Thursday, June 26, 2014

ANOTHER WIN FOR ROBERT E. BROWN, PC -- Wells Fargo v. Eisler

The Second Department published the attached decision yesterday entitled Wells Fargo v. Eisler.  I have attached the relevant point heading from Wells Fargo’s brief which set out  the then current state of the law.  The issue was whether the bank adequately proved that it sent the attached unsigned notice of default/acceleration letter.  It is undisputed  that the mailing of this letter is a condition precedent to starting a foreclosure action pursuant to the terms of the mortgage.  Banks across America are unable or unwilling to provide any information as to the identity of the purported sender.  The affidavit provided is quite typical of those routinely used by banks in foreclosure actions.  In essence, a bank employee swears that based on a review of the books and records of the bank (here Wells) the notice of default letter “was sent.”  In my experience, this key provision is always written in the passive voice.   

For years, banks have successfully argued if the default letter is contained in their business records, it must have been sent. 

This panel had two of the same Justices from the Bank of New York v. Silverberg panel.    Although I was hoping for a more strongly worded decision, the holding is clear: the bank didn’t prove it sent the notice of default/acceleration letter.

The Court wrote: “The unsubstantiated and conclusory statements in this affidavit, which indicated that the required notice of default was sent in accordance with the terms of the mortgage, combined with a copy of the notice of default, failed to show that the required notice was mailed by first class mail or actually delivered to the notice address.” 

The Court affirmed the order of Justice Aliotta of Richmond  County.


This case will have widespread ramifications on foreclosure actions.  The vast majority of foreclosures in New York State have mortgages with provisions which require a notice of default be sent.   In my opinion, lower courts can use this decision to clear their dockets and dismiss the majority of foreclosure actions.




Wednesday, May 7, 2014

STATEN ISLAND LEGAL SERVICES CELEBRATES TENTH ANNIVERSARY


Pictured above from the left: Attorney Richard Teemsma, Loss Mitagator John Brancato, an Attorney from MFY Legal Services and Attorney Robert Brown.

Thursday, February 27, 2014

The tide has turned against homeowners!

A judge went too far when he practically halved the amount of principal a bank sought to recover in a foreclosure action to penalize the bank's purported lack of good faith during conferences, a Brooklyn appellate court has ruled.

After required settlement conferences in a residential foreclosure proved ineffective, Acting Suffolk County Justice Jeffrey Spinner forever restrained Bank of America from "demanding, collecting or attempting to collect, directly or indirectly" any sums linked to a $493,219 mortgage that were considered "interest, attorney's fees, legal fees, costs, disbursements." The bank could only collect principal, and any advances on property taxes or insurance, he said.

Spinner then enforced $200,000 in exemplary damages against the bank, cutting the principal to $293,219.

Then, the Appellate Division, Second Department, on Feb. 13 unanimously overturned Spinner in Bank of America v. Lucido, 2012-05450., saying he didn't have the ability to impose the penalties he did….

The full article can be found here: http://www.newyorklawjournal.com

Monday, February 24, 2014

Panel Censures Lawyer and His Debt Collection Firm

The Second Department said David A. Cohen and the Cohen & Slamowitz firm had a "voluminous history" of complaints for trying to collect debts from people who had already paid their bills or were not the ones who owed money to the firm's client-creditors.

Read more: http://www.newyorklawjournal.com

What to Do When Your House Is About to Be Sold Due to Foreclosure

Loan Complaints by Homeowners Rise Once More

An interesting article from the New York Times about the growing power of mortgage servicers in deciding which get a mortgage modification and which  must hand over their home in a foreclosure.  The servicers are also forming  relationships with companies that can benefit from foreclosures.


These specialty servicers are buying the rights to collect mortgage payments at discounts. The quicker the servicer can make the loan current again, the sooner investors pay back the servicers’ advance in full. This may incentivize servicers to offer modifications that cause borrowers to default again.

For the full article click here: www.nytimes.com

Monday, January 27, 2014

Citimortgage, Inc. v Guarino | NYSC – The courts hold that perjury is intrinsic fraud and that therefore it is not ground for equitable relief against a judgment resulting from it

Decided on January 6, 2014 
Supreme Court, Suffolk County


Citimortgage, Inc., Plaintiff,

against

Joseph M. Guarino, TERESA GUARINO, E-LOAN, INC., MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., as nominee for Premium Capital Funding, LLC, , Defendants.



38302-07 



ROSICKI, ROSICKI & ASSOC. 

Attys. For Plaintiff 

2 Summit Ct. 

Fishkill, NY 12524 

JOSEPH & TERESA GUARINO 

Defendants Pro Se 

358 Old Country Rd. 

Deer Park, NY 11729 

Thomas F. Whelan, J.

ORDERED that this motion (#003) by the plaintiff for an order vacating the judgment of foreclosure and sale dated December 14, 2009 is considered under CPLR 5015 and is denied.
This uncontested mortgage foreclosure action was commenced in December of 2007 and was concluded by the issuance and entry of a judgment in December of 2009. No answer was served by any of the named defendants and no non-answering appearances were interposed. The sale of the mortgaged property contemplated by the judgment was, however, not conducted.
By the instant motion (#003), the plaintiff seeks an order vacating the judgment it obtained by its successful prosecution of its claims for foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged premises. The motion is opposed by defendant, Joseph M. Guarino. However, the merits of the claims advanced in his opposing papers shall not be considered by the court since Mr. Guarino is a party in default in this action in which a judgment against him and his property has been entered and remains in full force and effect. Absent a vacatur of his default, which is not requested, Mr. Guarino is without authority to oppose otherwise participate on this motion (see CPLR 3215[f]; U.S. Bank Natl. Ass'n v Gonzalez, 99 AD3d 694, 952 NYS2d 59 [2d Dept 2012]; Deutsche Bank Trust Co., Am. v Stathakis, 90 AD3d 983, 935 NYS2d 651 [2d Dept 2011]; Holubar v Holubar, 89 AD3d 802, 934 NYS2d 710 [2d Dept 2011]; McGee v Dunn, 75 AD3d 624, 624, 906 NYS2d 74 [2d Dept 2010]; see also Unsettled Times Make Well-Settled Law: Recent Developments in New York State's Residential Mortgage Foreclosure Statutes and Case Law", 76 Albany Law Review 1085, 1114 [2012-2013]).
The reason advanced by the plaintiff as the basis for the relief requested is its purported inability to comply with affirmation requirements imposed upon its counsel under the terms of Administrative Orders 548-10 and 431-11. These highly unusual Administrative Orders were adopted and implemented following the dissemination of widely publicized national media accounts of misdeeds in the preparation of foreclosure papers by mortgagees in states other than New York. Concern on the part of court administrators over the veracity of alleged facts and the propriety of the procedures employed in the preparation of affidavits of merit submitted in residential New York foreclosure actions was the apparent basis for the issuance of the Administrative Orders numbered 548/10 and 436/11. These orders or rules, as they are sometimes referred to, impose vouching[*2]requirements upon counsel for foreclosing plaintiffs in all foreclosure cases in which a sale has not yet occurred. The plaintiff's counsel must independently verify the accuracy of the notarizations contained in the supporting documents filed with the foreclosure action upon application for the final judgment or, if all ready issued, prior to the sale. While counsel's compliance therewith has been held to be mandatory (see U.S. Bank Natl. Assoc. v Eaddy, 109 AD3d 908, 971 NYS2d 336 [2d Dept 2013]), the affirmation itself has also been held to be non-substantive in nature (see LaSalle Bank, NA v Pace, 100 AD3d 970, 955 NYS2d 161 [2d Dept 2012]).
In its moving papers, the plaintiff asserts that it is unable to satisfy the affirmation "vouching" requirements although all previously alleged facts regarding the obligor defendants' payment defaults "are unchanged". The plaintiff thus intends to have a new affidavit of merit executed by its agent to facilitate the preparation of the attorney's affirmation. For reasons not apparent from the moving papers, the plaintiff believes that a vacatur of the judgment previously awarded to it some four years ago is necessary.
The court, however, finds this application to be in conflict with well established legal maxims of finality and with fundamental principles governing the independent adjudication of cases and wasteful of the extremely limited judicial resources available to state trial courts.
"It is elementary that a final judgment or order represents a valid and conclusive adjudication of the parties' substantive rights..." (Da Silva v Masso, 76 NY2d 436, 440, 560 NYS2d 109 [1990]; see Matter of Huie, 20 NY2d 568, 285 NYS2d 610 [1967]). Legal maxims such as law of the case and collateral estoppel serve to protect the sanctity and finality of litigated judicial orders and judgments, while the doctrine of res judicata does the same for such orders and those issued upon default (see TD Bank, N.A. v Talia Prop., Inc., 110 AD3d 1057, 973 NYS2d 789 [2d Dept 2013]; Richter v Sportsman Prop., Inc., 82 AD3d 733, 918 NYS2d 511 [2d Dept 2011]; 83-17 Broadway Corp. v Debcon Fin. Serv., Inc., 39 AD3d 583, 835 NYS2d 602 [2d Dept 2007]; Rosendale v Citibank, 262 AD2d 628, 691 NYS2d 901 [2d Dept 1999]). These maxims are the root of the finality doctrine which has been characterized as: "[a] policy against relitigation of adjudicated disputes [that] is strong enough generally to bar a second action even where further investigation of the law or facts indicates that the controversy has been erroneously decided, whether due to oversight by the parties or error by the courts" (Reilly v Reid, 45 NY2d 24, 407 NYS2d 645 [1979] [emphasis added], citing Deposit Bank v Frankfort, 191 US 499, 510-511, 24 S.Ct.154 [1903]). "Considerations of judicial economy as well as fairness to the parties mandate, at some point, an end to litigation. Afterthoughts or after discoveries however understandable and morally forgivable are generally not enough to create a right to litigate anew" (Reilly v Reid, 45 NY2d 24, 28, supra). Vacatur of final adjudicatory documents, such as an order or judgment and a re-litiagtion of the causes determined therein, is generally precluded by the the finality doctrine.
In addition to determinations affected by errors, adjudications influenced by instances of perjury do not warrant a re-adjudication of the case upon the invocation of the court's inherent power to vacate a judgment on the grounds of fraud. In Jacobowitz v Herson (269 NY 130, 197 N.E. 169 [1935]), the Court of Appeals described the nature of this rule and the reasons underlying as follows: [*3]

The authorities are uniform in holding that an action in equity will not lie to set aside a judgment in an action for intrinsic fraud, that is, for perjury or false swearing on the trial. Pomeroy states in his Equity Jurisprudence (Vol. V, § 2077, p. 4683) the rule as follows: The courts hold that perjury is intrinsic fraud and that therefore it is not ground for equitable relief against a judgment resulting from it. We have seen that the fraud which warrants equity in interfering with such a solemn thing as a judgment must be fraud in obtaining the judgment, and must be such as prevents the losing party from having an adversary trial of the issue. Perjury is a fraud in obtaining the judgment, but it does not prevent an adversary trial. * * * However, public policy seems to demand that there be an end to litigation. If perjury were accepted as a ground for relief, litigation might be endless; the same issues would have to be tried repeatedly. 

This State is committed to the rule that the perjured testimony of the successful party or his witnesses at the trial, even where the false testimony was procured by a conspiracy, is not sufficient ground for vacating a domestic judgment or enjoining its enforcement. (Ross v. Wood, 70 NY 8; Gitler v. Russian Co., 124 App. Div. 273; Standard Fashion Co. v. Thompson, 137 App. Div. 588; Crouse v. McVickar, 207 NY 213.) As before stated, the weight of authority in this country is to the same effect. (Freeman on the Law of Judgments [Vols. 1 and 3, 5th ed.], §§ 235, 1241, 1242.) (See, also, Metcalf v. Gilmore, 59 N. H. 417; Mahoney v. State Ins. Co., 133 Iowa, 570; Riley v. Murray, 8 Ind. 354; El Capitan Land & Cattle Co. v. Lees, 13 N. M. 407).

Inherent powers of a court to vacate its own orders and judgments on grounds of fraud have thus been viewed as extending only to extrinsic fraud and not to intrinsic fraud, such as perjury at trial (see Lockett v Juviler, 65 NY2d 182, 490 NYS2d 764 [1985]; Jacobowitz v Herson, 268 NY 130, supraMatter of Holden, 271 NY 212, 218, 2 NE2d 631 [1935]). To justify a court in setting aside and vacating a judgment on the ground of fraud, the fraud complained of must have been "extrinsic", that is, practiced in the very act of obtaining the judgment in such a way that a party was prevented from fully and fairly litigating the matter (see Matter of Holden, 271 NY 212, supra; Citimortgage, Inc. v Brown, 111 AD3d 593, 974 NYS2d 272 [2d Dept 2013]; Augustin v Augustin, 79 AD3d 651, 913 NYS2d 207 [1st Dept 2010]; Shaw v Shaw, 97 AD2d 403, 467 NYS2d 231 [2d Dept 1983]).
The inherent power of the court to vacate its own judgments does, however, extend to cases in which the court finds that the interests of substantial justice so require (seeWoodson v Mendon Leasing Corp., 100 NY2d 62, 68, 760 NYS2d 727 [2002]; HSBC Mtge. Serv. v Talip, 111 AD3d 889, 975 NYS2d 887 [2d Dept 2013]; Mortgage Elec. Registration Sys., Inc. v Dort-Relus, 107 AD3d 861, 968 NYS2d 117 [2d Dept 2013]; U.S. Bank Natl. Ass'n v Slavinski, 78 AD3d 1167, 912 NYS2d 285 [2d Dept 2010];Katz v Marra, 74 AD3d 888, 905 NYS2d 204 [2d Dept 2010]). It is the movant's burden "to show that the prior order should be set aside by submission of sufficient evidence supporting the grant of such relief" (Mortgage Elec. Registration Sys., Inc. v Dort-Relus, 107 AD3d 861supra). Allegations of improper practices by a plaintiff's or its agents in unrelated matters do not suffice (see Citimortgage, Inc. v Bustamante, 107 AD3d 752, 968 NYS2d 513 [2d Dept 2013]; Wells Fargo, N.A. v Levin, 101 AD3d 1519, 958 NYS2d 227 [3d Dept 2012]; cf., GMAC Mtge., LLC v Bisceglie, 109 AD3d 874, 973 NYS2d 225 [2d Dept 2013]). [*4]
In contrast to its inherent powers, courts are statutorily authorized to vacate a judgment under CPLR 5015(a)(3) for fraud, misrepresentation or misconduct of an adverse party (see Beltway Capital, LLC v Soleil, 104 AD3d 628, 961 NYS2d 225 [2d Dept 2013]; Chase Home Fin., LLC v Quinn, 101 AD3d 793, 954 NYS2d 897 [2d Dept 2012];Katz v Marra, 74 AD3d 888, supra). The fraud contemplated by CPLR 50515(a)(3) has been held to include intrinsic fraud, which rests upon false claims or perjury, as well as extrinsic fraud, which rests upon an impairment of a party's right to litigate (see Wilson v Galicia Contr. & Restoration Corp., 10 NY3d 827, 830, 860 NYS2d 417 [2008];Oppenheimer v Westcott, 47 NY2d 595, 603, 419 NYS2d 908 [1979]; Bank of New York v Stradford, 55 AD3d 765, 869 NYS2d 554 [2d Dept 2008]). Underlying this more modern view is the notion that the "courts must protect the integrity of the judicial process and ensure that plaintiffs do not secure money judgments based on fraudulent claims" (Wilson v Galicia Contr. & Restoration Corp., 10 NY3d 827, 830, suprasee also Nash v Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, ___ NY3d ___, 2013 WL 6164436 [2013]). However, the objective of assuring the honesty and integrity of judicial processes has been held not to be "furthered when the Court goes outside applicable law to itself raise arguments" or does the "lawyering" for the parties to the action (Wilson v Galicia Contr. & Restoration Corp., 10 NY3d 827 at 830, supra).
Here, the judgment of foreclosure and sale that was entered in this action some four years ago, remains unchallenged by any party against whom it was rendered or by others with jural interests therein including the plaintiff. It thus constitutes a conclusive adjudication of all questions at issue between the parties and all matters of defense which were raised or could have been raised by any of the defendants (see Richter v Sportsman Prop., Inc., 82 AD3d 733, supra83-17 Broadway Corp. v Debcon Fin. Serv., Inc., 39 AD3d 583, supraRosendale v Citibank, 262 AD2d 628, supra). The judgment is thus immune from attack except in the most limited circumstances, such as an appeal or upon a timely application for its vacatur by a party against whom it was rendered or other person interested (see CPLR 5015[a][1]; Oppenheimer v Westcott, 47 NY2d 595, supraMatter of Huie, 20 NY2d 568, 285 NYS2d 610 [1967]; Rizzo v Ippolito, 137 AD2d 511, 524 NYS2d 255 [2d Dept 1988]; Greenwich Sav. Bank v JAJ Carpet Mart, Inc., 126 AD2d 451, 510 NYS2d 594 [1st Dept 1987]). Since no facts constituting any one of the grounds necessary to support the vacatur of the judgment under the inherent or statutory powers of the court were advanced here, the vacatur of the judgment of foreclosure and sale requested is not available to the plaintiff.
Nor do the post-action commencement, administratively imposed affirmation requirements, with which the plaintiff cannot comply, constitute a valid basis on which the court may premise a vacatur of the previously issued judgment of foreclosure and sale (cf., CPLR 3012-b; effective 9/1/13).
As indicated above, the affirmation itself has been held not to constitute "substantive evidence" nor a "new argument" or defense in favor of the defendant mortgagor (seeLaSalle Bank, NA v Pace, 100 AD3d 970, 971, supra). The affirmation requirement was the product of Administrative Order 548/10, which issued in response to the dissemination of media accounts of misdeeds and misconduct in foreclosure cases elsewhere. Promulgation of such order and its [*5]amendment (Administrative Order 430/11) can be traced solely to the concerns of court administrators who apparently believed that the misconduct of foreclosing parties elsewhere had or was about to infiltrate foreclosure actions in this state (see Affirmation Form-Preamble attached to AO 548/10 and 430/11). However, neither the anecdotal reports of misdeeds of foreclosing parties elsewhere nor the categorical concerns of court administrators that similar misdeeds and misconduct might be present in foreclosure actions pending in this state are relevant to an adjudication of the issues before this court in such actions. The Administrative Orders and the affirmation requirements therein imposed thus appear to be a mis-guided attempt on the part of court administrators to go outside the law and to raise issues not raised by the parties under the guise of protecting "the honesty and integrity of the judicial process" (see Wilson v Galicia Contr. & Restoration Corp., 10 NY3d 827, 830, supra).
In addition, it appears that the administratively imposed affirmation requirements are contrary to judicial conduct cannons and several of the fundamental principles upon which the judiciary is premised. These cannons and principles mandate a full, fair and independent judiciary by prohibiting the interjection of outside influences into adjudicatory processes thereby leaving the court with consideration of only the claims, pleadings and proofs put before it by the parties and the court's judicious application of all relevant controlling principles of law thereto (see 22 NYCRR 100.2 [A];[B];[C]; 100.3[B][1];[2];[3] and [4]). Although the affirmation requirements are aimed at precluding such outside events from permeating judicial foreclosure proceedings in this state, their effect is just the opposite, as the taint arising from the misdeeds and other nefarious acts engaged in elsewhere must be affirmatively disproved by submission of the mandated vouching affirmation of the plaintiff's counsel. The affirmation requirements thus constitute a prohibited intrusion of outside factors into the independent adjudicatory processes this court is bound to observe.
It is the view of this court that the Administrative Orders and their affirmation requirements are not in keeping with the well established principles of finality and those governing adjudicatory processes, particularly, where as here, it is the successful plaintiff who seeks to tear down its own judgment rather than any party interested who is adversely affected thereby. The court thus finds that no judgment of foreclosure and sale nor any precursor order of reference that remain unchallenged under common law and statutory provisions governing vacatur are not subject to vacatur due to an inability to comply with administrative "orders" of a non-substantive nature.
These unfortunate circumstances do not, however, leave the plaintiff or its counsel without a remedy. In a recent case authority emanating from the Appellate Division, Second Department, the court granted a foreclosing plaintiff who obtained a judgment of foreclosure and sale, leave to file a new affidavit of merit, "nunc pro tunc" so as to facilitate the preparation of the attorney's affirmation that is the subject of the above cited Administrative Orders (see U.S. Bank v Eaddy, 109 AD3d 908, 971 NYS2d 336 [2d Dept 2013],supra). Similar applications may be employed in cases in which only an order of reference has issued. In such cases, the application should be made in conjunction with the motion for a judgment and include a proposed new affidavit of merit for which [*6]leave to file same is sought as well as the attorney's affirmation. Whenever made, these applications should not include demands for "vacaturs", "ratifications" or "confirmations" of prior orders or judgments, as the aim thereof should be to move the action forward to its ultimate conclusion, i.e., a judgment of foreclosure and/or the sale of the mortgaged premises under an existing judgment by facilitating the filing of the attorney's affirmation.
Here, no new affidavit of merit is attached to the moving papers and no attorney's affirmation of the type contemplated by the above cited Administrative Orders was included as a submission. Instead, the plaintiff merely asks that the court vacate its unchallenged judgment of foreclosure and sale due to counsel's inability to formulate the attorney's affirmation. These omissions, coupled with the court's finding that judgments of foreclosure and sale which remain unchallenged under common law and statutory provisions should not be subject to vacatur due to an inability to comply with "orders" promulgated by court administrators, warrant a denial of this motion. The court thus denies this application without prejudice to a further application of the type contemplated by the appellate court in U.S. Bank v Eaddy, supra.
Counsel are reminded that motions such as the instant one are extremely taxing upon the resources of the judiciary which has, for too long and unnecessarily so, been spread too thin in so far as the funding and staffing of judicial parts charged with the responsibility of adjudicating cases. This court and others are literally swamped with applications such as the instant one, which is, essentially, a "do-over" of a prior application that was duly considered and adjudicated by this court in a manner consistent with the cannons of judicial ethics and the fundamental principles upon which the judiciary is premised. Colloquially known as "remediation" motions, no basis in law or fact has been presented nor found by the court to be supportive of demands for recall and/or vacatur of jurisdictionally valid orders and judgments that subsist without challenge for years in residential mortgage foreclosure actions. Counsel are thus urged to carefully tailor all future applications to the one granted in U.S. Bank v Eaddy, and to avoid the interposition of unnecessary and unduly burdensome applications like the one now before the court. 

Dated: _____________________________________________
THOMAS F. WHELAN, J.S.C.

Friday, January 17, 2014

Borrower Waived Right to Raise Affirmative Defenses Under Forbearance Agreement

The Kings County Supreme Court found that a borrower waived the right to raise affirmative defenses including that the mortgage was not properly accelerated when the Borrower signed a forbearance Agreement.  The agreement stated that the borrower and guarantor “reaffirms all obligations contained within the Note and Mortgage and hereby agrees that there are no offsets, defenses, claims (asserted or unasserted) or counterclaims against First Central arising out of any transaction with [] First Central concerning the Note and/or Mortgage, and hereby waives any and all offsets, defenses, claims (asserted or unasserted) or counterclaims against First Central.”  

For the decision & order click below:

Monday, December 23, 2013

MFY Files Suit against Mortgage Scammer

ECONOMIC JUSTICE

MFY Files Suit against Mortgage Scammer

On November 18, 2013, MFY filed a lawsuit on behalf of Ms. Elva Brardo, a 60-year-old Queens County homeowner who lost thousands of dollars as part of a foreclosure rescue scam perpetrated by American Hope Group, Inc., The Donado Law Firm A Professional Corporation, and multiple individual defendants.  After charging Ms. Brardo an illegal, upfront fee, defendants falsely promised that an alleged “Securitization Mortgage Audit” would identify errors in her mortgage loan documents and this so-called erroneous information would be used to compel her lender to provide her with a more affordable monthly mortgage payment.  In addition to a loan modification, Ms. Brardo was promised legal representation to prevent foreclosure. 

 Even though Ms. Brardo signed a purported retainer agreement with The Donado Law Firm at American Hope’s office and authorized American Hope Group to automatically debit nearly $700 per month from her checking account in additional fees, defendants never obtained a more affordable mortgage payment for Ms. Brardo and never provided her with the promised legal representation.  In fact, Ms. Brardo never met nor spoke to any attorney.  The complaint asserts claims for violation of New York’s “distressed property consultant” law, Real Property Law § 265-b, which among other things makes it illegal to charge up-front fees for loan modification services; violation of New York’s Deceptive Practices Act, General Business Law § 349; and breach of contract. The lawsuit seeks to recover the illegal upfront fees paid to the defendants and also seeks to enjoin defendants from engaging in the deceptive acts and practices alleged.


Brardo v. American Hope Group, Inc., et al, Index No. 21154/2013, Supreme Court, Queens County

READ THE COMPLAINT

Monday, December 16, 2013

Governor Cuomo Announces Proposal to Expand Mortgage Relief for Underwater Homeowners Through Principal Reduction

Governor Cuomo proposed to expand the mortgage relief options available to struggling ‘underwater’ homeowners, who owe more than the current market value of their homes. Using “Shared Appreciation” mortgage modifications banks and mortgage servicers reduce the amount of principal outstanding on a borrower’s mortgage in exchange for a share of the future increase in the value of the home. 

Friday, November 8, 2013

Columbia Capital v. Cuervo: The Issue of Standing...

In the NY case of Columbia Capital v. Cuervo, the Court just recently found that a homeowner waived a standing defense by not raising the issue of standing in the answer.  

"Homeowners need to make sure that they raise standing even if they put in a pro se answer!"


-Robert E. Brown, Esq.
The Law Offices of Robert E. Brown, PC

Friday, October 25, 2013

Jury Finds Bank of America Unit and an Executive Liable for Mortgage Fraud

In another major victory for the Justice Department over mortgage securities sold during the financial crisis, a jury found Bank of America’s (BAC) Countrywide unitliable for defrauding Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac with loans it should have known were substandard.
The penalty is yet to be determined. The government has requested a maximum of almost $850 million, Bloomberg News reported. Rebecca Mairone, a former executive at Countrywide, was also found liable, as the jury heard details of a program she oversaw called the High Speed Swim Lane—aka “the hustle”—that earned the lender at least $165 million.
The Justice Department is also on the verge of reaching a record $13 billion settlement with JPMorgan Chase (JPM) over faulty mortgage securities that the bank and two institutions it bought during the crisis, Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual, sold. Bank of America bought Countrywide in July 2008.
During the four-week trial, prosecutors argued that HSSL processed nearly 30,000 loans with more regard for speed than quality. “Quality was no more than a distraction,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Jaimie Nawaday said in her closing argument, according to Bloomberg’s Patricia Hurtado.
Shares of Bank of America fell as the news was announced this afternoon and were trading at $14.18 after hours, down from the previous day’s close of $14.51. The stock has returned 22.7 percent this year, trailing a 28.1 percent return for the KBW Bank Index.
“The jury’s decision concerned a single Countrywide program that lasted several months and ended before Bank of America’s acquisition of the company,” a bank spokesman said in an e-mail to Bloomberg. “We will evaluate our options for appeal.”

Thursday, October 3, 2013

U.S. Bank National Assoc.v. Thomas, 7054/09

U.S. Bank N.A. v Thomas | NYSC – ASC/Wells has failed to comply with federal HAMP guidelines, and failed to complete its modification review... Referee's Report And Recommendation Supported By Record, Which Indicated Foreclosing Parties Failed To Negotiate In Good Faith...

The full story can be found here: http://stopforeclosurefraud.com


Wednesday, October 2, 2013

New York to Sue Wells Fargo Over Mortgage Settlement

Fielding complaints from borrowers struggling to save their homes, New York’s top prosecutor is preparing a lawsuit against Wells Fargo, accusing the bank, the nation’s largest home lender, of flouting the terms of a multi-billion-dollar settlement aimed at stanching foreclosure abuses.

The lawsuit, which is expected to be filed as early as Wednesday, accuses Wells Fargo of violating the guidelines of a broad agreement reached last year between five of the nation’s largest banks and 49 state attorneys general.
Under that deal, the banks must comply with 304 servicing standards. The guidelines map out how banks should field and process requests from distressed homeowners.
Vickee J. Adams, a spokeswoman for Wells Fargo, said the bank had not been served with a copy of the lawsuit. But, she added, “if true, it is very disappointing that the New York attorney general continues to pursue his course, given our commitment to the terms of the National Mortgage Settlement and ongoing engagement.
“Wells Fargo has been a leader in preventing foreclosures, helping families maintain homeownership with more than 880,000 modifications nationwide and 26,000 in New York over the last four years,” she said.
The New York attorney general, Eric T. Schneiderman, sent a previous warning shot to Bank of America and Wells Fargo, announcing in May that he had found that both banks violated the terms of the mortgage settlement. That announcement prompted negotiations between the New York prosecutor’s office and the two banks.
The outcomes for the lenders are starkly different. While Wells Fargo is bracing for a lawsuit, Bank of America is poised to announce a series of additional protections that it has adopted after discussions with Mr. Schneiderman’s office. Those additional protections — including an agreement to designate a “high-level” employee dedicated to fielding and responding to questions from housing counselors — appear to have won the bank a reprieve from a lawsuit.
“We are pleased to resolve these matters without litigation,” said a spokesman for Bank of America, Dan B. Frahm. “Along with the settlement monitoring committee, we continue to improve the experience for eligible customers and groups that represent them.”
Wells Fargo is also working with the monitor on additional consumer protections.
More state attorneys general may follow Mr. Schneiderman’s lead. The Massachusetts attorney general, Martha Coakley, has also sent a letter to Joseph A. Smith, the settlement monitor, outlining “recurring issues” with servicers, according to a copy of the letter reviewed by The New York Times.
For Wells Fargo, though, the discussions with the New York attorney general’s office resulted in a standoff. Mr. Schneiderman’s office, people briefed on the matter said, had pushed Wells Fargo to acknowledge a systematic pattern of mortgage servicing errors and to commit to a new agreement codifying changes to the way the bank services mortgages. Wells Fargo balked, the people said, and the talks broke down last week.
Amid the languishing talks, the bank sent a letter to Mr. Schneiderman’s office, reiterating its commitment to “helping borrowers maintain homeownership and achieve long-term financial success,” according to a copy of the letter reviewed by The Times.
Mr. Schneiderman had found 210 separate violations involving the bank and 96 borrowers. Four of those borrowers, the letter said, were not Wells Fargo customers. In its letter, the bank said it “disagrees with allegations” related to the remaining borrowers. Of the remainder, the bank has approved loan modifications for 39 customers and made a final decision on the loan modification applications for 28 others. Beyond helping the homeowners identified by the attorney general’s office, Wells Fargo voluntarily improved its processes, the bank argued in its letter.
Those concessions apparently did not appease Mr. Schneiderman’s office. Part of the problem, the people briefed on the matter said, was that Wells Fargo refused to improve their processes in a formal agreement.
Some within the attorney general’s office also felt the bank’s proposed fixes constituted a Whac-a-Mole approach in which it addressed only the cases originally highlighted, the people briefed on the matter said. The New York attorney general’s office still receives more complaints about Wells Fargo’s servicing than for any other lender, they added.
The settlement guidelines include requirements that banks provide homeowners with a single point of contact and notify borrowers of missing documentation within five days.
They are intended to help homeowners who are looking to modify their mortgages — a process that can prove frustrating for homeowners asked to submit the same documents again and again.
Such delays can mean the difference between saving a home and losing it to foreclosure, according to housing counselors. When applications for relief languish with borrowers caught in a bureaucratic maze, homeowners amass additional costs.
Ms. Adams of Wells Fargo said that the bank “continuously implements additional customer-focused measures based on the constructive feedback we receive from our customers, the monitoring committee and individual states, including New York.” She added that the bank believed a “collaborative approach” was better for homeowners than “protracted litigation.”
The move against Wells Fargo is the first time that an attorney general has sued one of the five participating banks on charges related to the settlement. That settlement, reached in 2012, sprung from an investigation that began in 2010 amid a national outcry that banks were relying on mass-produced documents to evict homeowners wrongfully.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Judge Jack M. Battaglia: "Defendant was Not in Default... " -- Wells Fargo Bank v Butler

"Judge Jack M. Battaglia of Kings County Supreme Court recently found that a  Defendant was Not in Default for 'Informal Appearances' in Foreclosure Settlement Part and judgment by default may not be entered against her."

-Robert E. Brown, Esq.

Wells Fargo Bank v Butler

[*1] Wells Fargo Bank v Butler 2013 NY Slip Op 23282 Decided on August 23, 2013 Supreme Court, Kings County Battaglia, J. Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the printed Official Reports. 

Decided on August 23, 2013 
Supreme Court, Kings County 

Wells Fargo Bank, as Trustee for Option One Mortgage Loan Trust 2005-1 Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2005-1, Plaintiff, 

against

Pamala Butler, New York City Environmental Control Board, New York City Parking Violations Bureau, New York City Transit Adjudication Bureau, and "JOHN DOE No. 1" through "JOHN DOE # 10," the last ten names being fictitious and unknown to the plaintiff, the person or parties intended being the person or parties, if any, having or claiming an interest in or lien upon the mortgaged premises described in the complaint, Defendants. 



30914/07 



Plaintiff was represented by Linda P. Manfredi, Esq. of Frankel Lambert Weiss Weisman & Gordon, LLP. Defendant Pamela Butler sued herein as Pamala Butler was self-represented. 

Jack M. Battaglia, J.

In this mortgage foreclosure action commenced on August 17, 2007, Plaintiff seeks an order, among other things, granting judgment by default and an order of reference. The mortgaged property is located at 518 Georgia Avenue, Brooklyn; the mortgagor is defendant Pamala Butler. With a Decision and Order dated January 10, 2008, this Court denied Plaintiff's first ex parte application [*2]for the same relief, with leave to renew; and with a Decision and Order dated September 10, 2008, this Court denied Plaintiff's renewed application, again with leave to renew.
These denials were based in part on the Court's determining that Plaintiff had not submitted sufficient "proof of the facts constituting . . . the default" (see CPLR 3215[f]), because the affidavit of service on defendant/mortgagor Pamala Butler did not establish prima facie that she was properly served. Specifically, on the second denial the Court stated:
"In an order denying Plaintiff's prior application for a default judgment and an order of reference, this Court pointed out that the affidavit of service on Pamala Butler describes nail and mail' service at 518 Georgia Avenue, the mortgaged premises, but does not assert that 518 Georgia Avenue was Ms. Butler's actual place of business, dwelling place or usual place of abode' or last known residence.' (See CPLR 308[4].)
In the instant renewed motion, Plaintiff attaches a new affidavit of service indicating that Pamala Butler was purportedly served by nail and mail' by affixing the summons and complaint on the door of Ms. Butler's usual place of abode.' Prior to resorting to nail and mail' service, Plaintiff's process server avers that he attempted personal service at Ms. Butler's usual place of abode on Friday, August 17, 2007 at 3:15 pm; Monday, August 20, 2007 at 10:10 am; and Thursday, August 23, 2007 at 9:30 pm.
CPLR 308(4) authorizes "nail and mail" service to be used only where personal service under CPLR 308(1) and (2) cannot be made with "due diligence".' (County of Nassau v Letosky, 34 AD3d 414, 415 [2d Dept 2006].) The due diligence requirement of CPLR 308(4) must be strictly observed, given the reduced likelihood that a summons served pursuant to that section will be received.' (Id. [quoting Gurevitch v Goodman, 269 AD2d 355, 355 (2d Dept 2000)].)
Service under circumstances similar to those here was found insufficient to confer personal jurisdiction in O'Connel v Post (27 AD3d 630 [2d Dept 2006]) [T]wo of the attempts at service occurred on weekdays during hours when it reasonably could have been expected that the defendant was either working or in transit to and from work.' (See id., at 631.) And there is no indication that the process server made any effort to determine [Ms. Butler's] business address in order to attempt personal service thereat pursuant to CPLR 308(2) before resorting to "nail and mail" service.' (Id.) (See also County of Nassau v Yohannan, 34 AD3d 620 [2d Dept 2006].) Indeed, a mortgagee would be expected to have a business address for its mortgagor."
The instant motion was served in December 2008, with an initial return date of January 7, 2009. The motion was not heard, however, because the action was referred to the Foreclosure Settlement Conference Part for mandatory settlement conference proceedings pursuant to CPLR 3408, and the motion was "held in abeyance" pursuant to court rule (see Uniform Civil Rules for the Supreme Court and the County Court, §202.12-a [c][7]; 22 NYCRR §202.12-a [c][7].)
Over the following four years, from January 2009 until March 2013, according to the case [*3]management database, the parties appeared 25 times in the Foreclosure Settlement Conference Part. With a Directive dated March 15, 2013, the action and the pending motion were referred to this Court, with an appearance scheduled for June 24 by administrative process over which the Court had no control. On that date, 50 motions were scheduled, together with seven foreclosure conferences, making it impossible for the Court to adequately address this action. The matter was adjourned to August 12.
At the August 12 conference, Pamala Butler having appeared, as she had on June 24, the Court suggested that, under the circumstances, it might serve the interests of both parties for Plaintiff to conditionally withdraw its motion pending receipt of an answer from Ms. Butler. The Court noted in particular Ms. Butler's many appearances in the Foreclosure Settlement Conference Part. Plaintiff's counsel subsequently advised the Court that Plaintiff preferred to have the motion determined as submitted.
Subsequent caselaw confirms that this Court correctly determined that, based upon Plaintiff's submission on its first renewal motion, proper service on defendant/mortgagor Butler had not been shown. (See Serrano v Staropoli, 94 AD3d 1083, 1085 [2d Dept 2012]; Prudence v Wright, 94 AD3d 1073, 1074 [2d Dept 2012]; JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. v Iancu Pizza, Ltd., 78 AD3d 902, 903 [2d Dept 2010]; see also McSorely v Spear, 50 AD3d 652, 653-54 [2d Dept 2008].) "What constitutes due diligence is determined on a case-by-case basis, focusing not on the quantity of the attempts at personal delivery, but on their quality." (Id. at 653.)
On this second renewal, Plaintiff submits an Amended Affidavit Information Pertaining to Nail and Mail Service of Demetra D. Karamitsos, and a copy of a Uniform Residential Loan Application dated November 9, 2004 purportedly executed by defendant/mortgagor Pamala Butler. Since the original Affidavit of Service was made by Ben Cohen, and this Amended Affidavit is based on information purportedly received from "deponent's agent," which is clearly hearsay and not shown to be admissible as evidence under any exception to the hearsay rule, it adds nothing to Plaintiff's showing. In any event, the only reference to a search for a business address for Ms. Butler is to "a search of a database system" that "revealed no possible places of employment for the defendant Pamala Butler," which, even if admissible, would have virtually no probative value.
As to the loan application, "the defendant's [sic] listed her place of employment at the same address service was effectuated and she further noted that she was self-employed" (see Affirmation in Support ¶ 12.) But there is no evidence that the loan application was provided to the process server, and nothing in the Amended Affidavit to suggest that the information contained therein in any way affected service. Moreover, information provided in 2004 would not satisfy the "due diligence" requirement three years later without further investigation.
The Court concludes, therefore, that "the service of the summons and complaint pursuant to CPLR 308(4) was defective as a matter of law" (see Prudence v Wright, 94 AD3d at 1074; see also Gray v Giannikios, 90 AD3d 836, 837 [2d Dept 2011]; JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. v Iancu Pizza, Ltd., 78 AD3d at 903.) But, "because improper service of the summons and complaint is a defense [*4]that may be waived," sua sponte dismissal of the complaint would be inappropriate. (See Dupps v Betancourt, 99 AD3d 855, 856 [2d Dept 2012].)
The Court has noted Plaintiff's argument that "the defendant has appeared in this action as she filed a motion to dismiss with the court which has never been placed on the Court's calendar"; and, "[t]herefore, it is clear the defendant is aware of the . . . foreclosure action and is actively participating in the same." (Affidavit in Support ¶ 12.) No motion to dismiss appears in the court's case management database, and defendant Butler does not refer to one in her opposition. Plaintiff offers no other factual basis for defendant Butler's "appearance," does not expressly contend that she has waived any jurisdictional defense, and cites no legal authority for any such contention. The Court finds it both unnecessary and inappropriate to address the question. (See, generally, CPLR 320[b]; Henderson v Henderson, 247 NY 428, 432 [1928]; In re Estate of Katz, 81 AD2d 145, 147-49 [2d Dept 1981], aff'd 55 NY2d 904 [1982]; Taveras v City of New York, 2013 NY Slip Op 5199 [2d Dept, July 10, 2013]; Dyker Heights Home for Blind Children v Stolitzky, 250 AD 229, 230 [2d Dept 1937].)
But Plaintiff's argument begs the question, if defendant Pamala Butler has appeared in the action, is she "in default" for purposes of entry of judgment by default? CPLR 320(a) provides, "The defendant appears by serving an answer or a notice of appearance or by making a motion which has the effect of extending the time to answer." For the most part, caselaw is clear that, where a defendant makes an "informal appearance" within the time specified by CPLR 320(a), the defendant is not "in default," and a motion to enter judgment by default should be denied. (See Jeffers v Stein, 99 AD3d 970, 971 [2d Dept 2012]; Stewart v Raymond Corp., 84 AD3d 932, 933 [2d Dept 2011]; Parrotta v Wolgin, 245 AD2d 872, 873 [3d Dept 1997]; Cohen v Ryan, 34 AD2d 789 [2d Dept 1970]; see also Meyer v A & B Am., 160 AD2d 688, 688 [2d Dept 1990]; but see U.S. Bank N.A. v Slavinski, 78 AD3d 1167, 1167 [2d Dept 2010] [dictum].)
There is also authority that at least suggests that, under some circumstances, an "informal appearance" after the expiration of the time to answer or move specified in CPLR 320(a) will preclude entry of judgment by default. (See City of Newburgh v 96 Broadway LLC, 72 AD3d 632, 633 [2d Dept 2010]; Carlin v Carlin, 52 AD3d 559, 560-61 [2d Dept 2008]; Ambers v C.T. Indus., 161 AD2d 256, 256-57 [1st Dept 1990]; Taylor v Taylor, 64 AD2d 592, 592 [1st Dept 1978]; see also Rubenstein v Manhattan & Bronx Surface Tr. Operating Auth., 280 AD2d 312, 313 [1st Dept 2001] [dismissal pursuant to CPLR 3215(c)]; Baron & Gleich v Epstein, 168 AD2d 589 [2d Dept 1990].) Participation in court conferences can constitute an "informal appearance" for this purpose. (See Carlin v Carlin, 52 AD3d at 560-61; Rubenstein v Manhattan & Bronx Surface Tr. Operating Auth., 280 AD2d at 313; see also Matter of Sessa v Board of Assessors of Town of N. Elba, 46 AD3d 1163, 1166 [3d Dept 2007].)
The Second Department's opinion in Carlin v Carlin (52 AD3d 559) is most instructive here:
"[A]lthough the defendant failed to timely file an answer, she, among other things, opposed the plaintiff's numerous motions, interposed cross-motions, and appeared and participated at a [*5]preliminary conference. Accordingly, especially given the liberal approach adopted by the courts in matrimonial actions which favors dispositions on the merits . . . , the defendant made an informal appearance in the action and is therefore not in default." (Carlin v Carlin, 52 AD3d at 560-61; see also Baron & Gleich v Epstein, 168 AD2d at 589 ["courts have a special interest in contracts between attorneys and clients"].)
Here, according to the court's case management database, defendant Butler appeared 25 times in the Foreclosure Settlement Conference Part, appeared twice before this Court after the action was released from that Part, and has served opposition to Plaintiff's renewal motion. CPLR 3408 mandates settlement conference proceedings in residential mortgage foreclosure actions (see CPLR 3408[a]), at which "[b]oth the plaintiff and defendant shall negotiate in good faith to reach a mutually agreeable resolution, including a loan modification, if possible" (see CPLR 3408[f].) The clear and simple purpose of the settlement conference process is to keep people in their homes "if possible," and thereby avoid the economic and social costs of foreclosure to individuals, families, and communities. Public policy in favor of disposition on the merits is at its strongest in residential foreclosure actions.
The Court concludes, therefore, that defendant Pamala Butler is not in default, and judgment by default may not be entered against her.
To the extent Plaintiff seeks judgment by default against any Defendant other than Pamala Butler, Plaintiff submits no "proof of the facts constituting the claim" against any of them (see CPLR 3215[f].)
Plaintiff's motion is denied.

August 23, 2013___________________
Jack M. Battaglia
Justice, Supreme Court

Monday, September 16, 2013

PERPETRATORS OF NATIONWIDE FORECLOSURE RESCUE SCAM SENTENCED TO FEDERAL PRISON

PERPETRATORS OF NATIONWIDE FORECLOSURE RESCUE SCAM
SENTENCED TO FEDERAL PRISON

WASHINGTON, DC – Mark S. Farhood, 49, formerly of San Diego, Calif., and Jason S. Sant, 38, of Lecanto, Fla., were sentenced today for their roles in operating a nationwide online foreclosure rescue scam that went by various names, including Home Advocate Trustees and Walk Away Today, and used various websites, including walkawaytoday.org and sellfastusa.com, to deceive hundreds of vulnerable, distressed homeowners into surrendering their properties to the company.

Farhood was sentenced to 11 years in prison, followed by 3 years of supervised release. Sant was sentenced to 6 years in prison, followed by 2 years of supervised release. Each was also ordered to forfeit approximately $2 million in fraud proceeds to the government, along with various bank accounts and other assets.

Christy Romero, Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP); Neil H. MacBride, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia; and Valerie Parlave, Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Washington Field Office, made the announcement today after sentencing by United States District Judge Anthony J. Trenga. Farhood and Sant each pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges on May 10, 2013.

“Farhood should spend the next 11 years in prison thinking about how he preyed on and cheated 389 distressed homeowners out of their homes by ‘buying’ their homes in fake sales for $10 per property andthen renting out the homes for $4 million, which he used to fund construction on his $1 million home in Costa Rica,” said Christy Romero, Special Inspector General for TARP (SIGTARP). “Farhood and his co-conspirator Sant, who was sentenced to six years in prison, hid their identities, stole identities of people whose pictures they found on the Internet, and exploited TARP’s housing program by submitting phony applications to stall foreclosures while they rented out the properties. When caught by SIGTARP and our law enforcement partners, Farhood tried to hide the proceeds of his crime, including the Costa Rica house and bags of silver coins, and tried have computer evidence of his crime deleted. SIGTARP will bring to justice all those who commit crimes exploiting the TARP bailout.”

According to court records, Farhood and Sant co-owned Home Advocate Trustees, which also went by the names Walk Away Today, First Equity Trustees, Home Security Consultants, Sell Fast USA, Short Sale Buyer, USA Sell House Fast, and USA Rental Housing. They marketed the businesses nationwide as purchasers of distressed real estate and a means by which vulnerable homeowners could avoid foreclosure and the accompanying negative effects on their credit. The companies told homeowners they were in the business of negotiating with lenders to purchase mortgage notes at a discount and falsely claimed to have been in business for seventeen years, to have experienced a 90% success rate in purchasing such notes, and to be the nation’s largest volume buyer of short sale and over-leveraged real estate.

As Sant and Farhood admitted in connection with their pleas, the businesses were a fraud, no such negotiations with lenders ever took place, and the scheme was merely a way for them to take possession of hundreds of residential properties, including homes within the Eastern District of Virginia, at virtually no cost and then reap millions of dollars in profits by renting the homes to unsuspecting tenants.

Farhood and Sant further admitted that as part of the scheme, they submitted fraudulent loan modification applications to mortgage lenders under the Treasury Department’s Making Home Affordable Program in the name of homeowners, without the homeowners’ knowledge or consent. Farhood and Sant used the fraudulent applications to stall foreclosures on the properties under their control and for which no mortgage payments were being made and to maximize the time period during which they could collect rental income.

The homes purportedly sold to Home Advocate Trustees and its related entities ended in foreclosure, harming the participating homeowners and commonly resulting in eviction of the tenants.This case was investigated by SIGTARP and the FBI’s Washington Field Office. Assistant United States Attorney Paul J. Nathanson prosecuted the case on behalf of the United States.This prosecution was brought in coordination with President Barack Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, which was established to wage an aggressive and coordinated effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. SIGTARP is a member of the task force. 

To learn more about the President’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, please visit www.StopFraud.gov.

To report suspected illicit activity involving TARP, dial the SIGTARP Hotline: 
1-877-SIG-2009 (1-877-744-2009).


Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Foreclosure Negotiation Delays Said to Show Bad Faith

A judge has ordered that a woman be paid all interest costs, late fees and attorneys fees which accrued against her as her mortgage lender and loan servicer "egregiously" dragged out the settlement conferences designed to help her avoid foreclosure.

The U.S. Bank National Association and the Bank of America (BOA) flouted the requirement in CPLR 3408(f) that the parties involved in state-mandated foreclosure conferences negotiate in good faith, Bronx Supreme Court Justice Robert Torres (See Profile) concluded in U.S. Bank, N.A. v. Shinaba, 381917-09.


Instead Torres described how Jumoke Shinaba experienced a 2 1/2-year ordeal beginning in December 2009 as 17 settlement conferences failed to produce a more affordable mortgage payment arrangement acceptable to both sides

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Your mortgage documents are fake!

If you know about foreclosure fraud, the mass fabrication of mortgage documents in state courts by banks attempting to foreclose on homeowners, you may have one nagging question: Why did banks have to resort to this illegal scheme? Was it just cheaper to mock up the documents than to provide the real ones? Did banks figure they simply had enough power over regulators, politicians and the courts to get away with it? (They were probably right about that one.)
A newly unsealed lawsuit, which banks settled in 2012 for $95 million, actually offers a different reason, providing a key answer to one of the persistent riddles of the financial crisis and its aftermath. The lawsuit states that banks resorted to fake documents because they could not legally establish true ownership of the loans when trying to foreclose.
This reality, which banks did not contest but instead settled out of court, means that tens of millions of mortgages in America still lack a legitimate chain of ownership, with implications far into the future. And if Congress, supported by the Obama administration, goes back to the same housing finance system, with the same corrupt private entities who broke the nation’s private property system back in business packaging mortgages, then shame on all of us.
The 2011 lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in both North and South Carolina, by a white-collar fraud specialist named Lynn Szymoniak, on behalf of the federal government, 17 states and three cities. Twenty-eight banks, mortgage servicers and document processing companies are named in the lawsuit, including mega-banks like JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citi and Bank of America.
Szymoniak, who fell into foreclosure herself in 2009, researched her own mortgage documents and found massive fraud (for example, one document claimed that Deutsche Bank, listed as the owner of her mortgage, acquired ownership in October 2008, four months after they first filed for foreclosure). She eventually examined tens of thousands of documents, enough to piece together the entire scheme.
A mortgage has two parts: the promissory note (the IOU from the borrower to the lender) and the mortgage, which creates the lien on the home in case of default. During the housing bubble, banks bought loans from originators, and then (in a process known as securitization) enacted a series of transactions that would eventually pool thousands of mortgages into bonds, sold all over the world to public pension funds, state and municipal governments and other investors. A trustee would pool the loans and sell the securities to investors, and the investors would get an annual percentage yield on their money.
In order for the securitization to work, banks purchasing the mortgages had to physically convey the promissory note and the mortgage into the trust. The note had to be endorsed (the way an individual would endorse a check), and handed over to a document custodian for the trust, with a “mortgage assignment” confirming the transfer of ownership. And this had to be done before a 90-day cutoff date, with no grace period beyond that.
Georgetown Law professor Adam Levitin spelled this out in testimony before Congress in 2010: “If mortgages were not properly transferred in the securitization process, then mortgage-backed securities would in fact not be backed by any mortgages whatsoever.”
The lawsuit alleges that these notes, as well as the mortgage assignments, were “never delivered to the mortgage-backed securities trusts,” and that the trustees lied to the SEC and investors about this. As a result, the trusts could not establish ownership of the loan when they went to foreclose, forcing the production of a stream of false documents, signed by “robo-signers,” employees using a bevy of corporate titles for companies that never employed them, to sign documents about which they had little or no knowledge.
Many documents were forged (the suit provides evidence of the signature of one robo-signer, Linda Green, written eight different ways), some were signed by “officers” of companies that went bankrupt years earlier, and dozens of assignments listed as the owner of the loan “Bogus Assignee for Intervening Assignments,” clearly a template that was never changed. One defendant in the case, Lender Processing Services, created masses of false documents on behalf of the banks, often using fake corporate officer titles and forged signatures. This was all done to establish standing to foreclose in courts, which the banks otherwise could not.
Szymoniak stated in her lawsuit that, “Defendants used fraudulent mortgage assignments to conceal that over 1400 MBS trusts, each with mortgages valued at over $1 billion, are missing critical documents,” meaning that at least $1.4 trillion in mortgage-backed securities are, in fact, non-mortgage-backed securities. Because of the strict laws governing of these kinds of securitizations, there’s no way to make the assignments after the fact. Activists have a name for this: “securitization FAIL.”
One smoking gun piece of evidence in the lawsuit concerns a mortgage assignment dated Feb. 9, 2009, after the foreclosure of the mortgage in question was completed. According to the suit, “A typewritten note on the right hand side of the document states:  ‘This Assignment of Mortgage was inadvertently not recorded prior to the Final Judgment of Foreclosure… but is now being recorded to clear title.’”
This admission confirms that the mortgage assignment was not made before the closing date of the trust, invalidating ownership. The suit further argued that “the act of fabricating the assignments is evidence that the MBS Trust did not own the notes and/or the mortgage liens for some assets claimed to be in the pool.”
The federal government, states and cities joined the lawsuit under 25 counts of the federal False Claims Act and state-based versions of the law. All of them bought mortgage-backed securities from banks that never conveyed the mortgages or notes to the trusts. The plaintiffs argued that, considering that trustees and servicers had to spend lots of money forging and fabricating documents to establish ownership, they were materially harmed by the subsequent impaired value of the securities. Also, these investors (which includes the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve) paid for the transfer of mortgages to the trusts, yet they were never actually transferred.
Finally, the lawsuit argues that the federal government was harmed by “payments made on mortgage guarantees to Defendants lacking valid notes and assignments of mortgages who were not entitled to demand or receive said payments.”
Despite Szymoniak seeking a trial by jury, the government intervened in the case, and settled part of it at the beginning of 2012, extracting $95 million from the five biggest banks in the suit (Wells Fargo, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citi and GMAC/Ally Bank). Szymoniak herself was awarded $18 million. But the underlying evidence was never revealed until the case was unsealed last Thursday.
Now that it’s unsealed, Szymoniak, as the named plaintiff, can go forward and prove the case. Along with her legal team (which includes the law firm of Grant & Eisenhoffer, which has recovered more money under the False Claims Act than any firm in the country), Szymoniak can pursue discovery and go to trial against the rest of the named defendants, including HSBC, the Bank of New York Mellon, Deutsche Bank and US Bank.
The expenses of the case, previously borne by the government, now are borne by Szymoniak and her team, but the percentages of recovery funds are also higher. “I’m really glad I was part of collecting this money for the government, and I’m looking forward to going through discovery and collecting the rest of it,” Szymoniak told Salon.
It’s good that the case remains active, because the $95 million settlement was a pittance compared to the enormity of the crime. By the end of 2009, private mortgage-backed securities trusts held one-third of all residential mortgages in the U.S. That means that tens of millions of home mortgages worth trillions of dollars have no legitimate underlying owner that can establish the right to foreclose. This hasn’t stopped banks from foreclosing anyway with false documents, and they are often successful, a testament to the breakdown of law in the judicial system. But to this day, the resulting chaos in disentangling ownership harms homeowners trying to sell these properties, as well as those trying to purchase them. And it renders some properties impossible to sell.
To this day, banks foreclose on borrowers using fraudulent mortgage assignments, a legacy of failing to prosecute this conduct and instead letting banks pay a fine to settle it. This disappoints Szymoniak, who told Salon the owner of these loans is now essentially “whoever lies the most convincingly and whoever gets the benefit of doubt from the judge.” Szymoniak used her share of the settlement to start the Housing Justice Foundation, a non-profit that attempts to raise awareness of the continuing corruption of the nation’s courts and land title system.
Most of official Washington, including President Obama, wants to wind down mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and return to a system where private lenders create securitization trusts, packaging pools of loans and selling them to investors. Government would provide a limited guarantee to investors against catastrophic losses, but the private banks would make the securities, to generate more capital for home loans and expand homeownership.
That’s despite the evidence we now have that, the last time banks tried this, they ignored the law, failed to convey the mortgages and notes to the trusts, and ripped off investors trying to cover their tracks, to say nothing of how they violated the due process rights of homeowners and stole their homes with fake documents.
The very same banks that created this criminal enterprise and legal quagmire would be in control again. Why should we view this in any way as a sound public policy, instead of a ticking time bomb that could once again throw the private property system, a bulwark of capitalism and indeed civilization itself, into utter disarray? As Lynn Szymoniak puts it, “The President’s calling for private equity to return. Why would we return to this?”
**Courtesy of www.salon.com ~click for full article.