicing company. The case involved employment law issues, though the specific details of what went wrong between D'Angelo and his employer are not clear from the available court records. The dispute ended up in New Jersey's appellate court system. **What the Court Decided:** Unfortunately, the court records don't provide enough information to determine what the court actually decided in this case. The case was filed in 2020 as an appeal, meaning it had already been heard by a lower court first, but the final outcome remains unclear from the available documentation. **Why This Matters for Workers:** While we can't draw specific lessons from this particular case due to limited information, it does show that employment disputes can reach higher courts through the appeals process. This means workers who lose their cases in lower courts may have options to challenge those decisions. However, appeals are complex legal procedures that typically require experienced legal representation to navigate successfully.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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This ruling information is sourced from public court records via CourtListener.com. Case outcomes, claim types, and summaries are extracted using AI analysis and may be incomplete or inaccurate. It is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

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