JPMorgan must face Wells Fargo lawsuit over troubled $481 million real estate loan

04/03/2026

 (Reuters) – A federal judge on Monday rejected JPMorgan ‌Chase’s bid to dismiss Wells Fargo’s  breach of contract lawsuit to recoup losses for investors in a defaulted $481 million commercial real estate loan.

U.S. District Judge ​Dale Ho in Manhattan said Wells Fargo, acting as the​investors’ trustee, adequately alleged that JPMorgan knew of an ⁠event of default by Chetrit Group, a Manhattan real estate development​firm that took out the loan in 2019 to buy 43​multifamily properties with 8,671 apartments in 10 U.S. states.

Wells Fargo said the borrower defaulted in 2022 and

JPMorgan did not immediately ​respond to requests for comment.

In its complaint, Wells Fargo said Chetrit told JPMorgan ‌more ⁠than five months before the $522 million purchase closed that the seller overstated the properties’ historical net operating income, a key commercial real estate metric, yet JPMorgan pretended “nothing unusual had happened” when making and​marketing the loan.

JPMorgan argued ​that Wells ⁠Fargo did not show how the overstatement reduced the value of the loan or the underlying properties.

But ​the judge said a plaintiff “may plead a material​breach where ⁠the breach materially increases a loan’s risk of loss.”

Wells Fargo accused JPMorgan of turning a blind eye in pursuit of millions of dollars ⁠in​fees.

It wants the largest U.S. bank to​repurchase the loan, less amounts the trust received from sales of underlying properties, or​else pay damages.