May
17

CALIFORNIA Foreclosure Help from Mandelman Matters – START HERE

You have found the Mandelman Matters state specific series of pages dedicated to homeowners at risk of foreclosure in California.

 

On the pages in this section you’ll find accurate, straightforward information and guidance specific to the State of California related to such topics as loan modifications, short sales, foreclosure defense litigation, bankruptcy… and other topics related to getting through the foreclosure crisis.

 

We’ve created these California specific pages in response to the proliferation of scammers polluting the Internet with misinformation and outright lies intended to sell something to homeowners at risk of foreclosure that they don’t need.  These sites are literally everywhere, and some are very good at appearing credible, when in fact they are nothing more than elaborate cons.

 

Well, we’ve taken great care to make sure that the information you’ll find here is always correct… always impartial… always based on real facts… and always easy to understand.

 

In case you’re not already familiar with me, my name is Martin Andelman and for going on four years, I’ve been writing the widely read blog Mandelman Matters.  Over the last three and a half years, I’ve written more than 650 in-depth articles covering the political, economic, social and legal aspects of the financial and foreclosure crises.

 

I decided that I had to do more to help stop homeowners from getting ripped off, by providing the state specific information homeowners need to make the right decisions for their individual goals and circumstances.  Moving forward on the best possible path… that’s what my state specific pages are all about.

 

And just so you know, I’ve never been in the mortgage business or the real estate business, but for more than twenty years I’ve been a writer that specializes in making complex subjects easy for people to understand… oh yeah, and people say I’m funny.  I have in-depth experience writing about subjects that fall under the broad headings of accounting, insurance, financial services and law.

 

You can read a lot more about me HEREHERE, and HERE.

 

You may want to start by getting to know my trusted attornies for the State of California, Gordon F. Dickson and Deborah P. Gutierrez of Prosper Law.

 

No one pays to be listed as a trusted attorney on Mandelman Matters… that’s just not how it works.  The lawyers I list as trusted… are simply those I trust.  And when I say that, I mean that I would trust these people to represent me, or to watch my house while I went away on vacation for the summer.

 

In order to write close to 700 articles on the economic situation we’re facing today, I had to learn everything possible about the mortgage and foreclosure crises.  Not only did I read dozens of books, research reports, court decisions, and more… I also had to interview a lot of people and many were attorneys from all over the country.  Over time, some became good friends.  So, when homeowners would call me to ask if I could recommend a lawyer, I would refer them to one that I had gotten to know well, and trusted.

 

As Mandelman Matters trusted attornies, Gordon Dickson and Deborah Gutierrez have agreed to take calls from California homeowners who have questions about foreclosures, and help them by providing answers regardless of whether the caller decides to hire their firm or not.  So, if you want to talk with someone who knows foreclosure in California, please don’t hesitate to call them.

 

For Prosper Law’s contact information, CLICK HERE.

And, if you’re looking for State ResourcesCLICK HERE.

Need to know more about California Foreclosure LawsCLICK HERE.

Want to read my latest post about California on Mandelman Matters? CLICK HERE.

May
17

State of California Foreclosure Resource Links

This Page Sponsored By…

Gordon F. Dickson, Chairman & Senior Partner &

Deborah P. Gutierrez, Managing Partner

PROSPER LAW – The Homeowner’s Law Firm

6100 Center Drive, Suite 1050
Los Angeles, CA 90045
info@prosperlaw.com

Telephone: 310.893.6200
Toll Free: 800.808.9798
Facsimile: 800.808.0428

Website: www.prosperlaw.com

 

STATE OF CALFORNIA GOVERNMENT RESOURCES:

California Department of Justice, Office of the Attorney General

Kamala D. Harris

Attorney General Consumer Alerts, Information and Complaints

  • You may find your answer in the most frequently asked questions or the listed consumer topics.
  • Online complaint referral tables, pdf. By taking this step, your complaint can get to the government agency that directly regulates the individuals or businesses about which you have a complaint.
  • Ways to resolve your complaint. Consider your options. Remember, you must pursue remedies in your private dispute on your own. The AG can’t provide you with legal advice or represent you in personal legal actions.

California Department of Consumer Affairs

CA Department of Consumer Affairs – File A Complaint

California Department of Finance

California Department of Financial Institutions

California Department of Insurance

CA Department of Insurance – Consumer Information

California Judicial Branch

California Legislature

California Office of the Governor

Governor Edmund G. Brown, Jr.

Office of the Governor, Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

California Secretary of State

California State Assembly

John A. Perez, Speaker of the Assembly

John Boehenr, Speaker of the House

California Bill Information

California Law Information – Code

California Legislative Calendar

California Legislation – Find A Bill

Find My CA Representative

California State Auditor

State Auditor, Elaine M. Howle, CPA

California State Senate

Find My Senator – By District

 State of California Franchise Tax Board

State of California

 

STATE OF CALIFORNIA FORECLOSURE RESOURCES:

California Association of Realtors

California Department of Real Estate (DRE)

DRE Foreclosure Brochure

Filing a Complaint with the Department

California Department of Housing and Community Development

Complaint Information Sheet

State of California Consumer Home Mortgage Information

California Foreclosure Information

California Foreclosure Law Summary

California Foreclosure Prevention Act

California Foreclosure Process – Housing and Economic Rights Advocates

California Local Department of Housing & Urban Development (HUD) Offices

California Mortgage Assistance Corporation

Foreclosure Prevention Workshops – Freddie Mac

Neighborhood Housing Services of Los Angeles County

Neighborhood Housing Services of Orange County

Neighborhood Housing Services of Silicon Valley

Neighborhood Housing Services of the Inland Empire

State of California Franchise Tax Form – Mortgage Forgiveness and Debt Relief Law

REPORT FRAUD OR SCAMS IN CALIFORNIA:

CA Association of Realtors Foreclosure-Related Scam Info & Help

California Department of Financial Institutions – Online Complaint Form

California Office of Consumer Affairs – Complaint Self-Help for Consumers

Prevent Loan Scams – California

California Department of Justice, Office of the Attorney General – Consumer Complaint Form

AG’s Public Inquiry Unit, including comsumer complaint info: (800) 952-5225

U.S. Consumer Action Website

STATE OF CALIFORNIA ADDITIONAL RESOURCES:

Vote – Find Your Polling Place

STATE OF CALIFORNIA SHORT SALE RESOURCES:

Fannie Mae Short Sale Assistance Desk

California Association of Realtors Short Sale Information and Advisory

STATE OF CALIFORNIA COURTS:

California Courts of Appeal

California Law Library

California Superior Courts

California Supreme Court

U.S. Bankruptcy Court – Central District of California

U.S. Bankruptcy Court – Eastern District of California

U.S. Bankruptcy Court – Northern District of California

U.S. Bankruptcy Court – Southern District of California

U.S. District Court – Central District of California

U.S. District Court – Eastern District of California

U.S. District Court – Northern District of California

U.S. District Court – Southern District of California

 

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT RESOURCES:

Fannie Mae Loan Look-Up Tool – Find out if your loan is owned by Fannie Mae here.

Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force

Freddie Mac Loan Look-Up Tool – Find out if Freddie Mac owns your loan here.

Homeowner Crisis Resource Center – Includes tips on avoiding foreclosure.

Homeownership Preservation Foundation – Find Credit Counseling here and HERE.

Information on the OCC’s Independent Foreclosure Review

MyMoney.gov – This site organizes financial education help from over 20 different Federal web sites in one place, including dealing with mortgages.

OCC’s Tips for Avoiding Foreclosure Rescue Scams

Office of the Comptroller of the Currency – For Complaints Against National Banks

Service Members Civil Relief Act – The Act that postpones or suspends certain civil obligations to enable service members to devote their full attention to duty and to relieve stress on their families. The act covers:

•       Outstanding credit card debt

•       Mortgage payments

•       Pending trials

•       Taxes

•       Termination of lease

•       Eviction from housing

•       Life insurance protection

Get more information at Military.com or at HUD’s National Servicing Center,                                                                             and here is Information for Veterans from HUD.

U.S. Congressional Representative Look-up Tool

U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development – Avoiding Foreclosures

May
17

California Foreclosure Laws

CLICK BELOW FOR:

State of California Foreclosure Laws

The link above will take you to the page dedicated to California’s foreclosure laws.  But, always remember… often people have a hard time understanding exactly what our laws mean just by reading them, so we always recommend that you contact an attorney and ask any questions you may have.

In California, the Mandelman Matters “trusted attornies,” are Gordon F. Dickson & Deborah P. Gutierrez.  You can reach them by clicking below, and they are happy to answer your questions about California foreclosure or anything related, so don’t worry about calling or sending them an email.

PROSPER LAW PLC

May
17

California Foreclosure Defense Attorney

Gordon F. Dickson, Chairman & Senior Partner

Deborah P. Gutierrez, Managing Partner

PROSPER LAW – The Homeowner’s Law Firm

6100 Center Drive, Suite 1050
Los Angeles, CA 90045
info@prosperlaw.com

Telephone: 310.893.6200
Toll Free: 800.808.9798
Facsimile: 800.808.0428

Website: www.prosperlaw.com

May
16

The Better Business Bureau, the State Bar, Loan Mods & Lawyers in California

 

For going on three years now I’ve watched the State of California more so than any other engage in a debate over loan modifications and lawyers, the key questions being: do you need one, should you have one, are lawyers scamming homeowners, and most notably, since California’s Senate Bill  94 (“SB 94”) became law in October of 2009, when can a lawyer be paid when providing loan modification services.

 

Throughout this “debate,” the Better Business Bureau has played a role by rating law firms offering loan modification services.  If the BBB says that someone is ‘A’ rated then presumably consumers are more likely to turn to that firm for assistance, and obviously, being rated ‘F’ tends to have the opposite effect.

 

Well, recently a law firm with which I’ve become very familiar over the last three years, CDA Law in Orange County, California, was rated ‘F’ by the BBB, and predictably, within a couple of weeks the firm started losing clients because of the rating.

 

Before I explain the background for what’s going on here, I want to be clear about a few things:

 

  1. I have no financial interest in CDA Law, nor am I being paid to write this.
  2. I’m sure that I’ve referred at least 200 hundred homeowners to CDA Law over the last few years, I don’t keep track of the number, but it’s in that range without question, and all I have to show for it are thank you notes.
  3. CDA Law does not deserve to be rated ‘F’ by the BBB.  The BBB’s ‘F’ rating is based on a politically motivated intentional misstatement of the law by certain individuals.
  4. This past year I personally audited 400 randomly selected 2011 client files at CDA Law, so I know how they perform first hand.  Over almost four years, firm records show it obtained permanent loan modifications for more than 3,000 California homeowners.

 

I also want to be clear that I am not writing this to tell homeowners that in all cases they should retain CDA Law.  Every homeowner’s situation, facts and goals are different, and the decision as to which law firm one should or shouldn’t engage depends on the specifics involved.

 

What I am here to do is state unequivocally to homeowners that it is my considered opinion that the decision not to retain CDA Law should not be based on the firm’s BBB’s rating, because that rating is baseless and entirely inappropriate.

 

 

The fact is that upon learning of the BBB’s ‘F’ rating of CDA Law, I offered to write this because I’m all but certain that some number of homeowners who decide to avoid CDA Law because of its BBB rating will end up getting scammed and homes will be lost to foreclosure as a result.

 

And, at this point in the foreclosure crisis, the fact that I can say that about the chances of a homeowner getting ripped off by a scammer, or wrongfully made homeless by a servicer, is both an unthinkable tragedy and a shameful testament to the failure of our state and federal regulators to protect homeowners from predatory servicers and unscrupulous operators of various foreclosure avoidance schemes.

 

Okay, so why is CDA Law rated ‘F’ by the BBB?

 

To understand where we stand today in California as related to lawyers and loan modifications, you have to understand a few things about how it all started back in 2009, when we went through a phase where we were told by banks, government agencies and the mainstream media that everyone involved in loan modifications was a “scammer.”

 

According to a knowledgeable insider who worked at the California State Bar Association at the time, the State Bar had no history of lawyers committing acts of misconduct related to loan modifications until the very end of 2008 when complaints started to trickle in, and then in 2009, inundate the Bar with 800-900 a month.  No one knew what was going on back then.  I’m sure just seeing the raw numbers of complaints was shocking, never mind what was being said.

 

California is the only state with a State Bar that is both a trade association and regulatory agency.  Technically, the Bar reports to the state’s Supreme Court, but at the same time the Governor can prevent the Bar from collecting its dues, and as a result the state legislature is known to put pressure on the Bar as well.

 

Most often, over the last 25 years, that pressure has come in the form of criticism that the Bar is not vigilant enough when it comes to prosecuting lawyers for misconduct.

 

By Spring of 2009, a joint task force was being set up to go after these “scammers” who were taking advantage of distressed homeowners.  Included would be the Office of the Attorney General, the state’s Department of Real Estate, the FTC… and of course, the State Bar.

 

Then State Bar president Howard Miller saw the task force as an opportunity to show politicians in Sacramento that the Bar was ready to get tough on crime, on behalf of the defenseless victims of the foreclosure crisis.

 

So, during summer of that year, Howard Miller, made the following statement to the press…

 

“At least hundreds and perhaps thousands of California lawyers who have been victimizing those who are already victims at the most vulnerable point in their lives… every one of those lawyers will be subject to discipline and some will go to jail.”

 

How many of the scammers were lawyers?  No one had any idea, in fact the State Bar hadn’t even had time to read the vast majority of the complaints, but there was no question that there were many charging up-front fees and claiming to be able to get loans modified, and with increasing and alarming frequency, they were definitely ripping off homeowners.

 

Back then, I think every major bank played messages to those waiting on hold that said: “You don’t need a lawyer, call (insert bank name) for assistance with a loan modification.”  And both the state and federal government’s positions were almost identical: “You don’t need a lawyer, call your bank or a HUD counselor for assistance with a loan modification.”

 

To anyone watching, one thing was very clear: Neither the banks nor our government wanted homeowners to retain lawyers to help them save their homes from foreclosure.

 

That the banks took this position wasn’t surprising.  Obviously, it would be easier to deal with a homeowner than a homeowner’s attorney.  And attorneys in the mix would mean the threat of litigation, which would be both costly and time consuming for banks to defend.  And as to why, in 2009, those in our government also assumed an anti-lawyer stance related to lawyers and loan modifications, to me the answer was the obvious one… they went along with the banks.

 

Miller’s statement always seemed to be a preposterous one to me, and I wrote about it at the time, saying that I found it impossible to accept that there were “hundreds if not thousands” of lawyers scamming homeowners in California or anywhere else for that matter.

 

Were there some?  Of course there were some.

 

California is a state of enormous size; over 37 million residents, roughly 7 million homeowners and more than 235,000 licensed attorneys, according to the California State Bar Association.  There are “some” of just about anything you can think of here.  I’d bet money that in California today there are “some” wearing tin foil so that the space ships can’t see them.  But were there ever “hundreds if not thousands” of lawyers scamming homeowners having to do with loan modifications?  Not a chance.

 

By 2010 it was becoming increasingly obvious that that what the Bar’s president had told the press about “hundreds if not thousands of lawyers” scamming homeowners was in fact false.

 

Just consider that as of May 12, 2012, and this is according to the State Bar Press Office, since February of 2009, more than three years after Mr. Miller voiced those inflammatory allegations:

 

  • Since 2009, only 18 attorneys in California have been disbarred related to providing loan modification services. 

 

  • The State Bar has “pursued disciplinary charges related to loan modification services involving about 153 attorneys.”

 

  • Of those, only 69 have been disciplined in some way, which includes anything from being required to attend an ethics class to a temporary suspension.

 

  • None have gone to jail. 

 

In California, a state with over 235,000 licensed attorneys, the disbarment of 18 lawyers is hardly to be considered pandemic.  And it’s a far cry from Miller’s “hundreds if not thousands,” to be sure.

 

There simply never were hundreds much less thousands of lawyers scamming homeowners in California.

 

The Banking Committees Get in On the Act…

 

Other politicians were fast to get in on the consumer protection act as well.

 

Senator Ron Calderon and Assembly Representative Pedro Nava, each the chairs of their respective banking committees, were both quick to sponsor bills claiming to protect homeowners from the proliferation of loan modification scammers.

 

Ex-Mortgage Banker, Sen. Ron S. Calderon

Chaired Senate Banking Committee, Sponsor of SB 94 

Senator Calderon’s bill, known as SB 94, was the one signed into law on October 12, 2009, with the Mortgage Bankers Association, the California State Bar Association and the California Department of Real Estate all listed among the supporters of the bill.

SB 94 was written to apply to both lawyers and Department of Real Estate (“DRE”) licensees.  The language pertaining to lawyers is found in the California Civil Code, and the language pertaining to DRE licensees is in the California Business & Professions Code.

 

The scams, in all cases, involved homeowners being required to pay an up-front or advance fee, so SB 94 focused on making it illegal to charge an advance fee related to providing loan modification services.  So, whether we’re talking about a licensed attorney or DRE licensee, the operative language is identical.  Neither is permitted to…

 

“…claim, demand, charge, collect, or receive any compensation until after the person has fully performed each and every service the person contracted to perform or represented that he or she would perform.” 

 

But, as it pertained to DRE licensees, however, SB 94 went a step further by modifying language contained in Business & Professions (“B&P”) Code Section 10026 to prevent DRE licensees from breaking up loan modification services or fees into component parts as shown below in bold:

 

DIVISION 4.  REAL ESTATE

    PART 1.  LICENSING OF PERSONS

     CHAPTER 1.  GENERAL PROVISIONS …………………………. 10000-10035

10026.  (a) The term “advance fee,” as used in this part, is a fee, regardless of the form, that is claimed, demanded, charged, received, or collected by a licensee for services requiring a license, or for a listing, as that term is defined in Section 10027, before fully completing the service the licensee contracted to perform or represented would be performed. Neither an advance fee nor the services to be performed shall be separated or divided into components for the purpose of avoiding the application of this division.

 

As a result, a DRE licensee can only view a loan modification as a single service, and therefore only be paid after that one service has been provided, which would be when the homeowner is either approved or denied for a loan modification… the very end of the process.

 

However, there is no language in SB 94 that prohibits lawyers from breaking up loan modification services and/or fees into parts, as there is for DRE licensees.

 

Therefore, while SB 94 precludes lawyers from charging advance fees, the law does allow lawyers providing loan modification services to be paid for a specific set of contracted services upon their completion, regardless of whether at the beginning, middle or end of the loan modification process.

 

The legal profession refers to this as the “unbundling” of services.

 

Even though literally hundreds of lawyers from all over California contacted the State Bar to ask about the unbundling of services into separate contractual agreements under SB 94, with compensation being received at the end of each contract, for more than two years, the State Bar remained quiet on the subject.

 

Of course, it didn’t much matter what the banks or government entities had said in early 2009, many homeowners discovered very quickly that calling their bank directly, or a HUD counselor, did not result in their loans being modified… and on top of that, it was a maddening and even torturous experience.  It was becoming clearer every day that having a lawyer to help get your loan modified wasn’t such a bad idea.

 

It seemed that the storm had passed.

 

Enter: The Better Business Bureau

 

In 2010, the BBB reacted to the rhetoric by giving an ‘F’ rating to just about everyone providing loan modification services in California.

 

Frankly, I always found that policy to be disadvantageous to homeowners because it forced consumers to choose a firm from a basket of ‘Fs,’ and since clearly some deserved the low rating and others didn’t, I reasoned that such a policy actually increased the potential for consumers to make a bad choice.

 

Having successfully completed more than 3,000 loan modifications for California homeowners over the last four years, not only is CDA Law not a scammer, but they’d certainly appear at or near the top of anyone’s list of most effective firms modifying loans.

 

Eventually, the BBB apparently agreed, awarding CDA Law an ‘A-‘ rating for a period of time.

 

And, yes… I am the authority on this issue. 

 

I want the reader to know that what I’m saying is not based on a cursory review of the subject matter.  My qualifications to make the statements I’m making about loan modifications and the foreclosure crisis in California at the very least equal anyone else’s.  Although it was never my intention that this be the case, on the subject of the foreclosure crisis, I’ve become a leading expert, and I can’t imagine anyone contesting that claim.

 

In point of fact, this past year I was accepted as an “expert witness” by the California State Bar Court and I provided expert testimony on loan modifications and the foreclosure crisis in an administrative hearing on behalf of an attorney in that court.

 

I started writing about the foreclosure crisis in 2008.  Since then I’ve written close to 700 articles on the political, economic, social and legal aspects of the financial and foreclosure crises.  To do that, as you might imagine, I’ve read essentially all of the most widely known articles, reports, or studies that have been published nationwide.

 

Last year, when I stopped counting, I’d received more than 30,000 emails from homeowners all over the country.  I’ve personally interviewed close to 4,000 homeowners at risk of foreclosure along with hundreds of attorneys involved in representing such homeowners.

 

In 2010, I also conducted a qualitative study of homeowner complaints, which included reading 1200 letters written by homeowners who had either hired a lawyer, a mortgage broker, or no one at all to help them with their loan modification.

 

I was an invited speaker on the subject of loan modifications at the American Bar Association’s Conference on Consumer Financial Services, appearing on a panel with Thomas Pahl, an Assistant Director in the FTC’s Division of Financial Practices, and I was invited to speak on the crisis again, from the homeowner’s perspective, at the 9th Circuit Judicial Conference in front of a few hundred federal court judges.

 

Additionally, I’ve been invited to speak at numerous homeowner meetings, and at a luncheon held by the Orange County Bar Association, for whom I also taught a CLE class for attorneys on loan modifications, alongside a compliance and mortgage banking attorney, and an ethics and bar defense attorney.

 

 

And I have not let up for what is now going on four years.  I continue to write my blog, Mandelman Matters, which is among the most widely read on the subject, and I continue to make my email and phone number available online, which means I get hundreds of calls and emails each month from homeowners at risk of foreclosure, and attorneys involved in foreclosure defense in almost all 50 states.

 

Lastly, I have no dog in this race, as they say.  I’ve never been in the mortgage or real estate industries, never been paid a nickel by a homeowner, nor for referring anyone anywhere.  I’m not personally at risk of foreclosure… today, anyway… and I have no direct financial incentive to say anything specific about the crisis or about CDA Law.

 

Now back to the BBB…

 

This past fall, members of the state legislature told the State Bar that they needed to clean up the back log of disciplinary cases, and once again, politics appears to have played a role in the Bar’s use of inflammatory rhetoric and behavior.

 

Suzan Anderson, Supervisor of the State Bar’s Special Team on Loan Modification Fraud, while speaking at the State Bar’s Annual Meeting last September, announced that the Bar would now be taking the position that lawyers helping clients with loan modifications would not be permitted to unbundle services related to loan modifications.

 

Ms. Anderson said that it was now the position of the California State Bar that lawyers working on obtaining loan modifications on behalf of their clients could not be paid until the end of the loan modification process, even though no such language is found in the statute. Not only that, but a disclaimer at the bottom of her presentation’s front page stated that this was not the official position of the State Bar, so once again the Bar wasn’t willing to make it a policy.

 

Following the State Bar’s annual meeting, prosecutors at the Bar began using the threat of SB 94 to get attorneys who were offering loan modification services to accept some sort of disciplinary action for unbundling their services.  These attorneys were only accepting payment for services upon the completion of contracted services, and they therefore were complying with both the language contained in SB 94 and the bill’s legislative intent, according to its drafter.  None that I knew personally ever charged advance fees.

 

The State Bar has provided no basis for their new opinion, nor have they allowed the issue to be argued in front of a judge.  Maybe the basis is their misreading of the statute.  Maybe it’s because the banking lobby has pressured the state legislature to do everything possible to stop homeowners from hiring lawyers to help them get their loans modified.

 

Or, maybe it’s just a feeling they have… I really don’t care.  The Bar’s made up of lawyers and they’ve had almost three years to figure it out, so unless they’re remedial readers, I’m done giving them a free pass.

 

Never mind for a moment what the law says, the fact is that lawyers could not offer to help homeowners with loan modifications if they couldn’t be paid until the end of the process, and the reason should be very easy to understand.

 

Homeowners applying for a loan modification… by definition… are experiencing a significant financial hardship and as a result, many end up filing bankruptcy at some point in the process.

 

That means if a lawyer were not paid along the way as services were completed, then he or she would often work for six months or a year to get a loan modified… and then, upon advising the client to file bankruptcy… have his or her bill for services placed into the bankruptcy as unsecured debt to be discharged.  The lawyer would never be able to receive payment for what could easily be months of time spent working on getting the loan modified.

 

It’s an unresolvable conflict.  Work all year.  Advise your client to file bankruptcy.  And then tear up your bill for your year’s work on the loan modification.  Do you know anyone that could or would work under such a condition?

 

The State Bar, if asked, says that they’re not trying to prevent homeowners at risk of foreclosure from being able to hire lawyers to help them get their loans modified.  But, that statement strains credulity when their so-called interpretation sets up the type of conflict as is found with SB 94.

 

What the State Bar started doing last fall is clearly politically motivated and very wrong.  And at this point, the issue is going to have to be settled by the courts as there is already one lawsuit filed by an attorney against the State Bar over their interpretation of SB 94, and most assuredly others are going to be filed very soon.

 

By the way, it’s interesting because as I mentioned, outside of threatening lawyers with charges of unbundling services under SB 94, the Bar has never actually brought such charges into court.  Instead, the State Bar only threatens attorneys with violations of SB 94, but then offers the lawyers some sort of deal to avoid have charges filed, and in all cases to-date the lawyers have taken the deal rather than take on the risk and expense of fighting the State Bar in court.

 

Once the lawyer accepts the discipline deal offered by the Bar, his name goes onto the Bar’s regulatory scorecard that they can then show to whichever members of the state legislature are interested, as proof that they are cleaning up their backlog of cases and being tough on the lawyers they regulate.

 

But, let’s be honest about this… we know which members of the state legislature we’re talking about here, right?  Why, the members of the senate and/or assembly banking committees, of course.  Do I know that to be a fact?  No.  But, if anyone is feeling lucky, let me know and I’d be happy to see if we can’t arrange a little wager.  Who else do you think it could be… telecommunications?  Agriculture?  Please…

 

It’s really quite scandalous.

 

The California State Bar has been getting away with using attorneys that offer to help homeowners obtain loan modifications as their political piñata for far too long.  It’s an example of a state agency abusing its power for political purposes and it must be stopped before its behavior causes any further harm to California homeowners.

 

Three years after SB 94 was signed into law, and its become abundantly clear that Miller’s statements were made for political purposes, without any regard for the truth or consideration of the harm such statements could cause.

 

Miller was all too aware that the State Bar was under attack by some in the state legislature for not aggressively disciplining lawyers, and he saw what was going on related to loan modifications and the foreclosure crisis as a way to look like a tough regulator of the legal profession.

 

The BBB Strikes Again…

 

One of the ways the Bar has endeavored to made life difficult for lawyers offering to help homeowners obtain loan modifications is by telling the BBB about what I would call their incorrect and baseless interpretation of SB 94.

 

And if you’re a lawyer helping homeowners with loan modifications, it’s not at all unusual to wake up one morning to find your firm has been rated ‘F’ by the BBB.

 

Why?  Because you’re unbundling loan modification services, of course.  Contracting to perform services A, B, C & D… and not being paid until those services have been completed to your client’s satisfaction.  Just like the language in SB 94 says you can do.

 

And just so everyone knows… I’m far from alone in this view.  Most or all State Bar Defense and Ethics attorneys in California share my view, as do numerous legal scholars and literally hundreds of other licensed practicing California attorneys.

 

We’ve learned a lot since 2009, or at least we should have…

 

In 2009, when President Obama announced his Making Home Affordable plan, most people in this country believed it would work.  Obama was the smart president… the man of the people.

 

It hasn’t worked though, at least nowhere near as he said it would, and we’ve also learned that he is as Wall Street friendly as they come… at least that’s how he behaved during his first term.

 

 

During the summer of 2009, when someone’s loan didn’t get modified, a lot of lawyers and others got the blame… many were even wrongly branded “scammers” as a result.  But, today we should all know what was actually going on, right?  It was the servicers that were at best giving homeowners the run-around and failing to modify loans as required under the president’s program.

 

And as State Bar Deputy Trial Counsel Victoria Molloy said back in 2010…

 

“If an attorney is hired to assist in a loan modification, and they make good faith efforts, whether they’re successful or not, presumably they’ve earned their fees.”

 

We know that today, but we didn’t know it then.  There were never “hundreds if not thousands” of lawyers scamming homeowners, that number was closer to 18.  The damage, however, was done, and many California homeowners who chose to go it alone lost their homes as a result.

 

Without question, that erroneous statement made by the Bar’s president continues to cause significant harm to the legal profession and to the numerous licensed and ethical attorneys in California who want to help, or do offer to help homeowners get their loans restructured.

 

Beyond those egregious outcomes, the State Bar’s lie has also caused irrevocable harm to California homeowners who have either not been able to find lawyers to represent them when seeking loan modifications, or have been too scared of being scammed by the fictitious thousands of illicit lawyers to try.

 

California has roughly two million homeowners either already in foreclosure or seriously delinquent, far more than any other state.  Whether the media wants to admit it or not, our state is literally drowning as a result of foreclosures, with our state’s budget deficit now at $16 billion and potentially rising.

 

And there should be no question, in light of the recent National Mortgage Settlement, among many other factors, that mortgage servicers are quite capable of abusing the rights of homeowners seeking to modify loans.

 

With all of that being the case, it would seem obvious that what the State Bar continues to do to prevent the legal profession in California from helping homeowners modify their loans is unconscionable and must be stopped.

 

The BBB is just acting as a witless and willing accomplice in this plot to deprive homeowners of lawyers should they find themselves at risk of foreclosure.  They’re certainly not protecting anyone by rating CDA Law ‘F.’  In fact, they’re only harming homeowners by doing that.

 

Over a four-year timeframe, and having helped over 3,000 homeowner get their loans modified, CDA Law has had only 15 total complaints with the BBB, as follows: 2009… 2, 2010… 7, 2011… 5 2012… just 1.  It’s not an easy business, dealing with servicers and homeowners at risk of foreclosure.  Not everyone will be happy.

 

But, in CDA’s case, complaints are under one-half of one percent, and every one has been answered… some of the complaints were made by homeowners who got their loans modified with CDA Law’s help, but they didn’t like the terms offered by their servicer.

 

At the same time, if you do visit the BBB’s website, be sure to check out the TrustLink positive comments made by 243 of CDA’s very satisfied clients who are still in their homes because of the work done by the attorneys and support staff at CDA Law.

 

And, by the way… SB 94 has not stopped scammers in California… they are as plentiful as they ever were.  Throw a dart at Google’s front page after searching for loan modification or anything close and I can all but assure you of getting robbed.

 

And the State Bar knows what I’m saying is true, because at the end of 2010, Suzan Anderson, Supervisor of the State Bar’s Special Team on Loan Modification Fraud, speaking last December to David Streitfeld of The New York Times about SB 94 said the following: “I wish the law had worked.”

 

Yeah, well don’t we all.

 

I look forward to the day when this area of the law can no longer be muddied by mortgage banking industry lobbyists and the politically motivated opinions of members of banking committees.

 

California is the only state having this debate, by the way.  The other 49 states figured things out ages ago, if they ever had the debate in the first place, and the FTC’s MARS rule, which allows lawyers to accept retainers into their trust account, receiving amounts as earned.

 

Soon enough, the courts will rule.  I have no doubt that California’s courts will uphold the rule of law, and not succumb to the wishes of the banking elite.

 

Banks have lawyers that help them, and should I ever find myself at risk of losing my own home to foreclosure, I want to be able to hire a lawyer to sit on my side of the table as well.  I don’t need the State Bar or the state legislature “protecting” me from scammers, imaginary or otherwise, if by doing so they are going to take away my absolute right to legal council.

 

Feel free to email me with questions or comments at mandelman@mac.com.

 

Martin Andelman

Mandelman Matters

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

May
16

ARIZONA Foreclosure Help from Mandelman Matters – START HERE

You have found the Mandelman Matters state specific series of pages dedicated to homeowners at risk of foreclosure in Arizona.

 

On the pages in this section you’ll find accurate, straightforward information and guidance specific to the State of Arizona related to such topics as loan modifications, short sales, foreclosure defense litigation, bankruptcy… and other topics related to getting through the foreclosure crisis.

 

We’ve created these Arizona specific pages in response to the proliferation of scammers polluting the Internet with misinformation and outright lies intended to sell something to homeowners at risk of foreclosure that they don’t need.  These sites are literally everywhere, and some are very good at appearing credible, when in fact they are nothing more than elaborate cons.

 

Well, we’ve taken great care to make sure that the information you’ll find here is always correct… always impartial… always based on real facts… and always easy to understand.

 

In case you’re not already familiar with me, my name is Martin Andelman and for going on four years, I’ve been writing the widely read blog Mandelman Matters.  Over the last three and a half years, I’ve written more than 650 in-depth articles covering the political, economic, social and legal aspects of the financial and foreclosure crises.

 

I decided that I had to do more to help stop homeowners from getting ripped off, by providing the state specific information homeowners need to make the right decisions for their individual goals and circumstances.  Moving forward on the best possible path… that’s what my state specific pages are all about.

 

And just so you know, I’ve never been in the mortgage business or the real estate business, but for more than twenty years I’ve been a writer that specializes in making complex subjects easy for people to understand… oh yeah, and people say I’m funny.  I have in-depth experience writing about subjects that fall under the broad headings of accounting, insurance, financial services and law.

 

You can read a lot more about me HEREHERE, and HERE.

 

You may want to start by getting to know my trusted attornies for the State of Arizona, Michael Fleishman and Donald Lawrence.

 

No one pays to be listed as a trusted attorney on Mandelman Matters… that’s just not how it works.  The lawyers I list as trusted… are simply those I trust.  And when I say that, I mean that I would trust these people to represent me, or to watch my house while I went away on vacation for the summer.

 

In order to write close to 700 articles on the economic situation we’re facing today, I had to learn everything possible about the mortgage and foreclosure crises.  Not only did I read dozens of books, research reports, court decisions, and more… I also had to interview a lot of people and many were attorneys from all over the country.  Over time, some became good friends.  So, when homeowners would call me to ask if I could recommend a lawyer, I would refer them to one that I had gotten to know well, and trusted.

 

As Mandelman Matters trusted attornies, Michael Fleishman and Donald Lawrence have agreed to take calls from Arizona homeowners who have questions about foreclosures, and help them by providing answers regardless of whether the caller decides to hire their firm or not.  So, if you want to talk with someone who knows foreclosure in Arizona, please don’t hesitate to call them.

 

For Fleishman Law’s contact information, CLICK HERE.

For Donald Lawrences’ contact information, CLICK HERE.

And, if you’re looking for State ResourcesCLICK HERE.

Need to know more about Arizona Foreclosure LawsCLICK HERE.

Want to read my latest post about Arizona on Mandelman Matters? CLICK HERE.

May
16

FLORIDA Foreclosure Help from Mandelman Matters – START HERE

You have found the Mandelman Matters state specific series of pages dedicated to homeowners at risk of foreclosure in Florida.

On the pages in this section you’ll find accurate, straightforward information and guidance specific to the State of Florida related to such topics as loan modifications, short sales, foreclosure defense litigation, bankruptcy… and other topics related to getting through the foreclosure crisis.

 

We’ve created these Florida specific pages in response to the proliferation of scammers polluting the Internet with misinformation and outright lies intended to sell something to homeowners at risk of foreclosure that they don’t need.  These sites are literally everywhere, and some are very good at appearing credible, when in fact they are nothing more than elaborate cons.

 

Well, we’ve taken great care to make sure that the information you’ll find here is always correct… always impartial… always based on real facts… and always easy to understand.

 

In case you’re not already familiar with me, my name is Martin Andelman and for going on four years, I’ve been writing the widely read blog Mandelman Matters.  Over the last three and a half years, I’ve written more than 650 in-depth articles covering the political, economic, social and legal aspects of the financial and foreclosure crises.

 

I decided that I had to do more to help stop homeowners from getting ripped off, by providing the state specific information homeowners need to make the right decisions for their individual goals and circumstances.  Moving forward on the best possible path… that’s what my state specific pages are all about.

 

And just so you know, I’ve never been in the mortgage business or the real estate business, but for more than twenty years I’ve been a writer that specializes in making complex subjects easy for people to understand… oh yeah, and people say I’m funny.  I have in-depth experience writing about subjects that fall under the broad headings of accounting, insurance, financial services and law.

 

You can read a lot more about me HEREHERE, and HERE.

 

You may want to start by getting to know my trusted attorney for the State of Florida, Cox & Sanchez.

 

No one pays to be listed as a trusted attorney on Mandelman Matters… that’s just not how it works.  The lawyers I list as trusted… are simply those I trust.  And when I say that, I mean that I would trust these people to represent me, or to watch my house while I went away on vacation for the summer.

 

In order to write close to 700 articles on the economic situation we’re facing today, I had to learn everything possible about the mortgage and foreclosure crises.  Not only did I read dozens of books, research reports, court decisions, and more… I also had to interview a lot of people and many were attorneys from all over the country.  Over time, some became good friends.  So, when homeowners would call me to ask if I could recommend a lawyer, I would refer them to one that I had gotten to know well, and trusted.

 

As a Mandelman Matters trusted attorney, Cox & Sanchez has agreed to take calls from Florida homeowners who have questions about foreclosures, and help them by providing answers regardless of whether the caller decides to hire their firm or not.  So, if you want to talk with someone who knows foreclosure in Florida, please don’t hesitate to call them.

 

For Cox & Sanchez’s contact information, CLICK HERE.

And, if you’re looking for State ResourcesCLICK HERE.

Need to know more about Florida Foreclosure LawsCLICK HERE.

Want to read my latest post about Florida on Mandelman Matters? CLICK HERE.

May
16

Wells Fargo gives $22,000 to Suicide Hotline… A gift the bank can use too.

 

It all started when I saw that this past February, Wells Fargo had donated $22,000 to establish a suicide prevention hotline in Idaho, apparently the state with the fourth highest suicide rate in the nation.  I find that statistic a little odd, but what do I know.  I’ve never even been to Idaho.

 

The United Way for Treasure Valley phrased it as follows on their website:

 

Wells Fargo stepped up Tuesday with a $22,000 gift to help establish an Idaho Suicide Prevention hotline.

“Wells Fargo is pleased to invest in this important community initiative to address a critical need in our state,” said Dana Reddington, Idaho Region president for the banking firm.

 

Wells Fargo “stepped up” with a $22,000 “gift.”  Is that how that should ideally be phrased?  I suppose it’s fine.  But, having spent the last few days writing and talking about Norm Rousseau, who took his own life this past Sunday after a protracted battle with… no, not cancer… much worse.  You know, we can in many cases cure certain kinds of cancer.

 

Norm’s protracted battle was with Wells Fargo, and no one has even come close to finding a cure for them.  So, on Sunday morning, just a few days ago, he lost the will to continue the fight after staying up all night trying in vain to fix the engine in a motorhome he was hoping to house his family in after being evicted on yesterday morning.

 

Look, I only spoke with Norm once for about an hour, so I shouldn’t really speak for him, but I just wanted to say that I’m pretty sure that he would have gladly traded his battle with Wells for… maybe not pancreatic, but let’s say prostate cancer… for sure.  I think so, anyway.

 

In fact, I’d probably make the same trade at this point were I given the choice.  I’m thinking that the cure rate for prostate cancer for a male in his 50s is much higher than the cure rate for a battle with Wells Fargo these days.  I don’t know… maybe I’m nuts… it’s not my core point here, so just forget it.

 

Anyway, I understand Wells Fargo wanting to give a gift that establishes a suicide hotline… it’s a gift the bank can use too.  And I do understand giving that sort of gift.

 

I’ve been married for 22 years, and although I hate to admit what I’m about to say, I’m hoping some of you guys have done it as well.  Maybe not the women, I really don’t know.

 

So, I was thinking about my birthday, it being only a few weeks away, and what I wanted to ask for in the way of a gift.

 

 

When my wife and I first got married, I always bought her birthday presents that were clearly hers alone… jewelry, clothes, I don’t know… a new tennis racquet, a mountain bike, golf clubs… those sorts of things.  Nothing that I had anything to do with as far as usage went.

 

But the longer we’ve been married, I’ve noticed that I’ve started drifting towards gifts that aren’t really just hers, but sort of ours… kind of.  I’m not entirely certain, but it’s possible that one year for her birthday I may have bought her our new breakfast nook table and chairs set.  That wasn’t cool, I thought to myself.

 

I shouldn’t be doing that sort of thing, right?  That’s not the way you stay happily married, or even breathing and walking upright, depending on your spouse’s comfort level with firearms.

 

It occurred to me that I might just be turning into my father, perish the thought… and that could not be considered anything short of terrifying.    Turn on the sirens people… crash positions… we’re going in hot and hard.

 

Truth be told, I couldn’t even remember what I had bought her last year for her birthday, and that was not giving me a very reassuring feeling.  Maybe since we need a new air conditioning unit for the house, maybe that’s what I should want for my birthday this year.

 

When I was really a young boy, maybe six or seven years old, I remember my father asking me if I wanted to go with him to Sears one evening after dinner.

 

 

I jumped at the opportunity of course, after all, a trip to Sears meant two things: A chance to sit on and pretend to drive several different riding lawnmowers… and a bag of hot cashews from the stand that sat in the middle of the store on the bottom level.  Good times.

 

So, we get to Sears, my father and me, and I head straight for the riding lawnmowers.  Remember that part of Forrest Gump when even though he’s already a zillionaire, he goes back home and the City Fathers give him “a fine job,” and he’s riding a lawnmower around this field cutting the grass?  Yeah, well I understood that part of the movie.  I completely agreed… Forrest looked like he did have a fine job there.

 

So, anyway… after a few minutes when my father had run out of patience with the lawnmower engine sounds I was making with my mouth, he said let’s go and we headed on into the store.  The smell of hot cashews used to hit you right as you walked in the door of the Sears where I grew up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and both my father and I were huge fans of the toasty warm aromatic nuts.

 

So, we got us a small bag before heading off for the guaranteed-to-be-boring part of the excursion, at least as far as I was concerned.  The part when we’d have to actually shop for whatever it was he wanted to find… the reason we were there, you might say.

 

He explained that we had come to buy my Mom a birthday present, which was the next day.

 

“Let’s get her a board game, Dad,” was the first thing that came to my young mind.  Well, why not… it was something I understood and knew I could get some utility from… and heck, she’d probably have liked it quite a bit too, especially if there was spelling involved.  Mom loved to spell anything anytime, and she was darn good at it too.

 

But, Dad said no. He had something else in mind, as we headed on over to the dreaded, “Housewares” department.

 

 

Housewares was the section that had the most things I didn’t understand, and I braced myself and took a deep breath, just as I might have done were I about to be placed into solitary confinement while doing time on Alcatraz.

 

We got there and I did a 360 to take in my surroundings.  Sure enough, I was absolutely surrounded by “Housewares,” and an old man who could have played Santa Claus at Christmas if you spotted him a fake beard and some hair, waddled over to offer his assistance to my father while doing a quick comb through of his thinning hair, completely ignoring me, of course.

 

This was the 1960s, and I was still to be seen, but not heard in many circles.  Unlike today, when we let our 8 year olds pick out the family car.

 

I heard my father say something about a chair of some kind… but after that it was pretty much just a blur.  For a boy my age during The Wonder Years of the 1960s it was genetically impossible to stay attentive during conversations of such banality.

 

Soon they had focused in on a particular chair.  It was metal with yellow vinyl, sort of a highchair with steps that slid out from underneath, a feature my father was saying would be highly valued by Mom, who was only 5’3” and apparently couldn’t reach certain things without a step ladder.  I hadn’t known about her shortcomings before that day, as she was plenty tall to reach everything I needed her to reach.

 

So, it was probably only a few minutes later, although it seemed a good hour or two, and we were paying with Dad’s Sears charge card, and then heading back to our station wagon, a 1963 Plymouth, dressed in a sickly hospital green color that my father said he liked, although I didn’t see how that could be possible.

 

We pulled around and there was that aging rotund and balding salesman, waddling towards us and carrying a decent size box, inside which, I assumed, would be the chair even though the box didn’t seem large enough to hold the chair.  As he was loading the box into the wagon, the man told my father that there would be, “some assembly required,” to which my father replied, “Sure.”  Dad actually seemed happy to hear of it.

 

My Dad owned a small grey metal Craftsman toolbox that he kept in the front hall closet that was strictly off limits as far as I was concerned.  He’d pull it out any time those words were spoken, “some assembly required,” or whenever there was some sort of disaster in our hundred year-old home.

 

Dad faced each job with an air of confidence that said clearly that he was unquestionably capable of handling any job that was thrown his way and he would do so with whatever was in his small grey metal toolbox.  It was a toolbox akin to Mary Poppins’ carpetbag, if you remember the movie with Julie Andrews and Dick Van Dyke.  It was as if he was expecting to be able to reach in and pull out a belt sander and a table saw.

 

The problem invariably was that whatever he needed he didn’t have and whatever he thought he could do, he really couldn’t, at least not in the time he had thought that he could.  And if hung around too long or stood too close, he’d end up blaming me for whatever wasn’t in his toolbox, growing more frustrated by the minute until he got the job done, which sometimes required a two or three day affair.

 

After the first couple of hours, there was no talking to him, and when the project had finally been completed he’d sit in front of the fireplace or television and sip what I later learned was Jack Daniels, but what he used to call Dry Sherry.

 

 

My father was, after all, a Harvard man.  And you can tell a Harvard man… but you can’t tell him much.

 

So, being a child of above average intelligence, as soon as we walked in our front door, I shot upstairs to my room, claiming homework or a bath was calling, the sort of tasks that I knew would trump helping Dad assemble the chair, or anything else he had in mind… so he went to work in the basement assembling Mom’s birthday surprise.

 

Yes, my brilliant, PhD, Harvard, college professor father had just thrown down maybe $19 on a metal stepstool/chair in yellow vinyl from Sears.  And he was so proud the next evening when, finally assembled after maybe six or seven hours of hard work, he presented it to her after we had finished dinner.

 

Mom had made cupcakes, as she was prone to do, and she started to light a match in order to light the little candles, one in each cupcake, except for the one that was for my little sister, Karen, who wasn’t even 2 years old at the time, and to my way of thinking, clearly didn’t qualify as any sort of human member of our family.  Certainly not one who needed a cupcake.

 

Mom struck the match but it failed to light and that was all the chances Mom got on things like lighting matches.  Dad reached out and took them into his much more capable hands.  He struck the match… nothing.  Mom smiled and looked away, you could tell she couldn’t have been more pleased at that moment.

 

Next match was the pressure match and lucky for Dad it was a winner and the candles were soon aglow as we sang…

 

 

Happy birthday to you… Happy birthday to you… Happy birthday dear Barbara/Mommy… Happy birthday to you!

 

I grunted as Mom gave Karen her own cupcake, sans candle.  “She can’t eat that, she doesn’t even know what it is,” I said with the sort of superiority only a six year-old older brother can muster.

 

“She can lick it,” Mom said smiling at the useless drooling infant that had Zwieback toast crumbs all over her face and in her hair.

 

I looked at the thing they called my sister thinking, “Later, when no one is looking, I’ll drag you down the stairs head first, you little parasite,” or at least the six year-old version of that sentence.

 

Karen grabbed the cupcake, squished it a little, mashed it icing side down onto her highchair… and promptly threw it straight onto the floor.  Yeah, she was small and didn’t say much, but I knew she had done that just to torture me.

 

“Maaaaaam,” I yelled out as I jumped for the cupcake, hoping against hope that my mother would at that moment take leave of her senses and allow me to eat it off the floor.  No such luck.

 

“Hand it to me,” she said in that voice.  And I did… resistance I knew, was futile.

 

 

So, with the festivities now over, we went into the kitchen to examine the gift and there it was… that glorious yellow vinyl and metal, half highchair, half stepstool… sitting poised for action… right in front of the sink.

 

You see, as I was about to learn, Mom was always standing over that sink washing dishes, and so my father thought the ideal birthday gift would be a chair high enough so that she could sit while washing the dishes, the stepstool functionality being an unanticipated bonus.

 

Of course, my Mom, being a mom of the mid 1960s, was beyond gracious at all times.  It was as if she liked everything.  Like, someone could have served her a bowl of dirt, and she’d have said thank you.

 

“Oh, look at that,” she said.

 

Now, even at six years old I was sensing something in her voice that felt like danger had just entered the room.  I swear, the temperature fell by 12 degrees… all of a sudden you could see your breath in our kitchen.

 

Dad was oblivious, explaining every single one of the chair’s highly valued features and functions.  “And, I bought it at Sears,” he explained as part of his wrap-up.  “So, if anything goes wrong, we can return it and they’ll give us a new one.”

 

Dad absolutely adored that about Sears.  He even bought his sport jackets at Sears when they would go on sale, of course, and I grew up assuming it was for the same reason… Sears’ famous return anything anytime policy.

 

“Isn’t that something,” Mom was saying.  She had decided that moment was a good one to start sharpening a giant kitchen knife, but then apparently thought better of it and set it down gingerly.

 

“Well, thank you Julian,” she said in a voice that I would one day learn to call condescending.  “That was very considerate of you.”

 

And that was it… Mom’s birthday was over for another year.  I knew not to ask her how old she was.  I ‘d learned the hard way the year before that a young man doesn’t ask a lady that question.  So, I just gave her a kiss on her cheek, said Happy Birthday Mom, and ran up to my room to see if I could sneak in a few minutes of black & white T.V. before they yelled up… “Turn off the T.V. please,” after which I’d drift off to sleep dreaming of riding lawnmowers and the like.

 

Less than a week passed until one day after school, I heard the doorbell, and ran to see who rang it.  A large truck was parked right in front of our house, on the side it read, “Sears Appliances,” or something very close.

 

“Maaaaam,” I called out.  It’s a man in a truck from Sears.”

 

My Mother came out in her apron, admonishing me for yelling for her to come in front of an adult, and then in her adult voice sweet as pie said, “Oh, hello, yes please, come in,” to the man in the Sears uniform.

 

And two hours later our kitchen had a brand new dishwasher installed… a Kenmore.

 

 

I didn’t connect the dots at the time, but inexplicably Mom made cupcakes again that night, highly unusual as it wasn’t anyone’s birthday, and this time she let me have the bowl of icing to lick and scrape on top of it all.  She was unusually happy and I was in sugar-induced nirvana.

 

After desert, we all walked into the kitchen and Mom started explaining all of the features and functionality of the new Kenmore dishwasher.

 

Dad listened, barely smiling occasionally, and then as I was sensing his patience was running thin he said right in the middle of Mom’s Kenmore demonstration that I was more than happy to watch, “Okay, are you finished?  I’ve got some work to do,” and with that he turned and walked towards the stairs.

 

Mom just kept going on about the Kenmore in a sort of sing-song voice, and as Dad started up the stairs, she was full on singing her words now and kind of dancing after him…

 

“And it’s from Sears… so if anything goes wrong… we can always return it,” Mom sang as if she were Judy Garland playing the role of a housewife in a movie.

 

I thought that I recognized the melody… “Home on the Range,” sort of.

 

Seconds later we could hear the door to Dad’s study close, I thought, perhaps a little harder than usual.  Mom walked back towards the kitchen humming, and without any advance notice, as she passed by me on her way to get started loading the new dishwasher, she set a second cupcake topped with icing right in front of me without saying a word.

 

And somehow I knew as I stared at the icing on my cupcake, there would be no percentage in asking questions.

 

It would be many years before I had any real appreciation for what had gone on that year… the year my Mom had two birthdays.  And the year my father had stared death in the face… and lived.

 

Yes, he was the Harvard man, the brilliant college professor… the breadwinner of our family… the owner of the tools… who never shirked his duty when “some assembly was required”… the one who always drove… and lit our matches when required… the patriarch.

 

But, make no mistake… that night Mom had let him live… let him off with a song about a Kenmore dishwasher from Sears… a song that sounded a lot like “Home on the Range.”  Now that I’m all grown up and married myself, I fully realize that a blow to the back of the head with a shovel would have been much less painful.

 

And I can’t quite remember when I noticed it again, but that yellow vinyl and metal chair/stepstool from Sears remained in our basement for the next twenty years… for all I know is still down there today.

 

Mom was never one to throw important things like that away.

 

I’m like that too.  So, I’m going to remember Wells Fargo’s $22,000 gift to establish a suicide hotline forever, and I hope that not only will you remember it too, but that you’ll also keep forwarding the story of Norm Rousseau to others for years to come, so they can remember what happened too.

 

Because although I only spoke to Norm for an hour or so… I know for sure that wherever you believe he is right now, he’ll smile through eternity if his battle and his death produced that kind of result.

 

Over the last two days, more people read Norm Rousseau’s story than anything I’ve ever written on Mandelman Matters.  And I wasn’t sure how I felt about that until I realized that maybe if his story spread and wasn’t forgotten, then maybe one day there wouldn’t be other stories like his for me to write.

 

And I can tell you that it sure would make his wife happy, give her some peace, even.  Nothing can change what happened.  But, yesterday she said that all she wants is for what happened to Norm never to happen to anyone else.

 

Here’s the link to NORM’S STORY.  Do more.  Do everything possible to stop this from ever happening again.  Stopping even one… matters a lot.

 

Do more.  Give a gift that keeps on giving.

 

Mandelman out.

 

 

May
16

Florida Foreclosure Laws

 CLICK BELOW FOR:

State of Florida Foreclosure Law

The link above will take you to the page dedicated to Florida’s foreclosure laws.  But, always remember… often people have a hard time understanding exactly what our laws mean just by reading them, so we always recommend that you contact an attorney and ask any questions you may have.

In Florida, the Mandelman Matters “trusted attorney,” is Cox & Sanchez.  You can reach them by clicking below, and they are happy to answer your questions about Florida  foreclosure or anything related, so don’t worry about calling or sending them an email.

The Law Offices of Cox & Sanchez

May
15

Arizona Foreclosure Laws

CLICK BELOW FOR:

State of Arizona Foreclosure Laws

The link above will take you to the page dedicated to Arizona’s foreclosure laws.  But, always remember… often people have a hard time understanding exactly what our laws mean just by reading them, so we always recommend that you contact an attorney and ask any questions you may have.

In Arizona, the Mandelman Matters “trusted attornies,” are Michael Fleishman and Donald J. Lawrence.  You can reach them by clicking below, and they are happy to answer your questions about Arizona foreclosure or anything related, so don’t worry about calling or sending them an email.

Fleishman Law

Donald J. Lawrence Jr., Attorney at Law

 

May
15

A Letter to Brian Stevens at TBWS: We Need More Houses?

 

BRIAN!  Dude… My good friend… Mi amigo de la Hipoteca clase… My favorite lender defender from whom laughs do engender… please don’t take me an offender… but as the message’s sender… a response to you I’ll tender… and my views I’ll therefore render…

 

Okay, I give in… that TBWS Daily was hysterical.  I mean, people say I’m funny, but I can’t hold a candle.

 

Overall, I loved the show, but, if I may… there were just a couple things…  

 

Just to make sure I understand what you said there… the problem is that there aren’t enough homes for people to buy?  We’re having a shortage of houses for sale, are we?  Wow… you know, I was sleeping and woke up to today’s video and for a minute there, I thought I must have dozed off for a decade or more.

 

But seriously… I had no idea that was the problem.  Well, alrighty then… I guess I’m going back to work… Mandelman doesn’t matter anymore… our economic problems have been solved.  And, thank heavens for that, because I was getting darn tired of writing about… um… well… I guess you could refer to it as… oh, I don’t know… how about… “the truth?”

 

Get more houses on the market?  Seriously?  More houses is what we need?  Am I on Candid Camera, or is there a rabbit hole around here somewhere that I can’t see?

 

So, I guess what you’re telling me is that at this point, the banks are actually hoarding them… holding them back for their own heads?  Foreclosing on more and more of them every day because they have a plan to corner the deteriorating home market?  Or are they just trying to pay us back for bailing them out by offering to pay most of the property taxes in this country going forward?  Or, maybe they just have a handyman fetish, so the more vacant homes the better?  Nothing turns them on like monitoring property preservation companies?

 

Why would they be hoarding empty houses?  Correct me if I’m wrong, but I was always under the impression that empty homes COST money as a result of their tendency to… what do they call it?  Oh yeah… decompose.

Aren’t banks the ones that are always trying to MAKE money?  Or have that backwards and banks are the ones that want to have the highest possible costs?  I can never keep that one straight… like eating eggs for breakfast… are they good for me or bad for me?  I can never remember… so I eat granola.

 

But, I digress…

 

Why do you suppose it might be that banks aren’t putting more homes on the market… or in the parlance of the economist… why are they limiting supply… making sure that it remains lower than demand?

 

Anyone?  Anyone?  Bueller?  Bueller?

 

 

Well, it can’t be because they don’t like money, right?  Right.  Okay, good.  I was pretty sure we’d have no argument there.

 

Could it be that they’re just so busy foreclosing and proprietarily trading credit derivatives for fun and losses, that they just haven’t realized that there are throngs of Californians and Arizonans clamoring to buy the homes they’re holding onto?  Again, I’d have to guess that… no, that can’t be it either.

 

Okay, let’s try this… What happens when the demand for a good exceeds its supply?  Oh, now lets not always see the same hands…

 

Brian?  Is that you I see in the back of the room doodling?  What’s that a picture of?  That’s you sitting at a table refinancing a four-plex for a dentist?  Yes, that’s very nice, but we’re trying to hold a class here, so if you wouldn’t mind…

 

So, what happens when the demand for a good exceeds its supply? Right, Brian!  Prices go up… or actually, in this particular case, they don’t go down as quickly.

 

And just what do you suppose would happen if the banks decided to make a bunch of homes available for sale, as you suggested is the thing to do in today’s TBWS Daily?  Do you think prices would tend to go up or down?  I’ll give you a hint… the answer is the opposite of “up.”

 

 

And, if home prices were to go down even faster than they are as a result of all of the other factors that haven’t changed a lick, except to worsen… you know… like, unemployment, long-term unemployment, foreclosures, average incomes… GDP… the state’s $16 billion budget deficit that’s about to constrict the state’s economy even further as we cut services and raise taxes on the wealthy… those kind of things?

 

Well, if home prices fell further and faster I’d have to venture a guess that more people would find themselves underwater and/or further underwater… and that would mean what do you suppose?  If you guessed further reductions in consumer spending, higher unemployment and more foreclosures… well, you’d be right once again!

 

And then what about all the people who, having been duped into believing that housing had bottomed, bought homes recently?  Would they be gaining equity or losing it?  Losing it, right!  And assuming an FHA/new-sub-prime loan was involved many would be underwater by Christmas… and you know what that would mean, right?

 

Even more foreclosures!  Maybe that’s why FHA is reporting almost 20 percent defaults on loans made SINCE 2009.  It’s kind of funny if you think about it… we’re actually creating foreclosures over at FHA even faster than we can foreclose down the street at Fannie and Freddie.  It’s very “Dr. Strangelove – Or, how I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb,” don’t you think?

 

 

And I did hear you say that the shortage was “at the low end of the market,” right?  I’m sure that’s correct, because that’s the end of the market that’s not only less expensive, but also less experienced.  Those are the folks easiest to convince to buy a home because it’s never going to be this cheap or the rates this low again… so, better hurry and get your offer in today… isn’t that about right, Brian?

 

Of course, I wouldn’t want to leave out my favorite flavor of scumbag, the vulture investors who envision this as a once in a lifetime opportunity to become full fledged slum lords, gouging the unfortunate and credit impaired with top tier rents for at least a decade while they put the absolute minimums into maintenance and scheme to hold onto security deposits in all cases.

 

No, I wouldn’t want to forget them.

 

See, it’s not that there aren’t enough homes on the market really, right Brian?  It’s that there aren’t enough homes that can be purchased below market value that’s the problem.  Realtors don’t really want more inventory… they want more inventory that can be purchased at distressed prices.  I’ll be happy to put my home on the market tomorrow, just not at a price at which it would sell any time soon.

 

Don’t get me wrong… I do understand that the banks dumping homes on the market at distressed prices would make summer fun for Realtors and mortgage brokers… and Lord knows I do like seeing you guys having a good time… after all, you’re always a fun lot to have at a party.

 

But, since the banks doing what you suggest under today’s circumstances would only push us further into a recession, with housing prices falling even faster than they will otherwise, thus creating even more foreclosures… thus further destroying the housing and credit markets once the fun ends… well, I’d like to humbly suggest that IT’S A TERRIBLE IDEA.

 

 

So, if you put it all together… the worsening employment and overall economic conditions (except in the media where it’s an election year), combined with the tightening of the already tight credit markets… and with the unabated flood of foreclosures on the horizon (forecasted to exceed the number of homes lost to-date, by the way)… and the permanently broken private securitization market… CA’s $16 billion and growing state budget deficit… and the need for Washington D.C. to reduce spending going forward…

 

… to say nothing of the EU’s high wire act, sans net, that’s destined to see one or two countries fall to their deaths sooner than we think, thus causing us to nationalize or bailout several or more of our TBTF banks once again… and then factor in the possibility of Mitt Romney and the GOP actually winning in November… OMG, OMG, OMG… consider all that…

 

… And you’ll want to eat a gun.

 

But… STOP!  Don’t do that.  That is NOT the answer, Brian.

Just like it’s NOT the answer to… “put more homes on the market.”

 

From your good friend who loves you… and as always I remain…

 

Most sincerely yours…

 

Martin

xoxoxoxoxo…

 

Martin Andelman

Mandelman Matters

 

P.S. If I’m in town, I think I’m going to come to Anaheim to see you guys… I figure you’re just dying to buy me a beer.  And tell Frank to be careful on that bike.

 

Mandelman out.

 

Hey, to subscribe to TBWS… CLICK HERE!

May
14

Husband’s Suicide Yesterday, Wells Fargo to Evict Wife Tomorrow Anyway

 

 

Just like the last VICTIM OF WELLS FARGO I wrote about, Wells Fargo claimed that Norman and Oriane Rousseau had missed a mortgage payment.  But the payment HAD been made in person at a Wells Fargo branch by Cashier’s Check, and Mrs. Rousseau has the receipt for the transaction.

 

The Rousseaus file a dispute with Wells Fargo over the supposed missing payment.  Wells Fargo “investigates” and comes back saying that the Rousseaus had stopped payment on the check.  They stopped payment on a Cashier’s Check?  Seriously?

 

I don’t want to spend too much time on this ridiculous point, so here’s how Rousseau’s lawyer explains this technical yet wholly insipid issue, and then we’ll move on…

 

The teller’s receipt establishes that the cashier’s check was in the custody and control of Wachovia on April 1, 2009, and the research by the Cashiering Department should have concluded that Wachovia screwed up by not applying the cash-equivalent funds to the Rousseau’s account. After delivery and acceptance to the branch office, it was Wachovia’s responsibility to safeguard the instrument; Wachovia itself effectively stopped payment on the cashier’s check.

 

Okay, so let’s get back to the meat of the story…

 

Concerned that they could not resolve the payment dispute but told they should apply for a loan modification, the Rousseaus hired a law firm and submitted a loan modification application.  After that it was standard operating procedure at Wells Fargo… we lost this, and we lost that, resend this, and resend that… for almost a year.

 

Good Lord, Wells Fargo, could you please do something differently just once?  This article is almost becoming a form letter.

 

Wells Fargo then of course told the Rousseau family not to make their payments, that they were being considered for a loan modification and that making their payments would immediately disqualify them.

 

So, they saved their payments just in case Wells decided to deny them a modification.  Saved every single one just in case the bank decided to act like… well, Wells Fargo Bank.

 

Then Wells sent them a Notice of Default, but when they called to say they wanted to reinstate their loan, Wells said what they always say… IGNORE IT… don’t worry about it, everything’s fine, it’s just an automated sort of thing… why, you’re being considered for a loan modification.

 

Then Wells filed a Notice of Sale on October 28, 2010.  Their home would be sold on November 22, 2010.  And still Wells said… IGNORE IT… it’s just another automated sort of thing… your loan modification is still pending… and please re-submit some documents.

 

It was November 10, 2010… just 12 days before their home was to be sold… when the Wells Fargo representative told the Rousseau’s that their loan modification had been denied.  The reason: Insufficient income.

 

Yeah, but you know the funny thing about that is that their income hadn’t changed a nickel since they applied for the loan modification.  So, what’s the deal?  Did it take Wells Fargo a year to figure out the Rousseau’s income was insufficient?  Is that the story I’m supposed to be buying into?

 

You’re a liar, Wells Fargo.  Either you knew you weren’t going to approve their loan modification, or you’re the most incompetent financial institution in the history of the world.  And you don’t just do this sometimes, you do this all the time… and especially to people in their 60s or older.  Why is that do you suppose? 

 

In case you’re wondering what I’ve been up to, I’m actually collecting Wells Fargo stories at this point.  I figure it’ll be a hoot to put them all together into a book.  What do you think?  Should I autograph a copy for you when it’s done?

 

That same day the Rousseaus found a lawyer and discovered they had a RIGHT TO REINSTATE their loan.  (Nice of Wells not to tell them that, by the way.)  They contacted Wells and requested a reinstatement quote… TWO DAYS LATER Wells finally gave them the phone number for RCS, the trustee.

 

 

But, RSC said that reinstatement would take two weeks and trustee sale was going off as planned in 8 days.  Wells got them their reinstatement quote too… it was dated November 15, but received via email on November 17, 2010.

 

And it expired in two days and had to be received in Texas by November 19, 2010.

 

The Rousseaus had more than enough in savings to reinstate their loan, they told Wells Fargo that… but now they couldn’t get the money from their IRA in time for the 2-day deadline and Wells refused to postpone the sale.

 

So, the Rousseau’s home sold at the trustee sale on November 22, 2010.

 

Next the Rousseaus go through a series of lawyers.  Finally, they get a good one and in July of 2011, the court grants an injunction contingent on them making a monthly payment of $1800.

 

But, by December of 2011, Wells finally wore the Rousseaus down and they just couldn’t make December’s payment.  They used up all their money fighting Wells Fargo, and Norm had been unemployed since the foreclosure.  He was taking odd jobs as a handy man to make ends meet.

 

Wells Fargo immediately goes to court… gets the injunction dissolved… then proceeds with the Unlawful Detainer… the lockout is set for May 15th, 2012… at 6:00 AM.

 

THAT’S TOMORROW MORNING… AT 6:00 AM.

 

Over this past weekend, Norm Rousseau talked with their attorney who is working pro bono by the way.  Basically, his lawyer tells him…

 

“Look… let’s face the facts here.  We’ll proceed with the lawsuit.  We’ll fight like hell to get you back in the home, but you have to be ready with some sort of plan so you’re not left homeless and on the streets.”

 

Norm found someone who has a 27-foot motorhome he can use, but after he gets it home on Saturday… it stops running… it won’t start.  But, Norm Rousseau is a man in his 50s with mad skills.  He goes to work around the clock taking apart the engine, doing everything he can to get it running so that on Tuesday morning he will have somewhere to house his family.  He’s up all night Saturday night, but still can’t get it running.  It’s too big to tow with a car.

 

His mind must have been wandering late on Saturday night.  What must a man, a father, a provider be thinking when he knows that everything in life has somehow gone terribly wrong and there’s nothing left to do?  He must have been imagining the sheriff pulling up to evict his family on Tuesday morning… just two days away, as the motorhome’s engine lay in pieces in his driveway.

 

I can only imagine what must have been going through his mind as he worked tirelessly, without sleep, on that engine and electrical system… as the clock ticked away the hours, I’m sure going faster and faster as time was running out.  Damn, it’s already 11:00 PM… then it’s 3:00 AM… and then 5:00 AM… and then before he knew it… a most unwelcome sun was shining… 9:00 AM…

 

I can almost hear him thinking: “Damn it, what am I going to do?  How could this have happened?”  I can hear him swearing under his breath as he fights with the old parts trying to get them to work together again… I can see him staring at the engine as the will to go on was leaving his soul…

 

Norman and Oriane Rousseau had bought their home in Ventura, California in 2000, putting nearly 30 percent down, which was their life savings.  In 2006, every time they went into the World Savings branch they’d get pitched on refinancing into one of World’s infamous Option ARM loans… that are now illegal, I believe.  After a couple of years of being pitched, they finally bought into World Saving’s lies.

 

They had told World Saving’s loan officer, ERIC COOPER, that they were only interested in obtaining a conventional 30-year, fixed-rate loan.  They wanted consistent payments over the life of the loan.

 

But COOPER assured them that they could significantly reduce their monthly payments… by more than $600 per month, with a lower interest refinanced loan. COOPER said that the new Pick-A-Payment loan product was better suited to their situation.

 

He described the Payment Option ARM as the new industry standard.  He pointed out that the lower interest rate and payment flexibility were valuable advantages that were not available with other loan products.  And he said that even more importantly, unlike the previous WORLD loans, the interest rate was tied to an index with historically low rates that were continuing to decrease.

 

According to COOPER, industry experts projected the interest rates to continue to fall, and so their monthly payments would be EVEN LOWER than their initial payments.

 

 

Even under the worst case scenario, COOPER assured them, the historical data for the index indicated that changes in the interest rate would only be slight, and if an increase should occur it would have a negligible effect on their monthly payments… no more than a few dollars.

 

And besides, COOPER explained, the loan would only be around for a couple years, as they should expect to refinance within the next two years to take advantage of even more favorable interest rates and as the steadily rising housing values would surely increase the amount of their equity in the property.

 

Then COOPER went for the close…

 

On the condition that the Rousseaus apply for the new loan that very day, he would agree to waive their pre-payment penalty, stating that there would be virtually no costs to refinance beyond a $35.00 application fee.

 

Yeah, COOPER, you’re a real peach.

 

COOPER also convinced the Rousseaus that it was in their best financial interests to consolidate approximately $25,000 in unsecured debt in the refinance transaction, citing the benefits of the lower interest rate and the convenience of having only one payment.

 

The Rousseaus provided COOPER with accurate and truthful information regarding their income and assets, and COOPER was such a nice guy that he offered to complete the Quick Qualifying Loan Application on their behalf.

 

Gee, thanks COOPER.

 

It was right around November 1, 2007, that WACHOVIA arranged for a notary to complete the closing at the Rousseau’s home.  The notary discouraged their review of the documents and directed them straight to the signature lines, but the Rousseaus noticed that a pre-payment penalty in excess of $4000.00 was included in the closing costs… the fee that COOPER had promised to waive if they applied that same day.  They called COOPER and he apologized for the oversight, but tried to get them to sign anyway, because it would only add a couple of bucks to their payment.

 

They said… no… they’d reschedule the appointment and wait for the four grand to be taken off their bill, thank you very much.

 

Two weeks later, the notary returned and they signed the paperwork for their new $368,000 state of the art loan.

 

Now, the Rousseaus didn’t know it at the time, but COOPER was a lying sack of garbage that had misrepresented just about everything having to do with their new loan.

 

The 7.2% interest rate of the new loan was actually higher than their old loan and higher than the 6.8% quoted by COOPER.  The “significant reduction in monthly payments” was an illusion accomplished by comparing the fully amortized payment of the 2006 loan with the negative amortizing minimum payment due under the new loan.

 

The new loan, at annual change dates, added deferred interest to principal and the loan amortized, with payment increases capped at 7.5% for ten years.  Then, the new loan recast when negative amortization reached 125%.

 

The Rousseaus were never told about the new loan’s fully amortizing payment of $2,497.94 per month, in fact their payment amount was intentionally misrepresented by COOPER.  And the new monthly payment could never decrease because it represented the minimum payment possible… the negatively amortizing option that meant payments would increase at each change date.

 

But that wasn’t enough for our boy COOPER.  The Rousseaus were charged $2,640.00 in origination fees for the “low cost” refinance, which made a tidy profit for World/Wachovia/Wells/Whatever bank.

 

And best of all, an undisclosed Yield Spread Premium (“YSP”) of $4,195 was charged for placing them in a loan with an interest rate .50% higher than they qualified for, and that YSP increased their monthly payments by $123.32, or $44,395.20 over the life of the loan.

 

The truth is that the Rousseaus were a heck of a long way from being considered well qualified for their new loan. Their fully amortized payment represented a total debt-to-income ratio of 27.91%, but that percentage was based on income figures that were grossly overstated by guess who? That’s right… COOPER.

 

The Rousseaus told COOPER their total gross annual income was, $76,000, but somehow it got listed as $136,800 on the application.  You know… the application that good old COOPER was nice enough to fill out for the Rousseaus.

 

 

So, it was Sunday… yesterday… around 10:00 AM… and Norm couldn’t get the motorhome running.  He must have realized that he couldn’t handle the shame of seeing his wife and stepson evicted with nowhere to go… living on the street.  I don’t know how anyone could face that reality.  I don’t think I could. 

 

How could it be that just 12 years before they had put their life savings down on their first and likely last home?  They had done everything right, but nothing was right anymore, and I’m sure to Norm Rousseau, nothing would ever be right again. 

 

Their church had offered to help them, maybe find them somewhere to stay temporarily, and that would be fine for his wife and her son… but not for him.  I’m sure he wept as he looked at the engine parts laying there, realizing that it was over.

 

Norm Rousseau called me a couple of months ago.  He wasn’t asking me to help him, in fact, he never even told me about what he was going through with Wells Fargo.  No, Norm was concerned about someone else who was losing a home.  A really good person who’s done so much for so many others, was how he described her.  It wasn’t right what the banks were doing he said.  He was hoping that I could do something to help someone he knew, because she was someone who had helped others… but he didn’t say a word about himself.

 

Norman Rousseau gave up over that engine that sits in pieces in his driveway today, the sun shining down making the metal parts hot to the touch.  Maybe it was the frustration of having nowhere to turn for justice, maybe it was the shame he felt that somehow he had let his family down… even though that was not the case at all.

 

Sometime mid-morning on Sunday Norm Rousseau ended his own life.  He went into his garage and shot himself.  At one point he could have reinstated his loan, that’s what he had planned to do, but Wells Fargo had made that impossible… they stripped him of everything he had.

 

And now, his wife and stepson are to be evicted at 6:00 AM tomorrow morning.  They have nowhere to go, they have no money, they are still in shock over the loss of Norm.

 

And I don’t know what to do really.  I’m going to call the sheriff’s office in Ventura… see if I can persuade them to drag their feet for a week before locking them out.  Their lawyer is trying to file something with the courts, but maybe you can think of something too.

 

Maybe you can forward this article to people in the media.  Tell them what’s going on… maybe someone will care enough to do something.  It’s 11:21 AM and I’ve been up all night again, I can’t really keep this up much longer… but somehow I felt like telling Norm’s story was the very least I could do.

 

Since Wells Fargo had already done the very least they could do.

 

Rest in peace, Norm Rousseau.

 

Mandelman out.

 

John Stumpf, CEO

john.g.stumpf@wellsfargo.com

Or, by phone: (415) 396-7018 or (866) 878-5865

Or, if you want to have some fun, since I know this physical address is correct, why not grab an envelope, buy a stamp and reach out to him via regular mail.  For extra smiles, consider throwing old keys in with your letter, or I’ve always enjoyed tossing a small handful of sunflower seeds in before sealing…

John G. Stumpf

Chief Executive Officer

Wells Fargo Bank

420 Montgomery St.

San Francisco, CA 94163

 ###

For a copy of the complaint in the Rousseau’s

lawsuit against Wells Fargo…

CLICK HERE.

May
14

Jamie Dimon tells Meet the Press he thinks we’re resenting “success.” He’s wrong.

This past week, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon announced that his bank lost $2 billion trading credit default swaps.  It was destined to become a major news story, and sure enough everyone and their cousin wrote about it from every conceivable angle, the consensus being that the loss exemplifies the need for Dodd-Frank, the Volker Rule, and even Glass-Steagall type legislation.

 

So, no surprise there, right?  I mean, JPMorgan Chase losing $2 billion in a little over a month betting on credit default swaps is pretty much why U.S. taxpayers ended up having to pump trillions into TBTF banks just a few years ago.

 

Dimon was quoted as having said that just because his bank had been stupid, it didn’t mean that all the other banks would be equally stupid.  But, see… it sort of does, right?  That’s why the sort of risk we’re talking about is termed, “systemic,” right?  That’s why all the Wall Street banks became insolvent at the same time, right?

 

The simple fact is that if JPMorgan Chase is being an idiot in it’s proprietary trading strategies, history shows us that chances are overwhelmingly that the other bankers are going to be idiots too.  Maybe not on the same day; okay fine.  But, within a matter of weeks or certainly months… for sure.

 

Oh, I know Wells Fargo will deny having done whatever it is that the other idiots have done, whenever bets go bad, but then we’ll soon find out that they were lying and not only did the same thing, but they did it to an even greater degree than the other morons du jour of the financial aristocracy.

 

The story of Dimon’s $2 billion loss got so big that Jamie even showed up to issue a mea culpa, Sunday morning on this week’s “Meet the Press.”  Among other things, he said…

 

“This is a stupid thing that we should never have done, but we’re still going to earn a lot of money this quarter, so it isn’t like the company is jeopardized.  We hurt ourselves and our credibility, yes – and that you’ve got to fully expect and pay the price for that.”

 

A billion here and a billion there…

 

The point that JPMorgan Chase is going to “earn” a lot of money this quarter is not only completely irrelevant, but it highlights another part of the problem we’re having with our mega-banks.

 

For one thing, and I can’t believe I even have to say this, losing $2 billion in a quarter at any corporation is supposed to be a significant problem.  If it’s not, then the corporation is gouging its customers with the expectation that it will need a multi-billion cushion to make up for its tendency to lose billions through stupidity at any given moment.

 

And for another thing, saying that this time around the stupidity isn’t going to jeopardize JPMorgan Chase’s future solvency, is not the point.

 

The point is, what will happen when the bank’s stupidity and obvious addiction to gambling does threaten to jeopardize the bank’s solvency.  What happens then?

 

Does the bank file bankruptcy?  Does the FDIC take it over, fire the executives, clean it up and re-sell it to the private sector?  Or, does it just mean that the U.S. taxpayer is forced to bail out the bank once again because it’s deemed too big to fail?  Because as long as it’s the latter… that’s the point.

 

Dimon also commented on the things he said a few weeks ago during a conference call, when he referred to the danger of what ultimately happened as being “a tempest in a teapot,” which is an idiom that refers to a small thing that’s been blown out of proportion.  On “Meet the Press,” Dimon said…

 

“So first of all, I was dead wrong when I said that.  I obviously didn’t know because I never would have said that. And one of the reasons we came public was because we wanted to say, ‘You know what, we told you something that was completely wrong a mere four weeks ago.’”

 

Yes, and that’s also the point, is it not?  Like all human beings, even the CEO of JPMorgan Chase can simply be wrong.  And the American taxpayer doesn’t want to be on the hook for however many billions wrong he or she is from time to time because what happened here that cost the bank $2 billion didn’t have anything to do with commercial banking.  So, there’s no reason in the world for us to be involved.

 

If we weren’t involved… if we could be sure that we weren’t going to be on the hook for the bank’s insolvency, then we wouldn’t care about any of this.  JPMorgan Chase could place multi-billion bets on which side of a room a fly will land on for all we would care.  We’d gladly sit on the sidelines and cheer as the bank gambled hundreds of billions on the derivatives of derivatives of derivatives.  We’d even go pay-per-view, like the ultimate poker challenge.

 

 

We like gamblers and big bets… we’re just too wimpy to be involved in making them ourselves.  Besides, we never seem to get to participate in the upside of these things, only the downside.

 

Success-haters hurt our recovery…

 

Lastly, Dimon said something during his interview that really got my goat.  Basically, he said that he’s sick of Americans being resentful of “success,” that “attacks on successful people,” were somehow harming our economic recovery.  And I have to say something about that because it’s just out of control ridiculous.

 

Americans are absolutely NOT resentful of success, in fact, we adore success… worship it, even.  In fact, success is like… our favorite thing in the whole world.  We’re success junkies.

 

In truth, we don’t resent failure either.  What we do resent is failure that comes as a result of irresponsible gambling in entirely unregulated environments and for which we have no choice but to pick up the tab.  That, we most definitely resent, at the very least.  We actually hate that with the white-hot intensity of a thousand suns.

 

We also resent that JPMorgan Chase was bailed out by taxpayers in 2008 and 2009, and continues to be allowed to profit based on a slew of special loan programs and accounting accommodations, while simultaneously foreclosing at will on homeowners who are only in their current situation because of Wall Street’s unregulated gambling addiction, appalling lack of judgment, and non-existent risk management systems.

 

Oh, and admittedly we’re not exactly nuts over Jamie’s $20.8 million in compensation for 2010 either, I suppose.  In 2010, his compensation went up by 1500 percent increase over the $1.3 million he was paid in 2009, if I’ve got my numbers right… and I do.  That’s one heck of a raise, I’d say.  What in the world did he do in 2010 that justified a 1500 percent raise?

 

(According to Reuters, he did quite a bit better than that in 2010, cashing in options and grants awarded during previous years for a grand total of $42 million that year.  And that same year his compensation also included $421458 in “moving expenses,” which would make total sense had he relocated from Chicago to the Uhuru Peak of Mount Kilimanjaro maybe.)

 

 

And all of that is to say nothing about the $35.8 million he received in 2008, the year he piloted his ship directly into the rocks and sunk it, were it not for the largesse of the U.S. taxpayer.  That was certainly a “successful year,” right Mr. Dimon?

 

You see, it’s not because we resent success that we give Jamie Dimon such a hard time, it’s because these days, we have a hard time viewing Dimon as “a success.”

 

Now, maybe if he would disclose his bank’s credit default swap counterparty positions, and off-balance sheet transactions, and conformed to GAAP accounting principals for valuing assets and recognizing losses… maybe then…

 

Or, maybe if his bank modified mortgages that were NPV positive even if it required a principal forbearance or, God forbid, a reduction, because keeping people in homes under these circumstances is simply the right thing to do.  Or, maybe if he just supported some sort of reasonable plan to handle things better than they’ve been handled to-date for America’s homeowners…

 

I’m sure then, we’d see Jamie Dimon as a major success, and wouldn’t care so much how much money he made…

 

Ya’ think?

 

Mandelman out.

 

In case you missed JPMorgan Chase’s CEO, Jamie Dimon on Meet the Press, hereeees… JAMIE!

 

 

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

May
12

UTAH Foreclosure Help from Mandelman Matters – START HERE

 

You have found the Mandelman Matters state specific series of pages dedicated to homeowners at risk of foreclosure in Utah.

On the pages in this section you’ll find accurate, straightforward information and guidance specific to the State of Utah related to such topics as loan modifications, short sales, foreclosure defense litigation, bankruptcy… and other topics related to getting through the foreclosure crisis.

 

We’ve created these Utah specific pages in response to the proliferation of scammers polluting the Internet with misinformation and outright lies intended to sell something to homeowners at risk of foreclosure that they don’t need.  These sites are literally everywhere, and some are very good at appearing credible, when in fact they are nothing more than elaborate cons.

 

Well, we’ve taken great care to make sure that the information you’ll find here is always correct… always impartial… always based on real facts… and always easy to understand.

 

In case you’re not already familiar with me, my name is Martin Andelman and for going on four years, I’ve been writing the widely read blog Mandelman Matters.  Over the last three and a half years, I’ve written more than 650 in-depth articles covering the political, economic, social and legal aspects of the financial and foreclosure crises.

 

I decided that I had to do more to help stop homeowners from getting ripped off, by providing the state specific information homeowners need to make the right decisions for their individual goals and circumstances.  Moving forward on the best possible path… that’s what my state specific pages are all about.

 

And just so you know, I’ve never been in the mortgage business or the real estate business, but for more than twenty years I’ve been a writer that specializes in making complex subjects easy for people to understand… oh yeah, and people say I’m funny.  I have in-depth experience writing about subjects that fall under the broad headings of accounting, insurance, financial services and law.

 

You can read a lot more about me HERE, HERE, and HERE.

 

You may want to start by getting to know my trusted attorney for the State of Utah, Walter Keane.

 

No one pays to be listed as a trusted attorney on Mandelman Matters… that’s just not how it works.  The lawyers I list as trusted… are simply those I trust.  And when I say that, I mean that I would trust these people to represent me, or to watch my house while I went away on vacation for the summer.

 

In order to write close to 700 articles on the economic situation we’re facing today, I had to learn everything possible about the mortgage and foreclosure crises.  Not only did I read dozens of books, research reports, court decisions, and more… I also had to interview a lot of people and many were attorneys from all over the country.  Over time, some became good friends.  So, when homeowners would call me to ask if I could recommend a lawyer, I would refer them to one that I had gotten to know well, and trusted.

 

So, in Utah, my trusted attorney is Walter Keane, and if you CLICK HERE, you’ll be taken to the Utah state specific page on which you can get to know him by watching a documentary style video on which Walter talks about the foreclosure crisis in Utah.

 

Walter became somewhat famous last year when he successfully quieted the title for four Utah homeowners.  Unfortunately, as he explains, that window is no linger open in Utah, but there are still things that can be done to fight a foreclosure action.  To hear a Mandelman Matters podcast featuring Walter Keane, CLICK HERE.

 

As a Mandelman Matters trusted attorney, Walter has agreed to take calls from Utah homeowners who have questions about foreclosures, and help them by providing answers regardless of whether the caller decides to hire his firm or not.  So, if you want to talk with someone who knows foreclosure in Utah, please don’t hesitate to call him.

 

For Walter’s contact information CLICK HERE.

And, if you’re looking for State Resources, CLICK HERE.

Need to know more about Utah Foreclosure Laws, CLICK HERE.

Want to read my latest post about Utah on Mandelman Matters?

Deceptive Foreclosure Headlines Spread Like Wild Fire in Utah

May
11

Attention Homeowners & Lawyers: AG Mortgage Settlement Launches Online Complaint Sites

Finally, there are places online where homeowners, lawyers and other advocates can go to lodge complaints about a mortgage servicer’s handling of mortgage modifications, et al.  And all I can say is, it’s about time.

 

A story by Ben Hallman in the Huffington Post, quoted Joseph Smith, the ex-banking commissioner charged with enforcing the national mortgage settlement…

 

“This allows me, as monitor, to hear complaints and learn more about advocates’ impressions of how the settlement is working,” he said. “Although I’ll extensively review reports and monitoring from the banks and my own team of auditors, it is still critical for me to receive information from the heart of each community this settlement serves.”

 

Now, it’s probably at least somewhat important to remember that Smith has no power to investigate individual complaints or help individual homeowners in any way. Here’s what it says on the complaint form in bold…

 

“Please note that the Monitor cannot intervene with the servicer on behalf of your individual client.”

 

Of course, I’d also guess that he doesn’t have the manpower to read the hundreds of thousands of complaints the sites would no doubt receive if homeowners and their lawyers were actually to hear about the website.  (I’m also betting that there’s not much of an advertising budget with which they’ll be getting the word out across the nation.)

 

But, so what?  Sure, there won’t be any action taken based on the complaints filed online, and nothing will likely change as a result.  But, at least now, if a homeowner is being dual-tracked, can’t get a response from a mortgage servicer for months, or is losing a home to a wrongful foreclosure, there’s a website effectively dedicated to ignoring complaints online.

 

Very cool, don’t you think?

 

I for one am glad to see that this country is finally taking the foreclosure crisis seriously and that my tax dollars are being put to good use, and I really do hope that everyone take advantage of the new websites.  Here’s what Mr. Smith says about the two new sites…

 

“Lawyers, caseworkers and other consumer advocates are the eyes and ears on the ground who will know first, and know intimately, what kind of difference these payments, adjustments and programs are making,” Smith said. “That’s why we’ve created this dedicated tool -– to see what they’re seeing.”

 

Look, people… the man used to be the banking commissioner in North Carolina, but now Mr. Smith has gone to Washington and he says he needs us to be his “eyes and ears on the ground,” as far as the AG settlement’s effectiveness goes.  So, let’s not let him down, okay?

 

 

Consider the math, and the whole thing becomes much more fun…

 

Assuming one person can read a complaint in 10 minutes, and they were to read them 6 hours each day, working the standard 2080 hours a year, it would take 1.3 years to read 100,000 complaints.

 

So, if the same numbers applied and there were a million complaints, it would take 13.3 years for one person… they’d need to hire a thousand people to get it done in 1.3 years.  And that assumes everyone is writing fairly short complaints.  Stretch those babies out to a 20-minute read and now we’re talking two thousand people to read them in 1.3 years.

 

So, look… do you want to help create jobs in this country or what?  Oh, and don’t forget to attach a large file to your complaint, I’m sure the servers are quite robust, and someone may want to read the details.  Like they said back in the 60s… can you dig what I’m saying here?

 

So, for HOMEOWNERS who want to file a complaint having to do with the National Mortgage Settlement, click here: WHERE CAN I FIND HELP?

 

For LAWYERS or ADVOCATES. click here: REPORT CLIENT ISSUES HERE.

 

The Huffington Post story also pointed out that the federal government has also made available two other avenues where borrowers can appeal for direct assistance.

 

One is the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (“CFPB”), which you can access here: File a Mortgage Complaint.  According to the Huffington Post, the CFPB,

 

“… promises to forward a grievance to the financial institution, assign it a tracking number and keep borrowers updated on the status.”

 

So, that’s very exciting, I would think.  I mean, if nothing else it sounds like you’ll have your very own individual tracking number, so that’s something right there.  I wonder how effective it will be when trying to persuade a judge not to have you evicted?

 

“But, hold on Your Honor… not so fast… have I showed you my tracking number?”

 

 

And for homeowners who were in foreclosure during 2009 and 2010, don’t forget about the OCC’s infamously dishonest and entirely corrupt, Independent Foreclosure Review, which you can access here: Submit a Request for Review.  I visited the site to check out what would be involved and the best part was that right in the middle of the page there’s a warning for homeowners that reads:

 

“Watch out for scams – There is only one Independent Foreclosure Review.”

 

So, for parents reading this who have been looking for a really good example with which you could teach your children the meaning of the word “IRONY,” I’d have to say that your search has ended. 

 

The deadline to submit your complaint is July 31st, so if you’re planning to be condescendingly placated by the equivocation of your claims, you don’t want to put it off.  Fewer than three percent of eligible homeowners have submitted their cases for review, so the Obama Administration is no doubt planning to announce that 97 percent of those foreclosed on during those two years were okay with it.  I think that’s really taking one for the team, and I, for one, salute you.

 

And although it would seem that no flaws have been uncovered as yet, that’s no reason not to participate in the process.  I mean, look… someone has to win something, right?  Like the lottery.  Or, maybe not in this case… I really don’t know.

 

Here’s what the OCC’s site says about the review:

 

“The Independent Foreclosure Review will determine whether individual borrowers suffered financial injury and should receive compensation or other remedy because of errors or other problems during their home foreclosure process.”

 

The OCC’s site also STRONGLY WARNS HOMEOWNERS who want to file their case for independent review NOT TO PAY A LAWYER to help them do it under any circumstances.

 

Good heavens no… who would ever think of doing such a thing?  I mean, give us some credit, would you?

 

I think everybody knows by now that when it comes to authoring a document that alleges the suffering of financial injury for which damages or other remedy may be assessed in conjunction with errors committed by a party purporting to be the holder in due course or to have been assigned the rights of a beneficiary to a deed of trust, and or the substitute trustee who is seeking to enforce said rights as part of a foreclosure or unlawful detainer action… the last thing you’d ever want to do is hire a lawyer.

 

Sheesh, it’s not like we’re children.

 

After all, we handled getting our mortgages all by ourselves, initialing and signing all those contractual pages containing 3 point type about how our snapping turtle, spring loaded mortgage might result in payments that exceed our monthly income by three-fold at a time when the credit markets would require a 780 FICO and 30 percent equity to refinance.

 

And if we can competently handle that sort of complicated transaction, surely we all know not to pay a lawyer a nickel for something as simple as filing a complaint with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

Look, even if the OCC finds nothing was wrong with the foreclosures in 2009 or 2010, I think we’ll all be able to join in a giant collective sigh of relief.  At least we’ll know that no one “suffered financial injury” because of errors in the foreclosure process during those two years, and we can finally move from insult to injury as we close the chapter on the unnecessary destruction of some two million family’s lives.

 

It reminds me of the stress tests they use with the banks… you know, the ones where every bank always passes.  Like something from a Monty Python skit.  Aren’t those the best?

 

Move along people, there’s nothing to see here.

 

Mandelman out.

May
11

Attention Homeowners & Lawyers: AG Mortgage Settlement Launches Online Complaint Sites

Finally, there are places online where homeowners, lawyers and other advocates can go to lodge complaints about a mortgage servicer’s handling of mortgage modifications, et al.  And all I can say is, it’s about time.

 

A story by Ben Hallman in the Huffington Post, quoted Joseph Smith, the ex-banking commissioner charged with enforcing the national mortgage settlement…

 

“This allows me, as monitor, to hear complaints and learn more about advocates’ impressions of how the settlement is working,” he said. “Although I’ll extensively review reports and monitoring from the banks and my own team of auditors, it is still critical for me to receive information from the heart of each community this settlement serves.”

 

Now, it’s probably at least somewhat important to remember that Smith has no power to investigate individual complaints or help individual homeowners in any way. Here’s what it says on the complaint form in bold…

 

“Please note that the Monitor cannot intervene with the servicer on behalf of your individual client.”

 

Of course, I’d also guess that he doesn’t have the manpower to read the hundreds of thousands of complaints the sites would no doubt receive if homeowners and their lawyers were actually to hear about the website.  (I’m also betting that there’s not much of an advertising budget with which they’ll be getting the word out across the nation.)

 

But, so what?  There may be another way to view these new online complaint sites.

 

Sure, there won’t be any action taken based on the complaints filed online, and nothing will likely change as a result.  And I realize that if a homeowner is being dual-tracked, can’t get a response from a mortgage servicer for months, or is losing a home to a wrongful foreclosure, these sites may only represent websites effectively dedicated to ignoring complaints online.

 

But, wait… there may be more.  Here’s what it says on the new sites…

 

“The Monitor and the Office of Mortgage Settlement Oversight can assist you by providing information about the organization in your state that is appropriate for you depending on your situation. By filling out the simple form below, you will open a webpage that has state-specific contact information of various organizations that may be able to help you. The Monitor will use this information to better understand how the servicers are treating their customers and detect any patterns in violation of the agreement.”

 

So, I really do hope that everyone takes advantage of the new websites should they have problems with their servicers related to the National Mortgage Settlement.  Here’s what Mr. Smith says about the two new sites…

 

“Lawyers, caseworkers and other consumer advocates are the eyes and ears on the ground who will know first, and know intimately, what kind of difference these payments, adjustments and programs are making,” Smith said. “That’s why we’ve created this dedicated tool -– to see what they’re seeing.”

 

Look, people… the man used to be the banking commissioner in North Carolina, but now Mr. Smith has gone to Washington and he says he needs us to be his “eyes and ears on the ground,” as far as the AG settlement’s effectiveness goes.  So, let’s not let him down, okay?

 

 

Besides, if you consider the math, the whole thing becomes that much more fun…

 

Assuming one person can read a complaint in 10 minutes, and they were to read them 6 hours each day, working the standard 2080 hours a year, it would take 1.3 years to read 100,000 complaints.

 

So, if the same numbers applied and there were a million complaints, it would take 13.3 years for one person… they’d need to hire a thousand people to get it done in 1.3 years.  And that assumes everyone is writing fairly short complaints.  Stretch those babies out to a 20-minute read and now we’re talking two thousand people to read them in 1.3 years.

 

So, look… do you want to help create jobs in this country or what?  Oh, and don’t forget to attach a large file to your complaint, I’m sure the servers are quite robust, and someone may want to read the details.  Like they said back in the 60s… can you dig what I’m saying here?

 

So, for HOMEOWNERS who want to file a complaint having to do with the National Mortgage Settlement, click here: WHERE CAN I FIND HELP?

 

For LAWYERS or ADVOCATES. click here: REPORT CLIENT ISSUES HERE.

 

Here’s a list of topics under which your complaint may fall, as listed on the new sites…

Documentation: Documentation problems with foreclosure, bankruptcy or your loan file

Fees: Improper assessment of fees, including default, foreclosure, bankruptcy, attorney, late, or third party fees.

Loan Modification: Failure to modify or refinance loan.

Customer Service: Poor customer service, including no single point of contact or no customer portal.

Third Party Firms: Failure to properly oversee firms working for servicer on your mortgage.

Military Personnel: Failure to comply with legal protections afforded military personnel.

Bankruptcy: Improper failure to provide relief to homeowners in bankruptcy.

Force Placed Insurance: Required purchase of property insurance unnecessarily or improperly.

Community Blight: Failure to minimize community blight.

Tenant Rights: Violation of the rights of tenants in foreclosed properties.

Other: __________.  No issues. I just would like further information

 

The Huffington Post story also pointed out that the federal government has also made available two other avenues where borrowers can appeal for direct assistance.

 

1. CFPB

One is the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (“CFPB”), which you can access here: File a Mortgage Complaint.  According to the Huffington Post, the CFPB,

 

“… promises to forward a grievance to the financial institution, assign it a tracking number and keep borrowers updated on the status.”

 

So, that’s very exciting, I would think.  I mean, if nothing else it sounds like you’ll have your very own individual tracking number, so that’s something right there.  I wonder how effective it will be when trying to persuade a judge not to have you evicted?

 

“But, hold on Your Honor… not so fast… have I showed you my tracking number?”

 

 

2. The OCC

And for homeowners who were in foreclosure during 2009 and 2010, don’t forget about the OCC’s infamously dishonest and entirely corrupt, Independent Foreclosure Review, which you can access here: Submit a Request for Review.  I visited the site to check out what would be involved and the best part was that right in the middle of the page there’s a warning for homeowners that reads:

 

“Watch out for scams – There is only one Independent Foreclosure Review.”

 

So, for parents reading this who have been looking for a really good example with which you could teach your children the meaning of the word “IRONY,” I’d have to say that your search has ended. 

 

The deadline to submit your complaint is July 31st, so if you’re planning to be condescendingly placated by the equivocation of your claims, you don’t want to put it off.  Fewer than three percent of eligible homeowners have submitted their cases for review, so the Obama Administration is no doubt planning to announce that 97 percent of those foreclosed on during those two years were okay with it.  I think that’s really taking one for the team, and I, for one, salute you.

 

And although it would seem that no flaws have been uncovered as yet, that’s no reason not to participate in the process.  I mean, look… someone has to win something, right?  Like the lottery.  Or, maybe not in this case… I really don’t know.

 

Here’s what the OCC’s site says about the review:

 

“The Independent Foreclosure Review will determine whether individual borrowers suffered financial injury and should receive compensation or other remedy because of errors or other problems during their home foreclosure process.”

 

The OCC’s site also STRONGLY WARNS HOMEOWNERS who want to file their case for independent review NOT TO PAY A LAWYER to help them do it under any circumstances.

 

Good heavens no… who would ever think of doing such a thing?  I mean, give us some credit, would you?

 

I think everybody knows by now that when it comes to authoring a document that alleges the suffering of financial injury for which damages or other remedy may be assessed in conjunction with errors committed by a party purporting to be the holder in due course or to have been assigned the rights of a beneficiary to a deed of trust, and or the substitute trustee who is seeking to enforce said rights as part of a foreclosure or unlawful detainer action… the last thing you’d ever want to do is hire a lawyer.

 

Sheesh, it’s not like we’re children.

 

After all, we handled getting our mortgages all by ourselves, initialing and signing all those contractual pages containing 3 point type about how our snapping turtle, spring loaded mortgage might result in payments that exceed our monthly income by three-fold at a time when the credit markets would require a 780 FICO and 30 percent equity to refinance.

 

And if we can competently handle that sort of complicated transaction, surely we all know not to pay a lawyer a nickel for something as simple as filing a complaint with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

 

Look, even if the OCC finds nothing was wrong with the foreclosures in 2009 or 2010, I think we’ll all be able to join in a giant collective sigh of relief.  At least we’ll know that no one “suffered financial injury” because of errors in the foreclosure process during those two years, and we can finally move from insult to injury as we close the chapter on the unnecessary destruction of some two million family’s lives.

 

It reminds me of the stress tests they use with the banks… you know, the ones where every bank always passes.  Like something from a Monty Python skit.  Aren’t those the best?

 

Move along people, there’s nothing to see here.

 

Mandelman out.

May
11

Finally, Jamie Dimon and I Agree on Something

 

JPMorgan Chase’s CEO, Jamie Dimon, says he doesn’t want to make excuses, but his bank’s $2 billion losses in the last 45 days were due to errors, sloppiness, terrible execution, bad judgment and strategy, and the mark-to-market environment.

 

Want to know something?  Those are exactly the same things that I would have guessed caused the loss of $2 billion in 45 days.  I have no trouble imagining  that those things could contribute to some fairly significant losses.

 

Dimon also told analysts that in hindsight he should have paid more attention to “trading losses and… newspapers”?

 

Okay, that shocked me.  I mean, $2 billion is a lot of money to lose in 45 days when it could have been prevented just by noticing the losses and paying attention to newspapers.

 

 

I think I’m going to go ahead and send Mr. Dimon a one-year subscription to the New York Times.  I know he has the money to buy his own subscription… or the entire newspaper for that matter, but he must be terribly busy because he lost $2 billion in 45 days for want to newspapers so it seems the least I can do.

 

And I sure am glad he didn’t want to make any excuses.  I hate CEOs that lose billions and then come out making all sorts of excuses, don’t you?

 

According to CNN/Money

 

“The group that suffered the losses is part of the bank’s so-called corporate unit, and had been making trades designed to hedge against risk.”

 

Wait a minute… they were trying to hedge AGAINST RISK?  And they LOST $2 BILLION?   Now, that must be frustrating… I hate it when that happens.  Like, when I’m eating really carefully and I stick a fork right through my cheek.  Don’t you hate that?

 

CNN/Money also had the following to say…

 

“Last month, rumors swirled around a JPMorgan employee based in London who had, according to the Wall Street Journal, been taking large positions in credit default swaps. The employee was said to work in the bank’s Chief Investment Office.”

 

So, according to the WSJ on April 6, 2012, the guy had been “dubbed the London whale,” and was a “French-born J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. employee named Bruno Michel Iksil.”

 

“Mr. Iksil has taken large positions for the bank in insurance-like products called credit-default swaps. Lately, partly in reaction to market movements possibly resulting from Mr. Iksil’s trades, some hedge funds and others have made heavy opposing bets…”

 

Oh, good Lord.  We’re still doing this sort of thing, huh?  Some guy at JPMorgan Chase in London was gambling with credit default swaps, no one was watching, and next thing you know the bank was down $2 billion?

 

And this came as a surprise to Jamie?  I guess there’s no system in place at JPMorgan Chase that might of caught the losses at $1 billion, is that right?  Well, now there’s an idea for a new product that I would think would sell like hot cakes.  Someone should make a $1 Billion Lost Alarm.  You know, after you’ve lost a billion… the bell rings.

 

And since this seems to happen in London most of the time, here’s what the UK version could look like…

 

 

And we don’t need the Volker Rule?  The rule that would prevent banks from placing outrageous bets with their own money, and place limits on the amount of capital they can invest in risky things like hedge funds and swaps, to name but two.  The rule that’s part of Dodd-Frank’s financial reforms… the ones that are being fought tooth and nail by the financial services industry lobbyists and bank CEO, including Dimon.

 

According to the Washington Post on May 2nd…

 

“The warning from Daniel Tarullo, a Federal Reserve governor, comes as banks are putting up stiff resistance to new oversight and financial regulations — including at a private meeting Wednesday between Tarullo and the heads of Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and other Wall Street firms, according to the Fed.”

 

“Among the major new regulations that has been delayed is the Volcker Rule, which would seek to prevent banks from taking excessive risks by curtailing their ability to speculate with their own money — rather than on behalf of clients.”

 

Well, I can certainly understand why no one would want to rush into the Volker Rule, especially with JPMorgan Chase losing $2 billion in 45 days… actually fewer than 45 days.

 

I guess it’s really none of our business though, right?  I mean, it’s not OUR bank.  If JPMorgan Chase wants to take on the kind if risk involved in buying credit default swaps and the like, it’s on them.  It’s not like we’re on the hook if they bankrupt themselves… right?

 

Please say I’m right…

 

Mandelman out.

 

 

May
09

Former NACA Home Save Counselor Says Commissions Create Complaints


NACA stands for the Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America; a nonprofit that provides “Home Save Counselors” to assist homeowners trying to get their mortgages modified.  They put on really big shows at convention centers and have lines of homeowners waiting overnight… that sort of thing.

 

I’m not sure why, but meeting with a “Home Save Counselor” doesn’t make me feel like I’ll be talking with a commissioned salesperson who will be potentially making up to $1,000 on my loan modification case?  A “Home Save Counselor” is on commission?  What’s next?  Does the nurse in the Emergency Room get a bonus if I get an MRI?

 

Well, according to a reader of mine who wrote to tell me that he or she had been working at NACA and, among other things he or she found objectionable, was the compensation structure… or, the commission plan would be a better way to phrase that.

 

Here’s what my reader, who shall remain anonymous, had to say after working as a NACA “Home Save Counselor” for almost a year…

 

The pay structure at NACA is unbelievable.  They start you off at $12.00 and hour until you finish your training.  You’re told that within four months you should have built your pipeline.  Most of that pipeline consists of files transferred from those who have left the company’s employ.  

 

After training ends, your hourly pay drops to $8.00 an hour and becomes a draw against future commissions, the thinking being that by this time you should be closing loans – YEAH RIGHT.  The commissions could be anywhere from $750 to $1,000 – depending on the target (credit).

 

If you are licensed you get the 100% commission – if you’re not licensed you get only 80%, with the other 20% going to the mortgage consultant that pulls the bank application.  I could never figure out what happens to the percentage that I would think would be given to the mortgage consultant that qualified the member initially.  

 

The turnover rate is very high.  And they don’t appear to care who leaves or stays – they profit either way.  You can’t imagine how many mortgage consultants leave the company and never get that 80%.    

 

And you have to re-pay what they call, “The Draw.”  There are countless employees that owe NACA thousands of dollars, and are constantly fighting to receive their commissions.

 

Now, to begin with, I checked the NACA website and found they recruit for open positions right there.  Here’s what it lists as desired experience, just in case you’re interested in becoming a NACA “Home Save Counselor.”

 

B. EXPERIENCE: 

a.      Counseling

b.      Call Center

c.      Loss Mitigation

d.      Strong computer skills.

e.      Community Involvement

f.       Financial Services

g.      Mortgage brokerage, origination, processing and/or counseling is preferred.

 

Well, I was glad to see that they, at least, did include “counseling” on the list.  But, I can’t help but wonder how many people out there have a resume that looks like this:

 

“Mortgage brokers” who have worked for “financial services” companies…

Who have “loan origination” experience, having worked in a “call center”

With strong desktop underwriting… no, that’s not right… I meant, “strong computer skills,” and know what the term “loss mitigation” means…

 

Who are also “counselors involved in their communities?”

 

I only ask because I’ve known quite a few people in my 50 years on this planet, and I’ve personally never even heard of a… “Computer literate involved community counseling mortgage broker with telemarketing and loan originating experience in the financial services industry,” have you?

 

Do they even make those?

 

“Hello, Central Casting?  Yes, I’m looking for someone to play the part of a “Computer literate involved, community counseling mortgage broker with… CLICK.  Hello?  Hello?”  Huh, we must have gotten cut off… don’t you just hate AT&T?

 

Come on… I was born at night, but not last night.  Once you put “mortgage broker” on that list, you’re looking for a mortgage broker, right?  You know any mortgage brokers with diverse skill sets that you’d consider “many and varied?”

 

Why don’t they just say they’re looking for a mortgage broker to work on commission and sell people on applying for loan modifications?  They should let me write their ad on Craig’s List, I’d have the phone ringing off the hook.

 

Here’s what else it says on NACA’s website about working there…

 

“NACA staff have a passion for and commitment to community advocacy and the delivery of excellent services to working people.

 

The Home Save Counselor works directly with at-risk homeowners across the United States by providing comprehensive phone counseling. The Home Save process requires homeowners to complete information and submit documents through NACA’s website.  The homeowner can obtain comprehensive counseling either face-to-face in a NACA office or by phone through the counseling center. 

 

The Home Save Counselor should have experience with counseling, calculating income, budget preparation and traditional loss mitigation workouts. While NACA’s Home Save solutions are not the same as traditional workouts offered by lenders/servicers, we need those individuals skilled in traditional workouts so we may teach the Home Save process.

Home Save Counselors work from the Counseling Center and will be counseling homeowners over the phone. The Counseling Center is operating from 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m.  Employees work on two shifts.  NACA, at its discretion, may change the shift hours.  All Counselors may be required to work longer hours or additional days to accomplish the work.  Some staff are provided the opportunity to participate in NACA’s Save-the-Dream events which occur throughout the country.”

 

Well, the long hours are no problem… they’re working on commission right?  Commissioned sales people never mind working late as long as they’ve got “Ups” or “Leads” to “close on a loan mod deal,” after all they’ve got to cover their “nut” and “pay back their draw”.… is that about right for how I should be phrasing that?

 

It’s funny too because a few months ago my wife and I bought my daughter a new car for her birthday, and we both have such fond memories of the “Vehicle Attainment Counselor” we worked with at the VW dealership.  Actually, by the time we left in our new car, he had also helped save our marriage and made me understand my inner feminine child… oh, shut up, shut up, shut up!

 

He was a car salesman, which was fine by us as we were looking to purchase a car.  And I couldn’t pick him out of a line up today if there were prize money involved.  I can, however, describe the car we bought… it’s a Jetta TDI, black and tan leather… sunroof… gorgeous.

 

“Counselors,” is that what we’re calling them now?  How stupid do they think we are?  I don’t have a stockbroker, I’ve got a “Monetary Separation Counselor,” is that the deal?

 

Look… I have wanted to like NACA ever since I started reading about how Bruce Marks was delivering old furniture to the front lawns of bank CEOs… he seemed like a guy after my own heart for a while.  But all I ever hear from homeowners is that they went to a NACA Revival Show, and either nothing happened, or something bad did.  It’s never a positive experience… never.

 

And now maybe I’ve discovered why… commissioned mortgage brokers masquerading as “counselors from the community,” making up to a grand for selling loan mods.  You know, I’ve been wondering where all the mortgage brokers who used to sell loan mods went ever since the FTC’s and AG’s task forces started shutting them down a few years back, and the MARS rule pretty much put anyone out of business all over the country, if they weren’t already.

 

So, now I know… they’re at NACA… of course… why didn’t I think if that.  I should have realized that they’d all end up as “counselors” at a nonprofit housing counseling agency largely funded by HUD or other tax dollars of mine.  That is a truly lovely thought… now if you’ll excuse me I’m feeling some projectile vomiting coming on.

 

By the way, it’s not as if I’m the only one who feels this way about NACA… check this out…

 

Cleveland, Ohio — Homeowners should beware of an out-of-town housing assistance group that claims to help people get better mortgage terms, local foreclosure prevention groups say.

 

The groups — Empowering and Strengthening Ohio’s People, Neighborhood Housing Services of Greater Cleveland, Community Housing Solutions and the Cleveland Housing Network – issued a statement Wednesday against an event planned in late June, saying the sponsor jilted homeowners last time it came to town.

 

The Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America, in Boston, has scheduled an event June 28-July 2 at Cleveland’s Public Auditorium. The organization held a similar event in June 2009 at Cleveland State University’s Wolstein Center.

 

“NACA claims to have the best homeownership and foreclosure prevention program in the nation,” the local group’s statement said. “But that is no consolation to the hundreds of homeowners who were jilted by the organization the last time they came to Cleveland.”

 

Bruce Marks, NACA’s founder and chief executive officer, said the local groups were threatened because his organization has serviced 650,000 clients nationwide.

 

“It is just petty organizational jealousy,” he said. “It should be about the homeowners.”

 

Yes, Bruce it should be about the homeowners, but you’re not exactly the one to be on that particular soap box, are you?

 

Can’t you just see an ex-mortgage broker telling some homeowner that they’ll get a principal reduction and all sorts of other garbage because he needs the commish to make his Benz payment on Friday?  Close that loan mod, close that loan mod… good Lord.

 

Lou Tisler, executive director of Neighborhood Housing Services, said NACA staff assured many Northeast Ohio homeowners in 2009 that they would get mortgage modifications to keep them in their homes. Often, the “guarantee” didn’t materialize, and the homeowners ended up at the local agencies, he said. By then, months often had passed, making it more difficult to prevent homeowners from going into foreclosure, Tisler said.

 

“I have nothing against Bruce Marks,” Tisler said. “I have something against an organization coming in and building up expectations for people and then leaving town not making people whole.”

 

Yeah, I understand that sentiment… actually, no I don’t.  See NACA is Bruce Marks.  He set this thing up… made it too big to be competent, and now it’s causing homeowner harm and setting them up to be closed like they’re attending a time share presentation.

Oh, and there have been 19 complaints filed since 2007, as far as the Ohio Attorney General’s Office knows, and that includes the complaints relating to telephone solicitations and foreclosure counseling. Gee… so what does that tell us?  Maybe it’s that fewer people complain when they aren’t paying anything for the service they didn’t receive?  You think that could be it?

 

“Nineteen is a very, very small percentage given the number of people we’ve helped,” is how Bruce Marks responded, and he should try that argument out here with the State Bar or BBB.  I know firms with fewer than 19 complaints over the last four years, and thousands of satisfied clients… and they have a D- with the BBB.

 

No matter anyway… the complaints did not result in any action against the group, and why would they?  NACA’s a nonprofit with Home Save Counselors.  Now, if they were just a traveling circus of a high-pressure sale show hawking loans and loan mods, well, that would be another matter, right?

 

Oh, shut the front door.

 

People, I don’t know what to tell you about whether you should go to NACA or not… but if it were me and I was going to check it out… I’d keep my wallet in my front pocket so it doesn’t get picked, and I’d be every bit as suspicious as when talking to any other kind of commissioned salesperson.

 

For the record, I tried sending a couple guys to one of the events once, but the NACA goons spotted them looking like they might be cognizant of their surroundings and they threw them out.  It would seem that Mr. Marks doesn’t think his show is ready for prime time.

 

Too bad.  I wouldn’t mind slamming a few seniors into some crummy mods in order to pick up a quick Ten Gs for this weekend.  Come on, Bruce… I’d make one heck of a “counselor.”  (Wink, wink.)

 

Mandelman out.

May
09

State of Florida Foreclosure Resource Links

 

This Page Sponsored By…

Cox & Sanchez, Attorneys at Law

The Law Offices of Cox & Sanchez
4488 Star Street North St. Petersburg, Florida 33743
Ph. 727-869-2691
Website: www.coxsanchez.com

FLORIDA VIDEOS:


Overview - Cox & Sanchez on How an Informed Homeowner Can Prevail
Introduction - Cox & Sanchez on Educating Homeowners
Options - Cox & Sanchez on the 5 Options for Homeowners
Short Sale - Cox & Sanchez on Lenders Agreeing to be Shorted on a Mortgage
Rest Report - Cox & Sanchez on the “Game Changer” in the HAMP NPV Loan Mod Process

STATE OF FLORIDA GOVERNMENT RESOURCES:

Florida House of Representatives
Speaker: The Honorable Dean Cannon
www.myfloridahouse.gov
To write your representative go to: www.writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml
Florida Office of Financial Regulation
http://www.flofr.com
The Florida Senate
President: Mike Haridopolos
www.flsenate.gov
Office of the Florida State Attorney General
Attorney General: Pam Bondi
www.myfloridalegal.com

STATE OF FLORIDA FORECLOSURE RESOURCES:



May
08

Utah Foreclosure Laws

 

CLICK BELOW FOR:

State of Utah Foreclosure Laws

The link above will take you to the page dedicated to Utah’s foreclosure laws.  But, always remember… often people have a hard time understanding exactly what our laws mean just by reading them, so we always recommend that you contact an attorney and ask any questions you may have.

In Utah, the Mandelman Matters “trusted attorney,” is Walter T. Keane.  You can reach him by clicking below, and he’s happy to answer your questions about Utah foreclosure or anything related, so don’t worry about calling or sending him an email.

The Law Offices of Walter T. Keane

Listen to a Mandelman Matters Podcast with Utah Foreclosure Defense Attorney, Walter T. Keane

May
08

State of Utah Foreclosure Resource Links

This Page Sponsored By…

Walter T. Keane Esq.

The Law Offices of Walter T. Keane, P.C.

2825 Cottonwood Parkway, Suite 500
Salt Lake City, Utah 84121
Telephone: (801) 990-4422
Facsimile: (801) 606-7533
Website: www.WalterTKeane.com


STATE OF UTAH GOVERNMENT RESOURCES:

Office of the Utah State Auditor
Auston Johnson, CPA

Utah Department of Revenue

Utah Division of Consumer Protection

Gary R. Herbert

Utah Governor’s Office of Economic Development

Speaker: Rebecca D. Lockhart
To contact your representative, go to:  http://www.utah.gov/government/contactgov.html

Utah Insurance Department – Consumer Services

Utah Legislature
Email legislators and legislative staff: @le.utah.gov

Utah State Legislature Bill Search and Tracking

Utah State Legislative Calendar

Greg Bell
Mark Shurtleff

Utah State Government

Michael Waddoups, President

Email U.S. Senator Orrin Hatch

Email U.S. Senator Mike Lee

Email U.S. Representative Rob Bishop

Email U.S. Representative Jason Chaffetz

Email U.S. Representative Jim Matheson

Find Your Utah State Senator

Utah Telephone Directory of State Employees

Utah Senate Channel on YouTube

STATE OF UTAH FORECLOSURE RESOURCES:

HUD-Approved Utah Housing Couseling Agencies

(U.S. Dept. of Housing & Urban Development)

Utah Eviction Laws

Tenant & Landlord Rights

Utah Foreclosure Prevention Taskforce

Housing Education Coalition of Utah

Utah Legal Services

Utah Legal Services Foreclosure Information

Utah State Courts

Foreclosure, Mortgage Fraud & Predatory Lending

Utah State Courts 

Foreclosure Prevention Resources (Fair Housing & Fair Lending)

UTAH SHORT SALE RESOURCES:

STATE OF UTAH ADDITIONAL RESOURCES:

State of Utah Demographics & Statistics

State of Utah Information

Utah State Spending

Find Your Polling Place

REPORT FRAUD OR SCAMS IN UTAH:

If you suspect that you have been a victim of a scam or fraud, immediately contact the Utah Division of Real Estate to file a complaint: 801-530-6747. Visit their website: www.realestate.utah.gov.

Also, alert the Utah Attorney General’s Office if you have been the victim of a fraud or a scam:

800-244-4636.

File Loan Modification Complaint with Utah Department of Real Estate

File a Complaint Against a Bank – Utah Department of Financial Institutions

STATE OF UTAH COURTS:

Utah State Courts Administrative Office

State of Utah District Courts

State of Utah Court of Appeals

Utah State Law Library

Utah State Supreme Court

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT RESOURCES:

Fannie Mae Loan Look-Up Tool – Find out if your loan is owned by Fannie Mae here.

Freddie Mac Loan Look-Up Tool – Find out if Freddie Mac owns your loan here.

Homeowner Crisis Resource Center – Includes tips on avoiding foreclosure.

Homeownership Preservation Foundation – Find Credit Counseling here and HERE.

Information on the OCC’s Independent Foreclosure Review

MyMoney.gov – This site organizes financial education help from over 20 different Federal web sites in one place, including dealing with mortgages.

OCC’s Tips for Avoiding Foreclosure Rescue Scams

Office of the Comptroller of the Currency – For Complaints Against National Banks

Service Members Civil Relief Act – The Act that postpones or suspends certain civil obligations to enable service members to devote their full attention to duty and to relieve stress on their families. The act covers:

•       Outstanding credit card debt

•       Mortgage payments

•       Pending trials

•       Taxes

•       Termination of lease

•       Eviction from housing

•       Life insurance protection

Get more information at Military.com or at HUD’s National Servicing Center, and here is Information for Veterans from HUD.

U.S. Congressional Representative Look-up Tool


May
08

Florida Foreclosure Defense Attorney

Cox & Sanchez, Attorneys at Law

The Law Offices of Cox & Sanchez
4488 Star Street North St. Petersburg, Florida 33743
Ph. 727-869-2691
Website: www.coxsanchez.com

May
07

California Homeowner in Foreclosure Wins Quiet Title – It’s a Free House!

 

Well, just when I thought I’d seen everything…

 

A Riverside, California homeowner, Denise Saluto, who was in foreclosure filed for quiet title against Deutsche Bank National Trust, as trustee for Long Beach Mortgage, and its successors and/or assigns, and Washington Mutual Bank, successor in interest to Long Beach Mortgage Company… and won by default.  (And Washington Mutual, turned into JPMorgan Chase.)

 

That’s right… neither Deutsche Bank nor JPMorgan Chase responded to the lawsuit.

When this happens, the Plaintiff still has to present his or her case, but it’s unopposed so it’s not exactly the highest of hurdles.  After considering the evidence presented by the Plaintiff, the court entered judgment in favor of Plaintiff and against the Defendants, thereby voiding her Trustee Sale and the Deed of Trust.  So, presto-change-o… no more mortgage… as in… it’s a free and clear house!  Ms. Saluto may still owe the debt, but the mortgage company is now like Visa or Mastercard, insecure because they’re unsecured.  And no one wants to be unsecured, especially in bankruptcy court.

 

Now, some will say that Deutsche Bank/JPMorgan Chase didn’t respond because they just forgot or whatever, but I don’t know whether that’s the case or not.  In fact, when their lawyer tried using this excuse, the judge was quick to point out that the file had been with the lawyer for NINE MONTHS before any efforts were made to get the default judgment set aside.

 

When a party loses by default like that, assuming it was an oversight of some kind, they usually appeal the decision as soon as they’re notified of the judgment by coming back into court to ask the judge to set aside the default judgment, claiming they weren’t properly served or something like that.  And depending on the reason they defaulted, and almost certainly in the case of a bank and a foreclosure, the judge will set aside the default judgment and let the case start over. 

 

As a matter of fact, if it’s within six months of the default, and the lawyer takes the blame, the court MUST vacate the default judgment.  It’s actually the only time you ever get to see a lawyer willingly accept blame for anything.

 

So, in this case, as one would think, Deutsche Bank did appeal the decision, but the thing is, they waited almost a year to do so, in legalese… the bank, “failed to establish diligence in bringing their motion for relief.”

 

“On February 5, 2009, Saluto filed a complaint against JPMorgan Chase Bank and Deutsche Bank to set aside a trustee sale for violations of title 15 of the United States Code section 1601 et seq. and 12 Code of Federal Regulations part 226.1 et seq., to cancel the trustee deed upon sale, and for quiet title.

 

Defendants failed to respond to the complaint, and on March 16, 2009, Saluto served a request for entry of default on defendants.  The next day, Saluto filed the proofs of service and the request for default with the trial court. The trial court entered default on each defendant on March 17, 2009.” An entry of default just means that the defendant cannot file a response.  The Plaintiff still must file a “default judgment package,” which contains evidence supporting their claims.

 

In July 2009, Saluto filed a request for entry of default judgment, and on December 15, 2009, default judgments were entered.

 

 

Then… a year went by before…

 

“On June 15, 2010, defendants filed a motion to set aside the defaults and default judgments under section 473, subdivision (b), which allows relief from an action taken against a party through mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect when the motion for relief is made “within a reasonable time, in no case exceeding six months, after the judgment, dismissal, order, or proceeding was taken.”

 

To support the motion, defendants filed the declarations of their attorney, Jenny L. Merris; a vice-president of Deutsche Bank, Ronaldo Reyes; and a research analyst of JPMorgan Chase Bank, Harold Galo. The declarations stated that defendants had no record of receiving service and were not aware of the lawsuit until March 2010.”

 

So, on October 28, 2010, Judge Mark E. Johnson heard the banks’ motion.

 

At the hearing, Judge Johnson stated:

 

“Im going to deny the motion. I do believe that I am outside of the six-month limit. . . . I also dont see the due diligence. So if you want to re-bring it under [section] 473.5, I will look at that, but at least as to this ground I have before me, [section] 473 subdivision (b), Im denying the motion.

 

On December 3, 2010, defendants filed a motion to set aside the defaults under section 473.5. Defendants submitted new declarations of Reyes, Galo, and Merris in support of the motion.”

 

Deutsche Bank claimed the bank had “no actual knowledge of this action until in or around early April 2010 when JPMorgan Chase Bank’s counsel informed it that Plaintiff had recorded the Default Court Judgment against this property.”  Deutsche Bank’s declaration claimed, “This was the first time that Deutsche Bank became aware of the existence of this action.”

 

JPMorgan Chase claimed that it “had no actual knowledge of this action until on or around March 2010 when JPMorgan was informed that Plaintiff was seeking to refinance the property . . . and that Plaintiff had recorded the Default Court Judgment against this property.”

 

This time, Commissioner Barkley granted the motion brought by the banks thereby vacating the default judgment the Plaintiff had obtained about a year earlier. Saluto then appealed the decision to California’s Court of Appeals, Fourth District, Division Two, contending that the defendants’ motion under section 473.5 was, in essence, a motion for reconsideration, and defendants failed to comply with the procedural requirements of section 1008. (Don’t worry about section 1008 for a moment.)  Saluto also argued that Commissioner Barkley simply got it wrong, and that the default judgment should have been upheld.

 

Now, this gets kind of technical, but Section 473.5 says that when service of a summons fails to result in actual notice to a defendant in time to defend the action… and therefore a default or default judgment is entered… the defendant may serve and file a notice of motion to set aside the default or default judgment and for leave to defend the action.

 

Section 473.5 says that the notice of motion has to be served and filed within a reasonable time, but not exceeding the earlier of two years after entry if a default judgment, or 180 days after service of a written notice that the default or default judgment has been entered.

 

 

Basically, because JPMorgan Chase Bank said it discovered the default in March 2010 and Deutsche Bank said it discovered the default in early April 2010, but they didn’t file their motion under section 473.5 until December 2010, the appeals court found no evidence that the two banks acted “diligently” in bringing their motion for relief under section 473.5, and therefore the trial court should not have granted the motion that set aside the default judgment.

 

As far as complying with the procedural requirements of section 1008, mentioned above, the court said the following…

 

“Because we have found reversible error based on defendants failure to establish diligence in bringing their motion for relief, Salutos additional contentions are moot.”

 

So, that’s that for Denise Saluto… she won, quieted her title and now she has no mortgage on her home.  She may still owe the money to some entity, but the debt is unsecured… like credit card debt… whatever she owes it’s no longer tied to her home.

 

Pretty amazing, right?  If you would have asked me last week, I would have said there’s absolutely no chance that filing for quiet title will result in your loan being unsecured.  And I would have been entirely wrong because Denise Saluto just did it.

 

And again… did it happen because Deutsche Bank and JPMorgan Chase somehow let this slip through the cracks?  Maybe.  Or, was it that the banks weren’t prepared to defend the quiet title action… as in, they couldn’t find the note, or the assignment was a forged and fraudulent mess.

 

Honestly, I have no idea what happened here, and I don’t think anyone else can know for sure either.  All we can know is what happened.

 

So, what could happen next?

 

I started thinking about what could happen from here for Denise Saluto.  Would she simply walk away with her free and clear home and that would be it?  Or, would the banks have another move on the chessboard that would reverse the decision and cost Denise her home?

 

I called around to various lawyers and other experts, asking if the banks could somehow get the decision reversed?  The answer: No.  The decision by the Court of Appeal is essentially final.  Sure, the California Supreme Court could overturn a decision by this court, but I’m told that the chances of that happening are so remote that it’s not worth considering.

 

So, there are no legal maneuvers that will change what’s happened, but I can’t believe that the bankers are just going to give up and go home on this either.  Maybe they will, but maybe they won’t, right?  So, what else could happen next to threaten the title to Denise’s home?

 

Ooops, we forgot… we sold it to someone else?

 

I’m not saying this is going to happen, but it occurred to me that a “new owner” of Denise’s note could show up on the scene with paperwork showing they bought it from the prior owner, either Deutsche Bank or JPMorgan Chase, before all this transpired.

 

You know, like a surprise owner that just happens to have appropriately dated paperwork showing that they are the owners of Denise’s loan and therefore the quiet title doesn’t apply… she’s behind on her payments, and therefore they are moving to foreclose.

 

Would this be fraud?  I would certainly think so.  Would that stop the bankers from doing it?  I would certainly think not.  And would it work and cause Denise to lose her home?

 

The lawyers, however, all tell me the answer is no.  None of that would happen… it simply wouldn’t work.

So, Denise Saluto does now own her home free and clear.  However, it seems very likely that she still owes the amount of her mortgage as an unsecured debt.  Lawyers have told me that she could potentially have the debt discharged in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, but it would depend on a few things lining up just right, including the value of her home being less than the homestead exemption.

 

In general, a judgment creditor cannot force the sale of your home unless your home can be sold for an amount that would satisfy all superior liens PLUS the amount of your homestead exemption.  It looks to me like equity of up to $75,000 is exempt if you’re under 65 years of age, and $150,000 if over 65, and if you’re married it’s higher still.

 

But, as with everything having to do with the law, there are plenty of caveats, limitations and nuances.  I found many of them in the California Code of Civil Procedure Section 704.730, but as always, check with an attorney before assuming anything because my experience has been that just because it says one thing doesn’t mean that it doesn’t mean another.

 

Okay, so what does this mean to me?

 

Well, in my opinion… that’s an interesting question.

 

For one thing, filing quiet title did work out well for Denise Saluto, and since I would never have predicted it happening in her case, I’m certainly not going to tell you it won’t happen again in yours, because as I said earlier… I don’t know why it happened.  It might have slipped through cracks, or might have been caused by other factors.

 

Ever since yesterday when I started reading the decision by the California Court of Appeal, I’ve been trying to come up with a reason not to file one myself.

 

The lawyers I spoke with all told me that you have to have legitimate doubt about who holds title to your home, or else you’d be filing fraudulently, but I don’t see that as being a problem for me or anyone else in this country whose been paying attention to the news these last few years.

 

I mean, since I do know that Mickey Mouse has been signing the Assignment of the Deed of Trust in most cases, and Donald Duck has been notarizing it, and since the President of the United States recently told the country that there have been thousands of fraudulent foreclosures, and with countless lawsuits alleging that Mortgage-backed securities are in fact, less filling, as opposed to tasting great… let’s just say that I would not want to be asked under oath who owns my note.

 

As far as my having legitimate doubts as to the holder of title to my home, I could assure any court under oath that when it comes to my hizzle, my doubt is rizzle… it’s legit.  Word.

 

(That was me trying to be “hip,” but let’s not tell my daughter because she will be so embarrassed.)

 

This decision got me thinking about all sorts of possibilities, truth be told.  Like, what if many thousands of people all filed for quiet title around the same time… like maybe a million homeowners… LOL.  I would definitely have to go pay-per-view to see that shiznit go down.

 

If JPMorgan Chase and Deutsche were caught bo janglin in Denise’s case, I’d have to wager that many thousands of quiet title filings would leave them in a tizzle(Oops, I did it again.)

 

So, realizing that I wouldn’t be the only one thinking this way, I went online to see how many sites there were offering to teach homeowners how to file quiet title, or represent homeowners who want to file for quiet title… and not surprisingly, there were plenty of them… some want thousands of dollars for their services, and some want anywhere from many hundreds to a couple thousand dollars for a kit that claims to help you do it yourself.

 

And because, even though I think it’s a long shot, I don’t think it’s more of a long shot than winning the lottery or having a slot machine pay off, so I got together with some lawyers and other experts and am putting together a comprehensive guide to filing quiet title, which won’t cost more than $100, and will offer everything the more expensive versions have to offer, and probably even more.

 

Will it work?  I have no idea, and I’d have to guess that the answer will be no a lot more often than it’ll be yes.  But, if you’ve decided to try it, at least this way you won’t have to spend a lot of money doing so.  For a hundred bucks, you can spin the wheel and if it doesn’t work… oh well.  And if it does… well, then… Woohoo!

 

(Look for the new site in the next few days at www.filequiettitle.com and www.quiettitlecalifornia.com)

 

If you want more information on the Mandelman Guide to Filing Quiet Title, email me at mandelman@mac.com and I’ll send you an email response with more details.  The guide will be packed with easy to understand insight and instructions, tricks and tips, rules and limitations, and even sample templates to make it easy to file your own complaint with the court.

 

It will help you do it right… do it cheap… and do it safely.  And I’ll be consulting with lawyers in each state, so I’ll have the specifics for your state included, if applicable.

 

I’m not saying you should do it… and after Denise Saluto’s outcome, I’m sure as heck not saying you shouldn’t.  All I am saying is that I’m going to make sure that you don’t need to spend a bunch of money trying it.  And it shouldn’t become the primary strategy to keep your home, because no one knows why it worked in the Saluto case… or whether it will work for you.

 

But, it does prove one thing fo’ shizzle… when it comes to the foreclosure crisis, no one knows what will happen tomorrow, because the only thing that’s consistent about this mess is its glaring and scandalous inconsistencies.

 

Mandelman out.

 


May
07

Debt Forgiveness – The IMF, Iceland, and the U.S. of the 1930s all say it works


The International Monetary Fund (“IMF”), in its latest World Economic Outlook, stated quite clearly that mortgage write-downs, among other forms of debt forgiveness, can deliver significant economic benefits by substantially mitigating the negative impact of deleveraging on a nation’s economic activity.

 

The report points out that our recession is being driven by households forced to reduce their debt leading to reduced consumer spending, which in turn drives us deeper into recession.

 

Daniel Leigh, the report’s author, made the concept simple for anyone, except perhaps Ed DeMarco of the FHFA, to understand…

 

“Because debt is acting as a brake on economic growth, it is important to unstick the brake.” 

 

I love this guy… he’s like the Forrest Gump of the economics set.  Now get this…

 

“The IMF has studied the response of a number of countries to situations where large parts of the population are burdened with high mortgage debt in a recession, and finds that such programs can help prevent self-reinforcing cycles of falling house prices and lower aggregate demand.”

 

That sounds suspiciously familiar… which country would fall into that category?  Oh yeah… ours.  The report’s conclusions go on to give me goose bumps…

 

“Such policies are particularly relevant for economies with limited scope for expansionary macroeconomic policies and in which the financial sector has already received government support.”

 

The report focused in on the household debt reduction program implemented in the U.S. during the 1930′s… and in Iceland in our current crisis, which it said can…

 

“… significantly reduce the number of household defaults and foreclosures and substantially reduce debt repayment burdens.”

 

The report also contrasted those successes with examples of failures to effectively deal with the fallout of an economic crisis… such as the current response to the crisis in the U.S.”

 

 

Oh, dear Lord people… what do we need a ton of bricks to fall on our heads?  Because if we keep doing what we’ve been doing to-date, that’s at least metaphorically exactly what is going to happen.

 

The report also said that programs must be designed with incentives for BOTH banks and borrowers to participate, “notably by offering a viable alternative to default and foreclosure.”

 

The IMF also pointed out that…

 

“The friction caused by such redistribution may be one reason why such policies have rarely been used in the past, except when the magnitude of the problem was substantial and the ensuing social and political pressures considerable.”

 

I’m starting to feel a little nauseous over here… is any of this ringing any bells for anyone?  Who is it that keeps talking about the need for…considerable social and political pressures?  Me, right?

 

The report also cited a study which found that, “political systems tend to become more polarized in the wake of financial crises,” and as a result led to problems generating collective actions… like DOERS, comes to mind.  Specifically, the report said that, “distressed mortgage borrowers may be less politically organized than banks – and this can hamper efforts to implement household debt restructuring.”

 

I think I’m going to need to lie down soon… but first I think I’ll go out to my driveway and slam my hand in my car door… in an effort to make the pain go away.

 

 

Join me in the Way Back Machine…

It’s the U.S. during The Great Depression of the 1930′s and FDR has just introduced the Home Owners Loan Corporation or HOLC.

HOLC will be using government bonds that offer federal guarantees on principal and interest to buy up distressed mortgages from banks.  The purchases will represent 8.4 percent of our country’s GDP in 1933.

HOLC will then be restructuring these mortgages to make them more affordable to homeowners.  The result will be that 80 percent of these restructured loans, roughly 800,000, will be protected from foreclosure.

Primarily, HOLC will extend the term of the mortgages, in some cases doubling the term, and converting the loans from variable to fixed rate loans, but HOLC also wrote off principal in many instances so that no loans exceeded 80 percent of the current appraised value.

Over the next twenty years or so these mortgages will be sold and the government will even make a profit by the time the program ends in 1951.

 

Referring to the HOLC program, the IMF’s report said…

 

“A key feature of the HOLC was the effective transfer of funds to credit constrained households with distressed balance sheets and a high marginal propensity to consume, which mitigated the negative effects on aggregate demand, which was caused by the recession and need for household deleveraging.”

 

In other words, it worked.  Well, I’ll be Bernanke’s Uncle.  Isn’t Ben supposed to be an expert on The Great Depression?  I could have sworn…

 

But wait… there’s more…

 

Apparently, this year Iceland has been forgiving mortgage debt for its citizens in an effort to stimulate economic growth and guess what?

 

It’s working there too!

 

 

The Icelandic government and the reconstructed Icelandic banks worked together to develop, “a template to be used in case by case restructuring discussions between borrowers and lenders.”

 

“The templates facilitated substantial debt write-downs designed to align secured debt with the supporting collateral,” or in other words, reduce the loan in line with the current value of the home, and make sure that the terms are such that the homeowner has the ability to repay the loan.

 

Brilliant!  What are they putting in their Cheerios over there?  We need some, whatever it is.

 

“The IMF found that such case by case negotiations safeguard property rights and reduced moral hazard.”

 

No kidding.  Do tell.

 

Then only problem was that the process was time consuming because as of January of this year, only 35 percent of the restructuring applications were processed.  Here in the U.S. we’ve been knocking our politically divided heads against the wall for four years now, and we’re nowhere close to having processed 35 percent of anything.

 

But, Iceland is obviously a country with advanced critical thinking skills, likely the result of not having CNBC or Fox News channels, so it has introduced a debt forgiveness plan which writes down seriously underwater mortgages to 110 percent of the current value of the given property.

 

Iceland’s officials did say that before debt write-downs really took off, it took the announcement of “… a comprehensive framework and clear expiration date for relief measure.”

 

See, that leaves the U.S. out, right there.  Name one thing we’ve done since 2006 that you’d describe as being either comprehensive or clear?  Go ahead… I’m waiting.  Okay, I’ll make it even easier… what have we done that’s been somewhat comprehensive and reasonably clear?

 

Right… that’s what I thought you’d say.  The only way we’ll be able to make this Iceland strategy work over here is if we can succeed by developing something that’s “narrow and muddy.”  Comprehensive and clear seem entirely out of reach for us.

 

So… how’s it going, Ice, Ice Baby?

 

“As of January 2012, 15 to 20 percent of all Icelandic mortgages have been or are in the process of being written down.”

 

Of course, as an intuitive economist once said, and I’m paraphrasing here…

 

“If you want to create the much-admired Danish model, you’re going to need some Danes.”

 

Iceland’s mortgage write-down program happened as a result of thousands of its citizens taking to the streets demanding that something be done about the debts the people had incurred buying homes during the bubble at what turned out to be wildly inflated prices.  At one point, they surrounded the country’s parliament building and started throwing rocks.

 

(And people laughed at me last year when I suggested that we form a group called, “People in Favor of Hitting Politicians with Sticks,” or PIFOHPWS… for short.)

 

Of course, in our country, there’s no way that would ever happen because we’re all way too ashamed to be seen on CNN in what would be called, “The March of the Deadbeats.”  Which is why I suggested the DOERS idea… stay home, send emails and other clever things through the mail.  Occupy without leaving your house, if you will.

 

Even though, you would think that by now more people would be figuring out that if home values fall by 60 percent or more… and unemployment soars past the 20 percent mark… there are going to be an awful lot of people that may look, “irresponsible,” but are purely innocent victims of a global credit crisis.

 

Are you listening, Rick Santelli, you odious, insufferable, unenlightened and ill-bred jackass?  I doubt it.  I think it’s abundantly clear that you haven’t been able to listen to anything but the droning that goes on incessantly between your pinned back ears.

 

So, how come the whole debt forgiveness thing is working so well over in Iceland, but if the issue even comes up for discussion over here, we can’t stop a parade of badly behaved adult children from whining about how they’re paying their mortgage payments and therefore would rather see the country mired in a 40-year economic funk than lift a finger that could potentially benefit someone who took out a second to remodel a bathroom?

 

Who are these people, and more to the point, who are their parents?  Because when the revolution comes, I’m taking them out first.  Our new society simply cannot be allowed to start with their sort of genetic defect.  Or, like the man said… you can’t fix stupid or petty.

 

Brendan Keenan, writing in the Independent.ie, had the following to say on the topic of the Iceland debt forgiveness strategy…

 

“It will probably be necessary in the end to do something of the kind in this country, but any government trying should tread very, very warily. We may not be Greeks, but nor are we Icelanders.”

 

That’s true… but what are we in the eyes of the rest of the world these days?

 

A spoiled, drunk 15 year-old waving a gun in their face?

 

Mandelman out.

 

 

 

 

May
06

Utah Foreclosure Defense Attorney

Walter T. Keane Esq.

The Law Offices of Walter T. Keane, P.C.

2825 Cottonwood Parkway, Suite 500
Salt Lake City, Utah 84121
Telephone: (801) 990-4422
Facsimile: (801) 606-7533
Website: www.WalterTKeane.com

May
03

Deceptive foreclosure headlines spread like wildfire in Utah

 

Just as has become prevalent in other states, the headlines describing the situation related to future foreclosures in Utah are deceptive… or perhaps misleading is a better word.

 

On April 12, 2012, Bloomberg/Businessweek ran the headline, “Utah March foreclosures down 31 percent from 2011,” leading one to believe that the crisis is soon to be behind the citizens of that state.  And like all “good news,” it spread.

 

Based on the same date as the Bloomberg story, “Foreclosure rates drop in Utah’s large metros,” was the headline used by the Deseret News on April 25, 2012.  And KSL.com, the online version of KSL-TV, found a way to make the story even more positive by using a three-month comparison, under the April 12th headline, Utah foreclosure rate fall nearly 50 percent.”

 

I certainly understand the desire for good news on this topic.  After all, it’s going on six years since the tsunami of foreclosures began to flood this country with repossessed homes, so at this point it’s understandable that we’d be ready to grasp at any positive port in the continuing storm.   And it’s not that I take pleasure being a porcupine in Utah’s balloon factory.  In fact, it is much more my nature to be branded an eternal optimist than anything else.

 

Optimism, however, is when someone looks at the facts of a situation and expects the best outcome possible.  It’s not optimism to believe something that’s impossible will happen… that’s called “fantasy.”  And, while I also understand that hope springs eternal, false hope only springs disappointment.

 

Compared to what?

 

In 2011, mortgage servicers slowed the pace of foreclosures by not proceeding with foreclosures for a variety of reasons, none of which relate to homeowners’ ability to make their mortgage payments.  In  some cases, servicers foreclosed less as a result of the “robo-signing” or document fraud scandal that started making headlines during the fall of 2010.

 

Confident that a settlement would ultimately be reached between the five largest servicers and the attorneys general  from the fifty states who began investigating servicer practices as a result of document fraud coming to light, and knowing that such a settlement would include amnesty from prosecution for such acts by the states, they simply held off foreclosing until they could do so without the risk of a being sued by a given state.

 

In several states, recently passed legislation also caused servicers to put foreclosures on hold as they regrouped in order to comply with the new laws, and in some other states, foreclosures were delayed awaiting decisions by state courts.  But, the point is, once these barriers were lifted, and the national mortgage settlement was finalized, foreclosures started rising all over the country almost immediately.

 

The result of the 2011 slowdown in foreclosures is making for some very deceptive headline comparisons, even while all credible forecasts are calling for record numbers of foreclosures across the board both this year and next.

 

 

Going up?

 

Beyond the Utah headline, the Bloomberg article also explains that according to RealtyTrac, the State of Utah’s foreclosure rate “jumped” by 74 percent between this past February and March, resulting in Utah’s foreclosure rate coming in seventh in the nation.

 

A 74 percent “jump” in foreclosures in a single month of this year would seem to me to be a much more important piece of news than any year over year comparison, although I would readily agree that it doesn’t lend itself to feelings of optimism and therefore would likely garner less readership than the happy headline comparing this year with last.

 

And, has something that has increased by 74 percent in a single month merely “jumped?”  Because I would suggest that it “soared,” or even “rocketed.”  I think when describing increases in excess of 20-30 percent, using “jumped” falls into the category of dramatic understatement.

 

I asked an editor at a major monthly business magazine why they seemed to run this sort of headline as opposed to… well, conveying the real truth of the matter to their readers, and his response was frankly unforgettable.  He said…

 

“Well, we just had an editorial meeting on this topic and I think the consensus was that people don’t buy depressing magazines.”

 

Well, fair enough, I replied, thinking to myself… I guess the magazine would better be thought of as some sort of business comic book for grown-ups going forward.

 

 

Like I said, I don’t like being the bearer of bad news all the time, but in case you haven’t noticed, we’ve been told that prosperity is imminent at least annually ever since the flood of foreclosures began almost six years ago, and all its done is prevent us from putting more pressure on our respective state legislatures to do more to mitigate the damage the crisis is causing.

 

So, I’m sorry if I spoiled your day… but until we come to accept that there will be no economic recovery until we do more to prevent foreclosures, we’re doomed to continue our race to the bottom.

 

Foreclosures can only breed foreclosures, I don’t care which state your in, and they don’t just magically stop all by themselves one day.  Or maybe the better way to describe that thought is metaphorically.   So, try this on for size:

 

Just like a forest fire that’s been allowed to burn out of control, it won’t stop until it runs out of forest.

 

Mandelman out.

 

 

 Mandelman Matters State Specific Content: Utah Foreclosure Resources and Articles 

State of Utah Foreclosure Resource Links

Utah Foreclosure Defense Attorney, Walter Keane on a Mandelman Matters Podcast

 

May
02

Bar Defense Atty David Carr Exposes the CA Bar on Scammers and SB 94 – A MM Podcast

 

FASCINATING!  SHOCKING!  SCANDALOUS! 

INVALUABLE INFORMATION AND INSIGHT FOR LAWYERS… REAL ESTATE LICENSEES… AND ANYONE INVOLVED IN THE FORECLOSURE CRISIS IN CALIFORNIA AND ELSEWHERE.

David Cameron Carr has been in private practice representing California attorneys and applicants since 2001, but before that, between 1989 and 2001,  he was a staff attorney at the California State Bar Association, and from 1999 and 2001 he was Manager, Los Angeles General Trials Unit.  From 1992-1999, he was a State Bar Discipline Prosecutor, and from 1989-1992, he worked as a Staff attorney, handling Complaint Audit & Review.

David graduated in 1986 from Loyola Law School, Los Angeles, and was admitted to the State Bar of California in December of that same year.  He’s admitted to Southern, Central and Northern US District Courts for California.  He;s a Member of the San Diego County Bar Association’s Legal Ethics Committee, a Member of the Association of Professional Responsibility Lawyers (APRL), a Member of the American Bar Association and ABA Center for Professional Responsibility.

He also serves as President of the Association of Discipline Defense Counsel.

Okay, now that we’ve got that out of the way…

I can tell you that I’ve gotten to know David Carr pretty well over the last few years, we’ve worked together in a way, as I’ve been intimately involved in the travesty related to lawyers and loan modifications that was created in 2009, when California Senate Bill 94, which was sponsored by Senate Banking Committee Chair, Rom Calderon was signed into law by the Governor on October 12, that year.

The law created by SB 94 is the Crown Prince of unintended consequences.  Created in the hopes of to protecting California’s distressed homeowners at risk of foreclosure from unscrupulous scammers by prohibiting advance fees in conjunction with providing loan modification services.  The law hasn’t come anywhere near achieving its objective.  Even Suzan Anderson, who is the Supervisor of the State Bar’s Special Team on Loan Modification Fraud, speaking last December to David Streitfeld of The New York Times said: “I wish the law had worked.”

What SB 94 has done in the hands of the California State Bar is create so much confusion in the legal community that hundreds or perhaps thousands of legitimate attorneys have stopped offering to help homeowners get their loans modified, while the scammers have continued to proliferate as if nothing changed.

HOW DID THIS HAPPEN?

David Cameron Carr knows what’s really happened and continues to happen in California since SB 94 became law in 2009.  And he knows the situation from the perspective of the State Bar, and from the perspective of the ethical lawyers caught up in the confusion.

If you’re a lawyer or real estate licensee that has been involved in helping homeowners save their homes from foreclosure over the last few years, or a homeowner struggling to understand the crisisat hand…

I PROMISE… YOU DO NOT WANT TO MISS THIS…

Mandelman Matters Podcast with David Cameron Carr

Mandelman out.

May
01

White Powder in Envelopes Mailed to Wells Fargo in NYC – Idiots happy it’s not toxic

Well, here we go.  In our race to the bottom… our attempt to see how far we can push it before we break something… our desire to see chaos American style… ABC News reported yesterday that at least seven locations in Manhattan, “primarily Wells Fargo Banks,” according to the story, received envelopes in the mail containing  “suspicious white powder,” police officials said.

 

Well, thank heaven it wasn’t the non-suspicious form of white powder… you know, the kind we’re all used to getting in our mail every day.

 

The message that arrived in the envelopes read as follows:

 

“This is a reminder that you are not in control.  Just in case you needed a little incentive to stop working we have a little surprise for you.  Think fast you have seconds.”

 

AP reported that the powder in the envelopes caused evacuations at bank branches, but no injuries, as if that last part mattered in the least.  Idiots appear to be happy that the powder was found to be cornstarch… as opposed to Anthrax, I suppose.

 

Gee, now that’s certainly a relief.  Whew, I guess we dodged a bullet there, didn’t we?

 

 

Manhattan police, about ready to round up the usual suspects and get a rope, initially suggested based on absolutely nothing that the envelopes could have been mailed by “militants from within the Occupy Wall Street movement.”

 

Luckily, a spokesperson for Occupy Wall Street denied any connection to the mailings… and that seemed to accomplish what exactly?  I guess the NYPD said, “Oh, okay… sorry about accusing you guys of potentially mailing Anthrax to banks in Manhattan?  Our bad.”

 

The police say they thought that Wells Fargo was the target of the mailings because it’s based in San Francisco, and what they described as “about half of a key dozen Occupy Wall Street members have backgrounds in Oakland, San Francisco and Berkeley… and SIMILAR INCIDENTS OCCURRED IN CALIFORNIA EARLIER THIS WEEK, police sources said.”

 

“A key dozen Occupy Wall Street members?”  So, now there are probably a few hundred who are convinced that phrase was referring to them… perfect.  And what exactly was similar about the incidents that occurred in California that no one seems to have heard anything about until now?  Was it the cornstarch… the mailings… the scary message inside?  How similar were these events exactly and why were they mentioned before now?

 

Another theory I just made up is that Wells Fargo was targeted because it’s stage coach logo is reminiscent of the old West, when Native Americans were the victims of genocide, so the FBI is said to be investigating Indian casinos in several states.

 

What?  My theory makes every bit as much sense as theirs does.

 

Others on the list of potential suspects include any number of the 8 million Americans whose lives have been destroyed by the foreclosure crisis, or any of the hundred million or so that are beyond pissed over bailing out banks with trillions while leaving the country’s working class to die on the proverbial vine.

 

Or the commies, it could always be the commies.  And let’s not forget the Jews, al-Qaeda, ex-military wackos, or a prankish band of Ivy League college students, saddled by student loans and out to have some fun.  Or foreigners, don’t forget foreigners.

 

In other words, police had no idea whatsoever who sent the mailings.

 

Embarrassingly, ABC reported that the Manhattan mailings, “mainly appear to have reached low-level workers.”  And New York police spokesman Deputy Commissioner Paul Browne incoherently blathered to ABC News:

 

“Apparently, the message was aimed at the mail room workers among the 99 percent.”

 

The police are saying that the mailings were intended for May Day delivery, but arrived a day early.  One official, according to ABC News, inexplicably said…

 

”They underestimated the efficiency of the U.S. Postal Service.”

 

Ha!  So, the joke’s really on them after all, right?  Didn’t think the USPS could foil your plans with their efficient inner city delivery, now did you?  Ha!  So there.

 

 

I’m reporting, however, that regardless of who the mailings appear to have reached, senior executive seat cushions at Wells Fargo and other banks are all being replaced today after being soiled as the news of the mailings and their enclosed powdery substance spread through the executive ranks.

 

I’m also reporting that I have instructed my wife and daughter not to go inside the bank for any reason, and instead only use the ATM after hours.  And I’m not kidding about that in the least.

 

No one should be the least bit surprised that this is happening, and it’s nothing to take lightly or brush off as nothing to be worried about… it’s scary as all hell because it’s a certainty, in my opinion, that it’s only a matter of time before people are killed in one way or the other as a result of what this country has allowed to happen to untold millions.

 

“This is a reminder that you are not in control.  Just in case you needed a little incentive to stop working we have a little surprise for you.  Think fast you have seconds.”

 

There’s a word for that sort of message, it’s “terrorism.”  And it can strike without warning and claim the lives of thousands… and there’s no way to stop it, and no one who cares about being punished for it after the fact.

 

The Oklahoma City bombing, April 19, 1995, claimed 168 lives, including 19 children under the age of 6 years old.  More than 680 were injured.  The bomb destroyed or damaged 324 buildings in a 16-block radius, destroyed or burned 86 cars, and shattered glass in 258 buildings nearby.

 

 

Timothy McVeigh believed that the bombing had a positive impact on government policy.  And what angered him then is nothing compared to the potential for rage that exists today.

 

During the 1930s, after the attack and attempted lynching of a judge (who was signing eviction orders) by 200 Iowa farmers who stormed into Judge Bradley’s courtroom in April 1933, the Governor of Iowa placed the state under martial law.

 

In Minnesota, similar degrees of civil unrest and the threat of violence led Chief Justice Hughes to declare a moratorium on foreclosures.

 

Expressing frank understanding that the nation’s economic catastrophe threatened political stability, Hughes remarked, “the policy of protecting contracts against impairment presupposes the maintenance of a government by virtue of which contractual relations are worthwhile.” 

 

Hughes found that the mortgage crisis in Minnesota justified the stay of “immediate and literal enforcement of contractual obligations” insofar as the emergency was real and no mere legislative subterfuge; the statute was designed for the benefit of society as a whole rather than particular individuals; and the legislation was temporary and no broader than necessary to accomplish its purpose.  Hughes also denied that the statute violated due process or equal protection.

 

A foreclosure moratorium is not what we need… it is a last resort.

 

What we need is a fairer and more compassionate process through which we can get through the foreclosure crisis.  The way in which foreclosures have been handled to-date has been wrong to the point of being barbaric, and we will continue to deny and ignore this truth at our peril.

 

Mandelman out.

May
01

DOER UPDATE: Patricia Martin v. Wells Fargo – Court Grants Injunction, Injustice on Trial Ahead

 

What you’re about to read about should never be allowed to happen in this country, and what is particularly troubling is that Wells Fargo Bank could have very easily prevented it by simply communicating with its customer honestly or competently.

 

And the law firm employed by Wells Fargo to wrongfully foreclose on this 73 year-old widow’s home of 43 years, Anglin, Flewelling, Rasmussen, Campbell & Trytten, LLP of Pasadena, California, could have stopped this travesty of justice as well, but these lawyers can’t even be bothered to actually appear in the courtroom, choosing instead to phone in their odious nuggets of legal claptrap, entirely devoid of common sense, because that’s how they roll.

 

As it stands, and as a result of Wells Fargo’s handling of the matter, a 73 year-old woman is at risk of losing a home that she has owned for 43 years… and all because she fell behind on her mortgage by $104.27. 

 

That’s right… we’re talking about a hundred bucks and change here.  You want some offensive stupidity?  Wells you’ve certainly come to the right fargo.

 

A Personal Note to Laurie Maggiano at Treasury… I just wanted you to know that I was sincere when I told you that I’m trying to suppress my aggressive tendencies and stop being so snarky all the time, but are you following this case at all?  Because as long as the Obama Administration continues to ignore this sort of thing, you could be the Michelangelo of Home Preservation and it won’t matter because your ceiling’s being covered in a Navajo White semi-gloss with a stipple effect.  I’m just saying…

 

Remember Patricia Martin’s foreclosure situation with Wells Fargo? 

 

I wrote about it on February 20th of this year, and if you didn’t see it, I’d suggest that you continue reading what follows and then if you think it necessary, you can click DOER ALERT to read the original article.

 

Patricia Martin’s DOER ALERT, by the way, was the only one that did not succeed. Although Wells Fargo had responded to a DOER ALERT in the past, this time they completely ignored our pleas for the bank to do the right thing and stop her eviction.

 

She was not evicted, however, as her attorney, Mark Zanides (who happens to be a good friend of mine), drove a few hundred miles to appear in court on her behalf and successfully stopped the eviction.

 

And this past week, Mark won in court again, with the court granting the preliminary injunction… so at this point… Patricia Martin will be remaining in her home as the case proceeds to trial… a jury trial, by the way.  (You can read Patricia’s declaration HERE.)

 

You can call me naïve, but I just can’t believe that even Wells Fargo, the bank that appears committed to being the worst the servicing industry has to offer, wants to do this.

 

Zanides estimates that the bank has spent a significant amount already on legal fees and now is certain to spend a whole lot more.  Patricia Martin’s home is worth no more than $275,000.  How can it be worth it to spend $50,000 or more to take her home, when she wasn’t even late… didn’t want a loan modification… and could have simply continued making her payments… as she has for the last 43 years?

 

How can anyone want this to happen?

 

Memo to Wells Fargo: If you’ll just have someone contact me to explain the reasoning behind this situation, I promise to explain it from your perspective and stop calling your bank disparaging names.

 

But, until then, and absent any information to the contrary, what am I or anyone else to think other than that you are the epitome of the worst sort of corporate citizen… the sort of bank that is not to be trusted… a bank that we should all warn our children about… a bank that should reasonably be despised for its behavior.

 

 

Here’s an in-a-nutshell type recap with quotes from the declarations of those involved:

 

Patricia Martin’s daughter, Nicole Ortega (who lives in the home with her husband and her mother) went into a Wells Fargo branch on September 27, 2010 and asked how much was owed to satisfy the August and September payments.   She then paid the amount that Wells Fargo said she owed, $3238.30, which she thought represented a monthly payment of $1619.15.

 

She didn’t know it for several months, but the amount she was paying was $104.27 short of the required amount.  In her own words, from her declaration

 

“I had previously been told by Wells Fargo Bank’s agents that the bank does not take partial payments.  The fact that the bank took these payments confirmed to me that I had made a full payment.  Had I known that the full payment for September 15 was supposed to be $1723.41, I was ready willing and able to pay it.  In no way would I ever jeopardize our family’s home to save $104.27, that is, the difference between the amount paid and what was apparently the amount owed.”

 

Yes, and we certainly believe you.  In fact, I think it’s safe to say that every single human being with a fully developed adult brain on the planet believes you… okay, except maybe Larry Summers and Ed DeMarco… and the fact that you had to write a declaration stating this fact so that it could be used in court is absolutely emblematic of the insanity American homeowners continue to face today.

 

Roughly five years into the financial and resulting foreclosure crises, and this story, instead of shocking every ear who hears it, is starting to sound like meatloaf and mashed potatoes.

 

Wells Fargo’s employee, Michael Dolan, states in his declaration that he is an Operations Analyst in Wells Fargo’s Mortgage Lending Operations, located at 4101 Wiseman Blvd. in San Antonio, Texas.

 

Prior to his current position, he states he was a Vice President in the Portfolio Retention Department at Wachovia Mortgage, FSB, and prior to that he says he was Vice President of Loan Services at World Savings Bank, FSB.  He also mentions that he started at World Savings in 1984, so he was at World and Wachovia for a combined 23 years.  So, I’m going to go ahead and assume that he knows how to read a calendar and mail a letter.

 

Here’s what Patricia Martin’s daughter’s declaration says about a statement made in Mr. Dolan’s declaration

 

“The Dolan declaration states that ‘on or about September 29, 2010, the Bank sent the borrower a letter informing her that the loan was due for September 15, 2010 loan payment, and that $1619.15 had not been applied to the loan because it was not enough to cover the balance due.’  (The letter is marked Exhibit Q.)  I am aware that my mother did receive this letter dated September 29, 2010.  However, we did not receive this letter until early June 2011, when it arrived in an envelope postmarked May 30, 2011.  I have attached this letter and the envelope in which it came.  I remember this letter specifically because it arrived so far after the letter itself was dated.  I thought that was significant, so I saved the envelope in which it arrived.”

 

Now, you see Mr. Michael Dolan… that makes you a lying piece of itinerant trash, because not only did you lie in your declaration, but you also figured you could cover the lie and your worthless ass by sticking a backdated letter in the mail more than eight months later.

 

And why not?

 

I mean, what are the chances that anyone would have kept a certain blue dress around all that time without sending it to the cleaners, right Mikey?

 

 

If this were the first time that Wells Fargo was ever accused of such behavior, I’d have the tendency to say… maybe it was an error.  If it were the second time… okay, what the heck.  But since no one can even count how many similar things Wells has not only been accused of doing, but in fact has been proven to have done… well, there’s no benefit of the doubt due here.  The mere suggestion is utterly laughable.

 

Patricia’s daughter continues in her declaration to state what anyone would have to agree is the obvious.  (You can read the Plaintiff’s Evidentiary Objections to Dolan’s Declaration HERE.)

 

“I did not know the September payment whose amount had been given to me by the bank employee and which had been paid on September 27 had not been credited.  Had I received Exhibit Q in early October, it would have explained what happened and I would have asked how I could pay the remaining balance of $104 or so and made arrangements to pay the late fees.”

 

Yes, that’s right because that’s what ANYONE would have done under the same circumstances.  She continues…

 

“Had I received Exhibit Q, I would not have had to make all of the calls to the bank seeking clarification that I made later on in December when I learned the September payment had not been credited.  Nor would I have needed to write the letter in December seeking explanation of why the September payment had not been credited.”  (Her letter is marked “First Ortega Dec. Exhibit A.”)

 

And again… she is making complete sense.  The question is why is any of this being questioned and who is the imbecile questioning it?  She continues…

 

In early October, I received a letter dated October 5, 2010, stating that the September payment had not been made.  (Marked “Dolan Exhibit R.”)  The letter states that ‘if this payment has already been made, then please disregard this notice.’  Since I knew that I had made the September payment, I disregarded the notice, as the bank’s letter invited the borrower to do.”

 

Yep, that’s what I would have done as well.

 

Okay, look… this tale goes on and on and as it does, it gets worse and worse.

 

The homeowner received another letter late in October saying that the last two payments had not been received, and that the loan was now in default.  Another letter arrived a few days later saying basically the same thing.  Again, the homeowner assumed that the letters were wrong, as in their mind the September payment had definitely been made, so they did the next logical thing… they called Wells Fargo at the number provided on the letters.

 

The homeowner’s daughter told the bank that they were aware that they owed the October and November payments, explaining that her mother, Patricia Martin, had been hospitalized and there were other hardships involved… but that the September payment had been made.

 

They asked the bank if it would be okay to make the October and November payments on December 3, 2010… and Wells Fargo representative stated that by doing so, “you will be fine,” with the exception that the December payment would be due later that month.

 

The Wells agent then said that she would notate the account to that effect.

 

 

During that same call, the Wells Fargo representative uttered the words that would make a bad situation far worse, she suggested that the borrower should apply for a Map2 modification, and then transferred the call to a Ms. Leffert.

 

Patricia Martin’s daughter spoke with Ms. Leffert and gave her some of the information she requested.  She didn’t have all of the information, however, and told Ms. Leffert that she would have to speak with her mother before going further.  Subsequently, she called Ms. Leffert to provide the missing information, and in late November Ms. Leffert stated that “you qualify” and that “you’ll be ahead of the game since the late payments will be added to the modified loan.”

 

And then things got even worse.  A letter dated November 18, 2010, but not received until the end of that month, now said that the note was delinquent and would need to be reinstated by paying $4829.96 by November 30th.  Patricia’s daughter immediately contacted Wells Fargo to find out what was wrong with their system and records, as she had already made arrangements to pay October and November payments on December 3rd.

 

She spoke with a representative named Jason who told her that there were some unapplied funds in the amount of $1619.15 that it looked like something was happening with, also saying that it may be applied to October’s payment.

 

Jason was told that September’s payment had been made, and he said he couldn’t tell her why September was not credited, but he suggested that she wait and let the bank finish whatever they were doing and it would clear things up.

 

Patricia’s daughter then states in her declaration…

 

“Had I been told by the bank’s representative that we were required to make a payment of $4829.96 by November 30 or lose our home, we could and would have done so.”

 

And again, all I can say is… OF COURSE YOU WOULD HAVE.  Your mother has lived in the home for 43 years… good Lord, when did our world lose its common sense and critical thinking skills?

 

So, of course, when she goes into branch on December 3rd to make her two delinquent payments as she had arranged that she would do… the bank won’t accept the payments, as they were due by November 30th.

 

Does everyone realize how many billions in delinquent and defaulted loans Wells Fargo has on its books… to say nothing of the untold billions in worthless garbage that exists off the bank’s balance sheet?  You do, right?

 

And does everyone realize that the President of the United States, the U.S. Attorney General and the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development have all made it abundantly clear that unnecessary foreclosures are to be avoided as they are not in our national interests?

 

So, what possible difference does it make whether a homeowner is paying on November 30th or December 3rd?  Wells Fargo… are you stupid, irrational and incompetent… or are you just plain evil and sadistic?

 

And don’t start blaming anything on “the investor,” Fannie Mae, or the mystery trust that thinks it holds this loan because this beauty of a loan is one of those fabulous pick-a-pay jobs made popular by World Savings, so it’s on you, Wells Fargo, all the way.  And should I even ask who might be responsible for such a loan being sold to a 68 year-old widow?

 

I’ve never been a great speller, so maybe someone at the bank could help me out here… how many “Wells” are there in “predatory shithead?”

 

By January Wells Fargo says they won’t fix it, won’t accept payments, and months later when loan modification is denied, house goes to foreclosure sale and is taken back by the bank.

 

The modification, by the way, is denied months later because Wells Fargo says they won’t consider Patricia’s son-in-law’s income.  He lives in the house with his wife… her daughter… ever since Patricia, whose husband passed on a few years ago, started having some serious medical problems.  Oh, and he’s a police officer… a sergeant on the local police force… someone who protects and serves his community.

 

Writing this article, I had to wonder… on how many other occasions has Wells Fargo improperly credited amounts paid by borrowers?  Luckily, I didn’t have to wonder for very long, as I remembered the article I wrote a little over a week ago about a case in Louisiana involving Wells Fargo and in front of Federal Bankruptcy Court Judge Elizabeth Magner.  If you haven’t read it, I highly recommend that you do.

 

In Judge Magner’s own words, after describing Wells Fargo’s behavior as being, “highly reprehensible,” she went on to say…

 

“Wells Fargo has taken advantage of borrowers who rely on it to accurately apply payments and calculate the amounts owed, but perhaps more disturbing is Wells Fargo’s refusal to voluntarily correct its errors.  It prefers to rely on the ignorance of borrowers or their inability to fund a challenge to its demands, rather than voluntarily relinquish gains obtained through improper accounting methods.”

 

So, is what has happened to Patricia Martin yet another example of Wells Fargo’s systemic misapplication of funds in order to repossess homes?

 

I would imagine that Wells Fargo would answer “No,” to that question.

 

So, fine… then you’d have me believe what?  That it’s a fluke?  An aberration?  Some sort of inexplicable, unfortunate deviation from the norm perhaps?

 

HORSE PUCKY.

 

For all of you legal eagle types… You can read Wells Fargo’s Opposition to the Preliminary Injunction HERE, Wells Fargo’s Appendix to Opposition to Preliminary Injunction HERE, and the Plaintiff’s Reply to Wells Fargo’s Objection to Preliminary Injunction HERE.

 

Mandelman out.

 

 

HEY DOERS… Looking for Something to DO?

 

Wells Fargo’s CEO, John Stumpf “earned” $19.8 million last year, according to the Wall Street Journal and documents filed with the SEC in March of this year.

 

If you’d like to congratulate him, you can try reaching him by email:

john.g.stumpf@wellsfargo.com

Or, by phone: (415) 396-7018 or (866) 878-5865

Or, if you want to have some fun, since I know this physical address is correct, why not grab an envelope, buy a stamp and reach out to him via regular mail.  For extra smiles, consider throwing old keys in with your letter, or I’ve always enjoyed tossing a small handful of sunflower seeds in before sealing…

John G. Stumpf

Chief Executive Officer

Wells Fargo Bank

420 Montgomery St.

San Francisco, CA 94163

### 

 

You’ll also be happy to hear that Wells has just launched its new business unit, Abbot Downing, which is dedicated to caring for the wealth of the super rich… its clients have more than $50 million in investable assets.  Only recently launched, Abbot has already recruited about $33 billion in investable assets under management.  So, very well done there.  (And I heard that one of their clients holds the patent on the color “blue.”)

 

 

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