Nov
24

Huge TILA Rescission Victory in Oregon

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

Oct
31

THIS FRIDAY, Nov 4th: WPB & Sarasota Lunch & Learn Events for Foreclosure Defense Attorneys, Concerned Citizens

These working lunches serve as an opportunity to exchange information, network, share pleadings & case law, and regale war stories. WEST PALM BEACH Please bring $4 in quarters to cover 2 – ... Related posts:
  1. Friday February 4, 2011 West Palm Beach – First Fridays Lunch & Learn for Foreclosure Defense Attorneys (and list of upcoming events)
  2. THIS FRIDAY April 1st – @1pm WPB, FL. 1hr CLE! First Fridays Foreclosure Defense Lunch & Learn for Attorneys
  3. FRIDAY in West Palm Beach, FL! Jan 7, 2011 First Fridays Lunch & Learn for Foreclosure Defense Attorneys
Oct
06

Freddie Mac Fires Marshall C. Watson, but Fannie Mae Continues to Use Firm Because it’s too Expensive to Transfer the Files

  Fannie Mae was told about foreclosure abuses by an investor as early as 2003. The concerns were backed up in a 2006 report commissioned by Fannie that found “foreclosure attorneys in Florida are routinely filing false pleadings and affidavits.” “It is axiomatic that the practice is improper and should be stopped,” the 2006 report … Read more
May
02

FINALLY- HOW TO SAVE YOUR HOME FROM FORECLOSURE IN CALIFORNIA!

I get calls all the time from people all over the country who are looking for attorneys or for assistance in fighting their foreclosure for themselves.

In the State of Florida, hforeclosure-defenseomeowners and litigants are fortunate to have a dedicated corps of attorneys, many of whom offer deeply discounted legal fees and others who share their pleadings and strategies.  One of the best things about practicing in this area of law is working closely with so many exceptional attorneys who selflessly share their hard fought work product because they believe in the higher calling of the profession of law which is to serve others.

Another fine example of this sort of effort is a newly-published book authored by my friend and colleague George Gingo.  Click below for a sample of the detailed and comprehensive work covered in this book…

Conclusion and About the Authors

And most importantly, click on the link below to find out how you can order this book….I really support this effort and encourage everyone, whether you live in California or other states, to purchase this book and learn how to defend and protect your home!

GEORGE GINGO

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Apr
10

A Call To Action!

From Lynn Syzmoniak:

Dear Friends,

After the 60 Minutes Segment on Foreclosure Fraud on April 3, 2011, I was contacted by over 2,000 individuals, seeking help or wanting to help.

FOR ALL THOSE WHO WANT TO HELP RESEARCH THE DOCX FORGERY SCHEME:

1. Search the official records of your county and find all the Mortgage Assignments filed by Docx in 2009.  Search by bank: Deutsche Bank, Bank of NY Mellon, U.S. Bank, HSBC, Wells Fargo, etc.
These are very recognizable.  On each form, in the left hand corner, there is a statement that the Assignment was prepared by Docx in Alpharetta, GA.
For examples, click on the word PLEADINGS on the Home Page of www.frauddigest.com (my online magazine) – then click on the second entry – 10 Versions of Linda Green signatures on mortgage documents.
Print each example you find in your county Official Records.  Identify and circle the name of the borrorwer/homeowner on each record.
2.  Go Back to the Official Records.  Search the name of each homeowner on the Docx Assignments for Lis Pendens.
Print the Lis Pendens that corresponds to the Assignment and staple these together.
Note that there will not be a Lis Pendens for every Assignment – many homeowners will have already handed over the keys or agreed to a short sale to avoid litigation.
3. Sort by Law Firm Preparing the Lis Pendens.
In Florida, for example, the firms using these Assignments will include Law Offices of David Stern, Law Offices of Marshall Watson, Shapiro & Fishman, Florida Default Law Group, Law Offices of Daniel Consuegra, Akerman & Senterfitt, Gladstone Law Group and many others. These are the firms that continued to use the documents, never “noticing” that:
(1) the signatures varied so significantly that forgeries were likely;
(2) the same individuals used so many different job titles that the validity was unlikely;
(3) the dates of the Assignments indicated a fraudulent document because the Assignments came after the Lis Pendens.
4. Compile a report of these findings -State plainly which law firms used these documents and attach the documents supporting your conclusions.
5. Send your reports to the following:
(1) your local State Attorney;
(2) the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Association in your state;
(3) the FBI/attention: Mortgage Fraud Taskforce;
(4) the U.S. Attorney for your district;
(5) the Attorney General for your state;
(6) your country recorder;
(7) your area newspaper/television investigative reporter.
6. You may also sort by the BANK that used these fraudulent documents to take homes, and include that information in your reports.
Please send a .pdf file of your letter (without attachments) to szymoniak@mac.com.
If you are very ambitious, you may also add the face value of all of the Docx Assignments you locate so that you can report the total amount that banks took or tried to take using these forged and fabricated documents in 2009.
WHEN WE ALL COMPLETE THIS PROJECT, WE WILL MOVE ON TO FORGED AND FABRICATED ASSIGNMENTS PREPARED BY LAW FIRMS (such as David Stern in Florida and Baum in NY) AND OTHER SERVICERS.
Thank you for joining this effort.
Best regards,
LYNN E. SZYMONIAK
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Feb
18

2nd DCA SMACKDOWN- Attorney’s Fees Due in Foreclosure Cases!

Florida’s Second District Court of Appeals continues to hammer away at the foreclosure mills…..read on…..

At oral argument, the bank’s attorney tried to justify this improper filing due
to the vast volume of foreclosure cases in the judicial system. While this court is well
aware of the volume of these cases, that circumstance is not a matter that relieves the
bank and its attorneys of their obligation to file pleadings that are adequately supported
by a reasonable investigation prior to suit. If anything, the volume of these cases and
the obvious detrimental effect that such volume has upon the legal system should be a
factor requiring attorneys who file the actions to engage in a higher degree of
professionalism.

South Bay Lakes Homeowners Association

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Jan
14

Is The Fix In- Will The Wall Street Banks Beat Down The New Jersey Court?

residential-mortgageI’m increasingly concerned that the banks and institutions, the Wall Street Fat Cats are too powerful, that they in fact own and control this country, everyone in it and that even our courts….the highest courts in the land…are not above being bullied and intimidated by the forces aligned against our fundamental American values like due process, fairness and liberty.

My latest fear comes in the form of the following disturbing Order released by the court in the case:

New-Jersey-In-the-Matter-of-Residential-Foreclosure-Pleadings-and-Document-Irregularities-Scheduling-Order-1

For more evidence of my fears, visit 4ClosureFraud for their analysis.

I fear the leadership and those that (theoretically at least) run this county,  along with the banks and Wall Street Wizards that are destroying this country (and that really do run this country) are all huddled together and they’re buying into the mantra that WE’VE GOT TO KEEP THIS FORECLOSURE TRAIN MOVING…FULL STEAM AHEAD, DAMN THE TORPEDOES!

The thing that I find most disturbing about all of this is the threats of the institutions to the courts and the arguments that the very courts that are pushing these issues lack the authority or jurisdiction to pursue these institutions.  If this position is allowed to develop, then we really are in desperate trouble in this country.  Think about it. These banks and multi-national trusts and corporations file foreclosures against real property located within a state, then take the position that because they are banks and multi-national trusts, they are not subject to the laws, jurisdiction and regulations of the states in which they prosecute their claims….

ORWELLIAN, KAFKAESQUE, TOTALITARIAN

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Dec
28

Response to Florida’s Attorney General Appeal in Foreclosure Mill Case

Florida’s new Attorney General is continuing in the epic battle on behalf of all Floridians in this Foreclosure War.

A little background from the Palm Beach Post here.

But the real good stuff is in the pleadings that are filed in the court cases.  These are tough times, but it certainly is encouraging to know that Florida’s Attorney General is working hard to fight for Floridian’s rights.  Please read the documents and come to your own conclusions about the legal issues involved and especially the response to the appeal that was just filed by foreclosure mill Shapiro Fishman’s attorneys.  This is a key battle, but regardless of the ultimate decision in this case, I think some of the most important issues are already laid out in the appeal.

If Florida’s Attorney General cannot investigate law firms, then who in God’s name can?

foreclosure-newsIf these kinds of arguments prevail then we’re in far worse trouble than we already are….I hope our Appellate Courts recognize the gravity of these issues.

Petition Writ Certorari

Rsp Petition Certiorari

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Nov
10

Foreclosure Complaints Must Be Verified- Without Qualification!

Foreclosure-order Florida Rules of Civil Procedure 1.110 (a) Forms of Pleadings. Forms of action and technical forms for seeking relief and of pleas, pleadings, or motions are abolished. (b) Claims for Relief. ….. When filing an action for foreclosure of a mortgage on residential real property the complaint shall be verified. When verification of a document is required, (emphasis added) the document filed shall include an oath, affirmation, or the following statement: “Under penalty of perjury, I declare that I have read the foregoing, and the facts alleged therein are true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.”

rondolinoOrder

Oct
22

Defendants are Not Getting Notice / Due Process in Foreclosure Cases

Due-processOur entire justice system is based on the quaint notion that lawyers and their employees, like process servers, are telling the truth.  Here’s a big secret…….THEY’RE NOT ALL TELLING THE TRUTH.

The depositions from David Sterns’ employees describe disturbing, systemic failures and abuses of the system and reports rolling in from all over the state of flawed Service of Process and no notice of hearings and proceedings are very disturbing.  Process servers are not delivering proper service on Defendants and some of the foreclosure mills in some cases are not sending notices of hearings and other pleadings to defendants.  Any defense practitioner can cite any number of cases where they are not receiving hearing notices and pleadings….and if it’s happening when  a Defendant is represented by counsel, what do you think is happening to unrepresented people?  Let me sketch this out on a chart….

No Service of Process = No Due Process

No Service of Process = The Homeowner Still Owns The Home

Homeowner Ownership Claims = Massive Title Insurance Claims

Massive Title Insurance = Insolvency of the Title Insurance Market

Just wait until the smaller local press picks up on these issues and starts advising the minority members of the community about their Constitutional Right to Due Process. (The minority communities are going to be hardest hit by abuses by the process servers and the trash out companies.)  It’s going to be hard to explain how Rosita Diaz got served on January 1, 2009 in Miami Dade when she just happened to be in Puerto Rico at the time.  Process in some cases is just thrown on doorsteps or tossed at strangers….but we know that in too many cases, the process servers have abused the process.  Forget about Robo Signers, Sewer Servers are where the real title claims are going to come from and you cannot just ignore those issues.

Attached below is an example of claims of no service based on a local attorney who I know well.  I am certain that this attorney has absolute confidence and belief in his client’s claims and we are going to see many more such claims going forward.  Remember, there are no statues of limitations on No Service of Process claims and that any Final Judgments or Titles to property based on fraudulent service of process is void.  I expect that we’re going to hear wild stories and see quite a bit of documentation that will show just how out of control and flawed the process servers have become in the middle of this foreclosure chaos…..

NoService

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Sep
27

Attorney Signatutes- The Next Fraud Battle Ground

The Florida Rules of Civil Procedures require that all pleadings filed in a case be signed by a licensed Florida attorney.  I have started to examine files and am becoming increasingly suspicious that this important rule is not being followed by the foreclosure mills.

I am therefore starting to examine all my pleadings closely and I encourage each of you to do the same.  Ultimately I would like to build a database of these signatures to compare, so for those of you out there that are spending time looking at court filings, please start examining the signatures and making a cut and past document similar to the one I attach below.

My first example of gross irregularities in the signature of an attorney who makes filings in a court case comes from Ohio.  The document was prepared by a reader of this blog and it comes from an Ohio foreclosure mill attorney.  Please look at the sheet. There really is no commentary necessary regarding whether these were signed by the same person….

Given what we know about the foreclosure mills and their operations (particularly the offshore components of their practice) I cannot imagine that they are following this rule. (I mean the violate every other rule)

attorneysignatures

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Sep
25

The Stephan/GMAC Foreclosure Fiasco Is Just The Start- Next, Are The Attorney Signatures Real?

gmacA requirement of every lawsuit filed in Florida courts is that they must be signed and affirmed by a licensed member of the Florida Bar.  I’ve long had a real problem with the sloppy, arrogant messes of signatures that appear on pleadings filed in these foreclosure actions and now I’ve got real suspicions that some of these signatures may not be of attorneys at all.

Take a close look at the attorney signatures that appear on the complaints that are filed and on the lis pendens and motions.  Next, look that attorney’s signature up on mortgages for their homes that are recorded in the counties where these attorneys work.  The mortgage signatures are presumably their real signatures, but look at the “signatures” that are on the pleadings.  If the signatures that are on those pleadings are not of the attorney as they are required to be according to the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure, this would be a Bombshell at least as big as the Stephan announcement.

Up next, more GMAC affidavits that are withdrawn

gmacaffidavitwilson

gmacWithdrawal of Affidavit

By the way, these notices cannot just go out in contested cases, they must be withdrawn in every single case in which they were filed, contested or not.  Are our courts equipped to match those withdraws up to the cases they are filed in?  How many taxpayer dollars will be spent processing these withdraws?  Worse yet, how many foreclosure rocket docket judgments will be granted since this withdraw issue came out?  How many of our Senior Judges who are presiding over these foreclosure gas chambers are even aware of these issues?  (I know the ones that I have made aware of this were totally aware of anything…they are even unaware of the AG investigations….)

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Sep
23

Washington Post- Are Florida Judges Ignoring Their Duties?

washington-post-foreclosureThe Jeffrey Stephan story has spread like wildfire, but now the press is starting to ask the kind of tough questions that need to be asked of the judges who are ultimately responsible for accepting the flawed “evidence” and pleadings of attorneys and for signing the orders that throw their neighbors out onto the streets.  Some judges understand the consequences of their actions and realize that if they do not review the files in front of them they are no better than the Robo Signers who are now the target of so much press heat.

WashingtonPostArticleHere

Other judges, like the retired trial judge quoted in the article, seem totally unconcerned about such issues as fundamental and pervasive fraud choking our circuit courtrooms.  I suppose one needn’t be concerned with such issues if you won’t be facing the angry mob of electors who will hold you accountable.

At least we have our press to count on.  In the months and years to come, our press will be pouring through court files to examine all the fraud and mistakes that exist.  Remember court files, emails and all other correspondence are public documents in Florida and there are going to be more examples of abdicated responsibility than the papers will have room to print.

KEEP FIGHTING!

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Aug
31

Dan Gelber- FOCUS ON THE FLORIDA ATTORNEY GENERAL’S RACE

This site averages several thousand unique hits every single day.  I constantly review the site stats and the geographic reach of those who are following the page in order to monitor the reach and impact.

My sole purpose in creating this blog is to spread the word, assist consumers and protect our courts from the unprecedented attacks that the foreclosure crisis represents.  I appreciate all of the positive feedback I receive from each of you and know that the pleadings, Orders and other detailed and technical information has proven very valuable to each of you.  Now I want each one of you to give something back.

I IMPLORE EACH AND EVERY ONE OF THE THOUSANDS OF YOU TO VISIT DAN GELBER’S CAMPAIGN FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL PAGE BY CLICKING THE LINK BELOW

Dan Gelber for Attorney General

Please spend time on his page and pay particular attention to the “Issues” tab.  You will note that Gelber already indicates issues relating to mortgages are some of his key concerns.  Please also note Gelber’s strong focus on rooting out public corruption.  I believe we have a real opportunity to make an impact in this election, so I want each and every one of you to log onto his site and register as a supporter.  Also, go onto Facebook and become a supporter there.

PLEASE DO THIS TODAY, RIGHT NOW, IMMEDIATELY

Gelber’s Facebook fan page lists only 1,539 members.  If only a small portion of those of you that follow this blog will log on and become a fan of his campaign, this number can increase dramatically.  I want each of you to log onto his page and send his campaign a message about foreclosure fraud and abuse.  Share your stories on his wall.  Ask that he continue to make this a high priority in his campaign.  Ask that he take a keen interest in the failures that are occurring in our circuit courtrooms.  Ask him why these Fat Cat Wall Street bankers are being allowed to run roughshod over our state.

I’m going to monitor Dan Gelber’s Facebook page carefully.  I would consider it a personal favor if each of you would respond to this request and make a post on his wall.

LOG ONTO DAN GELBER’S FACEBOOK PAGE BY CLICKING HERE

OR SEARCH FACEBOOK UNDER “DAN GELBER FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL”

If the pleadings and information shared on this page have provided any assistance with your case and for you attorneys out there, if the information has been valuable to you, please click on and importantly

DONATE TO THE CAMPAIGN!

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Aug
27

NATIONAL LAW JOURNAL PICKS UP ON THE AFFIDAVIT ABSURDITY IN FLORIDA COURTS

The national media is now picking up on a major issue in foreclosure cases that we’ve been raising in this office for months now….the fact that most foreclosure judgments entered in this state are entered with no admissible evidence whatsoever.  Think about that.  The Florida Supreme Court estimates that there are over 500,000 foreclosure cases pending in Florida and I’m suggesting that most judgments should not be entered because they Plaintiff has not met its threshold burden of introducing the evidence it needs to prevail in its case.

Legal Analysis-  Something is Very Wrong In Foreclosure Court

The issue first came to my attention when a law student came to work for me and started questioning the basics of foreclosure law.  This young lawyer, Michael Fuino drafted a memo then questioned how judges accepted the affidavits stuck in all my foreclosure files.  Now most times, when you get memos or pleadings from a law student, they’re all over the place…citing the Constitution and the Magna Carta and all sorts of law and rules that have no place in a fast-paced law office.  But this memo was different.  It was concise and dead on point.  I attach it right here for all the world to read:

AFFIDAVIT Memo

We continued fleshing this issue out and from that small beginning, the memo was crafted into the motion that appears below:

affidavitMONTGOMERY

That memo and then that Motion helped develop the legal analysis that made it’s way into a courtroom transcript which appears below:

wasyliktranscript

And then finally, the national legal news media picks up the story, found here:

Law.com – New Strategy in Foreclosure

I sat in a courtroom yesterday and I watched foreclosure file after foreclosure file get churned through and judgment entered.  It pained me to watch this process.  I remain and will remain very much bothered by the physical sight of seeing those files, one right after another signed, foreclosure judgment granted.  There wasn’t even an attorney for the Plaintiff present.  No attorney to confirm the facts in the file or whether the Plaintiff still wanted judgment.  Granted there was no attorney or defendant there to oppose the garbage in the files, but what about the fact that there wasn’t even a Plaintiff’s attorney to support the file going forward.  The collective value of these judgments was millions of dollars and the law firms that filed these cases cannot even send a flunkie lawyer to push the file through?  Were the homeowners in a workout plan?  Were they in modification?  Were the assignments fraudulent?  Were there really original notes in the file?  Did the defendants receive service of process?  Who was the lender getting all these properties?  Who was really owed the money?

NONE OF THOSE QUESTIONS MATTERED IN THE SLIGHTEST BIT…..JUST KEEP CHURNING THOSE FORECLOSURES THROUGH.

I hope that all this will can be righted someday.  I hope that we will all take a deep breath and think about what we’re doing here.

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Aug
05

How the Other Side Sees Us

From a comment from icetea

Here’s a good powerpoint to read

http://www.mortgagebankers.org/files/Conferences/2010/LIRC/LIRC1011Lit1Huo.pdf.

Note that this is just the common view of most banks to litigation and what causes of action they are most prepared for.

As a Pro Se, I have learned that reading appellate decisions about how claims fail is very instructive (even if it isn’t a foreclosure case). What you may soon learn is that you can lose right at the beginning (to borrow from Neil’s admonition to win at the beginning).

• Most pro se litigants know just enough procedure to kill their cases from the get go and even a skilled attorney brought in later can’t fix what was broken.

• Many attorneys write crappy pleadings and were a complete waste of money for their client.

• You have to put in the very long hours at a real law library. Find your state/federal causes of action reference texts and learn the rules of what you have to plead – or should plead – in your complaint or answer.

• Learn about how cases get removed from State to Federal court and what that means to you – especially Twombly pleading standards.

• Learn the procedures of the court you are in. Not just the official statutes but find some books written to get attorneys up to speed on the procedures and terminology.

• Learn to search appeals decisions for your court (this is often available from the web). With a bit of keyword search skill, you can get access to how your state/fed court views the rules for proving various claims or how it views things like recission, Lis Pendens, injuctions etc.

• Evidence, evidence, evidence. Learn your court’s rules and objections. (If you watch Neil’s youtube vids, you might see a classic text on Evidence in the background … hint hint) Some of the books on evidence are massive so you will have to learn about what parts are likely to affect your case.

• Most of all, if you are going to do this Pro Se, you cannot learn everything you need to know from the web. Hit the real books made out of dead trees!

• Whatever you do, don’t mistake a rant against securitization (of which this blog has thousands) as a sufficient basis for your pleadings or motions.

Its way more work than you think. This is also why picking the right attorney with specific experience in this area of litigation – and familiarity with modern foreclosure defense – is critical.


Filed under: foreclosure
Jul
13

NV Judge Grants TRO and Denies M/Dismiss

Please send pleadings motions and order to ngarfield@msn.com

NEVADA case law.

Joseph Brown, Plaintiff vs. Wells Fargo Bank.

Plaintiff Brown wins a temporary injunction against mortgage giant Wells Fargo.
Also, defendants Motion to Dismiss was denied. The case is bound over for trial.


Filed under: foreclosure
Jul
01

EXHIBITS MORE IMPORTANT THAN PLEADINGS

From www.foreclosureblues.wordpress.com

Editor’s Note: I think we posted the referenced case when it came out, but this article from foreclosure blues does point out some things that I had not emphasized. They are right that a primary point to remember is that where there is a conflict between what the would-be forecloser SAYS and what they submit as EXHIBITS, the Exhibits control for purposes of motion hearings. Of course neither the pleading nor the exhibits are evidence until there is an evidential hearing, the exhibits are offered into evidence after a competent witness establishes authenticity, personal knowledge, business records, foundation etc.and the Judge accepts them into evidence. Of course you can change all that by just sitting back and saying nothing while they keep offering exhibits into evidence without any objections from you.

Editor’s Note….This decision is directly on point and this strategy has the potential to sway the entire foreclosure pendulum in favor of the homeowner, in order to obtain the leverage needed to force a truly viable financial solution.

A Florida Circuit Court Judge has issued a 5-page written opinion dismissing a foreclosure filed by Aurora Loan Services, LLC finding that the Plaintiff (Aurora) lacked standing at the inception of the case and that the MERS assignment was invalid.

The court cited several Florida cases and the Bellistri v. Ocwen case from Missouri as to the necessity of standing being established and that it cannot be waived. Aurora claimed to have standing by an alleged “equitable transfer” of the note, possession of the original note, and the MERS assignment. The court stated very bluntly “These arguments are without merit”.

As to the “equitable transfer” argument, the court found that there was no indication in the assignment that the note and mortgage were physically transferred to Aurora, and could not have been in view of the second count of the Complaint to “enforce a lost note”. The “physical possession” argument was vitiated by the fact that the exhibits attached to the Complaint, including the Note and Mortgage, were executed in favor of an entity other than Aurora (which we all know is nothing more than a servicer which was the servicer for the now-bankrupt Lehman Brothers), and that when there is a conflict between what the Complaint alleges and what the exhibits show, the exhibits control. The court also found that none of the documents attached to the Complaint identified Aurora as the “holder”.

The Court went on to show why the MERS assignment was a legal nullity, citing the LaSalle Bank v. Lamy case from New York, the MERS v. Nebraska Department of Finance case, the Arkansas and Kansas Supreme Court cases on the lack of authority of MERS, the Saxon v. Hillery case from California, and the In Re Vargas case from the California Bankruptcy Court to demonstrate that MERS’ capacity is limited and that MERS had no authority to execute the assignment. The Court held the assignment to be invalid.

The Court finally noted that the lack of standing at the inception of the case is not a defect that may be cured by the acquisition of standing after the case is filed, citing a Florida appeals case from the same appellate court which issued the BAC Funding case on standing (which we previously discussed on this website).

The Court dismissed the foreclosure and reserved jurisdiction to address the borrower’s request for attorneys’ fees.

The importance of this April 28, 2010 opinion is severalfold: first, it shows that trial court Judges are willing to accept the law on MERS from other jurisdictions. Second, it shows that trial court Judges are going to hold foreclosing parties to their legal obligations of proving standing by competent evidence. Third, it shows that courts will dismiss legally infirm foreclosure cases and entertain borrower requests for attorneys’ fees in having to defend a legally infirm foreclosure.


Filed under: foreclosure
Jun
13

Finally, Borrowers Score Points

“The court certainly agrees that ‘mistakes happen,’ ” Judge Bohm wrote. “However, when mistakes happen not once, not twice, but repeatedly, and when actions are not taken to correct these mistakes within a reasonable period of time, the failure to right the wrong — particularly when the basis for the problem is a months-long violation of an agreed judgment — the excuse of ‘mistakes happen’ has no credence.”

Judge Bohm also punted Wells’s claim that its problems with the couple were anomalies. He cited three other federal cases — one in Florida and two in Louisiana — in which Wells improperly collected money from borrowers, applied payments inappropriately, overcharged borrowers or failed to keep accurate records. The judge imposed $11,825 in fines on Wells and required it to pay $4,544 in lawyer’s fees to the De La Fuentes.

Editor’s Note: Finally the ship is turning. Virtually every day I receive another trial court ruling or appellate decision that recognizes the fraudulent predatory practices of the nations largest financial institutions.

Whether it is fines, contempt, damages, title, striking pleadings, or just plain fury directed at these heretofore venerable institutions, one by one, Judges are starting to scrutinize what had been a ministerial clerk-like function of approving foreclosure. One by one they are seeing outright fraud — not just at the time of closing but during servicing, during foreclosure, and even during bankruptcy.

Lawyers who are making money hand over fist advocating for these institutions best be careful that their ankle-biting clients will point the finger at them and claim an “advice of counsel” defense. Law firms that have increased their profits a hundred fold by bringing document fabrication and forgery “in-house” are now up for criminal investigations, indictment, conviction and prison.

Pretender lenders who have been in a non-stop feeding frenzy for years are now seeing the walls close in around them. And the political capital they thought they had purchased on capital hill has depreciated. That is why they are concentrating their lobbying dollars on state legislatures.

At bottom is the sickening awareness that our nation’s finance companies betrayed the country and the world. This was not just fraud on the investors who bought mortgage backed securities and the homeowners who bought unworkable, incomprehensible loan products.

It was fraud upon the country and it worked. Instead of seeing the great wrong perpetrated upon 20 million homeowners and 300 million taxpayers, instead of seeing the storm and the victims for what it was, our leaders and our neighbors were convinced that the victims were to blame. That one assumption magnified the  loss and prevented a robust recovery.

Most of all it prevented justice.

Nobody would argue that a victim of fraud has rights in court. If the fraud is proven, then the object of the decision should be to restore the victims to the position they had before the fraud was committed.

Nobody would argue that if the crime was egregious against society that punitive damages, exemplary damages, compensatory damages and jail should be the punishment.

Somehow this simple proposition that we all believe in has been turned on its head through the purchasing of favors in legislatures. The last bastion left to protect the country from a continuation of fraud in the courts and a perpetuation of fraud upon innocent victims is the judiciary. They are starting to get it right. Let’s hope it stays that way.

June 11, 2010

Finally, Borrowers Score Points

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

WHILE the wheels of justice have turned very slowly in the years since our nation’s financiers and regulators nearly cratered our economy, the Federal Trade Commission’s settlement last Monday with Countrywide Home Loans suggests that they haven’t entirely ground to a halt.

Countrywide, now a unit of Bank of America, was once led by Angelo Mozilo and was the nation’s largest mortgage lender in the glorious, pre-crisis days of the housing boom. But it was also a predatory institution, and the F.T.C., citing Countrywide’s serial abuse of troubled borrowers, extracted a $108 million fine from Bank of America last week.

That money will go back to some 200,000 customers whom Countrywide forced to pay outsized fees for foreclosure services. These included billing a borrower $300 to have a property’s lawn mowed and levying $2,500 in trustees’ fees on another borrower, when the going rate for that service was about $600.

Though Countrywide’s mortgage contracts specifically barred such practices, they served the company well by generating income during downturns when it was harder to keep making money off new mortgages. This “counter-cyclical diversification strategy,” as Countrywide called it, was designed to “extract the last dollar out of the pockets of the most desperate consumers,” said Jon Leibowitz, the F.T.C. chairman.

Mr. Leibowitz also said Countrywide made bogus claims about what homeowners owed during the resolution of bankruptcy cases and added fees to borrowers’ obligations without notice. His office’s investigation turned up cases in which Countrywide tried to collect improper fees years after a bankruptcy case was over.

In some cases, Mr. Leibowitz said, even after a distressed homeowner became up-to-date on all of his or her payments, Countrywide would start another foreclosure proceeding against the same borrower.

PRETTY shameful, all in all. But nothing new to lawyers who represent troubled borrowers. They say these kinds of abuses still occur.

“We’ve been screaming about these practices for I don’t know how many years now,” said David B. Shaev, a lawyer in New York City who represents consumers. “A lot of the fees seem like nickel-and-dime charges, but they add up to big money. The $108 million in the Countrywide case is the tip of the iceberg.”

The other dubious Countrywide actions identified by the F.T.C. — pursuing foreclosure improperly, adding fees without notice — also sound familiar to consumer lawyers across the country.

Consider a recent federal bankruptcy case in Houston involving Wells Fargo. The facts of the case were outlined last month in a harsh contempt ruling against the bank by Judge Jeff Bohm.

Back in 2003, Antoinette and Lenord De La Fuente filed for bankruptcy protection after they fell behind on their Washington Mutual mortgage. Court filings show they proposed a restructuring plan that called for 60 monthly payments to the bankruptcy trustee, who would in turn distribute the money to their creditors. The bankruptcy court agreed to the couple’s plan in June 2004.

The couple dutifully made their payments. Wells Fargo took over their loan in June 2007 and the next January sent the couple a letter accusing them of being delinquent by $8,400. Wells told them that they had until mid-February to come up with the money or the bank would start foreclosure proceedings.

The court documents show that the borrowers tried unsuccessfully to argue that Wells was wrong. But Wells refused to back down; afraid they would lose their home, the couple struck a forbearance agreement and received a loan modification in April 2008.

This loan modification violated the borrowers’ repayment plan. “Wells Fargo frightened the De La Fuentes into making payments to Wells Fargo in violation of the confirmation order,” Judge Bohm wrote.

In June 2008, the couple hired a lawyer to investigate the dispute with Wells; they filed a lawsuit against the bank that August. About a year later, Wells offered to settle with the couple. In a court-approved settlement, Wells stated that the couple were indeed current on their $66,572 mortgage and owed no outstanding fees or charges. Wells agreed to pay the couple about $30,000 for their legal fees.

With that, the couple thought their problem with Wells had been solved.

But in November 2009, Wells told them their mortgage balance had mysteriously increased to almost $71,000, even though they had made all of their payments. Two months later, Mrs. De La Fuente noticed that Wells had reversed several of the mortgage payments she and her husband had made. When she asked Wells why, she was told her loan was in bankruptcy status; if she wanted to resolve the problem, she would have to pay almost $9,000. Late fees were also accruing.

The couple and their lawyer went back to court and accused Wells of violating the settlement agreement. After hearing testimony, the court agreed. It also didn’t buy the argument of Wells that errors, including a computer glitch, caused the couple’s problems.

“The court certainly agrees that ‘mistakes happen,’ ” Judge Bohm wrote. “However, when mistakes happen not once, not twice, but repeatedly, and when actions are not taken to correct these mistakes within a reasonable period of time, the failure to right the wrong — particularly when the basis for the problem is a months-long violation of an agreed judgment — the excuse of ‘mistakes happen’ has no credence.”

Judge Bohm also punted Wells’s claim that its problems with the couple were anomalies. He cited three other federal cases — one in Florida and two in Louisiana — in which Wells improperly collected money from borrowers, applied payments inappropriately, overcharged borrowers or failed to keep accurate records. The judge imposed $11,825 in fines on Wells and required it to pay $4,544 in lawyer’s fees to the De La Fuentes.

Teri Schrettenbrunner, a Wells Fargo spokeswoman, said, “There is no doubt here that we didn’t handle this case well, but it is rare that you see a confluence of this many errors coming together as you did on this case.”

She contended that a vast majority of Wells’s mortgage customers are satisfied with it and that its operations are nothing like Countrywide’s. “There are significant contrasts between the way Countrywide did business and the way we do business,” she said.

NEVERTHELESS, for imperiled borrowers, the new scrutiny on foreclosure practices is long overdue. Thankfully, the United States Trustee, the Department of Justice unit that oversees the nation’s bankruptcy courts, is also investigating possible improprieties among lenders, mortgage servicers and the law firms that represent them in bankruptcy cases against homeowners. The trustee’s office assisted the F.T.C. in the Countrywide matter.

It’s a slow process, to be sure. But at least it is proceeding.


Filed under: bubble, CASES, CORRUPTION, Eviction, evidence, expert witness, Fannie MAe, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, Forensic Analysis Workshop, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, Investor, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Motion Practice and Discovery, Motions, Pleading, Securitization Survey, Servicer, trustee, workshop Tagged: Angelo Mozilo, Bank of America, borrowers, contempt ruling, countrywide, David B. Shaev, De La Fuentes, F.T.C., Federal Trade Commission’s settlement, GRETCHEN MORGENSON, HERS, Jon Leibowitz, Judge Jeff Bohm, legal fees, predatory fees, Washington Mutual, Wells Fargo
Jun
03

In States Requiring Mediation

More and more states are following the example set by the federal government in requiring mediation or modification attempts before going forward with litigation. We think that is a good idea in theory, but without the teeth that is in the enabling rules and statutes in Florida, you are just going to end up playing the same game of “who’s my lender.?”

Even in Florida, as in all cases, YOU must bring up the the issue of the authroity of the person being offered as a decision-maker.” 99 times out of a hundred they are not. The most they have is some authority from a dubious source to agree to some minor adjustments, like adding the payments to the back end of the mortgage.

Make no mistake about it — there is no decision-maker unless they have full power over that mortgage. That means they could if they want to, reduce the principal. They will argue that nobody has that power because the securitization documetns prohibit it. That is their little way of getting your eye off the ball.

Of course the securitization documents don’t allow certain things to be done to the mortgage. Those documents are aimed at restricting the actions of the agents of the principal (i.e. the creditor/lender).

It is ONLY an authorized representative of the investors who DO have the final say over any settlement that is needed in that mediation room and proof of that authority, which means notice to the investors, which means disclosing that notice to the investors and proof that a sufficient number of investors under the documents have approved the grant of decision-making authority to modify, amend, alter or change the obligation, note and/or mortgage.

Unless the person offered for the mediation has the authority to sign a satisfaction of mortgage on whatever terms he/she sees fit, they are not the decision-maker. If the other side refuses to comply move for contempt, sanctions and to strike their pleadings with prejudice.

If the other side fights this and they probably will, you should probably argue that this is a flat out admission that the principal (i.e., real party in interest, creditor, lender) is not represented in the proceedings because the other party in your litigation refuses to disclose them contrary to the requirements of federal law, state law and the rules of civil procedure.

If they can’t produce this authority then they also lack authority to foreclose. It might even be an admission that they are seeking to steal the house, put in their own entity and keep the proceeds of sale contrary to the interests of the investor who is entitled to be paid and contrary to the borrower who is entitled to a credit against the obligation that is due.


Filed under: CASES, CORRUPTION, Eviction, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, foreign relations, Forensic Analysis Workshop, GTC | Honor, HERS, investment banking, Investor, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Motion Practice and Discovery, securities fraud, Securitization Survey, Servicer, trustee, workshop Tagged: authority, decision-maker, Florida Modification, investors, mediation, modification, Mortgage, note, Obligation
Apr
15

Why You Should Attend the Discovery and Motion Practice Workshop

REGISTER NOW: CLICK HERE –>REGISTER NOW FOR DISCOVERY AND MOTION PRACTICE WORKSHOP 5/23-24

From the very start, three years ago when I predicted the crash and the rash of foreclosures which would virally spread around the world, my goal was to provide tools to everyone that would enable them to stop the flood. So far, I have succeeded in only a small percentage of the 20 million homes that are affected. We need more lawyers winning, more Judges getting mad at what they come to realize is a trick played upon them, and more people staying in their homes because that is where they rightfully belong.

THE IDEA IS TO START WINNING AND TO STOP “MAKING A POINT.” SCORING POINTS WON’T GIVE YOU ANY RELIEF. WINNING EACH MOTION WILL GET YOU CLOSER TO YOUR GOAL OF A REASONABLE SETTLEMENT, MODIFICATION OR EVEN FREE AND CLEAR TITLE.

In a nutshell, a lot of cases are starting off well with reasonably good pleadings but running into trouble when they get in front of a judge who doesn’t understand what you are saying or worse, thinks he or she does understand what you’re after and doesn’t like it.

This can only happen if you let control of the narrative get away from you, and that only happens if you don’t know how to use the rules of evidence well, can cite them in strongly worded clearly stated objections, and you make sense to the Judge. We keep forgetting they are just people and they have lots on their mind besides this one case.

So the purpose of the workshop is to provide the participants with an interactive experience that will enable them to present and argue objections to thwart hearsay and lawyer representations from the other side from being admitted or considered as evidence.

We are going to drill down on securitization NOT because you are going to accept the burden of proof, but to know exactly how to keep the burden of proof on the pretender lenders and to stand your ground. And their burden of proof on MOTIONS is HIGHER than beyond a reasonable doubt.(No, I’m not kidding or exaggerating).

But you still have to make sense to the judge. You must show the basis of your objections not by proving the evil sorcery of securitization but by insisting that the pretender lender prove their rights under the scheme of securitization. DO NOT STIPULATE TO ANYTHING. MAKE THEM PROVE THEIR CASE.

GET THE JUDGE TO AGREE THAT EVEN THOUGH HE/SHE DOESN’T THINK YOU HAVE A CHANCE IN HELL OF WINNING YOU ARE ENTITLED TO A HEARING ON THE MERITS. After you get into discovery it will become apparent to the Judge that you weren’t so crazy after all.

Accomplishing this takes some skills and knowledge about litigation that are not taught in law school except on a mostly abstract level. As Beth Findsen says, “You can be right on the law, but if the Judge refuses to apply it, you are still going to lose.” All the forensic audits or analyses, expert declarations and brilliant memoranda in the world won’t stop you from losing if you don’t know how to use the tools we are providing to you here.

Litigation is always an exercise in intimidation and withstanding intimidation. If you are not sure of yourself the other side will smell blood and go for it. This workshop will make you sure of yourself, make you a better litigator, and a better adviser to your clients about what to expect and what goals to seek.

REGISTER NOW FOR DISCOVERY AND MOTION PRACTICE WORKSHOP MAY 23-24


Filed under: foreclosure
Apr
07

WHAT NOT TO DO IN PLEADING AND MOTION PRACTICE

REGISTER NOW FOR DISCOVERY AND MOTION PRACTICE WORKSHOP

(2006) Here is a case that should not have been filed (entire text of opinion below) and was argued improperly. The homeowners clearly lost because they put their eggs in the wrong basket. Nonetheless, the opinion is a pretty good compilation of the various statutes, rules and regulations affecting mortgages and their enforcement.

An interest quote used against the “homeowner” which itself was a trust, is that the word “interest” should be interpreted to mean “Ownership interest”. This is precisely the argument I advance regarding the holders of of certificates or even non-certificated mortgage-backed securities whose indenture is the prospectus. Those investors received at the very least a “beneficial” interest in the loans. Thus either the prospectus, the certificate or both are starting points, in addition to the note signed by the borrower, as evidence of the terms and status of the obligation.

CAROL R. ROSEN, Plaintiff,
v.
U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION as TRUSTEE, EQUIFIRST CORP., AMERICAN MORTGAGE SPECIALISTS, INC., and JOHN and JANE DOES 1-10, Defendants.

CIV-06-0427 JH/LAM.

  1. DON’T TRY OUT NEW THEORIES IN PLEADINGS THAT SOUND LIKE THE CONSPIRACY THEORIES OF CRAZY PEOPLE, EVEN IF YOU THINK YOU ARE RIGHT. IF YOU KNOW IN ADVANCE THAT THE THEORY IS OUT OF BOUNDS IN THE PERCEPTION OF MOST PEOPLE, USE SOMETHING ELSE — there are plenty of simpler basic principles of law that will enhance rather than reduce your credibility.
  2. Beware of companies that claim to have a magic bullet to end your mortgage problems. Securitization is complex, and you need to focus on breaking it down to its simplest elements.
  3. Don’t try to win your case on a knock-out punch in the first hearings. Plan your strategy around education of the judge as to what happened in YOUR loan, using published reports, expert declarations and forensic analysis as corroborative.
  4. Don’t even think the Judge will indict the entire financial industry for what happened in your case. This will diminish your credibility.
  5. Plead causes of action that are familiar to the Judge and make sure you know and plead all the elements of those causes of action.
  6. Focus in pleadings and hearings as much as possible on the premises with which nobody could disagree — like every case should be heard on the merits, that you have a right to the same presumptions as anyone else who is pleading a claim or defense, and that you need to conduct discovery because there are facts and documents known to the defendants for which it would be over-burdensome and hugely expensive for you to get any other way.
  7. Don’t expect the Judge to be sympathetic. In most cases Judges still look at securitized mortgages like any other mortgage. In most cases Judges see challanges to foreclosures as desperate attempts to stave of the inevitable. Lead and repeat your main message. Your main message is that it is indisputable that if the facts you are pleading are true, then you are entitled to the precise relief you have demanded. KEEP IT SIMPLE. Use each hearing to repeat the previous “lesson” and add new lessons for the Judge.
  8. Do not avoid arguments of opposing counsel. Challenge them in a direct manner showing the Judge that if the attorney was correct in what he is saying, then he would be right and his client would win (if that is the case) or showing that the if the attorney was correct he still would not win his case. THINK BEFORE YOU SPEAK. PLAN BEFORE YOU APPEAR.
  9. DO NOT FALL INTO THE TRAP OF ALLOWING OPPOSING COUNSEL TO PROFFER FACTS AS THOUGH THEY WERE TRUE. Challenge that tactic by admitting that counsel has a right to put on evidence in support of what he/she is arguing but that the hearing is not the trial and you have evidence too, and you’ll have more evidence if you are allowed to proceeds on the merits of your claim. By all means, once opposing counsel has “testified” include in your remarks prepared script as to YOUR facts and YOUR conclusions. END WITH THE INESCAPABLE CONCLUSION THAT THERE IS OBVIOUSLY AN ISSUE OF FACT AND WHETHER THE JUDGE THINKS YOU WILL WIN OR NOT IS IMMATERIAL. YOU HAVE A RIGHT TO BE HEARD ON THE MERITS AND A RIGHT TO CONDUCT DISCOVERY. If opposing counsel is so sure that what you are alleging is frivolous, then there are many remedies available including summary judgment. But it is not until the FACTS come out that any of those remedies arise.
  10. Do not characterize your opposition as part of an evil axis of power. They may well have contributed to the Judge’s campaign, or otherwise have indirect relationships that do not merit recusal. This is not about whether banks are evil, it is about why are all these entities necessary to simply foreclose on a mortgage? If it is as simple as THEY say, why don’t they have the paperwork to back it up?
  11. DO NOT SAY ANYTHING YOU CAN’T BACK UP. This does NOT mean you have all the proof you need to win your case when you file your first pleading. It means that you know that if you are allowed to proceed, and you actually get the disclosure and discovery of the true facts, you will win.

United States District Court, D. New Mexico.

November 8, 2006.

Carol Rosen, Albuquerque, NM, Attorney for Plaintiff.

Rhodes & Salmon, P.C., William C. Salmon, Albuquerque, NM, Attorney for Defendant U.S. Bank.

Karla Poe, Rodey, Dickason, Sloan, Akin & Robb, P.A., Albuquerque, NM, Kimberly Smith Rivera, McGlinchey Staford, PLLC, Cleveland, OH, Attorney for Defendant EquiFirst.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

JUDITH HERRERA, District Judge.

THIS MATTER is before the Court on Defendant U.S. Bank National Association’s (“U.S. Bank”) Motion to Dismiss or Stay [Doc. 23, filed Aug. 7, 2006], and Defendant EquiFirst Corporation, Inc.’s (“EquiFirst”) Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings [Doc. 28, filed Sept. 15, 2006]. The Court has reviewed the motions, the record in this case, and the relevant law, and concludes that the motions are well-taken and should be GRANTED.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Before turning to the facts presented in the pleadings in this case, the Court takes judicial notice of cases involving D. Scott Heineman and Kurt F. Johnson, who are the Trustees of the Rosen Family Trust, of which Plaintiff Carol R. Rosen is a beneficiary. See Doc. 17, Ex. B ¶ 4.A. Heineman and Johnson

were the proprietors of a business that claimed to help homeowners eliminate their mortgages. [Heineman and Johnson's] business operated under the “vapor money” theory of lending, which holds that loans funded through wire transfers rather than through cash are unenforceable. [They] claimed that, through a complicated series of transactions, they could take advantage of this loophole and legally eliminate their clients’ mortgages.

In 2004, Johnson and Heineman filed a series of lawsuits against mortgage companies on behalf of their clients, seeking, among other things, a declaration that any mortgages on their clients’ properties were void. All fifteen cases were . . . found. . . to be “frivolous and . . . filed in bad faith.”

. . . .

On September 22, 2005, a federal grand jury indicted [Heineman and Johnson] on charges of mail fraud, wire fraud, and bank fraud.

United States v. Heineman, 2006 WL 2374580, *1 (N. D. Cal. Aug. 15, 2006). The step-by-step method Heineman and Johnson advertised over the internet and used to attempt to eliminate mortgages is as follows. They would have

the homeowner prepare and sign a promissory note as well as a loan agreement for the encumbered property. The homeowner then sends these documents to [Heineman and Johnson] with a cashier’s check “of $3,000 [to eliminate a] 1st mortgage, and $1,500 [to eliminate] a second mortgage or home equity line of credit.” Once this initial fee is received, Heineman and Johnson set up a Family Estate Amenable Complex trust in the homeowner’s name, i.e., the Frances Kenny Family Trust. Heineman and Johnson name themselves the trustees. Title to the homeowner’s property is transferred to the trust.

Now in charge as trustees, Heineman and Johnson approach the bank or lending institution that lent the homeowner the money to purchase the property. They make a “Presentment” to the bank in the form of “a cash-backed bond in double-amount of the promissory note.” The “bond” is allegedly “a valid, rated instrument backed by a $120 Million Letter of Credit against the Assets of an 85-year old, $800 Million Swiss Trust Company.” This is essentially an offer to the lender to satisfy the borrower’s indebtedness. The alleged “bond,” however, is a ploy.

. . . .

In addition to the “bond,” Heineman and Johnson hire “Trustee lawyers” to “begin the legal process by sending out a legal complaint in the form of a CPA Report that outlines 40 or more different federal laws that have been violated in the ‘lending process.’” The lending institution thereafter has a certain time frame within which to respond to the complaint. Purportedly, the homeowner will be notified by plaintiffs’ legal team when the loan is “satisfied.” The homeowner’s “lender may or may not let [you] know or acknowledge this.”

Once the loan is satisfied, “re-financing begins.” The homeowner is told to “refinance [his] property at the maximum loan to value ratio possible” with a new lender. The alleged “purpose of this new re-financing is for you, the client, to compensate the Provider and CCR.” Heineman and Johnson are the “Provider.” They run CCR. The proceeds from this new loan are disbursed as follows: “The Provider receives 50%. CCR receives 25%. You, the client, receives the other 25%.” This entire process takes “5-7 months in most cases.” And, “[t]he end result is that the [homeowner] gets free and clear title to the home and a good amount of cash in hand.”

[Heineman and Johnson], however, perpetrate a fraud to “satisfy” the original indebtedness. One of the documents Heineman and Johnson present to the bank or lending institution is entitled a “power of attorney.” This document demands that the lender sign and thereby acknowledge that it has given the homeowner “vapor money” in exchange for an interest (via a deed of trust) in the subject property at the time of financing. A provision of this “power of attorney” provides that the lender’s “silence is deemed consent.” When the lender fails to respond, [Heineman and Johnson] execute the power of attorney. They then sign a deed of reconveyance reconveying the lender’s security interest in the property to Heineman and Johnson. The forged power of attorney and the deed of reconveyance are duly recorded at the county recorder’s office. The county’s records thus show a power of attorney from the lender granting Heineman and Johnson the right to sign the deed of reconveyance and the reconveyance from the original lender. The title seems clear and unencumbered. The lender is unaware of the maneuver.

[Heineman and Johnson] then turn around and from an unsuspecting new lender seek a loan to refinance the property. When the new lender conducts a preliminary title search, it discovers the power of attorney and deed of reconveyance, both of which appear to have been validly executed. From the new lender’s point of view, the property appears to be unencumbered. And it is thus willing to refinance the property.

. . . .

At the conclusion of this process, the borrower is in even worse condition than when he or she first looked to [Heineman and Johnson] for debt relief. Two lenders believe that they have valid security interests in the subject property. When the homeowner defaults on both loans, both lenders commence foreclosure proceedings. In response, Heineman and Johnson, as trustees, file a bankruptcy petition on behalf of the borrower or file suit alleging that no enforceable debt accrued from either lender because the loans were funded through wire transfers rather than cash. Fifteen such lawsuits were filed in [the Northern District of California] on such a “vapor money” theory.

Frances Kenny Family Trust v. World Sav. Bank FSB, 2005 WL 106792 at *1-*3 (N. D. Cal., Jan. 19, 2005).

The following facts are taken from Rosen’s Amended Complaint and from the exhibits attached to her complaint and to U.S. Bank’s Answer. They demonstrate a pattern strikingly and disturbingly similar to the one described above. In December 2004, Rosen quitclaimed her property located on Wellesley Drive in Albuquerque, NM to Heineman and Johnson, as Trustees of the Rosen Family Trust. See Doc. 17, Ex. B ¶ 4.A. Colonial Savings held a mortgage secured by the Wellesley property. On March 3, 2005, Heineman, acting as “Attorney-in-Fact” for Colonial Savings, executed and recorded a notarized “Discharge of Mortgage” purporting to release Rosen from her mortgage of $86,250. Id. Ex. A. The Discharge stated that the mortgage had been “fully paid, satisfied, and discharged” and that Heineman’s power of attorney to act on behalf of Colonial Savings was granted “through the doctrine of agency by estoppel.” Id. The Vice President of Colonial Savings, however, recorded an “Affidavit of Fraudulent Recording of Discharge of Mortgage,” disputing that Heineman had any authority to act on Colonial’s behalf or discharge the mortgage and attesting that the note and mortgage had not been paid. Id.

On April 27, 2005, Rosen submitted a loan application to Defendant American Mortgage Specialists, Inc. (“American Mortgage”), a mortgage broker located in Arizona, for the purpose of refinancing the Wellesley property. See Am. Compl. at ¶¶ 8, 10-11 & Ex. A (Doc. 13). Rosen subsequently executed a note for $198,305 in favor of EquiFirst, secured by a Deed of Trust on the Wellesley property. See id. Ex. A, B. The mortgage provides that, if the note was sold or the Loan Servicer was changed, EquiFirst would give Rosen written notice, together with “any other information RESPA requires.” Id. Ex. B at 13.

Rosen signed the note and mortgage on May 17, 2005. See id. at 16. The loan was closed that same day, and proceeds were disbursed on May 23, 2005, including over $29,000 to third-party creditors. See Am. Compl. Ex. G. Colonial Savings is not included in the list of payoff recipients. See id.

Lines 801, 812, and 814 of the closing statement, under the heading “ITEMS PAYABLE IN CONNECTION WITH LOAN,” show that a 1% “loan origination fee” of $1983.05 as well as “OTHER BRK FEES” of $1762 were paid to American Mortgage from Rosen’s loan proceeds, and that a $940 “LENDER ORIGINATION” fee was paid to EquiFirst from Rosen’s loan proceeds. Id. at 2. In addition, line 813 of the closing statement states: “BROKER FEE PAID BY LENDER YSP $3,966.10 POC.[1]Id. This represented a yield spread premium that EquiFirst additionally paid to American Mortgage upon the loan closing.

On June 21, 2005, EquiFirst and Homecomings Financial notified Rosen that the servicing of her mortgage loan (i.e., the right to collect payment from her) had been transferred to Homecomings Financial and that the effective date of transfer would be June 29, 2005. See Am. Compl., Ex. C. The transfer of servicing did not affect the terms or conditions of the mortgage. See id. Further, during the 60 days following the effective date of transfer, timely loan payments made to EquiFirst could not be treated as late by Homecomings Financial. See id.

On July 11, 2005, Rosen executed a Grant Deed granting “to D. Scott Heineman and Kurt F. Johnson, Trustees of Rosen Family Trust, for a valuable consideration . . .” her Wellesley Drive property that secured her EquiFirst mortgage. Am. Compl. at ¶ 26, Ex. D. The complaint does not state whether Rosen gave Homecomings Financial or EquiFirst notice of her transfer of ownership of the property to the Trust. According to her “Affidavit of Sum Certain,” Rosen made only three mortgage payments between the time she closed the EquiFirst loan in May 2005 and August 7, 2006, when she filed the affidavit. See Doc. 22.

On January 23, 2006, EquiFirst granted, assigned, and transferred its beneficial interest in Rosen’s mortgage to Defendant U.S. Bank as Trustee. See Am. Compl., Ex. E. U.S. Bank initiated foreclosure proceedings on Rosen’s mortgage and the Wellesley Drive property on February 1, 2006, in state district court. See Am. Compl. ¶ 28. On May 11, 2006, Rosen mailed a “notice of rescission” to EquiFirst, U.S. Bank, and Homecomings Financial. See id. ¶ 42, Ex. I. She alleged a right to rescind her mortgage transaction based on her claim that, when she closed the loan in May 2005, “EquiFirst failed to meet the requirements to give me accurate material disclosures and the proper notice of the right to rescind.” Am. Compl., Ex. I ¶ 7. She also claimed that “[a] broker’s fee, in the form of a yield spread premium, was fraudulently assessed to the loan transaction, . . . [which] renders the HUD 1/Settlement Statement defective, inter alia, because it does not state to whom the fee was paid . . . [and because] the charge was encoded, to the extent that no consumer or most any other person could decipher [it] . . . .” Id. ¶ 10B. Rosen claimed that these failures extended her statutory right to rescind from the regular three-day period to a three-year period. See id. ¶ 10D. Homecomings Financial, through counsel, responded to Rosen’s May 11 letter on June 6, 2006. It sent Rosen a copy of the Notice of Right to Cancel she signed on May 17, 2005, in which she acknowledged receipt of two copies of the Notice. See Am. Compl., Ex. H. It asserted that the abbreviations of “YSP” and “POC” “are standard terms within the mortgage banking industry” and that, if she’d had any concerns about those terms, she should have addressed them at closing. Id. Finding no basis for rescission, it refused to rescind the loan transaction.

Rosen filed her initial complaint in federal court on May 19, 2006, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief and monetary damages. See Doc. 1. She filed an amended complaint on July 17, 2006, that contains six claims. Count One is for rescission under 15 U.S.C. § 1635 and § 226.23 of Regulation Z of the Truth in Lending Act (“TILA”). See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 33, 48. She claims that recission “extinguishes any liability Plaintiff may have had to Defendants for finance or other charges arising from the [loan] Transaction,” id. ¶ 49, and that “Defendants [sic] failure to take action to reflect the termination of the security interest in the property within twenty . . . days of [her] rescission. . . releases [her] from any liability whatsoever to Defendants.” Id. ¶ 50.

Count Two alleges damages under 15 U.S.C. § 1640 for Defendants’ failure to comply with § 1635 after Defendants received Rosen’s rescission letter. Id. ¶¶ 51-52. Count Three is for recoupment of a statutory penalty provided under § 1640. In support, Rosen lists twenty-eight alleged violations of various federal and state statutes and regulations. See id. ¶¶ 54(a)-(bb).

Count Four alleges violation of a right to Equal Credit Opportunity as described in 12 C.F.R. § 202.14. In support, Rosen alleges that the Defendants failed to make clear and conspicuous disclosures, and that various documents were confusing. See id. ¶ 55.

Count Five alleges violations of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (“RESPA”), 12 U.S.C. §§ 2601-17. Rosen claims that Defendants failed to give her fifteen days notice before the loan servicing contract was assigned from EquiFirst to Homecomings Financials in violation of § 2605(b), see Am. Compl. ¶¶ 57-59, and that EquiFirst’s payment of the yield-spread premium to American Mortgage constituted an illegal fee or “kickback” violating 12 U.S.C. § 2607(a)[2], see id. ¶ 60. Additionally, she alleges that EquiFirst and American Mortgage engaged in “fee splitting” in violation of § 2607(d)[3]. Id. ¶ 61.

Court Six alleges violation of the New Mexico Unfair Practices Act, N.M.S.A. §§ 57-12-1 et seq., based on the same allegations that EquiFirst and American Mortgage engaged in illegal kickback and fee-splitting activities that caused her to pay a higher interest rate. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 63-68, 76.

Rosen seeks: (i) a judicial declaration that she validly rescinded the loan and is not liable for any finance or other charges and has no liability whatsoever to Defendants; (ii) an order requiring Defendants to terminate their security interest in her home; (iii) an injunction enjoining Defendants from maintaining foreclosure proceedings or otherwise taking steps to deprive her of ownership of the property; (iv) an award of statutory damages and penalties; and (v) attorney fees. See id. at 26-27.

II. LEGAL STANDARDS

U.S. Bank’s motion to dismiss is brought pursuant to Fed R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). It asserts that Rosen has failed to state claims under particular statutes and that other claims are time-barred. It urges the Court to abstain from asserting jurisdiction over any remaining claims that should be resolved in the pending state foreclosure action. EquiFirst moves for dismissal under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(c) (“Judgment on the Pleadings”), asserting that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on Counts One through Four and Count Six, and on part of Count Five of Rosen’s amended complaint. In resolving motions brought under either Rule 12(b)(6) or 12(c), the Court must

accept all facts pleaded by the non-moving party as true and grant all reasonable inferences from the pleadings in favor of the same. Judgment on the pleadings should not be granted “unless the moving party has clearly established that no material issue of fact remains to be resolved and the party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” United States v. Any & All Radio Station Transmission Equip., 207 F.3d 458, 462 (8th Cir. 2000). As with . . . motions to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), documents attached to the pleadings are exhibits and are to be considered in [reviewing] . . . [a] 12(c) motion. See Hall v. Bellmon, 935 F.2d 1106, 1112 (10th Cir. 1991); Fed. R. Civ. P. 10(c).

Park Univ. Enter., Inc. v. Am. Cas. Co. of Reading, PA, 442 F.3d 1239, 1244 (10th Cir. 2006).

It is true that dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) is a harsh remedy which must be cautiously studied, not only to effectuate the spirit of the liberal rules of pleading but also to protect the interests of justice. It is also well established that dismissal of a complaint is proper only if it appears to a certainty that plaintiff is entitled to no relief under any state of facts which could be proved in support of the claim.

Moore v. Guthrie, 438 F.3d 1036, 1039 (10th Cir. 2006) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). “The court’s function on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion is not to weigh potential evidence that the parties might present at trial, but to assess whether the plaintiff’s complaint alone is legally sufficient to state a claim for which relief may be granted.” Miller v. Glanz, 948 F.2d 1562, 1565 (10th Cir. 1991).

In reviewing a pro se complaint, a court applies the same legal standards applicable to pleadings counsel has drafted, but is mindful that the complaint must be liberally construed. See Hall v. Bellmon, 935 F.2d 1106, 1110 (10th Cir. 1991). But “[t]he broad reading of the plaintiff’s complaint does not relieve the plaintiff of alleging sufficient facts on which a recognized legal claim could be based.” Id.

[T]he [pro se] plaintiff whose factual allegations are close to stating a claim but are missing some important element that may not have occurred to him, should be allowed to amend his complaint. Nevertheless, conclusory allegations without supporting factual averments are insufficient to state a claim on which relief can be based. This is so because a pro se plaintiff requires no special legal training to recount the facts surrounding his alleged injury, and he must provide such facts if the court is to determine whether he makes out a claim on which relief can be granted. Moreover, in analyzing the sufficiency of the plaintiff’s complaint, the court need accept as true only the plaintiff’s well-pleaded factual contentions, not his conclusory allegations.

Id. (citations omitted). The legal sufficiency of a complaint is a question of law. See Moore, 438 F.3d at 1039.

III. ANALYSIS

A. ROSEN FAILS TO STATE A CLAIM FOR RESCISSION.

In transactions covered by the TILA, the borrower is entitled to rescind the transaction. See § 1635(a). The right to rescind lasts for three days, if the lender has given the borrower the disclosures required by the TILA and a notice of the right to rescind; the right lasts up to three years if the lender fails to give the requisite disclosures and notice, unless the borrower sells or transfers the property to someone else before the end of the three-year period[4]. See § 1635(f). EquiFirst asserts that Rosen’s right to rescind expired by operation of law upon her transfer of her ownership interest in the Wellesley Drive property to Heineman and Johnson as Trustees of the Rosen Family Trust. Rosen contends, however, that because she did not actually sell the Wellesley Drive property and maintains a beneficial interest in remaining in the house (apparently by the terms of the Trust, which is not part of the record), her right to rescind has not expired.

Congress gave the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System broad authority to promulgate extensive regulations implementing the TILA, see 15 U.S.C. § 1604(a), which it calls Regulation Z, see 12 C.F.R. § 226.1(a). In interpreting and implementing § 1635(f), Regulation Z specifically provides that the borrower’s right to rescind immediately expires not only “upon sale of the property,” but also “upon transfer of all of the [borrower's] interest in the property.” 12 C.F.R. § 226.23(a)(3). The parties do not point to anything within the TILA, Regulation Z, or case law that further defines the extent of the borrower’s interest that must be transferred in order to trigger expiration of the right to rescind, and the Court has found none in its own research.

But the Court concludes that the words “all of the [borrower's] interest” means all of the borrower’s ownership or title interest for several reasons. First, the Board clarified through § 226.23(a)(3) that something less than an outright sale of the property triggers expiration of the right to rescind. Second, because TILA provides for penalties when a lender fails to comply with rescission requirements and gives the lender only twenty days to return earnest money, down payments, and accrued interest and payments and to remove the security interest after receiving notice of the recission letter, see 15 U.S.C. § 1635(b), the lender must be able to quickly ascertain whether the borrower still legally owns the property securing the loan and has a statutory right to rescind. The only way to timely accomplish this goal is to examine the real property records in the county where the real property title is recorded. If, as here, those records demonstrate that the borrower has transferred her ownership and legal interests in the property, for valuable consideration, to another entity controlled by someone other than the borrower, the lender can reasonably contest the borrower’s right to rescission without fear of penalty. Trust documents that may contractually grant various types of beneficial interests after the sale or transfer of all of a borrower’s ownership interest in property are not generally filed in the public records, and a lender should not be required to assume that a beneficial interest of some sort may secretly exist that would hypothetically extend the borrower’s right to rescission. It is therefore consistent with the TILA’s goals to interpret “interest” as “ownership interest. See Williams v. Homestake Mortgage Co., 968 F.2d 1137, 1140 (11th Cir. 1992) (noting that “another goal of § 1635(b) ['s recission requirement] is to return the parties most nearly to the position they held prior to entering the transaction”).

“Although the right to rescind is statutorily granted [in the TILA], it remains an equitable doctrine subject to equitable considerations.. . . Thus, district courts are to consider traditional equitable notions in applying [the TILA's] statutory grant of rescission.” Brown v. Nat’l Permanent Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n , 683 F.2d 444, 447 (D.C. Cir. 1982); see In re Ramirez, 329 B.R. 727, 738 (D. Kan. 2005) (stating that, “[r]escission, whether statutory or common law, is an equitable remedy. Its relief, in design and effect, is to restore the parties to their pre-transaction positions. The TILA authorizes the courts to apply equitable principles to the rescission process. . . . [W]ithin the context of the TILA, rescission is a remedy that restores the status quo ante.”). Because Rosen has transferred her ownership of the property to a third party, the parties cannot be returned to their pre-transaction positions, which would unfairly prejudice EquiFirst if she maintained the right to recission. Cf., e.g., Powers v. Sims & Levin, 542 F.2d 1216, 1221-22 (4th Cir. 1976) (holding that a court could condition the borrowers’ continuing right of rescission upon tender to the lender of all of the funds spent by the lender in discharging the earlier indebtedness of the borrowers as well as the value of the home improvements). Without legal ownership of the Wellesley property to use as security for another mortgage, Rosen most likely could not return the $198,305 EquiFirst gave to her and her creditors. Equity therefore requires that the Court interpret § 226.23(a)(3) to provide for expiration of the right to rescission upon the transfer of a borrower’s ownership interest in the property securing a loan. See Beach v. Ocwen Fed. Bank, 523 U.S. 410, 411-12, 417-19 (1998) (noting that “a statutory right of rescission could cloud a bank’s title on foreclosure, [so] Congress may well have chosen to circumscribe that risk” by “governing the life” of the right to rescission with absolute expiration provisions under § 1635(f), “while permitting recoupment damages regardless of the date a collection action may be brought,” and holding that a borrower may not assert the right to rescind as an affirmative defense in a collection action after the right has expired by operation of law).

Finally, TILA is a strict liability statute. See Mars v. Spartanburg Chrysler Plymouth, Inc., 713 F.2d 65, 67 (4th Cir. 1983) (“To insure that the consumer is protected, as Congress envisioned, requires that the provisions of [the TILA and Regulation Z] be absolutely complied with and strictly enforced.”); Thomka v. A.Z. Chevrolet, Inc., 619 F.2d 246, 248 (3d Cir.1980) (noting that the TILA and its regulations mandate a standard of disclosure of certain information in financing agreements and enforce that mandate by “a system of strict liability in favor of consumers who have secured financing when this standard is not met”). There should, therefore, be a bright line delineating the borrower’s and lender’s rights and responsibilities. Interpreting § 226.23(a)(3) to mean that transfer of all of the borrower’s ownership interest in the property securing a loan triggers expiration of the right to rescission preserves an easily-ascertainable bright line.

The Court concludes that, when Rosen transferred her ownership interest in the Wellesley Drive property to a Trust with Trustees other than herself on July 11, 2005, her right to rescission expired that same date by operation of law. Her May 11, 2006, recission letter was untimely and ineffective. She therefore cannot state a cause of action for rescission, and Count One must be dismissed. Accordingly, her claims stated in Count Two for monetary damages and penalties arising from Defendants’ refusal to rescind the refinancing contract must also be dismissed.

B. CLAIMS FOR DAMAGES UNDER TILA ARE TIME BARRED.

“Section 1640 is a general ‘civil liability’ section in the TILA. In subsection (a) it provides for either actual and/or statutory damages for various TILA violations” set forth in parts B, D, and E of the subchapter. Baker v. Sunny Chevrolet, Inc., 349 F.3d 862, 870 (6th Cir. 2003); § 1640(a) (providing liability for creditors who fail to comply with “any requirements imposed under this part, including any requirement under section 1635 of this title, or part D or E of this subchapter”). Count Three, for recoupment of a statutory penalty provided under § 1640 alleges violations of not only TILA, but also of various other non-TILA regulations and the New Mexico UCC. Insofar as Rosen attempts to recover damages for violation of statutes not listed in § 1640(a), she has failed to state a claim.

Further, her claims for failing to disclose information or otherwise violating subchapter B at the time of closing must be dismissed as time barred. As both U.S. Bank and EquiFirst point out, claims for damages under § 1640 of TILA have a one-year limitations period. See § 1640(e) (“Any action under this section may be brought in any United States district court, or in any other court of competent jurisdiction, within one year from the date of the occurrence of the violation . . . .”). A review of Rosen’s complaint reveals that all alleged violations of subchapter B occurred at or before closing on May 17, 2005, but she did not file her complaint until more than one year later. Count Three must be dismissed.

D. ROSEN FAILS TO STATE A CLAIM FOR VIOLATION OF THE EQUAL CREDIT OPPORTUNITY ACT.

The Equal Credit Opportunity Act, codified at 15 U.S.C. § 1691-1691(f), makes it unlawful for a creditor to discriminate “on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex or marital status, or age (provided the applicant has the capacity to contract); [] because all or part of the applicant’s income derives from any public assistance program; or [] because the applicant has in good faith exercised any right under [TILA].” § 1691(a). Rosen’s amended complaint alleges no facts to support a claim for violation of the Act, and she made no argument in her response brief to support amendment. Count Four must be dismissed.

E. RESPA CLAIMS MUST BE DISMISSED.

Rosen attempts to assert two types of claims under RESPA in Count Five of the Amended Complaint. The first is for violation, on June 21, 2005, of a provision that requires creditors to give a borrower fifteen days notice before transferring an account to a different loan servicer. See § 2605(b)(2)(A) (“Except as provided under subparagraphs (B) and (C), the notice required under paragraph (1) shall be made to the borrower not less than 15 days before the effective date of transfer of the servicing of the mortgage loan.”). To recover under § 2605, the borrower must allege and show actual damages suffered “as a result of the failure.” § 2605(f)(1)(A). If the borrower also alleges and establishes that the violation is a “pattern or practice of noncompliance,” a court may additionally award statutory damages “not to exceed $1000.” § 2605(f)(1)(B). Although the Amended Complaint neither alleges that Rosen suffered any actual damages as a result of EquiFirst’s failure to give her a full 15-days notice of the change of loan servicer, nor alleges that EquiFirst engaged in a pattern or practice of not complying with the 15-day notice requirement, Rosen requests that the Court “reduce the amount owed by Plaintiff by the amount of statutory and actual damages available under RESPA.” Am. Compl. at 22.

Because she has not alleged she suffered actual damages, the Court concludes that Rosen has failed to state a claim for damages under § 2605 and that she should not be given an opportunity to amend her complaint because none of the Defendants have attempted, in this federal suit, to bring any claims for money Rosen owes them. Any claims for recoupment that Rosen may be able to bring are relevant to the state foreclosure action and should be litigated there. Cf. Demmler v. Bank One NA, 2006 WL 640499, *5 (S.D. Ohio, Mar. 9, 2006) (alternatively holding that the plaintiff’s claims brought pursuant to TILA and other federal statutes against lending bank and challenging validity of loan were barred because they were compulsory counterclaims that should have been raised in the foreclosure action in state court).

Rosen alleges that Defendants violated § 2607 by giving “kickbacks” or engaging in “fee-splitting” on May 17, 2005, when EquiFirst paid a broker’s fee to American Mortgage as a yield-spread premium. The statute of limitations for violations of § 2607 is one year from the date the violation is alleged to have occurred. See 12 U.S.C. § 2614. The Court concludes that Rosen’s claims for violation of § 2607 are barred by the one-year statute of limitations. See Snow v. First Am. Title Ins. Co., 332 F.3d 356, 359-60 (5th Cir. 2003) (“The primary ill that § 2607 is designed to remedy is the potential for ‘unnecessarily high settlement charges,’ § 2601(a), caused by kickbacks, fee-splitting, and other practices that suppress price competition for settlement services. This ill occurs, if at all, when the plaintiff pays for the service, typically at the closing. Plaintiffs therefore could have sued at that moment, and the standard rule is that the limitations period commences when the plaintiff has a complete and present cause of action.”) (internal quotation marks and bracket omitted). Rosen’s argument that her claim survives the one-year statute of limitations because it is one for recoupment is unavailing because Defendants have not sued her by way of counter-claim in this federal suit. Again, any claims for recoupment should have been brought as a defense in the state foreclosure action. See 15 U.S.C. § 1640(e); Beach, 523 U.S. at 417-19.

F. THE COURT WILL NOT TAKE SUPPLEMENTAL JURISDICTION OVER POTENTIAL STATE-LAW CLAIMS.

The Tenth Circuit has instructed district courts that, when federal jurisdiction is based solely upon a federal question, absent a showing that “the parties have already expended a great deal of time and energy on the state law claims, . . . a district court should normally dismiss supplemental state law claims after all federal claims have been dismissed, particularly when the federal claims are dismissed before trial.” United States v. Botefuhr, 309 F.3d 1263, 1273 (10th Cir. 2002); see Sawyer v. County of Creek, 908 F.2d 663, 668 (10th Cir. 1990) (“Because we dismiss the federal causes of action prior to trial, we hold that the state claims should be dismissed for lack of pendent jurisdiction.”). None of the factors identified in Thatcher Enterprises v. Cache County Corp., 902 F.2d 1472, 1478 (10th Cir. 1990) — “the nature and extent of pretrial proceedings, judicial economy, convenience, or fairness” — would be served by retaining jurisdiction over any potential state-law claim in this case. No discovery has been conducted in this case, and no energy has been expended on the potential state-law claims. The Court will dismiss Rosen’s state-law claims for violation of the New Mexico Unfair Practices Act contained in Count Six of her amended complaint.

NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED that all Counts of Rosen’s federal complaint are DISMISSED.

[1] “YSP” is an abbreviation for “yield spread premium” and “POC” is an abbreviation for “paid outside closing.” Am. Compl., Ex. H

[2] Although Rosen cites 12 U.S.C. § 1207(a) as the statute violated, there is no such statute and her citation to 24 C.F.R. § 3500.14 refers to violations of § 2607. The Court therefore construes her complaint to allege violations of § 2607.

[3] See footnote 2.

[4] Section 1635 provides, in relevant part:

(a) Disclosure of obligor’s right to rescind

Except as otherwise provided in this section, in the case of any consumer credit transaction . . . in which a security interest . . . is or will be retained or acquired in any property which is used as the principal dwelling of the person to whom credit is extended, the obligor shall have the right to rescind the transaction until midnight of the third business day following the consummation of the transaction or the delivery of the information and rescission forms required under this section together with a statement containing the material disclosures required under this subchapter, whichever is later, by notifying the creditor, in accordance with regulations of the Board, of his intention to do so. The creditor shall clearly and conspicuously disclose, in accordance with regulations of the Board, to any obligor in a transaction subject to this section the rights of the obligor under this section. The creditor shall also provide, in accordance with regulations of the Board, appropriate forms for the obligor to exercise his right to rescind any transaction subject to this section.

. . . .

(f) Time limit for exercise of right

An obligor’s right of rescission shall expire three years after the date of consummation of the transaction or upon the sale of the property, whichever occurs first, notwithstanding the fact that the information and forms required under this section or any other disclosures required under this part have not been delivered to the obligor . . . .


Filed under: CORRUPTION, currency, Eviction, expert witness, foreclosure, foreclosure mill, GTC | Honor, HERS, Investor, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, Motion Practice and Discovery, securities fraud, Servicer, STATUTES, workshop Tagged: 1039 (10th Cir. 2006), 1110 (10th Cir. 1991), 1112 (10th Cir. 1991);, 12 C.F.R. § 226.1(a), 12 C.F.R. § 226.23(a)(3, 1244 (10th Cir. 2006)., 15 U.S.C. § 1635(b), 1565 (10th Cir. 1991)., 2005 WL 106792 at *1-*3 (N. D. Cal., 2005)., 207 F.3d 458, 438 F.3d 1036, 442 F.3d 1239, 462 (8th Cir. 2000), 935 F.2d 1106, 948 F.2d 1562, Affidavit of Fraudulent Recording of Discharge of Mortgage, Akin & Robb, AMERICAN MORTGAGE SPECIALISTS, CAROL R. ROSEN, certificate, CIV-06-0427 JH/LAM., Cleveland, Colonial Savings, Dickason, Discharge of Mortgage, discovery, EQUIFIRST CORP, Fed R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), Fed. R. Civ. P. 10(c)., Frances Kenny Family Trust v. World Sav. Bank FSB, Hall v. Bellmon, Hearing, HERS, Homecomings Financial, HUD 1/Settlement Statement, Inc., Inc. v. Am. Cas. Co. of Reading, Jan. 19, JUDITH HERRERA, Karla Poe, Kimberly Smith Rivera, McGlinchey Staford, merits, Miller v. Glanz, Moore v. Guthrie, MOTION TO DISMISS, N.M.S.A. §§ 57-12-1, New Mexico, New Mexico Unfair Practices Act, Obligation, Oh, Ownership interest, P.A., P.C., PA, Park Univ. Enter., Pleading, PLLC, Prospectus, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Regulation Z, RESPA, Rhodes & Salmon, Rodey, Sloan, TILA, trustee, Truth in Lending Act, U.S. Bank National Association, United States v. Any & All Radio Station Transmission Equip., William C. Salmon
Mar
30

Livinglies Search Engine — GET INVOLVED AND REAP THE REWARDS

First I want to thank the readers who are sending in information that connects the dots. Relationships between companies that were not obvious, signors with dubious authority. Signors on assignments, allonges, indorsements, affidavits on behalf of multiple “employers (see Judge Schack’s decisions), Pool Names, Trustees, servicers, underwriters, loan originators etc. are all pouring in. While we are compiling the database structure and service, we are taking the short-cut route of going through posts and comments that already contain this information. If you use the WordPress search engine on the home page of this blog you can search on “HERS” (Homeowner Electronic registration System) and it will return a whole bunch of things already. If you put in the name “Litton” or “Countrywide” likely you will already be getting some valuable information.

So keep that info coming in. REMEMBER TO DELETE INFORMATION THAT WOULD ENABLE IDENTITY THEFT. SO REDACT WITH BLACK MARKER YOUR SSN ETC. If you are doing research or of the other side has already given information in their pleadings, send the info in and we will include it in the data here. Each time you send something in you are helping others and you are probably helping yourself.

IF YOU CAN, PLEASE SEND IN PROPERTY ZIP CODE, YOUR PURCHASE PRICE, THE PURCHASE PRICE BEFORE YOU, THE APPRAISAL AMOUNT WHEN YOU BOUGHT THE PROPERTY, THE CURRENT TAX APPRAISED VALUE (AND THE TAX APPRAISED VALUE WHEN YOU BOUGHT YOUR HOME IF IT IS AVAILABLE), THE AMOUNT DEMANDED BY THE PRETENDER LENDER, THE AMOUNT DEMANDED IN THE NOTICE OF DEFAULT, AND THE AMOUNT OF THE FORECLOSURE SALES PRICE IF IT IS AVAILABLE.

We ALSO want ANYTHING FROM THE LIST BELOW YOU HAVE, ARE WILING TO RESEARCH OR CAN GET:

  1. Names of people, companies, trusts, from the pretender lender side

  2. Addresses

  3. Phone numbers

  4. zip codes

  5. notaries

  6. witnesses

  7. signers

  8. officers

  9. titles of officers

  10. escrow agents

  11. title agents

  12. closing agents

  13. trustees — anyone referred to or calling themselves trustees

  14. beneficiaries — on Mortgage or Deed of Trust, Payee on Note, Title Insurance Policy, Property Insurance on Home.

  15. Is your obligation going to reset? If you are willing to do so, please tell us when, what will happen to the payments and whether you can afford the new payment structure. Include the date of closing.

  16. nominees

  17. MERS nominee relationships

  18. MERS signers

  19. foreclosure mill law firms

  20. employees of foreclosure mill law firms

  21. document fabrication mills, their location, signers, notaries officers etc.

  22. “trust” names

  23. trustees for mortgage backed securities

  24. copies of pooling and service agreements

  25. copies of assignment and assumption agreements

  26. copies of assignments

  27. copies of allonges

  28. copies of indorsements

  29. copies of mortgage backed securities

  30. cusip numbers

  31. copies of prospectus

  32. copies of deeds of trust

  33. copies of notes

  34. copies of good faith estimates

  35. copies of HUD settlement statements

  36. COPIES OF NOTICES OF DEFAULT

  37. COPIES OF NOTICES OF DELINQUENCY

  38. COPIES OF PREFORECLOSURE NOTICES

  39. COPIES OF NOTICES OF SALE

  40. COPIES OF LAWSUITS AND EXHIBITS

  41. COPIES OF MEMORANDUM FILED BY EITHER SIDE

  42. copies of unlawful detainer (eviction) actions

  43. copies of motions for writ of possession

  44. copies of motion to lift stay (MLS)
  45. copies of documents showing foreclosure sale took place

  46. copies of certificate of title issued by clerk or trustee in foreclosure sale

  47. COPIES OF MOTIONS AND EXHIBITS

  48. COPIES OF TRANSCRIPTS

  49. SUCCESSFUL SHORT-SALE DOCUMENTATION

  50. SUCCESSFUL MODIFICATION DOCUMENTATION

  51. SUCCESSFUL QUIET TITLE JUDGMENTS

  52. APPEAL BRIEFS PENDING

  53. ANYTHING ELSE YOU THINK IS MISSING FROM THIS LIST


Filed under: bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, currency, Eviction, foreclosure, GTC | Honor, HERS, Investor, Mortgage, securities fraud Tagged: HERS, SEARCH ENGINE
Feb
01

Important Florida Case – one way to get a foreclosure dismissed

There is a recent decision out of the Sixth Judicial Circuit in FL (Pinellas County) that I believe warrants focus and analysis for homeowners and their attorneys. In Wachovia Mortgage v. Matacchiero, the Defendant filed a Motion to Dismiss (MTD) the case through her attorney. The basic premise of the MTD was that the Plaintiff lacked the “capacity to sue” the Defendant for foreclosure under Fla. Civ. Pro., Rule 1.120(a).

Most foreclosure attorneys are used to hearing (and arguing) the legal issue of “standing” and while standing is a very valid issue that should be questioned in every foreclosure case, the “capacity to sue”  is different. ‘Capacity to sue’ is an absence or legal disability which would deprive a party of the right to come into court.” Judge Rondolino, the presiding judge who signed the order granting the Defendant’s MTD, made the distinction right in his order.

In this case, the Plaintiff was, “Wachovia Mortgage FSB, F/K/A World Savings Bank.” The argument was simply that the Plaintiff failed to properly identify itself in the pleadings (complaint) and therefore the Defendant was deprived of knowing exactly who to answer or frame her responsive pleading to.

The Defendant’s argument: “Because the Plaintiff failed to “plead or specify in what capacity the Plaintiff brings suit and by failing to define or identify in any way the nature of its legal entity the Plaintiff has not plead that it has the capacity to maintain suit before this court.”

Notice point 4 of the Judge’s order where he specifically compares capacity to standing and note the differences.

The attorney in this case did a great job really analyzing the Defendant’s case and he obviously has a firm grasp on and working knowledge of the rules of civil procedure. He successfully attacked the legal deficiencies in this case and won on the merits of his well plead argument.

The majority of foreclosure cases are fraught with legal deficiencies. The problem I see is that few are truly analyzing the complaint, pleadings and allegations made by these institutional fraudsters to find these deficiencies and use them against the Plaintiffs. You know the old saying, “the devil is in the details.”

Hopefully, you’ll read the judge’s order and dive into the rules of civil procedure in your state and really learn something as to how “we should think” about foreclosure cases. The lesson here is to learn how to “frame” our thinking regarding foreclosure cases and to learn to look at the details. Look at what these Plaintiffs are truly alleging. The words they are using are not accidental and often we will find conflicting statements, inconsistencies and the like.

Use the rules of civil procedure as the guide and attack the missteps of these institutions. The rules define how the game is played. If a party fails to follow the rules they have a problem and if you have a rogue judge who doesn’t care about ensuring the rules are followed, these things need to be identifed, recorded and quantified so that you can set a case up for an appeal. The Appellate courts are in a position where they have to hold the parties (and judges) to following the well-established rules of civil procedure.

Now, what you are waiting for? If you need legal representation in a foreclosure matter (or even think you might), call Houk Law today to speak with us about all the reasons why you should consider retaining us to represent you… and why it makes complete economic sense as well!

We can be reached at 1-877-508-4848 ext. 0

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