Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Ohio AG Asks State Courts To Review Ally/GMAC Foreclosures

Reuters reports:
  • Fallout over GMAC Mortgage's foreclosure practices deepened on Tuesday as Ohio's top law enforcement official asked courts in that state to review all foreclosure cases involving the Ally Financial Inc unit.

  • Richard Cordray, the state's attorney general, said he made his request after GMAC last week acknowledged that some employees were submitting affidavits in foreclosure proceedings without personally verifying the documents' contents.

  • This has raised doubt over GMAC's foreclosure process, including whether some borrowers lost their homes without good reason, exacerbating the nation's housing crisis. It has also raised the specter that procedural shortfalls might be an industrywide problem, and not limited to GMAC.

For more, see Ohio asks courts to review GMAC foreclosures.

For the Ohio AG press release, see Cordray Asks Ohio Judges to Carefully Review GMAC Foreclosure Cases.

Palm Beach County Chief Judge Considers More Active Role For Jurists In Examining Foreclosure Cases

In West Palm Beach, Florida, The Palm Beach Post reports:
  • Palm Beach County Chief Judge Peter Blanc is trying to decide whether judges can take a more active role in examining foreclosure cases after a meltdown in Ally Financial's foreclosure proceedings last week.

  • Blanc said Monday that there has been an increase in requests by lenders and loan servicers to cancel foreclosure sales and vacate judgments following the disclosure that Ally was freezing portions of its foreclosure operation in 23 states, including Florida.

  • While judges granted those requests, Blanc said he was concerned about cases in which defective foreclosure affidavits aren't being brought to the court's attention, possibly because the borrower has given up or walked away from the home. Also, he's unclear on whether the court should scrutinize past cases for flaws.

***

  • Blanc said he was looking at case law regarding the duties and responsibilities of judges to see whether there is precedent for the current situation. But he said Florida's foreclosure crisis has brought many unique challenges to the courts and there is likely little historical guidance.

For more, see Judge ponders jurists' role in Ally Financial foreclosure cases.

SC Foreclosure Defense Attorney: Undated, Unnotarized Stamps "Magically Appear When A Foreclosure Plaintiff Needs To Prove Chain Of Title In A Case"

In Columbia, South Carolina, The Washington Post reports:
  • A South Carolina attorney is alleging more wrongdoing against homeowners facing foreclosure by Ally Financial's GMAC mortgage unit. In a letter to a state trial court, Robert Rikard accused Judy Faber, a woman who identified herself as a GMAC vice president, of having "fabricated and changed the title in thousands of foreclosure cases."

***

  • Faber, who is not named as a defendant in the South Carolina case, was the owner of a stamp that was used to authenticate the transfer of titles. In a deposition in Alabama, she said she was a vice president and director of a residential funding corporation in addition to being a GMAC vice president.

  • Whether these stamps were used legally is critical in foreclosure cases. To foreclose on a house, a lender needs to not only prove that the homeowner is in default but that the company owns the mortgage.

  • In case after case, "these stamps are all undated and not notarized, and they magically appear when a foreclosure plaintiff needs to prove chain of title in a case," Rikard said in a phone interview.

For the story, see Ally disputes charges that another GMAC employee 'fabricated and changed title' in foreclosure cases.

JPMorgan Chase Next In Line To Face Scrutiny Over Use Of Dubious Documents In Foreclosure Actions

In Palm Beach County, Florida, Bloomberg News reports:
  • JPMorgan Chase & Co. faces a legal challenge next month that could cast doubt on thousands of foreclosures after a mortgage executive [Beth Ann Cottrell] at the bank said she didn’t verify documents used to justify home seizures.

  • Lawyers for a Palm Beach County, Fla. homeowner asked a judge to throw out a foreclosure as a penalty for misleading the court, according to attorney Tom Ice of Ice Legal PA. They’re citing a May 17 deposition(1) in which the JPMorgan executive [Cottrell] said she signed thousands of affidavits and documents supporting the New York-based bank’s claims without personally checking loan records. The court is scheduled to hear arguments Oct. 19.

For more, see JPMorgan Based Foreclosures on Faulty Documents, Lawyers Claim.

(1) See May 17, 2010 deposition of Beth Ann Cottrell (available online courtesy of Mother Jones).

Another Notorious Multiple Corporate Hat-Wearing Vice President In The News

A recent USA Today story references another multiple corporate hat-wearing vice president that has gained some notoriety over the last couple of years for allegedly signing reams of documents related to foreclosure actions for various companies, and mostly doing so without actually reading them:
  • In one case, Erica Johnson-Seck, a vice president at OneWest, said she signed 750 foreclosure documents a week and didn't read each document before signing it, according to a 2009 deposition [page 13, lines 11-23] obtained by Ice Legal. She also said they were signed without a notary present.(1)

Source: Mistakes widespread on foreclosures, lawyers say.

See also: The Washington Post: OneWest Bank employee: 'Not more than 30 seconds' to sign each foreclosure document:

  • Johnson-Seck estimated that she spent no more than 30 seconds to sign each document. She explained that while she does not check everything, she does check some information, "which is why I said 30 seconds instead of two seconds."

  • In the past, the company had a quality control process that required signatories to check 100 percent of the debts and any figures for loans and bankruptcy, Johnson-Seck said. But the error rate was low, so now they only check about 10 percent of the documents.

(1) Go here for:

The Motion for Sanction makes reference to two earlier cases in which Ms. Johnson-Seck receives a less-than-honorable mention:

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

North Carolina, Colorado Join List Of State AGs Seeking Stoppage Of Ally/GMAC Foreclosures

Bloomberg News reports:
  • Ally Financial Inc., the lender that stopped evictions in 23 states amid concern that its foreclosure process may be illegal, was asked by Colorado’s attorney general to extend the freeze by its GMAC Mortgage unit to his state.

***

  • North Carolina sent a similar letter to Ally yesterday. “The use of unverified affidavits to obtain judicial relief could constitute a fraud upon the court,” North Carolina Assistant Attorney General Philip Lehman wrote in a Sept. 27 letter to Ally General Counsel William B. Solomon Jr.

For more, see Ally Asked to Halt Colorado Evictions as Foreclosure Legality Questioned.

Florida High Court Declines Request To Freeze Foreclousres; Hands Are Tied By Procedural Rules

The Palm Beach Post reports:
  • The Florida Supreme Court says it has no authority to freeze foreclosure proceedings as was requested by U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson in light of state investigations into three foreclosure law firms and allegations they submitted fraudulent foreclosure documents.

  • In a letter [] responding to the Orlando congressman's request, Clerk of Court Thomas D. Hall said the court has no authority under the Florida constitution or court rules to intercede in pending cases on the basis of allegations of attorney misconduct. The court also has no authority to investigate allegations of fraud or misconduct in foreclosure cases.

For more, see Florida Supreme Court powerless to freeze state foreclosures.

BofA Finally Dumps Debt Collector After Report Of Use Of Racist, Obscene Calls Hits National TV; Bank Continued Using Outfit Despite $1.5M+ Jury Award

In Dallas, Texas, ABC News reports:
  • Two days after being confronted by ABC News, Bank of America has fired a debt collection agency after several of its operators were caught using racist and obscene phone calls to collect debts from bank customers.

  • "What's up, you f---ing n---r?" said one of the collection agents in a message to 32-year old Allen Jones of Dallas, who owed $81 on his Bank of America credit card. "This is your f---ing wake up call, man," the debt collector said in a message left at Jones' home at 6:30 a.m. In a message left a few minutes later, the debt collection agent told Jones, "You little, lazy ass bitch, get your mother f---ing ass up and go pick some mother f---ing cotton fields, bitch."

  • Jones said the calls continued even after he told the debt collection company he had paid his credit card bill. [...] Jones saved the taped messages and hired lawyers to sue ACT. A jury in Texas found the [sic] both the debt collectors and the corporation responsible and awarded Jones more than $1.5 million.(1)

  • Despite the verdict, Bank of America continued to use ACT, accepting the company's explanation that these calls were made by rogue employees, until the bank CEO, Brian Moynihan, was given a copy of the taped calls and questioned about the use of the agency.

For more, see Investigation: Debt Collectors, the N-Word and Bank of America (Bank Fires Collection Agency After Operators Caught Using Racist, Obscene Phone Calls to Collect Debts).

(1) Click Here, Here, Here, Here, Here, Here, and Here to listen to phone messages left by the debt collectors (Warning: Offensive Content in the phone messages, and be prepared to first sit through a ponderous commercial before hearing the messages).

Connecticut AG Jumps Into Dubious Documents Fray; Demands Immediate Freeze On All Ally/GMAC Foreclosures In State

The Wall Street Journal reports:
  • Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal is probing GMAC Mortgage, one of the nation's largest servicers of home loans, over what he claims are "defective foreclosure documents" filed in Connecticut. Mr. Blumenthal is demanding that GMAC Mortgage, a unit of Ally Financial Inc., freeze all foreclosures in the state. Ally Financial is majority-owned by the U.S. government.

  • "The bank's apparent failure to follow basic legal procedure—a potential fraud on the court—is appalling and unacceptable," Mr. Blumenthal said. "Our investigation will enable strong legal action against GMAC/Ally, if warranted by the facts and the law. I will fight to assure the banks comply with clear legal requirements that protect homeowners from unfair foreclosures of their homes."(1)

For more, see Connecticut Attorney General Probes GMAC Mortgage (WSJ subscribers only; if no subscription, GO HERE - then click appropriate link for the story).

For the Connecticut AG press release, see Attorney General Investigating Defective GMAC/Ally Foreclosure Docs, Demands Halt To Its CT Foreclosures.

(1) According to his press release, Blumenthal has given GMAC/Ally an October 15 deadline to provide the following information:

  • Provide case names and docket numbers of all Connecticut foreclosure cases in which defective affidavits were filed;

  • Explain when and how it will inform defendants and the Connecticut Superior Court regarding the defective affidavits and documents, and whether it will withdraw the defective affidavits;

  • Identify employees or contractors who reviewed and signed Connecticut foreclosure-related documents and describe their relationship to the bank;

  • Outline steps to ensure the integrity of future affidavits and other documents submitted to the Connecticut Superior Court.

Lender's Foreclosure Attempt Of Alleged Predatory Loan To 75-Year Old Widow Hits Roadblock As C. Florida Non-Profit Law Firm Steps In, Files Suit

In Sarasota, Florida, the Sarasota Herald Tribune reports:
  • Mildred McClendon's troubles with a small second mortgage show just how quickly people caught up in predatory home loans can find themselves on the verge of losing their home. The 75-year-old Sarasota widow, her attorneys say, was granted a second mortgage that was written up illegally, and the lender then tried to foreclose, even though McClendon continued to make her monthly payments.

  • Along the way, they say she was also charged bogus late fees and penalties, and in just the past 10 months the mortgage company doubled the amount McClendon is said to owe -- from $8,000 to $16,000. Then the firm then offered a settlement agreement that would allow it to take her $55,000 home of 40 years if she missed just one payment.(1)

  • A local legal aid group has helped McClendon file a lawsuit against Nationstar Mortgage in Texas. It is the first of many lawsuits Gulfcoast Legal Services(2) expects to file to make mortgage companies and collection agencies treat troubled Southwest Florida homeowners more fairly.

  • McClendon's case has so many loan irregularities on such a small amount owed that Gulfcoast Legal attorney Elizabeth Boyle is optimistic McClendon will not owe anything after her lawsuit goes through the courts. "It's rare that this relatively early in the case we would have so much evidence of wrongdoing," Boyle said.

***

  • The lawsuit is related to others Gulfcoast Legal Services plans to file on behalf of troubled homeowners who made mortgage payments for months on modified mortgages only to have the lender file a foreclosure anyway.

For more, see Second loan turns into a foreclosure nightmare.

(1) Go here for more on The Predatory Nature of Home Loan Modifications.

(2) Gulfcoast Legal Services is a Central Florida-based non-profit corporation providing free legal aid to income eligible residents of the greater Tampa Bay area, having offices in Pinellas, Manatee, Sarasota and Hillsborough Counties.

Questions On Potentially-Defective Titles To Real Estate Recently Foreclosed Continue To Be Raised

Buried in a recent Bloomberg News report on Chase Home Finance operation supervisor (ie. "robo-signer", "affidavit slave") Beth Ann Cottrell contains this excerpt noting that the dubious documents being used by lenders and foreclosure mills to foreclose on homes could lead to defective title ownership to the same homes when they are ultimately taken back by these outfits and subsequently unloaded or otherwise dumped onto the unwitting general public:
  • If the documents are shown to be false after a home has already been resold by a bank, that casts doubt on who is the rightful owner, said O. Max Gardner III, an attorney at law firm Gardner & Gardner PLLC in Shelby, North Carolina, who has represented homeowners in fighting foreclosures and has cases pending against JPMorgan.

  • I’m sure a lot of title insurance companies are concerned about the potential liability right now,” as borrowers challenge how banks made statements, he said. “The judges could absolutely hold the bank and attorneys in contempt.”

Source: JPMorgan Based Home Foreclosures on Faulty Court Documents, Lawyers Claim.

Now That The Dam Is Bursting Open, Are The "Ambulance Chaser" Billboards Trolling For "Wrongful Foreclosure" Cases Far Behind???

A story in The New York Times on the foreclosure mess fueled by the recent Ally/GMAC, dubious-document scandal contained this gem:
  • The issue has broad consequences for the millions of buyers of foreclosed homes, some of whom might not have clear title to their bargain property. And it may offer unforeseen opportunities for those who were evicted.

  • You know those billboards that lawyers put up seeking divorcing or bankrupt clients?” asked Greg Clark, a Florida real estate lawyer. “It’s only a matter of time until they start putting up signs that say, ‘You might be entitled to cash payment for wrongful foreclosure.’”(1)

Source: GMAC’s Errors Leave Foreclosures in Question.

(1) If the following "wrongful lock-out/trash-out" cases provide any sense for what "wrongful foreclosure" cases might be worth, the billboards should begin dotting the landscape before year-end:

Monday, September 27, 2010

Paying "All-Cash" In A Recent Home Purchase Not Enough To Avoid BofA Foreclosure; Ft. Lauderdale Man Left "Hanging In The Wind ... Scared To Death!"

In Fort Lauderdale, Florida, the South Florida Sun Sentinel reports:
  • When Jason Grodensky bought his modest Fort Lauderdale home in December, he paid cash. But seven months later, he was surprised to learn that Bank of America had foreclosed on the house, even though Grodensky did not have a mortgage.(1)

  • Grodensky knew nothing about the foreclosure until July, when he learned that the title to his home had been transferred to a government-backed lender. "I feel like I'm hanging in the wind and I'm scared to death," said Grodensky. "How did some attorney put through a foreclosure illegally?"

  • Bank of America has acknowledged the error and will correct it at its own expense, said [the presumably now-beleaguered] spokeswoman Jumana Bauwens. Grodensky's story and other tales of foreclosure mistakes started popping up recently across South Florida. [...] It wasn't until last week, when Grodensky brought his problem to the attention of the Sun Sentinel, that it began to be resolved.(2)(3)

For more, see Lauderdale man's home sold out from under him in foreclosure mistake.

Go here for links to other reported Bank of America foreclosure screw-ups.

(1) Reportedly, the foreclosure mill law firm Florida Default Law Group, currently the subject of a Florida Attorney general probe for alleged foreclosure sloppiness that might border on fraud, handled the foreclosure for Bank of America.

(2) For a recent similar incident in Arizona, see BofA Bagged Again On Wrongful Foreclosure Attempt; Says It's Sorry For Action Against Couple With Paid-Off Loan After Local Media Steps In (for a copy of the resulting federal lawsuit, see Newman v. Bank of America, N.A. and go here for the attached Exhibits).

(3) For earlier posts on a couple of high profile foreclosure screw-up cases involving other banks and resulting in significant sums in court-awarded financial damages, see:

"I Don't Know Why They Do Crappy Work!" Responds B'klyn Jurist When Asked About The 'Sludge' From Banks, Foreclosure Mills That Clogs Up His Courtroom

A recent story(1) in the New York Post reports on a recent interview it had with Kings County (Brooklyn) Supreme Court Justice Arthur M. Schack on the large number of foreclosure dismissals in his courtroom for a procedure that is often routinely granted:
  • "I read papers. I ask questions. I look at things and this is what I come up with. That's why some foreclosures are denied," according to Judge Schack. He raises questions about the assignment of ownership. He raises questions about attorneys' knowledge of the facts. He raises questions about potential attorney conflicts of interest.

  • All these irregularities raise Judge Schack's ire when asked why so many foreclosure applications get tossed. "I'm not the creator of this mess," he complained. The mess, he said, is in the recording and assignment of mortgage sales. Often people with physical control of a mortgage agreement come to his courtroom, he noted, but don't have clear title to the property.

  • "It's not my fault. I'm not the bank. Ask Chase Manhattan. Ask Deutsche Bank. Ask Bank of New York. Ask Wells Fargo. I don't know why they do crappy work," said the judge.

  • Asked about Judge Schack, a JPMorgan Chase spokesman said "We're not going to comment on that."

For more, see Mortgage mayhem (B'klyn judge tosses bad foreclosure filings).

(1) A point made in the following excerpt in the story, as originally reported, merits a bit of clarification:

  • Indeed, the Web site [The] Home Equity Theft Reporter awarded the judge its Restore Integrity Award for "his appropriately strict scrutiny of foreclosure cases before him."

In fact, the Restore Integrity Award is an award given by the grassroots good government and legal reform advocate known as POPULAR (Power Over Poverty Under Laws of America Restored). See Judges Dominate Group’s Year-end “Restore Integrity Award”. This blog simply noted the well-deserved honor in an earlier post.

Ally/GMAC Begins Withdrawing Affidavits From Another "Robo-Signer"

The Washington Post reports:
  • Was Kristine Wilson another "robo-signer"? Attorneys for homeowners in Florida say Ally Financial's GMAC mortgage unit has begun to withdraw affidavits submitted in support of foreclosures that were signed by a second employee. Like Jeffrey Stephan--the document processor who admitted in sworn testimony that he signed 10,000 documents a month without reviewing them--Kristine Wilson signed as a "limited signing officer" for GMAC.

For more, see Ally's GMAC unit withdraws foreclosure affidavits signed by second employee.

Rubber-Stamping Judges Allow 11th Hour Bank Substitutions, Make Court Docs Confidential In Continuing Effort To Bulldoze Cases Thru F'closure Pipeline

In West Palm Beach, Florida, the Daily Business Review reports:
  • Garret Bender and his wife Gina started a court battle more than a year ago against SunTrust Mortgage, which wanted to foreclose on their Delray Beach house to recoup a $4 million mortgage. The Benders asked the 4th District Court of Appeal to intervene last week after they came across what many foreclosure defense attorneys call growing and serious problems in South Florida courts — plaintiff substitutions and the increasing use of confidentiality in foreclosures against a backdrop of the muddled world of securitized mortgages.

***

  • The Benders filed a petition to quash an order by Palm Beach Circuit Judge Meenu Sasser granting a motion by SunTrust to keep confidential the documents related to the transfer and sale of the Benders’ mortgage. In the petition, the couple also criticized the order that allowed SunTrust to name a new plaintiff to replace itself in the foreclosure action.(1)

  • The order granting confidentiality was decided without a hearing and failed to identify the grounds for making the court records confidential, Fort Lauderdale appellate attorney Laura Watson claims in the petition she filed on behalf of the Benders. Watson did not return a call seeking comment by deadline.

  • Sasser ordered the documents related to the purchase and servicing of the mortgage be made available to attorneys representing the Benders but otherwise remain confidential. SunTrust claimed in its motion for confidentiality that the documents contained “proprietary commercial information.”

  • Florida International University law professor Howard Wasserman said the ruling seems unusual since no hearing was held on the confidentiality motion and the justification for granting confidentiality isn’t detailed in the order. “Ideally, there would be an opportunity for the defense to respond, and you have to have good reason why the records should be confidential,” he said.

For (much) more, see 4th DCA to review sealing of documents in foreclosure case (if link is unavailable, TRY HERE - available online courtesy of Ice Legal).

(1) According to the story, even though rules require substitutions can’t be granted without a hearing, several South Florida judges have been granting the ex parte motions without a hearing, foreclosure defense attorney Carol Asbury said. Attorney Darin Lentner of the Foreclosure Fighters Law Center in Fort Lauderdale said he has been involved in at least 10 cases this year in which lenders switched the plaintiff’s name in the lawsuit, and said he hopes they will eventually be held responsible for their alleged wrongdoing, the story states. “We joke amongst ourselves that there are currently two set of rules — the rules that apply to every other case and the foreclosure case rules, which are being bent, manipulated and violated by lenders, lawyers and the judiciary.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Concerns Over Lenders' Use Of "Affidavit Slaves" In Foreclosure Actions Now Threaten To Jam Up Resales Of Bank-Owned REOs

In Palm Beach County, Florida, The Palm Beach Post reports:
  • The revelation [...] that tens of thousands of Ally Financial Inc.'s GMAC foreclosures may have flawed court documents not only has implications for some of the nation's largest mortgage companies, it could strangle the resales of bank-owned homes. Attorneys are warning that title insurance companies may reject foreclosed properties for fear of future challenges to the procedures used in repossessing those homes.

  • Already, one Boca Raton real estate attorney said she has seen title insurance refused on a foreclosed property where the case was handled by one of Florida's massive foreclosure law firms. The firm is one of four under investigation by the state attorney general for allegedly mishandling documents in a rush to move thousands of cases through the courts. The reason for the title insurance denial: defects in the foreclosure.

  • "I think that the underwriting community - all of the title companies - are going to be looking at sales after foreclosure very carefully in light of the GMAC freeze," Boca Raton attorney Marlyn Wiener said. "If the underlying affidavits signed by the bank representatives were false, then the whole foreclosure is suspect."

***

  • How title insurers will take on that kind of legal risk is an industrywide question, said Norwood Gay, chief legal officer of Attorneys' Title Fund Services LLC in Orlando. "This has got more arms and legs to it than you can count," Gay said. "I don't know that there is any definitive industry policy because, frankly, it's all too new and too inconclusive."

For more, see GMAC troubles threaten to halt foreclosure sales.

Illinois AG Demands Meeting With Ally/GMAC Bigshots Over Massive Foreclosure Screwup

From the Office of the Illinois Attorney General:
  • Attorney General Lisa Madigan [] issued a letter to the mortgage lender Ally (formerly GMAC) demanding a meeting to address concerns that the company has violated the state’s Consumer Fraud Act in its pursuit of Illinois homeowners in foreclosure. Madigan’s letter responds to reports raising serious questions about the accuracy of documents the lender files in foreclosure lawsuits.

For more, see Attorney General Madigan Demands Meeting With Mortgage Lender At Center Of Foreclosure Controversy (GMAC Suspected of Submitting False Documents in Foreclosure Cases).

Go here for the Illinois AG's letter to Ally/GMAC.

California AG To Ally/GMAC: Immediately Prove State Laws Are Being Observed Or Stop The Foreclosures Until You Can!

In Los Angeles, California, the Los Angeles Times reports:
  • California ordered Ally Financial Inc. to prove it was complying with foreclosure laws in the state or stop seizing properties, a reaction to the lender's suspension of evictions in 23 other states because of botched foreclosure paperwork it filed with courts. The Detroit company, formerly known as GMAC, didn't suspend evictions in California because almost all foreclosures here by it and other lenders don't require a court order. Still, Atty. Gen Jerry Brown on Friday told Ally to halt foreclosures in the state unless it can prove it is observing state laws.(1)

For more, see California puts Ally Financial on notice over botched foreclosures (Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown orders the lender to halt foreclosure proceedings in the state unless it can prove it has followed state laws).

For the California AG press release, see Brown Directs Nation's Fourth Largest Home Lender to Suspend Foreclosures Until It Proves It Is Complying with the Law.

(1) Go here for the California AG's letter to Ally/GMAC:

  • "The Office ofthe Attorney General writes to demand that Ally Financial, Inc. demonstrate immediately that it conducts foreclosures in compliance with California Civil Code, section 2923.5 or, if it cannot, halt all foreclosures in California until it can."

F'closure Rocket Docket Alive & Well In Palm Beach County; Local Chief Tells Financially Strapped Homeowner Hit w/ Rubber-Stamped Ruling To Appeal

In West Palm Beach, Florida, The Palm Beach Post reports:
  • Last month, Palm Beach County Senior Judge Roger Colton opened his afternoon foreclosure session by telling homeowners that he'd heard all their stories before, and he would give them a maximum of five months before letting lenders take their homes.

***

  • In the first case, Judge Colton signed a final summary judgment giving Everhome Mortgage Co. the right to foreclose on a Lake Worth couple's home despite their attorney's objections that Everhome had failed to prove that it owns the note. Foreclosure defense lawyers cite the case as an egregious example of Florida's so-called "rocket docket," the process of expediting foreclosure cases through the courts by siding with lenders.

***

  • In the case before Judge Colton, attorney Loretta Bangor questioned the validity of affidavits submitted by Everhome's attorney, a lawyer with Shapiro & Fishman, one of three firms under investigation by the Florida attorney general for "unfair and deceptive actions" in foreclosure cases. Judge Colton, one of two retired judges hired to handle foreclosures under the new state program, did not ask to see the documents. Nor did he question Shapiro & Fishman about the validity of the documents.(1)

______________________

When Judge Colton's conduct was brought to Palm Beach County Chief Judge Peter Blanc's attention, Blanc reportedly stated:

  • "If Judge Colton was wrong, the case can be appealed, and it will come back."(2)

For the story, see Legislature did not approve $9.6 million for judges to listen only to lenders.

(1) See Jacksonville Trial Judge Bags Foreclosure Mill, Chase, WAMU For Fraud On The Court In Foreclosure Action; Dismisses Suit With Prejudice for more on the Shapiro & Fishman foreclosure mill.

(2) Chief Judge Blanc's "brilliant" suggestion, of course, necessarily assumes that the financially strapped homeowner can cough up the cash to cover the cost of both:

  • a supersedeas bond (to stall the foreclosure sale), and
  • appellate counsel (even if the homeowner has the cash to pay legal fees for an appeal, there's a good chance that his/her attorney in the trial court doesn't do appellate work, thereby forcing him/her to scramble to find another lawyer to file the appeal).

A better approach to the administration of justice in these types of cases, where the average foreclosure defendant isn't flush with extra cash, may be to simply get it right the first time. We'll all be better off (just think of all the "clouded titles" to foreclosed homes that can be avoided if the trial judges try to get it right the first time).

Miami-Area Foreclosure Defense Attorneys Concerned Over Court's Expressed Goal Of Bulldozing 52,000 Foreclosure Cases Off The Docket By June

In Miami, Florida, the Daily Business Review reports a story on the Miami-Dade Circuit Court's recently announced goal of bulldozing 52,000 foreclosure cases out of the judicial pipeline by June. Naturally, the foreclosure defense bar expresses concern:
  • [T]he creation of a foreclosure master calendar heard by senior judges whose sole task is to consider summary judgments and clear dockets causes attorneys for homeowners to fear the system is biased toward lenders.

***

  • [T]alk of quotas and case closure goals is enough to worry foreclosure defense attorneys like Christopher Black. Although none of his cases has gone to summary judgment in the new court on the third floor, Black, a Miami solo practitioner, said he’s uncomfortable with how the system has been created.

  • It appears on its face that the task is simply to move these foreclosure cases along as fast as possible. And the fastest way to move it along is a summary judgment, which is inherently against the interests of the homeowners,” he said.

  • Similar worries plague Rafael Recalde, another Miami solo practitioner. By his own account, he has been on the master calendar more than a dozen times. He said he often sees judges often ask how old a case is, and the older it is the more aggressively they push it. “In many cases, there will still be discovery pending or affirmative defenses,” he said.

  • Recalde said the entire docket-clearing strategy is based on a single premise -- borrowers who lose their homes don’t have the money for an appeal. He also questions the motivation of judges. “It’s almost like regular laws and rules of procedures don’t apply to bank attorneys.”

  • Boca Raton foreclosure defense attorney W. Jeff Barnes, who runs the blog ForeclosureDefenseNationwide.com, questioned a summary judgment order issued by Senior Judge Jeffrey Rosinek on Sept. 7 -- the same day Barnes received notice of the hearing.

  • This procedure flies in the face of recent Florida case law, which provides that any final order entered without notice is void and subject to being vacated. As such, the Miami-Dade Circuit Court has probably served to further clog its dockets with a deluge of motions likely be filed by those who never received notice from the master calendar of a summary judgment motion,” Barnes wrote last week.

  • Judge Jennifer Bailey, who supervises the foreclosure program, said not all criticism is valid. She noted borrowers’ attorneys sometimes use discovery and other maneuvers for no other reason than to delay cases while mortgages go unpaid. “They can’t just file discovery as a stalling tactic and expect that to delay summary judgment. If they pursue the discovery in a diligent way, then that’ll affect the court’s consideration of summary judgment. Every individual case gets evaluated on its merit,” she said.(1)(2)

For the story, see Miami Court Aims to Clear Out 52,000 Foreclosure Cases by June (Case closure goals at Miami-Dade Circuit Court worry defense attorneys).

(1) Some time ago, in the context of properly serving defaulting homeowners with notice of a foreclosure action, Judge Bailey was quoted as saying:

Before concluding that discovery requests are nothing more than stalling tactics when allowing foreclosure sales to move forward, Judge Bailey may want to carefully consider whether her earlier observation on the consequences arising when homeowners are improperly notified about foreclosure actions is equally applicable when foreclosure actions are improperly prosecuted.

(2) It seems clear that, unless a trial judge is prepared to clearly articulate a finding that the discovery request in a particular case is a stalling tactic, or that the discovery requested is otherwise irrelevant to the pleadings, granting summary judgment while discovery is pending is improper. See, for example:

Payne v. Cudjoe Gardens Prop. Owners Ass'n, 837 So. 2d 458 (Fla. App. 3d DCA 2002) (try here for 'Lexis' version):

  • It is axiomatic that Summary Judgment may not be granted unless the moving party is able to show that no genuine issues of material fact exist. See Holl v. Talcott, 191 So. 2d 40, 43-44 (Fla. 1966); Kemper v. First Nat'l Bank of Dayton, Ohio, 277 So. 2d 804 (Fla. 3d DCA 1973).

  • Where discovery is not complete, the facts are not sufficiently developed to enable the trial court to determine whether genuine issues of material facts exist. See Singer v. Star, 510 So. 2d 637, 639 (Fla. 4th DCA 1987).

  • Thus, where discovery is still pending, the entry of Summary Judgment is premature. See Smith v. Smith, 734 So. 2d 1142, 1144 (Fla. 5th DCA 1999)("Parties to a lawsuit are entitled to discovery as provided in the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure including the taking of depositions, and it is reversible error to enter summary judgment when discovery is in progress and the deposition of a party is pending."); Henderson v. Reyes, 702 So. 2d 616, 616 (Fla. 3d DCA 1997)(reversing the entry of Summary Judgment where depositions had not been completed and a request for the production of documents was outstanding.); Collazo v. Hupert, 693 So. 2d 631, 631 (Fla. 3d DCA 1997) (holding that a trial court should not entertain a motion for summary judgment while discovery is still pending); Spradley v. Stick, 622 So. 2d 610, 613 (Fla. 1st DCA 1993); Singer v. Star, 510 So. 2d 637 (Fla. 4th DCA 1987).

Fleet Fin. & Mortg. v. Carey, 707 So. 2d 949 (Fla. App. 4th DCA 1998):

  • This court has held on many occasions that "a court should not enter summary judgment when the opposing party has not completed discovery." Lubarsky v. Sweden House Properties of Boca Raton, Inc., 673 So. 2d 975, 977 (Fla. 4th DCA 1996) (quoting Brandauer v. Publix Super Markets, Inc., 657 So. 2d 932, 933 (1995)). See also Sica v. Sam Caliendo Design, Inc., 623 So. 2d 859 (Fla. 4th DCA 1993); Moore v. Freeman, 396 So. 2d 276 (Fla. 3d DCA 1981) (trial court's granting of summary judgment was premature where the opposing party, through no fault of his own, had not completed discovery). Further, it is reversible error to grant summary judgment where depositions are still pending. See Sica.

Trio Of Congressional Dems Demand Answers From Fannie As To Why They Used Foreclosure Mills Accused Of Fabricating Court Docs

The Washington Post reports:
  • A trio of congressional Democrats is demanding to know why government-backed mortgage giant Fannie Mae has entrusted many of its foreclosure cases to Florida law firms that stand accused of fabricating or backdating numerous court documents.

  • These so-called "foreclosure mills," essentially law firms that specialize in representing lenders while churning out foreclosure suits quickly and efficiently, are under investigation by the Florida attorney general and are running into legal challenges in other parts of the country.

  • According to the letter from three House Democrats - Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank of Massachusetts and Corrine Brown and Alan Grayson of Florida - several firms facing scrutiny represent Fannie Mae both in foreclosure suits and in the company's pre-filing mediation program, which is designed to help borrowers and lenders talk through possible alternatives to foreclosure.(1)

For more, see Lawmakers question Fannie Mae on use of 'foreclosure mills.'

(1) "In other words, Fannie Mae seems to specifically delegate its foreclosure avoidance obligations out to lawyers who specialize in kicking people out of their homes," the group reportedly wrote Friday in a letter to the company's chief executive. "The legal pressure to foreclose at all costs is leading to a situation where servicers are foreclosing on properties on which they do not even own the note," they reportedly added. "This practice is blessed by a legal system overwhelmed with foreclosure cases and unable to sort out murky legal details, and a set of law firms who mass produce filings to move foreclosures as quickly as possible."

Saturday, September 25, 2010

WV High Court Disbars Attorney For $90K Ripoff Of Client Cash; Follows Suit After Lawyer Received Similar Boot From Maryland, Virginia, D.C Bars

In Charleston, West Virginia, The West Virginia Record reports:
  • The state Supreme Court has followed suit with Maryland's high court to disbar an attorney for misappropriating over $90,000 in client funds. The Court on Sept. 16 voted to annul the license of Cumberland, Md. attorney Nathan H. Wasser. The decision came eight days after the Court heard arguments why they should impose a lesser punishment than the Maryland Court of Appeals for Wasser's misconduct.

  • The Court of Appeals on Feb. 3, 2009, ordered Wasser's license annulled. The annulment came three months after his office manager, Sherry Yates, resigned, and filed a complaint with Maryland's Attorney Grievance Commission that Wasser was using client funds for personal use.(1)

***

  • Despite reciprocal annulments in the District of Columbia and Virginia, where he was admitted to the Bar in 1969, and 1980, respectively, Wasser hoped the West Virginia Supreme Court would show him some mercy. [...] However, the Court found his argument unpersuasive. In an unsigned, unanimous opinion the Court said Wasser's repeated conversion of funds over a three-year period is grounds enough to disbar him.(2)

For the story, see WVSCA revokes Md. attorney's license.

For the court's ruling, see Lawyers Disciplinary Board v. Wasser.

(1) Reportedly, in the Maryland case, Wasser acknowledged his misconduct, expressed remorse for it, and forked over a check for $183,633.99 - the balance in his escrow account - to the Commission which was later forwarded to The Client Protection Fund of the Bar of Maryland.

(2) The West Virginia State Bar's Lawyers Fund for Client Protection was created to help reimburse clients for money they may have lost because of misappropriation or embezzle­ment by their attorneys.

For similar "attorney ripoff reimbursement funds" that sometimes help cover the financial mess created by the dishonest conduct of lawyers licensed in other states and Canada, see:

Florida Court System Begins Banning Public From Observing Foreclosure Proceedings? "You Don't Argue With Someone Carrying A Gun," Says One Attorney

Buried in a recent story in The Tampa Tribune on the three-ring circus that is the foreclosure process in Florida is this excerpt regarding public access to the legal proceedings taking place when booting delinquent homeowners from their homes:
  • Another concern of defense attorneys: a closed-door policy for something that should be open to the public.

  • "You get off the elevator now in Jacksonville and the doors leading to the foreclosure hearings are locked" [foreclosure defense attorney April] Charney said. "A bailiff won't let you in until your scheduled hearing is to begin."

  • Randall Reder, a Tampa foreclosure defense attorney, said he has repeatedly seen homeowners and attorneys turned away from hearings. He said he now waits in the hallway until his case hearing because bailiffs won't let him in the hearing room to observe. "The laws are very clear that all judicial proceedings are open to the public," Reder said. "But my automatic reaction is, 'you don't argue with someone carrying a gun.'"

***

  • The courts say it's not a matter of access but of space. "The rooms are small and we have emotional issues here," [Hillsborough County court administrator Mike] Bridenback said. "We only have one bailiff, and there is a need for security."

For the story, see Area judges handling hundreds of foreclosures a day.

Los Angeles Feds: Section 1031 Exchange Accomodator Illegally Dipped Into Investor Escrow Accounts, Pocketing $23M

In Los Angeles, California, the Los Angeles Times reports:
  • This week's indictment of Los Angeles real estate mogul Ezri Namvar on criminal fraud charges was welcome news to local investors who say the Iranian immigrant preyed on their shared ethnic ties and bilked them out of hundreds of millions of dollars.

  • Namvar has agreed to surrender to federal authorities Monday to face charges that he stole $23 million from clients of his company, Namco Financial Exchange Corp., which safeguarded proceeds from commercial real estate transactions, said Thom Mrozek, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office in Los Angeles. A federal grand jury indicted Namvar on Tuesday.

  • The indictment alleged that Namvar misappropriated the money in 2008, using it to pay investors and creditors from a real estate investment company he ran, instead of holding it in escrow as promised. The charges carry a combined maximum sentence of 100 years in prison. Also charged in the indictment was Hamid Tabatabai, who served as controller and vice president of Namco Financial.

***

  • Allegations in the indictment related only to Namco Financial, which helped investors avoid taxes by holding their commercial real estate profits in escrow until they could be reinvested.(1) Namvar promised to safeguard the money but instead dipped into it throughout 2008 to help run his struggling businesses, the indictment alleged.(2)

For more, see Investors cheer indictment of L.A. real estate mogul (A federal grand jury accuses Ezri Namvar of misappropriating $23 million held in escrow by one of his companies. 'I am happy because he deserves it,' said one man who lost $700,000).

For the U.S. Attorney press release, see Prominent L.A. Businessman Indicted On Fraud Charges That Allege He Bilked Five Victims Out $23 Million (Ezri Namvar Allegedly Stole Money Given to His Company for Safekeeping).

Go here for other posts on Section 1031 exchange escrow ripoffs.

(1) This outfit acted as a Qualified Intermediary (Exchange Accommodator) in Internal Revenue Code Section 1031 Exchanges, a legal maneuver that enables real estate investors reinvest proceeds from sales of profitable real estate investments into new real estate deals while indefinitely deferring the payment of income taxes on the profits.

(2) If it wasn't bad enough that the investors lost all this loot, the U.S. tax laws state that if the escrowed cash isn't reinvested in new real estate within certain time parameters, the investors will have to immediately pay their income tax liability. Thus, they now face a big tax bill on the un-reinvested profits from the sales, and no longer have those profits from which to pay the IRS bill (See Alleged 1031 Exchange Scam Leaves Real Estate Investors With Big Tax Bill & No Money To Pay It With).

However, the victims may be entitled to offset their taxable investment profits by taking an itemized deduction on their income tax returns for some, if not all, of their losses. See IRS Revenue Ruling 2009-9 for tax information that may provide some guidance:

  • (1) A loss from criminal fraud or embezzlement in a transaction entered into for profit is a theft loss, not a capital loss, under §165.

    (2) A theft loss in a transaction entered into for profit is deductible under §165(c)(2), not §165(c)(3), as an itemized deduction that is not subject to the personal loss limits in §165(h), or the limits on itemized deductions in §§67 and 68.

    (3)
    A theft loss in a transaction entered into for profit is deductible in the year the loss is discovered, provided that the loss is not covered by a claim for reimbursement or recovery with respect to which there is a reasonable prospect of recovery.
    (Editor's Note: If you are one of the investors in the reported story, how the hell do you determine if "there is a reasonable prospect of recovery" when the criminal prosecution has only just started and you don't know how much, if any, of the loot the Feds will recover - and how much will ultimately end up in your pocket???)

Now-Disbarred Title Lawyer Cops Plea To Ripping Off $2.7M In Real Estate Closing Proceeds Due To Existing Mortgage Holders, Clients From Trust Account

From the Office of the U.S. Attorney (Fort Lauderdale, Florida):
  • [A]ttorney James B. Hayes, 57, of Boca Raton, Florida, pled guilty [] to a criminal information charging him in two counts of making false statements on a HUD-1 Settlement Form, a matter within the jurisdiction of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1001.

***

  • According to the criminal information and statements made in court during [this week's] plea hearing, Hayes practiced law during 2007 through December 2009 at James B. Hayes P.A. in Boca Raton, Florida, handling real estate closings for clients and mortgage lenders.

  • According to statements made in court, during that time, Hayes misappropriated more than $2,706,346.91 that were to be used to payoff prior loans and clients funds from his law firms trust account. Instead of using the money as directed on several closings, Hayes prepared and sent false HUD-1 Real Estate Settlement Forms on closings, falsely reflecting the old loans had been paid off.

  • As part of the plea agreement announced in court today, Hayes agreed to make mandatory restitution of the $2,706,346.91 to the title insurance companies and to the client victims.(1)

  • Hayes was permanently disbarred by the Florida Supreme Court on August 24, 2010 and in his plea agreement agreed to never reapply or seek admission as an attorney in any state.

For the U.S. Attorney press release, see Title Lawyer Pleads Guilty To Stealing More Than $2,706,000 In Trust Funds.

(1) The Florida Bar's Clients' Security Fund, which was created to help reimburse clients for money they may have lost because of misappropriation or embezzle­ment by their attorneys, may also end up holding the bag in this ripoff as well.

For similar "attorney ripoff reimbursement funds" that sometimes help cover the financial mess created by the dishonest conduct of lawyers licensed in other states and Canada, see:

Maps available courtesy of The National Client Protection Organization, Inc.

South Florida Feds: Recently Disbarred Lawyer Looted $2.4M In Client Cash From Trust Account

In Fort Lauderdale, Florida, the South Florida Sun Sentinel reports:
  • A disbarred Fort Lauderdale attorney faces a mail fraud charge with federal authorities suspecting him of embezzling more than $2.4 million from clients.

  • Joseph Sindaco, 62, lost his law license last month after admitting during Florida Bar proceedings he misappropriated about $445,000 from two clients. He had practiced law in South Florida for three decades, specializing in estate and trust cases and real estate closings, court records show.

  • Federal court documents indicate that from April 2006 to December, he used clients' trust money for his own personal expenses. Prosecutors filed the mail fraud charge against him last week, accusing him of failing to distribute $318,000 to the family of a retired tool and die maker who died in 2008.(1)

For more, see Disbarred Fort Lauderdale attorney suspected of embezzling $2.4 million of clients' money (Joseph Sindaco has been charged with mail fraud).

(1) At the risk of solidifying my status as persona non grata among some of my "friends and colleagues" in the legal profession, I repeat the following (now-nauseating for some) reminder:

The victims in this story may be able to turn to the The Florida Bar's Clients' Security Fund (which was created to help reimburse clients for money they may have lost because of misappropriation or embezzle­ment by their attorneys) to recover some, if not all, of the swindled money.

For similar "attorney ripoff reimbursement funds" that sometimes help cover the financial mess created by the dishonest conduct of lawyers licensed in other states and Canada, see:

Maps available courtesy of The National Client Protection Organization, Inc.

Metropolitan Money Store Foreclosure Rescue Civil Litgation Continues Kicking Around

The class action plaintiffs/homeowners who were victims of the Metropolitan Money Store sale leaseback, foreclosure rescue scam were hit with something of an unfavorable ruling in a U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Maryland recently in a matter involving the Chapter 7 bankruptcy proceeding of Sussex Title, LLC, a title and closing agent involved in many of the deals resulting in the draining of any equity the financially strapped plaintiffs had in their homes.

The court overruled an objection by the class action homeowners to an application by Special Counsel for the Chapter 7 Trustee seeking an allowance of $178,868.48 for the period January 4, 2008, through March 31, 2010. The homeowners unsuccessfully claimed that the amount of the attorney fees being charged by the attorney for the Chapter 7 trustee was excessive. As a result, less money is available for the homeowners to recover by way of damages resulting from the screwing over that they took.

For the ruling, see In Re Sussex Title, LLC, Case No. 07-22878PM (Bankr. D. Md., September 22, 2010).

CT Probate Judge Dodges Major Trouble, Gets Hand-Slap In Suspected Land Grab Case Involving Now-Deceased, Dementia-Stricken 92-Year Old's $1.5M+ Farm

In Southington, Connecticut, The New Britain Herald reports:
  • Local Probate Judge Bryan Meccariello has been publicly censured by the Council of Probate Judicial Conduct for his conduct in the Josephine Smoron estate issue. The council found that Meccariello “engaged in judicial misconduct” and “failed to perform the duties of his office and his conduct was prejudicial to the impartial and effective administration of justice.”

***

  • The council opened a hearing in June after receiving a complaint from Samuel Manzo. Josephine Smoron, his longtime employer and friend, had willed the 100-acre farm to him but, instead. the land went to three churches, two in New Britain and one in Southington. [...] The report said the council found “clear and convincing evidence” that Smoron had willed her estate to Manzo, whom she had known since 1985.

***

  • This is not the first time Meccariello has faced the Council on Probate Judicial Conduct. In 2007, the council found that Meccariello “probably violated judicial ethics rules” but that his actions did not rise to the level of judicial misconduct.

For more, see Conduct council censures probate judge.

For an earlier post, see CT Probate Judge With Dubious History Faces Judicial Misconduct Charges In Suspected Land Grab Involving Now-Deceased 92 Year-Old's $1.5M+ Farm.

NYC To Use Pro Bono Engineers, Architects In Program To Estimate Rehab Costs, Ward Away Would-Be Flippers, Of Over-Leveraged Apartment Buildings

In New York City, The Wall Street Journal reports:
  • The City Council plans to announce [...] a new program to detail distressed living-conditions in the city's so-called over-leveraged buildings,(1) aiming to raise awareness about the money required to make the buildings more habitable.

  • The program will rely on engineers and architects offering to examine and report on these buildings on a pro-bono basis, according to Council Speaker Christine Quinn. The model for the program is a study done by Baer Architecture Group on a portfolio of 10 Bronx buildings owned by private-equity firm Milbank Real Estate. The buildings went into foreclosure last year when Milbank defaulted on $35 million in debt.(2)

  • The Baer report is also expected to be made public on Thursday. It will say that the 10 buildings, which have been short of cash since the default and seen their living conditions worsen, require between $20 million and $25 million in repairs, a higher estimate than previously thought, an official in Ms. Quinn's office said.

***

  • Ms. Quinn says she hopes the estimates of repair costs will be an eye-opener for other investment firms that may be considering buying the debt of over-leveraged buildings but don't realize the actual costs involved with maintaining the properties. "Some investors hope to flip these buildings and make money," she said. "If it becomes clear how much money is needed, lenders make think twice" before lending money to firms pursuing this strategy.

For the story, see Quinn Warns About Buildings' Excess Debt (City Council Program to Focus on Actual Property Costs; 'Flipping' Strategy Could Backfire on Private-Equity Investors).

(1) Reportedly, the Department of Housing Preservation and Development estimates that 110,000 New York City apartment units are in buildings where the debt exceeds what the property's income can support.

(2) In a related story on this portfolio of 10 Bronx buildings, see Crains' New York Business: New owner cleared for troubled Bronx buildings (Unknown buyer expected to take control next week; residents and officials concerned that badly deteriorated properties are being saddled with too much debt):

  • Concern is high among elected officials, tenants and housing activists who worry that the properties—which are saddled with 3,261 code violations—will likely deteriorate further because the new owner is paying too much for the portfolio and won't be able to make needed repairs. [...] Leaks, mold, rats, roaches, collapsed ceilings, missing floorboards and fire damage have made the 548 units virtually uninhabitable, tenants say.

Deed Service Ripoff Operation Uses Mail Solicitations Simulating Government Collection Notices To Clip Homeowners Out Of Unecessary Fees

In Colorado Springs, Colorado, KKTV-TV Channel 11 reports:
  • A company is targeting homeowners, asking for $87 to send you a copy of your property deed. The company uses a mailing that looks a lot like a bill from a government agency, but don't be fooled.

For the story, see No Need to Pay More for Deed (go here for the video news report).

Well-Known Monopoly Icon Gets Boot From Expensive Park Place/Boardwalk Hotel Digs; Forced To Shack Up In Modest Baltic Avenue Abode

In AnyCity, USA, Spooftimes.com reports:
  • Echoing the difficult economic times being faced by so many people, a well-known Monopoly player recently had two valuable properties foreclosed-- including five hotels on Park Place and Boardwalk. The bank gave him just two weeks to vacate the expensive properties -- forcing the owner to move into a much thriftier small green house on Baltic Avenue.

For more, see Park Place and Boardwalk Properties Facing Foreclosure.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Ally/GMAC Told Freddie Of Dubious Documents Weeks Before Slamming Brakes On Its Own Foreclosures

Bloomberg News reports:
  • Ally Financial Inc.’s GMAC Mortgage unit told Freddie Mac that foreclosures by the auto and home lender might have been faulty weeks before halting its own evictions, according to two people briefed on the matter.

  • Ally informed Freddie Mac on Aug. 25 that affidavits for court proceedings might not be valid, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter. By Sept. 1, Freddie Mac had notified its network of lawyers and stopped related foreclosures and evictions, said the person, who declined to be identified because the matter hasn’t been formally disclosed. GMAC told agents to halt evictions in 23 states on Sept. 17.

For more, see Ally Said to Tell Freddie Mac of Faulty Foreclosures Weeks Ago.

Texas, Iowa AGs Open Probe Into Ally/GMAC Foreclosure Practices

Bloomberg News reports:
  • Attorneys general in Texas and Iowa, following Florida, have started their own investigations into foreclosure practices at Ally Financial Inc.’s GMAC mortgage unit.

  • The integrity of the foreclosure process is of utmost importance and we are very concerned by the issues that have been raised regarding Ally Financial’s treatment of affidavits,” Iowa Assistant Attorney General Patrick Madigan said yesterday. Iowa leads an 11-state working group of attorneys general and bank examiners exploring ways to prevent foreclosures.

For more, see Texas, Iowa Attorneys General Probe Foreclosure Actions by Ally's GMAC.

(1) Texas is a non-judicial foreclosure state, and is not one of the 23 states originally included by Ally/GMAC in their list of states affected by their foreclosure "suspension/moratorium."

Dubious Docs Begin Surfacing In Ally/GMAC's 27 Non-Foreclosure Moratorium States, Leaving Homeowners Across Country Scrambling To Challenge F'closures

The Washington Post reports:
  • Flawed foreclosure documents like those that led mortgage lender Ally Financial [the outfit formerly known as GMAC] to halt evictions in 23 states this week are showing up in parts of the country previously thought to be unaffected, including the Washington area, according to attorneys and consumer advocates.

  • Ally Financial has not called off evictions in the other 27 states or the District of Columbia, none of which require a court order to initiate a foreclosure. And yet in those places, distressed borrowers, on the brink of losing their homes, are finding flawed and forged documents in their files and scrambling to challenge foreclosure proceedings.

***

  • In Maryland, Virginia, the District and 25 other states in which lenders do not need a court order, homeowners challenging foreclosure proceedings face an uphill battle. In those places, a bank needs only to file papers with a local court official after giving a borrower sufficient notice. It's up to the homeowner to sue the lender to stop the process.

***

  • Generally speaking, delinquent borrowers have a better chance of keeping their homes in judicial foreclosure states because of the involvement of judges who appear to have wide discretion over how to handle shoddy or forged foreclosure papers. The system in the other states creates "enormous barriers for homeowners who want to assert legal claims and raise a defense," a report from the National Consumer Law Center concluded.(1)

For more, see Ally's mortgage documentation problems could extend beyond 23 states.

(1) See Foreclosing A Dream: State Laws Deprive Homeowners of Basic Protections (page 4).

Florida Appeals Court Says No Way To Rubber-Stamping Trial Judge "Nabbed" Improperly Striking Homeowner's Pleadings In Foreclosure Action

A Florida appeals court recently reversed another rubber-stamped summary judgment in a foreclosure action. This time, the state's 3rd District Court of Appeal reversed a ruling by Miami-Dade County Circuit Court Judge Mark King Leban who, on his own motion ("sua sponte"), improperly struck all of the pleadings filed by a homeowner/defendant, and then granted summary judgment for the foreclosing lender.(1)

Bringing this appeal on behalf of the homeowner were attorneys John H. Ruiz and Hector A. Peña (go here for website in Spanish), Miami, Florida.

For the ruling, see Sanchez v. LaSalle Bank National Association, No. 3D09-2095 (Fla. App. 3rd DCA, September 22, 2010).

(1) In reaching its conclusion, the court simply stated the following ("Fla. R. Civ. P." is a reference to the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure; bold text is my emphasis, not in the original text):
  • Generally, the striking of pleadings is not favored. See, e.g., Menke v. Southland Specialties Corp., 637 So. 2d 285 (Fla. 2d DCA 1994); Costa Bell Dev. Corp. v. Costa Dev. Corp., 445 So. 2d 1090 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984).

  • Florida Rules of Civil Procedure authorize a trial court sua sponte to strike a pleading which is "redundant, immaterial, impertinent or scandalous," and, upon a party's motion, a pleading which is sham. Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.140(f), 1.150.

  • A trial court, however, should not strike a pleading sua sponte on the ground that it is legally insufficient, or because the party subsequently may not be able to prove his or her allegations. Bay Colony Office Bldg. Joint Venture v. Wachovia Mortgage Co., 342 So. 2d 1005 (Fla. 4th DCA 1977).

  • Here, the trial court, on its own motion, struck Sanchez' affirmative defenses without finding them redundant, immaterial, impertinent, scandalous or a sham. Apparently, the trial court deemed the defenses to be lacking in specificity and support. Neither of these grounds warrants the sua sponte dismissal of Sanchez' affirmative defenses. Accordingly, we reverse the final summary judgment, and remand the cause for further proceedings.

Volunteer Lawyers' Efforts Help Shine Light On Shoddy Mortage Servicing Practices In Foreclosure Actions

In Portland, Maine, The Portland Press Herald reports:
  • Two Maine lawyers who help homeowners fight foreclosures may have contributed to a decision this week by one of the nation's largest mortgage-servicing companies to stop foreclosing on homes in 23 states, including Maine.

  • Thomas Cox(1) of South Portland and Geoffrey Lewis of Fryeburg said Wednesday that the shoddy legal practices that led to the temporary halt appear to be common in an industry that is swamped by troubled loans. [...] Cox and Lewis volunteer with a legal defense group called Maine Attorneys Saving Homes. About 6,000 foreclosures a year have been filed recently in Maine, and the advocacy group estimates that only one in 10 homeowners is represented by a lawyer.

For more, see Maine lawyers help uncover mishandled foreclosures (Now they're trying to get a summary judgment in a GMAC case nullified to keep a Denmark woman in her home).

(1) For more on Thomas Cox, see Retired Maine Attorney Joins Fight Against Foreclosures; Volunteers Services With Local Legal Aid Program.

Other Multiple Corporate Hat Wearing Vice Presidents Begin To Share The Spotlight

The Washington Post reports:
  • The nation's overburdened foreclosure system is riddled with faked documents, forged signatures and lenders who take shortcuts reviewing borrower's files, according to court documents and interviews with attorneys, housing advocates and company officials. The problems, which are so widespread that some judges approving the foreclosures ignore them, are coming to light after Ally Financial, the country's fourth-biggest mortgage lender, halted home evictions in 23 states this week.

***

  • Beth Ann Cottrell said in a sworn deposition in May(1) that she signed off on thousands of foreclosures a month for JPMorgan Chase even though she did not verify the accuracy of the information. In one instance in Palm Beach, Fla., Cottrell signed off on two documents that stated conflicting amounts of mortgage, the court testimony states. Cottrell claimed that both were signed by the borrower at closing. But the homeowner recognized that her signature had been forged, her attorney Christopher Immel said. The attorney added that such forgeries are common among the cases he's seen. JPMorgan Chase declined to comment.

  • In Georgia, an employee of a document processing company, Linda Green, for years claimed to be executives of Bank of America, Wells Fargo, U.S. Bank and dozens of other lenders while signing off on tens of thousands of foreclosure affidavits.

  • In many cases, her signature appeared to be forged by different employees.(2) Green worked for a foreclosure document company owned by Lender Processing Services. The company is being investigated by a U.S. attorney in Florida for allegedly using improper documentation to speed foreclosures. Lenders have already started to withdraw foreclosures that had Green's name on them.

For the story, see Under piles of paperwork, a foreclosure system in chaos.

(1) See May 17, 2010 deposition of Beth Ann Cottrell (available online courtesy of Mother Jones).

(2) Go here for examples of Linda Green's changing signature.

(3) Green has also been known to have signed at least one assignment of mortgage with an effective date of 9/9/9999 (see 4closurefraud.org - document titled - "DOCX Assignment of Mortgage 3 Effective 09-09-9999").