Archive for April, 2010

Title Problems and Litigation Ahead

From Matt Weidner’s Blog Telling indeed.

Since the foreclosure crisis began, myself and a chorus of responsible, ethical attorneys have been screaming at the top of our lungs to judges and anyone else that might listen…

HOW IN THE WORLD CAN YOU CONTINUE TO LET ALL THIS FRAUD CONTINUE TO BE COMMITTED?

DON’T YOU UNDERSTAND THAT FRAUD IN THE FORECLOSURE PROCESS IS GOING TO WREAK HAVOC ON THE REAL ESTATE MARKETS AND COURTS FOR DECADES TO COME?

EVEN IF YOU PUSH FORECLOSURES THROUGH NOW, THE TITLE TO PROPERTIES FROM FORECLOSURES GRANTED IN THIS PERIOD WILL HAVE LITTLE OR NO VALUE!

and finally

THE TITLE INSURORS WHO ARE UNDERWRITING TITLE POLICIES WILL GO BANKRUPT AND TITLE INSURANCE WILL BE WORTHLESS!

Our realtor friends are starting to catch on…read the following article which is quite chilling…

-by George Mantor

Category: All Articles » REO’s and Foreclosures

George Mantor

Agents involved in foreclosures and short sales may need to begin to disclose the possibility of serious defects in title associated with these types of lender controlled sales.

If recent court decisions are any indication, we are headed for an explosion of litigation in this area. And now, Massachusetts Courts have revealed the possibility that unlawful foreclosures, dating back to 1989, might be invalidated and that buyers of foreclosed properties and short sales may have clouded titles. The implications are enormous for title companies, bankruptcy attorneys, real estate agents, those facing foreclosure, and those who have lost their homes. The problem stems from the collision of two worlds.  It illustrates what can happen when the new world fails to acknowledge or understand the old.  It is change that takes place without the cooperation of all affected parties. Real property law has an ancient tradition.  But, its laws and their purpose are not always apparent to those who want to change those traditions to benefit themselves. In the case of maintaining a public chain of title to real property, it was thought to be essential and generally required by the law. For hundreds of years, no one ever thought of any reason to change it.  It was thought to be part of the public good. That is, until Wall Street saw the money making potential in Credit Derivatives.

Credit Derivatives are packages of debts such as car loans, student loans, credit card debts, and mortgage loans to name a few.  These are collected, rated according to their risk, and sold to investors around the world. One small problem; if you are going to bundle mortgages from every county in the country, you would have to physically send someone to every county recorder’s office on multiple occasions and pay multiple recording fees.  It was costly and cumbersome to those responsible for affecting the recordings. Their solution?  Stop recording the assignments in public and track them instead in an electronic data base that the major lenders would operate through a cooperative entity.  Say hello to Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, affectionately known as MERS.  Not only did it save them a fortune in county fees and manpower, it turned out to be a cash cow.

Well, good for them, right?  They figured out how to bring technology to the process and were handsomely rewarded.  Never mind that the cost of maintaining a county recording system is paid, in part, by the recording revenue. They still have to maintain the apparatus, but now they aren’t receiving the revenue intended to maintain the system.  Of course, this comes at a time when many counties are struggling to provide necessary services to their residents.

But, as with many new ideas, there are unintended consequences that are now coming to light as state after state are enforcing basic property rights.

Massachusetts

On October 14, 2009, Judge Keith Long of the Massachusetts Land Court said in his ruling, “The issues in this case are not merely problems with paperwork or a matter of dotting i’s and crossing t’s. Instead they lie at the heart of the protections given to homeowners and borrowers by the Massachusetts legislature.”

He was referring to the industry practice of trading notes endorsed in blank, in direct violation of securities law.  Here is what he said on that point; “The blank mortgage assignments they possessed transferred nothing…in Massachusetts, a mortgage is a conveyance of land. Nothing is conveyed unless and until it is validly conveyed.  The various agreements between the securitization entities stating that each had a right to an assignment of the mortgage are not themselves an assignment and they are certainly not in recordable form.”

Two years earlier, Judge Rosenthal in re Schwartz, found that there was no evidence that the note itself was assigned and no evidence as to who the current holder might be.

Kansas

On August 28, 2009, Judge Eric S. Rosen of the Kansas Supreme Court likened MERS to a “straw man” and not a party of interest with the right to foreclose.

“Indeed, in the event that a mortgage loan somehow separates interests of the note and the deed of trust, with the deed of trust lying with some independent entity, the mortgage may become unenforceable.  The practical effect of splitting the deed of trust from the promissory note is to make it impossible for the holder of the note to foreclose, unless the holder of the deed of trust is the agent of the holder of the note.  Without the agency relationship, the person holding only the note lacks the power to foreclose in the event of a default. The person holding only the deed of trust will never experience a default because only the holder of the note is entitled to payment of the underlying obligation. The mortgage loan becomes ineffectual when the note holder did not hold the deed of trust.”

California

On October 21, 2008, Judge Samuel L. Bufford noted in his ruling that California codified the principal in 1872 in Carpenter v. Longan: “Given that ‘the debt is the principal thing and the mortgage an accessory,’ the Supreme Court reasoned that as a corollary, ‘the mortgage can have no separate existence.  An assignment of the note carries the mortgage with it, while an assignment of the latter alone is a nullity.”

Nevada

On August 19th, 2008, Judge Linda B. Riegle concluded, “There is no evidence that the named nominee is entitled to enforce the note or that MERS is the agent of the note’s holder.  Indeed, the evidence is to the contrary, the note has been sold, and the named nominee no longer has any interest in the note.”

Arkansas

On March 19, 2009 the Supreme Court of Arkansas found that MERS was not the beneficiary under the deed of trust, although so designated in the deed of trust, because it did not receive the payments on the underlying debt.

Ohio

On October 31, 2007, U.S. District Judge Christopher Boyko dismissed 14 foreclosure actions and delivered a strong admonishment in a footnote:

“Plaintiff’s ‘Judge, you just don’t understand how things work,’ argument reveals a condescending mindset and quasi-monopolistic system where financial institutions have traditionally controlled, and still control, the foreclosure process…There is no doubt that every decision made by a financial institution in the foreclosure is driven by money.”

When you consider the origin of this problem, it is hard to disagree.  If the foreclosing entity didn’t loan the money, the original note was sold, the location of the note is unknown, and it isn’t even clear what would happen to the proceeds of the eventual sale of the property to a new owner.

Until recently, MERS had succeeded in most foreclosure actions.  In non judicial foreclosure states like California, there is no judicial review of the elements of a foreclosure.  Unless the borrower files for Bankruptcy or brings a law suit against MERS alleging RESPA or TILA violations, there is no opportunity for the borrower to challenge the foreclosure.

In judicial foreclosure states, there is a law suit brought by the party entitled to payment on the defaulted loan.  Not the trust, but the actual possessor in due course of the original note.  Its part judicial procedure, part uniform commercial code and part ancient property law.

But, the securitization business is so complicated, intentionally so, that defendants, most of their legal representation, and the judges rarely considered the consequences to the real parties in interest.  This will continue until enough people understand the importance of the actual note and its relationship to the property.

Many homes have been unlawfully foreclosed by entities not entitled to anything. The former owners of these homes have rights that will need to be addressed.

People who applied for mortgage modifications and received them may have gotten approval from a bank employee with no authority to change the underlying terms of the securities in the pools.

Many people bought these homes and have potential future claims.  If there is a cloud on title, the new owner is at risk of being unable to sell or encumber the property.  If the foreclosure were unlawful, the borrower is entitled to their property.  And, there is a very real possibility that the true holder of the actual note, once and if ever this mess is sorted out, could come forward with the actual note.

It isn’t important to only those in foreclosure. For those seeking loan modifications, potential buyers of short sales and foreclosures and those acting in a fiduciary capacity on their behalf, you may soon be demanding, “Show me the note.”

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U.S. Criminal Probe: Bogus Foreclosure Docs

Below is a Must Read article in the Wall Street Journal today about an ongoing criminal probe of a Florida-based company that is being investigated for fabricating [bogus] documents for use in foreclosure actions.

Fabricating evidence to prop up foreclosures is finally now being investigated, criminally.  A mortgage company having nothing to hide, or to fabricate for that matter, should not have to engage in this kind of conduct.

This kind of fraud is what makes it difficult for everyone looking to get the foreclosure dispute resolved, including defense counsel, judges, mediators and the homeowner.  The mortgage and banking industry has shown over and over that it cannot be trusted.  Now the same people want to get Florida legislators to allow totally unsupervised non-judicial foreclosures in this state (pending House Bill 1523).

A memo with this article and related evidence attached should be filed with each challenge to bogus foreclosure actions.

By AMIR EFRATI and CARRICK MOLLENKAMP

A subsidiary of a company that is a top provider of the documentation used by banks in the foreclosure process is under investigation by federal prosecutors.

The prosecutors are “reviewing the business processes” of the subsidiary of Lender Processing Services Inc., based in Jacksonville, Fla., according to the company’s annual securities filing released in February. People familiar with the matter say the probe is criminal in nature.

Michelle Kersch, an LPS spokeswoman, said the subsidiary being investigated is Docx LLC. Docx processes and sometimes produces documents needed by banks to prove they own the mortgages. LPS’s annual report said that the processes under review have been “terminated,” and that the company has expressed its willingness to cooperate. Ms. Kersch declined to comment further on the probe.

A spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office for the middle district of Florida, which the annual report says is handling the matter, declined to comment.

The case follows on the dismissal of numerous foreclosure cases in which judges across the U.S. have found that the materials banks had submitted to support their claims were wrong. Faulty bank paperwork has been an issue in foreclosure proceedings since the housing crisis took hold a few years ago. It is often difficult to pin down who the real owner of a mortgage is, thanks to the complexity of the mortgage market.

During the housing boom, mortgages were originated by lenders, quickly sold to Wall Street firms that bundled them into debt pools and then sold to investors as securities. The loans were supposed to change hands but the documents and contracts between borrowers and lenders often weren’t altered to show changes in ownership, judges have ruled.

That has made it hard for banks, which act on behalf of mortgage-securities investors in most foreclosure cases, to prove they own the loans in some instances.

LPS has said its software is used by banks to track the majority of U.S. residential mortgages from the time they are originated until the debt is satisfied or a borrower defaults. When a borrower defaults and a bank needs to foreclose, LPS helps process paperwork the bank uses in court.

LPS was recently referenced in a bankruptcy case involving Sylvia Nuer, a Bronx, N.Y., homeowner who had filed for protection from creditors in 2008.

Diana Adams, a U.S. government lawyer who monitors bankruptcy courts, argued in a brief filed earlier this year in the Nuer case that an LPS employee signed a document that wrongly said J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. had owned Ms. Nuer’s loan.

Documents related to the loan were “patently false or misleading,” according to Ms. Adams’s court papers. J.P. Morgan Chase, which has withdrawn its request to foreclose, declined to comment.

Linda Tirelli, a lawyer for Ms. Nuer, declined to comment directly on the case.

Ms. Kersch said LPS didn’t actually create the document and that the company’s “sole connection to this case is that our technology and services were utilized by J.P. Morgan Chase and its counsel.”

While the majority of foreclosures go unchallenged, some homeowners have won the right to keep their homes by proving the bank couldn’t show, on paper, that it owned the mortgage.

Some lawyers representing homeowners have claimed that banks routinely file erroneous paperwork showing they have a right to foreclose when they don’t.

Firms that process the paperwork are either “producing so many documents per day that nobody is reviewing anything, even to make sure they have the names right, or you’ve got some massive software problem,” said O. Max Gardner, a consumer-bankruptcy attorney in Shelby N.C., who has defended clients against foreclosure actions.

The wave of foreclosures and housing crisis appears to have helped LPS. According to the annual securities filing, foreclosure-related revenue was $1.1 billion last year compared with $473 million in 2007.

LPS has acknowledged problems in its paperwork. In its annual securities filing, in which it disclosed the federal probe, the company said it had found “an error” in how Docx handled notarization of some documents. Docx also has processed documents used in courts that incorrectly claimed an entity called “Bogus Assignee” was the owner of the loan, according to documents reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

Ms. Kersch said the “bogus” phrase was used as a placeholder. “Unfortunately, on a few occasions, the document was inadvertently recorded before the field was updated,” she said.

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