Friday, June 17, 2011

Victimized Couple Gets Little Help From Title Insurer After Discovering Deed To Home May Have Been Forged; Suspect Currently Faces Criminal Trial

In Murrieta, California, KABC-TV Channel 7 reports:
  • A family is being told the house they thought they bought in Murrieta actually belongs to someone else. The family says they can't stop making their mortgage payments. "Even though you've made your payments in full every month, you could get a knock at the door saying get out," said would-be homeowner Charlie Zahari. "If you look at it, we're renters in a house we can't move out of."
  • That was hardly the feeling last summer where there was all the euphoria of buying their first home. They custom painted the girls' bedrooms and sodded the backyard. They stopped making improvements when they found out they're not the legal owners of the home.
  • "We actually got a call from the FBI who said we just wanted to inform you that your house has been part of a deed fraud scheme," Zahari said. Karen Tappert is the person the Zahari's say is responsible for stealing the home and selling it to them. She's facing federal charges,(1) but that does little to help the Zahari's with their situation. They must continue paying for the home or otherwise put their credit at risk. They can also be forced to vacate at any moment.
  • Officials said it started when the original owners of the property vacated the house because they thought the bank was going to foreclose on them. That never happened, and the alleged scam artists swooped in and fraudulently sold it to the Zaharis.
  • The family said neither the title company, First American Title Insurance, nor the bank have done much to help answer how the title company allowed the purchase of the home in the first place.
  • In a statement, First American said, "For privacy reasons we cannot comment on the specifics of Mr. & Mrs. Zahari's claim, however, generally the process of establishing title involves other necessary parties and is dependent on their cooperation. This process can be time consuming and complicated."
  • Bank of America also said they're a victim too and they're working with the title company for a resolution. Tappert's federal trial is under way in Nevada.

Source: FBI informs family they bought stolen house in Murrieta.

Thanks to Deontos for the heads-up on the story.

(1) For more on Karen Tappert's indictment, see Vegas Feds Say Woman Used Fraudulent Deeds In Foreclosure Rescue Ripoffs & Squatter Scams.

Michigan AG Urges All With Knowledge Of Illegal Robosigner Practices To Step Forward As DocX, LPS, Fidelity Get Slammed w/ Subpoenas In Criminal Probe

In Lansing, Michigan, The Grand Rapids Press reports:
  • Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette issued criminal investigative subpoenas against DocX and three affiliated companies as part of his office's investigation into fraudulent signatures on mortgage documents filed in Michigan.
  • In addition to DocX, which provides mortgage support services, Schuette's office also served investigative subpoenas to Lender Processing Services Inc., Fidelity National Financial Inc. and CT Corporation System, according to an announcement today.
  • Schuette is requesting documents regarding the companies’ processing of foreclosure and/or bankruptcy documents. The subpoenas were approved by the 54B District Court in Ingham County on Monday. The companies have until June 30 to comply.
  • The subpoenas are part of an investigation launched in April after county officials across the state reported suspect documents. The reports were triggered by a 60 Minutesstory revealing that the name Linda Greenwas signed to thousands of mortgage-related documents nationwide, but with many different variations in handwriting.
  • Schuette is investigating whether certain mortgage processing companies permitted such “robosigning” of legal documents filed in connection with Michigan foreclosures. obosigning may also involve individuals signing affidavits to signify that mortgage documentation was properly prepared without ever conducting a proper review of the documents.
  • The attorney general is urging any current or former employees of mortgage servicers or processing companies with information about unlawful practices [to contact] the Corporate Oversight Division at (517) 373-1160.(1)

Source: Michigan AG issues subpoenas in investigation of foreclosure documents with fraudulent signatures.

For the Michigan AG press release, see Schuette Issues Subpoenas in Criminal Probe of Mortgage Processors.

(1) Those thinking about whether to come forward, spill their guts about their roles in the robosigning racket, and essentially, 'roll' on their current/former employers should factor in this admonition, made by a Federal judge, when deciding what to do:

  • When a conspiracy is exposed by an arrest or execution of search warrants, soon-to-be defendants know that the first one to "belly up" and tell what he knows receives the best deal. The pressure is to bargain and bargain early, even if an indictment has not been filed. United States v. Moody, 206 F.3d 609, 617 (6th Cir. 2000) (Wiseman, J., concurring).

One can reasonably believe that the Michigan AG is won't be investing his limited resources in this probe without the view of 'scoring a few high-level scalps.'

Final Defendant Goes Down In Scam Using Rent To Own Racket To Lure, Rip Off Investors, Would-Be Homebuyers On 100+ Homes That Ended Up In Foreclosure

From the Office of the U.S. Attorney (Portland, Oregon):
  • Jennifer Venable, 29, of Beaverton, Oregon, was sentenced by the Honorable Robert E. Jones of the United States District Court on June 8, 2011, to 5 years probation and ordered to pay $15,000 in restitution relative to her January 13, 2011 wire fraud conviction.

***

  • Ms. Venable’s sentencing brings to an end the prosecutions related to the conduct of Jeremy Richardson and his company, Richardson Equities LLC. Richardson’s company ran a “rent-to-own” scheme that promised high profits to investors who purchased homes on behalf of tenants who agreed to purchase the home from the investor at a price greater than the original purchase price when their credit improved.
  • To effect the scheme, the investor would apply for a residential mortgage using inflated asset and income information and lie about the true nature of the loan. Richardson and his associates purchased over 100 homes in the Portland area valued in excess of $35 million.
  • In every case, Richardson and his investors failed to maintain their financial obligations and the properties fell into foreclosure.(1)

For the U.S. Attorney press release, see Sentencing of Real Estate Agent Concludes Prosecution of Mortgage Fraud Scheme.

(1) According to the press release, on May 4, 2010, Jeremy Richardson was sentenced to 37 months in federal custody following his guilty plea to money laundering. In addition to Richardson and Venable, others involved in the rent-to own scheme involved:

  • Nicolas Cooper of Portland, Oregon, who was sentenced to a term of 5 years probation and ordered to pay $102,058 in restitution on May 23, 2011,
  • Andrew Paul Shute of Seattle Washington, who was sentenced to 5 years of probation and ordered to pay $61,332 in restitution following his plea of guilty to wire fraud related to his activities as a mortgage broker on behalf of Richardson; and
  • Tyler Jacob Marsten of Tulsa, Oklahoma, who was sentenced to 5 years probation and ordered to pay $39,549 in restitution following his conviction for bank fraud related to his activities as a mortgage broker on behalf of Richardson.

Would-Be Homebuyers Under Rent-To-Own Deal Get Clipped Out Of $12K Upfront, Monthly Payments As Rent-Skimming Owner Pockets Cash, Stiffs Bank

In St. Charles, Missouri, KTVI-TV Channel 2 reports:
  • If you don't qualify for a conventional home loan, you might want to proceed with caution if lease to own is your only option. We talked with a couple who now have to fight to keep a roof over their hea^ds while battling serious health concerns.
  • Brian and Teresa Wilson understand what it means to have terminal cancer. They didn't expect they'd be fighting health issues and a bad deal on a lease to own agreement for a house.
  • They signed a contract on this house in St. Charles County in February 2011. The family traveled a lot with Brian's job. And they just wanted to settle into their own home. But Brian says they've gotten the shock of their lives. "We've since come to find out that this home is not, is in foreclosure and has not had a current payment made in over seven months."
  • Brian signed a contract and lease agreement with a St. Louis area real estate investor who's come to the attention of the Better Business Bureau. The BBB recommends extreme caution when dealing with Jack l. Roddy, JMZ homes, JMZ Investment Group. Jim Judge of the BBB explains why they started investigating. "We're getting complaints from consumers that are getting into lease to own situations with this company."
  • Wilson says, "It was two months behind going into default in February when I gave him a check for twelve thousand dollars plus we made a thousand dollar rent payment every month on time since then." Four checks written by the Brian were cashed. Jack Roddy had no comment when we called him.

***

  • The Wilsons say they researched the company before signing the contract but saw no red flags. They believe the mortgage is still held by the original owners. Something they just discovered. Teresa was the first to hear the news.

For the story, see Contact 2: Lease to Own Scam.

Would-Be Homebuyer Gets Boot After Paying Rent-Skimming Middleman $6K Upfront, Monthly Payments In Rent To Own Deal; Title Owner Also Left Holding Bag

In El Paso, Texas, KFOX-TV Channel 14 reports:
  • Leticia Ornelas said she's been buying a house for two years only to find out none of her payments ever made it to the mortgage company. Now she's been kicked out of the home and she’s suing the man who supposedly sold her the home, Lorenzo Trujillo.(1)
  • Signs that were targeted towards people with bad credit are what first got Ornelas’ attention. She said she and Trujillo had a plan to fix her credit while buying a Horizon City home; $6,000 down, $695 a month.
  • Once she was approved for a bank loan, a man named Erick Martinez came to her door and told her the house was his and it was under foreclosure. Ornelas had to move out. "I was scared like, what do you mean I'm not buying this house?” Ornelas said. “They told me even the owner wasn't given the payments at all and that's why this house was up for an action."
  • Trujillo spoke with KFOX14 today. He admits that Ornelas’ payments never went to the mortgage company. "We came to an agreement and told her if she’s unhappy, we can buy this house back from her,” said Trujillo.
  • Ornelas is suing Trujillo in small claims court. She doesn’t understand how Trujillo can buy the house back from her when he never sold it to her in the first place.
  • Martinez also has a lawsuit against Trujillo. Martinez said he didn’t realize that no payments had been made to the mortgage company. Martinez originally hired Trujillo to sell the house for him.

Source: Woman Says She Bought A House But Seller Never Paid Mortgage (Woman Sues To Get Money Back After, She Says, She Was Scammed).

(1) This isn't the first time a Lorenzo Trujillo has made the news for involvement in a dubious real estate deal. See August 5, 2009: KFOX-TV Channel 14: Woman Shocked To Find People Living In Her El Paso Home:

  • A former El Paso woman says people are living in her Lower Valley home that she never sold. Tammy Diaz asked a real estate investor to help her sell this home more than two years ago. Diaz moved to Corpus Christi, and almost never heard from him again.
    Diaz in 2007 faced a separation from her husband and impending foreclosure on her home. So she reached out for help.
  • "He made it seem like everything was real perfect, he was going to be able to sell our house for us," said Diaz.
  • Diaz is talking about Lorenzo Trujillo. Diaz was under the impression that Trujillo was going to sell her home in 45 days, but two years later, she said she had gotten no news from Trujillo.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Appellate Court Foreclosure Reversals Continue As Rubber-Stamping Mississippi Trial Judge Fumbles Ball On Basic Rules Governing Service Of Process

From a recent ruling from the Mississippi Court of Appeals:
  • Deutsche Bank National Trust Company initiated a foreclosure action in the Warren County Chancery Court and attempted to serve Angela Turner by publication.
  • But before doing so, it neither certified Turner was a non-resident of Mississippi nor alleged she could not be located in the state after a diligent inquiry.
  • Because we find service of process did not strictly comply with the governing rules, we reverse the chancellor's refusal to set aside the default judgment she entered on behalf of Deutsche Bank when Turner did not respond. We remand the case for further proceedings.

For the facts of the case, and the court's analysis of the applicable state law on service of process, see Turner v. Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, No. 2009-CA-01601-COA (Miss. Ct. App. June 14, 2011).

(1) From the opinion, reversing the earlier ruling of Warren County Chancery Court Judge Jane R. Weathersby: (bold text is my emphasis):

  • ¶ 8. The issue before us is whether Deutsche Bank's attempted service by publication was sufficient where it failed to certify that Turner was a nonresident or, after a diligent inquiry, could not be located in Mississippi. If service of process was deficient, the default judgment entered against Turner is void and must be set aside. See Caldwell v. Caldwell, 533 So.2d 413, 417-18 (Miss. 1988); Clark, 43 So. 3d at 501 (¶21) (citing Morrison v. Miss. Dep't of Human Servs., 863 So.2d 948, 952 (¶13) (Miss. 2004); Soriano v. Gillespie, 857 So.2d 64, 69-70 (¶22) (Miss. Ct. App. 2003)).

***

  • ¶ 11. Although Deutsche Bank published a summons in the newspaper for three consecutive weeks and filed proof of the publication, Deutsche Bank did not comply with Rule 4(c)(4)(A). It is undisputed that Deutsche Bank never filed a sworn petition or affidavit attesting that Turner was a nonresident or could not be found in Mississippi after a diligent inquiry. Therefore, it follows that Deutsche Bank did not comply with any of the remaining requirements for information that must be included in the petition or affidavit.

    ¶ 12. "The rules on service of process are to be strictly construed. If they have not been complied with, the court is without jurisdiction unless the defendant appears of his own volition." Kolikas v. Kolikas,
    821 So.2d 874, 878 (¶16) (Miss. Ct. App. 2002) (internal citation omitted). Actual notice does not cure defective process. See, e.g., Mosby v. Gandy, 375 So.2d 1024, 1027 (Miss. 1979). "Even if a defendant is aware of a suit, the failure to comply with rules for the service of process, coupled with the failure of the defendant voluntarily to appear, prevents a judgment from being entered against him." Sanghi, 759 So. 2d at 1257 (¶33).

***

  • ¶ 15. We need not reach the rule violated in Kolikas because Deutsche Bank violated the more preliminary requirement that it file a sworn petition or affidavit. In the petition or affidavit, the plaintiff must certify to the court, among other things, that the defendant is a nonresident or cannot be found in Mississippi. From a straightforward application of Rule 4(c)(4), we find Deutsche Bank's attempt to serve Turner fell far short of the required notice. And since Turner did not voluntarily appear to defend against the foreclosure suit, the chancery court did not acquire jurisdiction to enter a judgment against her. sewer service

Robosigning Notaries From Now-Defunct Georgia Foreclosure 'Sweatshop' Find Themselves In Local Clerk Of Court's Crosshairs Over Bogus 'Docx' Docs

In Fulton County, Georgia, WSB-TV Channel 2 reports:
  • Fulton County's clerk of court said homeowners from across the country have filed complaints questioning the credentials of notaries who signed their mortgage documents. Cathelene "Tina" Robinson said she's already revoked certifications from several of the notaries involved. "As a notary, your job is to prevent fraud," said Robinson, who commissions all of Fulton County's notaries.
  • The notary affixes his or her seal to a document to verify the signatures on it are authentic. But employees from at least one foreclosure mill said they were turning out documents by the thousands, signing names of fictitious bank representatives.
  • "It's awful. It's terrible. It should not have occurred," said Robinson. She vowed to investigate any claims of notaries misusing their seals. "Once the notary comes in, we do fact finding. We ask questions," she said.
  • In the past three months, Robinson has revoked the certifications of four notaries who worked for an Alpharetta company called Docx. The company is accused of robo-signing hundreds of thousands of foreclosure documents for banks around the country. Channel 2 investigative reporter Jodie Fleischer reviewed Robinson's files and found at least 10 remaining Docx notaries with remaining inquiries.
  • Last year, Robinson's office cleared three notaries of wrongdoing after they insisted they witnessed a valid signature. Robinson couldn't prove them wrong at the time, despite wild variations in the same name, Linda Green, signed on many of the documents.
  • Now Robinson is considering trying to pull all of the Docx documents filed locally to check out the notaries. One told Fleischer that Docx paid for her to become a notary.
  • Notaries are not required to list their employers on the application, and Georgia requires no training or test to become a notary. Robinson would like to see the state tighten its laws. "Anyone that has any concerns as it relates to any person Fulton County commissioned, I would be happy, please contact me so we can investigate," she said.
  • But all Robinson can do is revoke their notary seals. Any criminal prosecution would have to come from the district attorney. There is also an ongoing federal investigation.

For the story, see Official Vows To Investigate Notary Misuse Claims.

Dozens Of Would-Be Illinois Home Buyers Under 'Rent To Own' Deals May Face The Boot Over Landlord's Pending Foreclosure

In Sangamon County, Illinois, The State Journal Register reports:
  • A Sangamon County judge has appointed a receiver to take over stewardship of nearly 130 homes, most in Springfield, while foreclosure actions are pending. The order issued Thursday by Circuit Judge Patrick Londrigan effectively takes the properties away from JSP Investments while State Bank of Lincoln, which says it is owed nearly $6.8 million, attempts to gain title to the properties via a foreclosure action filed in March. That could take several months, according to Phillip Montalvo, the bank’s attorney.
  • In the meantime, The Apartment Mart of Springfield will manage the properties, performing maintenance, collecting rents and evicting tenants when necessary, according to the court order.

***

  • Dozens of the tenants have contracts-for-deed or rent-to-own agreements with JSP, according to court documents. Montalvo said he is not certain just how many tenants have contracts to purchase homes. The bank has discovered that some tenants who had contracts have moved, he said. “The records we have are very, very old,” Montalvo said. Montalvo said he cannot guarantee that tenants still in their homes with rent-to-own agreements will be able to have rent money paid to JSP apply toward purchase.
  • One problem, he said, is most of the rent-to-own contracts were never filed with the Sangamon County recorder’s office. If contracts were recorded before JSP obtained bank financing, tenants have a better shot of having claims honored, he said.(1)

***

  • Montalvo said there are two lessons to be drawn from the case. One is to have rent-to-own contracts filed with the county recorder’s office so tenants can be in a position to have contracts honored. Another is to keep all receipts for rental payments, he said.
  • Linda Stephenson, who signed a rent-to-own agreement for a JSP house on North Ninth Street, said she has receipts, but never had her contract filed with the recorder’s office. She said she signed a rent-to-own contract four years ago and stopped paying rent to JSP two months ago, after learning that her home was in foreclosure through no fault of her own.
  • Nobody knows what’s going to happen,” said Stephenson, whose home with a neatly kept yard and flowerbeds is a bright spot on a street where several houses are in disrepair. "We don’t know if we’re going to lose our home. “I love living here.”

For the story, see Receiver appointed to oversee 130 JSP properties.

(1) If the would-be buyers under the unrecorded rent-to-own deals and contract for deed arrangements took possession of their homes prior to the seller-landlord getting the mortgage loan from the bank, and if said possession was actual, open, and notorious, it may be that the earlier-created, but unrecorded, interests held by the would-be buyers in their homes will trump the lender's later-created, recorded interest in the mortgage.

When determining the priority of competing interests and equities in real estate, the general rule is that the interest that is recorded in the public records first will have priority over later-recorded or unrecorded interests. The determination is made without regard to when the interest was actually created.

However, a frequently overlooked exception to this rule exists where the holder of a later-created, but earlier-recorded interest fails to qualify for status as a bona fide purchaser. Such failure will disqualify the holder of the earlier-recorded interest for the protection afforded by the state recording statutes. In such a case, the holder of the earlier-created, but unrecorded or later-recorded interest will have priority.

Whether the mortgage lender in this case would qualify as a bona fide purchaser (assuming the loan was made after the renters took possession of their homes) would turn on whether or not the lender had 'notice' of the latter's unrecorded rights. If the lender is found to have had 'notice' of the would-be buyers possession, protection as a bona fide purchaser would be unavailable to it (note that, under the law, one can be found to have had 'notice' of a fact, even if he/she did not have actual knowledge of the fact).

In most states, one seeking to acquire an interest in the real estate (either as a buyer or lender) generally has the duty to know who was in possession of the property before making the purchase or secured loan, and to inquire of the occupants into any rights or equities they may hold. In this regard, when an ordinary inspection of the premises by a purchaser or mortgage lender, followed by reasonable inquiry, would reveal the existence of unrecorded rights or equities, then that purchaser or mortgage lender is charged with notice of those rights. Whether or not the buyer or secured lender had actual knowledge (to be distinguished from 'actual notice') of the occupant's possession is generally immaterial. As many courts have observed, if it were allowed that by failing to acquaint oneself with the fact of possession, the buyer or lender could avoid the effect of this rule, one could purposely avoid any inquiry on the subject, and thereby evade the rule and its consequences entirely.

A U.S. Bankruptcy Judge (In Re Polo Builders, Inc., 433 B.R. 700 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. E. Div. 2010)) recently observed that "[i]t has long been settled in Illinois ... that possession of property is notice of whatever rights to the property the party in possession claims ...", and emphasized this point in a footnote by adding: "So long, in fact, that more than a century ago the Illinois Supreme Court described the rule as "too well settled to call for the citation of authorities" citing Mason v. Mullahey, 145 Ill. 383, 388, 34 N.E. 36, 36 (1893)." Cases too numerous to list here support this proposition in the state. See:

----------------------------

For those in neighboring Missouri, support for this proposition can be found in (bold text is my emphasis):

Obernay v. Chamberlin, 506 SW 2d 446 (Mo. 1974):

  • The leading Missouri case on this subject is Drey v. Doyle, 99 Mo. 459, 12 S.W. 287, wherein the court stated: "Now from the line of former adjudications of this court it is plain to be seen that the notice which will postpone a recorded instrument, affecting real estate, to a prior unrecorded one, must be actual notice. Such notice may be shown by direct evidence, or it may be inferred from facts and circumstances. The question is one of fact, and is to be determined like any other fact.

    Circumstances coming to the knowledge of the subsequent purchaser, which would put a prudent person upon inquiry, should go to the jury as evidence of notice. In short any evidence tending to show knowledge of the prior unrecorded instrument should be received as evidence of notice. The inference to be drawn from the facts and circumstances is one of fact and not of law.

    Possession and knowledge thereof will, in ordinary cases, be good proof of notice of the title under which the party in possession claims. Such evidence, under other circumstances, will be of little value."

    The Missouri cases on this subject are treated at length in an article on possession as notice, appearing in 16 Mo.L.Rev. 142 (April, 1951).

Hayward v. Arnold, 779 SW 2d 342 (Mo. App. W.D. 1989):

Janss v. Pearman, 863 SW 2d 643 (Mo. App. S.D. 1993):

See also, Hart v. Parrish, 244 SW 2d 105 (Mo. 1951):

  • Plaintiff Hart was familiar with property and knew defendant-respondent Lillian Parrish, widow of Charles H. Parrish, was in possession, "living on the property." In these circumstances, it should not be held Mittler had no notice of the fraud upon which defendant Lillian has relied for cancellation.

------------------------

For other states, see Bona Fide Purchaser Doctrine, Possession Of Property By Occupants Other Than The Vendor & The Duty To Inquire.

------------------------

By the way, a discussion that may be helpful in understanding the concepts of 'actual notice', 'actual knowledge', and the 'duty to inquire' can be found in this excerpt from Hatcher v. Hall, 292 SW 2d 619 (Mo. App. S.D. 1956) (bold text is my emphasis):

  • It is true that, as our courts have reiterated many times, notice is regarded in law as actual where the person sought to be charged therewith either knows of the existence of the particular fact in question or is conscious of having the means of knowing it, even though such means may not be employed by him;[12] and that, since notice does not mean positive information brought directly home to the person sought to be affected thereby, whatever fairly is sufficient to put an ordinarily prudent person on inquiry constitutes notice to him of such facts as would be disclosed by reasonable pursuit and proper inquiry.[13]

    For, justice is not so indulgent as to encourage one to shut his eyes to circumstances which would excite the zetetic impulse in an ordinarily prudent individual [Drey v. Doyle
    , 99 Mo. 459, 469, 12 S.W. 287, 289] or to throw away the key to the door of exploration through which the facts reasonably might be ascertained [Barrett v. Davis, 104 Mo. 549, 561, 16 S.W. 377, 380; James v. Hutchinson, Mo.App., 211 S.W.2d 507, 511]; and, from early times, our courts "have always recognized that the still small voice of suggestion, emanating as it will from contiguous facts and surrounding circumstances, pregnant with inference and provocative of inquiry, is as potent to impart notice as a presidential proclamation, or an army with banners." Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Smith, 117 Mo. 261, 292-293, 22 S.W. 623, 629; Adams v. Gossom, 228 Mo. 566, 583, 129 S.W. 16, 21.

    However, one is put on inquiry and charged with notice of the facts which would be disclosed thereby, only when "`the inquiry becomes a duty, and the failure to make it a negligent omission'" [Laughlin v. Findlay
    , 324 Mo. 1021, 1024, 25 S.W.2d 464, 465(1)];[14] or, as otherwise stated, "`(w)here there is a duty of finding out and knowing, negligent ignorance has the same effect in law as actual knowledge.'"[15]

    Whether the circumstances are sufficient to give rise to a duty of further inquiry is ordinarily a question of fact[16] [at least where the evidence is conflicting or is such that more than one inference of fact might be drawn therefrom (Merrill on Notice, Vol. 1, Section 64, p. 61)], frequently fraught with appreciable difficulty and always determinable in the light of the circumstances of the particular case under consideration;[17] and whether, when one is put on inquiry, the exercise of common prudence and ordinary diligence [Edwards v. Carondelet Milling Co., 108 Mo. App. 275, 287, 83 S.W. 764, 768; Kitchen v. St. Louis, K. C. & N. Ry. Co.
    , 69 Mo. 224, 265] in further investigation would have led to discovery of the information, knowledge of which is sought to be charged, likewise usually becomes a question of fact.[18]

Lawsuit: Home Buyer Took Possession Of Premises Pre-Closing, Rented To Tenants, Then Refused To Close

In Beaumont, Texas, The Southeast Texas Record reports:
  • A woman has filed suit against the couple who she claims promised to buy real estate from her, placed tenants in the property, then reneged on their original offer to purchase the property.
  • Mary Ross Stinebrickner claims she agreed to sell property at 4340 Chaison St. in Beaumont to defendants Rex and Kathy Johnson. The Johnsons signed an agreement to sell real estate form on July 8, 2010, according to the complaint filed May 25 in Jefferson County District Court.
  • After signing the form but before the closing on the property, the Johnsons took possession of the property and placed tenants in it, the suit states. At the closing, however, the defendants refused to sign the deed of trust and lien note, the complaint says. They have also refused to evict their tenants from the property, Stinebrickner claims.
  • As a result, the Johnsons are making rent money from property that Stinebrickner still owns and is making tax payments on, according to the complaint.

For the story, see Owner claims buyer reneged on property sale.

Ex-Bug Board Commish Cops Plea To Using Dead Man's ID To Score Double Homestead Exemption; Ordered To Cough Up $60K In Back Real Estate Taxes, Fines

The Florida Keys Keynoter reports:
  • When all is said and done, former Florida Keys Mosquito Control Board Commissioner Charles Langstaff will end up paying more than $60,000 in back taxes for his homestead exemption fraud. Langstaff, 66, pleaded guilty Monday to the misdemeanor in Levy County and was ordered to pay more than $14,000 to that county.
  • Langstaff, a commissioner from 1998 until 2010, admitted using the Social Security number of a dead Islamorada man to secure a homestead exemption on his Morriston property near Gainesville. He was a longtime employee at Beyer Funeral Home in Key Largo.

***

  • [Levy County State Attorney's Office's lead investigator Spencer] Mann said Langstaff's agreement would settle only Levy County's lien against his Levy County property.
  • According to the Monroe County Tax Collector's Office, Langstaff still has a $45,683 lien on his Key Largo home for claiming the exemption while he lived in Levy.
  • [Monroe County] Tax Collector Danise Henriquez said her office filed the lien in both Levy and Monroe counties. [...] Henriquez added that Langstaff's homestead exemptions have been revoked from both of his properties. "He is going to have to file [for an exemption] wherever he is going to reside," she said.

For the story, see Former bug-board member in hole for $60,000.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Another Lower Court Reversal: NY Appeals Court Slams MERS In Rejecting Standing-Lacking Suit Against Pro Se Foreclosure Defense Attorney

Forbes reports:
  • A New York appeals court has thrown out a foreclosure proceeding involving MERS, the national registry for mortgages that tracks millions of individual loans behind mortgage-backed securities. The case sets a bad precedent for MERS in New York, but may not cause upheaval nationwide.
  • In a 7-page ruling issued Friday, the New York appellate court threw out Bank of New York’s foreclosure suit against Stephen and Frederica Silverberg, who were allegedly behind on $479,000 in loans. Bank of New York is the trustee for the trust containing mortgages, one them presumably the Silverberg’s, that were bundled together and sold to investors as bonds. Unfortunately for the bank, the court ruled that MERS, the bookkeeping entity set up to keep track of those mortgages in land-records offices around the country, couldn’t give BONY the authority to foreclose because it didn’t possess the underlying note, or Silverberg’s promise to pay.
  • A transfer of the mortgage without the debt is a nullity, and no interest is acquired by it,” the court ruled.
  • Public Citizen said the decision could havefar reaching consequences,” but not everyone agrees this is a big deal. Even the lawyer for the Silverbergs, Stephen Silverberg himself, acknowledged his was an unusual situation. Bank of New York “admitted it didn’t have the note” proving it was the rightful owner of the collateral, Silverberg told me.
  • They’ve had three years to find it and they haven’t,” he said. Without both the note and the mortgage, or legal document establishing the home as collateral for the note, the court said a lender can’t foreclose.

***

  • The New York appeals court acknowledged it could be creating trouble for those investors.

    This Court is mindful of the impact that this decision may have on the mortgage industry in NewYork, and perhaps the nation. Nonetheless, the law must not yield to expediency and the convenienceof lending institutions. Proper procedures must be followed to ensure the reliability of the chain of ownership, to secure the dependable transfer of property, and to assure the enforcement of the rules thatgovern real property.
  • Silverberg, who represents other homeowners in foreclosure actions, was similarly unapologetic. He declined to say whether he was paying his mortgage, or intended to do so.
  • The question here is some bank is coming forward saying the homeowner owes them hundreds of thousand of dollars but can’t present any evidence of ownership,” he said. “In New York, in order to evict the owner you must prove you have right to do so. This is the law and no apologies for enforcing your rights. They really pushed when they had nothing behind them.”(1)

For the story, see New York Appeals Court Rejects MERS Foreclosure.

For the appeals court ruling, see Bank of N.Y. v. Silverberg, 2011 NY Slip Op 05002 (NY Sup. Ct. App. Div. 2nd Dept. June 7, 2011).

See also:

(1) For aficionados of appellate procedure, it should be noted that, until the New York Court of Appeals, the state's highest court pronounces a contrary rule on this issue, and absent any conflicting ruling by a sister intermediate appellate court, existing New York case law suggests that this ruling may be binding on all trial courts throughout the state (both inside and outside the jurisdiction of the Second Department) presiding over cases involving substantially the same legal issues. See:

  • People v. Turner, 840 NE 2d 123 (NY 2005): The New York high court referenced the binding effect of an intermediate court ruling on all trial courts (both inside and outside the appeals court jurisdiction) throughout the state in this passing comment:

    Appellate counsel's apparent conclusion that
    Di Pasquale was not worth citing was not a reasonable one, even by the undemanding standard we apply in ineffective-assistance cases. Di Pasquale, though old, was still a valid precedent, binding on all trial-level courts in the state (see Mountain View Coach Lines v Storms, 102 AD2d 663, 664-665 [2d Dept 1984]) and entitled to respect by appellate courts.
  • Mountain View Coach v. Storms, 102 AD 2d 663 (NY Sup Ct. App. Div. 2nd Dept. 1984):

    At the outset, we note that if the Third Department cases were, in fact, the only New York authorities on point, the trial court followed the correct procedural course in holding those cases to be binding authority at the nisi prius level.

    The Appellate Division is a single State-wide court divided into departments for administrative convenience (see
    Waldo v Schmidt, 200 N.Y. 199, 202; Project, The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York: An Empirical Study of its Powers and Functions as an Intermediate State Court, 47 Ford L Rev 929, 941) and, therefore, the doctrine of stare decisis requires trial courts in this department to follow precedents set by the Appellate Division of another department until the Court of Appeals or this court pronounces a contrary rule (see, e.g., Kirby v Rouselle Corp., 108 Misc 2d 291, 296; Matter of Bonesteel, 38 Misc 2d 219, 222, affd 16 AD2d 324; 1 Carmody-Wait 2d, NY Prac, § 2:63, p 75).

    This is a general principle of appellate procedure (see, e.g., Auto Equity Sales v Superior Ct. of Santa Clara County, 57 Cal 2d 450, 455;
    Chapman v Pinellas County, 423 So 2d 578, 580 [Fla App]; People v Foote, 104 Ill App 3d 581), necessary to maintain uniformity and consistency (see Lee v Consolidated Edison Co., 98 Misc 2d 304, 306), and, consequently, any cases holding to the contrary (see, e.g., People v Waterman, 122 Misc 2d 489, 495, n 2) are disapproved.
  • Nachbaur v. American Transit Insurance Company, 300 A.D.2d 74; 752 N.Y.S.2d 605 (NY Sup. Ct. App Div., 1st Dept. 2002):

    We particularly disapprove of the failure of plaintiff's attorney to cite adverse authority. The failure is especially glaring in this case since plaintiff's attorney represented the losing appellant in Bettan (supra), a Second Department case issued a matter of weeks before plaintiff's reply brief on the instant appeal was submitted, which precisely addresses five out of six of plaintiff's causes of action as well as the issue of class certification (see
    Amazon Coffee Co. v Trans World Airlines, 111 AD2d 776, 778) and, unless and until overruled or disagreed with by this Court, is "controlling" authority that plaintiff's attorney was obligated to bring to the attention of this Court (see Matter of Cicio v City of New York, 98 AD2d 38; Merl v Merl, 128 AD2d 685; see also Mountain View Coach Lines v Storms, 102 AD2d 663, 664-665).

See also these lower court New York rulings:

  • Bush v. Cobble Hill Health Ctr., Inc., 2007 NY Slip Op 52268(U) (NY Sup. Ct. Kings County, 2007):

    "The rule in New York is that the trial courts must follow an Appellate Division precedent set in any department in the State until its own appellate division decides otherwise (see
    Mountain View Coach Lines, Inc. v. Storms, 102 AD2d 663 [2d Dept 1984])." (Stewart v. Volkswagen of America, Inc., 181 AD2d 4, 7 [2d Dept 1992]).
  • In The Matter Of SS, 2007 NY Slip Op 50218, (Fam. Ct. Nassau County, 2007):

    Regarding decisions from an Appellate Division other than our own in the Second Department, those decisions are just as binding upon this Court as if they were Second Department cases, unless the Court of Appeals or the Second Department has decided any issue differently.

    This is because the Appellate Division is a single state-wide Court, which is divided into departments solely for administrative convenience.
    Mountain View Coach Lines v. Storms, 102 AD2d 663 (2d Dept 1984), cited approvingly in People v. Turner, 5 NY3d 476 (2005).

    The First Department also has the same fiat:
    Nachbaur v. American Transit Insurance Co., 300 AD2d 74 (1st Dept 2002), appeal den'd 99 NY2d 576 (2003), cert. den'd sub nom Moore v. American Transit Insurance Co., 538 US 987 (2003).

Go here for links to a few other cases that have applied this rule.

Fannie To Do 'End Run' Around New Hawaii F'closure Rules; Orders Dismissal Of All Non-Judicial Actions; Cases Now To Be Filed In Court; Re-Dos Needed

MortgageOrb reports:
  • Fannie Mae has directed its servicers to commence all new foreclosures in the state of Hawaii as judicial foreclosures.(1) The company has also instructed servicers to dismiss all pending Fannie Mae nonjudicial foreclosures in the state that have not proceeded to sale and convert them to judicial foreclosures.
  • The new policy, which is effective immediately, is the result of recent legislation that changes the state's foreclosure process and encourages third-party mediation.(2)
  • According to a servicing announcement issued Friday, Fannie Mae has established a maximum allowable fee of $2,200 for Hawaii judicial foreclosures.
  • The company has also indicated that, because of potential title insurance issues, it may have to undo recent real estate owned (REO) acquisitions that resulted from nonjudicial foreclosures. "Upon being notified of any eliminations, servicers must immediately restart the matters as judicial foreclosures," Fannie Mae says of the REO properties.

Source: Fannie Instructs Servicers To Convert Hawaii Foreclosures.

For Fannie Mae's servicing announcement, see Hawaii Legislative Changes Affecting Non-Judicial Foreclosures.

(1) Inasmuch as Fannie Mae, in its announcement, makes no distinction between the handling of owner-occupied and non-owner occupied homes in foreclosure, its policy apparently applies to all of its delinquent home mortgages. Contrast this policy with the policy codified in the recently-passed Hawaii foreclosure law that allows homeowners facing non-judicial foreclosure to convert the process to a judicial foreclosure. Said conversion option is limited, however, to owner-occupied homes. See New Court Rules to Convert Non-Judicial Foreclosures to Judicial Foreclosures.

(2) For more on the new Hawaii foreclosure rules, see:

Bank Backs Down On Alleged Intimidation In Foreclosure Action; White Shoe Law Firm's Naming Of Fraud Expert's Son In Suit Viewed As Act Of Retaliation

The Huffington Post reports:
  • Deutsche Bank has dropped the son of high-profile foreclosure fraud investigator Lynn Szymoniak from the foreclosure case against her, according to new court documents. The bank had added Szymoniak's son, Mark Cullen, to the foreclosure suit this May, a move that many experts saw as an act of retaliation against Szymoniak, who has publicized banks' widespread use of forged signatures in the foreclosure process to improperly give borrowers the boot. On June 8, lawyers filed a "Notice of Dropping Party" with the Florida court dismissing its previous claims against Cullen.

***

  • When the bank refiled [a previously-thrown out foreclosure action against Szymoniak], her son, Mark Cullen, had been named a party to the lawsuit, creating a blight on his legal record and a major hassle for the family. Independent foreclosure attorneys accused the bank of attempting to intimidate Szymoniak's family and retaliating against Szymoniak for her public activism.

***

  • [Mortgage servicer] American Home declined to comment after the new court documents were filed, but a spokesperson told HuffPost earlier that the decision to include Szymoniak's son in the refiled lawsuit was not an act of retaliation. Instead, they said at the time they believed him to be a tenant who could have a secondary claim to the home. He was named in the foreclosure suit, American Home said, to make sure that he couldn't come back and press legal claims against American Home if his mother is later evicted.
  • But Szymoniak's son, Mark Cullen, has not lived there for seven years, Szymoniak said. He is a graduate student in poetry at the New School in New York, a fact that any cursory inquiry by American Home's lawyers could have detected.

***

  • When Szymoniak challenged the foreclosure, the bank brought in Florida corporate law behemoth Akerman Senterfit & Eidson. It wasn't the notoriously sloppy foreclosure mill adding Szymoniak's son to the case -- it was an expensive team of corporate law experts.
  • That fact reinforced the impression among Florida foreclosure attorneys that the decision to add Szymoniak's son to the mortgage was an act of intimidation. Akerman did not respond to phone calls for comment but conferred with American Home prior to the mortgage servicer's interactions with HuffPost.

For the story, see Bank Drops Legal Pressure On Foreclosure Fraud Expert's Family.

Delaware Judiciary To Zombie Debt Buyers, Collectors Coming To Court Claiming They're Owed Cash: Prove It!

From Public Citizen's Consumer Law & Policy Blog:
  • The Delaware courts have posted an administrative directive setting higher standards for consumer debt collectors to plead and document their collection actions. Among other things the directive calls for debt buyers to identify the original creditor and all assignments of the debt and to attach a copy of the original contract.
  • The latter requirement will be challenging for credit card debts, because the written credit card account agreement is a thing of the past; most credit card contracts are now formed (according to the card issuers anyway) when a consumer clicks an "I agree" button, and the contract terms are somewhere in the cloud. You can read and respond to comments on the directive here.

Source: Delaware Courts to Collectors: Prove It.

In related stories, see:

Thanks to Deontos for the heads up on the CL&P Blog post.

Feds Accuse BofA Of Foot-Dragging, Providing Incomplete Information, Reluctance In Allowing Employee Interviews In Current FHA Mortgage Probe

Bloomberg reports:
  • Bank of America Corp., the largest U.S. lender, “significantly hindered” a federal review of its foreclosures on loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration, the U.S. said.
  • The bank was slow in providing data and offered incomplete information, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development inspector general’s office, which conducted the review. The bank cooperated with the office, Dan Frahm, a company spokesman, said.
  • Our review was significantly hindered by Bank of America’s reluctance to allow us to interview employees or provide data and information in a timely manner,” William Nixon, an assistant regional inspector general for the agency, said in a sworn declaration.
  • The declaration, dated June 1 and obtained yesterday by Bloomberg News, was filed as an exhibit in a lawsuit by the state of Arizona against the Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank. Arizona, which is seeking to interview former Bank of America employees, accuses the bank of misleading homeowners who were seeking mortgage modifications.

For more, see BofA Hindered Foreclosure Review, U.S. Says.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Chase Dumps Chief Of Beleaguered Mortgage Unit Over Illegal Foreclosure Practices That Screwed Over U.S. Servicemembers

Bloomberg reports:
  • JPMorgan Chase & Co., the second- largest U.S. bank, ousted mortgage chief David Lowman after it overcharged active-duty military personnel on loans and improperly foreclosed on other borrowers.

***

  • JPMorgan has been taking steps this year to repair its mortgage unit, which posted at least $3.3 billion in losses during the first quarter.

***

  • [Chase CEO Jamie] Dimon said the military foreclosures were the worst mistake the bank has ever made. “We deeply apologize to the military, the veterans, anyone who’s ever served this country and we’re trying to go way beyond” what is needed to correct the errors, he said at the company’s May 17 annual shareholder meeting. “We’re sorry.”

For more, see JPMorgan Ousts Mortgage Chief Lowman After Foreclosure Lapses.

More Heat For Banksters As NY, Delaware AGs Begin Sniffing Around For Faulty Securitizations

The New York Times reports:
  • Opening a new line of inquiry into the problems that have beset the mortgage loan process, two state attorneys general are investigating Wall Street’s bundling of these loans into securities to determine whether they were properly documented and valid.
  • The investigation is being led by Eric T. Schneiderman, the attorney general of New York, who has teamed with Joseph R. Biden III, his counterpart from Delaware. Their effort centers on the back end of the mortgage assembly lines — where big banks serve as trustees overseeing the securities for investors — according to two people briefed on the inquiry but who were not authorized to speak publicly about it.
  • The attorneys general have requested information from Bank of New York Mellon and Deutsche Bank, the two largest firms acting as trustees. Trustee banks have not been a focus of other investigations because they are administrators of the securities and did not originate the loans or service them. But as administrators they were required to ensure that the documentation was proper and complete.

***

  • The stakes are potentially high. If the trustees did not follow the rules set out in the prospectus, they may be liable for breaching their duties to investors who bought the securities. That could expose the banks to costly civil litigation.

***

  • The trusts were governed by the laws of the states in which they were set up. Roughly 80 percent of the trusts are governed by New York law with the rest by Delaware law. The rules governing the securitization process are labyrinthine, and there are steps required if the investment is to comply with tax laws and promises made by the issuer in its offering document. If the trusts did not comply with tax laws, for example, the beneficial treatment given to investors could be rescinded, causing taxes to be levied on the transactions.
  • The terms of these mortgage deals varied, but many of them required that the trustee examine each of the loan files as soon as they came in from the Wall Street firm or bank issuing the security. For a file to be complete, it would typically have to include all of the information necessary to establish a chain of ownership through the various steps of the bundling process, as when the originator transferred it to the issuer of the security who then moved it to the trustee.
  • Complete loan files were supposed to be delivered to the trusts within 90 days in most cases. If the trustee found any missing or defective documents, it was supposed to notify the loan originator so that it could either cure the deficiency or replace the loan. Such substitutions are typically allowed only in the early years of the trust.
  • By asking for documents relating to this process, investigators are trying to determine if the trustees fulfilled their obligations to the investors who bought the mortgage deals, according to the people briefed on the inquiry.

For the story, see Two States Ask if Paperwork in Mortgage Bundling Was Complete.

See also, The Dylan Ratigan Show: Attorneys-General Look Into Bank Behavior In Mortgage Mess.

NJ Appeals Court: State Fair Foreclosure Act Inapplicable To Non-Owner Occupants

A recent ruling of the New Jersey appeals court serves as a reminder that the rights of New Jersey homeowners pursuant to the state Fair Foreclosure Act, (N.J.S.A. 2A:50-53 to -68) applies only to owner-occupants.

In rejecting the claims by a New Jersey couple challenging a foreclosure judgment, the court, in a nutshell, summarized thier legal analysis in this excerpt (bold text is my emphasis):
  • In other words, if the debtor or his or her family does not occupy, or plan to occupy the property when the loan originated, the Act does not apply, even if the debtor or a family member later takes up residence.

    On the other hand, even if the debtor or the debtor's family occupied or planned to occupy the property when the loan originated, the Act may cease to apply if the debtor and his family vacate the property and convert it to a rental or investment property. That is because the mortgage would cease to be a "residential mortgage" as defined once the property is no longer "occupied, or . . . to be occupied" by the debtor or the debtor's family. Ibid.

In modifying this position, however, the court hastened to add the following, in footnote 5 of their ruling:

  • One can imagine a scenario in which a mortgagor temporarily rents his or her property — for example, while taking on an extended work assignment away from home — but intends to return.

    Under such circumstances, the mortgage remains a "residential mortgage" because the property "is to be occupied" by the debtor. Defendants in this case presented no evidence of an intention to return to the mortgaged premises. Indeed, they apparently resided nearby on the same street in the same municipality.

For the ruling, and the court's full analysis of the New Jersey law on this point, see Aurora Loan Services, LLC v. Einhorn, No. A-5586-09T1 (NJ Sup. Ct., App. Div. June 9, 2011).

Recently-Issued Bankster Anti-Flopping Short Sale Contracts Put Real Estate Agents On Hot Seat As Brokers Bellyache

The Sarasota Herald Tribune reports:
  • New short-sale contracts issued by two of the largest banks in the country are causing concern in the local real estate community.
  • The contracts, which were issued by Bank of America and Wells Fargo, ask real estate agents to certify -- under penalty of perjury -- that the short sales they are conducting are "arms length" and that the properties will not be resold within 30 to 90 days of closing.
  • The object of the contracts, according to Sarasota attorney Evan Berlin, is to protect banks against what has become known as "flopping" -- a form of mortgage fraud in which real estate professionals get banks to accept low-ball prices for properties in some stage of foreclosure and quickly resell them at higher prices.
  • Though real estate agents acknowledge flopping is a legitimate concern for banks, they see the new contracts as another way in which banks are shifting more of the financial burden and liability of making sure mortgage fraud does not occur onto them. "The contracts put extra pressure on Realtors to do due diligence and could have a chilling effect on legitimate flip transactions," Berlin said.

For more, including contract excerpts from the Wells Fargo and Bank of America short sale documents, see New short-sale contracts upsetting Realtors.

Delinquent Debt-Buying Vultures Sighted Circling Around Yankee Stadium In Search Of Next Big Meal

In The Bronx, New York, Bloomberg reports:
  • Hedge funds specializing in distressed debt are buying municipal bonds backed by parking lots and garages at the new Yankee Stadium, which face a payment default as soon as next year, according to two people familiar with the purchases.

***

  • This facility seems meaningfully impaired, but there are some potential fixes,” said Laurence Gottlieb, chief executive officer of Fundamental Advisors LP, a private-equity firm in New York that buys municipal debt. “Costs can be reduced and it could be repositioned for commuter parking.”

***

  • Bronx Parking Development Co. issued the bonds through New York City’s Industrial Development Agency to build three garages, renovate two others and refurbish six lots near the 50,287-seat stadium.

***

  • The garages generated $2.4 million in April, 28 percent less than assumed, according to a May 25 report available to bondholders. They hold 9,266 spaces and the average occupancy has been 43 percent since the Yankees’ home season began March 31, according to bond filings. Self-parking on game days costs $35, an increase of $12 over last year.(1)
  • The facility will not have sufficient operating revenue to make an interest payment on April 1, 2012, based on current projections, according to Steven Polivy, an attorney at Akerman Senterfitt LLP in New York, which represents Bronx Parking. That payment would need to be made out of the debt service reserve fund, he said.

***

  • The Yankees continue to draw consistently strong attendance,” Morgan Stanley executive director Pete Block said in a March 18 report. The Yankees attracted 1.4 million fans to home games this season through June 9, up 16 percent from 1.2 million in the same period last year, according to the Sports Network news service. The Yankees led all Major League Baseball teams in attendance last year at 3.77 million, according to ESPN.

For more, see Hedge Funds Target Yankee Stadium Parking-Garage Muni Bonds Near Default.

(1) With the No. 4 train (East Side) and the B and D trains (West Side) continuing to make stops (after all these years) at East 161st Street and River Avenue, and the MTA Metro-North Railroad's Hudson Line stopping at the Yankees' E. 153rd Street Station, who the hell wants to get clipped for $35 in self-parking.

Further, I'm sure it doesn't help the bondholders much that the Yankees, on their own website, promote the use of mass transit in traveling to and from The Stadium "without having to deal with the hassles of parking, tolls and traffic" and give the general public this advice:

Monday, June 13, 2011

Standing-Lacking Banksters Take Another Hit In Federal Bankruptcy Appeals Ruling

In a 46-page opinion, the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit handed the bankster industry its latest drubbing in an Arizona case, finding that the banksters in question failed to establish that, given the facts of the case, they both:
  • lacked standing to seek relief from the automatic stay, and
  • lacked standing to file a proof of claim.

In addition to setting forth the facts in the case, the opinion discusses the issues as it breaks down as follows:

  • A. Standing in Mortgage Cases:

    1. Constitutional Standing
    2. Prudential Standing
    3. Prudential Standing and the Real Party in Interest Doctrine
    4. Real Party in Interest Status and Its Policies

    B. The Substantive Law Related to Notes Secured by Real Property

    1. Applicability of UCC Articles 3 and 9
    2. Article 3 of the UCC and the Concept of a “Person Entitled to Enforce” a Note
    3. Article 9 and Transfers of Ownership and Other Interests in a Promissory Note

    C. Wells Fargo’s Lack of Standing to Seek Relief from the Automatic Stay

    1. Standing to Seek Relief from Automatic Stay
    2. Wells Fargo’s Argument Regarding Standing
    3. Wells Fargo’s Lack of a Connection to the Note

    D. AHMSI’s Lack of Standing To File Proof of Claim

    1. The Lack of Findings on Central Issues
    2. Analysis of the Record and AHMSI’s Status as a “Person Entitled to Enforce” the Note

As referenced earlier, the opinion is 46 pages, so for those who are interested in this kind of stuff, you'll need to set aside some time to digest this ruling.(1)

For the ruling, see Veal v. American Home Mortgage Servicing, Inc. (In re Veal), BAP Nos. AZ-10-1055-MkKiJu, AZ-10-1056-MkKiJu, Bk. No. 09-14808 (9th Cir. BAP June 10, 2011).

Thanks to Mike Dillon at GetDShirtz. com and Deontos for the heads-up on the ruling.

(1) In the following selected excerpt, the court identifies one of the problems that, while it may not have directly impacted on the court's ruling, exists in many cases throughout the country: an assignment of mortgage that doesn't also assign the promissory note (while, in most jurisdictions, the general rule is that a mortgage follows the note that has been assigned, the note does doesn't follow the mortgage when only the latter is assigned) (bold text is emphasis contained in the ruling):

  • The purported assignment from Option One to Wells Fargo was different, however, and more limited. It purported to transfer

    the following described mortgage, securing the payment of a certain promissory note(s) for the sum listed below, together with all rights therein and thereto, all liens created or secured thereby, all obligations therein described, the money due and to become due thereon with interest, and all rights accrued or to accrue under such mortgage.

    Thus, unlike the assignment from GSF to Option One, the purported assignment from Option One to Wells Fargo does not contain language effecting an assignment of the Note. While the Note is referred to, that reference serves only to identify the Mortgage. Moreover, unlike the first assignment, the record is devoid of any indorsement of the Note from Option One to Wells Fargo. As a consequence, even had the second assignment been considered as evidence, it would not have provided any proof of the transfer of the Note to Wells Fargo. At most, it would have been proof that only the Mortgage, and all associated rights arising from it, had been assigned.7

In footnote 7 of its ruling, the court elaborated on the foregoing with this observation, one which may be helpful to those trying to convince a trial judge that a mortgage assignment doesn't operate to transfer the promissory note it secures unless the language of the assignment explicitly provides for such a transfer (bold text is my emphasis):

  • One might argue that the clauses in the assignment which follow the italicized appositive phrase are broad enough to pick up the Note, and thus effect a transfer of it. They do, after all, purport to transfer “all rights therein and thereto, . . . all obligations therein described, [and] the money due and to become due thereon with interest.”

    But given the carve out of the Note at the beginning of the sentence, the relative pronouns “therein,” “thereto,” and “thereon” more naturally refer back to the obligations contained in the Mortgage itself, such as the obligation to insure the Property, and not to an external obligation such as the Note. It would be odd indeed if, after referring to the Note but not explicitly making it the object of the transfer (as the initial assignment from GSF did), the words were made to curl back and pick up the Note just because the Mortgage mentioned the Note among its many terms. Although the clauses might be sufficiently vague to permit parol evidence to clarify their intended meaning, no such evidence was offered or requested.

Recent Michigan Court Ruling Slamming MERS Means More Headaches For Banksters Defending Securitization Process

The Wall Street Journal reports on the recent slamming of MERS by an Ann Arbor, Michigan trial judge in ruling on a recent paperwork screw-up that will be the source of great headaches to banksters defending the flawed securitization process by which they transferred mortgage loans to investors:
  • Last week, we wrote about how borrowers and courts have uncovered potential defects that could make it harder for banks to foreclose on certain homeowners whose loans were bundled together and sold as securities.
  • On Monday, a Michigan judge overturned a foreclosure after concluding that the foreclosing entity couldn’t have owned the mortgage after it failed to comply with certain mortgage securitization rules.

***

  • The decision is a possible setback for the securitization industry, which has argued that its transfers of mortgage loans are valid under the Uniform Commercial Code, which governs commerce across the nation. The Michigan court ruled that the specific securitization agreements didn’t comply with New York trust law, which superseded the UCC because it governs most so-called pooling and servicing agreements. (For more, see this write-up by Naked Capitalism.)

***

  • Potentially more troubling is the fact that investors in the mortgage bond deal didn’t actually own the loan that it believed it did. Securitizations are governed by very specific rules to ensure that they wouldn’t run afoul of special IRS rules designed to make mortgage-backed securities investments tax exempt. The case follows a similar decision by an Alabama trial court judge in March.

For more, see In Michigan Case, Securities Trip Up Foreclosure.

In a related story, see Naked Capitalism: Michigan Court Relies on New York Trust Theory, Rules Loan Never Made it to Trust.

For the Michigan court ruling, see Hendricks v. U.S. Bank Nat'l Association, Case N. 10-849 CH (Washtenaw Cty. Trial Ct., June 6, 2011).

Unsophisticated Lender Not a "Foreclosure Consultant", Dodges Liability On '11th Hour' Usurious Loan Made To Save Homeowner Facing Foreclosure

In a recent court ruling, a California Court of Appeals recently let an unsophisticated lender off the hook for liability on a usurious loan made to save a financially strapped homeowner about to lose her home at a foreclosure sale, agreeing with the trial judge that the lender lacked a usurious intent.

The appeals court also affirmed the trial court ruling that the unsophisticated lender did not fall within the definition of a "foreclosure consultant" under the California Mortgage Foreclosure Consultant Act (Civ. Code, § 2945 et seq.) and, accordingly, that statute was inapplicable to the subject transaction.

In each case, the issue centered primarily on the fact that the lender, one Richard T. Homem, was an individual unsophisticated in real estate matters, and was unfamiliar with the formal process of making a secured loan when entering into the loan agreement with one, Lisa Charter, the homeowner facing foreclosure.

The appeals court provides this description of what happened (the reference to one, Hjerpe, is a reference to the homeowner's attorney) (bold text is my emphasis):
  • At the time Homem made the loan to Charter, he was unaware of the terms of the promissory note. Those terms, including the length of the loan, the $15,000 fee, and the 8 percent interest rate, were supplied by Charter as approved terms from previous loan negotiations. Homem was unaware his loan would cover liens on Charter's property until after payment of the USDA mortgage and execution of a deed of trust in his name. Homem was told, and at all times believed, that the terms of the note were fair.

    Homem was not knowledgeable or experienced in loaning money. He had never loaned money for a promissory note, and was previously uninformed about the process. Homem paid Charter's defaulting mortgage before obtaining a promissory note or deed of trust to secure repayment.

    He is not an attorney or real estate broker, and holds no professional licenses of any kind. The promissory note was drafted by Hjerpe. Homem considered Hjerpe to serve as both his and Charter's attorney throughout the entire process, relied on his advice, and expected to be protected by him. These circumstances support the conclusion that Homem lacked a usurious intent.

Further, Homem's involvement in this matter appeared to occur innocently enough. His relationship with the homeowner that led to the transaction in question began by the latter's grandmother hiring Homem to do yard work around the house.

Upon finding out the house was in foreclosure, Homem asked the homeowner if she was interesting in selling it, to which she replied in the negative, and Homem initiated no further discussion on his inquiry. Eventually, it was the homeowner who began bugging Homem for a loan, which he was reluctant to make, after her attempts to refinance failed while the scheduled foreclosure date continued closing in on her.

According to the appeals court:

  • The trial court correctly found that Homem does not qualify as a foreclosure consultant. In so concluding, the trial court cited its finding that he did not intend to enter into a usurious transaction. We have already rejected Charter's challenge to this finding. (See pt. II.B., ante).

    Additionally, at the time of the June 2007 loan, no agreement required Homem to perform any of the listed services for compensation for Charter. Indeed, Homem had never made a loan or obtained a deed of trust before and was unaware how to conduct secured real estate transactions. The only agreements signed between Charter and Homem were the deed of trust and the promissory note, both of which were signed after the June 2007 foreclosure sale had been halted.

    Further, Charter's three calls to Homem for help the day before the USDA foreclosure sale and his reluctance to make the loan supports an inference that Charter solicited his help, and not vice-versa. The record satisfies us that Homem did not act or perform in a manner consistent with the statutory definition of a foreclosure consultant.

Further, in footnote 4 of the opinion, the appeals court made this observation on the trial court's ruling:

  • It also noted Homem could have denied Charter's requests for a loan and proceeded as a bidder at the June 2007 foreclosure sale. Instead, he tendered a cashier's check for the full amount of Charter's defaulted mortgage prior to the execution of documents to protect himself.

What triggered this litigation was that the homeowner ultimately went into default on the mortgage payments to Homem, at which point he foreclosed on the home and took title to it at a foreclosure sale.

For the ruling, see Charter v. Homem, No. A129519 (Cal. App. 1st Dist., Div. 4, June 8, 2011) (unpublished).