Nov
24

Huge TILA Rescission Victory in Oregon

A homeowner who retained our services to investigate his mortgage loan just recently scored a major victory in US District Court in Oregon in Barnes v. Chase Home Finance.

Our investigation revealed that the borrower, Timothy Barnes, had the extended right to rescind his loan under TILA/Regulation Z due to material disclosure violation by the original lender. We assisted Mr. Barnes in drafting the appropriate notices to rescind his loan and he subsequently elected to send the notices and rescind.

At the time the first notices were sent, Chase Home Finance was the servicer. Chase failed to respond appropriately to the rescission notice. Chase subsequently decided to transfer servicing to IBM Lender Business Process Services. Notice of Chase’s failure to rescind and/or respond according to the requirements under TILA/Reg. Z was provided to IBM. IBM also failed to respond according to the regulations and refused to rescind.

Mr. Barnes subsequently drafted and filed a Pro Se complaint in federal court. Chase and IBM have been playing games in this case and they filed a Motion to Dismiss (predictable). The federal magistrate assigned to the case seems to have a real bias for the banks and handed down a terribly misguided decision dismissing Mr. Barnes’ claims. He objected to the magistrate’s jurisdiction and essentially appealed the woefully wrong conclusions.

Judge Anna Brown analyzed the issues, pleadings, etc. and handed down a near complete reversal of the magistrate’s decision. Her brief has since been published on WestLaw and multiple legal databases since it so complete. She goes into great detail on the actual law which we stand on in this case.

CLICK HERE to get the slip copy of her brief published in WestLaw. It goes through the entire history of this case in great detail along with her reasoning and findings.

This is a major score for the homeowners in Oregon especially but really all over the US. I have been saying for years and years that TILA Rescission is a complete defense to foreclosure and provides the most comprehensive remedy to a homeowner when PROPERLY applied.

The key issue is that most attorneys do not truly understand TILA Rescission and really don’t know how to apply it and argue the elements. That’s ok if they have an expert like myself helping them but it’s so important for homeowners to understand that TILA Rescission is an excellent tool to fight with when you have the statutory right to rescind.

The other problem I have seen though is that most of these “forensic auditors” out there who are not experts, many, if not most are actually scammers, and the few who aren’t an outright scam have no clue how to properly apply the elements of TILA rescission and analyze the issues to elicit if the homeowner has the right to rescind. In fact, I have seen many many cases where the homeowner thinks they can rescind but really don’t have the right under TILA to do so.

Yes, there are instances where fraudulent inducement or fraudulent concealment or mortgage fraud may provide for a claim of common law rescission but that is completely different from TILA rescission. It’s important to have an expert truly analyze your loan.

For Tim Barnes, way to go. Great victory and anxious to see how this case progresses now that we have a real judge involved who cares about the law. Way to go Judge Brown. It’s refreshing to see a judge who takes the time to understand the issues and truly cares about applying this consumer protection statute properly, without bias.

 

Oct
20

Recasting A Mortgage – What Is It and Why Is It Done?

Article by Peter Harper

A mortgage recast is more like mortgage modification but it mainly involves re-amortization of your home loan. The need for mortgage recast in general comes up in case of three situations. One is when you would want to pay down the principal and get the home loan amortized. The second situation is when a homeowner is in financial hardship and thus may want to extend the term of the home loan. Another situation is when negative amortization happens on a home loan, recast is done.

Why is recasting on mortgage done?

Mortgage recasting is done in order to lower the monthly payment on your mortgage. Thus, it is more like mortgage modification as the loan term gets changed and the payment on the mortgage is reduced. Through mortgage recasting the cost and the hassles of refinancing your mortgage gets reduced. There are many such lenders who offer the homeowners the chance which can help them in to lowering their monthly payments through recasting or re-amortization.

Amortization is when the payments against the mortgage are made and when the loan amount reduces as a result of this. Thus, negative amortization is just the opposite of this where the loan amount grows as a result of less than minimum payments made by the borrower.

The amortized loan lowers the fixed amount of money that you are required to pay each month against the home loan so that at the end of the mortgage, the principal amount gets paid off. Thus, you can use a mortgage calculator in order to understand fully the amortization schedule which shows as to how the monthly payments are broken down into the payment towards the interest and the payment against the principal amount borrowed.

Typically the homeowners do not recast the home mortgage under a situation where they make additional payments against the principal. Rather the loan gets foreshortened and this is because additional payments towards the principal reduce the outstanding balance of the loan, along with the expense on the monthly interest. In this case as the monthly payment do not change, so the loan gets paid off faster.

However, sometimes the main idea of the homeowners, in making the additional principal payments is not mainly to reduce the loan but to lower the monthly payments on the mortgage. In such a situation the home loan is required to be recast. The lender in case of recast is required to base the payments against the home loan as per the new term, thereby the lower balance of the loan and also the remaining home loan term.

But again, not all of the mortgage lenders may offer their customers the provision to recast the home mortgage. The main lenders in many cases sell off the loans and these get originated to investors. The investors in general are not much interested in providing this level of provisions and flexibility to the borrowers and so these home loans may not have the recast option. However, it is always better to talk to your lender about the mortgage recast and if you can get such a provision.

Other than this in case of the negative amortization loans or also as known as the pick and pay loan, you may be able to recast the loan. Though these loans offer you various advantage and various low payment options, this is quite a troublesome kind of loan. This is because the loan amount grows and at a point of time it becomes really tough for you to make the payments against the home loan. So, in such cases the loans can be recast and in this case the loan payments grow higher in order to lower the principal amount which you had borrowed.

Oct
13

Dividing the Mortgage Loan and Affirming the Consequent

This is a fantastic article (below) written by Gregory M. Lemelson and is posted on his blog at amvona.com

I like his writing style… this article is a fun read, while somewhat tragic, when you understand what is and has been happening in our country. It is also highly instructive and articulates well many of the pertinent issues in this foreclosure scam around our country – which is nothing more than the seizure of homes and wealth in a massive transfer of money and property to the 1%.

While I don’t agree with everything going on in the Occupy Wall Street protests, I do identify with the 1% vs. the 99% concept. It is a reality nonetheless in this country. While Obama and his cronies are trying to use the protests as political currency to create some illusion that they support these people, their policies, when laid bare, simply enforce, support and exacerbate the 1% vs. the 99% issue which is nothing more than “someone” deciding that they can transfer anyone’s money or property to “someone” else. This is wrong  - whether it’s accomplished through fraud or through governmental policy – tax policy or otherwise.

Government’s role is and should be to protect all players in our system from fraud and should be focused on ensuring the system is free from manipulation, fraud, misrepresentation and such. Then, true capitalism and the entrepreneurial and innovative spirit of Americans can thrive and do what “we” do best. Some will get rich and deservedly so. Some will become poorer because they want to be lazy or maybe because they have no such aspirations to innovate, thrive or ‘get rich’. Either way, the freedoms our country was founded on will create a dynamic, thriving place for all of us to live in where opportunity to create wealth and decide your own future will, once again, rule the day.

Enjoy this fantastic article. Thanks Gregory!

Dividing the Mortgage Loan and Affirming the Consequent
by Gregory M. Lemelson 

Background: A post Ibanez world

In January the Massachusetts supreme judicial court held in US Bank National Association vs. Antonio Ibanez that a note holder may not foreclose on a property in order to redeem a debt, if they are not also the holder of a valid mortgage (that is to say also with a valid assignment). We outlined the details of this case and its implications in our article “Ibanez – Denying the Antecedent, Suppressing the Evidence and one big fat Red Herring” on January 11th, 2011.

The issue before the SJC in Henrietta Eaton v. Federal National Mortgage Association and Green Tree Servicing, LLC is whether the assignee of a mortgage security alone (fraudulent assignments aside), without any direct or indirect interest in or claim to the underlying debt, can seek to recover the debt through foreclosure.

Oral arguments in the case were heard on Oct. 3rd, 2011.

It is important to note that in Ibanez, the SJC was not willing to overturn long standing legal principles simply because of recent “innovation” in the way banks chose to record their security interest in real property (e.g. MERS), or because of the extraordinary liability such a ruling would have on what basically amounted to four years of mostly illegal foreclosure activity in the Commonwealth.

The Ibanez article published last January predated Eaton by some ten months, and since the SJC reviewed Eaton “sua sponte”, there was no way to know at the time, that Eaton would make it all the way to the SJC, so the following comments taken from the article are perhaps prescient:

” It is possible that from the banks perspective an invalid assignment of the note is the more serious concern for the following reasons:

1. Without first having proper ownership of the debt, the bank can not initiate any collection activity, let alone foreclosure.

2. Notes (ownership of the debt asset), may be subject to further contention in bankruptcy proceedings where many creditors have a vested interest in the assets of a defunct mortgage lender, particularly since these notes are often sold in bankruptcy for a fraction of their face value.

3. The trusts that are supposed to contain the validly conveyed notes will in fact, not actually contain them (because they are not bearer paper), thus violating the representations and warranties made to investors who purchase these securities. Therefore, it is unsecured debt, and potentially, no debt at all upon which to collect payments.

6. Even if the notes obtain a valid conveyance, or confirmation of conveyance at a later date, it is still may be impossible to place them into the MBS’s:

a. It will have been longer than 90 days (the typical expiry period to transfer assets into the trust)

b. If it is a foreclosure matter, the loan is in default (the PSA’s do not allow for the addition of defaulted loans)

c. Any effort on the part of the trust to insert old or defaulted loans would jeopardize the trusts favorable REMIC status – thus further harming already impaired returns.”

As pointed out in the Ibanez article, clear title to the property is important. If the assignment of the mortgage is invalid, then there is a “cloud on title”. The banks recognizing this, brought Ibanez before the land court of their own volition in order to clear this “cloud on title”. One of the key mistakes counsel for Eaton made, perhaps in their effort to establish the more serious problem of legitimate possession of the note, was overlooking the validity of the Mortgage assignment, (still incredibly important) which, as with most securitized loans, was so clearly fraudulent (see Amicus brief of Marie McDonnell). Incidentally, this was of particular interest to the court during oral arguments, however, because the issue was never raised by Eaton’s counsel in its complaint, it could not be addressed by the court. Thus the opportunity to cite the authority of Crowley v. Adams 22 Mass. 582 (1917) which concerned the fraudulent conveyance of a mortgage without a note, was lost. Within the context of discussing the assignees knowledge of the fraud, the court held:

“[the assignee] should be held to have known as to each transaction, the possession of the note was essential to an enforceable mortgage, without which neither mortgage could be effectively foreclosed.” Id. at 585.

This was a error on the part of counsel, and eliminated a potential fifth source of authority in Eaton, as we wrote in January:

“1.If there must be a perfected interest in the mortgage (according to MA law) at the time of foreclosure, then how many foreclosures have taken place in Massachusetts with the same profile as Ibanez, and are thus invalid?

2. Clear title is important – In the statement of the case, the banks actually brought the complaint before the land court as independent actions in order to “remove a cloud on the title” – thus the banks recognize that such defects are a problem for future conveyance. All MA homeowners should be worried about the same (discussed further below).

3. To foreclose on a mortgage securing property in the commonwealth, one must be the holder of the mortgage. To be the holder of the mortgage, the bank must:

a. Be the original mortgagee

b. Be an assignee under a valid assignment of the mortgage

c. It is not sufficient to possess the mortgagor’s promissory note (bearer paper). Apparently most if not all securitized mortgages were endorsed in “blank”, in other words to the bearer.

4. The notice requirements set forth in G.L.c. 244, ss 14 unequivocally requires that the foreclosure notice must identify the present holder of the mortgage. This likely was not the case in past foreclosures in MA. For future foreclosure actions the question is can the real mortgage holder be found and will they cooperate in assigning the security interest?

5. Assignees of a mortgage must hold a written statement conveying the mortgage that satisfied the statute of Frauds or even the most basic elements of contractual requirements.

AG Coakley acknowledges that “the securitization regime was required to conform to state law prior to foreclosing, to ensure simply that legal ownership ‘caught up’ in order that the creditor foreclose legally in MA. The lenders, trustees and servicers could have done this, but apparently elected not to, perhaps on a ‘Massive Scale’ ” Saying that they “could have done this” within the context of MA law is one thing, within the context of IRS tax code, or NY trust law, is another.”

Further the article points out that a holder of the mortgage without the note, really only holds the security instrument in trust for the debt holder (thus anticipating Eaton), as pointed out in the following taken from the Ibanez article:

4. The holder of the mortgage holds the mortgage in trust for the purchaser of the note, who has an equitable right to obtain an assignment of the mortgage, which may be accomplished by filing an action in court and obtaining an equitable order of assignment. If the average MBS has 5,000 notes for example, then we have to assume 5000 separate actions would have to be filed in court to ensure they are truly “Mortgage Backed Securities”, and that is only if the REMIC status isn’t jeopardized by such a revelation or action.”

However, the impasse for banks is the fact, that even if the court recognizes the authority of MERS to assign the mortgage to the foreclosing entity (usually the servicer), the following conditions still must be met:

a) The assignment must still be a valid assignment (most are not)

b) There must also be a valid assignment of the note to establish who exactly owns the debt.

The vast majority of these loans were sold into securitization trusts and are merely endorsed “in blank” (if they can even be found in the trust at all). Most schedules attached to the trust documents include little or no information on the details of the particular loans (as was the case in Ibanez), or sometimes include the address of particular properties, but no information on the barrowers, or curiously the loan amounts. Other failures include post-dated or otherwise invalid notarizations, and fraudulent signatures etc., which are all suggestive of fraud.

Given this, to speak of Eaton merely as a question over the validity of MERS and its assignments is incorrect. Even if Eaton is not affirmed by the SJC, the issue of validly conveyed notes, remains of vital importance.

That having been said, we believe the Appellants chances of prevailing are precisely zero, or maybe less. Taken together with Ibanez, this means serious problems for the bond holders in these securitization trusts and their bank administrators. With all the nuance of every day speak we could muster, we think it is put best by saying just; some of the debt-servants might escape. That isn’t to say that all measures won’t be taken to try to prevent this outcome.

On contemporary Pheronic thinking and the Pyramids that debt-servants build

We believe that this situation lends itself to the possibility of violence, as tragic an outcome as that is and would be. On June 3rd, 2011 we published our follow up to the Ibanez article entitled simply “On the ethics of mortgage loan default”. Four days later, the Essex county registrar of deeds John O’Brian, who we quote in the article, stopped recording fraudulent mortgage assignments (which many if not most are). It seems logical that this would be a “wake-up” call to the average homeowner, particularly since other registrars are prepared to follow suit. With the registrar’s decision, it has become a fact that title may no longer be recordable and ownership is in question. As it turns out, the homeowner who faithfully sends in monthly mortgage payments for years or decades (in an effort to “do the right thing”), may have no more clear ownership rights in the related property than a perfect stranger.

As the article “On the ethics of mortgage loan default” spread throughout the Internet with countless links and references, we were surprised to find comments that included (not unlike the allegory of the cave) the desire that the author “be shot”. We were equally surprised when the Hacktivist group “Anonymous” (which was not our target audience either) featured the article prominently in several of their sites.

It has been said “the rich rules over the poor, and the borrower is servant to the lender”. Perhaps in our Naiveté, we did not understand the sensitivity around the suggestion that a servant might want to be free one day. Nor did we recognize that the powerful human inclination to denial might elicit more than just a passive reaction. Like the prisoner who is freed from the cave and comes to understand that the shadows on the wall do not make up reality at all – later puts their life in danger from those who remain in the cave. Yet, the source of the light is truth and intelligence and those who would act prudently must see it.

These implications give rise to powerful questions in the current context. One such question regards the difference between a debt and a moral obligation? Why do we confuse the two so often in our society? Such that those who seek forgiveness of debt, are made to feel as if they are violating a moral code, or a cultural taboo? Perhaps the explanation lies in a more clear definition of the two. A moral obligation is something that can be forgiven with some flexibility, there is hardly exactness involved.

A monetary debt on the other hand can be calculated with the accuracy and immutability of math and the related science of accounting, and grown with the power of compounded interest, and therefore, in proper monetary debt, exist the possibility of subjugation in perpetuity, or at least for the entire natural life of the debtor.

Oddly, our society adds insult to injury in this failing of human civilization, and as if this dreadful revelation were not enough, adds on top of these accurately calculated and compounded financial obligations, the fallacy of a moral obligation, and in so doing the debt-servant is made to feel guilt regarding his moral character as well as his failure to pay.

When this sleight of hand is wedded to exhaustion (a pre-existing condition of many debt-servants), the odds of one actually fighting back against such a system, corrupt though it may be, are only minute. It must have been a genius who figured out that slavery with chains is inefficient. If a human could be conditioned to believe he is a free man, when he is not, and that already disillusioned he might be convinced that he is also a rich man, when he is not, then chains and their related complications are wholly unnecessary. All that is necessary then is to lower his idea of freedom and wealth substantially, and provide him with cut-rate imitations.

Under these circumstances, the average man would in fact work extraordinary hours, even if his paycheck was essentially diminished to less than zero by his existing debts (thus requiring him to take on new ones), and if by chance he was able to save, those funds too would be safely transferred to the hands of strangers (through “innovations” such as 401K’s, which could be convenient deducted from his paycheck electronically and instantly). These strangers are there to help the debt-servant loose what meager savings might be possible through sub-par investments (like internet stocks) which he never understood, but which is broker was always paid for trading.

Notably, this shell game can never be revealed to a debt-servant, because then he would understand that he is not really a free man, even though the real law is “…not on tablets of stone but on tablets of human hearts”, and yet this inclination of the heart is often resisted, even with violence. Nonetheless, In this law of the heart lies “a desire” which is so great that it over powers all other human constructs, including offensive debts.

In this respect, surely a few folks in Europe must have believed that the entire trade in chained slaves made the United States look like an economically and operationally primitive bunch – for the cost of that variety of servant is actually much higher, and had a far smaller pool of candidates, namely those with a particular tint to their skin. Yet, telling someone that they are inferior based merely on the color of their skin is a hard sell year after year. Conversely, telling someone they are free, when they have never tasted real freedom because they were born into debt, is easier to maintain, because it deals with more subtle issues, and the likelihood of confusion with moral obligation, and exploits the power of human denial.

The earliest evidence regarding market places and trade indicate that if you have something to sell that is of far lesser value than you are indicating, than it is wise to have the greatest physical distance possible between yourself and your counterpart – for in such a trade lies the inherent possibility of a violent reaction to the discovery on the part of the unsuspecting buyer, particularly when accurate accounts of credit and debt are kept and ruthlessly enforced. Some of the oldest recorded documents in history are of this variety; they are surprisingly, accounts of credit and debt. Perhaps human history is really a history of subjugation then. Cultural anthropologists are quite familiar with this idea of credit and debt in (even ancient) market places. It’s an old story. However, Americans are bread as consumers, not as economic or cultural anthropologist, because in that knowledge rests power, and power, by definition must belong to a coterie. For the greater the number of those subdued, the greater the power of the few who would subdue, just as with money, power deals only in transfers.

That is why the average American home owner is not allowed to have the true owner of their mortgage debts revealed – they are the counter party to an impolite deal. In these trades great profits were made, and in the pricing of the assets, great misrepresentations regarding intrinsic value. Wealth destruction therefore is a misleading expression in describing what happened; the accurate term is wealth transfer. During the housing “Pyramid” (this term is far more accurate than “bubble”, because it accurately describes an order) one of the greatest logical errors of all time was sold; that the intrinsic value of a home, which had within it the possibility of calculating (accurately) fair price was tied instead to a hyper speculative measure, that which is inherently impossible to price with any degree of accuracy, and which is immaterial; our notion of an ideal. As one might imagine, no price is too high to live an “ideal” – think of it as a seller’s paradise. After, a difficult stock market collapse, and an even more difficult terrorist attack, why would anyone be interested in mere stocks or bonds? After all the very place where these electronic slips are traded was very nearly destroyed. This new investment was allegedly concrete, and also patriotic. Americans were led to believe they had “…discovered a pearl of great value”, the only security whose price could never go down – it was like a “Dream”, like an “American Dream”.

However, when loan documents were to be signed a new broker suddenly appeared. Without any forewarning, with a name that was not before heard, or with anyone who had actually seen him, or understood how he operated, he made a subtle but powerful arrival on the scene. His name is Mr. MERS, and he instituted even greater secrecy than stock brokers and fund managers. Few have seen his physical appearance, or pulled back the curtain, it’s uninteresting anyways, because Mr. MERS is nothing more than a relational database, which only a very small fraction of the world’s population have access to (even democratically elected bodies, such as county recorders have no such access). He brokers the movements of trillions of dollars in capital. He is a construct of your trading partner, and because of his existence, you can never have a “level playing field”, or hope of a fair trade. In this brave new world, the requisite distance that precedes a bad trade, is no longer a measure of geography, it is a piece of software.

With this surreptitious matrix of relational database fields safely in place, how are all those houses, like so many stone blocks cut by ancient hands, turned into a pyramid? The answer seems self-evident; through a pyramid scheme naturally.

How would a contemporary mass exodus from such bondage look? Just as Fannie Mae and Green Tree divided the essential components of their security, It might look like ordinary debt-servants parting and dividing a sea of concrete, and traversing the depth of high rise buildings in New York, just as “by faith the people passed through the Red Sea as on dry land”.

The people in New York are criticized for their lack of direction, the fact that they appear to be lost in a veritable desert – but they are free, and in their hearts live an almost child-like innocence that we should desire to have. After all, their predecessors spent a good deal more time lost, and through it discovered a greater revelation, one that would lay the foundation to ultimate answers.

The popular accounts promulgated by Adam Smith and the contemporary science of modern economics as we were made to understand them, rely on more than one myth regarding the engineering of debt, and its related instrument – money. These underlying misrepresentations give rise to the possibility of great abuses, for the very nature of trade, and all else which rests upon it is thus misunderstood.

There are many reasons to despair over the future of our fragile state in the US today. However, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court is not one of those reasons. By upholding the rule of law, and observing the incredibly important, and notably democratic foundations of land recording practice in the commonwealth they serve as a beacon for the rest of the country to follow and impart hope. This comes at a time when such hope is in scarce supply. If it is God’s will, than the light of wisdom handed down from prior ages on this point will shine through the darkness that has been created by corrupt forces. We can only hope.

A Road Map for Homeowners: Four Authoritative Guidelines

In Massachusetts law there exists four authoritative guidelines by which property may be foreclosed upon in order to redeem a debt (Five if Crowley v. Adams is included from above). Incidentally division is not a problem for these four authorities, for they stand equally well alone as they do in combination as requirements to validly exercise the power of sale of real property. Both the spirit and the letter of these sources are echoed in laws of other states, and as such can be taken as fundamentally universal. They are as follows:

The Common Law and the problem of Division

In Summary Eaton dealt with the following three realities of long standing Massachusetts law:

1. The assignee of a mortgage with no claim to the underlying debt cannot foreclose.

2. A mortgage separated from the debt it secures has no value in and of itself; it can only be held in trust for the note holder (naked title)

3. The trust relationship implied for the benefit of the note holder does not empower a mortgage assignee to foreclose as a “fiduciary” at any time.

It should be offensive even to the casual observer that in the case of Eaton, as would be the case for most home owners today, a valid promissory note memorializing the debt was and is missing. Who held it at the time of the foreclosure, how they obtained it, and what relationship they had if any to the appellants was and is still unknown.

Although a photo copy of the note was produced with the typical “endorsement in blank” markings, the appellants provided no document or other information indicating when the note was endorsed or who held it either then or now. The required assignments between intermediaries were never produced. Interestingly neither of the defending entities offered any testimony or other evidence in either court action to resolve these all important questions or otherwise identify the holder of the note. However, they did concede, that it was not the foreclosing entity Green Tree, LLC.

Conceivably this is because they do not know, and they do not want to know, and maybe they would even like to forget. Perhaps the note it is evidence.

Not surprisingly counsel for the appellants, despite this revelation, argued that the whereabouts and history of the promissory note was “irrelevant” and that they were entitled to foreclose nonetheless.

After a careful review of the full history of the mortgage foreclosure law in Massachusetts, as well as the related statutes and appellate decisions, The Superior court didn’t exactly see it that way – determining that no decision had ever overturned the established common law rule that a mortgage assignee must hold the note in order to enforce it through foreclosure.

Needless to say, this is of great concern to the banks, as predicted in the Ibanez article (cited above). Given the audacity of their claims, we believe it is reasonable to assume these folks would, if given the opportunity “send an orphan into slavery or sell a friend”. It has been difficult and time consuming to discover that notes were sold multiple times into multiple trust, thus creating a out-and-out pyramid of securities, upon which even more derivatives could be sold. However, something even more simple and obvious has been taking place in broad daylight, something peculiar that has been overlooked – the awkward problem of entire houses being stolen, by folks who have categorically no financial interest or otherwise is the properties.

Since this is the direct opposite of “The American Dream”, possibly the moniker “the American Nightmare” is appropriate.

Taking a step back, it is awful to consider that GreenTree, LLC had no interest in the debt, no interest in holding the property pre or post foreclosure, and had no material interest in the entire affair whatsoever, and yet they were the entity which sought to foreclose (or steal). Does it not appear as Les Trois Perdants with GreenTree, LLC acting as a shill?

For centuries promissory notes and the mortgages securing their repayment were held or assigned together. The separation of these two instruments, until recently was an anomaly and exception. Albeit no longer an anomaly, but rather the general business practice of approximately the last ten years, the SJC reaffirmed in Ibanez, that a trust implied by operation of law gave the note holder the right to sue to obtain an equitable assignment of the mortgage (U.S. Bank v. Ibanez, 458 Mass. 637 (2011) – which implies surprising possibilities (e.g. every note allegedly held in every securitized pool, would have an individual and related suit to perfect it’s claim). Implications aside, the court’s ruling established nonetheless a method by which the note holder (the person to whom the debt is owed) could be empowered to collect payment.

Incidentally, long before the bifurcation of the notes and mortgages was ubiquitous, this operation of law was periodically challenged by mortgage assignees who believed that they, as “mortgagees” could simply foreclose in their own names. However, since the 19th century, and as pointed out above, the SJC has ruled otherwise. In a series of decisions it articulated the rule that a mortgagee who has no interest in the debt underlying the note cannot conduct a foreclosure, insisting instead that that right is reserved for a holder of a valid note along with a valid mortgage.

Green Tree, LLC and their Government handlers suggest that the parts of the whole, when taken independently have the properties of the whole. That is to say in this case, that since the mortgage contains the power to foreclose, the mortgage must have with it all the powers of the note – this proposition is patently wrong, and is the fallacy of Division. The instruments may function properly together, but have incomplete authority independently – and that is exactly what long standing statute (as outlined below) has upheld.

In Summary, Ibanez brought to light that banks holding only notes have only an unsecured debt – that is to say one that could be negotiated like any other. Eaton, on the other hand brings to our attention something of far greater importance; namely that a holder of a mortgage alone (even if validly assigned), without proper ownership of the underlying debt, has in fact nothing.

Call us speculators, but if SJC affirms the lower court’s decision we have a funny feeling more than one banks share price might be adversely affected.

In the end, suggesting independent authority of the mortgage, regardless of any concern for the note or the debt is just a bad argument – it’s not only “Division” it is also a great candidate for the “Non Sequitur” argument of the year award.

GreenTree, LLC – Affirming the Consequent

A thorough discussion of Massachusetts foreclosure law can be found in Howe v. Wilder, 77 Mass. 267 (1858). which resolved a foreclosure dispute by holding that a mortgagee, without the note, could not foreclose on the mortgage.

The court goes on to elaborate that because the party who would otherwise seek to foreclose was owed no debt, he cannot recover possession:

“For in pursuing such a suit [the party] has only the rights of a mortgagee, and is limited by the restriction imposed upon him…if nothing is found due to the plaintiff, it follows by necessary implication, from the provisions of the statute, that he can recover no judgment at all; none to have possession at common law, because that is expressly prohibited; and none under the statute, because where there is no condition to be performed, there can be no failure of performance, and no consequences can follow a contingency which in nature of things can never occur.”

Suggesting that by being an assignee of the mortgage, encompasses the right to foreclose is simply “Affirming the Consequent” and is just another logical fallacy.

MGL 244 § 14 and the Straw Man

Bifurcating the note and the mortgage was an extraordinary circumstance when the legislature decided the subject laws. At the time these laws were ameliorated there was no reason to explicitly delineate between the debt and the mortgage instrument securing it. To argue, as Green Tree has, that the term “Mortgagee” as used in MGL 244 § 14 means also “naked mortgagee”, (a mortgage holder not having any interest in the underlying debt) is a “Straw Man”. This suggestion overlooks the historical context in which the law was authored, the rise of the mortgage securitization industry, its related practices and the compulsory changes to recording which has taken place over the last decade. It is to overlook the privatization of land records that (as far as we know), no elected official or law maker had blessed beforehand.

If Green Tree’s argument were accurate, they would not assign the mortgages to third party servicers at all, and rather continue to foreclose in MERS name (more efficient) as had been the practice until several states supreme courts ruled against it, citing the fact that MERS had no economic interest in the mortgage, which is “but an incident to the note” or “a mere technical interest” (Wolcott v. Winchester) – this of course reaffirms the spirit of the law which Henrietta Eaton asserts in her complaint.

In particular the court stated that the assignee of a “naked Mortgage”:

“…must have known that the possession of the debt was essential to an effective mortgage, and that without it he could not maintain an action to foreclose the mortgage.” Wolcott v. Winchester, 81 Mass. 462 (1860)

Despite all of this, the bright idea of the securitization industry was to simply transfer the mortgage instrument to the servicer – a related party, sort of.

If Eaton is not affirmed by the SJC, we might as well make Three Card Monte our national pastime and get rid of baseball altogether. In such a scenario handicapping the future of the US economy and the ability to affectively and profitably speculate in the CDS market will be “duck soup”.

The authority of the UCC codified at G.L.c. 106

Because the common law involves a great deal of common sense, it just so happens to be mirrored in the Uniform Commercial Code. In particular G.L.c. 106. Article 3 of the UCC governs the negotiation and enforcement of negotiable instruments, including promissory notes secured by mortgages. Section 3-301, like the common law, provides that one must hold a (valid) note in order to validly enforce it. This rule serves the purpose of protecting consumers and barrowers against the very real possibility of double liability created when a debt is enforced. As in the current matter, Green Tree, LLC or any other mere mortgagee (even if they could get a valid assignment), would have no power or authority to discharge the actual debt. Thus if the operation of law were in any other capacity than it currently is, the mortgagee could foreclose on a property, while the debtor would still be left with a valid debt outstanding to an entirely unrelated party.

This lends itself to the requirement for transparency. During the oral arguments before the SJC, one justice asked why it mattered if the homeowner knew to whom they owed their debt. The answer is that homeowners have an important role to play in the outcome of the final settlement and discharge of their debt, and are above all the most interested party in ensuring that their payments are in fact reducing the outstanding principle balance as they are made. Otherwise, they may as well be directed to make their payments to any random stranger. It is absurd to suggest that a debtor be required to simply make payments to anybody who asks for it. That is to suggest that he is not only a debtor-servant, but also a mindless sheep – then again, perhaps that is the desired outcome.

In fact the entire matter may only be possible in a non-judicial foreclosure state, for if it were a civil complaint for the collection of an amount due, than would the debt instrument itself not be scrutinized as a first priority in the proceedings? Perhaps small unimportant questions like who actually owns the debt and is bringing the action would be relevant under such circumstances.

The authority of loan contracts

In the end, the entire action by Fannie Mae and Green Tree, violates the very contract which is being disputed. Even if no other statues or laws had operated or ever existed, Eaton’s argument would survive on this one point alone – and Eaton is not unaccompanied – she stands with some 60 million other homeowners in the US with virtually identical contracts.

In the case of Eaton standard mortgage loan documents were used, and they essentially all look alike. The terms of Eaton’s mortgage contract, as with virtually all others, authorizes only the note holder to exercise the power of sale. The one concession Green Tree, LLC made was that they are not the note holder and have neither argued, nor provided evidentiary support for the claim, that a foreclosure by anyone other than the note holder was necessary (not that it would be possible).

A bitter Fruit: Double Liability

It has been said, “By their fruit you will recognize them. Do people pick grapes from thorn bushes, or figs from thistles?”. No, because “every good tree bears good fruit, but a bad tree bears bad fruit” . Is Green Tree’s lawyer actually advocating that homeowners should just rely on the banks and servicers to be “nice guys” and not go after the debtors twice? It is already known that certain elements in the industry were willing to sell the same note multiple times into multiple pools which given Burnett v. Pratt, 39 Mass. 556 (1839), presents interesting problems for RMBS investors, who were essentially their business partners. If the architects of these systems can sell the same note twice, to their own business partners and customers, why would they not try to also collect twice from their debt-servants, who rank many orders below business partners and real customers?

If the severity of compound interest is not enough, the result may be plan “B” – “doubling up” where needed.

If the fact that being named on a valid mortgage is not sufficient to authorize a foreclosure, than automatically the question becomes who holds the note? The answer to the latter question is a bit more serious, for in the answer lies a good deal more than the banks would like to reveal.

Does greed have rational limits? It does not and it cannot because greed is not rational to begin with. Since nobody knows how the foreclosing mortgagee would actually go about paying the note holder, are homeowners to rely on a system of document management (which usually involves an Iron Mountain truck, and a whole lot of paper shredding) to ensure that debt-servants are set free if they ever pay off their “debts”?

Did barrowers really sign up for that when they signed their mortgage and note? If not, when and where are the limits?

It’s only a matter of time

Homeowners must examine the assignments on their mortgages and notes. If a foreclosure is imminent, a preliminary injunction should be sought in order to have an opportunity to examine the documents thoroughly and also to give time to the SJC to issue its ruling – Jurisprudence matters. When the final Eaton ruling is taken together with Ibanez, there will be a sea change – it’s only a matter of time.

It seems reasonable that in a world where bandwidth intensive videos can be encoded and uploaded over a high speed 4G network from the New York Stock Exchange and on the Internet in 30 sec. using a smartphone with 64 gigs of memory (that can fit on a SanDisk card the size of your fingernail), and join billions of other files that have highly accurate GPS data embedded in their metadata, that finding a note for multiple six or seven figures debt and bringing it to court with you would really be no big deal – but apparently it is.

Foreclosures that took place before Ibanez, likely involve an assignment of the mortgage which is invalid because it would have been assigned post foreclosure (as was the common practice at the time), thus invalidating a huge number of existing foreclosures.

For foreclosures or those facing foreclosure in the post Ibanez era, than it is highly likely that the assignment of the mortgage is both invalid and fraudulent, as Mrs. McDonnell so accurately points out is endemic in most registry of deeds. If it’s the note than that servicers intend to rely on, they may need to dream up a new strategy, because those are all “missing” as we see in Eaton. New strategies it seems are now in short supply.

A few more questions and thoughts

The “pump and dump” is as old as “market places” are. Whether it’s a street vendor in morocco extolling the virtues of his wares he wants to sell, or a the salesmen of shares in Netflix and Linkedin at impossiblele valuations – this “pump and dump” technique often is done with considerable misrepresentations, which result in artificially high prices for a time, and makes true price discovery impossible for buyers.

If you’re on the wrong side of the transfer, as a buyer of such stocks or bonds, you would have claims against the salesman – it’s called securities fraud. Now this ‘old time’ operation has been executed in the real estate market as well, and real estate, although most people don’t think of it this way, is also a security just like any other (it’s really not the American Dream, as has been sold – because as pointed out above, when something goes beyond the parameters of a mere security, to that of a “dream”, no price is too high). Just like stocks, these securities were pumped, and then dumped (but only after the related CDS’s were purchased by the architects).

What’s being described is an activity based on fraudulent misrepresentations, like most other such schemes. The “Pump” part involved a lot of paper shuffling, so that when the “dump” took place, the profiteers could not be easily identified. The same is true today. That is why debt-servants are not allowed to know their lender-masters – because it is the beginning of the paper trail, and as any certified fraud examiner will indicate, it all starts with the paper trail.

By focusing the attention of the court and the people on the intricacies of the letter of the law – even though they are wrong at that as well, the banks are taking attention away from the more obvious question, which is why? Why fight to interpret the law that way? That is the real question: Why. Why not produce the note. Why not reunite the note with the Mortgage?

Why would notes go missing? These are not credit card bills, they are documents outlining typically multi-six figure sums, or seven figure sums in some cases. Isn’t it logical that these documents would be kept in a safe place? And tracked? How could so many notes just disappear?

Why would the SJC and the American people at large not be alarmed by entities who foreclose on a property and yet have no idea who actually holds the debt?

The securitization process, in which so many notes were resold is subtle, but complex and riddled with a taxonomy that makes it as understandable as a foreign language to the casual observer. Yet, more careful scrutiny reveals that there is nothing even vaguely sophisticated about it’s operation.

The business of taking homes without any debt being owed is so obvious and simple so as to lend itself to denial. For example, one member of the SJC panel actually asked the attorney for Eaton why the barrower needed to know who owned the debt that they were paying? We thought maybe it was a joke – sadly it may not have been.

Yet, we know that notes have been sold multiple times into multiple pools and trusts, thus creating multiple creditors.

Any consumer should want to know if there debt is actually going to be discharged, and in order to know this, they would have to know who the actual debt holder is.

These debts are not secured. They are negotiable. This week alone, there was talk of bankruptcy proceedings for Eastman Kodak and American Airlines, Friendly’s, after more than 80 years in business, including operating during the last depression, actually did file. As commercial entities, they will be allowed before, during and after bankruptcy to work with their creditors in a completely transparent way.

Why is the average American expressly forbidden this simple aspect of business dealing? Though they entered into such obligations at far greater disadvantage than their corporate cousins?

It is clear that by introducing multiple parties that there are conflicting incentives and interests. It was surprising that the SJC brought up inadvertently during the oral arguments that the lender may have contractually sold their rights to have any say whatsoever in negotiations with the debt holder.

It is now well established that the servicers have the greatest financial incentives to foreclose, and apparently answer to no one, perhaps not even the lender, who nobody appears to be able to find.

The following question regarding Green Tree, MERS and the Eaton case are worth asking:

- Why would they go to such great lengths to keep the “lender” or holder of the debt in “secret”? What is there to gain? Would it not be much more expeditious to just reunite the note with the mortgage and then foreclose?

- Foreclosing with just a mortgage used to be an anomaly? But now it is the rule – what changed? Why would lenders take such an extraordinary risk with trillions of dollars?

- Does the claim that the notes are “lost”, or “missing” seem credible in light of the extraordinary technological world we live in?

- Is the imbalance in power between the home buyer (as signer) and the lawyer (as author) of the contract important? 99% of home buyers had no clue what they were signing – their attorney’s didn’t understand the assignee aspect of MERS or how it functioned either.

- Why would the servicer hide the debt holder? Why go through all of this trouble? Is it because it is really the US government by proxy of Fannie and Freddie?

- Were the notes used in a pyramid scheme? Were they sold multiple times intentionally in order to accommodate increasing degrees of leverage that the derivatives market required to sustain itself?

- What is the size of the global derivatives market which rest (at least in part) upon RMBS securities?

- Are RMBS pools really “Dark Liquidity” or simply “Dark Pools” and is that why MERS is necessary?

A final note on reverse transfers

In the Commonwealth of Massachusetts servicers in possession of mortgages only (which is basically all of those who represent securitized notes) are barred by common law rule, by statute, by the Uniform Commercial Code, and by the terms of the mortgages themselves from conducting foreclosures. If they have already done so, those foreclosures are void. We believe these principles do and will extend beyond the commonwealth eventually to all of the US.

The reason the banks are fighting this is because there exists a very real fear that homeowners stuck with inflated debts, which are the equivalent to indentured servents, might actually gain some negotiating power to settle these debts, at prices which not only reflect the prudent risk management which should have taken place in prior years, but also the related and more realistic asset prices which should have prevailed at the time of the original transactions.

From a purely business point of view, the asset prices were inflated, and the average home buyer with a home loan vintage 2002-2007 had little or no choice in the setting of those prices. However, there is another group who did, and they were writing “loans” and selling them as fast as the CPU and the RAMM on MERS’ servers would allow them (thankfully cloud computing, with its superior ability to process data, and elastic memory and bandwidth wasn’t yet widely used).

Yet the securitization industry and their very elite and very wealthy captains are not having any of that – because it is a reverse transfer. To be a debt-servant is to be the servant of another man by force. Humans are not designed or built for that – that is a construct of an unfortunate human condition, which we should want to change.

How a mortgage payment can be made with fidelity every month into a authentic black hole, and the attendant psychology which enables this behavior is beyond the scope of this article. The Common Law, the MGL and UCC and even the contracts themselves make it clear though, if a mortgagor expects a discharge of the debt, they need to know who exactly they are paying.

Taking a step forward requires some courage, but less than those who have taken to the streets in NY, Boston or other cities – they are doing really hard and courageous work. Not paying a mortgage in light of the a priori evidence cannot even qualify as an act of civil disobedience. The average homeowner and mortgagor is not called to such a high calling in this instance – they are merely called to follow the mundane laws of the land which have been set down for over 150 years. It is just simple prudence. It is the lack of denial, and a willingness to recognize the truth, no matter how unpleasant. Participation in the system as it is, while concurrently declining to examine the issues intelligently is not defensible.

Paradoxically the hand of the strong which moved to Divide (the notes) and Affirm (title interest) – when taken in God’s hands, has destroyed (the notes) and preserved (the legitimate ownership).

Aug
09

The Myth of the “Free House”

This is a great post by Katie Porter and I fully agree with her on every point. I have this discussion on a regular basis with people on all sides of this issue. First, homeowners who signed a note and borrowed money don’t deserve a free and clear house. They may even achieve that on rare occasions but they don’t deserve that. Katie is right on and her point is based on logical reasoning…. the borrower signed a note, someone has the right to the payment of that note. There is an entity that is the real party in interest. Dismissing a foreclosure case filed by a servicing institution against a homeowner does NOT in any way, give the homeowner a free and clear house. The security instrument is still a lien on the property and, like Katie discusses, the issues can be corrected in the future and the case can be re-filed.

If the bank or servicer or trustee commit fraud in the process of trying to foreclose, they deserve every sanction they get for that which could and maybe should include the extinguishment of the deed of trust or mortgage. That’s for the court and jury to decide, case by case.

But this soap box argument that dismissing a foreclosure case or finding in favor of the homeowner or against the servicer is NOT the same as giving the homeowner a free and clear house. Let’s just be clear and be able to articulate this point when in court and this issue comes about because it is this exact sentiment that I believe causes judges to skew their rulings because they truly think their ruling will amount to a “free and clear” house.

 

The Free House Myth
posted by Katie Porter on CreditSlips.org

As challenges to whether a “bank” (usually actually a securitized trust) has the right to foreclose because it owns the note and mortgage become more common, rumors swirl about the ability to use such tactics to get a “free house.” There are a few instances of consumer getting a free house, see here and here, for examples, but these are extreme situations not premised on ownership, but on a more fundamental flaw with the mortgage. In general, the idea that even a successful ownership challenge will create a free house to the borrower is an urban myth. I’ll explain why below, but there is a policy point here. The myth of the free house drives policymakers to complain about the moral hazard risks of holding mortgage companies to the law and tries to set up homeowners who are paying their mortgages against those who are not. It serves the banks’ political agenda to be able to point to the “free house” as an obviously unacceptable alternative of consumers winning legal challenges. It’s key then to understand that the “free house” is largely a creature of consumers’ and banks’ over-active imaginations.

In sorting out why even a successful ownership challenge does not give homeowners a free house, it is helpful to parse some key concepts. The first one is standing, which is the right of a party to ask a court for the relief it seeks. This comes in different flavors, including constitutional standing, but in the foreclosure context, usually boils down to whether the moving party is the “real party in interest.” In re Vealthe recent decision from the 9th Circuit BAP authored by Judge Bruce Markell, mentioned previously onCredit Slips , contains a discussion of standing in the foreclosure context. At least in part, the concern of the real party in interest doctrine is to make sure that the plaintiff is the right person to get legal relief in order to protect the defendant from a later action by the person truly entitled to relief. Note that standing is a concept that only applies in court; here that means in judicial foreclosures. In states that allow non-judicial foreclosure, the issue is slightly different. Does the party initiating the non-judicial foreclosure have the authority to do so under the state statute authorizing the sale? For example, cases such as In re Salazar discuss whether a recorded assignment of the mortgage is needed, as opposed to an unrecorded assignment, to initiate a foreclosure. Under either standing or statutory authority, a “win” by the homeowner leads to the same result. The foreclosure cannot proceed.

But this win is not the same as a free house. Just because a party lacked standing or statutory authority does not mean that there is not some party out there that does have the authority to foreclosure. Nor does a win on standing mean that there cannot be action taken to give the initial foreclosing party the authority that they need, which might occur by transferring possession of the note or by executing a series of assignments, to foreclose at a later date. Unless other problems exist, there is still a valid note that obligates the homeowner to pay money due and there is still a mortgage encumbering the house. The homeowner does not get a free house. Rather, the homeowner just doesn’t lose her house today to foreclosure. These are pretty different outcomes!

This doesn’t mean that I think the standing/ownership issue is inconsequential. For homeowners, a successful challenge that results in the dismissal of a foreclosure can lead to a loan modification or the delay itself can give the homeowner the time to find another solution. For investors in mortgage-backed securities, the problems with paperwork likely increase their loss severities in foreclosure, both because of increased litigation costs and because of delay in correcting problems. (And there may be even more serious problems for investors relating to whether the transfers even succeeded in putting the homes in the trust.) But we shouldn’t confuse these issues with the idea that what is at stake in sorting out this mess is giving a “free house” to some Americans, despite the lamentations of this LaSalle Bank lawyer after a judge ruled that LaSalle as trustee lacked standing to foreclose. A fruitful discussion of these issues needs to begin with a clear understanding of the consequences of the problem, as well as empirical evidence on how widespread these problems are. The free house is political handwringing, not legal reality.

Jul
28

Rep. Darren Soto Requests Records Pertaining to Ouster of Bondi’s Former Foreclosure Investigators

I am just going to go out on a limb here and predict that we are at the very beginning of this scandal and that Pam Bondi is in a heap of deep doo, at least politically speaking. This has bad news written all over it for the new Atty General of Florida and I support all efforts in getting to the real truth of what’s happening here in Florida.

It really is wrong to see what amazing crimes the banks and their robo-employees are getting away with. If I didn’t see it everyday with my own eyes and see no one going to jail for this stuff, I’d say you were a quack and that there was no way that any white collar criminal could get away with this stuff so often in such massive quantity. Especially when you marry these crimes to the confiscation and illegal seizure of people’s homes! Frickin amazing….

 

Apr
08

5th DCA Win for Homeowner – Khan, Appellant, v. Bank of America NA

This just out from Florida’s 5th District Court of Appeals! Big win for homeowner and defense bar in Florida. The essence of this decision was that Bank of America alleged to be owner and holder of the Note and Mortgage but, like a HUGE number of these cases, the documents that they attached to their Complaint directly conflicted with those allegations (as in the Note was payable to a different entity)!

The lower court granted summary judgment anyway, presumably because the Judge felt that well-established case law in Florida didn’t matter that the exhibits attached to a complaint are controlling when the allegations conflict. Just one more example… well, you know that already!

Here you go…

36 Fla. L. Weekly D738a

Mortgage foreclosure — Standing — Error to enter final summary judgment of foreclosure in favor of plaintiff where, although unverified amended complaint alleged plaintiff was holder of note and mortgage, this allegation was contradicted by copy of note attached to amended complaint — When exhibits are attached to complaint, contents of exhibits control over allegations of complaint

SHAKIL KHAN AND DINA KHAN, Appellant, v. BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., Appellee. 5th District. Case No. 5D10-3288. Opinion filed April 8, 2011. Non-Final Appeal from the Circuit Court for Orange County, Emerson R. Thompson, Jr., Senior Judge. Counsel: Craig R. Lynd, Matthew D. Valdes and Jonathon C. Blevins, of Kaufman, Englett & Lynd, PLLC, Orlando, for Appellant. No Appearance for Appellee.

(ORFINGER, J.) Shakil and Dina Khan appeal a final summary judgment of foreclosure entered in favor of Bank of America, N.A. We reverse.

In its amended complaint to foreclose a mortgage on the Khans’ home, Bank of America alleged that it was the owner and holder of the note and mortgage. However, the copy of the note attached to the amended complaint bears an endorsement from Bank of America to Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. as trustee for the holders of Banc of America Mortgage Securities, Inc. Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-B. The Khans correctly raised the issue of Bank of America’s standing to prosecute the foreclosure based on the assignment of the note to Wells Fargo Bank.

The proper party with standing to foreclose a note and mortgage is the holder of the note and mortgage or the holder’s representative. See Taylor v. Deutsche Bank Nat. Trust. Co., 44 So. 3d 618, 622 (Fla. 5th DCA 2010); BAC Funding Consortium Inc. ISAOA/ATIMA v. Jean-Jacques, 28 So. 3d 936, 938 (Fla. 2d DCA 2010). While Bank of America alleged in its unverified complaint that it was the holder of the note and mortgage, the copy of the note attached to the amended complaint contradicts that allegation. When exhibits are attached to a complaint, the contents of the exhibits control over the allegations of the complaint. See Hunt Ridge at Tall Pines, Inc. v. Hall, 766 So. 2d 399, 401 (Fla. 2d DCA 2000). Because the exhibit to Bank of America’s amended complaint conflicts with its allegations concerning standing, Bank of America did not establish that it had standing to foreclose the mortgage as a matter of law. As a result, the trial court acted prematurely in entering the final summary judgment of foreclosure in favor of Bank of America. We, therefore, reverse the final summary judgment of foreclosure and remand for further proceedings.

REVERSED and REMANDED for further proceedings. (PALMER and EVANDER, JJ., concur.)

Nov
12

Deposition of Expert Witness (Yours Truly) in a Securitized Trust/Trustee Foreclosure Case

By Lane Houk
November 11, 2010

It took an Act of Congress to finally get a copy of my own deposition. Go figure… I was retained by an attorney and client in a New Jersey case to conduct a securitization analysis and investigation on this case and then quantify my opinion in an Affidavit. The Affidavit was filed in the instant case and the judge relied on my Affidavit in his ruling on the Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment – which he denied after carefully considering my opinion in the Affidavit.

The case was set for trial and the Plaintiff, Deutsche Bank National Trust Company (DBNTC) as Trustee For Argent Securities Inc. Series 2004-PW1, wanted to depose me, presumably, to get an idea of what they were going to have to deal with at trial in my testimony.

Here is the 62-Page Deposition taken by DBNTC and their attorney on September 17, 2010 in New York.

Here is the Affidavit filed in the instant case.

Mind you, this work was done by me back in early 2010. I have advanced considerably in my analyses and how I structure my Affidavits now versus how I used to structure them – with the gracious help of some of the attorneys I work with on a regular basis.

Here is a much more recent live sample of an Affidavit of Expert Opinion with all Exhibits recently filed in a Duval County, Jacksonville, FL case. One thing for sure… this work and the affidavit filed in a foreclosure case is successful almost 100% of the time in defeating summary judgment and getting to trial and advanced discovery phases. It also sets up a deposition(s) of corporate reps very nicely. There are so many issues of fact presented in my affidavits that a judge is going to have go rogue in a major way to still grant summary judgment.

If you would like more information on this, please feel free to contact me at 800-985-4685.

Nov
04

Hot Off the Press – CA Federal Judge Grants Homeowner TRO against Chase

Alright… so not every federal judge in CA is in the tank for the banks. Surprising but refreshing. At least the judges around this country seem to be “getting it” as well. By getting it I mean starting to understand that the banks, servicers and secondary mortgage market players are generally deceptive, dubious, misleading, unfair, immoral, unethical, oppressive, unscrupulous – oh my goodness… I’m in adjective heaven here!

Seriously, though, the servicers are bottom-dwellers in every sense of the word and it’s nice to see a judge actually recognize  that their collection tactics are oppressive and immoral and, when pleaded with specificity, accepted by the judge as true. In this case, a pro se homeowner went on the offense (as needed in California) and filed a complaint (23 pages) and also motioned for a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) and a Preliminary Injunction. The judge granted the homeowner’s request for a TRO in her order. All of these documents can be downloaded below as well. Read and Learn… if you’re a pro se homeowner, this is some really good research for you. Way to go Mr. Khast!

Complaint with Motion for TRO

Motion for Preliminary Injunction

Memorandum in Support of Motion for Prelim Injunction

Order Granting TRO

Opposition by Chase and CA Reconveyance Company

Oh and by the way, I didn’t know this until I read Chase’s Certification of Interested Parties that JP Morgan Chase Bank, NA actually purchased CA Reconveyance Company. Isn’t that convenient? Our tax bailout dollars hard at work making home seizure even more convenient and easy for Chase. Seriously, if you have any bank account of any sort with Chase, B of A, Wells Fargo, Citi, you have got to be out of your mind. I ABSOLUTELY REFUSE TO PATRONIZE THESE LARGE BANKS AND GIVE THEM ANY OF MY MONEY, PAY THEIR FEES OR LET THEM KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT ME. YOU SHOULD DO THE SAME. IMAGINE HOW GREAT IT WOULD BE IF WE STARTED A MOVEMENT TO REMOVE OUR DEPOSITORY ACCOUNTS FROM THESE LARGE BANKS!

For over two years now, my banking is done exclusively with a small community bank. You know, the old face to face, relationship banking that used to be the norm. These large banks can kiss my ass. They are horrendous in how they treat their customers. Use the power of choice and abandon the big banks. Start a trend in your neighborhood and community. I would just love to see one of the big banks fail because of a run on their bank deposits.

Nov
03

ANOTHER ROUND OF BUYING TOXIC SECURITIES!!! HERE WE GO AGAIN!!

submitted by Ann

Fed Will Probably Start $500 Billion of Bond Buys, Survey Shows
By Caroline Salas and Alex Tanzi – Nov 1, 2010 9:00 PM PT

Nov. 1 (Bloomberg) — Julia Coronado, chief economist for North America at BNP Paribas, talks about the outlook for the financial markets following this week’s meeting of Federal Reserve policy makers and the congressional elections, the state of the U.S. labor market and her expectations for the size of the latest round of quantitative easing by the Fed. Coronado speaks with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance Midday.” (Source: Bloomberg)
Pimco’s Crescenzi Interview on Fed Policy, Treasuries

Play Video

Nov. 2 (Bloomberg) — Tony Crescenzi, a market strategist and portfolio manager at Pacific Investment Management Co., talks about the prospects for Federal Reserve monetary policy. The Fed will probably begin a new round of unconventional monetary easing this week by announcing a plan to buy at least $500 billion of long-term securities, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Crescenzi also discusses the outlook for Treasuries and his investment strategy. He speaks from Newport Beach, California, with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television’s “First Up.” (Source: Bloomberg)

The Federal Reserve is likely to start a fresh round of unorthodox stimulus tomorrow by announcing a plan to purchase at least $500 billion of long-term securities, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

Policy makers meeting today and tomorrow will restart a program of securities purchases to spur growth, reduce unemployment and increase inflation, said 53 of 56 economists surveyed last week. Twenty-nine estimated the Fed will pledge to buy $500 billion or more, while another seven predicted $50 billion to $100 billion in monthly purchases without a specified total. The remainder said the Fed would buy up to $500 billion or didn’t quantify their forecast.

The varied responses reflect differences among Fed officials over the total amount of purchases needed to bolster the recovery. Policy makers, pursuing unprecedented stimulus, have cut the benchmark rate almost to zero and bought $1.7 trillion in securities without generating growth fast enough to bring down unemployment from near a 26-year high.

“There’s no silver bullet right now,” and central bankers have “very few options left in terms of lowering interest rates,” said John Silvia, chief economist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC in Charlotte, North Carolina. He predicted $500 billion of Treasury and mortgage-backed securities purchases over the next six months.

Shock-and-Awe Plan

Disagreements among policy makers over whether to incrementally expand the balance sheet or stage a so-called shock-and-awe program of big asset purchases has created confusion among investors over the likely size and duration of any new easing, said Ward McCarthy, chief financial economist at Jefferies & Co. in New York.

“There has not been a uniformity of opinion emanating from the multitude of public appearances from Fed officials,” McCarthy said. He predicts the Fed will buy $500 billion of securities over the next six months and was among 13 economists who said the purchases would include mortgage-backed bonds in addition to Treasuries.

New York Fed President William Dudley set expectations at $500 billion in purchases when he said in an Oct. 1 speech that purchases totaling about that amount would add as much stimulus as lowering the Fed’s benchmark rate by 0.5 percentage point to 0.75 percentage point.

Dudley put the $500 billion figure “in there and it sounded like he was trying to move it along in that direction,” said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo- Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York, who predicts the Fed will announce up to $500 billion of purchases by March.

Many Variables

Referring to investor expectations of the central bank’s next move, Rupkey said, “It’s a mess and it’s just because there’s too many variables between the amount and the time period.”

St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said Oct. 21 the Fed should buy $100 billion in long-term Treasuries this month and calibrate subsequent purchases based on the course of the economy. Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart said that a pace of $100 billion of purchases a month is “in the range of numbers one might consider.”

Estimates by economists about the duration of a Fed asset purchase program ranged from as short as three months to as long as the end of 2011. Three analysts said the Federal Open Market Committee wouldn’t announce new stimulus.

Favorable Reaction

“It’s highly unlikely that anyone’s going to get all the details right because going into the meeting Fed officials themselves won’t have agreed on all of” them, Jefferies’ McCarthy said. He said he expects the Fed to buy mortgage-backed securities because it would be a positive surprise, and the central bank wants a “favorable market reaction.”

The lack of clarity over the Fed’s plans has played out in the Treasury market, which handed investors a loss of 0.18 percent in October, the first negative monthly return since March, according to index data compiled by Bank of America Merrill Lynch. After falling to 2.38 percent on Oct. 7 from 2.51 percent on Sept. 30, the yield on 10-year Treasuries has since climbed to 2.63 percent as of late yesterday, Bloomberg data show.

Not all Fed officials agree the central bank should start new stimulus measures. Kansas City’s Thomas Hoenig, who has already dissented six straight times, said Oct. 25 that he opposes more easing because it’s “a very dangerous gamble” that may accelerate inflation and create asset-price bubbles. Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher and the Philadelphia Fed’s Charles Plosser have also spoken out since the FOMC’s last meeting against more action by the central bank.

Raise Inflation

Chicago Fed President Charles Evans said several times last month that the central bank needs to take action and should buy securities on a large scale to carry out his preferred strategy of aiming to raise inflation temporarily.

“They’re in uncharted waters here, and no one really knows, we’re all guessing” about the size and duration of the easing program and its ultimate impact, said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Pierpont Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. “I haven’t seen anybody out there who has made a convincing case that this is anything but a trivial boost for the economy.”

The central bank last month asked bond dealers and investors for projections of its asset purchases over the next six months, along with the likely effect on yields. The New York Fed, the branch of the Fed System that implements monetary policy, asked about expectations for the size of the program and the time over which it would be completed, according to a survey obtained by Bloomberg News.

Incremental Tactic

Stanley predicted the Fed will opt for the incremental tactic and announce a program to buy $200 billion of Treasuries by its Jan. 26 meeting.

“They want to preserve flexibility and to have the option of tweaking the pace as they go based on whatever it is that they choose to look at,” Stanley said.

“Clearly the thrust of this is to get long-term rates lower, but when you listen to what they say about it, they don’t even plan to get a lot of juice out of what they want to do,” he said. “What does that do for the economy?”

Dudley, who is also vice chairman of the FOMC, said in the Oct. 1 speech that the central bank would probably need to act to address “unacceptable” job growth and inflation.

The U.S. economy expanded at a 2 percent annual rate in the third quarter and inflation cooled, Commerce Department figures showed Oct. 29 in Washington. The report showed the inflation gauge watched by the Fed rose the least in almost two years as retailers like Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Target Corp. use discounts to lure shoppers.

Raise Expectations

In addition to a new round of asset purchases, policy makers are also considering efforts to boost public expectations that inflation will rise, according to the minutes of the FOMC’s Sept. 21 meeting.

All but two economists predict the Fed will leave the interest rate on excess reserves unchanged at 0.25 percent. Fifteen analysts, including McCarthy, say the Fed will alter the phrase that its benchmark interest rate will stay near zero for an “extended period,” which was introduced in March 2009.

“They’ve been telling us they’ve been considering a change to the ‘extended period,’ so at some point they’re going to do it and this is as good a time as any,” McCarthy said.

The questions were as follows:

1a. At the FOMC’s Nov. 2-3 meeting, will the committee decide to (choose one):

a) Retain the current policy of keeping a constant level of the Fed’s securities holdings by reinvesting principal payments from agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities in longer-term Treasury securities

b) Increase the level of securities holdings through additional asset purchases

Result (56 replies): A, 3; B, 53.

1b. If you answered (b) to the last question, please provide your predictions on the following possible elements of the announcement:

a. The amount of additional purchases announced in billions

of dollars:

b. The length of time for the additional purchases to be

completed:

c. The types of securities to be purchased:

1) Treasuries

2) mortgage-backed securities

3) both Treasuries and MBS

4) other (please elaborate)

Result (53 replies): a) 29 expect $500 billion or more; 7 predicted monthly purchases of $50 billion to $100 billion without specifying a total; 12 predicted up to $500 billion; 5 didn’t specify an amount.

b) 7 predicted monthly purchases with no timeline; 9 predicted up to three months; 17 said between three and six months; 9 said between six months and one year; 5 said through 2011; 6 didn’t specify a pace or timeline.

c) 38 said Treasuries (including Treasury-Inflation Protected Securities); 13 said both Treasuries and MBS (including one that also predicted agency bond purchases); 2 didn’t specify.

2. Will the FOMC statement following the Nov. 2-3 meeting include any changes to the following sentence: “The Committee will maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and continues to anticipate that economic conditions, including low rates of resource utilization, subdued inflation trends, and stable inflation expectations, are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period.” Yes or no.

Results (49 replies): Yes, 15; No, 34.

3. Will the Fed decide at the Nov. 2-3 meeting to reduce the 0.25 percent interest rate on excess reserves? Yes or no.

Results (47 replies): Yes, 2; No, 45.

To contact the reporters on this story: Caroline Salas in New York at csalas1@bloomberg.net; Alex Tanzi at atanzi@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Christopher Wellisz at cwellisz@bloomberg.net


Filed under: bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, currency, Eviction, foreclosure, GTC | Honor, Investor, Mortgage, securities fraud
Oct
14

UPDATED! Nationwide Title Clearing (NTC) should be investigated – Video Depositions Unveiled

UPDATED NOVEMBER 8, 2010 - New Depositions of NTC Employees

Hey folks, the depostions of NTC Employees Crystal Moore, Bryan Bly and Dhurata Doko by the Forrest Law Firm are below. Compare my report below to these depositions… great work by Forrest Law Firm. Good to see that these guys have finally been deposed by a good foreclosure defense attorney. No one over at NTC has responded to this post yet… still waiting. Would certainly like to see what they have to say about these depositions.

With the all the news breaking daily now about the massive and systemic fraud in Florida and around the country, it’s hard to keep up; and I’m sure the Florida Attorney General’s office feels the same way as each deposition they complete unveils another deep crevasse in the proverbial rabbit hole this issue represents.

But while the AG’s office is at it, I  suggest that they investigate Nationwide Title Clearing out of Palm Harbor Florida including the depositions of Bryan Bly and Crystal Moore, two NTC employees who, by all appearances, look like the typical “robo-signers” and “robo-notaries.” NTC is basically a mortgage document clearinghouse… Crystal Moore, Bryan Bly and company have signed thousands of mortgage assignments and affidavits on behalf of several different financial institutions - many of which have been filed in Florida court cases and used and relied upon to issue final judgments against a Florida homeowner.

I would really encourage my readers to contact the Florida AG’s office and to submit a request that their office investigate NTC while they are in the process of investigating mortgage-gate or foreclosure-gate as this mess is starting to be called. You can contact the Florida AG’s office and submit a request right online by clicking HERE.

For some examples of the documents being produced at NTC… Click HERE. I mean how obvious can they be with these signatures? Don’t miss the very last page of the attachment linked above… I actually have what I believe to be the real signature of Dhurata Doko from a public records search I did. I couldn’t find anything on Crystal Moore or Bryan Bly but I’m still investigating and will update this as my own investigation evolves.

I officially reported the possible fraud going on to the Pinellas County Clerk of Court in February 2010… Click HERE for a copy of that report.

The FDIC actually has some sort of Power of Attorney arrangement with NTC… Click HERE for a copy of that. I am currently investigating a case out of Duval County, Florida wherein the attorney hired me to investigate and audit what is turning into a really big issue. There are two assignments in this case drafted by NTC and I believe signed by NTC employees but let’s just say for now that these two assignments were provably created after the fact. I can’t reveal more at this time as we are going into a serious discovery phase.

The St. Pete Times ran an article about NTC and Bryan Bly some four months after I filed a complaint with Pinellas County Clerk and contacted them about what I thought was going on at NTC. Click HERE for a copy of that article.

One would think that what’s in this post alone is about all the Florida Attorney General needs to find cause to investigate NTC. We’ll see…

As is my policy, I will give anyone over at NTC the opportunity to respond in writing to this post. I am not judge and jury so I cannot say that what they are doing over at NTC is outright fraudulent or improper. That is for someone else to decide but, in my opinion, there is a serious appearance of impropriety based on the documents I have inspected and the cases I have and still are working on. NTC employees have rendered assignments in cases that in my professional opinion simply do NOT represent what actually happened based on all the other documentation relevant to the case. We’ll let the courts and other law enforcement agencies draw their own conclusions.

If we’re ever going to ensure that Florida homes and property will have marketable and insurable title, then we need to FULLY resolve the fraud and mishandling of foreclosures in this state and that won’t happen unless and until we put every single company, law firm, attorney, judge and anyone else in this scheme out of business, out of the courtroom and hopefully some of them in jail.

All you and I as regular citizens can do is keep blowing the horns and hopefully the media will continue to keep this issue front and center thereby placing enormous pressure on our elected officials to not just give lip service to this issue - which is what I truly fear is going to happen. We’ve seen it a thousand times… politicians seem soooo concerned and surprised and “aghast” at these types of practices BUT ONLY while the media is reporting it. Once the media moves on so do the spineless politicians who simply wanted free press and wanted to appear concerned about consumers.

Let’s get real America, the only way people are going to really go to jail over the CRIMES that are being committed - because that’s what they are, not mere “technicalities” - is for our collective voice to not stop until that happens and that will likely take firm resolve on your part and my part to keep this going until we see justice served. Keep up the good fight! This fight is representative of everything that is both wrong and right in America. This is not, as some say, just a fight for desperate homeowners. Look, I believe in the system. Mortgage lending has a real role in our housing market and the economy - if it’s done right and responsibly. The secondary mortgage market is a much needed industry and plays a critical role in the housing market as well - if it’s done right, with ethics and the paperwork and documentation is completed properly from the very beginning; not after the fact as it’s being done now. If someone signs a note and mortgage and then defaults, the integrity of the system demands that the creditor, the true owner of that mortgage loan, be allowed all of its rights to foreclose if need be. I have no issue with this at all. A creditor has its legal rights and should have every accord to pursue them when there is a default. What I have a BIG problem with is the fraud, the greed, the sloppiness, the lies, the smoke and mirrors. These issues are detrimental to all of us and to our entire economy and to every community.

Our constitutional rights as citizens are being hijacked day by day. The average American is really not represented anymore save for a few honorable politicians who still see their role as being a “servant of their constituents.” The banking cartels in this country which includes all major banks, investment banks, the FDIC, the Federal Reserve and most Senators on Capitol Hill are robbing Americans blind and taxing us in increasing ways. If their criminal practices (I define violating the constitution criminal) are not stopped the largest tax of all on us will be the wholesale global failure of our currency. Once the OPEC and the oil producing countries decide that the US DOLLAR is no longer worth the paper it is printed on and decide to peg oil to a different currency, we will see a major crisis ensue overnight in this country. Think about that for a second… all transportation lines in this country come to a grinding halt… food, medicine and basic necessities would stop being shipped, trucked and transported. You can play the rest of that scenario out for yourself… and it ain’t pretty in any fashion.

My entire point here is that our entire system we call the United States of America was founded on HONOR, INTEGRITY AND JUSTICE and we have lost that in massive quantities to GREED, POWER AND INJUSTICE. Once the rest of this world determines that we are beyond fixing, folks it’s over and it will take decades to rebuild and that’s only if we have the stomach, balls and inner fortitude as a country to truly rebuild a destroyed republic.

Please do your part this November and continue to fight for honor, integrity and justice ANYWHERE AND EVERYWHERE you see those virtues being undermined. It is going to take a lot of struggle to restore this system but do we have another choice?

Oct
01

Foreclosure Fraud Factories explained by Congressman Alan Grayson

 

Ok, for the record, I’m not a fan of Rep. Alan Grayson but hey, we agree on everything he says in this video and I mean everything. Because I’m a Patriot and not a Democrat OR Republican, this video makes it my blog today.

Rep. Grayson is right on and I’m doing my part to help his video go viral in the  hopes that our Florida legislature, Supreme Court and the Florida judiciary actually has the spine to step up and bring the foreclosure fraud to a screeching halt in this state by instituting system-wide procedures and a cautious judiciary as a stop-gap to bring this problem under control. What has been happening in nearly every foreclosure case in Florida (and nationally for that matter) is criminal. Serious crimes are being committed and they need to be investigated properly and prosecuted with the full force of the law. Robo-signers, attorneys, paralegals, doc processing executives, bank executives and all of their ilk need to be named in federal and state indictments – and we should very well see  a few Florida judges thrown into that mix as well because from what I have seen and experienced, there are several of them complicit in the scheme to defraud homeowners and deny them of their basic rights to due process. At the very least, a number of the Florida judges should be brought up on ethics complaints and lose their seat as a judge because they have violated their oaths and have knowingly and willfuly denied due process to thousands upon thousands of Florida citizens.

And again, all of this is major reminder that WHO we vote for (including judges) really, really matters. I hope you are reminded of this come election day and that you conduct your own due diligence before you vote for anyone!

Sep
23

Why the REST Report and NPV Analysis is what you need for HAMP Loan Modification Approval

By Lane Houk

THE REST REPORT IS a report generated by the REST software platform, which is a loan disposition analysis system that, in limited different formats, is used by major banks and mortgage servicers with borrowers and properties that are in default, to run an NPV test and to determine qualification for a HAMP Loan Modification. Financial institutions use systems like REST to analyze the various options available when a loan is not being repaid as agreed by the borrower.  The purpose of such analysis is to make sure that the bank can choose the path that offers the best financial outcome possible for the investor or owner of the loan; the servicer is simply the agent for the investor with whom most borrowers interface with on a regular basis. Usually, the investor/owner of the loan is unknown to the borrower and, in most cases, is a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) more commonly known as a “Trust.”

Although almost all financial institutions and servicers use loan disposition analysis software platforms, these systems are not made available to consumers.  They are sophisticated systems only purchased and utilized by banks that have many thousands of loans that need to be analyzed so that outcomes may be determined and optimized.

When homeowners arrange to run a REST Report, the system produces an 11-page document based on the specifics of their property and their financial situation that shows, from the investor and servicer’s perspective, the various financial outcomes that would result from modifying their mortgage compared with the costs and bottom line result of foreclosure and distressed sale.  A homeowner can then use the report by submitting it to his or her lender or servicer, along with the required supporting documents, when seeking to obtain a loan modification, or approval for a short sale.

Compare the approach of using an expert financial professional who knows how to use the REST Report to that of today’s homeowners applying for a loan modification without any assistance and without any negotiating leverage whatsoever.  Some homeowners attempt to negotiate with their lender or servicer on their own and from a position of weakness, while others hire lawyers or other third parties to represent them, but in either case, all the homeowner ends up submitting to the lender or servicer is information about themselves, and nothing substantive about the possible dispositions of that loan from the bank’s perspective, or in the best interests of investors.

Law firms and other third parties, depending on the state you live in, all concentrate on helping homeowners submit the best possible application… or “proposal” to the bank.  In general, that proposal includes the borrower’s information, various documents intended to verify income, a letter describing the hardship that has caused the homeowner to apply for a modification or short sale… all the information that the homeowner or attorney/representative hopes will paint a picture that the servicer will view as qualifying for a loan modification.

But, “hope,” should only be considered a negotiating strategy, when hope is all you’ve got.

When applying for a loan modification with the REST Report, borrowers still submit their application and supporting documentation, but in addition the borrower submits a report, generated by a loan disposition analysis platform that incorporates the same decision analytics used by lenders and servicers.  The report clearly shows the servicer the investor’s financial outcome, in terms of net present value, in a range of scenarios, assuming such outcomes are possible, of course. In addition, the REST Report clearly quantifies a borrower’s eligibility for a HAMP Loan Modification and a HAFA short sale or deed in lieu of foreclosure alternatives.

In March 2009, the Obama Administration published detailed program guidelines for the Making Home Affordable (MHA) Program. Mortgage servicers were authorized to begin modifications under the HAMP plan immediately. With the assistance of several government agencies, GSEs, and servicers – this effort involved the development and refinement of servicer guidelines, modification documents, and data collection and modeling tools.

The Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) was designed to help as many as 3 to 4 million financially struggling homeowners avoid foreclosure by modifying loans to a level that is affordable for borrowers now and sustainable over the long term. The program provides clear and consistent loan modification guidelines that the entire mortgage industry can use.

Borrower eligibility is based on meeting specific criteria including:

1) borrower is delinquent on their mortgage or faces imminent risk of default

2) property is occupied as borrower’s primary residence

3) mortgage was originated on or before Jan. 1, 2009 and unpaid principal balance must be no greater than $729,750 for one-unit properties.

After determining a borrower’s eligibility, a servicer will take a series of steps to adjust the monthly mortgage payment to 31% of a borrower’s total pretax monthly income:

First, reduce the interest rate to as low as 2%,

Next, if necessary, extend the loan term to 40 years,

Finally, if necessary, forbear (defer) a portion of the principal until the loan is paid off and waive interest on the deferred amount.

Note: Servicers may elect to forgive principal under HAMP on a stand-alone basis or before any modification step in order to achieve the target monthly mortgage payment.

The Home Affordable Modification Program was designed with good intentions, however, in reality, the servicers are denying thousands of homeowners who actually qualify for a HAMP Modification. There is an answer “why” but that’s another article for another time. In short, if you’re reading this, you are likely one of the tens of  thousands of homeowners who have been denied a HAMP Modification even though you really qualify. The problem is that the servicers don’t usually tell the homeowner the specific reason(s) they were denied because, in reality, they should never have been denied. Let’s just say that the real reason for denial is that it’s just not in the servicer’s best interest to modify. They’d rather foreclose because they’ll make more money going that route. It may not make sense to you right now at face value but trust me; they make more money foreclosing than they do modifying a homeowner’s loan.

The simple fact is that when a servicer receives an application for a loan modification from a borrower, that servicer should conduct its own loan disposition analysis in order to determine which outcome, foreclosure or some form of modification or disposition, is in the best interests of the investor who owns the loan.  So, when you apply with the REST Report, you provide that loan disposition analysis, causing the servicer to have to verify those numbers.  When they find that the report’s analysis is correct, we are seeing modifications granted in situations, and in timeframes, that were unexpected.

Loans and loan modifications are like snowflakes… no two are alike.  And while there are law firms or other mortgage professionals that may feel confident about their analysis, the REST Report unquestionably adds a degree of certainty that hasn’t been possible until now.

According to the latest HAMP report from the U.S. Treasury, dated April 30, 2010: Out of 1.2 million HAMP trial modifications there have been 277,640 trials cancelled… and 295,348 permanent modifications granted.

The latest Treasury HAMP Report shows the situation clearly.  The number of trial modifications that have been cancelled, is about the same as the number of permanent modifications granted, which is not good enough if you find yourself among those that have been declined by HAMP.  There are still 637,353 trial modifications awaiting an answer… thumbs up, or thumbs down. I have seen homeowners who have paid 6, 9 and even 12 trial monthly payments (which is outside the allowable guidelines) and they are still awaiting approval for their permanent modification. Still other clients have come to me having faithfully paid their 3 monthly trial period payments only to be denied a permanent modification and for no apparent or good reason.

The latest Treasury data did show some very encouraging trends as well.  For example, as of June 1, 2010, borrowers will have to document their income before beginning a trial modification, and many servicers started implementing this policy in April, so there is data, and it is very encouraging in that it shows roughly twice as many homeowners being approved for a permanent modification after successfully completing the trial period.

Well, when it comes to loan modifications under HAMP, the REST Report runs NPV analytics that should fall within HAMP guidelines.  So, when the report says you qualify for HAMP, there’s no one else, besides your servicer of course, that can be as sure you do, as the REST Report.

But, what if you don’t qualify for HAMP?

However, for homeowners that don’t qualify for HAMP, the REST Report can be every bit as helpful to the loan modification or short sale process as it is for those applying under HAMP.  Perhaps the principal balance on your loan exceeds HAMP’s $729,000 limit.  Or, perhaps you’ve been turned down for HAMP and don’t know why.  Or, maybe it’s a mortgage on a second home that you’re trying to modify.

Whatever the reason for falling outside of HAMP guidelines, the loan disposition analysis report produced by the REST platform is proving itself invaluable in the negotiations between a homeowner and their lender or servicer.

Mortgage servicers are companies that are hired by investors to “service” mortgages they own.  The servicers all work under a contract called a “Pooling and Servicing Agreement,” or PSA.  And all PSAs require servicers to make decisions related to the loans they are servicing in the best interests of the investors for whom they work.

So, when you submit a REST Report to your lender or servicer, they don’t just receive information about you, they also receive an analysis of the financial impact to investors of the alternatives to foreclosure compared with the cost of foreclosing on your property.

If the net present value analysis shows that investors would be better off modifying than foreclosing, we’re seeing servicers responding to the report, and offering to modify loans in more cases than we expected.

It’s not that we believe that a servicer would accept the analysis shown in the REST Report at face value, they most certainly would not.  But we do know that when they verify the report’s conclusions using their own internal systems, they will find the REST Report’s financial analysis to be accurate.

Does that mean that submitting an application for a loan modification or short sale along with the REST Report guarantees anything?  No, no one can guarantee anyone that a lender or servicer will modify a loan, at the end of the day, both participation in HAMP, and their willingness to modify a mortgage internally, is strictly voluntary.  And as anyone in the banking industry will readily tell you… banks only modify loans when it’s in their own best financial interest to do so.

And that, folks is precisely the point. When you can quantify and document that the modification (or short sale) is in the best interest of the investor, the servicer will be put in a very precarious position if they then still choose to ignore those findings.

Most importantly, when it comes to a HAMP Modification, the core component of a HAMP approval boils down to the NPV Analysis or NPV Test. NPV stands for “Net Present Value.”

The base NPV model provides consistency in NPV calculations for the Home Affordable Modification Program and was designed to help the mortgage industry move toward a more standard process for evaluating the NPV of mortgages for purposes of making modifications.

A participating servicer in the Home Affordable Modification Program must modify any loan that meets the program’s eligibility criteria if the modification tests “positive” for NPV. I hope you noted that point above. That word is “must.”

When mortgage modifications have a positive NPV, it is in the best interests of lenders, servicers, investors, and borrowers to modify mortgages to reduce the risk of foreclosure. The Home Affordable Modification Program increases the potential number of mortgage modifications that will have a positive NPV, resulting in more servicers modifying mortgages, and keeping more Americans in their homes. The Home Affordable Modification Program specifies a precise method for determining NPV and provides a base NPV model that any servicer can use or customize into a proprietary NPV model that satisfies all of the program’s methodological requirements.

Almost all servicers in the US have by now elected to participate in the Making Home Affordable program and have signed what is called a “Servicer Participation Agreement” (SPA) with the US Department of Treasury, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as compliance agent.

The SPA obligates the servicer to follow the HAMP guidelines. If the NPV Test comes back positive and the servicer still refuses to modify, it is likely that a claim for breach of contract could be brought against the servicer; and, there are already about a dozen lawsuits currently pending claiming just that… that the servicer breached their contract with Treasury by wrongfully denying homeowners for a HAMP Modification.

Now, if you are a homeowner who is frustrated beyond belief and looking for relief, I encourage you to pick up the phone and call us. We are one of the few firms around the country authorized to run REST Reports and help homeowners with the process of getting their ducks in a row and putting their best foot forward.

Call the National Institute of Consumer Advocacy at 800-985-4685 or by email at info[at]nioca.org

Sep
22

HOT OFF THE PRESS! Florida’s 3rd DCA overturns Summary Judgment against Homeowner

Here you go folks! One more case where the Florida District Court of Appeals is sending a strong message to the lower courts around Florida that they cannot just simply ignore well-established law and the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure just because it’s a “Foreclosure Case” and the judges are overwhelmed with them. They simply cannot continue to ignore the basic elements of due process and rules of civil procedure. The very fact that the majority of foreclosure cases end in a summary judgment should draw the ire and attention of every Florida legislator, politician, and the Florida Supreme Court. In no other area of law do the cases end in Summary Judgment with this type of frequency or percentage.

To put it simply: The vast majority of Florida Judges are applying completely different rules of evidence, procedure and ethics to Foreclosure Cases as opposed to any and all other types of cases. Combined with the obvious facts that systemic fraud is running amok in the system and the fact that the Florida Attorney General’s office and the FBI are investigating the firms that handle the large majority of foreclosure cases statewide, there should be an immediate reversal in what is clearly an unspoken mandate by the Administrative Judges in every FL Judicial Circuit – which, obviously, is to cram these foreclosure cases through as fast as their rubber stamp and gavel can be applied.

I suggest they start paying attention to the bullhorn in their ears… enjoy the case below (if you’re a homeowner or advocate thereof).

35 Fla. L. Weekly D2106b

Mortgage foreclosure — Affirmative defenses — Trial court erred in striking mortgagor’s affirmative defenses on ground that they were not specific or supported

WASHINGTON L. SANCHEZ, Appellant, vs. LASALLE BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, ETC., Appellee. 3rd District. Case No. 3D09-2095. L.T. Case No. 09-4074. Opinion filed September 22, 2010. An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Mark King Leban, Judge. Counsel: John H. Ruiz and Hector A. PeÑa, for appellant. Butler & Hosch, Beth A. Norrow, and Thomasina Moore, for appellee.

(Before GERSTEN, SHEPHERD, and LAGOA, JJ.)

(PER CURIAM.) Washington Sanchez (“Sanchez”) appeals from a summary final judgment for foreclosure in favor of LaSalle Bank National Association, as Trustee for Merrill Lynch First Franklin Mortgage Loan Trust (“LaSalle”). We reverse.

Sanchez defaulted under the terms of his mortgage, and LaSalle filed suit for mortgage foreclosure. In response, Sanchez filed an answer and affirmative defenses. Among other things, Sanchez alleged that LaSalle did not comply with the federal Truth-in-Lending Act (“TILA”), 15 U.S.C. § 1601 et seq.

Thereafter, LaSalle responded to the affirmative defenses, and moved for summary judgment. Shortly before the hearing on the motion for summary judgment, Sanchez moved to add additional affirmative defenses. The trial court granted Sanchez’ motion, but then sua sponte struck all of Sanchez’ affirmative defenses. The trial court also granted LaSalle’s motion for summary judgment.

On appeal, Sanchez asserts that the trial court erred in striking his affirmative defenses and entering summary judgment. LaSalle contends the trial court properly struck the affirmative defenses because they were not specific or supported. We agree with Sanchez.

Generally, the striking of pleadings is not favored. See, e.g., Menke v. Southland Specialties Corp., 637 So. 2d 285 (Fla. 2d DCA 1994); Costa Bell Dev. Corp. v. Costa Dev. Corp., 445 So. 2d 1090 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984). Florida Rules of Civil Procedure authorize a trial court sua sponte to strike a pleading which is “redundant, immaterial, impertinent or scandalous,” and, upon a party’s motion, a pleading which is sham. Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.140(f), 1.150. A trial court, however, should not strike a pleading sua sponte on the ground that it is legally insufficient, or because the party subsequently may not be able to prove his or her allegations. Bay Colony Office Bldg. Joint Venture v. Wachovia Mortgage Co., 342 So. 2d 1005 (Fla. 4th DCA 1977).

Here, the trial court, on its own motion, struck Sanchez’ affirmative defenses without finding them redundant, immaterial, impertinent, scandalous or a sham. Apparently, the trial court deemed the defenses to be lacking in specificity and support. Neither of these grounds warrants the sua sponte dismissal of Sanchez’ affirmative defenses.

Accordingly, we reverse the final summary judgment, and remand the cause for further proceedings.

Reversed and remanded.

Aug
30

The Obvious: Bankers Told Recovery May Be Slow

“I’m more worried than I have ever been about the future of the U.S. economy,” said Allen Sinai, co-founder of the consulting firm Decision Economics and a longtime participant in the symposium. “The challenge is unique: poor and diminishing growth, a sticky unemployment rate, sky-high deficits and a sovereign debt that makes us one of the most fiscally irresponsible countries in the world.”

Editor’s Comment: It is only natural that the setting for this event was in a place with the word “hole” in it. Carmen M Reinhart, an economist at the University of Maryland told 110 central bankers and economists that they were deluding themselves. While they were congratulating themselves on having weathered the storm, the economy is clearly in freefall.

They keep using the term “jobless recovery” as though that was something real. With GDP falling under 2% under the latest calculation, which probably excludes between 30 and 50% of all human activity worthy of measurement, we clearly do not have a recovery nor do we have an economy that under any scenario could generate more jobs than those being lost. In a nutshell, unemployment is virtually certain to increase.

Before we start blaming the current president or even his predecessor for the current state of events, let me point out that it took more than three decades for the financial sector to grow from less than 15% of the nation’s GDP to over 40%. In simplistic terms we allowed the economy to create a system in which the financial community was taking a 40% commission on every transaction of every nature because they had been permitted, without regulation, to literally issue the equivalent of money.

The hard truth is that 25% of our current economy as it is currently measured is pure vapor. We don’t make anything or provide any services within that gap which adds value to our society or anyone in it. Reality has a nasty way of catching up. There is a 25% contraction waiting in the wings. The only way to avoid such a calamitous result is to use our strongest resource, American ingenuity, to create new businesses, new industries, and new jobs at an unprecedented pace that will shock the economy back into normal sinus rhythm.

With the vast majority of bankers and economists holding on to old ideas, unrealistic perceptions of reality, and an aversion to the risk of trying something new, the economist from the University of Maryland is merely stating the obvious––and doing it in the most gentle way possible. Stating that the recovery may be slow is the equivalent of saying that we will be on the ground shortly after it is obvious that the engines and wings have fallen off the aircraft.

August 28, 2010

Bankers Told Recovery May Be Slow

By SEWELL CHAN

JACKSON HOLE, Wyo. — The American economy could experience painfully slow growth and stubbornly high unemployment for a decade or longer as a result of the 2007 collapse of the housing market and the economic turmoil that followed, according to an authority on the history of financial crises.

That finding, contained in a new paper by Carmen M. Reinhart, an economist at the University of Maryland, generated considerable debate during an annual policy symposium here, organized by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, which concluded on Saturday.

The gathering, at a historic lodge in Grand Teton National Park, brought together about 110 central bankers and economists, including most of the Federal Reserve’s top officials. In 2008, the symposium occurred weeks before the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy nearly shut down the financial markets. At the symposium last year, officials congratulated themselves on weathering the worst of the crisis.

But the recent slowing of the recovery cast a pall on this year’s gathering. As economists (some wearing jeans and cowboy boots) conferred on a terrace with a sweeping view of the 13,770-foot peak of Mount Teton, or watched a horse trainer tame an unruly colt at a nearby ranch, they anxiously discussed research like Ms. Reinhart’s. (Participants pay to attend the event, which is not financed by taxpayers, a Kansas City Fed spokeswoman emphasized.)

“I’m more worried than I have ever been about the future of the U.S. economy,” said Allen Sinai, co-founder of the consulting firm Decision Economics and a longtime participant in the symposium. “The challenge is unique: poor and diminishing growth, a sticky unemployment rate, sky-high deficits and a sovereign debt that makes us one of the most fiscally irresponsible countries in the world.”

Ms. Reinhart’s paper drew upon research she conducted with the Harvard economist Kenneth S. Rogoff for their book “This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly,” published last year by Princeton University Press. Her husband, Vincent R. Reinhart, a former director of monetary affairs at the Fed, was the co-author of the paper.

The Reinharts examined 15 severe financial crises since World War II as well as the worldwide economic contractions that followed the 1929 stock market crash, the 1973 oil shock and the 2007 implosion of the subprime mortgage market.

In the decade following the crises, growth rates were significantly lower and unemployment rates were significantly higher. Housing prices took years to recover, and it took about seven years on average for households and companies to reduce their debts and restore their balance sheets. In general, the crises were preceded by decade-long expansions of credit and borrowing, and were followed by lengthy periods of retrenchment that lasted nearly as long.

“Large destabilizing events, such as those analyzed here, evidently produce changes in the performance of key macroeconomic indicators over the longer term, well after the upheaval of the crisis is over,” Ms. Reinhart wrote.

Ms. Reinhart added that officials may err in failing to recognize changed economic circumstances. “Misperceptions can be costly when made by fiscal authorities who overestimate revenue prospects and central bankers who attempt to restore employment to an unattainably high level,” she warned.

Several scholars here cautioned that it was premature to infer long-term economic woes for the United States from the aftermath of past crises.

The Reinharts’ research “has not yet tried to assess the extent to which different policy stances mitigated the length of the outcome,” said Susan M. Collins, an economist and the dean of the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan. “But the reality is that we need to have an understanding that the issues we are dealing with are severe, and that we should not expect them to be unwound in a few months.”

Ms. Collins added: “I’m very much a glass-half-full person. What we’ve seen in the past few years has been a policy success. Things are not where we want them to be, but they could have been a lot worse.”

The Reinharts’ paper was not the only one to offer somber implications for policy makers.

Two economists, James H. Stock of Harvard and Mark W. Watson of Princeton, presented a paper arguing that inflation, which has already fallen so much that some Fed officials fear the economy is at risk of deflation, a cycle of falling prices and wages, could fall even further by the middle of next year.

Inflation has been running well below the Fed’s unofficial target of about 1.5 percent to 2 percent. Ben S. Bernanke, the Fed chairman, reiterated on Friday that the central bank would “strongly resist deviations from price stability in the downward directions.”

Mr. Stock and Mr. Watson noted that recessions in the United States were associated with declines in inflation, with an exception being an increase in inflation in 2004, which occurred despite a “jobless recovery” from the 2001 recession. The authors said they could not explain the anomaly but also could not “offer a reason why it might happen again.”


Filed under: bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, foreclosure, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, trustee Tagged: FINANCIAL MARKETS, Ny Times, recovery, SEWELL CHAN
Aug
29

Lakeside Bank, St. Charles, La — The Way Banking Should Be

Editor’s Comment: Only one Bank has failed in Louisiana since the financial crisis began. And only one bank in the United States has commenced operations in the year 2010 — this one in Louisiana. Despite an unofficial moratorium on new bank charters of 70-year-old retiree, Hartie Spence, managed to navigate the regulations and got the only new start-up bank to open in the country, operating out of a secondhand double wide trailer.

The probable reason for the apparent safety of banks in the state of Louisiana is the rampant poverty. But it shows that even where people have very little money the financial system can be stable as long as outsiders don’t meddle in their financial affairs. Louisiana was a bad target all Wall Street and thus avoided the absurd fraudulent increases in appraisal values that lie at the core of the financial crisis. Landing was based upon the actual value of the property, the willingness of a lender to take the risk, and the ability of the borrower to repay.

For hundreds of years that was the lending model and obviously the only one that makes any sense. For 10 years that model was turned on its head in places other than Louisiana where lenders were not lenders, where inflated appraisal values were a good thing, and where the ability of borrowers to repay a loan was obstructed by layers of unknown entities never disclosed at the time of closing and obstructed by exotic terms and presumptions that were plainly wrong but which work to the benefit of the intermediaries who had arranged for the funding of the loan from investors and the buying of the loan product by unwitting borrowers.

I don’t know anything about this particular bank other than what I have read. I don’t know the people in it and I don’t know their business model. But in an economy where new bank charters are being discouraged, and new start-ups of any kind of business are made increasingly difficult while the government aids the large corporations and financial institutions that got us into this mess, I think this bank deserves the support not only of its own community but anyone who is looking for a new banking relationship. Between the Postal Service, the Internet and the telephone your bank can be anywhere.

August 28, 2010

In Hard Times, One New Bank (Double-Wide)

By ANDREW MARTIN

LAKE CHARLES, La. — The only new start-up bank to open in the United States this year operates out of a secondhand double-wide trailer, on a bare lot in front of the cavernous Trinity Baptist Church. A blue awning covers the makeshift drive-through window.

Called Lakeside Bank, it is run by a burly and balding former tackle for Louisiana State’s football team named Hartie Spence, who doles out countrified humor along with deposit slips and the occasional loan.

“This is the one place where the cause of death is mildew,” he quipped, standing outside the trailer in withering heat.

Asked how his bank in this steaming town of oil refineries and oversize casinos managed to win over federal regulators, Mr. Spence, 70, said, “I’m still thinking it’s my looks that did it.”

The dearth of new banks follows a particularly wrenching period for the industry. As the financial crisis deepened, hundreds of banks and thrifts closed and thousands more were saddled with bad loans and credit card defaults, costing the industry billions of dollars.

As a result, the number of investor groups applying to start a new bank from scratch has dropped precipitously. And for the intrepid few who have tried, regulators — sharply criticized for lax oversight in recent years — are being particularly stingy in granting approval.

So far this year, Mr. Spence holds the privilege of opening the only truly new federally insured bank. (In seven other instances, investors received regulatory approval to buy an existing bank, usually one that had failed, and reopen it).

Of course, many of the nation’s biggest banks were bailed out by the government, and have since rebounded. But since January 2008, more than 280 smaller banks and thrifts have been closed, and many community banks are struggling to recover from the real estate collapse.

Those bank failures have cost the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s fund roughly $70 billion, and not surprisingly, the agency’s regulators are now giving greater scrutiny to new bank applications, according to bankers and industry officials.

Technically, banks obtain charters from their primary regulatory agency, either state banking regulators or, for national banks, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. But the charters are contingent on the applicants’ obtaining deposit insurance from the F.D.I.C.

The F.D.I.C. said the reduction in charters simply reflects the effects of the recession on new businesses. “There was considerable interest in forming banks before the economy deteriorated,” said an agency spokesman, David Barr. “In today’s climate we are seeing very little interest.”

However, last year the agency toughened its oversight of new banks, saying banks that had been open for fewer than seven years were “over represented” among failed banks in 2008 and 2009.

The reason, the agency said in a public release, is that many new banks strayed from their approved business plans and ran into problems because of “weak risk management practices,” among other problems.

Ralph F. “Chip” MacDonald III, a lawyer in Atlanta who advises banks on regulatory matters, said he believed the F.D.I.C. had imposed an “unofficial moratorium” on new bank charters, a charge that the agency denies.

Adam Taylor, president of the Bank Capital Group, an Atlanta company that helps investors set up new banks, said he had several recent clients, whom he declined to name, withdraw applications for new banks after it became clear that the F.D.I.C. would not approve them. He said the agency rarely denies charters — a fact confirmed by agency records — but that it places the applications in “purgatory” until the applicants give up.

The number of banks and thrifts — also known as savings and loans — in the United States has been declining steadily for 25 years, because of consolidation in the industry and deregulation in the 1990s that reduced barriers to interstate banking. There were 6,840 banks and 1,173 thrifts last year, down from 14,507 banks and 3,566 thrifts in 1984.

The number of charters has generally declined too, though there have been periodic swings. The lowest number of bank charters granted in any one year was 15, in 1942.

How, then, did Lakeside Bank win this year’s regulatory lottery?

Mr. Spence’s looks aside, he said that regulators were not ready to grant approval until Lakeside had raised enough capital, created a sufficiently conservative business plan and hired an experienced management team.

The initial idea for Lakeside Bank came from a local real estate developer, Andrew Vanchiere, who was dissatisfied with his existing bank. In 2007, he rounded up a group of local businessmen who set about raising $13 million in start-up capital and began looking for someone to run the bank.

The initial candidates were deemed too inexperienced by regulators. When the group contacted Mr. Spence in 2008, he was a few months into retirement and coming to the realization that fishing for trout and redfish just wasn’t enough to keep him occupied.

“I was bored absolutely stiff,” said Mr. Spence, who had successfully run several Louisiana banks during his career. “My response was, ‘Let’s do it!’

“You can manage a good bank in a bad economy, particularly when you are at the bottom,” he said. Noting that he has a clean balance sheet and can be selective about making loans, he added, “I thought it was a perfect time to be starting.”

Lakeside’s application was also helped by the surprising vitality of Lake Charles, a city of 72,000 roughly 30 miles from the Texas border. Lake Charles has gotten a boost from casino gambling and the oil and gas industry, as well as an infusion of new businesses, including liquefied natural gas terminals and a new plant that builds parts for nuclear reactors.

Louisiana, meanwhile, has fared better than many states during the economic downturn because of the petroleum industry and the infusion of government and insurance money to pay for damages from Hurricanes Katrina, Rita and Ike.

Only one bank has failed in Louisiana since the financial crisis began.

Regulators made it clear that Lakeside would not be approved if other banks in town were struggling to stay afloat, Mr. Spence said. But Lakeside, which opened on July 26, sits on a busy boulevard lined with about a dozen or more banks or credit unions, all of which appear to be thriving.

“There’s enough for all of us, and we are no threat to them for many, many years,” Mr. Spence said of his competitors.

Lakeside Bank is promoting itself as an old-fashioned community bank that focuses on customer service and bread-and-butter banking products, even though it also makes them available online.

Whereas loan decisions for many big banks are made in distant cities, Mr. Spence said that Lakeside will make them right there in the double-wide trailer, at least until the bank moves into a more permanent structure in a year or two.

“That’s our motto, ‘The Way Banking Should Be,’ ” he said, adding later, “It got rushed enough yesterday that I had to answer the phones and work the switchboard.”


Filed under: community banks Tagged: ANDREW MARTIN, FDIC, Harties Spence, Lakeside Bank, Louisiana, moratorium, Ny Times, St. Chales
Aug
28

Judges Rising to the Rules

Editor’s Comment: Without inventing anything, an increasing number of Judges are coming to the same conclusion. If they apply the rules and deny the pretender lender the benefit of presumptions to which they were not entitled in the first place, the case can be heard on the merits. They don’t need to decide who is right or who is wrong. They need to call balls and strikes.

In this submission from 4closurefraud.com the Judge simply states the obvious — an affidavit from some stranger who says that he looked at some papers and arrived at some conclusions in his or her own mind is not evidence or even a proffer of evidence. It is nonsense. Summary Judgment denied. Motion to lift stay should similarly be denied. Any motion based upon such an affidavit from EITHER side should be denied. AND NOW THEY ARE…..

I SHOULD ADD THAT THE NAME “ICE” ESQ. IS COMING UP MORE FREQUENTLY. I’D LIKE TO SEE MORE FROM THIS LAWYER. He seems to be talking the same tack as Gator Bradshaw in Central Florida (Ocala et al) , Jon Lindemen (S. Fla and Orlando), George Gingo (Northern Florida) and others, to wit: we are out to win these cases not just “mix it up” to justify the fees. Very gratifying to me. 3 years ago, nobody would listen. Now they are taking the ideas developed here, by Max Gardner and April Charney and taking it to the next level. I hope they leave us in the dust.

Full Hearing Transcript attached . Courtesy of T. Ice Esq. Palm Beach Florida

Florida – June 2010 – MSJ denied. Affidavits Hearsay Insufficient

What we are starting to see here is a pattern of Judges not excepting these affidavits from these robo-signers.

I can tell you that, if properly challenged, they will pull the affidavits across the board.

Don,t let that stop you from deposing these people, because once you do it will clearly show that they DO NOT have the authority to produce them. It will also show you they know absolutely nothing about the documents that they are signing even though they state it is of their personal knowledge.

Below is a transcript of how one Judge, in Palm Beach County, DENIED a motion for summary judgment on pending issues, including the insufficient affidavit.

Another key issue was an affidavit presented by the defense from Expert Witness Lynn Szymoniak regarding the fraudulent assignment presented in the case.

Lynn’s expert testimony has stopped many foreclosures in its tracks.

If you are interested in talking to Lynn about her services she can be reached at szymoniak@mac.com and just tell her 4closureFraud sent ya…

Some excerpts from the transcript…

THE BANK OF NEW YORK TRUST
COMPANY, N.A., AS TRUSTEE FOR
CHASEFLEX TRUST SERIES 2007-3,
Plaintiff,
-vs-
DAVID J. MOSQUERA; ELIZABETH

~

THE COURT: Okay. Without going into
anything else, I’m not about to enter a motion –
granting a motion for summary judgement based onan affidavit of Mr. Reardon.
~
MR. CHANE: Your Honor, there is simply no — there’s no basis to –
~
THE COURT: I’m sorry. It’s just — it
basically just says he looked at some records. I
don’t know what he looked at and he plugged some
numbers in.
~
MR. CHANE: Your Honor, it’s based on his
personal knowledge. That’s all he needs to do
according to the Rule.
~
THE COURT: Well, motion denied.
~
MR CHANE: On what basis, Judge?
~
THE COURT: On the basis that the Court
fears that there are many issues of fact to be
determined. This is not a matter in which
everything is undisputed.
~
MR. CHANE: What issues of fact?
~
THE DEPUTY: Sir, the Judge ruled. The
hearing is over.

http://www.scribd.com/doc/36551048/Full-Transcript-M-S-J-denied-Hearsay-Affidavit-not-Valid

4closureFraud.org

THE BANK OF NEW YORK TRUST COMPANY, N.A., AS TRUSTEE FOR CHASEFLEX TRUST SERIES 2007-13 PLAINTIF VS. DAVID MOSQUERA

CASE NUMBER 50 2008 CA 04969 XXXX MB PALM BEACH COUNTY FLORIDA


Filed under: CASES, CORRUPTION, Eviction, evidence, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, Investor, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Motions, Pleading, securities fraud, Servicer, STATUTES, trustee Tagged: affidavit, evidence, Florida, judges, motion for summary judgment, Rules
Aug
28

New strategy attacks validity of affidavits

Foreclosure Crisis
New strategy attacks validity of affidavits
August 26, 2010
hen it comes to fighting foreclosures, homeowners and their lawyers may have found a new strategy to score courtroom victories.
Defense lawyers across the state are increasingly attacking the validity of affidavits that owners of notes must file with the courts as part of the foreclosure process. Attorneys like Dustin Zacks, of the firm Ice Legal in West Palm Beach, are successfully arguing that plaintiffs — usually a trust that owns the note or the servicer of the note — are violating court rules by filing affidavits with no records attached to support their foreclosure suits. The records include details of the loan, borrower fees and payment history.
The Florida Rules of Civil Procedure (Rule 1.510) states that “sworn or certified copies” of all records referred to in the affidavit must be attached as evidence in the foreclosure case.
The rule helps ensure that homeowners’s due process rights aren’t violated — namely that the lender has to prove it is entitled to press its claim.
By: Paola Iuspa-Abbott
Dustin Zacks
In a foreclosure suit, the plaintiff’s affidavit outlines how much the homeowner owes, asserts that there are no unresolved disputes between the lender and borrower and that the home is legally ready to be sold.
Judges rely on the affidavits as critical evidence when they hand down a summary judgment in favor of the lenders, which paves the way for the sale of a property at a foreclosure auction. Since most foreclosure cases are unopposed, the validity of the affidavits and compliance to the rules have rarely been questioned.
When a summary judgment is denied — because an affidavit is flawed, among other reasons — the homeowner can face the lender at trial.
A deficient affidavit can be the difference between homeowners losing their properties through a summary judgment or going to trial, Zacks said.
“These affidavits are the linchpin of cases when they are trying to win a house at summary judgment,” he said. “A summary judgment cuts short [a homeowner’s] right to a full trial.”
Several judges and lawyers say deficient affidavits are rare in most other civil cases, but are rampant in foreclosure cases.
“Our entire judicial system is under attack as a result of this foreclosure process,” said St. Petersburg lawyer Matthew Weidner, who blogs about foreclosures. “Judges, just like us, have just sort of overlooked this in the midst of this crisis.”
AG’s Investigation
Foreclosure firms are increasingly under scrutiny for questionable practices, including the alleged falsification of documents. Earlier this month, Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum launched a probe into the Law Offices of David J. Stern in Plantation; the Law Offices of Marshall C. Watson in Fort Lauderdale; and Shapiro & Fishman, with offices in Boca Raton and Tampa.
McCollum’s office is investigating whether the three law firms submitted false affidavits or fabricated court documents to obtain final judgments against homeowners.
The Law Offices of David J. Stern and Shapiro & Fishman deny wrongdoing and have filed motions to quash or modify the subpoenas issued by the AG office.
Defense lawyers, who have been filing civil lawsuits against the foreclosure law firms, welcomed the investigation. They claim some plaintiff lawyers are rushing through large volumes of foreclosures on behalf of lenders, often improperly serving notice on homeowners or filing false pleadings.
Some judges say they don’t have the resources nor it is their job to make sure every affidavit is proper, but at least two said they are interested in hearing the argument.
“It is a genuine question that should be raised,” said Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Jennifer Bailey. “The question is, where should each judge draw the line about the degree of investigation they are going to do on these affidavits? There is no clear answer.”
In June, Zacks persuaded Palm Beach Circuit Judge Howard Harrison Jr. to deny a motion for summary judgment because of a flawed affidavit.
Page 1 of 3
http://www.dailybusinessreview.com/news.html?news_id=64829&stripTemplate=1    8/26/2010
Harrison told a representative of the Bank of New York, the loan’s trustee, that it needed to produce the loan records rather than having an employee of the plaintiff attorney or the loan servicer attest that documents are in order before signing the affidavits.
“It basically just says he looked at and plugged some numbers in,” Harrison said, according to a transcript of a June 29 hearing. “If they are not contested, that’s fine. But where somebody just basically says, ‘I looked at the records,’ this is it. That’s not enough for me to agree.”
Harrison’s ruling gave Elizabeth and David Mosquera a temporary break. The couple owes $1 million on a six-bedroom Wellington home they bought for $1.4 million in 2007, according to Palm Beach County property records. The couple fell behind on their mortgage payments last year.
In May, Zacks got Palm Beach Circuit Judge Jack Cook to strike an affidavit that did not include records. Now it will be up to Wells Fargo Bank, as trustee, to file a new affidavit.
Challenging Rule
In addition to requiring a copy of the records, Rule 1.510 also says that the person signing the affidavit must have personal knowledge of the facts of the case. That can be a challenge since most loans have been sold several times since they were originated and have been processed by different servicers. Many notes and mortgages are not available for review.
Since the foreclosure crisis started in 2008, it has become common for plaintiff lawyers and servicers to assign an employee to sign hundreds of affidavits, even though they usually are not familiar with the cases.
“I’d like to see in one of these cases where a defense lawyer cross examines, takes a deposition of these people [so] we can see whether they ought to be charged with perjury for all of these affidavits,” Pinellas Circuit Judge Anthony Rondolino said during an April 7 hearing.
At that hearing, he vacated a summary judgment he granted in January in favor of GMAC Mortgage.
Rondolino reconsidered his decision after defense lawyer Michael Wasylik of Dade City asked for a rehearing to challenge GMAC’s affidavit, which did not include any sworn or certified documents.
Rondolino said he hasn’t seen many defense lawyers use flawed-affidavit arguments as a defense, “but when they do raise these issues, I listen to the argument carefully.”
Wasylik said summary judgements that were granted based on insufficient affidavits can be appealed and set aside. “If courts are fooled into granting judgments … it could be disastrous for Florida’s real estate,” he said.
Attorney Mark Romance, with Richman Greer in Miami, said people who lost their homes to foreclosure can appeal a judgment that was the result of an insufficient affidavit or on a mistake.
“That doesn’t help necessarily the person whose home has been foreclosed upon and sold … but they can still get some relieve from the court,” he said.
Nonjudicial process?
The Florida Bankers Association is pushing state lawmakers to make the foreclosure process nonjudicial so lenders can repossess properties faster.
It can take more than a year for uncontested cases to move through the overworked court system and several years if a homeowner defends the case.
A bill proposed by the FBA to make foreclosures nonjudicial failed earlier this year during the legislative session in Tallahassee. The industry group is considering re-introducing the bill in the 2011 session, said Anthony DiMarco, the FBA’s executive vice president and director of government affairs.
“Everybody has the right to a defense, but if they do it just to slow down the process, they are just going to slow down the [recovery of the housing market,]” DiMarco said. “And the faster we get through all this, the faster we are going to get to the end of the crisis and we can move on.”
Paola Iuspa-Abbott can be reached at (305) 347-6657.


Filed under: CASES, CORRUPTION, Eviction, evidence, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, Mortgage, Motions, Pleading, securities fraud, Servicer, trustee Tagged: affidavits, DUSTIN ZACKS, evidence, Florida, ICE LEGAL, Paola Iuspa-Abbott
Aug
27

MERS-BAC Agreement Revealed

Damnedest thing I ever saw. BAC-Stewart – Plaintiff_s Memorandum in Opposition to Defendants_ Motion to Vacate (8_13_10)

With the left hand in the right pocket and the left foot in the left pocket and the right foot in the back pocket. Read the whole thing through and give me comments.


Filed under: foreclosure
Aug
26

U.S. Judges Sound Off on Bank Settlements

EDITOR’S NOTE: It’s always slower than we want. But the Bench is starting to groan at the absurd “settlements” being reached that are actually a vehicle for immunizing the major players from liabilities that vastly exceed the settlements. In most cases, class actions, government actions and other major agency complaints at state and federal levels are being settled for a tiny fraction of a penny on the dollar. It sounds like a bunch of money when you see hundreds of millions of dollars on the table. But what is that when they took trillions?
August 23, 2010

U.S. Judges Sound Off on Bank Settlements

By BINYAMIN APPELBAUM

WASHINGTON — Everything was rolling along traditional lines. A bank broke the rules. The government found out. The company agreed to pay a fine and improve its behavior.

And then the judge assigned to approve the deal blew his top.

In a scene that is becoming increasingly common, Judge Emmet G. Sullivan of Federal District Court chewed out federal prosecutors at a hearing in Washington last week for a proposed settlement with Barclays.

“Why isn’t the government getting tough with banks?” he asked.

Just one day earlier in the same courthouse, Judge Ellen Segal Huvelle refused to sign a settlement between the government and Citigroup, demanding, “Why would I find this fair and reasonable?” She ordered government lawyers to return with answers next month.

The scoldings from the bench are a striking departure from a long tradition of judicial deference to settlements formulated by federal agencies, reflecting broad disenchantment not just with Wall Street, but with its government overseers.

It is a pattern that began last year, when Judge Jed S. Rakoff of Federal District Court in Manhattan denounced the Securities and Exchange Commission for going easy on Bank of America, which the agency had accused of misleading its shareholders.

“The courts are staking out a role that frankly we seem to need,” said Jill E. Fisch, a law professor at the University of Pennsylvania. “They are standing in for the general public, the public interest, and demanding more” from regulators.

The immediate impact, however, has varied. Courts have limited power over settlements. Judge Rakoff persuaded the S.E.C. to punish Bank of America with a larger fine, but Judge Sullivan gave grudging approval last week to the deal between the Justice Department and Barclays after airing his concerns for a second day.

Experts also disagree about the long-term consequences. Some, like Professor Fisch, expect regulators to seek more punitive settlements. Others said that agencies instead would favor lenient penalties that do not require judicial review.

M. Todd Henderson, a law professor at the University of Chicago, said the impact would be determined by the public’s reaction.

“I think it’s a public relations stunt more than anything else,” Professor Henderson said. “The court is trying to make it public that the government may be cutting cozy deals, because it is the public that ultimately controls the executive branch,” which includes the Justice Department and the S.E.C.

Litigants are generally free to settle cases on agreed terms, but the law grants judges a narrow mandate in some cases to reject settlements that they believe do not serve the public interest. In the cases at hand, the judges expressed concern that the government was claiming victory without holding companies properly accountable — an approach Judge Rakoff described last year as creating a “façade of enforcement.”

The Barclays settlement, which Judge Sullivan approved last week, involved charges that the British bank helped customers in Iran, Cuba and other sanctioned nations move more than $500 million into the United States, breaking federal law — and undermining national policy — for more than a decade. The bank distributed instructions to employees for circumventing internal controls, for example by obscuring the source of the transfers.

Moreover, employees knew the transfers were illegal.

The cover sheets “must not mention” the offending entity, which could cause the funds to be seized, one employee wrote in an e-mail quoted by prosecutors. “A good example is Cuba, which the U.S. says we shouldn’t do business with but we do.”

The Justice Department agreed not to pursue criminal charges against the bank. In exchange, Barclays admitted to wrongdoing, forfeited $298 million and agreed to improve employee training.

Justice defended the settlement as a “serious sanction,” and said it did not seek a larger fine because Barclays had disclosed the crimes and cooperated with prosecutors.

“The public looks at this and says, you know, they’re getting a free ride here,” Judge Sullivan told government lawyers last Wednesday. He said he had agreed to approve the settlement despite his concerns because it was not his job to supervise the department.

Under the terms of Citigroup’s proposed settlement, which Judge Huvelle has questioned, the bank would acknowledge concealing from shareholders the extent of its investment in subprime mortgages, which totaled more than $50 billion in 2007. The chief financial officer at the time, Gary L. Crittenden, told investors that the bank’s exposure totaled only $13 billion.

The S.E.C. calculated that the company realized an economic benefit of up to $123 million from its misrepresentations, but proposed to settle for a fine of $75 million.

“You expect the court to rubber stamp, but we can’t,” Judge Huvelle said.

Judge Rakoff told an audience at Stanford in June that he hoped other judges would follow the example that he set last year in the Bank of America case. That case, he said, “may enable some of my colleagues to be a little more proactive in assessing S.E.C. settlements in the future.”

“I like to think that it will contribute to greater justice.”

But David S. Ruder, chairman of the S.E.C. in the late 1980s, said that regulators were in a better position to determine the fairness of a settlement because they commanded both the specifics and context of each case.

“It’s my view that by and large the judge ought to give great deference to the judgment of the agency as to what’s the appropriate punishment,” said Mr. Ruder, now a law professor at Northwestern University.

The three judges, all appointed to the district courts by President Bill Clinton, have shown particular frustration with the government’s failure to punish individuals.

Judge Rakoff repeatedly questioned the S.E.C.’s decision not to bring charges against the Bank of America’s executives. The agency described their conduct as negligent but not fraudulent. The New York attorney general, Andrew M. Cuomo, has since filed civil fraud charges against the former chief executive Kenneth D. Lewis and another executive. They have denied the allegations, and the case is pending.

The Citigroup case includes companion settlements with Mr. Crittenden and another executive. But the S.E.C. said in its complaint that other executives also had been aware of the legerdemain, prompting Judge Huvelle to demand an explanation as to why other Citigroup executives were not cited.

And the Justice Department did not seek to hold any employees responsible for the crimes that it attributed to Barclays, leading Judge Sullivan to observe that corporations are inanimate objects.

“You agree there must have been some human being who violated U.S. laws?” he asked the government’s lead lawyer.

He proceeded to ask that same question in a dozen different ways, growing increasingly exasperated with the answers, until he finally interrupted the government lawyer to ask, “Can I just share a thought with you?”

“You know what?” he asked. “If other banks saw that the government was being rough and tough with banks and requiring banking officials to stand before federal judges and enter pleas of guilty, that might be a powerful deterrent to this type of conduct.”


Filed under: foreclosure
Aug
25

Request for Legal Service: New Livinglies Feature

THIS SERVICE IS AVAILABLE TO ANY PAID SUBSCRIBER OR MEMBER:

SEE $9.95 PER MONTH DONATION/SUBSCRIPTION LLB

SEE LL SUBSCRIPTION MEMBERSHIP $49.95 PER MONTH

REQUEST FOR LEGAL SERVICE IN CALIFORNIA:

We have a customer who has gone through the title search, securitization search and who has filled out the GTC Registration form on the right hand side of the Blog. Reference #5198002. California Property. Any attorney wishing to offer to provide services to this customer should write to neilfgarfield@hotmail.com. You will receive the completed registration form. No referral fee or co-counsel fee is expected and none will be accepted. Arrangements with client are your own. Expert declarations and other forensic help are available through the blog, the blog store and through anyone else of your choosing. The customer may supply you with title report, securitization report and commentaries if they so wish.

“I am looking for an attorney who will help with a simple and effective quiet title action. No assignments are done at the courthouse, only the original deed of trust. B of A sent me a copy of their note after I requested it. This is a copy with NO ENDORSEMENTS OR ALLONGES, only a scanned copy they received before they went out of business. They totally blew off my QWR I got from this site. A QTA should be pretty straight forward and require very little in regards to representation, I am sure the biggest part will be to use the word ‘objection’ repeatedly when they show their freshly created bogus documents. Please help Obi Wan Kenobi! You’re my only hope!! :)


Filed under: foreclosure
Aug
25

Unconstitutionality of a Power of Sale

THIS IS FROM REUBEN NIEVES. IT IS A GOOD PIECE OF WORK AND HE WANTS COMMENTS AND CONTRIBUTIONS. HE HAS A FINELY MADE POINT HERE AND IT IS SELF-EXPLANATORY.

I have always said that the power of sale raises constitutional questions — namely, that no  person should be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law. The fiction is that you can waive that right by contract. That premise is questioned here. But in addition, this piece raises the stronger point that even if one were to conclude that it is possible to contract away your most basic constitutional rights (like agreeing to be a slave), the manner in which it is being applied in the era of securitized loans is clearly unconstitutional.

There is also the fiction that use of the power of sale is not state action and THAT evades the issue of constitutionality. The answer to that argument is that if there is no state action then there is no sale, there is no new owner, and there is no new deed. The proponents speciously argue that you can take one part of the foreclosure process out of the courts and call that private while the rest is state action rubber stamping a foreclosure sale without due process under a set of presumptions that in most cases no longer apply.

The arguments for judicial economy and waste of money that lay at the foundation of the statutes permitting non-judicial sale simply are not present anymore. The obvious identities of the proper parties, accounting for the entire transaction, and the inevitability of the foreclosure by default without any real meritorious defenses that existed when these statutes were passed, do not pass even the smell test in today’s environment.

But the court need not reach the constitutional question. It is also a matter of breach of contract, jurisdictional standing and procedural due process. Once the borrower OBJECTS to the sale on the grounds that he denies the default, or denies the default as to the pretender lender, or denies the standing of the would-be forecloser as a creditor at all, the question should be resolved in the courts with all the usual trappings of proper pleading by the party seeking affirmative relief (the one seeking foreclosure). The requirements of good faith pleading and joining issues to be tried according to the normal rules of evidence should apply.

As it stands now, the power of sale is being used as an end-run around the requirements that the borrower even owe anything, much less to the party seeking foreclosure.

PLEASE KEEP US IN THE LOOP OF THIS DISCUSSION.

REUBEN NIEVES: As an addendum to my prior comment on the unconstitutionality of a power of sale provision in a mortgage contract with respect to federally chartered bank corporations created for public and national purposes I am submitting my research to this site and invite any opposition or legal commentator to dispel or affirm my research

The issue is one of First Impression because the Supreme Court of the United States has never decided whether a federally chartered bank corporation created under an act of Congress to provide an important public and national purpose could use a non- judicial procedure that allows the taking of a property interest without a hearing thus violating the 5th Amendment. The Court, however, has made numerous decisions which would have been relevant in determining whether non-judicial procedures were applicable given the nature of these corporations. Though several appellate courts have had occasion to determine the constitutionality of non-judicial procedures in the form of a trustee sale provision, none have vetted the corporations seeking this remedy. The issue goes to the core of the nature of federally chartered corporations created under special law for public and national purposes. This issue deals with the right of these corporations to put such a provision in a contract and rests on whether the act of foreclosure is a governmental act or a proprietary act. It is an issue which, in the context of the current economic crisis and massive foreclosures, sweeps the breadth of this nation like a plague destroying families and communities as it spreads, swelling the homeless population in its wake. This issue involves a constitutional right affecting the lives of millions of families across this nation.
It would allow homeowner a level playing field with the banks to negotiate loan modification. If the bank had to take them to court, the homeowner could raise affirmative defenses and a right to a jury trial. I ask that you look at the arguments proffered in this letter to make your decision and that you act quickly.
ARGUMENT
I. BANK’S USE OF NON-JUDICIAL FORECLOSURES
IS NOT WITHIN THE SCOPE OF A LAW OF CONGRESS
To resolve the issue of the constitutionality of a trustee sale by National banks and federal savings associations , we must first identify the nature of the corporations . NATIONAL BANKS AND FEDERAL SAVINGS ASSOCIATIONS are federally chartered corporations created under acts of Congress (The Homeowner Loan Act (HOLA) and the National Bank Act(NBA) for a public and national purposes. In Conference of Federal Savings and Loan Associations et al v. Alan L. Stein et al. 604 F.2d 1256 (9th Circuit) (1979) the court related the history of HOLA and the reason for its’ creation:
The Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933, 12 U.S.C. §§ 1461 Et seq. (HOLA), was the result of congressional dissatisfaction with state law and practice in the financing of home construction.
….. The Federal Home Loan Bank Board (the Bank Board) was created with extremely broad powers to promulgate rules and regulations. 12 U.S.C. § 1464(a) provides in part:
…[T]he Board is authorized, under such rules and regulations as it may prescribe, to provide for the organization, incorporation, examination, operation, and regulation of associations to be known as ‘Federal Savings and Loan Associations’ * * * and to issue charters therefore, giving primary consideration to the best practices of local mutual thrift and home-financing institutions in the United States.” [bold added]

A. BANKS CAN BE A GOVERNMENTAL
ACTOR IN VIOLATION OF THE 5TH AMENDMENT
National banks and federal savings banks are agencies of the United States created to promote its fiscal policies. National banks and federal savings banks benefit by not paying state taxes, avoiding state predatory lending laws through the concept of Federal preemption, allowing them to export high interest for the credit card thus avoiding the state usury laws. Federal Savings banks also have the same benefits and are no less instrumentalities of the federal government than national banks whose purpose is to promote its fiscal policies. Alexander Hamilton argued that the Central Bank was necessary to the nation in cases of emergency such as the financing of war… Hamilton believed that there was a symbiotic relationship between agriculture, commerce, and manufacturing, and that progress in each of these sectors was necessary for America’s economic development. (In the Report of Credit II, Dec. 1790)

B. A PARTY MUST STATE FACTS
SUFFICIENT TO STATE A EITHER A
5th or 14th AMENDMENT DUE PROCESS CLAIM
Non-judicial foreclosures have been the subject of a flurry of cases including the most current Apao v. San Diego Home Loans, Inc.,324 F3d 1091, Ninth Circuit (2002) a California corporation. Margaret Apao lost her home to a foreclosure and sale under Hawaii’s non-judicial foreclosure statute. The federal district court dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim and that the sale was a purely private remedy. Apao appealed to the Ninth Circuit. The Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s decision on the grounds that previous decisions of appellate courts upheld the constitutionality of similar non-judicial procedures. The Ninth Circuit held in Apao that the case of Charmicor v. Deaner, 572 F2nd 694 “was controlling” although the consumers in Apao attempted to distinguish it. In Charmicor, the consumers claimed that the statute offended due process by failing to provide a pre-sale hearing and that it offends civil rights statutes and the equal protection clause by discriminating against appellant’s shareholders, who are black. The court in Charmicor noted that the “complaint failed to state a claim for relief under the civil rights statutes, because the record was utterly barren of any facts or allegations that could support a claim under the equal protection clause”, the Ninth Circuit affirmed. The court in these cases made no reference to several Supreme Court decisions which examined the nature of corporations created under an act of Congress and were content with the notion that Congress could adopt the local customs on debtor creditor relations without further analysis. The fact of the matter is that the issue should be determined under federal law.

C. NATIONAL BANKS ARE PUBLIC
NOT PRIVATE CORPORATIONS

In Easton v. Iowa,188 U.S.220 (1903) the Court said of national banks:
. . .[W]e cannot concur in the suggestions that national banks, in respect to the powers conferred upon them, are to be viewed as solely organized and operated for private gain.
The Court in Easton went on to say at 188 U.S. 220 at p. 230 that the principles enunciated in McCullough v Maryland, 17 U.S. 316(1819), and in Osborn v Bank of United States, 22 U.S.738 (1824), though expressed in respect to banks incorporated directly by acts of Congress, were still applicable to the later and present system of national banks. The Court cited with approval the holding of the latter as expressed by Chief Justice Marshall:
The bank is not considered as a private corporation whose principal object is individual trade and individual profit, but as a public corporation created for public and national purposes. That the mere business of banking is, in its own nature, a private business, and may be carried on by individuals or companies having no political connection with the government, is admitted, but the bank is not such an individual or company. It was not created for its own sake or for private purposes. It has never been supposed that Congress could create such a corporation.[bold and italics added]

The court in Easton goes on to say:

‘National banks are instrumentalities of the Federal government, created for a public purpose, and as such necessarily subject to the paramount authority of the United States. It follows that an attempt by a state to define their duties or control the conduct of their affairs is absolutely void, wherever such attempted exercise of authority expressly conflicts with the laws of the United States, and either frustrates the purpose of the national legislation or impairs the efficiency of these agencies of the Federal government to discharge the duties for the performance of which they were enacted.

Our conclusions, upon principle and authority, are that Congress, having power to create a system of national banks, is the judge as to the extent of the powers which should be conferred upon such banks, and has the sole power to regulate and control the exercise of their operations…[bold, underline and italics added]
In view of the holding in Osborn which Justice Marshall held that banks were public and not private bank corporations, which was approved and held applicable to later national bank corporations not directly created by Congress by the Supreme Court in Easton, why should we now consider national banks private corporations? And why not consider them “agencies of the Federal government” as referred to in Easton? And why should the same reasoning not apply to FEDERAL SAVINGS ASSOCIATIONS .
In Osborn at p. 22 U.S. 823 the court said of these national banks:
The charter of incorporation not only creates it, but gives it Every faculty which it possesses. The power to acquire rights of any description, to transact business of any description, to sue on those contracts, is given and measured by its charter, and that charter is a law of the United States. Take the case of a contract, which is put as the strongest against the Bank. . . [H]as this being a right to make this particular contract? .. . .[T]his question, too, depends entirely on a law of the United States [underline added]

The court in Osborn at p. 823, made it clear that federally chartered corporations created under acts of Congress could “. . .acquire no right, make no contract, bring no suit, which is not authorized by a law of the United States. It is not only itself the mere creature of law, but all its actions and all its rights are dependent on the same law”.[underline and bold added]
In an excerpt from Shoshone Mining Co. v. Rutter, 177 U.S. 505,509,510 ,citing Osborn, the court said:
A corporation has no powers and can incur no obligations except as authorized or provided for in its charter. Its power to do any act which it assumes to do, and its liability to any obligation which is sought to be cast upon it, depend upon its charter, and when such charter is given by one of the laws of the United States there is the primary question of the extent and meaning of that law;[underline & bold added]

In Runyan v. Lessee of Coster, 39 U .S. 122 , p. 129 (1840) the court Said:

…[T]hat a corporation “possesses only those properties which the charter of its creation confers upon it, either expressly, or as incidental to its very existence. That corporations created by statute must depend for their powers and the mode of exercising them, upon the true construction of the statute.
… The corporation must show that the law of its creation gave it authority to make such contracts.” . [underline and bold added]
Did the law of its creation (HOME OWNER LOAN ACT or NATIONAL BANK ACT ) give National banks and federal savings associations the right to make this contract with this provision?
Can it then be said that the provision in a mortgage contract requiring a mortgagor to transfer his rights to a trustee with a power of sale for the non-payment of a mortgage is authorized by the federal charter? Is this not the right to foreclose on an owner without resort to judicial process and a hearing? Is this not the right to deprive a person of procedural due process? We must then ask the question: Is the act of the national or federal savings association in foreclosing non-judicially within the scope of a law of Congress? Can the government by way of a federal charter authorize a right to a bank to do what it is forbidden to do itself? It is fundamentally clear that the government can impart no greater power through a charter than they possess themselves. The power to deny a person of procedural due process is denied to the government under the 5th Amendment and is equally denied to the banks. As John Locke said nearly 300 years ago: “…Nobody can transfer to another more power than he has in himself “ [John Locke, TWO TREATISE OF GOVERNMENT, BOOK II] The courts in Osborn and Shoshone and Runyan show us that the conduct of banks in pursuit of non-judicial foreclosures must be done under the authority of the federal charter which is a “law of the United States” and therefore “under color of federal law”. Thus National banks and federal savings associations Mortgage fsb could be considered a “governmental actor” like the assumption made by the First Circuit in Gerena v Puerto Rico Legal Services, Inc., 697 F. 2d 447(1st Cir. 1983)

D. CONGRESS CANNOT AUTHORIZE OR
DELEGATE A RIGHT OR POWER THAT
IT CANNOT EXERCISE ITSELF
If all the acts, rights and obligations of corporations with federal charters must be done under the authority of the federal charter and a law of the United States, including rights created in contract, how can Congress authorize a provision that it could not exercise itself? The provision can only be validated by what it represents and the constitutional implications it may give rise to. In United States v Grimaud, 220 U.S. 506 (1911) the Supreme Court decided that very issue and the court citing Justice Marshall at 220 US pg. 517 said.

It will not be contended that Congress can delegate to the courts, or to any other tribunals, powers which are strictly and exclusively legislative. But Congress may certainly delegate to others powers which the legislature may rightfully exercise itself. [underline bold & italics added]

E. A POWER OF SALE PROVISION UPON DEFAULT IS
ULTRA VIRES AND NULL AND VOID
As the Supreme Court said in Concord First Nat’l Bank v Hawkins 174 U.S. 364 p. 371:
The doctrine of ultra vires, by which a contract made by a corporation beyond the scope of corporate powers is unlawful and void and will not support an action, rests as the Court has often recognized and affirmed, upon three distinct grounds: the obligation of anyone contracting with a corporation to take notice of the legal limits of its powers, the interest of the stockholders not to be subject risks which they have never undertaken, and above all, the interest of the public that the corporation shall not transcend the powers conferred upon it by law.[bold added]
The powers of a corporation are express and incidental. Runyan at p. 129 supra. If Congress cannot confer the power to foreclose non judicially to National banks and federal savings associations then the provision is ultra vires and void.

II. THE LENDING FUNCTIONS OF
OF NATIONAL BANKS AND FEDERAL SAVINGS ASSOCIATIONS ARE GOVERNMENTAL
In Federal Land Bank v. Bismarck Co. of St. Paul, 314
U. S. 95 (1941) the court was faced with determining
whether the lending functions were proprietary or governmental. The court said:
The argument that the lending functions of the federal land banks are proprietary, rather than governmental, misconceives the nature of the federal government with respect to every function which it performs. The federal government is one of delegated powers, and from that it necessarily follows that any constitutional exercise of its delegated powers is governmental. Graves v. New York ex rel. O’Keefe, 306 U. S. 466, 306 U. S. 477. It also follows that, when Congress constitutionally creates a corporation through which the federal government lawfully acts, the activities of such corporation are governmental. (cites)
As part of their general lending functions, the land banks are authorized to foreclose their mortgages and to purchase the real estate at the resulting sale. They are “instrumentalities of the federal government, engaged in the performance of an important governmental function.”(cites)
In Federal Land Bank v. Board of Kiowa County., 368 U.S. 146 the court said :

“the Federal Government performs no ‘proprietary’ functions. If the enabling Act is constitutional and if the instrumentality’s activity is within the authority granted by the Act, a governmental function is being performed.”
It is well settled that the enabling Act, Home Owner Loan Act (HOLA) is constitutional . Pittman v. Home Owners’ Loan Corp., 308 U. S. 21. Like federal land banks, the lending functions including foreclosures of federal savings assn’s/federal savings banks, such as National banks and federal savings associations Mortgage fsb, a federal instrumentality , should be treated as governmental just as the court in Bismarck held. Federal Land Bank v. Bismarck Co. of St. Paul, 314 U. S. 95, p. 102 (1941)
A. GOVERNMENT CANNOT EVADE ITS MOST SOLEMN CONSTITUTIONAL OBLIGATIONS BY SIMPLY RESORTING TO THE CORPORATE FORM
Can Congress divest itself of its identity with a corporation created and participated in for a public purpose sufficiently to allow the corporation to use a procedure that does not allow a hearing? That question was asked and answered in Lebron v National Railroad Passenger Corporation. 513 U.S. pgs 374, 375 when the court said:
c) There is a long history of corporations created and participated in by the United States for the achievement of governmental objectives. Like some other Government corporations, Amtrak’s authorizing statute provides that it “will not be an agency or establishment of the United States Government,” [cite]
(d) Although § 541 is assuredly dispositive of Amtrak’s governmental status for purposes of matters within Congress’s control–e. g., whether it is subject to statutes like the Administrative Procedure Act-and can even suffice to deprive it of all those inherent governmental powers and immunities that Congress has the power to eliminate-e. g., sovereign immunity from suit-it is not for Congress to make the final determination of Amtrak’s status as a Government entity for purposes of determining the constitutional rights of citizens affected by its actions. The Constitution constrains governmental action by whatever instruments or in whatever modes that action may be taken…
(e) Amtrak is an agency or instrumentality of the United States for the purpose of individual rights guaranteed against the Government by the Constitution. This conclusion accords with the public, judicial, and congressional understanding over the years that Government-created and -controlled corporations are part of the Government itself.(cites) ; A contrary holding would allow government to evade its most solemn constitutional obligations by simply resorting to the corporate form, Bank of United States v. Planters’ Bank of Georgia, 9 Wheat. 904, 907, 908 (other cites).
Like Amtrak, national banks and federal savings associations are federal instrumentalities and members in banking systems created for a public purposes and controlled by the director of The Office of Thrift Supervision and the director of the Comptroller of the currency. Like Amtrak it is not for Congress to make the final determination of the status of these corporations as government entities for purposes of determining the constitutional rights of citizens affected by its actions. Consumers are citizens whose constitutional rights are affected when non- judicial foreclosures are exercised by federally chartered corporations like National banks and federal savings associations . To paraphrase an old saying, “that with great power comes great obligations.” This is no less true when Congress confers enumerated and incidental powers on a corporation it creates for an important governmental function. It must follow that with the immunities from taxation and state laws that frustrate the activities of corporations for which an act of Congress was enacted, the constitutional obligations of the government must also attach. For as Justice Scalia said in Lebron, at p. 399:
But it does not contradict those statements to hold that a corporation is an agency of the Government for purposes of the constitutional obligations of Government rather than the “privileges of the government,” when the State has specifically created that corporation for the furtherance of governmental objectives, and not merely holds some shares but controls the operation of the corporation through its appointees.
In this case control of the operations is exercised by the director of the Office of Thrift Supervision and the director of the Office of the Comptroller of Currency independent federal regulatory agencies vested with plenary authority to administer the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933 (HOLA) and the National Bank Act, The Director of the OTS is appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the senate. (12 USC §1462c) The Director of the Comptroller of the Currency is appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the senate.(12 USC § 2) The issue of the government’s control over the operations of federal savings associations is clarified by the court in Fidelity Fed. S. & L. v. De la Cuesta, 458 U.S. 141 (1982) at p. 161 when the court said:
The broad language of § 5(a) expresses no limits on the Board’s authority to regulate the lending practices of federal savings and loans. As one court put it, “[I]t would have been difficult for Congress to give the Bank Board a broader mandate.” [cites] And Congress’ explicit delegation of jurisdiction over the “operation” of these institutions must empower the Board to issue regulations governing mortgage loan instruments.

In National Banks the governments control was made clear in Easton when the court said:
Our conclusions, upon principle and authority, are that Congress, having power to create a system of national banks, is the judge as to the extent of the powers which should be conferred upon such banks, and has the sole power to regulate and control the exercise of their operations…[bold, underline and italics added]

B. THE POWER TO FORECLOSE IS AN
INCIDENTAL POWER OF THE NATIONAL BANKS
AS WELL AS FEDERAL SAVINGS BANKS
The history of national banking legislation has been “one of interpreting grants of both enumerated and incidental `powers’ to national banks” as well as federal savings associations[which include savings banks]. Bank of America et al v City of San Francisco et al 309 F.3d 551 (Ninth Circuit) (2002) Consider this hypothetical. The California legislature would makes a law that as a matter of public policy foreclosures of any kind will not be permitted on a homeowner’s primary residence. The OTS is charged with the supervision of the Home Owner Loan Act like the Office of the Controller of Currency is ”charged with supervision of the National Bank Act” NationsBank of N.C.N.A. v Variable Annuity Life Ins. Co. 513 U.S. 252, 256(1995) The OTS and the OCC would promulgate rules allowing the banks to foreclose on the homes that have defaulted and in concert with the banks claim that the power to foreclose was an incidental power of national banks and also federal savings banks and therefore would preempt state law. The State would challenge that decision in court. Both Acts are silent on the necessity of banks foreclosures to secure the residential property in the event of default. The Acts, however, do bestow upon banks the authority to exercise by its board of directors, or duly authorized officers or agents, subject to law, all such incidental powers as necessary to carry on the business of banking. . .”12 U.S.C.§24(Seventh). The OTS authority to preempt state laws affecting its lending practices lies in 12 cfr §560.2. Because these sections are not explicit on the limits of “incidental powers”, an inquiry as to whether the NBA or HOLA would support the use of either one or both methods of foreclosures (Judicial foreclosures and/or non-judicial foreclosure) would be necessary. The holding in United States v. Grimaud, 220 U.S. 506(1911) would apply. The NBA or HOLA could authorize the former but not the latter because the government could not exercise the power to foreclose non-judicially itself.
C. NATIONAL BANKS AND FEDERAL SAVINGS ASSOCIATIONS MORTGAGE FSB CAN BE
CONSIDERED “AGENCIES” OF THE GOVERNMENT
In Acron Investments, Inc. et al v Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation , 363 F.2nd 236 (9th Circuit, 1966) the court was given the task of determining if the Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) was an “agency”. After reviewing all the relevant code sections the court concluded that the corporation was an “agency” under 28 USC 451 because the control of the government over the corporation was more than custodial or incidental. In Acron at paragraphs 27 & 28 the court said:
…[T]he Reviser’s Note under 18 U.S.C. § 6 states that “The phrase `corporation in which the United States has a proprietary interest’ is intended to include those governmental corporations in which stock is not actually issued, as well as those in which stock is owned by the United States. It excludes those corporations in which the interest of the Government is custodial or incidental.” (Emphasis added.) 28 …Since the control which Congress and the United States exercise over the Corporation is clearly more than “custodial or incidental,” it would appear that the Corporation fits within the definition of “agency” of 28 U.S.C. § 451 and thus within the terms of 28 U.S.C. § 1345. [bold added]
Under the Ninth Circuit’s own test national banks and federal savings associations are “agencies”. Any doubt as to government’s control over the “operations” as being “custodial or incidental” is dispelled in Fidelity Fed. S. & L. v. De la Cuesta, 458 U.S. 141 (1982) at p. 161 when the court said:
The broad language of § 5(a) expresses no limits on the Board’s authority to regulate the lending practices of federal savings and loans. As one court put it, “[I]t would have been difficult for Congress to give the Bank Board a broader mandate(cites) And Congress’ explicit delegation of jurisdiction over the “operation” of these institutions must empower the Board to issue regulations governing mortgage loan instruments

With respect to National Banks the holding in Easton would apply as the court said:
Our conclusions, upon principle and authority, are that Congress, having power to create a system of national banks, is the judge as to the extent of the powers which should be conferred upon such banks, and has the sole power to regulate and control the exercise of their operations…[bold, underline and italics added]

CONCLUSION
The subject corporations cited share a common heritage with National banks and federal savings associations. They are corporations federally chartered and created under acts of Congress for important public and national purposes for which the Supreme Court has ruled on that premise in a number of cases that their activities were governmental. Thus in Bismarck the Court ruled that the lending functions were governmental not proprietary; and that foreclosure was part of the general lending functions. In Lebron, the Court ruled that the corporation was part of the government for the purpose of determining its constitutional obligations toward the rights of citizens affected by its actions.
The Ninth Circuit and other appellate courts have yet to apply the settled principles enunciated by these Supreme Court cases which lead to one conclusion— that National banks and federal savings associations’ use of a Trustee Sales(non-judicial foreclosures) must be a governmental acts and a 5th amendment violation of due process.
Constitutional powers conferred on a corporation should not be used to produce an unconstitutional result. The fallacy is that state law cannot determine the manner of foreclosure, but federal law with respect to the corporations created under acts of Congress. And federal law cannot authorize a non-judicial foreclosure , nor can the Constitution allow it.
Respectfully submitted,

___________¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬________ Date:___________, 2010
Reuben Nieves


Filed under: bubble, CASES, CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, evidence, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, GTC | Honor, investment banking, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Motions, Pleading, securities fraud, Servicer, STATUTES, trustee Tagged: 14th Amendment and Due Process, due process, foreclosure, power of sale, rueben nieves, slavery
Aug
24

Brown Wins $1 Million in Restitution for Victims of Attorney-Backed Foreclosure Rescue Scam

There are good business models and bad business models.  It is not automatically true that a large scale operation is running after the money rather than service for you, but be sure to check out their references. Many if not most of  these scam operations are being chased off the market with full support of the banking industry. It seems that even though the operations are less than upscale, they nevertheless delayed the foreclosure process and cost the pretender lenders money. Or check them out here with a posting and see what response you get.
2010/08/24 at 1:28 pm submitted by ABBY

CALIFORNIA ATTORNEY GENERAL BROWN NAILS THEM AGAIN!!!!

Brown Wins $1 Million in Restitution for Victims of Attorney-Backed Foreclosure Rescue Scam

LOS ANGELES – Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. today announced a $1.1 million judgment against longtime Los Angeles attorney Mitchell Roth after he conned 2,000 desperate homeowners into paying him thousands of dollars to file “frivolous and phony” lawsuits that didn’t reduce a penny of mortgage debt for a single client.

“Roth promised foreclosure relief through aggressive litigation, but the frivolous and phony lawsuits he filed instead left 2,000 desperate homeowners in even greater debt,” Brown said. “This settlement forces Roth to pay $1.1 million and prohibits him from ever again preying on new victims.”

In 2008, Roth, a seasoned Los Angeles attorney, joined with Nevada-based United First, Inc. and the company’s owner, Paul Noe, to provide foreclosure relief services to homeowners struggling to pay their mortgages. Noe, who was previously convicted of wire fraud and the subject of a 2004 Department of Insurance Cease and Desist Order, operated the company and handled client solicitations, while Roth provided legal services.

Homeowners were told that if they worked with United First and hired Roth to pursue their cases in court, they could lower or eliminate their mortgage debt and save their homes.

United First charged homeowners some $1,800 in up-front fees, plus at least $1,250 each month, and 50 percent of the cash value of any settlement. If a homeowner’s debt was eliminated altogether, the homeowner was required to pay United First 80 percent of the value of the home.

After collecting up-front fees, Roth filed lawsuits on behalf of homeowners, pushing a novel legal argument that a borrower’s loan could be deemed invalid because the mortgages had been sold so many times on Wall Street that the lender could not demonstrate who owned it.

Once the lawsuit was filed, Roth did next to nothing to advance the case and often failed to make required court filings, respond to legal motions, comply with court deadlines or appear at court hearings. Instead, Roth tried to extend the lawsuits as long as possible to collect additional monthly fees from clients.

This approach did not generate a single victory in court and did not lower or eliminate the mortgage debt for a single one of the 2,000 homeowners who hired Roth and United First.

Brown filed suit last July, alleging that Roth, Noe and United First engaged in unfair competition, made untrue and misleading statements and violated California’s credit counseling and foreclosure consultant laws.

The settlement announced today requires Roth to pay $1 million in restitution to defrauded homeowners plus $125,000 in penalties, and prohibits him from ever engaging in similar conduct in the future.

Roth was admitted to the California State Bar in 1977 and resigned in April 2009, after the State Bar ordered his law firm closed.

Brown’s office continues to litigate the case against Noe and United First.

Homeowners who were defrauded by Roth and United First, or victimized by any other foreclosure rescue scam, should contact Brown’s office at 1-800-952-5225 or file a complaint online at: http://www.ag.ca.gov/consumers/general.php

.

Homeowners can also file a complaint against a lawyer, a legal specialist or a company purporting to operate as a law firm with the State Bar by calling 1-800-843-9053 or visiting http://www.calbar.ca.gov

.

United First customers who are eligible for a refund will be contacted by mail.

By law, all individuals and businesses offering mortgage-foreclosure consulting, loan modification and foreclosure-assistance services must register with Brown’s office and post a $100,000 bond. It is also illegal for loan modification consultants and businesses to charge up-front fees for their services.

Non-profit housing counselors certified by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development provide free help to homeowners. To find a counselor in your area, call 1-800-569-4287.

Brown has sought court orders to shut down more than 30 fraudulent foreclosure-relief companies and has brought criminal charges and obtained lengthy prison sentences for dozens of deceptive loan modification consultants.

For more information on Brown’s action against loan modification fraud visit: http://ag.ca.gov/loanmod

.

Copies of Brown’s original complaint, filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court, and the settlement announced today are attached.
# # #

You may view the full account of this posting, including possible attachments, in the News & Alerts section of our website at: http://ag.ca.gov/newsalerts/release.php?id=1979


Filed under: foreclosure
Aug
24

THE RIGHT TO CHOOSE YOUR LENDER

EDITOR’S COMMENT: Here is an interesting comment from Scott Baker — someone who “has no dog in the race.” They paid off their mortgage. The point here is that Lenders knew exactly who their customer was, but the borrowers never did. In a “free” marketplace, this choice was taken out of the hands of the borrowers by concealing the real source of funds and the identities of the players.

The comment makes a good point when he says that he chose a Lender based upon reputation and his perception of the relationship he wanted with a Lender. This was also eviscerated. And his point is fairly made — there was no disclosure and he was coerced into doing the deal because “everybody’s doing it.”

Sound familiar? If it does, it is because that is exactly how the rest of the deal went and our society is slow to realize that amongst the many freedoms we gave up over the last decade was the freedom to choose the party with whom we do business.

I’m not in the same dire situation as so many commenters on this page, having paid off my mortgage before the s*^t hit the fan.
However, I did try to object to the clause in my mortgage that allowed my bank to split my mortgage via securitization to other investors. My reasoning was that not only should a lender be able to choose their borrowers, but a borrower should be able to choose their lender, even if the terms ostensibly don’t change. In fact, I specifically chose (what I thought) was a reputable lender, based on size, reputation (at the time), and, finally, terms. I specifically did not want any of the fly-by-night lenders that flooded my spam folder in those days (thankfully, these seem to have disappeared).
However, my RE lawyer said I had no right to object to securitization because “they all do that.” So, reluctantly, I signed the contract with that clause. It turns out that the bank did, indeed, securitize my loan, and virtually all others, but I paid it off in full shortly after anyway.
I still maintain that a borrower has a full right to decide to borrow from one party and not another.


Filed under: foreclosure
Aug
24

Home Sales at Lowest Level in More Than a Decade

Editor’s Comment: THIS IS WHY EVERYONE SHOULD BE ALARMED AT THE FAILURE OF THE COURTS AND GOVERNMENT AGENCIES TO GIVE THE STOLEN PURSE BACK TO INVESTORS AND BORROWERS. EVEN IF YOU ARE NOT UPSIDE DOWN, EVEN IF YOU DON’T HAVE A PREDATORY LOAN YOUR HOME, YOUR LIFE AND THE ECONOMIC HEALTH OF YOUR SOCIETY IS CRUMBLING UNDER THE WEIGHT OF SOME IDEOLOGICAL NOTION THAT IT IS BETTER TO FORCE MILLIONS FROM THEIR HOMES AND CHEAT INVESTORS THAN TO LET THEM HAVE RELIEF. THE FIGURES WERE BOGUS. PRINCIPAL REDUCTION IS NOT A GIFT IT IS A RECOGNITION OF REALITY.

Home Sales at Lowest Level in More Than a Decade

By DAVID STREITFELD

Housing sales in July plunged to their lowest level in more than a decade, exceeding even the grimmest forecasts.

The National Association of Realtors said Tuesday that the seasonally adjusted annual sales rate of 3.83 million was 25.5 percent below the level of July a year ago.

July was the first month that buyers could not qualify for a tax credit of up to $8,000, so analysts were expecting weak results. But their consensus called for a decline of about 13 percent.

“Truly gut-wrenching,” said Jennifer H. Lee, senior economist for BMO Capital Markets.

July sales were down 27.2 percent from June. It was the lowest rate for existing-home sales, which include houses, condos, co-ops and town houses, since 1999. For sales of single-family homes, it was the lowest rate since 1995.

The number of homes on the market increased only slightly but the large drop in sales was enough to push inventory levels up to 12.5 months. A normal market has an inventory level of about six months.

Higher inventories anticipate price declines as many sellers compete to take advantage of fewer buyers.

The drop in sales came despite the lowest mortgage rates in decades.

The Realtor group was optimistic the fall-off would be temporary, as long as the economy improves — a rather big “if.”

“Given the rock-bottom mortgage interest rates and historically high housing affordability conditions, the pace of a sales recovery could pick up quickly, provided the economy consistently adds jobs,” the group’s chief economist, Lawrence Yun, said in a statement.


Filed under: foreclosure
Aug
23

Max Gardner’s Top Reasons for Wanting a Pooling Servicing Agreement

EDITOR’S NOTE: Lest people think I invented this whole field of law just because I’m loudest about it, here is a post from Max Gardner, who only a few days after I started this blog had already figured out everything I had figured out and was already doing something about it.

Max Gardner’s Top Reasons for Wanting a Pooling Servicing Agreement

Monday, November 5th, 2007

Every time I file a civil action against a mortgage servicer the very first document I want is a copy of the “Pooling and Servicing Agreement.”  This is the legal document that creates the securitized trust of mortgage loans and also strictly provides for the duties of all entities who are assigned the responsiblity of servicing loans for the Trust.

For all “public placements” or “public offerings,”  the Pooling and Servicing Agreement is always filed on Form 8-K with the Securities and Exchange Commission.  All such documents can be found by conducting a search of the SEC’s website through an internal search engine known as “Edgar.”  But, what is a PSA?  Why do I want to see it? What can be found in the PSA?  Kevin Byers, a forensic accountant, who works with me on these cases, has assisted me in developing the following list of reasons why any consumer must have the PSA.  The reasons are as follows:

Pooling and Servicing Agreements (PSA)Top Twenty Reasons to Request ProductionKevin Byers and O. Max Gardner III

In no particular order, these are some of reasons you need to request through formal discovery in any mortgage-related case the PSA Agreement and why it is relevant:

1.     It is a contractual document naming the parties to any given securitization, important for standing issues.  The document will list the Sponsor, the Trustee for the Securitized Trust, the Master Servicer, and all primary and secondary servicers.

2.     It provides address for all necessary parties including “notice” addresses for the service of legal process. 3.     It outlines the specific duties of the Servicer and/or the Master Servicer as well as the Trustee on behalf of a respective trust. 4.     It contains the representations and warranties of all parties to the agreement, including the Servicer and/or Master Servicer.

5.     It includes all representations provided by the Depositor of the loans into the trust as the same relate to important consumer protection issues related to the underwriting and origination of the loan, such as conformity with anti-predatory lending laws, full-file credit reporting, title insurance coverage, and validity and content of individual loan files.

6.     It gives the conditions under which a prepayment penalty may be waived or modified by the Servicer and/or Master Servicer. 7.     It oftentimes will outline specific loss mitigation and foreclosure avoidance measures available to the Servicer, including, for example, forbearance and loan modification, principal reductions, interest reductions and interest changes.

8.     It defines a “defective mortgage loan” and describes the circumstances and process by which the lender must repurchase a loan.

9.     It establishes the rights of the Trustee under the Trust to force the Depositor/Originator of any loan to repurchase a loan under the recourse provisions. 10.    It describes the specific process by which a delinquent loan can be charged off and the subsequent servicing party and procedures that apply to such charged-off loan. 11.    It provides guidelines on loan-level advances that must be paid by the servicer. 12.    It provides details regarding the mechanics of how the Servicer must go about foreclosing on property, what documents need to be requested and/or recorded and what authorizations need to be granted to foreclose, and in whose name the foreclosure must be filed. 13.    It provides guidance on the fees a Servicer may retain as compensation in the administration of the loans, for example, NSF fees, late fees, loan modification or assumption fees.

14.    It will contain the Mortgage Loan Schedule, important to verify the ownership of the loan on behalf of the Trust.

15.    It details the requirements for mortgage assignments and when these will or will not be recorded and the implications of the failure to record such assignments. 16.    It details the specific loan documents contained in each loan file that will be delivered to the Trustee or Document Custodian on behalf of the trust, establishing who holds the original Note and where it may be found.

17.    It describes the credit enhancements that have been deployed to enhance the rating of the most secure certificates of investment in the Trust.

18.    It provides rules and procedures for the rights of the Master Servicer or the Primary Servicer to accept a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure or a short sale of the property so as to avoid a foreclosure.

19.    It describes the rights the Originator/Depositor may retain the Residual Value of the Trust and the extent to which the residuals may be used as credit enhancements.

20.    It will name a default servicer and describe when a loan is considered to be in default and outline the process for the transfer of servicing rights.

O. Max Gardner IIIHistoric Webbley House


Filed under: bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, evidence, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Pleading, securities fraud, Servicer, STATUTES, trustee Tagged: discovery, Master Servicer, MAX GARDNER, Pooling and Servicing Agreement, PSA, trust
Aug
23

NEW RULES AND OLD RULES

EDITOR’S NOTE: Today’s editorial in the New York Times mirrors the outlook of most Americans. It’s time to pass some new rules. I agree but I think that puts the emphasis on the wrong place. Most of these “new rules” were already in the old rules. They were not enforced. So the first new rule I would propose is “let’s enforce the old rules.”

While the writer of the opinion acknowledges that it has become fashionable to blame the borrowers, there is not one word of why and how that is simply not an adequate explanation for the mortgage mess, nor does it give us a proper starting point for correcting it.

Here is why we got into this mess: borrowers and investors who advanced the funds for the borrowers to borrow were fooled by clickety-clack quant language and assurances about “this is standard”, and other meaningless phrases. The result was that they relied upon the persons who were offering them a financial product that actually had a negative value. Nearly all borrowers and nearly all investors who participated were genuinely fooled. It was the equivalent of a business calling itself a bank taking deposits and then not giving it back. It was the equivalent of selling a poison pill as a natural herb supplement.

It was fraud that got us into this mess and it is prosecution of fraud that will get us out. Anything else, any other way of looking at it, merely compounds the record title problems that will soon explode in our faces, the economic problems that can’t go away unless they are actually addressed (as opposed to “dressed” in nice clothes).

Any Judge who allows another one to slip by thus giving a free house to a snickering lawyer and his client who has the name “Bank” is compounding problems that are already projected to last for more than three decades.

Any lawyer who fails to object to a proffer of evidence without the real evidence being required is aiding and abetting the enemy. They were lying when they started this and they are lying now.

This wasn’t an event. Is was and remains an on-going process of fraudulent transfers and shell games building on an already successful ponzi scheme that has never been taken down.

August 22, 2010 New York Times

Now, the Rules

The new financial regulatory reform is supposed to curb the predatory lending practices that led to the collapse of the mortgage market and have put millions of Americans at risk of losing their homes.

The Federal Reserve must now translate the legislative language into rules that will govern how brokers, lenders, appraisers and investors behave from now on. Given the Fed’s long history of putting the financial industry first and consumer protection second, Congress will need to keep a close eye on the rule-making process.

It has become fashionable to blame profligate borrowers for the calamity. And there is no question that in the madness of the housing bubble, some people should never have sought mortgages or bought homes they clearly couldn’t afford. But the crisis was driven by Wall Street’s hunger for quick profits and its eagerness to buy mortgages and package them into securities. Banks, mortgage companies, brokers and appraisers all conspired to steer borrowers into loans with escalating interest rates, balloon payments and other conditions that made them highly prone to default.

The new law does not ban risky loans outright. It does establish several conditions that, if correctly implemented, should discourage lenders from issuing them.

Lenders must now take the common-sense precaution of documenting the borrower’s ability to pay. They can no longer penalize borrowers — eager to free themselves from subprime or other risky mortgages — for paying off the loans early. And lenders are forbidden to pay kickbacks — “yield spread premiums” — to brokers who push borrowers into costly, higher-interest loans.

If loans violate the law, borrowers will be able to stop a foreclosure and sue to recover damages. The risk of being hauled into court should persuade investors to look closer at the underlying loans to make sure that they conform with federal law.

These are all good, and desperately needed, reforms. Industry lobbyists, who do some of their best work in the rule-making phase, will work hard to water them down.

Consumer advocates are especially worried about how the Fed will formulate the rules that are supposed to stop lenders from steering creditworthy minority or female applicants into more expensive mortgages and end “wealth stripping,” under which lenders design loans that quickly rob homeowners of their equity.

Congressional leaders believe that the Fed was chastened by the crisis and will now do all that is needed to protect lenders. Given the agency’s long history of kowtowing to the banks, mortgage lenders and credit card companies, Congress will need to do more than trust. It will have to verify that the new rules finally give consumers — and the American economy — the strong, permanent protections they need.


Filed under: foreclosure
Aug
22

Make it Real, Mr. President

The Quote of the day in the New York Times reflects the main sentiment: to most people the economic recovery doesn’t look real. REALITY is what I’ve been seeking from government, the marketplace and the judicial system, but we just can’t seem to get it.

  • They want a housing recovery but there is no plan in place to increase median income, which is the only reliable indicator or predictor of housing prices. Increase jobs, increase income, and you increase economic activity, tax revenue and the economy thrives.
  • They measure and proclaim rising reported profits under a wink and nod accounting system that began in the 1960′s and which led to items being taken off the balance sheet or income statement if they looked bad on a company’s financial statements — but they don’t talk about median income which has shrunk for more than three decades, “offset” they say by rising debt. Exactly how is a lack of income offset by increasing debt. Could someone explain that to me?
  • They want people to have confidence in the financial system that has tricked, scammed and stuck American and foreign citizens with a bill whose proceeds went into the pockets of the management of companies whose sole purpose was to get people into more debt. For every dollar spent by a consumer, business or governmental entity, $10 in fake and real money went into the pockets of “financial innovators.”
  • They want people to have more confidence in the marketplace and start buying things they don’t need, when they don’t have the income, the savings or the credit to buy the things they DO need.
  • They see the problem with mortgages and foreclosures but their plan is to get them modified without actually changing the terms.
  • They send money into the financial system to get the players to modify the mortgages, but the players they are talking to don’t have the mortgages, don’t have the authority, and make a lot more money by (a) pretending to modify mortgages and then taking federal money and (b) foreclosing on property so they can apply unconscionable fees to the detriment of both the borrower and the lender (investor) who advanced the funds for the deal.
  • They want more jobs created but they don’t do anything to stimulate the creation of small businesses which for 2 centuries have been the sole engine of economic growth and median income. Liquidity from the Fed has been reserved for financial institutions to keep trading with each other creating fictitious profits, creating no added value to society or the marketplace — no service, no products, just trades that give the appearance of profit.
  • They want the deficit down which has largely resulted from a decrease in REAL economic activity, so they want to cut expenses which will decrease economic activity even further. Just what do you think those people losing jobs are going to buy? What businesses are they going to start? How will they capitalize their businesses or their life-style with no money? What we are seeing is an instant replay of the 1937 error, which FDR admitted, when he finally gave into the deficit hawks and the Country plunged even deeper into depression.
  • What business has ever prospered by cutting revenues, channels of growth, innovation and employment? NONE. But that’s the plan that is being seriously considered for government by people more interested in their election prospects than they are in the prospects of the country as a whole.
  • What business allows it’s biggest customer to not only skip paying their bills but gives them more money without any hope of getting it back? NONE. But that is what the State and Federal governments are doing when they fail to collect taxes, interest, fees, costs, penalties and damages from enterprises doing business, making money and not even reporting the trade as a profit, much less paying taxes, recording fees etc. That is what they did when they pumped $5 trillion into the financial sector to prop it up so that the world would not see how stupid and greedy our financial geniuses were and how relentless they were at pursuing and creating even fake money at the expense of the welfare of the entire world?

The problem is not that we are broke. The problem is that Wall Street has our money and won’t give it back. The problem is that they did it by tricking citizens into fake deals (stealing the purse) and making a culture out of life-styles of debt. The problem is that they took the one asset consumers had left — their house — and inflated the apparent value using sophisticated means far beyond the ability of the understanding of the average person, and then had these hapless people sign onto deals that were “backed” by property that was not worth half of the deal. Both the borrowers and the investors got stuck with the same lie.

So, Mr. President and the rest of your genius dream team of economic advisers, I realize that you are trying to do your best to avoid drama. I realize that you are trying to prop up an unsustainable economic infrastructure in which more money was created ($600 trillion) than we could ever hope to cover in a world where the real amount of government issued currency is less than 1/1oth that amount. And I realize there is no precedent for what has occurred here and the magnitude of the problem. It is brand new in human history. It is a fraud of unimaginable scope. But using old techniques of trying to kick the can down the road is not going to work. It can’t.

The likelihood is that if you let the bubble burst, which most people don’t realize exists, but investors are starting to get nervous about, the real loss is going to fall on the financial players who created this mess and who incidentally are holding the real money; the counter-party trades will neutralize a large part of the apparent money bubble that looks like it is there (but isn’t); and demonstrating that you are dealing with truth and reality will allow people, companies and government to deal with reality instead of maintaining the fantasy of Wall Street infallibility. THAT is when people will have confidence — when they know they are being told the truth.

If you have guts in addition to hope, if you have grit in addition to steadiness, if you have imagination in addition to your formidable intelligence and knowledge, you know that eventually REALITY will govern whether we like it or not. The quicker we get there the fewer people will suffer. The faster we take the brave steps amidst loud crises of “traitor!” the faster will have REAL RECOVERY. There is nothing in the world that is ever going to bring home prices back to where they were quoted when these deals were done. We ALL know that. The economy cannot really recover until median income and housing needs are fixed.

The goal here is not to assess blame but to QUICKLY spread the risk of loss in a fair and equitable way — just like derivatives were supposedly doing but in the hands of liars and cheats did quite the opposite. Right now the consumer is taking the brunt of this in debt, taxes, expenses that can’t be met and loss of self-esteem. American ingenuity has taken a direct hit and it is up to you, Mr. President to revive it in a wholesale shift, not in your favorite incremental steps.

NEIL F GARFIELD AUGUST 22, 2010 WWW.LIVINGLIES.WORDPRESS.COM


Filed under: foreclosure
Aug
22

REALITY and A NATION OF LAWS

I AM INCREASING IMPRESSED BY THE QUALITY OF WRITING AND THOUGHT OF OUR READERS. HERE’S ONE FROM RUEBEN NIEVES

August 21st, 2010
Dear John Q Public
I am concerned over the massive amounts of foreclosures that have plagued this nation, robbed homeowners of their equity and their homes by the predatory lending practices of the banks. Many of these foreclosures are done through “Trustee sales” which do not allow a hearing and a right to a jury trial.

I am concerned because the entities seeking this remedy are overwhelmingly federally chartered corporations created under acts of Congress for public and national purposes.

Several Supreme Court decisions have ruled that the activities of these type of corporations are governmental not propriety.

I am seeking help from the city of Sacramento based on my research to send a letter to the regulatory authorities—The Office of Thrift Supervision and The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to issue “Cease and Desist Order” to its members to use only Judicial Foreclosure which does not violate the 5th Amendment.

Most of these lenders are not making meaningful modifications. They would rather foreclose and affect everyone’s equity downward than modify the loans.

If the banks were required to go to court, the homeowner could raise affirmative defenses like unclean hands because most of the loans were inherently predatory because they were not intended to go to term but to be refinanced in a couple of years creating a revenue stream for the banks.

The city would be impacted by revenues tied to the sinking value of the homes through lower property taxes thus forcing severe budget shortfalls. If the regulatory authorities failed to comply with the cities demand, then the city could seek a writ of mandamus coupled with a preliminary injunction prohibiting banks from foreclosing until the legal issue as to their right to foreclose non judicially could be established.
On July 13th, 2010 I spoke before the city council of Sacramento. You can see my video plea on the website of the city of Sacramento. If there is anyone who can help stop these foreclosures with funding, you can contact me at reuben.nieves@yahoo.com I will send you a copy of my research.

Thank you

Reuben Nieves


Filed under: foreclosure
Aug
21

Securitization Searches: Devil and Details

I had occasion to respond to an inquiry and after reading it i thought this might help a few people on a number of levels. So here it is:

——–

August 20, 2010 by Neil F Garfield

HI there!. I received an inquiry that was forwarded to me about your “title review.” Since this has gone through several different people, I wanted to contact you directly. You placed your  $149 deposit for a securitization search, review, report, copies of relevant documents and strategic commentary. You were one of the first people to help us get started in launching a search tool for homeowners and their lawyers and we thank you for your support.

My guess is that somewhere in your junk mail folder you received further introductions and since we don’t sell things here to people who are not interested we didn’t follow-up. The $149 you paid was the down payment on the securitization search. We presumed that we could do that without a title search but we were wrong. So we gave our customers two options: Either fill out the GTC Registration form which is a lot of work, or order the loan specific title search, review, report, copies of relevant documents and strategic commentary.

Despite the money we advanced for some very expensive subscriptions that only banks have (normally) costing thousands of dollars per month, and despite our own developing database, we discovered that the pretender lenders had been playing with the loan descriptions. What that means is that there we found that there were “alleged: pools that might or might not have been actually formed, but which were referred to in securitization documents as though they had been created. Close examination frequently reveals that the “Trust” or whatever was often never actually created even though investors received evidence of the issuance of a bond that they had “purchased” that entitled them to the receivables from the loans in one particular pool. It was a shell game/ponzi scheme.

THAT was only part of the problem. The rest was that there were multiple pools in which loans answering the same general description were claimed to be in one or more tranches of the pool. And in most cases NONE of the descriptions precisely matches the actual loan description we were looking for. So we ended up scratching various parts of our anatomy, realizing that the game was on and that we were not dealing with a series of individual events, but rather, on on-going process in which the parts were always moving and the pretender lenders kept their options open at all times because they were constantly “repackaging” loans into new “pools”, CDOs, special purpose vehicles, synthetic CDOs, cred it default swaps sales (the equivalent of buying the loan) etc..

And THAT was only part of the problem: we then discovered that there was literally NO PAPER trail on virtually ANY loan. That means you have a “Trustee” claiming to represent investors who own asset backed bonds which in turn supposedly own the loans, but the loans were never transferred in the first place. So legally, in the public records, the only lender was the one who appeared at your loan closing as the lender, and who also appeared as the Payee on your promissory note. Most of those companies are out of business. None of them, including MERS claim to have any interest in the obligation, note or mortgage. But that has not stopped the pretender lender from fabricating with low-tech solutions the “original”documents. So we are left with an empty security document, a note payable to nobody because the original lender was being funded by a third party, and an obligation hanging like a dangling modifier, if you remember your high school English. It’s an obligation with no where to go because the real party on the other end keeps changing. The only party entitled to enforce anything against you is someone who can honestly say that they advanced money that was used or accepted by you as a benefit and that they have not received the money back.

The services we subscribed to and which told us we can find anything in a snap if we pay all this money over-stated their capability, in part because they were not actually automated and in part because they depended upon the voluntary reporting of the underwriters. So we had the issue of getting all the precise details of each transaction.

That means that without charge you can fill out this form: —> GTC Registration Form For Seach Services
Or purchase this service — > CLICK THIS LINK TO DO LOAN SPECIFIC TITLE RECORDS SEARCH, ANALYSIS AND COMMENTARY

THEN AFTER YOU HAVE DONE THAT YOU CAN COMPLETE THE SECURITIZATION SEARCH BY PURCHASING THIS SERVICE WHICH IS EXCLUSIVE TO EARLY PEOPLE WHO SUPPORTED THIS EFFORT: —>COMPLETION OF SPECIAL OFFER SUBSCRIPTION FOR SECURITIZATION SEARCH (YOUR $149) IS TREATED AS A THREE MONTH SUBSCRIPTION MEMBERSHIP.

Hopefully this clears things up for you. I know it is complicated, but we didn’t make it that way — Wall Street did.

Regards,
Neil


Filed under: foreclosure