Foreclosure Fraud 101 – How (not) to Fraudclose on a Default When There is No Default in Order to Steal Money from the Government (FDIC)
California Homeowner in Foreclosure Wins Quiet Title – It’s a Free House!

Well, just when I thought I’d seen everything…
A Riverside, California homeowner, Denise Saluto, who was in foreclosure filed for quiet title against Deutsche Bank National Trust, as trustee for Long Beach Mortgage, and its successors and/or assigns, and Washington Mutual Bank, successor in interest to Long Beach Mortgage Company… and won by default. (And Washington Mutual, turned into JPMorgan Chase.)
That’s right… neither Deutsche Bank nor JPMorgan Chase responded to the lawsuit.
When this happens, the Plaintiff still has to present his or her case, but it’s unopposed so it’s not exactly the highest of hurdles. After considering the evidence presented by the Plaintiff, the court entered judgment in favor of Plaintiff and against the Defendants, thereby voiding her Trustee Sale and the Deed of Trust. So, presto-change-o… no more mortgage… as in… it’s a free and clear house! Ms. Saluto may still owe the debt, but the mortgage company is now like Visa or Mastercard, insecure because they’re unsecured. And no one wants to be unsecured, especially in bankruptcy court.
Now, some will say that Deutsche Bank/JPMorgan Chase didn’t respond because they just forgot or whatever, but I don’t know whether that’s the case or not. In fact, when their lawyer tried using this excuse, the judge was quick to point out that the file had been with the lawyer for NINE MONTHS before any efforts were made to get the default judgment set aside.
When a party loses by default like that, assuming it was an oversight of some kind, they usually appeal the decision as soon as they’re notified of the judgment by coming back into court to ask the judge to set aside the default judgment, claiming they weren’t properly served or something like that. And depending on the reason they defaulted, and almost certainly in the case of a bank and a foreclosure, the judge will set aside the default judgment and let the case start over.
As a matter of fact, if it’s within six months of the default, and the lawyer takes the blame, the court MUST vacate the default judgment. It’s actually the only time you ever get to see a lawyer willingly accept blame for anything.
So, in this case, as one would think, Deutsche Bank did appeal the decision, but the thing is, they waited almost a year to do so, in legalese… the bank, “failed to establish diligence in bringing their motion for relief.”
“On February 5, 2009, Saluto filed a complaint against JPMorgan Chase Bank and Deutsche Bank to set aside a trustee sale for violations of title 15 of the United States Code section 1601 et seq. and 12 Code of Federal Regulations part 226.1 et seq., to cancel the trustee deed upon sale, and for quiet title.
Defendants failed to respond to the complaint, and on March 16, 2009, Saluto served a request for entry of default on defendants. The next day, Saluto filed the proofs of service and the request for default with the trial court. The trial court entered default on each defendant on March 17, 2009.” An entry of default just means that the defendant cannot file a response. The Plaintiff still must file a “default judgment package,” which contains evidence supporting their claims.
In July 2009, Saluto filed a request for entry of default judgment, and on December 15, 2009, default judgments were entered.

Then… a year went by before…
“On June 15, 2010, defendants filed a motion to set aside the defaults and default judgments under section 473, subdivision (b), which allows relief from an action taken against a party through mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect when the motion for relief is made “within a reasonable time, in no case exceeding six months, after the judgment, dismissal, order, or proceeding was taken.”
To support the motion, defendants filed the declarations of their attorney, Jenny L. Merris; a vice-president of Deutsche Bank, Ronaldo Reyes; and a research analyst of JPMorgan Chase Bank, Harold Galo. The declarations stated that defendants had no record of receiving service and were not aware of the lawsuit until March 2010.”
So, on October 28, 2010, Judge Mark E. Johnson heard the banks’ motion.
At the hearing, Judge Johnson stated:
“I’m going to deny the motion. I do believe that I am outside of the six-month limit. . . . I also don’t see the due diligence. So if you want to re-bring it under [section] 473.5, I will look at that, but at least as to this ground I have before me, [section] 473 subdivision (b), I’m denying the motion.
On December 3, 2010, defendants filed a motion to set aside the defaults under section 473.5. Defendants submitted new declarations of Reyes, Galo, and Merris in support of the motion.”
Deutsche Bank claimed the bank had “no actual knowledge of this action until in or around early April 2010 when JPMorgan Chase Bank’s counsel informed it that Plaintiff had recorded the Default Court Judgment against this property.” Deutsche Bank’s declaration claimed, “This was the first time that Deutsche Bank became aware of the existence of this action.”
JPMorgan Chase claimed that it “had no actual knowledge of this action until on or around March 2010 when JPMorgan was informed that Plaintiff was seeking to refinance the property . . . and that Plaintiff had recorded the Default Court Judgment against this property.”
This time, Commissioner Barkley granted the motion brought by the banks thereby vacating the default judgment the Plaintiff had obtained about a year earlier. Saluto then appealed the decision to California’s Court of Appeals, Fourth District, Division Two, contending that the defendants’ motion under section 473.5 was, in essence, a motion for reconsideration, and defendants failed to comply with the procedural requirements of section 1008. (Don’t worry about section 1008 for a moment.) Saluto also argued that Commissioner Barkley simply got it wrong, and that the default judgment should have been upheld.
Now, this gets kind of technical, but Section 473.5 says that when service of a summons fails to result in actual notice to a defendant in time to defend the action… and therefore a default or default judgment is entered… the defendant may serve and file a notice of motion to set aside the default or default judgment and for leave to defend the action.
Section 473.5 says that the notice of motion has to be served and filed within a reasonable time, but not exceeding the earlier of two years after entry if a default judgment, or 180 days after service of a written notice that the default or default judgment has been entered.

Basically, because JPMorgan Chase Bank said it discovered the default in March 2010 and Deutsche Bank said it discovered the default in early April 2010, but they didn’t file their motion under section 473.5 until December 2010, the appeals court found no evidence that the two banks acted “diligently” in bringing their motion for relief under section 473.5, and therefore the trial court should not have granted the motion that set aside the default judgment.
As far as complying with the procedural requirements of section 1008, mentioned above, the court said the following…
“Because we have found reversible error based on defendants‟ failure to establish diligence in bringing their motion for relief, Saluto’s additional contentions are moot.”
So, that’s that for Denise Saluto… she won, quieted her title and now she has no mortgage on her home. She may still owe the money to some entity, but the debt is unsecured… like credit card debt… whatever she owes it’s no longer tied to her home.
Pretty amazing, right? If you would have asked me last week, I would have said there’s absolutely no chance that filing for quiet title will result in your loan being unsecured. And I would have been entirely wrong because Denise Saluto just did it.

And again… did it happen because Deutsche Bank and JPMorgan Chase somehow let this slip through the cracks? Maybe. Or, was it that the banks weren’t prepared to defend the quiet title action… as in, they couldn’t find the note, or the assignment was a forged and fraudulent mess.
Honestly, I have no idea what happened here, and I don’t think anyone else can know for sure either. All we can know is what happened.
So, what could happen next?
I started thinking about what could happen from here for Denise Saluto. Would she simply walk away with her free and clear home and that would be it? Or, would the banks have another move on the chessboard that would reverse the decision and cost Denise her home?
I called around to various lawyers and other experts, asking if the banks could somehow get the decision reversed? The answer: No. The decision by the Court of Appeal is essentially final. Sure, the California Supreme Court could overturn a decision by this court, but I’m told that the chances of that happening are so remote that it’s not worth considering.
So, there are no legal maneuvers that will change what’s happened, but I can’t believe that the bankers are just going to give up and go home on this either. Maybe they will, but maybe they won’t, right? So, what else could happen next to threaten the title to Denise’s home?
Ooops, we forgot… we sold it to someone else?
I’m not saying this is going to happen, but it occurred to me that a “new owner” of Denise’s note could show up on the scene with paperwork showing they bought it from the prior owner, either Deutsche Bank or JPMorgan Chase, before all this transpired.
You know, like a surprise owner that just happens to have appropriately dated paperwork showing that they are the owners of Denise’s loan and therefore the quiet title doesn’t apply… she’s behind on her payments, and therefore they are moving to foreclose.
Would this be fraud? I would certainly think so. Would that stop the bankers from doing it? I would certainly think not. And would it work and cause Denise to lose her home?
The lawyers, however, all tell me the answer is no. None of that would happen… it simply wouldn’t work.

So, Denise Saluto does now own her home free and clear. However, it seems very likely that she still owes the amount of her mortgage as an unsecured debt. Lawyers have told me that she could potentially have the debt discharged in a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, but it would depend on a few things lining up just right, including the value of her home being less than the homestead exemption.
In general, a judgment creditor cannot force the sale of your home unless your home can be sold for an amount that would satisfy all superior liens PLUS the amount of your homestead exemption. It looks to me like equity of up to $75,000 is exempt if you’re under 65 years of age, and $150,000 if over 65, and if you’re married it’s higher still.
But, as with everything having to do with the law, there are plenty of caveats, limitations and nuances. I found many of them in the California Code of Civil Procedure Section 704.730, but as always, check with an attorney before assuming anything because my experience has been that just because it says one thing doesn’t mean that it doesn’t mean another.
Okay, so what does this mean to me?
Well, in my opinion… that’s an interesting question.
For one thing, filing quiet title did work out well for Denise Saluto, and since I would never have predicted it happening in her case, I’m certainly not going to tell you it won’t happen again in yours, because as I said earlier… I don’t know why it happened. It might have slipped through cracks, or might have been caused by other factors.
Ever since yesterday when I started reading the decision by the California Court of Appeal, I’ve been trying to come up with a reason not to file one myself.
The lawyers I spoke with all told me that you have to have legitimate doubt about who holds title to your home, or else you’d be filing fraudulently, but I don’t see that as being a problem for me or anyone else in this country whose been paying attention to the news these last few years.
I mean, since I do know that Mickey Mouse has been signing the Assignment of the Deed of Trust in most cases, and Donald Duck has been notarizing it, and since the President of the United States recently told the country that there have been thousands of fraudulent foreclosures, and with countless lawsuits alleging that Mortgage-backed securities are in fact, less filling, as opposed to tasting great… let’s just say that I would not want to be asked under oath who owns my note.
As far as my having legitimate doubts as to the holder of title to my home, I could assure any court under oath that when it comes to my hizzle, my doubt is rizzle… it’s legit. Word.
(That was me trying to be “hip,” but let’s not tell my daughter because she will be so embarrassed.)
This decision got me thinking about all sorts of possibilities, truth be told. Like, what if many thousands of people all filed for quiet title around the same time… like maybe a million homeowners… LOL. I would definitely have to go pay-per-view to see that shiznit go down.
If JPMorgan Chase and Deutsche were caught bo janglin in Denise’s case, I’d have to wager that many thousands of quiet title filings would leave them in a tizzle. (Oops, I did it again.)
So, realizing that I wouldn’t be the only one thinking this way, I went online to see how many sites there were offering to teach homeowners how to file quiet title, or represent homeowners who want to file for quiet title… and not surprisingly, there were plenty of them… some want thousands of dollars for their services, and some want anywhere from many hundreds to a couple thousand dollars for a kit that claims to help you do it yourself.
And because, even though I think it’s a long shot, I don’t think it’s more of a long shot than winning the lottery or having a slot machine pay off, so I got together with some lawyers and other experts and am putting together a comprehensive guide to filing quiet title, which won’t cost more than $100, and will offer everything the more expensive versions have to offer, and probably even more.
Will it work? I have no idea, and I’d have to guess that the answer will be no a lot more often than it’ll be yes. But, if you’ve decided to try it, at least this way you won’t have to spend a lot of money doing so. For a hundred bucks, you can spin the wheel and if it doesn’t work… oh well. And if it does… well, then… Woohoo!
(Look for the new site in the next few days at www.filequiettitle.com and www.quiettitlecalifornia.com)
If you want more information on the Mandelman Guide to Filing Quiet Title, email me at mandelman@mac.com and I’ll send you an email response with more details. The guide will be packed with easy to understand insight and instructions, tricks and tips, rules and limitations, and even sample templates to make it easy to file your own complaint with the court.
It will help you do it right… do it cheap… and do it safely. And I’ll be consulting with lawyers in each state, so I’ll have the specifics for your state included, if applicable.
I’m not saying you should do it… and after Denise Saluto’s outcome, I’m sure as heck not saying you shouldn’t. All I am saying is that I’m going to make sure that you don’t need to spend a bunch of money trying it. And it shouldn’t become the primary strategy to keep your home, because no one knows why it worked in the Saluto case… or whether it will work for you.
But, it does prove one thing fo’ shizzle… when it comes to the foreclosure crisis, no one knows what will happen tomorrow, because the only thing that’s consistent about this mess is its glaring and scandalous inconsistencies.
Mandelman out.
Toxic Titles | Title Companies Limit Ability to Use Deed-in-Lieu as a Remedy
- Freddie Mac Bulletin NUMBER: 2012-5 | Servicers Must Waive All Rights to Pursue Deficiency from Short Sales and Deed-In-Lieu of Foreclosure
- BRYLLAW LITIGATION: First Quiet-Title Order in Virginia Voiding Deed of Trust (by default)
- NY TOXIC TITLES | Herkimer County Clerk to Nationwide Title Clearing “MERS Assignments and Satisfactions Do NOT Comply with all the Legal Requirements Per NY Law”
MUST SEE TV: WA State Supreme Court Hears Arguments in Case Against MERS

“May a party be a lawful ‘beneficiary’ under Washington’s Deed of Trust Act if it never held the promissory note secured by the Deed of Trust?”
That’s the key question the Washington State’s Supreme Court heard arguments in the potentially pivotal case, Bain v. Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, et al and Selkowitz v. Little “Litton” Loan Servicing, LP, et al. It’s also a form of the same question that’s been asked by countless homeowners and their lawyers as they’ve fought to prevent their homes from being lost to foreclosure over the last 3-4 years.
Go back in time fewer than five years and you’d be hard pressed to find anyone who had ever heard of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, but today the acronym “MERS,” is a household dirty word in American homes from coast-to-coast.
Although the mortgage banking industry would say that they created Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems for the benefit of mankind, there’s no question that its creation also provided the industry with a way to avoid having to pay the costs involved in recording mortgage transfers. Lenders permanently list MERS as the “mortgagee of record,” and by doing so the avoid the expense of recording any subsequent transfers.
MERS makes the claim that it is both an “agent” of the lender and the “mortgagee,” but the practice has fueled a firestorm of debate over a wide range of legal issues, and although many courts seem to have accepted the MERS way… it’s often not clear whether such decisions were actually made in favor of MERS, or just against homeowners not making their mortgage payments.
What MERS does is operate a computer database that’s supposed to track mortgage servicing and the ownership rights of mortgage loans throughout the U.S. And when I first heard that explanation, I thought… well, that sounds incredibly boring.
Frankly, as a layperson… the whole thing is kind of insane, especially when you stop to consider that although MERS would readily admit that it doesn’t own any mortgage loans… it is also the recorded owner of over half of the nation’s residential real estate. At least I think that’s right… every time I try to understand it better, the whole thing confuses me and then I have to take a nap.

The best way to understand the issue I’ve seen…
The video below puts you in the courtroom to watch as both sides of the debate present oral arguments related to MERS’ involvement in the foreclosure process in front of the nine justices of the Washington State Supreme Court.
I found it fascinating to watch… almost as good as an episode of “Boston Legal,” in fact, the MERS lawyer kind of reminded me of Bill Shatner’s character on that show, Denny Crane.
You’ll watch the plaintiff’s attorneys who are representing homeowners at risk of foreclosure argue that MERS violates the state’s Deed of Trust Act, among other things… followed by the attorney flown in from Minnesota to appear “pro hac vice,” on behalf of defendant MERS, who basically argues that MERS isn’t the problem no matter what because no one ever needs to know who owns their loan.
I’m paraphrasing, of course, but you’ll see what I’m saying when you watch it. It’s not quite 45 minutes long, but it feels shorter… and afterwards, I’ll pick up the discussion below and share my thoughts on the matter.
~~~
A simplified view of how we got here…
The foreclosure crisis put MERS in the national spotlight as it started filing foreclosure lawsuits on behalf of financiers and servicers against millions of American families.
These people losing homes to something using the name MERS had been told by President Obama that because of his new government program, Making Home Affordable, they would be able to get their loans modified and hence save their homes from foreclosure simply by calling their bank… assuming, of course, they weren’t “irresponsible borrowers.”
So, believing that he was both smart and “a man of the people,” they did what he said they should do… but he wasn’t, and it didn’t work.
But, more than just “didn’t work,” the experience was nothing short of torturous, and in fact, I’m quite certain that many who lived through it, would have jumped at waterboarding as an alternative.
Lawyers representing homeowners who had clearly been wronged tried turning to the courts to enforce the HAMP guidelines, but to no avail. So, they went after anything and everything… TILA/RESPA… MERS and the failings of securitization… and most recently robo-signing related allegations are all the rage…
“I’ll take one securitization audit, and one forensic… oh… and give me one of those fraud reports too… to-go, please… how much? Oh my. Do you take Texaco cards?”
The thinking was obvious… judges and everyone else could see them coming a mile away… cause enough trouble for the servicers and they’d offer to modify loans and hence save homes. And soon… when even that wasn’t working… well, then even just delaying the loss of a home was something of a win, right?

Right… wrong… it didn’t matter… homeowners not making their mortgage payments was the issue at hand, as far as the vast majority of judges went, and today, although the battle rages on fueled by words like “forgery and fraud,” the outcomes are fundamentally the same as far as homeowners at risk of foreclosure are concerned.
Oh sure, some states became better than others, and bankruptcy courts seemed to fare better than others, but homeowners became more and more confused as courts of appeals, in some cases, tooketh away, what lower courts had given.
The OCC turned out to be an acronym for the Office of Ceremonial Complacency.
Many states today have bills on their legislative calendars that could help in some ways, but banking lobbyists don’t give up a single yard without a fight.
And finally it was OCCUPY… the blunt force edition of the foreclosure defense game, but again, to most… sort of a delay with a side of pepper spray.
So… now what? What’s next? The UCC 9 v. UCC 3 argument? Okay, fair enough. Not as exciting as securitization fail and REMICs exploding all over the place, but I’m in… why not?
I don’t like it any more than anyone else, but the fact is that in 2011… a year during which in some states like New Jersey and Nevada, foreclosures were said to be down year over year by something like 80 percent, even with the servicers waiting for the settlement to be reached so they could pick up their “Get Out of Fail Free” card… even with all of the things that caused delays… foreclosures were essentially flat when compared with 2010. Absent anything new that I’m not seeing… can you imagine how bad this year and next are going to be?
Well, of course, there is the $2,000 if you were foreclosed on in 2009-2011… do I have that right? I think so, but every time I type that out my mind says… no, that can’t be right… and then it is.
So, in the Bain case you watched on the video… what happens if the court sides with the plaintiffs? Says that MERS does violate the state’s Deed of Trust Act… does that save homes in a way that I’m not seeing. Or, will the servicers just start foreclosing judicially, as they’ve done in response in Hawaii, for example.
So… I called a couple of lawyers licensed to practice in the State of Washington to ask if their views of the Bain case confirmed mine… and they did.
Please understand what I’m trying to say, because I’m not saying everyone shouldn’t fight this year and next and next and next… and harder than ever, for that matter. I know I will…
BUT, WAIT A MINUTE… some changes have come to pass.
Like what? Like, the new servicer standards, for one.
Remember… the servicers and their propensity to ignore the toothless HAMP guidelines is one of the main reasons we’re all here, right? Well, now we have new servicer guidelines that are part of the settlement agreement between the 49 AGs and the five largest servicers that doesn’t quite exist as yet, but I’m willing to believe if you are.
Ever since the day that the Obama administration prematurely asseverated that the AG settlement had arrived, I’ve had only one thought on my mind… what happens if servicers don’t adhere to the new standards?
Is there a private right of action? I don’t think so… they’re not even laws, right? So what good are ANOTHER set of servicing guidelines related to loan modifications that no one can enforce when they’re ignored? We’ve already got a perfectly good set of servicing guidelines related to loan modifications that no one can enforce when ignored… they’re called HAMP guidelines and they’re like new, hardly used at all. If they were a car they might be a 2009, but they’d have no miles on them and still come with the full factory warranty and that new car smell.
Why are we troubling the servicers with having to come up with another set of guidelines they don’t have to follow? Don’t they have enough on their plates already? I mean… they’ve got all those foreclosures still to get handled… and without several of their biggest mills, like Stern and Baum.
Then there’s designing the next phase of document creation, that’s not going to be done in a day or two. And I hear that some servicers may actually have to get things notarized… no, I mean for real… actually notarized.

I think we should just call the five servicers involved and tell them not to bother with the new guidelines… we don’t need them.
Either that, or we should put some pressure on our AGs and our state legislatures to give the new standards or guidelines the force of law… you know… including a private right of action for homeowners, and a provision for attorneys fees.
What are the banking lobbyists going to say in response to that? There will never be lending again in this state? No chance. Plus, even if the new standards were made into state law, it would be very easy for the banks to not get sued and lose… just don’t break the new law and follow the standards you agreed to follow in the settlement, which you said you’d follow… so, what’s the problem?
To the AGs and state legislators, I would put forth that we don’t need new rules that lack teeth… that no one who agreed to them has to follow. We’ve got plenty of those kinds of rules related to loan modifications already. Why would the AGs oppose taking the terms and making them law?
I realize the states are gong to have “independent monitors,” but I’m not worried about the monitors getting screwed over and losing their homes… monitors aren’t being damaged by rules being broken, it’s the homeowners, silly. They’re the ones that need to be able to assert their rights under the agreement.
And to the homeowners not at risk of foreclosures just yet… forget about the deadbeat cracks, shouldn’t any rules of any federal program or settlement with our government be followed? Period? Of course they should. So, since we KNOW the last set were ignored, let’s make these new standards into a law with a private right of action and a provision for attorneys fees and let’s see what happens from there.
Maybe with such a law and attorneys fees clause, the trial bar will get interested, and they’ve got a lobby in DC that’s pretty effective, I hear.
I know… there are allowable margins for error in the settlement agreement, and extended timeframes for compliance… but, so what? Whatever we’ve got, make it a law… something that must be adhered to, or consequences might result.
Embrace incremental improvements…
If you’re waiting for a BIG BANG, you’re going to be waiting for a long time. It’s become obvious that, as I’ve been saying for so long I’m tired of saying it… it’s a game of inches.
And it’s a simple game. You hit the ball… you catch the ball. Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose and sometimes it rains.
Well, some things are actually better. Over 80 percent of trial modifications become permanent modifications today… that didn’t used to be true. And I’ve checked with lawyers all over the country and they’re seeing what I’m seeing… better modifications… and principal reductions more and more.
Bank of America has started granting principal reductions as part of their loan mods. I’ve seen eight in the last two weeks, and a dozen lawyers from around the country, including Bruce Levitt in New Jersey, have reported the same thing. And how about BofA’s new rent-for-three-years-if-you-can’t-afford-it-any-more program? I call it a soft landing.
And Ocwen is offering shared appreciation modifications (“SAM”) and they’re offering quite a few of them by the way. But they are still awaiting approval from several states… it’s a requirement, I’m told.
And look… I’m not just saying this stuff to protect homeowners from bankers… I’m saying it to protect the bankers and our society too. I just don’t believe many people can take another failed program that happened because no one followed the rules. Last time, well… that’s one thing… it wasn’t pretty, but we made it through.

Not to put too fine a point on it but there are more than a few programs I could reference… like, dozens… that have failed so spectacularly that… and I do mean this literally… their reported outcomes would have been identical had they been administered by farm animals or house pets. And that would be funny, were it not so entirely accurate.
Allow the same exact things to happen back-to-back and I’m not at all sure… all bets could be off.
Or… tell me I’m wrong. I’m always willing to be wrong. I actually like being wrong because I always learn something… and it happens so infrequently these days… lol.
Mandelman out.
Hawaii | Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeals In re: MARGERY KANAMU-KALEHUANANI KEKAUOHA-ALISA – The court voided the sale of the Appellant’s property and awarded her treble damages of $417,761.66
- Kim v. JP Morgan Chase Bank | Court Sets Aside Foreclosure Sale Where Assignee Of Mortgage Failed To Record Its Interest Prior To Sale
- Can it Be? YES! Foreclosure Sale Set Aside After a Third Party Had Purchased the Property
- California Victory! Court Renders Judgment in Plaintiffs’ Favor Voiding the Deed of Trust Plus Statutory Damages of $16K
Action Alert | Washington SB6199 Makes it a Felony to Claim Actual Holder Status of a Promissory Note When Not
- Court of Appeals of Ohio – HSBC BANK USA v. THOMPSON AFFIRMED – HSBC Failed to Establish that it was the Holder of a Promissory Note Secured by a Mortgage
- Promissory Note Fraud | Bondi Capitulates, Admits Promissory Note Transfers Invalidated by Fraud
- Action Alert | The Case of The Disappearing Docket Entry re: Alleged Original Note & Mortgage
BRYLLAW LITIGATION: First Quiet-Title Order in Virginia Voiding Deed of Trust (by default)
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.
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 Veal, the 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.
Governor Abercrombie Signs SB 651 – Toughest Foreclosure Bill in Nation NOW LAW!
At 4:00 PM today, May 5, 2011, Governor Neil Abercrombie signed into law SB 651, unquestionably the toughest foreclosure mediation law in the nation. The new law includes a moratorium on what are referred to as Part 1, non-judicial foreclosures, and amends Part 2, nonjudicial foreclosures to no longer require the borrower’s signature on the Deed of Trust.
Those are important changes for homeowners in Hawaii because most of the large mainland banks have been pursuing the Part 1 non-judicial foreclosures, which offer the fewest consumer protection provisions. Going forward, banks will have to seek to foreclose under Part 2 non-judicial rules, or follow the rules of the judicial foreclosure process. But, that’s not all that’s sure to make national news…
The new law makes mediation prior to foreclosure MANDATORY if requested by the borrower, and requires mortgage servicers attempting to foreclose to submit to the mediation board, 14 days prior to mediation, proof that the chain of title is intact, including the “promissory note, any endorsements, assignments, allonges, amendments or riders to the note evidencing the mortgage debt.”
Usually, the governor signs bills over the summer months, but Sen Roz Baker, who sponsored the bill along with Rep. Bob Herkes, had told me the day of the bill’s passage that she would be contacting the governor as soon as it had been enrolled to his office and asking him to sign it immediately. Quite obviously, she was successful because Governor Abercrombie signed the bill into law just a two days after it was passed by the legislature, which feels like some sort of record… although I don’t really know if that’s the case.
The question on the mind of those familiar with the situation is, how will the banks handle the new law governing Hawaii’s foreclosures in the future. Undoubtedly, many in the financial industry are holding meetings to try to figure out how to proceed under the new law.
With Part 1 non-judicial foreclosure no longer an option, they could file under the Part 2 rules, but should the homeowner request dispute resolution through mediation, the servicers must get their ducks in a row, and that may not be something many can do. And under the new law, should a servicer be deemed not to be negotiating in good faith, there are serious sanctions that could be imposed. (I suppose they could try robo-signing lost note affidavits, but or manufacturing other documents, but that’s probably a bad idea.)
The other alternative is to file for a judicial foreclosure, which requires a judge to hear the case and ultimately grant the foreclosure, and all you have to do is take one look at the State of Florida’s courts, with their back-logs and judges refusing to rubber stamp foreclosures without the proper documentation having been provided by the servicers… and you’ll see why servicers might be hesitant to taker that route.
There is a third option, of course… and it’s the one that would have made all of this unnecessary… they could contact borrowers and agree to modify loans so people can stay in their homes, assuming they can afford a modified payment. I call this “preventing preventible foreclosures,” and it needs to be done in all 50 states. I think it’s worth noting that, had the banks taken this approach from the beginning, it’s quite likely the new law wouldn’t have been necessary.
The fact of the matter is that banks have been exceedingly difficult to deal with, treating borrowers poorly, keeping homeowners calling on hold for hours, repeatedly losing paperwork, failing to live up to promises of modification, foreclosing while borrowers are still under consideration for a modification, failing to inform borrowers of the reason for being denied… the list longer than my arm. Servicer behavior has been so bad, that several states are suing major banks for loan modification fraud.
So, Hawaii’s new foreclosure law is the toughest in the country today, and hopefully will become a model for other states (which is I’m sure the financial industry’s greatest fear.) It remains to be seen how the industry will respond, but with governor now having signed the bill into law, we’ll know soon enough.
Perhaps it will force the bankers to do what they should of done from the beginning, and perhaps the other 49 states will follow suit… and perhaps this will one day be seen as the beginning of the end of this country’s foreclosure crisis.
The people of Hawaii should be very proud of their politicians today… they joined together and accomplished something very good for the people and the state’s economy… and they did it quickly and without undue influence by industry lobbyists. And these days, that’s unheard of and nothing short of miraculous.
So, I hate to even ask, but do you suppose the rest of the country could borrow them to run the federal government for a while… you don’t have to answer now… just thinking out loud over here.
Mandelman out.
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In Re Walker, Part Deux – March 3rd, 2011, may just be a HUGE day for California Homeowners
So, when we left our intrepid hero, one Mr. Ricki Walker, back on May 27, 2010, the court had ruled, as I phrased it on Mandelman Matters at the time, that MERS could not foreclose and Citibank could not collect.
“Since no evidence of MERS’ ownership of the underlying note has been offered, and other courts have concluded that MERS does not own the underlying notes, this court is convinced that MERS had no interest it could transfer to Citibank. Since MERS did not own the underlying note, it could not transfer the beneficial interest of the Deed of Trust to another. Any attempt to transfer the beneficial interest of a trust deed without ownership of the underlying note is void under California law.”
As to Citibank’s claim, the Honorable Judge Ronald H. Sargis said…
“Since the claimant, Citibank, has not established that it is the owner of the promissory note secured by the trust deed, Citibank is unable to assert a claim for payment in this case.”
Now in “Normal World,” that would be the end of that, and angels would sing. But, this isn’t “Normal World”. We are living in “Banker World,” where things are rarely as they seem and everything is eligible for a do-over… if you’re a banker, that is.
Citibank’s lawyers, realizing that they were now in real trouble, woke up … got out of bed… dragged a comb across their collective head, and filed an objection saying that the Proof of Claim had not been properly served… or not served at all because they never received it… or that they didn’t calendar it properly. Or, maybe something else happened, your Honor, whatever will work with you.
You see, Citibank had never opposed the objection to the Proof of Claim.
The judge sort of rolled his eyes… because with electronic notice having been provided, there was no way Citi’s lawyers didn’t know about the borrower’s objection, but since he had left Citi “leave to amend” anyway… what the heck… re-deal the cards and let’s play a new hand.
So, the order granting Walker’s objection was vacated, prompting Ricki Walker’s attorney, Mitchell Abdullah, to file a new objection, in the hopes that Judge Sargis would once again have a chance to uphold the rule of law and change the playing field for homeowners in California.
This time, however, Citi’s lawyers have put their Top Gun type lawyer on the case, and so along with their opposition to Walker’s objection, they’ve submitted a declaration, written by William Hultman, Secretary and Treasurer of MERS, who you might remember from the recent opinion on MERS written by Judge Grossman in New York.
Okay, so… Judge Sargis is set to rule on Walker, Part Deux at 10:30 AM on March 3, 2011, in the United States Bankruptcy Court, Eastern District of California, Sacramento Division, Department E, Courtroom 33.
There seem to be a number of unanswered questions about this case, for example…
Mr. Walker signed the note on November 21, 2006. Citi claims that Blackrock employee endorsed the note sometime in 2007, but the endorsement of the note, by alonge, is not dated, uses different fonts, and according to the debtor expert, it appears fraudulent. In addition, Mr. Brown, the Blackrock employee, didn’t work there after 2006, according to an investigator hired by the defense, and since the trust wasn’t established until 2007… well, that creates a certain awkwardness.
The way I see it… for whatever that’s worth… Mitchell Abdullah’s chances look pretty darn good for a major win here, and Ricky Walker may just find himself a winner. But, even more importantly, should the decision go the way it went last time, California’s homeowners will finally have a decision that can begin to meaningfully address a significant amount of the injustice inherent to the state’s foreclosure crisis.
I’m not saying it will be “the answer,” but all journeys begin with a few steps, and this seems like this decision, assuming in favor of Ricki Walker, will represent more than just a few steps.
Ricki Walker and Mitchell Abdullah, by the way, are heros…
According to Ricki Walker’s bankruptcy filing:
- November 2006, he buys his home.
- He owes $1.473 million on his primary residence, first and second mortgages combined.
- His pre-petition amounts in arrears totals $262,851.
- He also has a rental property with two mortgages from our good friends at Bank of America.
- One is $697,615.
- The second is $73,000 and change.
- The home is said to be worth about #334,000.
- It rents for $1196 a month.
Walker owns his own business, Ricki Walker DBA Rick’s Janitorial. He has $5,884 in current cash assets, and his statement of total current monthly income shows that he makes $1198/month as of February 18, 2010.
He owes $1.473 million on his home. Monthly income of $1198 a month, owes $1.473 million.
And someone out there wants to blame the borrower for this? You’ve got to be kidding me.
~~~
If you’re the type that wants to blame the borrower here… let me ask you this:
If a 7 year-old boy shoots and kills his 5 year-old little brother, who do you blame:
- The 7 year-old for shooting the 5 year-old.
- The 5 year-old for being so annoying that his brother couldn’t stop himself from shooting him?
- Violent video games and television programs.
- Too much sugar.
- The Republicans.
Stay tuned… Thursday will be here before you know it. Cross your fingers, okay?
Mandelman out.
MERS —MERS—-CALIFORNIA CASE—-Rickie Walker Case ——California Mers—– Bk Ed 2010–FULL SERIES OF…
THE ANSWER TO FLORIDA’S FORECLOSURE CRISIS- Florida Statute 69.021
Bondholders’ committee.
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FLA State probes whether three law firms falsified foreclosure documents
Editor’s Note: The REAL BOTTOM LINE POINT is not some technicality wherein the paperwork wasn’t done right, which frankly is reason enough to deny the foreclosure, it is that this “technical” deficiency is “derived” from the fact that there is no note or mortgage or deed of trust that can be enforced. There might not even be any obligation at all if the creditor received payment in full.
LAWYERS TAKE NOTE: Go back to the law books. There are essential differences between the obligation that arises as a matter of law, the note that is offered as proof of the obligation, and the mortgage or deed of trust which is incident to the note.
Don’t dispute the obligation. It DID arise by operation of law. And by operation of law it may still exist, be partially extinguished or entirely extinguished. The documents signed at closing were only PART of the deal in a securitized residential loan. The borrower signs a note and the lender (investor) gets a bond (or evidence of a bond). [THE NOTE AND BOND HAVE DIFFERENT TERMS AND PARTIES BUT THE BOND REFERS TO SECURITIZATION DOCUMENTS THAT IN TURN DESCRIBE LOANS OF WHICH THE BORROWER'S LOAN IS ONE CLAIMED TO BE IN A POOL FORMING THE SOURCE OF REVENUE].
WITHOUT REAL DOCUMENTS SIGNED BY REAL PEOPLE WITH REAL AUTHORITY WITH REAL EFFECTIVE DATES, THE CHAIN IS BROKEN.
The borrower signs the note to a party whom the investor never heard of nor could the investor have uncovered the payee on the note because the information was withheld. The investor receives a bond which is an assignment of all right, title and interest to the receivables, but the security instrument is left where it always was — with the mortgage originator (the only one in county records with an interest). The lender (investor) doesn’t know the borrower and the borrower doesn’t know the lender, while each of them receives different terms and [promises from different parties.
But by operation of law, the originator’s interest is extinguished the moment it arises because it is in most cases a table funded loan in which the originator acted as a broker not a lender, and performed no underwriting tasks. So the legal obligation is extinguished at the same time that the legal obligation arises.
BUT that is not the end of the story.
The equitable powers of the court come into play to prevent unjust enrichment. So the next time a Judge says he doesn’t want the borrower to get a house for free, your answer should be you don’t want anyone to get the house for free. And if the Court wishes to exercise its equitable powers to allocate any equity in the home, after due consideration for the obligations of the borrowers and many others who promised to pay the bond holder then the party seeking affirmative relief must make a short plain statement of ultimate facts upon which relief could be granted and then prove their case.
What these law firms and fabrication mills are doing is fabricating and forging documents to create the illusion that those complexities don’t exist — a conclusion that every Judge would like to reach.
Ultimately, the die is cast — the Courts are required to consider the complexity and force the real party in interest, the party with standing to say they lost money on the deal and to show exactly how they did lose money — not merely point to the borrower’s non-payment.
The non-payment by borrower ONLY comes into play if the payment is due and the “creditor” can prove their standing and prove the obligation, complete with an accounting from beginning to end. The fact that the note SAYS the payment is due does not make the payment due — not if the payment was made or the obligation has been changed or satisfied.The note is evidence that must be proffered though the rules of evidence with authentication from competent witnesses or admission from the borrower. Don’t be so quick to admit that they have the note. Even if it is right in front of you, close examination may well reveal that it came off a color printer that morning.
The reason the die is cast is that ultimately this comes down to property law. The breaks in the chain of title render every title in whichever a securitized loan was involved susceptible to being identified as unmarketable or defective title. This threatens the entire marketplace. It is this issue that these firms and the large banks are continuing to finesse with their freshly color-printed “original” documents, indorsements, assignments and powers of attorney.
NEWS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
August 10, 2010
Contact: Sandi Copes
Phone: 850.245.0150
Sandi.Copes@myfloridalegal.com
FLORIDA LAW FIRMS SUBPOENAED OVER FORECLOSURE FILING PRACTICES
——————————————————————TALLAHASSEE, FL – Attorney General Bill McCollum today announced his office has launched three new investigations into allegations of unfair and deceptive actions by Florida law firms handling foreclosure cases.
The Attorney General’s Economic Crimes Division is investigating whether improper documentation may have been created and filed with Florida courts to speed up foreclosure processes, potentially without the knowledge or consent of the homeowners involved.
The new investigations name The Law Offices of Marshall C. Watson, P.A.; Shapiro & Fishman, LLP; and the Law Offices of David J. Stern, P.A. The law firms were hired by loan servicers to begin foreclosure proceedings when consumers were in arrears on their mortgages.
Because many mortgages have been bought and sold by different institutions multiple times, key paperwork involved in the process to obtain foreclosure judgments is often missing. On numerous occasions, allegedly fabricated documents have been presented to the courts in foreclosure actions to obtain final judgments against homeowners.
Thousands of final judgments of foreclosure against Florida homeowners may have been the result of the allegedly improper actions of the law firms under investigation.
The Attorney General’s Office is also investigating whether the law firms have created affiliated companies outside the United States where the allegedly false documents are being prepared and then submitted to the law firms for use.
Subpoenas have been served on each of the law firms listed above, and the investigations are ongoing.
For an official, downloadable photograph, please visit http://www.myfloridalegal.com/picture.html. Also, follow the Attorney General’s Office on Twitter! http://www.twitter.com/myfloridalegal
Filed under: CASES, CORRUPTION, Eviction, evidence, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, GTC | Honor, HERS, Investor, Mortgage, Motions, Pleading, trustee
FALSE DOCUMENTS, FALSE IDENTITIES
FALSE DOCUMENTS, FALSE IDENTITIES
I have been receiving a great deal of confidential information from sources that appear to be reliable. These people wish to maintain their privacy and have offered their information on condition of anonymity. This is a report concerning some of that information.
We have received information from several homeowners that when they went to the recording office and obtained copies of the documents on their loan closing they discovered that the note and mortgage (deed of trust) were dated before the loan closing. In some cases people are alleging an actual forgery and assert that they have handwriting experts to back them up. This alone is interesting. They don’t dispute the loan closing and they don’t dispute that they signed a note and mortgage. What they dispute is that the documents recorded are not the documents they signed.
A little more disturbing is the fact that several homeowners with specific knowledge are reporting forged and fabricated documents wherein the signature is actually computer-generated. Unlike previous reports on this blog which relate to the signatures of the various people supposedly representing the pretender lenders, these reports relate to the signatures of the homeowner.
Apparently there is technology that produces a false “true and correct copy” of any signature. According to the reports I am receiving, this technology is currently in widespread use by pretender lenders. The reasons for the use of forged signatures through computers may relate back to the original studies from three years ago where it was found that at least 40% of the notes were destroyed or lost. Somehow that issue has diminished over the last three years, but that doesn’t mean that it isn’t still true. (Another reason to follow our rule here “assume nothing, question everything.”)
There is a growing body of evidence that the pretender lenders and their attorneys are involved in a common practice of creating documents and forging the signatures. The witnesses produced afterwards are carefully coached on what to say. One specific case was pointed out by a reader in which the “witness” testified that they “would sign” and not that they “did sign.”
Additionally, I have a report that alleges that virtually all the names on foreclosure documents are false identities. In fact, this source alleges that several names in the mortgage electronic registration system are people who do not exist. The source was referring to the top management. I would also wonder whether the people who signed on behalf of MERS were false identities––in other words people who did not exist.
I have often said on these pages that MERS does not touch any of the documents or the money. I would maintain that that continues to be true, but there is an allegation from someone who has access to detailed information regarding the technology platforms in use that the actual fabrication of documents is managed by a common entity and electronically created off of a common technology platform. This has minimized but not eliminated cases in which the same homeowner and the same property is subject to multiple foreclosures from multiple sources.
The forgery of signatures through electronic devices is only a temporary stopgap until ERDS comes into widespread use, at which time a “digital signature,” will be all that is required. The problem here is that lawmakers have no idea what is involved in digital signatures and the many opportunities for moral hazard. Or, the other possibility is that they don’t care.
In any event it is worth repeating that the MERS technology platform is only a technology platform and does not involve people interacting with people. It involves people all over the country logging on to the MERS system and interacting with a computer. This interaction consists of both (A.) changing data at will and (B.) producing self-serving documents which purport to give any person designated in the computer session the right to sign on behalf of MERS or even other entities.
It is undoubtedly difficult to believe that the major financial institutions of this country are involved in the continuing fraud to literally steal the homes and property of tens of millions of our citizens. Yet that is the substance of the continuing flow of reports which I am receiving. What is particularly disturbing is that in no case have I seen any information that would contradict these reports in or out of court. Instead, it seems to be the common pattern of defense to finesse the issues of actual proof which would ordinarily be required in any foreclosure, particularly in a foreclosure that is disputed.
Filed under: CORRUPTION, evidence, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, Investor, Mortgage, Servicer, trustee Tagged: ERDS, false documents, false identities, First Data, MERS
CA BANKRUPTCY CT HOLDS THAT MERS CANNOT ASSIGN
“Since the claimant, Citibank, has not established that it is the owner of the promissory note secured by the trust deed, Citibank is unable to assert a claim for payment in this case.” Thus, any foreclosing party which is not the original lender which purports to claim payment due under the note and the right to foreclose in California on the basis of a MERS assignment does not have the right to do so under the principles of this opinion.
← The Bank Will Foreclose While Telling You They Will Modify
CALIFORNIA BANKRUPTCY COURT HOLDS THAT MERS CANNOT TRANSFER NOTE FOR WANT OF OWNERSHIP
Posted on July 15, 2010 by Foreclosureblues
Editor’s Note…This is the key that unlocks the door, it bears repeating. http://foreclosureblues.wordpress.com/
CALIFORNIA BANKRUPTCY COURT HOLDS THAT MERS CANNOT TRANSFER NOTE FOR WANT OF OWNERSHIP; CITES BOYKO, LANDMARK (KANSAS), LAMY, AND VARGAS CASES
JULY 9, 2010
The United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of California has issued a ruling dated May 20, 2010 in the matter of In Re: Walker, Case No. 10-21656-E-11 which found that MERS could not, as a matter of law, have transferred the note to Citibank from the original lender, Bayrock Mortgage Corp. The Court’s opinion is headlined stating that MERS and Citibank are not the real parties in interest.
The court found that MERS acted “only as a nominee” for Bayrock under the Deed of Trust and there was no evidence that the note was transferred. The opinion also provides that “several courts have acknowledged that MERS is not the owner of the underlying note and therefore could not transfer the note, the beneficial interest in the deed of trust, or foreclose on the property secured by the deed”, citing the well-known cases of In Re Vargas (California Bankruptcy Court), Landmark v. Kesler (Kansas decision as to lack of authority of MERS), LaSalle Bank v. Lamy (New York), and In Re Foreclosure Cases (the “Boyko” decision from Ohio Federal Court).
The opinion states: “Since no evidence of MERS’ ownership of the underlying note has been offered, and other courts have concluded that MERS does not own the underlying notes, this court is convinced that MERS had no interest it could transfer to Citibank. Since MERS did not own the underlying note, it could not transfer the beneficial interest of the Deed of Trust to another. Any attempt to transfer the beneficial interest of a trust deed without ownership of the underlying note is void under California law.”
Read that again: “Any attempt to transfer the beneficial interest of a trust deed without ownership of the underlying note IS VOID UNDER CALIFORNIA LAW.” This conclusion was based upon California law cited in the opinion that the note and the mortgage are inseparable, with the former being essential while the latter is “an incident”, and that an assignment of the note carries the mortgage with it, “while an assignment of the latter [the mortgage] alone is a nullity.” As MERS must own the note in order to assign the incident deed of trust, MERS is legally precluded from assigning the deed of trust for want of ownership of the note, and cannot assign the note in any event as it never owned it. MERS’ lack of ownership interest in promissory note is a matter of decided case law based on a record stipulation of MERS’ own lawyers in the MERS v. Nebraska Dept. of Finance decision.
This opinion thus serves as a legal basis to challenge any foreclosure in California based on a MERS assignment; to seek to void any MERS assignment of the Deed of Trust or the note to a third party for purposes of foreclosure; and should be sufficient for a borrower to not only obtain a TRO against a Trustee’s Sale, but also a Preliminary Injunction barring any sale pending any litigation filed by the borrower challenging a foreclosure based on a MERS assignment.
The Court concluded by stating: “Since the claimant, Citibank, has not established that it is the owner of the promissory note secured by the trust deed, Citibank is unable to assert a claim for payment in this case.” Thus, any foreclosing party which is not the original lender which purports to claim payment due under the note and the right to foreclose in California on the basis of a MERS assignment does not have the right to do so under the principles of this opinion.
This ruling is more than significant not only for California borrowers, but for borrowers nationwide, as this California court made it a point to cite non-bankruptcy cases as to the lack of authority of MERS in its opinion. Further, this opinion is consistent with the prior rulings of the Idaho and Nevada Bankruptcy courts on the same issue, that being the lack of authority for MERS to transfer the note as it never owned it (and cannot, per MERS’ own contract which provides that MERS agrees not to assert any rights to mortgage loans or properties mortgaged thereby).
We thank one of our dedicated readers for providing this opinion to us.
Jeff Barnes, Esq.;, http://www.ForeclosureDefenseNationwide.com
Filed under: foreclosure
33 LIES MY “LENDER(S)” TOLD ME
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“Trust me, I’m your friend.”
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“Hi! I want to be your Lender” (pretender lender)
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“I’ve got a great deal for you”
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“Here is the name of the underwriter of your loan.”
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“Here is the appraisal — it came in higher than your deal.”
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“You can rely on the appraisal”
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“It’s a 30 year loan” (1-6 years actually)
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“This is your interest rate”
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“This is your APR”
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“Prices only go up in housing”
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“You’ll be able to refinance in a year and take out more money.”
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“Here is the name of your Lender”
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“It’s just a formality”
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“These are form documents and cannot be changed”
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“You don’t need a lawyer”
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“This is a straight forward industry standard loan.”
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“This is the mortgage broker” (versus several parties undisclosed acting as brokers)
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“The settlement statement shows all the fees and commissions.”
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“Your payments will be credited to your account.”
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“The settlement statement shows the insurance contracts.”
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“This is the beneficiary under your deed of trust.”
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“This is the mortgagee under your mortgage.”
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“This is the balance due on your loan.”
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“This is a computer printout of the accounting for all credits and debits on this loan.”
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“Your loan is in default.”
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“Your loan was assigned.”
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“We are the holder of the note.” (have they been receiving payments?)
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“This is the original note” (printed on color printer)“
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“I’m the records custodian.”
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“These are the business records.”
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“I am familiar with the history of this loan.”
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“I’m an officer of MERS.”
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“Third party payments are irrelevant.”
Filed under: bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, evidence, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, GTC | Honor, investment banking, Investor, Mortgage, Motions, Pleading, securities fraud, STATUTES, trustee
“KING” DEUTSCH CITED FOR DESTRUCTION OF CITIES
The article below was purloined from www.foreclosureblues.wordpress.com — the comments are mine. Neil Garfield
“According to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), Deutsche Bank now holds loans for American single-family and multi-family houses worth about $3.7 billion (€3.1 billion). The bank, however, claims that much of this debt consists of loans to wealthy private customers. (EDITOR’S NOTE: THUS ALL THE OTHER LOANS IT CLAIMS TO OWN, IT DOESN’T OWN)
The bank did not issue the mortgages for the many properties it now manages, and yet it accepted, on behalf of investors, the fiduciary function for its own and third-party CDOs. In past years, says mortgage expert Steve Dibert, real estate loans were “traded like football cards” in the United States. (Editor’s Note: This is why we say that the loan never makes it into the pool until litigation starts AND even if it was ever in the pool there is no guarantee it remained in the pool for more than a nanosecond). Sworn testimony from Deutsch employees corroborate that no assignments are done until “needed,” which means that in the mean time they are still legally owned by the loan originator. The loan originator therefore created an obligation that was satisfied simultaneously with the closing on the loan. The note is therefore evidence of an obligation that does not legally exist. Thus there are possible equitable theories under which investors could assert claims against the borrower, but the note and deed of trust or mortgage are only PART of the evidence and ONLY the investor has standing to bring that claim. Recent cases have rejected claims of “equitable transfer.”)
How many houses was he responsible for, Co was asked? “Two thousand,” he replied. But then he corrected himself, saying that 2,000 wasn’t the number of individual properties, but the number of securities packages being managed by Deutsche Bank. Each package contains hundreds of mortgages. So how many houses are there, all told, he was asked again? Co could only guess. “Millions,” he said.
The exotic financial vehicles are sometimes managed by an equally exotic firm: Deutsche Bank (Cayman) Limited, Boundary Hall, Cricket Square, Grand Cayman. In an e-mail dated Feb. 26, 2010, a Deutsche Bank employee from the Cayman Islands lists 84 CDOs and similar products, for which she identifies herself as the relevant contact person.
However, C-BASS didn’t just manage abstract securities. It also had a subsidiary to bring in all the loans that were subsequently securitized. By the end of 2005 the subsidiary, Litton Loan, had processed 313,938 loans, most of them low-value mortgages, for a total value of $43 billion.
EDITOR’S NOTE: Whether it is Milwaukee which is going the the way of Cleveland or thousands of other towns and cities, Deutsch Bank as a central player in more than 2,000 Special Purpose Vehicles, involving thousands more pools and sub-pools, is far and away the largest protagonist in the foreclosure crisis. This article, originally written in German, details just how deep they are into this mess, while at the same time disclaiming any part in it. It corroborates the article I wrote about the Deutsch Bank executive who said ON TAPE, which I have, that even though Deutsch is named as Trustee it knows nothing and does nothing.
SPIEGEL ONLINE
06/10/2010 07:42 AM
‘America’s Foreclosure King’
How the United States Became a PR Disaster for Deutsche Bank
By Christoph Pauly and Thomas Schulz
Deutsche Bank is deeply involved in the American real estate crisis. After initially profiting from subprime mortgages, it is now arranging to have many of these homes sold at foreclosure auctions. The damage to the bank’s image in the United States is growing.
The small city of New Haven, on the Atlantic coast and home to elite Yale University, is only two hours northeast of New York City. It is a particularly beautiful place in the fall, during the warm days of Indian summer.
But this idyllic image has turned cloudy of late, with a growing number of houses in New Haven looking like the one at 130 Peck Street: vacant for months, the doors nailed shut, the yard derelict and overgrown and the last residents ejected after having lost the house in a foreclosure auction. And like 130 Peck Street, many of these homes are owned by Germany’s Deutsche Bank.
“In the last few years, Deutsche Bank has been responsible for far and away the most foreclosures here,” says Eva Heintzelman. She is the director of the ROOF Project, which addresses the consequences of the foreclosure crisis in New Haven in collaboration with the city administration. According to Heintzelman, Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank plays such a significant role in New Haven that the city’s mayor requested a meeting with bank officials last spring.
The bank complied with his request, to some degree, when, in April 2009, a Deutsche Bank executive flew to New Haven for a question-and-answer session with politicians and aid organizations. But the executive, David Co, came from California, not from Germany. Co manages the Frankfurt bank’s US real estate business at a relatively unknown branch of a relatively unknown subsidiary in Santa Ana.
How many houses was he responsible for, Co was asked? “Two thousand,” he replied. But then he corrected himself, saying that 2,000 wasn’t the number of individual properties, but the number of securities packages being managed by Deutsche Bank. Each package contains hundreds of mortgages. So how many houses are there, all told, he was asked again? Co could only guess. “Millions,” he said.
Deutsche Bank Is Considered ‘America’s Foreclosure King’
Deutsche Bank’s tracks lead through the entire American real estate market. In Chicago, the bank foreclosed upon close to 600 large apartment buildings in 2009, more than any other bank in the city. In Cleveland, almost 5,000 houses foreclosed upon by Deutsche Bank were reported to authorities between 2002 and 2006. In many US cities, the complaints are beginning to pile up from homeowners who lost their properties as a result of a foreclosure action filed by Deutsche Bank. The German bank is berated on the Internet as “America’s Foreclosure King.”
American homeowners are among the main casualties of the financial crisis that began with the collapse of the US real estate market. For years, banks issued mortgages to homebuyers without paying much attention to whether they could even afford the loans. Then they packaged the mortgage loans into complicated financial products, earning billions in the process — that is, until the bubble burst and the government had to bail out the banks.
Deutsche Bank has always acted as if it had had very little to do with the whole affair. It survived the crisis relatively unharmed and without government help. Its experts recognized early on that things could not continue as they had been going. This prompted the bank to get out of many deals in time, so that in the end it was not faced with nearly as much toxic debt as other lenders.
But it is now becoming clear just how deeply involved the institution is in the US real estate market and in the subprime mortgage business. It is quite possible that the bank will not suffer any significant financial losses, but the damage to its image is growing by the day.
‘Deutsche Bank Is Now in the Process of Destroying Milwaukee’
According to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), Deutsche Bank now holds loans for American single-family and multi-family houses worth about $3.7 billion (€3.1 billion). The bank, however, claims that much of this debt consists of loans to wealthy private customers.
More damaging to its image are the roughly 1 million US properties that the bank says it is managing as trustee. “Some 85 to 90 percent of all outstanding mortgages in the USA are ultimately controlled by four banks, either as trustees or owners of a trust company,” says real estate expert Steve Dibert, whose company conducts nationwide investigations into cases of mortgage fraud. “Deutsche Bank is one of the four.”
In addition, the bank put together more than 25 highly complex real estate securities deals, known as collateralized debt obligations, or CDOs, with a value of about $20 billion, most of which collapsed. These securities were partly responsible for triggering the crisis.
Last Thursday, Deutsche Bank CEO Josef Ackermann was publicly confronted with the turmoil in US cities. Speaking at the bank’s shareholders’ meeting, political science professor Susan Giaimo said that while Germans were mainly responsible for building the city of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, “Deutsche Bank is now in the process of destroying Milwaukee.”
As Soon as the Houses Are Vacant, They Quickly Become Derelict
Then Giaimo, a petite woman with dark curls who has German forefathers, got to the point. Not a single bank, she said, owns more real estate affected by foreclosure in Milwaukee, a city the size of Frankfurt. Many of the houses, she added, have been taken over by drug dealers, while others were burned down by arsonists after it became clear that no one was taking care of them.
Besides, said Giaimo, who represents the Common Ground action group, homeowners living in the neighborhoods of these properties are forced to accept substantial declines in the value of their property. “In addition, foreclosed houses are sold to speculators for substantially less than the market value of houses in the same neighborhood,” Giaimo said. The speculators, according to Giaimo, have no interest in the individual properties and are merely betting that prices will go up in the future.
Common Ground has posted photos of many foreclosed properties on the Internet, and some of the signs in front of these houses identify Deutsche Bank as the owner. As soon as the houses are vacant, they quickly become derelict.
A Victorian house on State Street, painted green with red trim, is now partially burned down. Because it can no longer be sold, Deutsche Bank has “donated” it to the City of Milwaukee, one of the Common Ground activists reports. As a result, the city incurs the costs of demolition, which amount to “at least $25,000.”
‘We Can’t Give Away Money that Isn’t Ours’
During a recent meeting with US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, representatives of the City of Milwaukee complained about the problems that the more than 15,000 foreclosures have caused for the city since the crisis began. In a letter to the US Treasury Department, they wrote that Deutsche Bank is the only bank that has refused to meet with the city’s elected representatives.
Minneapolis-based US Bank and San Francisco-based Wells Fargo apparently took the complaints more seriously and met with the people from Common Ground. The activists’ demands sound plausible enough. They want Deutsche Bank to at least tear down those houses that can no longer be repaired at a reasonable cost. Besides, Giaimo said at the shareholders’ meeting, Deutsche Bank should contribute a portion of US government subsidies to a renovation fund. According to Giaimo, the bank collected $6 billion from the US government when it used taxpayer money to bail out credit insurer AIG.
“It’s painful to look at these houses,” Ackermann told the professor. Nevertheless, the CEO refused to accept any responsibility. Deutsche Bank, he said, is “merely a sort of depository for the mortgage documents, and our options to help out are limited.” According to Ackermann, the bank, as a trustee for other investors, is not even the actual owner of the properties, and therefore can do nothing. Besides, Ackermann said, his bank didn’t promote mortgage loans with terms that have now made the payments unaffordable for many families.
The activists from Wisconsin did, however, manage to take home a small victory. Ackermann instructed members of his staff to meet with Common Ground. He apparently envisions a relatively informal and noncommittal meeting. “We can’t give away money that isn’t ours,” he added.
Deutsche Bank’s Role in the High-Risk Loans Boom
Apparently Ackermann also has no intention to part with even a small portion of the profits the bank earned in the real estate business. Deutsche Bank didn’t just act as a trustee that — coincidentally, it seems — manages countless pieces of real estate on behalf of other investors. In the wild years between 2005 and 2007, the bank also played a central role in the profitable boom in high-risk mortgages that were marketed to people in ways that were downright negligent.
Of course, its bankers didn’t get their hands dirty by going door-to-door to convince people to apply for mortgages they couldn’t afford. But they did provide the distribution organizations with the necessary capital.
The Countrywide Financial Corporation, which approved risky mortgages for $97.2 billion from 2005 to 2007, was the biggest provider of these mortgages in the United States. According to the study by the Center for Public Integrity, a nonprofit investigative journalism organization, Deutsche Bank was one of Countrywide’s biggest financiers.
Ameriquest — which, with $80.7 billion in high-risk loans on its books in the three boom years before the crash, was the second-largest subprime specialist — also had strong ties to Deutsche Bank. The investment bankers placed the mortgages on the international capital market by bundling and structuring them into securities. This enabled them to distribute the risks around the entire globe, some of which ended up with Germany’s state-owned banks.
‘Deutsche Bank Has a Real PR Problem Here’
After the crisis erupted, there were so many mortgages in default in 25 CDOs that most of the investors could no longer be serviced. Some CDOs went bankrupt right away, while others were gradually liquidated, either in full or in part. The securities that had been placed on the market were underwritten by loans worth $20 billion.
At the end of 2006, for example, Deutsche Bank constructed a particularly complex security known as a hybrid CDO. It was named Barramundi, after the Indo-Pacific hermaphrodite fish that lives in muddy water. And the composition of the deal, which was worth $800 million, was muddy indeed. Many securities that were already arcane enough, like credit default swaps (CDSs) and CDOs, were packaged into an even more complex entity in Barramundi.
Deutsche Bank’s partner for the Barramundi deal was the New York investment firm C-BASS, which referred to itself as “a leader in purchasing and servicing residential mortgage loans primarily in the Subprime and Alt-A categories.” In plain language, C-BASS specialized in drumming up and marketing subprime mortgages for complex financial vehicles.
However, C-BASS didn’t just manage abstract securities. It also had a subsidiary to bring in all the loans that were subsequently securitized. By the end of 2005 the subsidiary, Litton Loan, had processed 313,938 loans, most of them low-value mortgages, for a total value of $43 billion.
One of the First Victims of the Financial Crisis
Barramundi was already the 19th CDO C-BASS had issued. But the investment firm faltered only a few months after the deal with Deutsche Bank, in the summer of 2007. C-BASS was one of the first casualties of the financial crisis.
Deutsche Bank’s CDO, Barramundi, suffered a similar fate. Originally given the highest possible rating by the rating agencies, the financial vehicle stuffed with subprime mortgages quickly fell apart. In the spring of 2008, Barramundi was first downgraded to “highly risky” and then, in December, to junk status. Finally, in March 2009, Barramundi failed and had to be liquidated. (EDITOR’S NOTE: WHAT HAPPENED TO THE LOANS?)
While many investors lost their money and many Americans their houses, Deutsche Bank and Litton Loan remained largely unscathed. Apparently, the Frankfurt bank still has a healthy business relationship with the subprime mortgage manager, because Deutsche Bank does not play a direct role in any of the countless pieces of real estate it holds in trust. Other service providers, including Litton Loan, handle tasks like collecting mortgage payments and evicting delinquent borrowers.
The exotic financial vehicles are sometimes managed by an equally exotic firm: Deutsche Bank (Cayman) Limited, Boundary Hall, Cricket Square, Grand Cayman. In an e-mail dated Feb. 26, 2010, a Deutsche Bank employee from the Cayman Islands lists 84 CDOs and similar products, for which she identifies herself as the relevant contact person.
Trouble with US Regulatory Authorities and Many Property Owners
The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is now investigating Deutsche Bank and a few other investment banks that constructed similar CDOs. The financial regulator is looking into whether investors in these obscure products were deceived. The SEC has been particularly critical of US investment bank Goldman Sachs, which is apparently willing to pay a record fine of $1 billion to avoid criminal prosecution.
Deutsche Bank has also run into problems with the many property owners. The bank did not issue the mortgages for the many properties it now manages, and yet it accepted, on behalf of investors, the fiduciary function for its own and third-party CDOs. In past years, says mortgage expert Steve Dibert, real estate loans were “traded like football cards” in the United States.
Amid all the deal-making, the deeds for the actual properties were often lost. In Cleveland and New Jersey, for example, judges invalidated foreclosures ordered by Deutsche Bank, because the bank was unable to come up with the relevant deeds.
Nevertheless, Deutsche Bank’s service providers repeatedly try to have houses vacated, even when they are already occupied by new owners who are paying their mortgages. This practice has led to nationwide lawsuits against the Frankfurt-based bank. On the Internet, angry Americans fighting to keep their houses have taken to using foul language to berate the German bank.
“Deutsche Bank now has a real PR problem here in the United States,” says Dibert. “They want to bury their head in the sand, but this is something they are going to have to deal with.”
Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan
Filed under: bubble, CASES, CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, evidence, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, foreign relations, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, Investor, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Motions, Pleading, securities fraud, Servicer, STATUTES, trustee Tagged: ALT-A, Boundary Hall, C-BASS, CDO, Christoph Pauly, Cleveland, Common Ground, Countrywide Financial Corporation, Cricket Square, Deutsche Bank (Cayman) Limited, Deutsche Bank AG, exotic financial vehicles, FDIC, fiduciary function, foreclosureblues, foreclosures, Giaimo, Grand Cayman, HERS, Josef Ackermann, Litton Loan, Milwaukee, New Haven, ROOF Project, subprime, third-party CDO, Thomas Schulz
AFTER THE SALE: PART II
Finally got on the list. A servicer, (not on the deed of trust) tried to execute a power of sale. Thanks Neil for your wonderful posts. I’ve been reading for months.
I showed up. Spoke to the ‘appointed’ trustee. Said, according to your appointment you have the Deed and the Note? She said, “I don’t want to talk to you.”. I told her I had a complaint for identity theft and consumer protection in a real estate transaction with the Attorney General. She gives me the law firm she’s helping (in another city) and I told her, I was disputing the sale. It was fraud. I informed her I would capture the sale with my cell phone. Eventually I was told they would not call out my home for sale. I waited through all the foreclosures. Those she called out, she stated she was authorized to bid for the “lender” (term used loosely) and she’d place the first bid, and of course had the highest bid, and would say ‘sold’. She read mine, and I started recording, I spoke while she sold, and said I never did business with this company. They are not a lender nor a creditor to me. They are not recorded in the real property records. The title is clouded. etc…so on, and eventually heard her say, sold. So I stopped talking and asked what it sold for and a person sitting by her gave a value. I said, that’s all I need and stopped recording. The cell has my voice over hers, but the point is, I was there, and have video of a fraudulent sale. I waited. No filings yet to try to transfer the title from the original trustee to the ‘substitute trustee’ (term used loosely). The acceleration (power of sale) can only be done by the ‘lender’. That definition is in the Deed of Trust. Without an ‘Assignment/Transfer’ in the Real Property Records…no one else can claim the status of the “lender’. Only the ‘lender’ can appoint a substitute trustee. The entire process was flawed. I got information from the ‘lender’ I never paid, that should prove I owed them the money (without an assignment) but their note was a certified copy from a title company, their copy of the Deed is different from a certified copy I can get from the official real estate records. I got the law firm to send their proof they have the Note and Deed as per their appointment. Their note does not match what the ‘lender’ sent, and their copy of the Deed does not match what the ‘lender’ sent nor the copy on file in Real Property records. They made it easy for me to prove to the attorney general the fraud. Problem was the AG represents that ‘state’ whereas I needed someone to represent me. Attorneys in non-judicial states do not know this part of the process so they avoid it. I found one who was new to the state, needed clients, and said if I could tell her what was wrong she’d try to help me. Well I’m on my way to either ‘reverse the sale’ (if they file something to show it was done…seems there is a delay to complete that fraudulent process), and to seek quiet title to remove all claims to this property. Sad thing is the ‘lenders’ (that term will always be used loosely) only wants the legal title to the property. They could care less about me, my payment or the house. But they can’t get it from the Trustee on my Deed of Trust because they aren’t the original Lender. The original Lender was merged away into another entity, and the Trustee would only recognize the holder of the Note and Deed. Good luck with that.
America’s property is held by legal title by the origianl Trustees of our Deeds/Mortgages and the Bankers can’t get to these titles because they split the Deed and Note. A shame the fraud they’d go through to make sure an attorney is not the final holder of all the property titles. Makes it hard to flip homes over and over again as people buy, sell, or lose their homes doesn’t it. Can’t back out of the bad documents. They did get sloppy in their greed.
They assign a substitute trustee, then force a sale or foreclosure, then get the original trustee to transfer the legal title to the substitute trustee so the substitute trustee can transfer it to the banker. The fraud is deep, pretending to pay taxes so they can set up an escrow and charge higher mortgage, pretending to not receive payments, canned letters no matter how you communicate in writing telling you they didn’t get your documentation even if you sent it three different times and three different ways. Then if you refinance to get from under them, the bank that refinanced is bound to assign you to them as a servicer again to go through the same pains over and over until they get that title!
Good luck to all. I admit, stay in the language of Love, ’cause when you operate with Love in your heart, you can see through all the darkness and all the fraud and all the deception. With Love, your eyes are open and you see the slightest details in their fraud and can expose the evil side of the business. Stay in Love, that’s the language that will open the doors to victory. Forgive the players. They are working and earning a paycheck. A few at the top caused the problems. The rest of us on both sides are the pawns and expendable. Love your neighbor, they may be the very person to help you. Keep an amount of cash, (coins) in your possession for emergency situations. Lately, there has been interruptions weather related or not, where ATMs, gas stations, food services, etc.. have not been able to process credit and debit. Seems like a test for something later to come. Not fear mongering, just making an observation and giving a heads-up. Neil, keep up the good work.
Filed under: CASES, CORRUPTION, evidence, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, Forensic Analysis Workshop, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, Investor, Mortgage, Motion Practice and Discovery, securities fraud, Securitization Survey, Servicer, STATUTES, trustee, workshop Tagged: after the sale, attorney general, Fruad, servicer, trustee, wrongful foreclosure
Conservative NC Court of App: Power of Sale is Not Favored Under the Law
GET LOAN SPECIFIC RECORDS PROPERTY SEARCH AND SECURITIZATION SUMMARY
because a foreclosure under a power of sale is not favored in the law and must be “watched with jealousy,” see In re Foreclosure of Goforth Props., 334 N.C. at 375, 432 S.E.2d at 859 (internal quotation marks omitted), we must conclude that the evidence presented to the trial court was not sufficient to establish that the Note was payable to Deutsche Bank for Soundview, and so was not sufficient to support the trial court’s finding of fact that “Novastar Mortgage, Inc., . . . transferred and assigned its interest in the Note and Deed of Trust to Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for Soundview Home Loan Trust 2005-4 (`Lender’).”
Conservative NC Court of Appeals says “Show us the note!”
Today, June 07, 2010, 31 minutes ago | admin From Home Equity Theft Reporter:
Another trial court screw-up in a foreclosure action was recently reversed – this time by the North Carolina Court of Appeals, which ruled that a lender seeking to foreclose on a mortgage had failed to properly provide sufficient competent evidence that it was the holder of the promissory note secured by the mortgage. Accordingly, it ruled that the lender was not entitled to go forward with a foreclosure
sale.(1)
For the ruling, see In re Foreclosure of Adams, No. COA09-1455 (N.C.
App. June 1, 2010).
(1) An excerpt from the ruling (bold text is my emphasis, not in the original text):
[S]ince the photocopies of the Note and Deed of Trust presented to the trial court indicate that the original holder of both instruments was Novastar, not Deutsche Bank for Soundview, and since these photocopies do not indicate that Novastar negotiated, indorsed or transferred the Note to Deutsche Bank for Soundview, respondents contend the photocopied instruments alone were not sufficient to establish that Deutsche Bank for Soundview is the current holder of the Note.
We recognize that, in the present case, the testimony by affidavit from Ms. Smith, the assistant secretary of Deutsche Bank for Soundview——an out-of-state entity——as well as the in-person testimony offered by Ms. Cole indicated that Deutsche Bank for Soundview is the current holder of the Note and Deed of Trust. However, neither the in-person testimony from Ms. Cole nor the testimony by affidavit from Ms. Smith expressly showed that Novastar transferred or assigned its interest in the Note and Deed of Trust to Deutsche Bank for Soundview.
Moreover, as we discussed above, the photocopied Note and Deed of Trust, which were described in Ms. Smith’s affidavit as “exact reproductions” of the original instruments, do not show that the Note was indorsed, transferred, or otherwise made payable by Novastar, the original holder of the instrument, to Deutsche Bank for Soundview.
Thus, whereas the record in In re Foreclosure of Brown, 156 N.C. App. 477, 577 S.E.2d 398 (2003), also included an Assignment of Deed of Trust as evidence showing that the original holder of the note and deed of trust had assigned its interest in said instruments to the party seeking to foreclose on the respondent—borrowers, the record before the trial court in the present case contained no such additional evidence.
Accordingly, because a foreclosure under a power of sale is not favored in the law and must be “watched with jealousy,” see In re Foreclosure of Goforth Props., 334 N.C. at 375, 432 S.E.2d at 859 (internal quotation marks omitted), we must conclude that the evidence presented to the trial court was not sufficient to establish that the Note was payable to Deutsche Bank for Soundview, and so was not sufficient to support the trial court’s finding of fact that “Novastar Mortgage, Inc., . . . transferred and assigned its interest in the Note and Deed of Trust to Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as Trustee for Soundview Home Loan Trust 2005-4 (`Lender’).”
Filed under: CASES, CORRUPTION, Eviction, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, Forensic Analysis Workshop, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, Investor, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Motion Practice and Discovery, Pleading, Securitization Survey, Servicer, STATUTES, trustee, workshop Tagged: Assign, Cole, DEED OF TRUST, Deutsch, evidence, foreclosure, Goforth Props, HERS, HOLDER, Home Equity Theft Reporter, In re Foreclosure of Brown, indorse, make payable, Mortgage, North Carolina, Novestar Mortgage, payable, photocopy, power of sale, promissory note, Smith, Soundview, Soundview Home Loan Trust 2005-4 (`Lender’).”, transfer
Box Case Slams BAC for Lack of Standing
Missouri 6 03 10 RE-BOX-Order-Denying-Motion-for-Relief-From-Stay1
US Trustee opposed the relief, not the debtor.
IN RE BOX
In re: MARTY EUGENE BOX and TAMMY JEAN BOX, Debtors.
Case No. 10-20086.
United States Bankruptcy Court, W. D. Missouri.
June 3, 2010.
ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR RELIEF FROM STAY
ARTHUR B. FEDERMAN, Bankruptcy Judge
BAC Home Loans Servicing LP f/k/a Countrywide Home Loans Servicing (“BAC”) seeks relief from the automatic stay to allow it to exercise its rights under state law as to the Debtors’ real property. The Debtors do not oppose the motion, but the Chapter 7 Trustee has challenged BAC’s standing to seek relief from the stay. The Trustee asserts that the Note and Deed of Trust were not properly assigned to BAC and, because it is not the holder of the Note and Deed of Trust, it lacks standing to seek relief from the stay to enforce those documents. This is a core proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 157(b)(2) over which the Court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(b), 157(a), and 157(b)(1). For the reasons that follow, the Court finds that BAC has not proven that it is the holder of the Note. Therefore, it lacks standing, so its motion for relief from stay will be denied.
On January 21, 2009, Debtors Marty E. Box and Tammy J. Box executed a promissory note in
the original principal amount of $164,836, for the purchase of their home. The Note was made
payable to Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp. and its successors and assigns. The Note is
secured by a Deed of Trust on the home. The Deed of Trust identifies the beneficiary as
“Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (`MERS’),” and states that “MERS is a separate
corporation that is acting solely as nominee for Lender and Lender’s successors and assigns.” The
“Lender” is identified as Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp. The Deed of Trust was
recorded with the Hickory County Recorder of Deeds on January 28, 2009.
BAC states that Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp. (“Taylor Bean”) transferred the Note
and Deed of Trust to BAC on August 25, 2009, although the only evidence of any such transfer
is an affidavit by BAC’s representative, discussed more fully below.
The Debtors filed this Chapter 7 bankruptcy case on January 20, 2010, and BAC filed the instant
Motion for Relief from Stay on February 24, 2010. As stated, the Chapter 7 Trustee maintains
that there was no proper assignment of the Note and Deed of Trust to BAC and, therefore, BAC
lacks standing to seek relief from the stay.
To obtain relief from the stay, BAC must be a party in interest[ 1 ] and have standing.[ 2 ] www.4closurefraud.org
The Missouri Court of Appeals has recently discussed assignment of notes and deeds of trust in
Bellistri v. Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC.[ 3 ] In that case, the borrower executed a promissory note
in favor of lender BNC Mortgage Inc. As here, the deed of trust did not name BNC as the
beneficiary, but instead named Mortgage Electronic Registration System (MERS) solely as
BNC’s nominee. The promissory note made no reference to MERS. The note and deed of trust
both required that payments be made to the lender, not MERS. These facts regarding the loan
documents are, for all relevant purposes, identical to those in the case at bar.
www.4closureFraud.org
Subsequently, a third party, Robert Bellistri, purchased the property at a tax sale. Bellistri sent
BNC a notice of redemption as required by Missouri statute. After the collector of revenue issued
Bellistri a collector’s deed, MERS, as nominee for BNC, assigned the deed of trust to Ocwen.
The assignment of the deed of trust contained language that the assignment was made “together
with any and all notes and obligations therein described or referred to, the debt respectively
secured thereby and all sums of money due and to become due.” Bellistri then filed a quiet title
action to eject the original borrower from the property. Bellistri moved to add Ocwen as a
necessary party because the assignment of the deed of trust to Ocwen had been recorded and
Ocwen was, therefore, the recorded grantee as to the deed of trust. Granting summary judgment
in favor of Bellistri, the circuit court found that Ocwen lacked standing in the action. Ocwen
appealed.
In affirming the circuit court’s decision, the Missouri Court of Appeals discussed the law of
mortgages in order to determine Ocwen’s interest in the property.[ 4 ] The Court explained:
Generally, a mortgage loan consists of a promissory note and security instrument, usually a
mortgage or a deed of trust, which secures payment on the note by giving the lender the ability to
foreclose on the property. Typically, the same person holds both the note and deed of trust. In the
event that the note and the deed of trust are split, the note, as a practical matter becomes
unsecured. The practical effect of splitting the deed of trust from the promissory note is to make
it impossible for the holder of the note to foreclose, unless the holder of the deed of trust is the
agent of the holder of the note. Without the agency relationship, the person holding only the note
lacks the power to foreclose in the event of default. The person holding only the deed of trust
will never experience default because only the holder of the note is entitled to payment of the
underlying obligation. The mortgage loan [becomes] ineffectual when the note holder [does] not
also hold the deed of trust.[ 5 ]
Regarding assignments:
When the holder of the promissory note assigns or transfers the note, the deed of trust is also
transferred. An assignment of the deed of trust separate from the note has no “force.” Effectively,
the note and the deed of trust are inseparable, and when the promissory note is transferred, it
vests in the transferee “all the interest, rights, powers and security conferred by the deed of trust
upon the beneficiary therein and the payee in the notes.”[ 6 ]
Thus, if the note is properly assigned, the deed of trust automatically goes with it, and the note is
not split from the deed of trust. However, that is not necessarily the case when it is the deed of www.4closurefraud.org
trust which is assigned — if the note is not also assigned, the assignment of the deed of trust is,
for all practical purposes, ineffectual because the note and deed of trust have become split.
In Bellistri, when MERS purported to assign the deed of trust to Ocwen, MERS also apparently
attempted to transfer the note because the deed of trust stated that its assignment to Ocwen was
“together with any and all notes and obligations therein described.”[ 7 ] The Court of Appeals did
not comment on the issue of whether such a notation on the assignment of the deed of trust
effectively also assigned the note. However, the Court of Appeals said, BNC was the holder of
the promissory note, and since there was no evidence that MERS ever held the promissory note
or that BNC gave MERS the authority to transfer the promissory note, MERS did not have such
authority to transfer the promissory note.[ 8 ] Thus, the language in the assignment of the deed of
trust purporting to transfer the promissory note was ineffective.[ 9 ] In other words, “MERS never
held the promissory note, thus its assignment of the deed of trust to Ocwen separate from the
note had no force.”[ 10 ]
Here, as in Bellistri, the Note is made payable only to Taylor Bean; MERS is mentioned nowhere
in the Note. And, as in Bellistri, MERS is identified in the Deed of Trust as the beneficiary,
solely as Taylor Bean’s nominee.
With regard to the purported assignment of the loan documents to BAC, the evidence in the case
at bar is both scant and suspect. Specifically, at an April 21, 2010, hearing on BAC’s Motion for
Relief from Stay, counsel for BAC submitted a notarized Affidavit dated April 19, 2010,
partially in fill-in-the-blank form, which states, in its entirety:
CAMETRICE JACKSON, first being duly sworn, on his/her oath states that he/she is the LOAN
SVC SPECIALIST of BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP f/k/a Countrywide Home Loans
Servicing, LP and is authorized by said entity to sign this Affidavit. This is to certify that BAC
Home Loans Servicing, LP f/k/a Countrywide Home Loans Servicing, LP is the holder of the
Promissory Note and Deed of Trust dated January 21, 2009, executed by Marty E. Box and
Tammy J. Box, in the original principal amount of $164,836.00. The Promissory Note and Deed
of Trust were transferred from TAYLOR BEAN & WHITAKER MORTGAGE CORP to BAC
Home Loans Servicing, LP f/k/a Countrywide Home Loans Servicing, LP on 8/25/2009. The
only document attached to the Affidavit was an Assignment of Deed of Trust, dated February
18, 2010, in which “Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., solely as nominee for
Taylor, Bean & Whitaker Mortgage Corp.” purports to assign the Deed of Trust to “BAC Home
Loans Servicing, LP F/K/A Countrywide Home Loans Servicing, LP.” The February 18
Assignment states that it is “[t]ogether with any and all notes and obligations therein described or
referred to, the debt respectively secured thereby and all sums of money due thereon, with
interest thereon, and attorneys’ fees and all other charges.” No documents evidencing an August
25, 2009 assignment were attached, nor were any of the loan documents themselves.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the parties were granted time in which to submit briefs on the
issue. BAC did submit a brief, and attached a copy of the Note, the Deed of Trust, and another
copy of the Affidavit quoted above. Notably, BAC attached no documents whatsoever to support
the Affidavit’s representation that the Note and Deed of Trust were assigned at all, much less on
August 25, 2009, as represented in the Affidavit. Moreover, the Affidavit does not state with any www.4closurefraud.org
specificity how BAC purportedly became the “holder” of the Note and Deed of Trust or how the
documents were “transferred” to BAC. Although I overruled the Trustee’s objection to the
admission of the Affidavit and admitted it into evidence at the hearing,[ 11 ] the Affidavit, in and
of itself, is self-serving, lacks credibility, and is entirely unpersuasive on the question of whether
the Note and Deed of Trust were properly assigned to BAC. Indeed, in In re Wilhelm, the court
held that a statement identical to the one in BAC’s Affidavit, namely that BAC is the “holder of
the Promissory Note and Deed of Trust,” is a legal conclusion, not a fact, and inappropriate for
such an affidavit.[ 12 ] Moreover, the court said, it did not answer the critical question of fact,
which is: Who has possession of the original note?[ 13 ]
The only actual evidence of any assignment at all in this case is the February 18, 2010
Assignment which was attached to the Affidavit submitted at the hearing. The fact that the
February 18, 2010 Assignment was made after the bankruptcy case was filed does not render it
per se invalid in that there is no rule prohibiting a creditor from assigning its claim postpetition.
However, the February 18 “assignment” contradicts the date stated in the Affidavit and,
particularly since no August 25 documents were attached, makes the Affidavit even more
suspect.[ 14 ]
That said, even looking to the February 18 Assignment, that document has the same fatal flaw
that the one in Bellistri did: Even assuming that the holder of a note and deed of trust can
effectively assign the note by including such language only on the deed of trust assignment (an
issue not decided by Bellistri), there is no evidence in this case that MERS has ever held the
Note, or that MERS was Taylor Bean’s agent for purposes of assigning the Note. Perhaps MERS
had the authority to assign the Deed of Trust because it was named as a nominee beneficiary, a
question I do not decide here.[ 15 ] However, as stated, MERS was not named in any capacity in
the Note, and there was no evidence that it otherwise had the authority to assign the Note.
Consequently, because MERS has not demonstrated that it had the authority to assign the Note,
its statement on the Deed of Trust Assignment purporting to do so could not be effective.[ 16 ]
This case does present one fact that was not addressed in Bellistri. Here, the Note contains a
blank endorsement by Taylor Bean.[ 17 ] Hence, BAC asserts that Taylor Bean transferred the
Note to it, and that the Deed of Trust follows the assigned Note.[ 18 ]
As relevant here, § 400.3-301 of the Missouri Statutes provides that a party may enforce a
promissory note if it is either (1) the holder of the promissory note, or (2) a nonholder in
possession of the instrument who has the rights of a holder.[ 19 ] “`Holder’ with respect to a
negotiable instrument, means the person in possession if the instrument is payable to bearer or, in
the case of an instrument payable to an identified person, if the identified person is in
possession.”[ 20 ] “`Negotiation’ means a transfer of possession, whether voluntary or involuntary,
of an instrument by a person other than the issuer to a person who thereby becomes its holder.”[
21 ] “An instrument is transferred when it is delivered by a person other than its issuer for the
purpose of giving to the person receiving delivery the right to enforce the instrument.”[ 22 ]
“Except for negotiation by a remitter, if an instrument is payable to an identified person,
negotiation requires transfer of possession of the instrument and its endorsement by the holder. If
an instrument is payable to bearer, it may be negotiated by transfer of possession alone.”[ 23 ] www.4closurefraud.org
Therefore, because the Note is made payable to Taylor Bean, in order to transfer the Note to
BAC, Taylor Bean had to both transfer possession of the Note to BAC, and endorse it.
Because the Note here contains a blank endorsement, § 400.3.-205(b) applies. That section
provides:
If an endorsement is made by the holder of an instrument and it is not a special endorsement, it is
a “blank” endorsement. When endorsed in blank, an instrument becomes payable to bearer and
may be negotiated by transfer of possession alone until specially endorsed.[ 24 ]
“`Bearer’ means the person in possession of an instrument, document of title, or certificated
security payable to bearer or endorsed in blank.”[ 25 ] As the Trustee suggests, as to bearer paper,
an entity is only entitled to enforce the obligation if it proves that it holds the original or
complies with the lost not requirements discussed later.[ 26 ] This requirement serves an important
purpose. As stated, under Missouri law, the transfer of a note serves to also transfer the
transferor’s rights under a deed of trust, regardless of whether that transfer is recorded.
Possession of the note insures that this creditor, and not an unknown one, is the one entitled to
exercise rights under the deed of trust, and that the debtor will not be obligated to pay twice.[ 27 ]
BAC has not produced the original Note, nor has it even produced a witness stating that BAC is
in possession of the original Note. Indeed, even the Affidavit, for what it is worth, fails to make
such a statement.[ 28 ] Since BAC has failed to demonstrate that the loan was properly assigned to
it by Taylor Bean, it lacks standing to seek relief from the stay.
Perhaps BAC can correct the problem it currently faces with standing, as well as the Trustee’s
likely attack on the validity of the lien BAC asserts. The most obvious way would be for BAC to
produce the original Note, either endorsed to it or endorsed in blank. If BAC can do that, such
that the evidence sufficiently establishes proper assignment of the Note to BAC, then, as stated
above, the Deed of Trust followed, and the February 18 Assignment would be, in effect, a
nullity. BAC would, in that event, be the holder of both the Note and Deed of Trust.
On the other hand, if BAC cannot produce the original Note (or satisfy the requirements for a
lost note under §400.3-309), then assuming that the February 18 Assignment of the Deed of
Trust is valid (i.e., assuming MERS had authority as nominee beneficiary to make such an
assignment of the Deed of Trust), the Note and Deed of Trust may have become split, in that
Taylor Bean still holds the Note, but BAC holds the Deed of Trust. In that case, the Trustee
might prevail in challenging the lien. However, the court in Landmark Nat’l Bank v. Kesler has
suggested that MERS may not have had the authority to assignment of the Deed of Trust, either.
If that is correct, then Taylor Bean may still hold both the Note and the Deed of Trust. And, as
stated, there is no rule prohibiting a postpetition assignment of a claim to another party such as
BAC.
This Order does not go further than necessary, and specifically does not decide whether the
structure of MERS is fatally flawed under Missouri law because, e.g., it splits the note and deed
of trust between different entities. I am well aware that there would be far-reaching
consequences from such a determination on creditors holding what they believed were mortgage www.4closurefraud.org
loans, and also on debtors, who may or may not be able to obtain new financing in order to
purchase their homes from the estate at current value. Therefore, I would hope to decide those
issues in a proceeding in which the promissory note is produced, and in which evidence is
offered as to the relationship between MERS and lenders for whom it purports to act, as well as
the powers granted to it by them. Such evidence might include, for example, an agency
agreement if one exists.
All I find here is that BAC has not proven that it holds the Note. Thus, it has not established that
it is a party in interest or that it has standing to seek relief from the stay.
ACCORDINGLY, the Motion for Relief from Stay filed by BAC Home Loans Servicing LP
f/k/a Countrywide Home Loans Servicing is DENIED.
4closureFraud
www.4closureFraud.org www.4closurefraud.org
Filed under: foreclosure
Fannie Mae Policy Now Admits Loan Not Secured
29248253-Mers-May-Not-Foreclosure-for-Fannie-Mae
Editor’s Note: Their intention was to get MERS and servicers out of the foreclosure business. They now say that prior to foreclosure MERS must assign to the real party in interest.
Here’s their problem: As numerous Judges have pointed out, MERS specifically disclaims any interest in the obligation, note or mortgage. Even the language of the mortgage or Deed of Trust says MERS is mentioned in name only and that the Lender is somebody else.
These Judges who have considered the issue have come up with one conclusion, an assignment from a party with no right, title or interest has nothing to assign. The assignment may look good on its face but there still is the problem that nothing was assigned.
Here’s the other problem. If MERS was there in name only to permit transfers and other transactions off-record (contrary to state law) and if the original party named as “Lender” is no longer around, then what you have is a gap in the chain of custody and chain of title with respect to the creditor’s side of the loan. It is all off record which means, ipso facto that it is a question of fact as to whose loan it is. That means, ipso facto, that the presence of MERS makes it a judicial question which means that the non-judicial election is not available. They can’t do it.
So when you put this all together, you end up with the following inescapable conclusions:
- The naming of MERS as mortgagee in a mortgage deed or as beneficiary in a deed of trust is a nullity.
- MERS has no right, title or interest in any loan and even if it did, it disclaims any such interest on its own website.
- The lender might be the REAL beneficiary, but that is a question of fact so the non-judicial foreclosure option is not available.
- If the lender was not the creditor, it isn’t the lender because it had no right title or interest either, legally or equitably.
- Without a creditor named in the security instrument intended to secure the obligation, the security was never perfected.
- Without a creditor named in the security instrument intended to secure the obligation, the obligation is unsecured as to legal title.
- Since the only real creditor is the one who advanced the funds (the investor(s)), they can enforce the obligation by proxy or directly. Whether the note is actually evidence of the obligation and to what extent the terms of the note are enforceable is a question for the court to determine.
- The creditor only has a claim if they would suffer loss as a result of the indirect transaction with the borrower. If they or their agents have received payments from any source, those payments must be allocated to the loan account. The extent and measure of said allocation is a question of fact to be determined by the Court.
- Once established, the allocation will most likely be applied in the manner set forth in the note, to wit: (a) against payments due (b) against fees and (c) against principal, in that order.
- Once applied against payments, due the default vanishes unless the allocation is less than the amount due in payments.
- Once established, the allocation results in a fatal defect in the notice of default, the statements sent to the borrower, and the representations made in court. Thus at the very least they must vacate all foreclosure proceedings and start over again.
- If the allocation is less than the amount of payments due, then the investor(s) collectively have a claim for acceleration and to enforce the note — but they have no claim on the mortgage deed or deed of trust. By intentionally NOT naming parties who were known at the time of the transaction the security was split from the obligation. The obligation became unsecured.
- The investors MIGHT have a claim for equitable lien based upon the circumstances that BOTH the borrower and the investor were the victims of fraud.
Filed under: foreclosure
New MERS Case: Bellistri v Ocwen Loan Servicing, Mo App.20100309
SUBMITTED BY MAX GARDNER. HIS NEXT BOOT CAMP IS MAY 20, 2010
SEE Bellistri v Ocwen Loan Servicing, Mo App.20100309
Bellistri paid the taxes for three years, then sent notice to Crouther and BNC that he was applying for a collector’s deed. After BNC failed to redeem (which means “pay the taxes with interest and penalties,” so that Bellistri could be reimbursed), the county collector issued a collector’s deed to Bellistri, in 2006.
Meanwhile, MERS assigned the promissory note and deed of trust to Ocwen Servicing, probably because nobody was making mortgage payments, so that Ocwen would be in a position to attempt to (a) get Crouther to bring the loan payments up to date or (b) to foreclose, if necessary. But this assignment, as explained below, eliminated Ocwen’s right to foreclose and any right to the property.
Bellistri filed a suit for quiet title and to terminate any right of Crouther to possess the property. After discovering the assignment of the deed of trust to Ocwen, Bellistri added Ocwen as a party to the quiet title suit, so that Ocwen could have an opportunity to prove that it had an interest in the property, or be forever silenced.
Bellistri’s attorney Phillip Gebhardt argued that Ocwen had no interest in the property, because the deed of trust that it got from MERS could not be foreclosed. As a matter of law, the right to foreclose goes away when the promissory note is “split” from the deed of trust that it is supposed to secure. The note that Crouther signed and gave to BNC didn’t mention MERS, so MERS had no right to assign the note to Ocwen. The assignment that MERS made to Ocwen conveyed only the deed of trust, splitting it from the note.
When MERS assigned the note to Ocwen, the note became unsecured and the deed of trust became worthless. Ironically, the use of MERS to make ownership of the note and mortgage easier to trace also made the deed of trust unenforceable. Who knows how many promissory notes are out there that don’t mention MERS, even though MERS is the beneficiary of the deed of trust securing such notes?
O. Max Gardner III
Gardner & Gardner PLLC
PO Box 1000
Shelby NC 28151-1000
704.418.2628 (C)
704.487.0616 (O)
888.870.1647 (F)
704.475.0407 (S)
Next Boot Camp: May 20 to May 24, 2010
Filed under: foreclosure
Assignments: Why Were They Needed?
Since the entire scheme was based upon using money advanced by investors, why are they not the beneficiaries on the mortgage or deed of trust and why were they not the payee on the note?
The investors would not have advanced any money without getting a certificated or non-certificated interest in the pool of assets “purchased” with money from a pool of money collected from a group of investors.
There could be no certificate of asset backed series xxx-2006A without there being something in existence bearing the name asset backed series xxx-2006A.
There could be no entity (SPV) bearing the name asset backed series xxx-2006A without a framework of securitization of money (SIV) and assets (SPV).
That framework could not exist but for the existence of securitization documents including the pooling and service agreement.
Thus all this must be in place before accepting the first application for a loan.
Therefore when the loan closed the true beneficiaries and payees on the note were known and should have been named as such without a nominee (MERS) or any other intermediaries. Of course THAT would have ceded control over the pool of assets to the owners of that investment, something that neither the investment bank nor any of the other intermediaries wanted. It would mean that loans and claims could be modified or settled easily since all parties are known.
It would also mean that if the intermediaries did anything wrong, like for example investing only part of the money into mortgages and keeping the rest, BOTH the investor and the borrower would probably find out. And it would mean that third party payment would be made to the investors and the investors would deduct those payments from the balance due on the obligation and statements sent out to borrowers would reflect the change _ i.e., either a deduction or subrogation of rights, spreading the ownership out to the third parties who made the payments.
And THAT would mean all those illicit profits would be the subject of liability and damages in lawsuits and maybe criminal liability. So the pretender lenders are right. This is a simple matter — or would be — if they had played by the rules and named the right parties to begin with. Maybe they would even have used industry standard underwriting principles since there was real risk involved.
Filed under: foreclosure
Non-judical sale is not exactly a foreclosure
The problem is that a statute passed for judicial economy is now being used to force the burden of proof onto the borrower in the foreclosure of their own home
I think the main issue in non-judicial states is what does “non-judicial” mean.
I think in your argument you do NOT want to concede that they wish to foreclose. What they want to do is execute on the power of sale in the deed of trust WITHOUT going through the judicial foreclosure process as provided in state statutes.
You must understand that the opposition is seeking to go around normal legal process which requires a foreclosure lawsuit. THAT would require them to make allegations about the obligation, note and mortgage that they cannot make (we are the lender, the defendant owes us money, we are the holder of the note, the note is payable to us, he hasn’t paid, the unpaid balance of the note is xxx etc.) and they would have to prove those allegations before you had to say anything. In addition they would subject to discovery in which you could test their assertions before an evidentiary hearing. That is how lawsuits work.
The power of sale given to the trustee is a hail Mary pass over the requirements of due process. But it allows for you to object.
The question which nobody has asked and nobody has answered, is on the burden of proof, once you object to the sale, why shouldn’t the would-be forecloser be required to plead and prove its case? If the court takes the position that in non-judicial states the private power of sale is to be treated as a judicial event, then that is a denial of due process required by Federal and state constitutions.
The only reason it is allowed, is because it is private and “non-judicial.” The quirk comes in because in practice the homeowner must file suit. Usually the party filing suit must allege facts and prove a prima facie case before the burden shifts to the other side. So the Judge is looking at you to do that when you file to prevent the sale.
Legally, though, your case should be limited to proving that they are trying to sell your property and that you have meritorious defenses. That SHOULD trigger the requirement of re-orienting the parties and making the would-be forecloser file a complaint (lawsuit) for foreclosure.
Then the burden of proof would be properly aligned with the party seeking affirmative relief (i.e., the party who wants to enforce the deed of trust (mortgage), note and obligation) required to file the complaint with all the necessary elements of an action for foreclosure and attach the necessary exhibits.
They don’t want to do that because they don’t have the exhibits and the note is not payable to them and they cannot actually prove standing (which is a jurisdictional question). The problem is that a statute passed for judicial economy is now being used to force the burden of proof onto the borrower in the foreclosure of their own home. This is not being addressed yet but it will be addressed soon.
Filed under: CASES, CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, Forensic Analysis Workshop, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, Investor, Motion Practice and Discovery, Servicer, STATUTES, trustee, workshop Tagged: BURDEN OF PROOF, judicial event, judicial foreclosure, non-judicial, object to the sale, power of sale, trustee
WEISBAND Case No. 4:09-bk-05175-EWH. BKR Tucson Judge HOLLOWELL Denies MLS for Lack of Standing
GMAC has failed to demonstrate that it is the holder of the Note because, while it was in possession of the Note at the evidentiary hearing, it failed to demonstrate that the Note is properly payable to GMAC
Once the securities have been sold, the SPV is not actively involved.
IN RE WEISBAND
In re: BARRY WEISBAND, Chapter 13, Debtor.
Case No. 4:09-bk-05175-EWH.
United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Arizona.
March 29, 2010.
Barry Weisband, Tucson, AZ, Ronald Ryan, Ronald Ryan, P.C., Tucson, AZ, Attorney for Debtor.
MEMORANDUM DECISION
EILEEN W. HOLLOWELL, Bankruptcy Judge
I. INTRODUCTION
The debtor, Barry Weisband (“Debtor”), has challenged the standing of creditor, GMAC Mortgage, LLC (“GMAC”), to seek stay relief on his residence. After reviewing the documents provided by GMAC and conducting an evidentiary hearing, the court concludes that GMAC, the alleged servicer of the Debtor’s home loan, lacks standing to seek stay relief. The reasons for this conclusion are explained in the balance of this decision.
II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A. Creation of Debtor’s Note And Asserted Subsequent Transfers
On or about October 6, 2006, the Debtor executed and delivered to GreenPoint Mortgage Funding, Inc. (“GreenPoint”) an adjustable rate promissory note in the principal sum of $540,000 (“Note”) secured by a Deed of Trust (“DOT”) on real property located at 5424 East Placita Apan, Tucson, Arizona 85718 (“Property”).
On a separate piece of paper, GreenPoint endorsed the Note to GMAC (“Endorsement”). The Endorsement is undated. The DOT was signed by the Debtor on October 9, 2006, and recorded on October 13, 2006. The DOT lists GreenPoint as the lender, and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (“MERS”) as the beneficiary of the DOT “solely as nominee for [GreenPoint], its successors and assigns.”
Approximately five months before the creation of the Note and DOT, on April 10, 2006, GreenPoint entered into a Flow Interim Servicing Agreement (“FISA”) (Exhibit D)[ 1 ] with Lehman Capital, a division of Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc. (collectively “Lehman”), pursuant to which Lehman agreed to purchase conventional, residential, fixed and adjustable rate first and second lien mortgage loans from GreenPoint. Under the FISA, GreenPoint agreed to service the mortgage loans it sold to Lehman. According to GMAC, GreenPoint transferred the Note and DOT to Lehman under the FISA.
On November 1, 2006, Lehman entered into a Mortgage Loan Sale and Assignment Agreement (“MLSAA”) with Structured Asset Securities Corporation (“SASC”) (Exhibit E). Under that agreement, Lehman transferred a number of the mortgage loans it acquired under the FISA to SASC. GMAC claims that the Note was one of the mortgage loans transferred to SASC. SASC created a trust to hold the transferred mortgages — GreenPoint Mortgage Funding Trust (“Trust”). The MLSAA also transferred the right to receive principal and interest payments under the transferred mortgage loans from Lehman to the Trust.
Also, on November 1, 2006, SASC entered into a Trust Agreement (Exhibit F) with Aurora Loan Services (“Aurora”) as the master servicer, and U.S. Bank National Association (“U.S. Bank”) as the trustee. A Reconstituted Servicing Agreement (Exhibit G) was executed the same day, which provided that GreenPoint would continue to service the mortgages transferred to the Trust under the MLSAA, but that the Trust could change servicers at any time. Also, according to GMAC, on November 1, 2006, GMAC, Lehman, and Aurora entered into a Securitization Servicing Agreement (“SSA”) (Exhibit H), pursuant to which GMAC would service the loans transferred to the Trust. GMAC claims that under the SSA it is the current servicer of the Note and DOT.
Thus, according to GMAC, as of November 1, 2006, the Note and DOT had been transferred to the Trust, with SASC as the Trustor, U.S. Bank as the Trustee, Aurora as the master servicer, and GMAC as the sub-servicer. GreenPoint went out of business in 2007. According to GMAC, it remains the sub-servicer of the Note, and that is its only financial interest in the Note and DOT. (Transcript Nov. 10, 2009, pp. 44, 47, 75.)
B. Bankruptcy Events
As of March 1, 2009, the Debtor was in default of his obligations under the Note. Debtor filed his petition for relief under Chapter 13 of the Bankruptcy Code on March 19, 2009. On May 16, 2009, GMAC filed a proof of claim (“POC”), which attached the Note and DOT. The Endorsement from GreenPoint to GMAC was not attached to GMAC’s proof of claim. On May 12, 2009, MERS, as nominee for GreenPoint, assigned its interest in the DOT to GMAC (“MERS Assignment”). The MERS Assignment was recorded on July 16, 2009.
GMAC filed a Motion for Relief from Stay (“Motion”) on May 29, 2009, on the grounds that the Debtor had no equity in the Property and the Property was not necessary for an effective reorganization. The Motion also requested adequate protection payments to protect GMAC’s alleged interest in the Property. GMAC attached the Note with the Endorsement and DOT as exhibits to the Motion.
The Debtor filed a response challenging GMAC’s standing to seek relief from stay. After various discovery disputes, GMAC sent a letter dated September 17, 2009, to the Debtor which purported to explain the various transfers of the Note and the DOT. (Docket #90). The letter explained that GreenPoint transferred the “subject loan” to Lehman under the FISA, that Lehman sold the “subject loan” to SASC under the MLSAA, that SASC, Aurora Loan Services, and U.S. National Bank entered into a trust agreement, which created the Trust and made Aurora the master servicer for the “subject loan,” and, that GMAC was the servicer of the “subject loan” under the SSA. According to GMAC, its status as servicer, along with the Endorsement of the Note to GMAC and the assignment of the DOT from MERS to GMAC, demonstrated that it had standing to bring the Motion.
On November 10, 2009, the Court conducted an evidentiary hearing on the Motion. GMAC offered the original Note at the hearing and admitted into evidence a copy of the Note, DOT, copies of the FISA, MLSAA, Trust Agreement, the Reconstituted Servicing Agreement and the SSA. However, GMAC did not offer any documents demonstrating how the Note and DOT were conveyed by GreenPoint to the FISA. No document was offered demonstrating how the Note and DOT were conveyed from the FISA to the MLSAA or from the MLSAA into the Trust. Schedule A-1 of the MLSAA, where the transferred mortgages presumably would have been listed, only has the words “Intentionally Omitted” on it, and Schedule A-2 has the word “None.” (Exhibit F, pp. 19-20). Similarly, there is no evidence that the Note and DOT are subject to the SSA. Exhibit A to the SSA, titled “Mortgage Loan Schedule,” is blank. At the conclusion of the hearing, this Court ordered the Debtor to begin making adequate protection payments commencing on December 1, 2009 to the Chapter 13 Trustee. The Court further ordered GMAC and the Debtor to negotiate the amount of the adequate protection payments. When the parties were unable to reach agreement, the Court set the amount of the monthly payments at $1,000.
III. ISSUE
Does GMAC have standing to bring the Motion?
IV. JURISDICTIONAL STATEMENT
Jurisdiction is proper under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(a) and 157(b)(2)(G).
V. DISCUSSION
A. Introduction
Section 362(a) of the Bankruptcy Code provides that the filing of a bankruptcy petition operates as a stay of collection and enforcement actions. 11 U.S.C. § 362(a). The purpose of the automatic stay is to provide debtors with “protection against hungry creditors” and to assure creditors that the debtor’s other creditors are not “racing to various courthouses to pursue independent remedies to drain the debtor’s assets.” In re Tippett,Dean v. Trans World Airlines, Inc., 72 F.3d 754, 755-56 (9th Cir. 1995)); see also In re Johnston, 321 B.R. 262, 2737-4 (D. Ariz. 2005). Despite the broad protection the stay affords, it is not without limits. 542 F.3d 684, 689-90 (9th Cir. 2008) (citing Section 362(d) allows the court, upon request of a “party in interest,” to grant relief from the stay, “such as terminating, annulling, modifying, or conditioning such stay.” 11 U.S.C. § 362(d)(1). The court may grant relief “for cause, including the lack of adequate protection.” Id. The court may also grant relief from the stay with respect to specific property of the estate if the debtor lacks equity in the property and the property is not necessary to an effective reorganization. 11 U.S.C. § 362(d)(2).
Any party affected by the stay should be entitled to seek relief. 3 COLLIER’S ON BANKRUPTCY ¶ 362.07[2] (Henry Somers & Alan Resnick, eds. 15th ed., rev. 2009); Matter of Brown Transp. Truckload, Inc., 118 B.R. 889, 893 (Bankr. N.D. Ga. 1990); In re Vieland, 41 B.R. 134, 138 (Bankr. N.D. Ohio 1984)). Relief from stay hearings are limited in scope — the validity of underlying claims is not litigated. In re Johnson, 756 F.2d 738, 740 (9th Cir. 1985). As one court has noted, “[s]tay relief hearings do not involve a full adjudication on the merits of claims, defenses or counterclaims, but simply a determination as to whether a creditor has a colorable claim.” In re Emrich, 2009 WL 3816174, at *1 (Bankr. N.D. Cal. 2009).
Nevertheless, in order to establish a colorable claim, a movant for relief from stay bears the burden of proof that it has standing to bring the motion. In re Wilhelm, 407 B.R. 392, 400 (Bankr. D. Idaho 2009). The issue of standing involves both “constitutional limitations on federal court jurisdiction and prudential limitations on its exercise.” Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. 490, 498 (1975). Constitutional standing concerns whether the plaintiff’s personal stake in the lawsuit is sufficient to have a “case or controversy” to which the federal judicial power may extend under Article III. Id.; see also Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 559-60 (1992); Pershing Park Villas Homeowners Ass’n v. United Pac. Ins. Co., 219 F.3d 895, 899 (9th Cir. 2000).
Additionally, the “prudential doctrine of standing has come to encompass several judicially self-imposed limits on the exercise of federal jurisdiction.’” Pershing Park Villas, 219 F.3d at 899. Such limits are the prohibition on third-party standing and the requirement that suits be maintained by the real party in interest. See Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. at 498-99; Gilmartin v. City of Tucson, 2006 WL 5917165, at *4 (D. Ariz. 2006). Thus, prudential standing requires the plaintiff to assert its own claims rather than the claims of another. The requirements of Fed. R. Civ. P. 17, made applicable in stay relief motions by Rule 9014, “generally falls within the prudential standing doctrine.” In re Wilhelm, 407 B.R. at 398.
B. GMAC’s Standing
GMAC advances three different arguments in support of its claim to be a “party in interest” with standing to seek relief from stay. First, GMAC asserts it has standing because the Note was endorsed to GMAC and GMAC has physical possession of the Note. Second, GMAC asserts that by virtue of the MERS Assignment, it is a beneficiary of the DOT and entitled to enforce and foreclose the DOT under Arizona law. Third, GMAC asserts it has standing because it is the servicer of the Note. The court addresses each of GMAC’s claims in turn.
1. GMAC Has Not Demonstrated That It Is A Holder Of The Note
If GMAC is the holder of the Note, GMAC would be a party injured by the Debtor’s failure to pay it, thereby satisfying the constitutional standing requirement. GMAC would also be the real party in interest under Fed. R. Civ. P. 17 because under ARIZ. REV. STAT. (“A.R.S.’) § 47-3301, the holder of a note has the right to enforce it.[ 2 ] However, as discussed below, GMAC did not prove it is the holder of the Note.
Under Arizona law, a holder is defined as “the person in possession of a negotiable instrument that is payable either to bearer or to an identified person that is the person in possession.” A.R.S. § 47-1201(B)(21)(a).[ 3 ] GMAC has failed to demonstrate that it is the holder of the Note because, while it was in possession of the Note at the evidentiary hearing, it failed to demonstrate that the Note is properly payable to GMAC. A special endorsement to GMAC was admitted into evidence with the Note. However, for the Endorsement to constitute part of the Note, it must be on “a paper affixed to the instrument.” A.R.S. § 47-3204; see also In re Nash, 49 B.R. 254, 261 (Bankr. D. Ariz. 1985). Here, the evidence did not demonstrate that the Endorsement was affixed to the Note. The Endorsement is on a separate sheet of paper; there was no evidence that it was stapled or otherwise attached to the rest of the Note. Furthermore, when GMAC filed its proof of claim, the Endorsement was not included, which is a further indication that the allonge containing the Endorsement was not affixed to the Note.[ 4 ]
In Adams v. Madison Realty & Dev., Inc., 853 F.2d 163 (3d Cir. 1988), the plaintiffs executed promissory notes which, after a series of transfers, came into the defendant’s possession. At issue was whether the defendant was the rightful owner of the notes. The court held that the defendant was not entitled to holder in due course status because the endorsements failed to meet the UCC’s fixation requirement. Id. at 168-69. The court relied on UCC section 3-202(2) [A.R.S. § 47-3204]: “An indorsement must be written by or on behalf of the holder and on the instrument or on a paper so firmly affixed thereto as to become a part thereof.” Id. at 165. Since the endorsement page, indicating that the defendant was the holder of the note, was not attached to the note, the court found that the note had not been properly negotiated. Id. at 166-67. Thus, ownership of the note never transferred to the defendant. Applying that principle to the facts here, GMAC did not become a holder of the Note due to the improperly affixed special endorsement.
While the bankruptcy court in In re Nash, 49 B.R. 254 (Bankr. D. Ariz. 1985) found that holder in due course status existed even though an allonge was not properly affixed to an instrument, the court based its determination on the clear intention that the note assignment be physically attached because: (1) the assignment was signed and notarized the same day as the trust deed; (2) the assignment specifically referenced the escrow number; (3) the assignment identified the original note holder; and (4) the assignment recited that the note was to be attached to the assignment. Id. at 261.
In this case, however, there is no proof that the allonge containing the special endorsement from GreenPoint to GMAC was executed at or near the time the Note was executed. Furthermore, the Endorsement does not have any identifying numbers on it, such as an account number or an escrow number, nor does it reference the Note in any way. There is simply no indication that the allonge was appropriately affixed to the Note, in contradiction with the mandates of A.R.S. § 47-3204. Thus, there is no basis in this case to depart from the general rule that an endorsement on an allonge must be affixed to the instrument to be valid.
GMAC cannot overcome the problems with the unaffixed Endorsement by its physical possession of the Note because the Note was not endorsed in blank and, even if it was, the problem of the unaffixed endorsement would remain.[ 5 ] As a result, because GMAC failed to meet its burden of demonstrating that the Endorsement was proper, it has failed to demonstrate that it is the holder of the Note.
2. The MERS Assignment Of The DOT Did Not Provide GMAC With Standing
GMAC argues that it has standing to bring the Motion as the assignee of MERS.[ 6 ] In this case, MERS is named in the DOT as a beneficiary, solely as the “nominee” of GreenPoint, holding only “legal title” to the interests granted to GreenPoint under the DOT. A number of cases have held that such language confers no economic benefit on MERS. See, e.g., In re Sheridan, 2009 WL 631355, *4 (Bankr. D. Idaho 2009); In re Mitchell, 2009 WL 1044368, *3-4 (Bankr. D. Nev. 2009); In re Jacobson, 402 B.R. 359, 367 (Bankr. W.D. Wash. 2009). As noted by the Sheridan court, MERS “collect[s] no money from [d]ebtors under the [n]ote, nor will it realize the value of the [p]roperty through foreclosure of the [d]eed of [t]rust in the event the [n]ote is not paid.” 2009 WL 631355 at *4.
Because MERS has no financial interest in the Note, it will suffer no injury if the Note is not paid and will realize no benefit if the DOT is foreclosed. Accordingly, MERS cannot satisfy the requirements of constitutional standing. GMAC, as MERS’ assignee of the DOT, “stands in the shoes” of the assignor, taking only those rights and remedies the assignor would have had. Hunnicutt Constr., Inc. v. Stewart Title & Trust of Tucson, Trust No. 3496, 187 Ariz. 301, 304 (Ct. App. 1996) citing Van Waters & Rogers v. Interchange Res., Inc., 14 Ariz. App. 414, 417 (1971); In re Boyajian, 367 B.R. 138, 145 (9th Cir. BAP 2007). Because GMAC is MERS’ assignee, it cannot satisfy the requirements of constitutional standing either.[ 7 ]
3. GMAC Does Not Have Standing As The Servicer Of The Note
(a) Servicer’s Right To Collect Fees For Securitized Mortgages
Securitization of residential mortgages is “the process of aggregating a large number of notes secured by deeds of trust in what is called a mortgage pool, and then selling security interests in that pool of mortgages.” Kurt Eggert, Held Up In Due Course: Predatory Lending, Securitization, and the Holder in Due Course Doctrine, 35 CREIGHTON L. REV. 503, 536 (2002). The process begins with a borrower negotiating with a mortgage broker for the terms of the loan. Then, the mortgage broker either originates the loan in its own name or in the name of another entity, which presumably provides the money for the loan. Almost immediately, the broker transfers the loan to the funding entity. “This lender quickly sells the loan to a different financial entity, which pools the loan together with a host of other loans in a mortgage pool.” Id. at 538.
The assignee then transfers the mortgages in the pool to another entity, which in turn transfers the loans to a special purpose vehicle (“SPV”,) whose sole role is to hold the pool of mortgages. Id. at 539. “The transfer to the special purpose trust must constitute a true sale, so that the party transferring the assets reduces its potential liability on the loans and exchanges the fairly illiquid loans for much more liquid cash.” Id. at 542. Next, the SPV issues securities which the assignee sells to investors. Id. at 539.
Once the securities have been sold, the SPV is not actively involved. It “does not directly collect payments from the homeowners whose notes and deeds of trust are held by the SPV.” Id. at 544. Rather, servicers collect the principal and interest payments on behalf of the SPV. Id. Fees are associated with the servicing of loans in the pool. Therefore, GMAC would have constitutional standing if it is the servicer for the Note and DOT because it would suffer concrete injury by not being able to collect its servicing fees.[ 8 ]In re O’Kelley, 420 B.R. 18, 23 (D. Haw. 2009) . In this case, however, the evidence does not demonstrate that the Note and DOT were transferred to the Trust, and, without that evidence, there is no demonstration that GMAC is the servicer of the Note.
(b) There Is Insufficient Evidence That The Note Was Sold To Lehman And Became Part Of The Trust
When the Debtor executed the Note and DOT, GreenPoint was the original holder of the Note and the economic beneficiary of the DOT. GreenPoint, allegedly, transferred the Note to Lehman pursuant to the FISA. However, the term “mortgage loans” is not defined in the FISA and GMAC’s documents regarding the securitization of the Note and DOT provide no evidence of actual transfers of the Note and DOT to either the FISA or the Trust. Because such transfers must be “true sales,” they must be properly documented to be effective. Thus, to use an overused term, GMAC has failed “to connect the dots” to demonstrate that the Note and DOT were securitized. Accordingly, it is immaterial that GMAC is the servicer for the Trust.
C. Debtor’s Other Arguments
1. Securities Investors Are Not The Only Individuals Who Can Satisfy Standing Requirements When Dealing With A 362 Motion on a “Securitized” Mortgage
The Debtor argues that, in an asset securitization scheme, only the securities investors have standing to seek stay relief because they are the only parties with a financial interest in the securitized notes. However, because the Debtor executed the Note and received consideration (which he used to purchase the house), the contract is enforceable regardless of who provided the funding. In other words, the fact that the funds for a borrower’s loan are supplied by someone other than the loan originator, does not invalidate the loan or restrict enforcement of the loan contract to the parties who funded the loan. A number of cases and treatises recognize that consideration for a contract, including a promissory note, can be provided by a third party. See, e.g., DCM Ltd. P’ship v. Wang, 555 F. Supp. 2d 808, 817 (E.D. Mich. 2008); Buffalo County v. Richards, 212 Neb. 826, 828-29 (Neb. 1982); 3 WILLISTON ON CONTRACTS § 7:20 (Richard A. Lord, 4th ed. 2009); RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 71(4) (2009).
Notes are regularly assigned and the assignment does not change the nature of the contract. The assignee merely steps into the shoes of the assignor. In re Boyajian, 367 B.R. 138, 145 (9th Cir. BAP 2007); In re Trejos, 374 B.R. 210, 215 (9th Cir. BAP 2007). No additional consideration is required, as opposed to a novation which creates a new obligation. Id. at 216-17 citing RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 280, cmt. e. Therefore, the Debtor’s argument that the Note is unenforceable because the funder of the Note was not the payee fails. The Note is still valid and can be enforced by the party who has the right to enforce it under applicable Arizona law.
2. Proof Of A Note’s Entire Chain Of Ownership Is Not Necessary For Stay Relief
A movant for stay relief need only present evidence sufficient to present a colorable claim — not every piece of evidence that would be required to prove the right to foreclose under a state law judicial foreclosure proceeding is necessary. In re Emrich, 2009 WL 3816174, at *1 (Bankr. N.D. Cal. 2009). Accordingly, not every movant for relief from stay has to provide a complete chain of a note’s assignment to obtain relief.
Arizona’s deed of trust statute does not require a beneficiary of a deed of trust to produce the underlying note (or its chain of assignment) in order to conduct a Trustee’s Sale. Blau v. Am.’s Serv. Co., 2009 WL 3174823, at *6 (D. Ariz. 2009); Mansour v. Cal-W. Reconveyance Corp., 618 F. Supp. 2d 1178, 1181 (D. Ariz. 2009); Diessner v. Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys., 618 F. Supp. 2d 1184, 1187 (D. Ariz. 2009). It would make no sense to require a creditor to demonstrate more to obtain stay relief than it needs to demonstrate under state law to conduct a judicial or non-judicial foreclosure. Moreover, if a note is endorsed in blank, it is enforceable as a bearer instrument. See In re Hill, 2009 WL 1956174, at *2 (Bankr. D. Ariz. 2009). Therefore, this Court declines to impose a blanket requirement that all movants must offer proof of a note’s entire chain of assignments to have standing to seek relief although there may be circumstances where, in order to establish standing, the movant will have to do so.
3. The Movant Has Not Violated Rule 9011
The Debtor argues that GMAC “violated Rule 7011″ by presenting insufficient and misleading evidence. Given that there is no Rule 7011, the Court assumes that the Debtor was actually referring to Bankruptcy Rule 9011. Rule 9011 allows a court to impose sanctions for filing a frivolous suit. FED. R. BANKR. P. 9011(c); see also FED. R. CIV. P. 11(c). As noted at the evidentiary hearing, the Court did not find that GMAC filed its motion for relief stay in bad faith, nor does this Court believe GMAC filed its motion thinking it did not have proper evidentiary support. There are numerous, often conflicting, decisions on the issues of “real party in interest” and constitutional standing, and what evidence must be presented by a servicer seeking stay relief. The record in this case does not support imposition of 9011 sanctions.
VI. CONCLUSION
GMAC has not demonstrated that it has constitutional or prudential standing or is the real party in interest entitled to prosecute a motion for relief from stay.
Accordingly, its motion is DENIED without prejudice.
Filed under: CASES, CORRUPTION, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, Forensic Analysis Workshop, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, Investor, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Motion Practice and Discovery, securities fraud, Securitization Survey, Servicer, STATUTES, trustee, workshop Tagged: adequate protection payments, adjustable rate promissory note, allonge, ARIZONA, Aurora Loan Services ("Aurora"), case or controversy, endorsement, evidentiary hearing, FISA, Flow Interim Servicing Agreement ("FISA"), GMAC as the sub-servicer, GreenPoint Mortgage Funding, GreenPoint Mortgage Funding Trust ("Trust"), HERS, HOLLOWELL, Inc., Inc. ("GreenPoint", Lehman Brothers Holdings, Lehman Capital, Master Servicer, MERS, Mortgage Electronic registration Systems, Mortgage Loan Sale and Assignment Agreement ("MLSAA"), Motion for Relief from Stay, motion to lift stay, prohibition on third-party standing, REAL PARTY IN INTEREST, Reconstituted Servicing Agreement, Ronald Ryan, SASC, standing, Structured Asset Securities Corporation ("SASC"), third-party standing, trust, Trust Agreement, Tucson, U.S. Bank National Association ("U.S. Bank"), WEISBAND
ID THEFT: Example of one person’s response
Editors’ Note: In response to my post on ID THEFT I received a number of comments and ideas. Here is one example of how someone stuck to the message and forced the issue using ID theft as a defensive tactic as well as preparing for an offensive response.
Are you reading my mind?
Out of the blue in Oct. Got a letter with my mortgage company letterhead stating “welcome to new mortgage company”. Said they changed their name. Separate letter said on Nov 6. stop making payments to them by their name and Nov. 7 start making payments to them by new name.
I know about contracts so I attempted to not contract with new name. It’s been a disaster.
1. No assignment 5 months out, in the Official Real Estate Records.
2. Real Trustee still holds title. I contacted him, but he only represents the beneficiary ‘who has the note and an interest secured in the home”.
3. Checked all three credit reports, 5 months out. Two show old name one show new name all have the same info. I disputed new name in the credit report that had it – stating I didn’t know them.
4. I disputed old name in another credit report since they are no longer exist to force identification of who is updating that report. Got copies of all.
4. Checked SEC filings. Investors bought the first name corporation in 2008. Then on Nov. 6, 2009 they merged the bank into their business. That explains why they said to stop paying one name.
5. Foreclosures under old name on file in Deed of Trust has been without assignment or transfer filings. Using Substitute Trustee. Three problems. Original Trustee still holds title. I already wrote him and know this. Deed of Trust on file has no provision for Substituting the Trustee. By virtue of the ‘merger’ they should have the original documents.
6. Spent 5 months asking them to validate their claim. They send a copy of the Certified copy of my Deed of Trust on file in the public (that does not name them), and a copy of a Certified copy of the Promissory note (that does not name them). Two problems They can’t attach to the Deed of Trust without assignment..name change or not…their name is ‘not’ the named Lender nor beneficiary in the Deed of Trust. And the Promissory Note was made out to a specific entity. You can’t possibly assume that I have to know that when you sell it, they can come up and say ‘pay me’ when the promissory note is supposed to be held by the person you promised to pay. If they sell it, that’s a different agreement between them and the other buyer, but I can’t be forced into their third party agreement as long as I agree to pay you..you stay right there and let me pay you..but don’t force me to pay someone I did not ‘promise to pay’.
7. They’ve hired a law firm (setting up for a substitute trustee situation). I contacted the firm. (not pro bono, not pro se, no attorney..just me and told them I don’t recognize the other company and I have asked them to validate and they respond with stronger demand for money.) Maybe that’s why I got the ‘copies’ I did get from the mortgage company that does not support their claim.
8. Informed the attorney of their violation of FDCPA by forwarding information to another party and by not disclosing the amount attempted to collect is in dispute.
9. I wouldn’t trust an attorney at this time. The United States is in Bankruptcy, China filed a lien for 45 Million dollars in December 2009.
10. Have a copy of a Substitute Trustee sale by this company. They never released the lien on the debtor they foreclosed on after the sale. If they had the papers they could have released the lien.
11. Once you admit there is a contract you can’t use Statue of Frauds which helps me because I have refused to contract and have refused to pay and requested validation of their claim of a debt owed to them.
Thinking seriously about filing SEC complaint and sending the ‘Communications, Notice and Order’ to the named person listed in their SEC filing and a copy of that to the law firm listed with the words “With a copy to” – in their SEC filing
My identity has been stolen by the company. When I establish an account with one firm, that does not give a right to another firm to step up and say I have the account, change the name, change the terms of your initial agreement and start paying me now because I have a ‘new name’. How can you have an account demanding payment when there is no agreement and you are really a new entity, not just a new name?
I’m learning about Statute of Frauds. It would also appear that Deceptive Trade Practices can be proven in this mess. A company who has no contract attaches to your credit report as if you’ve established business agreement with them? They have no definition in your Deed of Trust, yet they can get an attorney to represent their interest in your document and start nonjudicial foreclosure proceedings. If they have the papers it takes to change the name on the credit report, they should have the papers it takes to file an assignment/transfer and change the name on the Deed of Trust.
I’ve not paid them any money, but I have filed FTC and Attorney General complaints. Not sure if I have to pay the 5 months in arrears as Threat, Duress, and Coercion to get some action done by these public resources I’m using to filing the compliant.
Filed under: bubble, CASES, CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, Forensic Analysis Workshop, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Motion Practice and Discovery, securities fraud, Securitization Survey, Servicer, STATUTES, trustee, workshop Tagged: assignment, beneficiary, credit reports, DEED OF TRUST, disclosure, discovery, dispute credit report, FDCPA, foreclosure, foreclosure defense, foreclosure offense, fraud, FTC Complaint, HERS, ID Theft, identity theft, lender, SEC Complaint, SEC filings, securitization, Substitute Trustee, transfer, trustee
SEPARATION OF DEED OF TRUST FROM NOTE: Bellistri Opinion
There is a lot of conflicting opinions about this. My opinion is that the confusion arises not from the law, not from application of the law and not from what is written on the note or deed of Trust. If you look at the Bellistri Missouri case the issue is well settled. And the problem is not what is written, it is what is assumed to be written. The Bellistri case, 284SW 3d 619, (Missouri Appeal, cert. reportedly denied) coupled with its quote from Restatement 3rd is simple: put one name on the note and another on the DOT as beneficiary (particularly when the beneficiary is MERS and therefore an undisclosed principal) and you have direct evidence that the intention of the parties was to separate the note from the mortgage. The burden of proof thus shifts to the alleged creditor.
Conflict comes not from the law or the wording on the instruments but from the inherent question of “why would anyone want to do that?” There are of course many answers to that question in a securitized mortgage context. But it is the existence of the question that causes people to lean toward the idea that no reasonable person would have intended that and to assume that the parties, including the borrower, would never have intended WHAT WAS WRITTEN.
I think the point of the Bellistri case is simple: factually, the note and DOT are split and according to the Restatement 3rd, they can never be put back together again. The note, while still enforceable as an instrument by itself, is no longer secured by an encumbrance on the property. The “mistake” is that of the drafter of the instruments. They want to say, much later in time, what we NOW mean is that the beneficiary is X, who is not the payee on the note,, but X has received an assignment of the note. Thus NOW the beneficiary and the payee are the same which means we can foreclose.
So the question put to the Judge is can a note and security instrument, initially made out to two different parties be LATER joined and if so, what does that mean for enforcement. My first comment is that once you have established that facially the note and DOT were split, your prima facie case is met and the burden goes to the “lender” to prove they are the creditor along with a whole bunch of other things that are not unlike the elements of proving up a lost or destroyed note. You can’t just say it happened. You must explain and prove HOW it happened.
But the simple answer to the question as per the Restatement 3rd, is “NO.” The reason why they cannot be joined later is not just because Restatement 3rd says so, it is the reason Restatement 3rd says that, to wit: if you allowed, particularly in a non-judicial setting, parties not named on the note and not named as beneficiary to later act because of a claim as being both, you are introducing uncertainty into the marketplace which is the precise reason we have the law of contracts, property records and such. The moral hazard is raised from possibility to near certainty when you KNOW from the beginning that the payee and the beneficiary are two different parties and the beneficiary is not the real party so the knowledge includes, from the beginning, that there is at least one additional undisclosed party.
Let’s take the simplest example we can given the complexity of securitized residential mortgages. ABC is named the Payee on the note. MERS is named the beneficiary. MERS obviously has some understanding with a third party DEF not to make a claim on the loan (according to their website). So we must presume that they have that understanding and that maybe it is in writing in some general type of contract which was neither disclosed nor revealed to exist at the time of the closing with the borrower. DEF defaults in its payment obligations to MERS. MERS now says we refuse to perform under our contract with DEF. Borrower knows nothing of DEF nor of DEF’s payment default to MERS. Borrower pays the note in full to ABC. ABC returns the note as paid in full. Borrower wants a release and reconveyance (satisfaction) so the title record is clear.
Now it MIGHT be that DEF=ABC. But we don’t know that. So for purposes of your case, you MUST assume that DEF is simply an undisclosed third party. Borrower asks MERS for the release and reconveyance. MERS refuses because it wasn’t paid by DEF and because it has no idea whether you paid the right person. With MERS refusing to execute a document releasing the lien, Borrower now has a defect in title that is unmarketable.
Borrower files a quiet title suit against MERS. MERS says it was named as beneficiary but that the DOT clearly states it serves only as nominee and therefore has no power to do anything. Now you have, on record, that the beneficiary is not MERS but the undisclosed third party DEF. The court MIGHT grant the final judgment, but it would then be adjudicating the rights of other parties who are not present in court, thus leaving the title clouded and possibly still unmarketable.
Another possibility is that the Court would inquire or allow discovery to allow the identification of DEF. Assuming MERS wishes to comply, there is still a problem. Data entry is NOT performed by MERS employees. Data entry is performed by “members” with passwords and user ID’s. Thus all MERS can say is that at a particular point in time MERS computer records show DEF, which was assigned to ABC or perhaps yet another party. The assignment is executed by Jane Jones as “limited signing officer” for MERS. MERS can’t say they know Jane Jones or anything about her because she doesn’t work for MERS. Therefore the only competent evidence from MERS is the data in fields populated by unknown sources of data input, and references to documents that were never seen or kept by MERS. The evidence from MERS thus has little or no probative value.
So now the Court or borrower goes to DEF and says “Who is Jane Jones?” DEF replies they don’t know because the assignment document was prepared by a foreclosure processing firm in Jacksonville, Florida named DOCX. DOCX has no contract with ABC or DEF or MERS. They were just following orders from yet a fourth party who is unidentified, and whose instructions were relayed through a fifth firm that serves as the correspondent or document manager once the loan goes into foreclosure (perhaps ordered by the servicer, BAC).
Thus the reason that a note and DOT can never be joined at any time other than the creation of those documents and executed contemporaneously with the funding of the obligation is that the contract and its performance is not based upon a condition subsequent (because such a condition would render the contract inchoate until the condition subsequent arrived or which would extinguish the obligation, note and mortgage). For there to be enforceability there must be certainty in the contract. Certainty can only be achieved if the terms and parties who are expected to perform are identified with sufficient clarity that any reasonable person would say they are known.
A borrower who signs papers without having a known party who is required by law to execute a satisfaction (release and reconveyance) has in effect executed documentation without a counterparty. The document is therefore void. Since the document (note, DOT, etc.) is only evidence of the obligation that arose because the borrower did in fact receive a benefit from the funding of the loan, the obligation survives while the note and/or DOT do not. However, in order to achieve certainty in the marketplace, the obligation is not secured unless and until some party identifies itself as the creditor and establishes a subsequent encumbrance through judgment lien, equitable or constructive trust or some other means.
Such a creditor action would be subject to rigorous requirements of pleading and proof. In the context of a securitized residential mortgage, the creditor can only be the party(ies) who advanced actual money, from which money the borrower’s loan was funded. In the context of mortgage-backed securities, a creditor who pleads that he expected a secured loan, must also plead all the documents and transactions that gave rise to advancing the money. This would mean that the creditor would be required to disclose and account for credit enhancements, insurance, credit default swaps, over-collateralization, cross-collateralization, and payments received from all sources pursuant to the terms under which the creditor advanced said funds.
Those terms are included in the prospectus and bond indenture which incorporate the pooling and service agreement, Depositor Agreement, Assignment and Assumption Agreements etc. In other words, the actual terms upon which the creditor advanced money were different from the actual terms accepted by the borrower. A court in equity would thus be required to allocate equity and liability for the various unpaid and paid obligations of multiple parties whose existence was unknown to borrower at the time of the loan closing, and whose existence even now would be at best dimly understood by the borrower or any other person who was not extremely well-versed in the securitization of credit.
Filed under: CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, Forensic Analysis Workshop, GTC | Honor, HERS, Investor, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Motion Practice and Discovery, securities fraud, Securitization Survey, Servicer, workshop Tagged: Bellistri case, Bellistri v Ocwen Loan Servicing, beneficiary, borrower, Certainty, creditor, DEED OF TRUST, defect in title, DOT, enforceability, HERS, MERS, Moral Hazard, multiple parties, nominee, note, Obligation, Ocwen, Payee, quiet title suit, release and reconveyance, Restatement 3rd, SEPARATION OF DEED OF TRUST FROM NOTE, unmarketable
AZ STATUTE DEFINES BENEFICIARY and CREDIT BID: NOT “NOMINEE”
33-801. Definitions
In this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:
1. “Beneficiary” means the person named or otherwise designated in a trust deed as the person for whose benefit a trust deed is given, or the person’s successor in interest. [Note that this does not include a nominee like MERS. There is a reason for that. The legislature intended to create certainty in contracts and actions on contracts. Using a nominee immediately creates the question of agency. The question of agency immediately raises the question of "who is the principal?" As long as that question exists, this statute is violated. If this statue is violated the deed of trust is void.]
2. “Business day” means any day other than a saturday or a legal holiday.
3. “Cash” means United States currency.
4. “Contract” means a promise or a set of promises for the breach of which the law gives a remedy, or the performance of which the law in some way recognizes as a duty, including but not limited to a note, A promissory note or provisions of any trust deed.
5. “Credit bid” means a bid made by the beneficiary in full or partial satisfaction of the contract or contracts which are secured by the trust deed. [Note that such credit bids are the rule rather than the exception and that the person making the credit bid is almost never the named the beneficiary. hence the sale is void]. [Note also that without an accounting for third party payments to the creditor in the securitization chain who has succeeded to the position of beneficiary BECAUSE THE SUCCESSION IS SHOWN IN THE COUNTY RECORDS, is voidable because the amount is incorrect, which is a question of fact that must be judicially resolved, which is why NO NON-JUDICIAL sale of securitized property is appropriate.] Such credit bid may only include an amount up to the full amount of the contract or contracts secured by the trust deed, less any amount owing on liens or encumbrances with interest which are superior in priority to the trust deed and which the beneficiary is obligated to pay under the contract or contracts or under the trust deed, together with the amount of other obligations provided in or secured by the trust deed and the costs and expenses of exercising the power of sale and the sale, including the trustee’s fees and reasonable attorney fees actually incurred. (e.s.)
6. “Force majeure” means an act of God or of nature, a superior or overpowering force or an event or effect that cannot reasonably be anticipated or controlled and that prevents access to the sale location for conduct of a sale.
7. “Parent corporation” means a corporation which owns eighty per cent or more of every class of the issued and outstanding stock of another corporation or, in the case of a savings and loan association, eighty per cent or more of its issued and outstanding guaranty capital.
8. “Trust deed” or “deed of trust” means a deed executed in conformity with this chapter and conveying trust property to a trustee or trustees qualified under section 33-803 to secure the performance of a contract or contracts, other than a trust deed which encumbers in whole or in part trust property located in Arizona and in one or more other states.
9. “Trust property” means any legal, equitable, leasehold or other interest in real property which is capable of being transferred, whether or not it is subject to any prior mortgages, trust deeds, contracts for conveyance of real property or other liens or encumbrances.
10. “Trustee” means an individual, association or corporation qualified pursuant to section 33-803, or the successor in interest thereto, to whom trust property is conveyed by trust deed. The trustee’s obligations to the trustor, beneficiary and other persons are as specified in this chapter, together with any other obligations specified in the trust deed.
11. “Trustor” means the person conveying trust property by a trust deed as security for the performance of a contract or contracts, or the successor in interest of such person.
Filed under: CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, foreclosure, GTC | Honor, Investor, Mortgage, securities fraud Tagged: agency, ARIZONA, Arizona statutes, beneficiary, credit bid, DEED OF TRUST, judicial sale, MERS, nominee, NON-JUDICIAL SALE, principal, UNDISCLOSED PRINCIPAL, VIOLATION OF STATUTE, VOID, VOIDABLE











Request for Legal Service: New Livinglies Feature
By LH | Foreclosure Blog News, Homeowner Resources, Weidner
1 Comment
THIS SERVICE IS AVAILABLE TO ANY PAID SUBSCRIBER OR MEMBER:
SEE $9.95 PER MONTH DONATION/SUBSCRIPTION LLB
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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!!
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Filed under: foreclosure