ACLU – Foreclosure “Robo-signers” Under Scrutiny | Foreclosure Fraud Fighters Under Attack (via Foreclosureblues)

ACLU – Foreclosure “Robo-signers” Under Scrutiny | Foreclosure Fraud Fighters Under Attack ACLU – Foreclosure “Robo-signers” Under Scrutiny | Foreclosure Fraud Fighters Under Attack Today, December 11, 2010, 3 hours ago | Foreclosure Fraud ACLU Appeals Gag Order on Homeowner’s Attorney FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 9, 2010 CONTACT: (786) 363-2737 or media@aclufl.org SARASOTA, Fla. – The ACLU of Florida, on behalf of attorney Christopher Forrest and The Forrest Law Firm, today asked Florida’s Second District Court of Appeal to reverse … Read More

via Foreclosureblues

The Economy Cannot Recover Until the Big Banks Are Broken Up (via Foreclosureblues)

The Economy Cannot Recover Until the Big Banks Are Broken Up The Economy Cannot Recover Until the Big Banks Are Broken Up Today, December 11, 2010, 27 minutes ago | noreply@blogger.com (George Washington)   A lot of people still haven't heard that the economy cannot recover until the big banks are broken up. But as everyone from Paul Krugman to Simon Johnson has noted, the banks are so big and politically powerful that they have bought the politicians and captured the regulators. In addition, as Fortu … Read More

via Foreclosureblues

WEIDNER: BIGGEST RICO CASE ON EARTH (via Foreclosureblues)

WEIDNER: BIGGEST RICO CASE ON EARTH Posted on October 19, 2010 by Neil Garfield by Matt Weidner on IRS Form 938 Sometimes this all becomes a bit too overwhelming, trying to unravel this whole foreclosure cataclysm.  This is so far beyond the simple situation where a borrower borrows money from a bank and doesn’t pay….that bank is clearly entitled to their money back. I’m a fairly bright guy with a good education and a fair to ‘middlin grasp on co … Read More

via Foreclosureblues

The Cause of the Foreclosure Crisis (via Foreclosureblues)

The Cause of the Foreclosure Crisis The Cause of the Foreclosure Crisis Today, December 12, 2010, 2 hours ago | Mark Stopa David Bornstein of the New York Times penned a nice article today called When Lenders Won’t Listen.  Here’s the part that really jumped off the page at me… After describing the injustices experienced by several homeowners in their experiences with lenders, a competing view was presented: There are those of us who were raised with the idea that if you make a bar … Read More

via Foreclosureblues

Legal Aid for Homeowners: Perhaps the only thing on the planet for which TARP funds CANNOT be used. (via Foreclosureblues)

Legal Aid for Homeowners: Perhaps the only thing on the planet for which TARP funds CANNOT be used. Legal Aid for Homeowners: Perhaps the only thing on the planet for which TARP funds CANNOT be used. Yesterday, December 11, 2010, 9:32:56 PM | Mandelman The Nation is reporting a story about Treasury Secretary Tim “Transparency” Geithner that proves that he actually is a “by-the-books” guy who is very concerned about protecting the taxpayer’s money from being spent in unauthorized ways.  I’m not kidding about that… that’s what the story shows.  W … Read More

via Foreclosureblues

Debt settlement: A costly escape not always the best solution


Negotiating away your bills is legal, but it may not be your best solution. And sometimes, hiring a professional to help you isn’t as good an idea as doing it yourself.

If you’re drowning in unpaid bills and desperately looking for a way out, chances are you’ve come across an offer that sounds something like this: For a fee, a professional debt-settlement company will help rid you of your debt for as little as half the amount you owe.

Sounds like a scam? Or like you’re finally getting the break you deserve?

The answer may surprise you. Debt settlement is, in fact, a perfectly legal solution for consumers who are in deep and seeking an alternative to bankruptcy. But having a debt-settlement company do the legwork for you is fraught with risk, not to mention outrageous fees.

Here’s what you need to know about debt settlement and the companies that claim to do it for you:

The basics

It’s a little-known fact that when you fall further and further behind on your payments, creditors would much rather agree to settle your debts than have you file bankruptcy and not get paid at all, says debt expert Gerri Detweiler, author of “The Ultimate Credit Handbook”.

In exchange for an agreed-upon one-time payment — typically, between 20% and 75% of what you owe — the creditor forgives the rest of your debt and starts reporting it to the credit bureaus as settled. Meanwhile, you’ll need to put money aside toward the settlement and stop making payments to your creditors. On your credit reports, the balances of settled debts will show $0. However, any previous history of delinquent payments or charge-offs will remain on your report.

Not surprisingly, creditors don’t like to advertise debt settlement. They also make it an extremely difficult solution to pursue. As a rule, creditors won’t negotiate with consumers who are current on their bills, often refusing to discuss settlements unless you’re at least three to six months behind, explains Detweiler. That means dodging collections calls while trying to save up the cash for a settlement.

If you’re working with several creditors — you’d typically tackle the debts one at a time as you collect the money to pay them off — it’s hard, if not impossible to know which creditor might agree to settle earlier than others. “There’s an art to it,” Detweiler notes.

The problem with debt-settlement companies

With that in mind, it would be great to have an experienced, knowledgeable debt-settlement company hold your hand through the process, right? Not really.

Once you sign up with a company, chances are you’ll pay dearly for its services, says Deanne Loonin, a staff attorney with the National Consumer Law Center (NCLC) who has investigated the practices of debt-settlement companies.

Outrageous fees


Just how much will you pay? Good luck finding that out.

“I’ve never seen a company that’s given a straight answer,” says Loonin. The industry’s fees and fee structures are all over the place. Some companies charge a percentage of the total debt — typically 15% or 18% — that’s paid before you start accumulating savings. Others charge a percentage of the debt savings — usually 25% — once you settle, plus an initial sign-up fee and monthly service charges. Then there are those that charge a flat monthly fee throughout the length of the program.

Even the industry admits figuring out the costs is a challenge. “I have seen every kind of (fee) model you can think of,” says Jenna Keehnen, the executive director of the U.S. Organizations for Bankruptcy Alternatives (USOBA), an industry trade group. “It’s very confusing.”

Worse than confusing, it’s prohibitively expensive, says Katie Porter, a professor of bankruptcy law at the University of Iowa. She recently came across an offer to settle $33,551 in debt that projected a $5,032 service fee that was to be paid in monthly installments. Only after the service fee was paid off, two years later, did the client actually start saving for the settlement.

“That $5,000 buys a substantial amount of attorney time,” she says. “You can get a consumer (or bankruptcy) attorney to represent you and help with your debt problems for a lot less than that.”

Questionable services

What does a debt-settlement company do for you? In theory, it’s supposed to help you negotiate your debts. In practice though, that doesn’t really happen, says Porter. During the two or more years that you’re saving money — typically in an escrow account that the debt-settlement company has access to — the company does nothing but withdraw fees.

“A lot of consumers think they’ve taken care of the problem after contacting a company, but the reality is the debt-settlement company hasn’t settled anything in the beginning,” Porter says.
The companies also claim that they’ll help you dodge collections calls. But referring collections calls to your debt-settlement company often backfires, says Leslie Linfield, the executive director at the Institute for Financial Literacy, an organization that provides pre-bankruptcy counseling.

“Many creditors, once they know a client is working with a debt-settlement company, will escalate the account,” she notes. That means sending it to a collections agency sooner or even suing you. And when a creditor takes legal action, the debt-settlement companies drop the account: They don’t have the right to give legal advice or represent you in court.

High dropout rates

While there’s no independent research on the average success rate of debt-settlement programs, anecdotal evidence shows many consumers drop out before the company reaches a settlement with their creditors, Linfield says. “As you talk to bankruptcy attorneys you’ll hear horror stories of clients who paid thousands of dollars to a company and they’re still in the exact same place,” she says.

Consider what happened at National Consumer Council, which was shut down by the Federal Trade Commission in 2004 on accusations of falsely claiming nonprofit status. The company’s court records show that only 1.4% of the consumers who signed up for the program ever completed it. Nearly half — 42.9% — dropped out, paying an average of $1,780 in fees and saving $966 in their escrow accounts.

Secrets of the trade

Here’s what debt-settlement companies might not tell you:

Debt settlement may not be right for you. Debt settlement is a niche solution that’s right only for a small segment of the population. You could be a good candidate for debt settlement if you’re heading toward bankruptcy but don’t qualify for filing Chapter 7, Phelan explains. (Under Chapter 7, most of your unsecured debts are written off, but you’ll most likely have to sell some property including your home). “Most people who can qualify for Chapter 7 in all likelihood lack the cash flow to make debt settlement work for them,” he says. Debt settlement, in other words, might be a viable alternative to Chapter 13, which sets up a three- to five-year schedule with your creditors to repay your debts.

Likewise, if you can scrape up the cash to pay off your debts in a debt-management program  where you work with a debt-management company to pay off your balances in full but with lower interest rates, then debt settlement isn’t the best solution.

Your credit will suffer. Creditors don’t settle unless you’re severely behind on your payments. That means one thing: Debt settlement is damaging to your credit. Just how damaging it is depends on your track record. If you’re already behind on payments, your credit will suffer less than if you’ve managed to avoid delinquencies and credit charge-offs.

You could get sued. With bankruptcy, creditors have to stop collections efforts as soon as you file. That’s not the case with debt settlement. Even if you inform your creditors of your efforts to settle, they won’t stop trying to collect, Phelan says. Worst-case scenario, they could sue you for the amounts you owe. Should that occur the only way to avoid a black mark on your credit record would be to pay off the debt in full.

There are tax consequences. Debt settlement is a taxable event. Any forgiven balance that exceeds $600 is taxable income, says Linfield. “Sometimes that tax event can put people in worse shape than they were in to begin with,” she says. Consider this: If your tax rate is 15%, $5,000 of forgiven debt will carry a $750 tax liability. That’s a debt that the Internal Revenue Service won’t forgive. One exception: If you’re insolvent — namely your assets are less than your liabilities — you can petition the IRS to waive that tax liability by filing Form 982.

Their services might be illegal. Though the laws regulating debt-settlement companies vary greatly by state, it’s worth noting that 12 states prohibit for-profit debt management. Since debt-settlement companies are for-profit entities, they’re not allowed to practice there. Those states are Arizona, Georgia, Hawaii, Louisiana, Maine, Mississippi, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, West Virginia and Wyoming.

If you live in one of those states, remember: It is illegal for for-profit debt-settlement companies to contact you and work with you, even if they’re based in another state. “Many companies do it anyway,” Linfield says. “And that’s a big red flag.”

Securitization Workshop in Sacramento, December 11, 2010… for Attorneys & Other Interested Parties (via Foreclosureblues)

Securitization Workshop in Sacramento, December 11, 2010… for Attorneys & Other Interested Parties Securitization Workshop in Sacramento, December 11, 2010… for Attorneys & Other Interested Parties Today, December 06, 2010, 4 hours ago | Mandelman On December 11th, 2010, in Sacramento, California, DTC Systems, Inc. and Secure Document Research is holding a Securitization Workshop designed to help attorneys get quickly up-tp-speed on the topic of mortgage securitization as related to the financial and resulting foreclosure crises that conti … Read More

via Foreclosureblues

A question we get alot – can my house be saved after the foreclosure sale? Answer – Maybe, and it is expensive. (via Foreclosureblues)

A question we get alot – can my house be saved after the foreclosure sale? Answer – Maybe, and it is expensive. A question we get alot – can my house be saved after the foreclosure sale? Answer – Maybe, and it is expensive. Today, December 06, 2010, 7 hours ago | Foreclosure Defense Attorney Steve Vondran If your house sells, you are in a tough spot in California and Arizona. Normally, we would need to see if there was any fraud/robosigner in the sub of trustee. It is tough to reverse a sale where the notice of default and notice of sale and other document … Read More

via Foreclosureblues

California to join multi-state investigation into foreclosures

By Dale Kasler
dkasler@sacbee.com
Published: Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2010 – 10:56 am
Last Modified: Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2010 – 1:17 pm

California officials are joining a multi-state effort to investigate mortgage “robo-signers” – employees of lending institutions who’ve approved foreclosures without reading the documents.

Jim Finefrock, a spokesman for California Attorney General Jerry Brown, said today his office will participate in the investigation. The effort is to be led by Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller.

Brown has previously called on all lenders to halt foreclosures in California temporarily. He also issued demands to two lenders – Ally and JP Morgan Chase – to stop California foreclosures until they can show they’re following state law.

Finefrock said Brown’s lawyers are in talks with Ally and Chase. California law prohibits lenders from issuing default notices – the first step toward foreclosure – until they’ve made serious efforts to contact homeowners to see if their loans can be modified. The law applies to mortgages issued from 2003 to 2007.

Now that he is Governor he probably will not do anything. He has to “work” with the banks to help get California out of it fiscal mess. When running for office you must criticize the status quo and vow  to change it if elected. Once elected you must preserve the status quo. Its right out of the election play book.

Saving your home

I.  GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS

 

A.        WHETHER TO REINSTATE, DEFEND OR GIVE-UP

 

By far the most important decision that must be initially made is whether the property is worth saving.  This is often ignored and wasted effort is expended when there is no “equity” (realistic fair market value minus all debt, liens, property taxes, anticipated foreclosure costs, late fees, and selling costs) in the property.

The options are as follows:

1.         Reinstatement.  Pay the costs and late charges and stop the process.  In most non-judicial foreclosures this is permitted up until the date of sale.  In Washington the lender must allow reinstatement 10 days prior to the sale date.  See RCW 61.24.  Often a lender or relative will loan necessary funds and take a subordinate lien on the property to do so.  The makes sense only if the new payments are within the means of the debtor.

2.         Sell the Property.  If there is equity, but no ability to reinstate, then immediately list and sell the property to recoup equity.

3.         Obtain Foreclosure Relief.  Most government insured loans (if, VA, FHA) have programs allowing (or requiring) lenders to assist defaulting borrowers.  See discussion under §V infra.  Check into these options immediately.

4.         Give Up.  This is actually an option as most state laws permit the debtor to remain in possession during the foreclosure process and redemption period rent-free.  Most laws, especially in non-judicial foreclosure states – do not allow (or at least limit) deficiencies.  Debtors contemplating bankruptcy should take advantage of homestead rights and redemption rights.  If there is no equity or negative equity and no ability to make payments, there is no economic reason to try to avoid foreclosure.

5.         Defend the Foreclosure.  After all of the above have been considered, defense of the foreclosure may be warranted.  This outline discusses some defenses that may result in re-instatement of the mortgage or recovery of equity.

B.         OFFENSIVE STRATEGY

In addition to defenses that may be raised, there may be affirmative claims that can be brought against the lender which should be immediately determined and raised in a counterclaim or set-off or, in the case of non-judicial foreclosure, brought by separate suit and coupled with an injunction against continuing the non-judicial foreclosure.  These claims can also be brought in bankruptcy.  See, e.g. In re Perkins, 106 BR 863 (1989).

A few examples of affirmative claims:

1.         Truth-in-Lending Act Violations.  Often lenders will hand the debtor a claim, which can turn a debt into an asset.  If the Truth-in-Lending disclosure statement is less than one year old, there may be damage claims for improper disclosure.  See, 15 U.S.C. 1635.  More importantly, there may be a right of rescission, which can be exercised up to three years after the closing resulting in a tremendous advantage to the borrower.  See, e.g., Beach v. Ocwen Fed Bank, 118 S. Ct. 1408 (1998).

2.         Usury.  If a state usury law applies (usually on seller financed real estate), this can parlay a debt into an asset.  Federal pre-emption generally prevents this, but there are exceptions.  See, RCW 19.52.

3.         Mortgage Broker Liability, Lender Liability, Unfair or Deceptive Acts or Practices.  Numerous claims that arise in the mortgage financing context give rise to set-offs that can allow negotiation out of the foreclosure.  See e.g. Mason v. Mortgage America, 114 Wn. 2d 842 (1990).  Intentional breach of contract gives rise to emotional stress damages.  See, Cooperstein v. Van Natter, 26 Wn. App. 91 (1980); Theis v. Federal Finance Co., 4 Wn. App. 146 (1971).

Under a new federal statute to regulate high interest, predatory loans, Congress enacted in 1994 the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act (effective on loans after October 1, 1995).  This amendment to the Truth-In-Lending Act requires greater disclosures in loans where a number of factors exist such as, points exceeding 8% and other excessive costs.  Penalties include enhanced damages and rescission.  See 15 U.S.C. 1602(u) and 15 U.S.C. 1640(a).

The Mortgage Broker Practices Act, RCW 31.04 and the Consumer Protection Act also have enhanced damages and attorney fees.

 

II.  DEFENDING NONJUDICIAL DEED OF TRUST FORECLOSURES

A.        INTRODUCTION

The deed of trust is currently one of the most common devices for securing conventional and government insured or guaranteed real estate loans.  The deed of trust may be typically foreclosed either judicial­ly as a mortgage or non-judicially. Set forth below are the jurisdictional variations in security agreements and the most common foreclosure procedures[1]. Nonjudicial foreclosure is allowed in approximately one-half of the states.  Also listed are the states that permit nonjudicial foreclosure and their relevant statutes[2]. With nonjudicial foreclosure, it is not necessary to utilize the court for the foreclosure sale unless a deficiency judgment is sought. Nonjudicial foreclosure is often the preferred method of foreclosure because it is more efficient than judicial foreclosure and quicker. The nonjudicial foreclosure procedure has been found constitutional between private parties on the basis that there is no state action[3], but there is a serious question as to whether the government can direct a lender to use a nonjudicial procedure[4].

B.         PROCEDURE FOR RESTRAINING TRUSTEE’S SALE

Anyone having an interest in the real property security, including the borrower, may restrain the non-judicial foreclosure of a deed of trust on any proper ground[5].  Proper grounds for enjoining a trustee’s sale include: (1) there is no default on the obligation, Salot v. Wershow, 157 CA.2d 352, 320 P.2d 926 (1958), (2) the deed of trust has been reinstated, (3) the notice of default, notice of sale, or proposed conduct of the sale is defective, Crummer v. Whitehead, 230 CA.2d 264, 40 CR 826 (1964), (4) the lender has waived the right to foreclose, (5) a workout/settlement has been agreed to, (6) equitable reasons that would entitle a debtor to close a sale of the property or complete a refinance, (7) to enforce government relief programs, and trustee misconduct.  Finally, there may be defenses to the debt (i.e. usury, truth in lending violations, misrepresentation of the seller, breach of warranty by the seller, etc.) or set-offs, which substantially reduce the debt.

1.         Time for Filing Action

The action can presumably be filed any time before the scheduled trustee’s sale, but the sooner the better.  Under Washington law, if one seeks to restrain the sale, five days notice must be given to the trustee and the beneficiary.  See the Revised Code of Washington (hereinafter “RCW”) 61.24.130(2); Note, supra, footnote 4.  A trustor in California has at least one hundred and ten days (after the recording of the notice of default) to seek to enjoin the sale. In California, fifteen days are required for noticing a motion for a preliminary injunction. See CCP section 1005.

2.         Effect of Lis Pendens

Filing a lis pendens at the time the lawsuit is com­menced constitutes constructive notice to purchasers and others dealing with the property of the claims and defenses asserted by the plaintiff[6].  Even if the plaintiff does not seek an order restraining the trustee’s sale or a restraining order is denied, purchasers at the sale acquire the property subject to the pending litigation[7].

3.         Notice of Application for Restraining Order

In Washington, a person seeking to restrain a trustee’s sale must give five days notice to the trustee setting forth when, where and before whom the application for the restraining order or injunction will be made. See RCW 61.24.130(2).  See also Civil Rules 6 and 81 of the Civil Rules for Superior Court regarding computation of time.

4.         Payment Obligation

When a preliminary injunction is sought, many states require the petitioner to post an injunction bond to protect the lender from injury because of the injunction[8].  Some courts require the party seeking the injunctive relief to pay to the court the amount due on the obligation[9].  If the amount due on the obligation is in dispute, most courts will require the borrower to tender at least what he/she acknowledges is due[10].

Under Washington law, if the default is in making the monthly payment of principal, interest and reserves, the court requires such sum to be paid into the court every thirty days.  See RCW 61.24.130(1)(a).  A practice tip: even if local law does not require this, it would advantageous to offer to make ongoing payments.  Then the creditor loses nothing during the pendency of the suit.  In the case of default on a balloon payment, the statute requires that payment of the amount of the monthly interest at the new default rate shall be made to the court clerk every thirty days. See RCW 61.24.130 (1)(b).  If the property secured by the deed of trust is an owner occupied single family dwelling, then the court must require the party seeking to restrain the trustee’s sale to make the monthly payment of principal interest and reserves to the clerk of the court every 30 days.  See RCW 61.24.130(1).

Although the amount that the party seeking to restrain the trustee’s sale must pay as a condition of continuing the restrain­ing order would ordinarily be the regular monthly payment on the obligation, RCW 61.24.130(1)(a), when there is a balloon payment past due, RCW 61.24.130(1)(b) provides:

In the case of default in making payments of an obligation then fully payment by its terms, such sum shall be the amount of interest accruing monthly on said obligation at the non-default rate, paid to the clerk of the court every thirty days.

 

This is consistent with the intent to preserve the status quo while the lawsuit is pending and provide security only for prospec­tive harm.

Failure to seek a restraint may constitute a waiver of all rights to challenge a sale for defects whenever the party who received notice of the right to enjoin the trustees sale, had actual or constructive knowledge of a defense to foreclosure prior to the sale, and failed to bring an action to enjoin the sale.  The doctrine of waiver would thus preclude an action by a party to set aside a completed trustee’s sale[11].  Finally, RCW 61.24.130 allows the court to consider the grantor’s equity in determining the amount of security.  This would significantly help a borrower avoid a costly bond.  An appraisal showing equity should persuade a court that the lender is protected while the underlying dispute is resolved in court.

When a party knew or should have known that they might have a cause of action to set aside the sale but unreasonably delayed commencing the action, causing damage to the defendant, the doctrine of laches may bar the action[12].

C.        DEFENSES BASED ON TRUSTEE MISCONDUCT

Most defenses that are available in judicial foreclosures are also available in nonjudicial foreclosures of deeds of trust.  Defenses may include violation of Truth-in-Lending, usury statutes, other consumer protection legislation, or special requirements when the government is the lender, insurer, or guarantor, infra.  Other defenses are unique to nonjudicial foreclosure of deeds of trust because they relate to the particular obligations imposed upon trustees who conduct the sale of the real property.

1.         Breach of Fiduciary Duties

A trustee selling property at a nonjudicial foreclosure sale has strict obligations imposed by law.  In most states, “a trustee is treated as a fiduciary for both the borrower and the lender.”[13]

In McPherson v. Purdue, 21 Wn. App. 450, 452-3, 585 P.2d 830 (1978), the court approved the following statement describing the duties of a trustee from California law:

Among those duties is that of bringing “the property to the hammer under every possible advantage to his cestui que trusts,” using all reasonable diligence to obtain the best price.

 

In Cox v. Helenius, 103 Wn.2d 383, 388, 693 P.2d 683 (1985), the Washington Supreme Court adopted the following view:

Because the deed of trust foreclosure process is conducted without review or confrontation by a court, the fiduciary duty imposed upon the trustee is “exceedingly high”.

 

The court went on to illuminate four duties of the trustee:

(1)        The trustee is bound by his office to use diligence in presenting the sale under every possible advantage to the debtor as well as the creditor;

(2)        The trustee must take reasonable and appropriate steps to avoid sacrifice of the debtor’s property and his interest;

(3)        Once a course of conduct is undertaken that is reasonably calculated to instill a sense of reliance thereon by the grantor, that course of conduct can not be abandoned without notice to the grantor; and

(4)        When an actual conflict of interest arises between the roles of attorney for the beneficiary and trustee, the attorney should withdraw from one position, thus preventing a breach of fiduciary duty.

In Blodgett v. Martsch, 590 P.2d 298 (UT 1978), it was stated that “the duty of the trustee under a trust deed is greater than the mere obligation to sell the pledged property, . . . it is a duty to treat the trustor fairly and in accordance with a high punctilio of honor.” The Supreme Court in Blodgett went even further and found that the breach of this confidential duty may be regarded as constructive fraud[14].

The general rule is summarized in Nelson & Whitman, Real Estate Finance Law, (West Publishing Co., 3d Ed. 1994), §7.21:

. . . a trustee in a deed of trust is a fidu­ciary for both the mortgagor and mortgagee and must act impartially between them.  As one leading decision has stated, “the trustee for sale is bound by his office to bring the estate to a sale under every possible advan­tage to the debtor as well as to the creditor, and he is bound to use not only good faith but also every requisite degree of diligence in conducting the sale and to attend equally to the interest of debtor and creditor alike, apprising both of the intention of selling, that each may take the means to procure an advantageous sale.”

 

Mills v. Mutual Building & Loan Association, 216 N.C. 664, 669, 6 S.E.2d 549, 554 (1940).

The fiduciary duty of a trustee to obtain the best possible price for trust property that it sells has been discussed in nonjudicial and other contexts[15].

However, this “fiduciary” characterization of a trustee is not accepted in all jurisdictions. The California Supreme Court has stated,

“The similarities between a trustee of an express trust and a trustee under a deed of trust end with the name. ‘Just as a panda is not a true bear, a trustee of a deed of trust is not a true trustee.’ *** [T]he trustee under a deed of trust does not have a true trustee’s interest in, and control over, the trust property. Nor is it bound by the fiduciary duties that characterize a true trustee.”

 

Monterey S.P. Partnership v. W.L. Bangham, Inc. 49 Cal.3d 454, 462, 261 Cal.Rptr. 587,592 (1989).

In most jurisdictions, a trustee cannot, without the express consent of the trustor, purchase at the sale that he conducts[16].  A court may impose additional affirmative duties (beyond the statutory requirements) upon the trustee in certain circumstances.  This could include a requirement that a trustee’s sale be con­tinued, if necessary, to prevent a total loss of the debtor’s equity.  West v. Axtell, 322 Mo. 401, 17 S.W.2d 328 (1929). RCW 61.24.040(6) authorizes a trustee to continue a trustee’s sale for a period or periods totaling 120 days for “any cause he deems advantageous.”

However, the Washington Court of Appeals has ruled that the trustee need not exercise “due diligence” in notifying interested parties of an impending sale.  Morrell v. Arctic Trading Co., 21 Wn. App. 302, 584 P.2d 983 (1978).  Further, the general rule is that a trustee is not obligated to disclose liens or other interests which the purchaser could or should have discovered through his or her own investigation. Ivrey v. Karr, 182 Md. 463, 34 A.2d 847, 852 (1943). The Washington courts have held that even when a trustee is aware of defects in title, the trustee only undertakes an affirmative duty of full and accurate disclosure if s/he has made any representations or answered any questions concerning the title.  McPherson v. Purdue, 21 Wn. App. 450, 453, 585 P.2d 830 (1978). However, despite this general rule, there is authority behind the proposition that a trustee has a fiduciary duty to restrain the sale due to defects known to the trustee. In Cox v. Helenius, 103 Wn.2d 383,*,693 P.2d 683 (1985), in which the trustee knew that the right to foreclose was disputed and that the attorney for the trustor had failed to restrain the sale, the court held that the trustee should have either informed the attorney for the trustor that she had failed to properly restrain the sale or delayed foreclosure. As a result of the trustee’s failure to do so, the sale was held void.

Trustees are not permitted to “chill the bidding” by making statements which would discourage bidding, for example, a statement that it is unlikely that the sale will be held because the debtor intends to reinstate[17].  If a trustee does engage in “chilled bidding”, the sale is subject to being set aside[18].

2.         Strict Construction of the Deed of Trust Statute

The nonjudicial foreclosure process is intended to be inexpensive and efficient while providing an adequate opportunity for preventing wrongful foreclosures and promoting the stability of land titles[19].  However, statutes allowing foreclosure under a power of sale contained within the trust deed or mortgage are usually strictly construed.  Id. at 509.

Recent decisions have moved away from the strict construction ruling, holding that some technical violations of statutes governing nonjudicial foreclosures will not serve as grounds for setting aside sale when the error was non-prejudicial and correctable.  See Koegal, supra at 113.  An example of a non-prejudicial and correctable error is noncompliance with the requirement that the trustee record the notice of sale 90-days prior to the actual sale when actual notice of the sale was given to the debtors 90-days prior to the sale and the lack of recording caused no harm.  Steward, supra at 515. Further, inconsequential defects often involve minor discrepancies regarding the notice of sale. In Bailey v. Pioneer Federal Savings and Loan Association, 210 Va. 558, 172 S.E.2d 730 (1970), where the first of four published notices omitted the place of the sale, the court held that since there was “substantial compliance” with the requirements specified by the deed of trust and since the parties were not affected in a “material way,” the sale was valid[20].  In another case, where the notice of sale was sent by regular rather than by statutorily required certified or registered mail and the mortgagor had actual notice of the sale for more than the statutory period prior to the sale, the sale was deemed valid[21]. Clearly a grantor must show some prejudice.

D.        POST-SALE REMEDIES

1.         Statutory Presumptions

The Washington Deed of Trust Act contains statutory presumptions in connection with a trustee’s sale that are similar to those found in most other states. [22] RCW 61.24.040(7) provides, in part:

. . . the [trustee’s] deed shall recite the facts showing that the sale was conducted in compliance with all of the requirements of this chapter and of the deed of trust, which recital shall be prima facie evidence of such compliance and conclusive evidence thereof in favor of bona fide purchasers and encumbran­cers for value.

 

Such provisions are designed to protect bona fide purchasers and to assure that the title passed through a trustee’s sale will be readily insurable.  However, although the required recitals are described as “conclusive” in favor of bona fide purchasers and encumbrancers for value, there is extensive case law setting forth the basis for rebutting these presumptions. They also don’t apply to a dispute between the grantor and grantee.  See, generally, Nelson & Whitman, Real Estate Finance Law, (2d ed. 1985) § 7.21 ff. Some states employ other means of stabilizing titles, such as title insurance. Yet another means of stabilizing titles is to include a provision in the deed of trust that in the event of a trustee’s sale, the recital will be conclusive proof of the facts.  See, Johnson v. Johnson, 25 Wn. 2d 797 (1946); Glidden v. Municipal Authority, 111 Wn. 2d 341 (1988), modified By Glidden v. Municipal Authority, 764 P.2d 647 (1988).

2.         The Bona Fide Purchaser

The law is well settled that a bona fide purchaser, in order to achieve that status, must have purchased the property “for value.” See RCW 61.24.040(7).

The general rule is set forth in Phillips v. Latham, 523 S.W.2d 19, 24 (Tex. 1975):

[The purchaser] cannot claim to be a good-faith purchaser for value because the jury found . . . that the sale price of $691.43 was grossly inadequate.  These findings are not attacked for lack of evidence.  Although good faith does not necessarily require payment of the full value of the property, a purchaser who pays a grossly inadequate price cannot be considered a good-faith purchaser for value.

 

Further, if a lis pendens has been recorded, it “will cause the purchaser to take subject to the plaintiff’s claims.” Bernhardt, California Mortgage & Deed of Trust Practice (2d Edition 1990). A purchaser will not then constitute a bona fide purchaser able to utilize the presumptions of regularity in recitals of the trustee’s deed. See CC § 2924.  The beneficiary of a deed of trust is not a bona fide purchaser.  See Johnson, supra.

E.         SETTING ASIDE THE TRUSTEE’S SALE

Setting aside a trustee’s sale is largely a matter for the trial court’s discretion.  Crummer v. Whitehead, 230 Cal. App. 2d 264, 40 Cal. Rptr. 826 (1964); Brown v. Busch, 152 Ca. App. 2d 200, 313 P.2d 19 (1957). After a trustee’s sale has taken place, a trustor or junior lienor may bring an action in equity to set aside the sale. See Crummer v. Whitehead, 230 Cal. App. 2d 264, 40 Cal. Rptr. 826 (1964); see also Note, “Court Actions Contesting The Nonjudicial Foreclosure of Deeds of Trust In Washington,” 59 Wash.L.Rev. 323 (1984)[23].

An action may be brought to set aside a trustee’s sale under circumstances where the trustee’s sale is void.  Cox v. Helenius, 103 Wn.2d 383, 693 P.2d 683 (1985).  In those circumstances where the defect in the trustee’s sale procedure does not render the trustee’s sale void, the court will probably apply equitable principles in deciding what relief, if any, is available to the parties.  A general discussion of equitable principles in contexts other than trustee’s sale can be found in Eastlake Community Council v. Roanoake Associates, 82 Wn.2d 475, 513 P.2d 36 (1973) and Arnold v. Melani, 75 Wn.2d 143, 437 P.2d 908 (1968).  Although it is preferable to raise any defenses to the obligations secured by the deed of trust or other defects in the nonjudicial foreclo­sure process prior to the trustee’s sale, a trustee’s sale can presumably be set aside if there was a good reason for not restraining it.  Possible reasons could include those described below.

1.         Breach of the Trustee’s Duty

a.  Inadequate Sale Price

The general rule on using inadequate sale price to set aside a deed of trust sale is stated in Nelson & Whitman, supra, § 7.21:

All jurisdictions adhere to the recognized rule that mere inadequacy of the foreclosure sale price will not invalidate a sale, absent fraud, unfairness, or other irregularity. Stating the rule in a slightly different manner, courts sometimes say that inadequacy of the sale price is an insufficient ground unless it is so gross as to shock the conscience of the court, warranting an inference of fraud or imposition[24].

 

In Cox v. Helenius, supra, at p. 388, the court indicated that the inadequate sale price coupled with the trustee’s actions, would have resulted in a void sale, even if not restrained.

Generally, unless the sale price is grossly inadequate, other irregularities or unfairness must exist.  However, consider­able authority exists to support setting aside a sale when, coupled with an inadequate sale price, there is any other reason warranting equitable relief.  Nelson & Whitman, Real Estate Finance Law, supra.

b.         Hostility or Indifference to Rights of Debtor.

 

In Dingus, supra, at 289, it is stated:

 

In an action to set aside a foreclosure sale under a deed of trust, evidence showing that the trustee was hostile and wholly indifferent to any right of the mortgagor warrants setting aside the sale.  Lunsford v. Davis, 254 S.W. 878 (Mo. 1923).

 

CF. Cox v. Helenius, supra.

 

c.  Other Trustee Misconduct

Other trustee misconduct that would give rise to grounds for setting aside a trustees sale could include “chilled bidding” where the trustee acts in a manner that discourages other parties from bidding on the property[25].  Actions by the trustee which lull the debtor into inaction may also give rise to grounds for avoiding the sale[26].  Particular note should also be made of the discussion in Cox v. Helenius, supra, at p.390 in which trustees who serve a dual role as trustee and attorney for the beneficiary are directed to transfer one role to another person where an actual conflict of interest arises.

2.         Absence of Other Foreclosure Requisites

RCW 61.24.030 sets forth the requisites to non-judicial foreclosure.  Failure to meet these requisites may render the trustee’s sale void.  In Cox v. Helenius, 103 Wn.2d 383, 693 P.2d 683 (1985), the court concluded that a trustee’s sale was void under circumstances where the borrower had filed an action contesting the obligation and that action was pending at the time of the trustee’s sale.  The action was filed after service of the notice of default but before service of the notice of foreclosure and trustee’s sale.

The decision in Cox was based on language in the Deed of Trust Act that made it a requisite to foreclosure that “no action is pending on an obligation secured by the deed of trust.”  That part of the Cox decision was legislative overruled by Chapter 193, Law of 1985, Reg. Sess., which amended RCW 61.24.030(4) to read as follows:

That no action commenced by the beneficiary of the deed of trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of an obligation secured by the deed of trust in any court by reason of the grantor’s default on the obligation secured;

 

As a result of the amendment, pendency of an action on the obligation brought by the grantor does not render a subsequent trustee’s sale void.  Only pending actions commenced by the beneficiary to seek satisfaction of the obligation secured by the deed of trust operate as a bar to nonjudicial foreclosure.  The trustee must be properly appointed and be appointed before the trustee has authority to act.  When an eager trustee “jumps the gun” the actions are equally void.

F.         ADDITIONAL STATUTORY REMEDIES

1.         Confirmation of Sale Price.

Many states (but not Washington) require confirmation that the nonjudicial sale resulted in a fair value to the debtor. Below is listed the states that have adopted fair market value statutes[27]. Fair market value statutes are usually used to limit deficiency judgments to the difference between the fair market value and the debt. Failure to confirm the sale within the statutory period is usually a bar to a deficiency. For example, in Georgia the court must be petitioned for a confirmation of the sale if a deficiency judgment is sought.

2.         Redemption in Nonjudicial Foreclosures.

Approximately one-half of the states allow for redemption after foreclosure, although not Washington. Some states allow redemption after a nonjudicial sale. See Minnesota Statutes Annotated § 580 et seq.  Generally, the grantor can remain in possession during the redemption period, rent the property (retaining the rents) and/or sell the property (or sell the redemption rights).

G.        RAISING DEFENSES IN THE UNLAWFUL DETAINER (EVICTION) ACTION

 

In Washington, RCW 61.24.060 specifies that the purchaser at a trustee’s sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale.  If the grantor or person claiming through the grantor refuses to vacate the property, the purchaser is entitled to bring an action to recover possession of the property pursuant to the unlawful detainer statute, RCW 59.12.  Ordinarily, parties in possession will not be allowed to raise  some defenses in the unlawful detainer action that could have been raised prior to the trustee’s sale[28].  In most states defenses in an eviction action are severely limited.  Despite these early cases restricting defenses in unlawful detainer, e.g. Peoples National Bank v. Ostander, 6 Wn. App. 28 (1971), a more recent case, Cox v. Helenius, 103 Wash. 2d 208 (1985), allowed defenses to be raised that the sale was void because of defects in the foreclosure process itself.  In fact, Cox v. Helenius was initially a unlawful detainer action in the King County Superior Court.  In Savings Bank of Puget Sound v. Mink, 49 Wn. App. 204 (1987), Division One of the Court of Appeals, held that a number of defenses raised by the appellant (Truth-in-Lending violations, infliction of emotional distress, defamation, slander, etc.) were not properly assertable in an unlawful detainer action but ruled that:

However, in Cox v. Helenius, supra, the Supreme Court recognized that there may be circumstances surrounding the foreclosure process that will void the sale and thus destroy any right to possession in the purchaser at the sale.

In Cox, the Court recognized two bases for post sale relief: defects in the foreclosure process itself, i.e., failure to observe the statutory prescriptions and the existence of an actual conflict of interest on the part of the trustee…

 

B.      The Deed of Trust Act must be construed strictly against lenders and in favor of borrowers.

 

Washington law is similarly clear that the Deed of Trust Act, being non-judicial in nature and without the scrutiny by courts until the unlawful detainer stage, is strictly construed against lenders and in favor of borrowers.  Queen City Savings and Loan v. Mannhalt, 111

In order to avoid the jurisdictional and other problems that arise when trying to litigate claims in the unlawful detainer action, it is recommended that a separate action be filed to set aside the trustee’s sale and that the two actions be consolidated.

H.        DAMAGES FOR WRONGFUL FORECLOSURE

There is a damage claim for the tort of wrongful foreclosure.  The claim may also exist as a breach of contract claim.  See, Theis v. Federal Finance Co., 4 Wn. App. 146 (1971); Cox v. Helenius, supra.

III.  DEFENDING JUDICIAL FORECLOSURES

A.        INTRODUCTION

The same range of defenses is generally available to the borrower in both nonjudicial and judicial foreclosures.  Defenses may include fraud or misrepre­sentation, violations of Truth-in-Lending, violations of usury statutes, violations of other consumer protection acts, or failure to comply with applicable regulations when the government is the lender, insurer, or guarantor.  Other defenses, however, are unique to judicial foreclosures and must be raised affirmatively. Most rights are set forth in statutes and they must be asserted in compliance with the particular requirements of the law.  The judicial foreclosure statutes are set forth below[29].

B.         HOMESTEAD RIGHTS

If the plaintiff’s complaint seeks possession of the property at the sheriff’s sale and the homeowner wishes to remain on the premises during the redemption period, then the homeowner should plead the existence of homestead rights in the answer so as not to waive them.  State, ex rel., O’Brien v. Superior Court, 173 Wash. 679, 24 P.2d 117 (1933); State, ex rel., White v. Douglas, 6 Wn.2d 356, 107 P.2d 593 (1940).

C.        UPSET PRICE

Some states authorize the court to establish an upset price (or minimum bid amount) in a foreclosure sale.  In Washington, RCW 61.12.060 authorizes the court where a deficiency is sought, in ordering a sheriff’s sale, to take judicial notice of economic conditions and, after a proper hearing, fix a minimum or upset price for which the mortgaged premises must be sold before the sale will be confirmed.  If a depressed real estate market justifies seeking an upset price, then the mortgagor should request in the answer that one be set.  See, McClure v. Delguzzi, 53 Wn. App. 404 (1989).  Some states give this power to the courts with any sale without reference to any other valuation method.  See e.g. Kan. Stat. §60-2415(b) (1988); Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. §600.3155 (1919).  The court has great discretion in arriving at and setting an upset price if the statute fails to specify the method to be used in calculating the price.  There is always the danger that in the absence of statutory standards, the power to set the upset price will be abused[30].

D.        DEFICIENCY JUDGMENTS

A deficiency judgment results when the amount for which the property is sold at the sheriff’s sale is less than the amount of the judgment entered in the foreclosure action.  A deficiency judgment in connection with a foreclosure is enforceable like any other money judgment.  If the mortgage or other instrument contains an express agreement for the payment of money, then the lender may seek a deficiency judgment.  See RCW 61.12.070.  In Thompson v. Smith, 58 Wn. App. 361 (1990), Division I, held the acceptance of a deed in lieu of foreclosure triggers the anti-deficiency provisions of the Deed of Trust Act, 61.24.100. The procedural requirements for obtaining a deficiency judgment vary, but must be strictly adhered to or the right will be lost. In general, an action must be brought within a statutorily set amount of time following the foreclosure sale. For example, California Civ. Proc. Code § 726 (Supp. 1984) (three months); N.Y. Real Prop. Acts. Law § 1371 (2) (McKinney 1979) (ninety days); and Pennsylvania Stat. Ann. tit. 12, section 2621.7 (1967) (six months). Many states also have time limits for the completion of the execution of a deficiency. Maryland Rules, Rule W75 (b)(3) (1984) (three years); and Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2329.08 (Anderson 1981) (two years on land with dwelling for two families or less or used as a farm dwelling). Some states have longer redemption periods when a deficiency is sought. e.g. Wisconsin (6-12 months); Washington (8-12 months).

E.         REDEMPTION RIGHTS

Approximately one-half of the states have statutes that give a borrower the right to redeem the property after the foreclosure sale. This right has specific statutory time limits. The time period for redemption varies from thirty days to three years after the foreclosure sale.  Strict compliance with the statutory requirements is mandatory.

Under Washington law, if the lender seeks a deficiency judgment or if the mortgage does not contain a clause that the property is not for agricultural purposes, then the redemption period is one year from the date of the sheriff’s sale.  See RCW 6.23.020.

If the lender does not seek a deficiency judgment and the mortgage contains a clause that the property is not being used for agricultural purposes, than the redemption period is eight months.  Id.

There is no statutory redemption period if there is a structure on the land and the court finds that the property has been abandoned for six months prior to the decree of foreclosure.  See RCW 61.12.093.  This section is not applicable to property that is used primarily for agricultural purposes.  RCW 61.12.095.

The purchaser at the sheriff’s sale, or the purchaser’s assignee, must send notice to the judgment debtor every two months that the redemption period is expiring.  Failure to give any of the notices in the manner and containing the information required by statute will operate to extend the redemption period.  RCW 6.23.080.

Any party seeking to redeem must give the sheriff at least five days written notice of the intention to apply to the sheriff for that purpose.  RCW 6.23.080(1). The amount necessary to redeem is the amount of the bid at the sheriff’s sale, interest thereon at the rate provided in the judgment to the time of redemption, any assessment or taxes which the purchaser has paid after circumstanc­es, other sums that were paid on prior liens or obligations.  RCW 6.23.020.

Redemption rights are freely alienable and a property owner can sell the homestead during the redemption period free of judgment liens.  Great Northwest Federal Savings and Loan Associa­tion v. T.B. and R.F. Jones, Inc., 23 Wn. App. 55, 596 P.2d 1059 (1979). This is an important right and is often overlooked.  For example, in VA loans the sale price is very low because the VA deducts its anticipated costs of holding and resale.  Therefore, the property can be redeemed for that amount.  There, lenders routinely advise debtors to move out at the beginning of the period, which they do not legally have to do.

The debtor can sometimes rent the property and the rents retained during the redemption period.

F.         POSSESSION AFTER SALE

If the homeowner exercises his redemption rights and there is a purchaser in possession, then the homeowner can apply for a writ of assistance to secure possession of the property anytime before the expira­tion of the redemption period.  If the homeowner has no right to claim a homestead or is not occupying the property as a homestead during redemption period, then the lender can apply for a writ of assistance at the time of the foreclosure decree to obtain possession of the property.  A writ of assistance is similar to a writ of restitution and is executed by the sheriff.  The purchaser at the sheriff’s sale normally has no right to possession until after receipt of a sheriff’s deed[31].

G.  POST FORECLOSURE RELIEF

A foreclosure can be vacated under rules allowing vacating judgments, e.g. F.R.Civ.P 60(b); See also Godsden & Farba, Under What Circumstances Can a Foreclosure Sale be Set Aside Under New York Law, New York State Bar Journal (May 1993).

IV.  MISCELLANEOUS ISSUES

A.        BANKRUPTCY

Bankruptcy has a significant impact on real estate foreclosures and is beyond the scope of this outline. Under section 362 (a) of the Bankruptcy Code, filing any of the three types of bankruptcy stays all foreclosure proceedings. See 11 U.S.C.A. § 362 (a)(4); Murphy, The Automatic Stay in Bankruptcy, 34 Clev.St.L.Rev. 597 (1986).  A stay has been held to apply to a possessory interest after foreclosure to allow a challenge to the validity of the foreclosure in an adversary action in bankruptcy court.  In re Campos, No. 93-04719 (W.D. WN-B.Ct, Order of July 9, 1993).  The stay applies to both judicial and nonjudicial foreclosures and it also applies whether or not the foreclosure was begun before the bankruptcy. See 11 U.S.C.A. § 362 (a). The only notable exception to the automatic stay is for foreclosures brought by the Secretary of HUD on federally insured mortgages for real estate involving five or more units. See 11 U.S.C.A. § 362 (b)(8).

A trustee in a bankruptcy may also undo a foreclosure as a fraudulent transfer if a creditor gets a windfall.  See II U.S.C. §547 and §548, within 90 days or within one year if an “insider” forecloses[32].

A portion of the equity under state or federal law may be protected from creditors, although not from secured creditors.

B.         WORKOUTS (DEED IN LIEU)

A deed is sometimes given by a mortgagor in lieu of foreclosure and in satisfaction of a mortgage debt. Such a workout “is subject to close scrutiny in an effort to determine whether it was voluntarily entered into on the part of the mortgagor under conditions free of undue influence, oppression, unfairness or unconscientious advantage. Further the burden of proving the fairness rests with the mortgagee.” Robar v. Ellingson, 301 N.W.2d 653, 657-658 (N.D.1981) (insufficient threshold evidence of oppression or unfairness to trigger mortgagee’s burden of proof). Courts also tend to find the deed in lieu of foreclosure to be another mortgage transaction in the form of an absolute deed. Peugh v. Davis, 96 U.S. (6 Otto) 332, 24 L.Ed. 775 (1877). See also, Noelker v. Wehmeyer, 392 S.W.2d 409 (Mo.App.1965). When a mortgagee takes a deed in lieu there is the possibility that the conveyance will be avoided under bankruptcy laws. It should be noted that if other liens have been created against a property after the time of the original mortgage, the deed in lieu will not cut off those liens. See Note, 31 Mo.L.Rev. 312, 314 (1966).  A deed in lieu should contain a comprehensive agreement regarding any deficiency claims, etc.

C.        LENDER LIABILITY

It is possible to use theories of lender liability to assist in successfully negotiating a workout, or an avoidance of foreclosure.  This principally occurs in commercial foreclosures but there are some strategies that apply to the residential setting.  This may involve persuading the lender that failing to reach a workout agreement may result in a claim against the lender, absolving the borrower from liability on the loan and/or granting an affirmative judgment against the lender.  Some of the useful theories of lender liability are breach of agreement to lend, breach of loan agreement, failure to renew term note/wrongful termination, promissory estoppel, lender interference, and negligent loan management. Some of the common law defenses for a borrower are fraud, duress, usury and negligence. Further, because banks are so closely regulated, a borrower should also explore statutory violations.  For a detailed treatment of workouts, see Dunaway, supra, (Vol. 1, Chapter 4B)[33].

D.        MOBILE HOME FORECLOSURES

Generally, mobile homes are repossessed under Article 9-503 of the Uniform Commercial Code, and are beyond the scope of this outline.  Many states limit deficiencies in purchase money security agreements and/or allow reinstatement.  There are many abuses in the sales of mobile homes and the various consumer protection laws (and usury laws) provide a fertile source of potential defenses.  See generally, Unfair and Deceptive Practices, National Consumer Law Center (2nd ed.), paragraph 5.4.8.

E.         TAX CONSEQUENCES OF FORECLOSURE

Although beyond the scope of this outline, there are tax consequences when property is foreclosed, particularly in commercial transactions.

First, a foreclosure or deed in lieu of foreclosure is treated as a sale or exchange.  Treas. Rep. 1-001-2; Rev. Ruling 73-36, 1973-1 CB 372.  The amount realized (gained) is the greater of the sales proceeds or the debt satisfied.  Parker v. Delaney, 186 F.2d 455 (1st Cir. 1950).  When debt is cancelled (such as by an anti-deficiency statute), a gain may be generated.  IRS Code §61(a).

Second, when home equity debt plus purchase debts exceeds the value of the property, a taxable gain can be generated.  Finally, if the debtor is “insolvent” when the foreclosure occurs, §108(a)(1)(A) of the IRS Code excludes income (gain) to the extent the debtor is insolvent.  This is complicated and a tax expert should be consulted to analyze any potential tax bite upon foreclosure. See generally, Dunaway, supra, for a detailed analysis of the tax consequences of foreclosure.

 

V. THE GOVERNMENT AS INSURER, GUARANTOR OR LENDER

A.        INTRODUCTION

There are a variety of federal home ownership programs that may provide special protections for homeowners who are faced with the prospect of foreclosure.  These protections generally apply regardless of whether the security divide used is a mortgage or deed of trust.  The programs range from home loans insured by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) or guaranteed by the Veteran’s Administration (VA) to programs such as the Farmer’s Home Administration (FmHA) home ownership program where the government acts as a direct lender.  The procedures which must be followed by loan servicers and applicable governmental agencies are described below.  Also, Fannie Mae published in 1997 a Foreclosure Manual for loan services, which outlines various workouts and other loss mitigation procedures.

When the government controls the loan (or the lender) its actions are subject to the protection of the due process provision of the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution[34].  This calls into question the use of nonjudicial foreclosure as there is no opportunity to be heard and notice is usually deficient or, at best, minimal.

B.         HUD WORKOUT OPTIONS

1.         Applicability

Homeowners who have a HUD insured mortgage or deed of trust may be eligible for relief through the HUD foreclosure prevention program.  HUD regulations also require that lenders meet certain servicing responsibilities before proceeding with foreclosure.  Regulations for loss mitigation are found at 24 C.F.R. Sec. 203.605.

2.         Procedure when the Homeowner is in Default

a.  Delinquency Required for Foreclosure.

The servicer shall not turn the action over for foreclo­sure until at least three full monthly payments are unpaid after application of any partial payments.  24 C.F.R. Sec. 203.  The servicer is required to send a HUD brochure on avoiding foreclosure to the borrower informing them of their right to seek various alternatives to foreclosure.

The servicer must allow reinstatement even after foreclosure has been started if the homeowner tenders all amounts to bring the account current, including costs and attorney fees.  24 C.F.R. Sec. 203.

b.  Forbearance Relief.

The homeowner may be eligible for special forbearance relief if it is found that the default was due to circumstances beyond the homeowners’ control.  24 C.F.R. Sec. 203.  The homeowner and the lender are authorized to enter into a forbearance agreement providing for:

i.          Increase, reduction, or suspension of regular payments for a specified period;

 

ii.          Resumption of regular payments after expiration of the forbearance period;

 

iii.         Arrangements for payment of the delin­quent amount before the maturity date of the mortgage or at a subsequent date.

 

Suspension or reduction or payments shall not exceed 18 months under these special forbearance relief provisions.

c.  Recasting of Mortgage.

HUD has the authority to approve a recasting agreement to extend the term of the mortgage and reduce the monthly payments.  24 C.F.R. Sec. 203.

HUD’s actions may be declared unlawful and set aside if the court finds it to be arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.  See Federal National Mortgage Association v. Rathgens, 595 F. Supp. 552 (S.D. Ohio 1984); Butler v. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, 595 F. Supp. 1041 (E.D. Pa. 1984).  See, generally, Ferrell v. Pierce, 560 F. Supp. 1344 (N.D. Ill. 1983).

In Brown v. Kemp, 714 F. Supp. 445 (W.D. Wash. 1989)       the court found HUD’s decision for an assignment program application to be informal agency action and thus reviewable under the “arbitrary” and “capricious” standard.

Failure to follow servicing requirements or comply with the HUD assignment regulations or handbook provisions may also constitute an equitable defense to foreclosure[35].

 

C.        THE VA HOME LOAN PROGRAM

1.         Applicability

Homeowners who have a VA guaranteed mortgage or deed of trust may be eligible for relief through a VA recommended forbearance program or “refunding” of the loan.  Regulations promulgated at 38 C.F.R. Sec. 36.4300, et seq., and VA servicing handbooks establish a policy of forbearance when a loan is in default.  The VA is reluctant to enforce these regulations against lenders.

2.         Forbearance Relief

Lenders are officially encouraged to grant forbearance relief for mortgagors who default on their loans due to circumstances beyond their control.  Lender’s Handbook, VA Pamphlet No. 26-7 (Revised) and VA Manual 26-3.  These rights should be pursued with the lender immediately.

3.         Refunding Loans

The Veteran’s Administration is authorized to “refund” loans when borrowers meet certain criteria.  Refunding the loan is when the VA pays the lender in full and takes an assignment of the loan and security in cases where the loan is in default.  The VA then owns the loan and the veteran makes payments to the VA directly.  Although 38 C.F.R. Sec. 36.4318 authorize refunding, the regulations are much more vague than those promulgated in connection with the HUD assignment program.

4.         Judicial Review

The VA decision to deny assignment of a VA loan is committed to agency discretion within the meaning of the federal Administra­tive Procedures Act, 5 U.S.C. Sec. 701(a)(2), and is not review­able.  Rank v. Nimmo, 677 F.2d 692 (9th Cir. 1982).

The courts have ruled that a borrower has no express or implied right of action in federal court to enforce duties, which VA or lenders might have under VA publications with respect to forbearance assistance.  See, Rank v. Nimmo, supra; Gatter v. Nimmo, 672 P.2d 343 (3rd Cir. 1982); Simpson v. Clelend, 640 F.2d 1354 (D.C. Cir. 1981).  But, see, Union National Bank v. Cobbs, 567 A.2d 719 (1989) (failure to follow VA Handbook an equitable defense).

Failure to follow VA publications, however, may be an equitable defense to foreclosure under state law.  See, Simpson v. Cleland, supra.

5.         Waiver of Debt/Release of Liability

Federal statutes, VA regulations and guidelines require the VA to waive a deficiency (or indemnity) debt, after a foreclosure, when equity and good conscience require it.  38 C.F.R. §1.965(a)(3).  The VA is reluctant to follow its own regulations and must be pressed.  The Court of Veterans Appeals (CVA) reverses over 50% of denial of waivers – an astonishing measure of the VA’s failure to follow clear federal law!  See The Veterans Advocate, Vol. 5, No. 10, P. 93 (June 1994).  The VA urged its regional offices to avoid CVA rulings until forced to retract this directive.  See The Veterans Advocate, supra.  The VA also ignores the six-year statute of limitations when demanding payment.  28 U.S.C. 2415.

Secondly, the VA can determine that the claimed debt is invalid, such as when the veteran is eligible for a retroactive release of liability.  This occurs when the VA would have released the veterans when the property was sold to a qualifying purchaser who assumes the debt.  38 U.S.C. 3713(b); Travelstead v. Derwinski, 978 F.2d 1244 (Fed. Cir. 1992).

The VA has the burden to determine whether the veteran should be released.

6.         Deficiency Judgments and VA Loans

It is the policy of VA to order an appraisal prior to a judicial or nonjudicial foreclosure sale and to instruct the lender to bid the amount of the appraisal at the sale.  This “appraisal” is always below fair market value and includes the VA’s anticipated costs of holding and liquidating the property.  38 U.S.C. 3732(c); 38 C.F.R. §36.4320.  Ordinarily, on pre-1989 laws, VA will not waive its right to seek a deficiency judgment in a judicial foreclosure and will reserve its right to seek a deficien­cy against a borrower, even in the case of a nonjudicial foreclo­sure of a deed of trust, notwithstanding the anti-deficiency language of RCW 61.24.100.  On loans made after 1989 changes in the VA program, deficiencies are not sought.

Although, United States v. Shimer, 367 U.S. 374 (1960) appears to authorize this VA deficiency policy, the Washington non-judicial deed of trust foreclosure procedure which retains judicial foreclosure and preservation of the right to seek a deficiency judgment as an option, seems to make United States v. Shimer, distinguishable.

In United States v. Vallejo, 660 F. Supp. 535 (1987), the court held that the VA must follow Washington foreclosure law, including the anti-deficiency provisions of the Deed of Trust Act as the “federal common law”.  This ruling was subsequently followed in a class action, Whitehead v. Derwinski, 904 F.2d 1362 (9th Cir. 1990), wherein the VA has been permanently enjoined from collecting $63 million in claims and ordered to repay millions in illegally collected deficiencies.  This issue of the application of various state laws as to federally insured loans is not clear, as the Ninth Circuit overruled Whitehead in Carter v. Derwinski, 987 F.2d 611 (9th Cir. – en banc – 1993).  Subsequent decisions still create doubt as to whether United States v. Shimer, supra, is still good law[36].

At the very least, if the lender is instructed by the VA to preserve the right to seek a deficiency against the borrower, then the lender should be required to foreclose the deed of trust judicially as a mortgage.

D.        RURAL HOUSING SECTION 502 LOANS

1.         Applicability

The Rural Housing Service (RHS) formerly, the Farmer’s Home Administration, is authorized to grant interest credit and provide moratorium relief for homeowners who fall behind on their loan payments due to circumstances beyond their control.  Regulations for moratorium relief and interest credit are found at 7 C.F.R. Sec. 3550 et seq and must be complied with prior to foreclosure.  United States v. Rodriguez, 453 F. Supp. 21 (E.D. Wn. 1978).  See, 42 U.S.C. §1472.  All servicing of RHS loans is handled at the Centralized Servicing Center in St. Louis, MO (phone: 1-800-793-8861).

2.         Interest Credit

If a homeowner falls behind on his RHS loan because of circumstances beyond his or her control, then RHS has the authority to accept principal only and waive the interest payments.  Although RHS is supposed to use this remedy before considering moratorium relief, it rarely does.

3.         Moratorium Relief

If a homeowner falls behind in loan payments because of circumstances beyond his or her control, RHS may suspend payments or reduce payments for six months.  Moratorium relief may be extended for additional six-month segments up to a total of three years[37].

Once a homeowner has been granted moratorium relief, RHS cannot grant it again for five years.  If a homeowner cannot resume payments in three years from when moratorium relief began, then it will begin foreclosure proceedings.

After moratorium relief has been extended, the homeowner can make additional partial payments to catch up the delinquent amount or, the loan can be reamortized.  RHS will restructure the loan, 7 U.S.C. 2001.

4.         Waiver of Redemption and Homestead Rights

Form mortgages used by RHS purported to waive the homeowner’s redemption rights and homestead rights in the event of foreclosure.  It is questionable whether such a waiver is enforceable[38].

5.         Homestead Protection

See, 7 U.S.C. 2000.

6.         Lease/Buy-Back

See, 7 U.S.C. 1985 (e).

VI.  RESOURCES

The following treatises are excellent sources of basic information about all aspects of the foreclosure process.  Dunaway, The Law of Distressed Property (4 volumes – Clark Boardman Co. 1994 and suppls.; Nelson & Whitman, Real Estate Finance Law (West 3rd Ed. 1994); Bernhardt, California Mortgages and Deed of Trust Practice, (3rd ed. 2000 University of Calif.), Repossessions and Foreclosures (4th ed. 2000) National Consumer Law Center.  See also, Fuchs, Defending Non-Judicial Residential Foreclosures, Texas Bar J (November 1984).


1

 

Jurisdiction Customary Security Agreement Customary Foreclosure Procedure
  Alabama Mortgage Nonjudicial
  Alaska Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  Arizona Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  Arkansas Mortgage Judicial
  California Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  Colorado Deed of Trust (Semi-judicial) Public Trustee’s Sale
  Connecticut Mortgage Judicial-Strict Foreclosure
  Delaware Mortgage Judicial
  Dis. of Col. Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  Florida Mortgage Judicial
  Georgia Security Deed Nonjudicial
  Hawaii Mortgage Judicial
  Idaho Mortgage Judicial & Nonjudicial
  Illinois Mtg. & D.T. Judicial
  Indiana Mortgage Judicial
  Iowa Mortgage Judicial
  Kansas Mortgage Judicial
  Kentucky Mortgage Judicial
  Louisiana Mortgage Judicial
  Maine Mortgage Judicial (Nonjudicial for Corporate Borrower)
  Maryland Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  Massachusetts Mortgage Nonjudicial
  Michigan Mortgage Nonjudicial
  Minnesota Mortgage Nonjudicial
  Mississippi Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  Missouri Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  Montana Instlmnt. Contract Nonjudicial
  Nebraska Deed of Trust Mortgage Judicial & Nonjudicial
  Nevada Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  New Hampshire Mortgage Nonjudicial
  New Jersey Mortgage Judicial
  New Mexico Mortgage Judicial
  New York Mortgage Judicial
  North Carolina Deed of Trust Judicial
  North Dakota Mortgage Judicial
  Ohio Mortgage Judicial
  Oklahoma Mortgage Judicial
  Oregon Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  Pennsylvania Mortgage Judicial
  Puerto Rico Mortgage Judicial
  Rhode Island Mortgage Nonjudicial
  South Carolina Mortgage Judicial
  South Dakota Mortgage Judicial & Nonjudicial
  Tennessee Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  Texas Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  Utah Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  Vermont Mortgage Strict Foreclosure
  Virgin Islands Mortgage Judicial
  Virginia Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  Washington Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  West Virginia Deed of Trust Nonjudicial
  Wisconsin Mortgage Judicial
  Wyoming Mtg. & Installment Contracts Judicial
       

 

[2] Alabama:  Ala. Code §§35-10-1 to 35-10-10; [foreclosure after 12/1988 §§35-10-11 to 35-10-16]

(1991).

Alaska:  Alaska Stat. §§34.20.090 to 34.20.100 (1991).

Arizona:  Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§33-807 to 33-814 (West 1991).

Arkansas:  Ark. Code Ann. §§18-50-108; 18-50-116 (1987).

California:  Cal. Civ. Code §§2924 to 2924(h) West 1992).

D.C.:  D.C. Code Ann. §§45-715 to 45-718 (1991).

Georgia:  Ga. Code Ann. §§9-13-141; 44-14-162.4; 44-14-48; 44-14-180 to 187 (Harrison 1991).

Idaho:  Idaho Code §§6-101; 104; 45-1502 to 45-1506 (1991).

Iowa:  Iowa Code Ann. §654.18 (West 1992).

Maine:  Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 14, §§7-105; 7-202 (1988).

Massachusetts:  Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 183, §§19, 21; ch. 244, §§11-15 (West 1992).

Michigan:  Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. §§451-401 et seq.; 600.2431; 600.3201 et seq.; 600.3170 (West 1992).

Minnesota:  Minn. Stat. Ann. §§580.01 to 580.30; 582.01 et seq. (West 1992).

Mississippi:  Miss. Code Ann. §§11-5-111; 15-1-23; 89-1-55 (1972).

Missouri:  Mo. Ann. Stat. §§442.290to 443.325 (Vernon 1992).

Montana:  Mont. Code Ann. §§25-13-802; 71-1-111; 71-1-223 to 232, 71-1-311 to 317 (1991).

Nebraska: Neb. Rev. Stat. §§76-1001 to 1018 (1981).

Nevada:  Nev. Rev. Stat. §§107.020; 107.025; 107.080 to 107.100; 40.050; 40.453 (Michie 1991).

New Hampshire:  N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§479:22 to 479:27 (1991).

New York:  N.Y. Real Prop. Acts §§1401 to 1461 (McKinney 1992).

North Dakota:  N.D. Cent. Code §35-22-01 (1992).

Oklahoma:  Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 46, §§40 to 49 (West 1992).

Oregon:  Or. Rev. Stat. §§86.705 to 86.795 (1989).

Rhode Island:  R.I. Gen. Laws §§34-11-22; 34-20-4; 34-23-3; 34-27-1 (1984).

South Dakota:  S.D. Codified Laws Ann. §§21-48-1 to 21-48-26; 21-48A-1 to 21-48A-5 (1992).

Tennessee:  Tenn. Code Ann. §§35-5-101 to 35-5-112 (1991).  See, Note, Power of Sale Foreclosures in

Tennessee, 8 Mem. St. U.L. Rev. 871 (1978).

Texas:  Tex. Prop. Code Ann. §§51-002; 51.003; 51.005 (West 1992).

Utah:  Utah Code Ann. §§57-1-23 to 57-1-34 (1986).

Vermont:  Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 12, §§4531a to 4533 (1991).

Virginia:  Va. Code Ann. §§55-59.1 to 55-59.4; 55-61 to 55-66.7 (Michie 1991).

Washington:  Wash. Rev. Code Ann. §§61.24.010 to 61.24.130 (West 1992).

West Virginia:  W. Va. Code §§38-1-3 to 38-1-12 (1991).

Wyoming:  Wyo. Stat. §§34-4-101 to 34-4-113 (1991).

 

[3] See Charmicor, Inc. v. Deaner, 572 F.2d 694 (9th Cir.1978); Northrip v. Federal National Mortgage Association, 527 F.2d 23 (6th Cir.1975); Barrera v. Security Building & Investment Corp., 519 F.2d 1166 (5th Cir. 1975); Bryant v. Jefferson Federal Savings & Loan Association, 509 F.2d 511 (D.C. Cir.1974); Lawson v. Smith, 402 F.Supp. 851 (N.D.Cal.1975); Global Industries, Inc. v. Harris, 376 F.Supp. 1379 (N.D.Ga.1974); Homestead Savings v. Darmiento, 230 Cal.App.3d 424, 281 Cal.Rptr. 367 (1991); Leininger v. Merchants & Farmers Bank, macon, 481 So.2d 1086 (Miss.1986); Wright v. Associates Financial Services Co. of Oregon, Inc., 59 Or.App.688, 651 P.2d 945 (1983), certiorari denied 464 U.S. 834, 104 S.Ct. 117, 78 L.Ed.2d 116 (1983); Kennebec Inc. v. Bank of the West, 88 Wash.2d 718, 565 P.2d 812 (1977); Dennison v. Jack, 172 W.Va. 147, 304 S.E.2d 300 (1983).

[4] Island Financial, Inc. v. Ballman, 92 Md.App. 125, 607 A.2d 76 (1992); Turner v. Blackburn, 389 F.Supp. 1250 (W.D.N.C.1975); Vail v. Derwinski, 946 F.2d 589 (8th Cir.1991), amended by 956 F.2d 812 (8th Cir.1992) and Boley v. Brown, 10 F.3d 218 (4th Cir.1993) which held that the VA’s control over the foreclosure process in VA guaranteed loan foreclosures constitutes sufficient governmental action to trigger due process protections. Accord, U.S. v. Whitney, 602 F. Supp. 722 (W.D. N.Y. 1985); U.S. v. Murdoch, 627 F. Supp. 272 (N.D. Ind. 1986).  See Also Leen, Galbraith & Gant, Due Process and Deeds of Trust – Strange Bedfellows, 48 Wash.L.Rev. 763 (1973).

[5] See, e.g., Reiserer v. Foothill Thrift and Loan, 208 Cal.App.3d 1082, 256 Cal.Rptr. 508 (1989) (unpublished opinion); Metropolitan Life Insurance Company v. La Mansion Hotels & Resorts, Ltd., 762 S.W.2d 646 (Tex.App.1988); Bekins Bar V Ranch v. Huth, 664 P.2d 455 (Utah 1983); National Life Insurance Co. v. Cady, 227 Ga. 475, 181 S.E.2d 382 (1971); Peoples National Bank v. Ostrander, 6 Wn.App. 28, 491 P.2d 1058 (1971). See, generally, note, Court Actions Contesting The Nonjudicial Foreclosure of Deeds of Trust in Washington, 59 Wash.L.Rev. 323 (1984); Restraining Orders in Non-Judicial Deed of Trust Foreclosures, Property Law Reporter, June 1987 (Vol. 3 Nos. 4 & 5).

[6] Putnam Sand & Gravel Co. v. Albers, 14 CA3d 722, 92 CR 636 (1971).

 

[7] Avco Financial Services Loan, Inc. v. Hale, 36 Ohio App.3d 65, 520 N.E.2d 1378 (1987); Land Associates, Inc. v. Becker, 294 Or. 308, 656 P.2d 927 (1982), appeal after remand 74 Or.App. 444, 703 P.2d 1004 (1985).

[8] See Hummell v. Republic Federal Savings & Loan, 133 Cal.App.3d 49, 183 Cal.Rptr. 708 (4th Dist.1982); Broad & Locust Associates v. Locust-Broad Realty Co., 318 Pa.Super. 38, 464 A.2d 506 (1983); Strangis v. Metropolitan Bank, 385 N.W.2d 47 (Minn.App.1986); Franklin Savings Association v. Reese, 756 S.W.2d 14 (Tex.App.1988); Koegal v. Prudential Mutual Savings, Inc., 51 Wn.App. 108 (1988).

 

[9] See Ginther-Davis Center, Limited v. Houston National Bank, 600 S.W.2d 856 (Tex.Civ.App. 1980), error refused n.r.e.; see also Tiffany, Real Property, § 1549 (3d Ed. 1939) for a list of cases; Thompson, Real Property § 5179 (1957). Cf. Grella v. Berry, 647 S.W.2d 15 (Tex.App.1982).

[10] See Glines v. Theo R. Appel Realty Co., 201 Mo.App.596, 213 S.W. 498 (1919).

 

[11] Koegel v. Prudential Mutual Savings, Inc., 51 Wn. App. 108, 114 (1988); Steward v. Good, 51 Wn. App. 509, 515 (1988).

 

[12] Carlson v. Gibraltar Savings, 50 Wn. App. 424, 429 (1988).

[13] Baxter & Dunaway, The Law of Distressed Real Estate (Clark Boardman Company, Ltd., November 1990). See Spires v. Edgar, 513 S.W.2d 372 (Mo.1974).

[14] See also McHugh v. Church, 583 P.2d 210, 214 (Alaska 1978).

 

[15] See Cox v. Helenius, supra, at p. 389; Allard v. Pacific National Bank, 99 Wn. 2d 394, 405, 663 P.2d 104 (1983), modified by 99 Wn.2d 394, 773 P.2d 145 (1989). superseded by RCW 11.100.140 as stated in Conran v. Seafirst Bank, 1998 Wn.App. Lexis 156.. See also National Life Insurance Company v. Silverman, 454 F.2d 899, 915 (D.C. Cir. 1971), in which the court stated that the same good faith is required of trustees under a deed of trust of real estate as is required of other fiduciaries.

 

[16] See Smith v. Credico Industrial Loan Company, 234 Va. 514, 362 S.E.2d 735 (1987); Whitlow v. Mountain Trust Bank, 215 Va. 149, 207 S.E.2d 837 (1974).

 

[17] See, Nelson & Whitman, supra, Section 7.21; Dingus, Mortgages-Redemption After Foreclosure Sale in Missouri, 25 Mo.L.REV. 261, 284 (1960).

 

[18] Biddle v. National Old Line Ins. Co., 513 S.W.2d 135 (Tex.Civ.App.1974), error refused n.r.e.; Sullivan v. Federal Farm Mortgage Corp., 62 Ga.App.402, 8 S.E.2d 126 (1940).

 

[19] Queen City Savings v. Manhalt, 111 Wn.2d 503 (1988).

 

[20] See also Tarleton v. Griffin Federal Savings Bank, 202 Ga.App. 454, 415 S.E.2d 4 (1992); Concepts, Inc. v. First Security Realty Services, Inc., 743 P.2d 1158 (Utah 1987).

 

[21] Macon-Atlanta State Bank v. Gall, 666 S.W.2d 934 (Mo.App.1984). For a complete list of defects considered “insubstantial”, see Graham v. Oliver, 659 S.W.2d 601, 604 (Mo.App.1983).

[22] See also Cal. Civ. Code § 2924 (West 1981); Utah Code Ann.1953, 57-1-28; West’s Colo.Rev.Stat. Ann. §38-39-115; Or.Rev.Stat. 86.780; So.Dak.Compiled Laws 21-48-23.

 

[23] Attempting to Set Aside Deed of Trust Foreclosure Because of Trustee’s Fiduciary Breach, 53 Missouri L. Rev. 151 (1988).

 

[24] See also Dingus, Mortgages – Redemption After Foreclosure Sale in Missouri, 25 Mo.L.REV. 261, 262 (1960); California Mortgage and Deed of Trust Practice, Section 6.60 (University of California 1979).

 

[25] Nelson & Whitman, supra, Section 7.21. Dingus, supra, at p. 274; see also Biddle v. National Old Line Insurance Co., 513 S.W.2d 135 (Tex.Civ.App. 1974).

 

[26] Dingus, supra, at pp. 272-73; Cox v. Helenius, supra, at p. 389.

[27] Arizona:  Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. §33-814(A) (1989).

California:  Cal. Civ. Code §580a (1989); Id. §726 (1989); Kirkpatrick v. Stelling, 36 Cal. App.2d 658, 98

P.2d 566, appeal dismissed, 311 U.S. 607 (1940); Risenfeld, California Legislation Curbing Deficiency

Judgments, 48 Calif. L. rev. 705 (1960).  See infra, California jurisdictional summary in Part 1.

Georgia:  Ga. Code Ann. §§44-14-161, -162 (1989).

Idaho:  Idaho Code §§6-108, 45-1512 (1988).

Michigan:  Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. §§600.3170, .3280 (1989).

Nebraska: Neb. Rev. Stat. §76-1013 (1989).

Nevada:  Nev. Rev. Stat. §40.457 (1988).

New Jersey:  N.J. Stat. Ann. §2A:50-3 (1989).

New York:  N.Y. Real Prop. Acts Law §1371 (McKinney 1979 and Supp. 1990).

North Carolina:  N.C. Gen. Stat. §45-21.36 (1988).

North Dakota:  N.D. Cent. Code §32-19-06 (Supp. 1989).

Oklahoma:  Okla. Stat. tit. 12, §686 (1990).

Pennsylvania:  Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 12 §§2621.1, .6 (Purdon 1967).

South Dakota:  S.D. Comp. Laws Ann. §§21-47-16, -48-14 (1989).

Utah:  Utah Code Ann. §57-1-32 (1989).

Washington:  Wash. Rev. Code Ann. §61.12.060 (1989).

Wisconsin:  Wis. Stat. §846.165 (1988).

[28] People’s National Bank v. Ostrander, 6 Wn. App. 28, 491 P.2d 1058 (1970).  See, however, Crummer v. Whitehead, 230 Cal. App. 2d 264 (1964)  contra declined to follow by Eardley v. Greenberg, 160 Az.518, 774 P.2d 822 (Az.App. Div. 1 1989); MCA, Inc., v. Universal Diversified Enterprises Corp., 27 Cal. App. 3d 170 (1972).  contra declined to follow by Eardley v. Greenberg, 160 Az.518, 774 P.2d 822 (Az.App. Div. 1 1989)  But in a bankruptcy proceeding, defenses may be raised after the sale if the debtor is in possession.

 

[29] Alabama:  Ala. Code §§6-9-140 to 150; 164; 35-10-2 to 35-10-12; (1977).

Alaska:  Alaska Stat. §§90.45.170 to .220 (1991).

Arizona:  Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§33-721 to 33-728 (1991).

Arkansas:  Ark. Code Ann. §§18-49-103 to 106 (1987).

California:  Cal. Civ. proc. §§725a to 730.5 (West 1991).

Colorado:  Colo. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§38-38-101 to 38-38-111 (West 1991).

Connecticut:  Conn. Gen. Stat. Ann. §§49-24 to 49-31 (West 1991).

Delaware:  Del. Code Ann. tit. 10 §§5061 to 5067 (1991).

D.C.:  D.C. Code Ann. §45-716 (1981).

Florida:  Fla. Stat. Ann. §702.01 (West 1992).

Georgia:  Ga. Code Ann. §§9-13-140; 44-14-48 to 44-14-49; 44-14-184; 187; 189 (1991).

Hawaii:  Haw. Rev. Stat. §§667-1 to 667-7 (1991)

Idaho:  Idaho Code §§6-101 to 6-103; 45-1502 to 45-1503 (1991).

Illinois:  Ill. Ann. Stat. Ch. 10, para. 15-1404; 15-1501 to 15-1512 (Smith-Hurd 1987).

Indiana:  Ind. Code Ann. §32-8-11-3 (Burns 1980)

Iowa:  Iowa Code Ann. §654.18 (West 1992).

Kansas:  Kan. Stat. Ann. §60-2410 (1990).

Kentucky:  Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§381.190; 426.525 (Michie 1991).

Louisiana:  La. Code Civ. Proc. Ann. art. 2631 (West 1992).

Maine:  Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 14, §§6321 to 6325 (West 1991).

Maryland:  Md. Real Prop. Code Ann. §7-202 (1988).

Massachusetts:  Mass. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 244, §1 (West 1992).

Michigan:  Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. §§600.3101 to 600.3130 (West 1992).

Minnesota:  Minn. Stat. Ann. §§581.01 to 581.12 (1992).

Mississippi:  Miss. Code Ann. §§89-1-53; 89-1-55 (1972).

Missouri:  Mo. Ann. Stat. §§443.190 (Vernon 1992).

Montana:  Mont. Code Ann. §§71-1-222; 232; 311; 25-13-802 (1991).

Nebraska: Neb. Rev. Stat. §§25-2137 to 25-2147 (1991).

Nevada:  Nev. Rev. Ann. Stat. §§40.430; 40.435 (Michie 1991).

New Hampshire:  N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§479:19 to 479:27 (1991).

New Jersey:  N.J. Stat. Ann. §2A:50-2 (West 1991).

New Mexico:  N.M. Stat. Ann. §§39-5-1 to 39-5-23; 48-7-7 (1991).

New York:  N.Y. Real Prop. Acts Law §§1321; 1325 to 1355 (McKinney 1992).

North Carolina:  N.C. Gen. Stat. §§45-21.16; 45-21.17; 45-38 (1991).

North Dakota:  N.D. Cent. Code §32-19-01 to 32-19-40 (1992).

Ohio:  Ohio Rev. Code Ann. §2323.07 (Anderson 1984).

Oklahoma:  Okla. Stat. Ann. tit. 12, §686 (West 1992).

Oregon:  Or. Rev. Stat. §§88.010 et seq. (1989).

Pennsylvania:  Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 21, §§274; 715; Pa. Rules Civ. Proc. Rules 1141 to 1150; 3180 to 3183;

3232; 3244; 3256; 3257.

Rhode Island:  R.I. Gen. Laws §34-27-1 (1984).

South Carolina:  S.C. Code Ann. §§15-7-10; 29-3-650 (Law Co-op 1990).

South Dakota:  S.D. Codified Laws Ann. §§21-47-1 to 25; 21-48A-4 (1991).

Tennessee:  Tenn. Code Ann. §21-1-803 (1991).

Texas:  Tex. Prop. Code Ann. §§51-002; 51.004; 51.005 (West 1992).

Utah:  Utah Code Ann. §§78-37-1 to 78-37-9 (1986).

Vermont:  Vt. Stat. Ann. tit. 12, §4528 (1991).

Virgin Islands:  V.I. Code Ann. tit. 28, §531 to 535 (1991).

Virginia:  Va. Code Ann. §§55-59.4; 55-61 (Michie 1981).

Washington:  Wash. Rev. Code Ann. §§61.12.040; 61.12.060 (West 1992).

West Virginia:  W. Va. Code §§55-12-1 to 55-12-8 (1991).

Wisconsin:  Wis. Stat. Ann. §§846.01 to 846.25 (West 1991 (Repealed).

Wyoming:  Wyo. Stat. §§1-18-101 to 1-18-112 (199).

[30] See Michigan Trust Co. v. Dutmers, 265 Mich. 651, 252 N.W. 478 (1933).

[31] Norlin v. Montgomery, 59 Wn.2d 268, 357 P.2d 621 (1961).  The mortgagee’s right to posses­sion of the property is not lost through default or abandonment. overruled on other grounds.  Howard v. Edgren, 62 Wn.2d 884, 385 P.2d 41 (1963).

 

[32] See Durrett v. Washington National Ins., 621 F.2d 201 (5th Cir. 1980); cf. In re Madrid, 725 F.2d 1197 (9th Cir. 1984).  Compare state fraudulent conveyances statutes, e.g, RCW 19.40.031.

 

[33] See also, Penthouse International v. Dominion Fed. S&L, 665 F. Supp. 301 (S.D. N.Y. 1987, rev. 855 F.2d 963 (2nd Cir. 1988); Joques v. First National, 515 A.2d 756 (Md. 1976); KMC v. Irving Trust, 757 F.2d 752 (6th Cir. 1985); Douglas-Hamilton, Creditor Libilities Resulting From Improper Interference with Financially Troubled Debtor, 31 Bus. Law J. 343 (1975).

 

[34] See Vail v. Brown, 946 F.2d 589 (8th Cir. 1991); Johnson v. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, 734 F.2d 774 (11th Cir. 1984); United States v. Murdoch, 627 F. Supp. 272 (N.D. Ind. 1985); Boley v. Brown, 10 F.3d 218 (4th Cir. 1993).

[35] See, Bankers Life Company v. Denton, 120 Ill. App. 3d 676, 458 N.E.2d 203 (1983); Brown v. Lynn, 385 F. Supp. 986 (N.D. Ill. 1974); GNMA v. Screen, 379 N.Y.S.2d 327 (1976); Cross v. FNMA, 359 So.2d 464 (1978); FNMA v. Ricks, 372 N.Y.S.2d 485 (1975); contra, Robert v. Cameron Brown Co., 556 F.2d 356 (5th Cir. 1977); Hernandez v. Prudential Mortgage Corporation, 553 F.2d 241 (1st Cir. 1977).

[36] See, United States v. Yazell, 382 U.S. 341 (1966); United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc., 440 U.S. 715 (1979); United States v. Ellis. 714 F.2d 953 (9th Cir. 1983); United States v. Haddon Haciendas Co., 541 F.2d 777 (9th Cir. 1976).

[37] See generally, Note, Agricultural Law:  FmHA Farm Foreclosures, An Analysis of Deferral Relief, 23 Washburn L.J. 287 (Winter 1984); Newborne, Defenses to a FmHA Foreclosure, 15 NYU Review of Law and Social Change, 313 (1987).

[38] See, United States v. Kimbell Foods, Inc., 440 U.S. 715 (1979); United States v. Haddon Haciendas, 541 F.2d 777 (9th Cir. 1976); United States v. MacKenzie, 510 F.2d 39 (9th Cir. 1975); United States v. Stadium Apts., Inc., 425 F.2d 358 (9th Cir.), (1970), cert. den. 400 U.S. 926, 91 S. Ct. 187 (1970); Phillips v. Blaser, 13 Wn.2d 439, 125 P.2d 291 (1942).

 

Guest Post: Ireland, Please Do the World a Favor and Default

Guest Post: Ireland, Please Do the World a Favor and Default

Today, November 28, 2010, 3 hours ago | Tyler DurdenGo to full article


Submitted by Charles Hugh Smith from Of Two Minds

Ireland, Please Do the World a Favor and Default

Ireland would save the world from much misery by defaulting now and driving the vampire banks into liquidation.

The alternative title for today entry is: Ireland, please drive a stake through the heart of the vampire banks which have the world by the throat. The entire controlled demolition of the Eurozone’s finances can be summed up in one phrase: privatize leverage and profits, socialize losses and risk.

The basic deal is this: protect the bank’s managers, shareholders and bondholders from any losses, while heaping the socialized losses and risks on the taxpayers and citizens.

While there are murmurings of “forcing bondholders to share the pain,” any future haircut will undoubtedly be just for show, while the Irish pension funds are gutted to bail out the banks.

EU Outlines Bond Restructuring Plan (WSJ.com)

Europe Goes “Completely Mad” At Suggestion Of Irish Default Demanded By 57% Of Irish Population (Zero Hedge)

Here is a chart which illustrates the dynamic at play in Greece, Ireland and indeed, the rest of the world as well: leveraged speculation and mal-investment lead to asset deflation and collapse.

 


Here is a chart which illustrates how asset deflation leads to taxpayer-funded bank bailouts and then sovereign default. It’s fairly self-explanatory:

 

It’s rather straightforward: as asset bubbles rise, they enable vast leveraging of credit and debt. Once mal-invested assets collapse in value, then the debt remains, unsupported by equity or capital.

As the Financial/Political Elites transfer these catastrophic losses onto the citizenry, they set off a positive (runaway) feedback loop: the Central State austerity required to pay the borrowing costs of the bailout sends the economy into recession, which reduces borrowers’ incomes, triggering more defaults which further sink housing prices. As prices continue falling, bank capital declines, requiring ever-larger bailouts to provide the banks with a simulacrum of solvency.

Austerity measures must be tightened to channel more of the citizens’ incomes to the banks, which further suppresses the economy, lowering tax revenues and incomes, which leads to more austerity to fund more bailouts, and so on, until the haggard remnants of a once-wealthy citizenry finally rebel against their Financial/Political Overlords and topple the government which arranged the bailout.

A new populist government announces a sovereign default, to widespread huzzahs from the unyoked citizenry.

The EU’s bailout of Greece and Ireland will only hasten this dynamic. The Power Elites are rapidly losing their credibility; just compare the market’s euphoric reaction to the Greek bailout in May and the openly negative response to the Irish bailout.

The money is lost, and Capitalism requires those who took on the risk to earn outsized returns must take the loss, come what may. When a nation such as Ireland is running a State deficit equal to 32% of GDP, austerity cannot generate the stupendous surpluses needed to make good the vast sums which are already lost.

And even if they could, why should the citizens save the banks and bondholders from the losses Capitalism requires? Mal-investments should be sold, for pennies on the dollar if need be, insolvent banks liquidated and bondholders handed 95% losses. Managers would be sacked, bonuses cancelled and shareholders wiped out.

It’s a little late to decide Capitalism is only fun when reaping gargantuan profits from highly leveraged mal-investment and fraud. Ireland, and indeed the world, will survive if all the vampire banks are liquidated. That is the end-state, and “buying time” just increases the misery of the citizens who have been yoked to save their “betters.”

Ireland, please drive a stake through the heart of the vampire banks which have the world by the throat. By defaulting, you would be doing the world (and your own nation) an immense favor.

Justice for Some

November 24th, 2010 BlogAdmin

Burden

NEW YORK – The mortgage debacle in the United States has raised deep questions about “the rule of law,” the universally accepted hallmark of an advanced, civilized society. The rule of law is supposed to protect the weak against the strong, and ensure that everyone is treated fairly. In America in the wake of the sub-prime mortgage crisis, it has done neither.

Part of the rule of law is security of property rights – if you owe money on your house, for example, the bank can’t simply take it away without following the prescribed legal process. But in recent weeks and months, Americans have seen several instances in which individuals have been dispossessed of their houses even when they have no debts.

 

To some banks, this is just collateral damage: millions of Americans – in addition to the estimated four million in 2008 and 2009 – still have to be thrown out of their homes. Indeed, the pace of foreclosures would be set to increase – were it not for government intervention. The procedural shortcuts, incomplete documentation, and rampant fraud that accompanied banks’ rush to generate millions of bad loans during the housing bubble has, however, complicated the process of cleaning up the ensuing mess.

To many bankers, these are just details to be overlooked. Most people evicted from their homes have not been paying their mortgages, and, in most cases, those who are throwing them out have rightful claims. But Americans are not supposed to believe in justice on average. We don’t say that most people imprisoned for life committed a crime worthy of that sentence. The US justice system demands more, and we have imposed procedural safeguards to meet these demands.

But banks want to short-circuit these procedural safeguards. They should not be allowed to do so.

To some, all of this is reminiscent of what happened in Russia, where the rule of law – bankruptcy legislation in particular – was used as a legal mechanism to replace one group of owners with another. Courts were bought, documents forged, and the process went smoothly.

In America, the venality is at a higher level. It is not particular judges that are bought, but the laws themselves, through campaign contributions and lobbying, in what has come to be called “corruption, American-style.”

It was widely known that banks and mortgage companies were engaged in predatory lending practices, taking advantage of the least educated and most financially uninformed to make loans that maximized fees and imposed enormous risks on the borrowers. (To be fair, the banks tried to take advantage of the more financially sophisticated as well, as with securities created by Goldman Sachs that were designed to fail.) But banks used all their political muscle to stop states from enacting laws to curtail predatory lending.

When it became clear that people could not pay back what was owed, the rules of the game changed. Bankruptcy laws were amended to introduce a system of “partial indentured servitude.” An individual with, say, debts equal to 100% of his income could be forced to hand over to the bank 25% of his gross, pre-tax income for the rest of his life, because, the bank could add on, say, 30% interest each year to what a person owed. In the end, a mortgage holder would owe far more than the bank ever received, even though the debtor had worked, in effect, one-quarter time for the bank.

When this new bankruptcy law was passed, no one complained that it interfered with the sanctity of contracts: at the time borrowers incurred their debt, a more humane – and economically rational – bankruptcy law gave them a chance for a fresh start if the burden of debt repayment became too onerous.

That knowledge should have given lenders incentives to make loans only to those who could repay. But lenders perhaps knew that, with the Republicans in control of government, they could make bad loans and then change the law to ensure that they could squeeze the poor.

With one out of four mortgages in the US under water – more owed than the house is worth – there is a growing consensus that the only way to deal with the mess is to write down the value of the principal (what is owed). America has a special procedure for corporate bankruptcy, called Chapter 11, which allows a speedy restructuring by writing down debt, and converting some of it to equity.

It is important to keep enterprises alive as going concerns, in order to preserve jobs and growth. But it is also important to keep families and communities intact. So America needs a “homeowners’ Chapter 11.”

Lenders complain that such a law would violate their property rights. But almost all changes in laws and regulations benefit some at the expense of others. When the 2005 bankruptcy law was passed, lenders were the beneficiaries; they didn’t worry about how the law affected the rights of debtors.

Growing inequality, combined with a flawed system of campaign finance, risks turning America’s legal system into a travesty of justice. Some may still call it the “rule of law,” but it would not be a rule of law that protects the weak against the powerful. Rather, it would enable the powerful to exploit the weak.

In today’s America, the proud claim of “justice for all” is being replaced by the more modest claim of “justice for those who can afford it.” And the number of people who can afford it is rapidly diminishing.

Foreclosure fraud on utube

Suggestions

  • 3:38 Added to queue Fox Business News Attacks Grayson, Sanctions Fo…by RepAlanGrayson9,686 views
  • 4:05 Added to queue Rep. Alan Grayson: Fox News is “Monty Python’s …by RepAlanGrayson10,055 views
  • 4:14 Added to queue Rep. Alan Grayson: I Just Tell the Truthby RepAlanGrayson6,643 views
  • 8:48 Added to queue Rep. Alan Grayson: “They couldn’t buy me, and n…by RepAlanGrayson6,329 views
  • 9:59 Added to queue foreclosure fraud pt 2- read update infoby earthicastar4,903 views
  • 4:43 Added to queue MERS Mortgage Fraud Update – Foreclosure Proof …by tnknoxrealtor2,351 views
  • 5:12 Added to queue If You’re About To Lose Your Job, Your Car, Or …by carnegieja426 views
  • 3:50 Added to queue Foreclosure fraud Hitler parodyby propanealex74,164 views
  • 10:57 Added to queue Beat Banking Thieves At Their Own Game. GET TH…by thecashgroup2,269 views
  • 5:17 Added to queue BOB CHAPMAN: BOMBSHELL TRUTH ABOUT FRAUDCLOSUR…by traynickel5,981 views
  • 3:19 Added to queue Rep. Alan Grayson: Politico Is Part of the Perm…by RepAlanGrayson2,724 views
  • 8:17 Added to queue Rep. Alan Grayson on Rampant Foreclosure Fraudby TPOCS386 views
  • 11:32 Added to queue Rep. Alan Grayson: You Own the Red Roof Inn, Th…by RepAlanGrayson116,875 views
  • 7:49 Added to queue Fraud Factories, MERS, LPS, Forgeries: Rep. Ala…by DinSFLA35,312 views
  • 5:02 Added to queue Rep. Alan Grayson Battles Against Home Foreclos…by RepAlanGrayson2,566 views
  • 6:02 Added to queue Fed Lends Two Trillion Without Oversightby AmericanNewsProject52,949 views
  • Mortgage modifications may lead to foreclosure (via Foreclosureblues)

    Mortgage modifications may lead to foreclosure Mortgage modifications may lead to foreclosure Today, November 07, 2010, 5 hours ago | admin LOS ANGELES — Grocery store owners William and Esperanza Casco were making enough money to stay current on their mortgage, but when JPMorgan Chase & Co. offered a plan that reduced their payments, they figured they could use the extra cash and signed up. The Cascos say they never missed a subsequent payment, so they were horrified when the bank decide … Read More

    via Foreclosureblues

    One Law for the Rich, One Law for the Poor (via Foreclosureblues)

    One Law for the Rich, One Law for the Poor One Law for the Rich, One Law for the Poor Today, November 07, 2010, 13 hours ago | ceramic cat FROM: http://www.slate.com/id/2273916/ The new foreclosure crisis reveals the shocking unfairness in how the law treats struggling homeowners. By Joseph E. Stiglitz Posted Sunday, Nov. 7, 2010, at 8:24 AM ET The mortgage debacle in the United States has raised deep questions about "the rule of law," the universally accepted hallmark of an advanced, civ … Read More

    via Foreclosureblues

    FORECLOSURE FRAUD | by DinSFLA…VIDEO DEPOSITION OF NATIONWIDE TITLE CRYSTAL MOORE…VIDEO DEPOSITION OF NATIONWIDE TITLE CLEARING DHURATA DOKO…VIDEO DEPOSITION OF NATIONWIDE TITLE CLEARING BRYAN BLY

    VIDEO DEPOSITION OF NATIONWIDE TITLE CLEARING BRYAN BLY

    Today, November 07, 2010, 1 hour ago | dinsflaGo to full article
    Video deposition of alleged robo-signer Bryan Bly taken by attorney Christopher Forrest of The Forrest Law Firm in Pinellas County, FL on Nov. 4, 2010. http://www.foreclosuredefenseflorida.com © 2010 FORECLOSURE FRAUD | by DinSFLA. All rights reserved. http://www.StopForeclosureFraud.com Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall, Humpty Dumpty had a great fall. All the king’s horses and all the king’s men Couldn’t put […]

    VIDEO DEPOSITION OF NATIONWIDE TITLE CLEARING DHURATA DOKO

    Today, November 07, 2010, 3 hours ago | dinsflaGo to full article
    Video deposition of alleged robosigner Dhurata Doko taken by attorney Christopher Forrest of The Forrest Law Firm in Pinellas County, Florida on Nov. 4, 2010. http://www.foreclosuredefenseflorida.com © 2010 FORECLOSURE FRAUD | by DinSFLA. All rights reserved. http://www.StopForeclosureFraud.com Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall, Humpty Dumpty had a great fall. All the king’s horses and all the king’s men Couldn’t put […]

    SFF EXCLUSIVE: VIDEO DEPOSITION OF NATIONWIDE TITLE CRYSTAL MOORE

    Today, November 07, 2010, 4 hours ago | dinsflaGo to full article
    The videotaped depositions of alleged robosigners Crystal Moore, Bryan Bly, Vilma Castro and Dhurata Doko (Nationwide Title Clearing) were taken on Nov. 4, 2010 by Sarasota attorney Christopher Forrest. http://www.ForeclosureDefenseFlorida.com Citi Group (Citi Residential Lending) and American Home Mortgage Servicing, as well as other companies that utilize Nationwide Title Clearing for assignments including Deutsche Bank, One […]

    Utah class action citing FDCPA (via Foreclosureblues)

    Utah class action citing FDCPA Utah class action citing FDCPA Today, November 06, 2010, 1 hour ago | Rob Harrington Some action going on in non-judicial Utah…. Coleman, et al vs BoA, Mers, Wells Fargo, et al. http://stopforeclosurefraud.com/2010/11/05/utah-class-action-coleman-v-bofa-recontrust-mers-wells-fargo-hsbc-us-bank-keybank-bny-mellon/Read More

    via Foreclosureblues

    Why Are Banks Foreclosing? (via Foreclosureblues)

    Why Are Banks Foreclosing? Why Are Banks Foreclosing? Yesterday, November 05, 2010, 12:12:18 PM | Kevin Drum Mike Konczal makes a familiar point today about the HAMP program, which was supposed to help reduce home foreclosures but, in fact, has accomplished close to nothing: Obama's Treasury team took a system that had a terrible design and doubled-down on it. Servicers aren't modifying mortgages. There's an active empirical debate we'll cover next week over whether or not … Read More

    via Foreclosureblues

    Forget About Homeowners and Pesky Defense Attorneys (via Foreclosureblues)

    Forget About Homeowners and Pesky Defense Attorneys Forget About Homeowners and Pesky Defense Attorneys…. Today, November 06, 2010, 2 hours ago | Matthew D. Weidner, Esq. The real heat in this foreclosure war is going to come from the institutional investors.  The real interesting in this dynamic is going to be the fact that that the issues raised by we pesky defense attorneys are going to be the very issues raised and pounced upon by the other parties who are really getting screwed in this whole … Read More

    via Foreclosureblues

    The tunnel people of Las Vegas: How 1,000 live in flooded labyrinth under Sin City's shimmering strip (via Foreclosureblues)

    The tunnel people of Las Vegas: How 1,000 live in flooded labyrinth under Sin City's shimmering strip The tunnel people of Las Vegas: How 1,000 live in flooded labyrinth under Sin City's shimmering strip By Daily Mail Reporter Last updated at 11:18 AM on 4th November 2010 Comments (170) Add to My Stories Deep beneath Vegas’s glittering lights lies a sinister labyrinth inhabited by poisonous spiders and a man nicknamed The Troll who wields an iron bar. But astonishingly, the 200 miles of flood tunnels are also home to 1,000 people who eke out a li … Read More

    via Foreclosureblues

    The American Dream of Home Ownership has become a Nightmare (via Foreclosureblues)

    The American Dream of Home Ownership has become a Nightmare The American Dream of Home Ownership has become a Nightmare Yesterday, November 06, 2010, 10:45:46 PM | moraloutrage Nothing symbolizes America’s dream more than home ownership. Former President Franklin D. Roosevelt once said that a country of homeowners would be “invincible.” More recently, former President George W. Bush said, “Owning a home lies at the heart of the American dream”. By the 1960s, two-thirds of Americans owned a home. Now, 11 m … Read More

    via Foreclosureblues

    Eliminating Foreclosure Fraud: Setting the Record Straight on Bank of America, Part 2: (via Foreclosureblues)

    Eliminating Foreclosure Fraud: Setting the Record Straight on Bank of America, Part 2: Eliminating Foreclosure Fraud: Setting the Record Straight on Bank of America, Part 2: Friday, November 05, 2010, 1:02:37 PM | Randall Wray William K. Black is an Associate Professor of Economics and Law at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. He is a white-collar criminologist and was a senior financial regulator. He is the author of The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One. L. Randall Wray is a Professor of Economics at the University of Mis … Read More

    via Foreclosureblues

    talk to someone by the numbers

    Property Preservation Servicer Contacts
    Company Names Mailing Information Key Contacts Title/Department Phone
    Amtrust Bank 1111 Chester Avenue
    Cleveland, OH 44144 Jaques Hawkins
    jhawkins@amtrust.com

    Stephen Murphy
    smurphy3@amtrust.com
    Property Preservation Specialist, Foreclosure Dept.
    Property Preservation Specialist, Foreclosure Dept. 216-588-5936

    216-588-4541
    American Home Mortgage 1525 S. Beltline Road
    Coppell, TX 75067 Christine Morse
    Christine.Morse@AHMSI3.com

    Renena Summerfield
    Renena.Summerfield@AHMSI3.com
    Property Preservation Specialist

    Property Preservation Specialist
    469-645-3000, Ext 50229

    469-645-3000, Ext. 50304
    Aurora Loan Services 10350 Park Meadows Drive
    Littleton, CO 80124 Brandon McGill AVP, Property Services 720-945-4775
    Bank of America 400 National Way, Simi
    Valley, CA 93065

    301 E. Vanderbilt Way
    San Bernardino, CA 92408

    301 E. Vanderbilt Way
    San Bernardino, CA 92408
    Brian Zamani
    brian.zamini@bankofamerica.com

    Tiaquanda S. Turner
    tiaquanda.turner@bankofamerica.com

    Martha (Marta) Fulgham Sanchez
    martha.fulgham@bankofamerica.com

    Brendan Gail
    brendan.gail@bankofamerica.com
    AVP, FHA Conveyance/Claims

    AVP, FHA Conveyance/Claims

    VP, Control Tower/Field Services

    VP, Operations/Field Services
    805-306-8274

    972-526-2353

    972-526-6711

    909-806-2525
    BB&T 301 College Street
    6th Floor
    Greenville, SC 29601 PropertyPreservation@bbandt.com 800-827-3700
    Carrington Mortgage Services, LLC 1610 E St. Andrew
    Santa Ana, CA 92705 Sharif Touny
    sharif.touny@carringtonms.com

    Chris Castruita
    chris.castruita@carringtonms.com

    Victor Revis
    victor.revis@carringtonms.com
    Director of Default

    Preservation

    REO Manager
    949-517-5162

    949-517-5380

    949-517-5598
    Capital One P.O. Box 259330
    Plano, TX 75025-9330 Jeremy Atkinson

    Elaine Parker

    Derrick Weber
    dxweber@chevychasebank.net
    Default Control

    Default Control

    Default Control
    469-238-7041

    469-238-7062

    469-238-7062
    Central Mortgage Company 801 John Barrow Road
    Ste. 1
    Little Rock, AR 72205 Shelia Roeling
    Sroeling@Arvest.com

    Chellie Stewart
    MKStewart@Arvest.com

    Jan Davis
    JKDavis@Arvest.com
    Asset Preservation Specialist-Default Asset Management Department
    REO Supervisor-Default Asset Management Department
    Default Asset Manager, Default Asset Management Department 501-716-4810

    501-716-5758

    501-716-5614
    Chase 800 Brooksedge Blvd.
    Westerville, OH 43081
    Attn: MC OH1-8020 Michelle R. Stevens-Schultz
    michelle.r.schultz@chase.com

    Vicky Beever
    vicky.beever@chase.com
    Officer – Property Preservation & Hazard Claims
    Officer – Property Preservation 614-776-8031

    614-776-7010
    Citi Mortgage 1000 Technology Drive
    O’Fallon, MO 63368
    MS 323 code.violation@citi.com

    securing.needed@citi.com

    David Mazanek
    david.mazanek@safeguardproperties.com
    Code Violations Department
    Property Preservation Department
    Field Service Contact 877-290-3997, Option 2

    877-290-3997, Option 1

    800-852-8306, Ext 1261
    Dovenmuehle Mortgage, Inc. 1 Corporate Drive
    Suite 360
    Lake Zurich, IL 60047 Paula Borshell
    borshep1@dmicorp.com

    Rachel Deuser
    deuserr1@dmicorp.com
    Property Preservation Department Manager

    Property Preservation Department Supervisor
    847-550-7388

    847-550-7514
    Everhome Mortgage 8100 Nations Way
    Jacksonville, FL 32256 Shannon Hudson
    shannon.hudson@everhomemortgage.com Supervisor, Property Preservation 866-918-4507
    Fannie Mae 14221 Dallas Parkway
    Ste. 1000
    Dallas, TX 75254 Elonda Crockett
    property_preservation@fanniemae.com

    Michael Lawler

    Paul Hayes
    Vice President, REO Fulfillment

    Director, Loss Mitigation-Credit
    Manager, REO Foreclsoure-Credit
    972-773-4663

    972-773-4663

    972-773-4663
    Fifth Third Bank 5001 Kingsley Drive
    Cincinnati, OH 45227
    MD 1MOB1o Jennifer Lewis
    jennifer.leewis@53.com

    Jill Cannon
    jill.cannon@mcsnow.com
    Supervisor. Property Preservation

    Director, MCS
    513-358-8575

    214-451-0787
    First Bank Mortgage 1 First Missouri Center
    St. Louis, MO 63141 Karen Hanawinkel
    karen.hanawinkel@fbol.com

    Lou Sanders
    lou.sanders@fbol.com

    Autumn Kingsbury-Buck
    kingsburybuck@fbol.com
    Foreclosure Manager

    Loss Mitigation Manager

    Collection Manager
    314-205-3118

    314-205-3124

    314-579-1659
    First Niagara Bank 6950 S. Transit Rd.
    PO Box 514
    Lockport, NY 14095-0514 Trish Harris
    trish.harris@fnfg.com

    Christina Palmer
    christina.palmer@fnfg.com
    Collections

    Recovery Services
    716-932-3448

    716-932-3463
    Franklin Credit 101 Hudson Street
    Jersey City, NJ 07302 Glenn Murphy
    gmurphy@franklincredit.com Vice President 201-604-1800
    Freddie Mac 8000 Jones Branch Drive
    McLean, VA 22102 Joe Moschetto
    joesph_moschetto@freddiemac.com

    Deloise Browne-Miller
    Deloise_E_Browne-Miller@freddiemac.com

    Mahad Ali
    mahad_ali@freddiemac.com
    Senior Manager-FC/Bankruptcy Operations

    Unit Mnaager-FC/Bankruptcy

    FC/Bankruptcy Associate
    703-388-7820

    703-7624802

    703-762-4055
    GMAC Mortgage Corporation 3451 Hammond Ave.
    Waterloo, IA 50702-5345 Patric F. McCool
    pat.mccool@gmacm.com Key Partner Manager Analyst 319-236-4733
    HSBC Mortgage Services, Inc. Mortgage Services
    636 Grand Regency Blvd.
    Brandon, FL 33510 Property Preservation Department Team
    us.mortgage.property.preservation.team@us.hsbc.com Property Preservation Department 866-411-3810, Option 3
    HSBC Mortgage Corporation Mortgage Corporation
    2929 Walden ave., Depew
    NY 14073 Code Violations Department
    code.violations@safeguardproperties.com Safeguard Properties/Field Service Contact 800-852-8306, Ext 2173
    HUD Prior To Conveyance: See MCB Below
    http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/reo/mm/
    mminfo.cfm

    Post Conveyance: Follow Link For State Coverages & Contacts

    Key Bank 4910 Tiedeman Road
    Brooklyn, OH 44114 Lori Tierney
    Liberty Bank 2251 Rombach Ave.
    Wilmington, OH 45177 JB Stamper
    Litton Loan Servicing 4828 Loop Cebtral Drive
    Houston, TX 77081 Terrell Phearse
    terrell.phearse@littonloan.com

    Sharon Graham
    Sharon.Graham@littonloan.com

    Amy West
    Amy.West@littonloan.com

    Linda Milan
    Linda.Milan@littioloan.com
    Property Preservation Processor

    Property Preservation Processor

    Property Preservation Team Lead

    Property Preservation Supervisor
    713-218-4824

    713-218-4666

    713-218-4658

    713-218-4669
    M&T Bank One Fountain Plaza
    6th Floor
    Buffalo, NY 14203 Preservation Manager
    propertypreservation@mtb.com

    David Mazanek
    david.mazanek@safeguardproperties.com
    Preservation Department

    Field Service Contact
    800-724-1633

    800-852-8306, Ext. 1261
    Michaelson, Connor & Boul, Inc. (MCB) 4400 Will Rogers Parkway
    Ste. 300
    Oklahoma City, OK 73108 Ryan McDoulett
    ryan.mcdoulett@mcbreo.com

    Greg Nelson
    greg.nelson@mcbreo.com

    Sheree McClure
    sheree.mcclure@mcbreo.com

    Donna Telles
    donna.telles@mcbreo.com

    Kimberly Bell
    kimberly.bell@mcbreo.com

    Goeff Grafford
    goeff.grafford@mcbreo.com

    Damon Kornele
    damon.kornele@mcbreo.com
    Overallowables & Extensions

    Occupied Conveyance Requests

    Claims Department

    Claims Department

    Title Department

    Appeals Department

    Reconveyance Department
    405-595-2000

    405-595-2000

    405-595-2000

    405-595-2000

    405-595-2000

    405-595-2000

    405-595-2000
    Midland Mortgage/MidFirst Bank 999 NW Grand Blvd.
    Oklahoma City, OK 73118 Midfirst Property Preservation
    property.preservation@midfirst.com

    Safeguard Code Violations
    code.violations@safeguardproperties.com

    MCS Code Violations
    codeviolations@mcsnow.com

    Mortgage Contracting Services One Urban Centre – Suite 950
    4830 West Kennedy Blvd.
    Tampa, FL 33609 Code.Compliance@mcsnow.com Field Service Provider 813-387-1100
    Ocwen Financial Corporation 2300 M Street, NW, Suite 800
    Washington, DC 20037 Tara Williams
    tara.williams@altisource.com

    Jasbir Chawdhary
    jasbir.chawdhary@altisource.com
    Vice President
    Field Services

    Senior Manager
    Property Preservation and Inspection
    (713) 647-8990
    (800) 280-3863
    Ex 296191
    One West Bank 2900 Esperanza Crossing
    Austin, TX 78758 Kim Magel
    Kim.Magel@owb.com

    Leah Collins
    Leah.Collins@owb.com
    Supervisor, Property Preservation (Pre-sale)

    Supervisor, Property Preservation (REO)
    512-506-6852

    512-250-2859
    PA Housing Finance Agency 211 North Front Street
    PO Box8029
    Harrisburg, PA 17105-8029 Tom Gouker
    tgouker@phfa.org

    Bonita Russell
    brussell@phfa.org

    Jennifer Smallwood
    jsmallwood@phfa.org

    Dave Mazanek
    david.mazanek@safeguardproperties.com
    Foreclosure Manager

    Conventional REO Manager

    FHA REO Manager

    Field Services Provider
    717-780-3869

    717-780-1857

    717-780-1844

    800-852-8306, 1261
    PHH Mortgage 2001 Bishops Gate Blvd
    Mount Laurel, NJ 08002 Bieu T. Corl
    bieu.corl@mortgagefamily.com

    Dana Young
    dana.young@mortgagefamily.com

    Kelly Smyth
    kelly.smyth@mortgagefamily.com

    Safeguard Code Violations
    code.violations@safeguardproperties.com

    MCS Code Violations
    codeviolations@mcsnow.com
    P&P Rep II/Claims-REO

    Claims Supervisor, REO Dept.

    Claims Assistant Supervisor
    856-917-8373

    405-964-5676

    856-917-8433

    800-852-8306, Ext 2173

    813-387-1100
    PNC Mortgage (formally National City), dba Commonwealth United Mortgage, Accubank Mortgage and MidAmerica Bank 3232 Newmark Drive
    Miamisburg, OH 45342 Property Preservation Team:
    propertypreservation@pncmortgage.com

    Gail Klein
    gail.klein@pncmortgage.com

    Julie Kick
    Julie.Kick@pncmortgage.com

    Dave Mazanek
    david.mazanek@safeguardproperties.com
    Process Leader

    Process Manager

    Field Services Contact/Safeguard Properties
    937-910-4952

    937-910-4563

    937-910-3543

    800-852-8306, Ext. 1261
    Regions Mortgage 215 Forrest St.
    PO Box 18001
    Hattiesburg, MS 39401 Denise McLaurin
    Denise.Mclaurin@regions.com

    Paula Gilliland
    paula.gilliland@regions.com
    Legal Claims Processor 601-554-2386

    601-554-2463
    Residential Credit Solutions 4282 North Freeway
    Ft. Worth, TX 76137 Susan Jorgensen
    sjorgensen@residentialcredit.com

    Jeff Gideon
    jgideon@residentialcredit.com

    Alicia Wood
    awood@residentialcredit.com
    Property Coordinator (REO)

    VP, FC, BK & REO

    VP, Loan Administration
    817-321-6028

    817-321-6015

    817-321-6016
    RRR 92 W 3900 South
    Salt Lake City, UT 84107 Joe Arico
    joe.arico@rrreview.com VP 801-293-2658
    Safeguard Properties code.enforcement.violations@safeguard
    properties.com Field Service Provider 800-852-8306, 2173
    Saxon Mortgage Services 4708 Mercantile Drive, North, Fort Worth, TX 76137 Renee Tello
    TelloR@saxonmsi.com

    Peter Gilkey
    GilkeyP@saxonmsi.com

    Code Violations
    CodeViolations@saxonmsi.com
    Senior Manager, Property Preservation

    Senior Manager, Property Preservation

    Distribution Desk
    817-665-7966

    682-647-4993
    SC State Housing 300C Outlet Pointe Blvd.
    Columbia, SC 29210 Lisa E. Rivers
    lisa.rivers@schousing.com Director, Mortgage Servicing 803-896-9384
    Sovereign Bank Mail Code 10-6438-MD4
    601 Penn Street
    Reading, PA 19601 Connie Cocroft
    Ccocroft@sovereignbank.comCcocroft@
    sovereignbank.com

    Shannon Lippert
    Slippert@sovereignbank.com

    Heather Solley
    Hsolley@sovereignbank.com
    Consumer Default VP

    Consumer Default Manager

    Consumer Default Manager
    610-378-6313

    610-378-6323

    610-378-6879
    Specialized 8742 Lucent Blvd.
    Suite 300
    Highland Ranch, CO 80129 Susan Beck
    susan.beck@sls.net VP Consumer Support OP/DS 720-241-7385
    Suntrust Mortgage, Inc. Foreclosure Dept. RVW3064
    1001 Semmes Ave.
    Fourth Florr
    Richmond, VA 23224 Lorrie Pond
    Lorrie.pond@suntrust.com

    Tammi Stubbs
    Tammi.stubbs@suntrust.com

    Natish King
    Natish.King@suntrust.com
    AVP, Post Foreclosure & Property Preservation

    Property Preservation Supervisor

    Property Preservation Team Lead
    804-319-4797

    804-291-2515

    804-319-1212
    Wells Fargo Home Mortgage 1 Home Campus
    Des Moines, IA 50328 Andrew Hohensee
    andrew.d.hohensee@wellsfargo.com

    Code Violations
    codeviolations@wellsfargo.com

    CoreLogic Field Services
    wellsinquiries@corelogic.com

    LPS Field Services
    high.risk@lpsvcs.com

    Mortgage Contracting Services
    codeviolations@mcsnow.com
    Violation Specialist

    Field Service Provider

    Field Service Provider

    Field Service Provider
    414-214-4383

    440-633-4100, Option 3, Option 1

    813-387-1100

    * Spread the word
    * StumbleUpon
    * Digg
    * Reddit
    * Share
    *

    *
    * Print
    *
    * Facebook
    * Email
    *
    * Press This
    *

    Filed under: CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, GTC | Honor, Investor, Mortgage, bubble, currency, foreclosure, securities fraud
    « Georgia Notary Fraud Revealed by TV Investigation Developer In the Shadows: Be Careful of What You Ask For »

    Countrywide Financial Bankruptcy a Possibility for Bank of America (via Livinglies's Weblog)

    Countrywide Financial Bankruptcy a Possibility for Bank of America Countrywide Financial Bankruptcy a Possibility for Bank of America Countrywide Financial, the distressed mortgage-lending arm of Bank of America, could file for bankruptcy, according to a leading stock analyst.Financial analyst Mike Mayo, who works for Credit Agricole, released a report this week saying the company might file for bankruptcy because it is still technically separate from Bank of America, according to a Wall Street Journal report.  … Read More

    via Livinglies's Weblog

    LUCY VUKI et al., Petitioners, v. THE SUPERIOR COURT OF ORANGE COUNTY, Respondent; HSBC BANK USA, Real Party in Interest

    Filed 10/29/10
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    LUCY VUKI et al.,
    Petitioners,
    v.
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF ORANGE COUNTY,
    Respondent;
    HSBC BANK USA,
    Real Party in Interest.
    G043544
    (Super. Ct. No. 30-2010-00360268)
    O P I N I O N
    Original proceedings; petition for a writ of mandate to challenge an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, David C. Velasquez, Judge. Petition denied.
    Law Offices of Moses S. Hall and Moses S. Hall for Petitioners.
    No appearance for Respondent.
    Severson & Werson, Suzanne M. Hankins, Jarlath M. Curran II and Jan T. Chilton for Real Party in Interest.
    * * *
    2
    Lucy and Manatu Vuki lost their Buena Park home to foreclosure. The sale took place October 7, 2009, with their erstwhile lender, HSBC Bank USA (HSBC), as the buyer at the foreclosure sale. In early January 2010 the Vukis stipulated to entry of judgment in an unlawful detainer action (denominated a “Limited Civil” action) brought against them by HSBC. The stipulation provided for an immediate writ of possession, but allowed the Vukis to remain in the house until January 26, 2010.
    However, the day before January 26, the Vukis filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. It took HSBC just a little more than 60 days to obtain relief from the automatic stay, which it did on March 30, 2010. Six days after that, on April 6, 2010, the Vukis filed this state court action against HSBC for, among other things, statutory violation of Civil Code sections 2923.52 and 2923.53.
    On April 9, three days later, they filed an application for a temporary restraining order seeking a stay of eviction. Three days after that, on April 12, the trial court denied the request for that restraining order. The eviction was thus free to proceed.
    But then the Vukis filed this writ proceeding on April 16. On April 20 this court stayed the eviction pending further order. In particular, we wanted to consider the scope of Civil Code sections 2923.52 and 2923.53, a question of first impression. (All further undesignated statutory references will be to the Civil Code.)
    We have now heard oral argument in this proceeding. Because of the importance of the statutory issues presented, we publish this opinion explaining the reasons we deny the requested writ. (See Hecht, Solberg, Robinson, Goldberg & Bagley LLP v. Superior Court (2006) 137 Cal.App.4th 579, 584 [denying petition but issuing opinion “in an effort to clarify” law on issue]; Greenlining Institute v. Public Utilities Com. (2002) 103 Cal.App.4th 1324, 1326, 1329 [same].)
    In particular, we conclude that, unlike section 2923.5 as construed by this court in Mabry v. Superior Court (2010) 185 Cal.App.4th 208 (Mabry), neither section 2923.52 or section 2923.53 provides any private right of action, even a very limited one as this court found in Mabry.
    3
    We also address a related question of the operation of section 2923.54. Subdivision (b) of that statute is clear that: “Failure to comply with Section 2923.52 or 2923.53 shall not invalidate any sale that would otherwise be valid under Section 2924f.” The Vukis, however, claim that the statute does not apply to lenders who themselves buy the property at foreclosure, i.e., to lenders who cannot claim the status of bona fide purchasers. This argument fails since any claim which the Vukis might have to invalidate the foreclosure sale based on sections 2923.52 and 2923.53 necessarily entails a private right of action which the statutes do not give them.
    DISCUSSION
    1. The Operation of Sections 2923.52 and 2923.53
    a. basic requirements for a loan modification program
    Civil Code section 2923.52 imposes a 90-day delay in the normal foreclosure process. But Civil Code section 2923.53 allows for an exemption to that delay if lenders have loan modification programs that meet certain criteria. Before section 2923.52 was enacted, there was a minimum of three months from any notice of default until any foreclosure sale (§ 2924, subd. (a)(3)). After the enactment of section 2923.52, at least for certain loans, another 90 days must be included “in order to allow the parties to pursue a loan modification to prevent foreclosure.” However, if lenders meet the requirements of section 2923.53, they are exempted from the 90-day delay imposed by section 2923.52.
    Those requirements are set forth in subdivision (a) of section 2923.53. Readers should note the theme that the requirements are a matter of a general program, evaluated by regulatory commissioners:
    “(1) The loan modification program is intended to keep borrowers whose principal residences are homes located in California in those homes . . . .
    “(2) The loan modification program targets a ratio of the borrower‟s housing-related debt to the borrower‟s gross income of 38 percent or less, on an aggregate basis in the program.
    4
    “(3) The loan modification program includes some combination of the following features:
    “(A) An interest rate reduction, as needed, for a fixed term of at least five years.
    “(B) An extension of the amortization period for the loan term, to no more than 40 years from the original date of the loan.
    “(C) Deferral of some portion of the principal amount of the unpaid principal balance until maturity of the loan.
    “(D) Reduction of principal.
    “(E) Compliance with a federally mandated loan modification program.
    “(F) Other factors that the commissioner determines are appropriate. In determining those factors, the commissioner may consider efforts implemented in other jurisdictions that have resulted in a reduction in foreclosures.
    “(4) When determining a loan modification solution for a borrower under the loan modification program, the servicer seeks to achieve long-term sustainability for the borrower.” (Italics added.)
    b. application for an exemption
    Subdivision (b) of section 2923.53 sets forth the process by which a lender may obtain an exemption from an otherwise applicable 90-day delay. Everything in the exemption process, in short, is funneled through the relevant commissioner:
    “(b)(1) A mortgage loan servicer may apply to the commissioner for an order exempting loans that it services from Section 2923.52. If the mortgage loan servicer elects to apply for an order, the application shall be in the form and manner determined by the commissioner.
    “(2) Upon receipt of an initial application for exemption under this section, the commissioner shall immediately notify the applicant of the date of receipt of the application and shall issue a temporary order, effective from that date of receipt, exempting the mortgage loan servicer from the provisions of subdivision (a) of Section
    5
    2923.52. The temporary order shall remain in effect until a final order has been issued by the commissioner pursuant to paragraph (3). If the initial application for exemption is denied pursuant to paragraph (3), the temporary order shall remain in effect for 30 days after the date of denial.
    “(3) Within 30 days of receipt of an initial or revised application, the commissioner shall make a final determination on whether the application meets the criteria of subdivision (a). If, after review of the application, the commissioner concludes that the mortgage loan servicer has a comprehensive loan modification program that meets the requirements of subdivision (a), the commissioner shall issue a final order exempting the mortgage loan servicer from the requirements of Section 2923.52. If the commissioner concludes that the loan modification program does not meet the requirements of subdivision (a), the application for exemption shall be denied and a final order shall not be issued.
    “(4) A mortgage loan servicer may submit a revised application if its application for exemption is denied.” (Italics added.)
    c. enforcement of the statute
    Similar to subdivision (b), subdivisions (c) and (d) of section 2923.53 commit enforcement of the statute to the relevant commissioner. That particular commissioner is given legislative authority to issue regulations fleshing out the process set forth in sections 2923.52 and 2923.53:
    “(c) The commissioner may revoke a final order, upon reasonable notice and an opportunity to be heard, if the mortgage loan servicer has submitted a materially false or misleading application or if the approved loan modification program has been materially altered from the loan modification program on which the exemption was based. A revocation by the commissioner shall not be retroactive.
    “(d) The commissioner shall adopt, no later than 10 days after the date this section takes effect, emergency and final regulations to clarify the application of this section and Section 2923.52, including the creation of the application for mortgage loan
    6
    servicers and requirements regarding the reporting of loan modification data by mortgage loan servicers.” (Italics added.)
    Along the same lines, section 2923.53, subdivision (h), makes enforcement a matter of losing a license:
    “(h) Any person who violates any provision of this section or Section 2923.52 shall be deemed to have violated his or her license law as it relates to these provisions.”
    d. public assessment
    Subdivision (e) sets forth requirements making the relevant commissioner report back to the Legislature on how the whole process is going, generally and throughout the state. Readers should note that the operation contemplates a sample for purposes of a report that does not even necessarily include every loan servicer. That is, the scope of the assessment process is one which is within the discretion of the relevant commissioner:
    “(e) Three months after the first exemption is issued pursuant to subdivision (b) by order of any commissioner specified in paragraph (1) of subdivision (j), the Secretary of Business, Transportation and Housing shall submit a report to the Legislature regarding the details of the actions taken to implement this section and the numbers of applications received and orders issued. The secretary shall submit an additional report six months from the date of the submission of the first report and every six months thereafter. Within existing resources, the commissioners shall collect, from some or all mortgage loan servicers, data regarding loan modifications accomplished pursuant to this section and shall make the data available on an Internet Web site at least quarterly.” (Italics added.)
    By the same token, subdivision (f) of section 2923.53 sets up a public informational system to determine who has exemptions and who doesn‟t:
    “(f) The Secretary of Business, Transportation and Housing shall maintain on an Internet Web site a publicly available list disclosing the final orders granting
    7
    exemptions, the date of each order, and a link to Internet Web sites describing the loan modification programs.”
    e. the enforcing commissioners
    The definitions section of the legislation comes at the end of the statute. The most significant language here is that “the commissioner” is defined to include any one of three separate heads of executive branch departments:
    “(k) For purposes of this section and Sections 2923.52 and 2923.54:
    “(1) „Commissioner‟ means any of the following:
    “(A) The Commissioner of Corporations for licensed residential mortgage lenders and servicers and licensed finance lenders and brokers servicing mortgage loans and any other entities servicing mortgage loans that are not described in subparagraph (B) or (C).
    “(B) The Commissioner of Financial Institutions for commercial and industrial banks and savings associations and credit unions organized in this state servicing mortgage loans.
    “(C) The Real Estate Commissioner for licensed real estate brokers servicing mortgage loans.”
    f. analysis of the text
    The text of sections 2923.52 and 2923.53 stands in sharp contrast to that of section 2923.5, which was the subject of this court‟s decision in Mabry, supra, 185 Cal.App.4th 208. As the italicized language quoted above shows, sections 2923.52 and 2923.53, read together, create a structure much more resembling the regulatory structure over general insurance industry claims practices that the Supreme Court held to be without a private right of action in Moradi-Shalal v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Companies (1988) 46 Cal.3d 287. Enforcement of sections 2923.52 and 2923.53 is committed to regulatory agencies, which have implicit power to terminate the license of any company whose program is not in compliance. By contrast, in Mabry, nothing in the subject
    8
    statute (§ 2923.5) suggested that its enforcement was committed to a regulatory structure, and the individual, case-by-case approach of the statute indicated otherwise. (See Mabry, supra, 185 Cal.App.4th at p. 219 [“the enforcement mechanism at hand, in direct contrast to the one in Moradi-Shalal, is one that strongly implies individual enforcement of the statute”].) Not only is there no express unmistakable private right to sue (see Lu v. Hawaiian Gardens Casino, Inc. (2010) 50 Cal.4th 592, 597), there is a virtually unmistakable intent not to allow a private right to sue.
    2. The Operation of Section 2923.54
    Section 2923.54 first imposes a requirement that a notice of sale give information about whether the servicer has, or has not, obtained an exemption from the 90-day delay provisions of section 2923.52. But then section 2923.54 makes clear that whatever else is the case as regards actual compliance or noncompliance with sections 2923.52 and 2923.53, it will not invalidate any otherwise valid foreclosure sale:
    “(b) Failure to comply with Section 2923.52 or 2923.53 shall not invalidate any sale that would otherwise be valid under Section 2924f.”
    The Vukis argue that there is an implied exception in section 2923.54‟s used of the word “otherwise,” (as in “otherwise be valid under Section 2924f”). Their theory is that Section 2924f only protects bona fide purchasers for value (“BFP‟s”), and in this case HSBC cannot be a BFP because it would have purchased the Vukis‟ home knowing of its own noncompliance with section 2923.52 or 2923.53.
    The argument fails because, as shown above, any noncompliance with sections 2923.52 and 2923.53 is entirely a regulatory matter, and cannot be remedied in a private action. The statutory scheme contains no express or implied exceptions for any lender who buys property knowing that it may not have complied with sections 2923.52 and 2923.53.
    9
    CONCLUSION
    Because the Vukis claim for relief against the impending eviction rests entirely on alleged violations of statutes which afford them no private right of action, we need not address the additional argument made by HSBC that their stipulation for judgment in the unlawful detainer action is itself preclusive of their claim.
    The stay of the eviction is hereby discharged. The petition for the requested writ is denied.
    RYLAARSDAM, ACTING P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    MOORE, J.
    ARONSON, J.

    recent cases on foreclosure law

    California Cases – 2004 to Present
    Including Federal cases interpreting California law
    LISTED WITH MOST RECENT CASES FIRST
    Go to cases 2000 – 2003

    Vuki v. Superior Court Docket
    Cal.App. 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G043544)  10/29/10TRUSTEE’S SALES: Unlike section 2923.5 as construed by this court in Mabry v. Superior Court (2010) 185 Cal.App.4th 208, neither Section 2923.52 or Section 2923.53 provides any private right of action, even a very limited one as this court found in Mabry. Civil Code section 2923.52 imposes a 90-day delay in the normal foreclosure process. But Civil Code section 2923.53 allows for an exemption to that delay if lenders have loan modification programs that meet certain criteria. The only enforcement mechanism is that a violation is deemed to be a violation of lenders license laws. Section 2923.54 provides that a violation of Sections 2923.52 or 2923.53 does not invalidate a trustee’s sale, and plaintiff also argued that a lender is not entitled to a bona fide purchaser protection. The court rejected that argument because any noncompliance is entirely a regulatory matter, and cannot be remedied in a private action.
    Abers v. Rounsavell Docket
    Cal.App. 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G040486)  10/18/10LEASES: Leases of residential condominium units required a re-calculation of rent after 30 years based on a percentage of the appraised value of the “leased land”. The term “leased land” was defined to consist of the condominium unit and an undivided interest in the common area of Parcel 1, and did not include the recreational area (Parcel 2), which was leased to the Homeowners Association. The Court held that the language of the leases was clear. The appraisals were to be based only on the value of the lessees’ interest in Parcel 1 and not on the value of the recreational parcel.
    UNPUBLISHED: Residential Mortgage Capital v. Chicago Title Ins. Company Docket
    Cal.App. 1st Dist. (A125695)  9/20/10ESCROW: An escrow holder released loan documents to a mortgage broker at the broker’s request in order to have the borrowers sign the documents at home. They were improperly backdated and the broker failed to provide duplicate copies of the notice of right to rescind. Due these discrepancies, the lender complied with the borrower’s demand for a rescission of the loan, and filed this action against the escrow holder for amounts reimbursed to the borrower for finance charges and attorney’s fees. The Court held that the escrow holder did not breach a duty to the lender because it properly followed the escrow instructions, and it is common for escrow to release documents to persons associated with the transaction in order for them to be signed elsewhere.
    Starr v. Starr Docket
    Cal.App. 2nd Dist. (B219539)  9/30/10COMMUNITY PROPERTY: In a divorce action the Court ordered the husband to convey title to himself and his former wife. Title had been taken in the husband’s name and the wife executed a quitclaim deed. But Family Code Section 721 creates a presumption that a transaction that benefits one spouse was the result of undue influence. The husband failed to overcome this presumption where the evidence showed that the wife executed the deed in reliance on the husband’s representation that he would subsequently add her to title. The husband was, nevertheless, entitled to reimbursement for his separate property contribution in purchasing the property.
    Malkoskie v. Option One Mortgage Corp. Docket
    Cal.App. 2nd Dist. (B221470)  9/23/10TRUSTEE’S SALES: After plaintiff stipulated to a judgment in an unlawful detainer action, she could not challenge the validity of the trustee’s sale in a subsequent action because the subsequent action is barred by collateral estoppel. Because the action was barred, the court did not reach the question of the validity of the trustee’s sale based on the substitution of trustee being recorded after trustee’s sale proceedings had commenced and based on assignments of the deed of trust into the foreclosing beneficiary being recorded after the trustee’s deed.
    Lee v. Fidelity National Title Ins. Co. Docket
    Cal.App. 1st Dist. (A124730)  9/16/10TITLE INSURANCE:
    1. The insureds could have reasonably expected that they were buying a title insurance policy on APN 22, and not just APN 9, where both the preliminary report and policy included a reference to APN 22, listed exclusions from coverage that were specific to APN 22, and attached an assessor’s parcel map with an arrow pointing to both APN 9 and 22.
    2. A preliminary report is merely an offer to issue a title policy, but an insured has the right to expect that the policy will be consistent with the terms of the offer.
    3. There was a triable issue of fact as to whether a neighbor’s construction of improvements on APN 22 was sufficient to commence the running of the statute of limitations, where the insureds testified that they did not know the precise location of APN 22 and assumed that the neighbors constructed the improvements on their own property.
    4. There was a triable issue of fact as to whether Fidelity National Title Insurance Company acted as escrow holder or whether the escrow was conducted by its affiliate, Fidelity National Title Company (only the insurance company was named as a defendant).
    Vanderkous v. Conley Docket
    Cal.App. 1st Dist (A125352)  9/2/10QUIET TITLE: 1) In a quiet title action the court has equitable powers to award compensation as necessary to do complete justice, even though neither party’s pleadings specifically requested compensation. 2) Realizing that the court was going to require plaintiff to compensate defendant in exchange for quieting title in plaintiff’s favor, plaintiff dismissed the lawsuit. However, the dismissal was invalid because it was filed following trial after the case had been submitted to the court.
    Purdum v. Holmes Docket
    Cal.App. 2nd Dist. (B216493)  7/29/10     Case complete 10/22/10NOTARIES: A notary was sued for notarizing a forged deed. He admitted that he knew the grantor had not signed the deed, but the lawsuit was filed more than six years after the deed was signed and notarized. The court held that the action was barred by the six-year limitation period in C.C.P. 338(f)(3) even though plaintiff did not discover the wrongful conduct until well within the six year period.
    Perlas v. GMAC Mortgage Docket
    Cal.App. 1st Dist. (A125212)  8/11/10     Case complete 10/10/10DEEDS OF TRUST: Borrowers filed an action against a lender to set aside a deed of trust, setting forth numerous causes of action. Borrowers’ loan application (apparently prepared by a loan broker) falsely inflated the borrowers’ income. In the published portion of the opinion. The court held in favor of the lender, explaining that a lender is not in a fiduciary relationship with borrowers and owes them no duty of care in approving their loan. A lender’s determination that the borrowers qualified for the loan is not a representation that they could afford the loan. One interesting issue in the unpublished portion of the opinion was the court’s rejection of the borrowers’ argument that naming MERS as nominee invalidated the deed of trust because, as borrower argued, the deed of trust was a contract with MERS and the note was a separate contract with the lender.
    Soifer v. Chicago Title Company Modification Docket
    Cal.App. 2nd Dist. (B217956)  8/10/10TITLE INSURANCE: A person cannot recover for errors in a title company’s informal communications regarding the condition of title to property in the absence of a policy of title insurance or the purchase of an abstract of title. There are two ways in which an interested party can obtain title information upon which reliance may be placed: an abstract of title or a policy of title insurance. Having purchased neither, plaintiff cannot recover for title company’s incorrect statement that a deed of trust in foreclosure was a first lien.
    In re: Hastie (Weinkauf v. Florez) Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    Cal.App. 1st Dist. (A127069)  7/22/10     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. filed late and DENIED 9/21/10DEEDS: An administrator of decedent’s estate sought to set aside two deeds on the basis that the grantees were the grandson and granddaughter of decedent’s caregiver. Defendant did not dispute that the transfers violated Probate Code Section 21350, which prohibits conveyances to a fiduciary, including a caregiver, or the fiduciary’s relatives, unless specified conditions are met. Instead, defendant asserted only that the 3-year statute of limitations had expired. The court held that the action was timely because there was no evidence indicating that the heirs had or should have had knowledge of the transfer, which would have commenced the running of the statute of limitations.
    Bank of America v. Stonehaven Manor, LLC Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    Cal.App. 3rd Dist. (C060089)  7/12/10     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 10/20/10ATTACHMENT: The property of a guarantor of a debt–a debt which is secured by the real property of the principal debtor and also that of a joint and several co-guarantor–is subject to attachment where the guarantor has contractually waived the benefit of that security (i.e. waived the benefit of Civil Code Section 2849).
    Luna v. Brownell Docket
    Cal.App. 2nd Dist. (B212757)  6/11/10     Case complete 8/17/10DEEDS: A deed transferring property to the trustee of a trust is not void as between the grantor and grantee merely because the trust had not been created at the time the deed was executed, if (1) the deed was executed in anticipation of the creation of the trust and (2) the trust is in fact created thereafter. The deed was deemed legally delivered when the Trust was established.
    Mabry v. Superior Court Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    Cal.App. 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G042911)  6/2/10     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 8/18/10TRUSTEE’S SALES: The court answered, and provided thorough explanations for, a laundry list of questions regarding Civil Code Section 2923.5, which requires a lender to explore options for modifying a loan with a borrower prior to commencing foreclosure proceedings.
    1. May section 2923.5 be enforced by a private right of action?  Yes.
    2. Must a borrower tender the full amount of the mortgage indebtedness due as a prerequisite to bringing an action under section 2923.5?  No.
    3. Is section 2923.5 preempted by federal law?  No.
    4. What is the extent of a private right of action under section 2923.5?  It is limited to obtaining a postponement of a foreclosure to permit the lender to comply with section 2923.5.
    5. Must the declaration required of the lender by section 2923.5, subdivision (b) be under penalty of perjury?  No.
    6. Does a declaration in a notice of default that tracks the language of section 2923.5(b) comply with the statute, even though such language does not on its face delineate precisely which one of three categories applies to the particular case at hand?  Yes.
    7. If a lender forecloses without complying with section 2923.5, does that noncompliance affect the title acquired by a third party purchaser at the foreclosure sale?  No.
    8. Did the lender comply with section 2923.5?  Remanded to the trial court to determine which of the two sides is telling the truth.
    9. Can section 2923.5 be enforced in a class action in this case?  Not under these facts, which are highly fact-specific.
    10. Does section 2923.5 require a lender to rewrite or modify the loan? No.
    612 South LLC v. Laconic Limited Partnership Docket
    Cal.App. 4th Dist., Div. 1 (D056646)  5/25/10     Case complete 7/26/10ASSESSMENT BOND FORECLOSURE:
    1. Recordation of a Notice of Assessment under the Improvement Act of 1911 imparted constructive notice even though the notice did not name the owner of the subject property and was not indexed under the owner’s name. There is no statutory requirement that the notice of assessment be indexed under the name of the property owner.
    2. A Preliminary Report also gave constructive notice where it stated: “The lien of special tax for the following municipal improvement bond, which tax is collected with the county taxes. . .”
    3. A property owner is not liable for a deficiency judgment after a bond foreclosure because a property owner does not have personal liability for either delinquent amounts due on the bond or for attorney fees incurred in prosecuting the action.
    Tarlesson v. Broadway Foreclosure Investments Docket
    Cal.App. 1st Dist. (A125445)  5/17/10     Case complete 7/20/10HOMESTEADS: A judgment debtor is entitled to a homestead exemption where she continuously resided in property, even though at one point she conveyed title to her cousin in order to obtain financing and the cousin subsequently conveyed title back to the debtor. The amount of the exemption was $150,000 (later statutorily changed to $175,000) based on debtor’s declaration that she was over 55 years old and earned less than $15,000 per year, because there was no conflicting evidence in the record.
    UNPUBLISHED: MBK Celamonte v. Lawyers Title Insurance Corporation Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    Cal.App. 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G041605)  4/28/10     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 7/21/10TITLE INSURANCE / ENCUMBRANCES: A recorded authorization for a Mello Roos Assessment constitutes an “encumbrance” covered by a title policy, even where actual assessments are conditioned on the future development of the property.
    Plaza Home Mortgage v. North American Title Company Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    Cal.App. 4th Dist., Div. 1 (D054685)  4/27/10     Depublication request DENIED 8/11/10ESCROW / LOAN FRAUD: The buyer obtained 100% financing and managed to walk away with cash ($54,000) at close of escrow. (Actually, the buyer’s attorney-in-fact received the money.) The lender sued the title company that acted as escrow holder, asserting that it should have notified the lender when it received the instruction to send the payment to the buyer’s attorney-in-fact after escrow had closed. The court reversed a grant of a motion for summary judgment in favor of the escrow, pointing out that its decision is narrow, and holding only that the trial court erred when it determined the escrow did not breach the closing instructions contract merely because escrow had closed. The case was remanded in order to determine whether the escrow breached the closing instructions contract and if so, whether that breach proximately caused the lender’s damages.
    Garcia v. World Savings Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    Cal.App. 2nd (B214822)  4/9/10     Petition for review and depublication by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 6/23/10TRUSTEE’S SALES: A lender told plaintiffs/owners that it would postpone a trustee’s sale by a week to give plaintiffs time to obtain another loan secured by other property in order to bring the subject loan current. Plaintiffs obtained a loan the following week, but the lender had conducted the trustee’s sale on the scheduled date and the property was sold to a third party bidder. Plaintiffs dismissed causes of action pertaining to setting aside the sale and pursued causes of action for breach of contract, wrongful foreclosure and promissory estoppel. The court held that there was no consideration that would support the breach of contract claim because plaintiffs promised nothing more than was due under the original agreement. Plaintiffs also could not prove a cause of action for wrongful foreclosure because that cause of action requires that the borrower tender funds to pay off the loan prior to the trustee’s sale. However, plaintiffs could recover based on promissory estoppel because procuring a high cost, high interest loan by using other property as security is sufficient to constitute detrimental reliance.
    LEG Investments v. Boxler Docket
    Cal.App. 3rd Dist. (C058743)  4/1/10     Certified for Partial Publication     Case complete 6/2/10PARTITION: A right of first refusal in a tenancy in common agreement does not absolutely waive the right of partition. Instead, the right of first refusal merely modifies the right of partition to require the selling cotenant to first offer to sell to the nonselling cotenant before seeking partition. [Ed. note: I expect that the result would have been different if the right of partition had been specifically waived in the tenancy in common agreement.]
    Steiner v. Thexton Docket
    Cal. Supreme Court (S164928)  3/18/10OPTIONS: A contract to sell real property where the buyer’s performance was entirely conditioned on the buyer obtaining regulatory approval to subdivide the property is an option. Although plaintiffs’ promise was initially illusory because no consideration was given at the outset, plaintiffs’ part performance of their bargained-for promise to seek a parcel split cured the initially illusory nature of the promise and thereby constituted sufficient consideration to render the option irrevocable.
    Grotenhuis v. County of Santa Barbara Docket
    Cal.App. 2nd Dist. (B212264)  3/15/10     Case complete 5/18/10PROPERTY TAXES: Subject to certain conditions, a homeowner over the age of 55 may sell a principle residence, purchase a replacement dwelling of equal or lesser value in the same county, and transfer the property tax basis of the principal residence to the replacement dwelling. The court held that this favorable tax treatment is not available where title to both properties was held by an individual’s wholly owned corporation. The court rejected plaintiffs’ argument that the corporation was their alter ego because that concept is used to pierce the corporate veil of an opponent, and not to enable a person “to weave in and out of corporate status when it suits the business objective of the day.”
    Clear Lake Riviera Community Assn. v. Cramer Docket
    Cal.App. 1st Dist. (A122205)  2/26/10     Case complete 4/29/10HOMEOWNER’S ASSOCIATIONS: Defendant homeowners were ordered to bring their newly built house into compliance with the homeowners association’s guidelines where the house exceed the guidelines’ height restriction by nine feet. Even though the cost to the defendants will be great, they built the house with knowledge of the restriction and their hardship will not be grossly disproportionate to the loss the neighbors would suffer if the violation were not abated, caused by loss in property values and loss of enjoyment of their properties caused by blocked views. The height restriction was contained in the associations guidelines and not in the CC&R’s, and the association did not have records proving the official adoption of the guidelines. Nevertheless, the court held that proper adoption was inferred from the circumstantial evidence of long enforcement of the guidelines by the association.
    Forsgren Associates v. Pacific Golf Community Development Docket Sup. Ct. Docket
    Cal.App. 4th Dist., Div. 2 (E045940)  2/23/10     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 6/17/10MECHANIC’S LIENS: 1. Owners of land are subject to mechanic’s liens where they were aware of the work being done by the lien claimant and where they failed to record a notice of non-responsibility.
    2. Civil Code Section 3128 provides that a mechanic’s lien attaches to land on which the improvement is situated “together with a convenient space about the same or so much as may be required for the convenient use and occupation thereof”. Accordingly, defendant’s land adjacent to a golf course on which the lien claimant performed work is subject to a mechanic’s lien, but only as to the limited portions where a tee box was located and where an irrigation system was installed.
    3. The fact that adjacent property incidentally benefits from being adjacent to a golf course does not support extending a mechanic’s lien to that property.
    4. The owners of the adjacent property were liable for interest, but only as to their proportionate share of the amount of the entire mechanic’s lien.
    Steinhart v. County of Los Angeles Docket
    47 Cal.4th 1298 – Cal. Supreme Court (S158007)  2/4/10PROPERTY TAXES: A “change in ownership”, requiring a property tax reassessment, occurs upon the death of a trust settlor who transferred property to a revocable trust, and which became irrevocable upon the settlor’s death. The fact that one trust beneficiary was entitled to live in the property for her life, and the remaining beneficiaries received the property upon her death, did not alter the fact that a change in ownership of the entire title had occurred.
    Kuish v. Smith Docket
    181 Cal.App.4th 1419 – 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G040743)  2/3/10     Case complete 4/12/10CONTRACTS: 1. Defendants’ retention of a $600,000 deposit designated as “non-refundable” constituted an invalid forfeiture because a) the contract did not contain a valid liquidated damages clause, and b) plaintiff re-sold the property for a higher price, so there were no out-of-pocket damages. 2. The deposit did not constitute additional consideration for extending the escrow because it was labeled “non-refundable” in the original contract.
    Kendall v. Walker (Modification attached) Docket
    181 Cal.App.4th 584 – 1st Dist. (A105981)  12/30/09     Case complete 3/29/10WATER RIGHTS: An owner of land adjoining a navigable waterway has rights in the foreshore adjacent to his property separate from that of the general public. The court held that the boundary in the waterway between adjacent parcels of land is not fixed by extending the boundary lines into the water in the direction of the last course ending at the shore line. Instead, it is fixed by a line drawn into the water perpendicular to the shore line. Accordingly, the court enjoined defendants from allowing their houseboat from being moored in a manner that crossed onto plaintiffs’ side of that perpendicular boundary line.
    Junkin v. Golden West Foreclosure Service Docket
    180 Cal.App.4th 1150 – 1st Dist. (A124374)  1/5/10     Case complete 3/12/10USURY: The joint venture exception to the Usury Law, which has been developed by case law, provides that where the relationship between the parties is a bona fide joint venture or partnership, an advance by a joint venturer is an investment and not a loan, making the Usury Law inapplicable. The court applied the exception to a loan by one partner to the other because instead of looking at the loan in isolation, it looked at the entire transaction which it determined to be a joint venture. The case contains a good discussion of the various factors that should be weighed in determining whether the transaction is a bona fide joint venture. The presence or absence of any one factor is not, alone, determinative. The factors include whether or not: 1) there is an absolute obligation of repayment, 2) the investor may suffer a loss, 3) the investor has a right to participate in management, 4) the subject property was purchased from a third party and 5) the parties considered themselves to be partners.
    Banc of America Leasing & Capital v. 3 Arch Trustee Services Docket
    180 Cal.App.4th 1090 – 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G041480)  12/11/09     Case complete 3/8/10TRUSTEE’S SALES: A judgment lien creditor is not entitled to receive a notice of default, notice of trustee’s sale or notice of surplus sale proceeds unless the creditor records a statutory request for notice. The trustee is required to disburse surplus proceeds only to persons who have provided the trustee with a proof of claim. The burden rests with the judgment creditor to keep a careful watch over the debtor, make requests for notice of default and sales, and to submit claims in the event of surplus sale proceeds.
    Park 100 Investment Group v. Ryan Docket
    180 Cal.App.4th 795 – 2nd Dist. (B208189)  12/23/09     Case complete 2/26/10LIS PENDENS: 1. A lis pendens may be filed against a dominant tenement when the litigation involves an easement dispute. Although title to the dominant tenement would not be directly affected if an easement right was shown to exist, the owner’s right to possession clearly is affected

    2.A recorded lis pendens is a privileged publication only if it identifies an action previously filed with a court of competent jurisdiction which affects the title or right of possession of real property. If the complaint does not allege a real property claim, or the alleged claim lacks evidentiary merit, the lis pendens, in addition to being subject to expungement, is not privileged.

    Millennium Rock Mortgage v. T.D. Service Company Modification Docket
    179 Cal.App.4th 804 – 3rd Dist. (C059875)  11/24/09     Case complete 1/26/10TRUSTEE’S SALES: A trustee’s sale auctioneer erroneously read from a script for a different foreclosure, although the correct street address was used. The auctioneer opened the bidding with the credit bid from the other foreclosure that was substantially less than the correct credit bid. The errors were discovered after the close of bidding but prior to the issuance of a trustee’s deed. The court held that the errors constituted an “irregularity” sufficient to give the trustee the right to rescind the sale.

    The court distinguished 6 Angels v. Stuart-Wright Mortgage, in which the court held that a beneficiary’s negligent miscalculation of the amount of its credit bid was not sufficient to rescind the sale. In 6 Angels the error was totally extrinsic to the proper conduct of the sale itself. Here there was inherent inconsistency in the auctioneer’s description of the property being offered for sale, creating a fatal ambiguity in determining which property was being auctioned.

    Fidelity National Title Insurance Company v. Schroeder Docket
    179 Cal.App.4th 834 – 5th Dist. (F056339)  11/24/09     Case complete 1/25/10JUDGMENTS: A judgment debtor transferred his 1/2 interest in real property to the other cotenant prior to the judgment creditor recording an abstract of judgment. The court held that if the trial court on remand finds that the transfer was intended to shield the debtor’s property from creditors, then the transferee holds the debtor’s 1/2 interest as a resulting trust for the benefit of the debtor, and the creditor’s judgment lien will attach to that interest. The court also held that the transfer cannot be set aside under the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act because no recoverable value remained in the real property after deducting existing encumbrances and Gordon’s homestead exemption.

    The case contains a good explanation of the difference between a resulting (“intention enforcing”) and constructive (“fraud-rectifying”) trust. A resulting trust carries out the inferred intent of the parties; a constructive trust defeats or prevents the wrongful act of one of them.

    Zhang v. Superior Court Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    Cal.App. 4th Dist., Div. 2 (E047207) 10/29/09     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. GRANTED 2/10/10INSURANCE / BAD FAITH: Fraudulent conduct by an insurer does not give rise to a private right of action under the Unfair Insurance Practices Act (Insurance Code section 790.03 et seq.), but it can give rise to a private cause of action under the Unfair Competition Law (Business and Professions Code section 17200 et seq.).
    Presta v. Tepper Docket
    179 Cal.App.4th 909 – 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G040427)  10/28/09     Case complete 1/25/10TRUSTS: An ordinary express trust is not an entity separate from its trustee, like a corporation is. Instead, a trust is merely a relationship by which one person or entity holds property for the benefit of some other person or entity. Consequently, where two men entered into partnership agreements as trustees of their trusts, the provision of the partnership agreement, which required that upon the death of a partner the partnership shall purchase his interest in the partnership, was triggered by the death of one of the two men.
    Wells Fargo Bank v. Neilsen Modification Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    178 Cal.App.4th 602 – 1st Dist. (A122626)  10/22/09 (Mod. filed 11/10/09)     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 2/10/10CIRCUITY OF PRIORITY: The Court follows the rule in Bratcher v. Buckner, even though Bratcher involved a judgment lien and two deeds of trust and this case involves three deeds of trust. The situation is that A, B & C have liens on the subject property, and A then subordinates his lien to C’s lien. The problem with this is that C appears to be senior to A, which is senior to B, which is senior to C, so that each lien is senior and junior to one of the other liens.

    The Court held that the lien holders have the following priority: (1) C is paid up to the amount of A’s lien, (2) if the amount of A’s lien exceeds C’s lien, A is paid the amount of his lien, less the amount paid so far to C, (3) B is then paid in full, (4) C is then paid any balance still owing to C, (5) A is then paid any balance still owing to A.

    This is entirely fair because A loses priority as to the amount of C’s lien, which conforms to the intent of the subordination agreement. B remains in the same position he would be in without the subordination agreement since his lien remains junior only to the amount of A’s lien. C steps into A’s shoes only up to the amount of A’s lien.

    NOTE: The odd thing about circuity of priority cases is that they result in surplus proceeds after a foreclosure sale being paid to senior lienholders. Normally, only junior lienholders and the foreclosed out owner are entitled to share in surplus proceeds, and the purchaser takes title subject to the senior liens.

    Schmidli v. Pearce Docket
    178 Cal.App.4th 305 – 3rd Dist. (C058270)  10/13/09      Case complete 12/15/09MARKETABLE RECORD TITLE ACT: This case was decided under the pre-2007 version of Civil Code Section 882.020, which provided that a deed of trust expires after 10 years if the maturity date is “ascertainable from the record”. The court held that this provision was not triggered by a Notice of Default, which set forth the maturity date and which was recorded prior to expiration of the 10-year period. NOTE: In 2007, C.C. Section 882.020 was amended to make it clear that the 10-year period applies only where the maturity date is shown in the deed of trust itself.
    Nielsen v. Gibson Docket
    178 Cal.App.4th 318 – 3rd Dist. (C059291)  10/13/09     Case complete 12/15/09ADVERSE POSSESSION: 1. The “open and notorious” element of adverse possession was satisfied where plaintiff possessed the subject property by actual possession under such circumstances as to constitute reasonable notice to the owner. Defendant was charged with constructive knowledge of plaintiff’s possession, even though defendant was out of the country the entire time and did not have actual knowledge.

    2. The 5-year adverse possession period is tolled under C.C.P. Section 328 for up to 20 years if the defendant is “under the age of majority or insane”. In the unpublished portion of the opinion the court held that although the defendant had been ruled incompetent by a court in Ireland, there was insufficient evidence that defendant’s condition met the legal definition of “insane”.

    Ricketts v. McCormack Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    177 Cal.App.4th 1324 – 2nd Dist. (B210123)  9/27/09     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 12/17/09RECORDING LAW: Civil Code Section 2941(c) provides in part, “Within two business days from the day of receipt, if received in recordable form together with all required fees, the county recorder shall stamp and record the full reconveyance or certificate of discharge.” In this class action lawsuit against the County recorder, the court held that indexing is a distinct function, separate from recording a document, and is not part of section 2941(c)’s stamp-and-record requirement.

    The court distinguished indexing, stamping and recording:
    Stamping: The “stamping” requirement of Section 2941(c) is satisfied when the Recorder endorses on a reconveyance the order of receipt, the day and time of receipt and the amount of fees paid.
    Recording: The reconveyance is “recorded” once the Recorder has confirmed the document meets all recording requirements, created an entry for the document in the “Enterprise Recording Archive” system, calculated the required fees and confirmed payment of the correct amount and, finally, generated a lead sheet containing, among other things, a bar code, a permanent recording number and the words “Recorded/Filed in Official Records.”
    Indexing: Government Code Section 27324 requires all instruments “presented for recordation” to “have a title or titles indicating the kind or kinds of documents contained therein,” and the recorder is “required to index only that title or titles captioned on the first page of a document.

    Starlight Ridge South Homeowner’s Assn. v. Hunter-Bloor Docket
    177 Cal.App.4th 440 – 4th Dist., Div. 2 (E046457)  8/14/09 (Pub. Order 9/3/09)     Case complete 10/19/09CC&R’s: Under Code Civ. Proc. Section 1859, where two provisions appear to cover the same matter, and are inconsistent, the more specific provision controls over the general provision. Here the provision of CC&R’s requiring each homeowner to maintain a drainage ditch where it crossed the homeowners’ properties was a specific provision that controlled over a general provision requiring the homeowner’s association to maintain landscape maintenance areas.
    First American Title Insurance Co. v. XWarehouse Lending Corp. Docket
    177 Cal.App.4th 106 – 1st Dist. (A119931)  8/28/09      Case complete 10/30/09TITLE INSURANCE: A loan policy provides that “the owner of the indebtedness secured by the insured mortgage” becomes an insured under the loan policy. Normally, this means that an assignee becomes an insured. However, where the insured lender failed to disburse loan proceeds for the benefit of the named borrower, an indebtedness never existed, and the warehouse lender/assignee who disbursed money to the lender did not become an insured. The court pointed out that the policy insures against defects in the mortgage itself, but not against problems related to the underlying debt.

    NOTE: In Footnote 8 the court distinguishes cases upholding the right of a named insured or its assignee to recover from a title insurer for a loss due to a forged note or forged mortgage because in those cases, and unlike this case, moneys had been actually disbursed or credited to the named borrower by either the lender or its assignee.

    Wells Fargo v. D & M Cabinets Docket
    177 Cal.App.4th 59 – 3rd Dist. (C058486)  8/28/09     Case complete 10/28/09JUDGMENTS: A judgment creditor, seeking to sell an occupied dwelling to collect on a money judgment, may not bypass the stringent requirements of C.C.P. Section 704.740 et seq. when the sale is conducted by a receiver appointed under C.C.P Section 708.620. The judgment creditor must comply with Section 704.740, regardless of whether the property is to be sold by a sheriff or a receiver.
    Sequoia Park Associates v. County of Sonoma Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    176 Cal.App.4th 1270 – 1st Dist. (A120049)  8/21/09     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 12/2/09PREEMPTION: A County ordinance professing to implement the state mobilehome conversion statutes was preempted for the following reasons: (1) Gov. Code Section 66427.5 expressly preempts the power of local authorities to inject other factors when considering an application to convert an existing mobilehome park from a rental to a resident-owner basis, (2) the ordinance is impliedly preempted because the Legislature has established a dominant role for the state in regulating mobilehomes, and has indicated its intent to forestall local intrusion into the particular terrain of mobilehome conversions and (3) the County’s ordinance duplicates several features of state law, a redundancy that is an established litmus test for preemption.
    Citizens for Planning Responsibly v. County of San Luis Obispo Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    176 Cal.App.4th 357 – 2nd Dist (B206957)  8/4/09     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 10/14/09PREEMPTION: The court held that the State Aeronautics Act, which regulates the development and expansion of airports, did not preempt an initiative measure adopted by the voters because none of the following three factors necessary to establish preemption was present: (1) The Legislature may so completely occupy the field in a matter of statewide concern that all, or conflicting, local legislation is precluded, (2) the Legislature may delegate exclusive authority to a city council or board of supervisors to exercise a particular power over matters of statewide concern, or (3) the exercise of the initiative power would impermissibly interfere with an essential governmental function.
    Delgado v. Interinsurance Exchange of the Auto Club of So. Cal. Docket
    47 Cal.4th 302 – Cal. Supreme Court (S155129)  8/3/09INSURANCE / BAD FAITH: The case is not as relevant to title insurance as the lower court case, which held that an insurance company acted in bad faith as a matter of law where a potential for coverage was apparent from the face of the complaint. The Supreme Court reversed, basing its decision on the meaning of “accident” in a homeowner’s policy, and holding that an insured’s unreasonable belief in the need for self-defense does not turn the resulting intentional act of assault and battery into “an accident” within the policy’s coverage clause. Therefore, the insurance company had no duty to defend its insured in the lawsuit brought against him by the injured party.
    1538 Cahuenga Partners v. Turmeko Properties Docket
    176 Cal.App.4th 139 – 2nd Dist. (B209548)  7/31/09     Case complete 10/7/09RECONVEYANCE: [This is actually a civil procedure case that it not of much interest to title insurance business, but it is included here because the underlying action sought to cancel a reconveyance.] The court ordered that a reconveyance of a deed of trust be cancelled pursuant to a settlement agreement. The main holding was that a trial court may enforce a settlement agreement against a party to the settlement that has interest in the subject matter of the action even if the party is not named in the action, where the non-party appears in court and consents to the settlement.
    Lee v. Lee Docket
    175 Cal.App.4th 1553 – 5th Dist. (F056107)  7/29/09     Case complete 9/28/09DEEDS / STATUTE OF FRAUDS:
    1. The Statute of Frauds does not apply to an executed contract, and a deed that is executed by the grantor and delivered to the grantee is an executed contract. The court rejected defendants’ argument that the deed did not reflect the terms of sale under a verbal agreement.
    2. While the alteration of an undelivered deed renders the conveyance void, the alteration of a deed after it has been delivered to the grantee does not invalidate the instrument as to the grantee. The deed is void only as to the individuals who were added as grantees after delivery.
    White v. Cridlebaugh Docket
    178 Cal.App.4th 506 – 5th Dist. (F053843)  7/29/09  (Mod. 10/20/09)     Case complete 12/21/09MECHANIC’S LIENS: Under Business and Professions Code Section 7031, a property owner may recover all compensation paid to an unlicensed contractor, in addition to not being liable for unpaid amounts. Furthermore, this recovery may not be offset or reduced by the unlicensed contractor’s claim for materials or other services.
    Linthicum v. Butterfield Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    175 Cal.App.4th 259 – 2nd Dist. (B199645)  6/24/09     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 9/9/09NOTE: This is a new opinion following a rehearing. The only significant changes from the original opinion filed 4/2/09 (modified 4/8/09) involve the issue of a C.C.P. 998 offer, which is not a significant title insurance or escrow issue.
    EASEMENTS: The court quieted title to an easement for access based on the doctrine of “balancing conveniences ” or “relative hardship”. Prohibiting the continued use of the roadway would cause catastrophic loss to the defendants and insignificant loss to the plaintiffs. However, the court remanded the case for the trial court to determine the width of the easement, which should be the minimal width necessary. The court reversed the judgment insofar as it awarded a utility easement to the defendants because they did not seek to quiet title to an easement for utilities, even though they denied the material allegations of that cause of action.
    United Rentals Northwest v. United Lumber Products Docket
    174 Cal.App.4th 1479 – 5th Dist. (F055855)  6/18/09     Case complete 8/18/09MECHANIC’S LIENS: Under Civil Code Section 3106, a “work of improvement” includes the demolition and/or removal of buildings. The court held that lumber drying kilns are “buildings” so the contractor who dismantled and removed them was entitled to a mechanic’s lien.
    People v. Shetty Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    174 Cal.App.4th 1488 – 2nd Dist. (B205061)  6/18/09     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 9/30/09HOME EQUITY SALES: This case is not significant from a title insurance standpoint, but it is interesting because it is an example of a successful prosecution under the Home Equity Sales Contract Act (Civil Code Section 1695 et seq.).
    In re Marriage of Lund Docket
    174 Cal.App.4th 40 – 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G040863)  5/21/09     Case complete 7/27/09COMMUNITY PROPERTY: An agreement accomplished a transmutation of separate property to community property even though it stated that the transfer was “for estate planning purposes”. A transmutation either occurs for all purposes or it doesn’t occur at all.
    St. Marie v. Riverside County Regional Park, etc. Docket
    46 Cal.4th 282 – Cal. Supreme Court (S159319)  5/14/09OPEN SPACE DEDICATION: Property granted to a Regional Park District is not “actually dedicated” under Public Resources Code Section 5540 for open space purposes until the district’s Board of Directors adopts a resolution dedicating the property for park or open space purposes. Therefore, until the Board of Directors adopts such a resolution, the property may be sold by the District without voter or legislative approval.
    Manhattan Loft v. Mercury Liquors Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    173 Cal.App.4th 1040 – 2nd Dist. (B211070)  5/6/09     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 8/12/09LIS PENDENS: An arbitration proceeding is not an “action” that supports the recordation of a notice of pendency of action. The proper procedure is for a party to an arbitration agreement to file an action in court to support the recording of a lis pendens, and simultaneously file an application to stay the litigation pending arbitration.
    Murphy v. Burch Docket
    46 Cal.4th 157 – Cal. Supreme Court (S159489)  4/27/09EASEMENT BY NECESSITY: This case contains a good discussion of the law of easements by necessity, which the court held did not apply in this case to provide access to plaintiff’s property. This means plaintiff’s property is completely landlocked because the parties had already stipulated that a prescriptive easement could not be established.

    An easement by necessity arises by operation of law when 1) there is a strict necessity as when a property is landlocked and 2) the dominant and servient tenements were under the same ownership at the time of the conveyance giving rise to the necessity. The second requirement, while not categorically barred when the federal government is the common grantor, requires a high burden of proof to show 1) the intent of Congress to establish the easement under federal statutes authorizing the patent and 2) the government’s lack of power to condemn the easement. Normally, a reservation of an easement in favor of the government would not be necessary because the government can obtain the easement by condemnation.

    The court pointed out that there is a distinction between an implied grant and implied reservation, and favorably quotes a treatise that observes: “an easement of necessity may be created against the government, but the government agency cannot establish an easement by necessity over land it has conveyed because its power of eminent domain removes the strict necessity required for the creation of an easement by necessity.”

    Abernathy Valley, Inc. v. County of Solano Docket
    173 Cal.App.4th 42 – 1st Dist. (A121817)  4/17/09     Case complete 6/22/09SUBDIVISION MAP ACT: This case contains a very good history of California’s Subdivision Map Act statutes. The court held that parcels shown on a 1909 map recorded pursuant to the 1907 subdivision map law are not entitled to recognition under the Subdivision Map Act’s grandfather clause (Government Code Section 66499.30) because the 1907 act did not regulate the “design and improvement of subdivisions”. The court also held that a local agency may deny an application for a certificate of compliance that seeks a determination that a particular subdivision lot complies with the Act, where the effect of issuing a certificate would be to effectively subdivide the property without complying with the Act.
    Linthicum v. Butterfield Modification Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    172 Cal.App.4th 1112 – 2nd Dist. (B199645)  4/2/09
    SEE NEW OPINION FILED 6/24/09
    EASEMENTS: The court quieted title to an easement for access based on the doctrine of “balancing conveniences ” or “relative hardship”. Prohibiting the continued use of the roadway would cause catastrophic loss to the defendants and insignificant loss to the plaintiffs. However, the court remanded the case for the trial court to determine the width of the easement, which should be the minimal width necessary. The court reversed the judgment insofar as it awarded a utility easement to the defendants because they did not seek to quiet title to an easement for utilities, even though they denied the material allegations of that cause of action.
    McAvoy v. Hilbert Docket
    172 Cal.App.4th 707 – 4th Dist., Div 1 (D052802)  3/24/09     Case complete 5/27/09ARBITRATION: C.C.P. Section 1298 requires that an arbitration provision in a real estate contract be accompanied by a statutory notice and that the parties indicate their assent by placing their initials on an adjacent space or line. The court held that a listing agreement that is part of a larger transaction for the sale of both a business and real estate is still subject to Section 1298, and refused to enforce an arbitration clause that did not comply with that statute.
    Peak-Las Positas Partners v. Bollag Modification Docket
    172 Cal.App.4th 101 – 2nd Dist. (B205091)  3/16/09     Case complete 5/27/09ESCROW: Amended escrow instructions provided for extending the escrow upon mutual consent which “shall not be unreasonably withheld or delayed”. The court held that substantial evidence supported the trial court’s determination that the seller’s refusal to extend escrow was unreasonable. The court pointed out the rule that equity abhors a forfeiture and that plaintiff had paid a non-refundable deposit of $465,000 and spent $5 million in project costs to obtain a lot line adjustment that was necessary in order for the property to be sold.
    Alfaro v. Community Housing Improvement System & Planning Assn Modification Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    171 Cal.App.4th 1356 6th Dist. (H031127)  2/19/09     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 5/13/09CC&R’s: The court upheld the validity of recorded CC&R’s containing an affordable housing restriction that required property to remain affordable to buyers with low to moderate income. The court reached several conclusions:
    1. Constructive notice of recorded CC&R’s is imparted even if they are not referenced in a subsequent deed,
    2. CC&R’s may describe an entire tract, and do not need to describe individual lots in the tract,
    3. An affordable housing restriction is a reasonable restraint on alienation even if it is of indefinite duration,
    4. Defendants had a duty as sellers to disclose the existence of the CC&R’s. Such disclosure was made if plaintiffs were given, prior to close of escrow, preliminary reports that disclosed the CC&R’s.
    5. The fact that a victim had constructive notice of a matter from public records is no defense to fraud. The existence of such public records may be relevant to whether the victim’s reliance was justifiable, but it is not, by itself, conclusive.
    6. In the absence of a claim that defendants somehow prevented plaintiffs from reading the preliminary reports or deeds, or misled them about their contents, plaintiffs cannot blame defendants for their own neglect in reading the reports or deeds. Therefore, the date of discovery of alleged fraud for failing to disclose the affordable housing restriction would be the date plaintiffs received their preliminary reports or if they did not receive a preliminary report, the date they received their deeds.
    Kwok v. Transnation Title Insurance Company Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    170 Cal.App.4th 1562 – 2nd Dist. (B207421)  2/10/09     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 4/29/09TITLE INSURANCE: Plaintiffs did not succeed as insureds “by operation of law” under the terms of the title insurance policy after transfer of the property from a wholly owned limited liability company, of which appellants were the only members, to appellants as trustees of a revocable family trust. This case highlights the importance of obtaining a 107.9 endorsement, which adds the grantee as an additional insured under the policy.
    Pro Value Properties v. Quality Loan Service Corp. Docket
    170 Cal.App.4th 579 – 2nd Dist. (B204853)  1/23/09     Case complete 3/27/09TRUSTEE’S SALES: A Trustee’s Deed was void because the trustee failed to record a substitution of trustee. The purchaser at the sale was entitled to a return of the money paid plus interest. The interest rate is the prejudgment interest rate of seven percent set forth in Cal. Const., Art. XV, Section 1. A trustee’s obligations to a purchaser are based on statute and not on a contract. Therefore, Civil Code Section 3289 does not apply, since it only applies to a breach of a contract that does not stipulate an interest rate.
    Sixells v. Cannery Business Park Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    170 Cal.App.4th 648 – 3rd Dist. (C056267)  12/29/08     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 3/25/09CONTRACTS: The Subdivision Map Act (Gov. Code, Section 66410 et seq.) prohibits the sale of a parcel of real property until a final subdivision map or parcel map has been filed unless the contract to sell the property is “expressly conditioned” upon the approval and filing of a final map (66499.30(e)). Here, the contract satisfied neither requirement because it allowed the purchaser to complete the purchase if, at its election, the subject property was made into a legal parcel by recording a final map or if the purchaser “waived” the recording of a final map. Therefore the contract was void.
    Patel v. Liebermensch Docket
    45 Cal.4th 344 – Cal. Supreme Court (S156797)  12/22/08SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE: The material factors required for a  written contract are the seller, the buyer, the price to be paid, the time and manner of payment, and the property to be transferred, describing it so it may be identified. Here, specific performance of an option was granted even though it was not precise as to the time and manner of payment because where a contract for the sale of real property specifies no time of payment, a reasonable time is allowed. The manner of payment is also a term that may be supplied by implication.
    In re Marriage of Brooks and Robinson Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    169 Cal.App.4th 176 – 4th Dist., Div. 2 (E043770)  12/16/08     Request for review and depublication by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 3/25/09COMMUNITY PROPERTY: The act of taking title to property in the name of one spouse during marriage with the consent of the other spouse effectively removes that property from the general presumption that the property is community property. Instead, there is a presumption that the parties intended title to be held as stated in the deed. This presumption can only be overcome by clear and convincing evidence of a contrary agreement, and not solely by tracing the funds used to purchase the property or by testimony of an intention not disclosed at the time of the execution of the conveyance. Because the court found that there was no agreement to hold title other than as the separate property of the spouse who acquired title in her own name, it did not reach the issue of whether a purchaser from that spouse was a BFP or would be charged with knowledge of that the seller’s spouse had a community property interest in the property.
    The Formula, Inc. v. Superior Court Docket
    168 Cal.App.4th 1455 – 3rd Dist. (C058894)  12/10/09     Case complete 2/10/09LIS PENDENS: A notice of litigation filed in another state is not authorized for recording under California’s lis pendens statutes. An improperly filed notice of an action in another state is subject to expungement by a California court, but not under the authority of C.C.P. Section 405.30, and an order of expungement is given effect by being recorded in the chain of title to overcome the effect of the earlier filing.
    Ekstrom v. Marquesa at Monarch Beach HOA Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    168 Cal.App.4th 1111 – 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G038537)  12/1/08     Depublication request DENIED 3/11/09CC&R’s: A provision in CC&R’s requiring all trees on a lot to be trimmed so as to not exceed the roof of the house on the lot, unless the tree does not obstruct views from other lots, applies to palm trees even though topping a palm tree will kill it. All trees means “all trees”, so palm trees are not exempt from the requirement that offending trees be trimmed, topped, or removed.
    Spencer v. Marshall Docket
    168 Cal.App.4th 783 – 1st Dist. (A119437)  11/24/08     Case complete 1/26/09HOME EQUITY SALES: The Home Equity Sales Contract Act applies even where the seller is in bankruptcy and even where the seller’s Chapter 13 Bankruptcy Plan allows the seller to sell or refinance the subject property without further order of the court.
    Kachlon v. Markowitz Docket
    168 Cal.App.4th 316 – 2nd Dist. (B182816)  11/17/08     Case complete 1/27/09TRUSTEE’S SALES:
    1. The statutorily required mailing, publication, and delivery of notices in nonjudicial foreclosure, and the performance of statutory nonjudicial foreclosure procedures, are privileged communications under the qualified, common-interest privilege, which means that the privilege applies as long as there is no malice. The absolute privilege for communications made in a judicial proceeding (the “litigation privilege”) does not apply.
    2. Actions seeking to enjoin nonjudicial foreclosure and clear title based on the provisions of a deed of trust are actions on a contract, so an award of attorney fees under Civil Code Section 1717 and provisions in the deed of trust is proper.
    3. An owner is entitled to attorney fees against the trustee who conducted trustee’s sale proceedings where the trustee did not merely act as a neutral stakeholder but rather aligned itself with the lender by denying that the trustor was entitled to relief.
    Hines v. Lukes Docket
    167 Cal.App.4th 1174 – 2nd Dist. (B199971)  10/27/08     Case complete 12/31/08EASEMENTS: [Not significant from a title insurance standpoint]. The underlying dispute concerns an easement but the case involves only civil procedure issues pertaining to the enforcement of a settlement agreement.
    Satchmed Plaza Owners Association v. UWMC Hospital Corp. Docket
    167 Cal.App.4th 1034 – 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G038119)  10/23/08     Case complete 12/23/08RIGHT OF FIRST REFUSAL: [Not significant from a title insurance standpoint]. The underlying dispute concerns a right of first refusal but the case involves only civil procedure issues pertaining to a party’s waiver of its right to appeal where it has accepted the benefits of the favorable portion of judgment.
    Gray v. McCormick Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    167 Cal.App.4th 1019 – 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G039738)  10/23/08     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 1/14/09EASEMENTS: Exclusive easements are permitted under California law, but the use by the owner of the dominant tenement is limited to the purposes specified in the grant of easement, not all conceivable uses of the property.
    In re Estate of Felder Docket
    167 Cal.App.4th 518 – 2nd Dist.   (B205027)  10/9/08     Case complete 12/11/08CONTRACTS: [Not significant from a title insurance standpoint]. The case held that an estate had the right to retain the entire deposit upon a purchaser’s breach of a sales contract even though the estate had only a 1/2 interest in the subject property.
    Secrest v. Security National Mortgage Loan Trust Order Modifying Opinion Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    167 Cal.App.4th 544 – 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G039065)  10/9/08, Modified 11/3/08     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 12/17/08LOAN MODIFICATION: Because a note and deed of trust come within the statute of frauds, a Forbearance Agreement also comes within the statute of frauds pursuant to Civil Code section 1698. Making the downpayment required by the Forbearance Agreement was not sufficient part performance to estop Defendants from asserting the statute of frauds because payment of money alone is not enough as a matter of law to take an agreement out of the statute, and the Plaintiffs have legal means to recover the downpayment if they are entitled to its return. In addition to part performance, the party seeking to enforce the contract must have changed position in reliance on the oral contract to such an extent that application of the statute of frauds would result in an unjust or unconscionable loss, amounting in effect to a fraud.
    FDIC v. Dintino Docket
    167 Cal.App.4th 333 – 4th Dist., Div. 1 (D051447)  9/9/08 (Pub. Order 10/2/08)     Case complete 12/2/08TRUST DEEDS: A lender who mistakenly reconveyed a deed of trust could not sue under the note because it would violate the one action rule. However, the lender prevailed on its unjust enrichment cause of action. The applicable statute of limitations was the 3-year statute for actions based on fraud or mistake, and not the 4-year statute for actions based on contract. Nevertheless, the action was timely because the statute did not begin to run until the lender reasonably discovered its mistake, and not from the date of recordation of the reconveyance. Finally, the court awarded defendant attorney’s fees attributable to defending the contract cause of action because defendant prevailed on that particular cause of action even though he lost the lawsuit.
    California Coastal Commission v. Allen Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    167 Cal.App.4th 322 – 2nd Dist. (B197974)  10/1/08     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 1/14/09HOMESTEADS:
    1. The assignees of a judgment properly established their rights as assignees by filing with the clerk of the court an acknowledgement of assignment of judgment.
    2. The subject property was not subject to a homestead exemption because the debtor transferred the property to a corporation of which he was the sole shareholder. The homestead exemption only applies to the interest of a natural person in a dwelling.
    3. The debtor could not claim that he was only temporarily absent from a dwelling in order to establish it as his homestead where he leased it for two years. This is true even though the debtor retained the right to occupy a single car section of the garage and the attic.
    In re Marriage of Holtemann Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    162 Cal.App.4th 1175 – 2nd Dist. (B203089)  9/15/08     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 12/10/08COMMUNITY PROPERTY: Transmutation of separate property to community property requires language which expressly states that the characterization or ownership of the property is being changed. Here, an effective transmutation occurred because the transmutation agreement clearly specified that a transmutation was occurring and was not negated by arguably confusing language in a trust regarding the parties’ rights to terminate the trust. The court also stated that it was not aware of any authority for the proposition that a transmutation can be conditional or temporary. However, while questioning whether a transmutation can be conditional or temporary, the court did not specifically make that holding because the language used by the parties was not conditional.
    Mission Shores Association v. Pheil Docket
    166 Cal.App.4th 789 – 4th Dist., Div. 2 (E043932)  9/5/08     Case complete 11/7/08CC&R’s: Civil Code Section 1356 allows a court to reduce a super-majority voting requirement to amend CC&R’s where the court finds that the amendment is reasonable. Here the court reduced the 2/3 majority requirement to a simple majority for an amendment to limit rentals of homes to 30 days or more.
    Zanelli v. McGrath Docket
    166 Cal.App.4th 615 – 1st Dist. (A117111)  9/2/08     Case complete 11/4/08EASEMENTS:
    1. The doctrine of merger codified in Civil Code Sections 805 and 811 applies when “the right to the servitude,” and “the right to the servient tenement” are not vested in a single individual, but in the same persons;

    2. The doctrine of merger applies regardless of whether the owners held title as joint tenants or tenants in common. Also, the fact that one owner held his interest in one of the properties as trustee for his inter vivos revocable trust does not preclude merger because California law recognizes that when property is held in this type of trust the settlor has the equivalent of full ownership of the property. (If he had held title only in a representative capacity as a trustee for other beneficiaries under the terms of an irrevocable trust, then his ownership might not result in extinguishment by merger because he would only hold the legal title for the benefit of others.) The court cites Galdjie v. Darwish (2003) 113 Cal.App.4th 1331, stating that a revocable inter vivos trust is recognized as simply a probate avoidance device, but does not prevent creditors of the settlers from reaching trust property.

    (3) After being extinguished by merger, an easement is not revived upon severance of the formerly dominant and servient parcels unless it is validly created once again.

    Ritter & Ritter v. The Churchill Condominium Assn. Docket
    166 Cal.App.4th 103 – 2nd Dist. (B187840) 7/22/08  (pub. order 8/21/08)     Case complete 10/21/08HOMEOWNERS’ ASSOCIATIONS: A member of a condominium homeowners’ association can recover damages from the association which result from a dangerous condition negligently maintained by the association in the common area. However, the court found in favor of the individual directors because a greater degree of fault is necessary to hold unpaid individual board members liable, and such greater degree of fault was not present here.
    Kempton v. City of Los Angeles Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    165 Cal.App.4th 1344 – 2nd Dist. (B201128) 8/13/08     Request for Depublication by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 11/12/08NUISANCE: A private individual may bring an action against a municipality to abate a public nuisance when the individual suffers harm that is specially injurious to himself, or where the nuisance is a public nuisance per se, such as blocking a public sidewalk or road. The court held that plaintiff’s assertions that neighbors’ fences were erected upon city property, prevent access to plaintiff’s sidewalk area, and block the sightlines upon entering and exiting their garage were sufficient to support both a public nuisance per se and specific injury.
    Claudino v. Pereira Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    165 Cal.App.4th 1282 – 3rd Dist. (C054808) 8/12/08     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 11/12//08SURVEYS: Determining the location of a boundary line shown on a plat recorded pursuant to the 1867 Townsite Acts requires an examination of both the plat and the surveyor’s field notes. Here, the plat showed the boundary as a straight line, but the court held that the boundary followed the center line of a gulch because the field notes stated that the boundary was “down said gulch”.
    Zack’s, Inc. v. City of Sausalito Docket
    165 Cal.App.4th 1163 – 1st Dist. (A118244) 8/11/08     Case complete 10/14/08TIDELANDS / PUBLIC STREETS: A statute authorizing the City’s lease of tidelands does not supersede other state laws establishing procedures for the abandonment of public streets. Because the City failed to follow the normal procedure for abandonment of the portion of the street upon which it granted a lease, the leasehold was not authorized and can therefore be deemed a nuisance.
    Gehr v. Baker Hughes Oil Field Operations Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    165 Cal.App.4th 660 – 2nd Dist. (B201195) 7/30/08     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 10/16/08NUISANCE: Plaintiff purchased from Defendant real property that was contaminated, and Defendant had begun the remediation process. The 3-year statute of limitations for suing under a permanent nuisance theory had expired. So Plaintiff sued for nuisance damages under a continuing nuisance theory, seeking interest rate differential damages based on the difference in the interest rate between an existing loan and a loan that plaintiff could have obtained if not for the contamination.

    The court held that plaintiff’s claim for interest rate differential damages is actually a claim for diminution in value, which may not be recovered under a continuing nuisance theory. Damages for diminution in value may only be recovered for permanent, not continuing, nuisances. When suing for a continuing nuisance, future or prospective damages are not allowed, such as damages for diminution in the value of the subject property. A nuisance can only be considered “continuing” if it can be abated, and therefore a plaintiff suing under this theory may only recover the costs of abating the nuisance.

    If the nuisance has inflicted a permanent injury on the land, the plaintiff generally must bring a single lawsuit for all past, present, and future damages within three years of the creation of the nuisance. But if the nuisance is one which may be discontinued at any time, it is considered continuing in character and persons harmed by it may bring successive actions for damages until the nuisance is abated. Recovery is limited, however, to actual injury suffered prior to commencement of each action.

    Witt Home Ranch v. County of Sonoma Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    165 Cal.App.4th 543 – 1st Dist. (A118911) 7/29/08     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 5/28/08SUBDIVISION MAP ACT: This case contains a good history of California’s Subdivision Map Act statutes. The court held that the laws governing subdivision maps in 1915 did not regulate the “design and improvement of subdivisions,” as required by the grandfather clause of Government Code Section 66499.30. The subdivision map in this case was recorded in 1915 and no lots were subsequently conveyed, so the map does not create a valid subdivision.
    T.O. IX v. Superior Court Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    165 Cal.App.4th 140 – 2nd Dist. (B203794) 7/24/08     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 9/10/08MECHANIC’S LIENS: A mechanic’s lien claimant recorded a mechanic’s lien against each of the nine parcels in a project, each lien for the full amount due under the contract. The court held that defendant could record a single release bond under Civil Code Section 3143 to release all of the liens.
    Kassir v. Zahabi Docket
    164 Cal.App.4th 1352 – 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G038449) 3/5/08 (Pub. Order 4/3/08, Received 7/16/08)     Case complete 5/9/08SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE: The trial court ordered Defendant to specifically perform his contract to sell real property to Plaintiff, and further issued a judgment ordering Defendant to pay Plaintiff for rents accruing during the time Defendant was able to perform the agreement but refused to do so. The court held that because the property was overencumbered, Defendant would have received nothing under the agreement and no offset was required.

    The court explained that because execution of the judgment in a specific performance action will occur later than the date of performance provided by the contract, financial adjustments must be made to relate their performance back to the contract date, namely: 1) when a buyer is deprived of possession of the property pending resolution of the dispute and the seller receives rents and profits, the buyer is entitled to a credit against the purchase price for the rents and profits from the time the property should have been conveyed to him, 2) a seller also must be treated as if he had performed in a timely fashion and is entitled to receive the value of his lost use of the purchase money during the period performance was delayed, 3) if any part of the purchase price has been set aside by the buyer with notice to the seller, the seller may not receive credit for his lost use of those funds and 4) any award to the seller representing the value of his lost use of the purchase money cannot exceed the rents and profits awarded to the buyer, for otherwise the breaching seller would profit from his wrong.

    Grant v. Ratliff Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    164 Cal.App.4th 1304 – 2nd Dist. (B194368) 7/16/08     Request for depublication by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 10/1/08PRESCRIPTIVE EASEMENTS: The plaintiff/owner of Parcel A sought to establish a prescriptive easement to a road over Parcel B. In order to establish the requisite 5-year period of open and notorious possession, the plaintiff needed to include the time that the son of the owner of Parcel B spent living in a mobile home on Parcel A. The court held that the son’s use of Parcel A was not adverse but was instead a matter of “family accommodation” and, therefore, a prescriptive easement was not established. The court also discussed: 1) a party seeking to establish a prescriptive easement has the burden of proof by clear and convincing evidence and 2) once the owner of the dominant tenement shows that use of an easement has been continuous over a long period of time, the burden shifts to the owner of the servient tenement to show that the use was permissive, but the servient tenement owner’s burden is a burden of producing evidence, and not a burden of proof.
    SBAM Partners v. Wang Docket
    164 Cal.App.4th 903 – 2nd Dist. (B204191) 7/9/08     Case complete 9/10/08HOMESTEADS: Under C.C.P. Section 704.710, a homestead exemption is not allowed on property acquired by the debtor after the judgment has been recorded unless it was purchased with exempt proceeds from the sale, damage or destruction of a homestead within the six-month safe harbor period.
    Christian v. Flora Docket
    164 Cal.App.4th 539 – 3rd Dist. (C054523) 6/30/08     Case complete 9/2/08EASEMENTS: Where parcels in a subdivision are resubdivided by a subsequent parcel map, the new parcel map amends the provisions of any previously recorded parcel map made in compliance with the Map Act. Here, although the deeds to plaintiffs referred to the original parcel map, since the intent of the parties was that the easement shown on the amended parcel map would be conveyed, the grantees acquired title to the easement shown on the amended map.
    Lange v. Schilling Docket
    163 Cal.App.4th 1412 – 3rd Dist. (C055471) 5/28/08; pub. order 6/16/08     Case Complete 8/18/08REAL ESTATE AGENTS: The clear language of the standard California real estate purchase agreement precludes an award of attorney’s fees if a party does not attempt mediation before commencing litigation. Because plaintiff filed his lawsuit before offering mediation, there was no basis to award attorney’s fees.
    Talbott v. Hustwit Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    164 Cal.App.4th 148 – 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G037424) 6/20/08     Petition for review and depublication DENIED by Cal Supreme Ct. 9/24/08GUARANTEES:
    1. C.C.P. 580a, which requires an appraisal of the real property security before the court may issue a deficiency judgment, does not apply to an action against a guarantor.
    2. A lender cannot recover under a guaranty where there the debtor and guarantor already have identical liability, such as with general partners or trustees of a revocable trust in which the debtor is the settlor, trustee and primary beneficiary. Here, however, a  guarantee signed by the trustees of the debtors’ trust is enforceable as a “true guarantee” because, although the debtors were the settlors, they were a) secondary, not primary, beneficiaries and b) were not the trustees.
    Mayer v. L & B Real Estate Sup.Ct. Docket
    43 Cal.4th 1231 – Cal. Supreme Court (S142211) 6/16/08TAX SALES: The one-year statute of limitations for attacking a tax sale does not begin to run against a property owner who is in “undisturbed possession” of the subject property until that owner has actual notice of the tax sale. Ordinarily, a property owner who has failed to pay property taxes has sufficient knowledge to put him on notice that a tax sale might result. However, in this case the property owners did not have notice because they purchased a single piece of commercial property and received a single yearly tax bill. They had no reason to suspect that due to errors committed by the tax assessor, a small portion of their property was being assessed separately and the tax bills were being sent to a previous owner.

    NOTE: This creates a hazard for title companies insuring after a tax sale in reliance on the one-year statute of limitations in Revenue and Taxation Code Section 3725.

    California Golf v. Cooper Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    163 Cal.App.4th 1053 – 2nd Dist. (B195211) 6/9/08     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 9/17/08TRUSTEE’S SALES:
    1. A bidder at a trustee’s sale may not challenge the sale on the basis that the lender previously obtained a decree of judicial foreclosure because the doctrine of election of remedies benefits only the trustor or debtor.
    2. A lender’s remedies against a bidder who causes a bank to stop payment on cashier’s checks based on a false affidavit asserting that the checks were lost is not limited to the remedies set forth in CC Section 2924h, and may pursue a cause of  action for fraud against the bidder.
    (The case contains a good discussion (at pp. 25 – 26) of the procedure for stopping payment on a cashier’s check by submitting an affidavit to the issuing bank.)
    Biagini v. Beckham Docket
    163 Cal.App.4th 1000 – 3rd Dist. (C054915) 6/9/08     Case complete 8/11/08DEDICATION:
    1. Acceptance of a dedication may be actual or implied. It is actual when formal acceptance is made by the proper authorities, and implied when a use has been made of the property by the public 1) of an  intensity that is reasonable for the nature of the road and 2) for such a length of time as will evidence an intention to accept the dedication. BUT the use in this case was not sufficient because the use was by neighbors whose use did not exceed what was permitted pursuant to a private easement over the same area.
    2. A statutory offer of dedication can be revoked as to the public at large by use of the area that is inconsistent with the dedication, but the offer remains open for formal acceptance by the public entity to which the offer was made.
    Steiner v. Thexton Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    Cal.App. 3rd Dist. (C054605) 5/28/08     REVERSED by Cal. Supreme Ct.OPTIONS: A contract to sell real property where the buyer’s performance was entirely conditioned on the buyer obtaining regulatory approval to subdivide the property is an option. An option must be supported by consideration, but was not here, where the buyer could back out at any time. Buyer’s promise to deliver to seller copies “of all information, reports, tests, studies and other documentation” was not sufficient consideration to support the option.
    In re Marriage Cases Docket
    43 Cal.4th 757 – Cal. Supreme Court (S147999) 5/15/08MARRIAGE: The language of Family Code Section 300 limiting the designation of marriage to a union “between a man and a woman” is unconstitutional and must be stricken from the statute, and the remaining statutory language must be understood as making the designation of marriage available both to opposite-sex and same-sex couples.
    Harvey v. The Landing Homeowners Association Docket
    162 Cal.App.4th 809 – 4th Dist., Div. 1 (D050263) 4/4/08 (Cert. for Pub. 4/30/08)     Case complete 6/30/08HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATIONS: The Board of Directors of an HOA has the authority to allow owners to exclusively use common area accessible only to those owners where the following provision of the CC&R’s applied: “The Board shall have the right to allow an Owner to exclusively use portions of the otherwise nonexclusive Common Area, provided that such portions . . . are nominal in area and adjacent to the Owner’s Exclusive Use Area(s) or Living Unit, and, provided further, that such use does not unreasonably interfere with any other Owner’s use . . .” Also, this is allowed under Civil Code Section 1363.07(a)(3)(E).
    Salma v. Capon Docket
    161 Cal.App.4th 1275 – 1st Dist. (A115057) 4/9/08     Case complete 6/11/08HOME EQUITY SALES: A seller claimed he sold his house for far less than it was worth “due to the duress of an impending trustee’s sale and the deceit of the purchasers”. The case involves procedural issues that are not relevant to this web site. However, it is included here because it demonstrates the kind of mess that can occur when you are dealing with property that is in foreclosure. Be careful, folks.
    Aviel v. Ng Docket
    161 Cal.App.4th 809 – 1st Dist. (A114930) 2/28/08; pub. order 4/1/08     Case complete 5/6/08LEASES / SUBORDINATION: A lease provision subordinating the lease to “mortgages” also applied to deeds of trust because the two instruments are functionally and legally the same. Therefore a foreclosure of a deed of trust wiped out the lease.
    People v. Martinez Docket
    161 Cal.App.4th 754 – 4th Dist., Div. 2 (E042427) 4/1/08     Case complete 6/2/08FORGERY: This criminal case involves a conviction for forgery of a deed of trust. [NOTE: The crime of forgery can occur even if the owner actually signed the deed of trust. The court pointed out that “forgery is committed when a defendant, by fraud or trickery, causes another to execute a document where the signer is unaware, by reason of such trickery, that he is executing a document of that nature.”
    Pacific Hills Homeowners Association v. Prun Docket
    160 Cal.App.4th 1557 – 4th Dist., Div. 3 (G038244) 3/20/08     Case complete 5/27/08CC&R’s: Defendants built a gate and fence within the setback required by the CC&R’s. 1) The court held that the 5-year statute of limitations of C.C.P. 336(b) applies to unrecorded as well as recorded restrictions, so that the shorter 4-year statute of limitations of C.C.P. 337 is inapplicable. 2) The court upheld the trial court’s equitable remedy of requiring the HOA to pay 2/3 of the cost of relocation defendant’s gate based upon the HOA’s sloppiness in not pursuing its case more promptly.
    Nicoll v. Rudnick Docket
    160 Cal.App.4th 550 – 5th Dist. (F052948) 2/27/08     Case complete 4/28/08WATER RIGHTS: An appropriative water right established in a 1902 judgment applied to the entire 300 acre parcel so that when part of the parcel was foreclosed and subsequently re-sold, the water rights must be apportioned according to the acreage of each parcel, not according to the prior actual water usage attributable to each parcel. NOTE: This case contains a good explanation of California water rights law.
    Real Estate Analytics v. Vallas Docket
    160 Cal.App.4th 463 – 4th Dist., Div. 1 (D049161) 2/26/08     Case complete 5/29/08SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE: Specific performance is appropriate even where the buyer’s sole purpose and entire intent in buying the property was to earn money for its investors and turn a profit as quickly as possible. The fact that plaintiff was motivated solely to make a profit from the purchase of the property does not overcome the strong statutory presumption that all land is unique and therefore damages were inadequate to make plaintiff whole for the defendant’s breach.
    Fourth La Costa Condominium Owners Assn. v. Seith Docket
    159 Cal.App.4th 563 – 4th Dist., Div. 1 (D049276) 1/30/08     Case complete 4/1/08CC&R’s/HOMEOWNER’S ASSOCIATIONS: The court applied CC 1356(c)(2) and Corp. Code 7515, which allow a court to reduce the supermajority vote requirement for amending CC&R’s and bylaw because the amendments were reasonable and the balloting requirements of the statutes were met.
    02 Development, LLC v. 607 South Park, LLC Docket
    159 Cal.App.4th 609 – 2nd Dist. (B200226) 1/30/08     Case complete 4/3/08SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE: 1) An assignment of a purchaser’s rights under a purchase agreement prior to creation of the assignee as an LLC is valid because an organization can enforce pre-organization contracts if the organization adopts or ratifies them. 2) A purchaser does not need to prove that it already had the necessary funds, or already had binding commitments from third parties to provide the funds, when the other party anticipatorily repudiates the contract. All that plaintiff needed to prove was that it would have been able to obtain the necessary funding (or funding commitments) in order to close the transaction on time.
    Richeson v. Helal Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    158 Cal.App.4th 268 – 2nd Dist. (B187273) 11/29/07; Pub. & mod. order 12/21/07 (see end of opinion) Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 2/20/08CC&R’s / MUNICIPALITIES: An Agreement Imposing Restrictions (“AIR”) and CC&R’s did not properly lend themselves to an interpretation that would prohibit the City from changing the permitted use or zoning and, were they so construed, the AIR and CC&R’s would be invalid as an attempt by the City to surrender its future right to exercise its police power respecting the property. Here, the AIR and CC&R’s did not prohibit the City from issuing a new conditional use permit allowing the continued use of the subject property as a neighborhood market.
    Bill Signs Trucking v. Signs Family Ltd. Partnership Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    157 Cal.App.4th 1515 – 4th Dist., Div. 1 (D047861) 12/18/07     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 4/9/08LEASES / RIGHT OF FIRST REFUSAL: A tenant’s right of first refusal under a commercial lease is not triggered by the conveyance of an interest in the property between co-partners in a family limited partnership that owns the property and is the landlord.
    Schweitzer v. Westminster Investments Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    157 Cal.App.4th 1195 – 4th Dist., Div. 1 (D049589) 12/13/07     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 3/26/08EQUITY PURCHASERS:
    1) The bonding requirement of the Home Equity Sales Contracts Act (Civil Code Section 1695.17) is void for vagueness under the due process clause and may not be enforced. Section 1695.17 is vague because it provides no guidance on the amount, the obligee, the beneficiaries, the terms or conditions of the bond, the delivery and acceptance requirements, or the enforcement mechanisms of the required bond.
    2) Although the bond requirement may not be enforced, the remainder of the statutory scheme remains valid because the bond provisions are severable from the balance of the enactment.
    3) The court refused to set aside the deed in favor of the equity purchaser because, first, the notice requirements of Civil Code Section 1695.5 appear to have been met and, second, the seller’s right to rescind applies before the deed is recorded but the statute “does not specify that a violation of section 1695.5 provides grounds for rescinding a transaction after recordation of the deed”.
    Crestmar Owners Association v. Stapakis Docket
    157 Cal.App.4th 1223 – 2nd Dist. (B191049) 12/13/07     Case complete 2/15/07CC&R’s: Where a developer failed to convey title to two parking spaces as required by the CC&R’s, the homeowner’s association was able to quiet title even though more than 20 years had passed since the parking spaces should have been conveyed. The statute of limitations does not run against someone, such as the homeowner’s association here, who is in exclusive and undisputed possession of the property.
    Washington Mutual Bank v. Blechman Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    157 Cal.App.4th 662 – 2nd Dist. (B191125) 12/4/07     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 3/19/08TRUSTEE’S SALES: The foreclosing lender and trustee are indispensable parties to a lawsuit which seeks to set aside a trustee’s sale. Therefore, a default judgment against only the purchaser at the trustee’s sale is subject to collateral attack.
    Garretson v. Post Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    156 Cal.App.4th 1508 – 4th Dist., Div.2 (E041858) 11/20/07     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 2/27/08TRUSTEE’S SALES: A cause of action for wrongful foreclosure does not fall within the protection of Code of Civil Procedure section 425.16, commonly referred to as the anti-SLAPP statute (strategic lawsuit against public participation).
    Murphy v. Burch Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    Cal.App. 1st Dist. (A117051) 11/19/07
    AFFIRMED by Cal Supreme Ct. 4/27/09EASEMENT BY NECESSITY: An easement by necessity arises by operation of law when 1) there is a strict necessity as when a property is landlocked and 2) the dominant and servient tenements were under the same ownership at the time of the conveyance giving rise to the necessity. However, the second requirement is not met when the properties were owned by the federal government because the Government has the power of eminent domain, rendering it unnecessary to resort to the easement by necessity doctrine in order to acquire easements.

    The court attempts to distinguish Kellogg v. Garcia, 102 Cal.App.4th 796, by pointing out that in that case the issue of eminent domain did not arise because the dominant tenement was owned by a private party and the servient tenements by the federal government. [Ed. Note: the court does not adequately address the fact that the government does not always have the power of eminent domain. It only has that power if a public purpose is involved. Also, I do not think the court adequately distinguishes Kellogg, which seems to hold that common ownership by the federal government satisfies the requirement of common ownership.]

    Elias Real Estate v. Tseng Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    156 Cal.App.4th 425 – 2nd Dist. (B192857) 10/25/07     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 2/13/08SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE: Acts of a partner falling within Corp. Code 16301(1) (acts in ordinary course of business) are not subject to the statute of frauds. Acts of a partner falling within Corp. Code 16301(2) (acts not in the ordinary course of business) are subject to the statute of frauds. In this case, a sale of the partnership’s real property was not in the ordinary course of business, so it fell within Corp. Code 16301(2) and plaintiff could not enforce a contract of sale signed by only one partner.
    Strong v. State Board of Equalization Docket Sup.Ct. Docket
    155 Cal.App.4th 1182 – 3rd Dist. (C052818) 10/2/07     Petition for review by Cal Supreme Ct. DENIED 1/3/08CHANGE OF OWNERSHIP: The statute that excludes transfers between domestic partners from property tax reassessment is constitutional.

    insider mers memo foreclosure procedures all states

    State-by-State
    MERS Recommended
    Foreclosure Procedures
    Updated 2002
    Corporate Offices
    1818 Library Street, Suite 300
    Reston, VA 20190
    tel (800) 646-6377
    fax (703) 748-0183
    http://www.mersinc.org
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    INTRODUCTION__________________________________________________________3
    RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURES:
    Alabama___________________________________________________________________________8
    Alaska____________________________________________________________________________10
    Arizona___________________________________________________________________________12
    Arkansas__________________________________________________________________________14
    California__________________________________________________________________________16
    Colorado__________________________________________________________________________18
    Connecticut________________________________________________________________________20
    Delaware__________________________________________________________________________22
    District of Columbia_________________________________________________________________24
    Florida____________________________________________________________________________26
    Georgia___________________________________________________________________________28
    Hawaii____________________________________________________________________________30
    Idaho_____________________________________________________________________________32
    Illinois____________________________________________________________________________34
    Indiana____________________________________________________________________________36
    Iowa______________________________________________________________________________38
    Kansas____________________________________________________________________________40
    Kentucky__________________________________________________________________________42
    Louisiana__________________________________________________________________________44
    Maine_____________________________________________________________________________46
    Maryland__________________________________________________________________________48
    Massachusetts______________________________________________________________________50
    Michigan__________________________________________________________________________52
    Minnesota_________________________________________________________________________54
    Mississippi_________________________________________________________________________56
    Missouri___________________________________________________________________________58
    Montana___________________________________________________________________________60
    Nebraska__________________________________________________________________________62
    Nevada___________________________________________________________________________64
    New Hampshire_____________________________________________________________________66
    New Jersey________________________________________________________________________68
    New Mexico_______________________________________________________________________70
    New York_________________________________________________________________________72
    North Carolina______________________________________________________________________74
    North Dakota_______________________________________________________________________76
    Ohio______________________________________________________________________________78
    Oklahoma_________________________________________________________________________80
    Oregon____________________________________________________________________________83
    Pennsylvania_______________________________________________________________________85
    Rhode Island_______________________________________________________________________87
    South Carolina______________________________________________________________________89
    South Dakota_______________________________________________________________________91
    Tennessee_________________________________________________________________________93
    Texas_____________________________________________________________________________95
    Utah______________________________________________________________________________97
    Vermont___________________________________________________________________________99
    Virginia__________________________________________________________________________102
    Washington_______________________________________________________________________104
    West Virginia_____________________________________________________________________106
    Wisconsin________________________________________________________________________108
    Wyoming_________________________________________________________________________110
    Introduction
    MERS has put together this Foreclosure Manual to provide a state by state guideline for our Members to follow when foreclosing a mortgage loan in the name of MERS. Each state’s procedure was developed jointly with local counsel in that respective state. There may be future versions of this Manual if needed. If you have any questions about this Foreclosure Manual, please contact MERS.
    Sharon McGann Horstkamp
    Corporate Counsel
    3
    What is MERS?
    MERS serves two purposes. First, it is a national electronic registry for tracking servicing rights and beneficial ownership interests in mortgage loans. Second, MERS acts as nominee (a form of agent) for the servicer and beneficial owner of a mortgage loan in the public land records. MERS is designed to operate within the existing legal framework in all U.S. jurisdictions and did not require any changes to existing laws.
    How is this made possible? Its members appoint MERS as the mortgagee of record on all loans that they register on the MERS System. This appointment eliminates the need for any future assignments when servicing rights are sold from one MERS Member to another. Instead of preparing a paper assignment to track the change in the county land records, all subsequent transfers are tracked electronically on the MERS System.
    MERS does not create or transfer beneficial interests in mortgage loans or create electronic assignments of the mortgage. What MERS does do is eliminate the need for subsequent recorded assignments altogether. The transfer process of the beneficial ownership of mortgage loans does not change with the arrival of MERS. Promissory notes still require an endorsement and delivery from the current owner to the next owner in order to change the beneficial ownership of a mortgage loan.
    MERS is a Delaware corporation with a broad base of ownership from the mortgage industry. American Land Title Association is among our owners and has a seat on the MERS Board of Directors. Other owners with substantial investments in MERS include the Mortgage Bankers Association of America (MBA), Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac. These parties, along with Ginnie Mae, decided several years ago that MERS would be a major benefit to the mortgage industry and worked together to create the MERS of today.
    How does MERS become the Mortgagee of Record?
    MERS is put in this position in one of two ways: the first is by an assignment from a lender or servicer to MERS. This method is usually associated with bulk transfers of servicing. The second way is with the lender naming MERS as the mortgagee of record as nominee for itself (and its successors and assigns) in the original security instrument at the time the loan is closed. We call this second option “MOM”, which stands for MERS as Original Mortgagee.
    4
    “MOM” was a significant milestone for MERS and the mortgage industry. Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae have each approved the use of MERS as original mortgagee as nominee for a lender on the security instrument for loans sold to them and registered on the MERS System.
    In order to make MOM work, changes were made by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to their uniform security instruments allowing MERS to be named as the mortgagee in a nominee capacity for the lender. First, to reflect the interrelationship of the promissory note and mortgage and to ensure these two instruments are tied together properly, the recital paragraph names MERS, solely as nominee for Lender, as beneficiary. Second, it is made clear that the originating lender rather than MERS is defined as the “Lender”. This change was made so that everyone understands that MERS is not involved in the loan administration process. Third, as mortgagee of record, MERS needs to have the authority to release the lien of security instrument, or if necessary, foreclose on the collateral on behalf of the lender. Such authority is provided by adding a paragraph to the security instrument informing the borrower that MERS holds only legal title to the interests granted by the borrower. It also informs the borrower that, if necessary to comply with law or custom, MERS may exercise the right to foreclose and sell the property and may take any action required of the Lender to release or cancel the security instrument.
    Once MERS is named in the original security instrument or by way of an assignment, the document is then recorded in the appropriate public land records. From this point on, no subsequent assignments of the mortgage to a MERS member needs to be recorded. MERS remains in the land records, as mortgagee, throughout the life of the loan so long as servicing is not sold to a non-MERS member. All subsequent transfers of ownership in mortgage loans and servicing rights for that loan are tracked electronically between MERS members through the MERS System. This process eliminates the opportunity for a break in the chain of title.
    Moreover, unless a MERS member transfers servicing rights to a loan registered on the MERS System to a non-MERS member, the loan stays on the system until it is paid off. The process to transfer servicing rights between MERS members requires an electronic confirmation from the buyer. It begins with the seller entering loan transfer information into the system, including the Mortgage Identification Number (explained below), the new servicer organizational identification number, the sale date, and the transfer effective date. The buyer then must submit a confirmation acknowledgment to the system. The old servicer and the new servicer are still required to notify the homeowner in writing when loan servicing is traded as required under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), 12 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq. A loan is de-registered from the system only if its servicing rights to a loan are transferred to a non-MERS member.
    With every new loan that is registered on the MERS System, it becomes more likely that you will come in contact with a mortgage loan having MERS as the mortgage holder in the chain of title. MERS is put in this position in one of two ways: the first is by an assignment from a lender or servicer to MERS. This method is usually associated with bulk transfers of servicing. The second way is with the lender naming MERS as the mortgagee of record as
    5
    nominee for itself (and its successors and assigns) in the original security instrument at the time the loan is closed. We call this second option “MOM”, which stands for MERS as Original Mortgagee.
    “MOM” was a significant milestone for MERS and the mortgage industry. Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae have each approved the use of MERS as original mortgagee as nominee for a lender on the security instrument for loans sold to them and registered on the MERS System.
    In order to make MOM work, changes were made by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to their uniform security instruments allowing MERS to be named as the mortgagee in a nominee capacity for the lender. First, to reflect the interrelationship of the promissory note and mortgage and to ensure these two instruments are tied together properly, the recital paragraph names MERS, solely as nominee for Lender, as beneficiary. Second, it is made clear that the originating lender rather than MERS is defined as the “Lender”. This change was made so that everyone understands that MERS is not involved in the loan administration process. Third, as mortgagee of record, MERS needs to have the authority to release the lien of security instrument, or if necessary, foreclose on the collateral on behalf of the lender. Such authority is provided by adding a paragraph to the security instrument informing the borrower that MERS holds only legal title to the interests granted by the borrower. It also informs the borrower that, if necessary to comply with law or custom, MERS may exercise the right to foreclose and sell the property and may take any action required of the Lender to release or cancel the security instrument.
    Once MERS is named in the original security instrument or by way of an assignment, the document is then recorded in the appropriate public land records. From this point on, no subsequent assignments of the mortgage to a MERS member needs to be recorded. MERS remains in the land records, as mortgagee, throughout the life of the loan so long as servicing is not sold to a non-MERS member. All subsequent transfers of ownership in mortgage loans and servicing rights for that loan are tracked electronically between MERS members through the MERS System. This process eliminates the opportunity for a break in the chain of title.
    Moreover, unless a MERS member transfers servicing rights to a loan registered on the MERS System to a non-MERS member, the loan stays on the system until it is paid off. The process to transfer servicing rights between MERS members requires an electronic confirmation from the buyer. It begins with the seller entering loan transfer information into the system, including the Mortgage Identification Number (explained below), the new servicer organizational identification number, the sale date, and the transfer effective date. The buyer then must submit a confirmation acknowledgment to the system. The old servicer and the new servicer are still required to notify the homeowner in writing when loan servicing is traded as required under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA), 12 U.S.C. § 2601 et seq. A loan is de-registered from the system only if its servicing rights to a loan are transferred to a non-MERS member.
    6
    Why Foreclose in the Name of MERS
    The mortgage establishes the remedy to foreclose and sell the property if the borrower does not pay back the amount loaned to the borrower according to schedule. Typically, the loan servicer, as the mortgagee of record, is the party that initiates the foreclosure proceedings on behalf of the investor. When MERS is the mortgagee of record, the foreclosure can be commenced in the name of MERS in place of the loan servicer. For another entity to foreclose, an assignment is required from MERS to the other entity.
    Establishing MERS as mortgagee of record will not cause any significant changes to current foreclosure practices in any state when the beneficial owner wants to proceed with foreclosures in the name of MERS. Just take a look at the recommended procedures.
    7
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR ALABAMA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are foreclosed non-judicially under power of sale. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. Notice of the foreclosure sale is published with Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) named as the foreclosing entity instead of the servicer.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require the promissory note be endorsed in blank when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. However, we have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the promissory note to the servicer prior to foreclosure. We recommend that the agencies’ policies be followed.
    At the foreclosure sale, the certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If the bid is the highest bid, then the auctioneer will be instructed to deed the property directly to the investor. We have been advised that this is the same procedure followed when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    8
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the auctioneer deed can be issued to the servicer. This way, the eviction can be brought in the name of the servicer. Once the eviction is completed, then the servicer can issue a deed to HUD. Again, you should follow the same procedures you follow when foreclosing in the name of the servicer.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    9
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR ALASKA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are typically used and are foreclosed non-judicially by the power of sale contained therein. MERS local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be done in the name of MERS. Local counsel confirmed with First American Title Insurance Company that with a few minor caveats, foreclosing in the name of MERS should not present any problems.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the substitution of trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies’ policy is that the promissory note is endorsed in blank when the seller/servicer sells the loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have been advised that sometimes the Note is endorsed to the servicer prior to the foreclosure, but unless it is legally required, the Note should remain endorsed in blank. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.
    The trustee, who is typically a title company, commences the foreclosure by executing and recording the Notice of Default. The Notice of Default is filed and published the same way with the same required information except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    10
    entity. At the foreclosure sale, an “offset bid” is entered on behalf of MERS who is acting in the capacity as “agent” for the servicer. Local counsel advises that the Beneficiary’s Declaration of Default can be modified to describe the relationship of MERS and the Servicer. This should enable the servicer, instead of MERS, to be the named grantee of the Trustee’s Deed. The servicer can then issue a deed to the investor. This procedure is consistent with the current two-deed foreclosure practice.
    While initially there may be some hesitation to accept an “offset bid” by the servicer, MERS local counsel states that usually a title company is willing to recognize the substance of who actually owns the loan rather than the form of the record ownership.1 In that instance, if the servicer is successful at the foreclosure sale, the trustee’s deed will be issued directly to the servicer.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the servicer, by being the grantee of the trustee’s deed, is able to commence the eviction. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    1 If the “offset bid” is not accepted, then the trustee’s deed may need to be granted to MERS. If MERS takes title to the property, a subsequent deed should be executed to the investor as soon as possible.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    11
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR ARIZONA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is the deed of trust that gives the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are used and are generally foreclosed non-judicially under a power of sale in the security instrument. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. The Notice of Trustee’s Sale is filed and published the same way it is when foreclosing in the name of the servicer except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity. It is important to note that the same procedures and state requirements that are required when foreclosing in the servicer’s name still must be followed when foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS. The substituted trustee is typically the foreclosing attorney.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mae and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells the loan to them. The note is to remain endorsed in the blank when a servicer commences foreclosure. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    At the trustee sale, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS for the investor. This is the same process that is used today when foreclosing in the servicer’s name. We have been advised that the
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    12
    current foreclosure procedure is a one-deed process with the investor directly taking title from the Trustee’s Deed. Therefore, the MERS recommended procedure is the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. The bid is made on behalf of the investor so that the Trustee’s deed will be issued directly to the investor. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional recording or taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan, then the trustee’s deed is not recorded to the investor until after the eviction is completed. The eviction is conducted the same way it would be conducted if the servicer foreclosures.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    13
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR ARKANSAS
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like a servicer , will be the record mortgage holder. It is the mortgage or deed of trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are used and are generally foreclosed non-judicially under a power of sale in the security instrument. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. The Notice of Default is filed and published the same way it is when foreclosing in the name of the servicer except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS. The substituted trustee is typically the foreclosing attorney.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    At the trustee sale, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. The Trustee’s deed will be issued directly to the assignee of the bid. We have been advised that the current foreclosure procedure is a two-deed process with the servicer taking title and then executing a subsequent deed to the investor. Therefore, the MERS recommended procedure is the same as the current practice of assigning the bid to the servicer. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    14
    forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the servicer, by being the grantee of the trustee’s deed, can commence the eviction. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    15
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR CALIFORNIA
    A deed of trust in which the Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) is named as beneficiary requires special non-judicial foreclosure procedures. MERS was created to avoid the cost and delays caused by assignments of mortgages and deeds of trust. To avoid the need to prepare and record an assignment with the County Recorder’s office, MERS holds title as nominee for the true mortgagee/beneficiary of the mortgage/deed of trust and as transfers occur, they are recorded on the MERS computer in a book entry systems similar to the transfer of stocks.
    The MERS procedure for tracking the ownership of mortgages has a direct effect on the foreclosure process. On MERS loans, MERS is shown as the record beneficiary and therefore a MERS foreclosure is brought in the name of MERS. However, at the time of sale the true beneficiary is determined by MERS and the Trustee’s Deed Upon Sale is recorded in the name of that true beneficiary. There are no assignments, additional taxes or costs when foreclosing under the MERS’ foreclosure procedures.
    To achieve this result, the following non-judicial foreclosure guidelines are recommended:
    On MERS loans, MERS will show as the beneficiary of record. Foreclosures should be commenced in the name of MERS. To effectuate this process, MERS has allowed each servicer to choose a select number of its own employees to act as officers for MERS. Through this process, appropriate documents may be executed at the servicer’s site on behalf of MERS by the same servicing employee that signs foreclosure documents for non-MERS loans.
    Until the time of sale, the foreclosure is handled in same manner as non-MERS foreclosures. At the time of sale, if the property reverts, the Trustee’s Deed Upon Sale will follow a different procedure. Since MERS acts as nominee for the true beneficiary, it is important that the Trustee’s Deed Upon Sale be made in the name of the true beneficiary and not MERS. Your title company or MERS officer can easily determine the true beneficiary. Title companies have indicated that they will insure subsequent title when these procedures are followed.
    Normally, where the name of the grantee under the Trustee’s Deed Upon Sale is different than the name of the foreclosing entity, the Trustee’s Deed Upon Sale states that the “Grantee was not the foreclosing beneficiary.” This designation triggers the imposition of transfer taxes on the sale. It is important to note that in a MERS foreclosure sale, even where the property reverts, the name of the grantee will be different than the name of the entity foreclosing. Nonetheless, the Trustee’s
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    16
    Deed Upon Sale should state that “The Grantee was the foreclosing beneficiary.” This is because MERS merely holds title as nominee for the true beneficiary; it is the true beneficiary that has actually foreclosed and acquired title.
    Finally, should a bankruptcy be filed, servicers should use the same procedures they use for other investor loans. Motions for Relief from Stay should be brought by the real party in interest, namely “Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as record holder and nominee for the true beneficiary _________.” On Proofs of Claim, both the servicer and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. should be jointly named. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    17
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR COLORADO
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.
    (MERS) has been around since 1998. The reason why it works is because when the role
    of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to
    foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It
    is the Deed of Trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose. However, because
    Colorado differs from other states in that the Promissory Note controls, and MERS is not
    the beneficial note holder, we recommend foreclosing in the servicer’s name by
    endorsing the Note to the servicer.
    We are amending our prior recommended Procedure to foreclose in MERS name due to
    recent changes in the Colorado Foreclosure Statute. This revision was developed in
    conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel. The goal of the recommended
    procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions.
    The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are used and are generally foreclosed non-judicially pursuant to a power
    of sale. In Colorado, the deed of trust names a Colorado public trustee rather than a
    private trustee. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of
    MERS. However, because the endorsement on the Note controls, and MERS holds the
    mortgage lien on behalf of the Note Holder, it is a better practice to foreclose in the Note
    Holder’s name. That may be the servicer of the loan.. This does not impact MERS
    position as the mortgagee and no assignment from MERS to the servicer is necessary to initiate the foreclosure and the mortgage loan should remain registered on the MERS® System.
    Keep in mind that the agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a
    blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage
    loan to them. However, in Colorado, the requirement is that the promissory note
    needs to be endorsed to the foreclosing entity, which is usually the servicer. Therefore, the note should be endorsed to servicer.
    This switch in our recommendation is also predicated on the change in the Colorado Foreclosure Statute that now allows for a copy of the Note rather than the original
    Note to be produced together with a Certificate that can be filed by certain entities of which MERS does not fit into in its current corporate structure. The certificate states
    that the foreclosing entity is the owner of the Note/debt and is a qualified entity
    under the Statute to use a copy of the Note. Please consult with your own counselon
    how this change impacts your current foreclose procedure.
    Version 2.0 18
    December 2002
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the
    name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of
    MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all
    trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief
    from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the
    servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    MERS Local Counsel:
    Caren Castle, Esq.
    Castle & Castle, P.C.
    Denver Place Plaza Tower
    1099 18th Street, Suite 2300
    Denver, CO 80202
    Tel: (303) 299-1800
    Fax: (303) 299-1808
    Version 2.0 19
    December 2002
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR CONNECTICUT
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. When the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that the authority is given to MERS to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially either by strict foreclosure or by a power of sale. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. It up to the judge to decide which method will be used. The caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS unless it is legally required to be endorsed to the foreclosing entity, and not just the preferred method.3 If it is required to endorse the promissory note to the foreclosing entity, then the note may need to be endorsed to MERS.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    20
    3 Local Counsel advises us that certain judges take the position that the note and mortgage must be held by the same entity. This is typically considered to be the servicer because if the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of having the servicer’s employees be certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan.
    same individual that signs the documents today for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    In a strict foreclosure, once the Judgement of Strict Foreclosure is entered, and the applicable redemption period has expired, a certificate of Foreclosure is filed on the land records that will reflect MERS as the property owner. MERS should remain in the land records for as short a time as possible. A subsequent deed should be prepared from MERS to the investor.4 Alternatively, at the time of the entering of the judgment, if an assignment of judgment is executed by MERS, judgment could automatically be entered into the investor’s name.
    In a foreclosure by sale, a motion should be submitted to the judge requesting the judge that the servicer be allowed to bid at the auction. If it is the highest bid, then after approval of the sale by the Court, a closing will be scheduled whereby title should vest in the servicer.5
    Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name for the investor, no additional taxes or recording fees are incurred.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the title holder. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the name of the title holder. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    4 Some Connecticut Revenue Officers have taken the position that a state conveyance tax is due on the subsequent deed from the servicer to the investor. MERS local counsel is currently appealing this issue.
    5 If a judge will not allow the servicer to “credit” bid, then a bid may be entered on behalf of MERS. Title will then vest with MERS momentarily until the deed to the investor is executed and recorded.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    21
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR DELAWARE
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is the mortgage that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. The same procedures and requirements that are followed when foreclosing in the name of the servicer are still followed when foreclosing in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. The major difference is that the caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.6
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS unless it is legally required to be endorsed to the foreclosing entity and not just the preferred method.7
    6 Even though the servicer has physical custody of the note, custom in the mortgage industry is that the investor (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae or a private investor) owns the beneficial rights to the promissory note.
    7 If the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of having the servicer’s employees be certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    22
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a judgment to MERS is entered, a sheriff’s sale is held. The certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If it is the successful bid, the sheriff will be instructed to execute a deed directly to the investor. This is the same method that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name. The sheriff then issues a sheriff’s deed directly to the investor. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional recording or taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    23
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is the deed of trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are foreclosed non-judicially. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. The Notice of Sale is sent, filed and published the same way it is when foreclosing in the name of the servicer with the same required information except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. This is the same requirement when foreclosing a loan in the name of the servicer. We have found that it is not legally required to have the note endorsed to MERS prior to the foreclosure.
    At the trustee sale, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If the bid is the highest bid, then an unrecorded assignment of the deed of trust to the investor is given to the trustee prior to the sale. This assignment allows the Trustee’s Deed to be issued directly to the investor. We have been advised that this is the procedure used when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same Version 1.1
    November 1999
    24
    procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the eviction can be brought in the name of MERS. At this point, MERS holds only equitable title. Once the eviction is completed, then the investor can be substituted in as the party to receive the Trustee’s Deed. Again, the same procedures should be followed as you do when foreclosing in the name of the servicer.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    25
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR FLORIDA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the mortgagee of record. It is the mortgage that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. When MERS has been assigned the mortgage, the caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. However, this changes slightly if MERS is the original mortgagee of record, meaning that MERS is named on the mortgage in a nominee capacity for the originating lender. The caption should then state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for [insert name of the current servicer]. The key is how MERS is named as the mortgagee of record.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will be the ultimate owner of the note.8
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced unless it is legally required to be endorsed to the foreclosing entity and not just the preferred method. If it is required to endorse the promissory note to the foreclosing entity, then the note may need to be endorsed to MERS. However, we have not found it a requirement in Florida that the Note needs to be endorsed to the foreclosing entity.9
    8 Even though the servicer has physical custody of the note, custom in the mortgage industry is that the investor (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae or a private investor) owns the beneficial rights to the promissory note.
    9 If the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of Version 1.1
    November 1999
    26
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution from MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a foreclosure judgment to MERS is entered, a public sale is held. The Plaintiff (MERS) has the option of assigning the foreclosure bid either prior to the foreclosure sale or in the ten (10) day period between the sale and the issuance of the Certificate of Title. The assignment is done with a motion filed with the court, and a court order is entered. If the bid is assigned, the certificate of title is issued directly to the assignee. This is the same method that is used when the servicer forecloses in its own name. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer foreclosures in its name, no additional recording or transfer taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, then proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    having the servicer’s employees be certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    27
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR GEORGIA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Security Deeds are used and are generally foreclosed non-judicially pursuant to a power of sale. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. It is important to note that the same procedures and state requirements that are required to be followed when foreclosing in the servicer’s name still must be followed when foreclosing in the name of MERS. The foreclosure proceeding is commenced by advertising the foreclosure in the official county newspaper once a week for four consecutive weeks prior to the date of the foreclosure sale. A notice is mailed to the debtor’s residence at least 15 days prior to the sale date. You will continue to do everything that you normally do when foreclosing a mortgage in the servicer’s name. The only difference is that the foreclosing entity is Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution from MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents today for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    At the sale, the certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney to enter a bid on behalf of the servicer. This is the same process that is used today when
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    28
    foreclosing in the servicer’s name. If it is the successful bid, then the attorney will be instructed to execute the deed under power directly to the servicer. We have been advised that the current foreclosure procedure is a two-deed process with the servicer taking title and then executing a special warranty deed to the investor. Therefore, the MERS recommended procedure would conform to the current practice. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional recording or transfer taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. The servicer is issued the deed under power and therefore commences the eviction in the servicer’s name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    29
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR HAWAII
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of MERS is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially10. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. The same procedures and state requirements that are followed when foreclosing in the name of the servicer are still followed when foreclosing in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. The major difference is that the caption of the complaint will state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. in place of the servicer’s name.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. A secondary market investor will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution from MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    10 Freddie Mac has initiated a non-judicial program in Hawaii effective January 1, 1998.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    30
    After a foreclosure judgment to MERS is entered, a public auction is held. A bid is entered on behalf of MERS, and if the successful bid, then the Commissioner will be instructed that MERS has selected a nominee to be the ultimate purchaser of the property. (The nominee can be the servicer or the investor).
    After the hearing to confirm the sale and the confirmation order, a deed is executed directly to the nominee. This is the same method that is used today when the servicer forecloses in its name. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional recording fees or taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS. A conveyance tax and recording fee is paid on the transfer of the property from the commissioner to the nominee of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure had been filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of MERS and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    31
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR IDAHO
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Trust Deeds are used and are generally foreclosed non-judicially pursuant to a power of sale. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. It is important to note that the same procedures and requirements that are followed when foreclosing in the servicer’s name must still be followed when foreclosing in the name of MERS. The Trustee must still file and record the Notice of Default and provide the grantor with a Notice of Sale. The Notice of Sale is published the same way is it when foreclosing in the name of the servicer except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. The note should remain endorsed in blank when the servicer commences foreclosure. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have not found that it is legally required that the note be endorsed to the foreclosing entity.
    At the trustee sale, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If it is the highest bid, then the trustee will be instructed by an instruction letter to execute the Trustee’s Deed directly to the
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    32
    investor. We have been advised that the current foreclosure procedure is a one-deed process with the trustee executing the Trustee’s Deed directly to the investor. The MERS recommended procedure is the same procedure followed when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. Therefore, no additional recording or transfer taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan, then the Trustee’s Deed may be issued to the servicer in order for the servicer to commence the eviction. Another option may be that the trustee’s deed is not recorded to the investor until after the eviction is completed. The eviction should be conducted the same way it would be conducted if the servicer commenced the foreclosure.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    33
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR ILLINOIS
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. The caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer.
    MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.11
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS unless it is legally required to be endorsed to the foreclosing entity and not just the preferred method. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to foreclosure. However, we recommend the agencies’ policies be followed.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying
    11 If the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of having its employees become certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    34
    officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a judgment to MERS is entered and the applicable redemption period expires, a foreclosure sale is held. A bid is entered on behalf of MERS, and if the successful bid, then the Certificate of Sale would be assigned to the investor. This assignment is not normally recorded. A confirmation hearing will be held confirming the sale. This is the same method that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name for the investor. After the entry of the Order of Confirmation, the holder of the Certificate of Sale is entitled to a deed. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the deed is not recorded until after the eviction is completed. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of MERS and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    35
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR INDIANA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is the mortgage or deed of trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. When MERS has been assigned the mortgage, the caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. However, this changes slightly if MERS is the original mortgagee of record, meaning that MERS is named on the mortgage in a nominee capacity for the originating lender. The caption should then state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for [insert name of the current servicer]. The key is how MERS is named as the mortgagee of record.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note.12 An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to foreclosure. However, we recommend that the agencies’ policies be followed.
    12 If the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of having its employees become certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    36
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution from MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a foreclosure judgment to MERS is entered, MERS will assign the judgment and the right to bid to the servicer. This assignment of the judgment is filed with the Clerk of the Court in which the judgment is pending. A sheriff’s sale is scheduled as a result of the filing of a praecipe for sale. The servicer will enter a bid as the bid assignee and if the highest bidder, the Return of Sale will reflect this. The assignment of the judgment allows the servicer to bid so that title can be taken directly by the servicer. The servicer can then convey a subsequent deed to the investor. Because the MERS recommended procedure closely follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional transfer taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. Because the foreclosure judgment is assigned to the servicer, the eviction can be brought in the name of the servicer.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of MERS and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    37
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR IOWA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is the mortgage or deed of trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Generally, mortgages are used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. The caption of the petition of foreclosure should name Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) as the plaintiff. The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement when a seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to foreclosure. However, we recommend that the agencies’ policies be followed.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the substitution of trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After the foreclosure judgment to MERS is entered, there is a sheriff’s foreclosure sale. At the sale, a bid would be entered on behalf of MERS, and if the bid is successful, MERS will receive a certificate of purchase which it will assign to the
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    38
    servicer or the investor.13 The sheriff’s deed is then issued directly to the servicer or investor. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the procedures used when foreclosing in the name of the servicer, no additional transfer taxes are incurred.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    13 On a foreclosure without the right of redemption, there is no Certificate of Purchase issued. Instead, the foreclosure judgment should be assigned to the servicer or investor. To whom the judgment is issued will depend upon the instructions given from the servicer or investor. If the judgment is not assigned from MERS, this may cause title to be issued directly to MERS if a bid is entered on the behalf of MERS at the sheriff’s sale. If title is then subsequently passed to a private investor, revenue stamps may be incurred.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    39
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR KANSAS
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. The caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require that the promissory note be endorsed in blank when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS unless it is legally required to be endorsed to the foreclosing entity and not just the preferred method. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to the foreclosure. However, we recommend that the agencies’ requirements be followed.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a judgment to MERS is entered, and the district court issues an order of sale, a notice of the sheriff’s sale is published and a sale is then held. The certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney as to the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. Version 1.1
    November 1999
    40
    If the successful bid, the sheriff will issue a certificate of purchase to MERS. This certificate will then be assigned from MERS to the investor. This is the same method that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name. After the applicable redemption period, a deed will be issued directly to the investor. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    41
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR KENTUCKY
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. The caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to foreclosure. However, we recommend that the agencies’ policies be followed.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a judgment to MERS is entered, a foreclosure sale is held. The certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If it is the successful bid, it will be assigned to the investor by simple documentation that is signed by the foreclosing attorney. The bid assignment does
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    42
    not need to be recorded. This is the same method that is used today when the servicer forecloses in its name.
    The Motion to Confirm the sale is filed, and after the sale is confirmed, a deed will be prepared by the Master Commissioner to the investor. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional recording fees or transfer taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    43
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR LOUISIANA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are employed in Louisiana in real estate transactions and must be foreclosed judicially, usually by a proceeding known as “Executory Process.” MERS local counsel advises that Louisiana law does not prohibit a loan from being foreclosed in the name of MERS.14 When MERS has been assigned the mortgage, the caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. However, this changes slightly if MERS is the original mortgagee of record, meaning that MERS is named on the mortgage in a nominee capacity for the originating lender, its successors and assigns. The caption should then state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for [insert name of the current servicer]. The key is how MERS becomes the mortgage holder.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.15
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them.16 Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. However, it seems to be the standard practice that the blank endorsement is cancelled and the note is endorsed to the servicer to
    14 Please Note: Fannie Mae’s foreclosure regulations require an assignment from MERS to Fannie Mae in the Parish of Orleans. This means that Fannie Mae will be the foreclosing entity. This is the same requirement that exists when the servicer is the record mortgage holder.
    15 Even though the servicer has physical custody of the note, custom in the mortgage industry is that the investor (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae or a private investor) owns the beneficial rights to the promissory note.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    44
    possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan.
    foreclose. If it is required to endorse the promissory note to the foreclosing entity, then the note may need to be endorsed to MERS.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After the Petition is filed and the judge signs an order of executory process, the writ of seizure and sale is issued by the clerk and is served by the sheriff upon the mortgagor. After the foreclosure is published for the required amount of time, a sheriff’s sale is held. The certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney as to the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If it is the successful bid, then the sheriff will issue a deed to MERS. MERS will then issue a subsequent deed to the investor.17 This is the same method that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    17 If the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of having the servicer’s employees be certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of
    17 MERS should remain as the titleholder for as short of time as possible.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    45
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR MAINE
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS.18 The caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.19
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to the foreclosure. However, we recommend adhering to the agencies’ policies.
    18 We have been advised that the named plaintiff in the foreclosure action should be both the record holder of the mortgage and the holder of the promissory note. This is typically considered to be the servicer because if the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of having the servicer’s employees be certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan.
    19 Even though the servicer has physical custody of the note, custom in the mortgage industry is that the investor (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae or a private investor) owns the beneficial rights to the promissory note.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    46
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a judgment to MERS is entered and the redemption period has expired, a public auction is held. The certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney as to the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If the successful bid, then MERS will assign its bid and any deficiency judgment to the investor. This is the same method that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name. The foreclosure deed will issue directly to the investor. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    47
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR MARYLAND
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the mortgagee of record. It is through the deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are foreclosed non-judicially. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. The foreclosure is filed and placed on the docket of the applicable circuit court with the same required information except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be the named as the foreclosing entity instead of the servicer.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. However, we have been advised that there is sometimes an endorsement to the servicer in order to foreclose. We have not found this to be a legal requirement, and therefore, the agencies’ policies should be followed.
    At the trustee sale, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If the bid is the highest bid, then before ratification, a motion to substitute interests will be filed so that the deed is issued directly to the investor. We have been advised that this is the procedure used when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    48
    same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the servicer can be substituted as the interested party. This way, the eviction can be brought in the name of the servicer. Once the eviction is completed, then the servicer can issue a deed to HUD. Again, you should follow the same procedures you follow when foreclosing in the name of the servicer.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    49
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR MASSACHUSETTS
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is the mortgage or deed of trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are used and are foreclosed using the mortgage power of sale together with a Land Court Judgment. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents on behalf of the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have been advised that sometimes the Note is endorsed to the servicer prior to the foreclosure. However, we recommend that the agencies’ policies be followed.
    MERS stands in the same position as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.20
    At the foreclosure auction, MERS can waive the requirement of a deposit as to the investor. This way, the servicer can enter a bid on behalf of the investor without the
    20 Even though the servicer has physical custody of the note, custom in the mortgage industry is that the investor (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae or a private investor) owns the beneficial rights of the promissory note.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    50
    investor needing to produce any funds. If it is the highest bid, the foreclosure deed can be issued directly to the investor. We have been advised that this procedure is the same procedure used when Freddie Mac or Ginnie Mae are the investors. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    51
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR MICHIGAN
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are foreclosed non-judicially usually by a power of sale contained in the mortgage. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. The foreclosure is advertised by publishing the notice for four (4) consecutive weeks. The attorney should follow the same procedure followed when foreclosing in the name of the servicer except that the foreclosing entity is Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS).
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. The endorsement is to remain in blank even if the servicer commences foreclosure. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. However, we have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the promissory notes to the servicer to foreclose. However, we recommend that the agencies’ policies be followed. We have not found an endorsement to the foreclosure entity to be a legal requirement, and therefore, the note should not be endorsed to MERS prior to the foreclosure.
    At the auction, the certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If the bid is the highest bid, then a deed may be issued to MERS. However, when the role of MERS, the servicer and the
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    52
    investor is explained and understood, the servicer may be allowed to bid on its own behalf without having to produce any funds at the sale. This would be the preferred method to use if at all possible. This way, the deed is executed directly to the servicer. If this is not possible, and MERS must take title, then title should be held by MERS for as short of time as possible. A subsequent deed from MERS to the investor should be executed immediately so that MERS remains in the chain of title only for an instant. We have been advised that the current practice used when foreclosing in the name of the servicer, is for the servicer to take title and then execute a subsequent deed to the investor. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    53
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR MINNESOTA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is the mortgage or deed of trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are used and are typically foreclosed non-judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the power of attorney to foreclose the mortgage, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that currently sign the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to foreclosure. However, we recommend that the agencies’ policies be followed.
    At the foreclosure sale, the certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney to enter a bid on behalf of MERS. A sheriff’s certificate is issued to the highest bidder. If MERS is the highest bidder, then the Sheriff’s certificate will be issued to MERS. The sheriff’s certificate operates as the conveyance of title. The certificate is executed and recorded during the redemption period. At the end of the redemption period, a deed will be issued from MERS to the investor.21 However, not every
    21 During the redemption period, MERS will be considered to be titleholder. However, at the end of the redemption period, a deed to the investor should be executed as soon as possible so that MERS remains in the chain of title for as short a time as possible.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    54
    foreclosure counsel follows this procedure currently when foreclosing mortgage loans in the name of the servicer. If your current practice is to assign the sheriff’s certificate to the investor, then this is also an acceptable option.22
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the eviction can be brought in the name of MERS if MERS is the sheriff’s certificate holder. However, if you use the option of assigning the sheriff’s certificate, then the certificate is assigned to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    22 The difference between the two options is that some counsels prefer a one-deed process implementing an assignment of the sheriff’s certificate to the investor. Other counsels use a two-deed process with the servicer first taking title, and then executing a subsequent deed to the investor. Counsel should continue to follow the instructions given to them by the servicer of the mortgage loan.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    55
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR MISSISSIPPI
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are foreclosed non-judicially. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. The foreclosure is advertised with the same required information except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity instead of the servicer.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Deed of Appointment substituting Trustees, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents on behalf of the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have been advised that sometimes there is a blank note endorsement to the servicer prior to foreclosure. We have not found this to be a legal requirement, and therefore, the note should not be endorsed to MERS prior to the foreclosure.
    At the trustee sale, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If the bid is the highest bid, then MERS can assign the bid to the investor. This assignment is simply a paragraph incorporated in the substitution of trustee document authorizing the substituted trustee to convey the property directly to the investor in the Substituted Trustee’s Deed. We have been
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    56
    advised that this procedure is the same procedure used when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the servicer can be assigned the bid. This way, the eviction can be brought in the name of the servicer. Once the eviction is completed, then the servicer can issue a deed to HUD. Again, you should follow the same procedures you follow when foreclosing in the name of the servicer.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of MERS and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    57
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR MISSOURI
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are foreclosed non-judicially under a power of sale. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. A notice of sale is published and the borrower is notified along with all parties entitled to notice under state laws. A sale is then held. The same requirements continue to be followed except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity instead of the servicer.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require that the promissory note be endorsed in blank when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to the foreclosure. However, we recommend that the agencies’ requirements be followed.
    At the trustee sale, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee by a written bid letter that the bid is being assigned to the investor and that title should vest with the investor. We have been advised that this procedure is the same procedure used when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. Therefore, no additional fees are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    58
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the servicer can be the assignee of the bid. This way, the eviction can be brought in the name of the servicer. Once the eviction is completed, then the servicer can issue a deed to HUD. Again, you should follow the same procedures you follow when foreclosing in the name of the servicer.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    59
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR MONTANA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are foreclosed non-judicially. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. The Notice of Sale includes the same required information as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity instead of the servicer. The Notice of Sale is recorded in the county where the property is located and is published in a newspaper of general circulation.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents on behalf of the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells the loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    At the trustee sale, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If the bid is the highest bid, then a trustee’s deed will be issued to MERS. Title should only remain with MERS for as short of time as possible. A certifying officer of MERS will subsequently execute a Grant Deed to the investor. We have been advised that this procedure is the same procedure used when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. Because the MERS recommended
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    60
    procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    61
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR NEBRASKA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    If a mortgage is used, it is foreclosed judicially. If a deed of trust is used, it can be foreclosed non-judicially under power of sale. Regardless of the type of security instrument used, MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS.
    In a judicial foreclosure, when MERS has been assigned the mortgage, the caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. However, this changes slightly if MERS is the original mortgagee of record, meaning that MERS is named on the mortgage in a nominee capacity for the originating lender. The caption should then state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for [insert name of the current servicer].23 The key is how MERS is named as the mortgagee of record.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. However, it is advised that a paragraph be inserted that explains that the servicer is the entity that is servicing the loan. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.
    In a non-judicial foreclosure, a notice of default is filed and recorded with the register of deeds in the county in which the property is located. The same procedures that are followed when foreclosing in the name of the servicer should continue to be followed except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. will be named as the foreclosing entity.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    62
    23 We have been advised that the named plaintiff in the foreclosure action should be both the record holder of the mortgage and the owner and holder of the promissory note. This is typically considered to be the servicer because if the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of having its employees become certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan. Therefore, MERS is both the mortgage holder and the note holder as nominee for the current servicer.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS unless it is legally required to be endorsed to the foreclosing entity and not just the preferred method.24
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents today on behalf of the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a judgment to MERS is entered in a judicial foreclosure, a foreclosure sale is held. The certifying officer enters a bid on behalf of MERS. If it is the successful bid, then the bid will be assigned to the investor. The sheriff’s deed will be issued directly to the investor. This is the same method that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name. Because the MERS recommended procedure is the same as when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commenced the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of MERS and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship between MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    24 Even though the servicer has physical custody of the note, custom in the mortgage industry is that the investor (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae or a private investor) owns the beneficial rights to the promissory note.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    63
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR NEVADA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is the deed of trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are used and are generally foreclosed non-judicially pursuant to a power of sale. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. It is important to note that the same procedures and state requirements that are required to be followed when foreclosing in the servicer’s name must still be followed when foreclosing in the name of MERS. The Trustee must still record the Notice of Default and Election to Sell the Property. After the expiration of the three-month period, the Notice of Trustee’s Sale is filed and published the same way it is when foreclosing in the name of the servicer except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS. The substituted trustee is typically the foreclosing attorney.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. The note should remain endorsed in blank when the servicer commences the foreclosure. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    At the trustee sale, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS for the investor. This is the same process that is used
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    64
    when foreclosing in the servicer’s name. If it is the successful bid, then the trustee will be instructed to execute the Trustee’s Deed directly to the investor. Therefore, the MERS recommended procedure is the same as the current practice of bidding on behalf of the investor so that the Trustee’s Deed is issued directly to the investor. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional recording or transfer taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS. Furthermore, there will not be a transfer tax when the trustee’s deed is issued directly to Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, VA or HUD.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan, then the deed is not recorded to the investor until after the eviction is completed. The eviction is conducted the same way it is conducted when the foreclosure is brought in the name of the servicer.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    65
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR NEW HAMPSHIRE
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be record mortgage holder. It is the mortgage or deed of trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are used and are generally foreclosed non-judicially under a power of sale in the security instrument. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS.25 The Notice of Sales must be published with all required information except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity instead of the servicer.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies’ (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    At the foreclosure auction, the certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If the bid is the highest bid, MERS will assign the bid to the investor so that the foreclosure deed is issued directly to the investor. We have been advised that the current foreclosure procedure is a one-deed process with the investor taking title. Therefore, the MERS
    25 Please Note: Fannie Mae’s foreclosure regulations require an assignment from MERS to Fannie Mae in New Hampshire. This means that Fannie Mae will be the foreclosing entity. This is the same requirement that exists when the servicer is the record mortgage holder.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    66
    recommended procedure is same the as the current practice with an assignment of the bid to the investor. Therefore, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS in place of the servicer.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the servicer may be assigned the bid so that the servicer is the grantee of the foreclosure deed. This way, the servicer is able to commence the eviction. The servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name. After the eviction is completed, the servicer will then issue a deed to HUD.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    67
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR NEW JERSEY
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. When MERS has been assigned the mortgage, the caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. However, this changes slightly if MERS is the original mortgagee of record, meaning that MERS is named on the mortgage in a nominee capacity for the originating lender. The caption should then state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for [insert name of the current servicer]. The key is how MERS become the mortgage holder.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.26
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to the foreclosure. However, we recommend following the agencies’ policies.
    26 If the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of having the servicer’s employees be certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    68
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a judgment to MERS is entered, a sheriff’s sale is held. The certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney as to the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If it is the highest bid, then the sheriff would be instructed that MERS has assigned its bid to the investor. This is the same method that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name. The sheriff would issue a sheriff’s deed directly to the investor. Local counsel advises that only VA and HUD are exempt from transfer taxes on the sheriff’s deed. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    69
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR NEW MEXICO
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is the mortgage or deed of trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. When MERS has been assigned the mortgage, the caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. However, this changes slightly if MERS is the original mortgagee of record, meaning that MERS is named on the mortgage in a nominee capacity for the originating lender. The caption should then state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for [insert name of the current servicer]. The key is how MERS is named as the mortgagee of record.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same position as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.27
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.28 We have not found it to be a requirement in New Mexico that the Note be endorsed to the foreclosing entity.
    27 Even though the servicer has physical custody of the note, custom in the mortgage industry is that the investor (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae or a private investor) owns the beneficial rights of the promissory note.
    28 If the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of having the servicer’s employees be certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    70
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution from MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a foreclosure judgment to MERS is entered, a Notice of Sale is published. The certifying officer will instruct the attorney regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. After the sale, a Report of Special Master is filed and an Order approving Sale and Special Master’s Report is filed. If MERS bid is the highest bid, then the Special Master’s Deed is recorded conveying the title to MERS. The title should only be held by MERS momentarily. A second deed should be prepared as soon as possible conveying the property from MERS to the investor. This is the same method that is used when the servicer forecloses in its own name. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional recording or transfer taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of MERS and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    71
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR NEW YORK
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is the mortgage or deed of trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. When MERS has been assigned the mortgage, the caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. However, this changes slightly if MERS is the original mortgagee of record, meaning that MERS is named on the mortgage in a nominee capacity for the originating lender, its successors and assigns. In that case, the caption should then state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for [insert name of the current servicer]. The key is how did MERS become the mortgagee of record.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to foreclosure. However, we recommend that the agencies’ policies be followed.
    Employees of the servicer will be authorized to sign any necessary documents as a certifying officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. This typically will be the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer, but now will be signing as an officer of MERS.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    72
    A foreclosure judgment to MERS would be entered. At the foreclosure sale the certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If it is the successful bid, MERS will assign the bid to the investor. The assignment of the bid is a simple one-sentence reference that is submitted to the referee that states MERS assigns the bid to investor. The referee’s deed would be directly issued to the investor. This is the same method that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is for the servicer so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    73
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR NORTH CAROLINA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are foreclosed non-judicially under power of sale. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. Notices are sent to all interested parties, and a hearing is scheduled with the Clerk of Superior Court. The same process followed when foreclosing in the name of the servicer continues to be followed except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity instead of the servicer.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents on behalf of the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. However, we have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to the commencement of the foreclosure. We have not found this to be a legal requirement, and therefore, the agencies’ requirements should be followed.
    At the trustee sale, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If the bid is the highest bid, then MERS will assign its bid to the investor. We have been advised that this procedure is the same Version 1.1
    November 1999
    74
    procedure followed when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. Because it is the same procedure, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid can be assigned to the servicer. This way, the eviction can be brought in the name of the servicer. Once the eviction is completed, then the servicer can issue a deed to HUD. Again, you should follow the same procedures you follow when foreclosing in the name of the servicer.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship between MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    75
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR NORTH DAKOTA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through this instrument that the authority is given to MERS to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS.29 When MERS has been assigned the mortgage, the caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. However, this changes slightly if MERS is the original mortgagee of record, meaning that MERS is named on the mortgage in a nominee capacity for the originating lender. The caption should then state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for [insert name of the current servicer]. The key is how MERS is named as the mortgagee of record.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. However, it is advised that a paragraph be inserted that explains that the servicer is the entity that is servicing the loan. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.30
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to
    29 We have been advised that the named plaintiff in the foreclosure action should be both the record holder of the mortgage and the holder of the promissory note. This is typically considered to be the servicer because if the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of having the servicer’s employees be certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    76
    30 Even though the servicer has physical custody of the note, custom in the mortgage industry is that the investor (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae or a private investor) owns the beneficial rights to the promissory note.
    them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS unless it is legally required to be endorsed to the foreclosing entity and not just the preferred method. If it is required to endorse the promissory note to the foreclosing entity, then the note may need to be endorsed to MERS. However, we have not found it a requirement in North Dakota that the Note be endorsed to the foreclosing entity.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents today on behalf of the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a judgment to MERS is entered, a sheriff’s sale is held. A bid is entered on behalf of MERS, and if the successful bid, then the certificate of sale can be issued to MERS. At the sale, only the party who conducted the foreclosure is entitled to “credit.” At this point, one of two options can be followed. One is to assign the certificate of sale to the servicer or the investor. This way, the sheriff’s deed will be issued directly to the assignee. The other is the sheriff’s deed can be issued to MERS, and a Grant Deed will be subsequently issued to the investor. The latter option is the same method that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is for the servicer so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    77
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR OHIO
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. The caption should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to foreclosure. However, we recommend that the agencies’ policies be followed.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a judgment to MERS is entered, a sheriff’s sale is held. The certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney as to the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If it is the successful bid, then MERS will assign its bid to the investor. The deed will then be issued directly to the investor. This is the same method that is used
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    78
    when the servicer forecloses in its name. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer foreclosures in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    79
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR OKLAHOMA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS, so long as MERS is the record mortgage holder and the holder of the promissory note (even if not the beneficial owner of the promissory note). The caption should reflect Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note.31 An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the beneficial owner of the promissory note.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them.32 Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. However, we have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to foreclosure. However, we recommend that the agencies’ policies be followed.
    31 Even though the servicer has physical custody of the note, custom in the mortgage industry is that the investor (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae or a private investor) owns the beneficial rights to the promissory note.
    32 If the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of having the servicer’s employees be certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    80
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a judgment to MERS is entered, a Special Execution and Order of Sale is issued. The party instituting a foreclosure action must send a notice of the sheriff’s sale date to the borrower and all other persons that have a recorded interest or other known interest in the property that will be extinguished by the sale. This would include any junior lienholders, current owners or tenants and the holders of any other encumbrances on the property. The notice must be executed by the county sheriff and must contain a legal description of the property, as well as the date, time and place of sale. This notice must be sent at least 10 days prior to the date of sale. The attorney for the foreclosing party must execute and file an affidavit of compliance with these notice rules.
    In addition, the party instituting a foreclosure action must publish notice of public sale for two successive weeks in the newspaper of the county in which the property is situated. The notice must also be executed by the sheriff and must state the names of persons having an interest in the property that will be extinguished by the sale. If the county does not have a newspaper, then a notice must be published on the court house, in 5 other public places in the county, as well as in any general circulation paper distributed in the county. If the county has a population of 110,000 as of the latest federal census, then the notice of sale must be published in a newspaper in the city or township in which the property is situated, or if no such paper exists, then the notice must be published in some newspaper published in the county. Okla. Stat. Tit. 12, section 764 (1995).
    The sale is conducted by the county sheriff and must be held not less than 30 days after the date of the first publication or posting of the sale notice. Okla. Stat. Tit. 12, section 764 (1995). The sale is conducted through a public auction and the property is awarded to the highest bidder.
    The certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney to enter a bid on behalf of MERS. If it is the highest bid, then in the motion to confirm sale, MERS will request that the sheriff’s deed be issued to the investor. Upon the entering of the order confirming sale, the sheriff’s deed will be executed in favor of the investor. The MERS recommended procedures do not cause any additional taxes to be incurred.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of MERS and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    81
    disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    82
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR OREGON
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is the mortgage or deed of trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are used and are foreclosed non-judicially by conferring a power of sale on the trustee in the event of default by the borrower. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the substitution of trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The only change to the foreclosure procedure is to name Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. in the foreclosure notices as the beneficiary instead of to name the servicer. At the trustee’s sale, a bid will be entered on behalf of MERS. The bid is entered the same way it is entered for the servicer when foreclosing in the servicer’s name. If the bid is the highest bid, then the trustee’s deed can be issued directly to the investor. The Trustee’s deed will identify the investor as the grantee under the trustee’s deed and will recite that MERS, as nominee, successfully bid for the property at the trustee’s sale. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    83
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    84
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR PENNSYLVANIA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer or the investor to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. The caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer or investor. A paragraph should be added that MERS, is or will be, the owner of legal title to the mortgage that is the subject of this action, and nominee for the [insert name of investor, or name of current servicer, if investor is Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac], which is the owner of the entire beneficial interest in the mortgage.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to foreclosure. However, we recommend that the agencies’ policies be followed.
    After the foreclosure judgment is entered in favor of MERS, the sheriff’s sale is scheduled. The servicer provides bidding instructions to the foreclosure attorney. After the sale, assuming that the foreclosure attorney was the successful bidder, the
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    85
    attorney instructs the sheriff, in writing, to assign the bid to the investor and to name the investor as grantee on the sheriff’s deed.33
    The name of MERS must not appear on any post-sale documents, including sheriff’s deeds and complaints in ejectment. For FHA-insured loans that require evictions, the attorney must instruct the sheriff, in writing, to assign the bid to the investor, instead of to HUD, and to name the investor as grantee on the sheriff’s deed. The servicer, on behalf of the investor, proceeds with the eviction and deeds the property to HUD once the eviction is completed.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of MERS and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    33 MERS local counsel has contacted and received a letter from the Department of Revenue of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania that indicates the investor can use the foreclosing mortgagee transfer tax exemption by showing that MERS participated in the sheriff’s sale merely as an agent of the investor.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    86
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR RHODE ISLAND
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is the mortgage or deed of trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are used and are foreclosed non-judicially. MERS local counsel advises a loan can be foreclosed in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.34 The foreclosure is advertised with Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the named foreclosing entity.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents on behalf of the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the Note to the servicer prior to foreclosure. However, we recommend that the agencies’ policies be followed.
    34 Please Note: Fannie Mae’s foreclosure regulations require an assignment from MERS to Fannie Mae in Rhode Island. This means that Fannie Mae will be the foreclosing entity. This is the same requirement that exists when the servicer is the record mortgage holder.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    87
    MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.35
    At the foreclosure auction, MERS can waive the requirement of a deposit as to the investor. This way, the servicer can enter a bid on behalf of the investor without the investor needing to produce any funds. If it is the highest bid, the foreclosure deed can be issued directly to the investor. We have been advised that this procedure is the same procedure used when Freddie Mac or Ginnie Mae are the investors. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer foreclosures in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    35 Even though the servicer has physical custody of the note, custom in the mortgage industry is that the investor (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae or a private investor) owns the beneficial right to the promissory note.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    88
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR SOUTH CAROLINA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS.36 When MERS has been assigned the mortgage, the caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. However, this changes slightly if MERS is the original mortgagee of record, meaning that MERS is named on the mortgage in a nominee capacity for the originating lender, its successors and assigns. The caption should then state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for [insert name of the current servicer]. The key is how MERS is named as the mortgagee of record.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. However, it is advised that a paragraph be inserted that explains that the servicer is the entity that is servicing the loan. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note. 37
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require that the promissory note be endorsed in blank when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure
    36 We have been advised that the named plaintiff in the foreclosure action should be both the record holder of the mortgage and the holder of the promissory note. This is typically considered to be the servicer because if the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of having the servicer’s employees be certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    89
    37 Even though the servicer has physical custody of the note, custom in the mortgage industry is that the investor (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae or a private investor) owns the beneficial rights to the promissory note.
    is commenced in the name of MERS unless it is legally required to be endorsed to the foreclosing entity and not just the preferred method. We have been advised that sometimes there is an endorsement of the note to the servicer prior to the foreclosure. However, we recommend that the agencies’ requirements be followed.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a judgment to MERS is entered, a foreclosure sale is held. A bid is entered on behalf of MERS, and if the successful bid, then the bid will be assigned to the investor by using a one-page form instructing the sheriff of the assignment of bid. This is the same method that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name. The master in equity or the special referee would issue a deed directly to the investor. Local counsel advises that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, VA and HUD are exempt from transfer taxes on the sheriff’s deed. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    90
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR SOUTH DAKOTA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. When MERS has been assigned the mortgage, the caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. However, this changes slightly if MERS is the original mortgagee of record, meaning that MERS is named on the mortgage in a nominee capacity for the originating lender. The caption should then state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for [insert name of the current servicer]. The key is how MERS become the mortgage holder.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer in relation to not being the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.38
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the
    38 Even though the servicer has physical custody of the note, custom in the mortgage industry is that the investor (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae or a private investor) owns the beneficial right to the promissory note.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    91
    same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a judgment to MERS is entered, a sheriff’s sale is held. The certifying officer will instruct the foreclosing attorney as to the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If it is the successful bid, then one of two options can be followed39. The first is that the Certificate of Sale may be assigned from MERS to the investor. This way, upon expiration of the redemption period, the sheriff’s deed will issue directly to the investor. There is a recording cost for the Certificate of Sale. The second option is that upon the expiration of the redemption period, MERS is issued the sheriff’s deed by virtue of being the holder of the Certificate of Sale. If this option is followed, MERS should only remain in the chain of title for as short of time as possible. A subsequent deed will then be executed from MERS to the investor. We have been advised that this latter option is the method that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name. Typically the servicer is issued the sheriff’s deed, and then issues a subsequent deed to the investor. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    39 MERS prefers to not take title to the property, so the Certificate of Sale should be assigned if possible. However, either option is acceptable.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    92
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR TENNESSEE
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, in place of the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is the mortgage or deed of trust that gives MERS the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are used and are generally foreclosed non-judicially under a power of sale in the security instrument. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. The Notice of Default is filed and published the same way it is when foreclosing in the name of the servicer except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Appointment of Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    At the trustee sale, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. In the Trustee’s Deed, the bid will be assigned to the investor, unless the certifying officer instructs the trustee to assign the bid to the servicer. We have been advised that the current foreclosure procedure is a one-deed process with the investor directly taking title upon the conclusion of the trustee’s sale. Therefore, the MERS recommended procedure is the same as the current practice of assigning the bid to the investor. Because the MERS recommended
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    93
    procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan, the eviction may need to be brought in the name of MERS. Therefore, MERS may need to be the grantee of the trustee’s deed. After the eviction is completed, MERS will then issue a deed to HUD.40
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of MERS and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    40 MERS should only be in the chain of title for as short of a time as possible. As soon as the eviction is completed, the deed to HUD should be recorded.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    94
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR TEXAS
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the mortgagee or beneficiary of record in the chain of title. It is through the power of sale in the deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are foreclosed non-judicially. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. The foreclosure is commenced the same way as if it were being brought in the servicer’s name except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named the foreclosing entity as the mortgagee or beneficiary of record as the nominee for the current servicer.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Appointment of Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    At the trustee sale, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS as the mortgagee of record. If the bid is the highest bid, then the trustee’s deed is issued to MERS as the mortgagee of record and as the nominee for the current servicer. The servicer, as a duly appointed officer of MERS, can then convey the property by deed to the investor which is the same as the current practice that is used when foreclosing in the name of the servicer as mortgagee or
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    95
    beneficiary of record. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of MERS and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    96
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR UTAH
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are foreclosed non-judicially. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. The Notice of Default and Election to Sell is filed with the county recorder. Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity instead of the servicer.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    After the reinstatement period expires, the Notice of Sale is published for the required length of time. Once this is completed, the foreclosure sale is held. The certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If the bid is the highest bid, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee to deed the property directly to the investor. We have been advised that this procedure is the same procedure used when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. Therefore, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS in place of the servicer.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    97
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the servicer can be substituted as the interested party.41 This way, the eviction can be brought in the name of the servicer. Once the eviction is completed, then the servicer can issue a deed to HUD. Again, you should follow the same procedures you follow when foreclosing in the name of the servicer.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    41 MERS local counsel advises that an eviction is brought in the name of the party that takes title to the property following the foreclosure sale.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    98
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR VERMONT
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. When the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS. Over 90% of the foreclosures are by strict foreclosures. When MERS has been assigned the mortgage, the caption of the complaint should state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the plaintiff. However, this changes slightly if MERS is the original mortgagee of record, meaning that MERS is named on the mortgage in a nominee capacity for the originating lender, its successors and assigns. The caption should then state Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for [insert name of the current servicer]. The key is how MERS is named as the mortgagee of record.
    The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. An investor, typically a secondary market investor, will still be the ultimate owner of the promissory note.42
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS unless it is legally required to be endorsed to the
    42 The servicer usually has physical custody of the note at the time of the foreclosure with a blank endorsement. This makes the servicer the noteholder for the purposes of foreclosing. However, custom in the mortgage industry is that the investor (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae or a private investor) owns the beneficial rights to the promissory note.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    99
    foreclosing entity. If it is required to endorse the promissory note to the foreclosing entity, then the note may need to be endorsed to MERS. Local counsel has advised that it is essential that the Promissory Note be held in the name of the mortgage holder.43
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    Because the majority of the foreclosures are by strict foreclosure, title will vest in MERS momentarily.44 The certifying officer will submit an affidavit of amounts due to the Clerk of Court, after which a default or summary judgment will be issued by the Court. The Clerk will prepare an accounting. Once the accounting is received, a judgment is prepared and served. The judgment is then signed by the Court. After the redemption period expires, a Certificate of Non-Redemption and Writ of Possession will be issued by the Court to MERS. The property will then be deeded from MERS to the investor. This is the same process that occurs when the servicer of the mortgage loan forecloses in its name. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    An alternative option is to file a Motion for Substitution of Parties after the judgment to MERS is entered. At this time, an unrecorded assignment of the mortgage needs to be shown to the judge. It should be noted that certain courts are not staffed with full time judges and there may be a slight increase in time before this Motion can be decided. It is recommended that this Motion be filed as soon as possible after the judgment is entered so that it is completed prior to the expiration of the redemption period. At the end of the redemption period, a Certificate of Non-Redemption is recorded which transfers the title. Prior to the Certificate being issued, the assignment of the mortgage is recorded.
    Local counsel advises that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, VA and HUD are exempt from transfer taxes on the sheriff’s deed.
    43 We have been advised that the named plaintiff in the foreclosure action should be both the record holder of the mortgage and the holder of the promissory note. This is typically considered to be the servicer because if the promissory note is endorsed in blank and the servicer has physical custody of the note, the servicer will technically be the note holder as well as the record mortgage holder. By virtue of having the servicer’s employees be certifying officers of MERS, there can be an in-house transfer of possession of the note so that MERS is considered the note holder for purposes of foreclosing the loan.
    44 MERS should only remain the titleholder for as short as time as possible. A subsequent deed should be executed to the investor immediately. Version 1.1
    November 1999
    100
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    101
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR VIRGINIA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are foreclosed non-judicially by a power of sale given to the Trustee upon default. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS.45 The same procedure that is followed when foreclosing in the name of the servicer is followed when foreclosing in the name of MERS except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Because the original note is required to be shown to the Commissioner at the time of the final accounting, the note is usually endorsed to the servicer when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. Therefore, local counsel advises that the note may need to be endorsed to MERS as the foreclosing entity. The endorsement of the note to the servicer is the same procedure that is followed when foreclosing in the name of the servicer.
    45 Local Counsel advises that the promissory note is endorsed to the servicer prior to commencing a foreclosure so that the servicer becomes the noteholder. In order for a foreclosure to be brought in the name of MERS, the note should be endorsed to MERS so that MERS is the noteholder.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    102
    At the trustee sale, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If the bid is the highest bid, then the trustee will be instructed to deed the property directly to the investor. We have been advised that this procedure is the same used when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. Therefore, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the servicer can be deeded the property so that the eviction can be brought in the name of the servicer. Once the eviction is completed, then the servicer can issue a deed to HUD. Again, you should follow the same procedures you follow when foreclosing in the name of the servicer.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    103
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR WASHINGTON
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are used and are foreclosed non-judicially by conferring a power of sale on the trustee in the event of default by the borrower. MERS local counsel advises that a loan can be foreclosed in the name of MERS.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the substitution of trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    The only change to the foreclosure procedure is to name Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as the foreclosing entity. The Notice of Default and Notice of Trustee’s Sale is still required to be sent and published and all requirements related to these Notices must be followed. At the trustee’s sale, a bid will be entered on behalf of MERS. The bid is entered the same way it is entered for the servicer when foreclosing in the servicer’s name. If the bid is the highest bid, then the trustee’s deed can be issued directly to the investor. This is the same procedure that is followed when commencing a foreclosure in the name of the servicer. The Trustee’s deed will identify the investor as the grantee under the trustee’s deed and will recite that MERS, as nominee, successfully bid for the
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    104
    property at the trustee’s sale. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional recording or transfer taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to HUD. This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    105
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR WEST VIRGINIA
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Deeds of Trust are foreclosed non-judicially. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. The notice of sale is served on the grantor of the Deed of Trust by certified mail. The foreclosure sale is published according to the same requirements followed when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity instead of the servicer.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents, such as the Substitution of Trustee, as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    At the trustee auction, the certifying officer will instruct the trustee regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If the bid is the highest bid, then the certifying officer will instruct the trustee on how to deed the property. A three-party deed can be used with the trustee transferring the property to the investor. MERS simply signs the deed and states that it has assigned its right in its bid to the investor. We have been advised that this procedure is the same procedure used when foreclosing
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    106
    in the name of the servicer. Therefore, no additional taxes are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the property can be deeded to the servicer. This way, the eviction can be brought in the name of the servicer. Once the eviction is completed, the servicer can issue a deed to HUD. Again, you should follow the same procedures you follow when foreclosing in the name of the servicer.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    107
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR WISCONSIN
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like a servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed in conjunction with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are typically used and are foreclosed judicially. The caption of the complaint should name Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) as the plaintiff. The body of the complaint should be the same as when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. MERS stands in the same shoes as the servicer to the extent that it is not the beneficial owner of the promissory note. A secondary market investor will still be the owner of the promissory note. A paragraph can be added to the complaint to explain the role of MERS as being the mortgagee of record with the authority to foreclose.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when a seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    After a foreclosure judgment in favor of MERS is entered and after expiration of the redemption period, a foreclosure sale is held. The certifying officer will provide local counsel with bid instructions. A bid will be entered on behalf of MERS, and if it is the highest bid, MERS will assign its bid to the investor and the investor can appear as the grantee on the Sheriff’s Deed. The Sheriff’s deed is then issued
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    108
    directly to the investor. The assignment of the bid is the method that is being used when the servicer forecloses in its name. The sheriff’s deed is exempt from transfer tax as are sheriff’s deeds following an assignment of bid. Certain other transfers, as between “principal and agent for no consideration may also be exempt from transfer tax. Because the MERS recommended procedure follows the procedure used when foreclosing in the servicer’s name, no additional taxes are incurred.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the bid assignment is given to the servicer instead of to the investor (HUD). This way, the servicer will proceed with the eviction the same way it would if the foreclosure were filed in its own name.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    109
    MERS RECOMMENDED FORECLOSURE PROCEDURE
    FOR WYOMING
    Foreclosing a loan in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is something new in the foreclosure arena. However, when the role of MERS is examined, it becomes clear that MERS stands in the same position to foreclose as the servicer. MERS, like the servicer, will be the record mortgage holder. It is through the mortgage or deed of trust that MERS is given the authority to foreclose.
    To help make a smooth transition from foreclosing loans in the name of the servicer to foreclosing loans in the name of MERS, we have developed state by state recommended guidelines to follow. These guidelines were developed with experienced foreclosure counsel in your state. We have been able to keep the MERS recommended procedures consistent with the existing foreclosure procedures. The goal of the recommended procedures is to avoid adding any extra steps or incurring any additional taxes or costs by foreclosing in the name of MERS instead of the servicer.
    MERS will continually review the guidelines and, if necessary, will issue revisions. The recommended guidelines to follow in your state are as follows:
    Mortgages are foreclosed non-judicially by a power of sale contained in the mortgage. Local counsel advises that a foreclosure can be brought in the name of MERS. Notice of the sale is recorded in the real estate records and mailed by certified mail to all interested parties. The same procedures followed when foreclosing a mortgage loan in the name of the servicer is followed when foreclosing in the name of MERS except that Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) will be named as the foreclosing entity instead of the servicer. Publication of the sale occurs ten (10) days after the recording and mailing of the Notice.
    Employees of the servicer will be certifying officers of MERS. This means they are authorized to sign any necessary documents as an officer of MERS. The certifying officer is granted this power by a corporate resolution of MERS. In other words, the same individual that signs the documents for the servicer will continue to sign the documents, but now as an officer of MERS.
    The agencies (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae) require a blank endorsement of the promissory note when the seller/servicer sells a mortgage loan to them. Therefore, the note should remain endorsed in blank when the foreclosure is commenced in the name of MERS.
    At the sheriff’s sale, the certifying officer will instruct the sheriff regarding the bid to be entered on behalf of MERS. If the bid is the highest bid, then MERS will be issued a Certificate of Purchase. The Certificate of Purchase will be assigned to the investor. We have been advised that this is the same procedure used when foreclosing in the name of the servicer. Because the MERS recommended procedure
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    110
    follows the same procedure that is used when the servicer forecloses in its name, no additional recording costs are incurred by foreclosing in the name of MERS. Wyoming does not have transfer taxes.
    Evictions are handled the same way they are handled when the servicer commences the foreclosure as the foreclosing entity. If it is an FHA-insured loan and an eviction is necessary, then the servicer can be assigned the Certificate. This way, the eviction can be brought in the name of the servicer. Once the eviction is completed, then the servicer can issue a deed to HUD. Again, you should follow the same procedures you follow when foreclosing in the name of the servicer.
    If the debtor declares bankruptcy, the proof of claim should be filed jointly in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. and the servicer. It is advised to file in both names in order to disclose to the court the relationship of MERS and the servicer. The address to be used is the servicer’s address so that all trustee payments go directly to the servicer, not to MERS. The Motion for Relief from Stay may be filed either solely in the name of MERS or jointly with the servicer. If MERS is the foreclosing entity, then it is MERS that needs the relief from the bankruptcy.
    Version 1.1
    November 1999
    111

    Bank Robo-Signers Oust Homeowners

    It could almost come from a science fiction movie where tens of thousands are forced out of their homes by a cold, mechanized Robo-Signer. But it’s not science fiction. It’s reality.

    Over the past two weeks, both Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase have suspended their foreclosure proceedings for tens of thousands of mortgages as they look at their foreclosure process. The issue? Robo-Signers are authorizing thousands of foreclosures every week denying homeowners a proper, human review and proper consideration for their individual foreclosure case.

    At least RoboCop had it right when he said, “Serve the public trust, protect the innocent, uphold the law.” Have banks’ foreclosure practices violated the public trust? Foreclosed on innocent homeowners? Broken the law?

    In fact, banks in Florida, Texas, Maine and other states are withdrawing their foreclosure affidavits that were signed by Robo-Signers. GMAC and Chase in particular have admitted in sworn depositions that they have used Robo-Signers to authorize as many as 10,000 foreclosure documents a month without proper review and notorization.

    Banks like GMAC claim that the errors are technical in nature and didn’t result in any inappropriate foreclosures. Attorneys General in states like Colorado, Texas, Iowa and others are looking into GMAC’s practices to see if they constitute criminal fraud.

    Unfortunately, many homeowners, maybe 60% or more, facing foreclosure do little or nothing to safeguard their rights allowing Robo-Signers to run rough-shod over them. But some homeowners who have fought back have found irregularities in the foreclosure process used by banks. In some cases, the bank didn’t even own the loan it. It had been sold into a securitized trust held by other investors meaning that the bank had no basis for foreclosure.

    According to the Wall Street Journal, IndyMac used a Robo-Signer named Erica A Johnson-Seck to sign more than 6,000 documents a week. Upon review by a court, it was determined that IndyMac couldn’t possibly have properly reviewed foreclosure cases as required by law.

    More and more homeowners are beginning to fight their foreclosure process. Some complain that this will slow down the foreclosure process and, thus, the housing recovery.

    Homeowner v Robo-signer

    Bank Robo-Signers Oust Homeowners

    It could almost come from a science fiction movie where tens of thousands are forced out of their homes by a cold, mechanized Robo-Signer. But it’s not science fiction. It’s reality.

    Over the past two weeks, both Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase have suspended their foreclosure proceedings for tens of thousands of mortgages as they look at their foreclosure process. The issue? Robo-Signers are authorizing thousands of foreclosures every week denying homeowners a proper, human review and proper consideration for their individual foreclosure case.

    At least RoboCop had it right when he said, “Serve the public trust, protect the innocent, uphold the law.” Have banks’ foreclosure practices violated the public trust? Foreclosed on innocent homeowners? Broken the law?

    In fact, banks in Florida, Texas, Maine and other states are withdrawing their foreclosure affidavits that were signed by Robo-Signers. GMAC and Chase in particular have admitted in sworn depositions that they have used Robo-Signers to authorize as many as 10,000 foreclosure documents a month without proper review and notorization.

    Banks like GMAC claim that the errors are technical in nature and didn’t result in any inappropriate foreclosures. Attorneys General in states like Colorado, Texas, Iowa and others are looking into GMAC’s practices to see if they constitute criminal fraud.

    Unfortunately, many homeowners, maybe 60% or more, facing foreclosure do little or nothing to safeguard their rights allowing Robo-Signers to run rough-shod over them. But some homeowners who have fought back have found irregularities in the foreclosure process used by banks. In some cases, the bank didn’t even own the loan it. It had been sold into a securitized trust held by other investors meaning that the bank had no basis for foreclosure.

    According to the Wall Street Journal, IndyMac used a Robo-Signer named Erica A Johnson-Seck to sign more than 6,000 documents a week. Upon review by a court, it was determined that IndyMac couldn’t possibly have properly reviewed foreclosure cases as required by law.

    More and more homeowners are beginning to fight their foreclosure process. Some complain that this will slow down the foreclosure process and, thus, the housing recovery.

    the debate

    Debunking the Gospel of Garfield

    April 7, 2010 by admin · 15 Comments

    Since starting MFI-Miami almost 2 years ago, I have received some pretty strange calls from people. I’ve had real estate agents call me who have bought 15 income properties and then try to claim they are victim of Predatory Lending. I’ve had people who have bought investment properties who thought because they watched two episodes of The Apprentice they’re as smart as Donald Trump. I have gotten calls from the conspiracy theorists who think the Obama Administration wants their property so they can build an internment camp on it when the armed UN hovercraft come skimming over the Everglades. These are some of the more interesting calls.

    However, the most interesting calls I get are from Pro Se litigants. What are Pro Se litigants? Pro Se litigants are homeowners who represent themselves in court and usually have no training as a lawyer. They are usually people who think they know more than everyone else or have the attitude of “Why should I hire a lawyer when I can do it myself.”

    As the saying goes, “An attorney who represents themselves has a fool for a client.” Here’s a case in point. I had a foreclosure client when I started MFI-Miami, who filed an answer to his foreclosure that he copied and pasted off Neil Garfield’s website, Living Lies. My client then tells me he was going file a federal civil RICO case against his lender because his wife’s “forged” signature violated interstate commerce laws which is a RICO predicate. When I asked him who told him he could do that, he claimed he read he could do it on Garfield’s site. I have since received dozens of calls from people asking me for free advice based on what they read by Neil Garfield.

    I have received at least 6 calls in the past week from Pro Se litigants claiming that they don’t know what to do because their Florida judge laughs at them for demanding the wet inked copy of their note. This is one of those misconceptions out on the blogosphere that had its origin from the Living Lies site. The misconception is that if the servicer or the Trustee cannot produce the original wet inked note, then they lack legal standing to execute a foreclosure and therefore the debt obligation is now nullified. This is absolutely false. In Florida, the transfer affidavit or note must officially be on record with the county 60 days prior to a servicer or Trustee filing the initial foreclosure complaint. When the attorney files the foreclosure complaint, all they are required to do is attach a copy of the original note.

    For those you who don’t know who Neil Garfield is, he is a self-proclaimed Foreclosure Expert who holds seminars across the country for lawyers and Pro-Se litigants helping them fight foreclosures. According to his biography, was an Economist, Accountant and he is a “Chairman Emeritus” of a consortium of financial service companies and claims to be the “ultimate insider” on Wall Street. (Page 4, Garfield Continuum Handbook) Yet, he never mentions which companies he has worked with or the positions he held. The state of Florida also has no license on file for him being an accountant.

    If he was a Wall Street “Insider,” he was like Lon Chaney aka The Man of Thousand Faces because friends of mine in the media who cover Wall Street had never heard of him until he started doing seminars. He was a trial attorney in Florida from 1977 until 1993 and by his own admission to me when I attended his seminar in Orlando last May, has not done any litigation work since then.

    He preaches that, “homeowners can walk into a foreclosure hearing and walk out owning their house free and clear.” (Page 5, Garfield Continuum Handbook)

    He even preaches this on his website and it is over-simplified comments like this that draw people to his website looking for easy answers. Like a late night televangelist, Garfield delivers a lot of what on the surface appears to be easy solutions but in reality are very complex legal arguments. Unfortunately, for the homeowner, foreclosure defense is not easy. It is a lot of painstaking detective work and TILA rescissions happen in only one of out of 50-75 loans.

    Neil Garfield’s theories make for great legal debate and table talk for foreclosure defense junkies and conspiracy theorists. However, in reality his theories are impractical for the average homeowner due to the astronomical fees of legal research and litigation that they would require. What Neil Garfield fails to understand or express to his seminar participants is that judges do not like going out on the proverbial limb and therefore will not make precedent making decisions.

    In other words, Neil Garfield is great at talking the talk but is a little short on walking the walk. He lacks the practical litigation experience to transform his theories into reality. Even now if you read his blogs, attorneys as well as Pro Se litigants who are frequent contributors phrase their comments as if expressing opinion instead of fact.

    Garfield has created a problem in judicial foreclosure states such as Florida. He has unleashed an army of Pro Se litigants who have clogged the courts trying to argue their foreclosure cases using theories they barely understand. They lack not only legal expertise but lending expertise. They are totally unprepared to argue their own cases and fail to learn or obey court procedure. Many of them go in to court trying to argue constitutional law or TILA and find themselves summarily dismissed by a judge. They then write comments on the blogosphere claiming the judicial system is corrupt and that corruption is a result of some mass government conspiracy.

    What the Garfield seminars fail to express to these litigants is that foreclosure laws vary from state to state and if you are fortunate enough to live in a judicial state like Florida or New York, judges want to hear state statute not federal statute unless it is relevant to your case.

    This also creates another problem for the court system. The problem consists of the homeowners who have been successful in getting their foreclosures postponed. Fed by what they read on Living Lies, these pro se litigants begin having delusions of grandeur and begin believing they are the next Alan Dershowitz or Gerry Spence. They begin dispensing legal advice on the internet. The reality is, it was not the Gospel of Neil Garfield or the Pro Se litigant’s superior linguistic or legal abilities that got the foreclosure postponed but forces beyond the homeowner’s control.

    In his 683 page handbook which is riddled with errors, he claims, “Neil has come out of retirement with one purpose in mind – to do all he can to counter the effects of the mortgage meltdown and save the people and the country from the disaster of created by free money using derivative securities that not even experts understood and targeting the least sophisticated members of society.”
    This may sound charitable, but don’t believe the hype. At the end of the day, it’s all about the Bejamins. Garfield and his partner Brad Keiser use these seminars to market future consulting work and forensic audits from law firms and Pro Se litigants that attend their conferences.

    Don’t get me wrong, I have no problem with people making money and I don’t have a problem with the fees Garfield and Kaiser charge their clients, I do have an issue with what they preach and how they manage the expectations of what they preach to the average homeowner. This industry is filled with enough wannabe Elmer Gantrys or messianic types with no practical mortgage industry experience and the last thing it needs is to encourage more unqualified “healers” to come into this business which is what Garfield and Keiser are doing.

    0diggsdigg

    Comments

    15 Responses to “Debunking the Gospel of Garfield”

    1. KevinG says:

      Steve, I’m just an average guy with properties that are upside down like alot of my friends whom I network with here in Las Vegas. Like Florida, Vegas has been hard hit with foreclosures. The State Fight Fraud Task Force trys to keep up with the foreclosure ‘consultants’ and even passed legistlation requiring registration and licensing. But, many innocent, ignorant and desperate homeowners are still being SCAMMED on a regular basis. Self procalimed ‘Experts’ like Garfield tend to flourish in ecomonic times like this.

      I have attended at least four local meetings her in Vegas that all pitch slight variations on Garfields approach to ‘fighting back’ with the tools he provides from ‘Living Lies’. I’ve met with an attorney listed as a reference for one of these companies who represents homeowers in predatory lending situations…he was not the least positive about the outcome. On the other hand, I’ve met with 60+ people in a $2,000,000 home with the owner who shared his personal experience in using this ‘Administrative Process’ to reconvey his property back into his name (I’m still trying to get eyes on proof of this claim). Every week I hear from somebody who’s considering trying this Living Lies strategy…mainly out of desperation.

      I’ve seen the paperwork and process and the claims, claims and more claims…but no proof as you say. I’ve even started to document this investigation to help inform and warn others like the gray haired lady and her elderly husband who asked at one of these meetings…”If I am already in the Foreclosure Process will your methods effect my credit rating?” That really sadden me to think that people really don’t know what they’re getting themselves into.

      I have looked for others in Nevada who can validate, proof positive, that Neils methods will work in Nevada. So far, I haven’t found anyone…except those who CLAIM sucess.

      His methods are also being combined with what’s called ‘Accepted for Value” …A4V for short. As I understand it, this involves paying your debts from your “Treasury Account” that is based upon your Birth Certificate. I’ve heard so many claims about this for paying credit cards, mortgages, etc. it’s amazing how much buzz there is about this. But, as I say again…how can the average guy or gal validate an of this with the IRS and Treasury Dept?

      Tonight is the first time I came upon your blog…based upon a search I googled for Neil Garfield. I have yet another meeting with yet another person making claims that they helped people by using the LIVING LIES principles.

      The report I am writing entitiled “Mortgage Elimination Education – Fact or Fiction” could use the input by someone with better creditials than mine. If you know of anyone … hint…hint… in Nevada whom I may confer with I would appreciate hearing from anyone both pro or con.

    2. skeptical-optimist-1 says:

      I also heard of a few others ‘educating’ people.

      Any comments would be appreciated.

    3. admin says:

      I have picked up on your hint. ;) Feel free to contact me at the phone number on the website or send me over anything you would like my opinion on.

      From what I’ve seen with the “Accepted For Value” programs (it also goes by different names) is that it is essentially the same thing as those Money Merge Accounts scams that were floating around about three years ago. It’s the BS but in a different package.

    4. Capt. Jack says:

      I’m not here to defend Neil Garfield or Brad Kaiser or the Livinglies website. I am here to question how you differentiate yourself from them.

      Where is your resume? Is everyone doomed without your service? Surely you are not suggesting you are the only one with the skills to defend against fraud.

    5. Capt. Jack says:

      What is the policy here on posting links? I see that mine were “trimmed” but others are allowed!

      Very revealing!

    6. admin says:

      There are several big difference between what I do and what Neil Garfield and Brad Keiser do. First, I don’t encourage people to play Perry Mason without a law degree. I will not take a client on unless they have either retained a attorney or have spoken to an attorney before they hire me to tear apart their mortgage. Matter of fact, I won’t do business with pro se litigants because of the problems they create. They exacerbate the problem of their foreclosure because they read on the internet that foreclosure defense is easy and they can simply walk into foreclosure hearing and walk out with a free house. Here’s a perfect example from the client I mentioned in the article. In his answer that he copied and pasted off Living Lies, he accused the Lender of violating “Florida mini-FTC laws”. This was actually in the sample Neil and Brad had on the website. There is a huge problem with this because Florida never called the Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act (Florida Statute 501) a “Florida Mini-FTC”. Neil Garfield being a member of the Florida Bar and licensed attorney should know this.

      Second, I don’t give my clients false expectations of what the outcome will be. Myself and the attorneys I work with (4 have gone to a Garfield seminar) all give the client realistic expectations of what to expect if they fight their foreclosure. The attorney also explains to them any alternatives, they feel may be better for the client.

      I not saying and I never said foreclosure victims are doomed if they don’t use my services. I said the problem I have with what Neil Garfield and Brad Keiser do is that they do not manage the expectations of their clients or their readers. There are other companies out there doing excellent work. I will even bring on competitors to help me on files. If we are successful on file like Cindi Dixon (who operates Mela Capital Group) and I were on the Cirigliano file, I have no problem sharing the accolades or the credit.

    7. admin says:

      Your post was “trimmed” because you were plugging your sites. The links were the only things removed.

    8. Alina says:

      admin,

      There is an old Texas saying – load your brain before you shoot off your mouth.

      Above you state that Florida does not have a mini-FTC statute. First let me begin by enlightening you. Every state’s UDAP statute is patterned after the FTC, therefore they are commonly referred to as the mini-FTC. If you want to proof of this, I have plenty of case law I can send to you. It appears from your statement and also from your disclaimer on the right of this site that you are not an attorney. But yet, you believe you have the right to negatively comment on an attorney’s work.

      The homeowner in your story was unprepared. He copied and pasted something for which he was not versed in. However, this is in no way Neil’s or Brad’s fault. The Living Lies site should be used as a starting point. From there every homeowner should be taxed with the duty to research their own state’s laws, rules, statutes. The site have a vast amount of invaluable information.

      Alina

    9. This contradicts the MFI-Miami blogpost that appears above this one. There’s no way the courts are being clogged up by homeowners – the ones that know their rights and choose to defend themselves are few and far between. Comrad, you should embrace the fact that Mr. Garfield has enlightened many… for you to edit “snippets” of his site and brand him as an alarmist converting the masses into pro se litigants is completely BUNK. I think it is merely an attempt to use his name to further your stat counter!

      When I search your name I find the article “Steve Dibert at MFI-Mod Squad Leaves Consumers Confused” & “Another Smart & Feisty Chick Doesn’t Take Any Crap From Martin Andelman, Steve Dibert or Aaron Krowne.” But this doesn’t mean I would go out and spread bad words about you and your company.

      So what to do… post my comment and reply to me or delete my comment. I guess we’ll see what happens. Take care and please, lets try & stick together. We need all the help we can get (HB 1523).

    10. admin says:

      Alina,
      I didn’t say Florida didn’t have it’s own version of an FTC law, I said it’s not called “Mini-FTC” and no one in the legal profession here in Florida calls it that. I know because 90% of my business comes from law firms. They refer to as FS 501 or FDUTP. Again, the problem is that the majority of people who read that site substitute it for bona fide legal advice. As I told the other person who wrote a comment, I get 6-10 phone calls a week saying, “I read on Living Lies, I can do. . .” and usually followed by some theory the courts have already shot down. It’s usually some person with no legal training that thinks he’s Gerry Spence or Alan Dershowitz.

    11. admin says:

      I haven’t seen that article. It was probably written by Erin Baldwin who was a self-proclaimed “fraud fighter” because she couldn’t qualify for a modification and lost her house. I later exposed her for being a scam and being mentally unbalanced. If not, it was Krista Railey who is a friend of everyone’s favorite ex-convict and illegal mod company operator Moe Bedard, who was mad because the three of us said nice things about a mod company she was hell bent on taking down.

      I do agree about HB 1523. We need to put pressure on the Florida legislature to vote no on HB 1523. I will be posting an article about it Monday or Tuesday. Feel free to cut paste the information from the article. I’m also going to make up flyers people can print out and pass out in their neighborhoods. I have a call into some trial lawyers who are going to help. I will also spread the word with my friends in the Florida media next week as well.

    12. ppulatie says:

      I work with attorneys in CA, doing examinations. I have many of the same concerns as Steve. To give all an idea:

      1. Garfield talks about the “2nd Yield Spread Premium” paid to lenders. The YSP is based upon the purchase price of the bonds, and also when the interest rate changes on a adjustable rate loan. There is no potential way that these differences could ever be considered YSP and need to be disclosed.

      YSP is a payment to a broker for placing a borrower into a higher interest rate than what they were qualified for. It is a required disclosure.

      When a lender sells a loan, if they receive a “YSP”, it is not a requirement for disclosure. This “YSP” has occurred after the sell, so how could it be disclosed anyway?

      When bonds are sold, that is a completely different transaction, and cannot be considered a YSP. Those would fall under Security Laws, anyway, and not TILA or RESPA.

      2. In his seminars, Garfield quotes 226.34, the section that covers the requirement of the lender to determine the ability of the borrower to repay the loan. This sounds great, unless one knows that statute. 226.34 ONLY applies to HOEPA loans, of which there are very few done. It does not apply to 99% of the loans that were done. I see attorneys file complaints with 226.34 alleged, and I can immediately sees the flaws in the arguments. This should get tossed, if the lenders have competent attorneys.

      BTW, most attorneys and even auditors do not realize that the “CAP” on the interest rate is not to be used in determining HOEPA violations. It is the Fully Amortized Rate.

      3. Garfield and others have made representations that the securitization of the Note changes the character of the Note and that it might make the loan no longer forecloseable. Under CA Uniform Commercial Code, and I suspect most others, the Code covers this and allows for such foreclosures.

      4. Most of the cases that are posted on the website are preliminary rulings or they are the initial complaints. As such, they have not generally would their way through appeal, and until they do so, the cases are not much use.

      5. Garfield does not really expound upon the fact that case law is jurisdictional, and what might work in one jurisdiction, would not work in another.

      6. Foreclosure law is state specific. And Non-Judicial v Judicial foreclosures are completely different animals.

      7. The Countrywide/B of A Class Action in Washington that Garfield posted, has major issues with the complaint. It alleges violations of HAMP. I tried to point out these issues, with regard to the fact that HAMP does not guarantee a loan modification, nor is there likely a Private Right of Action, among other issues. Furthermore, many of the claimants in the action would not qualify for HAMP, but unless the attorneys fully understand this, and only a few do, then it will pose issues for determining Class members. Garfield deleted my post for this. This occurs each and every time that I right something contradictory to what he writes.

      Garfied also deleted my post ragarding a case that Max Gardner, the BK attorney posted. Gardner made mention when “MERS transfers the Note”. I called him out on this and suggested that either Gardner “mis-wrote” or he was in error. The reason is that MERS does not transfer a Note. The Note is endorsed, usually in blank, and transferred by the original lender to the Trust. MERS only transfers the Deed. (I also explained other issues that could be exploited.)

      Well, that post was deleted as well. And Gardner’s comments have not been corrected. If Garfield is not willing to correct false or incorrect information, then what good is he?

      8. Most attorneys that I know who went to his seminar in CA, also say that much of his info is useless, if not garbage.

      9. He promotes seminars, whereby he will train people in forensic analysis and expert witness testimony in just a couple of days. This is pure bunk. There is too much to know and understand in just a couple of days. The concepts and the statutes and case law are just too complicated. Especially so when you consider California, whereby one court will rule one way, and another court will rule the opposite, both in the same day, and the merits are the same.

      Expert Witness? That is a joke. There are only a few people I know that are competent to be an expert witness. And those people have no desire to be one. That is because the “true auditor” can look at a file and see not just lender fraud, but also broker fraud and borrower fraud. The lenders that know what I do would love to get me on the stand because they know that I would be able to also indict most borrowers, if questioned correctly. That is why each of my Predatory Lending Exams, I provide the attorney a separate Comment Sheet, apart from the Exam, which details the other issues and how the lender will discredit the borrower.

      I do not do Pro Se litigants either. They end up wanting me to act as an attorney for them, and I am not one and do not pretend to be. It is just that over 30 months of doing this, I understand how CA courts work, and what works in the court and does not.

      When a homeowner calls, I will talk with them a bit, to find out what is going on. I then refer them to an attorney. I will not work with a homeowner without an attorney who litigates. I will not work with attorneys who simply do loan modifications. I do not contact lenders, servicers or other entities, because under CA law, I then become a foreclosure consultant. I have been checked out twice by the CA DRE and both times, they have concluded that I am doing things “right” and in accordance with CA law.

      I make no representations about what I do and what it can accomplish. In fact, I tell people that there are no guarantees about what will occur. The best that can be hoped for is to bring the lender to the table for a loan modification. There will be no principal reductions, or getting homes for free. Better to be realistic, that give them false hopes.

      That said, I am working with three different Class Action law firms, to attack lenders on specific items I have discovered. These are very narrow issues, and are designed to prevent Federal Preemption arguments, but they do have a Private Right to Action. These will be interesting to see what happens. They won’t help everyone, but they will help many.

      I know that the Garfield followers will likely not care for what I write. But, it is time to address the issues and let the chips fall where they do. I am tired of the blatant misrepresentations or errors by so many people who claim to be “auditors” and other foreclosure assistance personnel. Unfortunately, there are too many “scam artists” out there, epecially in CA, and no, I am not calling Garfield a scam artist, and are just preying on homeowners in trouble.

    13. Elvis says:

      Steve
      Really…the axe you are grinding with Garfield and Keiser just discredits you. First, like you I have attended the Lawyers seminar. They both are very clear that their target audience is Lawyers and that homeowners need to have “competent” local counsel and the objective of their seminars is to surface competent lawyers willing to take foreclosure defense cases that homeowners can be referred to, since you are not a lawyer you may not have picked up on this… So your whole diatribe that they have “unleashed an army of Pro Se litigants” is patently false.

      I have followed the blog for sometime and I know you used to post frequently and include the link to your site to solicit “loan audit” business.

      Essentially, you were “trolling” the Livinglies site for customers for loan audits. Since you say you have four lawyers that you work for that have attended the Garfield seminar, I can only assume you like many other “loan auditors” (including Mr. Pulatie who posts here)have also used the list of lawyers posted to benefit homeowners the site as a prospect list to solicit business. Just curious have you ever sent a dollar of donation to the Livinglies blog site? I bet not. I have.

      If homeowners cannot find competent lawyers to represent them and have to go Pro Se and use the internet, well you have to admit the Livinglies site is a good resource for them. The fact is there are not enough lawyers to serve the homeowners that need help, but like “loan auditors” there are even more lawyers that will take homeowners money an DO NOTHING…because they don’t know what to do.

      So really this whole article is misguided, Garfield and Keiser have as another poster here commented “enlighted” thousands, maybe hundred of thousands to the reality of the fraud taking place with these foreclosures, helped many lawyers and homeowners who they will probably never meet and you want to take issue with “snippets” of their materials. Really we all need to work together. I do have to hand it to you if this was a strategy to increase the stats/hits on your website its not a bad angle. If you have the “nads” to actually allow this comment to be posted, then good for you. If not you will be confirming that you are just another fringe player out there trying to leverage Livinglies and the work that Garfield and Keiser have done to enlighten the marketplace and homeowners to the facts for your own benefit.(I think you used the term “its all about the Benjamins”)

      Oh and by the way a recent post on Livinglies re: “Produce the Note is Not Enough” kind of contradicts your point that Garfield originated that angle…it was April Charney long before Garfield came along, I like to give credit where credit is due…but since you only started your business a little less than two years ago you may have not known that…did you by chance attend their Forensic Mortgage Analysis Workshop a couple weeks ago? I talked to a couple folks who did and they were very impressed and felt it was worth the money. I am just hoping they will do one in the East sometime soon.

      Hopefully you actually allow this comment to be posted…if not I understand your agenda.

      Truth

    14. admin says:

      Elvis,

      First, I don’t have an “axe to grind” against Neil and Brad. If you actually read the article you would have known that. You and other Neil Garfield Groupies make a lot of assumptions about how I run my business, how I market my company and my motivations. I find it interesting all of you want to question my testicular fortitude but none of you have the spine to post your real names on these posts.

      Besides, I really don’t need to start a blog war with Neil Garfield to increase my SEO. I get plenty of traffic from the exposure I get from international media. I find it interesting that the people helping drive traffic to this site are the upset Garfield Groupies who keep pasting the link and spreading it around.

      Those quotes where from his handbook were not “snippets.” They were the actual quotes from his hand book. Look at both page 4 and 5 of his handbook.

      Tell you what, if you can show me 5 cases of a pro se litigants who were awarded a free and clear title to their home using the what they learned at a Garfield seminar without the help of a lawyer, I will retract the article.

      Also, why would I “donate” to a website that is clearly a marketing tool for a for-profit venture. Does that mean I should ask you for an $11 donation for my Go Daddy bill next month?

    15. ppulatie says:

      For the record, I do not recommend any attorneys from the Neil Garfield website. Heck, most of those who attended the CA seminars quickly understood that CA law is different from Florida, and what works in Florida does not work in Ca. I only accept work from attorneys who I interview, and know that they will do good work. I work for very few attorneys as a result, because most attorneys really haven’t got past the first three months of a learning curve that is needed in CA.

      CA Civil Code 2924 is considered “exhaustive” and as such, Produce the Note does not work. 2924 has no requirement. Nor do other arguments that Garfield talks about.

      I will say that I was more than happy to see that Garfield did write recently about using reasonable arguments and not theories that courts were not ready for. But prior to that post, he had never mentioned such before, and so large numbers of homeowners were led astray. I know, because I have read the complaints filed by these Pro Se litigants, and I have talked with large numbers on the phone. That is a major reason why I do not do retail audits, and only work through attorneys.

      BTW, the post previous to this one was the very first one I had ever done on this website. I only respond to your post to explain that I do not work with attorneys on Garfield’s list.

      Also, I should note that I do not do audits outside of CA and a couple of other states. That is because the laws are so different and the case law per state takes months to really understand. To be proficient in other states, a person must understand what is going on and tailor the exam to what the courts in that state will accept. Otherwise, the exam is a waste of money. That is why I have consistently turned down offers to take my operation nationwide.

      Also, I have found that to train an examiner, it takes at least a year of very hard work and effort. It is not about plugging information into a software program, as most so called auditors do. It is about understanding the statutes, the lending process, underwriting process, and knowing and keeping up to date on case law. As well, it is an intuitive feel for what happens in the loan process.

      That is why I differentiate my operations from others. I don’t do forensic audits. I do Predatory Lending Exams. That is far beyond what all but a few companies will ever do, because they don’t understand the full process. Most were former loan officers who decided to jump into this business long after people like Steve and I developed it. They never took the time to learn the law, go into court and watch what happened, and they never tried to read the case law and understand how it related to loans.

      And that is why, when I start working with knowledgeable attorneys, they come back time and again.

    foreclosure out of control

    A Visit To A Loan Modification Marathon

    BofA Exec Signed But Didn’t Read Up To 8,000 Foreclosure Papers Per Month

    Cautious Homeowners Not Seduced By Record-Low Interest Rates

    Mortgage Rates Low: Level Matches Lowest In Decades

    ‘Club Fed’: The Cozy Ties Between Fed And Big Investors

    Click on the links below for individual wrongful foreclosure stories.

    Click on the links below for individual wrongful foreclosure stories.

    Bank of America’s unfunny foreclosure tricks

    Repossession hell: 6 extremely ‘wrongful’ foreclosures

    Bank of America Sued for Foreclosing on Wrong Homes

    House “trashed out” that Michigan couple paid cash for

    Kentucky man sues after bank takes wrong house

    Bank of America Pocketed Insurance Proceeds for Gas Explosion, Then Attempts Foreclosure on Home Anyway

    Foreclosures go wrong as lenders, clean-up crews cut legal corners

    Pittsburgh area woman with paid-up mortgage says bank “repossessed” property, damaged furniture, confiscated pet parrot

    Bank of America forecloses on house that Massachusetts couple paid cash for

    Texas doctor says bank seized house he owns free and clear, turned off utilities and left him with 75 pounds of spoiled fish

    Bank Tries To Foreclose on Owned Home in California

    Fort Lauderdale man’s home sold out from under him in foreclosure mistake

    Click on the links below for overviews of the foreclosure crisis.

    Caught in a pile of paper – the foreclosure crisis rages on

    The looting of America continues

    Bank of America Exec Signed, but Didn’t Read Up to 8,000 Foreclosure Papers Per Month

    A Crack in Wall Street’s Foreclosure Pipeline

    While We Are on the Subject of Bad Foreclosures, What About HAMP’s Compliance?

    Fannie And Freddie’s Foreclosure Barons

    Bank of America to Freeze Foreclosure Cases

    fraud factories in foreclosure

    FDCPA — Fair Debt Collection Practices Act


    Posted on June 29, 2009 by Neil Garfield

    Don’t get misled by titles. The wording of the statute clearly uses “verification” not validation. Verification generally means some sworn document or affidavit. This means when you contest the debt under FDCPA (in addition to sending a QWR) the party who is supposedly collecting or enforcing the debt has a duty to “obtain verification”. And that means they can’t verify it themselves unless they are the actual lender. And the statutes says pretty clearly that they must give the lenders name and contact information — past and present. STRATEGY: IF THEY SUPPLY SUCH A DOCUMENT, PICK UP THE PHONE AND SPEAK WITH THE PERSON WHO SIGNED IT.I CAN PRACTICALLY GUARANTEE THEY WILL DISCLAIM EVERYTHING THAT WAS IN IT AND POSSIBLY EVEN THAT THEY SIGNED IT.

    15 U.S.C. 1692 ———–

    FDCPA

    Salient provisions affecting foreclosures:

    § 1692. Congressional findings and declaration of purpose

    Abusive practices

    There is abundant evidence of the use of abusive, deceptive, and unfair debt collection practices by many debt collectors. Abusive debt collection practices contribute to the number of personal bankruptcies, to marital instability, to the loss of jobs, and to invasions of individual privacy.
    (b) Inadequacy of laws
    Existing laws and procedures for redressing these injuries are inadequate to protect consumers.

    (4) The term “creditor” means any person who offers or extends credit creating a debt or to whom a debt is owed, but such term does not include any person to the extent that he receives an assignment or transfer of a debt in default solely for the purpose of facilitating collection of such debt for another.
    (5) The term “debt” means any obligation or alleged obligation of a consumer to pay money arising out of a transaction in which the money, property, insurance, or services which are the subject of the transaction are primarily for personal, family, or household purposes, whether or not such obligation has been reduced to judgment.
    The term “debt collector” means any person who uses any instrumentality of interstate commerce or the mails in any business the principal purpose of which is the collection of any debts, or who regularly collects or attempts to collect, directly or indirectly, debts owed or due or asserted to be owed or due another. Notwithstanding the exclusion provided by clause (F) of the last sentence of this paragraph, the term includes any creditor who, in the process of collecting his own debts, uses any name other than his own which would indicate that a third person is collecting or attempting to collect such debts.

    § 1692g. Validation of debts

    (a) Notice of debt; contents
    Within five days after the initial communication with a consumer in connection with the collection of any debt, a debt collector shall, unless the following information is contained in the initial communication or the consumer has paid the debt, send the consumer a written notice containing—
    (1) the amount of the debt;
    (2) the name of the creditor to whom the debt is owed;
    (3) a statement that unless the consumer, within thirty days after receipt of the notice, disputes the validity of the debt, or any portion thereof, the debt will be assumed to be valid by the debt collector;
    (4) a statement that if the consumer notifies the debt collector in writing within the thirty-day period that the debt, or any portion thereof, is disputed, the debt collector will obtain verification of the debt or a copy of a judgment against the consumer and a copy of such verification or judgment will be mailed to the consumer by the debt collector; and
    (5) a statement that, upon the consumer’s written request within the thirty-day period, the debt collector will provide the consumer with the name and address of the original creditor, if different from the current creditor.
    (b) Disputed debts
    If the consumer notifies the debt collector in writing within the thirty-day period described in subsection (a) of this section that the debt, or any portion thereof, is disputed, or that the consumer requests the name and address of the original creditor, the debt collector shall cease collection of the debt, or any disputed portion thereof, until the debt collector obtains verification of the debt or a copy of a judgment, or the name and address of the original creditor, and a copy of such verification or judgment, or name and address of the original creditor, is mailed to the consumer by the debt collector. Collection activities and communications that do not otherwise violate this subchapter may continue during the 30-day period referred to in subsection (a) unless the consumer has notified the debt collector in writing that the debt, or any portion of the debt, is disputed or that the consumer requests the name and address of the original creditor. Any collection activities and communication during the 30-day period may not overshadow or be inconsistent with the disclosure of the consumer’s right to dispute the debt or request the name and address of the original creditor.
    (c) Admission of liability
    The failure of a consumer to dispute the validity of a debt under this section may not be construed by any court as an admission of liability by the consumer.
    (d) Legal pleadings
    A communication in the form of a formal pleading in a civil action shall not be treated as an initial communication for purposes of subsection (a).
    § 1692j. Furnishing certain deceptive forms

    (a) It is unlawful to design, compile, and furnish any form knowing that such form would be used to create the false belief in a consumer that a person other than the creditor of such consumer is participating in the collection of or in an attempt to collect a debt such consumer allegedly owes such creditor, when in fact such person is not so participating.
    Any person who violates this section shall be liable to the same extent and in the same manner as a debt collector is liable under section 1692k of this title for failure to comply with a provision of this subchapter.

    § 1692k. Civil liability

    (a) Amount of damages
    Except as otherwise provided by this section, any debt collector who fails to comply with any provision of this subchapter with respect to any person is liable to such person in an amount equal to the sum of—
    (1) any actual damage sustained by such person as a result of such failure;
    (2)
    (A) in the case of any action by an individual, such additional damages as the court may allow, but not exceeding $1,000; or
    (B) in the case of a class action, (i) such amount for each named plaintiff as could be recovered under subparagraph (A), and (ii) such amount as the court may allow for all other class members, without regard to a minimum individual recovery, not to exceed the lesser of $500,000 or 1 per centum of the net worth of the debt collector; and
    (3) in the case of any successful action to enforce the foregoing liability, the costs of the action, together with a reasonable attorney’s fee as determined by the court. On a finding by the court that an action under this section was brought in bad faith and for the purpose of harassment, the court may award to the defendant attorney’s fees reasonable in relation to the work expended and costs.
    (b) Factors considered by court
    In determining the amount of liability in any action under subsection (a) of this section, the court shall consider, among other relevant factors—
    (1) in any individual action under subsection (a)(2)(A) of this section, the frequency and persistence of noncompliance by the debt collector, the nature of such noncompliance, and the extent to which such noncompliance was intentional; or
    (2) in any class action under subsection (a)(2)(B) of this section, the frequency and persistence of noncompliance by the debt collector, the nature of such noncompliance, the resources of the debt collector, the number of persons adversely affected, and the extent to which the debt collector’s noncompliance was intentional.
    (c) Intent
    A debt collector may not be held liable in any action brought under this subchapter if the debt collector shows by a preponderance of evidence that the violation was not intentional and resulted from a bona fide error notwithstanding the maintenance of procedures reasonably adapted to avoid any such error.
    (d) Jurisdiction
    An action to enforce any liability created by this subchapter may be brought in any appropriate United States district court without regard to the amount in controversy, or in any other court of competent jurisdiction, within one year from the date on which the violation occurs.
    (e) Advisory opinions of Commission
    No provision of this section imposing any liability shall apply to any act done or omitted in good faith in conformity with any advisory opinion of the Commission, notwithstanding that after such act or omission has occurred, such opinion is amended, rescinded, or determined by judicial or other authority to be invalid for any reason.

    § 1692n. Relation to State laws

    This subchapter does not annul, alter, or affect, or exempt any person subject to the provisions of this subchapter from complying with the laws of any State with respect to debt collection practices, except to the extent that those laws are inconsistent with any provision of this subchapter, and then only to the extent of the inconsistency. For purposes of this section, a State law is not inconsistent with this subchapter if the protection such law affords any consumer is greater than the protection provided by this subchapter.

    § 1692o. Exemption for State regulation

    The Commission shall by regulation exempt from the requirements of this subchapter any class of debt collection practices within any State if the Commission determines that under the law of that State that class of debt collection practices is subject to requirements substantially similar to those imposed by this subchapter, and that there is adequate provision for enforcement.

    The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (FDCPA) has long been ignored by the mortgage servicing and foreclosure industry, which have thought of the law as designed to arrest the abusive behavior of bill collectors, such as the late night phone calls and the harassing letters to the debtor’s place of business. In fact, it is a law whose impact is beginning to be felt throughout the mortgage industry. The FDCPA is a federal law, first enacted in 1977. For years, the FDCPA was enforced through litigation by consumers that was outside the context of the mortgage foreclosure. However, the FDCPA’s expansive language, as well as recent court decisions have led more industries, such as lawyers and mortgage services, to examine whether they are subject to the provisions of the FDCPA. The answer is that they often are. This article will discuss who is subject to the provisions of the FDCPA, and if subject thereto, what the compliance requirements are, and finally, what the penalty provisions for violation of the FDCPA are.

    There are some gray areas in the applicability of the FDCPA, but it is indisputably the law that a mortgage debt and those trying to collect  upon it, in the correct circumstances, can be subject to the FDCPA. The Act applies only to debts that were incurred primarily for “personal, family or household purposes, whether or not [a debt] has been reduced to judgment.” This means that the character of the debt, i.e., consumer or non consumer, is determined by the use to which the money loaned is put. For instance, monies loaned (and secured by a deed of trust) that are invested in a business or used to purchase a commercial strip center or apartment dwelling would represent a non-consumer debt and not be subject to the FDCPA. However, if the borrower used the loaned monies to purchase his personal residence or for other personal expenses, the debt would be a consumer debt subject to the Act.

    Note that the character of the debt, consumer or nonconsumer, is not determined by the type of property that is secured by the deed of trust. For example, the borrower could borrow against a commercial strip center and use the proceeds to buy groceries. Although, the commercial center is, of course, a commercial enterprise, the loaned monies were used for personal purposes and the debt is, therefore, subject to the FDCPA.

    As a practical matter, of course, mortgage services and trustees will find it insufferably burdensome to have to determine the original use of the loan proceeds in every foreclosure situation. Good practice, therefore, would be to assume that all mortgage loan debt is consumer debt, unless there is certain knowledge to the contrary.

    The next question for purposes of determining the applicability of the FDCPA is to ascertain whether the person communicating with the debtor is a “debt collector.” The FDCPA defines debt collector as a person engaged in a business with the principal purpose of collecting debts or who “regularly collects or attempts to collect, directly or indirectly, debts owed to another.” Whether you fall within the definition is crucial. If you are considered a debt collector, you are subject to all of the requirements and restrictions of the FDCPA.

    The application by the courts of who is a debt collector under this definition has been growing over time. For instance, in a case decided on April 18,1995, the United States Supreme Court held that lawyers who regularly collect consumer debts, even when their collection efforts are through litigation only, are debt collectors under FDCPA.  Heintz v. Jerkins 95 Daily Journal D.A.R. 7134 (1995). Note that those organizations that collect on their own debts are not debt collectors (other than those persons whose business’ principal purpose is debt collection). Therefore, courts have held that lenders who foreclose on their mortgage loans are not debt collectors. Olroyd v. Associates Consumer Discount Co., 863 F.2d 23 7 (D.C., E D. Penn 1994).

    Creditors who take an assignment of the debt while it is in default are generally considered to be subject to FDCPA as debt collectors. Therefore, mortgage services who receive a loan prior to default are not covered as debt collectors (Penny v. Stewart Elk Co., 756 F.2d 1197 (5th Cir., 1985); rehearing granted on other grounds, 7611 F.2d 237), but mortgage services who obtained the loan while it was in default are subject to the FDCPA as debt collectors [Games v. Cavazas, 737 F.Supp. 1368 (D.C., D. Del. 1990)]. Thus, the same servicer can be a debt collector for purposes of some loans and not others.

    The author has not reviewed any court decisions holding that a trustee merely performing its statutorily required acts for a nonjudicial foreclosure sale is a debt collector. However, given the increasingly expensive view of the FDCPA taken by the courts, this may be an area of future litigation, and so trustees may be well advised to examine whether their practices are in accordance with the requirements of the FDCPA.

    Often, if not in the majority of cases, the trustee handling a non-judicial foreclosure is substituted onto the deed of trust after the loan falls into default. In a sense, the trustee is analogous to the mortgage servicer who obtains a loan in default. The trustee might be considered by a court at least for some of its activities, as a debt collector for purposes of the FDCPA.

    The FDCPA falls under the purview of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). The FTC has promulgated Statements of General Policy and Staff Commentary on the FDCPA. In part of this commentary and particularly in other FTC staff interpretations, the FTC has stated that legally required communications to debtors in connection with judicial or non-judicial foreclosures are not “communications” within the meaning of the FDCPA. In particular, the interpretations by the FTC state that the preparation or non-judicial foreclosure notices are not debt collection activities under the Act.

    Although the FTC’s comments may appear comforting to trustees, relying on the FTC’s comments may be a mistake. For instance, the FTC had taken a clear position that lawyers whose practice is limited to legal activities, are not subject to the FDCPA. The United States Supreme Court noted the FTC’s position recently in the Heintz case and specifically rejected it noting that the commentary is not binding on the FTC or the public, and the FTC’s interpretations did not properly express congressional intent as stated in the statute. Even if a court ultimately did determine that legally required communications, such as the notices of default, are not subject to the FDCPA, practically any other communications between the trustee and borrower might be covered.

    Once subject to the FDCPA, a debt collector has several responsibilities and restrictions. In particular, the debt collector must give a so called “Miranda Warning” in every communication with the debtor. The warning must disclose clearly to the debtor that, “the debt collector is attempting to collect the debt,” and, “any information obtained will be used for that purpose.”

    In addition to the Miranda Warning, there are general rules about communications.For instance, unless otherwise informed, the debt collector should assume that it is inconvenient to contact the debtor between the hours of 9:00 p.m. and 8:00 a.m. local time. Also, if the debt collector knows the name of the debtor’s attorney or can readily obtain his name and address, the creditor must communicate only with the attorney, and address all communications only to the attorney, unless the attorney fails to respond within a reasonable period of time or consents to direct communication with the debtor. In addition, the debtor may not be contacted at his place of employment if the debt collector knows or has reason to know that the debtor’s employer prohibits the debtor from receiving such communication. There are also a number of types of communications that are considered misleading.

    The FDCPA also requires that a statement be included in the initial communication with the debtor (or within 5 days of the initial communication), providing the debtor with written notice containing the following:

    • the amount of the debt;
    • the name of the creditor to whom the debt is owed;
    • the statement that, unless the consumer, within thirty (30) days after the receipt of the notice disputes the validity of the debt or any portion there of, the debt will be assumed to be valid by the debt collector;
    • the statement that if the consumer notifies the debt collector in writing within the thirty-day period that the debt or any portion there of is disputed, the debt collector will obtain a verification of the debt or a copy of the judgment will be mailed to the consumer by the debt collector;
    • a statement that upon the consumer’s written request within the thirty day period, a debt collector will provide the consumer with the name and address of the original creditor, if different from the current creditor

    Violations of the FDCPA can be severely punished. The consumer has the right to bring its own lawsuit. If the debt collector is in violation of the FDCPA, he/she may be held liable for: (1) any actual damages sustained by the consumer (including damages for mental distress, loss of employment, etc.), and, (2) such additional damages as the court may allow, but not exceeding $ 1,000.

    In the case of the class action, the court may award up to $500,000 or one percent of the debt collector’s net worth, whichever is less. The statute of limitations for bringing an action under the FDCPA is one year. Because a class action award could be a significant cost to a violating debt collector, the statute does have some punitive aspects. In short, because of the continually expansive view of the coverage of the FDCPA, trustees are well advised to consult with their own courts and determine whether they should implement comprehensive practices and procedures to comply with the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.

    Duty to Maximize Net Present Value Owed to All Parties 2923.6.


    2923.6.  (a) The Legislature finds and declares that any duty
    servicers may have to maximize net present value under their pooling and servicing agreements is
    owed to all parties in a loan pool, or to all investors under a pooling and servicing agreement, not to
    any particular party in the loan pool or investor under a polling and servicing agreement, and that a
    servicer acts in the best interests of all parties to the loan pool or investors in the pooling and
    servicing agreement if it agrees to or implements a loan modification or workout plan for which both of
    the following apply:
    (1) The loan is in payment default, or payment default is
    reasonably foreseeable.
    (2) Anticipated recovery under the loan modification or workout plan exceeds the anticipated recovery
    through foreclosure on a net present value basis.
    (b) It is the intent of the Legislature that the mortgagee,
    beneficiary, or authorized agent offer the borrower a loan
    modification or workout plan if such a modification or plan is
    consistent with its contractual or other authority.
    (c) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
    2013, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
    statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2013, deletes or extends that date.

    The Pretender Lender says they do loan Mods but they don’t

    Notice of Sale – Additional 90 Days
    2923.52.  (a) Notwithstanding paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of
    Section 2924, a mortgagee, trustee, or other person authorized to take sale shall not give notice of sale
    until at least 90 days after the lapse of three months as set forth in paragraph (2) of
    subdivision (a) of Section 2924, in order to allow the parties to
    pursue a loan modification to prevent foreclosure, if all of the
    following conditions exist:
    (1) The loan was recorded during the period of January 1, 2003, to January 1, 2008, inclusive, and is
    secured by residential real property.
    (2) The loan at issue is the first mortgage or deed of trust that
    the property secures.
    (3) The borrower occupied the property as the borrower’s principal residence at the time the loan
    became delinquent.
    (4) The notice of default has been recorded on the property.
    (b) This section does not apply to loans serviced by a mortgage loan servicer if that mortgage loan
    servicer has obtained a temporary or final order of exemption pursuant to Section 2923.53 that is
    current and valid at the time the notice of sale is given.
    (c) This section does not apply to loans made, purchased, or
    serviced by:
    (1) A California state or local public housing agency or
    authority, including state or local housing finance agencies
    established under Division 31 (commencing with Section 50000) of the Health and Safety Code and
    Chapter 6 (commencing with Section 980) of Division 4 of the Military and Veterans Code.
    (2) Loans that are collateral for securities purchased by an
    agency or authority described in paragraph (1).
    (d) This section shall become operative 14 days after the issuance of regulations, which shall include
    the form of the application for mortgage loan servicers, by the commissioner pursuant to subdivision
    (d) of Section 2923.53.(e) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2011, and as of that
    date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2011, deletes or
    extends that date.

    Pre-Foreclosure – Required Notice and Duty to Confer with Borrower –

    Pre-Foreclosure – Required Notice and Duty to Confer with Borrower –
    2923.5.
    (a) (1) A mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized
    agent may not file a notice of default pursuant to Section 2924 until 30 days after initial contact is made
    as required by paragraph (2) or 30 days after satisfying the due diligence requirements as described in
    subdivision (g).
    (2) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall contact the borrower in person or by telephone
    in order to assess the borrower’s financial situation and explore options for the borrower to avoid
    foreclosure. During the initial contact, the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall advise the
    borrower that he or she has the right to request a subsequent meeting and, if requested, the mortgagee,
    beneficiary, or authorized agent shall schedule the
    meeting to occur within 14 days. The assessment of the borrower’s financial situation and discussion
    of options may occur during the first contact, or at the subsequent meeting scheduled for that purpose.
    In either case, the borrower shall be provided the toll-free telephone number made available by the
    United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to find a HUD-certified housing
    counseling agency. Any meeting may occur telephonically.
    (b) A notice of default filed pursuant to Section 2924 shall
    include a declaration that the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent has contacted the borrower,
    has tried with due diligence to contact the borrower as required by this section, or that no contact was
    required pursuant to subdivision (h).
    (c) If a mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized agent had already filed the notice of default prior to
    the enactment of this section and did not subsequently file a notice of rescission, then the mortgagee,
    trustee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall, as part of the notice of sale filed pursuant to Section
    2924f, include a declaration that either:
    (1) States that the borrower was contacted to assess the borrower’s financial situation and to explore
    options for the borrower to avoid foreclosure.
    (2) Lists the efforts made, if any, to contact the borrower in the
    event no contact was made.
    (d) A mortgagee’s, beneficiary’s, or authorized agent’s loss
    mitigation personnel may participate by telephone during any contact required by this section.
    (e) For purposes of this section, a “borrower” shall include a
    mortgagor or trustor.
    (f) A borrower may designate, with consent given in writing, a
    HUD-certified housing counseling agency, attorney, or other advisor to discuss with the mortgagee,
    beneficiary, or authorized agent, on the borrower’s behalf, the borrowers financial situation and options
    for the borrower to avoid foreclosure. That contact made at the direction of the borrower shall satisfy
    the contact requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a). Any loan modification or workout plan
    offered at the meeting by the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent is subject to approval by the
    borrower.
    (g) A notice of default may be filed pursuant to Section 2924 when a mortgagee, beneficiary, or
    authorized agent has not contacted a borrower as required by paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) provided
    that the failure to contact the borrower occurred despite the due diligence of the mortgagee,
    beneficiary, or authorized agent. For purposes of this section, “due diligence” shall require and mean
    all of the following:
    (1) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall first
    attempt to contact a borrower by sending a first-class letter that
    includes the toll-free telephone number made available by HUD to find a HUD-certified housing
    counseling agency.
    (2) (A) After the letter has been sent, the mortgagee,
    beneficiary, or authorized agent shall attempt to contact the
    borrower by telephone at least three times at different hours and on different days. Telephone calls
    shall be made to the primary telephone number on file.
    (B) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent may attempt to contact a borrower using an automated
    system to dial borrowers, provided that, if the telephone call is answered, the call is connected to a
    live representative of the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent.
    (C) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent satisfies the
    telephone contact requirements of this paragraph if it determines, after attempting contact pursuant to
    this paragraph, that the borrower’s primary telephone number and secondary telephone number or
    numbers on file, if any, have been disconnected.
    (3) If the borrower does not respond within two weeks after the telephone call requirements of
    paragraph (2) have been satisfied, the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall then send a
    certified letter, with return receipt requested.
    (4) The mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall provide a means for the borrower to contact it
    in a timely manner, including a toll-free telephone number that will provide access to a live
    representative during business hours.
    (5) The mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent has posted a prominent link on the homepage of its
    Internet Web site, if any, to the following information:
    (A) Options that may be available to borrowers who are unable to afford their mortgage payments and
    who wish to avoid foreclosure, and instructions to borrowers advising them on steps to take to explore
    those options.
    (B) A list of financial documents borrowers should collect and be prepared to present to the mortgagee,
    beneficiary, or authorized agent when discussing options for avoiding foreclosure.
    (C) A toll-free telephone number for borrowers who wish to discuss options for avoiding foreclosure
    with their mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent.
    (D) The toll-free telephone number made available by HUD to find a HUD-certified housing counseling
    agency.
    (h) Subdivisions (a), (c), and (g) shall not apply if any of the
    following occurs:
    (1) The borrower has surrendered the property as evidenced by either a letter confirming the surrender
    or delivery of the keys to the property to the mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized agent.
    (2) The borrower has contracted with an organization, person, or entity whose primary business is
    advising people who have decided to leave their homes on how to extend the foreclosure process and
    avoid their contractual obligations to mortgagees or beneficiaries.
    (3) A case has been filed by the borrower under Chapter 7, 11, 12, or 13 of Title 11 of the United States
    Code and the bankruptcy court has not entered an order closing or dismissing the bankruptcy case, or
    granting relief from a stay of foreclosure.
    (i) This section shall apply only to mortgages or deeds of trust
    recorded from January 1, 2003, to December 31, 2007, inclusive, that are secured by owner-occupied
    residential real property containing no more than four dwelling units. For purposes of this subdivision,
    “owner-occupied” means that the residence is the principal residence of the borrower as indicated to
    the lender in loan documents.
    (j) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
    2013, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
    statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2013, deletes or extends that date.

    Mortgage Broker duty defined

    Broker’s Duty to Borrower
    2923.1.
    (a) A mortgage broker providing mortgage brokerage services to a borrower is the fiduciary of the
    borrower, and any violation of the broker’s fiduciary duties shall be a violation of the mortgage broker’s
    license law. This fiduciary duty includes a requirement that the mortgage broker place the economic
    interest of the borrower ahead of his or her own economic interest. A mortgage broker who provides
    mortgage brokerage services to the borrower owes this fiduciary duty to the borrower regardless of
    whether the mortgage broker is acting as an agent for any other party in connection with the residential
    mortgage loan transaction.
    (b) For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:
    (1) “Licensed person” means a real estate broker licensed under the Real Estate Law (Part 1
    (commencing with Section 10000) of Division 4 of the Business and Professions Code), a finance
    lender or broker licensed under the California Finance Lenders Law (Division 9 (commencing with
    Section 22000) of the Financial Code), a residential mortgage lender licensed under the California
    Residential Mortgage Lending Act (Division 20 (commencing with Section 50000) of the Financial
    Code), a commercial or industrial bank organized under the Banking Law (Division 1 (commencing with
    Section 99) of the Financial Code), a savings association organized under the Savings Association
    Law (Division 2 (commencing with Section 5000) of the Financial Code), and a credit union organized
    under the California Credit Union Law (Division 5 (commencing with Section 14000) of the Financial
    Code).
    (2) “Mortgage broker” means a licensed person who provides
    mortgage brokerage services. For purposes of this section, a licensed person who makes a residential
    mortgage loan is a “mortgage broker,”and subject to the requirements of this section applicable to
    mortgage brokers, only with respect to transactions in which the
    licensed person provides mortgage brokerage services.
    (3) “Mortgage brokerage services” means arranging or attempting to arrange, as exclusive agent for
    the borrower or as dual agent for the borrower and lender, for compensation or in expectation of
    compensation, paid directly or indirectly, a residential mortgage loan made by an unaffiliated third party.
    (4) “Residential mortgage loan” means a consumer credit
    transaction that is secured by residential real property that is
    improved by four or fewer residential units.
    (c) The duties set forth in this section shall not be construed to limit or narrow any other fiduciary duty of
    a mortgage broker.

    Trust Deed/Mortgage defined

    “Mortgage” Defined
    2920.  (a) A mortgage is a contract by which specific property,
    including an estate for years in real property, is hypothecated for the performance of an act, without the
    necessity of a change of possession.
    (b) For purposes of Sections 2924 to 2924h, inclusive, “mortgage” also means any security device or
    instrument, other than a deed of trust, that confers a power of sale affecting real property or an estate
    for years therein, to be exercised after breach of the obligation so secured, including a real property
    sales contract, as defined in Section 2985, which contains such a provision.

    Property in possession of adverse claimant
    2921.  A mortgage may be created upon property held adversely to the mortgagor.

    Writing-Formalities
    2922.  A mortgage can be created, renewed, or extended, only by writing, executed with the formalities
    required in the case of a grant of real property.

    Lien-Special-Possession
    2923.
    The lien of a mortgage is special, unless otherwise expressly agreed, and is independent of
    possession.

    state sites for foreclosure help


    MEDIA CENTER

    VIDEO

    Home Front: California agency looks at ways to stem defaults ShareThis

    Upstairs in Sacramento’s fashionable Senator Office Building, three full-time staffers and a steering committee of 12 are hurriedly crafting solutions to the raging mortgage crisis that neither banks nor the federal government has been able to stop. Read more…

    Fighting for Mortgage Reform

    http://www.youtube.com/v/PNU6WCSMPV0&hl=en&fs=1&

    (Sacramento) One California state lawmaker is fighting to reverse the mortgage meltdown. State Assemblymember Ted Lieu (D-Torrance) says its time for financial institutions that have been bailed out by taxpayer dollars to do more to keep struggling homeowners in their homes. A new law authored by Assemblymember Lieu will force lenders to run a comprehensive loan modification program or face a 90 day foreclosure moratorium. And, Lieu says, his California Foreclosure Prevention Act is just the first step so hes introduced new legislation that will end some of the worst practices of the subprime loan industry. Heres more in this Assembly Web Report.

    Foreclosure Relief Bill Headed to Governor’s Desk

    http://www.youtube.com/v/XExe0-jcnGA&hl=en&fs=1&rel=0

    (Sacramento) – Legislation by Assembly Speaker Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles) and Senate President pro Tem Don Perata (D-Oakland) providing immediate relief to homeowners caught in the mortgage crisis is on its way to the Governor’s desk. As we learn in this Assembly Web Report, SB 1137 would require lenders to contact property owners to attempt to avoid foreclosure, provide tenants additional time to move from a foreclosed property and mandate maintenance of foreclosed properties to diminish the impact on the value of neighboring homes. The legislation is an urgency measure, meaning it will become law once the Governor signs it.

    Fixing the Foreclosure Crisis

    http://www.youtube.com/v/rF8VKe_vK3g&hl=en&rel=0

    (Sacramento) – As the mortgage meltdown in America continues to cause stress and strain for thousands of families, Assembly Democrats in the California State Legislature are working to reform the mortgage industry, hoping the proposed regulations will mitigate the financial pain. Led by Assembly Speaker Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles) and Assemblymember Ted Lieu (D-Torrance), Assembly Democrats have crafted a package of legislation designed  to change the way home loans are prepared and implemented. Here’s more on the Assembly Democrat’s mortgage crisis relief and reform package in this Assembly Web Report.

    Assemblymember Caballero Helping Constituents With Mortgage Crisis Issues

    http://www.youtube.com/v/R5pLho83XKw&rel=1

    (Sacramento) – The sub-prime mortgage crisis continues to ravage families throughout California and the nation. Assemblymember Anna Caballero (D-Salinas) says in 2007 home foreclosures skyrocketed in her 28th Assembly District that includes portions of Monterey, San Benito , Santa Clara  and Santa Cruz counties.  A package of Democratic measures to relieve some of the problems in the mortgage industry  continues to move forward in the Assembly. As we learn in this Assembly Web Report, Assemblywoman Caballero is bringing helpful information directly to her constituents by hosting mortgage crisis forums throughout her district.

    Assembly Democrats Take Action to Relieve Sub-prime Mortgage Crisis

    http://www.youtube.com/v/QaooIYl2hd4&rel=1

    (Sacramento) – As the sub-prime mortgage crisis continues to ravage families throughout the state and the nation Assembly Democrats are moving forward with legislation to help consumers who are in danger of losing their homes. Yesterday afternoon the Assembly Committee on Banking and Finance approved legislation from Assemblymembers Ted Lieu, Karen Bass and Alberto Torrico that will require lenders to report how they’re helping consumers who face possible foreclosure, that will keep “foreclosure consultants” from using predatory methods to take advantage of homeowners and that will require lenders to provide more and better notifications to homeowners of expected mortgage payment hikes.

    Assembly Democrats on Mortgage Crisis

    http://www.youtube.com/v/xHol_uxp1LQ&rel=0

    (Sacramento) — Assembly Democrats, led by Speaker of the Assembly Fabian Núñez, are calling for a special legislative session to address the growing foreclosure crisis. The Speaker and the Assembly Democrats have introduced a package of bills designed to stem the rising tide of foreclosures and keep the problem from happening again in the future. As we learn in this Assembly Web Report the Center for Responsible Lending says nearly 180,000 California homes will be lost to foreclosure from the 826,900 sub-prime loans made in 2005-2006 alone. Thousands of families are suffering and California could lose nearly $3 billion in property tax revenue.

    Stockton Foreclosure Rates Worst in Nation

    http://mfile.akamai.com/14081/wmv/vod.ibsys.com/2007/1115/14600265.200k.asx

    Stockton has the worst foreclosure rates in the nation for the third quarter of this year and Sacramento is not far behind.

    Lawmakers Look for Foreclosure Fixes

    http://mfile.akamai.com/14081/wmv/vod.ibsys.com/2007/1102/14498802.200k.asx

    Part of the government’s new program encourages people to get help before they’re too deep in debt….Nov 02, 2007

    Modesto Leads in Foreclosures Nationwide

    http://mfile.akamai.com/14081/wmv/vod.ibsys.com/2007/0919/14145823.200k.asx

    The sub prime lending mess created a housing bubble in the Sacramento Valley. In August, Modesto had more foreclosures than any other city in the nation….Sep 18, 2007

    Bush Announces Initiatives for Mortgage Crisis

    http://mfile.akamai.com/14081/wmv/vod.ibsys.com/2007/0831/14024625.200k.asx

    President Bush announces several initiatives to address the escalating mortgage crisis and help homeowners who are facing foreclosure….Aug 31, 2007

    All Stories on KCRA.com with Foreclosure in the heading

    http://www.youtube.com/v/ge5mx3cyNLM&rel=0

    Speaker Fabian Núñez on the Home Mortgage Crisis – part 1

    http://www.youtube.com/v/t9kRZZxFkzI&rel=0

    Speaker Fabian Núñez on the Home Mortgage Crisis – part 2

    http://www.youtube.com/v/n1nQgiqHy44&rel=0

    Speaker Fabian Núñez on the Home Mortgage Crisis – part 3

    http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=-6796823761430488459&hl=en

    Assembly Banking and Finance Committee Chair Ted Lieu on the Home Mortgage Crisis

    http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=4566431094117868557&hl=en

    Assembly Banking and Finance Committee Chair Ted Lieu on the Home Mortgage Crisis (part 2)

    http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=6265790924257265530&hl=en

    Assemblymember Kevin de León on the Home Mortgage Crisis

    http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=-5026681319705120773&hl=en

    Assembly Labor and Employment Committee Chair Sandré Swanson on the Home Mortgage Crisis

    http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=6654387921883820208&hl=en

    Assembly Judiciary Committee Chair Dave Jones on the Home Mortgage Crisis

    http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=-9170833597049132957&hl=en

    Assemblymember Kevin de León on the Home Mortgage Crisis (In Spanish)

    http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=7005864128976048040&hl=en

    Assemblymember Kevin de León on the Home Mortgage Crisis – (part 2) (In Spanish)

    AUDIO

    NEWS

    YOU MAY BE ENTITLED TO CASH PAYMENT FOR WRONGFUL FORECLOSURE — Coming to a Billboard Near YOU

    YOU MAY BE ENTITLED TO CASH PAYMENT FOR WRONGFUL FORECLOSURE — Coming to a Billboard Near YOU

    Posted on September 25, 2010 by Neil Garfield

    GARFIELD’S NOTE: Well it has finally happened. Three years ago I couldn’t get a single lawyer anywhere to consider this line of work. I predicted that this area of expertise in their practice would dwarf anything they were currently doing including personal injury and malpractice. I even tried to guarantee fees to lawyers and they wouldn’t take it. Now there are hundreds, if not thousands of lawyers who are either practicing in this field or are about to take the plunge. The early adopters who attended my workshops and read my materials, workbooks and bought the DVD’s are making some serious money and have positioned themselves perfectly ahead of the crowd.

    Congratulations, everyone, it was the readers who made this happen. Without your support I would not have been able to reach the many thousands of homeowners and lawyers and government officials whoa re now turning the corner in their understanding of this mess and their willingness to do something about it.

    The article below from Streitfeld sounds like it was written by me. No attribution though. No matter. The message is out. The foreclosures were and are wrongful, illegal, immoral and the opposite of any notion we have of justice. They were dressed up to look right and they got way with it for years because so many homeowners simply gave up convinced they had only to blame themselves for getting into a raw deal. Those homeowners who gave up were wrong and now they will find themselves approached by lawyers who will promise them return of the house they lost or damages for the wrongful foreclosure. When you left, you thought your loan had not been paid and that the notice you received was legitimate. You were wrong on both counts. The loan had been paid, there were other people who had signed up for liability along with you to justify the price on steroids that was sold to your lender (investor).

    For those who are just catching up, here it is in a nutshell: Borrower signs a note to ABC Corp., which says it is the lender but isn’t. So you start right away with the wrong party named on the note and mortgage (deed of trust) PLUS the use of a meaningless nominee on the mortgage (deed of trust) which completely invalidates the documents and clouds the title. Meanwhile the lender gets a mortgage bond NOT SIGNED BY THE BORROWER. The bond says that this new “entity” (which usually they never bothered to actually form) will pay them from “receivables.” The receivables include but ARE NOT LIMITED TO the payments from the borrower who accepted funding of a loan. These other parties are there to justify the fact that the loan was sold at a huge premium to the lender without disclosure to either the borrower or the lender. (The tier 2 Yield Spread Premium that raises some really juicy causes of action under TILA, RESPA and the 10b-5 actions, including treble damages, attorney fees and restitution).

    And and by the way for the more sophisticated lawyers, now would be the time to sharpen up your defense skills and your knowledge of administrative laws. Hundreds of thousands of disciplinary actions are going to filed against the professionally licensed people who attended the borrower’s “closing” and who attended the closing with the “lender.” With their livelihood at stake, their current arrogance will morph into abject fear. Here is your line when you quote them fees: “Remember that rainy day you were saving up for? Well, it’s raining!” Many lawyers and homeowners are going to realize that they have easy pickings when they bring administrative grievances in quasi criminal proceedings (don’t threaten it, that’s a crime, just do it) which results in restitution funded by the professional liability insurer. careful about the way you word the grievance. Don’t go overboard or else the insurance carrier will deny coverage based upon the allegation of an intentional act. You want to allege gross negligence.

    EVERYBODY in the securitization structure gets paid premium money to keep their mouth shut and money changes hands faster than one of those street guys who moves shells or cards around on a table. Yes everyone gets paid — except the borrower who never got the benefit of his the bargain he signed up for — a home worth whatever they said it was worth at closing. It wasn’t worth that and it will never be worth that and everyone except the borrower knew it with the possible exception of some lenders who didn’t care because the other people who the borrower knew nothing about, had “guaranteed” the value of the lender’s investment and minimized the risk to the level of “cash equivalent” AAA-rated.

    The securitization “partners” did not dot their “i’s” nor cross their “t’s.” And that is what the article below is about. But they failed to do that for a reason. They didn’t care about the documents because they never had any intention of using them anyway. It was all a scam cleverly disguised as a legitimate part of the home mortgage industry. It was instead a Ponzi scheme without any of the attributes of real appraisals, real underwriting reviews and committees and decisions. They bought the signature of the borrowers by promising the moon and they sold the apparent existence of signature (which in many cases) did not even exist) to Lenders by promising the stars.

    And now, like it wasn’t news three years ago when we first brought it up, suddenly mainstream media is picking up the possibility that  the foreclosures were all fraudulent also. The pretender lenders were intentionally and knowingly misrepresenting themselves as lenders in order to grab property that didn’t belong to them and to which they had no rights — to the detriment of both the borrowers and the lenders. And some judges, government officials and even lawyers appear to be surprised by that, are you?

    ———–

    GMAC’s Errors Leave Foreclosures in Question

    By DAVID STREITFELD

    The recent admission by a major mortgage lender that it had filed dubious foreclosure documents is likely to fuel a furor against hasty foreclosures, which have prompted complaints nationwide since housing prices collapsed.

    Lawyers for distressed homeowners and law enforcement officials in several states on Friday seized on revelations by GMAC Mortgage, the country’s fourth-largest home loan lender, that it had violated legal rules in its rush to file many foreclosures as quickly as possible.

    Attorneys general in Iowa and North Carolina said they were beginning separate investigations of the lender, and the attorney general in California directed the company to suspend all foreclosures in that state until it “proves that it’s following the letter of the law.”

    The federal government, which became the majority owner of GMAC after supplying $17 billion to prevent the lender’s failure, said Friday that it had told the company to clean up its act.

    Florida lawyers representing borrowers in default said they would start filing motions as early as next week to have hundreds of foreclosure actions dismissed.

    While GMAC is the first big lender to publicly acknowledge that its practices might have been improper, defense lawyers and consumer advocates have long argued that numerous lenders have used inaccurate or incomplete documents to remove delinquent owners from their houses.

    The issue has broad consequences for the millions of buyers of foreclosed homes, some of whom might not have clear title to their bargain property. And it may offer unforeseen opportunities for those who were evicted.

    “You know those billboards that lawyers put up seeking divorcing or bankrupt clients?” asked Greg Clark, a Florida real estate lawyer. “It’s only a matter of time until they start putting up signs that say, ‘You might be entitled to cash payment for wrongful foreclosure.’ ”

    The furor has already begun in Florida, which is one of the 23 states where foreclosures must be approved by courts. Nearly half a million foreclosures are in the Florida courts, overwhelming the system.

    J. Thomas McGrady, chief judge in the foreclosure hotbed of St. Petersburg, said the problems went far beyond GMAC. Four major law firms doing foreclosures for lenders are under investigation by the Florida attorney general.

    “Some of what the lenders are submitting in court is incompetent, some is just sloppy,” said Judge McGrady of the Sixth Judicial Circuit in Clearwater, Fla. “And somewhere in there could be a fraudulent element.”

    In many cases, the defaulting homeowners do not hire lawyers, making problems generated by the lenders hard to detect.

    “Documents are submitted, and there’s no one to really contest whether it is accurate or not,” the judge said. “We have an affidavit that says it is, so we rely on that. But then later we may find out that someone lost their home when they shouldn’t have. We don’t like that.”

    GMAC, which is based in Detroit and is now a subsidiary of Ally Financial, first put the spotlight on its procedures when it told real estate agents and brokers last week that it was immediately and indefinitely stopping all evictions and sales of foreclosed property in the states — generally on the East Coast and in the Midwest — where foreclosures must be approved by courts.

    That was a highly unusual move. So was the lender’s simultaneous withdrawal of important affidavits in pending cases. The affidavits were sworn statements by GMAC officials that they had personal knowledge of the foreclosure documents.

    The company played down its actions, saying the defects in its foreclosure filings were “technical.” It has declined to say how many cases might be affected.

    A GMAC spokeswoman also declined to say Friday whether the company would stop foreclosures in California as the attorney general, Jerry Brown, demanded. Foreclosures in California are not judicial.

    GMAC’s vague explanations have been little comfort to some states.

    “We cannot allow companies to systematically flout the rules of civil procedure,” said one of Iowa’s assistant attorneys general, Patrick Madigan. “They’re either going to have to hire more people or the foreclosure process is going to have to slow down.”

    GMAC began as the auto financing arm of General Motors. During the housing boom, it made a heavy bet on subprime borrowers, giving loans to many people who could not afford a house.

    “We have discussed the current situation with GMAC and expect them to take prompt action to correct any errors,” said Mark Paustenbach, a spokesman for the Treasury Department.

    GMAC appears to have been forced to reveal its problems in the wake of several depositions given by Jeffrey Stephan, the team leader of the document execution unit in the lender’s Fort Washington, Pa., offices.

    Mr. Stephan, 41, said in one deposition that he signed as many as 10,000 affidavits and other foreclosure documents a month; in another he said it was 6,000 to 8,000.

    The affidavits state that Mr. Stephan, in his capacity as limited signing officer for GMAC, had examined “all books, records and documents” involved in the foreclosure and that he had “personal knowledge” of the relevant facts.

    In the depositions, Mr. Stephan said he did not do this.

    In a June deposition, a lawyer representing a foreclosed household put it directly: “So other than the due date and the balances due, is it correct that you do not know whether any other part of the affidavit that you sign is true?”

    “That could be correct,” Mr. Stephan replied.

    Mr. Stephan also said in depositions that his signature had not been notarized when he wrote it, but only later, or even the next day.

    GMAC said Mr. Stephan was not available for an interview. The lender said its “failures” did not “reflect any disrespect for our courts or the judicial processes.”

    Margery Golant, a Boca Raton, Fla., foreclosure defense lawyer, said GMAC “has cracked open the door.”

    “Judges used to look at us strangely when we tried to tell them all these major financial institutions are lying,” said Ms. Golant, a former associate general counsel for the lender Ocwen Financial.

    Her assistants were reviewing all of the law firm’s cases Friday to see whether GMAC had been involved. “Lawyers all over Florida and I’m sure all over the country are drafting pleadings,” she said. “We’ll file motions for sanctions and motions to dismiss the case for fraud on the court.”

    For homeowners in foreclosure, the admissions by GMAC are bringing hope for resolution.

    One such homeowner is John Turner, a commercial airline pilot based near Detroit. Three years ago he bought a Florida condo, thinking he would move down there with a girlfriend. The relationship fizzled, his finances dwindled, and the place went into foreclosure.

    GMAC called several times a week, seeking its $195,000. Mr. Turner says he tried to meet the lender halfway but failed. Last week it put his case in limbo by withdrawing the affidavit.

    “We should be able to come to an agreement that’s beneficial to both of us,” Mr. Turner said. “I feel like I’m due something.”

    Foreclosure code

    “Mortgage” Defined
    2920.  (a) A mortgage is a contract by which specific property,
    including an estate for years in real property, is hypothecated for the performance of an act, without the
    necessity of a change of possession.
    (b) For purposes of Sections 2924 to 2924h, inclusive, “mortgage” also means any security device or
    instrument, other than a deed of trust, that confers a power of sale affecting real property or an estate
    for years therein, to be exercised after breach of the obligation so secured, including a real property
    sales contract, as defined in Section 2985, which contains such a provision.

    Property in possession of adverse claimant
    2921.  A mortgage may be created upon property held adversely to the mortgagor.

    Writing-Formalities
    2922.  A mortgage can be created, renewed, or extended, only by writing, executed with the formalities
    required in the case of a grant of real property.

    Lien-Special-Possession
    2923.
    The lien of a mortgage is special, unless otherwise expressly agreed, and is independent of
    possession.

    Broker’s Duty to Borrower
    2923.1.
    (a) A mortgage broker providing mortgage brokerage services to a borrower is the fiduciary of the
    borrower, and any violation of the broker’s fiduciary duties shall be a violation of the mortgage broker’s
    license law. This fiduciary duty includes a requirement that the mortgage broker place the economic
    interest of the borrower ahead of his or her own economic interest. A mortgage broker who provides
    mortgage brokerage services to the borrower owes this fiduciary duty to the borrower regardless of
    whether the mortgage broker is acting as an agent for any other party in connection with the residential
    mortgage loan transaction.
    (b) For purposes of this section, the following definitions apply:
    (1) “Licensed person” means a real estate broker licensed under the Real Estate Law (Part 1
    (commencing with Section 10000) of Division 4 of the Business and Professions Code), a finance
    lender or broker licensed under the California Finance Lenders Law (Division 9 (commencing with
    Section 22000) of the Financial Code), a residential mortgage lender licensed under the California
    Residential Mortgage Lending Act (Division 20 (commencing with Section 50000) of the Financial
    Code), a commercial or industrial bank organized under the Banking Law (Division 1 (commencing with
    Section 99) of the Financial Code), a savings association organized under the Savings Association
    Law (Division 2 (commencing with Section 5000) of the Financial Code), and a credit union organized
    under the California Credit Union Law (Division 5 (commencing with Section 14000) of the Financial
    Code).
    (2) “Mortgage broker” means a licensed person who provides
    mortgage brokerage services. For purposes of this section, a licensed person who makes a residential
    mortgage loan is a “mortgage broker,”and subject to the requirements of this section applicable to
    mortgage brokers, only with respect to transactions in which the
    licensed person provides mortgage brokerage services.
    (3) “Mortgage brokerage services” means arranging or attempting to arrange, as exclusive agent for
    the borrower or as dual agent for the borrower and lender, for compensation or in expectation of
    compensation, paid directly or indirectly, a residential mortgage loan made by an unaffiliated third party.
    (4) “Residential mortgage loan” means a consumer credit
    transaction that is secured by residential real property that is
    improved by four or fewer residential units.
    (c) The duties set forth in this section shall not be construed to limit or narrow any other fiduciary duty of
    a mortgage broker.

    Pre-Foreclosure – Required Notice and Duty to Confer with Borrower –
    2923.5.
    (a) (1) A mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized
    agent may not file a notice of default pursuant to Section 2924 until 30 days after initial contact is made
    as required by paragraph (2) or 30 days after satisfying the due diligence requirements as described in
    subdivision (g).
    (2) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall contact the borrower in person or by telephone
    in order to assess the borrower’s financial situation and explore options for the borrower to avoid
    foreclosure. During the initial contact, the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall advise the
    borrower that he or she has the right to request a subsequent meeting and, if requested, the mortgagee,
    beneficiary, or authorized agent shall schedule the
    meeting to occur within 14 days. The assessment of the borrower’s financial situation and discussion
    of options may occur during the first contact, or at the subsequent meeting scheduled for that purpose.
    In either case, the borrower shall be provided the toll-free telephone number made available by the
    United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to find a HUD-certified housing
    counseling agency. Any meeting may occur telephonically.
    (b) A notice of default filed pursuant to Section 2924 shall
    include a declaration that the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent has contacted the borrower,
    has tried with due diligence to contact the borrower as required by this section, or that no contact was
    required pursuant to subdivision (h).
    (c) If a mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized agent had already filed the notice of default prior to
    the enactment of this section and did not subsequently file a notice of rescission, then the mortgagee,
    trustee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall, as part of the notice of sale filed pursuant to Section
    2924f, include a declaration that either:
    (1) States that the borrower was contacted to assess the borrower’s financial situation and to explore
    options for the borrower to avoid foreclosure.
    (2) Lists the efforts made, if any, to contact the borrower in the
    event no contact was made.
    (d) A mortgagee’s, beneficiary’s, or authorized agent’s loss
    mitigation personnel may participate by telephone during any contact required by this section.
    (e) For purposes of this section, a “borrower” shall include a
    mortgagor or trustor.
    (f) A borrower may designate, with consent given in writing, a
    HUD-certified housing counseling agency, attorney, or other advisor to discuss with the mortgagee,
    beneficiary, or authorized agent, on the borrower’s behalf, the borrowers financial situation and options
    for the borrower to avoid foreclosure. That contact made at the direction of the borrower shall satisfy
    the contact requirements of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a). Any loan modification or workout plan
    offered at the meeting by the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent is subject to approval by the
    borrower.
    (g) A notice of default may be filed pursuant to Section 2924 when a mortgagee, beneficiary, or
    authorized agent has not contacted a borrower as required by paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) provided
    that the failure to contact the borrower occurred despite the due diligence of the mortgagee,
    beneficiary, or authorized agent. For purposes of this section, “due diligence” shall require and mean
    all of the following:
    (1) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall first
    attempt to contact a borrower by sending a first-class letter that
    includes the toll-free telephone number made available by HUD to find a HUD-certified housing
    counseling agency.
    (2) (A) After the letter has been sent, the mortgagee,
    beneficiary, or authorized agent shall attempt to contact the
    borrower by telephone
    at least three times at different hours and on different days. Telephone calls
    shall be made to the primary telephone number on file.
    (B) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent may attempt to contact a borrower using an automated
    system to dial borrowers, provided that, if the telephone call is answered, the call is connected to a
    live representative of the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent.
    (C) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent satisfies the
    telephone contact requirements of this paragraph if it determines, after attempting contact pursuant to
    this paragraph, that the borrower’s primary telephone number and secondary telephone number or
    numbers on file, if any, have been disconnected.
    (3) If the borrower does not respond within two weeks after the telephone call requirements of
    paragraph (2) have been satisfied, the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall then send a
    certified letter, with return receipt requested.
    (4) The mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall provide a means for the borrower to contact it
    in a timely manner, including a toll-free telephone number that will provide access to a live
    representative during business hours.
    (5) The mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent has posted a prominent link on the homepage of its
    Internet Web site, if any, to the following information:
    (A) Options that may be available to borrowers who are unable to afford their mortgage payments and
    who wish to avoid foreclosure, and instructions to borrowers advising them on steps to take to explore
    those options.
    (B) A list of financial documents borrowers should collect and be prepared to present to the mortgagee,
    beneficiary, or authorized agent when discussing options for avoiding foreclosure.
    (C) A toll-free telephone number for borrowers who wish to discuss options for avoiding foreclosure
    with their mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent.
    (D) The toll-free telephone number made available by HUD to find a HUD-certified housing counseling
    agency.
    (h) Subdivisions (a), (c), and (g) shall not apply if any of the
    following occurs:
    (1) The borrower has surrendered the property as evidenced by either a letter confirming the surrender
    or delivery of the keys to the property to the mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized agent.
    (2) The borrower has contracted with an organization, person, or entity whose primary business is
    advising people who have decided to leave their homes on how to extend the foreclosure process and
    avoid their contractual obligations to mortgagees or beneficiaries.
    (3) A case has been filed by the borrower under Chapter 7, 11, 12, or 13 of Title 11 of the United States
    Code and the bankruptcy court has not entered an order closing or dismissing the bankruptcy case, or
    granting relief from a stay of foreclosure.
    (i) This section shall apply only to mortgages or deeds of trust
    recorded from January 1, 2003, to December 31, 2007, inclusive, that are secured by owner-occupied
    residential real property containing no more than four dwelling units. For purposes of this subdivision,
    “owner-occupied” means that the residence is the principal residence of the borrower as indicated to
    the lender in loan documents.
    (j) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
    2013, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
    statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2013, deletes or extends that date.

    Notice of Sale – Additional 90 Days
    2923.52.  (a) Notwithstanding paragraph (3) of subdivision (a) of
    Section 2924, a mortgagee, trustee, or other person authorized to take sale shall not give notice of sale
    until at least 90 days after the lapse of three months as set forth in paragraph (2) of
    subdivision (a) of Section 2924, in order to allow the parties to
    pursue a loan modification to prevent foreclosure, if all of the
    following conditions exist:
    (1) The loan was recorded during the period of January 1, 2003, to January 1, 2008, inclusive, and is
    secured by residential real property.
    (2) The loan at issue is the first mortgage or deed of trust that
    the property secures.
    (3) The borrower occupied the property as the borrower’s principal residence at the time the loan
    became delinquent.
    (4) The notice of default has been recorded on the property.
    (b) This section does not apply to loans serviced by a mortgage loan servicer if that mortgage loan
    servicer has obtained a temporary or final order of exemption pursuant to Section 2923.53 that is
    current and valid at the time the notice of sale is given.
    (c) This section does not apply to loans made, purchased, or
    serviced by:
    (1) A California state or local public housing agency or
    authority, including state or local housing finance agencies
    established under Division 31 (commencing with Section 50000) of the Health and Safety Code and
    Chapter 6 (commencing with Section 980) of Division 4 of the Military and Veterans Code.
    (2) Loans that are collateral for securities purchased by an
    agency or authority described in paragraph (1).
    (d) This section shall become operative 14 days after the issuance of regulations, which shall include
    the form of the application for mortgage loan servicers, by the commissioner pursuant to subdivision
    (d) of Section 2923.53.(e) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2011, and as of that
    date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2011, deletes or
    extends that date.

    Loan Modification
    2923.53.  (a) A mortgage loan servicer that has implemented a
    comprehensive loan modification program that meets the requirements of this section shall have the
    loans that it services exempted from the provisions of Section 2923.52, upon order of the
    commissioner. A comprehensive loan modification program shall include all of the
    following features:
    (1) The loan modification program is intended to keep borrowers whose principal residences are
    homes located in California in those homes when the anticipated recovery under the loan modification
    or workout plan exceeds the anticipated recovery through foreclosure on a net present value basis.
    (2) The loan modification program targets a ratio of the borrower’s housing-related debt to the
    borrower’s gross income of 38 percent or less, on an aggregate basis in the program.
    (3) The loan modification program includes some combination of the following features:
    (A) An interest rate reduction, as needed, for a fixed term of at
    least five years.
    (B) An extension of the amortization period for the loan term, to no more than 40 years from the original
    date of the loan.
    (C) Deferral of some portion of the principal amount of the unpaid principal balance until maturity of the
    loan.
    (D) Reduction of principal.
    (E) Compliance with a federally mandated loan modification
    program.
    (F) Other factors that the commissioner determines are
    appropriate. In determining those factors, the commissioner may consider efforts implemented in other
    jurisdictions that have resulted in a reduction in foreclosures.
    (4) When determining a loan modification solution for a borrower under the loan modification program,
    the servicer seeks to achieve long-term sustainability for the borrower.
    (b) (1) A mortgage loan servicer may apply to the commissioner for an order exempting loans that it
    services from Section 2923.52. If the mortgage loan servicer elects to apply for an order, the
    application shall be in the form and manner determined by the commissioner.
    (2) Upon receipt of an initial application for exemption under
    this section, the commissioner shall immediately notify the applicant of the date of receipt of the
    application and shall issue a temporary order, effective from that date of receipt, exempting the
    mortgage loan servicer from the provisions of subdivision (a) of Section 2923.52. The temporary order
    shall remain in effect until a final order has been issued by the commissioner pursuant to paragraph
    (3). If the initial application for exemption is denied pursuant to
    paragraph (3), the temporary order shall remain in effect for 30 days after the date of denial.
    (3) Within 30 days of receipt of an initial or revised application, the commissioner shall make a final
    determination on whether the application meets the criteria of subdivision (a). If, after review of the
    application, the commissioner concludes that the mortgage loan servicer has a comprehensive loan
    modification program that meets the requirements of subdivision (a), the commissioner shall issue a
    final order exempting the mortgage loan servicer from the requirements of Section 2923.52. If the
    commissioner concludes that the loan modification program does not meet the requirements of
    subdivision (a), the application for exemption shall be denied and a final order shall not be issued.
    (4) A mortgage loan servicer may submit a revised application if its application for exemption is denied.
    (c) The commissioner may revoke a final order, upon reasonable notice and an opportunity to be heard,
    if the mortgage loan servicer has submitted a materially false or misleading application or if the
    approved loan modification program has been materially altered from the loan modification program on
    which the exemption was based. A revocation by the commissioner shall not be retroactive.
    (d) The commissioner shall adopt, no later than 10 days after the date this section takes effect,
    emergency and final regulations to clarify the application of this section and Section 2923.52, including
    the creation of the application for mortgage loan servicers and requirements regarding the reporting of
    loan modification data by mortgage loan servicers.
    (e) Three months after the first exemption is issued pursuant to subdivision (b) by order of any
    commissioner specified in paragraph (1) of subdivision (j), the Secretary of Business, Transportation
    and Housing shall submit a report to the Legislature regarding the details of the actions taken to
    implement this section and the numbers of applications received and orders issued. The secretary
    shall submit an additional report six months from the date of the submission of the first report and
    every six months thereafter.
    Within existing resources, the commissioners shall collect, from some or all mortgage loan servicers,
    data regarding loan modifications accomplished pursuant to this section and shall make the data
    available on an Internet Web site at least quarterly.
    (f) The Secretary of Business, Transportation and Housing shall maintain on an Internet Web site a
    publicly available list disclosing the final orders granting exemptions, the date of each order, and a link
    to Internet Web sites describing the loan modification programs.
    (g) Until January 1, 2010, the commissioner is authorized to
    contract for goods and services necessary to implement the provisions of this section and Section
    2923.52, and any such contract shall be exempt from Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 10290) of
    Part 2 of Division 2 of the Public Contract Code. Not less than 30 days prior to awarding any contract
    under this section, the commissioner shall provide the pending contract documents to the Joint
    Legislative
    Budget Committee.
    (h) Any person who violates any provision of this section or
    Section 2923.52 shall be deemed to have violated his or her license law as it relates to these
    provisions.
    (i) Nothing in this section or Section 2923.52 shall require a
    servicer to violate contractual agreements for investor-owned loans or provide a modification to a
    borrower who is not willing or able to pay under the modification.
    (j) The submission of an application for an exemption under this section, the reliance upon such an
    exemption, or the provision to the commissioner of data related to the loan modification program shall
    not confer on the commissioner visitorial authority over a federally chartered financial institution.
    Nothing in this subdivision is intended to affect the authority of the commissioner over a federally
    chartered financial institution pursuant to federal law or regulation.
    (k) For purposes of this section and Sections 2923.52 and 2923.54:
    (1) “Commissioner” means any of the following:
    (A) The Commissioner of Corporations for licensed residential mortgage lenders and servicers and
    licensed finance lenders and brokers servicing mortgage loans and any other entities servicing
    mortgage loans that are not described in subparagraph (B) or (C).
    (B) The Commissioner of Financial Institutions for commercial and industrial banks and savings
    associations and credit unions organized in this state servicing mortgage loans.
    (C) The Real Estate Commissioner for licensed real estate brokers servicing mortgage loans.
    (2) “Housing-related debt” means debt that includes loan
    principal, interest, property taxes, hazard insurance, flood
    insurance, mortgage insurance, and homeowner association fees.
    (3) “Mortgage loan servicer” means a person or entity that
    receives or has the right to receive installment payments of
    principal, interest, or other amounts placed in escrow, pursuant to the terms of a mortgage loan or deed
    of trust, and performs services relating to that receipt or enforcement as the holder of the note or on
    behalf of the holder of the note evidencing that loan.(l) This section shall remain in effect only until
    January 1, 2011, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that is enacted before
    January 1, 2011, deletes or extends that date.

    Notice of Sale
    2923.54.  (a) A notice of sale filed pursuant to Section 2924f shall include a declaration from the
    mortgage loan servicer stating both of the following:
    (1) Whether or not the mortgage loan servicer has obtained from the commissioner a final or temporary
    order of exemption pursuant to Section 2923.53 that is current and valid on the date the notice of sale
    is filed.
    (2) Whether the timeframe for giving notice of sale specified in
    subdivision (a) of Section 2923.52 does not apply pursuant to Section 2923.52 or 2923.55.
    (b) Failure to comply with Section 2923.52 or 2923.53 shall not
    invalidate any sale that would otherwise be valid under Section
    2924f.(c) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
    2011, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
    statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2011, deletes or extends that date.

    2923.55.  Section 2923.52 shall not apply if any of the following
    occurs:
    (a) The borrower has surrendered the property, as evidenced by either a letter confirming the surrender
    or delivery of the keys to the property to the mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized agent.
    (b) The borrower has contracted with an organization, person, or entity whose primary business is
    advising people who have decided to leave their homes regarding how to extend the foreclosure
    process and avoid their contractual obligations to mortgagees or beneficiaries.
    (c) A case has been filed by the borrower under Chapter 7, 11, 12, or 13 of Title 11 of the United States
    Code, and the bankruptcy court has not entered an order closing or dismissing the bankruptcy case or
    granting relief from a stay of foreclosure.(d) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
    2011, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that is enacted before January 1,
    2011, deletes or extends that date.

    Duty to Maximize Net Present Value Owed to All Parties
    2923.6.  (a) The Legislature finds and declares that any duty
    servicers may have to maximize net present value under their pooling and servicing agreements is
    owed to all parties in a loan pool, or to all investors under a pooling and servicing agreement, not to
    any particular party in the loan pool or investor under a polling and servicing agreement, and that a
    servicer acts in the best interests of all parties to the loan pool or investors in the pooling and
    servicing agreement if it agrees to or implements a loan modification or workout plan for which both of
    the following apply:
    (1) The loan is in payment default, or payment default is
    reasonably foreseeable.
    (2) Anticipated recovery under the loan modification or workout plan exceeds the anticipated recovery
    through foreclosure on a net present value basis.
    (b) It is the intent of the Legislature that the mortgagee,
    beneficiary, or authorized agent offer the borrower a loan
    modification or workout plan if such a modification or plan is
    consistent with its contractual or other authority.
    (c) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
    2013, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
    statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2013, deletes or extends that date.

    Trust Deed Exception – Exercise of Power of Sale in Trust Deed or Mortgage
    2924.  (a) Every transfer of an interest in property, other than in
    trust, made only as a security for the performance of another act, is to be deemed a mortgage, except
    when in the case of personal property it is accompanied by actual change of possession, in which
    case it is to be deemed a pledge. Where, by a mortgage created after July 27, 1917, of any estate in real
    property, other than an estate at will or for years, less than two, or in any transfer in trust made after
    July 27, 1917, of a like estate to secure the performance of an obligation, a power of sale is conferred
    upon the mortgagee, trustee, or any other person, to be exercised after a breach of the obligation for
    which that mortgage or transfer is a security, the power shall not be exercised except where the
    mortgage or transfer is
    made pursuant to an order, judgment, or decree of a court of record, or to secure the payment of bonds
    or other evidences of indebtedness authorized or permitted to be issued by the Commissioner of
    Corporations, or is made by a public utility subject to the provisions of the Public Utilities Act, until all
    of the following apply:
    (1) The trustee, mortgagee, or beneficiary, or any of their
    authorized agents shall first file for record, in the office of the
    recorder of each county wherein the mortgaged or trust property or some part or parcel thereof is
    situated, a notice of default. That notice of default shall include all of the following:
    (A) A statement identifying the mortgage or deed of trust by
    stating the name or names of the trustor or trustors and giving the book and page, or instrument
    number, if applicable, where the mortgage or deed of trust is recorded or a description of the
    mortgaged or trust property.
    (B) A statement that a breach of the obligation for which the
    mortgage or transfer in trust is security has occurred.
    (C) A statement setting forth the nature of each breach actually known to the beneficiary and of his or
    her election to sell or cause to be sold the property to satisfy that obligation and any other obligation
    secured by the deed of trust or mortgage that is in
    default.
    (D) If the default is curable pursuant to Section 2924c, the
    statement specified in paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) of Section 2924c.
    (2) Not less than three months shall elapse from the filing of the notice of default.
    (3) Except as provided in Section 2923.52, after the lapse of the three months described in paragraph
    (2), the mortgagee, trustee or other person authorized to take the sale shall give notice of sale, stating
    the time and place thereof, in the manner and for a time not less than that set forth in Section 2924f.
    (b) In performing acts required by this article, the trustee shall
    incur no liability for any good faith error resulting from reliance
    on information provided in good faith by the beneficiary regarding the nature and the amount of the
    default under the secured obligation, deed of trust, or mortgage. In performing the acts required by this
    article, a trustee shall not be subject to Title 1.6c (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4.
    (c) A recital in the deed executed pursuant to the power of sale of compliance with all requirements of
    law regarding the mailing of copies of notices or the publication of a copy of the notice of default or the
    personal delivery of the copy of the notice of default or the posting of copies of the notice of sale or the
    publication of a copy thereof shall constitute prima facie evidence of compliance with these
    requirements and conclusive evidence thereof in favor of bona fide purchasers and encumbrancers for
    value and without notice.
    (d) All of the following shall constitute privileged
    communications pursuant to Section 47:
    (1) The mailing, publication, and delivery of notices as required by this section.
    (2) Performance of the procedures set forth in this article.
    (3) Performance of the functions and procedures set forth in this article if those functions and
    procedures are necessary to carry out the duties described in Sections 729.040, 729.050, and 729.080
    of the Code of Civil Procedure.
    (e) There is a rebuttable presumption that the beneficiary
    actually knew of all unpaid loan payments on the obligation owed to the beneficiary and secured by the
    deed of trust or mortgage subject to the notice of default. However, the failure to include an actually
    known default shall not invalidate the notice of sale and the beneficiary shall not be precluded from
    asserting a claim to this omitted default or defaults in a separate notice of default.
    (f) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2011, and as of that date is repealed, unless a
    later enacted statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2011, deletes or extends that date.

    2924.3.  (a) Except as provided in subdivisions (b) and (c), a
    person who has undertaken as an agent of a mortgagee, beneficiary, or owner of a promissory note
    secured directly or collaterally by a mortgage or deed of trust on real property or an estate for years
    therein, to make collections of payments from an obligor under the note, shall mail the following
    notices, postage prepaid, to each mortgagee, beneficiary or owner for whom the agent has agreed to
    make collections from the obligor under the note:
    (1) A copy of the notice of default filed in the office of the
    county recorder pursuant to Section 2924 on account of a breach of obligation under the promissory
    note on which the agent has agreed to make collections of payments, within 15 days after recordation.
    (2) Notice that a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Section 2924 on account of a breach of
    an obligation secured by a mortgage or deed of trust against the same property or estate for years
    therein having priority over the mortgage or deed of trust securing the obligation described in
    paragraph (1), within 15 days after recordation or within three business days after the agent receives
    the information, whichever is later.
    (3) Notice of the time and place scheduled for the sale of the
    real property or estate for years therein pursuant to Section 2924f under a power of sale in a mortgage
    or deed of trust securing an obligation described in paragraphs (1) or (2), not less than 15 days before
    the scheduled date of the sale or not later than the next business day after the agent receives the
    information, whichever is later.
    (b) An agent who has undertaken to make collections on behalf of mortgagees, beneficiaries or owners
    of promissory notes secured by mortgages or deeds of trust on real property or an estate for years
    therein shall not be required to comply with the provisions of subdivision (a) with respect to a
    mortgagee, beneficiary or owner who is entitled to receive notice pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section
    2924b or for whom a request for notice has been recorded pursuant to
    subdivision (b) of Section 2924b if the agent reasonably believes that the address of the mortgagee,
    beneficiary, or owner described in Section 2924b is the current business or residence address of that
    person.
    (c) An agent who has undertaken to make collections on behalf of mortgagees, beneficiaries or owners
    of promissory notes secured by mortgages or deeds of trust on real property or an estate for years
    therein shall not be required to comply with the provisions of paragraph (1) or (2) of subdivision (a) if
    the agent knows or reasonably believes that the default has already been cured by or on behalf of the
    obligor.
    (d) Any failure to comply with the provisions of this section
    shall not affect the validity of a sale in favor of a bona fide
    purchaser or the rights of an encumbrancer for value and without notice.

    Acceleration Clauses – Notice of
    2924.5.  No clause in any deed of trust or mortgage on property
    containing four or fewer residential units or on which four or fewer residential units are to be
    constructed or in any obligation secured by any deed of trust or mortgage on property containing four or
    fewer residential units or on which four or fewer residential units are to be constructed that provides
    for the
    acceleration of the due date of the obligation upon the sale, conveyance, alienation, lease,
    succession, assignment or other transfer of the property subject to
    the deed of trust or mortgage shall be valid
    unless the clause is set forth, in its entirety in both the body
    of the deed of trust or
    mortgage and the promissory note or other document evidencing the secured obligation. This section
    shall apply to all such deeds of trust, mortgages, and obligations secured thereby executed on or after
    July 1, 1972.

    Acceleration Clause – Limitations
    2924.6.  (a) An obligee may not accelerate the maturity date of the principal and accrued interest on any
    loan secured by a mortgage or deed of trust on residential real property solely by reason of any one or
    more of the following transfers in the title to the real property:
    (1) A transfer resulting from the death of an obligor where the
    transfer is to the spouse who is also an obligor.
    (2) A transfer by an obligor where the spouse becomes a coowner of the property.
    (3) A transfer resulting from a decree of dissolution of the
    marriage or legal separation or from a property settlement agreement incidental to such a decree which
    requires the obligor to continue to make the loan payments by which a spouse who is an obligor
    becomes the sole owner of the property.
    (4) A transfer by an obligor or obligors into an inter vivos trust
    in which the obligor or obligors are beneficiaries.
    (5) Such real property or any portion thereof is made subject to a junior encumbrance or lien.
    (b) Any waiver of the provisions of this section by an obligor is void and unenforceable and is contrary
    to public policy.
    (c) For the purposes of this section, “residential real property” means any real property which contains
    at least one but not more than four housing units.
    (d) This act applies only to loans executed or refinanced on or
    after January 1, 1976.

    Acceleration Clause – Disbursement of Insurance Proceeds – Enforceability
    2924.7.  (a) The provisions of any deed of trust or mortgage on real property which authorize any
    beneficiary, trustee, mortgagee, or his or her agent or successor in interest, to
    accelerate the maturity
    date of the principal and interest on any loan secured thereby or to exercise any power of sale or other
    remedy contained therein upon the failure of the trustor or mortgagor to pay, at the times provided  for
    under the terms of the deed of trust or mortgage, any taxes, rents, assessments, or insurance
    premiums with respect to the property or the loan, or any advances made by the beneficiary,
    mortgagee, or his or her agent or successor in interest
    shall be enforceable whether or not impairment
    of the security interest in the
    property has resulted from the failure of the trustor or mortgagor to pay the taxes, rents, assessments,
    insurance premiums, or advances.
    (b) The provisions of any deed of trust or mortgage on real
    property which authorize any beneficiary, trustee, mortgagee, or his or her agent or successor in
    interest,
    to receive and control the disbursement of the proceeds of any policy of fire, flood, or other
    hazard insurance respecting the property shall be enforceable whether or not impairment of the
    security interest in the property has resulted from the event that caused the proceeds of the insurance
    policy to become payable.

    Foreclosure – Additional Notice to Occupants
    2924.8.  (a) Upon posting a notice of sale pursuant to Section
    2924f, a trustee or authorized agent shall also post the following notice, in the manner required for
    posting the notice of sale on the property to be sold, and a mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or
    authorized agent, concurrently with the mailing of the notice of sale pursuant to Section 2924b, shall
    send by first-class mail in an envelope addressed to the “Resident of property subject to foreclosure
    sale” the following notice in English and the languages described in Section 1632: “Foreclosure
    process has begun on this property, which may affect your right to continue to live in this
    property. Twenty days or more after the date of this notice, this
    property may be sold at foreclosure. If you are renting this
    property, the new property owner may either give you a new lease or rental agreement or provide you
    with a 60-day eviction notice.
    However, other laws may prohibit an eviction in this circumstance or provide you with a longer notice
    before eviction. You may wish to contact a lawyer or your local legal aid or housing counseling agency
    to discuss any rights you may have.”
    (b) It shall be an infraction to tear down the notice described in subdivision (a) within 72 hours of
    posting. Violators shall be
    subject to a fine of one hundred dollars ($100).
    (c) A state government entity shall make available translations of the notice described in subdivision
    (a) which may be used by a mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized agent to satisfy the
    requirements of this section.
    (d) This section shall only apply to loans secured by residential real property, and if the billing address
    for the mortgage note is different than the property address.
    (e) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
    2013, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
    statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2013, deletes or extends that date.

    Attorney for Trustee May Conduct Sale and Act as Auctioneer
    2924a.  If, by the terms of any trust or deed of trust a power of
    sale is conferred upon the trustee, the attorney for the trustee, or any duly authorized agent, may
    conduct the sale and act in the sale as the auctioneer for the trustee.

    Copies of Notice of Sale and Default – How Procured
    2924b.  (a) Any person desiring a copy of any notice of default and of any notice of sale under any deed
    of trust or mortgage with power of sale upon real property or an estate for years therein, as to which
    deed of trust or mortgage the power of sale cannot be exercised until these notices are given for the
    time and in the manner provided in Section 2924 may, at any time subsequent to recordation of the
    deed of trust or mortgage and prior to recordation of notice of default thereunder, cause to be filed for
    record in the office of
    the recorder of any county in which any part or parcel of the real property is situated, a duly
    acknowledged request for a copy of the notice of default and of sale. This request shall be signed and
    acknowledged by the person making the request, specifying the name and address of the person to
    whom the notice is to be mailed, shall identify the deed of trust or mortgage by stating the names of the
    parties thereto, the date of recordation thereof, and the book and page where the deed of trust or
    mortgage is recorded or the recorder’s number, and shall be in substantially the following form:

    “In accordance with Section 2924b, Civil Code,  request is  hereby  made that a copy of any notice of
    default and a  copy of any notice of  sale  under the deed of trust (or mortgage) recorded  ______, ____,
    in  Book  _____ page ____ records of ____ County, (or  filed for record  with  recorder’s serial number
    ____, _______County)  California,  executed  by ____ as trustor (or mortgagor) in which  ________ is
    named  as
    beneficiary (or mortgagee) and ______________ as  trustee be mailed to  _________________ at
    ___________________________.
    Name                    Address
    NOTICE: A copy of any notice of default and of  any notice of sale will  be  sent only to the address
    contained in this  recorded request. If your address changes, a new  request must be
    recorded.
    Signature _________________”

    Upon the filing for record of the request, the recorder shall
    index in the general index of grantors the names of the trustors (or mortgagor) recited therein and the
    names of persons requesting copies.
    (b) The mortgagee, trustee, or other person authorized to record the notice of default or the notice of
    sale shall do each of the following:
    (1) Within 10 business days following recordation of the notice of default, deposit or cause to be
    deposited in the United States mail an envelope, sent by registered or certified mail with postage
    prepaid, containing a copy of the notice with the recording date shown thereon, addressed to each
    person whose name and address are set forth in a duly recorded request therefor, directed to the
    address designated in the request and to each trustor or mortgagor at his or her last known address if
    different than the address specified in the deed of trust or mortgage with power of sale.
    (2) At least 20 days before the date of sale, deposit or cause to
    be deposited in the United States mail an envelope, sent by
    registered or certified mail with postage prepaid, containing a copy of the notice of the time and place
    of sale, addressed to each person whose name and address are set forth in a duly recorded request
    therefor, directed to the address designated in the request and to each trustor or mortgagor at his or her
    last known address if different than the address specified in the deed of trust or mortgage with power
    of sale.
    (3) As used in paragraphs (1) and (2), the “last known address” of each trustor or mortgagor means the
    last business or residence physical address actually known by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or
    other person authorized to record the notice of default.
    For the purposes of this subdivision, an address is “actually known” if it is contained in the original
    deed of trust or mortgage, or in any subsequent written notification of a change of physical address
    from the trustor or mortgagor pursuant to the deed of trust or mortgage. For the purposes of this
    subdivision, “physical address” does not include an e-mail or any form of electronic address for a
    trustor or mortgagor. The beneficiary shall inform the trustee of the
    trustor’s last address actually known by the beneficiary. However, the trustee shall incur no liability for
    failing to send any notice to the last address unless the trustee has actual knowledge of it.
    (4) A “person authorized to record the notice of default or the
    notice of sale” shall include an agent for the mortgagee or
    beneficiary, an agent of the named trustee, any person designated in an executed substitution of
    trustee, or an agent of that substituted trustee.
    (c) The mortgagee, trustee, or other person authorized to record the notice of default or the notice of
    sale shall do the following:
    (1) Within one month following recordation of the notice of
    default, deposit or cause to be deposited in the United States mail an envelope, sent by registered or
    certified mail with postage prepaid, containing a copy of the notice with the recording date shown
    thereon, addressed to each person set forth in paragraph (2), provided that the estate or interest of any
    person entitled to receive notice under this subdivision is acquired by an instrument sufficient to
    impart constructive notice of the estate or interest in the land or portion thereof that is subject to the
    deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed, and provided the instrument is recorded in
    the office of the county recorder so as to impart that constructive notice prior to the recording date of
    the notice of default and provided the instrument as so recorded sets forth a mailing address that the
    county recorder shall use, as instructed within the instrument, for the return of the instrument after
    recording, and which address shall be the address used for the purposes of mailing notices herein.
    (2) The persons to whom notice shall be mailed under this
    subdivision are:
    (A) The successor in interest, as of the recording date of the
    notice of default, of the estate or interest or any portion thereof
    of the trustor or mortgagor of the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed.
    (B) The beneficiary or mortgagee of any deed of trust or mortgage recorded subsequent to the deed of
    trust or mortgage being foreclosed, or recorded prior to or concurrently with the deed of trust or
    mortgage being foreclosed but subject to a recorded agreement or a recorded statement of
    subordination to the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed.
    (C) The assignee of any interest of the beneficiary or mortgagee described in subparagraph (B), as of the
    recording date of the notice of default.
    (D) The vendee of any contract of sale, or the lessee of any
    lease, of the estate or interest being foreclosed that is recorded
    subsequent to the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed, or recorded prior to or concurrently with
    the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed but subject to a recorded agreement or statement of
    subordination to the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed.
    (E) The successor in interest to the vendee or lessee described in subparagraph (D), as of the
    recording date of the notice of default.
    (F) The office of the Controller, Sacramento, California, where,
    as of the recording date of the notice of default, a “Notice of Lien for Postponed Property Taxes” has
    been recorded against the real property to which the notice of default applies.
    (3) At least 20 days before the date of sale, deposit or cause to
    be deposited in the United States mail an envelope, sent by
    registered or certified mail with postage prepaid, containing a copy of the notice of the time and place
    of sale addressed to each person to whom a copy of the notice of default is to be mailed as provided in
    paragraphs (1) and (2), and addressed to the office of any state taxing agency, Sacramento, California,
    that has recorded, subsequent to the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed, a notice of tax lien
    prior to the recording date of the notice of default against the real property to which the notice of default
    applies.
    (4) Provide a copy of the notice of sale to the Internal Revenue Service, in accordance with Section
    7425 of the Internal Revenue Code and any applicable federal regulation, if a “Notice of Federal Tax
    Lien under Internal Revenue Laws” has been recorded, subsequent to the deed of trust or mortgage
    being foreclosed, against the real property to which the notice of sale applies. The failure to provide the
    Internal Revenue Service with a copy of the notice of sale pursuant to this paragraph shall be sufficient
    cause to rescind the
    trustee’s sale and invalidate the trustee’s deed, at the option of
    either the successful bidder at the trustee’s sale or the trustee,
    and in either case with the consent of the beneficiary. Any option to rescind the trustee’s sale pursuant
    to this paragraph shall be exercised prior to any transfer of the property by the successful bidder to a
    bona fide purchaser for value. A rescission of the trustee’s sale pursuant to this paragraph may be
    recorded in a notice of rescission pursuant to Section 1058.5.
    (5) The mailing of notices in the manner set forth in paragraph
    (1) shall not impose upon any licensed attorney, agent, or employee of any person entitled to receive
    notices as herein set forth any duty to communicate the notice to the entitled person from the fact that
    the mailing address used by the county recorder is the address of the attorney, agent, or employee.
    (d) Any deed of trust or mortgage with power of sale hereafter
    executed upon real property or an estate for years therein may
    contain a request that a copy of any notice of default and a copy of any notice of sale thereunder shall
    be mailed to any person or party thereto at the address of the person given therein, and a copy of any
    notice of default and of any notice of sale shall be mailed to each of these at the same time and in the
    same manner required as though a separate request therefor had been filed by each of these persons
    as herein authorized. If any deed of trust or mortgage with power of
    sale executed after September 19, 1939, except a deed of trust or mortgage of any of the classes
    excepted from the provisions of Section 2924, does not contain a mailing address of the trustor or
    mortgagor therein named, and if no request for special notice by the trustor or mortgagor in
    substantially the form set forth in this section has subsequently been recorded, a copy of the notice of
    default shall be published once a week for at least four weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in
    the county in which the property is situated, the publication to commence within 10 business days after
    the filing of the notice of default. In lieu of publication, a copy of the notice of default may be delivered
    personally to the trustor or mortgagor within the 10 business days or at any time before publication is
    completed, or by posting the notice of default in a conspicuous place on the property and mailing the
    notice to the last known address of the trustor or mortgagor.
    (e) Any person required to mail a copy of a notice of default or
    notice of sale to each trustor or mortgagor pursuant to subdivision (b) or (c) by registered or certified
    mail shall simultaneously cause to be deposited in the United States mail, with postage prepaid and
    mailed by first-class mail, an envelope containing an additional copy of the required notice addressed
    to each trustor or mortgagor at the same address to which the notice is sent by registered or certified
    mail pursuant to subdivision (b) or (c). The person shall execute and retain an affidavit identifying the
    notice mailed, showing the name
    and residence or business address of that person, that he or she is over the age of 18 years, the date
    of deposit in the mail, the name and address of the trustor or mortgagor to whom sent, and that the
    envelope was sealed and deposited in the mail with postage fully prepaid. In the absence of fraud, the
    affidavit required by this subdivision shall establish a conclusive presumption of mailing.
    (f) With respect to separate interests governed by an association, as defined in subdivision (a) of
    Section 1351, the association may cause to be filed in the office of the recorder in the county in which
    the separate interests are situated a request that a mortgagee, trustee, or other person authorized to
    record a notice of default regarding any of those separate interests mail to the association a copy of any
    trustee’s deed upon sale concerning a separate interest. The request shall include a legal description
    or the assessor’s parcel number of the separate interests. A request recorded pursuant to this
    subdivision shall include the name and address of the association and a statement that it is a
    homeowners’ association.  Subsequent requests of an association shall supersede prior requests.  A
    request pursuant to this subdivision shall be recorded before the filing of a notice of default. The
    mortgagee, trustee, or other authorized person shall mail the requested information to the association
    within 15 business days following the date the trustee’s deed is recorded. Failure to mail the request,
    pursuant to this
    subdivision, shall not affect the title to real property.
    (g) No request for a copy of any notice filed for record pursuant to this section, no statement or
    allegation in the request, and no record thereof shall affect the title to real property or be deemed notice
    to any person that any person requesting copies of notice has or claims any right, title, or interest in, or
    lien or charge upon the property described in the deed of trust or mortgage referred to therein.
    (h) “Business day,” as used in this section, has the meaning
    specified in Section 9.

    Reinstatement After Default in Payment – Notice
    2924c.  (a) (1) Whenever all or a portion of the principal sum of
    any obligation secured by deed of trust or mortgage on real property or an estate for years therein
    hereafter executed has, prior to the maturity date fixed in that obligation, become due or been declared
    due by reason of default in payment of interest or of any installment of principal, or by reason of failure
    of trustor or mortgagor to pay, in accordance with the terms of that obligation or of the deed of trust or
    mortgage, taxes, assessments, premiums for insurance, or advances made by beneficiary or
    mortgagee in accordance with the
    terms of that obligation or of the deed of trust or mortgage, the
    trustor or mortgagor or his or her successor in interest in the
    mortgaged or trust property or any part thereof, or any beneficiary under a subordinate deed of trust or
    any other person having a subordinate lien or encumbrance of record thereon, at any time within the
    period specified in subdivision (e), if the power of sale therein is to be exercised, or, otherwise at any
    time prior to entry of the decree of foreclosure, may pay to the beneficiary or the mortgagee or their
    successors in interest, respectively, the entire amount due, at the time payment is tendered, with
    respect to (A) all amounts of principal, interest, taxes, assessments, insurance premiums, or advances
    actually known by the beneficiary to be, and
    that are, in default and shown in the notice of default, under the
    terms of the deed of trust or mortgage and the obligation secured thereby, (B) all amounts in default on
    recurring obligations not shown in the notice of default, and (C) all reasonable costs and expenses,
    subject to subdivision (c), which are actually incurred in enforcing the terms of the obligation, deed of
    trust, or mortgage, and trustee’s or attorney’s fees, subject to subdivision (d), other than the portion of
    principal as would not then be due had no default
    occurred, and thereby cure the default theretofore existing, and
    thereupon, all proceedings theretofore had or instituted shall be dismissed or discontinued and the
    obligation and deed of trust or mortgage shall be reinstated and shall be and remain in force and effect,
    the same as if the acceleration had not occurred. This section does not apply to bonds or other
    evidences of indebtedness authorized or permitted to be issued by the Commissioner of Corporations
    or made by a public utility subject to the Public Utilities Code. For the purposes of this subdivision, the
    term “recurring obligation” means all amounts of principal and interest on the loan, or rents, subject to
    the deed of trust or mortgage in default due after the notice of default is recorded; all amounts of
    principal and interest or rents advanced on senior liens or leaseholds which are advanced after the
    recordation of the notice of
    default; and payments of taxes, assessments, and hazard insurance advanced after recordation of the
    notice of default. Where the beneficiary or mortgagee has made no advances on defaults which would
    constitute recurring obligations, the beneficiary or mortgagee may require the trustor or mortgagor to
    provide reliable written evidence that the amounts have been paid prior to reinstatement.
    (2) If the trustor, mortgagor, or other person authorized to cure the default pursuant to this subdivision
    does cure the default, the beneficiary or mortgagee or the agent for the beneficiary or mortgagee shall,
    within 21 days following the reinstatement, execute and deliver to the trustee a notice of rescission
    which rescinds the declaration of default and demand for sale and advises the trustee of the date of
    reinstatement. The trustee shall cause the notice of
    rescission to be recorded within 30 days of receipt of the notice of rescission and of all allowable fees
    and costs.
    No charge, except for the recording fee, shall be made against the trustor or mortgagor for the
    execution and recordation of the notice which rescinds the declaration of default and demand for sale.
    (b) (1) The notice, of any default described in this section,
    recorded pursuant to Section 2924, and mailed to any person pursuant to Section 2924b, shall begin
    with the following statement, printed or typed thereon:
    “IMPORTANT NOTICE [14-point boldface type if printed or in
    capital letters if typed]
    IF YOUR PROPERTY IS IN FORECLOSURE BECAUSE YOU ARE BEHIND IN YOUR PAYMENTS, IT MAY
    BE SOLD WITHOUT ANY COURT ACTION, [14-point boldface type if printed or in capital letters if typed]
    and you may have the
    legal right to bring your account in good standing by paying all of your past due payments plus permitted
    costs and expenses within the time permitted by law for reinstatement of your account, which is
    normally five business days prior to the date set for the sale of your property. No sale date may be set
    until three months from the date this notice of default may be recorded (which date of recordation
    appears on this notice).

    This amount is ____________ as of ______________ (Date)
    and will increase until your account becomes current.

    While your property is in foreclosure, you still must pay other
    obligations (such as insurance and taxes) required by your note and deed of trust or mortgage. If you
    fail to make future payments on the loan, pay taxes on the property, provide insurance on the property,
    or pay other obligations as required in the note and deed of trust or mortgage, the beneficiary or
    mortgagee may insist that you do so in order to reinstate your account in good standing. In addition, the
    beneficiary or mortgagee may require as a condition to reinstatement
    that you provide reliable written evidence that you paid all senior liens, property taxes, and hazard
    insurance premiums.
    Upon your written request, the beneficiary or mortgagee will give you a written itemization of the entire
    amount you must pay. You may not have to pay the entire unpaid portion of your account, even though
    full payment was demanded, but you must pay all amounts in default at the time payment is made.
    However, you and your beneficiary or mortgagee may mutually agree in writing prior to the time the
    notice of sale is posted (which may not be earlier than the end of the three-month period stated above)
    to, among other things, (1) provide additional time in which to cure the default by transfer
    of the property or otherwise; or (2) establish a schedule of payments in order to cure your default; or
    both (1) and (2).
    Following the expiration of the time period referred to in the
    first paragraph of this notice, unless the obligation being
    foreclosed upon or a separate written agreement between you and your creditor permits a longer
    period, you have only the legal right to stop the sale of your property by paying the entire amount
    demanded by your creditor.
    To find out the amount you must pay, or to arrange for payment to stop the foreclosure, or if your
    property is in foreclosure for any other reason, contact:

    ____________________________________
    (Name of beneficiary or mortgagee)
    ____________________________________
    (Mailing address)
    ____________________________________
    (Telephone)

    If you have any questions, you should contact a lawyer or the
    governmental agency which may have insured your loan.
    Notwithstanding the fact that your property is in foreclosure, you may offer your property for sale,
    provided the sale is concluded prior to the conclusion of the foreclosure.
    Remember, YOU MAY LOSE LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU DO NOT TAKE PROMPT ACTION. [14-point boldface
    type if printed or in capital letters if typed]”

    Unless otherwise specified, the notice, if printed, shall appear
    in at least 12-point boldface type.
    If the obligation secured by the deed of trust or mortgage is a
    contract or agreement described in paragraph (1) or (4) of
    subdivision (a) of Section 1632, the notice required herein shall be in Spanish if the trustor requested a
    Spanish language translation of the contract or agreement pursuant to Section 1632. If the obligation
    secured by the deed of trust or mortgage is contained in a home improvement contract, as defined in
    Sections 7151.2 and 7159 of the Business and Professions Code, which is subject to Title 2
    (commencing with Section 1801), the seller shall specify on the contract whether or not the contract
    was principally negotiated in Spanish and if the contract was principally negotiated in Spanish, the
    notice required herein shall be in Spanish. No assignee of the
    contract or person authorized to record the notice of default shall incur any obligation or liability for
    failing to mail a notice in
    Spanish unless Spanish is specified in the contract or the assignee or person has actual knowledge
    that the secured obligation was  principally negotiated in Spanish. Unless specified in writing to the
    contrary, a copy of the notice required by subdivision (c) of Section 2924b shall be in English.
    (2) Any failure to comply with the provisions of this subdivision shall not affect the validity of a sale in
    favor of a bona fide purchaser or the rights of an encumbrancer for value and without notice.
    (c) Costs and expenses which may be charged pursuant to Sections 2924 to 2924i, inclusive, shall be
    limited to the costs incurred for recording, mailing, including certified and express mail charges,
    publishing, and posting notices required by Sections 2924 to 2924i, inclusive, postponement pursuant
    to Section 2924g not to exceed fifty dollars ($50) per postponement and a fee for a trustee’s sale
    guarantee or, in the event of judicial foreclosure, a litigation guarantee. For purposes of this
    subdivision, a trustee or beneficiary
    may purchase a trustee’s sale guarantee at a rate meeting the
    standards contained in Sections 12401.1 and 12401.3 of the Insurance Code.
    (d) Trustee’s or attorney’s fees which may be charged pursuant to subdivision (a), or until the notice of
    sale is deposited in the mail to the trustor as provided in Section 2924b, if the sale is by power of sale
    contained in the deed of trust or mortgage, or, otherwise at any time prior to the decree of foreclosure,
    are hereby authorized to be in a base amount that does not exceed three hundred dollars ($300) if the
    unpaid principal sum secured is one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) or less, or two hundred
    fifty dollars ($250) if the unpaid principal sum secured exceeds one hundred fifty
    thousand dollars ($150,000), plus one-half of 1 percent of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding
    fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) up to and including one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000), plus
    one-quarter of 1 percent of any portion of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding one hundred fifty
    thousand dollars ($150,000) up to and including five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000), plus one-
    eighth of 1 percent of any portion of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding five hundred thousand
    dollars ($500,000). Any
    charge for trustee’s or attorney’s fees authorized by this
    subdivision shall be conclusively presumed to be lawful and valid where the charge does not exceed
    the amounts authorized herein. For purposes of this subdivision, the unpaid principal sum secured
    shall determined as of the date the notice of default is recorded.
    (e) Reinstatement of a monetary default under the terms of an
    obligation secured by a deed of trust, or mortgage may be made at any time within the period
    commencing with the date of recordation of the notice of default until five business days prior to the
    date of sale set forth in the initial recorded notice of sale.
    In the event the sale does not take place on the date set forth in the initial recorded notice of sale or a
    subsequent recorded notice of sale is required to be given, the right of reinstatement shall be revived
    as of the date of recordation of the subsequent notice of sale, and shall continue from that date until
    five business days prior to the date of sale set forth in the subsequently recorded notice of sale.
    In the event the date of sale is postponed on the date of sale set forth in either an initial or any
    subsequent notice of sale, or is postponed on the date declared for sale at an immediately preceding
    postponement of sale, and, the postponement is for a period which exceeds five business days from
    the date set forth in the notice of sale, or declared at the time of postponement, then the right of
    reinstatement is revived as of the date of postponement and shall continue from that date until five
    business days prior to the date of sale declared at the time of the postponement.
    Nothing contained herein shall give rise to a right of
    reinstatement during the period of five business days prior to the date of sale, whether the date of sale
    is noticed in a notice of sale or declared at a postponement of sale.
    Pursuant to the terms of this subdivision, no beneficiary,
    trustee, mortgagee, or their agents or successors shall be liable in any manner to a trustor, mortgagor,
    their agents or successors or any beneficiary under a subordinate deed of trust or mortgage or any
    other person having a subordinate lien or encumbrance of record thereon for the failure to allow a
    reinstatement of the obligation secured by a deed of trust or mortgage during the period of five
    business days prior to the sale of the security property, and no such right of reinstatement during this
    period is created by this section. Any right of reinstatement created by this section is terminated five
    business days prior to the date of sale set forth in the initial date of sale, and is revived only as
    prescribed herein and only as of the date set forth herein.
    As used in this subdivision, the term “business day” has the same meaning as specified in Section 9.

    Payment of Costs and Expenses — Payment of Trustee’s and Attorney’s Fees —
    Prohibition Against Rebate or Kickback
    2924d.  (a) Commencing with the date that the notice of sale is
    deposited in the mail, as provided in Section 2924b, and until the property is sold pursuant to the power
    of sale contained in the mortgage or deed of trust, a beneficiary, trustee, mortgagee, or his
    or her agent or successor in interest, may demand and receive from a
    trustor, mortgagor, or his or her agent or successor in interest, or
    any beneficiary under a subordinate deed of trust, or any other
    person having a subordinate lien or encumbrance of record those
    reasonable costs and expenses, to the extent allowed by subdivision
    (c) of Section 2924c, which are actually incurred in enforcing the
    terms of the obligation and trustee’s or attorney’s fees which are
    hereby authorized to be in a base amount which does not exceed four
    hundred twenty-five dollars ($425) if the unpaid principal sum
    secured is one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) or less, or
    three hundred sixty dollars ($360) if the unpaid principal sum
    secured exceeds one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000), plus 1
    percent of any portion of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding
    fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) up to and including one hundred
    fifty thousand dollars ($150,000), plus one-half of 1 percent of any
    portion of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding one hundred
    fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) up to and including five hundred
    thousand dollars ($500,000), plus one-quarter of 1 percent of any
    portion of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding five hundred
    thousand dollars ($500,000). For purposes of this subdivision, the
    unpaid principal sum secured shall be determined as of the date the
    notice of default is recorded. Any charge for trustee’s or attorney’s
    fees authorized by this subdivision shall be conclusively presumed
    to be lawful and valid where that charge does not exceed the amounts
    authorized herein. Any charge for trustee’s or attorney’s fees made
    pursuant to this subdivision shall be in lieu of and not in addition
    to those charges authorized by subdivision (d) of Section 2924c.
    (b) Upon the sale of property pursuant to a power of sale, a
    trustee, or his or her agent or successor in interest, may demand and
    receive from a beneficiary, or his or her agent or successor in
    interest, or may deduct from the proceeds of the sale, those
    reasonable costs and expenses, to the extent allowed by subdivision
    (c) of Section 2924c, which are actually incurred in enforcing the
    terms of the obligation and trustee’s or attorney’s fees which are
    hereby authorized to be in an amount which does not exceed four
    hundred twenty-five dollars ($425) or one percent of the unpaid
    principal sum secured, whichever is greater. For purposes of this
    subdivision, the unpaid principal sum secured shall be determined as
    of the date the notice of default is recorded. Any charge for trustee’
    s or attorney’s fees authorized by this subdivision shall be
    conclusively presumed to be lawful and valid where that charge does
    not exceed the amount authorized herein. Any charges for trustee’s or
    attorney’s fees made pursuant to this subdivision shall be in lieu
    of and not in addition to those charges authorized by subdivision (a)
    of this section and subdivision (d) of Section 2924c.
    (c) (1) No person shall pay or offer to pay or collect any rebate
    or kickback for the referral of business involving the performance of
    any act required by this article.
    (2) Any person who violates this subdivision shall be liable to
    the trustor for three times the amount of any rebate or kickback,
    plus reasonable attorney’s fees and costs, in addition to any other
    remedies provided by law.
    (3) No violation of this subdivision shall affect the validity of
    a sale in favor of a bona fide purchaser or the rights of an
    encumbrancer for value without notice.
    (d) It shall not be unlawful for a trustee to pay or offer to pay
    a fee to an agent or subagent of the trustee for work performed by
    the agent or subagent in discharging the trustee’s obligations under
    the terms of the deed of trust. Any payment of a fee by a trustee to
    an agent or subagent of the trustee for work performed by the agent
    or subagent in discharging the trustee’s obligations under the terms
    of the deed of trust shall be conclusively presumed to be lawful and
    valid if the fee, when combined with other fees of the trustee, does
    not exceed in the aggregate the trustee’s fee authorized by
    subdivision (d) of Section 2924c or subdivision (a) or (b) of this
    section.
    (e) When a court issues a decree of foreclosure, it shall have
    discretion to award attorney’s fees, costs, and expenses as are
    reasonable, if provided for in the note, deed of trust, or mortgage,
    pursuant to Section 580c of the Code of Civil Procedure.

    Request for Written Notice of Delinquencies — Requirements
    2924e.  (a) The beneficiary or mortgagee of any deed of trust or
    mortgage on real property either containing one to four residential
    units or given to secure an original obligation not to exceed three
    hundred thousand dollars ($300,000) may, with the written consent of
    the trustor or mortgagor that is either effected through a signed and
    dated agreement which shall be separate from other loan and security
    documents or disclosed to the trustor or mortgagor in at least
    10-point type, submit a written request by certified mail to the
    beneficiary or mortgagee of any lien which is senior to the lien of
    the requester, for written notice of any or all delinquencies of four
    months or more, in payments of principal or interest on any
    obligation secured by that senior lien notwithstanding that the loan
    secured by the lien of the requester is not then in default as to
    payments of principal or interest.
    The request shall be sent to the beneficiary or mortgagee, or
    agent which it might designate for the purpose of receiving loan
    payments, at the address specified for the receipt of these payments,
    if known, or, if not known, at the address shown on the recorded
    deed of trust or mortgage.
    (b) The request for notice shall identify the ownership or
    security interest of the requester, the date on which the interest of
    the requester will terminate as evidenced by the maturity date of
    the note of the trustor or mortgagor in favor of the requester, the
    name of the trustor or mortgagor and the name of the current owner of
    the security property if different from the trustor or mortgagor,
    the street address or other description of the security property, the
    loan number (if available to the requester) of the loan secured by
    the senior lien, the name and address to which notice is to be sent,
    and shall include or be accompanied by the signed written consent of
    the trustor or mortgagor, and a fee of forty dollars ($40). For
    obligations secured by residential properties, the request shall
    remain valid until withdrawn in writing and shall be applicable to
    all delinquencies as provided in this section, which occur prior to
    the date on which the interest of the requester will terminate as
    specified in the request or the expiration date, as appropriate. For
    obligations secured by nonresidential properties, the request shall
    remain valid until withdrawn in writing and shall be applicable to
    all delinquencies as provided in this section, which occur prior to
    the date on which the interest of the requester will terminate as
    specified in the request or the expiration date, as appropriate. The
    beneficiary or mortgagee of obligations secured by nonresidential
    properties that have sent five or more notices prior to the
    expiration of the effective period of the request may charge a fee up
    to fifteen dollars ($15) for each subsequent notice. A request for
    notice shall be effective for five years from the mailing of the
    request or the recording of that request, whichever occurs later, and
    may be renewed within six months prior to its expiration date by
    sending the beneficiary or mortgagee, or agent, as the case may be,
    at the address to which original requests for notice are to be sent,
    a copy of the earlier request for notice together with a signed
    statement that the request is renewed and a renewal fee of fifteen
    dollars ($15). Upon timely submittal of a renewal request for notice,
    the effectiveness of the original request is continued for five
    years from the time when it would otherwise have lapsed. Succeeding
    renewal requests may be submitted in the same manner. The request for
    notice and renewals thereof shall be recorded in the office of the
    county recorder of the county in which the security real property is
    situated. The rights and obligations specified in this section shall
    inure to the benefit of, or pass to, as the case may be, successors
    in interest of parties specified in this section. Any successor in
    interest of a party entitled to notice under this section shall file
    a request for that notice with any beneficiary or mortgagee of the
    senior lien and shall pay a processing fee of fifteen dollars ($15).
    No new written consent shall be required from the trustor or
    mortgagor.
    (c) Unless the delinquency has been cured, within 15 days
    following the end of four months from any delinquency in payments of
    principal or interest on any obligation secured by the senior lien
    which delinquency exists or occurs on or after 10 days from the
    mailing of the request for notice or the recording of that request,
    whichever occurs later, the beneficiary or mortgagee shall give
    written notice to the requester of the fact of any delinquency and
    the amount thereof.
    The notice shall be given by personal service, or by deposit in
    the mail, first-class postage paid. Following the recording of any
    notice of default pursuant to Section 2924 with respect to the same
    delinquency, no notice or further notice shall be required pursuant
    to this section.
    (d) If the beneficiary or mortgagee of any such senior lien fails
    to give notice to the requester as required in subdivision (c), and a
    subsequent foreclosure or trustee’s sale of the security property
    occurs, the beneficiary or mortgagee shall be liable to the requester
    for any monetary damage due to the failure to provide notice within
    the time period specified in subdivision (c) which the requester has
    sustained from the date on which notice should have been given to the
    earlier of the date on which the notice is given or the date of the
    recording of the notice of default under Section 2924, and shall also
    forfeit to the requester the sum of three hundred dollars ($300). A
    showing by the beneficiary or mortgagee by a preponderance of the
    evidence that the failure to provide timely notice as required by
    subdivision (c) resulted from a bona fide error notwithstanding the
    maintenance of procedures reasonably adapted to avoid any such error
    shall be a defense to any liability for that failure.
    (e) If any beneficiary or mortgagee, or agent which it had
    designated for the purpose of receiving loan payments, has been
    succeeded in interest by any other person, any request for notice
    received pursuant to this section shall be transmitted promptly to
    that person.
    (f) Any failure to comply with the provisions of this section
    shall not affect the validity of a sale in favor of a bona fide
    purchaser or the rights of an encumbrancer for value and without
    notice.
    (g) Upon satisfaction of an obligation secured by a junior lien
    with respect to which a notice request was made pursuant to this
    section, the beneficiary or mortgagee that made the request shall
    communicate that fact in writing to the senior lienholder to whom the
    request was made. The communication shall specify that provision of
    notice pursuant to the prior request under this section is no longer
    required.

    Notice of Sale of Property under Power of Sale in Deed of Trust or Mortgage
    2924f.  (a) As used in this section and Sections 2924g and 2924h,
    “property” means real property or a leasehold estate therein, and
    “calendar week” means Monday through Saturday, inclusive.
    (b) (1) Except as provided in subdivision (c), before any sale of
    property can be made under the power of sale contained in any deed of
    trust or mortgage, or any resale resulting from a rescission for a
    failure of consideration pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section
    2924h, notice of the sale thereof shall be given by posting a written
    notice of the time of sale and of the street address and the
    specific place at the street address where the sale will be held, and
    describing the property to be sold, at least 20 days before the date
    of sale in one public place in the city where the property is to be
    sold, if the property is to be sold in a city, or, if not, then in
    one public place in the judicial district in which the property is to
    be sold, and publishing a copy once a week for three consecutive
    calendar weeks, the first publication to be at least 20 days before
    the date of sale, in a newspaper of general circulation published in
    the city in which the property or some part thereof is situated, if
    any part thereof is situated in a city, if not, then in a newspaper
    of general circulation published in the judicial district in which
    the property or some part thereof is situated, or in case no
    newspaper of general circulation is published in the city or judicial
    district, as the case may be, in a newspaper of general circulation
    published in the county in which the property or some part thereof is
    situated, or in case no newspaper of general circulation is
    published in the city or judicial district or county, as the case may
    be, in a newspaper of general circulation published in the county in
    this state that (A) is contiguous to the county in which the
    property or some part thereof is situated and (B) has, by comparison
    with all similarly contiguous counties, the highest population based
    upon total county population as determined by the most recent federal
    decennial census published by the Bureau of the Census. A copy of
    the notice of sale shall also be posted in a conspicuous place on the
    property to be sold at least 20 days before the date of sale, where
    possible and where not restricted for any reason. If the property is
    a single-family residence the posting shall be on a door of the
    residence, but, if not possible or restricted, then the notice shall
    be posted in a conspicuous place on the property; however, if access
    is denied because a common entrance to the property is restricted by
    a guard gate or similar impediment, the property may be posted at
    that guard gate or similar impediment to any development community.
    Additionally, the notice of sale shall conform to the minimum
    requirements of Section 6043 of the Government Code and be recorded
    with the county recorder of the county in which the property or some
    part thereof is situated at least 20 days prior to the date of sale.
    The notice of sale shall contain the name, street address in this
    state, which may reflect an agent of the trustee, and either a
    toll-free telephone number or telephone number in this state of the
    trustee, and the name of the original trustor, and also shall contain
    the statement required by paragraph (3) of subdivision (c). In
    addition to any other description of the property, the notice shall
    describe the property by giving its street address, if any, or other
    common designation, if any, and a county assessor’s parcel number;
    but if the property has no street address or other common
    designation, the notice shall contain a legal description of the
    property, the name and address of the beneficiary at whose request
    the sale is to be conducted, and a statement that directions may be
    obtained pursuant to a written request submitted to the beneficiary
    within 10 days from the first publication of the notice. Directions
    shall be deemed reasonably sufficient to locate the property if
    information as to the location of the property is given by reference
    to the direction and approximate distance from the nearest
    crossroads, frontage road, or access road. If a legal description or
    a county assessor’s parcel number and either a street address or
    another common designation of the property is given, the validity of
    the notice and the validity of the sale shall not be affected by the
    fact that the street address, other common designation, name and
    address of the beneficiary, or the directions obtained therefrom are
    erroneous or that the street address, other common designation, name
    and address of the beneficiary, or directions obtained therefrom are
    omitted. The term “newspaper of general circulation,” as used in this
    section, has the same meaning as defined in Article 1 (commencing
    with Section 6000) of Chapter 1 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the
    Government Code.
    The notice of sale shall contain a statement of the total amount
    of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the property to be
    sold and reasonably estimated costs, expenses, advances at the time
    of the initial publication of the notice of sale, and, if republished
    pursuant to a cancellation of a cash equivalent pursuant to
    subdivision (d) of Section 2924h, a reference of that fact; provided,
    that the trustee shall incur no liability for any good faith error
    in stating the proper amount, including any amount provided in good
    faith by or on behalf of the beneficiary. An inaccurate statement of
    this amount shall not affect the validity of any sale to a bona fide
    purchaser for value, nor shall the failure to post the notice of sale
    on a door as provided by this subdivision affect the validity of any
    sale to a bona fide purchaser for value.
    (2) If the sale of the property is to be a unified sale as
    provided in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of
    Section 9604 of the Commercial Code, the notice of sale shall also
    contain a description of the personal property or fixtures to be
    sold. In the case where it is contemplated that all of the personal
    property or fixtures are to be sold, the description in the notice of
    the personal property or fixtures shall be sufficient if it is the
    same as the description of the personal property or fixtures
    contained in the agreement creating the security interest in or
    encumbrance on the personal property or fixtures or the filed
    financing statement relating to the personal property or fixtures. In
    all other cases, the description in the notice shall be sufficient
    if it would be a sufficient description of the personal property or
    fixtures under Section 9108 of the Commercial Code. Inclusion of a
    reference to or a description of personal property or fixtures in a
    notice of sale hereunder shall not constitute an election by the
    secured party to conduct a unified sale pursuant to subparagraph (B)
    of paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 9604 of the Commercial
    Code, shall not obligate the secured party to conduct a unified sale
    pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of
    Section 9604 of the Commercial Code, and in no way shall render
    defective or noncomplying either that notice or a sale pursuant to
    that notice by reason of the fact that the sale includes none or less
    than all of the personal property or fixtures referred to or
    described in the notice. This paragraph shall not otherwise affect
    the obligations or duties of a secured party under the Commercial
    Code.
    (c) (1) This subdivision applies only to deeds of trust or
    mortgages which contain a power of sale and which are secured by real
    property containing a single-family, owner-occupied residence, where
    the obligation secured by the deed of trust or mortgage is contained
    in a contract for goods or services subject to the provisions of the
    Unruh Act (Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 1801) of Title 2 of
    Part 4 of Division 3).
    (2) Except as otherwise expressly set forth in this subdivision,
    all other provisions of law relating to the exercise of a power of
    sale shall govern the exercise of a power of sale contained in a deed
    of trust or mortgage described in paragraph (1).
    (3) If any default of the obligation secured by a deed of trust or
    mortgage described in paragraph (1) has not been cured within 30
    days after the recordation of the notice of default, the trustee or
    mortgagee shall mail to the trustor or mortgagor, at his or her last
    known address, a copy of the following statement:

    YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A
    _______________________________________________,
    (Deed of trust or mortgage)
    DATED ____. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT
    YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE.
    IF
    YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE
    PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A
    LAWYER.

    (4) All sales of real property pursuant to a power of sale
    contained in any deed of trust or mortgage described in paragraph (1)
    shall be held in the county where the residence is located and shall
    be made to the person making the highest offer. The trustee may
    receive offers during the 10-day period immediately prior to the date
    of sale and if any offer is accepted in writing by both the trustor
    or mortgagor and the beneficiary or mortgagee prior to the time set
    for sale, the sale shall be postponed to a date certain and prior to
    which the property may be conveyed by the trustor to the person
    making the offer according to its terms. The offer is revocable until
    accepted. The performance of the offer, following acceptance,
    according to its terms, by a conveyance of the property to the
    offeror, shall operate to terminate any further proceeding under the
    notice of sale and it shall be deemed revoked.
    (5) In addition to the trustee fee pursuant to Section 2924c, the
    trustee or mortgagee pursuant to a deed of trust or mortgage subject
    to this subdivision shall be entitled to charge an additional fee of
    fifty dollars ($50).
    (6) This subdivision applies only to property on which notices of
    default were filed on or after the effective date of this
    subdivision.

    Procedure for Sale of Property — Postponement of Sale
    2924g.  (a) All sales of property under the power of sale contained
    in any deed of trust or mortgage shall be held in the county where
    the property or some part thereof is situated, and shall be made at
    auction, to the highest bidder, between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5
    p.m. on any business day, Monday through Friday.
    The sale shall commence at the time and location specified in the
    notice of sale. Any postponement shall be announced at the time and
    location specified in the notice of sale for commencement of the sale
    or pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (c).
    If the sale of more than one parcel of real property has been
    scheduled for the same time and location by the same trustee, (1) any
    postponement of any of the sales shall be announced at the time
    published in the notice of sale, (2) the first sale shall commence at
    the time published in the notice of sale or immediately after the
    announcement of any postponement, and (3) each subsequent sale shall
    take place as soon as possible after the preceding sale has been
    completed.
    (b) When the property consists of several known lots or parcels,
    they shall be sold separately unless the deed of trust or mortgage
    provides otherwise. When a portion of the property is claimed by a
    third person, who requires it to be sold separately, the portion
    subject to the claim may be thus sold. The trustor, if present at the
    sale, may also, unless the deed of trust or mortgage otherwise
    provides, direct the order in which property shall be sold, when the
    property consists of several known lots or parcels which may be sold
    to advantage separately, and the trustee shall follow that direction.
    After sufficient property has been sold to satisfy the indebtedness,
    no more can be sold.
    If the property under power of sale is in two or more counties,
    the public auction sale of all of the property under the power of
    sale may take place in any one of the counties where the property or
    a portion thereof is located.
    (c) (1) There may be a postponement or postponements of the sale
    proceedings, including a postponement upon instruction by the
    beneficiary to the trustee that the sale proceedings be postponed, at
    any time prior to the completion of the sale for any period of time
    not to exceed a total of 365 days from the date set forth in the
    notice of sale. The trustee shall postpone the sale in accordance
    with any of the following:
    (A) Upon the order of any court of competent jurisdiction.
    (B) If stayed by operation of law.
    (C) By mutual agreement, whether oral or in writing, of any
    trustor and any beneficiary or any mortgagor and any mortgagee.
    (D) At the discretion of the trustee.
    (2) In the event that the sale proceedings are postponed for a
    period or periods totaling more than 365 days, the scheduling of any
    further sale proceedings shall be preceded by giving a new notice of
    sale in the manner prescribed in Section 2924f. New fees incurred for
    the new notice of sale shall not exceed the amounts specified in
    Sections 2924c and 2924d, and shall not exceed reasonable costs that
    are necessary to comply with this paragraph.
    (d) The notice of each postponement and the reason therefor shall
    be given by public declaration by the trustee at the time and place
    last appointed for sale. A public declaration of postponement shall
    also set forth the new date, time, and place of sale and the place of
    sale shall be the same place as originally fixed by the trustee for
    the sale. No other notice of postponement need be given. However, the
    sale shall be conducted no sooner than on the seventh day after the
    earlier of (1) dismissal of the action or (2) expiration or
    termination of the injunction, restraining order, or stay that
    required postponement of the sale, whether by entry of an order by a
    court of competent jurisdiction, operation of law, or otherwise,
    unless the injunction, restraining order, or subsequent order
    expressly directs the conduct of the sale within that seven-day
    period. For purposes of this subdivision, the seven-day period shall
    not include the day on which the action is dismissed, or the day on
    which the injunction, restraining order, or stay expires or is
    terminated. If the sale had been scheduled to occur, but this
    subdivision precludes its conduct during that seven-day period, a new
    notice of postponement shall be given if the sale had been scheduled
    to occur during that seven-day period. The trustee shall maintain
    records of each postponement and the reason therefor.
    (e) Notwithstanding the time periods established under subdivision
    (d), if postponement of a sale is based on a stay imposed by Title
    11 of the United States Code (bankruptcy), the sale shall be
    conducted no sooner than the expiration of the stay imposed by that
    title and the seven-day provision of subdivision (d) shall not apply.

    Trustee’s Sale — Bidding Rules
    2924h.  (a) Each and every bid made by a bidder at a trustee’s sale
    under a power of sale contained in a deed of trust or mortgage shall
    be deemed to be an irrevocable offer by that bidder to purchase the
    property being sold by the trustee under the power of sale for the
    amount of the bid. Any second or subsequent bid by the same bidder or
    any other bidder for a higher amount shall be a cancellation of the
    prior bid.
    (b) At the trustee’s sale the trustee shall have the right (1) to
    require every bidder to show evidence of the bidder’s ability to
    deposit with the trustee the full amount of his or her final bid in
    cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, a check
    drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state
    or federal savings and loan association, savings association, or
    savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and
    authorized to do business in this state, or a cash equivalent which
    has been designated in the notice of sale as acceptable to the
    trustee prior to, and as a condition to, the recognizing of the bid,
    and to conditionally accept and hold these amounts for the duration
    of the sale, and (2) to require the last and highest bidder to
    deposit, if not deposited previously, the full amount of the bidder’s
    final bid in cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national
    bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check
    drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings
    association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the
    Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state, or a cash
    equivalent which has been designated in the notice of sale as
    acceptable to the trustee, immediately prior to the completion of the
    sale, the completion of the sale being so announced by the fall of
    the hammer or in another customary manner. The present beneficiary of
    the deed of trust under foreclosure shall have the right to offset
    his or her bid or bids only to the extent of the total amount due the
    beneficiary including the trustee’s fees and expenses.
    (c) In the event the trustee accepts a check drawn by a credit
    union or a savings and loan association pursuant to this subdivision
    or a cash equivalent designated in the notice of sale, the trustee
    may withhold the issuance of the trustee’s deed to the successful
    bidder submitting the check drawn by a state or federal credit union
    or savings and loan association or the cash equivalent until funds
    become available to the payee or endorsee as a matter of right.
    For the purposes of this subdivision, the trustee’s sale shall be
    deemed final upon the acceptance of the last and highest bid, and
    shall be deemed perfected as of 8 a.m. on the actual date of sale if
    the trustee’s deed is recorded within 15 calendar days after the
    sale, or the next business day following the 15th day if the county
    recorder in which the property is located is closed on the 15th day.
    However, the sale is subject to an automatic rescission for a failure
    of consideration in the event the funds are not “available for
    withdrawal” as defined in Section 12413.1 of the Insurance Code. The
    trustee shall send a notice of rescission for a failure of
    consideration to the last and highest bidder submitting the check or
    alternative instrument, if the address of the last and highest bidder
    is known to the trustee.
    If a sale results in an automatic right of rescission for failure
    of consideration pursuant to this subdivision, the interest of any
    lienholder shall be reinstated in the same priority as if the
    previous sale had not occurred.
    (d) If the trustee has not required the last and highest bidder to
    deposit the cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national
    bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check
    drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings
    association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the
    Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state, or a cash
    equivalent which has been designated in the notice of sale as
    acceptable to the trustee in the manner set forth in paragraph (2) of
    subdivision (b), the trustee shall complete the sale. If the last
    and highest bidder then fails to deliver to the trustee, when
    demanded, the amount of his or her final bid in cash, a cashier’s
    check drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or
    federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings
    and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified
    in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business
    in this state, or a cash equivalent which has been designated in the
    notice of sale as acceptable to the trustee, that bidder shall be
    liable to the trustee for all damages which the trustee may sustain
    by the refusal to deliver to the trustee the amount of the final bid,
    including any court costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees.
    If the last and highest bidder willfully fails to deliver to the
    trustee the amount of his or her final bid in cash, a cashier’s check
    drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or
    federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings
    and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified
    in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business
    in this state, or a cash equivalent which has been designated in the
    notice of sale as acceptable to the trustee, or if the last and
    highest bidder cancels a cashiers check drawn on a state or national
    bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check
    drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings
    association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the
    Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state, or a cash
    equivalent that has been designated in the notice of sale as
    acceptable to the trustee, that bidder shall be guilty of a
    misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not more than two thousand five
    hundred dollars ($2,500).
    In the event the last and highest bidder cancels an instrument
    submitted to the trustee as a cash equivalent, the trustee shall
    provide a new notice of sale in the manner set forth in Section 2924f
    and shall be entitled to recover the costs of the new notice of sale
    as provided in Section 2924c.
    (e) Any postponement or discontinuance of the sale proceedings
    shall be a cancellation of the last bid.
    (f) In the event that this section conflicts with any other
    statute, then this section shall prevail.
    (g) It shall be unlawful for any person, acting alone or in
    concert with others, (1) to offer to accept or accept from another,
    any consideration of any type not to bid, or (2) to fix or restrain
    bidding in any manner, at a sale of property conducted pursuant to a
    power of sale in a deed of trust or mortgage. However, it shall not
    be unlawful for any person, including a trustee, to state that a
    property subject to a recorded notice of default or subject to a sale
    conducted pursuant to this chapter is being sold in an “as-is”
    condition.
    In addition to any other remedies, any person committing any act
    declared unlawful by this subdivision or any act which would operate
    as a fraud or deceit upon any beneficiary, trustor, or junior lienor
    shall, upon conviction, be fined not more than ten thousand dollars
    ($10,000) or imprisoned in the county jail for not more than one
    year, or be punished by both that fine and imprisonment.

    Secured Obligations — Balloon Payments
    2924i.  (a) This section applies to loans secured by a deed of trust
    or mortgage on real property containing one to four residential
    units at least one of which at the time the loan is made is or is to
    be occupied by the borrower if the loan is for a period in excess of
    one year and is a balloon payment loan.
    (b) This section shall not apply to (1) open end credit as defined
    in Regulation Z, whether or not the transaction is otherwise subject
    to Regulation Z, (2) transactions subject to Section 2956, or (3)
    loans made for the principal purpose of financing the construction of
    one or more residential units.
    (c) At least 90 days but not more than 150 days prior to the due
    date of the final payment on a loan that is subject to this section,
    the holder of the loan shall deliver or mail by first-class mail,
    with a certificate of mailing obtained from the United States Postal
    Service, to the trustor, or his or her successor in interest, at the
    last known address of that person, a written notice which shall
    include all of the following:
    (1) A statement of the name and address of the person to whom the
    final payment is required to be paid.
    (2) The date on or before which the final payment is required to
    be paid.
    (3) The amount of the final payment, or if the exact amount is
    unknown, a good faith estimate of the amount thereof, including
    unpaid principal, interest and any other charges, such amount to be
    determined assuming timely payment in full of all scheduled
    installments coming due between the date the notice is prepared and
    the date when the final payment is due.
    (4) If the borrower has a contractual right to refinance the final
    payment, a statement to that effect.
    If the due date of the final payment of a loan subject to this
    section is extended prior to the time notice is otherwise required
    under this subdivision, this notice requirement shall apply only to
    the due date as extended (or as subsequently extended).
    (d) For purposes of this section:
    (1) A “balloon payment loan” is a loan which provides for a final
    payment as originally scheduled which is more than twice the amount
    of any of the immediately preceding six regularly scheduled payments
    or which contains a call provision; provided, however, that if the
    call provision is not exercised by the holder of the loan, the
    existence of the unexercised call provision shall not cause the loan
    to be deemed to be a balloon payment loan.
    (2) “Call provision” means a loan contract term that provides the
    holder of the loan with the right to call the loan due and payable
    either after a specified period has elapsed following closing or
    after a specified date.
    (3) “Regulation Z” means any rule, regulation, or interpretation
    promulgated by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
    under the Federal Truth in Lending Act, as amended (15 U.S.C. Sec.
    1601 et seq.), and any interpretation or approval thereof issued by
    an official or employee of the Federal Reserve System duly authorized
    by the board under the Truth in Lending Act, as amended, to issue
    such interpretations or approvals.
    (e) Failure to provide notice as required by subdivision (a) does
    not extinguish any obligation of payment by the borrower, except that
    the due date for any balloon payment shall be the date specified in
    the balloon payment note, or 90 days from the date of delivery or
    mailing of the notice required by subdivision (a), or the due date
    specified in the notice required by subdivision (a), whichever date
    is later. If the operation of this section acts to extend the term of
    any note, interest shall continue to accrue for the extended term at
    the contract rate and payments shall continue to be due at any
    periodic interval and on any payment schedule specified in the note
    and shall be credited to principal or interest under the terms of the
    note. Default in any extended periodic payment shall be considered a
    default under terms of the note or security instrument.
    (f) (1) The validity of any credit document or of any security
    document subject to the provisions of this section shall not be
    invalidated solely because of the failure of any person to comply
    with this section. However, any person who willfully violates any
    provision of this section shall be liable in the amount of actual
    damages suffered by the debtor as the proximate result of the
    violation, and, if the debtor prevails in any suit to recover that
    amount, for reasonable attorney’s fees.
    (2) No person may be held liable in any action under this section
    if it is shown by a preponderance of the evidence that the violation
    was not intentional and resulted from a bona fide error
    notwithstanding the maintenance of procedures reasonably adopted to
    avoid any such error.
    (g) The provisions of this section shall apply to any note
    executed on or after January 1, 1984.

    Conflicting Claims to Proceeds — Trustee’s Notice; Procedure
    2924j.  (a) Unless an interpleader action has been filed, within 30
    days of the execution of the trustee’s deed resulting from a sale in
    which there are proceeds remaining after payment of the amounts
    required by paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section
    2924k, the trustee shall send written notice to all persons with
    recorded interests in the real property as of the date immediately
    prior to the trustee’s sale who would be entitled to notice pursuant
    to subdivisions (b) and (c) of Section 2924b. The notice shall be
    sent by first-class mail in the manner provided in paragraph (1) of
    subdivision (c) of Section 2924b and inform each entitled person of
    each of the following:
    (1) That there has been a trustee’s sale of the described real
    property.
    (2) That the noticed person may have a claim to all or a portion
    of the sale proceeds remaining after payment of the amounts required
    by paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 2924k.
    (3) The noticed person may contact the trustee at the address
    provided in the notice to pursue any potential claim.
    (4) That before the trustee can act, the noticed person may be
    required to present proof that the person holds the beneficial
    interest in the obligation and the security interest therefor. In the
    case of a promissory note secured by a deed of trust, proof that the
    person holds the beneficial interest may include the original
    promissory note and assignment of beneficial interests related
    thereto. The noticed person shall also submit a written claim to the
    trustee, executed under penalty of perjury, stating the following:
    (A) The amount of the claim to the date of trustee’s sale.
    (B) An itemized statement of the principal, interest, and other
    charges.
    (C) That claims must be received by the trustee at the address
    stated in the notice no later than 30 days after the date the trustee
    sends notice to the potential claimant.
    (b) The trustee shall exercise due diligence to determine the
    priority of the written claims received by the trustee to the trustee’
    s sale surplus proceeds from those persons to whom notice was sent
    pursuant to subdivision (a). In the event there is no dispute as to
    the priority of the written claims submitted to the trustee, proceeds
    shall be paid within 30 days after the conclusion of the notice
    period. If the trustee has failed to determine the priority of
    written claims within 90 days following the 30-day notice period,
    then within 10 days thereafter the trustee shall deposit the funds
    with the clerk of the court pursuant to subdivision (c) or file an
    interpleader action pursuant to subdivision (e). Nothing in this
    section shall preclude any person from pursuing other remedies or
    claims as to surplus proceeds.
    (c) If, after due diligence, the trustee is unable to determine
    the priority of the written claims received by the trustee to the
    trustee’s sale surplus of multiple persons or if the trustee
    determines there is a conflict between potential claimants, the
    trustee may file a declaration of the unresolved claims and deposit
    with the clerk of the superior court of the county in which the sale
    occurred, that portion of the sales proceeds that cannot be
    distributed, less any fees charged by the clerk pursuant to this
    subdivision. The declaration shall specify the date of the trustee’s
    sale, a description of the property, the names and addresses of all
    persons sent notice pursuant to subdivision (a), a statement that the
    trustee exercised due diligence pursuant to subdivision (b), that
    the trustee provided written notice as required by subdivisions (a)
    and (d) and the amount of the sales proceeds deposited by the trustee
    with the court. Further, the trustee shall submit a copy of the
    trustee’s sales guarantee and any information relevant to the
    identity, location, and priority of the potential claimants with the
    court and shall file proof of service of the notice required by
    subdivision (d) on all persons described in subdivision (a).
    The clerk shall deposit the amount with the county treasurer or,
    if a bank account has been established for moneys held in trust under
    paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 77009 of the Government
    Code, in that account, subject to order of the court upon the
    application of any interested party. The clerk may charge a
    reasonable fee for the performance of activities pursuant to this
    subdivision equal to the fee for filing an interpleader action
    pursuant to Chapter 5.8 (commencing with Section 70600) of Title 8 of
    the Government Code. Upon deposit of that portion of the sale
    proceeds that cannot be distributed by due diligence, the trustee
    shall be discharged of further responsibility for the disbursement of
    sale proceeds. A deposit with the clerk of the court pursuant to
    this subdivision may be either for the total proceeds of the trustee’
    s sale, less any fees charged by the clerk, if a conflict or
    conflicts exist with respect to the total proceeds, or that portion
    that cannot be distributed after due diligence, less any fees charged
    by the clerk.
    (d) Before the trustee deposits the funds with the clerk of the
    court pursuant to subdivision (c), the trustee shall send written
    notice by first-class mail, postage prepaid, to all persons described
    in subdivision (a) informing them that the trustee intends to
    deposit the funds with the clerk of the court and that a claim for
    the funds must be filed with the court within 30 days from the date
    of the notice, providing the address of the court in which the funds
    were deposited, and a telephone number for obtaining further
    information.
    Within 90 days after deposit with the clerk, the court shall
    consider all claims filed at least 15 days before the date on which
    the hearing is scheduled by the court, the clerk shall serve written
    notice of the hearing by first-class mail on all claimants identified
    in the trustee’s declaration at the addresses specified therein.
    Where the amount of the deposit is twenty-five thousand dollars
    ($25,000) or less, a proceeding pursuant to this section is a limited
    civil case. The court shall distribute the deposited funds to any
    and all claimants entitled thereto.
    (e) Nothing in this section restricts the ability of a trustee to
    file an interpleader action in order to resolve a dispute about the
    proceeds of a trustee’s sale. Once an interpleader action has been
    filed, thereafter the provisions of this section do not apply.
    (f) “Due diligence,” for the purposes of this section means that
    the trustee researched the written claims submitted or other evidence
    of conflicts and determined that a conflict of priorities exists
    between two or more claimants which the trustee is unable to resolve.
    (g) To the extent required by the Unclaimed Property Law, a
    trustee in possession of surplus proceeds not required to be
    deposited with the court pursuant to subdivision (b) shall comply
    with the Unclaimed Property Law (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section
    1500) of Title 10 of Part 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure).
    (h) The trustee, beneficiary, or counsel to the trustee or
    beneficiary, is not liable for providing to any person who is
    entitled to notice pursuant to this section, information set forth
    in, or a copy of, subdivision (h) of Section 2945.3.

    Trustee’s Sale – Distribution of Proceeds; Charges for Costs and Expenses
    2924k.  (a) The trustee, or the clerk of the court upon order to the
    clerk pursuant to subdivision (d) of Section 2924j, shall distribute
    the proceeds, or a portion of the proceeds, as the case may be, of
    the trustee’s sale conducted pursuant to Section 2924h in the
    following order of priority:
    (1) To the costs and expenses of exercising the power of sale and
    of sale, including the payment of the trustee’s fees and attorney’s
    fees permitted pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 2924d and
    subdivision (b) of this section.
    (2) To the payment of the obligations secured by the deed of trust
    or mortgage which is the subject of the trustee’s sale.
    (3) To satisfy the outstanding balance of obligations secured by
    any junior liens or encumbrances in the order of their priority.
    (4) To the trustor or the trustor’s successor in interest. In the
    event the property is sold or transferred to another, to the vested
    owner of record at the time of the trustee’s sale.
    (b) A trustee may charge costs and expenses incurred for such
    items as mailing and a reasonable fee for services rendered in
    connection with the distribution of the proceeds from a trustee’s
    sale, including, but not limited to, the investigation of priority
    and validity of claims and the disbursement of funds. If the fee
    charged for services rendered pursuant to this subdivision does not
    exceed one hundred dollars ($100), or one hundred twenty-five dollars
    ($125) where there are obligations specified in paragraph (3) of
    subdivision (a), the fee is conclusively presumed to be reasonable.

    Filing Declaration of Nonmonetary Status by Trustee; 15 Day Objection Period
    2924l.  (a) In the event that a trustee under a deed of trust is
    named in an action or proceeding in which that deed of trust is the
    subject, and in the event that the trustee maintains a reasonable
    belief that it has been named in the action or proceeding solely in
    its capacity as trustee, and not arising out of any wrongful acts or
    omissions on its part in the performance of its duties as trustee,
    then, at any time, the trustee may file a declaration of nonmonetary
    status. The declaration shall be served on the parties in the manner
    set forth in Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 1010) of Title 14 of
    the Code of Civil Procedure.
    (b) The declaration of nonmonetary status shall set forth the
    status of the trustee as trustee under the deed of trust that is the
    subject of the action or proceeding, that the trustee knows or
    maintains a reasonable belief that it has been named as a defendant
    in the proceeding solely in its capacity as a trustee under the deed
    of trust, its reasonable belief that it has not been named as a
    defendant due to any acts or omissions on its part in the performance
    of its duties as trustee, the basis for that knowledge or reasonable
    belief, and that it agrees to be bound by whatever order or judgment
    is issued by the court regarding the subject deed of trust.
    (c) The parties who have appeared in the action or proceeding
    shall have 15 days from the service of the declaration by the trustee
    in which to object to the nonmonetary judgment status of the
    trustee. Any objection shall set forth the factual basis on which the
    objection is based and shall be served on the trustee.
    (d) In the event that no objection is served within the 15-day
    objection period, the trustee shall not be required to participate
    any further in the action or proceeding, shall not be subject to any
    monetary awards as and for damages, attorneys’ fees or costs, shall
    be required to respond to any discovery requests as a nonparty, and
    shall be bound by any court order relating to the subject deed of
    trust that is the subject of the action or proceeding.
    (e) In the event of a timely objection to the declaration of
    nonmonetary status, the trustee shall thereafter be required to
    participate in the action or proceeding.
    Additionally, in the event that the parties elect not to, or fail
    to, timely object to the declaration of nonmonetary status, but later
    through discovery, or otherwise, determine that the trustee should
    participate in the action because of the performance of its duties as
    a trustee, the parties may file and serve on all parties and the
    trustee a motion pursuant to Section 473 of the Code of Civil
    Procedure that specifies the factual basis for the demand. Upon the
    court’s granting of the motion, the trustee shall thereafter be
    required to participate in the action or proceeding, and the court
    shall provide sufficient time prior to trial for the trustee to be
    able to respond to the complaint, to conduct discovery, and to bring
    other pretrial motions in accordance with the Code of Civil
    Procedure.
    (f) Upon the filing of the declaration of nonmonetary status, the
    time within which the trustee is required to file an answer or other
    responsive pleading shall be tolled for the period of time within
    which the opposing parties may respond to the declaration. Upon the
    timely service of an objection to the declaration on nonmonetary
    status, the trustee shall have 30 days from the date of service
    within which to file an answer or other responsive pleading to the
    complaint or cross-complaint.
    (g) For purposes of this section, “trustee” includes any agent or
    employee of the trustee who performs some or all of the duties of a
    trustee under this article, and includes substituted trustees and
    agents of the beneficiary or trustee.

    Absolute Deed as Mortgage
    2925.  The fact that a transfer was made subject to defeasance on a
    condition, may, for the purpose of showing such transfer to be a
    mortgage, be proved (except as against a subsequent purchaser or
    incumbrancer for value and without notice), though the fact does not
    appear by the terms of the instrument.

    Lien of Mortgage; Extent
    2926.  A mortgage is a lien upon everything that would pass by a
    grant of the property.

    Possession Remains in Mortgagor
    2927.  A mortgage does not entitle the mortgagee to the possession
    of the property, unless authorized by the express terms of the
    mortgage; but after the execution of the mortgage the mortgagor may
    agree to such change of possession without a new consideration.

    Personal Liability of Mortgagor
    2928.  A mortgage does not bind the mortgagor personally to perform
    the act for the performance of which it is a security, unless there
    is an express covenant therein to that effect.

    Impairment of Security
    2929.  No person whose interest is subject to the lien of a mortgage
    may do any act which will substantially impair the mortgagee’s
    security.

    Duty to Maintain Vacant Residential Property; Fines
    2929.3.  (a) (1) A legal owner shall maintain vacant residential
    property purchased by that owner at a foreclosure sale, or acquired
    by that owner through foreclosure under a mortgage or deed of trust.
    A governmental entity may impose a civil fine of up to one thousand
    dollars ($1,000) per day for a violation. If the governmental entity
    chooses to impose a fine pursuant to this section, it shall give
    notice of the alleged violation, including a description of the
    conditions that gave rise to the allegation, and notice of the entity’
    s intent to assess a civil fine if action to correct the violation is
    not commenced within a period of not less than 14 days and completed
    within a period of not less than 30 days. The notice shall be mailed
    to the address provided in the deed or other instrument as specified
    in subdivision (a) of Section 27321.5 of the Government Code, or, if
    none, to the return address provided on the deed or other
    instrument.
    (2) The governmental entity shall provide a period of not less
    than 30 days for the legal owner to remedy the violation prior to
    imposing a civil fine and shall allow for a hearing and opportunity
    to contest any fine imposed. In determining the amount of the fine,
    the governmental entity shall take into consideration any timely and
    good faith efforts by the legal owner to remedy the violation. The
    maximum civil fine authorized by this section is one thousand dollars
    ($1,000) for each day that the owner fails to maintain the property,
    commencing on the day following the expiration of the period to
    remedy the violation established by the governmental entity.
    (3) Subject to the provisions of this section, a governmental
    entity may establish different compliance periods for different
    conditions on the same property in the notice of alleged violation
    mailed to the legal owner.
    (b) For purposes of this section, “failure to maintain” means
    failure to care for the exterior of the property, including, but not
    limited to, permitting excessive foliage growth that diminishes the
    value of surrounding properties, failing to take action to prevent
    trespassers or squatters from remaining on the property, or failing
    to take action to prevent mosquito larvae from growing in standing
    water or other conditions that create a public nuisance.
    (c) Notwithstanding subdivisions (a) and (b), a governmental
    entity may provide less than 30 days’ notice to remedy a condition
    before imposing a civil fine if the entity determines that a specific
    condition of the property threatens public health or safety and
    provided that notice of that determination and time for compliance is
    given.
    (d) Fines and penalties collected pursuant to this section shall
    be directed to local nuisance abatement programs.
    (e) A governmental entity may not impose fines on a legal owner
    under both this section and a local ordinance.
    (f) These provisions shall not preempt any local ordinance.
    (g) This section shall only apply to residential real property.
    (h) The rights and remedies provided in this section are
    cumulative and in addition to any other rights and remedies provided
    by law.
    (i) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
    2013, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
    statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2013, deletes or extends
    that date.

    Permission to Inspect for Hazardous Substance
    2929.5.  (a) A secured lender may enter and inspect the real
    property security for the purpose of determining the existence,
    location, nature, and magnitude of any past or present release or
    threatened release of any hazardous substance into, onto, beneath, or
    from the real property security on either of the following:
    (1) Upon reasonable belief of the existence of a past or present
    release or threatened release of any hazardous substance into, onto,
    beneath, or from the real property security not previously disclosed
    in writing to the secured lender in conjunction with the making,
    renewal, or modification of a loan, extension of credit, guaranty, or
    other obligation involving the borrower.
    (2) After the commencement of nonjudicial or judicial foreclosure
    proceedings against the real property security.
    (b) The secured lender shall not abuse the right of entry and
    inspection or use it to harass the borrower or tenant of the
    property. Except in case of an emergency, when the borrower or tenant
    of the property has abandoned the premises, or if it is
    impracticable to do so, the secured lender shall give the borrower or
    tenant of the property reasonable notice of the secured lender’s
    intent to enter, and enter only during the borrower’s or tenant’s
    normal business hours. Twenty-four hours’ notice shall be presumed to
    be reasonable notice in the absence of evidence to the contrary.
    (c) The secured lender shall reimburse the borrower for the cost
    of repair of any physical injury to the real property security caused
    by the entry and inspection.
    (d) If a secured lender is refused the right of entry and
    inspection by the borrower or tenant of the property, or is otherwise
    unable to enter and inspect the property without a breach of the
    peace, the secured lender may, upon petition, obtain an order from a
    court of competent jurisdiction to exercise the secured lender’s
    rights under subdivision (a), and that action shall not constitute an
    action within the meaning of subdivision (a) of Section 726 of the
    Code of Civil Procedure.
    (e) For purposes of this section:
    (1) “Borrower” means the trustor under a deed of trust, or a
    mortgagor under a mortgage, where the deed of trust or mortgage
    encumbers real property security and secures the performance of the
    trustor or mortgagor under a loan, extension of credit, guaranty, or
    other obligation. The term includes any successor-in-interest of the
    trustor or mortgagor to the real property security before the deed of
    trust or mortgage has been discharged, reconveyed, or foreclosed
    upon.
    (2) “Hazardous substance” includes all of the following:
    (A) Any “hazardous substance” as defined in subdivision (h) of
    Section 25281 of the Health and Safety Code.
    (B) Any “waste” as defined in subdivision (d) of Section 13050 of
    the Water Code.
    (C) Petroleum, including crude oil or any fraction thereof,
    natural gas, natural gas liquids, liquefied natural gas, or synthetic
    gas usable for fuel, or any mixture thereof.
    (3) “Real property security” means any real property and
    improvements, other than a separate interest and any related interest
    in the common area of a residential common interest development, as
    the terms “separate interest,” “common area,” and “common interest
    development” are defined in Section 1351, or real property consisting
    of one acre or less which contains 1 to 15 dwelling units.
    (4) “Release” means any spilling, leaking, pumping, pouring,
    emitting, emptying, discharging, injecting, escaping, leaching,
    dumping, or disposing into the environment, including continuing
    migration, of hazardous substances into, onto, or through soil,
    surface water, or groundwater.
    (5) “Secured lender” means the beneficiary under a deed of trust
    against the real property security, or the mortgagee under a mortgage
    against the real property security, and any successor-in-interest of
    the beneficiary or mortgagee to the deed of trust or mortgage.

    After-Acquired Title
    [2930.]  Section Twenty-nine Hundred and Thirty. Title acquired by
    the mortgagor subsequent to the execution of the mortgage, inures to
    the mortgagee as security for the debt in like manner as if acquired
    before the execution.

    Foreclosure — Code of Civil Procedure Governs
    2931.  A mortgagee may foreclose the right of redemption of the
    mortgagor in the manner prescribed by the CODE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE.

    State of California may be Made a Party to Case
    2931a.  In any action brought to determine conflicting claims to
    real property, or for partition of real property or an estate for
    years therein, or to foreclose a deed of trust, mortgage, or other
    lien upon real property, or in all eminent domain proceedings under
    Section 1250.110 et seq., of the Code of Civil Procedure against real
    property upon which exists a lien to secure the payment of taxes or
    other obligations to an agency of the State of California, other than
    ad valorem taxes upon the real property, the state agency charged
    with the collection of the tax obligation may be made a party. In
    such an action, the court shall have jurisdiction to determine the
    priority and effect of the liens described in the complaint in or
    upon the real property or estate for years therein, but the
    jurisdiction of the court in the action shall not include a
    determination of the validity of the tax giving rise to the lien or
    claim of lien. The complaint or petition in the action shall contain
    a description of the lien sufficient to enable the tax or other
    obligation, payment of which it secures, to be identified with
    certainty, and shall include the name and address of the person owing
    the tax or other obligation, the name of the state agency that
    recorded the lien, and the date and place where the lien was
    recorded. Services of process in the action shall be made upon the
    agency, officer, board, commission, department, division, or other
    body charged with the collection of the tax or obligation. It shall
    be the duty of the Attorney General to represent the state agency in
    the action.

    State may Bid on Properrty
    2931b.  In all actions in which the State of California is named a
    party pursuant to the provisions of Section 2931a and in which real
    property or an estate for years therein is sought to be sold, the
    Attorney General may, with the consent of the Department of Finance,
    bid upon and purchase that real property or estate for years.

    Actions to Foreclose Tax Liens
    2931c.  The Attorney General may bring an action in the courts of
    this or any other state or of the United States to enforce any lien
    to secure the payment of taxes or other obligations to the State of
    California under the Unemployment Insurance Code, the Revenue and
    Taxation Code, or Chapter 6 (commencing with Section 16180) of Part 1
    of Division 4 of Title 2 of the Government Code or to subject to
    payment of the liability giving rise to the lien any property in
    which the debtor has any right, title, or interest. In any action
    brought under this section the court shall have jurisdiction to
    determine the priority and effect of the lien in or upon the
    property, but the jurisdiction of the court in such action shall not
    extend to a determination of the validity of the liability giving
    rise to the lien.

    Power of Sale in Mortgage
    2932.  A power of sale may be conferred by a mortgage upon the
    mortgagee or any other person, to be exercised after a breach of the
    obligation for which the mortgage is a security.

    Power of Sale under Assigned Mortgage
    2932.5.  Where a power to sell real property is given to a
    mortgagee, or other encumbrancer, in an instrument intended to secure
    the payment of money, the power is part of the security and vests in
    any person who by assignment becomes entitled to payment of the
    money secured by the instrument. The power of sale may be exercised
    by the assignee if the assignment is duly acknowledged and recorded.

    Financial Institutions — Repair of Property After Foreclosure
    2932.6.  (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a financial
    institution may undertake to repair any property acquired through
    foreclosure under a mortgage or deed of trust.
    (b) As used in this section, the term “financial institution”
    includes, but is not limited to, banks, savings associations, credit
    unions, and industrial loan companies.
    (c) The rights granted to a financial institution by this section
    are in addition to, and not in derogation of, the rights of a
    financial institution which otherwise exist.

    Power of Attorney to Execute Mortgage
    2933.  A power of attorney to execute a mortgage must be in writing,
    subscribed, acknowledged, or proved, certified, and recorded in like
    manner as powers of attorney for grants of real property.

    Record of Assignment of Mortgage
    2934.  Any assignment of a mortgage and any assignment of the
    beneficial interest under a deed of trust may be recorded, and from
    the time the same is filed for record operates as constructive notice
    of the contents thereof to all persons; and any instrument by which
    any mortgage or deed of trust of, lien upon or interest in real
    property, (or by which any mortgage of, lien upon or interest in
    personal property a document evidencing or creating which is required
    or permitted by law to be recorded), is subordinated or waived as to
    priority may be recorded, and from the time the same is filed for
    record operates as constructive notice of the contents thereof, to
    all persons.

    Substitution of Trustees in Trust Deeds
    2934a.  (a) (1) The trustee under a trust deed upon real property or
    an estate for years therein given to secure an obligation to pay
    money and conferring no other duties upon the trustee than those
    which are incidental to the exercise of the power of sale therein
    conferred, may be substituted by the recording in the county in which
    the property is located of a substitution executed and acknowledged
    by: (A) all of the beneficiaries under the trust deed, or their
    successors in interest, and the substitution shall be effective
    notwithstanding any contrary provision in any trust deed executed on
    or after January 1, 1968; or (B) the holders of more than 50 percent
    of the record beneficial interest of a series of notes secured by the
    same real property or of undivided interests in a note secured by
    real property equivalent to a series transaction, exclusive of any
    notes or interests of a licensed real estate broker that is the
    issuer or servicer of the notes or interests or of any affiliate of
    that licensed real estate broker.
    (2) A substitution executed pursuant to subparagraph (B) of
    paragraph (1) is not effective unless all the parties signing the
    substitution sign, under penalty of perjury, a separate written
    document stating the following:
    (A) The substitution has been signed pursuant to subparagraph (B)
    of paragraph (1).
    (B) None of the undersigned is a licensed real estate broker or an
    affiliate of the broker that is the issuer or servicer of the
    obligation secured by the deed of trust.
    (C) The undersigned together hold more than 50 percent of the
    record beneficial interest of a series of notes secured by the same
    real property or of undivided interests in a note secured by real
    property equivalent to a series transaction.
    (D) Notice of the substitution was sent by certified mail, postage
    prepaid, with return receipt requested to each holder of an interest
    in the obligation secured by the deed of trust who has not joined in
    the execution of the substitution or the separate document.
    The separate document shall be attached to the substitution and be
    recorded in the office of the county recorder of each county in
    which the real property described in the deed of trust is located.
    Once the document required by this paragraph is recorded, it shall
    constitute conclusive evidence of compliance with the requirements of
    this paragraph in favor of substituted trustees acting pursuant to
    this section, subsequent assignees of the obligation secured by the
    deed of trust, and subsequent bona fide purchasers or encumbrancers
    for value of the real property described therein.
    (3) For purposes of this section, “affiliate of the licensed real
    estate broker” includes any person as defined in Section 25013 of the
    Corporations Code that is controlled by, or is under common control
    with, or who controls, a licensed real estate broker. “Control” means
    the possession, direct or indirect, of the power to direct or cause
    the direction of management and policies.
    (4) The substitution shall contain the date of recordation of the
    trust deed, the name of the trustor, the book and page or instrument
    number where the trust deed is recorded, and the name of the new
    trustee. From the time the substitution is filed for record, the new
    trustee shall succeed to all the powers, duties, authority, and title
    granted and delegated to the trustee named in the deed of trust. A
    substitution may be accomplished, with respect to multiple deeds of
    trust which are recorded in the same county in which the substitution
    is being recorded and which all have the same trustee and
    beneficiary or beneficiaries, by recording a single document,
    complying with the requirements of this section, substituting
    trustees for all those deeds of trust.
    (b) If the substitution is effected after a notice of default has
    been recorded but prior to the recording of the notice of sale, the
    beneficiary or beneficiaries shall cause a copy of the substitution
    to be mailed, prior to the recording thereof, in the manner provided
    in Section 2924b, to the trustee then of record and to all persons to
    whom a copy of the notice of default would be required to be mailed
    by the provisions of Section 2924b. An affidavit shall be attached to
    the substitution that notice has been given to those persons and in
    the manner required by this subdivision.
    (c) Notwithstanding any provision of this section or any provision
    in any deed of trust, unless a new notice of sale containing the
    name, street address, and telephone number of the substituted trustee
    is given pursuant to Section 2924f, any sale conducted by the
    substituted trustee shall be void.
    (d) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
    1998, and shall have no force or effect after that date, unless a
    later enacted statute, which is enacted before January 1, 1998,
    deletes or extends that date.

    Substitution of Trustees
    2934a.  (a) (1) The trustee under a trust deed upon real property or
    an estate for years therein given to secure an obligation to pay
    money and conferring no other duties upon the trustee than those
    which are incidental to the exercise of the power of sale therein
    conferred, may be substituted by the recording in the county in which
    the property is located of a substitution executed and acknowledged
    by: (A) all of the beneficiaries under the trust deed, or their
    successors in interest, and the substitution shall be effective
    notwithstanding any contrary provision in any trust deed executed on
    or after January 1, 1968; or (B) the holders of more than 50 percent
    of the record beneficial interest of a series of notes secured by the
    same real property or of undivided interests in a note secured by
    real property equivalent to a series transaction, exclusive of any
    notes or interests of a licensed real estate broker that is the
    issuer or servicer of the notes or interests or of any affiliate of
    that licensed real estate broker.
    (2) A substitution executed pursuant to subparagraph (B) of
    paragraph (1) is not effective unless all the parties signing the
    substitution sign, under penalty of perjury, a separate written
    document stating the following:
    (A) The substitution has been signed pursuant to subparagraph (B)
    of paragraph (1).
    (B) None of the undersigned is a licensed real estate broker or an
    affiliate of the broker that is the issuer or servicer of the
    obligation secured by the deed of trust.
    (C) The undersigned together hold more than 50 percent of the
    record beneficial interest of a series of notes secured by the same
    real property or of undivided interests in a note secured by real
    property equivalent to a series transaction.
    (D) Notice of the substitution was sent by certified mail, postage
    prepaid, with return receipt requested to each holder of an interest
    in the obligation secured by the deed of trust who has not joined in
    the execution of the substitution or the separate document.
    The separate document shall be attached to the substitution and be
    recorded in the office of the county recorder of each county in
    which the real property described in the deed of trust is located.
    Once the document required by this paragraph is recorded, it shall
    constitute conclusive evidence of compliance with the requirements of
    this paragraph in favor of substituted trustees acting pursuant to
    this section, subsequent assignees of the obligation secured by the
    deed of trust and subsequent bona fide purchasers or encumbrancers
    for value of the real property described therein.
    (3) For purposes of this section, “affiliate of the licensed real
    estate broker” includes any person as defined in Section 25013 of the
    Corporations Code that is controlled by, or is under common control
    with, or who controls, a licensed real estate broker. “Control” means
    the possession, direct or indirect, of the power to direct or cause
    the direction of management and policies.
    (4) The substitution shall contain the date of recordation of the
    trust deed, the name of the trustor, the book and page or instrument
    number where the trust deed is recorded, and the name of the new
    trustee. From the time the substitution is filed for record, the new
    trustee shall succeed to all the powers, duties, authority, and title
    granted and delegated to the trustee named in the deed of trust. A
    substitution may be accomplished, with respect to multiple deeds of
    trust which are recorded in the same county in which the substitution
    is being recorded and which all have the same trustee and
    beneficiary or beneficiaries, by recording a single document,
    complying with the requirements of this section, substituting
    trustees for all those deeds of trust.
    (b) If the substitution is executed, but not recorded, prior to or
    concurrently with the recording of the notice of default, the
    beneficiary or beneficiaries or their authorized agents shall cause
    notice of the substitution to be mailed prior to or concurrently with
    the recording thereof, in the manner provided in Section 2924b, to
    all persons to whom a copy of the notice of default would be required
    to be mailed by the provisions of Section 2924b. An affidavit shall
    be attached to the substitution that notice has been given to those
    persons and in the manner required by this subdivision.
    (c) If the substitution is effected after a notice of default has
    been recorded but prior to the recording of the notice of sale, the
    beneficiary or beneficiaries or their authorized agents shall cause a
    copy of the substitution to be mailed, prior to, or concurrently
    with, the recording thereof, in the manner provided in Section 2924b,
    to the trustee then of record and to all persons to whom a copy of
    the notice of default would be required to be mailed by the
    provisions of Section 2924b. An affidavit shall be attached to the
    substitution that notice has been given to those persons and in the
    manner required by this subdivision.
    (d) A trustee named in a recorded substitution of trustee shall be
    deemed to be authorized to act as the trustee under the mortgage or
    deed of trust for all purposes from the date the substitution is
    executed by the mortgagee, beneficiaries, or by their authorized
    agents. Nothing herein requires that a trustee under a recorded
    substitution accept the substitution. Once recorded, the substitution
    shall constitute conclusive evidence of the authority of the
    substituted trustee or his or her agents to act pursuant to this
    section.
    (e) Notwithstanding any provision of this section or any provision
    in any deed of trust, unless a new notice of sale containing the
    name, street address, and telephone number of the substituted trustee
    is given pursuant to Section 2924f after execution of the
    substitution, any sale conducted by the substituted trustee shall be
    void.
    (f) This section shall become operative on January 1, 1998.

    Vacation of Office of Trustee under Deed of Trust
    2934b.  Sections 15643 and 18102 of the Probate Code apply to
    trustees under deeds of trust given to secure obligations.

    Execution of Security Not Notice to Debtor
    2935.  When a mortgage or deed of trust is executed as security for
    money due or to become due, on a promissory note, bond, or other
    instrument, designated in the mortgage or deed of trust, the record
    of the assignment of the mortgage or of the assignment of the
    beneficial interest under the deed of trust, is not of itself notice
    to the debtor, his heirs, or personal representatives, so as to
    invalidate any payment made by them, or any of them, to the person
    holding such note, bond, or other instrument.

    Assignment of Debt Carries Security
    2936.  The assignment of a debt secured by mortgage carries with it
    the security.

    Transfer of Servicing of Debt Secured by Real Property Mortgage
    2937.  (a) The Legislature hereby finds and declares that borrowers
    or subsequent obligors have the right to know when a person holding a
    promissory note, bond, or other instrument transfers servicing of
    the indebtedness secured by a mortgage or deed of trust on real
    property containing one to four residential units located in this
    state. The Legislature also finds that notification to the borrower
    or subsequent obligor of the transfer may protect the borrower or
    subsequent obligor from fraudulent business practices and may ensure
    timely payments.
    It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this section to
    mandate that a borrower or subsequent obligor be given written notice
    when a person transfers the servicing of the indebtedness on notes,
    bonds, or other instruments secured by a mortgage or deed of trust on
    real property containing one to four residential units and located
    in this state.
    (b) Any person transferring the servicing of indebtedness as
    provided in subdivision (a) to a different servicing agent and any
    person assuming from another responsibility for servicing the
    instrument evidencing indebtedness, shall give written notice to the
    borrower or subsequent obligor before the borrower or subsequent
    obligor becomes obligated to make payments to a new servicing agent.
    (c) In the event a notice of default has been recorded or a
    judicial foreclosure proceeding has been commenced, the person
    transferring the servicing of the indebtedness and the person
    assuming from another the duty of servicing the indebtedness shall
    give written notice to the trustee or attorney named in the notice of
    default or judicial foreclosure of the transfer. A notice of
    default, notice of sale, or judicial foreclosure shall not be
    invalidated solely because the servicing agent is changed during the
    foreclosure process.
    (d) Any person transferring the servicing of indebtedness as
    provided in subdivision (a) to a different servicing agent shall
    provide to the new servicing agent all existing insurance policy
    information that the person is responsible for maintaining,
    including, but not limited to, flood and hazard insurance policy
    information.
    (e) The notices required by subdivision (b) shall be sent by
    first-class mail, postage prepaid, to the borrower’s or subsequent
    obligor’s address designated for loan payment billings, or if escrow
    is pending, as provided in the escrow, and shall contain each of the
    following:
    (1) The name and address of the person to which the transfer of
    the servicing of the indebtedness is made.
    (2) The date the transfer was or will be completed.
    (3) The address where all payments pursuant to the transfer are to
    be made.
    (f) Any person assuming from another responsibility for servicing
    the instrument evidencing indebtedness shall include in the notice
    required by subdivision (b) a statement of the due date of the next
    payment.
    (g) The borrower or subsequent obligor shall not be liable to the
    holder of the note, bond, or other instrument or to any servicing
    agent for payments made to the previous servicing agent or for late
    charges if these payments were made prior to the borrower or
    subsequent obligor receiving written notice of the transfer as
    provided by subdivision (e) and the payments were otherwise on time.
    (h) For purposes of this section, the term servicing agent shall
    not include a trustee exercising a power of sale pursuant to a deed
    of trust.

    Service of Process on Trustee — Effect on Transfer of Beneficiary
    2937.7.  In any action affecting the interest of any trustor or
    beneficiary under a deed of trust or mortgage, service of process to
    the trustee does not constitute service to the trustor or beneficiary
    and does not impose any obligation on the trustee to notify the
    trustor or beneficiary of the action.

    Effect of Assignment of Interest in Leases, Rents, Issues or Profits — Recordation —
    Alternative Methods of Enforcement
    2938.  (a) A written assignment of an interest in leases, rents,
    issues, or profits of real property made in connection with an
    obligation secured by real property, irrespective of whether the
    assignment is denoted as absolute, absolute conditioned upon default,
    additional security for an obligation, or otherwise, shall, upon
    execution and delivery by the assignor, be effective to create a
    present security interest in existing and future leases, rents,
    issues, or profits of that real property. As used in this section,
    “leases, rents, issues, and profits of real property” includes the
    cash proceeds thereof. “Cash proceeds” means cash, checks, deposit
    accounts, and the like.
    (b) An assignment of an interest in leases, rents, issues, or
    profits of real property may be recorded in the records of the county
    recorder in the county in which the underlying real property is
    located in the same manner as any other conveyance of an interest in
    real property, whether the assignment is in a separate document or
    part of a mortgage or deed of trust, and when so duly recorded in
    accordance with the methods, procedures, and requirements for
    recordation of conveyances of other interests in real property, (1)
    the assignment shall be deemed to give constructive notice of the
    content of the assignment with the same force and effect as any other
    duly recorded conveyance of an interest in real property and (2) the
    interest granted by the assignment shall be deemed fully perfected
    as of the time of recordation with the same force and effect as any
    other duly recorded conveyance of an interest in real property,
    notwithstanding a provision of the assignment or a provision of law
    that would otherwise preclude or defer enforcement of the rights
    granted the assignee under the assignment until the occurrence of a
    subsequent event, including, but not limited to, a subsequent default
    of the assignor, or the assignee’s obtaining possession of the real
    property or the appointment of a receiver.
    (c) Upon default of the assignor under the obligation secured by
    the assignment of leases, rents, issues, and profits, the assignee
    shall be entitled to enforce the assignment in accordance with this
    section. On and after the date the assignee takes one or more of the
    enforcement steps described in this subdivision, the assignee shall
    be entitled to collect and receive all rents, issues, and profits
    that have accrued but remain unpaid and uncollected by the assignor
    or its agent or for the assignor’s benefit on that date, and all
    rents, issues, and profits that accrue on or after the date. The
    assignment shall be enforced by one or more of the following:
    (1) The appointment of a receiver.
    (2) Obtaining possession of the rents, issues, or profits.
    (3) Delivery to any one or more of the tenants of a written demand
    for turnover of rents, issues, and profits in the form specified in
    subdivision (k), a copy of which demand shall also be delivered to
    the assignor; and a copy of which shall be mailed to all other
    assignees of record of the leases, rents, issues, and profits of the
    real property at the address for notices provided in the assignment
    or, if none, to the address to which the recorded assignment was to
    be mailed after recording.
    (4) Delivery to the assignor of a written demand for the rents,
    issues, or profits, a copy of which shall be mailed to all other
    assignees of record of the leases, rents, issues, and profits of the
    real property at the address for notices provided in the assignment
    or, if none, to the address to which the recorded assignment was to
    be mailed after recording.
    Moneys received by the assignee pursuant to this subdivision, net
    of amounts paid pursuant to subdivision (g), if any, shall be applied
    by the assignee to the debt or otherwise in accordance with the
    assignment or the promissory note, deed of trust, or other instrument
    evidencing the obligation, provided, however, that neither the
    application nor the failure to so apply the rents, issues, or profits
    shall result in a loss of any lien or security interest that the
    assignee may have in the underlying real property or any other
    collateral, render the obligation unenforceable, constitute a
    violation of Section 726 of the Code of Civil Procedure, or otherwise
    limit a right available to the assignee with respect to its
    security.
    (d) If an assignee elects to take the action provided for under
    paragraph (3) of subdivision (c), the demand provided for therein
    shall be signed under penalty of perjury by the assignee or an
    authorized agent of the assignee and shall be effective as against
    the tenant when actually received by the tenant at the address for
    notices provided under the lease or other contractual agreement under
    which the tenant occupies the property or, if no address for notices
    is so provided, at the property. Upon receipt of this demand, the
    tenant shall be obligated to pay to the assignee all rents, issues,
    and profits that are past due and payable on the date of receipt of
    the demand, and all rents, issues, and profits coming due under the
    lease following the date of receipt of the demand, unless either of
    the following occurs:
    (1) The tenant has previously received a demand that is valid on
    its face from another assignee of the leases, issues, rents, and
    profits sent by the other assignee in accordance with this
    subdivision and subdivision (c).
    (2) The tenant, in good faith and in a manner that is not
    inconsistent with the lease, has previously paid, or within 10 days
    following receipt of the demand notice pays, the rent to the
    assignor.
    Payment of rent to an assignee following a demand under an
    assignment of leases, rents, issues, and profits shall satisfy the
    tenant’s obligation to pay the amounts under the lease. If a tenant
    pays rent to the assignor after receipt of a demand other than under
    the circumstances described in this subdivision, the tenant shall not
    be discharged of the obligation to pay rent to the assignee, unless
    the tenant occupies the property for residential purposes. The
    obligation of a tenant to pay rent pursuant to this subdivision and
    subdivision (c) shall continue until receipt by the tenant of a
    written notice from a court directing the tenant to pay the rent in a
    different manner or receipt by the tenant of a written notice from
    the assignee from whom the demand was received canceling the demand,
    whichever occurs first. This subdivision does not affect the
    entitlement to rents, issues, or profits as between assignees as set
    forth in subdivision (h).
    (e) An enforcement action of the type authorized by subdivision
    (c), and a collection, distribution, or application of rents, issues,
    or profits by the assignee following an enforcement action of the
    type authorized by subdivision (c), shall not do any of the
    following:
    (1) Make the assignee a mortgagee in possession of the property,
    except if the assignee obtains actual possession of the real
    property, or an agent of the assignor.
    (2) Constitute an action, render the obligation unenforceable,
    violate Section 726 of the Code of Civil Procedure, or, other than
    with respect to marshaling requirements, otherwise limit any rights
    available to the assignee with respect to its security.
    (3) Be deemed to create a bar to a deficiency judgment pursuant to
    a provision of law governing or relating to deficiency judgments
    following the enforcement of any encumbrance, lien, or security
    interest, notwithstanding that the action, collection, distribution,
    or application may reduce the indebtedness secured by the assignment
    or by a deed of trust or other security instrument.
    The application of rents, issues, or profits to the secured
    obligation shall satisfy the secured obligation to the extent of
    those rents, issues, or profits, and, notwithstanding any provisions
    of the assignment or other loan documents to the contrary, shall be
    credited against any amounts necessary to cure any monetary default
    for purposes of reinstatement under Section 2924c.
    (f) If cash proceeds of rents, issues, or profits to which the
    assignee is entitled following enforcement as set forth in
    subdivision (c) are received by the assignor or its agent for
    collection or by another person who has collected such rents, issues,
    or profits for the assignor’s benefit, or for the benefit of a
    subsequent assignee under the circumstances described in subdivision
    (h), following the taking by the assignee of either of the
    enforcement actions authorized in paragraph (3) or (4) of subdivision
    (c), and the assignee has not authorized the assignor’s disposition
    of the cash proceeds in a writing signed by the assignee, the rights
    to the cash proceeds and to the recovery of the cash proceeds shall
    be determined by the following:
    (1) The assignee shall be entitled to an immediate turnover of the
    cash proceeds received by the assignor or its agent for collection
    or any other person who has collected the rents, issues, or profits
    for the assignor’s benefit, or for the benefit of a subsequent
    assignee under the circumstances described in subdivision (h), and
    the assignor or other described party in possession of those cash
    proceeds shall turn over the full amount of cash proceeds to the
    assignee, less any amount representing payment of expenses authorized
    by the assignee in writing. The assignee shall have a right to bring
    an action for recovery of the cash proceeds, and to recover the cash
    proceeds, without the necessity of bringing an action to foreclose a
    security interest that it may have in the real property. This action
    shall not violate Section 726 of the Code of Civil Procedure or
    otherwise limit a right available to the assignee with respect to its
    security.
    (2) As between an assignee with an interest in cash proceeds
    perfected in the manner set forth in subdivision (b) and enforced in
    accordance with paragraph (3) or (4) of subdivision (c) and another
    person claiming an interest in the cash proceeds, other than the
    assignor or its agent for collection or one collecting rents, issues,
    and profits for the benefit of the assignor, and subject to
    subdivision (h), the assignee shall have a continuously perfected
    security interest in the cash proceeds to the extent that the cash
    proceeds are identifiable. For purposes hereof, cash proceeds are
    identifiable if they are either (A) segregated or (B) if commingled
    with other funds of the assignor or its agent or one acting on its
    behalf, can be traced using the lowest intermediate balance
    principle, unless the assignor or other party claiming an interest in
    proceeds shows that some other method of tracing would better serve
    the interests of justice and equity under the circumstances of the
    case. The provisions of this paragraph are subject to any generally
    applicable law with respect to payments made in the operation of the
    assignor’s business.
    (g) (1) If the assignee enforces the assignment under subdivision
    (c) by means other than the appointment of a receiver and receives
    rents, issues, or profits pursuant to this enforcement, the assignor
    or another assignee of the affected real property may make written
    demand upon the assignee to pay the reasonable costs of protecting
    and preserving the property, including payment of taxes and insurance
    and compliance with building and housing codes, if any.
    (2) On and after the date of receipt of the demand, the assignee
    shall pay for the reasonable costs of protecting and preserving the
    real property to the extent of any rents, issues, or profits actually
    received by the assignee, provided, however, that no such acts by
    the assignee shall cause the assignee to become a mortgagee in
    possession and the assignee’s duties under this subdivision, upon
    receipt of a demand from the assignor or any other assignee of the
    leases, rents, issues, and profits pursuant to paragraph (1), shall
    not be construed to require the assignee to operate or manage the
    property, which obligation shall remain that of the assignor.
    (3) The obligation of the assignee hereunder shall continue until
    the earlier of (A) the date on which the assignee obtains the
    appointment of a receiver for the real property pursuant to
    application to a court of competent jurisdiction, or (B) the date on
    which the assignee ceases to enforce the assignment.
    (4) This subdivision does not supersede or diminish the right of
    the assignee to the appointment of a receiver.
    (h) The lien priorities, rights, and interests among creditors
    concerning rents, issues, or profits collected before the enforcement
    by the assignee shall be governed by subdivisions (a) and (b).
    Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, if an assignee who
    has recorded its interest in leases, rents, issues, and profits prior
    to the recordation of that interest by a subsequent assignee seeks
    to enforce its interest in those rents, issues, or profits in
    accordance with this section after any enforcement action has been
    taken by a subsequent assignee, the prior assignee shall be entitled
    only to the rents, issues, and profits that are accrued and unpaid as
    of the date of its enforcement action and unpaid rents, issues, and
    profits accruing thereafter. The prior assignee shall have no right
    to rents, issues, or profits paid prior to the date of the
    enforcement action, whether in the hands of the assignor or any
    subsequent assignee. Upon receipt of notice that the prior assignee
    has enforced its interest in the rents, issues, and profits, the
    subsequent assignee shall immediately send a notice to any tenant to
    whom it has given notice under subdivision (c). The notice shall
    inform the tenant that the subsequent assignee cancels its demand
    that the tenant pay rent to the subsequent assignee.
    (i) (1) This section shall apply to contracts entered into on or
    after January 1, 1997.
    (2) Sections 2938 and 2938.1, as these sections were in effect
    prior to January 1, 1997, shall govern contracts entered into prior
    to January 1, 1997, and shall govern actions and proceedings
    initiated on the basis of these contracts.
    (j) “Real property,” as used in this section, means real property
    or any estate or interest therein.
    (k) The demand required by paragraph (3) of subdivision (c) shall
    be in the following form:
    DEMAND TO PAY RENT TO
    PARTY OTHER THAN LANDLORD
    (SECTION 2938 OF THE CIVIL CODE)
    Tenant:  [Name of Tenant]

    Property Occupied by Tenant:  [Address]

    Landlord:  [Name of Landlord]

    Secured Party:  [Name of Secured Party]

    Address:  [Address for Payment of Rent to Secured Party and for
    Further Information]:

    The secured party named above is the assignee of leases, rents,
    issues, and profits under [name of document] dated ______, and
    recorded at [recording information] in the official records of
    ___________ County, California. You may request a copy of the
    assignment from the secured party at ____ (address).

    THIS NOTICE AFFECTS YOUR LEASE OR RENTAL AGREEMENT RIGHTS AND
    OBLIGATIONS. YOU ARE THEREFORE ADVISED TO CONSULT AN ATTORNEY
    CONCERNING THOSE RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS
    REGARDING YOUR RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS UNDER THIS NOTICE.

    IN ACCORDANCE WITH SUBDIVISION (C) OF SECTION 2938 OF THE CIVIL
    CODE, YOU ARE HEREBY DIRECTED TO PAY TO THE SECURED PARTY, ____ (NAME
    OF SECURED PARTY) AT ____ (ADDRESS), ALL RENTS UNDER YOUR LEASE OR
    OTHER RENTAL AGREEMENT WITH THE LANDLORD OR PREDECESSOR IN INTEREST
    OF LANDLORD, FOR THE OCCUPANCY OF THE PROPERTY AT ____ (ADDRESS OF
    RENTAL PREMISES) WHICH ARE PAST DUE AND PAYABLE ON THE DATE YOU
    RECEIVE THIS DEMAND, AND ALL RENTS COMING DUE UNDER THE LEASE OR
    OTHER RENTAL AGREEMENT FOLLOWING THE DATE YOU RECEIVE THIS DEMAND
    UNLESS YOU HAVE ALREADY PAID THIS RENT TO THE LANDLORD IN GOOD FAITH
    AND IN A MANNER NOT INCONSISTENT WITH THE AGREEMENT BETWEEN YOU AND
    THE LANDLORD. IN THIS CASE, THIS DEMAND NOTICE SHALL REQUIRE YOU TO
    PAY TO THE SECURED PARTY, ____ (NAME OF THE SECURED PARTY), ALL RENTS
    THAT COME DUE FOLLOWING THE DATE OF THE PAYMENT TO THE LANDLORD.

    IF YOU PAY THE RENT TO THE UNDERSIGNED SECURED PARTY, ____ (NAME
    OF SECURED PARTY), IN ACCORDANCE WITH THIS NOTICE, YOU DO NOT HAVE TO
    PAY THE RENT TO THE LANDLORD. YOU WILL NOT BE SUBJECT TO DAMAGES OR
    OBLIGATED TO PAY RENT TO THE SECURED PARTY IF YOU HAVE PREVIOUSLY
    RECEIVED A DEMAND OF THIS TYPE FROM A DIFFERENT SECURED PARTY.

    [For other than residential tenants] IF YOU PAY RENT TO THE
    LANDLORD THAT BY THE TERMS OF THIS DEMAND YOU ARE REQUIRED TO PAY TO
    THE SECURED PARTY, YOU MAY BE SUBJECT TO DAMAGES INCURRED BY THE
    SECURED PARTY BY REASON OF YOUR FAILURE TO COMPLY WITH THIS DEMAND,
    AND YOU MAY NOT BE DISCHARGED FROM YOUR OBLIGATION TO PAY THAT RENT
    TO THE SECURED PARTY. YOU WILL NOT BE SUBJECT TO THOSE DAMAGES OR
    OBLIGATED TO PAY THAT RENT TO THE SECURED PARTY IF YOU HAVE
    PREVIOUSLY RECEIVED A DEMAND OF THIS TYPE FROM A DIFFERENT ASSIGNEE.

    Your obligation to pay rent under this demand shall continue until
    you receive either (1) a written notice from a court directing you
    to pay the rent in a manner provided therein, or (2) a written notice
    from the secured party named above canceling this demand.

    The undersigned hereby certifies, under penalty of perjury, that
    the undersigned is an authorized officer or agent of the secured
    party and that the secured party is the assignee, or the current
    successor to the assignee, under an assignment of leases, rents,
    issues, or profits executed by the landlord, or a predecessor in
    interest, that is being enforced pursuant to and in accordance with
    Section 2938 of the Civil Code.

    Executed at _________, California, this ____ day of _________,
    _____.

    (Secured Party)
    Name: __________________________
    Title: _________________________

    Discharge
    2939.  A recorded mortgage must be discharged by a certificate
    signed by the mortgagee, his personal representatives or assigns,
    acknowledged or proved and certified as prescribed by the chapter on
    “recording transfers,” stating that the mortgage has been paid,
    satisfied, or discharged. Reference shall be made in said certificate
    to the book and page where the mortgage is recorded.

    Discharge by Foreign Executor
    2939.5.  Foreign executors, administrators and guardians may satisfy
    mortgages upon the records of any county in this state, upon
    producing and recording in the office of the county recorder of the
    county in which such mortgage is recorded, a duly certified and
    authenticated copy of their letters testamentary, or of
    administration or of guardianship, and which certificate or
    authentication shall also recite that said letters have not been
    revoked. For the purposes of this section, “guardian” includes a
    foreign conservator, committee, or comparable fiduciary.

    Discharge Certificate and Record Thereof
    2940.  A certificate of the discharge of a mortgage, and the proof
    or acknowledgment thereof, must be recorded in the office of the
    county recorder in which the mortgage is recorded.

    Duty of Mortgagee to Execute Certificate of Discharge
    2941.  (a) Within 30 days after any mortgage has been satisfied, the
    mortgagee or the assignee of the mortgagee shall execute a
    certificate of the discharge thereof, as provided in Section 2939,
    and shall record or cause to be recorded in the office of the county
    recorder in which the mortgage is recorded. The mortgagee shall then
    deliver, upon the written request of the mortgagor or the mortgagor’s
    heirs, successors, or assignees, as the case may be, the original
    note and mortgage to the person making the request.
    (b) (1) Within 30 calendar days after the obligation secured by
    any deed of trust has been satisfied, the beneficiary or the assignee
    of the beneficiary shall execute and deliver to the trustee the
    original note, deed of trust, request for a full reconveyance, and
    other documents as may be necessary to reconvey, or cause to be
    reconveyed, the deed of trust.
    (A) The trustee shall execute the full reconveyance and shall
    record or cause it to be recorded in the office of the county
    recorder in which the deed of trust is recorded within 21 calendar
    days after receipt by the trustee of the original note, deed of
    trust, request for a full reconveyance, the fee that may be charged
    pursuant to subdivision (e), recorder’s fees, and other documents as
    may be necessary to reconvey, or cause to be reconveyed, the deed of
    trust.
    (B) The trustee shall deliver a copy of the reconveyance to the
    beneficiary, its successor in interest, or its servicing agent, if
    known. The reconveyance instrument shall specify one of the following
    options for delivery of the instrument, the addresses of which the
    recorder has no duty to validate:
    (i) The trustor or successor in interest, and that person’s last
    known address, as the person to whom the recorder will deliver the
    recorded instrument pursuant to Section 27321 of the Government Code.
    (ii) That the recorder shall deliver the recorded instrument to
    the trustee’s address. If the trustee’s address is specified for
    delivery, the trustee shall mail the recorded instrument to the
    trustor or the successor in interest to the last known address for
    that party.
    (C) Following execution and recordation of the full reconveyance,
    upon receipt of a written request by the trustor or the trustor’s
    heirs, successors, or assignees, the trustee shall then deliver, or
    caused to be delivered, the original note and deed of trust to the
    person making that request.
    (D) If the note or deed of trust, or any copy of the note or deed
    of trust, is electronic, upon satisfaction of an obligation secured
    by a deed of trust, any electronic original, or electronic copy which
    has not been previously marked solely for use as a copy, of the note
    and deed of trust, shall be altered to indicate that the obligation
    is paid in full.
    (2) If the trustee has failed to execute and record, or cause to
    be recorded, the full reconveyance within 60 calendar days of
    satisfaction of the obligation, the beneficiary, upon receipt of a
    written request by the trustor or trustor’s heirs, successor in
    interest, agent, or assignee, shall execute and acknowledge a
    document pursuant to Section 2934a substituting itself or another as
    trustee and issue a full reconveyance.
    (3) If a full reconveyance has not been executed and recorded
    pursuant to either paragraph (1) or paragraph (2) within 75 calendar
    days of satisfaction of the obligation, then a title insurance
    company may prepare and record a release of the obligation. However,
    at least 10 days prior to the issuance and recording of a full
    release pursuant to this paragraph, the title insurance company shall
    mail by first-class mail with postage prepaid, the intention to
    release the obligation to the trustee, trustor, and beneficiary of
    record, or their successor in interest of record, at the last known
    address.
    (A) The release shall set forth:
    (i) The name of the beneficiary.
    (ii) The name of the trustor.
    (iii) The recording reference to the deed of trust.
    (iv) A recital that the obligation secured by the deed of trust
    has been paid in full.
    (v) The date and amount of payment.
    (B) The release issued pursuant to this subdivision shall be
    entitled to recordation and, when recorded, shall be deemed to be the
    equivalent of a reconveyance of a deed of trust.
    (4) Where an obligation secured by a deed of trust was paid in
    full prior to July 1, 1989, and no reconveyance has been issued and
    recorded by October 1, 1989, then a release of obligation as provided
    for in paragraph (3) may be issued.
    (5) Paragraphs (2) and (3) do not excuse the beneficiary or the
    trustee from compliance with paragraph (1). Paragraph (3) does not
    excuse the beneficiary from compliance with paragraph (2).
    (6) In addition to any other remedy provided by law, a title
    insurance company preparing or recording the release of the
    obligation shall be liable to any party for damages, including
    attorney’s fees, which any person may sustain by reason of the
    issuance and recording of the release, pursuant to paragraphs (3) and
    (4).
    (7) A beneficiary may, at its discretion, in accordance with the
    requirements and procedures of Section 2934a, substitute the title
    company conducting the escrow through which the obligation is
    satisfied for the trustee of record, in which case the title company
    assumes the obligation of a trustee under this subdivision, and may
    collect the fee authorized by subdivision (e).
    (8) In lieu of delivering the original note and deed of trust to
    the trustee within 30 days of loan satisfaction, as required by
    paragraph (1) of subdivision (b), a beneficiary who executes and
    delivers to the trustee a request for a full reconveyance within 30
    days of loan satisfaction may, within 120 days of loan satisfaction,
    deliver the original note and deed of trust to either the trustee or
    trustor. If the note and deed of trust are delivered as provided in
    this paragraph, upon satisfaction of the note and deed of trust, the
    note and deed of trust shall be altered to indicate that the
    obligation is paid in full. Nothing in this paragraph alters the
    requirements and obligations set forth in paragraphs (2) and (3).
    (c) For the purposes of this section, the phrases “cause to be
    recorded” and “cause it to be recorded” include, but are not limited
    to, sending by certified mail with the United States Postal Service
    or by an independent courier service using its tracking service that
    provides documentation of receipt and delivery, including the
    signature of the recipient, the full reconveyance or certificate of
    discharge in a recordable form, together with payment for all
    required fees, in an envelope addressed to the county recorder’s
    office of the county in which the deed of trust or mortgage is
    recorded. Within two business days from the day of receipt, if
    received in recordable form together with all required fees, the
    county recorder shall stamp and record the full reconveyance or
    certificate of discharge. Compliance with this subdivision shall
    entitle the trustee to the benefit of the presumption found in
    Section 641 of the Evidence Code.
    (d) The violation of this section shall make the violator liable
    to the person affected by the violation for all damages which that
    person may sustain by reason of the violation, and shall require that
    the violator forfeit to that person the sum of five hundred dollars
    ($500).
    (e) (1) The trustee, beneficiary, or mortgagee may charge a
    reasonable fee to the trustor or mortgagor, or the owner of the land,
    as the case may be, for all services involved in the preparation,
    execution, and recordation of the full reconveyance, including, but
    not limited to, document preparation and forwarding services rendered
    to effect the full reconveyance, and, in addition, may collect
    official fees. This fee may be made payable no earlier than the
    opening of a bona fide escrow or no more than 60 days prior to the
    full satisfaction of the obligation secured by the deed of trust or
    mortgage.
    (2) If the fee charged pursuant to this subdivision does not
    exceed forty-five dollars ($45), the fee is conclusively presumed to
    be reasonable.
    (3) The fee described in paragraph (1) may not be charged unless
    demand for the fee was included in the payoff demand statement
    described in Section 2943.
    (f) For purposes of this section, “original” may include an
    optically imaged reproduction when the following requirements are
    met:
    (1) The trustee receiving the request for reconveyance and
    executing the reconveyance as provided in subdivision (b) is an
    affiliate or subsidiary of the beneficiary or an affiliate or
    subsidiary of the assignee of the beneficiary, respectively.
    (2) The optical image storage media used to store the document
    shall be nonerasable write once, read many (WORM) optical image media
    that does not allow changes to the stored document.
    (3) The optical image reproduction shall be made consistent with
    the minimum standards of quality approved by either the National
    Institute of Standards and Technology or the Association for
    Information and Image Management.
    (4) Written authentication identifying the optical image
    reproduction as an unaltered copy of the note, deed of trust, or
    mortgage shall be stamped or printed on the optical image
    reproduction.
    (g) No fee or charge may be imposed on the trustor in connection
    with, or relating to, any act described in this section except as
    expressly authorized by this section.
    (h) The amendments to this section enacted at the 1999-2000
    Regular Session shall apply only to a mortgage or an obligation
    secured by a deed of trust that is satisfied on or after January 1,
    2001.
    (i) (1) In any action filed before January 1, 2002, that is
    dismissed as a result of the amendments to this section enacted at
    the 2001-02 Regular Session, the plaintiff shall not be required to
    pay the defendant’s costs.
    (2) Any claimant, including a claimant in a class action lawsuit,
    whose claim is dismissed or barred as a result of the amendments to
    this section enacted at the 2001-02 Regular Session, may, within 6
    months of the dismissal or barring of the action or claim, file or
    refile a claim for actual damages occurring before January 1, 2002,
    that were proximately caused by a time lapse between loan
    satisfaction and the completion of the beneficiary’s obligations as
    required under paragraph (1) of subdivision (b). In any action
    brought under this section, the defendant may be found liable for
    actual damages, but may not be found liable for any civil penalty
    authorized by Section 2941.
    (j) Notwithstanding any other penalties, if a beneficiary collects
    a fee for reconveyance and thereafter has knowledge, or should have
    knowledge, that no reconveyance has been recorded, the beneficiary
    shall cause to be recorded the reconveyance, or in the event a
    release of obligation is earlier and timely recorded, the beneficiary
    shall refund to the trustor the fee charged to perform the
    reconveyance. Evidence of knowledge includes, but is not limited to,
    notice of a release of obligation pursuant to paragraph (3) of
    subdivision (b).

    Reconveyance Fee
    2941.1.  Notwithstanding any other provision of law, if no payoff
    demand statement is issued pursuant to Section 2943, nothing in
    Section 2941 shall be construed to prohibit the charging of a
    reconveyance fee.

    Wilful Violation of Sec. 2941 a Misdemeanor
    2941.5.  Every person who willfully violates Section 2941 is guilty
    of a misdemeanor punishable by fine of not less than fifty dollars
    ($50) nor more than four hundred dollars ($400), or by imprisonment
    in the county jail for not to exceed six months, or by both such fine
    and imprisonment.
    For purposes of this section, “willfully” means simply a purpose
    or willingness to commit the act, or make the omission referred to.
    It does not require an intent to violate the law, to injure another,
    or to acquire any advantage.

    Corporate Bond Accompanied by Declaration
    2941.7.  Whenever the obligation secured by a mortgage or deed of
    trust has been fully satisfied and the present mortgagee or
    beneficiary of record cannot be located after diligent search, or
    refuses to execute and deliver a proper certificate of discharge or
    request for reconveyance, or whenever a specified balance, including
    principal and interest, remains due and the mortgagor or trustor or
    the mortgagor’s or trustor’s successor in interest cannot, after
    diligent search, locate the then mortgagee or beneficiary of record,
    the lien of any mortgage or deed of trust shall be released when the
    mortgagor or trustor or the mortgagor’s or trustor’s successor in
    interest records or causes to be recorded, in the office of the
    county recorder of the county in which the encumbered property is
    located, a corporate bond accompanied by a declaration, as specified
    in subdivision (b), and with respect to a deed of trust, a
    reconveyance as hereinafter provided.
    (a) The bond shall be acceptable to the trustee and shall be
    issued by a corporation lawfully authorized to issue surety bonds in
    the State of California in a sum equal to the greater of either (1)
    two times the amount of the original obligation secured by the
    mortgage or deed of trust and any additional principal amounts,
    including advances, shown in any recorded amendment thereto, or (2)
    one-half of the total amount computed pursuant to (1) and any accrued
    interest on such amount, and shall be conditioned for payment of any
    sum which the mortgagee or beneficiary may recover in an action on
    the obligation secured by the mortgage or deed of trust, with costs
    of suit and reasonable attorneys’ fees. The obligees under the bond
    shall be the mortgagee or mortgagee’s successor in interest or the
    trustee who executes a reconveyance under this section and the
    beneficiary or beneficiary’s successor in interest.
    The bond recorded by the mortgagor or trustor or mortgagor’s or
    trustor’s successor in interest shall contain the following
    information describing the mortgage or deed of trust:
    (1) Recording date and instrument number or book and page number
    of the recorded instrument.
    (2) Names of original mortgagor and mortgagee or trustor and
    beneficiary.
    (3) Amount shown as original principal sum secured thereby.
    (4) The recording information and new principal amount shown in
    any recorded amendment thereto.
    (b) The declaration accompanying the corporate bond recorded by
    the mortgagor or trustor or the mortgagor’s or trustor’s successor in
    interest shall state:
    (1) That it is recorded pursuant to this section.
    (2) The name of the original mortgagor or trustor and mortgagee or
    beneficiary.
    (3) The name and address of the person making the declaration.
    (4) That either the obligation secured by the mortgage or deed of
    trust has been fully satisfied and the present mortgagee or
    beneficiary of record cannot be located after diligent search, or
    refuses to execute and deliver a proper certificate of discharge or
    request for reconveyance as required under Section 2941; or that a
    specified balance, including principal and interest, remains due and
    the mortgagor or trustor or mortgagor’s or trustor’s successor in
    interest cannot, after diligent search, locate the then mortgagee or
    beneficiary.
    (5) That the declarant has mailed by certified mail, return
    receipt requested, to the last address of the person to whom payments
    under the mortgage or deed of trust were made and to the last
    mortgagee or beneficiary of record at the address for such mortgagee
    or beneficiary shown on the instrument creating, assigning, or
    conveying the interest, a notice of recording a declaration and bond
    under this section and informing the recipient of the name and
    address of the mortgagor or trustee, if any, and of the right to
    record a written objection with respect to the release of the lien of
    the mortgage or, with respect to a deed of trust, notify the trustee
    in writing of any objection to the reconveyance of the deed of
    trust. The declaration shall state the date any notices were mailed
    pursuant to this section and the names and addresses of all persons
    to whom mailed.
    The declaration provided for in this section shall be signed by
    the mortgagor or trustor under penalty of perjury.
    (c) With respect to a deed of trust, after the expiration of 30
    days following the recording of the corporate bond and accompanying
    declaration provided in subdivisions (a) and (b), and delivery to the
    trustee of the usual reconveyance fees plus costs and a demand for
    reconveyance under this section, the trustee shall execute and
    record, or otherwise deliver as provided in Section 2941, a
    reconveyance in the same form as if the beneficiary had delivered to
    the trustee a proper request for reconveyance, provided that the
    trustee has not received a written objection to the reconveyance from
    the beneficiary of record. No trustee shall have any liability to
    any person by reason of its execution of a reconveyance in reliance
    upon a trustor’s or trustor’s successor’s in interest substantial
    compliance with this section. The sole remedy of any person damaged
    by reason of the reconveyance shall be against the trustor, the
    affiant, or the bond. With respect to a mortgage, a mortgage shall be
    satisfied of record when 30 days have expired following recordation
    of the corporate bond and accompanying declaration, provided no
    objection to satisfaction has been recorded by the mortgagee within
    that period. A bona fide purchaser or encumbrancer for value shall
    take the interest conveyed free of such mortgage, provided there has
    been compliance with subdivisions (a) and (b) and the deed to the
    purchaser recites that no objections by the mortgagee have been
    recorded.
    Upon recording of a reconveyance under this section, or, in the
    case of a mortgage the expiration of 30 days following recordation of
    the corporate bond and accompanying declaration without objection
    thereto having been recorded, interest shall no longer accrue as to
    any balance remaining due to the extent the balance due has been
    alleged in the declaration recorded under subdivision (b).
    The sum of any specified balance, including principal and
    interest, which remains due and which is remitted to any issuer of a
    corporate bond in conjunction with the issuance of a bond pursuant to
    this section shall, if unclaimed, escheat to the state after three
    years pursuant to the Unclaimed Property Law. From the date of
    escheat the issuer of the bond shall be relieved of any liability to
    pay to the beneficiary or his or her heirs or other successors in
    interest the escheated funds and the sole remedy shall be a claim for
    property paid or delivered to the Controller pursuant to the
    Unclaimed Property Law.
    (d) The term “diligent search,” as used in this section, shall
    mean all of the following:
    (1) The mailing of notices as provided in paragraph (5) of
    subdivision (b), and to any other address that the declarant has used
    to correspond with or contact the mortgagee or beneficiary.
    (2) A check of the telephone directory in the city where the
    mortgagee or beneficiary maintained the mortgagee’s or beneficiary’s
    last known address or place of business.
    (3) In the event the mortgagee or beneficiary or the mortgagee’s
    or beneficiary’s successor in interest is a corporation, a check of
    the records of the California Secretary of State and the secretary of
    state in the state of incorporation, if known.
    (4) In the event the mortgagee or beneficiary is a state or
    national bank or a state or federal savings and loan association, an
    inquiry of the regulatory authority of such bank or savings and loan
    association.
    (e) This section shall not be deemed to create an exclusive
    procedure for the issuance of reconveyances and the issuance of bonds
    and declarations to release the lien of a mortgage and shall not
    affect any other procedures, whether or not such procedures are set
    forth in statute, for the issuance of reconveyances and the issuance
    of bonds and declarations to release the lien of a mortgage.
    (f) For purposes of this section, the trustor or trustor’s
    successor in interest may substitute the present trustee of record
    without conferring any duties upon the trustee other than those that
    are incidental to the execution of a reconveyance pursuant to this
    section if all of the following requirements are met:
    (1) The present trustee of record and the present mortgagee or
    beneficiary of record cannot be located after diligent search.
    (2) The declaration filed pursuant to subdivision (b) shall state
    in addition that it is filed pursuant to this subdivision, and shall,
    in lieu of the provisions of paragraph (4) of subdivision (b), state
    that the obligation secured by the mortgage or deed of trust has
    been fully satisfied and the present trustee of record and present
    mortgagee or beneficiary of record cannot be located after diligent
    search.
    (3) The substitute trustee is a title insurance company that
    agrees to accept the substitution. This subdivision shall not impose
    a duty upon a title insurance company to accept the substitution.
    (4) The corporate bond required in subdivision (a) is for a period
    of five or more years.

    Agreement by all Beneficiaries Under Trust Deed to Be Governed by Beneficiaries Holding
    More Than 50 Percent of Specified Interests
    2941.9.  (a) The purpose of this section is to establish a process
    through which all of the beneficiaries under a trust deed may agree
    to be governed by beneficiaries holding more than 50 percent of the
    record beneficial interest of a series of notes secured by the same
    real property or of undivided interests in a note secured by real
    property equivalent to a series transaction, exclusive of any notes
    or interests of a licensed real estate broker that is the issuer or
    servicer of the notes or interests or any affiliate of that licensed
    real estate broker.
    (b) All holders of notes secured by the same real property or a
    series of undivided interests in notes secured by real property
    equivalent to a series transaction may agree in writing to be
    governed by the desires of the holders of more than 50 percent of the
    record beneficial interest of those notes or interests, exclusive of
    any notes or interests of a licensed real estate broker that is the
    issuer or servicer of the notes or interests of any affiliate of the
    licensed real estate broker, with respect to actions to be taken on
    behalf of all holders in the event of default or foreclosure for
    matters that require direction or approval of the holders, including
    designation of the broker, servicing agent, or other person acting on
    their behalf, and the sale, encumbrance, or lease of real property
    owned by the holders resulting from foreclosure or receipt of a deed
    in lieu of foreclosure.
    (c) A description of the agreement authorized in subdivision (b)
    of this section shall be disclosed pursuant to Section 10232.5 of the
    Business and Professions Code and shall be included in a recorded
    document such as the deed of trust or the assignment of interests.
    (d) Any action taken pursuant to the authority granted in this
    section is not effective unless all the parties agreeing to the
    action sign, under penalty of perjury, a separate written document
    entitled “Majority Action Affidavit” stating the following:
    (1) The action has been authorized pursuant to this section.
    (2) None of the undersigned is a licensed real estate broker or an
    affiliate of the broker that is the issuer or servicer of the
    obligation secured by the deed of trust.
    (3) The undersigned together hold more than 50 percent of the
    record beneficial interest of a series of notes secured by the same
    real property or of undivided interests in a note secured by real
    property equivalent to a series transaction.
    (4) Notice of the action was sent by certified mail, postage
    prepaid, with return receipt requested, to each holder of an interest
    in the obligation secured by the deed of trust who has not joined in
    the execution of the substitution or this document.
    This document shall be recorded in the office of the county
    recorder of each county in which the real property described in the
    deed of trust is located. Once the document in this subdivision is
    recorded, it shall constitute conclusive evidence of compliance with
    the requirements of this subdivision in favor of trustees acting
    pursuant to this section, substituted trustees acting pursuant to
    Section 2934a, subsequent assignees of the obligation secured by the
    deed of trust, and subsequent bona fide purchasers or encumbrancers
    for value of the real property described therein.
    (e) For purposes of this section, “affiliate of the licensed real
    estate broker” includes any person as defined in Section 25013 of the
    Corporations Code who is controlled by, or is under common control
    with, or who controls, a licensed real estate broker. “Control” means
    the possession, direct or indirect, of the power to direct or cause
    the direction of management and policies.

    Statute Inapplicable to Bottomry
    2942.  Contracts of bottomry or respondentia, although in the nature
    of mortgages, are not affected by any of the provisions of this
    Chapter.

    Statement of Unpaid Balance on Demand
    2943.  (a) As used in this section:
    (1) “Beneficiary” means a mortgagee or beneficiary of a mortgage
    or deed of trust, or his or her assignees.
    (2) “Beneficiary statement” means a written statement showing:
    (A) The amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by
    the mortgage or deed of trust and the interest rate, together with
    the total amounts, if any, of all overdue installments of either
    principal or interest, or both.
    (B) The amounts of periodic payments, if any.
    (C) The date on which the obligation is due in whole or in part.
    (D) The date to which real estate taxes and special assessments
    have been paid to the extent the information is known to the
    beneficiary.
    (E) The amount of hazard insurance in effect and the term and
    premium of that insurance to the extent the information is known to
    the beneficiary.
    (F) The amount in an account, if any, maintained for the
    accumulation of funds with which to pay taxes and insurance premiums.
    (G) The nature and, if known, the amount of any additional
    charges, costs, or expenses paid or incurred by the beneficiary which
    have become a lien on the real property involved.
    (H) Whether the obligation secured by the mortgage or deed of
    trust can or may be transferred to a new borrower.
    (3) “Delivery” means depositing or causing to be deposited in the
    United States mail an envelope with postage prepaid, containing a
    copy of the document to be delivered, addressed to the person whose
    name and address is set forth in the demand therefor. The document
    may also be transmitted by facsimile machine to the person whose name
    and address is set forth in the demand therefor.
    (4) “Entitled person” means the trustor or mortgagor of, or his or
    her successor in interest in, the mortgaged or trust property or any
    part thereof, any beneficiary under a deed of trust, any person
    having a subordinate lien or encumbrance of record thereon, the
    escrowholder licensed as an agent pursuant to Division 6 (commencing
    with Section 17000) of the Financial Code, or the party exempt by
    virtue of Section 17006 of the Financial Code who is acting as the
    escrowholder.
    (5) “Payoff demand statement” means a written statement, prepared
    in response to a written demand made by an entitled person or
    authorized agent, setting forth the amounts required as of the date
    of preparation by the beneficiary, to fully satisfy all obligations
    secured by the loan that is the subject of the payoff demand
    statement. The written statement shall include information reasonably
    necessary to calculate the payoff amount on a per diem basis for the
    period of time, not to exceed 30 days, during which the per diem
    amount is not changed by the terms of the note.
    (6) “Short-pay agreement” means an agreement in writing in which
    the beneficiary agrees to release its lien on a property in return
    for payment of an amount less than the secured obligation.
    (7) “Short-pay demand statement” means a written statement, issued
    subsequent to and conditioned on the existence of a short-pay
    agreement that is in possession of the entitled person, that is
    prepared in response to a written demand made by an entitled person
    or authorized agent, setting forth an amount less than the
    outstanding debt, together with any terms and conditions, under which
    the beneficiary will execute and deliver a reconveyance of the deed
    of trust securing the note that is the subject of the short-pay
    demand statement. The period shall not be greater than 30 days from
    the date of preparation by the beneficiary.
    (8) “Short-pay request” means a written request made by an
    entitled person or authorized agent requesting the beneficiary to
    provide a short-pay demand statement that includes all of the
    following:
    (A) A copy of an existing contract to purchase the property for an
    amount certain.
    (B) A copy of the short-pay agreement in the possession of the
    entitled person.
    (C) Information related to the release of any other liens on the
    property, if any.
    (b) (1) A beneficiary, or his or her authorized agent, shall,
    within 21 days of the receipt of a written demand by an entitled
    person or his or her authorized agent, prepare and deliver to the
    person demanding it a true, correct, and complete copy of the note or
    other evidence of indebtedness with any modification thereto, and a
    beneficiary statement.
    (2) A request pursuant to this subdivision may be made by an
    entitled person or his or her authorized agent at any time before, or
    within two months after, the recording of a notice of default under
    a mortgage or deed of trust, or may otherwise be made more than 30
    days prior to the entry of the decree of foreclosure.
    (c) (1) A beneficiary, or his or her authorized agent, shall, on
    the written demand of an entitled person, or his or her authorized
    agent, prepare and deliver a payoff demand statement to the person
    demanding it within 21 days of the receipt of the demand. However, if
    the loan is subject to a recorded notice of default or a filed
    complaint commencing a judicial foreclosure, the beneficiary shall
    have no obligation to prepare and deliver this statement as
    prescribed unless the written demand is received prior to the first
    publication of a notice of sale or the notice of the first date of
    sale established by a court.
    (2) Except as provided in this subdivision, a beneficiary, or his
    or her authorized agent, shall, upon receipt of a short-pay request,
    prepare and deliver a short-pay demand statement to the person
    requesting it within 21 days of the receipt of the short-pay request.
    A beneficiary, or his or her authorized agent that elects not to
    proceed with the transaction that is the subject of the short-pay
    request may refuse to provide a short-pay demand statement for that
    transaction, but shall provide a written statement to the person
    requesting it, indicating that the beneficiary elects not to proceed
    with the proposed transaction, within 21 days of the receipt of the
    short-pay request. If the terms and conditions of the short-pay
    agreement require approval by the beneficiary of a closing statement
    or similar document prepared by an escrowholder, approval or
    disapproval shall be provided not more than four days after receipt
    by the beneficiary of the closing statement, or the closing statement
    shall be deemed approved, provided that the statement is not clearly
    contrary to the terms of the short-pay agreement or the short-pay
    demand statement provided to the escrowholder.
    (d) (1) A beneficiary statement, payoff demand statement, or
    short-pay demand statement may be relied upon by the entitled person
    or his or her authorized agent in accordance with its terms,
    including with respect to the payoff demand statement or short-pay
    demand statement reliance for the purpose of establishing the amount
    necessary to pay the obligation in full. If the beneficiary notifies
    the entitled person or his or her authorized agent of any amendment
    to the statement, then the amended statement may be relied upon by
    the entitled person or his or her authorized agent as provided in
    this subdivision.
    (2) If notification of any amendment to the statement is not given
    in writing, then a written amendment to the statement shall be
    delivered to the entitled person or his or her authorized agent no
    later than the next business day after notification.
    (3) Upon the dates specified in subparagraphs (A) and (B), any
    sums that were due and for any reason not included in the statement
    or amended statement shall continue to be recoverable by the
    beneficiary as an unsecured obligation of the obligor pursuant to the
    terms of the note and existing provisions of law.
    (A) If the transaction is voluntary, the entitled party or his or
    her authorized agent may rely upon the statement or amended statement
    upon the earlier of (i) the close of escrow, (ii) transfer of title,
    or (iii) recordation of a lien.
    (B) If the loan is subject to a recorded notice of default or a
    filed complaint commencing a judicial foreclosure, the entitled party
    or his or her authorized agent may rely upon the statement or
    amended statement upon the acceptance of the last and highest bid at
    a trustee’s sale or a court supervised sale.
    (e) The following provisions apply to a demand for either a
    beneficiary statement, a payoff demand statement, or a short-pay
    demand statement:
    (1) If an entitled person or his or her authorized agent requests
    a statement pursuant to this section and does not specify a
    beneficiary statement, a payoff demand statement, or short-pay demand
    statement the beneficiary shall treat the request as a request for a
    payoff demand statement.
    (2) If the entitled person or the entitled person’s authorized
    agent includes in the written demand a specific request for a copy of
    the deed of trust or mortgage, it shall be furnished with the
    written statement at no additional charge.
    (3) The beneficiary may, before delivering a statement, require
    reasonable proof that the person making the demand is, in fact, an
    entitled person or an authorized agent of an entitled person, in
    which event the beneficiary shall not be subject to the penalties of
    this section until 21 days after receipt of the proof herein provided
    for. A statement in writing signed by the entitled person appointing
    an authorized agent when delivered personally to the beneficiary or
    delivered by registered return receipt mail shall constitute
    reasonable proof as to the identity of an agent. Similar delivery of
    a policy of title insurance, preliminary report issued by a title
    company, original or photographic copy of a grant deed or certified
    copy of letters testamentary, guardianship, or conservatorship shall
    constitute reasonable proof as to the identity of a successor in
    interest, provided the person demanding a statement is named as
    successor in interest in the document.
    (4) If a beneficiary for a period of 21 days after receipt of the
    written demand willfully fails to prepare and deliver the statement,
    he or she is liable to the entitled person for all damages which he
    or she may sustain by reason of the refusal and, whether or not
    actual damages are sustained, he or she shall forfeit to the entitled
    person the sum of three hundred dollars ($300). Each failure to
    prepare and deliver the statement, occurring at a time when, pursuant
    to this section, the beneficiary is required to prepare and deliver
    the statement, creates a separate cause of action, but a judgment
    awarding an entitled person a forfeiture, or damages and forfeiture,
    for any failure to prepare and deliver a statement bars recovery of
    damages and forfeiture for any other failure to prepare and deliver a
    statement, with respect to the same obligation, in compliance with a
    demand therefor made within six months before or after the demand as
    to which the award was made. For the purposes of this subdivision,
    “willfully” means an intentional failure to comply with the
    requirements of this section without just cause or excuse.
    (5) If the beneficiary has more than one branch, office, or other
    place of business, then the demand shall be made to the branch or
    office address set forth in the payment billing notice or payment
    book, and the statement, unless it specifies otherwise, shall be
    deemed to apply only to the unpaid balance of the single obligation
    named in the request and secured by the mortgage or deed of trust
    which is payable at the branch or office whose address appears on the
    aforesaid billing notice or payment book.
    (6) The beneficiary may make a charge not to exceed thirty dollars
    ($30) for furnishing each required statement. The provisions of this
    paragraph shall not apply to mortgages or deeds of trust insured by
    the Federal Housing Administrator or guaranteed by the Administrator
    of Veterans Affairs.
    (f) The preparation and delivery of a beneficiary statement, a
    payoff demand statement, or short-pay demand statement pursuant to
    this section shall not change a date of sale established pursuant to
    Section 2924g.
    (g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
    2014, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
    statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2014, deletes or extends
    that date.

    Statement of Unpaid Balance on Demand — Definitions
    2943.  (a) As used in this section:
    (1) “Beneficiary” means a mortgagee or beneficiary of a mortgage
    or deed of trust, or his or her assignees.
    (2) “Beneficiary statement” means a written statement showing:
    (A) The amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by
    the mortgage or deed of trust and the interest rate, together with
    the total amounts, if any, of all overdue installments of either
    principal or interest, or both.
    (B) The amounts of periodic payments, if any.
    (C) The date on which the obligation is due in whole or in part.
    (D) The date to which real estate taxes and special assessments
    have been paid to the extent the information is known to the
    beneficiary.
    (E) The amount of hazard insurance in effect and the term and
    premium of that insurance to the extent the information is known to
    the beneficiary.
    (F) The amount in an account, if any, maintained for the
    accumulation of funds with which to pay taxes and insurance premiums.
    (G) The nature and, if known, the amount of any additional
    charges, costs, or expenses paid or incurred by the beneficiary which
    have become a lien on the real property involved.
    (H) Whether the obligation secured by the mortgage or deed of
    trust can or may be transferred to a new borrower.
    (3) “Delivery” means depositing or causing to be deposited in the
    United States mail an envelope with postage prepaid, containing a
    copy of the document to be delivered, addressed to the person whose
    name and address is set forth in the demand therefor. The document
    may also be transmitted by facsimile machine to the person whose name
    and address is set forth in the demand therefor.
    (4) “Entitled person” means the trustor or mortgagor of, or his or
    her successor in interest in, the mortgaged or trust property or any
    part thereof, any beneficiary under a deed of trust, any person
    having a subordinate lien or encumbrance of record thereon, the
    escrowholder licensed as an agent pursuant to Division 6 (commencing
    with Section 17000) of the Financial Code, or the party exempt by
    virtue of Section 17006 of the Financial Code who is acting as the
    escrowholder.
    (5) “Payoff demand statement” means a written statement, prepared
    in response to a written demand made by an entitled person or
    authorized agent, setting forth the amounts required as of the date
    of preparation by the beneficiary, to fully satisfy all obligations
    secured by the loan that is the subject of the payoff demand
    statement. The written statement shall include information reasonably
    necessary to calculate the payoff amount on a per diem basis for the
    period of time, not to exceed 30 days, during which the per diem
    amount is not changed by the terms of the note.
    (b) (1) A beneficiary, or his or her authorized agent, shall,
    within 21 days of the receipt of a written
    demand by an entitled
    person or his or her authorized agent, prepare and deliver to the person
    demanding it a true, correct, and complete copy of the note or
    other evidence of indebtedness with any
    modification thereto, and a
    beneficiary statement.
    (2) A request pursuant to this subdivision may be made by an
    entitled person or his or her authorized
    agent at any time before, or
    within two months after, the recording of a notice of default under a
    mortgage or deed of trust, or may otherwise be made more than 30
    days prior to the entry of the decree
    of foreclosure.
    (c) A beneficiary, or his or her authorized agent, shall, on the
    written demand of an entitled person, or
    his or her authorized agent,
    prepare and deliver a payoff demand statement to the person demanding it
    within 21 days of the receipt of the demand. However, if
    the loan is subject to a recorded notice of
    default or a filed
    complaint commencing a judicial foreclosure, the beneficiary shall have no obligation
    to prepare and deliver this statement as
    prescribed unless the written demand is received prior to the
    first
    publication of a notice of sale or the notice of the first date of sale established by a court.
    (d) (1) A beneficiary statement or payoff demand statement may be
    relied upon by the entitled person or
    his or her authorized agent in
    accordance with its terms, including with respect to the payoff demand
    statement reliance for the purpose of establishing the amount
    necessary to pay the obligation in full. If
    the beneficiary notifies
    the entitled person or his or her authorized agent of any amendment to the
    statement, then the amended statement may be relied upon by
    the entitled person or his or her
    authorized agent as provided in this subdivision.
    (2) If notification of any amendment to the statement is not given
    in writing, then a written amendment to
    the statement shall be
    delivered to the entitled person or his or her authorized agent no later than the
    next business day after notification.
    (3) Upon the dates specified in subparagraphs (A) and (B) any sums
    that were due and for any reason
    not included in the statement or
    amended statement shall continue to be recoverable by the beneficiary
    as an unsecured obligation of the obligor pursuant to the terms of
    the note and existing provisions of
    law.
    (A) If the transaction is voluntary, the entitled party or his or
    her authorized agent may rely upon the
    statement or amended statement
    upon the earlier of (i) the close of escrow, (ii) transfer of title, or (iii)
    recordation of a lien.
    (B) If the loan is subject to a recorded notice of default or a
    filed complaint commencing a judicial
    foreclosure, the entitled party
    or his or her authorized agent may rely upon the statement or amended
    statement upon the acceptance of the last and highest bid at
    a trustee’s sale or a court supervised sale.
    (e) The following provisions apply to a demand for either a
    beneficiary statement or a payoff demand
    statement:
    (1) If an entitled person or his or her authorized agent requests
    a statement pursuant to this section and
    does not specify a
    beneficiary statement or a payoff demand statement the beneficiary shall treat the
    request as a request for a payoff demand statement.
    (2) If the entitled person or the entitled person’s authorized
    agent includes in the written demand a
    specific request for a copy of
    the deed of trust or mortgage, it shall be furnished with the written
    statement at no additional charge.
    (3) The beneficiary may, before delivering a statement, require
    reasonable proof that the person making
    the demand is, in fact, an
    entitled person or an authorized agent of an entitled person, in which event
    the beneficiary shall not be subject to the penalties of
    this section until 21 days after receipt of the proof
    herein provided
    for. A statement in writing signed by the entitled person appointing an authorized agent
    when delivered personally to the beneficiary or
    delivered by registered return receipt mail shall
    constitute
    reasonable proof as to the identity of an agent. Similar delivery of a policy of title insurance,
    preliminary report issued by a title
    company, original or photographic copy of a grant deed or certified
    copy of letters testamentary, guardianship, or conservatorship shall
    constitute reasonable proof as to
    the identity of a successor in
    interest, provided the person demanding a statement is named as
    successor in interest in the document.
    (4) If a beneficiary for a period of 21 days after receipt of the
    written demand willfully fails to prepare
    and deliver the statement,
    he or she is liable to the entitled person for all damages which he or she
    may sustain by reason of the refusal and, whether or not
    actual damages are sustained, he or she shall
    forfeit to the entitled
    person the sum of three hundred dollars ($300). Each failure to prepare and deliver
    the statement, occurring at a time when, pursuant
    to this section, the beneficiary is required to prepare
    and deliver
    the statement, creates a separate cause of action, but a judgment awarding an entitled
    person a forfeiture, or damages and forfeiture,
    for any failure to prepare and deliver a statement bars
    recovery of
    damages and forfeiture for any other failure to prepare and deliver a statement, with
    respect to the same obligation, in compliance with a
    demand therefor made within six months before or
    after the demand as
    to which the award was made. For the purposes of this subdivision, “willfully”
    means an intentional failure to comply with the
    requirements of this section without just cause or
    excuse.
    (5) If the beneficiary has more than one branch, office, or other
    place of business, then the demand
    shall be made to the branch or
    office address set forth in the payment billing notice or payment book,
    and the statement, unless it specifies otherwise, shall be
    deemed to apply only to the unpaid balance of
    the single obligation
    named in the request and secured by the mortgage or deed of trust which is
    payable at the branch or office whose address appears on the aforesaid billing notice or payment book.
    (6) The beneficiary may make a charge not to exceed thirty dollars
    ($30) for furnishing each required
    statement. The provisions of this
    paragraph shall not apply to mortgages or deeds of trust insured by
    the Federal Housing Administrator or guaranteed by the Administrator
    of Veterans Affairs.
    (f) The preparation and delivery of a beneficiary statement or a
    payoff demand statement pursuant to this
    section shall not change a
    date of sale established pursuant to Section 2924g.
    (g) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2014.

    Commercial code Transactions or Interests
    2944.  None of the provisions of this chapter applies to any transaction or security interest governed by
    the Commercial Code,
    except to the extent made applicable by reason of an election made by the
    secured party pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of
    subdivision (a) of Section 9604 of the
    Commercial Code.

    Refusal to Accept Policy Issued for Continuous Period Without Fixed Expiration Date
    Prohibited
    2944.5.  No lender, mortgagee, or any third party having an interest in real or personal property shall
    refuse to accept a policy issued
    by an admitted insurer solely because the policy is issued for a
    continuous period without a fixed expiration date even though the
    policy premium is due and payable
    every six months, provided the
    lender, mortgagee, or third party is entitled to receive (a) notice
    of renewal from the insurer within 15 days of receipt of payment on
    the policy by the insured or (b)
    notice of cancellation or nonrenewal
    under the terms and conditions set forth in Sections 678 and
    2074.8
    of the Insurance Code, whichever is applicable.

    Loan Modification by Third Party
    2944.6.  (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any person who negotiates, attempts to
    negotiate, arranges, attempts to arrange,
    or otherwise offers to perform a mortgage loan modification or
    other
    form of mortgage loan forbearance for a fee or other compensation paid by the borrower, shall
    provide the following to the borrower, as
    a separate statement, in not less than 14-point bold type, prior
    to
    entering into any fee agreement with the borrower:
    It is not necessary to pay a third party to arrange for a loan
    modification or other form of forbearance
    from your mortgage lender
    or servicer. You may call your lender directly to ask for a change in
    your loan terms. Nonprofit housing counseling agencies also offer
    these and other forms of borrower
    assistance free of charge. A list
    of nonprofit housing counseling agencies approved by the United
    States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is available
    from your local HUD office or
    by visiting http://www.hud.gov.
    (b) If loan modification or other mortgage loan forbearance
    services are offered or negotiated in one of
    the languages set forth
    in Section 1632, a translated copy of the statement in subdivision (a) shall be
    provided to the borrower in that foreign language.
    (c) A violation of this section by a natural person is a public
    offense punishable by a fine not exceeding
    ten thousand dollars
    ($10,000), by imprisonment in the county jail for a term not to exceed one year, or
    by both that fine and imprisonment, or if by a
    business entity, the violation is punishable by a fine not
    exceeding
    fifty thousand dollars ($50,000). These penalties are cumulative to
    any other remedies or penalties provided by law.
    (d) This section does not apply to a person, or an
    agent acting on
    that person’s behalf, offering loan modification or other loan forbearance services for a
    loan owned or serviced by that person.
    (e) This section shall apply only to mortgages and deeds of trust
    secured by residential real property
    containing four or fewer
    dwelling units.

    2944.7.  (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, it shall be unlawful for any person who
    negotiates, attempts to negotiate, arranges, attempts to arrange, or otherwise offers to perform a
    mortgage loan modification or other form of mortgage loan forbearance for a fee or other compensation
    paid by the borrower, to do any of the following:
    (1) Claim, demand, charge, collect, or receive any compensation until after the person has fully
    performed each and every service the person contracted to perform or represented that he or she
    would perform.
    (2) Take any wage assignment, any lien of any type on real or personal property, or other security to
    secure the payment of compensation.
    (3) Take any power of attorney from the borrower for any purpose.
    (b) A violation of this section by a natural person is a public offense punishable by a fine not exceeding
    ten thousand dollars ($10,000), by imprisonment in the county jail for a term not to
    exceed one year, or by both that fine and imprisonment, or if by a business entity, the violation is
    punishable by a fine not exceeding fifty thousand dollars ($50,000). These penalties are cumulative to
    any other remedies or penalties provided by law.
    (c) Nothing in this section precludes a person, or an agent acting on that person’s behalf, who offers
    loan modification or other loan forbearance services for a loan owned or serviced by that person,
    from doing any of the following:
    (1) Collecting principal, interest, or other charges under the terms of a loan, before the loan is modified,
    including charges to establish a new payment schedule for a nondelinquent loan, after the
    borrower reduces the unpaid principal balance of that loan for the express purpose of lowering the
    monthly payment due under the terms of the loan.
    (2) Collecting principal, interest, or other charges under the terms of a loan, after the loan is modified.
    (3) Accepting payment from a federal agency in connection with the federal Making Home Affordable
    Plan or other federal plan intended to help borrowers refinance or modify their loans or otherwise avoid
    foreclosures.
    (d) This section shall apply only to mortgages and deeds of trust secured by residential real property
    containing four or fewer dwelling units.
    (e) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2013, and as of that date is repealed, unless
    a later enacted statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2013, deletes or extends
    that date.

    2932.5 ruling

    Deutsche Bank National Trust Company (Deutsche Bank),

    as Trustee for WaMu Series 2007-HEl Trust, its assignees

    and/or successors (HEl Trust), moved for relief from the

    automatic stay to proceed with foreclosure proceedings on

    Debtors’ residence (Property). It is undisputed that the

    claim asserted by Deutsche Bank on behalf of HEl Trust

    exceeds the fair market value of the Property. The Debtors

    filed no opposition and have indicated an intention to

    surrender the Property. The Trustee opposed the motion on

    the grounds that Deutsche Bank lacks standing in that

    Deutsche Bank had failed to establish that it or HEl Trust,

    the party represented thereby, held a perfected security

    interest in the Property.

    Because the Court finds that Deutsche Bank has failed

    to provide evidence that it, let alone HEl Trust, has a

    security interest in the Property, the Court denies the

    motion for relief from stay without prejudice.

    This Court has subject matter jurisdiction over the

    proceeding pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1334 and General Order

    No. 312-D of the United States District Court for the Southern

    District of California. This is a core proceeding under

    28 U.S.C. § 157(b) (2) (A) & (G).

    BACKGROUND

    On or about November 8, 2006, Debtors borrowed money from

    WAMU and executed a promissory note in favor of WAMU of the same

    date (Note). Debtors also executed a deed of trust granting

    WAMU a security interest in the Property (Deed of Trust). On

    December 17, 2007 Debtors filed a petition commencing this

    bankruptcy case. According to Debtors’ schedules, the value of

    the Property ($863,931.00) was less than the amount owed on the

    Note and secured by the Deed of Trust ($998,016.00). Debtors’

    schedules list WAMU as the secured creditor on the Property.

    Debtors indicated their intention to surrender the Property.

    On January 25, 2008, Deutsche Bank, “as Trustee for” HE1

    Trust, moved for relief from stay to proceed with foreclosure on

    the Property. In support of the motion Deutsche Bank submitted a

    declaration of Lori Brecheen – an officer of WAMU “as Servicing

    Agent for Movant.” The declaration included a copy of the Deed

    of Trust and the Note. The Deed of Trust lists WAMU as the

    beneficiary and “California Reconveyance Company” as the

    “Trustee.” The Promissory Note lists WAMU as the Lender and

    payee.

    As noted, the Debtors did not oppose the motion, but the

    Trustee did on the ground that Deutsche Bank failed to establish

    that it had standing to bring the motion because it had failed to

    prove that it had a perfected lien against the Property.

    In the Reply to the Trustee’s opposition, Deutsche Bank

    asserts that it is the “current beneficiary of a promissory note

    and deed of trust by way of assignment … ” In a subsequent

    declaration, Ms. Brecheen declared that WAMU “transferred the

    NOTE and DEED OF TRUST to DEUTSCHE BANK.” She went on to explain

    that since transferring the Note and Deed of Trust, WAMU has

    acted as servicing agent for Deutsche Bank on the loan. As agent

    for Deutsche Bank, WAMU was in possession of the Note, as

    endorsed to Deutsche Bank. Attached to the supplemental

    declaration was a copy of the Note with an added page with what

    Ms. Brecheen contends is the endorsement. As discussed below, it

    is simply a stamp signed by a vice president of WAMU reading “Pay

    to the order of ” – the space for payees is left blank.

    The Court held a hearing on the matter and took it under

    submission.

    DISCUSSION

    It is undisputed that the subject Property is, as the saying

    goes, underwater. All parties seem to agree that the claim

    secured by the Property exceeds the value of the Property. The

    Debtors are prepared to abandon the Property. The only issue

    before the Court is whether Deutsche Bank is in a position to

    seek relief from the stay.

    Bankruptcy Code section 362(d) provides for relief from stay

    on request of a “party in interest.” Party in interest for the

    purposes of a motion for relief from stay is not defined.

    However, the Court agrees with the court in In re Maisel, that

    “[a] party seeking relief from the automatic stay to exercise

    rights as to property must demonstrate at least a colorable claim

    to the property.” 378 B.R. 19, 21 (Bankr.D.Mass. 2007) (citing In

    re Huggins, 357 B.R. 180, 185 (Bankr.D.Mass. 2006). That is,

    since Deutsche Bank seeks relief from stay to proceed against the

    Property, it must establish that it, or more accurately the party

    it represents, HE1 Trust, has a security interest in such

    property. As movant, Deutsche Bank has the responsibility to

    convince the Court that the party seeking relief from the stay

    with respect to the Property has an interest in the Property.

    Deutsche Bank has failed to do so.

    In support of the motion, Deutsche Bank has provided the

    copies of the original Note and Deed of Trust. However, both the

    undisputed that WAMU held a security interest in the Property by

    virtue of the Deed of Trust, Deutsche Bank has provided no

    evidence at all that any interest in the Deed of Trust was ever

    assigned from WAMU to Deutsche Bank, or to anyone else for that

    matter. In her supplemental declaration Ms. Brecheen declares

    that the Deed of Trust was “transferred” to Deutsche Bank.

    However, Deutsche Bank has provided no authority (and the Court

    is aware of none) for the apparent proposition that transfer of

    the Deed of Trust without assignment, let alone recordation, is

    sufficient to give Deutsche Bank or HEl Trust a security interest

    in the Property. As it stands on the record before the Court,

    the Deed of Trust remains in the name (and possession) of WAMU. 1

    Nothing in the Deed of Trust as written or in the way in which it

    has been handled gives any indication that Deutsche Bank or HEl

    Trust has a security interest in the Property. Not surprisingly

    therefor, Deutsche Bank focuses the Court’s attention on the

    Note.

    The Note too runs solely in favor of WAMU. The copy of the

    Note produced in connection with the Motion gave no indication

    that anyone but WAMU had an interest therein. In response to the

    Trustee’s opposition, Deutsche Bank eventually produced a copy of

    the Note with an additional, unnumbered, undated page attached,

    which appears to been endorsement by WAMU. However, the “Pay to

    the order of” line of the endorsement is blank. There is no

    indication from the face of the Note as endorsed that it was

    endorsed to Deutsche Bank and/or HEl Trust.

    The sole evidence that Deutsche Bank provides which would

    indicate to the Court that Deutsche Bank might have any interest

    at all in the Property, is the supplemental declaration of

    Ms. Brecheen that the Note had been transferred to Deutsche Bank.

    Assuming for the sake of argument that this “transfer” amounts to

    an “assignment,” such an assignment of the Note appears to be

    sufficient under California to give Deutsche Bank a security

    interest in the Property.

    California Civil Code § 2932.5 provides:

    Where a power to sell real property is given to a

    mortgagee, or other encumbrancer, in an instrument

    intended to secure the payment of money, the power is

    part of the security and vests in any person who by

    assignment becomes entitled to payment of the money

    secured by the instrument. The power of sale may be

    exercised by the assignee if the assignment is duly

    acknowledged and recorded.

    The Court is aware of no California case law interpreting this

    section. However, it appears to indicate that a security

    interest runs with the obligation – in terms of the case at hand,

    that is, an assignment of the Note amounts to an assignment of

    the Deed of Trust. 2 However, as indicated, Deutsche Bank has

    provided no convincing evidence that the Note was ever assigned

    to Deutsche Bank. Furthermore, even if the Note was assigned to

    Deutsche Bank, Deutsche Bank is not the party asserting a

    security interest in the Property. Rather, the motion is brought

    by Deutsche Bank as Trustee for HEI Trust. The record is devoid

    of any further assignment to HEI Trust.

    In summary, the only question before this Court is whether

    Deutsche Bank and/or HEI Trust has an interest in the Property.

    The Court holds that Deutsche Bank has failed to provide evidence

    that it, let alone HEI Trust, has a security interest in the

    Property. 3 Accordingly, the motion is denied.

    The Trustee argues that based upon the last line of § 2932.5 Deutsche Bank may not

    foreclose on the Property because the assignment was not recorded. That may well be.

    However, that is an issue the Trustee can raise with the state court if relief from stay is ultimately

    granted.

    Both parties allotted much ink and paper to the issue of whether Deutsche Bank has a

    perfected security interest in the Note. The Court finds this discussion beyond the scope of the

    motion before it. Deutsche Bank has moved for relief from stay to proceed against the Property.

    Whether or not it holds a security interest in the Note is irrelevant. Since we are not concerned

    with a security interest in the Note, all talk of a “perfected lien” on the Note is beside the point.

    CONCLUSION

    For the reasons set forth above Deutsche Bank’s motion for

    relief from stay is denied without prejudice.

    IT IS SO ORDERED.

    DATE: JUN – 9 2008

    PE ER W. BOWIE, Chief Judge

    United States Bankruptcy Court

    Understanding California Civil Code Section 2932.5.

    Can a lender or their agent (ex, the loan servicer) pursue a non-judicial foreclose on real property via exercising the power of sale contained in the deed of trust, if the alleged creditor has only the note and no assignment and recording of the deed of trust (the security for payment of the note)?
    Posted by Foreclosure Defense Attorney Steve Vondran on July 18, 2010 · Leave a Comment

    Can a lender or their agent (ex, the loan servicer) pursue a non-judicial foreclose on real property via exercising the power of sale contained in the deed of trust, if the alleged creditor has only the note and no assignment and recording of the deed of trust (the security for payment of the note)? Understanding California Civil Code Section 2932.5.

    This article is general legal information only and not intended to serve as legal advice or a substitute for legal advice. As law is constantly changing and evolving, the information may not be 100% complete, accurate or up-to-date. For specific questions about your legal liability in regard to junior loans, please contact a skilled and experienced real estate or foreclosure defense lawyer.

    Steve Vondran is a California Real Estate Lawyer who is licensed to practice law in California and Arizona. He also holds a real estate broker’s license in California and Arizona and has a background in mortgage brokering and commercial real estate. HE can be reached at steve@vondranlaw.com or (877) 276-5084 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting (877) 276-5084 end_of_the_skype_highlighting.

    ________________________________________________________________

    First, let’s get some general rules on the table that lenders and their attorneys will rely on when seeking to foreclose on your property:

    (1) There is no obligation to produce the original note if a lender seeks to conduct a private trustee sale (i.e. a non-judicial foreclosure that relies on the power of sale contained in the deed of trust). In other words, do not try to file for an injunction in a court of law to fight the lender and challenge whether or not they own the loan, because you have no right to ask who is foreclosing on you in a private sale. Sad yes, but such is the law. Therefore, in a non-judicial foreclosure setting, there is no way to force them to prove they are in fact your creditor with the right to foreclose. Their mere allegation that they have the note is all they need if you challenge them at this stage, and do not expect the judge to rule otherwise.

    See our Blog posting on this page for more details: http://www.foreclosuredefenseresourcecenter.com/2010/03/can-a-california-homeowner-demand-that-the-lender-or-loan-servicer-produce-the-note-as-a-foreclosure-defense-strategy/.

    (2) In support of their right to foreclose non-judicially, lenders like to use the “security follows the note” argument and line of cases to support their position that if they merely allege that they have the note, then that must also mean they have the security interest (i.e. the deed of trust or mortgage) whether or not the security interest is/was specifically assigned to them – normally by MERS who originally records the security interest in as many as 60 million mortgages across the United States. For this proposition they usually cite two cases: (a) Carpenter v. Longan, 83 U.S. 271, 275 (1873); and (b) Restatement Third of Property (Mortgages) Section 5.4 (1997). Note that these pre-date most loan securitization.

    LONGAN: In Longan the United States Supreme Court held: “The note and mortgage are inseparable; the former as essential, the latter as an incident. An assignment of the note carries the mortgage with it, while an assignment of the latter alone is a nullity.” Note, this case says only that assigning the note also assigns the security (i.e. the right to foreclose). The case does NOT say that the POWER OF SALE is also assigned when a note is assigned. This is important, because without the power of sale, a lender should be relegated to conducting a JUDICIAL FORECLOSURE SALE AND NOT A PRIVATE TRUSTEE SALE USING THE POWER OF SALE.

    RESTATMENT: It appears to be the general rule in California that the transfer of a mortgage note transfers with it the related mortgage – “the mortgage follows the note” as they say. The RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF
PROPERTY (MORTGAGES) § 5.4 (1997), relied on by many lenders in their briefs, states: “a transfer of an obligation secured by a mortgage also transfers the mortgage unless the parties to the transfer agree otherwise.” The rationale is to avoid economic waste to the lender and avoid a windfall to the borrower if the note and mortgage are split – rendering the mortgage note unsecured. The Restatement also cites the case of Carpenter v. Longan, 83 U.S. 271 (1827) “all the authorities agree that the debt is the principal thing and the mortgage an accessory.”

    These cases seem to give the lenders wide latitude to just merely claim they own the note (they never want to show it) and have the Court agree that the security naturally follows (whether or not the deed of trust was assigned, acknowledged, and recorded) and that the lender therefore has standing to lift a stay in bankruptcy court. If the lender can show proof of the original promissory note in the BK lift-stay motion, I would say I might agree. But again, they will not want to show the note, and it is up to the BK judge to demand they show this critical piece of evidence before they allow a creditor to lift the automatic stay. If you want legal authority take a look at In re Hwang, 396 B.R. 757 (C.D. California 2008. I have attached a link to my case brief on this important case: http://www.producethenoteattorney.com/2010/05/in-re-hwang-an-overview-of-motion-for-relief-from-automatic-stay-real-party-in-interest-and-constitutional-standing-requirements-in-a-california-bankruptcy-court/

    But is the same true if a homeowner files for an injunction trying to prevent a lender from conducting a non-judicial foreclosure sale where there is simply no proof the lender has physical possession of the note and the chain of title does not indicate any assignment or recording of the deed of trust (i.e. the power of private sale never conveyed per 2932.5)?

    Applying Constitutional law standards, States are always free to grant more rights and freedoms that the United States Supreme Court may grant, but states cannot provide less. I would argue that is what California did when it enacted Civil Code Section 2932.5 by requiring an actual assignment and recording of the deed of trust if the lender/mortgagee wants to exercise the power of sale and conduct a private trustee sale – Notice of Default / Notice of Sale – outside the watchful eye of the Court (as would be required in a judicial sale). In other words, if a lender wants to foreclose in a non-judicial private trustee sale fashion, it would seem they need both the endorsed note and physical possession of such – or, physical possession of the note endorsed in blank – AND the assignment of the deed of trust duly acknowledged and recorded as required under California Civil Code Section 2932.5. Without both, I would argue a lender is relegated to a judicial foreclosure sale only, and the Court should enjoin the attempted and threatened private trustee sale. At least that is my honest opinion and it would be great if it worked out that way. There is not a lot of case law on this curious code section.

    Let’s take a look at 2932.5 and tell me if you agree. First off, here is a link to the law I am talking about so we can all take a look at it. It is short and sweet so do not be intimidated. http://law.onecle.com/california/civil/2932.5.html I have pasted the law below if you are the type of person who hates opening up links:

    “Where a power to sell real property is given to a mortgagee, or other encumbrancer, in an instrument intended to secure the payment of money, the power is part of the security and vests in any person who by assignment becomes entitled to payment of the money secured by the instrument. The power of sale may be exercised by the assignee if the assignment is duly acknowledged and recorded.”

    Looks to me like the power of sale (i.e. the right to pursue a private judicial foreclosure sale) requires an assignment of the deed of trust and recording of such in the County recorder’s office. If that is not what this law means, then what does it mean? In other words, if a lender conducts a private trustee sale and the chain of title reflects that there has been no assignment or recording of the deed by that lender or its agent, wouldn’t that make the private sale voidable and subject to set aside? See our blog piece on the “lender please don’t make me tender” rule before you get excited. Here is a link to that post.

    http://www.foreclosuredefenseresourcecenter.com/2010/03/phoenix-foreclosure-lawyer/

    Bolstering this position that the deed of trust must be assigned, acknowledged, and recorded before exercising the private power of sale in California is the case of Strike v. Transwest Discount Corp, 92 CA3d, 735 (1979). In this case the court held:

    “A recorded assignment of note and deed of trust vests in the assignee all of the rights, interests of the beneficiary (Musgrave v. Renkin, 180 Cal. 785 [183 P. 145]) including authority to exercise any power of sale given the beneficiary (Civ. Code, § 858)…… The power of sale here derived from the instrument itself. (Civ. Code, § 2932; McDonald v. Smoke Creek Live Stock, 209 Cal. 231).”

    Therefore, I would think you have at least a fair argument that a lender seeking to foreclose non-judicially, outside the Courts presence (as in a judicial foreclosure), that they would need to be able to establish that the deed of trust was properly assigned and recorded in addition to owning the note, although as discussed above they don’t have to show the note. If there is no proof of recorded assignment of the security in the County Recorder’s office, I would argue the lender has only the right to foreclose judicially (subject to a four year statute of limitations**), and by filing the Notice of Sale and Notice of Default, the lender has indicated that they are not willing to go that route. The problem is, if you filed for an injunction, they would probably just quickly assign and record the deed of trust killing the argument altogether. If any one else has any other opinions or interpretations, or even case law, I would love to see/hear it.

    ** There are time limits to file a judicial foreclosure as stated in the case of Aviel v. Ng, 161 Cal.App.4th 809, (2008) where the Court held: “The running of the statute of limitations on an obligation underlying a mortgage or deed of trust bars judicial foreclosure of the mortgage as well as an action to enforce the obligation. Cal.Civ.Code § 2911(1).”

    For now, suffice it to say, this might be something to look into or argue if you are going all out and trying to save your home from foreclosure. Before filing any civil lawsuit, you should consult with a real estate or foreclosure lawyer to determine whether you have proper legal grounds to file a lawsuit.

    One way this popped up in a bankruptcy case was the lender sought to record the assignment of the deed of trust while the borrower was in bankruptcy court and protected by the automatic stay. We are arguing that this is an attempt to perfect its right to non-judicially foreclose (i.e. they are trying to comply with 2932.5 to get the right to foreclose non-judicially) and that such action to perfect its interest violates Bankruptcy Code Section 362 which prohibits the following:

    (3) any act to obtain possession of property of the estate or of property from the estate or to exercise control over property of the estate;

    (4) any act to create, perfect, or enforce any lien against property of the estate;

    (5) any act to create, perfect, or enforce against property of the debtor any lien to the extent that such lien secures a claim that arose before the commencement of the case under this title;

    (6) any act to collect, assess, or recover a claim against the debtor that arose before the commencement of the case under this title;

    Again, just trying to give you some things to think about as you fight to save your home from foreclosure. Although the security may follow the note and that may be fine to judicially foreclose, perhaps that security interest must be assigned, acknowledged and recorded in order to preserve the right to conduct the private non-judicial trustee sale under the power of sale contained in the security. The deed of trust itself may also have some language you need to look at that that may dictate other rights.

    ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

    NOTICE: The foregoing information is general legal information only and shall not be relied upon as legal advice, or a substitution for legal advice. If you have specific legal questions about your foreclosure case you should seek out the advice of a real estate attorney. In addition, the information posted above may not be 100% complete, accurate or up-to-date. Law is always changing. The Law Offices of Steve Vondran is licensed to practice law in the state of Arizona and California and only seeks to solicit and serve Clients in these two states. Steve Vondran, Esq. is a licensed attorney and real estate broker in California and Arizona. He can be reached by email at steve@vondranlaw.com or toll free (877) 276-5084 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting (877) 276-5084 end_of_the_skype_highlighting. This is an advertisement and communication pursuant to State Bar Rules. Please do not send us private or confidential information through any of our above-listed websites. Sending us an email does not create an attorney-client relationship (only signing a legal retainer will do this). Copyright 2010 – Law Offices of Steven C. Vondran – All Rights Reserved.

    BASIC OVERVIEW OF TAKING A DEFAULT JUDGMENT IN CALIFORNIA WHERE A LENDER, LOAN SERVICER, HOMEOWNER, REAL ESTATE BROKER, OR INVESTOR FAILS TO ANSWER A REAL ESTATE COMPLAINT

    Posted by Foreclosure Defense Attorney Steve Vondran on September 11, 2010 · Leave a Comment

    The following is general legal information only and not intended as legal advice or a substitute for obtaining legal advice. For specific answers to your questions please consult a real estate attorney. Steve Vondran, Esq., is a real estate attorney licensed to practice law in California and Arizona. He can be reached at steve@vondranlaw.com or by phone at (877) 276-5084 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting (877) 276-5084 end_of_the_skype_highlighting. There is no representation that this article is 100% accurate or up-to-date as the law is constantly evolving.

    INTRODUCTION

    When we file lawsuits alleging predatory lending, truth in lending violations, RESPA violations, unfair competition, fraud, misrepresentation and the like and seeking money damages, loan rescission, quiet title and other remedies, sometimes the Defendants fail to respond. When the lenders, investors, loan servicers, MERS, or others fail to answer (which does happen from time to time) the next step is to “take a default” against them. The following is the process we normally follow in handling our cases. This usually involves two steps: (1) Filing the entry of default and (2) the “prove-up” stage. This article discusses an overview of the general process. It may vary depending on the type of case, causes of action alleged, the court’s rules, etc.

    OVERVIEW OF STEPS REQUIRED TO TAKE A DEFAULT JUDGMENT IN CALIFORNIA

    1. First, after the Defendant fails to respond to a complaint within the time permitted a document must be filed with the Court to get them to enter the default of that Defendant. Here is a look at the judicial counsel form we use for that purpose: http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/forms/fillable/civ100.pdf

    NOTE: If your case involves a simple contract issue, the Clerk may be able to enter that judgement. In most other cases, you will need to proceed to the steps listed below.

    1. Next, after the Court enters the Default of the Defendant, within 45 days a similar application to the court is made to actually get the Default Judgement against the non-answering defendants. This application will use the same form above, except we check the “court judgment” box and “I request a court judgment.” At this point, it is also wise to check with the Court clerk to see how the judge hears default judgments. Some Courts want oral evidence for example, and some would prefer to hear the case on affidavits, declarations, exhibits, etc. and not to hear live testimony. So we check with the Court to figure this out. In Quiet Title, or Fraud Real Estate actions, it is likely the Court will at some point require an oral prove up hearing with live testimony.
    2. At any rate, it is time to fill out the form and basically time to bring the evidence forward to prove the case against the non-answering defendant and to obtain a monetary judgment in according to proof and “for sums which appear just”.

    NOTE: When seeking a default it is important to note that we cannot obtain a default judgment in an amount in excess of sought in the complaint and cannot add new causes of action that were not raised in the complaint. This highlights the importance of having a well-plead complaint which must also be sufficient to raise facts constituting a prima facie case as to each cause of action for the Court will not award a defaul if the facts don’t meet the elements required for a particular cause of action. HERE IS LINK TO RULE 3.1800 CALIFORNIA RULES OF COURT IN REGARD TO DEFAULT JUDGEMENTS AND WHAT IS NEEDED. http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/rules/index.cfm?title=three&linkid=rule3_1800.

    AS YOU CAN SEE THERE IS A VERY SPECIFIC SET OF REQUIREMENTS TO OBTAIN THE DEFAULT JUDGMENT INCLUDING:

    ● Declarations under penalty of perjury

    ● Any Documentary Evidence or Exhibits which which are admissible as evidence

    ● Case Summary

    ● Declaration of Counsel in support of Application for Default Judgement by Court

    ● Legal Basis for any Attorney Fees requested (check with the Court to see if they have a Attorney fee schedule which may set forth maximum amounts that may be requested)

    ● Any interest calculations such as “per diem to date of entry of judgment.”

    ● Memorandum of Costs

    ● Declaration that Defendant is non-military

    ● Proposed form of Judgment

    ● Dismissal of parties to which a judgment is not sought

    ● Proof of publication if the defendant(s) were served (Summons and Complaint) by publication. (ex. State in a declaration that Publication Rules were complied with).

    ALSO NOTE: California Code of Civil Procedure Sectoin 587 which states:
    An application by a plaintiff for entry of default under

    subdivision (a), (b), or (c) of Section 585 or Section 586 shall

    include an affidavit stating that a copy of the application has been

    mailed to the defendant’s attorney of record or, if none, to the

    defendant at his or her last known address and the date on which the

    copy was mailed. If no such address of the defendant is known to the

    plaintiff or plaintiff’s attorney, the affidavit shall state that

    fact.

    NOTE: As you can see there are very strict requirements to getting a default judgement. If certain steps in the entire process are not followed, Default Judgments, even if obtained (note there is no guarantee a default judgment will ultimately be obtained, or be obtained in the amounts requested just because the Defendant fails to appear – the case and amounts have to be proven) can be subject to appeal or collateral attack.

    Local rules always come into play when seeking default judgement. Ex. Here are the local rules for Los Angeles: http://www.lasuperiorcourt.org/courtrules/ui/popup.aspx?ch=Chap9&tab=2

    SOME COMMON GROUNDS FOR ATTACKING OR APPEALING A DEFAULT JUDGEMENT ARE:

    (a) Court lacked jurisdiction to hear case or render a judgment.

    (b) Improper service of summons and complaint (no reasonable attempt to give actual notice of the lawsuit to defendant).

    (c) Complaint did not state a valid cause of action.

    (d) New causes of action (not set forth in the complaint) were raised at the prove up stage.

    (e) Relief requested and granted at prove-up exceeded relief asked for in the complaint.

    (f) Insufficnency of Evidence that lead to Default Judgment

    (g) Default was taken against Defendant (but another Defendant who answered the complaint was found not liable which would also make Defandant not liable – ex. Defendants were two partners who were sued in regards to partnership activities and the answering defendant proved there was no legal violations).

    SO, THE BOTTOM LINE IS THERE NEEDS TO BE A WELL PLEAD COMPLAINT BEFORE SEEKING A DEFAULT JUDGMENT, INCLUDING SETTING FORTH THE AMOUNTS SOUGHT AND THE FACTUAL SUPPORT FOR THE CAUSES OF ACTION PLED. WHEN THE DEFENDANTS DON’T ANSWER ON TIME THERE IS A SPECIFIC PROCEDURE THAT MUST BE FOLLOWED TO TAKE THE DEFAULT AND PROVE IT UP. FAILURE TO TAKE THE PROPER STEPS AT ALL STAGES COULD RESULT IN AN ATTACK ON THE JUDGEMENT.

    never stipulate to the Commissioner HERE’S WHY Listen

    never stipulate to the Commissioner HERE’S WHY ListenFannie Mae v Cabesas – Jul 9 10

    The Ultimate Question of the “Who”? (And this is Not About the Band)

    This is a guest post by G. Alex Morfesis and edited by Max.
    The current trend in the mortgage business in dealing with the foreclosure mess and the plague of bogus affidavits and other legal documents is to shout out as loudly as humanly possible that “we should not give the borrowers a free home” because they signed the mortgage notes and received the funds to buy their homes so they must owe the money! How can they deny they owe the money? And yes, it is certainly true that the funds are owed to someone; that the mortgage notes are somewhere; and that someone in some place actually and lawfully owns the notes. The real question is WHO are these parties? WHO lawfully owns and holds the mortgage notes? WHO will actually lose money if the $400,000 home is sold at foreclosure for $150,000? WHO has some real skin in this game that will be scrapped to the bone in a forced foreclosure sale?
    It is ironic that the people advancing these “free home” arguments are the same folks on Maiden Lane in downtown New York City who did not scream or shout when Wall Street stopped making a market in auction rate securities and the Treasury came to rescue with billions and billions of dollars to save their collective asses. After all, it was all just a “big oops” by the smartest guys in the room. These were the guys who failed to take into account that a lot of these multi-option payment adjustable rate mortgages (the so-called MOARMS or MORONS) might not perform once they “adjusted.” These were also the same people who assumed that the value of residential real estate would continue to appreciate from now on at the annual rate of at least 15% per year. Talk about falling asleep at the wheel; these guys were not even in the car!
    The average American home borrower pays much more in interest rates than most OECD nation borrowers. This is by design and not by chance. And, that additional thrown off capital from the American homeowner was originally designed to allow a cushion so that the flattening out of risks would be possible and the disruptive nature of recessions would not create problems in the housing markets. In sum, these loan pools were designed to be self-correcting and modifying, that was why the distribution of risk formulas were put in place.
    So, what happened? In short, a little instrument called derivatives got in the way, something not disclosed (by the way) in the original prospectuses of the depositors and sponsors upon the registration of these securitized loan pools with the SEC. Not that registration would have made any difference—Exhibit One being the Bernie Madoff case. And then we had the collateral debt obligations, the collateral debt obligations squared and cubed, the credit default swaps and the rest the ponzi-inspired investment schemes. We all know the rest of the story (which, by the way, is on-going and never ending at this point).
    So what about the HOPE NOW and HAMP programs? What about all of the participation agreements the mortgage servicers signed with the Treasury? The agreements the servicers never intended to honor and who drafted them with as many outs as a great piece of Swiss cheese. Well, the truth of the matter is that at least seventy plus billions of taxpayer dollars sit fallow since the servicers are much happier gaming the system than allowing the average borrower a modicum of financial and emotional stability. The economy is being held back by the disruptive nature of the servicers trying to pick the pockets of MBIA and AMBAC and MGIC and RADIAN in the same way they clipped AIG.
    Are there borrowers who want to play “Wall Street Banksters” and live off the hard work of the American taxpayer? Yes, but in truth probably less than ten percent. The fact is that most borrowers do not abandon their responsibilities just because their homes cannot be sold for a profit. The so-called structured defaults and “bail and buy” are the products of a propaganda campaign by the mortgage industry. If there was any logic to these lies, then most new car buyers would abandon their cars thirty seconds after driving off the dealer’s lot. Or, they would buy a new Chrysler under the 60 day free trial plan and then turn that baby back in and test drive another new vehicle for another 60 days and so on. And, by the way, don’t get me started on the federally funded Chapter 11 bankruptcy cases of Chrysler and GM! The Government spent billions to save several thousand jobs for these two corporations but will not spend any real money to save millions of homeowners.
    The fact that an extremely small percentage of borrowers might be able to enjoy the life of a Wall Street baron by getting a loan they do not have to pay for currently does not justify wholesale short-cutting, and in most states there is a difference between the “timing out” of a case and getting a “free” home. Most of those who hire counsel who know how the mill attorneys use the short cuts taken by the foreclosure industry and then use this information against that same industry will at most end up with a borrower that will get a major loan modification that will be paid off/refinanced by them long before they get to the many years needed to quiet title in many states.
    I understand that Max Gardner, who leads a consumer army of “trained soldiers” and is called the “go to guy for consumer bankruptcy cases” by Business Week, stresses that his Boot Camp trained-lawyers should use the “maximum amount of legal leverage” in order to secure the “maximum modification of the mortgage loan.” There is certainly power in fully understanding how the other side really does business. I think Gardner knows more than anybody on the consumer side of isle about how the mortgage business really operates and he has made a lot of money with that knowledge. He knows where all the bodies are buried and where the plan to plant the fresh ones.
    And as for the free-home advocates, who exactly suggested that Florida or any other state for that matter is a pro borrower jurisdiction? The facts are that about 95% of the Florida foreclosure cases get slam dunked without so much as a whimper from anyone. The foreclosure mills don’t even come into court to get their summary judgments, they just call them in. Actually, they get the judges to call them. You see these mill lawyers are very busy beavers and court and due process and proper evidence are just nuisances that should be avoided at all cost. So the most time a “mill” lawyer has to spend on a foreclosure case is about 90 seconds on a call in to the judge’s chambers…yup, not even in open court. Today, in America, a consumer can lose a home over the phone. This reminds me of the old TV show called “Dialing for Dollars” but this time in reverse. Now the mills are still dialing in for dollars but also securing an order of foreclosure at the same time. And, by the way, I could possibly agree to own a foreclosure or bankruptcy mill if the firm made $2,500.00 for 90 seconds of “real lawyer” work. It is not bad money if you can get away with and still sleep at night. I have trouble sleeping anyway so this would never work for me.
    Either way, this author would really much rather be working on using his human capital on helping small companies grow. You see we really and truly need jobs. And a lot of jobs. How can consumers make their mortgage payments without jobs? You see one must stop the bleeding before one can treat the patient.
    But for those who act as if the borrower is their spoiled kid asking for some more money to spend at their university, what good would come from pushing through foreclosures faster? Is there some mystery money out there floating around available for the average investor to buy these properties? I am sure the readers of Scotsman’s Guide would love to hear about it, this rush to “punish” people for having had the audacity to get laid off from their jobs. How does that help create stability in this economy? Does anybody think millions of Americans just walked off the job like the Jet Blue flight attendant did by jumping down the emergency exit ramp with two Miller High Life beers? Let’s get real for once!
    So that brings us back to the WHO. The parties in the securitized loan pools who are the ones being told to take the losses would NEVER say no to a mortgage modification as it would preserve their capital position. So it is not the so-called “owner of the note” who is saying “foreclose.” The parties who own the impacted bonds in a CUSIP based tranches in the REMIC Trusts who would take the losses are being precluded from making that choice. The truth of the matter is that the mortgage servicers and their legion of “out-source vendors” are the “real parties in interest” in terms of making these decisions because they are the only ones making money in the “foreclosure business.” And they are making a ton of money in this depression. Just check out the current 10-K filed by Lender Processing Services LLC as the proof is in the filing as they say.
    The proposition that the borrower should be negotiating with the mortgage servicers is akin to the old adage about the man making a deal with the devil—the devil always gets the best end of the deal and the other party ends up with a hell of an eternity. As a result, the borrower must know who the “real party in interest” is in all of these securitized deals because the homeowner and this party are the two players who have major bucks to lose if we let the servicers and their vendors continue on with their rape and plunder tactics. The Trustee and the Master Servicer in all of these RMBS trusts have fiduciary duties to the bond holders (the so-called “investors”) to do everything possible to protect the value of the bonds—which means they need to engage in mass mortgage modifications in order to preserve as much bond value as possible for all tranches in the structure.
    Conversely, the borrower has the absolute right to know who these “real parties” are so that the negotiations can be with those who have “skin in the game” as opposed to those who are simply taking as much skin out of the game as they can scam. This is especially important since the American taxpayer is footing the bill for all the scamsters.
    It is way past time to bring some sanity to this madness. The future of America is at risk along with the integrity of our system of just. The fierce urgency of now to quote a once famous leader.

    LOAN MODIFICATIONS: IS THIS WHAT I’M SUPPOSED TO BELIEVE??

    IS THIS WHAT I’M TO UNDERSTAND?

    You don’t need to hire anyone to help you negotiate with your bank for a loan modification.

    You don’t need an attorney, you don’t need a mortgage expert, and you don’t need a fraud examiner.

    All of those people, the lawyers, the mortgage experts, the fraud examiners… they’re all scammers because they CHARGE for their services.

    And everyone knows that loan modifications are FREE… like water in a stream, or the air that we breathe.

    Banks, on the other hand, have plenty of lawyers, mortgage experts, credit specialists, underwriters, and professional negotiators.

    You, however, should come alone.

    Who says you should come alone? The banks say so, that’s who.

    The banks are looking out for you. The banks are going to help you. The banks are on your side. You can trust the banks.

    The same banks that put you into mortgages where the payments double as soon as the prepayment penalty period ends.

    The same banks that blame you, the borrowers, for the meltdown, and have already foreclosed on millions of homes.

    The same banks that just lobbied congress to kill the bankruptcy reform bill that would have allowed judges to modify mortgages in bankruptcy so that people going bankrupt could have a chance to keep their homes.

    The same banks that just lobbied congress asking for a top allowable interest rate of 500%, and got 390%, while they charge you 29% on your credit card.

    The same banks that fraudulently packaged mortgage backed securities as AAA rated bonds and in doing so destroyed the bond market, and left the world’s financial systems in ruin.

    The same banks that paid their executives untold billions in compensation and bonuses as the entire country was sliding into the deepest recession since the 1930s.

    The same banks that have received TRILLIONS OF DOLLARS in taxpayer money. TRILLIONS.

    Those same banks are now going to help you … as long as you come alone to the negotiation. Don’t hire anyone to help you… and they’ll help you.

    And our President and our government agrees.

    But the FACT is that banks are REQUIRED BY LAW to negotiate in the banks best interest, not yours. The law says that the bank MUST do what’s in the bank’s best interest, not yours.

    It’s called a “fiduciary duty,” and it means that the banks MUST do what’s in the best interests of their shareholders, or their shareholders can SUE them for lots of money.

    Those are the facts. And while you are entitled to your own opinion, you are not entitled to your own set of facts.

    Here’s another fact: The banks don’t want you to have representation. They’d prefer you come alone… without help… without an attorney… without a mortgage expert. They’d much rather negotiate with people who are scared, emotional, and unknowledgeable. It makes it easier and better for them.

    But the 5th and 14th Amendments to the United States Constitution state that:

    No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”

    This can be viewed as a person’s rights to fair governing.

    In the United States of America there are two types of due process of law, “procedural” and “substantive”.

    Procedural due process of law means that the procedures used by government in making, applying, interpreting, and enforcing laws be reasonable and consistent. Substantive due process of law means that the government cannot make laws that apply to situations in which the government has no business interfering. It means that the “substance” or purpose of laws be constitutional.

    The Fourteenth Amendment continues and later talks about the “equal protection clause”. It states that no state may “deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” The Fourteenth Amendment’s original purpose was to create a society in which all people were treated equally.

    There have been three Taxpayer Bill of Rights passed by the United States Congress in the last 20 years. Here’s what the first right in the first Taxpayer Bill of Rights states:

    Taxpayers have the right to legal representation similar to that of a criminal defendant. Taxpayers have the right to have the IRS processes explained to them. Taxpayers have the right to sue the government for damages caused by IRS officials.

    Shouldn’t taxpayers have the same rights as homeowners when negotiating with their banks to avoid foreclosure and keep their homes?

    How many scammers are there? No one knows. How many mortgages have been successfully modified with the help of a private sector law firm or mortgage firm? No one knows.

    The government says we must protect homeowners from “scammers,” because homeowners can’t tell whether a given firm is a “scammer” or not. So, the banks and the government say they are all “scammers,” and you can tell because they charge a fee or retainer in advance of the work being completed… which is exactly the way all attorneys charge for every single case they take on.

    Is it the scammers who cause the scam, or is it the homeowner who is in a panic? It’s the panic.

    And who is causing the homeowner to be in a panic? Who defrauded the financial system and caused the housing meltdown and worst recession since The Great Depression? Who broke the bond market by selling bonds that were fraudulently packaged and sold to investors? Who put homeowners into loans they did not understand and could not afford?

    The banks did all of that. The banks caused the panic. The panic leads to the scams.

    SO, WHO ARE THE REAL SCAMMERS HERE?

    Yes… that’s right.

    SO, MAYBE IT’S TIME WE STOPPED LISTENING TO THEM. GET YOUR OWN REPRESENTATION BEFORE NEGOTIATING WITH YOUR BANK OVER A LOAN MODIFICATION. NO MATTER WHAT ANYONE TELLS YOU.

    USE YOUR HEAD. THIS MESS WASN’T YOUR FAULT. POOR PEOPLE WHO WANTED HOMES DIDN’T CAUSE THE WORLD’S BANKING SYSTEM AND WALL ST. TO FAIL.

    DON’T BE A SUCKER FOR THE BANKS… AGAIN.

    In a related story…

    Wells Fargo Bank killed a man recently. The man was in jeopardy of losing his home to foreclosure. He had raised his family there. He lived there with his wife. They lived in Agora, CA. He was trying to handle the negotiations himself. Because that’s what he was told to do…

    The bank was refusing to work with him. They wouldn’t modify his loan. They told him he had to come up with tens of thousands of dollars or he’d have to get out. They were nasty with him. It was taking a toll on him. The stress must have been unbearable. He couldn’t stand the thought of losing what he had worked his entire life to protect.

    Nothing worked. Now there was only ONE WEEK before his home would be sold in a foreclosure sale. He couldn’t stand it.

    He had a massive heart attack.

    He was 62 years old.

    His widow buried him. She was scared that she would have to move from their home.

    She hired the law firm of Serge, Rodnunsky & Jones in Woodland Hills. They called Wells Fargo and today they got the bank to agree to delay the sale until September. They’re confident they will be successful in obtaining a loan modification for the widow.

    That’s all they needed… a loan modification.

    But he is gone. Someone’s husband of decades. Someone’s father. Someone’s grandfather. A life ended.

    Because the bank couldn’t modify the loan. A few dollars.

    He worked his entire life in this country. His tax dollars made it possible for Wells Fargo to get bailed out by the government. And they killed him. And they didn’t and don’t care one bit.

    And I will never forgive Wells Fargo or any of the banks for this. Never.

    Biggest Defaulters on Mortgages Are the Rich

    By DAVID STREITFELD
    Published: July 8, 2010

    LOS ALTOS, Calif. — No need for tears, but the well-off are losing their master suites and saying goodbye to their wine cellars.

    Peter DaSilva for The New York Times

    A foreclosed house in Los Altos, Calif., where five such homes were recently set for an auction.

    The housing bust that began among the working class in remote subdivisions and quickly progressed to the suburban middle class is striking the upper class in privileged enclaves like this one in Silicon Valley.

    Whether it is their residence, a second home or a house bought as an investment, the rich have stopped paying the mortgage at a rate that greatly exceeds the rest of the population.

    More than one in seven homeowners with loans in excess of a million dollars are seriously delinquent, according to data compiled for The New York Times by the real estate analytics firm CoreLogic.

    By contrast, homeowners with less lavish housing are much more likely to keep writing checks to their lender. About one in 12 mortgages below the million-dollar mark is delinquent.

    Though it is hard to prove, the CoreLogic data suggest that many of the well-to-do are purposely dumping their financially draining properties, just as they would any sour investment.

    “The rich are different: they are more ruthless,” said Sam Khater, CoreLogic’s senior economist.

    Five properties here in Los Altos were scheduled for foreclosure auctions in a recent issue of The Los Altos Town Crier, the weekly newspaper where local legal notices are posted. Four have unpaid mortgage debt of more than $1 million, with the highest amount $2.8 million.

    Not so long ago, said Chris Redden, the paper’s advertising services director, “it was a surprise if we had one foreclosure a month.”

    The sheriff in Cook County, Ill., is increasingly in demand to evict foreclosed owners in the upscale suburbs to the north and west of Chicago — like Wilmette, La Grange and Glencoe. The occupants are always gone by the time a deputy gets there, a spokesman said, but just barely.

    In Las Vegas, Ken Lowman, a longtime agent for luxury properties, said four of the 11 sales he brokered in June were distressed properties.

    “I’ve never seen the wealthy hit like this before,” Mr. Lowman said. “They made their plans based on the best of all possible scenarios — that their incomes would continue to grow, that real estate would never drop. Not many had a plan B.”

    The defaulting owners, he said, often remain as long as they can. “They’re in denial,” he said.

    Here in Los Altos, where the median home price of $1.5 million makes it one of the most exclusive towns in the country, several houses scheduled for auction were still occupied this week. The people who answered the door were reluctant to explain their circumstances in any detail.

    At one house, where the lender was owed $1.3 million, there was a couch out front wrapped in plastic. A woman said she and her husband had lost their jobs and were moving in with relatives. At another house, the family said they were renters. A third family, whose mortgage is $1.6 million, said they would be moving this weekend.

    At a vacant house with a pool, where the lender was seeking $1.27 million, a raft and a water gun lay abandoned on the entryway floor.

    Lenders are fearful that many of the 11 million or so homeowners who owe more than their house is worth will walk away from them, especially if the real estate market begins to weaken again. The so-called strategic defaults have become a matter of intense debate in recent months.

    Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two quasi-governmental mortgage finance companies that own most of the mortgages in America with a value of less than $500,000, are alternately pleading with distressed homeowners not to be bad citizens and brandishing a stick at them.

    In a recent column on Freddie Mac’s Web site, the company’s executive vice president, Don Bisenius, acknowledged that walking away “might well be a good decision for certain borrowers” but argues that those who do it are trashing their communities.

    Garfield update 2009-2010

    1. No governmental relief is in sight for homeowners except in isolated instances of community action together with publicity from the media.
    2. State and federal governments continue to sink deeper into debt, cutting social and necessary services while avoiding the elephant in the living room: the trillions of dollars owed and collectible in taxes, recording fees, filing fees, late fees, penalties, financial damages, punitive damages and interest due from the intermediary players on Wall Street who created trading “instruments” based upon conveyance of interests in real property located within state borders. The death grip of the lobby for the financial service industry is likely to continue thus making it impossible to resolve the housing crisis, the state budget crisis or the federal budget deficit.
    3. Using taxpayer funds borrowed from foreign governments or created through quantitative easing, trillions of dollars have been paid, or provided in “credit lines” to intermediaries on the false premise that they own or control the mortgage backed securities that have defaulted. Foreclosures continue to hit new highs. Total money injected into the system exceeds 8 trillion dollars. Record profits announced by the financial services industry in which power is now more concentrated than before, making them the strongest influence in Federal and State capitals around the world.
    4. Toxic Titles reveal unmarketable properties in and out of foreclosures with no relief in sight because nearly everyone is ignoring this basic problem that is a deal-breaker on every transfer of an interest in real property.
    5. Evictions continue to hit new highs as Judges continue to be bombarded with ill-conceived motions that do not address the jurisdiction or authority of the court. The illegal evictions are based upon fraudulent conveyances procured through abuse of the foreclosure process and direct misrepresentations and fraud upon the court and recording system in each county as to the documents fabricated for purposes of foreclosure — creating the illusion of a proper paper trail.
    6. 1.7 million new foreclosed properties are due to hit the market according to published statistics. Livinglies estimate the number to be at least 4 million.
    7. Downward pressure on both price and marketability continues with no end in sight.
    8. Unemployment continues to rise, albeit far more slowly than at the beginning of 2009. Unemployment, underemployment, employment drop-outs, absence of entry-level jobs, low statistics on new business starts, and former members of workforce (particularly men) are harbingers for continued decline in median income combined with higher expenses for key components, particularly health care. The ability to pay anything other than rent is continuing its decline.
    9. Concurrent with the increase in foreclosures and the decrease in housing prices, official figures put the number of homes underwater at 25%. Livinglies estimates that when you look at three components not included in official statistics, the figure rises to more than 45%. The components are selling discounts, selling expenses, and continued delusional asking prices that will soon crash when sellers realize that past high prices were an illusion, not a market fluctuation.
    10. The number of people walking from their homes is increasing daily, including people who are not behind in their mortgages. This is increasing the inventory of homes that are not officially included in the pipeline because they are not sufficiently advanced in the delinquency or foreclosure process. This is a hidden second wave of pressure on housing prices and marketability.
    11. With the entire economy on government life-support that is not completely effective in preventing rises in homelessness and people requiring public assistance, the likelihood of severe social unrest and political upheaval increases month by month. Increasing risks of unrest prompted at least one Wall Street Bank to order enough firearms and ammunition to start an armory.
    12. Modification of mortgages has been largely a sham.
    13. Short-sales have been largely a sham.
    14. Quiet titles in favor of homeowners are increasing at a slow pace as the sophistication of defenses improves on the side of financial services companies seeking free homes through foreclosures.
    15. Legislative Intervention has been ineffective and indeed, misleading
    16. Executive intervention has been virtually non-existent. The people who perpetrated this fraud not only have evaded prosecution, they maintain close relationships with the Obama administration.
    17. Judicial intervention has been spotty and could be much better once people accept the complexity of securitization and the simplicity of STRATEGIES THAT WORK.
    18. Legal profession , slow to start went from zero to 15 mph during 2009. Let’s hope they get to 60 mph during 2010.
    19. Accounting profession, which has thus far stayed out of the process is expected to jump in on several fronts, including closer scrutiny of the published financial statements of public companies and financial institutions and the cottage industry of examining loan documents for compliance issues and violations of Federal and State lending laws.
    20. Prospects for actual economic recovery affecting the average citizen are dim. While there has been considerable improvement from the point of risk we had reached at the end of 2008, the new President and Congress have yet to address essential reforms on joblessness, regulation of financial services (including insurance businesses permitted to write commitments without sufficient assets in reserve to assure the payment of the risk. The economic indicators have been undermined by the intentional fraud perpetrated upon the world economic and financial system. Thus the official figures are further than ever from revealing the truth about about our current status. Without key acceptance of these anomalies it is inconceivable that the economy will, in reality, improve during 2010.
    21. Real inflation affecting everyday Americans has already started to rise as credit markets become increasingly remote from the prospective borrowers. Hyperinflation remains a risk although most of us were off on the timing because we underestimated the tenacious grip the dollar had on world commerce. While this assisted us in moving toward a softer landing, the probability that the dollar will continue to fall is still very high, thus making certain non-dollar denominated commodities more valuable. This phenomenon could affect housing prices in an upward direction if the trend continues. However the higher dollar prices will be offset by the fact that the cheaper dollars are required in greater quantities to buy anything. Thus the home prices might rise from $125,000 to $150,000 but the price of a loaf of bread will also be higher by 20%.
    22. GDP has been skewed away from including econometrics for actual work performed in the home unless money changes hands. Societal values have thus depreciated the value of child-rearing and stable homes. The results have been catastrophic in education, crime, technological innovation and policy making. While GDP figures are officially announced as moving higher, the country continues to move further into a depression. No actual increase in GDP has occurred for many years, unless the declining areas of the society are excluded from what is counted.
    23. The stock market is vastly overvalued again based upon vaporous forward earnings estimates and completely arbitrary price earnings ratios used by analysts. The vapor created by a 1000% increase in money supply caused by deregulation of the private financial institutions together with the illusion of profits created by these institutions trading between themselves has resulted in an increase from 16% to 45% of GDP activity. This figure is impossible to be real. As long as it is accepted as real or even possible, public figures, appointed and elected will base policy decisions on the desires of what is currently seen as the main driver of the U.S. economy. The balance of wealth will continue to move toward the levels of revolutionary France or the American colonies.
    24. Perceptible increases in savings and consumer resistance to retail impulse buying bodes well for the long-term prospects of the country. As the savings class becomes more savvy and more wealthy, they will, like their counterparts in the upper echelons of government commence exercising their power in the marketplace and in the voting booth.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, eviction, Foreclosure, Fraud, litigation, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, Foreclosure, Predatory Lending, eviction, stop foreclosure


    90% Forclosures Wrongful

    1 01 2010

    A wrongful foreclosure action typically occurs when the lender starts a non judicial foreclosure action when it simply has no legal cause. This is even more evident now since California passed the Foreclosure prevention act of 2008 SB 1194 codified in Civil code 2923.5 and 2923.6. In 2009 it is this attorneys opinion that 90% of all foreclosures are wrongful in that the lender does not comply (just look at the declaration page on the notice of default). The lenders most notably Indymac, Countrywide, and Wells Fargo have taken a calculated risk. To comply would cost hundreds of millions in staff, paperwork, and workouts that they don’t deem to be in their best interest. The workout is not in there best interest because our tax dollars are guaranteeing the Banks that are To Big to Fail’s debt. If they don’t foreclose and if they work it out the loss is on them. There is no incentive to modify loan for the benefit of the consumer.

    Sooooo they proceed to foreclosure without the mandated contacts with the borrower. Oh and yes contact is made by a computer or some outsourcing contact agent based in India. But compliance with 2923.5 is not done. The Borrower is never told that he or she have the right to a meeting within 14 days of the contact. They do not get offers to avoid foreclosure there are typically two offers short sale or a probationary mod that will be declined upon the 90th day.

    Wrongful foreclosure actions are also brought when the service providers accept partial payments after initiation of the wrongful foreclosure process, and then continue on with the foreclosure process. These predatory lending strategies, as well as other forms of misleading homeowners, are illegal.

    The borrower is the one that files a wrongful disclosure action with the court against the service provider, the holder of the note and if it is a non-judicial foreclosure, against the trustee complaining that there was an illegal, fraudulent or willfully oppressive sale of property under a power of sale contained in a mortgage or deed or court judicial proceeding. The borrower can also allege emotional distress and ask for punitive damages in a wrongful foreclosure action.

    Causes of Action

    Wrongful foreclosure actions may allege that the amount stated in the notice of default as due and owing is incorrect because of the following reasons:

    * Incorrect interest rate adjustment
    * Incorrect tax impound accounts
    * Misapplied payments
    * Forbearance agreement which was not adhered to by the servicer
    * Unnecessary forced place insurance,
    * Improper accounting for a confirmed chapter 11 or chapter 13 bankruptcy plan.
    * Breach of contract
    * Intentional infliction of emotional distress
    * Negligent infliction of emotional distress
    * Unfair Business Practices
    * Quiet title
    * Wrongful foreclosure
    * Tortuous violation of 2924 2923.5 and 2923.5 and 2932.5
    Injunction

    Any time prior to the foreclosure sale, a borrower can apply for an injunction with the intent of stopping the foreclosure sale until issues in the lawsuit are resolved. The wrongful foreclosure lawsuit can take anywhere from ten to twenty-four months. Generally, an injunction will only be issued by the court if the court determines that: (1) the borrower is entitled to the injunction; and (2) that if the injunction is not granted, the borrower will be subject to irreparable harm.

    Damages Available to Borrower

    Damages available to a borrower in a wrongful foreclosure action include: compensation for the detriment caused, which are measured by the value of the property, emotional distress and punitive damages if there is evidence that the servicer or trustee committed fraud, oppression or malice in its wrongful conduct. If the borrower’s allegations are true and correct and the borrower wins the lawsuit, the servicer will have to undue or cancel the foreclosure sale, and pay the borrower’s legal bills.

    Why Do Wrongful Foreclosures Occur?

    Wrongful foreclosure cases occur usually because of a miscommunication between the lender and the borrower. Most borrower don’t know who the real lender is. Servicing has changed on average three times. And with the advent of MERS Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems the “investor lender” hundreds of times since the origination. And now they then have to contact the borrower. The don’t even know who the lender truly is. The laws that are now in place never contemplated the virtualization of the lending market. The present laws are inadequate to the challenge.

    This is even more evident now since California passed the Foreclosure prevention act of 2008 SB 1194 codified in Civil code 2923.5 and 2923.6. In 2009 it is this attorneys opinion that 90% of all foreclosures are wrongful in that the lender does not comply (just look at the declaration page on the notice of default). The lenders most notably Indymac, Countrywide, and Wells Fargo have taken a calculated risk. To comply would cost hundreds of millions in staff, paperwork, and workouts that they don’t deem to be in their best interest. The workout is not in there best interest because our tax dollars are guaranteeing the Banks that are To Big to Fail’s debt. If they don’t foreclose and if they work it out the loss is on them. There is no incentive to modify loan for the benefit of the consumer.This could be as a result of an incorrectly applied payment, an error in interest charges and completely inaccurate information communicated between the lender and borrower. Some borrowers make the situation worse by ignoring their monthly statements and not promptly responding in writing to the lender’s communications. Many borrowers just assume that the lender will correct any inaccuracies or errors. Any one of these actions can quickly turn into a foreclosure action. Once an action is instituted, then the borrower will have to prove that it is wrongful or unwarranted. This is done by the borrower filing a wrongful foreclosure action. Costs are expensive and the action can take time to litigate.
    Impact

    The wrongful foreclosure will appear on the borrower’s credit report as a foreclosure, thereby ruining the borrower’s credit rating. Inaccurate delinquencies may also accompany the foreclosure on the credit report. After the foreclosure is found to be wrongful, the borrower must then petition to get the delinquencies and foreclosure off the credit report. This can take a long time and is emotionally distressing.

    Wrongful foreclosure may also lead to the borrower losing their home and other assets if the borrower does not act quickly. This can have a devastating affect on a family that has been displaced out of their home. However, once the borrower’s wrongful foreclosure action is successful in court, the borrower may be entitled to compensation for their attorney fees, court costs, pain, suffering and emotional distress caused by the action.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, civil code 2924, Countrywide, Foreclosure, Fraud, stop foreclosure

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, Foreclosure, Lender Class action

     

     

    TERRY MABRY et al., opinion 2923.5 Cilvil code

    7 06 2010

    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

    DIVISION THREE

    TERRY MABRY et al.,

    Petitioners,

    v.

    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF ORANGE COUNTY,

    Respondent;

    AURORA LOAN SERVICES, et al.,

    Real Parties in Interest.

    G042911

    (Super. Ct. No. 30-2009-003090696)

    O P I N I O N

    Original proceedings; petition for a writ of mandate to challenge an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, David C. Velazquez, Judge. Writ granted in part and denied in part.
    Law Offices of Moses S. Hall and Moses S. Hall for Petitioners.
    No appearance for Respondent.
    Akerman Senterfitt, Justin D. Balser and Donald M. Scotten for Real Party in Interest Aurora Loan Services.
    McCarthy & Holthus, Matthew Podmenik, Charles E. Bell and Melissa Robbins Contts for Real Party in Interest Quality Loan Service Corporation.
    Bryan Cave, Douglas E. Winter, Christopher L. Dueringer, Sean D. Muntz and Kamae C. Shaw for Amici Curiae Bank of America and BAC Home Loans Servicing on behalf of Real Parties in Interest.
    Wright, Finlay & Zak, Thomas Robert Finlay and Jennifer A. Johnson for Amici Curiae United Trustee’s Association and California Mortgage Association.
    Leland Chan for Amicus Curiae California Bankers Association.

    I. SUMMARY
    Civil Code section 2923.5 requires, before a notice of default may be filed, that a lender contact the borrower in person or by phone to “assess” the borrower’s financial situation and “explore” options to prevent foreclosure. Here is the exact, operative language from the statute: “(2) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall contact the borrower in person or by telephone in order to assess the borrower’s financial situation and explore options for the borrower to avoid foreclosure.” There is nothing in section 2923.5 that requires the lender to rewrite or modify the loan.
    In this writ proceeding, we answer these questions about section 2923.5, also known as the Perata Mortgage Relief Act :
    (A) May section 2923.5 be enforced by a private right of action? Yes. Otherwise the statute would be a dead letter.
    (B) Must a borrower tender the full amount of the mortgage indebtedness due as a prerequisite to bringing an action under section 2923.5? No. To hold otherwise would defeat the purpose of the statute.
    (C) Is section 2923.5 preempted by federal law? No — but, we must emphasize, it is not preempted because the remedy for noncompliance is a simple postponement of the foreclosure sale, nothing more.
    (D) What is the extent of a private right of action under section 2923.5? To repeat: The right of action is limited to obtaining a postponement of an impending foreclosure to permit the lender to comply with section 2923.5.
    (E) Must the declaration required of the lender by section 2923.5, subdivision (b) be under penalty of perjury? No. Such a requirement is not only not in the statute, but would be at odds with the way the statute is written.
    (F) Does a declaration in a notice of default that tracks the language of section 2923.5, subdivision (b) comply with the statute, even though such language does not on its face delineate precisely which one of the three categories set forth in the declaration applies to the particular case at hand? Yes. There is no indication that the Legislature wanted to saddle lenders with the need to “custom draft” the statement required by the statute in notices of default.
    (G) If a lender did not comply with section 2923.5 and a foreclosure sale has already been held, does that noncompliance affect the title to the foreclosed property obtained by the families or investors who may have bought the property at the foreclosure sale? No. The Legislature did nothing to affect the rule regarding foreclosure sales as final.
    (H) In the present case, did the lender comply with section 2923.5? We cannot say on this record, and therefore must return the case to the trial court to determine which of the two sides is telling the truth. According to the lender, the borrowers themselves initiated a telephone conversation in which foreclosure-avoidance options were discussed, and there were many, many phone calls to the borrowers to attempt to discuss foreclosure-avoidance options. According to the borrowers, no one ever contacted them about nonforeclosure options. The trial judge, however, never reached this conflict in the facts, because he ruled strictly on legal grounds: namely (1) that section 2923.5 does not provide for a private right of action and (2) section 2923.5 is preempted by federal law. As indicated, we have concluded otherwise as to those two issues.
    (I) Can section 2923.5 be enforced in a class action in this case? Not under these facts. The operation of section 2923.5 is highly fact-specific, and the details as to what might, or might not, constitute compliance can readily vary from lender to lender and borrower to borrower.
    II. BACKGROUND
    In December 2006, Terry and Michael Mabry refinanced the loan on their home in Corona from Paul Financial, borrowing about $700,000. In April 2008, Paul Financial assigned to Aurora Loan Services the right to service the loan. In this opinion, we will treat Aurora as synonymous with the lender and use the terms interchangeably.
    According to the lender, in mid-July 2008 — before the Mabrys missed their August 2008 loan payment — the couple called Aurora on the telephone to discuss the loan with an Aurora employee. The discussion included mention of a number of options to avoid foreclosure, including loan modification, short sale, deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, and even a special forbearance. The Aurora employee sent a letter following up on the conversation. The letter explained the various options to avoid foreclosure, and asked the Mabrys to forward current financial information to Aurora so it could consider the Mabrys for these options.
    According to the lender, the Mabrys missed their September 2008 payment as well, and mid-month Aurora sent them another letter describing ways to avoid foreclosure. Aurora employees called the Mabrys “many times” to discuss the situation. The Mabrys never picked up.
    It is undisputed that later in September, the Mabrys filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy and Aurora did not contact the Mabrys while the bankruptcy was pending. (See 11 U.S.C. § 362 [automatic stay].) The Mabrys had their Chapter 11 case dismissed, however, in late March 2009.
    According to the lender, Aurora once again began trying to call the Mabrys, calling them “numerous times,” including “three times on different days.” Meanwhile, in mid-April the Mabrys sent an authorization to discuss the loan with their lawyers.
    According to the lender, finally, in June, the Mabrys sent two faxes to Aurora, the aggregate effect of which was to propose a short sale to the Mabrys’ attorney, Moses S. Hall, for $350,000. If accepted, the short sale would have meant a loss of over $400,000 on the loan. Aurora rejected that offer, and an attorney in Hall’s law office proposed a sale price of $425,000, which would have meant a loss to the lender of about $340,000.
    It is undisputed that on June 18, 2009, Aurora recorded a notice of default. The notice of default used this (obviously form) language: “The Beneficiary or its designated agent declares that it has contacted the borrower, tried with due diligence to contact the borrower as required by California Civil Code section 2923.5, or the borrower has surrendered the property to the beneficiary or authorized agent, or is otherwise exempt from the requirements of section 2923.5.” Aurora sent six copies of the recorded notice of default to the Mabrys’ home by certified mail, and the certifications showed they were delivered.
    It is also undisputed that on October 7, the Mabrys filed a complaint in Orange County Superior Court based on Aurora’s alleged failure to comply with section 2923.5.
    According to the borrowers, no one had ever contacted them about their foreclosure options. Michael Mabry stated the following in his declaration: “We have never been contacted by Aurora nor [sic] any of its agents in person, by telephone or by first class mail to explore options for us to avoid foreclosure as required in CC § 2923.5.”
    The complaint sought a temporary restraining order to prevent the foreclosure sale then scheduled just a week away, on October 14, 2009. Based on the allegation of no contact, the trial court issued a temporary restraining order, and scheduled a hearing for October 20.
    But exactly one week before the October 20 hearing, the Mabrys filed an amended complaint, this one specifically adding class action allegations and seeking injunctive relief for an entire class. This new filing came with another request for a temporary restraining order, which was also granted, with a hearing on that temporary restraining order scheduled for October 27 (albeit the order was directed at Aurora only).
    The first restraining order was vacated on October 20, the second on October 27. The trial judge did not, however, resolve the conflict in the facts presented by the pleadings. Rather he concluded: (1) the action is preempted by federal law; (2) there is no private right of action under section 2923.5 — the statute can only be enforced by members of pooling and servicing agreements; and (3) the Mabrys were required to at least tender all arrearages to enjoin any foreclosure proceedings.
    The Mabrys filed a motion for reconsideration and a third request for a restraining order based on supposedly new law. The new law was a now review-granted Court of Appeal opinion which, let us merely note here, appears to have been quite off-point in regards to any issue which the trial judge had just decided. So it is not surprising that the requested restraining order was denied. The foreclosure sale was now scheduled for November 30, 2009. Six days before that, though, the Mabrys filed this writ proceeding, and two days later this court stayed all proceedings. We invited amicus curiae to give their views on the issues raised by the petition, and subsequently scheduled an order to show cause to consider those issues.
    III. DISCUSSION
    A. Private Right of Action? Yes
    1. Preliminary Considerations
    A private right of action may inhere within a statute, otherwise silent on the point, when such a private right of action is necessary to achieve the statute’s policy objectives. (E.g., Cannon v. University of Chicago (1979) 441 U.S. 677, 683 [implying private right of action into Title IX of the Civil Rights Act because such a right was necessary to achieve the statute’s policy objectives]; Basic Inc. v. Levinson (1988) 485 U.S. 224, 230-231 [implying private right of action to enforce securities statute].)
    That is, the absence of an express private right of action is not necessarily preclusive of such a right. There are times when a private right of action may be implied by a statute. (E.g., Siegel v. American Savings & Loan Assn. (1989) 210 Cal.App.3d 953, 966 [“Before we reach the issue of exhaustion of administrative remedies, we must determine, therefore, whether plaintiffs have an implied private right of action under HOLA.”].)
    California courts have, of recent date, looked to Moradi-Shalal v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Companies (1988) 46 Cal.3d 287 (Moradi-Shalal) for guidance as to whether there is an implied private right of action in a given statute. In Moradi-Shalal, for example, the presence of a comprehensive administrative means of enforcement of a statute was one of the reasons the court determined that there was no private right of action to enforce a statute (Ins. Code, § 790.03, subd. (h)) regulating general insurance industry practices. (See Moradi-Shalal, supra, 46 Cal.3d at p. 300.)
    There is also a pre-Moradi Shalal approach, embodied in Middlesex Ins. Co. v. Mann (1981) 124 Cal.App.3d 558, 570 (Middlesex). (The Middlesex opinion itself copied the idea from the Restatement Second of Torts, section 874A.) The approach looks to whether a private remedy is “appropriate” to further the “purpose of the legislation” and is “needed to assure the effectiveness of the provision.” (Middlesex, supra, 124 Cal.App.3d at p. 570.)
    Obviously, where the two approaches conflict, the one used by our high court in Moradi-Shalal trumps the Middlesex approach. But we may note at this point that as regards section 2923.5, there is no alternative administrative mechanism to enforce the statute. By contrast, in Moradi-Shalal, there was an existing administrative mechanism at hand (by way of the Insurance Commissioner) available to enforce section 790.03, subdivision (h) of the Insurance Code.
    There are other corollary principles as well.
    First, California courts, quite naturally, do not favor constructions of statutes that render them advisory only, or a dead letter. (E.g., Petropoulos v. Department of Real Estate (2006) 142 Cal.App.4th 554, 567; People v. Stringham (1988) 206 Cal.App.3d 184, 197.) Our colleagues in Division One of this District nicely summarized this point in Goehring v. Chapman University (2004) 121 Cal.App.4th 353, 375: “The question of whether a regulatory statute creates a private right of action depends on legislative intent . . . . In determining legislative intent, ‘[w]e first examine the words themselves because the statutory language is generally the most reliable indicator of legislative intent . . . . The words of the statute should be given their ordinary and usual meaning and should be construed in their statutory context. . . . These canons generally preclude judicial construction that renders part of the statute “meaningless or inoperative.”‘” (Italics added.)
    Second, statutes on the same subject matter or of the same subject should be construed together so that all the parts of the statutory scheme are given effect. (Lexin v. Superior Court (2010) 47 Cal.4th 1050, 1090-1091.) This canon is particularly important in the case before us, where there is an enforcement mechanism available at hand to enforce section 2923.5, in the form, as we explain below, of section 2924g. Ironically though, the enforcement mechanism at hand, in direct contrast to the one in Moradi-Shalal, is one that strongly implies individual enforcement of the statute.
    Third, historical context can also shed light on whether the Legislature intended a private right of action in a statute. As noted by one federal district court that has found a private right of action in section 2923.5, the fact that a statute was enacted as an emergency statute is an important factor in determining legislative intent. (See Ortiz v. Accredited Home Lenders, Inc. (S.D. 2009) 639 F.Supp.2d 1159, 1166 [agreeing with argument that “the California legislature would not have enacted this ‘urgency’ legislation, intended to curb high foreclosure rates in the state, without any accompanying enforcement mechanism”]; cf. County of San Diego v. State of California (2008) 164 Cal.App.4th 580, 609 [admitting that private right of action might exist, even if the Legislature did not imply one, if “‘compelling reasons of public policy'” required “judicial recognition of such a right”].) Section 2923.5 was enacted in 2008 as a manifestation of a felt need for urgent action in the midst of a cascading torrent of foreclosures.
    Finally, of course, there is recourse to legislative history. Alas, in this case, there is silence on the matter as regards the existence of a private right of action in the final draft of the statute, and we have been cited to nothing in the history that suggests a clear legislative intent one way or the other. (See generally J.A. Jones Construction Co. v. Superior Court (1994) 27 Cal.App.4th 1568, 1575 (J.A. Jones) [emphasizing importance of clear intent appearing in legislative history].) To be sure, as we were reminded at oral argument, an early version of section 2923.5 had an express provision for a private right of action and that provision did not make its way into the final version of the statute. And we recognize that this factor suggests the Legislature may not have wanted to have section 2923.5 enforced privately.
    On the other hand, the bottom line was an outcome of silence, not a clear statement that there should be no individual enforcement. And silence, as this court pointed out in J.A. Jones, has its own implications. There, we cited Professor Eskridge’s work on statutory interpretation (see Eskridge, The New Textualism (1990) 37 U.C.L.A. L.Rev. 621, 670-671 (hereinafter “Eskridge on Textualism”)) to recognize that ambiguity in a statute may itself be the result of both sides in the legislative process agreeing to let the courts decide a point: “[I]f there is ambiguity it is because the legislature either could not agree on clearer language or because it made the deliberate choice to be ambiguous — in effect, the only ‘intent’ is to pass the matter on to the courts.” (J.A. Jones, supra, 27 Cal. App.4th at p. 1577.) As Professor Eskridge put it elsewhere in his article: “The vast majority of the Court’s difficult statutory interpretation cases involve statutes whose ambiguity is either the result of deliberate legislative choice to leave conflictual decisions to agencies or the courts.” (Eskridge on Textualism, supra, 37 UCLA L.Rev. at p. 677.)
    We have a concrete example in the case at hand. Amicus curiae, the California Bankers Association, asserts that if section 2923.5 had included an express right to a private right of action, the association would have vociferously opposed the legislation. Let us accept that as true. But let us also accept as a reasonable premise that the sponsors of the bill (2008, Senate Bill No. 1137) would have vociferously opposed the legislation if it had an express prohibition on individual enforcement. The point is, the bankers did not insist on language expressly or even impliedly precluding a private right of action, or, if they did, they didn’t get it. The silence is consonant with the idea that section 2923.5 was the result of a legislative compromise, with each side content to let the courts struggle with the issue.
    With these observations, we now turn to the language, structure and function of the statute at issue.
    2. Operation of Section 2923.5
    Section 2923.5 is one of a series of detailed statutes that govern mortgages that span sections 2920 to 2967. Within that series is yet another long series of statutes governing rules involving foreclosure. This second series goes from section 2924, and then follows with sections 2924a through 2924l. (There is no section 2924m . . . yet.)
    Section 2923.5 concerns the crucial first step in the foreclosure process: The recording of a notice of default as required by section 2924. (Just plain section 2924 — this one has no lower case letter behind it.)
    The key text of section 2923.5 — “key” because of the substantive obligation it imposes on lenders — basically says that a lender cannot file a notice of default until the lender has contacted the borrower “in person or by telephone.” Thus an initial form letter won’t do. To quote the text directly, lenders must contact the borrower by phone or in person to “assess the borrower’s financial situation and explore options for the borrower to avoid foreclosure.” The statute, of course, has alternative provisions in cases where the lender tries to contact a borrower, and the borrower simply won’t pick up the phone, the phone has been disconnected, the borrower hides or otherwise evades contact.
    The contrast between section 2923.5 and one of its sister-statutes, section 2923.6, is also significant. By its terms, section 2923.5 operates substantively on lenders. They must do things in order to comply with the law. In Hohfeldian language, it both creates rights and corresponding obligations.
    But consider section 2923.6, which does not operate substantively. Section 2923.6 merely expresses the hope that lenders will offer loan modifications on certain terms. By contrast, section 2923.5 requires a specified course of action. (There is a reason for the difference, as we show in part III.C., dealing with federal preemption. In a word, to have required loan modifications would have run afoul of federal law.)
    As noted above, other steps in the foreclosure process are set forth in sections 2924a through 2924l. The topic of the postponement of foreclosure sales is addressed in section 2924g.
    Subdivision (c)(1)(A) of section 2924g sets forth the grounds for postponements of foreclosure sales. One of those grounds is the open-ended possibility that any court of competent jurisdiction may issue an order postponing the sale. Section 2923.5 and section 2924g, subdivision (c)(1)(A), when read together, establish a natural, logical whole, and one wholly consonant with the Legislature’s intent in enacting 2923.5 to have individual borrowers and lenders “assess” and “explore” alternatives to foreclosure: If section 2923.5 is not complied with, then there is no valid notice of default, and without a valid notice of default, a foreclosure sale cannot proceed. The available, existing remedy is found in the ability of a court in section 2924g, subdivision (c)(1)(A), to postpone the sale until there has been compliance with section 2923.5. Reading section 2923.5 together with section 2924g, subdivision (c)(1)(A) gives section 2923.5 real effect. The alternative would mean that the Legislature conferred a right on individual borrowers in section 2923.5 without any means of enforcing that right.
    By the same token, compliance with section 2923.5 is necessarily an individualized process. After all, the details of a borrower’s financial situation and the options open to a particular borrower to avoid foreclosure are going to vary, sometimes widely, from borrower to borrower. Section 2923.5 is not a statute, like subdivision (h) of section 790.03 of the Insurance Code construed in Moradi-Shalal, which contemplates a frequent or general business practice, and thus its very text is necessarily directed at those who regulate the insurance industry. (Insurance Code section 790.03, subdivision (h) begins with the words, “Knowingly committing or performing with such frequency as to indicate a general business practice any of the following unfair claims settlement practices: . . . .”; see generally Moradi-Shalal, supra, 46 Cal.3d 287.)
    Rather, in order to have its obvious goal of forcing parties to communicate (the statutory words are “assess” and “explore”) about a borrower’s situation and the options to avoid foreclosure, section 2923.5 necessarily confers an individual right. The alternative proffered by the trial court — enforcement by the servicer of pooling agreements — involves the facially unworkable problem of fitting individual situations into collective pools.
    The suggestion of one amicus that the Legislature intended enforcement of section 2923.5 to reside within the Attorney General’s office is one of which we express no opinion. Our decision today should thus not be read as precluding such enforcement by the Attorney General’s office. But we do note that the same individual-collective problem would dog Attorney General enforcement of the statute. To be sure (which is why the possibility should be left open), there might, ala Insurance Code section 790.03, subdivision (h), be lenders who systematically ignore section 2923.5, and their “general business practice” would be susceptible to some sort of collective enforcement. Even so, the Attorney General’s office can hardly be expected to take up the cause of every individual borrower whose diverse circumstances show noncompliance with section 2923.5.
    3. Application
    We now put the preceding ideas and factors together.
    While the dropping of an express provision for private enforcement in the legislative process leading to section 2923.5 does indeed give us pause, it is outweighed by two major opposing factors. First, the very structure of section 2923.5 is inherently individual. That fact strongly suggests a legislative intention to allow individual enforcement of the statute. The statute would become a meaningless dead letter if no individual enforcement were allowed: It would mean that the Legislature created an inherently individual right and decided there was no remedy at all.
    Second, when section 2923.5 was enacted as an urgency measure, there already was an existing enforcement mechanism at hand — section 2924g. There was no need to write a provision into section 2923.5 allowing a borrower to obtain a postponement of a foreclosure sale, since such a remedy was already present in section 2924g. Reading the two statutes together as allowing a remedy of postponement of foreclosure produces a logical and natural whole.
    B. Tender Full Amount of Indebtedness? No
    The right conferred by section 2923.5 is a right to be contacted to “assess” and “explore” alternatives to foreclosure prior to a notice of default. It is enforced by the postponement of a foreclosure sale. Therefore it would defeat the purpose of the statute to require the borrower to tender the full amount of the indebtedness prior to any enforcement of the right to — and that’s the point — the right to be contacted prior to the notice of default. Case law requiring payment or tender of the full amount of payment before any foreclosure sale can be postponed (e.g., Arnolds Management Corp. v. Eischen (1984) 158 Cal.App.3d 575, 578 [“It is settled that an action to set aside a trustee’s sale for irregularities in sale notice or procedure should be accompanied by an offer to pay the full amount of the debt for which the property was security.”]) arises out of a paradigm where, by definition, there is no way that a foreclosure sale can be avoided absent payment of all the indebtedness. Any irregularities in the sale would necessarily be harmless to the borrower if there was no full tender. (See 4 Miller & Starr, Cal. Real Estate (2d ed. 1989) § 9:154, pp. 507-508.) By contrast, the whole point of section 2923.5 is to create a new, even if limited right, to be contacted about the possibility of alternatives to full payment of arrearages. It would be contradictory to thwart the very operation of the statute if enforcement were predicated on full tender. It is well settled that statutes can modify common law rules. (E.g., Evangelatos v. Superior Court
    44 Cal.3d 1188, 1192 [noting that Civil Code sections 1431 to 1431.5 had modified traditional common law doctrine of joint and several liability].)
    C. Preempted by Federal Law? No — As Long
    As Relief Under Section 2923.5 is Limited to Just Postponement
    1. Historical Context
    A remarkable aspect of section 2923.5 is that it appears to have been carefully drafted to avoid bumping into federal law, precisely because it is limited to affording borrowers only more time when lenders do not comply with the statute. To explain that, though, we need to make a digression into state debtors’ relief acts as they have manifested themselves in four previous periods of economic distress.
    The first period of economic distress was the depression of the mid-1780’s that played a large part in engendering the United States Constitution in the first place. As Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes would later note for a majority of the United States Supreme Court, there was “widespread distress following the revolutionary period and the plight of debtors, had called forth in the States an ignoble array of legislative schemes for the defeat of creditors and the invasion of contractual obligations.” (Home Building and Loan Ass’n. v. Blaisdell (1934) 290 U.S. 398, 427 (Blaisdell).) Consequently, the federal Constitution of 1789 contains the contracts clause, which forbids states from impairing contracts. (See Siegel, Understanding the Nineteenth Century Contract Clause: The Role of the Property-Privilege Distinction and ‘Takings’ Clause Jurisprudence (1986) 60 So.Cal. L.Rev. 1, 21, fn. 86 [“Although debtor relief legislation was frequently enacted in the Confederation era, it was intensely opposed. It was among the chief motivations for the convening of the Philadelphia convention, and the Constitution drafted there was designed to eliminate such legislation through a variety of means.”].)
    The second period of distress arose out of the panic of 1837, which prompted, in 1841, the Illinois state legislature to enact legislation severely restricting foreclosures. The legislation (1) gave debtors 12 months after any foreclosure sale to redeem the property; and (2) prevented any foreclosure sale in the first place unless the sale fetched at least two-thirds of the appraised value of the property. (See Bronson v. Kinzie (1843) 42 U.S. 311 (Bronson); Blaisdell, supra, 290 U.S. at p. 431.) In an opinion, the main theme of which is the interrelationship between contract rights and legal remedies to enforce those rights (see generally Bronson, supra, 42 U.S. at pp. 315-321), the Bronson court reasoned that the Illinois legislation had effectively destroyed the contract rights of the lender as regards a mortgage made in 1838. (See id. at p. 317 [“the obligation of the contract, and the rights of a party under it, may, in effect, be destroyed by denying a remedy altogether”].)
    The third period of distress was, of course, the Great Depression of the 1930’s. In 1933, the Minnesota Legislature enacted a mortgage moratorium law that extended the period of redemption under Minnesota law until 1935. (See Blaisdell, supra, 290 U.S. at pp. 415-416.) But — and the high court majority found this significant — the law required debtors, in applying for an extension of the redemption period — to pay the reasonable value of the income of the property, or reasonable rental value if it didn’t produce income. (Id. at. pp. 416-417.) The legislation was famously upheld in Blaisdell. In distinguishing Bronson, the Blaisdell majority made the point that the statute did not substantively impair the debt the way the legislation in Bronson had: “The statute,” said the court, “does not impair the integrity of the mortgage indebtedness.” (Id. at p. 425.) The court went on to emphasize the need to pay the fair rental value of the property, which, it noted, was “the equivalent of possession during the extended period.”
    Finally, the fourth period was within the living memory of many readers, namely, the extraordinary inflation and high interest rates of the late 1970’s. That period engendered Fidelity Federal Savings & Loan Association v. de la Cuesta (1982) 458 U.S. 141 (de la Cuesta). Many mortgages had (still have) what is known as a “due-on-sale” clause. As it played out in the 1970’s, the clause effectively required any buyer of a new home to obtain a new loan, but at the then-very high market interest rates. To circumvent the need for a new high rate mortgage, creative wrap-around financing was invented where a buyer would assume the obligation of the old mortgage, but that required the due-on-sale clause not be enforced.
    An earlier decision of the California Supreme Court, Wellenkamp v. Bank of America (1978) 21 Cal.3d 943, had encouraged this sort of creative financing by holding that due-on-sale clauses violated California state law as an unreasonable restraint on alienation. Despite that precedent, the trial judge in the de la Cuesta case (Edward J. Wallin, who would later join this court) held that regulations issued by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, by the authority of the Home Owners’ Loan Act of 1933 preempted state law that invalidated due-on-sale clause. A California appellate court in the Fourth District (in an opinion by Justice Marcus Kaufman, who would later join the California Supreme Court) reversed the trial court. The United States Supreme Court, however, agreed with Judge Wallin’s determination, and reversed the appellate judgment and squarely held the state law to be preempted.
    The de la Cuesta court observed that the bank board’s regulations were plain — “even” the California appellate court had been required to recognize that. (de la Cuesta, supra, 458 U.S. at p. 154). On top of the express preemption, Congress had expressed no intent to limit the bank board’s authority to “regulate the lending practices of federal savings and loans.” (Id. at p. 161.) Further, going into the history of the Home Owners’ Loan Act, the de la Cuesta court pointed out that “mortgage lending practices” are a “critical” aspect of a savings and loan’s “‘operation,'” and the Home Loan Bank Board had issued the due-on-sale regulations in order to protect the economic solvency of such lenders. (See id. at pp. 167-168.) In what is perhaps the most significant part of the rationale for our purposes, the bank board had concluded that “the due-on-sale clause is ‘an important part of the mortgage contract,'” consequently its elimination would have an adverse effect on the “financial stability” of federally chartered lenders. (Id. at p. 168.) For example, invalidation of the due-on-sale clause would make it hard for savings and loans “to sell their loans in the secondary markets.” (Ibid.)
    With this history behind us, we now turn to the actual regulations at issue in the case before us.
    2. The HOLA Regulations
    Under the Home Owner’s Loan Act of 1933 (12 U.S.C. § 1461 et seq.) the federal Office of Thrift Supervision has issued section 560.2 of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations, a regulation that itself delineates what is a matter for federal regulation, and what is a matter for state law. Interestingly enough, section 560.2 is written in the form of examples, using the “ejusdem generis” approach of requiring a court to figure out what is, and what is not, in the same general class or category as the items given in the example.
    On the preempted side, section 560.2 includes:
    – “terms of credit, including amortization of loans and the deferral and capitalization of interest and adjustments to the interest rate” (§ 560.2(b)(4));
    – “balance, payments due, or term to maturity of the loan” (§ 560.2(b)(4)); and, most importantly for this case,
    – the “processing, origination, servicing, sale or purchase of, or investment or participation in, mortgages.” (§ 560.2(b)(10), italics added.)
    On the other side, left for the state courts, is “Real property law.” (12 C.F.R. § 560.2(c)(2).)
    We agree with the Mabrys that the process of foreclosure has traditionally been a matter of state real property law, a point both noted by the United States Supreme Court in BFP v. Resolution Trust Corp. (1994) 511 U.S. 531, 541-542, and academic commentators (e.g., Alexander, Federal Intervention in Real Estate Finance: Preemption and Federal Common Law (1993) 71 N.C. L. Rev. 293, 293 [“Historically, real property law has been the exclusive domain of the states.”]), including at least one law professor who laments that diverse state foreclosure laws tend to hinder efforts to achieve banking stability at the national level. (See Nelson, Confronting the Mortgage Meltdown: A Brief for the Federalization of State Mortgage Foreclosure Law (2010) 37 Pepperdine L.Rev. 583, 588-590 [noting that mortgage foreclosure law varies from state to state, and advocating federalization of mortgage foreclosure law].) By contrast, we have not been cited to anything in the federal regulations that govern such things as initiation of foreclosure, notice of foreclosure sales, allowable times until foreclosure, or redemption periods. (Though there are commentators, like Professor Nelson, who argue there should be.)
    Given the traditional state control over mortgage foreclosure laws, it is logical to conclude that if the Office of Thrift Supervision wanted to include foreclosure as within the preempted category of loan servicing, it would have been explicit. Nothing prevented the office from simply adding the words “foreclosure of” to section 560.2(b)(10).
    D. The Extent of Section 2923.5?
    More Time and Only More Time
    State law should be construed, whenever possible, to be in harmony with federal law, so as to avoid having the state law invalidated by federal preemption. (See Greater Westchester Homeowners Assn. v. City of Los Angeles (1979) 26 Cal.3d 86, 93; California Arco Distributors, Inc. v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (1984) 158 Cal.App.3d 349, 359.)
    We emphasize that we are able to come to our conclusion that section 2923.5 is not preempted by federal banking regulations because it is, or can be construed to be, very narrow. As mentioned above, there is no right, for example, under the statute, to a loan modification.
    A few more comments on the scope of the statute:
    First, to the degree that the words “assess” and “explore” can be narrowly or expansively construed, they must be narrowly construed in order to avoid crossing the line from state foreclosure law into federally preempted loan servicing. Hence, any “assessment” must necessarily be simple — something on the order of, “why can’t you make your payments?” The statute cannot require the lender to consider a whole new loan application or take detailed loan application information over the phone. (Or, as is unlikely, in person.)
    Second, the same goes for any “exploration” of options to avoid foreclosure. Exploration must necessarily be limited to merely telling the borrower the traditional ways that foreclosure can be avoided (e.g., deeds “in lieu,” workouts, or short sales), as distinct from requiring the lender to engage in a process that would be functionally indistinguishable from taking a loan application in the first place. In this regard, we note that section 2923.5 directs lenders to refer the borrower to “the toll-free telephone number made available by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to find a HUD-certified housing counseling agency.” The obvious implication of the statute’s referral clause is that the lender itself does not have any duty to become a loan counselor itself.
    Finally, to the degree that the “assessment” or “exploration” requirements impose, in practice, burdens on federal savings banks that might arguably push the statute out of the permissible category of state foreclosure law and into the federally preempted category of loan servicing or loan making, evidence of such a burden is necessary before the argument can be persuasive. For the time being, and certainly on this record, we cannot say that section 2923.5, narrowly construed, strays over the line.
    Given such a narrow construction, section 2923.5 does not, as the law in Blaisdell did not, affect the “integrity” of the basic debt. (Cf. Lopez v. World Savings & Loan Assn. (2003) 105 Cal.App.4th 729 [section 560.2 preempted state law that capped payoff demand statement fees].)
    E. The Wording of the Declaration:
    Okay If Not Under Penalty of Perjury
    In addition to the substantive act of contacting the borrower, section 2923.5 requires a statement in the notice of default. The statement is found in subdivision (b), which we quote here: “(b) A notice of default filed pursuant to Section 2924 shall include a declaration that the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent has contacted the borrower, has tried with due diligence to contact the borrower as required by this section, or that no contact was required pursuant to subdivision (h).” (Italics added.)
    The idea that this “declaration” must be made under oath must be rejected. First, ordinary English usage of the word “declaration” imports no requirement that it be under oath. In the Oxford English Dictionary, for example, numerous definitions of the word are found, none of which of require a statement under oath or penalty of perjury. In fact, the second legal definition given actually juxtaposes the idea of a declaration against the idea of a statement under oath: “A simple affirmation to be taken, in certain cases, instead of an oath or solemn affirmation.” (4 Oxford English Dict. (2d. ed. 1991) at p. 336.)
    Second, even the venerable Black’s Law Dictionary doesn’t define “declaration” to necessarily be under oath. Its very first definition of the word is: “A formal statement, proclamation or announcement, esp. one embodied in an instrument.” (Black’s Law Dict. (9th ed. 2009) at p. 467.)
    Third, if the Legislature wanted to say that the statement required in section 2923.5 must be under penalty of perjury, it knew how to do so. The words “penalty of perjury” are used in other laws governing mortgages. (E.g., § 2941.7, subdivision (b) [“The declaration provided for in this section shall be signed by the mortgagor or trustor under penalty of perjury.”].)
    And, finally — back to our point about the inherent individual operation of the statute — the very structure of subdivision (b) belies any insertion of a penalty of perjury requirement. The way section 2923.5 is set up, too many people are necessarily involved in the process for any one person to likely be in the position where he or she could swear that all three requirements of the declaration required by subdivision (b) were met. We note, for example, that subdivision (a)(2) requires any one of three entities (a “mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent”) to contact the borrower, and such entities may employ different people for that purpose. And the option under the statute of no contact being required (per subdivision (h) ) further involves individuals who would, in any commercial operation, probably be different from the people employed to do the contacting. For example, the person who would know that the borrower had surrendered the keys would in all likelihood be a different person than the legal officer who would know that the borrower had filed for bankruptcy.
    The argument for requiring the declaration to be under penalty of perjury relies on section 2015.5 of the Code of Civil Procedure, but that reliance is misplaced. We quote all of section 2015.5 in the margin. Essentially the statute says if a statement in writing is required to be supported by sworn oath, making the statement under penalty of perjury will be sufficient. The key language is: “Whenever, under any law of this state . . . made pursuant to the law of this state, any matter is required . . . to be . . . evidenced . . . by the sworn . . . declaration . . . in writing of the person making the same . . . such matter may with like force and effect be . . . evidenced . . . by the unsworn . . . declaration . . . in writing of such person which recites that it is . . . declared by him or her to be true under penalty of perjury . . . .” (Italics added.) The section sheds no light on whether the declaration required in section 2923.5, subdivision (b) must be under penalty of perjury.
    F. The Wording of the Declaration:
    Okay If It Tracks the Statute
    In light of what we have just said about the multiplicity of persons who would necessarily have to sign off on the precise category in subdivision (b) of the statute that would apply in order to proceed with foreclosure (contact by phone, contact in person, unsuccessful attempts at contact by phone or in person, bankruptcy, borrower hiring a foreclosure consultant, surrender of keys), and the possibility that such persons might be employees of not less than three entities (mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent), there is no way we can divine an intention on the part of the Legislature that each notice of foreclosure be custom drafted.
    To which we add this important point: By construing the notice requirement of section 2923.5, subdivision (b), to require only that the notice track the language of the statute itself, we avoid the problem of the imposition of costs beyond the minimum costs now required by our reading of the statute.
    G. Noncompliance Before Foreclosure
    Sale Affect Title After Foreclosure Sale? No
    A primary reason for California’s comprehensive regulation of foreclosure in the Civil Code is to ensure stability of title after a trustee’s sale. (Melendrez v. D & I Investment, Inc. (2005) 127 Cal.App.4th 1238, 1249-1250 [“comprehensive statutory scheme” governing foreclosure has three purposes, one of which is “to ensure that a properly conducted sale is final between the parties and conclusive as to a bona fide purchaser” (internal quotations omitted)].)
    There is nothing in section 2923.5 that even hints that noncompliance with the statute would cause any cloud on title after an otherwise properly conducted foreclosure sale. We would merely note that under the plain language of section 2923.5, read in conjunction with section 2924g, the only remedy provided is a postponement of the sale before it happens.
    H. Lender Compliance in This Case?
    Somebody is Not Telling the Truth
    and It’s the Trial Court’s Job to
    Determine Who It Is
    We have already recounted the conflict in the evidence before the trial court regarding whether there was compliance with section 2923.5. Rarely, in fact, are stories so diametrically opposite: According to the Mabrys, there was no contact at all. According to Aurora, not only were there numerous contacts, but the Mabrys even initiated a proposal by which their attorney would buy the property.
    Somebody’s not telling the truth, but appellate courts do not resolve conflicts in evidence. Trial courts do. (Butt v. State of California (1992) 4 Cal.4th 668, 697, fn. 23 [“Moreover, Diaz and Bezemek concede the proffered evidence is disputed; appellate courts will not resolve such factual conflicts.”].) This case will obviously have to be remanded for an evidentiary hearing.
    I. Is This Case Suitable for
    Class Action Treatment? No
    As we have seen, section 2923.5 contemplates highly-individuated facts. One borrower might not pick up the telephone, one lender might only call at the same time each day in violation of the statute, one lender might (incorrectly) try to get away with a form letter, one borrower might, like the old Twilight Zone “pitchman” episode, try to keep the caller on the line but change the subject and talk about anything but alternatives to foreclosure, one borrower might, as Aurora asserts here, try to have his or her attorney do a deal that avoids foreclosure, etcetera.
    In short, how in the world would a court certify a class? Consider that in this case, there is even a dispute over the basic facts as to whether the lender attempted to comply at all. We do not have, under these facts at least, a question of a clean, systematic policy on the part of a lender that might be amenable to a class action (or perhaps enforcement by the Attorney General). This case is not one, to be blunt, where the lender admits that it simply ignored the statute and proceeded on the theory that federal law had preempted it. We express no opinion as to any scenario where a lender simply ignored the statute wholesale — that sort of scenario is why we do not preclude, a priori, class actions and have not expressed an opinion as to whether the Attorney General or a private party in such a situation might indeed seek to enforce section 2923.5 in a class action.
    Consequently, while we must grant the writ petition so as to allow the Mabrys a hearing on the factual merits of compliance, we deny it insofar as it seeks reinstatement of any claims qua class action. By the same token, in light of the limited right to time conferred under section 2923.5, we also deny the writ petition insofar as it seeks reinstatement of any claim for money damages.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    Let a writ issue instructing the trial court to decide whether or not Aurora complied with section 2923.5. To the degree that the trial court’s order precludes the assertion of any class action claims, we deny the writ. If the trial court finds that Aurora has complied with section 2923.5, foreclosure may proceed. If not, it shall be postponed until Aurora files a new notice of default in the wake of substantive compliance with section 2923.5.
    Given that this writ petition is granted in part and denied in part, each side will bear its own costs in this proceeding.

    SILLS, P. J.
    WE CONCUR:

    ARONSON, J.

    IKOLA, J.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, Mortgage modification, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure


    Latest on MERS and “possession of the Note”

    3 04 2010

    There is a great case re MERS’ authority to operate in CA since it is NOT registered to do business. The case is Champlaie. It
    states that MERS is not a foreign lending institution, nor is it creating evidences.

    The case is also interesting since it discusses why those who foreclose do not have to be in possession of the promissory note.Here are three paragraphs below from the court, although they are taken from different pages.
    It is not helpful for us but the court does question why those who foreclose do not have to be in possession of the note.

    “Several courts have held that this language demonstrates that possession of the note is not required, apparently concluding that the statute authorizes initiation of foreclosure by parties who would not be expected to possess the
    note. See, e.g., Spencer v. DHI Mortg. Co., No. 09-0925, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 55191, *23-*24, 2009 WL 1930161 (E.D. Cal. June 30, 2009) (O’Neill, J.).
    However, the precise reasoning of these cases is unclear.FN14″

    “To say that a trustee’s duties are strictly limited does not appear to this court to preclude possession of the note as a prerequisite to foreclosure. On the other hand, perhaps it is not unreasonable to suggest that such a prerequisite imposes a nonstatutory duty.”

    “At some point, however, the opinion of a large number of decisions, while not in a sense binding, are by virtue of the sheer number, determinative. I cannot conclude that the result reached by the district courts is unreasonable or does not accord with the law. I further note that this conclusion is not obviously at odds with the policies underlying the California statutes. The apparent purpose
    of requiring possession of a negotiable instrument is to avoid fraud. In the context of non-judicial foreclosures, however, the danger of fraud is minimized by the requirement that the deed of trust be recorded, as must be any assignment or substitution of the parties thereto. While it may be that requiring production of the note would have done something to limit the mischief that led to the economic pain the nation has suffered, the great weight of authority has reasonably concluded that California law does not impose this requirement.”


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, Foreclosure, Fraud

    Categories : 2923.5, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, mortgage meltdown, pedatory lending, stop foreclosure


     

    Latest ruling on Civil Code 2923.5

    26 02 2010

    B. Perata Mortgage Relief Act, Cal. Civ. Code § 2923.5

    Plaintiffs’ second cause of action arises under the Perata Mortgage Relief Act, Cal. Civ. Code § 2923.5. Plaintiffs argue U.S. Bank is liable for monetary damages under this provision because it “failed and refused to explore” “alternatives to the drastic remedy of foreclosure, such as loan modifications” before initiating foreclosure proceedings. (FAC PP 17-18.) Furthermore, Plaintiffs allege U.S. Bank violated Cal. Civ. Code § 2923.5(c) by failing to include with the notice of sale a declaration that it contacted the borrower to explore such options. (Opp’n at 6.)

    Section 2923.5(a)(2) requires a “mortgagee, beneficiary or authorized agent” to “contact the borrower in person or by telephone in order to assess the borrower’s [*1166] financial situation and explore options for the borrower to avoid foreclosure.” For a lender which had recorded a notice of default prior to the effective date of the statute, as is the case here, § 2923.5(c) imposes a duty to attempt to negotiate with a borrower before recording a notice of sale. These provisions cover loans initiated between January 1, 2003 and December 31, 2007. Cal. Civ. Code § 2923.5(h)(3), (i).

    U.S. Bank’s primary argument is that Plaintiffs’ claim should be dismissed because neither § 2923.5 nor its legislative history clearly indicate an intent to create a private right of action. (Mot. at 8.) Plaintiffs counter that such a conclusion is unsupported by the legislative history; the California legislature would not have enacted this “urgency” legislation, intended to curb high foreclosure rates in the state, without any accompanying enforcement mechanism. (Opp’n at 5.) The court agrees with Plaintiffs. While the Ninth Circuit has yet to address this issue, the court found no decision from this circuit [**15] where a § 2923.5 claim had been dismissed on the basis advanced by U.S. Bank. See, e.g. Gentsch v. Ownit Mortgage Solutions Inc., 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 45163, 2009 WL 1390843, at *6 (E.D. Cal., May 14, 2009)(addressing merits of claim); Lee v. First Franklin Fin. Corp., 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 44461, 2009 WL 1371740, at *1 (E.D. Cal., May 15, 2009) (addressing evidentiary support for claim).

    On the other hand, the statute does not require a lender to actually modify a defaulting borrower’s loan but rather requires only contacts or attempted contacts in a good faith effort to prevent foreclosure. Cal. Civ. Code § 2923.5(a)(2). Plaintiffs allege only that U.S. Bank “failed and refused to explore such alternatives” but do not allege whether they were contacted or not. (FAC P 18.) Plaintiffs’ use of the phrase “refused to explore,” combined with the “Declaration of Compliance” accompanying the Notice of Trustee’s Sale, imply Plaintiffs were contacted as required by the statute. (Doc. No. 7-2, Exh. 4 at 3.) Because Plaintiffs have failed to state a claim under Cal. Civ. Code § 2923.5, U.S. Bank’s motion to dismiss is granted. Plaintiffs’ claim is dismissed without prejudice.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 8 Comments »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, civil code 2924, Foreclosure, litigation, Mortgage modification, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2924, Foreclosure, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, mortgage meltdown



    SB 94 and its interferance with the practice

    5 09 2009

    CA SB 94 on Lawyers & Loan Modifications Passes Assembly… 62-10

    The California Assembly has passed Senate Bill 94, a bill that seeks to protect homeowners from loan modification scammers, but could end up having the unintended consequence of eliminating a homeowner’s ability to retain an attorney to help them save their home from foreclosure.

    The bill, which has an “urgency clause” attached to it, now must pass the State Senate, and if passed, could be signed by the Governor on October 11th, and go into effect immediately thereafter.

    SB 94’s author is California State Senator Ron Calderon, the Chair of the Senate Banking Committee, which shouldn’t come as much of a surprise to anyone familiar with the bigger picture. Sen. Calderon, while acknowledging that fee-for-service providers can provide valuable services to homeowners at risk of foreclosure, authored SB 94 to ensure that providers of these services are not compensated until the contracted services have been performed.

    SB 94 prevents companies, individuals… and even attorneys… from receiving fees or any other form of compensation until after the contracted services have been rendered. The bill will now go to the Democratic controlled Senate where it is expected to pass.

    Supporters of the bill say that the state is literally teeming with con artists who take advantage of homeowners desperate to save their homes from foreclosure by charging hefty fees up front and then failing to deliver anything of value in return. They say that by making it illegal to charge up front fees, they will be protecting consumers from being scammed.

    While there’s no question that there have been some unscrupulous people that have taken advantage of homeowners in distress, the number of these scammers is unclear. Now that we’ve learned that lenders and servicers have only modified an average of 9% of qualified mortgages under the Obama plan, it’s hard to tell which companies were scamming and which were made to look like scams by the servicers and lenders who failed to live up to their agreement with the federal government.

    In fact, ever since it’s come to light that mortgage servicers have been sued hundreds of times, that they continue to violate the HAMP provisions, that they foreclose when they’re not supposed to, charge up front fees for modifications, require homeowners to sign waivers, and so much more, who can be sure who the scammers really are. Bank of America, for example, got the worst grade of any bank on the President’s report card listing, modifying only 4% of the eligible mortgages since the plan began. We’ve given B of A something like $200 billion and they still claim that they’re having a hard time answering the phones over there, so who’s scamming who?

    To make matters worse, and in the spirit of Y2K, the media has fanned the flames of irrationality with stories of people losing their homes as a result of someone failing to get their loan modified. The stories go something like this:

    We gave them 1,000. They told us to stop making our mortgage payment. They promised us a principal reduction. We didn’t hear from them for months. And then we lost our house.

    I am so sure. Can that even happen? I own a house or two. Walk me through how that happened again, because I absolutely guarantee you… no way could those things happen to me and I end up losing my house over it. Not a chance in the world. I’m not saying I couldn’t lose a house, but it sure as heck would take a damn sight more than that to make it happen.

    Depending on how you read the language in the bill, it may prevent licensed California attorneys from requiring a retainer in advance of services being rendered, and this could essentially eliminate a homeowner’s ability to hire a lawyer to help save their home.

    Supporters, on the other hand, respond that homeowners will still be able to hire attorneys, but that the attorneys will now have to wait until after services have been rendered before being paid for their services. They say that attorneys, just like real estate agents and mortgage brokers, will now only be able to receive compensation after services have been rendered.

    But, assuming they’re talking about at the end of the transaction, there are key differences. Real estate agents and mortgage brokers are paid OUT OF ESCROW at the end of a transaction. They don’t send clients a bill for their services after the property is sold.

    Homeowners at risk of foreclosure are having trouble paying their bills and for the most part, their credit ratings have suffered as a result. If an attorney were to represent a homeowner seeking a loan modification, and then bill for his or her services after the loan was modified, the attorney would be nothing more than an unsecured creditor of a homeowner who’s only marginally credit worthy at best. If the homeowner didn’t pay the bill, the attorney would have no recourse other than to sue the homeowner in Small Claims Court where they would likely receive small payments over time if lucky.

    Extending unsecured credit to homeowners that are already struggling to pay their bills, and then having to sue them in order to collect simply isn’t a business model that attorneys, or anyone else for that matter, are likely to embrace. In fact, the more than 50 California attorneys involved in loan modifications that I contacted to ask about this issue all confirmed that they would not represent homeowners on that basis.

    One attorney, who asked not to be identified, said: “Getting a lender or servicer to agree to a loan modification takes months, sometimes six or nine months. If I worked on behalf of homeowners for six or nine months and then didn’t get paid by a number of them, it wouldn’t be very long before I’d have to close my doors. No lawyer is going to do that kind of work without any security and anyone who thinks they will, simply isn’t familiar with what’s involved.”

    “I don’t think there’s any question that SB 94 will make it almost impossible for a homeowner to obtain legal representation related to loan modifications,” explained another attorney who also asked not to be identified. “The banks have fought lawyers helping clients through the loan modification process every step of the way, so I’m not surprised they’ve pushed for this legislation to pass.”

    Proponents of the legislation recite the all too familiar mantra about there being so many scammers out there that the state has no choice but to move to shut down any one offering to help homeowners secure loan modifications that charges a fee for the services. They point out that consumers can just call their banks directly, or that there are nonprofit organizations throughout the state that can help homeowners with loan modifications.

    While the latter is certainly true, it’s only further evidence that there exists a group of people in positions of influence that are unfamiliar , or at the very least not adequately familiar with obtaining a loan modification through a nonprofit organization, and they’ve certainly never tried calling a bank directly.

    The fact that there are nonprofit housing counselors available, and the degree to which they may or may not be able to assist a given homeowner, is irrelevant. Homeowners are well aware of the nonprofit options available. They are also aware that they can call their banks directly. From the President of the United States and and U.S. Attorney General to the community newspapers found in every small town in America, homeowners have heard the fairy tales about about these options, and they’ve tried them… over and over again, often times for many months. When they didn’t get the desired results, they hired a firm to help them.

    Yet, even the State Bar of California is supporting SB 94, and even AB 764, a California Assembly variation on the theme, and one even more draconian because of its requirement that attorneys only be allowed to bill a client after a successful loan modification has been obtained. That means that an attorney would have to guarantee a homeowner that he or she would obtain a modification agreement from a lender or servicer or not get paid for trying. Absurd on so many levels. Frankly, if AB 764 passes, would the last one out of California please turn off the lights and bring the flag.

    As of late July, the California State Bar said it was investigating 391 complaints against 141 attorneys, as opposed to nine investigations related to loan modifications in 2008. The Bar hasn’t read anywhere all of the complaints its received, but you don’t have to be a statistician to figure out that there’s more to the complaints that meets the eye. So far the State Bar has taken action against three attorneys and the Attorney General another four… so, let’s see… carry the 3… that’s 7 lawyers. Two or three more and they could have a softball team.

    At the federal level they’re still reporting the same numbers they were last spring. Closed 11… sent 71 letters… blah, blah, blah… we’ve got a country of 300 million and at least 5 million are in trouble on their mortgage. The simple fact is, they’re going to have to come up with some serious numbers before I’m going to be scared of bumping into a scammer on every corner.

    Looking Ahead…

    California’s ALT-A and Option ARM mortgages are just beginning to re-set, causing payments to rise, and with almost half of the mortgages in California already underwater, these homeowners will be unable to refinance and foreclosures will increase as a result. Prime jumbo foreclosure rates are already up a mind blowing 634% as compared with January 2008 levels, according to LPS Applied Analytics.

    Clearly, if SB 94 ends up reducing the number of legitimate firms available for homeowners to turn to, everyone involved in its passage is going to be retiring. While many sub-prime borrowers have suffered silently through this horror show of a housing crisis, the ALT-A and Option ARM borrowers are highly unlikely to slip quietly into the night.

    There are a couple of things about the latest version of SB 94 that I found interesting:

    1. It says that a lawyer can’t collect a fee or any other compensation before serivces have been delivered, but it doesn’t make clear whether attorneys can ask the client to deposit funds in the law firm’s trust account and then bill against thsoe funds as amounts are earned. Funds deposited in a law firm trust account remain the client’s funds, so they’re not a lawyer’s “fees or other compensation”. Those funds are there so that when the fees have been earned, the lawyer doesn’t have to hope his or her bill gets paid. Of course, it also says that an attorney can’t hold any security interest, but money in a trust account a client’s money, the attorney has no lien against it. All of this is a matter of interpretation, of course, so who knows.

    2. While there used to be language in both the real estate and lawyer sections that prohibited breaking up services related to a loan modification, in the latest version all of the language related to breaking up services as applied to attorneys has been eliminated. It still applies to real estate licensed firms, but not to attorneys. This may be a good thing, as at least a lawyer could complete sections of the work involved as opposed to having to wait until the very end, which the way the banks have been handling things, could be nine months away.

    3. The bill says nothing about the amounts that may be charged for services in connection with a loan modification. So, in the case of an attorney, that would seem to mean that… well, you can put one, two and three together from there.

    4. Lawyers are not included in definition of foreclosure consultant. And there is a requirement that new language be inserted in contracts, along the lines of “You don’t have to pay anyone to get a loan modification… blah, blah, blah.” Like that will be news to any homeowner in America. I’ve spoken with hundreds and never ran across one who didn’t try it themselves before calling a lawyer. I realize the Attorney General doesn’t seem to know that, but look… he’s been busy.

    Conclusion…

    Will SB 94 actually stop con artists from taking advantage of homeowners in distress? Or will it end up only stopping reputable lawyers from helping homeowners, while foreclosures increase and our economy continues its deflationary free fall? Will the California State Bar ever finishing reading the complaints being received, and if they ever do, will they understand what they’ve read. Or is our destiny that the masses won’t understand what’s happening around them until it sucks them under as well.

    I surely hope not. But for now, I’m just hoping people can still a hire an attorney next week to help save their homes, because if they can’t… the Bar is going to get a lot more letters from unhappy homeowners.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 3 Comments »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, bailout, bankruptcy, borrower, brad keiser, Cramdown, credit, credit crisis, depression, eviction, FDG, Federal Bailout, Foreclosure, foreclosure defense, Foreclosure Defense Group, foreclosure offense, foreclosures, Fraud, HAMP, I Have a Plan, lawyers, Lender Liability, lis pendence, Loan Mod, LOAN MODIFICATION, lost note, Mortgage, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, quiet title, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, rescission, respa, RICO, stop foreclosure, tila, TILA audit, truth in lending Audit

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, Cramdown, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, United First, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, pedatory lending, respa, stop foreclosure, tila, truth in lending, usury


    Don’t get HAMP ED out of your home!

    5 09 2009

    By Walter Hackett, Esq.
    The federal government has trumpeted its Home Affordable Modification Program or “HAMP” solution as THE solution to runaway foreclosures – few things could be further from the truth. Under HAMP a homeowner will be offered a “workout” that can result in the homeowner being “worked out” of his or her home. Here’s how it works. A participating lender or servicer will send a distressed homeowner a HAMP workout agreement. The agreement consists of an “offer” pursuant to which the homeowner is permitted to remit partial or half of their regular monthly payments for 3 or more months. The required payments are NOT reduced, instead the partial payments are placed into a suspense account. In many cases once enough is gathered to pay the oldest payment due the funds are removed from the suspense account and applied to the mortgage loan. At the end of the trial period the homeowner will be further behind than when they started the “workout” plan.
    In California, the agreements clearly specify the acceptance of partial payments by the lender or servicer does NOT cure any default. Further, the fact a homeowner is in the workout program does NOT require the lender or servicer to suspend or postpone any non-judicial foreclosure activity with the possible exception of an actual trustee’s sale. A homeowner could complete the workout plan and be faced with an imminent trustee’s sale. Worse, if a homeowner performs EXACTLY as required by the workout agreement, they are NOT assured a loan modification. Instead the agreement will include vague statements that the homeowner MAY receive an offer to modify his or her loan however there is NO duty on the part of the servicer or lender to modify a loan regardless of the homeowner’s compliance with the agreement.

    A homeowner who fully performs under a HAMP workout is all but guaranteed to have given away thousands of dollars with NO assurance of keeping his or her home or ever seeing anything resembling an offer to modify a mortgage loan.
    While it may well be the case the government was making an honest effort to help, the reality is the HAMP program is only guaranteed to help those who need help least – lenders and servicers. If you receive ANY written offer to modify your loan meet with a REAL licensed attorney and ask them to review the agreement to determine what you are REALLY agreeing to, the home you save might be your own.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: Audit, bailout, bankruptcy, borrower, brad keiser, credit, credit crisis, depression, FDG, Federal Bailout, foreclosure defense, Foreclosure Defense Group, foreclosure offense, foreclosures, Fraud, HAMP, lawyers, Lender Liability, Loan Mod, LOAN MODIFICATION, lost note, Mortgage, quiet title, rescission, respa, RICO, TILA audit

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, stop foreclosure, tila, truth in lending


    Countrywide complaint

    27 06 2009

    countrywide_fin_class_action_defense_mdl


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stay of eviction2923.5, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, pedatory lending, respa, stop foreclosure


    Homecomings TILA complaint GMAC

    27 06 2009

    homecomingstila


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, stop foreclosure, usury


    Leman Tila complaint

    27 06 2009

    Lemantilacomp


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, bankruptcy, eviction, stop foreclosure, truth in lending


    Lender class action

    27 06 2009

    Mortgageinvestorgroupclass


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Option One Complaint Pick a payment lawsuit

    27 06 2009

    optionone


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 2 Comments »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Win the eviction by Summary judgement

    27 06 2009

    When title to the property is still in dispute ie. the foreclosure was bad. They (the lender)did not comply with California civil code 2923.5 or 2923.6 or 2924. Or the didn’t possess the documents to foreclose ie. the original note. Or they did not possess a proper assignment 2932.5. at trial you will be ignored by the learned judge but if you file a Motion for Summary Judgmentevans sum ud
    template notice of Motion for SJ
    TEMPLATE Points and A for SJ Motion
    templateDeclaration for SJ
    TEMPLATEProposed Order on Motion for SJ
    TEMPLATEStatement of Undisputed Facts
    you can force the issue and if there is a case filed in the Unlimited jurisdiction Court the judge may be forced to consider title and or consolidate the case with the Unlimited Jurisdiction Case2nd amended complaint (e) manuel
    BAKER original complaint (b)
    Countrywide Complaint Form
    FRAUDULENT OMISSIONS FORM FINAL
    sample-bank-final-complaint1-2.docx


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, civil code 2923.5, eviction, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, eviction, stop foreclosure, truth in lending


    What is worse bankruptcy or foreclosure?

    25 06 2009

    So what is worse, bankruptcy or foreclosure? Which will have the biggest impact on my credit score? Both bankruptcy and foreclosure will have serious negative affects on your personal credit report and your credit score as well. With re-established credit after a bankruptcy and/or foreclosure you can possibly qualify for a good mortgage once again in as little as 24 months. Therefore, it is very difficult to say one is worse than the other, but the bottom line is that they are both very bad for you and should be avoided if all possible.

    Foreclosure is worse then bankruptcy because you are actually losing something of value, your home. Once you are in foreclosure you will lose any and all equity in your home. If there is no equity in the home you will be responsible for the remaining balance after the property auction. With chapter 7 bankruptcy all of your unsecured debts are erased and you start over and in most cases you will not lose anything other then your credit rating.

    Many times qualifying for a mortgage after a foreclosure is more difficult than applying for a home after a bankruptcy. With that said, that could possibly lead you to believe that foreclosure is worse than bankruptcy. Most people who have a home foreclosed upon end up filing bankruptcy as well.

    Bankruptcy and Foreclosure filings are public records, however no one would know about your proceedings under normal circumstances. The Credit Bureaus will record your bankruptcy and a foreclosure. Bankruptcies will remain on your credit record for 10 years while foreclosures can stay on your report for up to 7 years.

    In some cases, one can refinance out of a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy with a 12 month trustee payment history and a timely mortgage history. It is much more difficult to obtain financing with a foreclosure on your record.

    Foreclosure is worse because of the loss of value. You will not receive any compensation for the equity in your home if it proceeds to foreclosure.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, eviction, stop foreclosure


    Standing argument

    7 06 2009

    judge-youngs-decision-on-nosek

    Ameriquest’s final argument, that the sanctions are a
    criminal penalty, is bereft of authority. Ameriquest cites F.J.
    Hanshaw Enterprises, Inc. v. Emerald River Development, Inc., 244
    F.3d 1128 (9th Cir. 2001), a case about inherent powers – not
    Rule 11 –

    This is an excerpt from the decision just this bloggers note the Hanshaw Case was my case. I argued this case at the 9th circuit court of appeals

    http://openjurist.org/244/f3d/1128/fj-v-emeraldfj-v-emerald

    If you will grasp the implications of this judge-youngs-decision-on-nosekdecision all or most all the evictions and  foreclosures are being litigated by the wrong parties that is to say parties who have no real stake in the outcome. they are merely servicers not the real investors. They do not have the right to foreclose or evict. No assignment No note No security interest No standing They do not want to be listed anywhere. They (the lenders) have caused the greatest damage to the American Citizen since the great depression and they do not want to be exposed or named in countless lawsuits. Time and time again I get from the judges in demurer hearings ” I see what you are saying counsel but your claim does not appear to be against this defendant” the unnamed investment pool of the Lehman Brothers shared High yield equity Fund trustee does not exist and so far can’t be sued.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5, truth in lending, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, respa, stop foreclosure


    Using the countrywide complaint in your own case

    9 05 2009

    Using the countrywide complaint in your own casecounrtrywidelanderscomplaintand countrywidelanders and word versionsCountrywide attorney general Complaint Form and templetsCountrywide Complaint Form


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2932.5, civil code 2923.5, Foreclosure, Predatory Lending, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan


    Coalition sues lenders

    9 05 2009

    Coalition Sues lenders


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Loan Audit, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, pedatory lending


    They are to give options to foreclosure 2923.5

    9 05 2009

    (a) (1) A mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized

    agent may not file a notice of default pursuant to Section 2924 until

    30 days after contact is made as required by paragraph (2) or 30

    days after satisfying the due diligence requirements as described in

    subdivision (g).

    (2) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall contact

    the borrower in person (and this does not mean agent for the foreclosure company) or by telephone in order to assess the

    borrower’s financial situation and explore options for the borrower

    to avoid foreclosure. During the initial contact, the mortgagee,

    beneficiary, or authorized agent shall advise the borrower that he or

    she has the right to request a subsequent meeting and, if requested,

    the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall schedule the

    meeting to occur within 14 days. The assessment of the borrower’s

    financial situation and discussion of options may occur during the

    first contact, or at the subsequent meeting scheduled for that

    purpose. In either case, the borrower shall be provided the toll-free

    telephone number made available by the United States Department of

    Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to find a HUD-certified housing

    counseling agency. Any meeting may occur telephonically.

    (b) A notice of default filed pursuant to Section 2924 shall

    include a declaration from the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized

    agent that it has contacted the borrower, tried with due diligence to

    contact the borrower as required by this section, or the borrower

    has surrendered the property to the mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary,

    or authorized agent.

    (c) If a mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized agent had

    already filed the notice of default prior to the enactment of this

    section and did not subsequently file a notice of rescission, then

    the mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall, as

    part of the notice of sale filed pursuant to Section 2924f, include a

    declaration that either:


    (1) States that the borrower was contacted to assess the borrower’

    s financial situation and to explore options for the borrower to

    avoid foreclosure.

    (2) Lists the efforts made, if any, to contact the borrower in the

    event no contact was made.

    (d) A mortgagee’s, beneficiary’s, or authorized agent’s loss

    mitigation personnel may participate by telephone during any contact

    required by this section.

    (e) For purposes of this section, a “borrower” shall include a

    mortgagor or trustor.

    (f) A borrower may designate a HUD-certified housing counseling

    agency, attorney, or other advisor to discuss with the mortgagee,

    beneficiary, or authorized agent, on the borrower’s behalf, options

    for the borrower to avoid foreclosure. That contact made at the

    direction of the borrower shall satisfy the contact requirements of

    paragraph (2) of subdivision (a). Any loan modification or workout

    plan offered at the meeting by the mortgagee, beneficiary, or

    authorized agent is subject to approval by the borrower.

    (g) A notice of default may be filed pursuant to Section 2924 when

    a mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent has not contacted a

    borrower as required by paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) provided

    that the failure to contact the borrower occurred despite the due

    diligence of the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent. For

    purposes of this section, “due diligence” shall require and mean all

    of the following:

    (1) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall first

    attempt to contact a borrower by sending a first-class letter that

    includes the toll-free telephone number made available by HUD to find

    a HUD-certified housing counseling agency.

    (2) (A) After the letter has been sent, the mortgagee,

    beneficiary, or authorized agent shall attempt to contact the

    borrower by telephone at least three times at different hours and on

    different days. Telephone calls shall be made to the primary

    telephone number on file.

    (B) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent may attempt to

    contact a borrower using an automated system to dial borrowers,

    provided that, if the telephone call is answered, the call is

    connected to a live representative of the mortgagee, beneficiary, or

    authorized agent.

    (C) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent satisfies the

    telephone contact requirements of this paragraph if it determines,

    after attempting contact pursuant to this paragraph, that the

    borrower’s primary telephone number and secondary telephone number or

    numbers on file, if any, have been disconnected.

    (3) If the borrower does not respond within two weeks after the

    telephone call requirements of paragraph (2) have been satisfied, the

    mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall then send a

    certified letter, with return receipt requested.

    (4) The mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall provide

    a means for the borrower to contact it in a timely manner, including

    a toll-free telephone number that will provide access to a live

    representative during business hours.

    (5) The mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent has posted a

    prominent link on the homepage of its Internet Web site, if any, to

    the following information:

    (A) Options that may be available to borrowers who are unable to

    afford their mortgage payments and who wish to avoid foreclosure, and

    instructions to borrowers advising them on steps to take to explore

    those options.

    (B) A list of financial documents borrowers should collect and be

    prepared to present to the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized

    agent when discussing options for avoiding foreclosure.

    (C) A toll-free telephone number for borrowers who wish to discuss

    options for avoiding foreclosure with their mortgagee, beneficiary,

    or authorized agent.

    (D) The toll-free telephone number made available by HUD to find a

    HUD-certified housing counseling agency.

    (h) Subdivisions (a), (c), and (g) shall not apply if any of the

    following occurs:

    (1) The borrower has surrendered the property as evidenced by

    either a letter confirming the surrender or delivery of the keys to

    the property to the mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized

    agent.

    (2) The borrower has contracted with an organization, person, or

    entity whose primary business is advising people who have decided to

    leave their homes on how to extend the foreclosure process and avoid

    their contractual obligations to mortgagees or beneficiaries.

    (3) The borrower has filed for bankruptcy, and the proceedings

    have not been finalized.

    (i) This section shall apply only to loans made from January 1,

    2003, to December 31, 2007, inclusive, that are secured by

    residential real property and are for owner-occupied residences. For

    purposes of this subdivision, “owner-occupied” means that the

    residence is the principal residence of the borrower.

    (j) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2013,

    and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,

    that is enacted before January 1, 2013, deletes or extends that da


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, I Have a Plan, Predatory Lending, respa, stop foreclosure


    Doan on “produce the Note”

    3 05 2009

    Are Courts in California Truly Limited by Non-Judicial Foreclosure Statutes?

    By Michael Doan on May 2, 2009 in Foreclosure Defense, Foreclosure News

    Recently, many California Courts have been dismissing lawsuits filed to stop non-judicial foreclosures, ruling that the non-judicial foreclosure statutes occupy the field and are exclusive as long as they are complied with. Thus, in the case where a notice of default is recorded and a lawsuit then filed in response to stop the foreclosure since the foreclosing party does not possess the underlying note, all too often the Court will simply dismiss the case and claim “2924 has no requirement to produce the note.”

    Thus, these Courts view the statutes that regulate non-judicial foreclosures as all inclusive of all the requirements and remedies in foreclosure proceedings. Indeed, California Civil Code sections 2924 through 2924k provide a comprehensive framework for the regulation of a nonjudicial foreclosure sale pursuant to a power of sale contained in a deed of trust. This comprehensive statutory scheme has three purposes: ‘”(1) to provide the creditor/beneficiary with a quick, inexpensive and efficient remedy against a defaulting debtor/trustor; (2) to protect the debtor/trustor from wrongful loss of the property; and (3) to ensure that a properly conducted sale is final between the parties and conclusive as to a bona fide purchaser.” [Citations.]’ [Citation.]” (Melendrez v. D & I Investment, Inc. (2005) 127 Cal.App.4th 1238, 1249–1250 [26 Cal. Rptr. 3d 413].)

    Notwithstanding, the foreclosure statutes are not exclusive. If someone commits murder during an auction taking place under Civil Code 2924, that does not automatically mean they are immune from criminal and civil liability. Perhaps this is where some of these courts are “missing the boat.”

    For example, in Alliance Mortgage Co. v. Rothwell (1995) 10 Cal. 4th 1226, 1231 [44 Cal. Rptr. 2d 352, 900 P.2d 601], the California Supreme Court concluded that a lender who obtained the property with a full credit bid at a foreclosure sale was not precluded from suing a third party who had fraudulently induced it to make the loan. The court concluded that ” ‘the antideficiency laws were not intended to immunize wrongdoers from the consequences of their fraudulent acts’ ” and that, if the court applies a proper measure of damages, ” ‘fraud suits do not frustrate the antideficiency policies because there should be no double recovery for the beneficiary.’ ” (Id. at p. 1238.)

    Likewise, in South Bay Building Enterprises, Inc. v. Riviera Lend-Lease, Inc. [*1071] (1999) 72 Cal.App.4th 1111, 1121 [85 Cal. Rptr. 2d 647], the court held that a junior lienor retains the right to recover damages from the trustee and the beneficiary of the foreclosing lien if there have been material irregularities in the conduct of the foreclosure sale. (See also Melendrez v. D & I Investment, Inc., supra, 127 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1257–1258; Lo v. Jensen (2001) 88 Cal.App.4th 1093, 1095 [106 Cal. Rptr. 2d 443] [a trustee’s sale tainted by fraud may be set aside].)

    In looking past the comprehensive statutory framework, these other Courts also considered the policies advanced by the statutory scheme, and whether those policies would be frustrated by other laws. Recently, in the case of California Golf, L.L.C. v. Cooper, 163 Cal. App. 4th 1053, 78 Cal. Rptr. 3d 153, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 850 (Cal. App. 2d Dist. 2008), the Appellate Court held that the remedies of 2924h were not exclusive. Of greater importance is that the Appellate Court reversed the lower court and specifically held that provisions in UCC Article 3 were allowed in the foreclosure context:

    Considering the policy interests advanced by the statutory scheme governing nonjudicial foreclosure sales, and the policy interests advanced by Commercial Code section 3312, it is clear that allowing a remedy under the latter does not undermine the former. Indeed, the two remedies are complementary and advance the same goals. The first two goals of the nonjudicial foreclosure statutes: (1) to provide the creditor/beneficiary with a quick, inexpensive and efficient remedy against a defaulting debtor/trustor and (2) to protect the debtor/trustor from a wrongful loss of the property, are not impacted by the decision that we reach. This case most certainly, however, involves the third policy interest: to ensure that a properly conducted sale is final between the parties and conclusive as to a bona fide purchaser.

    This is very significant since it provides further support to lawsuits brought against foreclosing parties lacking the ability to enforce the underlying note, since those laws also arise under Article 3. Under California Commercial Code 3301, a note may only be enforced if one has actual possession of the note as a holder, or has possession of the note not as a non-holder but with holder rights.

    Just like in California Golf, enforcing 3301 operates to protect the debtor/trustor from a wrongful loss of the property. To the extent that a foreclosing party might argue that such lawsuits disrupt a quick, inexpensive, and efficient remedy against a defaulting debtor/trustor, the response is that “since there is no enforceable obligation, the foreclosing entity is not a party/creditor/beneficiary entitled to a quick, inexpensive, and efficient remedy,” but simply a declarant that recorded false documents.

    This is primarily because being entitled to foreclose non-judicially under 2924 can only take place “after a breach of the obligation for which that mortgage or transfer is a security.” Thus, 2924 by its own terms, looks outside of the statute to the actual obligation to see if there was a breach, and if the note is unenforceable under Article 3, there can simply be no breach. End of story.

    Accordingly, if there is no possession of the note or possession was not obtained until after the notice of sale was recorded, it is impossible to trigger 2924, and simple compliance with the notice requirements in 2924 does not suddenly bless the felony of grand theft of the unknown foreclosing entity. To hold otherwise would create absurd results since it would allow any person or company the right to take another persons’ home by simply recording a false notice of default and notice of sale.

    Indeed, such absurdity would allow you to foreclose on your own home again to get it back should you simply record the same false documents. Thus it is obvious that these courts improperly assume the allegations contained in the notice of default and notice of sale are truthful. Perhaps these courts simply can not or choose not to believe such frauds are taking place due to the magnitude and volume of foreclosures in this Country at this time. One can only image the chaos that would ensue in America if the truth is known that millions of foreclosures took place unlawfully and millions more are now on hold as a result of not having the ability to enforce the underlying obligation pursuant to Article 3.

    So if you are in litigation to stop a foreclosure, you can probably expect the Court will want to immediately dismiss your case. These Courts just can not understand how the law would allow someone to stay in a home without paying. Notwithstanding, laws can not be broken, and Courts are not allowed to join with the foreclosing parties in breaking laws simply because “not paying doesn’t seem right.”

    Accordingly, at least for appeal purposes, be sure to argue that 2924 was never triggered since there was never any “breach of the obligation” and that Appellate Courts throughout California have routinely held that other laws do in fact apply in the non-judicial foreclosure process since the policies advanced by the statutory non-judicial foreclosure scheme are not frustrated by these other laws.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 3 Comments »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan

    Another win against Downey Savings

    29 06 2010

    645068 – US BANK VS. MARTIN, A – Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment – DENIED. The Plaintiff as moving party has established a prima facie showing that it is entitled to judgment for possession against Defendant as a matter of law. However, Defendant’s objections Nos. 1, 3-6, 8, 9, and 11 to the Johnson Declaration are overruled; and objections Nos. 2, 7 and 10 are sustained, based on a lack personal knowledge and/or hearsay, regarding the alleged transfer of the beneficial interest to Plaintiff and as to the reasonable rental value.

    Further, the Court finds the Defendant has met his burden of establishing triable issues of fact to rebut the presumption of validity of the sale and the issue of whether Plaintiff had the right to proceed with foreclosure. Namely the evidence of a gap in title and security interest from Downey Savings & Loan through the FDIC to Plaintiff during the time of the foreclosure proceeding, as well as missing evidence to show whether the Trustee, DSL Service Company, was authorized to act as Plaintiff’s agent in continuing to pursue the sale once Downey Savings & Loan had lost its security interest. (See Plaintiff’s undisputed fact # 7 and Defendant’s objection thereto; and Declaration of Defense counsel, McCandless, paragraphs 2, 8, 9, 10, 12 and 13). As such, triable issues of material fact remain and the motion for summary judgment is denied.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, litigation, Fraud

    Categories : 2924, Foreclosure


    MABRY tip no injunction needed to stop foreclosure TERRY MABRY et al., opinion 2923.5 Cilvil code

    12 06 2010

    The court in Mabry pointed out there are provisions in 2924 G to postpone a foreclosure sale. This could go a long way to facilitate the postponement and workout contemplated by 2923.5. This would be without having to Get a Temporary restraining order (TRO) and preliminary injunction. In other words not have to meet the burden to sustain the preliminary injunction and since the holding declares no tender is necessary no posting of a bond. I have attached the provision:
    (c)

    (1) There may be a postponement or postponements of the sale proceedings, including a postponement upon instruction by the beneficiary to the trustee that the sale proceedings be postponed, at any time prior to the completion of the sale for any period of time not to exceed a total of 365 days from the date set forth in the notice of sale. The trustee shall postpone the sale in accordance with any of the following:

    (A) Upon the order of any court of competent jurisdiction.

    For all you non lawyers out there this is key.

    To sustain a preliminary injunction we have to put on a mini trial demonstrating that the case is more likely than no to prevail at trial;and sustain a permanent injunction. In the early stages this is an impossible burden without discovery.The other side puts up the Tender rule and asks the court to make the plaintiff (our client) put up a bond sometimes as high as the loan balance. If we use the code 2924 G the court has the power to delay the sale pursuant to 2924 G (c)(1)(A) for up to 365 days without using its equitable powers of injunction. The court can postpone the sale as a mater of law.


    Edit :
    Edit
    Comments : 3 Comments »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, civil code 2924, Foreclosure, 2923.5

    Categories : 2924, Mortgage modification, mortgage meltdown, pedatory lending, stop foreclosure


    Civil Code 2924

    12 06 2010

    CA Foreclosure Law – Civil Code 2924
    Civil Code 2924

    2924.
    (a) Every transfer of an interest in property, other than in trust, made only as a security for the performance of another act, is to be deemed a mortgage, except when in the case of personal property it is accompanied by actual change of possession, in which case it is to be deemed a pledge. Where, by a mortgage created after July 27, 1917, of any estate in real property, other than an estate at will or for years, less than two, or in any transfer in trust made after July 27, 1917, of a like estate to secure the performance of an obligation, a power of sale is conferred upon the mortgagee, trustee, or any other person, to be exercised after a breach of the obligation for which that mortgage or transfer is a security, the power shall not be exercised except where the mortgage or transfer is made pursuant to an order, judgment, or decree of a court of record, or to secure the payment of bonds or other evidences of indebtedness authorized or permitted to be issued by the Commissioner of Corporations, or is made by a public utility subject to the provisions of the Public Utilities Act, until all of the following apply:

    (1) The trustee, mortgagee, or beneficiary, or any of their authorized agents shall first file for record, in the office of the recorder of each county wherein the mortgaged or trust property or some part or parcel thereof is situated, a notice of default. That notice of default shall include all of the following:

    (A) A statement identifying the mortgage or deed of trust by stating the name or names of the trustor or trustors and giving the book and page, or instrument number, if applicable, where the mortgage or deed of trust is recorded or a description of the mortgaged or trust property.

    (B) A statement that a breach of the obligation for which the mortgage or transfer in trust is security has occurred.

    (C) A statement setting forth the nature of each breach actually known to the beneficiary and of his or her election to sell or cause to be sold the property to satisfy that obligation and any other obligation secured by the deed of trust or mortgage that is in default.

    (D) If the default is curable pursuant to Section 2924c, the statement specified in paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) of Section 2924c.

    (2) Not less than three months shall elapse from the filing of the notice of default.

    (3) After the lapse of the three months described in paragraph (2), the mortgagee, trustee or other person authorized to take the sale shall give notice of sale, stating the time and place thereof, in the manner and for a time not less than that set forth in Section 2924f.

    (b) In performing acts required by this article, the trustee shall incur no liability for any good faith error resulting from reliance on information provided in good faith by the beneficiary regarding the nature and the amount of the default under the secured obligation, deed of trust, or mortgage. In performing the acts required by this article, a trustee shall not be subject to Title 1.6c (commencing with Section 1788) of Part 4.

    (c) A recital in the deed executed pursuant to the power of sale of compliance with all requirements of law regarding the mailing of copies of notices or the publication of a copy of the notice of default or the personal delivery of the copy of the notice of default or the posting of copies of the notice of sale or the publication of a copy thereof shall constitute prima facie evidence of compliance with these requirements and conclusive evidence thereof in favor of bona fide purchasers and encumbrancers for value and without notice.

    (d) All of the following shall constitute privileged communications pursuant to Section 47:

    (1) The mailing, publication, and delivery of notices as required by this section.

    (2) Performance of the procedures set forth in this article.

    (3) Performance of the functions and procedures set forth in this article if those functions and procedures are necessary to carry out the duties described in Sections 729.040, 729.050, and 729.080 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

    (e) There is a rebuttable presumption that the beneficiary actually knew of all unpaid loan payments on the obligation owed to the beneficiary and secured by the deed of trust or mortgage subject to the notice of default. However, the failure to include an actually known default shall not invalidate the notice of sale and the beneficiary shall not be precluded from asserting a claim to this omitted default or defaults in a separate notice of default.

    2924.3.
    (a) Except as provided in subdivisions (b) and (c), a person who has undertaken as an agent of a mortgagee, beneficiary, or owner of a promissory note secured directly or collaterally by a mortgage or deed of trust on real property or an estate for years therein, to make collections of payments from an obligor under the note, shall mail the following notices, postage prepaid, to each mortgagee, beneficiary or owner for whom the agent has agreed to make collections from the obligor under the note:

    (1) A copy of the notice of default filed in the office of the county recorder pursuant to Section 2924 on account of a breach of obligation under the promissory note on which the agent has agreed to make collections of payments, within 15 days after recordation.

    (2) Notice that a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Section 2924 on account of a breach of an obligation secured by a mortgage or deed of trust against the same property or estate for years therein having priority over the mortgage or deed of trust securing the obligation described in paragraph (1), within 15 days after recordation or within three business days after the agent receives the information, whichever is later.

    (3) Notice of the time and place scheduled for the sale of the real property or estate for years therein pursuant to Section 2924f under a power of sale in a mortgage or deed of trust securing an obligation described in paragraphs (1) or (2), not less than 15 days before the scheduled date of the sale or not later than the next business day after the agent receives the information, whichever is later.

    (b) An agent who has undertaken to make collections on behalf of mortgagees, beneficiaries or owners of promissory notes secured by mortgages or deeds of trust on real property or an estate for years therein shall not be required to comply with the provisions of subdivision (a) with respect to a mortgagee, beneficiary or owner who is entitled to receive notice pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 2924b or for whom a request for notice has been recorded pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 2924b if the agent reasonably believes that the address of the mortgagee, beneficiary, or owner described in Section 2924b is the current business or residence address of that person.

    (c) An agent who has undertaken to make collections on behalf of mortgagees, beneficiaries or owners of promissory notes secured by mortgages or deeds of trust on real property or an estate for years therein shall not be required to comply with the provisions of paragraph (1) or (2) of subdivision (a) if the agent knows or reasonably believes that the default has already been cured by or on behalf of the obligor.

    (d) Any failure to comply with the provisions of this section shall not affect the validity of a sale in favor of a bona fide purchaser or the rights of an encumbrancer for value and without notice.

    2924.5.
    No clause in any deed of trust or mortgage on property containing four or fewer residential units or on which four or fewer residential units are to be constructed or in any obligation secured by any deed of trust or mortgage on property containing four or fewer residential units or on which four or fewer residential units are to be constructed that provides for the acceleration of the due date of the obligation upon the sale, conveyance, alienation, lease, succession, assignment or other transfer of the property subject to the deed of trust or mortgage shall be valid unless the clause is set forth, in its entirety in both the body of the deed of trust or mortgage and the promissory note or other document evidencing the secured obligation. This section shall apply to all such deeds of trust, mortgages, and obligations secured thereby executed on or after July 1, 1972.

    2924.6.
    (a) An obligee may not accelerate the maturity date of the principal and accrued interest on any loan secured by a mortgage or deed of trust on residential real property solely by reason of any one or more of the following transfers in the title to the real property:

    (1) A transfer resulting from the death of an obligor where the transfer is to the spouse who is also an obligor.

    (2) A transfer by an obligor where the spouse becomes a coowner of the property.

    (3) A transfer resulting from a decree of dissolution of the marriage or legal separation or from a property settlement agreement incidental to such a decree which requires the obligor to continue to make the loan payments by which a spouse who is an obligor becomes the sole owner of the property.

    (4) A transfer by an obligor or obligors into an inter vivos trust in which the obligor or obligors are beneficiaries.

    (5) Such real property or any portion thereof is made subject to a junior encumbrance or lien.

    (b) Any waiver of the provisions of this section by an obligor is void and unenforceable and is contrary to public policy.

    (c) For the purposes of this section, “residential real property” means any real property which contains at least one but not more than four housing units.

    (d) This act applies only to loans executed or refinanced on or after January 1, 1976.

    2924.7.
    (a) The provisions of any deed of trust or mortgage on real property which authorize any beneficiary, trustee, mortgagee, or his or her agent or successor in interest, to accelerate the maturity date of the principal and interest on any loan secured thereby or to exercise any power of sale or other remedy contained therein upon the failure of the trustor or mortgagor to pay, at the times provided for under the terms of the deed of trust or mortgage, any taxes, rents, assessments, or insurance premiums with respect to the property or the loan, or any advances made by the beneficiary, mortgagee, or his or her agent or successor in interest shall be enforceable whether or not impairment of the security interest in the property has resulted from the failure of the trustor or mortgagor to pay the taxes, rents, assessments, insurance premiums, or advances.

    (b) The provisions of any deed of trust or mortgage on real property which authorize any beneficiary, trustee, mortgagee, or his or her agent or successor in interest, to receive and control the disbursement of the proceeds of any policy of fire, flood, or other hazard insurance respecting the property shall be enforceable whether or not impairment of the security interest in the property has resulted from the event that caused the proceeds of the insurance policy to become payable.

    2924a.
    If, by the terms of any trust or deed of trust a power of sale is conferred upon the trustee, the attorney for the trustee, or any duly authorized agent, may conduct the sale and act in the sale as the auctioneer for the trustee.

    2924b.
    (a) Any person desiring a copy of any notice of default and of any notice of sale under any deed of trust or mortgage with power of sale upon real property or an estate for years therein, as to which deed of trust or mortgage the power of sale cannot be exercised until these notices are given for the time and in the manner provided in Section 2924 may, at any time subsequent to recordation of the deed of trust or mortgage and prior to recordation of notice of default thereunder, cause to be filed for record in the office of the recorder of any county in which any part or parcel of the real property is situated, a duly acknowledged request for a copy of the notice of default and of sale. This request shall be signed and acknowledged by the person making the request, specifying the name and address of the person to whom the notice is to be mailed, shall identify the deed of trust or mortgage by stating the names of the parties thereto, the date of recordation thereof, and the book and page where the deed of trust or mortgage is recorded or the recorder’ s number, and shall be in substantially the following form:

    “In accordance with Section 2924b, Civil Code, request is hereby made
    that a copy of any notice of default and a copy of any notice of sale
    under the deed of trust (or mortgage) recorded ______, ____, in
    Book_____ page ____ records of ____ County, (or filed for record with
    recorder’s serial number ____, _______County) California, executed
    by ____ as trustor (or mortgagor) in which ________ is named as
    beneficiary (or mortgagee) and ______________ as
    trustee be mailed to
    _________________ at ____________________________.
    Name Address

    NOTICE: A copy of any notice of default and of
    any notice of sale will be sent only to the address contained in this
    recorded request. If your address changes, a new
    request must be recorded.

    Signature _________________”

    Upon the filing for record of the request, the recorder shall index in the general index of grantors the names of the trustors (or mortgagor) recited therein and the names of persons requesting copies.

    (b) The mortgagee, trustee, or other person authorized to record the notice of default or the notice of sale shall do each of the following:

    (1) Within 10 business days following recordation of the notice of default, deposit or cause to be deposited in the United States mail an envelope, sent by registered or certified mail with postage prepaid, containing a copy of the notice with the recording date shown thereon, addressed to each person whose name and address are set forth in a duly recorded request therefor, directed to the address designated in the request and to each trustor or mortgagor at his or her last known address if different than the address specified in the deed of trust or mortgage with power of sale.

    (2) At least 20 days before the date of sale, deposit or cause to be deposited in the United States mail an envelope, sent by registered or certified mail with postage prepaid, containing a copy of the notice of the time and place of sale, addressed to each person whose name and address are set forth in a duly recorded request therefor, directed to the address designated in the request and to each trustor or mortgagor at his or her last known address if different than the address specified in the deed of trust or mortgage with power of sale.

    (3) As used in paragraphs (1) and (2), the “last known address” of each trustor or mortgagor means the last business or residence physical address actually known by the mortgagee, beneficiary, trustee, or other person authorized to record the notice of default. For the purposes of this subdivision, an address is “actually known” if it is contained in the original deed of trust or mortgage, or in any subsequent written notification of a change of physical address from the trustor or mortgagor pursuant to the deed of trust or mortgage. For the purposes of this subdivision, “physical address” does not include an e-mail or any form of electronic address for a trustor or mortgagor. The beneficiary shall inform the trustee of the trustor’s last address actually known by the beneficiary. However, the trustee shall incur no liability for failing to send any notice to the last address unless the trustee has actual knowledge of it.

    (4) A “person authorized to record the notice of default or the notice of sale” shall include an agent for the mortgagee or beneficiary, an agent of the named trustee, any person designated in an executed substitution of trustee, or an agent of that substituted trustee.

    (c) The mortgagee, trustee, or other person authorized to record the notice of default or the notice of sale shall do the following:

    (1) Within one month following recordation of the notice of default, deposit or cause to be deposited in the United States mail an envelope, sent by registered or certified mail with postage prepaid, containing a copy of the notice with the recording date shown thereon, addressed to each person set forth in paragraph (2), provided that the estate or interest of any person entitled to receive notice under this subdivision is acquired by an instrument sufficient to impart constructive notice of the estate or interest in the land or portion thereof which is subject to the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed, and provided the instrument is recorded in the office of the county recorder so as to impart that constructive notice prior to the recording date of the notice of default and provided the instrument as so recorded sets forth a mailing address which the county recorder shall use, as instructed within the instrument, for the return of the instrument after recording, and which address shall be the address used for the purposes of mailing notices herein.

    (2) The persons to whom notice shall be mailed under this subdivision are:

    (A) The successor in interest, as of the recording date of the notice of default, of the estate or interest or any portion thereof of the trustor or mortgagor of the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed.

    (B) The beneficiary or mortgagee of any deed of trust or mortgage recorded subsequent to the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed, or recorded prior to or concurrently with the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed but subject to a recorded agreement or a recorded statement of subordination to the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed.

    (C) The assignee of any interest of the beneficiary or mortgagee described in subparagraph (B), as of the recording date of the notice of default.

    (D) The vendee of any contract of sale, or the lessee of any lease, of the estate or interest being foreclosed which is recorded subsequent to the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed, or recorded prior to or concurrently with the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed but subject to a recorded agreement or statement of subordination to the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed.

    (E) The successor in interest to the vendee or lessee described in subparagraph (D), as of the recording date of the notice of default.

    (F) The office of the Controller, Sacramento, California, where, as of the recording date of the notice of default, a “Notice of Lien for Postponed Property Taxes” has been recorded against the real property to which the notice of default applies.

    (3) At least 20 days before the date of sale, deposit or cause to be deposited in the United States mail an envelope, sent by registered or certified mail with postage prepaid, containing a copy of the notice of the time and place of sale addressed to each person to whom a copy of the notice of default is to be mailed as provided in paragraphs (1) and (2), and addressed to the office of any state taxing agency, Sacramento, California, which has recorded, subsequent to the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed, a notice of tax lien prior to the recording date of the notice of default against the real property to which the notice of default applies.

    (4) Provide a copy of the notice of sale to the Internal Revenue Service, in accordance with Section 7425 of the Internal Revenue Code and any applicable federal regulation, if a “Notice of Federal Tax Lien under Internal Revenue Laws” has been recorded, subsequent to the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed, against the real property to which the notice of sale applies. The failure to provide the Internal Revenue Service with a copy of the notice of sale pursuant to this paragraph shall be sufficient cause to rescind the trustee’s sale and invalidate the trustee’s deed, at the option of either the successful bidder at the trustee’s sale or the trustee, and in either case with the consent of the beneficiary. Any option to rescind the trustee’s sale pursuant to this paragraph shall be exercised prior to any transfer of the property by the successful bidder to a bona fide purchaser for value. A recision of the trustee’ s sale pursuant to this paragraph may be recorded in a notice of recision pursuant to Section 1058.5.

    (5) The mailing of notices in the manner set forth in paragraph (1) shall not impose upon any licensed attorney, agent, or employee of any person entitled to receive notices as herein set forth any duty to communicate the notice to the entitled person from the fact that the mailing address used by the county recorder is the address of the attorney, agent, or employee.

    (d) Any deed of trust or mortgage with power of sale hereafter executed upon real property or an estate for years therein may contain a request that a copy of any notice of default and a copy of any notice of sale thereunder shall be mailed to any person or party thereto at the address of the person given therein, and a copy of any notice of default and of any notice of sale shall be mailed to each of these at the same time and in the same manner required as though a separate request therefor had been filed by each of these persons as herein authorized. If any deed of trust or mortgage with power of sale executed after September 19, 1939, except a deed of trust or mortgage of any of the classes excepted from the provisions of Section 2924, does not contain a mailing address of the trustor or mortgagor therein named, and if no request for special notice by the trustor or mortgagor in substantially the form set forth in this section has subsequently been recorded, a copy of the notice of default shall be published once a week for at least four weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in which the property is situated, the publication to commence within 10 business days after the filing of the notice of default. In lieu of publication, a copy of the notice of default may be delivered personally to the trustor or mortgagor within the 10 business days or at any time before publication is completed, or by posting the notice of default in a conspicuous place on the property and mailing the notice to the last known address of the trustor or mortgagor.

    (e) Any person required to mail a copy of a notice of default or notice of sale to each trustor or mortgagor pursuant to subdivision (b) or (c) by registered or certified mail shall simultaneously cause to be deposited in the United States mail, with postage prepaid and mailed by first-class mail, an envelope containing an additional copy of the required notice addressed to each trustor or mortgagor at the same address to which the notice is sent by registered or certified mail pursuant to subdivision (b) or (c). The person shall execute and retain an affidavit identifying the notice mailed, showing the name and residence or business address of that person, that he or she is over the age of 18 years, the date of deposit in the mail, the name and address of the trustor or mortgagor to whom sent, and that the envelope was sealed and deposited in the mail with postage fully prepaid. In the absence of fraud, the affidavit required by this subdivision shall establish a conclusive presumption of mailing.

    (f) No request for a copy of any notice filed for record pursuant to this section, no statement or allegation in the request, and no record thereof shall affect the title to real property or be deemed notice to any person that any person requesting copies of notice has or claims any right, title, or interest in, or lien or charge upon the property described in the deed of trust or mortgage referred to therein.

    (g) “Business day,” as used in this section, has the meaning specified in Section 9.

    2924c.
    (a)

    (1) Whenever all or a portion of the principal sum of any obligation secured by deed of trust or mortgage on real property or an estate for years therein hereafter executed has, prior to the maturity date fixed in that obligation, become due or been declared due by reason of default in payment of interest or of any installment of principal, or by reason of failure of trustor or mortgagor to pay, in accordance with the terms of that obligation or of the deed of trust or mortgage, taxes, assessments, premiums for insurance, or advances made by beneficiary or mortgagee in accordance with the terms of that obligation or of the deed of trust or mortgage, the trustor or mortgagor or his or her successor in interest in the mortgaged or trust property or any part thereof, or any beneficiary under a subordinate deed of trust or any other person having a subordinate lien or encumbrance of record thereon, at any time within the period specified in subdivision (e), if the power of sale therein is to be exercised, or, otherwise at any time prior to entry of the decree of foreclosure, may pay to the beneficiary or the mortgagee or their successors in interest, respectively, the entire amount due, at the time payment is tendered, with respect to (A) all amounts of principal, interest, taxes, assessments, insurance premiums, or advances actually known by the beneficiary to be, and that are, in default and shown in the notice of default, under the terms of the deed of trust or mortgage and the obligation secured thereby, (B) all amounts in default on recurring obligations not shown in the notice of default, and (C) all reasonable costs and expenses, subject to subdivision (c), which are actually incurred in enforcing the terms of the obligation, deed of trust, or mortgage, and trustee’s or attorney’s fees, subject to subdivision (d), other than the portion of principal as would not then be due had no default occurred, and thereby cure the default theretofore existing, and thereupon, all proceedings theretofore had or instituted shall be dismissed or discontinued and the obligation and deed of trust or mortgage shall be reinstated and shall be and remain in force and effect, the same as if the acceleration had not occurred. This section does not apply to bonds or other evidences of indebtedness authorized or permitted to be issued by the Commissioner of Corporations or made by a public utility subject to the Public Utilities Code. For the purposes of this subdivision, the term “recurring obligation” means all amounts of principal and interest on the loan, or rents, subject to the deed of trust or mortgage in default due after the notice of default is recorded; all amounts of principal and interest or rents advanced on senior liens or leaseholds which are advanced after the recordation of the notice of default; and payments of taxes, assessments, and hazard insurance advanced after recordation of the notice of default. Where the beneficiary or mortgagee has made no advances on defaults which would constitute recurring obligations, the beneficiary or mortgagee may require the trustor or mortgagor to provide reliable written evidence that the amounts have been paid prior to reinstatement.

    (2) If the trustor, mortgagor, or other person authorized to cure the default pursuant to this subdivision does cure the default, the beneficiary or mortgagee or the agent for the beneficiary or mortgagee shall, within 21 days following the reinstatement, execute and deliver to the trustee a notice of rescission which rescinds the declaration of default and demand for sale and advises the trustee of the date of reinstatement. The trustee shall cause the notice of rescission to be recorded within 30 days of receipt of the notice of rescission and of all allowable fees and costs.

    No charge, except for the recording fee, shall be made against the trustor or mortgagor for the execution and recordation of the notice which rescinds the declaration of default and demand for sale.

    (b)

    (1) The notice, of any default described in this section, recorded pursuant to Section 2924, and mailed to any person pursuant to Section 2924b, shall begin with the following statement, printed or typed thereon:

    “IMPORTANT NOTICE (14-point boldface type if printed or in
    capital letters if typed)

    IF YOUR PROPERTY IS IN FORECLOSURE BECAUSE YOU ARE BEHIND IN YOUR
    PAYMENTS, IT MAY BE SOLD WITHOUT ANY COURT ACTION, (14-point boldface
    type if printed or in capital letters if typed) and you may have the
    legal right to bring your account in good standing by paying all of
    your past due payments plus permitted costs and expenses within the
    time permitted by law for reinstatement of your account, which is
    normally five business days prior to the date set for the sale of
    your property. No sale date may be set until three months from the
    date this notice of default may be recorded (which date of
    recordation appears on this notice).

    This amount is ___________________ as of ______________________
    (Date)
    and will increase until your account becomes current.

    While your property is in foreclosure, you still must pay other
    obligations (such as insurance and taxes) required by your note and
    deed of trust or mortgage. If you fail to make future payments on
    the loan, pay taxes on the property, provide insurance on the
    property, or pay other obligations as required in the note and deed
    of trust or mortgage, the beneficiary or mortgagee may insist that
    you do so in order to reinstate your account in good standing. In
    addition, the beneficiary or mortgagee may require as a condition to
    reinstatement that you provide reliable written evidence that you
    paid all senior liens, property taxes, and hazard insurance premiums.

    Upon your written request, the beneficiary or mortgagee will give
    you a written itemization of the entire amount you must pay. You may
    not have to pay the entire unpaid portion of your account, even
    though full payment was demanded, but you must pay all amounts in
    default at the time payment is made. However, you and your
    beneficiary or mortgagee may mutually agree in writing prior to the
    time the notice of sale is posted (which may not be earlier than the
    end of the three-month period stated above) to, among other things,
    (1) provide additional time in which to cure the default by transfer
    of the property or otherwise; or (2) establish a schedule of payments
    in order to cure your default; or both (1) and (2).
    Following the expiration of the time period referred to in the
    first paragraph of this notice, unless the obligation being
    foreclosed upon or a separate written agreement between you and your
    creditor permits a longer period, you have only the legal right to
    stop the sale of your property by paying the entire amount demanded
    by your creditor.
    To find out the amount you must pay, or to arrange for payment to
    stop the foreclosure, or if your property is in foreclosure for any
    other reason, contact:

    ______________________________________
    (Name of beneficiary or mortgagee)

    ______________________________________
    (Mailing address)

    ______________________________________
    (Telephone)

    If you have any questions, you should contact a lawyer or the
    governmental agency which may have insured your loan.
    Notwithstanding the fact that your property is in foreclosure, you
    may offer your property for sale, provided the sale is concluded
    prior to the conclusion of the foreclosure.
    Remember, YOU MAY LOSE LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU DO NOT TAKE PROMPT
    ACTION. (14-point boldface type if printed or in capital letters if
    typed)”

    Unless otherwise specified, the notice, if printed, shall appear in at least 12-point boldface type.

    If the obligation secured by the deed of trust or mortgage is a contract or agreement described in paragraph (1) or (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1632, the notice required herein shall be in Spanish if the trustor requested a Spanish language translation of the contract or agreement pursuant to Section 1632. If the obligation secured by the deed of trust or mortgage is contained in a home improvement contract, as defined in Sections 7151.2 and 7159 of the Business and Professions Code, which is subject to Title 2 (commencing with Section 1801), the seller shall specify on the contract whether or not the contract was principally negotiated in Spanish and if the contract was principally negotiated in Spanish, the notice required herein shall be in Spanish. No assignee of the contract or person authorized to record the notice of default shall incur any obligation or liability for failing to mail a notice in Spanish unless Spanish is specified in the contract or the assignee or person has actual knowledge that the secured obligation was principally negotiated in Spanish. Unless specified in writing to the contrary, a copy of the notice required by subdivision (c) of Section 2924b shall be in English.

    (2) Any failure to comply with the provisions of this subdivision shall not affect the validity of a sale in favor of a bona fide purchaser or the rights of an encumbrancer for value and without notice.

    (c) Costs and expenses which may be charged pursuant to Sections 2924 to 2924i, inclusive, shall be limited to the costs incurred for recording, mailing, including certified and express mail charges, publishing, and posting notices required by Sections 2924 to 2924i, inclusive, postponement pursuant to Section 2924g not to exceed fifty dollars ($50) per postponement and a fee for a trustee’s sale guarantee or, in the event of judicial foreclosure, a litigation guarantee. For purposes of this subdivision, a trustee or beneficiary may purchase a trustee’s sale guarantee at a rate meeting the standards contained in Sections 12401.1 and 12401.3 of the Insurance Code.

    (d) Trustee’s or attorney’s fees which may be charged pursuant to subdivision (a), or until the notice of sale is deposited in the mail to the trustor as provided in Section 2924b, if the sale is by power of sale contained in the deed of trust or mortgage, or, otherwise at any time prior to the decree of foreclosure, are hereby authorized to be in a base amount that does not exceed three hundred dollars ($300) if the unpaid principal sum secured is one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) or less, or two hundred fifty dollars ($250) if the unpaid principal sum secured exceeds one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000), plus one-half of 1 percent of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) up to and including one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000), plus one-quarter of 1 percent of any portion of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) up to and including five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000), plus one-eighth of 1 percent of any portion of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000). Any charge for trustee’s or attorney’s fees authorized by this subdivision shall be conclusively presumed to be lawful and valid where the charge does not exceed the amounts authorized herein. For purposes of this subdivision, the unpaid principal sum secured shall be determined as of the date the notice of default is recorded.

    (e) Reinstatement of a monetary default under the terms of an obligation secured by a deed of trust, or mortgage may be made at any time within the period commencing with the date of recordation of the notice of default until five business days prior to the date of sale set forth in the initial recorded notice of sale.

    In the event the sale does not take place on the date set forth in the initial recorded notice of sale or a subsequent recorded notice of sale is required to be given, the right of reinstatement shall be revived as of the date of recordation of the subsequent notice of sale, and shall continue from that date until five business days prior to the date of sale set forth in the subsequently recorded notice of sale.

    In the event the date of sale is postponed on the date of sale set forth in either an initial or any subsequent notice of sale, or is postponed on the date declared for sale at an immediately preceding postponement of sale, and, the postponement is for a period which exceeds five business days from the date set forth in the notice of sale, or declared at the time of postponement, then the right of reinstatement is revived as of the date of postponement and shall continue from that date until five business days prior to the date of sale declared at the time of the postponement.

    Nothing contained herein shall give rise to a right of reinstatement during the period of five business days prior to the date of sale, whether the date of sale is noticed in a notice of sale or declared at a postponement of sale.

    Pursuant to the terms of this subdivision, no beneficiary, trustee, mortgagee, or their agents or successors shall be liable in any manner to a trustor, mortgagor, their agents or successors or any beneficiary under a subordinate deed of trust or mortgage or any other person having a subordinate lien or encumbrance of record thereon for the failure to allow a reinstatement of the obligation secured by a deed of trust or mortgage during the period of five business days prior to the sale of the security property, and no such right of reinstatement during this period is created by this section. Any right of reinstatement created by this section is terminated five business days prior to the date of sale set forth in the initial date of sale, and is revived only as prescribed herein and only as of the date set forth herein.

    As used in this subdivision, the term “business day” has the same meaning as specified in Section 9.

    2924d.
    (a) Commencing with the date that the notice of sale is deposited in the mail, as provided in Section 2924b, and until the property is sold pursuant to the power of sale contained in the mortgage or deed of trust, a beneficiary, trustee, mortgagee, or his or her agent or successor in interest, may demand and receive from a trustor, mortgagor, or his or her agent or successor in interest, or any beneficiary under a subordinate deed of trust, or any other person having a subordinate lien or encumbrance of record those reasonable costs and expenses, to the extent allowed by subdivision (c) of Section 2924c, which are actually incurred in enforcing the terms of the obligation and trustee’s or attorney’s fees which are hereby authorized to be in a base amount which does not exceed four hundred twenty-five dollars ($425) if the unpaid principal sum secured is one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) or less, or three hundred sixty dollars ($360) if the unpaid principal sum secured exceeds one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000), plus 1 percent of any portion of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) up to and including one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000), plus one-half of 1 percent of any portion of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) up to and including five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000), plus one-quarter of 1 percent of any portion of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000). For purposes of this subdivision, the unpaid principal sum secured shall be determined as of the date the notice of default is recorded. Any charge for trustee’s or attorney’ s fees authorized by this subdivision shall be conclusively presumed to be lawful and valid where that charge does not exceed the amounts authorized herein. Any charge for trustee’s or attorney’s fees made pursuant to this subdivision shall be in lieu of and not in addition to those charges authorized by subdivision (d) of Section 2924c.

    (b) Upon the sale of property pursuant to a power of sale, a trustee, or his or her agent or successor in interest, may demand and receive from a beneficiary, or his or her agent or successor in interest, or may deduct from the proceeds of the sale, those reasonable costs and expenses, to the extent allowed by subdivision (c) of Section 2924c, which are actually incurred in enforcing the terms of the obligation and trustee’s or attorney’s fees which are hereby authorized to be in an amount which does not exceed four hundred twenty-five dollars ($425) or one percent of the unpaid principal sum secured, whichever is greater. For purposes of this subdivision, the unpaid principal sum secured shall be determined as of the date the notice of default is recorded. Any charge for trustee’s or attorney’s fees authorized by this subdivision shall be conclusively presumed to be lawful and valid where that charge does not exceed the amount authorized herein. Any charges for trustee’s or attorney’s fees made pursuant to this subdivision shall be in lieu of and not in addition to those charges authorized by subdivision (a) of this section and subdivision (d) of Section 2924c.

    (c)

    (1) No person shall pay or offer to pay or collect any rebate or kickback for the referral of business involving the performance of any act required by this article.

    (2) Any person who violates this subdivision shall be liable to the trustor for three times the amount of any rebate or kickback, plus reasonable attorney’s fees and costs, in addition to any other remedies provided by law.

    (3) No violation of this subdivision shall affect the validity of a sale in favor of a bona fide purchaser or the rights of an encumbrancer for value without notice.

    (d) It shall not be unlawful for a trustee to pay or offer to pay a fee to an agent or subagent of the trustee for work performed by the agent or subagent in discharging the trustee’s obligations under the terms of the deed of trust. Any payment of a fee by a trustee to an agent or subagent of the trustee for work performed by the agent or subagent in discharging the trustee’s obligations under the terms of the deed of trust shall be conclusively presumed to be lawful and valid if the fee, when combined with other fees of the trustee, does not exceed in the aggregate the trustee’s fee authorized by subdivision (d) of Section 2924c or subdivision (a) or (b) of this section.

    (e) When a court issues a decree of foreclosure, it shall have discretion to award attorney’s fees, costs, and expenses as are reasonable, if provided for in the note, deed of trust, or mortgage, pursuant to Section 580c of the Code of Civil Procedure.

    2924e.
    (a) The beneficiary or mortgagee of any deed of trust or mortgage on real property either containing one to four residential units or given to secure an original obligation not to exceed three hundred thousand dollars ($300,000) may, with the written consent of the trustor or mortgagor that is either effected through a signed and dated agreement which shall be separate from other loan and security documents or disclosed to the trustor or mortgagor in at least 10-point type, submit a written request by certified mail to the beneficiary or mortgagee of any lien which is senior to the lien of the requester, for written notice of any or all delinquencies of four months or more, in payments of principal or interest on any obligation secured by that senior lien notwithstanding that the loan secured by the lien of the requester is not then in default as to payments of principal or interest.

    The request shall be sent to the beneficiary or mortgagee, or agent which it might designate for the purpose of receiving loan payments, at the address specified for the receipt of these payments, if known, or, if not known, at the address shown on the recorded deed of trust or mortgage.

    (b) The request for notice shall identify the ownership or security interest of the requester, the date on which the interest of the requester will terminate as evidenced by the maturity date of the note of the trustor or mortgagor in favor of the requester, the name of the trustor or mortgagor and the name of the current owner of the security property if different from the trustor or mortgagor, the street address or other description of the security property, the loan number (if available to the requester) of the loan secured by the senior lien, the name and address to which notice is to be sent, and shall include or be accompanied by the signed written consent of the trustor or mortgagor, and a fee of forty dollars ($40). For obligations secured by residential properties, the request shall remain valid until withdrawn in writing and shall be applicable to all delinquencies as provided in this section, which occur prior to the date on which the interest of the requester will terminate as specified in the request or the expiration date, as appropriate. For obligations secured by nonresidential properties, the request shall remain valid until withdrawn in writing and shall be applicable to all delinquencies as provided in this section, which occur prior to the date on which the interest of the requester will terminate as specified in the request or the expiration date, as appropriate. The beneficiary or mortgagee of obligations secured by nonresidential properties that have sent five or more notices prior to the expiration of the effective period of the request may charge a fee up to fifteen dollars ($15) for each subsequent notice. A request for notice shall be effective for five years from the mailing of the request or the recording of that request, whichever occurs later, and may be renewed within six months prior to its expiration date by sending the beneficiary or mortgagee, or agent, as the case may be, at the address to which original requests for notice are to be sent, a copy of the earlier request for notice together with a signed statement that the request is renewed and a renewal fee of fifteen dollars ($15). Upon timely submittal of a renewal request for notice, the effectiveness of the original request is continued for five years from the time when it would otherwise have lapsed. Succeeding renewal requests may be submitted in the same manner. The request for notice and renewals thereof shall be recorded in the office of the county recorder of the county in which the security real property is situated. The rights and obligations specified in this section shall inure to the benefit of, or pass to, as the case may be, successors in interest of parties specified in this section. Any successor in interest of a party entitled to notice under this section shall file a request for that notice with any beneficiary or mortgagee of the senior lien and shall pay a processing fee of fifteen dollars ($15). No new written consent shall be required from the trustor or mortgagor.

    (c) Unless the delinquency has been cured, within 15 days following the end of four months from any delinquency in payments of principal or interest on any obligation secured by the senior lien which delinquency exists or occurs on or after 10 days from the mailing of the request for notice or the recording of that request, whichever occurs later, the beneficiary or mortgagee shall give written notice to the requester of the fact of any delinquency and the amount thereof.

    The notice shall be given by personal service, or by deposit in the mail, first-class postage paid. Following the recording of any notice of default pursuant to Section 2924 with respect to the same delinquency, no notice or further notice shall be required pursuant to this section.

    (d) If the beneficiary or mortgagee of any such senior lien fails to give notice to the requester as required in subdivision (c), and a subsequent foreclosure or trustee’s sale of the security property occurs, the beneficiary or mortgagee shall be liable to the requester for any monetary damage due to the failure to provide notice within the time period specified in subdivision (c) which the requester has sustained from the date on which notice should have been given to the earlier of the date on which the notice is given or the date of the recording of the notice of default under Section 2924, and shall also forfeit to the requester the sum of three hundred dollars ($300). A showing by the beneficiary or mortgagee by a preponderance of the evidence that the failure to provide timely notice as required by subdivision (c) resulted from a bona fide error notwithstanding the maintenance of procedures reasonably adapted to avoid any such error shall be a defense to any liability for that failure.

    (e) If any beneficiary or mortgagee, or agent which it had designated for the purpose of receiving loan payments, has been succeeded in interest by any other person, any request for notice received pursuant to this section shall be transmitted promptly to that person.

    (f) Any failure to comply with the provisions of this section shall not affect the validity of a sale in favor of a bona fide purchaser or the rights of an encumbrancer for value and without notice.

    (g) Upon satisfaction of an obligation secured by a junior lien with respect to which a notice request was made pursuant to this section, the beneficiary or mortgagee that made the request shall communicate that fact in writing to the senior lienholder to whom the request was made. The communication shall specify that provision of notice pursuant to the prior request under this section is no longer required.

    2924f.
    (a) As used in this section and Sections 2924g and 2924h, “property” means real property or a leasehold estate therein, and “calendar week” means Monday through Saturday, inclusive.

    (b)

    (1) Except as provided in subdivision (c), before any sale of property can be made under the power of sale contained in any deed of trust or mortgage, or any resale resulting from a rescission for a failure of consideration pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 2924h, notice of the sale thereof shall be given by posting a written notice of the time of sale and of the street address and the specific place at the street address where the sale will be held, and describing the property to be sold, at least 20 days before the date of sale in one public place in the city where the property is to be sold, if the property is to be sold in a city, or, if not, then in one public place in the judicial district in which the property is to be sold, and publishing a copy once a week for three consecutive calendar weeks, the first publication to be at least 20 days before the date of sale, in a newspaper of general circulation published in the city in which the property or some part thereof is situated, if any part thereof is situated in a city, if not, then in a newspaper of general circulation published in the judicial district in which the property or some part thereof is situated, or in case no newspaper of general circulation is published in the city or judicial district, as the case may be, in a newspaper of general circulation published in the county in which the property or some part thereof is situated, or in case no newspaper of general circulation is published in the city or judicial district or county, as the case may be, in a newspaper of general circulation published in the county in this state that (A) is contiguous to the county in which the property or some part thereof is situated and (B) has, by comparison with all similarly contiguous counties, the highest population based upon total county population as determined by the most recent federal decennial census published by the Bureau of the Census. A copy of the notice of sale shall also be posted in a conspicuous place on the property to be sold at least 20 days before the date of sale, where possible and where not restricted for any reason. If the property is a single-family residence the posting shall be on a door of the residence, but, if not possible or restricted, then the notice shall be posted in a conspicuous place on the property; however, if access is denied because a common entrance to the property is restricted by a guard gate or similar impediment, the property may be posted at that guard gate or similar impediment to any development community. Additionally, the notice of sale shall conform to the minimum requirements of Section 6043 of the Government Code and be recorded with the county recorder of the county in which the property or some part thereof is situated at least 14 days prior to the date of sale. The notice of sale shall contain the name, street address in this state, which may reflect an agent of the trustee, and either a toll-free telephone number or telephone number in this state of the trustee, and the name of the original trustor, and also shall contain the statement required by paragraph (3) of subdivision (c). In addition to any other description of the property, the notice shall describe the property by giving its street address, if any, or other common designation, if any, and a county assessor’s parcel number; but if the property has no street address or other common designation, the notice shall contain a legal description of the property, the name and address of the beneficiary at whose request the sale is to be conducted, and a statement that directions may be obtained pursuant to a written request submitted to the beneficiary within 10 days from the first publication of the notice. Directions shall be deemed reasonably sufficient to locate the property if information as to the location of the property is given by reference to the direction and approximate distance from the nearest crossroads, frontage road, or access road. If a legal description or a county assessor’s parcel number and either a street address or another common designation of the property is given, the validity of the notice and the validity of the sale shall not be affected by the fact that the street address, other common designation, name and address of the beneficiary, or the directions obtained therefrom are erroneous or that the street address, other common designation, name and address of the beneficiary, or directions obtained therefrom are omitted. The term “newspaper of general circulation,” as used in this section, has the same meaning as defined in Article 1 (commencing with Section 6000) of Chapter 1 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code.

    The notice of sale shall contain a statement of the total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured by the property to be sold and reasonably estimated costs, expenses, advances at the time of the initial publication of the notice of sale, and, if republished pursuant to a cancellation of a cash equivalent pursuant to subdivision (d) of Section 2924h, a reference of that fact; provided, that the trustee shall incur no liability for any good faith error in stating the proper amount, including any amount provided in good faith by or on behalf of the beneficiary. An inaccurate statement of this amount shall not affect the validity of any sale to a bona fide purchaser for value, nor shall the failure to post the notice of sale on a door as provided by this subdivision affect the validity of any sale to a bona fide purchaser for value.

    (2) If the sale of the property is to be a unified sale as provided in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 9604 of the Commercial Code, the notice of sale shall also contain a description of the personal property or fixtures to be sold. In the case where it is contemplated that all of the personal property or fixtures are to be sold, the description in the notice of the personal property or fixtures shall be sufficient if it is the same as the description of the personal property or fixtures contained in the agreement creating the security interest in or encumbrance on the personal property or fixtures or the filed financing statement relating to the personal property or fixtures. In all other cases, the description in the notice shall be sufficient if it would be a sufficient description of the personal property or fixtures under Section 9108 of the Commercial Code. Inclusion of a reference to or a description of personal property or fixtures in a notice of sale hereunder shall not constitute an election by the secured party to conduct a unified sale pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 9604 of the Commercial Code, shall not obligate the secured party to conduct a unified sale pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 9604 of the Commercial Code, and in no way shall render defective or noncomplying either that notice or a sale pursuant to that notice by reason of the fact that the sale includes none or less than all of the personal property or fixtures referred to or described in the notice. This paragraph shall not otherwise affect the obligations or duties of a secured party under the Commercial Code.

    (c)

    (1) This subdivision applies only to deeds of trust or mortgages which contain a power of sale and which are secured by real property containing a single-family, owner-occupied residence, where the obligation secured by the deed of trust or mortgage is contained in a contract for goods or services subject to the provisions of the Unruh Act (Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 1801) of Title 2 of Part 4 of Division 3).

    (2) Except as otherwise expressly set forth in this subdivision, all other provisions of law relating to the exercise of a power of sale shall govern the exercise of a power of sale contained in a deed of trust or mortgage described in paragraph (1).

    (3) If any default of the obligation secured by a deed of trust or mortgage described in paragraph (1) has not been cured within 30 days after the recordation of the notice of default, the trustee or mortgagee shall mail to the trustor or mortgagor, at his or her last known address, a copy of the following statement:

    YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A
    ___________________________________________________,
    Deed of trust or mortgage
    DATED ______. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT
    YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE.
    IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE
    PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER.

    (4) All sales of real property pursuant to a power of sale contained in any deed of trust or mortgage described in paragraph (1) shall be held in the county where the residence is located and shall be made to the person making the highest offer. The trustee may receive offers during the 10-day period immediately prior to the date of sale and if any offer is accepted in writing by both the trustor or mortgagor and the beneficiary or mortgagee prior to the time set for sale, the sale shall be postponed to a date certain and prior to which the property may be conveyed by the trustor to the person making the offer according to its terms. The offer is revocable until accepted. The performance of the offer, following acceptance, according to its terms, by a conveyance of the property to the offeror, shall operate to terminate any further proceeding under the notice of sale and it shall be deemed revoked.

    (5) In addition to the trustee fee pursuant to Section 2924c, the trustee or mortgagee pursuant to a deed of trust or mortgage subject to this subdivision shall be entitled to charge an additional fee of fifty dollars ($50).

    (6) This subdivision applies only to property on which notices of default were filed on or after the effective date of this subdivision.

    2924g.
    (a) All sales of property under the power of sale contained in any deed of trust or mortgage shall be held in the county where the property or some part thereof is situated, and shall be made at auction, to the highest bidder, between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on any business day, Monday through Friday.

    The sale shall commence at the time and location specified in the notice of sale. Any postponement shall be announced at the time and location specified in the notice of sale for commencement of the sale or pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (c).

    If the sale of more than one parcel of real property has been scheduled for the same time and location by the same trustee, (1) any postponement of any of the sales shall be announced at the time published in the notice of sale, (2) the first sale shall commence at the time published in the notice of sale or immediately after the announcement of any postponement, and (3) each subsequent sale shall take place as soon as possible after the preceding sale has been completed.

    (b) When the property consists of several known lots or parcels, they shall be sold separately unless the deed of trust or mortgage provides otherwise. When a portion of the property is claimed by a third person, who requires it to be sold separately, the portion subject to the claim may be thus sold. The trustor, if present at the sale, may also, unless the deed of trust or mortgage otherwise provides, direct the order in which property shall be sold, when the property consists of several known lots or parcels which may be sold to advantage separately, and the trustee shall follow that direction. After sufficient property has been sold to satisfy the indebtedness, no more can be sold.

    If the property under power of sale is in two or more counties, the public auction sale of all of the property under the power of sale may take place in any one of the counties where the property or a portion thereof is located.

    (c)

    (1) There may be a postponement or postponements of the sale proceedings, including a postponement upon instruction by the beneficiary to the trustee that the sale proceedings be postponed, at any time prior to the completion of the sale for any period of time not to exceed a total of 365 days from the date set forth in the notice of sale. The trustee shall postpone the sale in accordance with any of the following:

    (A) Upon the order of any court of competent jurisdiction.

    (B) If stayed by operation of law.

    (C) By mutual agreement, whether oral or in writing, of any trustor and any beneficiary or any mortgagor and any mortgagee.

    (D) At the discretion of the trustee.

    (2) In the event that the sale proceedings are postponed for a period or periods totaling more than 365 days, the scheduling of any further sale proceedings shall be preceded by giving a new notice of sale in the manner prescribed in Section 2924f. New fees incurred for the new notice of sale shall not exceed the amounts specified in Sections 2924c and 2924d, and shall not exceed reasonable costs that are necessary to comply with this paragraph.

    (d) The notice of each postponement and the reason therefor shall be given by public declaration by the trustee at the time and place last appointed for sale. A public declaration of postponement shall also set forth the new date, time, and place of sale and the place of sale shall be the same place as originally fixed by the trustee for the sale. No other notice of postponement need be given. However, the sale shall be conducted no sooner than on the seventh day after the earlier of (1) dismissal of the action or (2) expiration or termination of the injunction, restraining order, or stay that required postponement of the sale, whether by entry of an order by a court of competent jurisdiction, operation of law, or otherwise, unless the injunction, restraining order, or subsequent order expressly directs the conduct of the sale within that seven-day period. For purposes of this subdivision, the seven-day period shall not include the day on which the action is dismissed, or the day on which the injunction, restraining order, or stay expires or is terminated. If the sale had been scheduled to occur, but this subdivision precludes its conduct during that seven-day period, a new notice of postponement shall be given if the sale had been scheduled to occur during that seven-day period. The trustee shall maintain records of each postponement and the reason therefor.

    (e) Notwithstanding the time periods established under subdivision

    (d), if postponement of a sale is based on a stay imposed by Title 11 of the United States Code (bankruptcy), the sale shall be conducted no sooner than the expiration of the stay imposed by that title and the seven-day provision of subdivision (d) shall not apply.

    2924h.
    (a) Each and every bid made by a bidder at a trustee’s sale under a power of sale contained in a deed of trust or mortgage shall be deemed to be an irrevocable offer by that bidder to purchase the property being sold by the trustee under the power of sale for the amount of the bid. Any second or subsequent bid by the same bidder or any other bidder for a higher amount shall be a cancellation of the prior bid.

    (b) At the trustee’s sale the trustee shall have the right (1) to require every bidder to show evidence of the bidder’s ability to deposit with the trustee the full amount of his or her final bid in cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state, or a cash equivalent which has been designated in the notice of sale as acceptable to the trustee prior to, and as a condition to, the recognizing of the bid, and to conditionally accept and hold these amounts for the duration of the sale, and (2) to require the last and highest bidder to deposit, if not deposited previously, the full amount of the bidder’s final bid in cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state, or a cash equivalent which has been designated in the notice of sale as acceptable to the trustee, immediately prior to the completion of the sale, the completion of the sale being so announced by the fall of the hammer or in another customary manner. The present beneficiary of the deed of trust under foreclosure shall have the right to offset his or her bid or bids only to the extent of the total amount due the beneficiary including the trustee’s fees and expenses.

    (c) In the event the trustee accepts a check drawn by a credit union or a savings and loan association pursuant to this subdivision or a cash equivalent designated in the notice of sale, the trustee may withhold the issuance of the trustee’s deed to the successful bidder submitting the check drawn by a state or federal credit union or savings and loan association or the cash equivalent until funds become available to the payee or endorsee as a matter of right.

    For the purposes of this subdivision, the trustee’s sale shall be deemed final upon the acceptance of the last and highest bid, and shall be deemed perfected as of 8 a.m. on the actual date of sale if the trustee’s deed is recorded within 15 calendar days after the sale, or the next business day following the 15th day if the county recorder in which the property is located is closed on the 15th day. However, the sale is subject to an automatic rescission for a failure of consideration in the event the funds are not “available for withdrawal” as defined in Section 12413.1 of the Insurance Code. The trustee shall send a notice of rescission for a failure of consideration to the last and highest bidder submitting the check or alternative instrument, if the address of the last and highest bidder is known to the trustee.

    If a sale results in an automatic right of rescission for failure of consideration pursuant to this subdivision, the interest of any lienholder shall be reinstated in the same priority as if the previous sale had not occurred.

    (d) If the trustee has not required the last and highest bidder to deposit the cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state, or a cash equivalent which has been designated in the notice of sale as acceptable to the trustee in the manner set forth in paragraph (2) of subdivision (b), the trustee shall complete the sale. If the last and highest bidder then fails to deliver to the trustee, when demanded, the amount of his or her final bid in cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state, or a cash equivalent which has been designated in the notice of sale as acceptable to the trustee, that bidder shall be liable to the trustee for all damages which the trustee may sustain by the refusal to deliver to the trustee the amount of the final bid, including any court costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees.

    If the last and highest bidder willfully fails to deliver to the trustee the amount of his or her final bid in cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state, or a cash equivalent which has been designated in the notice of sale as acceptable to the trustee, or if the last and highest bidder cancels a cashiers check drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state, or a cash equivalent that has been designated in the notice of sale as acceptable to the trustee, that bidder shall be guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not more than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).

    In the event the last and highest bidder cancels an instrument submitted to the trustee as a cash equivalent, the trustee shall provide a new notice of sale in the manner set forth in Section 2924f and shall be entitled to recover the costs of the new notice of sale as provided in Section 2924c.

    (e) Any postponement or discontinuance of the sale proceedings shall be a cancellation of the last bid.

    (f) In the event that this section conflicts with any other statute, then this section shall prevail.

    (g) It shall be unlawful for any person, acting alone or in concert with others, (1) to offer to accept or accept from another, any consideration of any type not to bid, or (2) to fix or restrain bidding in any manner, at a sale of property conducted pursuant to a power of sale in a deed of trust or mortgage. However, it shall not be unlawful for any person, including a trustee, to state that a property subject to a recorded notice of default or subject to a sale conducted pursuant to this chapter is being sold in an “as-is” condition.

    In addition to any other remedies, any person committing any act declared unlawful by this subdivision or any act which would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any beneficiary, trustor, or junior lienor shall, upon conviction, be fined not more than ten thousand dollars ($10,000) or imprisoned in the county jail for not more than one year, or be punished by both that fine and imprisonment.

    2924i.
    (a) This section applies to loans secured by a deed of trust or mortgage on real property containing one to four residential units at least one of which at the time the loan is made is or is to be occupied by the borrower if the loan is for a period in excess of one year and is a balloon payment loan.

    (b) This section shall not apply to (1) open end credit as defined in Regulation Z, whether or not the transaction is otherwise subject to Regulation Z, (2) transactions subject to Section 2956, or (3) loans made for the principal purpose of financing the construction of one or more residential units.

    (c) At least 90 days but not more than 150 days prior to the due date of the final payment on a loan that is subject to this section, the holder of the loan shall deliver or mail by first-class mail, with a certificate of mailing obtained from the United States Postal Service, to the trustor, or his or her successor in interest, at the last known address of that person, a written notice which shall include all of the following:

    (1) A statement of the name and address of the person to whom the final payment is required to be paid.

    (2) The date on or before which the final payment is required to be paid.

    (3) The amount of the final payment, or if the exact amount is unknown, a good faith estimate of the amount thereof, including unpaid principal, interest and any other charges, such amount to be determined assuming timely payment in full of all scheduled installments coming due between the date the notice is prepared and the date when the final payment is due.

    (4) If the borrower has a contractual right to refinance the final payment, a statement to that effect.

    If the due date of the final payment of a loan subject to this section is extended prior to the time notice is otherwise required under this subdivision, this notice requirement shall apply only to the due date as extended (or as subsequently extended).

    (d) For purposes of this section:

    (1) A “balloon payment loan” is a loan which provides for a final payment as originally scheduled which is more than twice the amount of any of the immediately preceding six regularly scheduled payments or which contains a call provision; provided, however, that if the call provision is not exercised by the holder of the loan, the existence of the unexercised call provision shall not cause the loan to be deemed to be a balloon payment loan.

    (2) “Call provision” means a loan contract term that provides the holder of the loan with the right to call the loan due and payable either after a specified period has elapsed following closing or after a specified date.

    (3) “Regulation Z” means any rule, regulation, or interpretation promulgated by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System under the Federal Truth in Lending Act, as amended (15 U.S.C. Sec. 1601 et seq.), and any interpretation or approval thereof issued by an official or employee of the Federal Reserve System duly authorized by the board under the Truth in Lending Act, as amended, to issue such interpretations or approvals.

    (e) Failure to provide notice as required by subdivision (a) does not extinguish any obligation of payment by the borrower, except that the due date for any balloon payment shall be the date specified in the balloon payment note, or 90 days from the date of delivery or mailing of the notice required by subdivision (a), or the due date specified in the notice required by subdivision (a), whichever date is later. If the operation of this section acts to extend the term of any note, interest shall continue to accrue for the extended term at the contract rate and payments shall continue to be due at any periodic interval and on any payment schedule specified in the note and shall be credited to principal or interest under the terms of the note. Default in any extended periodic payment shall be considered a default under terms of the note or security instrument.

    (f)

    (1) The validity of any credit document or of any security document subject to the provisions of this section shall not be invalidated solely because of the failure of any person to comply with this section. However, any person who willfully violates any provision of this section shall be liable in the amount of actual damages suffered by the debtor as the proximate result of the violation, and, if the debtor prevails in any suit to recover that amount, for reasonable attorney’s fees.

    (2) No person may be held liable in any action under this section if it is shown by a preponderance of the evidence that the violation was not intentional and resulted from a bona fide error notwithstanding the maintenance of procedures reasonably adopted to avoid any such error.

    (g) The provisions of this section shall apply to any note executed on or after January 1, 1984.

    2924j.
    (a) Unless an interpleader action has been filed, within 30 days of the execution of the trustee’s deed resulting from a sale in which there are proceeds remaining after payment of the amounts required by paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 2924k, the trustee shall send written notice to all persons with recorded interests in the real property as of the date immediately prior to the trustee’s sale who would be entitled to notice pursuant to subdivisions (b) and (c) of Section 2924b. The notice shall be sent by first-class mail in the manner provided in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 2924b and inform each entitled person of each of the following:

    (1) That there has been a trustee’s sale of the described real property.

    (2) That the noticed person may have a claim to all or a portion of the sale proceeds remaining after payment of the amounts required by paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 2924k.

    (3) The noticed person may contact the trustee at the address provided in the notice to pursue any potential claim.

    (4) That before the trustee can act, the noticed person may be required to present proof that the person holds the beneficial interest in the obligation and the security interest therefor. In the case of a promissory note secured by a deed of trust, proof that the person holds the beneficial interest may include the original promissory note and assignment of beneficial interests related thereto. The noticed person shall also submit a written claim to the trustee, executed under penalty of perjury, stating the following:

    (A) The amount of the claim to the date of trustee’s sale.

    (B) An itemized statement of the principal, interest, and other charges.

    (C) That claims must be received by the trustee at the address stated in the notice no later than 30 days after the date the trustee sends notice to the potential claimant.

    (b) The trustee shall exercise due diligence to determine the priority of the written claims received by the trustee to the trustee’ s sale surplus proceeds from those persons to whom notice was sent pursuant to subdivision (a). In the event there is no dispute as to the priority of the written claims submitted to the trustee, proceeds shall be paid within 30 days after the conclusion of the notice period. If the trustee has failed to determine the priority of written claims within 90 days following the 30-day notice period, then within 10 days thereafter the trustee shall deposit the funds with the clerk of the court pursuant to subdivision (c) or file an interpleader action pursuant to subdivision (e). Nothing in this section shall preclude any person from pursuing other remedies or claims as to surplus proceeds.

    (c) If, after due diligence, the trustee is unable to determine the priority of the written claims received by the trustee to the trustee’s sale surplus of multiple persons or if the trustee determines there is a conflict between potential claimants, the trustee may file a declaration of the unresolved claims and deposit with the clerk of the superior court of the county in which the sale occurred, that portion of the sales proceeds that cannot be distributed, less any fees charged by the clerk pursuant to this subdivision. The declaration shall specify the date of the trustee’s sale, a description of the property, the names and addresses of all persons sent notice pursuant to subdivision (a), a statement that the trustee exercised due diligence pursuant to subdivision (b), that the trustee provided written notice as required by subdivisions (a) and (d) and the amount of the sales proceeds deposited by the trustee with the court. Further, the trustee shall submit a copy of the trustee’s sales guarantee and any information relevant to the identity, location, and priority of the potential claimants with the court and shall file proof of service of the notice required by subdivision (d) on all persons described in subdivision (a).

    The clerk shall deposit the amount with the county treasurer or, if a bank account has been established for moneys held in trust under paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 77009 of the Government Code, in that account, subject to order of the court upon the application of any interested party. The clerk may charge a reasonable fee for the performance of activities pursuant to this subdivision equal to the fee for filing an interpleader action pursuant to Chapter 5.8 (commencing with Section 70600) of Title 8 of the Government Code. Upon deposit of that portion of the sale proceeds that cannot be distributed by due diligence, the trustee shall be discharged of further responsibility for the disbursement of sale proceeds. A deposit with the clerk of the court pursuant to this subdivision may be either for the total proceeds of the trustee’ s sale, less any fees charged by the clerk, if a conflict or conflicts exist with respect to the total proceeds, or that portion that cannot be distributed after due diligence, less any fees charged by the clerk.

    (d) Before the trustee deposits the funds with the clerk of the court pursuant to subdivision (c), the trustee shall send written notice by first-class mail, postage prepaid, to all persons described in subdivision (a) informing them that the trustee intends to deposit the funds with the clerk of the court and that a claim for the funds must be filed with the court within 30 days from the date of the notice, providing the address of the court in which the funds were deposited, and a telephone number for obtaining further information.

    Within 90 days after deposit with the clerk, the court shall consider all claims filed at least 15 days before the date on which the hearing is scheduled by the court, the clerk shall serve written notice of the hearing by first-class mail on all claimants identified in the trustee’s declaration at the addresses specified therein. Where the amount of the deposit is twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) or less, a proceeding pursuant to this section is a limited civil case. The court shall distribute the deposited funds to any and all claimants entitled thereto.

    (e) Nothing in this section restricts the ability of a trustee to file an interpleader action in order to resolve a dispute about the proceeds of a trustee’s sale. Once an interpleader action has been filed, thereafter the provisions of this section do not apply.

    (f) “Due diligence,” for the purposes of this section means that the trustee researched the written claims submitted or other evidence of conflicts and determined that a conflict of priorities exists between two or more claimants which the trustee is unable to resolve.

    (g) To the extent required by the Unclaimed Property Law, a trustee in possession of surplus proceeds not required to be deposited with the court pursuant to subdivision (b) shall comply with the Unclaimed Property Law (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 1500) of Title 10 of Part 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure).

    (h) The trustee, beneficiary, or counsel to the trustee or beneficiary, is not liable for providing to any person who is entitled to notice pursuant to this section, information set forth in, or a copy of, subdivision (h) of Section 2945.3.

    2924k.
    (a) The trustee, or the clerk of the court upon order to the clerk pursuant to subdivision (d) of Section 2924j, shall distribute the proceeds, or a portion of the proceeds, as the case may be, of the trustee’s sale conducted pursuant to Section 2924h in the following order of priority:

    (1) To the costs and expenses of exercising the power of sale and of sale, including the payment of the trustee’s fees and attorney’s fees permitted pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 2924d and subdivision (b) of this section.

    (2) To the payment of the obligations secured by the deed of trust or mortgage which is the subject of the trustee’s sale.

    (3) To satisfy the outstanding balance of obligations secured by any junior liens or encumbrances in the order of their priority.

    (4) To the trustor or the trustor’s successor in interest. In the event the property is sold or transferred to another, to the vested owner of record at the time of the trustee’s sale.

    (b) A trustee may charge costs and expenses incurred for such items as mailing and a reasonable fee for services rendered in connection with the distribution of the proceeds from a trustee’s sale, including, but not limited to, the investigation of priority and validity of claims and the disbursement of funds. If the fee charged for services rendered pursuant to this subdivision does not exceed one hundred dollars ($100), or one hundred twenty-five dollars ($125) where there are obligations specified in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a), the fee is conclusively presumed to be reasonable.

    2924l.
    (a) In the event that a trustee under a deed of trust is named in an action or proceeding in which that deed of trust is the subject, and in the event that the trustee maintains a reasonable belief that it has been named in the action or proceeding solely in its capacity as trustee, and not arising out of any wrongful acts or omissions on its part in the performance of its duties as trustee, then, at any time, the trustee may file a declaration of nonmonetary status. The declaration shall be served on the parties in the manner set forth in Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 1010) of Title 14 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

    (b) The declaration of nonmonetary status shall set forth the status of the trustee as trustee under the deed of trust that is the subject of the action or proceeding, that the trustee knows or maintains a reasonable belief that it has been named as a defendant in the proceeding solely in its capacity as a trustee under the deed of trust, its reasonable belief that it has not been named as a defendant due to any acts or omissions on its part in the performance of its duties as trustee, the basis for that knowledge or reasonable belief, and that it agrees to be bound by whatever order or judgment is issued by the court regarding the subject deed of trust.

    (c) The parties who have appeared in the action or proceeding shall have 15 days from the service of the declaration by the trustee in which to object to the nonmonetary judgment status of the trustee. Any objection shall set forth the factual basis on which the objection is based and shall be served on the trustee.

    (d) In the event that no objection is served within the 15-day objection period, the trustee shall not be required to participate any further in the action or proceeding, shall not be subject to any monetary awards as and for damages, attorneys’ fees or costs, shall be required to respond to any discovery requests as a nonparty, and shall be bound by any court order relating to the subject deed of trust that is the subject of the action or proceeding.

    (e) In the event of a timely objection to the declaration of nonmonetary status, the trustee shall thereafter be required to participate in the action or proceeding.

    Additionally, in the event that the parties elect not to, or fail to, timely object to the declaration of nonmonetary status, but later through discovery, or otherwise, determine that the trustee should participate in the action because of the performance of its duties as a trustee, the parties may file and serve on all parties and the trustee a motion pursuant to Section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure that specifies the factual basis for the demand. Upon the court’s granting of the motion, the trustee shall thereafter be required to participate in the action or proceeding, and the court shall provide sufficient time prior to trial for the trustee to be able to respond to the complaint, to conduct discovery, and to bring other pretrial motions in accordance with the Code of Civil Procedure.

    (f) Upon the filing of the declaration of nonmonetary status, the time within which the trustee is required to file an answer or other responsive pleading shall be tolled for the period of time within which the opposing parties may respond to the declaration. Upon the timely service of an objection to the declaration on nonmonetary status, the trustee shall have 30 days from the date of service within which to file an answer or other responsive pleading to the complaint or cross-complaint.

    (g) For purposes of this section, “trustee” includes any agent or employee of the trustee who performs some or all of the duties of a trustee under this article, and includes substituted trustees and agents of the beneficiary or trustee.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: Foreclosure

    Categories : 2924


    MERS and civil code 2932.5 and Bankruptcy code 547 here is how it comes together

    26 05 2010

    CA Civil Code 2932.5 – Assignment”Where a power to sell real property is
    given to a mortgagee, or other encumbrancer, in an instrument intended
    to secure the payment of money, the power is part of the security and
    vests in any person who by assignment becomes entitled to payment of the
    money secured by the instrument. The power of sale may be exercised by
    the assignee if the assignment is duly acknowledged and recorded.”

    Landmark vs Kesler – While this is a matter of first impression in
    Kansas, other jurisdictions have issued opinions on similar and related
    issues, and, while we do not consider those opinions binding in the
    current litigation, we find them to be useful guideposts in our analysis
    of the issues before us.”

    “Black’s Law Dictionary defines a nominee as “[a] person designated to
    act in place of another, usu. in a very limited way” and as “[a] party
    who holds bare legal title for the benefit of others or who receives and
    distributes funds for the benefit of others.” Black’s Law Dictionary
    1076 (8th ed. 2004). This definition suggests that a nominee possesses
    few or no legally enforceable rights beyond those of a principal whom
    the nominee serves……..The legal status of a nominee, then, depends
    on the context of the relationship of the nominee to its principal.
    Various courts have interpreted the relationship of MERS and the lender
    as an agency relationship.”

    “LaSalle Bank Nat. Ass’n v. Lamy, 2006 WL 2251721, at *2 (N.Y. Sup.
    2006) (unpublished opinion) (“A nominee of the owner of a note and
    mortgage may not effectively assign the note and mortgage to another for
    want of an ownership interest in said note and mortgage by the
    nominee.”)”

    The law generally understands that a mortgagee is not distinct from a
    lender: a mortgagee is “[o]ne to whom property is mortgaged: the
    mortgage creditor, or lender.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1034 (8th ed.
    2004). By statute, assignment of the mortgage carries with it the
    assignment of the debt. K.S.A. 58-2323. Although MERS asserts that,
    under some situations, the mortgage document purports to give it the
    same rights as the lender, the document consistently refers only to
    rights of the lender, including rights to receive notice of litigation,
    to collect payments, and to enforce the debt obligation. The document
    consistently limits MERS to acting “solely” as the nominee of the
    lender.

    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. [Citation omitted.] Without the agency relationship, the person
    holding only the note lacks the power to foreclose in the event of
    default. The person holding only the deed of trust will never experience
    default because only the holder of the note is entitled to payment of
    the underlying obligation. [Citation omitted.] The mortgage loan becomes
    ineffectual when the note holder did not also hold the deed of trust.”
    Bellistri v. Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, 284 S.W.3d 619, 623 (Mo. App.
    2009).

    “MERS never held the promissory note,thus its assignment of the deed of
    trust to Ocwen separate from the note had no force.” 284 S.W.3d at 624;
    see also In re Wilhelm, 407 B.R. 392 (Bankr. D. Idaho 2009) (standard
    mortgage note language does not expressly or implicitly authorize MERS
    to transfer the note); In re Vargas, 396 B.R. 511, 517 (Bankr. C.D. Cal.
    2008) (“[I]f FHM has transferred the note, MERS is no longer an
    authorized agent of the holder unless it has a separate agency contract
    with the new undisclosed principal. MERS presents no evidence as to who
    owns the note, or of any authorization to act on behalf of the present
    owner.”); Saxon Mortgage Services, Inc. v. Hillery, 2008 WL 5170180
    (N.D. Cal. 2008) (unpublished opinion) (“[F]or there to be a valid
    assignment, there must be more than just assignment of the deed alone;
    the note must also be assigned. . . . MERS purportedly assigned both the
    deed of trust and the promissory note. . . . However, there is no
    evidence of record that establishes that MERS either held the promissory
    note or was given the authority . . . to assign the note.”).

    What stake in the outcome of an independent action for foreclosure could
    MERS have? It did not lend the money to Kesler or to anyone else
    involved in this case. Neither Kesler nor anyone else involved in the
    case was required by statute or contract to pay money to MERS on the
    mortgage. See Sheridan, ___ B.R. at ___ (“MERS is not an economic
    ‘beneficiary’ under the Deed of Trust. It is owed and will collect no
    money from Debtors under the Note, nor will it realize the value of the
    Property through foreclosure of the Deed of Trust in the event the Note
    is not paid.”). If MERS is only the mortgagee, without ownership of the
    mortgage instrument, it does not have an enforceable right. See Vargas,
    396 B.R. 517 (“[w]hile the note is ‘essential,’ the mortgage is only ‘an
    incident’ to the note” [quoting Carpenter v. Longan, 16 Wall. 271, 83
    U.S. 271, 275, 21 L. Ed 313 (1872)]).

    * MERS had no Beneficial Interest in the Note,
    * MERS and the limited agency authority it has under the dot does
    not continue with the assignment of the mortgage or dot absent a
    ratification or a separate agency agreement between mers and the
    assignee.
    * The Note and the Deed of Trust were separated at or shortly
    after origination upon endorsement and negotiation of the note rendering
    the dot a nullity
    * MERS never has any power or legal authority to transfer the note
    to any entity;
    * mers never has a beneficial interest in the note and pays
    nothing of value for the note.

    Bankr. Code 547 provides, among other things, that an unsecured
    creditor who had won a race to an interest in the debtor’s property
    using the state remedies system within 90 days of the filing of the
    bankruptcy petition may have to forfeit its winnings (without
    compensation for any expenses it may have incurred in winning the race)
    for the benefit of all unsecured creditors. The section therefore
    prevents certain creditors from being preferred over others (hence,
    section 547 of the Bankruptcy Code is titled “Preferences).” An
    additional effect of the section (and one of its stated purposes) may be
    to discourage some unsecured creditors from aggressively pursuing the
    debtor under the state remedies system, thus affording the debtor more
    breathing space outside bankruptcy, for fear that money spent using the
    state remedies system will be wasted if the debtor files a bankruptcy
    petition.

    . Bankr. Code 547(c) provides several important exceptions to the
    preference avoidance power.

    Bankr. Code 547 permits avoidance of liens obtained within the 90 day
    (or one year) period: the creation of a lien on property of the debtor,
    whether voluntary, such as through a consensual lien, or involuntary,
    such as through a judicial lien, would, absent avoidance, have the same
    preferential impact as a transfer of money from a debtor to a creditor
    in payment of a debt. If the security interest was created in the
    creditor within the 90 day window, and if other requirements of section
    547(b) are satisfied, the security interest can be avoided and the real
    property sold by the trustee free of the security interest (subject to
    homestead exemption). All unsecured creditors of the debtor, including
    the creditor whose lien has been avoided, will share, pro rata, in the
    distribution of assets of the debtor, including the proceeds of the sale
    of the real estate


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2932.5, bankruptcy, Foreclosure, lis pendence

    Categories : 2924, Foreclosure, bankruptcy, stop foreclosure





    90% Forclosures Wrongful

    1 01 2010

    A wrongful foreclosure action typically occurs when the lender starts a non judicial foreclosure action when it simply has no legal cause. This is even more evident now since California passed the Foreclosure prevention act of 2008 SB 1194 codified in Civil code 2923.5 and 2923.6. In 2009 it is this attorneys opinion that 90% of all foreclosures are wrongful in that the lender does not comply (just look at the declaration page on the notice of default). The lenders most notably Indymac, Countrywide, and Wells Fargo have taken a calculated risk. To comply would cost hundreds of millions in staff, paperwork, and workouts that they don’t deem to be in their best interest. The workout is not in there best interest because our tax dollars are guaranteeing the Banks that are To Big to Fail’s debt. If they don’t foreclose and if they work it out the loss is on them. There is no incentive to modify loan for the benefit of the consumer.

    Sooooo they proceed to foreclosure without the mandated contacts with the borrower. Oh and yes contact is made by a computer or some outsourcing contact agent based in India. But compliance with 2923.5 is not done. The Borrower is never told that he or she have the right to a meeting within 14 days of the contact. They do not get offers to avoid foreclosure there are typically two offers short sale or a probationary mod that will be declined upon the 90th day.

    Wrongful foreclosure actions are also brought when the service providers accept partial payments after initiation of the wrongful foreclosure process, and then continue on with the foreclosure process. These predatory lending strategies, as well as other forms of misleading homeowners, are illegal.

    The borrower is the one that files a wrongful disclosure action with the court against the service provider, the holder of the note and if it is a non-judicial foreclosure, against the trustee complaining that there was an illegal, fraudulent or willfully oppressive sale of property under a power of sale contained in a mortgage or deed or court judicial proceeding. The borrower can also allege emotional distress and ask for punitive damages in a wrongful foreclosure action.

    Causes of Action

    Wrongful foreclosure actions may allege that the amount stated in the notice of default as due and owing is incorrect because of the following reasons:

    * Incorrect interest rate adjustment
    * Incorrect tax impound accounts
    * Misapplied payments
    * Forbearance agreement which was not adhered to by the servicer
    * Unnecessary forced place insurance,
    * Improper accounting for a confirmed chapter 11 or chapter 13 bankruptcy plan.
    * Breach of contract
    * Intentional infliction of emotional distress
    * Negligent infliction of emotional distress
    * Unfair Business Practices
    * Quiet title
    * Wrongful foreclosure
    * Tortuous violation of 2924 2923.5 and 2923.5 and 2932.5
    Injunction

    Any time prior to the foreclosure sale, a borrower can apply for an injunction with the intent of stopping the foreclosure sale until issues in the lawsuit are resolved. The wrongful foreclosure lawsuit can take anywhere from ten to twenty-four months. Generally, an injunction will only be issued by the court if the court determines that: (1) the borrower is entitled to the injunction; and (2) that if the injunction is not granted, the borrower will be subject to irreparable harm.

    Damages Available to Borrower

    Damages available to a borrower in a wrongful foreclosure action include: compensation for the detriment caused, which are measured by the value of the property, emotional distress and punitive damages if there is evidence that the servicer or trustee committed fraud, oppression or malice in its wrongful conduct. If the borrower’s allegations are true and correct and the borrower wins the lawsuit, the servicer will have to undue or cancel the foreclosure sale, and pay the borrower’s legal bills.

    Why Do Wrongful Foreclosures Occur?

    Wrongful foreclosure cases occur usually because of a miscommunication between the lender and the borrower. Most borrower don’t know who the real lender is. Servicing has changed on average three times. And with the advent of MERS Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems the “investor lender” hundreds of times since the origination. And now they then have to contact the borrower. The don’t even know who the lender truly is. The laws that are now in place never contemplated the virtualization of the lending market. The present laws are inadequate to the challenge.

    This is even more evident now since California passed the Foreclosure prevention act of 2008 SB 1194 codified in Civil code 2923.5 and 2923.6. In 2009 it is this attorneys opinion that 90% of all foreclosures are wrongful in that the lender does not comply (just look at the declaration page on the notice of default). The lenders most notably Indymac, Countrywide, and Wells Fargo have taken a calculated risk. To comply would cost hundreds of millions in staff, paperwork, and workouts that they don’t deem to be in their best interest. The workout is not in there best interest because our tax dollars are guaranteeing the Banks that are To Big to Fail’s debt. If they don’t foreclose and if they work it out the loss is on them. There is no incentive to modify loan for the benefit of the consumer.This could be as a result of an incorrectly applied payment, an error in interest charges and completely inaccurate information communicated between the lender and borrower. Some borrowers make the situation worse by ignoring their monthly statements and not promptly responding in writing to the lender’s communications. Many borrowers just assume that the lender will correct any inaccuracies or errors. Any one of these actions can quickly turn into a foreclosure action. Once an action is instituted, then the borrower will have to prove that it is wrongful or unwarranted. This is done by the borrower filing a wrongful foreclosure action. Costs are expensive and the action can take time to litigate.
    Impact

    The wrongful foreclosure will appear on the borrower’s credit report as a foreclosure, thereby ruining the borrower’s credit rating. Inaccurate delinquencies may also accompany the foreclosure on the credit report. After the foreclosure is found to be wrongful, the borrower must then petition to get the delinquencies and foreclosure off the credit report. This can take a long time and is emotionally distressing.

    Wrongful foreclosure may also lead to the borrower losing their home and other assets if the borrower does not act quickly. This can have a devastating affect on a family that has been displaced out of their home. However, once the borrower’s wrongful foreclosure action is successful in court, the borrower may be entitled to compensation for their attorney fees, court costs, pain, suffering and emotional distress caused by the action.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, civil code 2924, Countrywide, Foreclosure, Fraud, stop foreclosure

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, Foreclosure, Lender Class action



    Don’t get HAMP ED out of your home!

    5 09 2009

    By Walter Hackett, Esq.
    The federal government has trumpeted its Home Affordable Modification Program or “HAMP” solution as THE solution to runaway foreclosures – few things could be further from the truth. Under HAMP a homeowner will be offered a “workout” that can result in the homeowner being “worked out” of his or her home. Here’s how it works. A participating lender or servicer will send a distressed homeowner a HAMP workout agreement. The agreement consists of an “offer” pursuant to which the homeowner is permitted to remit partial or half of their regular monthly payments for 3 or more months. The required payments are NOT reduced, instead the partial payments are placed into a suspense account. In many cases once enough is gathered to pay the oldest payment due the funds are removed from the suspense account and applied to the mortgage loan. At the end of the trial period the homeowner will be further behind than when they started the “workout” plan.
    In California, the agreements clearly specify the acceptance of partial payments by the lender or servicer does NOT cure any default. Further, the fact a homeowner is in the workout program does NOT require the lender or servicer to suspend or postpone any non-judicial foreclosure activity with the possible exception of an actual trustee’s sale. A homeowner could complete the workout plan and be faced with an imminent trustee’s sale. Worse, if a homeowner performs EXACTLY as required by the workout agreement, they are NOT assured a loan modification. Instead the agreement will include vague statements that the homeowner MAY receive an offer to modify his or her loan however there is NO duty on the part of the servicer or lender to modify a loan regardless of the homeowner’s compliance with the agreement.

    A homeowner who fully performs under a HAMP workout is all but guaranteed to have given away thousands of dollars with NO assurance of keeping his or her home or ever seeing anything resembling an offer to modify a mortgage loan.
    While it may well be the case the government was making an honest effort to help, the reality is the HAMP program is only guaranteed to help those who need help least – lenders and servicers. If you receive ANY written offer to modify your loan meet with a REAL licensed attorney and ask them to review the agreement to determine what you are REALLY agreeing to, the home you save might be your own.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: Audit, bailout, bankruptcy, borrower, brad keiser, credit, credit crisis, depression, FDG, Federal Bailout, foreclosure defense, Foreclosure Defense Group, foreclosure offense, foreclosures, Fraud, HAMP, lawyers, Lender Liability, Loan Mod, LOAN MODIFICATION, lost note, Mortgage, quiet title, rescission, respa, RICO, TILA audit

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, stop foreclosure, tila, truth in lending


    A ‘Little Judge’ Who Rejects Foreclosures, Brooklyn Style

    2 09 2009

    By Michael Powell – NY Times – 8/30/09

    The judge waves you into his chambers in the State Supreme Court building in Brooklyn, past the caveat taped to his wall — “Be sure brain in gear before engaging mouth” — and into his inner office, where foreclosure motions are piled high enough to form a minor Alpine chain.

    “I don’t want to put a family on the street unless it’s legitimate,” Justice Arthur M. Schack said.

    Every week, the nation’s mightiest banks come to his court seeking to take the homes of New Yorkers who cannot pay their mortgages. And nearly as often, the judge says, they file foreclosure papers speckled with errors.

    He plucks out one motion and leafs through: a Deutsche Bank representative signed an affidavit claiming to be the vice president of two different banks. His office was in Kansas City, Mo., but the signature was notarized in Texas. And the bank did not even own the mortgage when it began to foreclose on the homeowner.

    The judge’s lips pucker as if he had inhaled a pickle; he rejected this one. “I’m a little guy in Brooklyn who doesn’t belong to their country clubs, what can I tell you?” he says, adding a shrug for punctuation. “I won’t accept their comedy of errors.”

    The judge, Arthur M. Schack, 64, fashions himself a judicial Don Quixote, tilting at the phalanxes of bankers, foreclosure facilitators and lawyers who file motions by the bale. While national debate focuses on bank bailouts and federal aid for homeowners that has been slow in coming, the hard reckonings of the foreclosure crisis are being made in courts like his, and Justice Schack’s sympathies are clear. He has tossed out 46 of the 102 foreclosure motions that have come before him in the last two years. And his often scathing decisions, peppered with allusions to the Croesus-like wealth of bank presidents, have attracted the respectful attention of judges and lawyers from Florida to Ohio to California. At recent judicial conferences in Chicago and Arizona, several panelists praised his rulings as a possible national model.

    His opinions, too, have been greeted by a cry of affront from a bank official or two, who say this judge stands in the way of what is rightfully theirs. HSBC bank appealed a recent ruling, saying he had set a “dangerous precedent” by acting as “both judge and jury,” throwing out cases even when homeowners had not responded to foreclosure motions. Justice Schack, like a handful of state and federal judges, has taken a magnifying glass to the mortgage industry. In the gilded haste of the past decade, bankers handed out millions of mortgages — with terms good, bad and exotically ugly — then repackaged those loans for sale to investors from Connecticut to Singapore. Sloppiness reigned. So many papers have been lost, signatures misplaced and documents dated inaccurately that it is often not clear which bank owns the mortgage.

    Justice Schack’s take is straightforward, and sends a tremor through some bank suites: If a bank cannot prove ownership, it cannot foreclose. “If you are going to take away someone’s house, everything should be legal and correct,” he said. “I’m a strange guy — I don’t want to put a family on the street unless it’s legitimate.”

    Justice Schack has small jowls and big black glasses, a thin mustache and not so many hairs combed across his scalp. He has the impish eyes of the high school social studies teacher he once was, aware that something untoward is probably going on at the back of his classroom. He is Brooklyn born and bred, with a master’s degree in history and an office loaded with autographed baseballs and photographs of the Brooklyn Dodgers. His written decisions are a free-associative trip through popular, legal and literary culture, with a sideways glance at the business pages.

    Confronted with a case in which Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs passed a defaulted mortgage back and forth and lost track of the documents, the judge made reference to the film classic “It’s a Wonderful Life” and the evil banker played by Lionel Barrymore. “Lenders should not lose sight,” Justice Schack wrote in that 2007 case, “that they are dealing with humanity, not with Mr. Potter’s ‘rabble’ and ‘cattle.’ Multibillion-dollar corporations must follow the same rules in the foreclosure actions as the local banks, savings and loan associations or credit unions, or else they have become the Mr. Potters of the 21st century.”

    Last year, he chastised Wells Fargo for filing error-filled papers. “The court,” the judge wrote, “reminds Wells Fargo of Cassius’s advice to Brutus in Act 1, Scene 2 of William Shakespeare’s ‘Julius Caesar’: ‘The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves.’ ”

    Then there is a Deutsche Bank case from 2008, the juicy part of which he reads aloud:

    “The court wonders if the instant foreclosure action is a corporate ‘Kansas City Shuffle,’ a complex confidence game,” he reads. “In the 2006 film ‘Lucky Number Slevin,’ Mr. Goodkat, a hit man played by Bruce Willis, explains: ‘A Kansas City Shuffle is when everybody looks right, you go left.’ “The banks’ reaction? Justice Schack shrugs. “They probably curse at me,” he says, “but no one is interested in some little judge.”

    Little drama attends the release of his decisions. Beaten-down homeowners rarely show up to contest foreclosure actions, and the judge scrutinizes the banks’ papers in his chambers. But at legal conferences, judges and lawyers have wondered aloud why more judges do not hold banks to tougher standards.

    “To the extent that judges examine these papers, they find exactly the same errors that Judge Schack does,” said Katherine M. Porter, a visiting professor at the School of Law at the University of California, Berkeley, and a national expert in consumer credit law. “His rulings are hardly revolutionary; it’s unusual only because we so rarely hold large corporations to the rules.”

    Banks and the cottage industry of mortgage service companies and foreclosure lawyers also pay rather close attention. A spokeswoman for OneWest Bank acknowledged that an official, confronted with a ream of foreclosure papers, had mistakenly signed for two different banks — just as the Deutsche Bank official did. Deutsche Bank, which declined to let an attorney speak on the record about any of its cases before Justice Schack, e-mailed a PDF of a three-page pamphlet in which it claimed little responsibility for foreclosures, even though the bank’s name is affixed to tens of thousands of such motions. The bank described itself as simply a trustee for investors.

    Justice Schack came to his recent prominence by a circuitous path, having worked for 14 years as public school teacher in Brooklyn. He was a union representative and once walked a picket line with his wife, Dilia, who was a teacher, too. All was well until the fiscal crisis of the 1970s.

    “Why’d I go to law school?” he said. “Thank Mayor Abe Beame, who froze teacher salaries.”

    He was counsel for the Major League Baseball Players Association in the 1980s and ’90s, when it was on a long winning streak against team owners. “It was the millionaires versus the billionaires,” he says. “After a while, I’m sitting there thinking, ‘He’s making $4 million, he’s making $5 million, and I’m worth about $1.98.’ ”

    So he dived into a judicial race. He was elected to the Civil Court in 1998 and to the Supreme Court for Brooklyn and Staten Island in 2003. His wife is a Democratic district leader; their daughter, Elaine, is a lawyer and their son, Douglas, a police officer.Justice Schack’s duels with the banks started in 2007 as foreclosures spiked sharply. He saw a plague falling on Brooklyn, particularly its working-class black precincts. “Banks had given out loans structured to fail,” he said.

    The judge burrowed into property record databases. He found banks without clear title, and a giant foreclosure law firm, Steven J. Baum, representing two sides in a dispute. He noted that Wells Fargo’s chief executive, John G. Stumpf, made more than $11 million in 2007 while the company’s total returns fell 12 percent. “Maybe,” he advised the bank, “counsel should wonder, like the court, if Mr. Stumpf was unjustly enriched at the expense of W.F.’s stockholders.”

    He was, how to say it, mildly appalled. “I’m a guy from the streets of Brooklyn who happens to become a judge,” he said. “I see a bank giving a $500,000 mortgage on a building worth $300,000 and the interest rate is 20 percent and I ask questions, what can I tell you?”


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: Audit, bailout, bankruptcy, borrower, brad keiser, credit, credit crisis, depression, FDG, Federal Bailout, foreclosure defense, Foreclosure Defense Group, foreclosure offense, foreclosures, Fraud, HAMP, lawyers, Lender Liability, Loan Mod, LOAN MODIFICATION, lost note, Mortgage, quiet title, rescission, respa, RICO, TILA audit

    Categories : 2924, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, bankruptcy, eviction


    Countrywide complaint

    27 06 2009

    countrywide_fin_class_action_defense_mdl


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stay of eviction2923.5, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, pedatory lending, respa, stop foreclosure


    Homecomings TILA complaint GMAC

    27 06 2009

    homecomingstila


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, stop foreclosure, usury


    Leman Tila complaint

    27 06 2009

    Lemantilacomp


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, bankruptcy, eviction, stop foreclosure, truth in lending


    Lender class action

    27 06 2009

    Mortgageinvestorgroupclass


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Option One Complaint Pick a payment lawsuit

    27 06 2009

    optionone


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 2 Comments »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, civil code 2923.5, truth in lending, Mortgage modification, eviction, california, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, bankruptcy, Chapter 13, 2924, 2923.5, 2932.5, Recoupment, Fraud, Predatory Lending, FCRA, 2923.6, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Uncategorized, California cram down, Audit, Countrywide, United First, usury, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Coalition sues lenders

    9 05 2009

    Coalition Sues lenders


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Loan Audit, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, pedatory lending

     




    90% Forclosures Wrongful

    1 01 2010

    A wrongful foreclosure action typically occurs when the lender starts a non judicial foreclosure action when it simply has no legal cause. This is even more evident now since California passed the Foreclosure prevention act of 2008 SB 1194 codified in Civil code 2923.5 and 2923.6. In 2009 it is this attorneys opinion that 90% of all foreclosures are wrongful in that the lender does not comply (just look at the declaration page on the notice of default). The lenders most notably Indymac, Countrywide, and Wells Fargo have taken a calculated risk. To comply would cost hundreds of millions in staff, paperwork, and workouts that they don’t deem to be in their best interest. The workout is not in there best interest because our tax dollars are guaranteeing the Banks that are To Big to Fail’s debt. If they don’t foreclose and if they work it out the loss is on them. There is no incentive to modify loan for the benefit of the consumer.

    Sooooo they proceed to foreclosure without the mandated contacts with the borrower. Oh and yes contact is made by a computer or some outsourcing contact agent based in India. But compliance with 2923.5 is not done. The Borrower is never told that he or she have the right to a meeting within 14 days of the contact. They do not get offers to avoid foreclosure there are typically two offers short sale or a probationary mod that will be declined upon the 90th day.

    Wrongful foreclosure actions are also brought when the service providers accept partial payments after initiation of the wrongful foreclosure process, and then continue on with the foreclosure process. These predatory lending strategies, as well as other forms of misleading homeowners, are illegal.

    The borrower is the one that files a wrongful disclosure action with the court against the service provider, the holder of the note and if it is a non-judicial foreclosure, against the trustee complaining that there was an illegal, fraudulent or willfully oppressive sale of property under a power of sale contained in a mortgage or deed or court judicial proceeding. The borrower can also allege emotional distress and ask for punitive damages in a wrongful foreclosure action.

    Causes of Action

    Wrongful foreclosure actions may allege that the amount stated in the notice of default as due and owing is incorrect because of the following reasons:

    * Incorrect interest rate adjustment
    * Incorrect tax impound accounts
    * Misapplied payments
    * Forbearance agreement which was not adhered to by the servicer
    * Unnecessary forced place insurance,
    * Improper accounting for a confirmed chapter 11 or chapter 13 bankruptcy plan.
    * Breach of contract
    * Intentional infliction of emotional distress
    * Negligent infliction of emotional distress
    * Unfair Business Practices
    * Quiet title
    * Wrongful foreclosure
    * Tortuous violation of 2924 2923.5 and 2923.5 and 2932.5
    Injunction

    Any time prior to the foreclosure sale, a borrower can apply for an injunction with the intent of stopping the foreclosure sale until issues in the lawsuit are resolved. The wrongful foreclosure lawsuit can take anywhere from ten to twenty-four months. Generally, an injunction will only be issued by the court if the court determines that: (1) the borrower is entitled to the injunction; and (2) that if the injunction is not granted, the borrower will be subject to irreparable harm.

    Damages Available to Borrower

    Damages available to a borrower in a wrongful foreclosure action include: compensation for the detriment caused, which are measured by the value of the property, emotional distress and punitive damages if there is evidence that the servicer or trustee committed fraud, oppression or malice in its wrongful conduct. If the borrower’s allegations are true and correct and the borrower wins the lawsuit, the servicer will have to undue or cancel the foreclosure sale, and pay the borrower’s legal bills.

    Why Do Wrongful Foreclosures Occur?

    Wrongful foreclosure cases occur usually because of a miscommunication between the lender and the borrower. Most borrower don’t know who the real lender is. Servicing has changed on average three times. And with the advent of MERS Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems the “investor lender” hundreds of times since the origination. And now they then have to contact the borrower. The don’t even know who the lender truly is. The laws that are now in place never contemplated the virtualization of the lending market. The present laws are inadequate to the challenge.

    This is even more evident now since California passed the Foreclosure prevention act of 2008 SB 1194 codified in Civil code 2923.5 and 2923.6. In 2009 it is this attorneys opinion that 90% of all foreclosures are wrongful in that the lender does not comply (just look at the declaration page on the notice of default). The lenders most notably Indymac, Countrywide, and Wells Fargo have taken a calculated risk. To comply would cost hundreds of millions in staff, paperwork, and workouts that they don’t deem to be in their best interest. The workout is not in there best interest because our tax dollars are guaranteeing the Banks that are To Big to Fail’s debt. If they don’t foreclose and if they work it out the loss is on them. There is no incentive to modify loan for the benefit of the consumer.This could be as a result of an incorrectly applied payment, an error in interest charges and completely inaccurate information communicated between the lender and borrower. Some borrowers make the situation worse by ignoring their monthly statements and not promptly responding in writing to the lender’s communications. Many borrowers just assume that the lender will correct any inaccuracies or errors. Any one of these actions can quickly turn into a foreclosure action. Once an action is instituted, then the borrower will have to prove that it is wrongful or unwarranted. This is done by the borrower filing a wrongful foreclosure action. Costs are expensive and the action can take time to litigate.
    Impact

    The wrongful foreclosure will appear on the borrower’s credit report as a foreclosure, thereby ruining the borrower’s credit rating. Inaccurate delinquencies may also accompany the foreclosure on the credit report. After the foreclosure is found to be wrongful, the borrower must then petition to get the delinquencies and foreclosure off the credit report. This can take a long time and is emotionally distressing.

    Wrongful foreclosure may also lead to the borrower losing their home and other assets if the borrower does not act quickly. This can have a devastating affect on a family that has been displaced out of their home. However, once the borrower’s wrongful foreclosure action is successful in court, the borrower may be entitled to compensation for their attorney fees, court costs, pain, suffering and emotional distress caused by the action.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, civil code 2924, Countrywide, Foreclosure, Fraud, stop foreclosure

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, Foreclosure, Lender Class action



    Countrywide complaint

    27 06 2009

    countrywide_fin_class_action_defense_mdl


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stay of eviction2923.5, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, pedatory lending, respa, stop foreclosure


    Homecomings TILA complaint GMAC

    27 06 2009

    homecomingstila


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, stop foreclosure, usury


    Leman Tila complaint

    27 06 2009

    Lemantilacomp


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, bankruptcy, eviction, stop foreclosure, truth in lending


    Lender class action

    27 06 2009

    Mortgageinvestorgroupclass


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Option One Complaint Pick a payment lawsuit

    27 06 2009

    optionone


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 2 Comments »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Win the eviction by Summary judgement

    27 06 2009

    When title to the property is still in dispute ie. the foreclosure was bad. They (the lender)did not comply with California civil code 2923.5 or 2923.6 or 2924. Or the didn’t possess the documents to foreclose ie. the original note. Or they did not possess a proper assignment 2932.5. at trial you will be ignored by the learned judge but if you file a Motion for Summary Judgmentevans sum ud
    template notice of Motion for SJ
    TEMPLATE Points and A for SJ Motion
    templateDeclaration for SJ
    TEMPLATEProposed Order on Motion for SJ
    TEMPLATEStatement of Undisputed Facts
    you can force the issue and if there is a case filed in the Unlimited jurisdiction Court the judge may be forced to consider title and or consolidate the case with the Unlimited Jurisdiction Case2nd amended complaint (e) manuel
    BAKER original complaint (b)
    Countrywide Complaint Form
    FRAUDULENT OMISSIONS FORM FINAL
    sample-bank-final-complaint1-2.docx


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, civil code 2923.5, eviction, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, eviction, stop foreclosure, truth in lending


    What is worse bankruptcy or foreclosure?

    25 06 2009

    So what is worse, bankruptcy or foreclosure? Which will have the biggest impact on my credit score? Both bankruptcy and foreclosure will have serious negative affects on your personal credit report and your credit score as well. With re-established credit after a bankruptcy and/or foreclosure you can possibly qualify for a good mortgage once again in as little as 24 months. Therefore, it is very difficult to say one is worse than the other, but the bottom line is that they are both very bad for you and should be avoided if all possible.

    Foreclosure is worse then bankruptcy because you are actually losing something of value, your home. Once you are in foreclosure you will lose any and all equity in your home. If there is no equity in the home you will be responsible for the remaining balance after the property auction. With chapter 7 bankruptcy all of your unsecured debts are erased and you start over and in most cases you will not lose anything other then your credit rating.

    Many times qualifying for a mortgage after a foreclosure is more difficult than applying for a home after a bankruptcy. With that said, that could possibly lead you to believe that foreclosure is worse than bankruptcy. Most people who have a home foreclosed upon end up filing bankruptcy as well.

    Bankruptcy and Foreclosure filings are public records, however no one would know about your proceedings under normal circumstances. The Credit Bureaus will record your bankruptcy and a foreclosure. Bankruptcies will remain on your credit record for 10 years while foreclosures can stay on your report for up to 7 years.

    In some cases, one can refinance out of a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy with a 12 month trustee payment history and a timely mortgage history. It is much more difficult to obtain financing with a foreclosure on your record.

    Foreclosure is worse because of the loss of value. You will not receive any compensation for the equity in your home if it proceeds to foreclosure.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, eviction, stop foreclosure


    Standing argument

    7 06 2009

    judge-youngs-decision-on-nosek

    Ameriquest’s final argument, that the sanctions are a
    criminal penalty, is bereft of authority. Ameriquest cites F.J.
    Hanshaw Enterprises, Inc. v. Emerald River Development, Inc., 244
    F.3d 1128 (9th Cir. 2001), a case about inherent powers – not
    Rule 11 –

    This is an excerpt from the decision just this bloggers note the Hanshaw Case was my case. I argued this case at the 9th circuit court of appeals

    http://openjurist.org/244/f3d/1128/fj-v-emeraldfj-v-emerald

    If you will grasp the implications of this judge-youngs-decision-on-nosekdecision all or most all the evictions and  foreclosures are being litigated by the wrong parties that is to say parties who have no real stake in the outcome. they are merely servicers not the real investors. They do not have the right to foreclose or evict. No assignment No note No security interest No standing They do not want to be listed anywhere. They (the lenders) have caused the greatest damage to the American Citizen since the great depression and they do not want to be exposed or named in countless lawsuits. Time and time again I get from the judges in demurer hearings ” I see what you are saying counsel but your claim does not appear to be against this defendant” the unnamed investment pool of the Lehman Brothers shared High yield equity Fund trustee does not exist and so far can’t be sued.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5, truth in lending, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, respa, stop foreclosure


    Using the countrywide complaint in your own case

    9 05 2009

    Using the countrywide complaint in your own casecounrtrywidelanderscomplaintand countrywidelanders and word versionsCountrywide attorney general Complaint Form and templetsCountrywide Complaint Form


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2932.5, civil code 2923.5, Foreclosure, Predatory Lending, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan


    Coalition sues lenders

    9 05 2009

    Coalition Sues lenders


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Loan Audit, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, pedatory lending


    They are to give options to foreclosure 2923.5

    9 05 2009

    (a) (1) A mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized

    agent may not file a notice of default pursuant to Section 2924 until

    30 days after contact is made as required by paragraph (2) or 30

    days after satisfying the due diligence requirements as described in

    subdivision (g).

    (2) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall contact

    the borrower in person (and this does not mean agent for the foreclosure company) or by telephone in order to assess the

    borrower’s financial situation and explore options for the borrower

    to avoid foreclosure. During the initial contact, the mortgagee,

    beneficiary, or authorized agent shall advise the borrower that he or

    she has the right to request a subsequent meeting and, if requested,

    the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall schedule the

    meeting to occur within 14 days. The assessment of the borrower’s

    financial situation and discussion of options may occur during the

    first contact, or at the subsequent meeting scheduled for that

    purpose. In either case, the borrower shall be provided the toll-free

    telephone number made available by the United States Department of

    Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to find a HUD-certified housing

    counseling agency. Any meeting may occur telephonically.

    (b) A notice of default filed pursuant to Section 2924 shall

    include a declaration from the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized

    agent that it has contacted the borrower, tried with due diligence to

    contact the borrower as required by this section, or the borrower

    has surrendered the property to the mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary,

    or authorized agent.

    (c) If a mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized agent had

    already filed the notice of default prior to the enactment of this

    section and did not subsequently file a notice of rescission, then

    the mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall, as

    part of the notice of sale filed pursuant to Section 2924f, include a

    declaration that either:


    (1) States that the borrower was contacted to assess the borrower’

    s financial situation and to explore options for the borrower to

    avoid foreclosure.

    (2) Lists the efforts made, if any, to contact the borrower in the

    event no contact was made.

    (d) A mortgagee’s, beneficiary’s, or authorized agent’s loss

    mitigation personnel may participate by telephone during any contact

    required by this section.

    (e) For purposes of this section, a “borrower” shall include a

    mortgagor or trustor.

    (f) A borrower may designate a HUD-certified housing counseling

    agency, attorney, or other advisor to discuss with the mortgagee,

    beneficiary, or authorized agent, on the borrower’s behalf, options

    for the borrower to avoid foreclosure. That contact made at the

    direction of the borrower shall satisfy the contact requirements of

    paragraph (2) of subdivision (a). Any loan modification or workout

    plan offered at the meeting by the mortgagee, beneficiary, or

    authorized agent is subject to approval by the borrower.

    (g) A notice of default may be filed pursuant to Section 2924 when

    a mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent has not contacted a

    borrower as required by paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) provided

    that the failure to contact the borrower occurred despite the due

    diligence of the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent. For

    purposes of this section, “due diligence” shall require and mean all

    of the following:

    (1) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall first

    attempt to contact a borrower by sending a first-class letter that

    includes the toll-free telephone number made available by HUD to find

    a HUD-certified housing counseling agency.

    (2) (A) After the letter has been sent, the mortgagee,

    beneficiary, or authorized agent shall attempt to contact the

    borrower by telephone at least three times at different hours and on

    different days. Telephone calls shall be made to the primary

    telephone number on file.

    (B) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent may attempt to

    contact a borrower using an automated system to dial borrowers,

    provided that, if the telephone call is answered, the call is

    connected to a live representative of the mortgagee, beneficiary, or

    authorized agent.

    (C) A mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent satisfies the

    telephone contact requirements of this paragraph if it determines,

    after attempting contact pursuant to this paragraph, that the

    borrower’s primary telephone number and secondary telephone number or

    numbers on file, if any, have been disconnected.

    (3) If the borrower does not respond within two weeks after the

    telephone call requirements of paragraph (2) have been satisfied, the

    mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall then send a

    certified letter, with return receipt requested.

    (4) The mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent shall provide

    a means for the borrower to contact it in a timely manner, including

    a toll-free telephone number that will provide access to a live

    representative during business hours.

    (5) The mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent has posted a

    prominent link on the homepage of its Internet Web site, if any, to

    the following information:

    (A) Options that may be available to borrowers who are unable to

    afford their mortgage payments and who wish to avoid foreclosure, and

    instructions to borrowers advising them on steps to take to explore

    those options.

    (B) A list of financial documents borrowers should collect and be

    prepared to present to the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized

    agent when discussing options for avoiding foreclosure.

    (C) A toll-free telephone number for borrowers who wish to discuss

    options for avoiding foreclosure with their mortgagee, beneficiary,

    or authorized agent.

    (D) The toll-free telephone number made available by HUD to find a

    HUD-certified housing counseling agency.

    (h) Subdivisions (a), (c), and (g) shall not apply if any of the

    following occurs:

    (1) The borrower has surrendered the property as evidenced by

    either a letter confirming the surrender or delivery of the keys to

    the property to the mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized

    agent.

    (2) The borrower has contracted with an organization, person, or

    entity whose primary business is advising people who have decided to

    leave their homes on how to extend the foreclosure process and avoid

    their contractual obligations to mortgagees or beneficiaries.

    (3) The borrower has filed for bankruptcy, and the proceedings

    have not been finalized.

    (i) This section shall apply only to loans made from January 1,

    2003, to December 31, 2007, inclusive, that are secured by

    residential real property and are for owner-occupied residences. For

    purposes of this subdivision, “owner-occupied” means that the

    residence is the principal residence of the borrower.

    (j) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2013,

    and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,

    that is enacted before January 1, 2013, deletes or extends that da


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, I Have a Plan, Predatory Lending, respa, stop foreclosure


    Doan on “produce the Note”

    3 05 2009

    Are Courts in California Truly Limited by Non-Judicial Foreclosure Statutes?

    By Michael Doan on May 2, 2009 in Foreclosure Defense, Foreclosure News

    Recently, many California Courts have been dismissing lawsuits filed to stop non-judicial foreclosures, ruling that the non-judicial foreclosure statutes occupy the field and are exclusive as long as they are complied with. Thus, in the case where a notice of default is recorded and a lawsuit then filed in response to stop the foreclosure since the foreclosing party does not possess the underlying note, all too often the Court will simply dismiss the case and claim “2924 has no requirement to produce the note.”

    Thus, these Courts view the statutes that regulate non-judicial foreclosures as all inclusive of all the requirements and remedies in foreclosure proceedings. Indeed, California Civil Code sections 2924 through 2924k provide a comprehensive framework for the regulation of a nonjudicial foreclosure sale pursuant to a power of sale contained in a deed of trust. This comprehensive statutory scheme has three purposes: ‘”(1) to provide the creditor/beneficiary with a quick, inexpensive and efficient remedy against a defaulting debtor/trustor; (2) to protect the debtor/trustor from wrongful loss of the property; and (3) to ensure that a properly conducted sale is final between the parties and conclusive as to a bona fide purchaser.” [Citations.]’ [Citation.]” (Melendrez v. D & I Investment, Inc. (2005) 127 Cal.App.4th 1238, 1249–1250 [26 Cal. Rptr. 3d 413].)

    Notwithstanding, the foreclosure statutes are not exclusive. If someone commits murder during an auction taking place under Civil Code 2924, that does not automatically mean they are immune from criminal and civil liability. Perhaps this is where some of these courts are “missing the boat.”

    For example, in Alliance Mortgage Co. v. Rothwell (1995) 10 Cal. 4th 1226, 1231 [44 Cal. Rptr. 2d 352, 900 P.2d 601], the California Supreme Court concluded that a lender who obtained the property with a full credit bid at a foreclosure sale was not precluded from suing a third party who had fraudulently induced it to make the loan. The court concluded that ” ‘the antideficiency laws were not intended to immunize wrongdoers from the consequences of their fraudulent acts’ ” and that, if the court applies a proper measure of damages, ” ‘fraud suits do not frustrate the antideficiency policies because there should be no double recovery for the beneficiary.’ ” (Id. at p. 1238.)

    Likewise, in South Bay Building Enterprises, Inc. v. Riviera Lend-Lease, Inc. [*1071] (1999) 72 Cal.App.4th 1111, 1121 [85 Cal. Rptr. 2d 647], the court held that a junior lienor retains the right to recover damages from the trustee and the beneficiary of the foreclosing lien if there have been material irregularities in the conduct of the foreclosure sale. (See also Melendrez v. D & I Investment, Inc., supra, 127 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1257–1258; Lo v. Jensen (2001) 88 Cal.App.4th 1093, 1095 [106 Cal. Rptr. 2d 443] [a trustee’s sale tainted by fraud may be set aside].)

    In looking past the comprehensive statutory framework, these other Courts also considered the policies advanced by the statutory scheme, and whether those policies would be frustrated by other laws. Recently, in the case of California Golf, L.L.C. v. Cooper, 163 Cal. App. 4th 1053, 78 Cal. Rptr. 3d 153, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 850 (Cal. App. 2d Dist. 2008), the Appellate Court held that the remedies of 2924h were not exclusive. Of greater importance is that the Appellate Court reversed the lower court and specifically held that provisions in UCC Article 3 were allowed in the foreclosure context:

    Considering the policy interests advanced by the statutory scheme governing nonjudicial foreclosure sales, and the policy interests advanced by Commercial Code section 3312, it is clear that allowing a remedy under the latter does not undermine the former. Indeed, the two remedies are complementary and advance the same goals. The first two goals of the nonjudicial foreclosure statutes: (1) to provide the creditor/beneficiary with a quick, inexpensive and efficient remedy against a defaulting debtor/trustor and (2) to protect the debtor/trustor from a wrongful loss of the property, are not impacted by the decision that we reach. This case most certainly, however, involves the third policy interest: to ensure that a properly conducted sale is final between the parties and conclusive as to a bona fide purchaser.

    This is very significant since it provides further support to lawsuits brought against foreclosing parties lacking the ability to enforce the underlying note, since those laws also arise under Article 3. Under California Commercial Code 3301, a note may only be enforced if one has actual possession of the note as a holder, or has possession of the note not as a non-holder but with holder rights.

    Just like in California Golf, enforcing 3301 operates to protect the debtor/trustor from a wrongful loss of the property. To the extent that a foreclosing party might argue that such lawsuits disrupt a quick, inexpensive, and efficient remedy against a defaulting debtor/trustor, the response is that “since there is no enforceable obligation, the foreclosing entity is not a party/creditor/beneficiary entitled to a quick, inexpensive, and efficient remedy,” but simply a declarant that recorded false documents.

    This is primarily because being entitled to foreclose non-judicially under 2924 can only take place “after a breach of the obligation for which that mortgage or transfer is a security.” Thus, 2924 by its own terms, looks outside of the statute to the actual obligation to see if there was a breach, and if the note is unenforceable under Article 3, there can simply be no breach. End of story.

    Accordingly, if there is no possession of the note or possession was not obtained until after the notice of sale was recorded, it is impossible to trigger 2924, and simple compliance with the notice requirements in 2924 does not suddenly bless the felony of grand theft of the unknown foreclosing entity. To hold otherwise would create absurd results since it would allow any person or company the right to take another persons’ home by simply recording a false notice of default and notice of sale.

    Indeed, such absurdity would allow you to foreclose on your own home again to get it back should you simply record the same false documents. Thus it is obvious that these courts improperly assume the allegations contained in the notice of default and notice of sale are truthful. Perhaps these courts simply can not or choose not to believe such frauds are taking place due to the magnitude and volume of foreclosures in this Country at this time. One can only image the chaos that would ensue in America if the truth is known that millions of foreclosures took place unlawfully and millions more are now on hold as a result of not having the ability to enforce the underlying obligation pursuant to Article 3.

    So if you are in litigation to stop a foreclosure, you can probably expect the Court will want to immediately dismiss your case. These Courts just can not understand how the law would allow someone to stay in a home without paying. Notwithstanding, laws can not be broken, and Courts are not allowed to join with the foreclosing parties in breaking laws simply because “not paying doesn’t seem right.”

    Accordingly, at least for appeal purposes, be sure to argue that 2924 was never triggered since there was never any “breach of the obligation” and that Appellate Courts throughout California have routinely held that other laws do in fact apply in the non-judicial foreclosure process since the policies advanced by the statutory non-judicial foreclosure scheme are not frustrated by these other laws.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 3 Comments »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan

     

    Self-Help Eviction: Don’t Even Think About It! Wrongful Foreclosure=Wrongful eviction

    24 06 2010

    Posted on May 24, 2010 by Julie Brook

    Here’s an all-too-common scenario these days: A property goes into foreclosure, the owner who buys the foreclosed property wants to evict the current tenants, who are living there lawfully. The owner decides to skirt the normal legal processes and engage in a self-help eviction. This is a very risky and potentially illegal course of action! Additionally when it is the lender evicting. If the foreclosure was Wrongful that makes the eviction Wrongful and substantial damages may be available as against the biggest banks in the world.

    A self-help eviction can take many forms: changing the lock on a unit, adding a lock without providing keys to the tenant, cutting off utilities, and forcibly entering the rental unit and refusing to permit the tenant to reenter. These practices have one thing in common: to oust the tenant from possession without complying with the legal requirements for eviction.

    California law is clear that an owner who has purchased property at a foreclosure sale cannot take possession after the foreclosure unless the occupants’ consent has been freely obtained or a judge has awarded possession following a court proceeding. See CCP §§1159-1179a. Also note that the law governing evictions after foreclosure is rapidly changing. In rent-controlled cities, the eviction of tenants of the borrower following foreclosure is prohibited unless the tenant defaults.

    Unlawful self-help by a landlord or owner can result in

    * Criminal penalties (see Pen C §§418, 602.5), and
    * Actual and punitive damages (see Jordan v Talbot (1961) 55 C2d 597, 12 CR 488).

    OwnerSecrets.com warns that self-help evictions can result in suits for the common law intentional torts of conversion, trespass to chattels, and trespass.

    Self-help is never a good choice for evictions. Instead, evictions should always be handled through legal processes, generally by an unlawful detainer action, i.e., a fast, summary procedure that is generally limited to the issues of possession of the premises and associated damages.

    On how to legally conduct a lawful eviction, see CEB’s online book Handling Unlawful Detainers and Landlord-Tenant Practice book (evictions following foreclosure are governed by both state and federal law and are covered in chap 8 of that book). On defending evictions, see CEB’s Eviction Defense Manual.

    Also, check out our June programs on Representing Residential Landlords and Tenants in Unlawful Detainer Actions, which will be available On Demand beginning June 29th.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 2 Comments »

    Tags: wrongful foreclosure, wrongful eviction

    Categories : eviction



    How to Stop Foreclosure

    5 12 2009

    This is general information and assumes that you have access to the rest of the material on the blog. Foreclosures come in various flavors.

    First of all you have non-judicial and judicial foreclosure states. Non-judicial basically means that instead of signing a conventional mortgage and note, you signed a document that says you give up your right to a judicial proceeding. So the pretender lender or lender simply instructs the Trustee to sell the property, giving you some notice. Of course the question of who is the lender, what is a beneficiary under a deed of trust, what is a creditor and who owns the loan NOW (if anyone) are all issues that come into play in litigation.

    In a non-judicial state you generally are required to bring the matter to court by filing a lawsuit. In states like California, the foreclosers usually do an end run around you by filing an unlawful detainer as soon as they can in a court of lower jurisdiction which by law cannot hear your claims regarding the illegality of the mortgage or foreclosure.

    In a judicial state the forecloser must be the one who files suit and you have considerably more power to resist the attempt to foreclose.

    Then you have stages:

    STAGE 1: No notice of default has been sent.

    In this case you want to get a forensic analysis that is as complete as humanly possible — TILA, RESPA, securitization, title, chain of custody, predatory loan practices, fraud, fabricated documents, forged documents etc. I call this the FOUR WALL ANALYSIS, meaning they have no way to get out of the mess they created. Then you want a QWR (Qualified Written Request) and DVL (Debt Validation Letter along with complaints to various Federal and State agencies. If they fail to respond or fail to answer your questions you file a suit against the party who received the QWR, the party who originated the loan (even if they are out of business), and John Does 1-1000 being the owners of mortgage backed bonds that are evidence of the investors ownership in the pool of mortgages, of which yours is one. The suit is simple — it seeks to stop the servicer from receiving any payments, install a receiver over the servicer’s accounts, order them to answer the simple question “Who is my creditor and how do I get a full accounting FROM THE CREDITOR? Alternative counts would be quiet title and damages under TILA, RESPA, SEC, etc.

    Tactically you want to present the forensic declaration and simply say that you have retained an expert witness who states in his declaration that the creditor does not include any of the parties disclosed to you thus far. This [prevents you from satisfying the Federal mandate to attempt modification or settlement of the loan. You’ve asked (QWR and DVL) and they won’t tell. DON’T GET INTO INTRICATE ARGUMENTS CONCERNING SECURITIZATION UNTIL IT IS NECESSARY TO DO SO WHICH SHOULD BE AFTER A FEW HEARINGS ON MOTIONS TO COMPEL THEM TO ANSWER.

    IN OTHER WORDS YOU ARE SIMPLY TELLING THE JUDGE THAT YOUR EXPERT HAS PRESENTED FACTS AND OPINION THAT CONTRADICT AND VARY FROM THE REPRESENTATIONS OF COUNSEL AND THE PARTIES WHO HAVE BEEN DISCLOSED TO YOU THUS FAR.

    YOU WANT TO KNOW WHO THE OTHER PARTIES ARE, IF ANY, AND WHAT MONEY EXCHANGED HANDS WITH RESPECT TO YOUR LOAN. YOU WANT EVIDENCE, NOT REPRESENTATIONS OF COUNSEL. YOU WANT DISCOVERY OR AN ORDER TO ANSWER THE QWR OR DVL. YOU WANT AN EVIDENTIARY HEARING IF IT IS NECESSARY.

    Avoid legal argument and go straight for discovery saying that you want to be able to approach the creditor, whoever it is, and in order to do that you have a Federal Statutory right (RESPA) to the name of a person, a telephone number and an address of the creditor — i.e., the one who is now minus money as a result of the funding of the loan. You’ve asked, they won’t answer.

    Contemporaneously you want to get a temporary restraining order preventing them from taking any further action with respect to transferring, executing documents, transferring money, or collecting money until they have satisfied your demand for information and you have certified compliance with the court. Depending upon your circumstances you can offer to tender the monthly payment into the court registry or simply leave that out.

    You can also file a bankruptcy petition especially if you are delinquent in payments or are about to become delinquent.

    STAGE 2: Notice of Default Received

    Believe it or not this is where the errors begin by the pretender lenders. You want to challenge authority, authenticity, the amount claimed due, the signatory, the notary, the loan number and anything else that is appropriate. Then go back to stage 1 and follow that track. In order to effectively do this you need to have that forensic analysis and I don’t mean the TILA Audit that is offered by so many companies using off the shelf software. You could probably buy the software yourself for less money than you pay those companies. I emphasize again that you need a FOUR WALL ANALYSIS.

    Stage 3 Non-Judicial State, Notice of Sale received:

    State statutes usually give you a tiny window of opportunity to contest the sale and the statute usually contains exact provisions on how you can do that or else your objection doesn’t count. At this point you need to secure the services of competent, knowledgeable, experienced legal counsel — professionals who have been fighting with these pretender lenders for a while. Anything less and you are likely to be sorely disappointed unless you landed, by luck of the draw, one of the increasing number of judges you are demonstrating their understanding and anger at this fraud.

    Stage 4: Judicial State: Served with Process:

    You must answer usually within 20 days. Failure to do so, along with your affirmative defenses and counterclaims, could result in a default followed by a default judgment followed by a Final Judgment of Foreclosure. See above steps.

    Stage 5: Sale already occurred

    You obviously need to reverse that situation. Usually the allegation is that the sale should be vacated because of fraud on the court (judicial) or fraudulent abuse of non-judicial process. This is a motion or Petitioner but it must be accompanied by a lawsuit, properly served and noticed to the other side. You probably need to name the purchaser at sale, and ask for a TRO (Temporary Restraining Order) that stops them from moving the property or the money around any further until your questions are answered (see above). At the risk of sounding like a broken record, you need a good forensic analyst and a good lawyer.

    Stage 6: Eviction (Unlawful Detainer Filed or Judgment entered:

    Same as Stage 5.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, bankruptcy, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, stop foreclosure

    Categories : Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, eviction, stop foreclosure


    The Long-Term Cost of the Mortgage Fraud Meltdown — The Real Legacy of Wall Street

    13 11 2009

    This is a re-post by Niel Garfield

    Posted 21 hours ago by livinglies on Livinglies’s Weblog

    Editor’s Note: Why do I do this? Because we are delivering a message to future generations about how the world works contrary to our constitution and contrary to American values and ideals. Conservatives conserve nothing except the wealth of the fantastic few while the liberals liberate nobody from the yoke of economic slavery. Maybe it’s all a game. I won’t play and if you care about this country and wish to avoid a societal collapse, you should stop playing too.

    History has shown us with grim clarity what happens to any country or empire when the power and the wealth gets so concentrated in just a few people while the rest of the population can’t keep a roof over their head and can’t eat food and can’t get medical care, all hell breaks loose. Galbraith, IMF economists, World Bank economists, all know what is going to happen do to our failure to police our own, our failure to make it right and our failure to make amends to our allies or would-be allies.

    Children are learning an important lesson: in their world, Mom and Dad are powerless to prevent the worst things from happening and there is nobody else they can depend upon. A whole generation is growing up with the notion that the American Dream is an unknown, unknowable fantasy. Every time the far right asserts personal responsibility in the face of a wretched fraud committed on most of the country, they close the gate a little more, waiting for the final slaughter. Every time the far left wimps out on their own paltform, the one the people elected them on for CHANGE NOW, they deceive and abandon our citizens.

    And so we are a Prozac nation because everyone is depressed. We are a Xanax nation because everyone is so stressed out we can’t think straight. And those of us who are entering our twilight years see a future where our children and grandchildren and their children will lead bleak lives of quiet desperation in a country which proclaims free speech and assembly but has surrendered that basic right to about 100 institutions that control the lobbyists who control the flow of money in Washington and state houses.

    In April, 2007 stocks were up, confidence was high and everyone had been convinced that all was well without questioning anything. Meanwhile in the inner recesses of the Federal Reserve and halls of power of the executive branch and the U.S. Department of Treasury in particular, they knew the collapse was coming and the only reason they did nothing was political — they didn’t want to admit that the free market was not working, that it wasn’t free, that it was controlled by monopoly and oligopoly, and that the government wasn’t working either because we the people had allowed people to get re-elected despite their sell-out of our countries and our lives.

    In I did some very simple calculations and determined that the DJIA was not actually worth 14,000, it was worth 8,000. As it came down, more stumps revealed themselves as the high water receded. The equities market is overpriced by about 25%-30%. Housing is still inflated by 15%-20%. Nobody wants to hear this. The dollar is in a swan dive because everyone in the world knows the reality except the citizens of the United States of America where we have a “free press” that would rather entertain us than actually tell us the news.

    I’m doing my part. What are you doing to end this catastrophe?

    Job Woes Exacting a Toll on Family Life
    By MICHAEL LUO

    THE WOODLANDS, Tex. — Paul Bachmuth’s 9-year-old daughter, Rebecca, began pulling out strands of her hair over the summer. His older child, Hannah, 12, has become noticeably angrier, more prone to throwing tantrums.

    Initially, Mr. Bachmuth, 45, did not think his children were terribly affected when he lost his job nearly a year ago. But now he cannot ignore the mounting evidence.

    “I’m starting to think it’s all my fault,” Mr. Bachmuth said.

    As the months have worn on, his job search travails have consumed the family, even though the Bachmuths were outwardly holding up on unemployment benefits, their savings and the income from the part-time job held by Mr. Bachmuth’s wife, Amanda. But beneath the surface, they have been a family on the brink. They have watched their children struggle with behavioral issues and a stress-induced disorder. He finally got a job offer last week, but not before the couple began seeing a therapist to save their marriage.

    For many families across the country, the greatest damage inflicted by this recession has not necessarily been financial, but emotional and psychological. Children, especially, have become hidden casualties, often absorbing more than their parents are fully aware of. Several academic studies have linked parental job loss — especially that of fathers — to adverse impacts in areas like school performance and self-esteem.

    “I’ve heard a lot of people who are out of work say it’s kind of been a blessing, that you have more time to spend with your family,” Mr. Bachmuth said. “I love my family and my family comes first, and my family means more than anything to me, but it hasn’t been that way for me.”

    A recent study at the University of California, Davis, found that children in families where the head of the household had lost a job were 15 percent more likely to repeat a grade. Ariel Kalil, a University of Chicago professor of public policy, and Kathleen M. Ziol-Guest, of the Institute for Children and Poverty in New York, found in an earlier study that adolescent children of low-income single mothers who endured unemployment had an increased chance of dropping out of school and showed declines in emotional well-being.

    In the long term, children whose parents were laid off have been found to have lower annual earnings as adults than those whose parents remained employed, a phenomenon Peter R. Orszag, director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, mentioned in a speech last week at New York University.

    A variety of studies have tied drops in family income to negative effects on children’s development. But Dr. Kalil, a developmental psychologist and director of the university’s Center for Human Potential and Public Policy, said the more important factor, especially in middle-class households, appeared to be changes in family dynamics from job loss.

    “The extent that job losers are stressed and emotionally disengaged or withdrawn, this really matters for kids,” she said. “The other thing that matters is parental conflict. That has been shown repeatedly in psychological studies to be a bad family dynamic.”

    Dr. Kalil said her research indicated that the repercussions were more pronounced in children when fathers experience unemployment, rather than mothers.

    She theorized that the reasons have to do with the importance of working to the male self-image, or the extra time that unemployed female breadwinners seem to spend with their children, mitigating the impact on them.

    Certainly, some of the more than a dozen families interviewed that were dealing with long-term unemployment said the period had been helpful in certain ways for their families.

    Denise Stoll, 39, and her husband, Larry, 47, both lost their positions at a bank in San Antonio in October 2008 when it changed hands. Mrs. Stoll, a vice president who managed a technology group, earned significantly more than her husband, who worked as a district loan origination manager.

    Nevertheless, Mr. Stoll took unemployment much harder than she did and struggled to keep his spirits up, before he landed a new job within several months in the Kansas City area, where the family had moved to be closer to relatives. He had to take a sizable pay cut but was grateful to be working again.

    Mrs. Stoll is still looking but has also tried to make the most of the additional time with the couple’s 5-year-old triplets, seeking to instill new lessons on the importance of thrift.

    “Being a corporate mom, you work a lot of hours, you feed them dinner — maybe,” she said. “This morning, we baked cookies together. I have time to help them with homework. I’m attending church. The house is managed by me. Just a lot more homemaker-type stuff, which I think is more nurturing to them.”

    Other families, however, reported unmistakable ill effects.

    Robert Syck, 42, of Fishers, Ind., lost his job as a call-center manager in March. He has been around his 11-year-old stepson, Kody, more than ever before. Lately, however, their relationship has become increasingly strained, Mr. Syck said, with even little incidents setting off blowups. His stepson’s grades have slipped and the boy has been talking back to his parents more.

    “It’s only been particularly in the last few months that it’s gotten really bad, to where we’re verbally chewing each other out,” said Mr. Syck, who admitted he had been more irritable around the house. “A lot of that is due to the pressures of unemployment.”

    When Mr. Bachmuth was first laid off in December from his $120,000 job at an energy consulting firm, he could not even bring himself to tell his family. For several days, he got dressed in the morning and left the house as usual at 6 a.m., but spent the day in coffee shops, the library or just walking around.

    Mr. Bachmuth had started the job, working on finance and business development for electric utilities, eight months earlier, moving his family from Austin. They bought something of a dream home, complete with a backyard pool and spa.

    Although she knew the economy was ultimately to blame, Mrs. Bachmuth could not help feeling angry at her husband, both said later in interviews.

    “She kind of had something in the back of her mind that it was partly my fault I was laid off,” Mr. Bachmuth said. “Maybe you’re not a good enough worker.”

    Counseling improved matters significantly, but Mrs. Bachmuth still occasionally dissolved into tears at home.

    Besides quarrels over money, the reversal in the couple’s roles also produced friction. Mrs. Bachmuth took on a part-time job at a preschool to earn extra money. But she still did most, if not all, of the cooking, cleaning and laundry.

    Dr. Kalil, of the University of Chicago, said a recent study of how people spend their time showed unemployed fathers devote significantly less time to household chores than even mothers who are employed full-time, and do not work as hard in caring for children.

    Mr. Bachmuth’s time with his girls, however, did increase. He was the one dropping off Rebecca at school and usually the one who picked her up. He began helping her more with homework. He and Hannah played soccer and chatted more.

    But the additional time brought more opportunities for squabbling. The rest of the family had to get used to Mr. Bachmuth being around, sometimes focused on his search for a job, but other times lounging around depressed, watching television or surfing soccer sites on the Internet.

    “My dad’s around a lot more, so it’s a little strange because he gets frustrated he’s not at work, and he’s not being challenged,” Hannah said. “So I think me and my dad are a lot closer now because we can spend a lot more time together, but we fight a lot more maybe because he’s around 24-7.”

    When Rebecca began pulling her hair out in late summer in what was diagnosed as a stress-induced disorder, she insisted it was because she was bored. But her parents and her therapist — the same one seeing her parents — believed it was clearly related to the job situation.

    The hair pulling has since stopped, but she continues to fidget with her brown locks.

    The other day, she suddenly asked her mother whether she thought she would be able to find a “good job” when she grew up.

    Hannah said her father’s unemployment had made it harder for her to focus on schoolwork. She also conceded she had been more easily annoyed with her parents and her sister.

    At night, she said, she has taken to stowing her worries away in an imaginary box.

    “I take all the stress and bad things that happen over the day, and I lock them in a box,” she said.

    Then, she tries to sleep.

    Your tags: Eviction, foreclosure

    Other Tags: conservatives, DJIA, IMF, Prozac, U.S Department of Treasury, World Bank, Xanax, bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, currency, GTC | Honor, Investor, Mortgage, securities fraud

    Published: November 12, 2009 6:04 pm
    Livinglies’s Weblog, Eviction, foreclosure

    * HideUnhide
    * BlockUnblock

    * Mark as ReadMark as Unread
    * SubscribeUnsubscribe

    “Officials” Who Sign for MERS: False, Fraudulent, Fabricated, Forged and Void Documents in the Chain

    Posted 3 days ago by livinglies on Livinglies’s Weblog

    all we have left is the obligation, unsecured and subject to counterclaims etc. MOST IMPORTANT procedurally, it requires a lawsuit by the would-be forecloser in order to establish the terms of the obligation and the security, if any. This means they must make allegations as to ownership of the receivable and prove it — the kiss of death for all would be lenders except investors who funded these transactions.

    sirrowan
    sirrowan@peoplepc.com

    “I just thought of something. I was reading what was posted a few above me regarding MERS own rules. They claim that their “officers” tend to act without authority from MERS and they do not use any records held by MERS etc.

    How can this be? How can they be officers then? They aren’t if you ask me. Now wonder all these judges are telling them they are nothing but agents if even that, lol.

    But if they were officers, wouldn’t MERS be liable for the actions of their “officers” on behalf of MERS?”

    ANSWER from Neil

    Sirrowan: GREAT POINT! The answer is that if they have a user ID and password ANYONE can become a “limited signing officer” for MERS.

    Sometimes they say they are vice-president, sometimes they use some other official title. But the fact remains that they have no connection with MERS, no employment with MERS, no access to MERS records, and definitely no direct grant of a POA (Power of attorney). It’s a game.

    This is why I have repeatedly say that in every securitized chain, particularly in the case of a MERS chain, there are one or more documents that are fabricated, forged or voidable. Whether this rises the level of criminality is up to future courts to determine.

    One thing is sure — a party who signs a document that has no authority to sign it in the capacity they are representing has just committed violations of federal and state statute and common law. And the Notary who knew the party was not authorized as represented has committed a violation as well. Most states have statutes that say a bad notarization renders the document void, even if it was recorded. This breaks the chain of title and reverts back to the originating lender (at best) or voids the documents in the originating transaction (at worst).

    In either event, the distinction I draw between the obligation (the substance of the transaction caused by the funding of a “loan product”) and the note (which by law is ONLY EVIDENCE of the obligation and the mortgage which is ONLY incident to the note, becomes very important. If the documents (note and mortgage) are void then all we have left is the obligation, unsecured and subject to counterclaims etc. MOST IMPORTANT procedurally, it requires a lawsuit by the would-be forecloser in order to establish the terms of the obligation and the security, if any. This means they must make allegations as to ownership of the receivable and prove it — the kiss of death for all would be lenders except investors who funded these transactions.

    Your tags: Eviction, foreclosure

    Other Tags: chain of title, disclosure, evidence, foreclosure defense, foreclosure offense, fraud, investors, lenders, MERS, Obligation, securitization, Signatures, trustee, bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, currency, GTC | Honor, Investor, Mortgage, securities fraud

    Published: November 10, 2009 3:10 pm
    Livinglies’s Weblog, Eviction, foreclosure

    * HideUnhide
    * BlockUnblock

    * Mark as ReadMark as Unread
    * SubscribeUnsubscribe

    What to Look For and Demand Through QWR or Discovery Part II

    Posted 4 days ago by livinglies on Livinglies’s Weblog

    Dan Edstrom, you are great!

    OK I found the loan level details for my deal. It shows my loan in foreclosure and my last payment in 6/2008 (which is accurate). What it doesn’t say (among other things) is what advances were made on the account. Very interesting. This report is generated monthly but they are only reporting the current month. It also shows which pool my loan is in (originally their were approx. 4 pools, now there are 2). This means I can use all of this information to possibly calculate the advances reported – except that two months before I missed my first payment they stopped reporting SUB-servicer advances. [Editor’s Note: Those who are computer savvy will recognize that these are field names, which is something that should be included in your demand and in your QWR. You will also wanat the record data and metadata that is attached to each record. ]

    DIST_DATE
    SERIES_NAME
    LOAN_NUM
    POOL_NUM
    DEAL_NUM LTV_DISCLOSED_PCT CLTV_PCT CREDIT_SCORE_NBR BACK_END_DTI_PCT
    JUNIOR_RATIO LOAN_DOC_TYPE_DSCR LOAN_PURPOSE_TYPE_DSCR OCCUPANCY_TYPE PROPERTY_TYPE_DSCR LIEN_PRIORITY_DSCR STANDALONE_IND SILENT_SECOND_IND PROPERTY_STATE CONFORMING_BAL_IND INT_RATE_TYPE_DSCR MARGIN_GROSS_PCT
    PMT_1ST_DATE INT_CHG_FREQ_MTH_QTY INT_CHG_PRD_INCR_CEIL_RATE INT_LIFE_CEIL_RATE INT_LIFE_FLOOR_RATE INT_ONLY_TERM_MTH_QTY INT_CHG_1ST_MTH INT_CHG_FREQ_DSCR INT_CHG_MTH_DIFF_QTY MORTAGE_INSURANCE_PROVIDER MORTAGE_INSURANCE_TYPE_DSCR MATURITY_DATE
    NOTE_DATE
    PRIN_ORIG_BAL
    SOLD_BAL
    TERM_ORIG_MTH_QTY PREPMT_PENALTY_TERM_MTH_QTY BORROWER_RESIDUAL_INCOME_AMT RFC_GRADE_CODE PRODUCT_GROUP_FALLOUT_DSCR MI_TYPE_DSCR INDEX_TYPE_CODE INDEX_TYPE_DSCR MLY_CURTAILMENT_AMT MLY_DRAW_GROSS_AMT MLY_COUPON_NET_RATE MLY_COUPON_GROSS_RATE MLY_PRIN_UNPAID_BAL MLY_PRIN_SCHED_BAL LOAN_AGE MLY_TERM_REMAIN_MTH_QTY MLY_UTILIZATION_PCT MLY_DELQ_REPORT_METHOD MLY_LOAN_STATUS_CODE MLY_LOAN_STATUS_DSCR MLY_PREPMT_TYPE_DSCR MLY_PAID_TO_DATE

    If anyone wants this file or any of the servicing reports so they can see the actual data shoot me an email.

    Thanks,
    Dan Edstrom
    dmedstrom@hotmail.com

    Your tags: Eviction, foreclosure

    Other Tags: accounting, disclosure, discovery, Edstrom, foreclosure defense, foreclosure offense, fraud, lost note, Mortgage, quiet title, QWR, TILA audit, trustee, bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, currency, GTC | Honor, Investor, securities fraud

    Published: November 9, 2009 6:24 pm
    Livinglies’s Weblog, Eviction, foreclosure

    * HideUnhide
    * BlockUnblock

    * Mark as ReadMark as Unread
    * SubscribeUnsubscribe

    TENT CITY, California While Vacant Houses Deteriorate

    Posted 4 days ago by livinglies on Livinglies’s Weblog

    TENT CITY, California While Vacant Houses Deteriorate

    From watergatesummer.blogspot.com we have this post on the moronic ideology that misuses our natural and creative resources. It can be said that conservatives do not conserve and liberals do not liberate. I coined that because it is obvious that politics in this country is degrading even while some try to revive it.

    Out of pure ideology and ignorance, people are being ejected from homes they own on the pretense that they don’t own the home. This sleight of hand is accomplished by “bridge to nowhere” logic — the pretender lender merely pretends to be authorized to initiate foreclosure proceedings. They come into court with a pile of inconsistent documents with little or no REAL connection with the originating papers and zero connection with the REAL lender.

    So we end up with hundreds of thousands of homes that are empty, subject to vandalism and decay from lack of mainteance and lack of anyone living in them, combined with nobody paying utility bills etc that would help take the edge off the crisis. Instead, we choose to allow TENT CITY where there are no decent facilities, where people are living in tents literally, resulting in a greater drain on social services, police, fire, health, schools etc.

    Why because some ideologue and people who mindlessly subscribe to such ideology has already played Judge and Jury and convicted these victims of Wall Street fraud. They are certain that these are deadbeats that don’t pay thier bills and won’t listen when someone points out that many of these people had nearly perfect credit scores before tragedy hit. That means the victims were generally considered to have been better credit risks based upon an excellent record of paying their bills, than their ideological detractors.

    Someone of this ideology will tell us or anyone who will listen that the victims should have read what they were signing. The is fact that NOBODY reads those closing documents, not even lawyers, not even the ideological (don’t confuse me with the facts) conservatives. So the same people who say you should have read those documents, didn’t read their own.

    And now everyone who is NOT in foreclosure or who has already lost possession of their home and who signed a securitized loan package is “underwater” an average of 25% , which means that they are, on average around $70,000 in debt that will never be covered by equity in their lifetime — so they can’t move without coming to the table with the shortfall.

    Such ideologues fall short of helping their fellow citizens to be sure. What is astonishing is that they fall short of helping themselves, which means they subject their life partners, spouses, children and other dependents to the same mindless mind-numbing shoot myself in the foot political theology. And somehow it is THESE people who are controlling the pace of the recovery, controlling the correction in housing and social services who are claiming to be angry about their country being taken away from them!

    Your tags: Eviction, foreclosure

    Other Tags: bailout, housing, lender, POLICY, securitization, tent city, CDO, CORRUPTION, GTC | Honor, Mortgage, securities fraud

    Published: November 9, 2009 6:15 pm
    Livinglies’s Weblog, Eviction, foreclosure

    * HideUnhide
    * BlockUnblock

    * Mark as ReadMark as Unread
    * SubscribeUnsubscribe

    U.S. STANDS FIRM IN SUPPORT OF WALL STREET WHILE THE REST OF THE WORLD TAKES THE ECONOMIC CRISIS SERIOUSLY

    Posted 5 days ago by livinglies on Livinglies’s Weblog

    MR. GEITNER, MR. SUMMERS AND OTHERS WHO ARE ON THE ECONOMIC TEAM DESERVE some CREDIT FOR BRINGING US BACK FROM AN ECONOMIC PRECIPICE THAT WOULD HAVE RESULTED IN A DEPRESSION FAR DEEPER AND LONGER THAN THE GREAT DEPRESSION. AND THEY SHOULD BE CUT SOME SLACK BECAUSE THEY WERE HANDED A PLATE ON WHICH THE ECONOMY WAS BASED LARGELY ON VAPOR — THE CONTRACTION OF WHICH WILL SPELL DISASTER IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE.
    THAT SAID, THEY ARE GOING TOO FAR IN PROTECTING INVESTMENT BANKS AND DEPOSITORY BANKS FROM THEIR OWN STUPIDITY AND ENCOURAGING BEHAVIOR THAT THE TAXPAYERS WILL ABSORB — AT LEAST THEY THINK THE TAXPAYERS WILL DO IT.
    As the following article demonstrates, the model currently used in this country and dozens of other countries is “pay to play” — and if there is a crash it is the fees the banks paid over the years that bails them out instead of the taxpayers.
    For reasons that I don’t think are very good, the economic team is marginalizing Volcker and headed down the same brainless path we were on when Bush was in office, which was only an expansion of what happened when Clinton was in office, which was a “me too” based upon Bush #1 and Reagan. The end result is no longer subject to conjecture — endless crashes, each worse than the one before.
    The intransigence of Wall Street and the economic team toward any meaningful financial reform adds salt to the wound we created in the first palce. We were fortunate that the rest of the world did not view the economic meltdown as an act of war by the United States. They are inviting us to be part of the solution and we insist on being part of the problem.
    Sooner or later, the world’s patience is going to wear thin. Has anyone actually digested the fact that there is buyer’s run on gold now? Does anyone care that the value of the dollar is going down which means that those countries, companies and individuals who keep their wealth in dollars are dumping those dollars in favor of diversifying into other units of storage?
    The short-term “advantage” will be more than offset by the continuing joblessness and homelessness unless we take these things seriously. Culturally, we are looking increasingly barbaric to dozens of countries that take their role of protecting the common welfare seriously.
    Bottom Line on these pages is that it shouldn’t be so hard to get a judge to realize that just because the would-be forecloser has a big expensive brand name doesn’t mean they are anything better than common thieves. But like all theft in this country, the bigger you are the more wiggle room you get when you rob the homeless or a bank or the government or the taxpayers. Marcy Kaptur is right. She calls for a change of “generals” (likening Obama’s situation to Lincoln), since their skills were perhaps valuable when Obama first tackled the economic crisis — but now are counterproductive. We need new generals on the economic team that will steer us clear from the NEXT crisis not the LAST crisis.

    November 8, 2009
    Britain and U.S. Clash at G-20 on Tax to Insure Against Crises
    By JULIA WERDIGIER

    ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — The United States and Britain voiced disagreement Saturday over a proposal that would impose a new tax on financial transactions to support future bank rescues.

    Prime Minister Gordon Brown of Britain, leading a meeting here of finance ministers from the Group of 20 rich and developing countries, said such a tax on banks should be considered as a way to take the burden off taxpayers during periods of financial crisis. His comments pre-empted the International Monetary Fund, which is set to present a range of options next spring to ensure financial stability.

    But the proposal was met with little enthusiasm by the United States Treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner, who told Sky News in an interview that he would not support a tax on everyday financial transactions. Later he seemed to soften his position, saying it would be up to the I.M.F. to present a range of possible measures.

    “We want to make sure that we don’t put the taxpayer in a position of having to absorb the costs of a crisis in the future,” Mr. Geithner said after the Sky News interview. “I’m sure the I.M.F. will come up with some proposals.”

    The Russian finance minister, Alexei Kudrin, also said he was skeptical of such a tax. Similar fees had been proposed by Germany and France but rejected by Mr. Brown’s government in the past as too difficult to manage. But Mr. Brown is now suggesting “an insurance fee to reflect systemic risk or a resolution fund or contingent capital arrangements or a global financial transaction levy.”

    Supporters of a tax had argued that it would reduce the volatility of markets; opponents said it would be too complex to enact across borders and could create huge imbalances. Mr. Brown said any such tax would have to be applied universally.

    “It cannot be acceptable that the benefits of success in this sector are reaped by the few but the costs of its failure are borne by all of us,” Mr. Brown said at the summit. “There must be a better economic and social contract between financial institutions and the public based on trust and a just distribution of risks and rewards.”

    At the meeting at the Scottish golf resort, the last to be hosted by Britain during its turn leading the group, the ministers agreed on a detailed timetable to achieve balanced economic growth and reiterated a pledge not to withdraw any economic stimulus until a recovery was certain.

    They also committed to enact limits on bonuses and force banks to hold more cash reserves. But they failed to reach an agreement on how to finance a new climate change deal ahead of a crucial meeting in Copenhagen next month.

    The finance ministers agreed that economic and financial conditions had improved but that the recovery was “uneven and remains dependent on policy support,” according to a statement released by the group. The weak condition of the economy was illustrated Friday by new data showing the unemployment rate in the United States rising to 10.2 percent in October, the highest level in 26 years.

    The finance ministers also acknowledged that withdrawing stimulus packages required a balancing act to avoid stifling the economic recovery that has just begun.

    “If we put the brakes on too quickly, we will weaken the economy and the financial system, unemployment will rise, more businesses will fail, budget deficits will rise, and the ultimate cost of the crisis will be greater,” Mr. Geithner said. “It is too early to start to lean against recovery.”

    As part of the group’s global recovery plan, the United States would aim to increase its savings rate and reduce its trade deficit while countries like China and Germany would reduce their dependence on exports. Economic imbalances were widely faulted as helping to bring about the global economic downturn.

    Mr. Geithner acknowledged on Saturday that the changes would take time but that “what we are seeing so far has been encouraging.”

    Your tags: Eviction, foreclosure

    Other Tags: bailout, credit, economic team, financial reform, foreclosures, Geitner, Summers, Volker, bubble, CDO, CORRUPTION, currency, GTC | Honor, Investor, Mortgage, securities fraud

    Published: November 8, 2009 6:55 pm
    Livinglies’s Weblog, Eviction, foreclosure

    * HideUnhide
    * BlockUnblock

    * Mark as ReadMark as Unread
    * SubscribeUnsubscribe

    I’m OK. Thanks for asking

    Posted 6 days ago by livinglies on Livinglies’s Weblog
    Livinglies’s Weblog, foreclosure

    * HideUnhide
    * BlockUnblock

    * Mark as ReadMark as Unread
    * SubscribeUnsubscribe

    FOLLOWING THE MONEY — WHAT TO ASK FOR AND LOOK FOR

    Posted 6 days ago by livinglies on Livinglies’s Weblog
    Livinglies’s Weblog, Eviction, foreclosure

    * HideUnhide
    * BlockUnblock

    * Mark as ReadMark as Unread
    * SubscribeUnsubscribe

    Why “too big to fail” has to be dealt with this time

    Posted 6 days ago by livinglies on Livinglies’s Weblog
    Livinglies’s Weblog, foreclosure

    * HideUnhide
    * BlockUnblock

    * Mark as ReadMark as Unread
    * SubscribeUnsubscribe

    AIG Reports Profits Increase — More Smoke and Mirrors

    Posted 7 days ago by livinglies on Livinglies’s Weblog
    Livinglies’s Weblog, Eviction, foreclosure

    * HideUnhide
    * BlockUnblock

    * Mark as ReadMark as Unread
    * SubscribeUnsubscribe

    Foreclosure Defense: New York Judge Gets It HSBC v Valentin N.Y. Sup., 2008

    Posted 7 days ago by livinglies on Livinglies’s Weblog
    Livinglies’s Weblog, Eviction, foreclosure

    * HideUnhide
    * BlockUnblock

    * Mark as ReadMark as Unread
    * SubscribeUnsubscribe


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: bankruptcy, Foreclosure, Fraud, Lender Liability

    Categories : Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Predatory Lending, eviction, stop foreclosure


    The lawyer is not competend to testify

    5 10 2009

    If the lawyer is not a competent witness with personal knowledge, then he should shut up and sit down.

    So you sent a QWR and you know the loan is securitized. The orignating lender says talk to the servicer and the servicer declines to answer all the questions because they didn’t originate the loan. Or you are in court and the lawyer is trying to finesse his way past basic rules of evidence and due process by making representations to the Judge as an officer of the court.

    He’s lying of course and if you let it go unchallenged, you will lose the case. Basically opposing counsel is saying “trust me Judge I wouldn’t say it if it wasn’t so.” And your answer is that the lawyer is not a witness, that you don’t trust the lawyer or what he has to say, that if he is a witness he should be sworn in and subject to cross examaintion and if he is not a witness you are entitled to be confronted with a real witness with real testimony based upon real knowledge.

    First Questions: When did you first learn of this case? What personal knowledge do you have concerning the payments received from the homeowner or third parties? What personal knowledge do you have as to who providing the actual cash from which the subject loan was funded?

    Only when pressed relentlessly by the homeowner, the servicer comes up with a more and more restrictive answer as to what role they play. But they always start with don’t worry about a thing we control everything. Not true. Then later after you thought you worked out a modification they tell the deal is off because the investor declined. The investor is and always was the lender. That is the bottom line and any representation to the contrary is a lie and a fraud upon the court.

    So whoever you sent the QWR to, always disclaims your right to ask, or tells you the name of the investor (i.e., your lender) is confidential, or that they have authority (but they won’t show it to you). That doesn’t seem to be a lender, does it? In fact they disclaim even knowing enough to answer your questions.

    So AFTER THEY SERVE YOU with something file a motion to compel an immediate full answer to your QWR since under TILA service on the servicer is the same as service on the lender. You argue that everyone seems to be claiming rights to be paid under the original obligation, everyone seems to be claiming the right to enforce the note and mortgage, but nobody is willing to state unequivocally that they are the lender.

    You are stuck in the position of being unable to seek modification under federal and State rules, unable to sell the property because you don’t know who can sign a satisfaction of mortgage or a release and reconveyance, unable to do a short-sale, and unable to refinance — all because they won’t give a simple answer to a simple question: who is the lender and what is the balance claimed by the real lender on the obligation? At this point you don’t even know that any of the real lenders wish to make a claim.

    This is probably because they received TARP funds and insurance proceeds on defaults of pools that they had purchased multiple insurance policies (credit default swaps). But whether they are paid by someone who acquired rights of subrogation or they were not paid, you have a right to a FULL accounting and to know who they are and whether they received any third party money. If they were paid in part or otherwise sold their interest, then you have multiple additional unknown parties.

    The reason is simple. They are not the lender and they know it. The lender is a group of investors who funded the transaction with Petitioner/Homeowner and others who purchased similar financial products from the same group of participants in the securitization chain relating to the subject loan.

    The people currently in court do not include all the real parties in interest for you to make claims against the lender. Cite to the Massachusetts case where Wells Fargo and its lawyer were subject to an $850,000 sanction for misrepresenting its status to the court.

    It is not enough for them to bluff their way by saying that they have already answered the interrogatories. When they lost and it came time to allocate damages and attorneys fees, Wells suddenly said they were NOT the lender, beneficiary or current holder and that therefore the damages and attorneys fees should be assessed against the real lender — who was not a party to the pending litigation and whom they refused to disclose along with their misrepresentation that they were the true lender.

    It is not enough that the lawyer makes a representation to the court as an officer of the court. That is not how evidence works. If the lawyer wants to represent facts, then he/she should be sworn in and be subject to (1) voir dire to establish that he/she is opposing counsel that it came from some company.

    The witness must be a competent witness who takes an oath, has personal knowledge regarding the content of the document, states that personal knowledge and whose testimony conforms to what is on the document.

    There is no such thing as foundation without a witness. There is no such thing as foundation without a competent witness. So if the lawyer tries to finesse the subject by making blanket representations to the court(e.g. the property is “underwater” by $xxx,xxx and we need a lift of stay…yet, there is no certified appraisal entered into evidence with a certified appraiser that can be cross examined…just a statement from opposing counsel) point to Wells, or even point to other inconsistencies between what counsel has represented and what now appears to be the truth, and demand an evidentiary hearing. If the lawyer is not a competent witness with personal knowledge, then he should shut up and sit down.

    File a motion to extend time to file adversary proceeding(in BK situation), answer, affirmative defenses and counterclaim UNTIL YOU GET A FULL AND COMPLETE ANSWER TO YOUR QWR so you can determine the real parties in interest and serve them with process. Otherwise, we will have a partial result wherein the real owner of the loan can and will claim damages and injunctive relief probably against all the current parties to this action including the Homeowner.

    In short, the opposing counsel cannot just make statements of “fact” and have them accepted by the court as “fact” if they don’t pass the sniff test of real evidence corroborated by a competent witness. …and with every pleading ask for an evidentiary hearing and attorneys fees. Follow rule 11 procedure in Federal Court or the state law counterpart so you can get them later.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: eviction, Foreclosure, litigation, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, rescission

    Categories : I Have a Plan, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, eviction, lis pendence, pedatory lending, respa, tila


    Foreclosure Victory For Nor Cal Area Homeowner!

    7 09 2009

    A Sacramento area court ruling against the plaintiff came in an unlawful detainer hearing last Friday. Lenders and servicers are taking notice of the “sale” by trustee that was set aside in favor of a loan modification. Submitted by Steve Shafer

    February 5, 2009 / Sacramento California – The Bay Area Superior Court decision and judgment against the plaintiff allows the “sale” by the trustee to be set aside in favor of a loan modification.
    Lenders nationwide who originate and service loans know California offers them a “safe haven” from homeowner’s who dispute a recent foreclosure. That means overwhelming odds for anyone in foreclosure who loses their home to a lender in a foreclosure. The borrower becomes a holdover and must respond to an unlawful detainer after their home is lost.

    That was not the case for an El Dorado area resident at a recent hearing for an unlawful detainer matter heard in a Placerville County superior court room. The recent victory in court was in an unlawful detainer matter for the defendant Ms. Stella Onyeu and mortgage lender and securities sponsor – AURORA LOAN SERVICES v. STELLA D. ONYEU (case number PCU2008032).

    AURORA LOAN SERVICES like so many other lender servicing agents has come under greater scrutiny as of late for questionable business practices. According to its web site Aurora Loan Services is operating as usual. The company is a subsidiary of Lehman Brothers Bank, and not part of the Lehman Brothers Holding Inc. bankruptcy filing.

    The case was originally filed in October of last year and shortly thereafter was dismissed when the Plaintiff failed to show at a scheduled hearing. Subsequent motions were filed to vacate the dismissal in favor of a motion to dismiss by the plaintiffs. The matter was heard recently heard again by the same court and earlier mentioned presiding judge. Mark Terbeek is the attorney for the Defendant and Maher Soliman a Juris Pro witness provided case development and court expert testimony.

    This judgment for the defendant is monumental given the courts limited jurisdiction related to the lenders sole focus to have the borrower removed from the home. The issues at hand are the legal procedural limitations and high attrition rate for defendants and their attorney’s. The problem is the defendant’s lack of standing for pleading a wrongful foreclosure due to jurisdiction of the court.

    So what does this all mean? Many homeowners can find some hope, for the moment, in knowing the otherwise unfriendly California UD courts will now hold some promise for hearing arguments as to the foreclosure and the plaintiffs standing. According to foreclosure and REO sales analyst Brenda Michelson of Nationwide Loan Services “It’s hit or miss at this level of the law and the courts willingness to step outside of its jurisdiction.” The smaller outlying courts seem to me to be more willing to entertain defense arguments that the plaintiff may not be the holder in due course and lacks capacity throughout the foreclosure” Terbeek’s response is that if the plaintiff cannot demonstrate a logical and properly conveyed transfer of the beneficial interest – it is not entitled to possession.

    After the foreclosure and conveyance back to the trustee, the homeowner is considered unlawfully occupying the dwelling as a holdover. However, the court ruled that AURORA had in fact violated its duty to show good faith and comply accordingly under the recent California statutes and amendments Power of Sale provision. The presiding judge who heard the matter ordered a judgment against the company allowed for Terbeek to enter a request for all legal fees due.

    According to legal expert Soliman, “there are more attorneys willing to now jump into the wrongful foreclosure business and fight the court on the jurisdiction issue. However, it is nearly impossible to rely on the judge and courts at this level”. Soliman is an examiner with Nationwide Loan Services and has engagements in multiple cases throughout California through attorneys such as Terbeek who represented the defendant.

    Jurisdiction: An Overview

    The term jurisdiction is really synonymous with the word “power” and the sovereignty on behalf of which it functions. Any court possesses jurisdiction over matters only to the extent granted to it by the Constitution, or legislation of a paramount fundamental question for lawyers is whether a given court has jurisdiction to preside over a given case. A jurisdictional question may be broken down into various components including whether there is jurisdiction over the person (in personam), the subject matter, or res (in rem), and to render the particular judgment sought.

    An unlawful detainer lawsuit is a “summary” court procedure. This means that the court action moves forward very quickly, and that the time given the tenant to respond during the lawsuit is very short. For example, in most cases, the tenant has only five days to file a written response to the lawsuit after being served with a copy of the landlord’s complaint. Normally, a judge will hear and decide the case within 20 days after the borrower now tenant files an answer.

    The question of whether a given court has the power to determine a jurisdictional question is itself a jurisdictional question. Such a legal question is referred to as “jurisdiction to determine jurisdiction.” In order to evict the tenant, the landlord must file an unlawful detainer lawsuit in superior court. In an eviction lawsuit, the lender is the “plaintiff” and the prior borrower and homeowners become an occupant holdover and the “defendant.” Immediately after the trustee sale of the home the conveyance by the trustee is entered in favor of the lender. Until recently in most cases the lender is with in its right foreclose if a borrower has missed a number of payments, failed to make the insurance premiums or not paid the property taxes. “But sometimes a lender is wrong and you can fight foreclosure by challenging the foreclosure process and related documents” said Soliman.

    As the new owner of record AURORA HOME LOAN SERVICES must follow procedures no different than that of a landlord in a tenant occupancy dispute. The next step is to remove the homeowner from the subject dwelling. If the tenant doesn’t voluntarily move out after the landlord has properly given the required notice to the tenant, the landlord can evict the tenant. If the lender makes a mistake in its filing of the foreclosure documents a court my throw out the whole foreclosure case. In the case of a wrongful foreclosure the borrower’s claims are limited to affirmative defenses.

    Affirmative Defenses

    Unlike a judicial proceeding, California lenders need to merely wait out the mandatory term for issuing default notices and ensure it has properly served those notices to the borrower. In other words the hearing and trial taken place in the above referenced matter is not subject to arguments brought by the homeowner for wrongful foreclosure versus the question as to lawful possession of the property by the lender.

    California lenders are typically limited to only the defenses a landlord will face when opposed and made subject to claims of wrongfully trying to evict a tenant. Claims such as the Plaintiff has breached the warranty to provide habitable premises, plaintiff did not give proper credit before the notice to pay or quit expired or plaintiff waived, changed, or canceled the notice to quit, or filed the complaint to retaliate against defendant are often completely unrelated to the matter at hand. The courts decision to enforce the provisions of an earlier modification in lieu of a foreclosure sends a major wake up call to the lenders who are under siege to avoid foreclose and be done with mortgage mess affecting United States homeowners. Soliman says the decision is unfortunately not likely to be read into as case precedent for future lawyers and wrongful defendants seeking to introduce our case as an example of a lenders wrongful action.

    Soliman goes on to say “it’s both interesting and entertaining to see experienced attorneys who jump in and immediately question the issue of the courts authority. Its reality time when they get to their first hearing and see first hand the problematic issues with jurisdiction.”

    Servicing agents are never the less on notice they must be ready to defend themselves when the opportunity to argue the plaintiffs standing are allowed in an unlawful detainer motivate by a foreclosure. Therefore, the debate about what the courts hear will remain open and subject to further scrutiny by the lawyers for both sides and judges who preside over the courts at this level.

    Nationwide Loan Servicing is an approved Expert Witness who provides court testimoney in matters concerning wrongful foreclosures, Federal Savings Banks regultory violations and SEC filings for private registrations.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, California cram down, Predatory Lending, stop foreclosure

    Categories : Foreclosure, Mortgage modification, eviction, stop foreclosure



    A ‘Little Judge’ Who Rejects Foreclosures, Brooklyn Style

    2 09 2009

    By Michael Powell – NY Times – 8/30/09

    The judge waves you into his chambers in the State Supreme Court building in Brooklyn, past the caveat taped to his wall — “Be sure brain in gear before engaging mouth” — and into his inner office, where foreclosure motions are piled high enough to form a minor Alpine chain.

    “I don’t want to put a family on the street unless it’s legitimate,” Justice Arthur M. Schack said.

    Every week, the nation’s mightiest banks come to his court seeking to take the homes of New Yorkers who cannot pay their mortgages. And nearly as often, the judge says, they file foreclosure papers speckled with errors.

    He plucks out one motion and leafs through: a Deutsche Bank representative signed an affidavit claiming to be the vice president of two different banks. His office was in Kansas City, Mo., but the signature was notarized in Texas. And the bank did not even own the mortgage when it began to foreclose on the homeowner.

    The judge’s lips pucker as if he had inhaled a pickle; he rejected this one. “I’m a little guy in Brooklyn who doesn’t belong to their country clubs, what can I tell you?” he says, adding a shrug for punctuation. “I won’t accept their comedy of errors.”

    The judge, Arthur M. Schack, 64, fashions himself a judicial Don Quixote, tilting at the phalanxes of bankers, foreclosure facilitators and lawyers who file motions by the bale. While national debate focuses on bank bailouts and federal aid for homeowners that has been slow in coming, the hard reckonings of the foreclosure crisis are being made in courts like his, and Justice Schack’s sympathies are clear. He has tossed out 46 of the 102 foreclosure motions that have come before him in the last two years. And his often scathing decisions, peppered with allusions to the Croesus-like wealth of bank presidents, have attracted the respectful attention of judges and lawyers from Florida to Ohio to California. At recent judicial conferences in Chicago and Arizona, several panelists praised his rulings as a possible national model.

    His opinions, too, have been greeted by a cry of affront from a bank official or two, who say this judge stands in the way of what is rightfully theirs. HSBC bank appealed a recent ruling, saying he had set a “dangerous precedent” by acting as “both judge and jury,” throwing out cases even when homeowners had not responded to foreclosure motions. Justice Schack, like a handful of state and federal judges, has taken a magnifying glass to the mortgage industry. In the gilded haste of the past decade, bankers handed out millions of mortgages — with terms good, bad and exotically ugly — then repackaged those loans for sale to investors from Connecticut to Singapore. Sloppiness reigned. So many papers have been lost, signatures misplaced and documents dated inaccurately that it is often not clear which bank owns the mortgage.

    Justice Schack’s take is straightforward, and sends a tremor through some bank suites: If a bank cannot prove ownership, it cannot foreclose. “If you are going to take away someone’s house, everything should be legal and correct,” he said. “I’m a strange guy — I don’t want to put a family on the street unless it’s legitimate.”

    Justice Schack has small jowls and big black glasses, a thin mustache and not so many hairs combed across his scalp. He has the impish eyes of the high school social studies teacher he once was, aware that something untoward is probably going on at the back of his classroom. He is Brooklyn born and bred, with a master’s degree in history and an office loaded with autographed baseballs and photographs of the Brooklyn Dodgers. His written decisions are a free-associative trip through popular, legal and literary culture, with a sideways glance at the business pages.

    Confronted with a case in which Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs passed a defaulted mortgage back and forth and lost track of the documents, the judge made reference to the film classic “It’s a Wonderful Life” and the evil banker played by Lionel Barrymore. “Lenders should not lose sight,” Justice Schack wrote in that 2007 case, “that they are dealing with humanity, not with Mr. Potter’s ‘rabble’ and ‘cattle.’ Multibillion-dollar corporations must follow the same rules in the foreclosure actions as the local banks, savings and loan associations or credit unions, or else they have become the Mr. Potters of the 21st century.”

    Last year, he chastised Wells Fargo for filing error-filled papers. “The court,” the judge wrote, “reminds Wells Fargo of Cassius’s advice to Brutus in Act 1, Scene 2 of William Shakespeare’s ‘Julius Caesar’: ‘The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves.’ ”

    Then there is a Deutsche Bank case from 2008, the juicy part of which he reads aloud:

    “The court wonders if the instant foreclosure action is a corporate ‘Kansas City Shuffle,’ a complex confidence game,” he reads. “In the 2006 film ‘Lucky Number Slevin,’ Mr. Goodkat, a hit man played by Bruce Willis, explains: ‘A Kansas City Shuffle is when everybody looks right, you go left.’ “The banks’ reaction? Justice Schack shrugs. “They probably curse at me,” he says, “but no one is interested in some little judge.”

    Little drama attends the release of his decisions. Beaten-down homeowners rarely show up to contest foreclosure actions, and the judge scrutinizes the banks’ papers in his chambers. But at legal conferences, judges and lawyers have wondered aloud why more judges do not hold banks to tougher standards.

    “To the extent that judges examine these papers, they find exactly the same errors that Judge Schack does,” said Katherine M. Porter, a visiting professor at the School of Law at the University of California, Berkeley, and a national expert in consumer credit law. “His rulings are hardly revolutionary; it’s unusual only because we so rarely hold large corporations to the rules.”

    Banks and the cottage industry of mortgage service companies and foreclosure lawyers also pay rather close attention. A spokeswoman for OneWest Bank acknowledged that an official, confronted with a ream of foreclosure papers, had mistakenly signed for two different banks — just as the Deutsche Bank official did. Deutsche Bank, which declined to let an attorney speak on the record about any of its cases before Justice Schack, e-mailed a PDF of a three-page pamphlet in which it claimed little responsibility for foreclosures, even though the bank’s name is affixed to tens of thousands of such motions. The bank described itself as simply a trustee for investors.

    Justice Schack came to his recent prominence by a circuitous path, having worked for 14 years as public school teacher in Brooklyn. He was a union representative and once walked a picket line with his wife, Dilia, who was a teacher, too. All was well until the fiscal crisis of the 1970s.

    “Why’d I go to law school?” he said. “Thank Mayor Abe Beame, who froze teacher salaries.”

    He was counsel for the Major League Baseball Players Association in the 1980s and ’90s, when it was on a long winning streak against team owners. “It was the millionaires versus the billionaires,” he says. “After a while, I’m sitting there thinking, ‘He’s making $4 million, he’s making $5 million, and I’m worth about $1.98.’ ”

    So he dived into a judicial race. He was elected to the Civil Court in 1998 and to the Supreme Court for Brooklyn and Staten Island in 2003. His wife is a Democratic district leader; their daughter, Elaine, is a lawyer and their son, Douglas, a police officer.Justice Schack’s duels with the banks started in 2007 as foreclosures spiked sharply. He saw a plague falling on Brooklyn, particularly its working-class black precincts. “Banks had given out loans structured to fail,” he said.

    The judge burrowed into property record databases. He found banks without clear title, and a giant foreclosure law firm, Steven J. Baum, representing two sides in a dispute. He noted that Wells Fargo’s chief executive, John G. Stumpf, made more than $11 million in 2007 while the company’s total returns fell 12 percent. “Maybe,” he advised the bank, “counsel should wonder, like the court, if Mr. Stumpf was unjustly enriched at the expense of W.F.’s stockholders.”

    He was, how to say it, mildly appalled. “I’m a guy from the streets of Brooklyn who happens to become a judge,” he said. “I see a bank giving a $500,000 mortgage on a building worth $300,000 and the interest rate is 20 percent and I ask questions, what can I tell you?”


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: Audit, bailout, bankruptcy, borrower, brad keiser, credit, credit crisis, depression, FDG, Federal Bailout, foreclosure defense, Foreclosure Defense Group, foreclosure offense, foreclosures, Fraud, HAMP, lawyers, Lender Liability, Loan Mod, LOAN MODIFICATION, lost note, Mortgage, quiet title, rescission, respa, RICO, TILA audit

    Categories : 2924, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, bankruptcy, eviction


    Brown Sues 21 Individuals and 14 Companies Who Ripped Off Homeowners Desperate for Mortgage Relief

    17 07 2009

    News Release
    July 15, 2009
    For Immediate Release
    Contact: (916) 324-5500 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              (916) 324-5500      end_of_the_skype_highlighting
    Print Version
    Attachments

    Los Angeles – As part of a massive federal-state crackdown on loan modification scams, Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. at a press conference today announced the filing of legal action against 21 individuals and 14 companies who ripped off thousands of homeowners desperately seeking mortgage relief.

    Brown is demanding millions in civil penalties, restitution for victims and permanent injunctions to keep the companies and defendants from offering mortgage-relief services.

    “The loan modification industry is teeming with confidence men and charlatans, who rip off desperate homeowners facing foreclosure,” Brown said. “Despite firm promises and money-back guarantees, these scam artists pocketed thousands of dollars from each victim and didn’t provide an ounce of relief.”

    Brown filed five lawsuits as part of “Operation Loan Lies,” a nationwide sweep of sham loan modification consultants, which he conducted with the Federal Trade Commission, the U.S. Attorney’s office and 22 other federal and state agencies. In total, 189 suits and orders to stop doing business were filed across the country.

    Following the housing collapse, hundreds of loan modification and foreclosure-prevention companies have cropped up, charging thousands of dollars in upfront fees and claiming that they can reduce mortgage payments. Yet, loan modifications are rarely, if ever, obtained. Less than 1 percent of homeowners nationwide have received principal reductions of any kind.

    Brown has been leading the fight against fraudulent loan modification companies. He has sought court orders to shut down several companies including First Gov and Foreclosure Freedom and has brought criminal charges and obtained lengthy prison sentences for deceptive loan modification consultants.

    Brown’s office filed the following lawsuits in Orange County and U.S. District Court for the Central District (Los Angeles):

    – U.S. Homeowners Assistance, based in Irvine;
    – U.S. Foreclosure Relief Corp and its legal affiliate Adrian Pomery, based in the City of Orange;
    – Home Relief Services, LLC, with offices in Irvine, Newport Beach and Anaheim, and its legal affiliate, the Diener Law Firm;
    – RMR Group Loss Mitigation, LLC and its legal affiliates Shippey & Associates and Arthur Aldridge. RMR Group has offices in Newport Beach, City of Orange, Huntington Beach, Corona, and Fresno;
    – and
    – United First, Inc, and its lawyer affiliate Mitchell Roth, based in Los Angeles.

    U.S. Homeowners Assistance
    Brown on Monday sued U.S. Homeowners Assistance, and its executives — Hakimullah “Sean” Sarpas and Zulmai Nazarzai — for bilking dozens of homeowners out of thousands of dollars each.

    U.S. Homeowners Assistance claimed to be a government agency with a 98 percent success rate in aiding homeowners. In reality, the company was not a government agency and was never certified as an approved housing counselor by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. None of U.S. Homeowners Assistance’s known victims received loan modifications despite paying upfront fees ranging from $1,200 to $3,500.

    For example, in January 2008, one victim received a letter from her lender indicating that her monthly mortgage payment would increase from $2,300 to $3,500. Days later, she received an unsolicited phone call from U.S. Homeowners Assistance promising a 40 percent reduction in principal and a $2,000 reduction in her monthly payment. She paid $3500 upfront for U.S. Homeowners Assistance’s services.

    At the end of April 2008, her lender informed her that her loan modification request had been denied and sent her the documents that U.S. Homeowners Assistance had filed on her behalf. After reviewing those documents, she discovered that U.S. Homeowners Assistance had forged her signature and falsified her financial information – including fabricating a lease agreement with a fictitious tenant.

    When she confronted U.S. Homeowners Assistance, she was immediately disconnected and has not been able to reach the company.

    Brown’s suit contends that U.S. Homeowners Assistance violated:
    – California Business and Professions Code section 17500 by falsely stating they were a government agency and misleading homeowners by claiming a 98 percent success rate in obtaining loan modifications;

    – California Business and Professions Code section 17200 by failing to perform services made in exchange for upfront fees;

    – California Civil Code section 2945.4 for unlawfully collecting upfront fees for loan modification services;

    – California Civil Code section 2945.45 for failing to register with the California Attorney General’s Office as foreclosure consultants; and

    – California Penal Code section 487 for grand theft.

    Brown is seeking $7.5 million in civil penalties, full restitution for victims, and a permanent injunction to keep the company and the defendants from offering foreclosure consultant services.

    US Homeowners Assistance also did business as Statewide Financial Group, Inc., We Beat All Rates, and US Homeowners Preservation Center.

    US Foreclosure Relief Corporation
    Brown last week sued US Foreclosure Relief Corporation, H.E. Service Company, their executives — George Escalante and Cesar Lopez — as well as their legal affiliate Adrian Pomery for running a scam promising homeowners reductions in their principal and interest rates as low as 4 percent. Brown was joined in this suit by the Federal Trade Commission and the State of Missouri.

    Using aggressive telemarketing tactics, the defendants solicited desperate homeowners and charged an upfront fee ranging from $1,800 to $2,800 for loan modification services. During one nine-month period alone, consumers paid defendants in excess of $4.4 million. Yet, in most instances, defendants failed to provide the mortgage-relief services. Once consumers paid the fee, the defendants avoided responding to consumers’ inquiries.

    In response to a large number of consumer complaints, several government agencies directed the defendants to stop their illegal practices. Instead, they changed their business name and continued their operations – using six different business aliases in the past eight months alone.

    Brown’s lawsuit alleges the companies and individuals violated:
    – The National Do Not Call Registry, 16 C.F.R. section 310.4 and California Business and Professions Code section 17200 by telemarketing their services to persons on the registry;

    – The National Do Not Call Registry, 16 C.F.R. section 310.8 and California Business and Professions Code section 17200 by telemarketing their services without paying the mandatory annual fee for access to telephone numbers within the area codes included in the registry;

    – California Civil Code section 2945 et seq. and California Business and Professions Code section 17200 by demanding and collecting up-front fees prior to performing any services, failing to include statutory notices in their contracts, and failing to comply with other requirements imposed on mortgage foreclosure consultants;

    – California Business and Professions Code sections 17200 and 17500 by representing that they would obtain home loan modifications for consumers but failing to do so in most instances; by representing that consumers must make further payments even though they had not performed any of the promised services; by representing that they have a high success rate and that they can obtain loan modification within no more than 60 days when in fact these representations were false; and by directing consumers to avoid contact with their lenders and to stop making loan payments causing some lenders to initiate foreclosure proceedings and causing damage to consumers’ credit records.

    Victims of this scam include a father of four battling cancer, a small business owner, an elderly disabled couple, a sheriff whose income dropped due to city budget cuts and an Iraq-war veteran. None of these victims received the loan modification promised.

    Brown is seeking unspecified civil penalties, full restitution for victims, and a permanent injunction to keep the company and the defendants from offering foreclosure consultant services.

    The defendants also did business under other names including Lighthouse Services and California Foreclosure Specialists.

    Home Relief Services, LLC
    Brown Monday sued Home Relief Services, LLC., its executives Terence Green Sr. and Stefano Marrero, the Diener Law Firm and its principal attorney Christopher L. Diener for bilking thousands of homeowners out of thousands of dollars each.

    Home Relief Services charged homeowners over $4,000 in upfront fees, promised to lower interest rates to 4 percent, convert adjustable-rate mortgages to low fixed-rate loans and reduce principal up to 50 percent within 30 to 60 days. None of the known victims received a modification with the assistance of the defendants.

    In some cases, these companies also sought to be the lenders’ agent in the short-sale of their clients’ homes. In doing so, the defendants attempted to use their customers’ personal financial information for their own benefit.

    Home Relief Services and the Diener Law Firm directed homeowners to stop contacting their lender because the defendants would act as their sole agent and negotiator.

    Brown’s lawsuit contends that the defendants violated:
    – California Business and Professions Code section 17500 by claiming a 95 percent success rate and promising consumers significant reductions in the principal balance of their mortgages;

    – California Business and Professions Code section 17200 by failing to perform on promises made in exchange for upfront fees;

    – California Civil Code section 2945.4 for unlawfully collecting upfront fees for loan modification services;

    – California Business and Professions Code section 2945.3 by failing to include cancellation notices in their contracts;

    – California Civil Code section 2945.45 by not registering with the Attorney General’s office as foreclosure consultants; and

    – California Penal Code section 487 for grand theft.

    Brown is seeking $10 million in civil penalties, full restitution for victims, and a permanent injunction to keep the company and the defendants from offering foreclosure consultant services.

    Two other companies with the same management were also involved in the effort to deceive homeowners: Payment Relief Services, Inc. and Golden State Funding, Inc.

    RMR Group Loss Mitigation Group
    Brown Monday sued RMR Group Loss Mitigation and its executives Michael Scott Armendariz of Huntington Beach, Ruben Curiel of Lancaster, and Ricardo Haag of Corona; Living Water Lending, Inc.; and attorney Arthur Steven Aldridge of Westlake Village as well as the law firm of Shippey & Associates and its principal attorney Karla C. Shippey of Yorba Linda – for bilking over 500 victims out of nearly $1 million.

    The company solicited homeowners through telephone calls and in-person home visits. Employees claimed a 98 percent success rate and a money-back guarantee. None of the known victims received any refunds or modifications with the assistance of defendants.

    For example, in July 2008, a 71-year old victim learned his monthly mortgage payments would increase from $2,470 to $3,295. He paid $2,995, yet received no loan modification and no refund.

    Additionally, RMR insisted that homeowners refrain from contacting their lenders because the defendants would act as their agents.

    Brown’s suit contends that the defendants violated:

    – California Business and Professions Code section 17500 by claiming a 98 percent success rate and promising consumers significant reductions in the principal balance of their mortgages;

    – California Business and Professions Code section 17200 by failing to perform on promises made in exchange for upfront fees;

    – California Civil Code section 2945.4 for unlawfully collecting upfront fees for loan modification services;

    – California Business and Professions Code section 2945.3 by failing to include cancellation notices in their contracts;

    – California Civil Code section 2945.45 by not registering with the Attorney General’s office as foreclosure consultants; and

    – California Penal Code section 487 for grand theft.

    Brown is seeking $7.5 million in civil penalties, full restitution for victims, and a permanent injunction to keep the company and the defendants from offering foreclosure consultant services.

    United First, Inc.
    On July 6, 2009, Brown sued a foreclosure consultant and an attorney — Paul Noe Jr. and Mitchell Roth – who conned 2,000 desperate homeowners into paying exorbitant fees for “phony lawsuits” to forestall foreclosure proceedings.

    These lawsuits were filed and abandoned, even though homeowners were charged $1,800 in upfront fees, at least $1,200 per month and contingency fees of up to 80 percent of their home’s value.

    Noe convinced more than 2,000 homeowners to sign “joint venture” agreements with his company, United First, and hire Roth to file suits claiming that the borrower’s loan was invalid because the mortgages had been sold so many times on Wall Street that the lender could not demonstrate who owned it. Similar suits in other states have never resulted in the elimination of the borrower’s mortgage debt.

    After filing the lawsuits, Roth did virtually nothing to advance the cases. He often failed to make required court filings, respond to legal motions, comply with court deadlines, or appear at court hearings. Instead, Roth’s firm simply tried to extend the lawsuits as long as possible in order to collect additional monthly fees.

    United First charged homeowners approximately $1,800 in upfront fees, plus at least $1,200 per month. If the case was settled, homeowners were required to pay 50 percent of the cash value of the settlement. For example, if United First won a $100,000 reduction of the mortgage debt, the homeowner would have to pay United First a fee of $50,000. If United First completely eliminated the homeowner’s debt, the homeowner would be required to pay the company 80 percent of the value of the home.

    Brown’s lawsuit contends that Noe, Roth and United First:

    – Violated California’s credit counseling and foreclosure consultant laws, Civil Code sections 1789 and 2945

    – Inserted unconscionable terms in contracts;

    – Engaged in improper running and capping, meaning that Roth improperly partnered with United First, Inc. and Noe, who were not lawyers, to generate business for his law firm violating California Business and Professions Code 6150; and

    – Violated 17500 of the California Business and Professions Code.

    Brown’s office is seeking $2 million in civil penalties, full restitution for victims, and a permanent injunction to keep the company and the defendants from offering foreclosure consultant services.

    Tips for Homeowners
    Brown’s office issued these tips for homeowners to avoid becoming a victim:

    DON’T pay money to people who promise to work with your lender to modify your loan. It is unlawful for foreclosure consultants to collect money before (1) they give you a written contract describing the services they promise to provide and (2) they actually perform all the services described in the contract, such as negotiating new monthly payments or a new mortgage loan. However, an advance fee may be charged by an attorney, or by a real estate broker who has submitted the advance fee agreement to the Department of Real Estate, for review.

    DO call your lender yourself. Your lender wants to hear from you, and will likely be much more willing to work directly with you than with a foreclosure consultant.

    DON’T ignore letters from your lender. Consider contacting your lender yourself, many lenders are willing to work with homeowners who are behind on their payments.

    DON’T transfer title or sell your house to a “foreclosure rescuer.” Fraudulent foreclosure consultants often promise that if homeowners transfer title, they may stay in the home as renters and buy their home back later. The foreclosure consultants claim that transfer is necessary so that someone with a better credit rating can obtain a new loan to prevent foreclosure. BEWARE! This is a common scheme so-called “rescuers” use to evict homeowners and steal all or most of the home’s equity.

    DON’T pay your mortgage payments to someone other than your lender or loan servicer, even if he or she promises to pass the payment on. Fraudulent foreclosure consultants often keep the money for themselves.

    DON’T sign any documents without reading them first. Many homeowners think that they are signing documents for a new loan to pay off the mortgage they are behind on. Later, they discover that they actually transferred ownership to the “rescuer.”

    DO contact housing counselors approved by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), who may be able to help you for free. For a referral to a housing counselor near you, contact HUD at 1-800-569-4287 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              1-800-569-4287      end_of_the_skype_highlighting (TTY: 1-800-877-8339 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              1-800-877-8339      end_of_the_skype_highlighting) or http://www.hud.gov.

    If you believe you have been the victim of a mortgage-relief scam in California, please contact the Attorney General’s Public Inquiry Unit at http://ag.ca.gov/consumers/general.php.
    # # #


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, bankruptcy, california, civil code 2923.5, eviction, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, usury

    Categories : Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, eviction, respa, stop foreclosure, tila, truth in lending


    Pretender Lenders

    2 07 2009

    — read and weep. Game Over. Over the next 6-12 months the entire foreclosure mess is going to be turned on its head as it becomes apparent to even the most skeptical that the mortgage mess is just that — a mess. From the time the deed was recorded to the time the assignments, powers of attorneys, notarization and other documents were fabricated and executed there is an 18 minute Nixonian gap in the record that cannot be cured. Just because you produce documents, however real they appear, does not mean you can shift the burden of proof onto the borrower. In California our legislator have attempted to slow this train wreck but the pretender lenders just go on with the foreclosure by declaring to the foreclosure trustee the borrower is in default and they have all the documents the trustee then records a false document. A notice of default filed pursuant to Section 2924 shall include a declaration from the mortgagee, beneficiary, or authorized agent that it has contacted the borrower, tried with due diligence to contact the borrower as required by this section, or the borrower has surrendered the property to the mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, or authorized agent.
    Invalid Declaration on Notice of Default and/or Notice of Trustee’s Sale.

    The purpose of permitting a declaration under penalty of perjury, in lieu of a sworn statement, is to help ensure that declarations contain a truthful factual representation and are made in good faith. (In re Marriage of Reese & Guy, 73 Cal. App. 4th 1214, 87 Cal. Rptr. 2d 339 (4th Dist. 1999).
    In addition to California Civil Code §2923.5, California Code of Civil Procedure §2015.5 states:
    Whenever, under any law of this state or under any rule, regulation, order or requirement made pursuant to the law of this state, any matter is required or permitted to be supported, evidenced, established, or proved by the sworn statement, declaration, verification, certificate, oath, or affidavit, in writing of the person making the same, such matter may with like force and effect be supported, evidenced, established or proved by the unsworn statement, declaration, verification, or certificate, in writing of such person which recites that is certified or declared by him or her to be true under penalty of perjury, is subscribed by him or her, and (1), if executed within this state, states the date and place of execution; (2) if executed at any place, within or without this state, states the date of execution and that is so certified or declared under the laws of the State of California. The certification or declaration must be in substantially the following form:
    (a) If executed within this state:
    “I certify (or declare) under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct”:
    _____________________ _______________________
    (Date and Place) (Signature)

    For our purposes we need not look any farther than the Notice of Default to find the declaration is not signed under penalty of perjury; as mandated by new Civil Code §2923.5(c). (Blum v. Superior Court (Copley Press Inc.) (2006) 141 Cal App 4th 418, 45 Cal. Reptr. 3d 902 ). The Declaration is merely a form declaration with a check box.

    No Personal Knowledge of Declarant
    According to Giles v. Friendly Finance Co. of Biloxi, Inc., 199 So. 2nd 265 (Miss. 1967), “an affidavit on behalf of a corporation must show that it was made by an authorized officer or agent, and the officer him or herself must swear to the facts.” Furthermore, in Giles v. County Dep’t of Public Welfare of Marion County (Ind.App. 1 Dist.1991) 579 N.E.2d 653, 654-655 states in pertinent part, “a person who verified a pleading to have personal knowledge or reasonable cause to believe the existence of the facts stated therein.” Here, the Declaration for the Notice of Default by the agent does not state if the agent has personal knowledge and how he obtained this knowledge.
    The proper function of an affidavit is to state facts, not conclusions, ¹ and affidavits that merely state conclusions rather than facts are insufficient. ² An affidavit must set forth facts and show affirmatively how the affiant obtained personal knowledge of those facts. ³
    Here, The Notice of Default does not have the required agent’s personal knowledge of facts and if the Plaintiff borrower was affirmatively contacted in person or by telephone
    to assess the Plaintiff’s financial situation and explore options for the Plaintiff to avoid foreclosure. A simple check box next to the “facts” does not suffice.
    Furthermore, “it has been said that personal knowledge of facts asserted in an affidavit is not presumed from the mere positive averment of facts, but rather, a court should be shown how the affiant knew or could have known such facts, and, if there is no evidence from which the inference of personal knowledge can be drawn, then it is
    ¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬¬____________________________________________________________________________
    ¹ Lindley v. Midwest Pulmonary Consultants, P.C., 55 S.W.3d 906 (Mo. Ct. App. W.D. 2001).
    ² Jaime v. St. Joseph Hosp. Foundation, 853 S.W.2d 604 (Tex. App. Houston 1st Dist. 1993).
    ³ M.G.M. Grand Hotel, Inc. v. Castro, 8 S.W.3d 403 (Tex. App. Corpus Chrisit 1999).

    presumed that from which the inference of personal knowledge can be drawn, then it is presumed that such does not exist.” ¹ The declaration signed by agent does not state anywhere how he knew or could have known if Plaintiff was contacted in person or by telephone to explore different financial options. It is vague and ambiguous if he himself called plaintiff.
    This defendant did not adhere to the mandates laid out by congress before a foreclosure can be considered duly perfected. The Notice of Default states,

    “That by reason thereof, the present beneficiary under such deed of trust, has executed and delivered to said agent, a written Declaration of Default and Demand for same, and has deposited with said agent such Deed of Trust and all documents evidencing obligations secured thereby, and has declared and does hereby declare all sums secured thereby immediately due and payable and has elected and does hereby elect to cause the trust property to be sold to satisfy the obligations secured thereby.”

    However, Defendants do not have and assignment of the deed of trust nor have they complied with 2923.5 or 2923.6 or 2924 the Deed of Trust, nor do they provide any documents evidencing obligations secured thereby. For the aforementioned reasons, the Notice of Default will be void as a matter of law. The pretender lenders a banking on the “tender defense” to save them ie. yes we did not follow the law so sue us and when you do we will claim “tender” Check Mate but that’s not the law.

    Recording a False Document
    Furthermore, according to California Penal Code § 115 in pertinent part:
    (a) Every person who knowingly procures or offers any false or forged instrument to be filed, registered, or recorded in any public office within this state, which instrument, if genuine, might be filed, registered, or recorded under any law of this state or of the United States, is guilty of a felony.

    If you say you have a claim, you must prove it. If you say you are the lender, you must prove it. Legislators take notice: Just because bankers give you money doesn’t mean they can change 1000 years of common law, statutory law and constitutional law. It just won’t fly. And if you are a legislator looking to get elected or re-elected, your failure to act on what is now an obvious need to clear title and restore the wealth of your citizens who were cheated and defrauded, will be punished by the votes of your constituents.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 3 Comments »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2923.6, 2924, california, California cram down, civil code 2923.5, civil code 2924, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, HOEPA, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, usury

    Categories : Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, eviction, respa, stop foreclosure, tila, truth in lending


    Homecomings TILA complaint GMAC

    27 06 2009

    homecomingstila


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, stop foreclosure, usury


    Leman Tila complaint

    27 06 2009

    Lemantilacomp


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, bankruptcy, eviction, stop foreclosure, truth in lending


    Lender class action

    27 06 2009

    Mortgageinvestorgroupclass


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Option One Complaint Pick a payment lawsuit

    27 06 2009

    optionone


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 2 Comments »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, civil code 2923.5, truth in lending, Mortgage modification, eviction, california, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, bankruptcy, Chapter 13, 2924, 2923.5, 2932.5, Recoupment, Fraud, Predatory Lending, FCRA, 2923.6, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Uncategorized, California cram down, Audit, Countrywide, United First, usury, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Win the eviction by Summary judgement

    27 06 2009

    When title to the property is still in dispute ie. the foreclosure was bad. They (the lender)did not comply with California civil code 2923.5 or 2923.6 or 2924. Or the didn’t possess the documents to foreclose ie. the original note. Or they did not possess a proper assignment 2932.5. at trial you will be ignored by the learned judge but if you file a Motion for Summary Judgmentevans sum ud
    template notice of Motion for SJ
    TEMPLATE Points and A for SJ Motion
    templateDeclaration for SJ
    TEMPLATEProposed Order on Motion for SJ
    TEMPLATEStatement of Undisputed Facts
    you can force the issue and if there is a case filed in the Unlimited jurisdiction Court the judge may be forced to consider title and or consolidate the case with the Unlimited Jurisdiction Case2nd amended complaint (e) manuel
    BAKER original complaint (b)
    Countrywide Complaint Form
    FRAUDULENT OMISSIONS FORM FINAL
    sample-bank-final-complaint1-2.docx


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, civil code 2923.5, eviction, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, eviction, stop foreclosure, truth in lending


    What is worse bankruptcy or foreclosure?

    25 06 2009

    So what is worse, bankruptcy or foreclosure? Which will have the biggest impact on my credit score? Both bankruptcy and foreclosure will have serious negative affects on your personal credit report and your credit score as well. With re-established credit after a bankruptcy and/or foreclosure you can possibly qualify for a good mortgage once again in as little as 24 months. Therefore, it is very difficult to say one is worse than the other, but the bottom line is that they are both very bad for you and should be avoided if all possible.

    Foreclosure is worse then bankruptcy because you are actually losing something of value, your home. Once you are in foreclosure you will lose any and all equity in your home. If there is no equity in the home you will be responsible for the remaining balance after the property auction. With chapter 7 bankruptcy all of your unsecured debts are erased and you start over and in most cases you will not lose anything other then your credit rating.

    Many times qualifying for a mortgage after a foreclosure is more difficult than applying for a home after a bankruptcy. With that said, that could possibly lead you to believe that foreclosure is worse than bankruptcy. Most people who have a home foreclosed upon end up filing bankruptcy as well.

    Bankruptcy and Foreclosure filings are public records, however no one would know about your proceedings under normal circumstances. The Credit Bureaus will record your bankruptcy and a foreclosure. Bankruptcies will remain on your credit record for 10 years while foreclosures can stay on your report for up to 7 years.

    In some cases, one can refinance out of a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy with a 12 month trustee payment history and a timely mortgage history. It is much more difficult to obtain financing with a foreclosure on your record.

    Foreclosure is worse because of the loss of value. You will not receive any compensation for the equity in your home if it proceeds to foreclosure.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, eviction, stop foreclosure


    Standing argument

    7 06 2009

    judge-youngs-decision-on-nosek

    Ameriquest’s final argument, that the sanctions are a
    criminal penalty, is bereft of authority. Ameriquest cites F.J.
    Hanshaw Enterprises, Inc. v. Emerald River Development, Inc., 244
    F.3d 1128 (9th Cir. 2001), a case about inherent powers – not
    Rule 11 –

    This is an excerpt from the decision just this bloggers note the Hanshaw Case was my case. I argued this case at the 9th circuit court of appeals

    http://openjurist.org/244/f3d/1128/fj-v-emeraldfj-v-emerald

    If you will grasp the implications of this judge-youngs-decision-on-nosekdecision all or most all the evictions and  foreclosures are being litigated by the wrong parties that is to say parties who have no real stake in the outcome. they are merely servicers not the real investors. They do not have the right to foreclose or evict. No assignment No note No security interest No standing They do not want to be listed anywhere. They (the lenders) have caused the greatest damage to the American Citizen since the great depression and they do not want to be exposed or named in countless lawsuits. Time and time again I get from the judges in demurer hearings ” I see what you are saying counsel but your claim does not appear to be against this defendant” the unnamed investment pool of the Lehman Brothers shared High yield equity Fund trustee does not exist and so far can’t be sued.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5, truth in lending, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, respa, stop foreclosure


    Coalition sues lenders

    9 05 2009

    Coalition Sues lenders


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Loan Audit, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, pedatory lending


    Sample complaint template

    26 04 2009

    this is the type of complaint to get the lender to the table sample-bank-final-complaint1-2


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 4 Comments »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, California cram down, civil code 2924, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, eviction, respa, stop foreclosure

     

    non-judicial sale is NOT an available election for a securitized loan

    2 06 2010

    Posted 6 days ago by Neil Garfield on Livinglies’s Weblog
    NON-JUDICIAL STATES: THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN FORECLOSURE AND SALE:

    FORECLOSURE is a judicial process herein the “lender” files a lawsuit seeking to (a) enforce the note and get a judgment in the amount owed to them (b) asking the court to order the sale of the property to satisfy the Judgment. If the sale price is lower than the Judgment, then they will ask for a deficiency Judgment and the Judge will enter that Judgment. If the proceeds of sale is over the amount of the judgment, the borrower is entitled to the overage. Of course they usually tack on a number of fees and costs that may or may not be allowable. It is very rare that there is an overage. THE POINT IS that when they sue to foreclose they must make allegations which state a cause of action for enforcement of the note and for an order setting a date for sale. Those allegations include a description of the transaction with copies attached, and a claim of non-payment, together with allegations that the payments are owed to the Plaintiff BECAUSE they would suffer financial damage as a result of the non-payment. IN THE PROOF of the case the Plaintiff would be required to prove each and EVERY element of their claim which means proof that each allegation they made and each exhibit they rely upon is proven with live witnesses who are competent — i.e., they take an oath, they have PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE (not what someone else told them),personal recall and the ability to communicate what they know. This applies to documents they wish to use as well. That is called authentication and foundation.

    SALE: Means what it says. In non-judicial sale they just want to sell your property without showing any court that they can credibly make the necessary allegations for a judicial foreclosure and without showing the court proof of the allegations they would be required to make if they filed a judicial foreclosure. In a non-judicial state what they want is to SELL and what they don’t want is to foreclose. Keep in mind that every state that allows non-judicial sale treats the sale as private and NOT a judicial event by definition. In Arizona and many other states there is no election for non-judicial sale of commercial property because of the usual complexity of commercial transactions. THE POINT is that a securitized loan presents as much or more complexity than commercial real property loan transactions. Thus your argument might be that the non-judicial sale is NOT an available election for a securitized loan.

    When you bring a lawsuit challenging the non-judicial sale, it would probably be a good idea to allege that the other party has ELECTED NON-JUDICIAL sale when the required elements of such an election do not exist. Your prima facie case is simply to establish that the borrower objects the sale, denies that they pretender lender has any right to sell the property, denies the default and that the securitization documents show a complexity far beyond the complexity of even highly complex commercial real estate transactions which the legislature has mandated be resolved ONLY by judicial foreclosure.

    THEREFORE in my opinion I think in your argument you do NOT want to concede that they wish to foreclose. What they want to do is execute on the power of sale in the deed of trust WITHOUT going through the judicial foreclosure process as provided in State statutes. You must understand and argue that the opposition is seeking to go around normal legal process which requires a foreclosure lawsuit.

    THAT would require them to make allegations about the obligation, note and mortgage that they cannot make (we are the lender, the defendant owes us money, we are the holder of the note, the note is payable to us, he hasn’t paid, the unpaid balance of the note is xxx etc.) and they would have to prove those allegations before you had to say anything. In addition they would be subject to discovery in which you could test their assertions before an evidentiary hearing. That is how lawsuits work.

    The power of sale given to the trustee is a hail Mary pass over the requirements of due process. But it allows for you to object. The question which nobody has asked and nobody has answered, is on the burden of proof, once you object to the sale, why shouldn’t the would-be forecloser be required to plead and prove its case? If the court takes the position that in non-judicial states the private power of sale is to be treated as a judicial event, then that is a denial of due process required by Federal and state constitutions. The only reason it is allowed, is because it is private and “non-judicial.” The quirk comes in because in practice the homeowner must file suit. Usually the party filing suit must allege facts and prove a prima facie case before the burden shifts to the other side. So the Judge is looking at you to do that when you file to prevent the sale.

    Legally, though, your case should be limited to proving that they are trying to sell your property, that you object, that you deny what would be the allegations in a judicial foreclosure and that you have meritorious defenses. That SHOULD trigger the requirement of re-orienting the parties and making the would-be forecloser file a complaint (lawsuit) for foreclosure. Then the burden of proof would be properly aligned with the party seeking affirmative relief (i.e., the party who wants to enforce the deed of trust (mortgage), note and obligation) required to file the complaint with all the necessary elements of an action for foreclosure and attach the necessary exhibits. They don’t want to do that because they don’t have the exhibits and the note is not payable to them and they cannot actually prove standing (which is a jurisdictional question). The problem is that a statute passed for judicial economy is now being used to force the burden of proof onto the borrower in the foreclosure of their own home. This is not being addressed yet but it will be addressed soon.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, Mortgage modification, mortgage meltdown, lis pendence, 2923.5, Predatory Lending, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi

    Categories : Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Predatory Lending, stop foreclosure


    90% Forclosures Wrongful

    1 01 2010

    A wrongful foreclosure action typically occurs when the lender starts a non judicial foreclosure action when it simply has no legal cause. This is even more evident now since California passed the Foreclosure prevention act of 2008 SB 1194 codified in Civil code 2923.5 and 2923.6. In 2009 it is this attorneys opinion that 90% of all foreclosures are wrongful in that the lender does not comply (just look at the declaration page on the notice of default). The lenders most notably Indymac, Countrywide, and Wells Fargo have taken a calculated risk. To comply would cost hundreds of millions in staff, paperwork, and workouts that they don’t deem to be in their best interest. The workout is not in there best interest because our tax dollars are guaranteeing the Banks that are To Big to Fail’s debt. If they don’t foreclose and if they work it out the loss is on them. There is no incentive to modify loan for the benefit of the consumer.

    Sooooo they proceed to foreclosure without the mandated contacts with the borrower. Oh and yes contact is made by a computer or some outsourcing contact agent based in India. But compliance with 2923.5 is not done. The Borrower is never told that he or she have the right to a meeting within 14 days of the contact. They do not get offers to avoid foreclosure there are typically two offers short sale or a probationary mod that will be declined upon the 90th day.

    Wrongful foreclosure actions are also brought when the service providers accept partial payments after initiation of the wrongful foreclosure process, and then continue on with the foreclosure process. These predatory lending strategies, as well as other forms of misleading homeowners, are illegal.

    The borrower is the one that files a wrongful disclosure action with the court against the service provider, the holder of the note and if it is a non-judicial foreclosure, against the trustee complaining that there was an illegal, fraudulent or willfully oppressive sale of property under a power of sale contained in a mortgage or deed or court judicial proceeding. The borrower can also allege emotional distress and ask for punitive damages in a wrongful foreclosure action.

    Causes of Action

    Wrongful foreclosure actions may allege that the amount stated in the notice of default as due and owing is incorrect because of the following reasons:

    * Incorrect interest rate adjustment
    * Incorrect tax impound accounts
    * Misapplied payments
    * Forbearance agreement which was not adhered to by the servicer
    * Unnecessary forced place insurance,
    * Improper accounting for a confirmed chapter 11 or chapter 13 bankruptcy plan.
    * Breach of contract
    * Intentional infliction of emotional distress
    * Negligent infliction of emotional distress
    * Unfair Business Practices
    * Quiet title
    * Wrongful foreclosure
    * Tortuous violation of 2924 2923.5 and 2923.5 and 2932.5
    Injunction

    Any time prior to the foreclosure sale, a borrower can apply for an injunction with the intent of stopping the foreclosure sale until issues in the lawsuit are resolved. The wrongful foreclosure lawsuit can take anywhere from ten to twenty-four months. Generally, an injunction will only be issued by the court if the court determines that: (1) the borrower is entitled to the injunction; and (2) that if the injunction is not granted, the borrower will be subject to irreparable harm.

    Damages Available to Borrower

    Damages available to a borrower in a wrongful foreclosure action include: compensation for the detriment caused, which are measured by the value of the property, emotional distress and punitive damages if there is evidence that the servicer or trustee committed fraud, oppression or malice in its wrongful conduct. If the borrower’s allegations are true and correct and the borrower wins the lawsuit, the servicer will have to undue or cancel the foreclosure sale, and pay the borrower’s legal bills.

    Why Do Wrongful Foreclosures Occur?

    Wrongful foreclosure cases occur usually because of a miscommunication between the lender and the borrower. Most borrower don’t know who the real lender is. Servicing has changed on average three times. And with the advent of MERS Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems the “investor lender” hundreds of times since the origination. And now they then have to contact the borrower. The don’t even know who the lender truly is. The laws that are now in place never contemplated the virtualization of the lending market. The present laws are inadequate to the challenge.

    This is even more evident now since California passed the Foreclosure prevention act of 2008 SB 1194 codified in Civil code 2923.5 and 2923.6. In 2009 it is this attorneys opinion that 90% of all foreclosures are wrongful in that the lender does not comply (just look at the declaration page on the notice of default). The lenders most notably Indymac, Countrywide, and Wells Fargo have taken a calculated risk. To comply would cost hundreds of millions in staff, paperwork, and workouts that they don’t deem to be in their best interest. The workout is not in there best interest because our tax dollars are guaranteeing the Banks that are To Big to Fail’s debt. If they don’t foreclose and if they work it out the loss is on them. There is no incentive to modify loan for the benefit of the consumer.This could be as a result of an incorrectly applied payment, an error in interest charges and completely inaccurate information communicated between the lender and borrower. Some borrowers make the situation worse by ignoring their monthly statements and not promptly responding in writing to the lender’s communications. Many borrowers just assume that the lender will correct any inaccuracies or errors. Any one of these actions can quickly turn into a foreclosure action. Once an action is instituted, then the borrower will have to prove that it is wrongful or unwarranted. This is done by the borrower filing a wrongful foreclosure action. Costs are expensive and the action can take time to litigate.
    Impact

    The wrongful foreclosure will appear on the borrower’s credit report as a foreclosure, thereby ruining the borrower’s credit rating. Inaccurate delinquencies may also accompany the foreclosure on the credit report. After the foreclosure is found to be wrongful, the borrower must then petition to get the delinquencies and foreclosure off the credit report. This can take a long time and is emotionally distressing.

    Wrongful foreclosure may also lead to the borrower losing their home and other assets if the borrower does not act quickly. This can have a devastating affect on a family that has been displaced out of their home. However, once the borrower’s wrongful foreclosure action is successful in court, the borrower may be entitled to compensation for their attorney fees, court costs, pain, suffering and emotional distress caused by the action.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, civil code 2924, Countrywide, Foreclosure, Fraud, stop foreclosure

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, Foreclosure, Lender Class action


    Fabrication of Documents: MERS GAP Illuminated

    23 12 2009

    Posted on July 30, 2009 by livinglies

    Another example of why a TILA audit is grossly inadequate. A forensic audit is required covering all bases. Although dated, this article picks up on a continuing theme that demonstrates the title defect, the questionable conduct of pretender lenders and the defects in the foreclosure process when you let companies with big brand names bluff the system. The MERS GAP arises whether MERS is actually the nominee on the deed of trust (or mortgage deed) or not. It is an announcement that there will be off record transactions between parties who have no interest in the loan but who will assert such an interest once they have successfullly fabricated documents, had someone without authority sign them, on behalf of an entity with no real beneficial interest or other economic interest in the loan, and then frequently notarized by someone in another state. we have even seen documents notarized in blank and forged signatures of borrowers on loan closing papers.

    NYTimes.com
    Lender Tells Judge It ‘Recreated’ Letters
    Tuesday January 8, 2008 11:38 pm ET
    By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
    The Countrywide Financial Corporation fabricated documents related to the bankruptcy case of a Pennsylvania homeowner, court records show, raising new questions about the business practices of the giant mortgage lender at the center of the subprime mess.The documents — three letters from Countrywide addressed to the homeowner — claimed that the borrower owed the company $4,700 because of discrepancies in escrow deductions. Countrywide’s local counsel described the letters to the court as “recreated,” raising concern from the federal bankruptcy judge overseeing the case, Thomas P. Agresti.

    “These letters are a smoking gun that something is not right in Denmark,” Judge Agresti said in a Dec. 20 hearing in Pittsburgh.

    The emergence of the fabricated documents comes as Countrywide confronts a rising tide of complaints from borrowers who claim that the company pushed them into risky loans. The matter in Pittsburgh is one of 300 bankruptcy cases in which Countrywide’s practices have come under scrutiny in western Pennsylvania.

    Judge Agresti said that discovery should proceed so that those involved in the case, including the Chapter 13 trustee for the western district of Pennsylvania and the United States trustee, could determine how Countrywide’s systems might generate such documents.

    A spokesman for the lender, Rick Simon, said: “It is not Countrywide’s policy to create or ‘fabricate’ any documents as evidence that they were sent if they had not been. We believe it will be shown in further discovery that the Countrywide bankruptcy technician who generated the documents at issue did so as an efficient way to convey the dates the escrow analyses were done and the calculations of the payments as a result of the analyses.”

    The documents were generated in a case involving Sharon Diane Hill, a homeowner in Monroeville, Pa. Ms. Hill filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy protection in March 2001 to try to save her home from foreclosure.

    After meeting her mortgage obligations under the 60-month bankruptcy plan, Ms. Hill’s case was discharged and officially closed on March 9, 2007. Countrywide, the servicer on her loan, did not object to the discharge; court records from that date show she was current on her mortgage.

    But one month later, Ms. Hill received a notice of intention to foreclose from Countrywide, stating that she was in default and owed the company $4,166.

    Court records show that the amount claimed by Countrywide was from the period during which Ms. Hill was making regular payments under the auspices of the bankruptcy court. They included “monthly charges” totaling $3,840 from November 2006 to April 2007, late charges of $128 and other charges of almost $200.

    A lawyer representing Ms. Hill in her bankruptcy case, Kenneth Steidl, of Steidl and Steinberg in Pittsburgh, wrote Countrywide a few weeks later stating that Ms. Hill had been deemed current on her mortgage during the period in question. But in May, Countrywide sent Ms. Hill another notice stating that her loan was delinquent and demanding that she pay $4,715.58. Neither Mr. Steidl nor Julia Steidl, who has also represented Ms. Hill, returned phone calls seeking comment.

    Justifying Ms. Hill’s arrears, Countrywide sent her lawyer copies of three letters on company letterhead addressed to the homeowner, as well as to Mr. Steidl and Ronda J. Winnecour, the Chapter 13 trustee for the western district of Pennsylvania.

    The Countrywide letters were dated September 2003, October 2004 and March 2007 and showed changes in escrow requirements on Ms. Hill’s loan. “This letter is to advise you that the escrow requirement has changed per the escrow analysis completed today,” each letter began.

    But Mr. Steidl told the court he had never received the letters. Furthermore, he noticed that his address on the first Countrywide letter was not the location of his office at the time, but an address he moved to later. Neither did the Chapter 13 trustee’s office have any record of receiving the letters, court records show.

    When Mr. Steidl discussed this with Leslie E. Puida, Countrywide’s outside counsel on the case, he said Ms. Puida told him that the letters had been “recreated” by Countrywide to reflect the escrow discrepancies, the court transcript shows. During these discussions, Ms. Puida reduced the amount that Countrywide claimed Ms. Hill owed to $1,500 from $4,700.

    Under questioning by the judge, Ms. Puida said that “a processor” at Countrywide had generated the letters to show how the escrow discrepancies arose. “They were not offered to prove that they had been sent,” Ms. Puida said. But she also said, under questioning from the court, that the letters did not carry a disclaimer indicating that they were not actual correspondence or that they had never been sent.

    A Countrywide spokesman said that in bankruptcy cases, Countrywide’s automated systems are sometimes overridden, with technicians making manual adjustments “to comply with bankruptcy laws and the requirements in the jurisdiction in which a bankruptcy is pending.” Asked by Judge Agresti why Countrywide would go to the trouble of “creating a letter that was never sent,” Ms. Puida, its lawyer, said she did not know.

    “I just, I can’t get over what I’m being told here about these recreations,” Judge Agresti said, “and what the purpose is or was and what was intended by them.”

    Ms. Hill’s matter is one of 300 bankruptcy cases involving Countrywide that have come under scrutiny by Ms. Winnecour, the Chapter 13 trustee in Pittsburgh. On Oct. 9, she asked the court to sanction Countrywide, contending that the company had lost or destroyed more than $500,000 in checks paid by homeowners in bankruptcy from December 2005 to April 2007.

    Ms. Winnecour said in court filings that she was concerned that even as Countrywide had misplaced or destroyed the checks, it levied charges on the borrowers, including late fees and legal costs. A spokesman in her office said she would not comment on the Hill case.

    O. Max Gardner III, a lawyer in North Carolina who represents troubled borrowers, says that he routinely sees lenders pursue borrowers for additional money after their bankruptcies have been discharged and the courts have determined that the default has been cured and borrowers are current. Regarding the Hill matter, Mr. Gardner said: “The real problem in my mind when reading the transcript is that Countrywide’s lawyer could not explain how this happened.”

    Filed under: CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, GTC | Honor, Investor, Mortgage, bubble, currency, foreclosure, securities fraud | Tagged: borrower, countrywide, disclosure, foreclosure defense, foreclosure offense, fraud, rescission, RESPA, TILA audit, trustee
    « Lucrative Fees May Deter Efforts to Alter Loans


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2932.5, eviction, Foreclosure, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act

    Categories : Foreclosure, Lender Class action, Loan Audit, Predatory Lending, bankruptcy


    Homecomings TILA complaint GMAC

    27 06 2009

    homecomingstila


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, civil code 2923.5, truth in lending, Mortgage modification, eviction, california, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, bankruptcy, Chapter 13, 2924, 2923.5, 2932.5, Recoupment, Fraud, Predatory Lending, FCRA, 2923.6, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Uncategorized, California cram down, Audit, Countrywide, United First, usury, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, stop foreclosure, usury


    Option One Complaint Pick a payment lawsuit

    27 06 2009

    optionone


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 2 Comments »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, civil code 2923.5, truth in lending, Mortgage modification, eviction, california, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, bankruptcy, Chapter 13, 2924, 2923.5, 2932.5, Recoupment, Fraud, Predatory Lending, FCRA, 2923.6, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Uncategorized, California cram down, Audit, Countrywide, United First, usury, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Coalition sues lenders

    9 05 2009

    Coalition Sues lenders


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, civil code 2923.5, truth in lending, Mortgage modification, eviction, california, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, bankruptcy, Chapter 13, 2924, 2923.5, 2932.5, Recoupment, Fraud, Predatory Lending, FCRA, 2923.6, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Uncategorized, California cram down, Audit, Countrywide, United First, usury, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Loan Audit, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, pedatory lending

     

    non-judicial sale is NOT an available election for a securitized loan

    2 06 2010

    Posted 6 days ago by Neil Garfield on Livinglies’s Weblog
    NON-JUDICIAL STATES: THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN FORECLOSURE AND SALE:

    FORECLOSURE is a judicial process herein the “lender” files a lawsuit seeking to (a) enforce the note and get a judgment in the amount owed to them (b) asking the court to order the sale of the property to satisfy the Judgment. If the sale price is lower than the Judgment, then they will ask for a deficiency Judgment and the Judge will enter that Judgment. If the proceeds of sale is over the amount of the judgment, the borrower is entitled to the overage. Of course they usually tack on a number of fees and costs that may or may not be allowable. It is very rare that there is an overage. THE POINT IS that when they sue to foreclose they must make allegations which state a cause of action for enforcement of the note and for an order setting a date for sale. Those allegations include a description of the transaction with copies attached, and a claim of non-payment, together with allegations that the payments are owed to the Plaintiff BECAUSE they would suffer financial damage as a result of the non-payment. IN THE PROOF of the case the Plaintiff would be required to prove each and EVERY element of their claim which means proof that each allegation they made and each exhibit they rely upon is proven with live witnesses who are competent — i.e., they take an oath, they have PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE (not what someone else told them),personal recall and the ability to communicate what they know. This applies to documents they wish to use as well. That is called authentication and foundation.

    SALE: Means what it says. In non-judicial sale they just want to sell your property without showing any court that they can credibly make the necessary allegations for a judicial foreclosure and without showing the court proof of the allegations they would be required to make if they filed a judicial foreclosure. In a non-judicial state what they want is to SELL and what they don’t want is to foreclose. Keep in mind that every state that allows non-judicial sale treats the sale as private and NOT a judicial event by definition. In Arizona and many other states there is no election for non-judicial sale of commercial property because of the usual complexity of commercial transactions. THE POINT is that a securitized loan presents as much or more complexity than commercial real property loan transactions. Thus your argument might be that the non-judicial sale is NOT an available election for a securitized loan.

    When you bring a lawsuit challenging the non-judicial sale, it would probably be a good idea to allege that the other party has ELECTED NON-JUDICIAL sale when the required elements of such an election do not exist. Your prima facie case is simply to establish that the borrower objects the sale, denies that they pretender lender has any right to sell the property, denies the default and that the securitization documents show a complexity far beyond the complexity of even highly complex commercial real estate transactions which the legislature has mandated be resolved ONLY by judicial foreclosure.

    THEREFORE in my opinion I think in your argument you do NOT want to concede that they wish to foreclose. What they want to do is execute on the power of sale in the deed of trust WITHOUT going through the judicial foreclosure process as provided in State statutes. You must understand and argue that the opposition is seeking to go around normal legal process which requires a foreclosure lawsuit.

    THAT would require them to make allegations about the obligation, note and mortgage that they cannot make (we are the lender, the defendant owes us money, we are the holder of the note, the note is payable to us, he hasn’t paid, the unpaid balance of the note is xxx etc.) and they would have to prove those allegations before you had to say anything. In addition they would be subject to discovery in which you could test their assertions before an evidentiary hearing. That is how lawsuits work.

    The power of sale given to the trustee is a hail Mary pass over the requirements of due process. But it allows for you to object. The question which nobody has asked and nobody has answered, is on the burden of proof, once you object to the sale, why shouldn’t the would-be forecloser be required to plead and prove its case? If the court takes the position that in non-judicial states the private power of sale is to be treated as a judicial event, then that is a denial of due process required by Federal and state constitutions. The only reason it is allowed, is because it is private and “non-judicial.” The quirk comes in because in practice the homeowner must file suit. Usually the party filing suit must allege facts and prove a prima facie case before the burden shifts to the other side. So the Judge is looking at you to do that when you file to prevent the sale.

    Legally, though, your case should be limited to proving that they are trying to sell your property, that you object, that you deny what would be the allegations in a judicial foreclosure and that you have meritorious defenses. That SHOULD trigger the requirement of re-orienting the parties and making the would-be forecloser file a complaint (lawsuit) for foreclosure. Then the burden of proof would be properly aligned with the party seeking affirmative relief (i.e., the party who wants to enforce the deed of trust (mortgage), note and obligation) required to file the complaint with all the necessary elements of an action for foreclosure and attach the necessary exhibits. They don’t want to do that because they don’t have the exhibits and the note is not payable to them and they cannot actually prove standing (which is a jurisdictional question). The problem is that a statute passed for judicial economy is now being used to force the burden of proof onto the borrower in the foreclosure of their own home. This is not being addressed yet but it will be addressed soon.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, Mortgage modification, mortgage meltdown, lis pendence, 2923.5, Predatory Lending, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi

    Categories : Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Predatory Lending, stop foreclosure


    90% Forclosures Wrongful

    1 01 2010

    A wrongful foreclosure action typically occurs when the lender starts a non judicial foreclosure action when it simply has no legal cause. This is even more evident now since California passed the Foreclosure prevention act of 2008 SB 1194 codified in Civil code 2923.5 and 2923.6. In 2009 it is this attorneys opinion that 90% of all foreclosures are wrongful in that the lender does not comply (just look at the declaration page on the notice of default). The lenders most notably Indymac, Countrywide, and Wells Fargo have taken a calculated risk. To comply would cost hundreds of millions in staff, paperwork, and workouts that they don’t deem to be in their best interest. The workout is not in there best interest because our tax dollars are guaranteeing the Banks that are To Big to Fail’s debt. If they don’t foreclose and if they work it out the loss is on them. There is no incentive to modify loan for the benefit of the consumer.

    Sooooo they proceed to foreclosure without the mandated contacts with the borrower. Oh and yes contact is made by a computer or some outsourcing contact agent based in India. But compliance with 2923.5 is not done. The Borrower is never told that he or she have the right to a meeting within 14 days of the contact. They do not get offers to avoid foreclosure there are typically two offers short sale or a probationary mod that will be declined upon the 90th day.

    Wrongful foreclosure actions are also brought when the service providers accept partial payments after initiation of the wrongful foreclosure process, and then continue on with the foreclosure process. These predatory lending strategies, as well as other forms of misleading homeowners, are illegal.

    The borrower is the one that files a wrongful disclosure action with the court against the service provider, the holder of the note and if it is a non-judicial foreclosure, against the trustee complaining that there was an illegal, fraudulent or willfully oppressive sale of property under a power of sale contained in a mortgage or deed or court judicial proceeding. The borrower can also allege emotional distress and ask for punitive damages in a wrongful foreclosure action.

    Causes of Action

    Wrongful foreclosure actions may allege that the amount stated in the notice of default as due and owing is incorrect because of the following reasons:

    * Incorrect interest rate adjustment
    * Incorrect tax impound accounts
    * Misapplied payments
    * Forbearance agreement which was not adhered to by the servicer
    * Unnecessary forced place insurance,
    * Improper accounting for a confirmed chapter 11 or chapter 13 bankruptcy plan.
    * Breach of contract
    * Intentional infliction of emotional distress
    * Negligent infliction of emotional distress
    * Unfair Business Practices
    * Quiet title
    * Wrongful foreclosure
    * Tortuous violation of 2924 2923.5 and 2923.5 and 2932.5
    Injunction

    Any time prior to the foreclosure sale, a borrower can apply for an injunction with the intent of stopping the foreclosure sale until issues in the lawsuit are resolved. The wrongful foreclosure lawsuit can take anywhere from ten to twenty-four months. Generally, an injunction will only be issued by the court if the court determines that: (1) the borrower is entitled to the injunction; and (2) that if the injunction is not granted, the borrower will be subject to irreparable harm.

    Damages Available to Borrower

    Damages available to a borrower in a wrongful foreclosure action include: compensation for the detriment caused, which are measured by the value of the property, emotional distress and punitive damages if there is evidence that the servicer or trustee committed fraud, oppression or malice in its wrongful conduct. If the borrower’s allegations are true and correct and the borrower wins the lawsuit, the servicer will have to undue or cancel the foreclosure sale, and pay the borrower’s legal bills.

    Why Do Wrongful Foreclosures Occur?

    Wrongful foreclosure cases occur usually because of a miscommunication between the lender and the borrower. Most borrower don’t know who the real lender is. Servicing has changed on average three times. And with the advent of MERS Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems the “investor lender” hundreds of times since the origination. And now they then have to contact the borrower. The don’t even know who the lender truly is. The laws that are now in place never contemplated the virtualization of the lending market. The present laws are inadequate to the challenge.

    This is even more evident now since California passed the Foreclosure prevention act of 2008 SB 1194 codified in Civil code 2923.5 and 2923.6. In 2009 it is this attorneys opinion that 90% of all foreclosures are wrongful in that the lender does not comply (just look at the declaration page on the notice of default). The lenders most notably Indymac, Countrywide, and Wells Fargo have taken a calculated risk. To comply would cost hundreds of millions in staff, paperwork, and workouts that they don’t deem to be in their best interest. The workout is not in there best interest because our tax dollars are guaranteeing the Banks that are To Big to Fail’s debt. If they don’t foreclose and if they work it out the loss is on them. There is no incentive to modify loan for the benefit of the consumer.This could be as a result of an incorrectly applied payment, an error in interest charges and completely inaccurate information communicated between the lender and borrower. Some borrowers make the situation worse by ignoring their monthly statements and not promptly responding in writing to the lender’s communications. Many borrowers just assume that the lender will correct any inaccuracies or errors. Any one of these actions can quickly turn into a foreclosure action. Once an action is instituted, then the borrower will have to prove that it is wrongful or unwarranted. This is done by the borrower filing a wrongful foreclosure action. Costs are expensive and the action can take time to litigate.
    Impact

    The wrongful foreclosure will appear on the borrower’s credit report as a foreclosure, thereby ruining the borrower’s credit rating. Inaccurate delinquencies may also accompany the foreclosure on the credit report. After the foreclosure is found to be wrongful, the borrower must then petition to get the delinquencies and foreclosure off the credit report. This can take a long time and is emotionally distressing.

    Wrongful foreclosure may also lead to the borrower losing their home and other assets if the borrower does not act quickly. This can have a devastating affect on a family that has been displaced out of their home. However, once the borrower’s wrongful foreclosure action is successful in court, the borrower may be entitled to compensation for their attorney fees, court costs, pain, suffering and emotional distress caused by the action.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, civil code 2924, Countrywide, Foreclosure, Fraud, stop foreclosure

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, Foreclosure, Lender Class action


    Fabrication of Documents: MERS GAP Illuminated

    23 12 2009

    Posted on July 30, 2009 by livinglies

    Another example of why a TILA audit is grossly inadequate. A forensic audit is required covering all bases. Although dated, this article picks up on a continuing theme that demonstrates the title defect, the questionable conduct of pretender lenders and the defects in the foreclosure process when you let companies with big brand names bluff the system. The MERS GAP arises whether MERS is actually the nominee on the deed of trust (or mortgage deed) or not. It is an announcement that there will be off record transactions between parties who have no interest in the loan but who will assert such an interest once they have successfullly fabricated documents, had someone without authority sign them, on behalf of an entity with no real beneficial interest or other economic interest in the loan, and then frequently notarized by someone in another state. we have even seen documents notarized in blank and forged signatures of borrowers on loan closing papers.

    NYTimes.com
    Lender Tells Judge It ‘Recreated’ Letters
    Tuesday January 8, 2008 11:38 pm ET
    By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
    The Countrywide Financial Corporation fabricated documents related to the bankruptcy case of a Pennsylvania homeowner, court records show, raising new questions about the business practices of the giant mortgage lender at the center of the subprime mess.The documents — three letters from Countrywide addressed to the homeowner — claimed that the borrower owed the company $4,700 because of discrepancies in escrow deductions. Countrywide’s local counsel described the letters to the court as “recreated,” raising concern from the federal bankruptcy judge overseeing the case, Thomas P. Agresti.

    “These letters are a smoking gun that something is not right in Denmark,” Judge Agresti said in a Dec. 20 hearing in Pittsburgh.

    The emergence of the fabricated documents comes as Countrywide confronts a rising tide of complaints from borrowers who claim that the company pushed them into risky loans. The matter in Pittsburgh is one of 300 bankruptcy cases in which Countrywide’s practices have come under scrutiny in western Pennsylvania.

    Judge Agresti said that discovery should proceed so that those involved in the case, including the Chapter 13 trustee for the western district of Pennsylvania and the United States trustee, could determine how Countrywide’s systems might generate such documents.

    A spokesman for the lender, Rick Simon, said: “It is not Countrywide’s policy to create or ‘fabricate’ any documents as evidence that they were sent if they had not been. We believe it will be shown in further discovery that the Countrywide bankruptcy technician who generated the documents at issue did so as an efficient way to convey the dates the escrow analyses were done and the calculations of the payments as a result of the analyses.”

    The documents were generated in a case involving Sharon Diane Hill, a homeowner in Monroeville, Pa. Ms. Hill filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy protection in March 2001 to try to save her home from foreclosure.

    After meeting her mortgage obligations under the 60-month bankruptcy plan, Ms. Hill’s case was discharged and officially closed on March 9, 2007. Countrywide, the servicer on her loan, did not object to the discharge; court records from that date show she was current on her mortgage.

    But one month later, Ms. Hill received a notice of intention to foreclose from Countrywide, stating that she was in default and owed the company $4,166.

    Court records show that the amount claimed by Countrywide was from the period during which Ms. Hill was making regular payments under the auspices of the bankruptcy court. They included “monthly charges” totaling $3,840 from November 2006 to April 2007, late charges of $128 and other charges of almost $200.

    A lawyer representing Ms. Hill in her bankruptcy case, Kenneth Steidl, of Steidl and Steinberg in Pittsburgh, wrote Countrywide a few weeks later stating that Ms. Hill had been deemed current on her mortgage during the period in question. But in May, Countrywide sent Ms. Hill another notice stating that her loan was delinquent and demanding that she pay $4,715.58. Neither Mr. Steidl nor Julia Steidl, who has also represented Ms. Hill, returned phone calls seeking comment.

    Justifying Ms. Hill’s arrears, Countrywide sent her lawyer copies of three letters on company letterhead addressed to the homeowner, as well as to Mr. Steidl and Ronda J. Winnecour, the Chapter 13 trustee for the western district of Pennsylvania.

    The Countrywide letters were dated September 2003, October 2004 and March 2007 and showed changes in escrow requirements on Ms. Hill’s loan. “This letter is to advise you that the escrow requirement has changed per the escrow analysis completed today,” each letter began.

    But Mr. Steidl told the court he had never received the letters. Furthermore, he noticed that his address on the first Countrywide letter was not the location of his office at the time, but an address he moved to later. Neither did the Chapter 13 trustee’s office have any record of receiving the letters, court records show.

    When Mr. Steidl discussed this with Leslie E. Puida, Countrywide’s outside counsel on the case, he said Ms. Puida told him that the letters had been “recreated” by Countrywide to reflect the escrow discrepancies, the court transcript shows. During these discussions, Ms. Puida reduced the amount that Countrywide claimed Ms. Hill owed to $1,500 from $4,700.

    Under questioning by the judge, Ms. Puida said that “a processor” at Countrywide had generated the letters to show how the escrow discrepancies arose. “They were not offered to prove that they had been sent,” Ms. Puida said. But she also said, under questioning from the court, that the letters did not carry a disclaimer indicating that they were not actual correspondence or that they had never been sent.

    A Countrywide spokesman said that in bankruptcy cases, Countrywide’s automated systems are sometimes overridden, with technicians making manual adjustments “to comply with bankruptcy laws and the requirements in the jurisdiction in which a bankruptcy is pending.” Asked by Judge Agresti why Countrywide would go to the trouble of “creating a letter that was never sent,” Ms. Puida, its lawyer, said she did not know.

    “I just, I can’t get over what I’m being told here about these recreations,” Judge Agresti said, “and what the purpose is or was and what was intended by them.”

    Ms. Hill’s matter is one of 300 bankruptcy cases involving Countrywide that have come under scrutiny by Ms. Winnecour, the Chapter 13 trustee in Pittsburgh. On Oct. 9, she asked the court to sanction Countrywide, contending that the company had lost or destroyed more than $500,000 in checks paid by homeowners in bankruptcy from December 2005 to April 2007.

    Ms. Winnecour said in court filings that she was concerned that even as Countrywide had misplaced or destroyed the checks, it levied charges on the borrowers, including late fees and legal costs. A spokesman in her office said she would not comment on the Hill case.

    O. Max Gardner III, a lawyer in North Carolina who represents troubled borrowers, says that he routinely sees lenders pursue borrowers for additional money after their bankruptcies have been discharged and the courts have determined that the default has been cured and borrowers are current. Regarding the Hill matter, Mr. Gardner said: “The real problem in my mind when reading the transcript is that Countrywide’s lawyer could not explain how this happened.”

    Filed under: CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, GTC | Honor, Investor, Mortgage, bubble, currency, foreclosure, securities fraud | Tagged: borrower, countrywide, disclosure, foreclosure defense, foreclosure offense, fraud, rescission, RESPA, TILA audit, trustee
    « Lucrative Fees May Deter Efforts to Alter Loans


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2932.5, eviction, Foreclosure, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act

    Categories : Foreclosure, Lender Class action, Loan Audit, Predatory Lending, bankruptcy


    , usury


    Homecomings TILA complaint GMAC

    27 06 2009

    homecomingstila


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, civil code 2923.5, truth in lending, Mortgage modification, eviction, california, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, bankruptcy, Chapter 13, 2924, 2923.5, 2932.5, Recoupment, Fraud, Predatory Lending, FCRA, 2923.6, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Uncategorized, California cram down, Audit, Countrywide, United First, usury, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, stop foreclosure, usury


    Option One Complaint Pick a payment lawsuit

    27 06 2009

    optionone


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 2 Comments »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, civil code 2923.5, truth in lending, Mortgage modification, eviction, california, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, bankruptcy, Chapter 13, 2924, 2923.5, 2932.5, Recoupment, Fraud, Predatory Lending, FCRA, 2923.6, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Uncategorized, California cram down, Audit, Countrywide, United First, usury, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Coalition sues lenders

    9 05 2009

    Coalition Sues lenders


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, civil code 2923.5, truth in lending, Mortgage modification, eviction, california, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, bankruptcy, Chapter 13, 2924, 2923.5, 2932.5, Recoupment, Fraud, Predatory Lending, FCRA, 2923.6, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Uncategorized, California cram down, Audit, Countrywide, United First, usury, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Loan Audit, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, pedatory lending

     



    An individual Chapter 11 bankruptcy may be better for you than Chapter 13

    28 01 2010

    by Chip Parker, Jacksonville Bankruptcy Attorney on October 25, 2009 · Posted in Chapter 11 Bankruptcy

    In my 17 years of practicing bankruptcy law, I have never been as excited by anything as the development of the individual Chapter 11 case.

    Traditionally, Chapter 13 has been used for personal reorganizations while Chapter 11 has been reserved for more complex corporate reorganizations. However, a small handful of sophisticated bankruptcy lawyers, like Brett Mearkle of Jacksonville, Florida and BLN contributors Brett Weiss and Kurt OKeefe, are taking advantage of the debtor-friendly rules of Chapter 11, to provide more meaningful debt restructuring for individual consumers.

    Before 2005, individual Chapter 11 cases were virtually non-existent. However, the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005, which has generally been horrible for individual debtors, changed a critical rule in Chapter 11 that has made it the choice for bankruptcy lawyers seeking the best restructuring options for many middle-class Americans. That rule, known as the Absolute Priority Rule, no longer applies to individuals filing under Chapter 11. The result is that, unlike corporate debtors, an individual (or married couple) filing under Chapter 11 does not have to repay 100% of his unsecured debts. Rather, the individual need only pay his disposable income over a 5 year period, just like in Chapter 13 cases.

    The challenge for bankruptcy lawyers is streamlining the Chapter 11 case for consumers to bring the overall cost of filing down. Currently, my firm has managed to bring down the cost of a typical Chapter 11, but even so, the individual Chapter 11 case costs $10,000 to $30,000, depending on the facts. However, in as many as half of all consumer reorganizations, these increased fees and costs are far outweighed by the savings and convenience of Chapter 11.

    These savings, like cram down of automobiles and elimination of the trustees administrative fee, will be discussed in more detail in my upcoming articles.

    The change to the Absolute Priority Rule has gone widely unnoticed by consumer bankruptcy lawyers, largely because so few understand Chapter 11. However, we are starting to realize the power of Chapter 11 for consumers, and a concerted effort is being made by many to understand this complicated area of bankruptcy law. I’ll be in Tucson next week, attending a three day seminar conducted by The National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys to learn how to identify which consumers will benefit from Chapter 11 and how to file these types of bankruptcies. Of course a three-day seminar is really the beginning of an education in Chapter 11, and I predict there will be more advanced seminars to follow.

    Be on the lookout for more articles and videos by me and other BLNers on the advantages and nuances of the individual Chapter 11.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: bankruptcy, California cram down, Chapter 13

    Categories : Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Mortgage modification, bankruptcy, pedatory lending


    Bankruptcy Court Wipes Out Mortgage Debt When Servicer Fails to Document Claim

    27 10 2009

    10/26/2009 By: Darrell Delamaide

    A federal bankruptcy judge in New York created new uncertainties for mortgage servicers when he expunged a mortgage debt after the servicer could not provide sufficient documentation that it had a claim on the home.

    The ruling came earlier this month in bankruptcy court in the Southern District of New York in a case involving Mount Laurel, New Jersey-based PHH Mortgage and a property in White Plains, the New York Times reported.

    Judge Robert Drain wiped out a $461,263 mortgage debt on the property, in another case of how things can go wrong when documentation does not keep up with transfers of mortgages in a world of securitized loans.

    A recent ruling by the Kansas Supreme Court similarly denied the Mortgage Electronic Registration Service (MERS) rights to recovery in a foreclosure case, even though MERS often stands in for banks that actually hold the mortgage. As a consequence, the bank holding the mortgage lost out in the foreclosure.

    In the PHH case, the homeowner, who was not identified, filed for bankruptcy and PHH claimed its mortgage debt.

    When attempts by the homeowner’s lawyer to get PHH to modify the debt met with no success, he asked for proof of PHH’s standing and received a letter stating that PHH was the servicer of the loan but that the holder of the note was U.S. Bank, as trustee of a securitization pool.

    When he then asked for proof that U.S. Bank was indeed the holder of the note, he received only an affidavit from an executive at PHH Mortgage, the Times reported.

    Among the documents supplied to the court to support PHH’s assertion was a copy of the assignment of the mortgage, but this was signed by the same PHH executive identified this time as an official of MERS, and was dated March 26 of this year, well after the bankruptcy had been filed.

    In the hearing, the PHH lawyer argued that in the secondary market, there are many cases where assignment of mortgages or assignment of notes don’t happen at the time they should – that this was standard operating procedure for many years.

    Judge Drain rejected that argument, the Times reported. “I think that I have a more than 50 percent doubt that if the debtor paid this claim, it would be paying the wrong person,” the newspaper quoted him as saying. “That’s the problem. And that’s because the claimant has not shown an assignment of a mortgage.”

    PHH is appealing Judge Drain’s decision.

    The ruling also puts the homeowner in uncharted territory. “Right now I am in bankruptcy court with a house that has no discernible debt on it,” her lawyer told the Times, “yet I have a client with a signed mortgage. We cannot in theory just go out and sell this house because the title company won’t give a clear title on it.”

    The lawyer’s options are to file an amended plan or sue to try to get clear title to the property.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: bankruptcy, Foreclosure, foreclosure defense, foreclosure offense, Mortgage modification

    Categories : Foreclosure, Mortgage modification, stop foreclosure


    Foreclosure Victory For Nor Cal Area Homeowner!

    7 09 2009

    A Sacramento area court ruling against the plaintiff came in an unlawful detainer hearing last Friday. Lenders and servicers are taking notice of the “sale” by trustee that was set aside in favor of a loan modification. Submitted by Steve Shafer

    February 5, 2009 / Sacramento California – The Bay Area Superior Court decision and judgment against the plaintiff allows the “sale” by the trustee to be set aside in favor of a loan modification.
    Lenders nationwide who originate and service loans know California offers them a “safe haven” from homeowner’s who dispute a recent foreclosure. That means overwhelming odds for anyone in foreclosure who loses their home to a lender in a foreclosure. The borrower becomes a holdover and must respond to an unlawful detainer after their home is lost.

    That was not the case for an El Dorado area resident at a recent hearing for an unlawful detainer matter heard in a Placerville County superior court room. The recent victory in court was in an unlawful detainer matter for the defendant Ms. Stella Onyeu and mortgage lender and securities sponsor – AURORA LOAN SERVICES v. STELLA D. ONYEU (case number PCU2008032).

    AURORA LOAN SERVICES like so many other lender servicing agents has come under greater scrutiny as of late for questionable business practices. According to its web site Aurora Loan Services is operating as usual. The company is a subsidiary of Lehman Brothers Bank, and not part of the Lehman Brothers Holding Inc. bankruptcy filing.

    The case was originally filed in October of last year and shortly thereafter was dismissed when the Plaintiff failed to show at a scheduled hearing. Subsequent motions were filed to vacate the dismissal in favor of a motion to dismiss by the plaintiffs. The matter was heard recently heard again by the same court and earlier mentioned presiding judge. Mark Terbeek is the attorney for the Defendant and Maher Soliman a Juris Pro witness provided case development and court expert testimony.

    This judgment for the defendant is monumental given the courts limited jurisdiction related to the lenders sole focus to have the borrower removed from the home. The issues at hand are the legal procedural limitations and high attrition rate for defendants and their attorney’s. The problem is the defendant’s lack of standing for pleading a wrongful foreclosure due to jurisdiction of the court.

    So what does this all mean? Many homeowners can find some hope, for the moment, in knowing the otherwise unfriendly California UD courts will now hold some promise for hearing arguments as to the foreclosure and the plaintiffs standing. According to foreclosure and REO sales analyst Brenda Michelson of Nationwide Loan Services “It’s hit or miss at this level of the law and the courts willingness to step outside of its jurisdiction.” The smaller outlying courts seem to me to be more willing to entertain defense arguments that the plaintiff may not be the holder in due course and lacks capacity throughout the foreclosure” Terbeek’s response is that if the plaintiff cannot demonstrate a logical and properly conveyed transfer of the beneficial interest – it is not entitled to possession.

    After the foreclosure and conveyance back to the trustee, the homeowner is considered unlawfully occupying the dwelling as a holdover. However, the court ruled that AURORA had in fact violated its duty to show good faith and comply accordingly under the recent California statutes and amendments Power of Sale provision. The presiding judge who heard the matter ordered a judgment against the company allowed for Terbeek to enter a request for all legal fees due.

    According to legal expert Soliman, “there are more attorneys willing to now jump into the wrongful foreclosure business and fight the court on the jurisdiction issue. However, it is nearly impossible to rely on the judge and courts at this level”. Soliman is an examiner with Nationwide Loan Services and has engagements in multiple cases throughout California through attorneys such as Terbeek who represented the defendant.

    Jurisdiction: An Overview

    The term jurisdiction is really synonymous with the word “power” and the sovereignty on behalf of which it functions. Any court possesses jurisdiction over matters only to the extent granted to it by the Constitution, or legislation of a paramount fundamental question for lawyers is whether a given court has jurisdiction to preside over a given case. A jurisdictional question may be broken down into various components including whether there is jurisdiction over the person (in personam), the subject matter, or res (in rem), and to render the particular judgment sought.

    An unlawful detainer lawsuit is a “summary” court procedure. This means that the court action moves forward very quickly, and that the time given the tenant to respond during the lawsuit is very short. For example, in most cases, the tenant has only five days to file a written response to the lawsuit after being served with a copy of the landlord’s complaint. Normally, a judge will hear and decide the case within 20 days after the borrower now tenant files an answer.

    The question of whether a given court has the power to determine a jurisdictional question is itself a jurisdictional question. Such a legal question is referred to as “jurisdiction to determine jurisdiction.” In order to evict the tenant, the landlord must file an unlawful detainer lawsuit in superior court. In an eviction lawsuit, the lender is the “plaintiff” and the prior borrower and homeowners become an occupant holdover and the “defendant.” Immediately after the trustee sale of the home the conveyance by the trustee is entered in favor of the lender. Until recently in most cases the lender is with in its right foreclose if a borrower has missed a number of payments, failed to make the insurance premiums or not paid the property taxes. “But sometimes a lender is wrong and you can fight foreclosure by challenging the foreclosure process and related documents” said Soliman.

    As the new owner of record AURORA HOME LOAN SERVICES must follow procedures no different than that of a landlord in a tenant occupancy dispute. The next step is to remove the homeowner from the subject dwelling. If the tenant doesn’t voluntarily move out after the landlord has properly given the required notice to the tenant, the landlord can evict the tenant. If the lender makes a mistake in its filing of the foreclosure documents a court my throw out the whole foreclosure case. In the case of a wrongful foreclosure the borrower’s claims are limited to affirmative defenses.

    Affirmative Defenses

    Unlike a judicial proceeding, California lenders need to merely wait out the mandatory term for issuing default notices and ensure it has properly served those notices to the borrower. In other words the hearing and trial taken place in the above referenced matter is not subject to arguments brought by the homeowner for wrongful foreclosure versus the question as to lawful possession of the property by the lender.

    California lenders are typically limited to only the defenses a landlord will face when opposed and made subject to claims of wrongfully trying to evict a tenant. Claims such as the Plaintiff has breached the warranty to provide habitable premises, plaintiff did not give proper credit before the notice to pay or quit expired or plaintiff waived, changed, or canceled the notice to quit, or filed the complaint to retaliate against defendant are often completely unrelated to the matter at hand. The courts decision to enforce the provisions of an earlier modification in lieu of a foreclosure sends a major wake up call to the lenders who are under siege to avoid foreclose and be done with mortgage mess affecting United States homeowners. Soliman says the decision is unfortunately not likely to be read into as case precedent for future lawyers and wrongful defendants seeking to introduce our case as an example of a lenders wrongful action.

    Soliman goes on to say “it’s both interesting and entertaining to see experienced attorneys who jump in and immediately question the issue of the courts authority. Its reality time when they get to their first hearing and see first hand the problematic issues with jurisdiction.”

    Servicing agents are never the less on notice they must be ready to defend themselves when the opportunity to argue the plaintiffs standing are allowed in an unlawful detainer motivate by a foreclosure. Therefore, the debate about what the courts hear will remain open and subject to further scrutiny by the lawyers for both sides and judges who preside over the courts at this level.

    Nationwide Loan Servicing is an approved Expert Witness who provides court testimoney in matters concerning wrongful foreclosures, Federal Savings Banks regultory violations and SEC filings for private registrations.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, California cram down, Predatory Lending, stop foreclosure

    Categories : Foreclosure, Mortgage modification, eviction, stop foreclosure

    Standing argument

    7 06 2009

    judge-youngs-decision-on-nosek

    Ameriquest’s final argument, that the sanctions are a
    criminal penalty, is bereft of authority. Ameriquest cites F.J.
    Hanshaw Enterprises, Inc. v. Emerald River Development, Inc., 244
    F.3d 1128 (9th Cir. 2001), a case about inherent powers – not
    Rule 11 –

    This is an excerpt from the decision just this bloggers note the Hanshaw Case was my case. I argued this case at the 9th circuit court of appeals

    http://openjurist.org/244/f3d/1128/fj-v-emeraldfj-v-emerald

    If you will grasp the implications of this judge-youngs-decision-on-nosekdecision all or most all the evictions and  foreclosures are being litigated by the wrong parties that is to say parties who have no real stake in the outcome. they are merely servicers not the real investors. They do not have the right to foreclose or evict. No assignment No note No security interest No standing They do not want to be listed anywhere. They (the lenders) have caused the greatest damage to the American Citizen since the great depression and they do not want to be exposed or named in countless lawsuits. Time and time again I get from the judges in demurer hearings ” I see what you are saying counsel but your claim does not appear to be against this defendant” the unnamed investment pool of the Lehman Brothers shared High yield equity Fund trustee does not exist and so far can’t be sued.

     

     

    An individual Chapter 11 bankruptcy may be better for you than Chapter 13

    28 01 2010

    by Chip Parker, Jacksonville Bankruptcy Attorney on October 25, 2009 · Posted in Chapter 11 Bankruptcy

    In my 17 years of practicing bankruptcy law, I have never been as excited by anything as the development of the individual Chapter 11 case.

    Traditionally, Chapter 13 has been used for personal reorganizations while Chapter 11 has been reserved for more complex corporate reorganizations. However, a small handful of sophisticated bankruptcy lawyers, like Brett Mearkle of Jacksonville, Florida and BLN contributors Brett Weiss and Kurt OKeefe, are taking advantage of the debtor-friendly rules of Chapter 11, to provide more meaningful debt restructuring for individual consumers.

    Before 2005, individual Chapter 11 cases were virtually non-existent. However, the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005, which has generally been horrible for individual debtors, changed a critical rule in Chapter 11 that has made it the choice for bankruptcy lawyers seeking the best restructuring options for many middle-class Americans. That rule, known as the Absolute Priority Rule, no longer applies to individuals filing under Chapter 11. The result is that, unlike corporate debtors, an individual (or married couple) filing under Chapter 11 does not have to repay 100% of his unsecured debts. Rather, the individual need only pay his disposable income over a 5 year period, just like in Chapter 13 cases.

    The challenge for bankruptcy lawyers is streamlining the Chapter 11 case for consumers to bring the overall cost of filing down. Currently, my firm has managed to bring down the cost of a typical Chapter 11, but even so, the individual Chapter 11 case costs $10,000 to $30,000, depending on the facts. However, in as many as half of all consumer reorganizations, these increased fees and costs are far outweighed by the savings and convenience of Chapter 11.

    These savings, like cram down of automobiles and elimination of the trustees administrative fee, will be discussed in more detail in my upcoming articles.

    The change to the Absolute Priority Rule has gone widely unnoticed by consumer bankruptcy lawyers, largely because so few understand Chapter 11. However, we are starting to realize the power of Chapter 11 for consumers, and a concerted effort is being made by many to understand this complicated area of bankruptcy law. I’ll be in Tucson next week, attending a three day seminar conducted by The National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys to learn how to identify which consumers will benefit from Chapter 11 and how to file these types of bankruptcies. Of course a three-day seminar is really the beginning of an education in Chapter 11, and I predict there will be more advanced seminars to follow.

    Be on the lookout for more articles and videos by me and other BLNers on the advantages and nuances of the individual Chapter 11.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: bankruptcy, California cram down, Chapter 13

    Categories : Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Mortgage modification, bankruptcy, pedatory lending


    Bankruptcy Court Wipes Out Mortgage Debt When Servicer Fails to Document Claim

    27 10 2009

    10/26/2009 By: Darrell Delamaide

    A federal bankruptcy judge in New York created new uncertainties for mortgage servicers when he expunged a mortgage debt after the servicer could not provide sufficient documentation that it had a claim on the home.

    The ruling came earlier this month in bankruptcy court in the Southern District of New York in a case involving Mount Laurel, New Jersey-based PHH Mortgage and a property in White Plains, the New York Times reported.

    Judge Robert Drain wiped out a $461,263 mortgage debt on the property, in another case of how things can go wrong when documentation does not keep up with transfers of mortgages in a world of securitized loans.

    A recent ruling by the Kansas Supreme Court similarly denied the Mortgage Electronic Registration Service (MERS) rights to recovery in a foreclosure case, even though MERS often stands in for banks that actually hold the mortgage. As a consequence, the bank holding the mortgage lost out in the foreclosure.

    In the PHH case, the homeowner, who was not identified, filed for bankruptcy and PHH claimed its mortgage debt.

    When attempts by the homeowner’s lawyer to get PHH to modify the debt met with no success, he asked for proof of PHH’s standing and received a letter stating that PHH was the servicer of the loan but that the holder of the note was U.S. Bank, as trustee of a securitization pool.

    When he then asked for proof that U.S. Bank was indeed the holder of the note, he received only an affidavit from an executive at PHH Mortgage, the Times reported.

    Among the documents supplied to the court to support PHH’s assertion was a copy of the assignment of the mortgage, but this was signed by the same PHH executive identified this time as an official of MERS, and was dated March 26 of this year, well after the bankruptcy had been filed.

    In the hearing, the PHH lawyer argued that in the secondary market, there are many cases where assignment of mortgages or assignment of notes don’t happen at the time they should – that this was standard operating procedure for many years.

    Judge Drain rejected that argument, the Times reported. “I think that I have a more than 50 percent doubt that if the debtor paid this claim, it would be paying the wrong person,” the newspaper quoted him as saying. “That’s the problem. And that’s because the claimant has not shown an assignment of a mortgage.”

    PHH is appealing Judge Drain’s decision.

    The ruling also puts the homeowner in uncharted territory. “Right now I am in bankruptcy court with a house that has no discernible debt on it,” her lawyer told the Times, “yet I have a client with a signed mortgage. We cannot in theory just go out and sell this house because the title company won’t give a clear title on it.”

    The lawyer’s options are to file an amended plan or sue to try to get clear title to the property.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: bankruptcy, Foreclosure, foreclosure defense, foreclosure offense, Mortgage modification

    Categories : Foreclosure, Mortgage modification, stop foreclosure


    Foreclosure Victory For Nor Cal Area Homeowner!

    7 09 2009

    A Sacramento area court ruling against the plaintiff came in an unlawful detainer hearing last Friday. Lenders and servicers are taking notice of the “sale” by trustee that was set aside in favor of a loan modification. Submitted by Steve Shafer

    February 5, 2009 / Sacramento California – The Bay Area Superior Court decision and judgment against the plaintiff allows the “sale” by the trustee to be set aside in favor of a loan modification.
    Lenders nationwide who originate and service loans know California offers them a “safe haven” from homeowner’s who dispute a recent foreclosure. That means overwhelming odds for anyone in foreclosure who loses their home to a lender in a foreclosure. The borrower becomes a holdover and must respond to an unlawful detainer after their home is lost.

    That was not the case for an El Dorado area resident at a recent hearing for an unlawful detainer matter heard in a Placerville County superior court room. The recent victory in court was in an unlawful detainer matter for the defendant Ms. Stella Onyeu and mortgage lender and securities sponsor – AURORA LOAN SERVICES v. STELLA D. ONYEU (case number PCU2008032).

    AURORA LOAN SERVICES like so many other lender servicing agents has come under greater scrutiny as of late for questionable business practices. According to its web site Aurora Loan Services is operating as usual. The company is a subsidiary of Lehman Brothers Bank, and not part of the Lehman Brothers Holding Inc. bankruptcy filing.

    The case was originally filed in October of last year and shortly thereafter was dismissed when the Plaintiff failed to show at a scheduled hearing. Subsequent motions were filed to vacate the dismissal in favor of a motion to dismiss by the plaintiffs. The matter was heard recently heard again by the same court and earlier mentioned presiding judge. Mark Terbeek is the attorney for the Defendant and Maher Soliman a Juris Pro witness provided case development and court expert testimony.

    This judgment for the defendant is monumental given the courts limited jurisdiction related to the lenders sole focus to have the borrower removed from the home. The issues at hand are the legal procedural limitations and high attrition rate for defendants and their attorney’s. The problem is the defendant’s lack of standing for pleading a wrongful foreclosure due to jurisdiction of the court.

    So what does this all mean? Many homeowners can find some hope, for the moment, in knowing the otherwise unfriendly California UD courts will now hold some promise for hearing arguments as to the foreclosure and the plaintiffs standing. According to foreclosure and REO sales analyst Brenda Michelson of Nationwide Loan Services “It’s hit or miss at this level of the law and the courts willingness to step outside of its jurisdiction.” The smaller outlying courts seem to me to be more willing to entertain defense arguments that the plaintiff may not be the holder in due course and lacks capacity throughout the foreclosure” Terbeek’s response is that if the plaintiff cannot demonstrate a logical and properly conveyed transfer of the beneficial interest – it is not entitled to possession.

    After the foreclosure and conveyance back to the trustee, the homeowner is considered unlawfully occupying the dwelling as a holdover. However, the court ruled that AURORA had in fact violated its duty to show good faith and comply accordingly under the recent California statutes and amendments Power of Sale provision. The presiding judge who heard the matter ordered a judgment against the company allowed for Terbeek to enter a request for all legal fees due.

    According to legal expert Soliman, “there are more attorneys willing to now jump into the wrongful foreclosure business and fight the court on the jurisdiction issue. However, it is nearly impossible to rely on the judge and courts at this level”. Soliman is an examiner with Nationwide Loan Services and has engagements in multiple cases throughout California through attorneys such as Terbeek who represented the defendant.

    Jurisdiction: An Overview

    The term jurisdiction is really synonymous with the word “power” and the sovereignty on behalf of which it functions. Any court possesses jurisdiction over matters only to the extent granted to it by the Constitution, or legislation of a paramount fundamental question for lawyers is whether a given court has jurisdiction to preside over a given case. A jurisdictional question may be broken down into various components including whether there is jurisdiction over the person (in personam), the subject matter, or res (in rem), and to render the particular judgment sought.

    An unlawful detainer lawsuit is a “summary” court procedure. This means that the court action moves forward very quickly, and that the time given the tenant to respond during the lawsuit is very short. For example, in most cases, the tenant has only five days to file a written response to the lawsuit after being served with a copy of the landlord’s complaint. Normally, a judge will hear and decide the case within 20 days after the borrower now tenant files an answer.

    The question of whether a given court has the power to determine a jurisdictional question is itself a jurisdictional question. Such a legal question is referred to as “jurisdiction to determine jurisdiction.” In order to evict the tenant, the landlord must file an unlawful detainer lawsuit in superior court. In an eviction lawsuit, the lender is the “plaintiff” and the prior borrower and homeowners become an occupant holdover and the “defendant.” Immediately after the trustee sale of the home the conveyance by the trustee is entered in favor of the lender. Until recently in most cases the lender is with in its right foreclose if a borrower has missed a number of payments, failed to make the insurance premiums or not paid the property taxes. “But sometimes a lender is wrong and you can fight foreclosure by challenging the foreclosure process and related documents” said Soliman.

    As the new owner of record AURORA HOME LOAN SERVICES must follow procedures no different than that of a landlord in a tenant occupancy dispute. The next step is to remove the homeowner from the subject dwelling. If the tenant doesn’t voluntarily move out after the landlord has properly given the required notice to the tenant, the landlord can evict the tenant. If the lender makes a mistake in its filing of the foreclosure documents a court my throw out the whole foreclosure case. In the case of a wrongful foreclosure the borrower’s claims are limited to affirmative defenses.

    Affirmative Defenses

    Unlike a judicial proceeding, California lenders need to merely wait out the mandatory term for issuing default notices and ensure it has properly served those notices to the borrower. In other words the hearing and trial taken place in the above referenced matter is not subject to arguments brought by the homeowner for wrongful foreclosure versus the question as to lawful possession of the property by the lender.

    California lenders are typically limited to only the defenses a landlord will face when opposed and made subject to claims of wrongfully trying to evict a tenant. Claims such as the Plaintiff has breached the warranty to provide habitable premises, plaintiff did not give proper credit before the notice to pay or quit expired or plaintiff waived, changed, or canceled the notice to quit, or filed the complaint to retaliate against defendant are often completely unrelated to the matter at hand. The courts decision to enforce the provisions of an earlier modification in lieu of a foreclosure sends a major wake up call to the lenders who are under siege to avoid foreclose and be done with mortgage mess affecting United States homeowners. Soliman says the decision is unfortunately not likely to be read into as case precedent for future lawyers and wrongful defendants seeking to introduce our case as an example of a lenders wrongful action.

    Soliman goes on to say “it’s both interesting and entertaining to see experienced attorneys who jump in and immediately question the issue of the courts authority. Its reality time when they get to their first hearing and see first hand the problematic issues with jurisdiction.”

    Servicing agents are never the less on notice they must be ready to defend themselves when the opportunity to argue the plaintiffs standing are allowed in an unlawful detainer motivate by a foreclosure. Therefore, the debate about what the courts hear will remain open and subject to further scrutiny by the lawyers for both sides and judges who preside over the courts at this level.

    Nationwide Loan Servicing is an approved Expert Witness who provides court testimoney in matters concerning wrongful foreclosures, Federal Savings Banks regultory violations and SEC filings for private registrations.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, California cram down, Predatory Lending, stop foreclosure

    Categories : Foreclosure, Mortgage modification, eviction, stop foreclosure

    Standing argument

    7 06 2009

    judge-youngs-decision-on-nosek

    Ameriquest’s final argument, that the sanctions are a
    criminal penalty, is bereft of authority. Ameriquest cites F.J.
    Hanshaw Enterprises, Inc. v. Emerald River Development, Inc., 244
    F.3d 1128 (9th Cir. 2001), a case about inherent powers – not
    Rule 11 –

    This is an excerpt from the decision just this bloggers note the Hanshaw Case was my case. I argued this case at the 9th circuit court of appeals

    http://openjurist.org/244/f3d/1128/fj-v-emeraldfj-v-emerald

    If you will grasp the implications of this judge-youngs-decision-on-nosekdecision all or most all the evictions and  foreclosures are being litigated by the wrong parties that is to say parties who have no real stake in the outcome. they are merely servicers not the real investors. They do not have the right to foreclose or evict. No assignment No note No security interest No standing They do not want to be listed anywhere. They (the lenders) have caused the greatest damage to the American Citizen since the great depression and they do not want to be exposed or named in countless lawsuits. Time and time again I get from the judges in demurer hearings ” I see what you are saying counsel but your claim does not appear to be against this defendant” the unnamed investment pool of the Lehman Brothers shared High yield equity Fund trustee does not exist and so far can’t be sued.

     

    Fannie Mae Policy Now Admits Loan Not Secured

    2 06 2010

    Posted 14 hours ago by Neil Garfield on Livinglies’s Weblog

    29248253-Mers-May-Not-Foreclosure-for-Fannie-Mae

    Editor’s Note: Their intention was to get MERS and servicers out of the foreclosure business. They now say that prior to foreclosure MERS must assign to the real party in interest.

    Here’s their problem: As numerous Judges have pointed out, MERS specifically disclaims any interest in the obligation, note or mortgage. Even the language of the mortgage or Deed of Trust says MERS is mentioned in name only and that the Lender is somebody else.

    These Judges who have considered the issue have come up with one conclusion, an assignment from a party with no right, title or interest has nothing to assign. The assignment may look good on its face but there still is the problem that nothing was assigned.

    Here’s the other problem. If MERS was there in name only to permit transfers and other transactions off-record (contrary to state law) and if the original party named as “Lender” is no longer around, then what you have is a gap in the chain of custody and chain of title with respect to the creditor’s side of the loan. It is all off record which means, ipso facto that it is a question of fact as to whose loan it is. That means, ipso facto, that the presence of MERS makes it a judicial question which means that the non-judicial election is not available. They can’t do it.

    So when you put this all together, you end up with the following inescapable conclusions:

    * The naming of MERS as mortgagee in a mortgage deed or as beneficiary in a deed of trust is a nullity.
    * MERS has no right, title or interest in any loan and even if it did, it disclaims any such interest on its own website.
    * The lender might be the REAL beneficiary, but that is a question of fact so the non-judicial foreclosure option is not available.
    * If the lender was not the creditor, it isn’t the lender because it had no right title or interest either, legally or equitably.
    * Without a creditor named in the security instrument intended to secure the obligation, the security was never perfected.
    * Without a creditor named in the security instrument intended to secure the obligation, the obligation is unsecured as to legal title.
    * Since the only real creditor is the one who advanced the funds (the investor(s)), they can enforce the obligation by proxy or directly. Whether the note is actually evidence of the obligation and to what extent the terms of the note are enforceable is a question for the court to determine.
    * The creditor only has a claim if they would suffer loss as a result of the indirect transaction with the borrower. If they or their agents have received payments from any source, those payments must be allocated to the loan account. The extent and measure of said allocation is a question of fact to be determined by the Court.
    * Once established, the allocation will most likely be applied in the manner set forth in the note, to wit: (a) against payments due (b) against fees and (c) against principal, in that order.
    * Once applied against payments, due the default vanishes unless the allocation is less than the amount due in payments.
    * Once established, the allocation results in a fatal defect in the notice of default, the statements sent to the borrower, and the representations made in court. Thus at the very least they must vacate all foreclosure proceedings and start over again.
    * If the allocation is less than the amount of payments due, then the investor(s) collectively have a claim for acceleration and to enforce the note — but they have no claim on the mortgage deed or deed of trust. By intentionally NOT naming parties who were known at the time of the transaction the security was split from the obligation. The obligation became unsecured.
    * The investors MIGHT have a claim for equitable lien based upon the circumstances that BOTH the borrower and the investor were the victims of fraud.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, bankruptcy, 2924, Predatory Lending

    Categories : Foreclosure, Loan Audit, bankruptcy, mortgage meltdown, pedatory lending, stop foreclosure


    MERS and civil code 2932.5 and Bankruptcy code 547 here is how it comes together

    26 05 2010

    CA Civil Code 2932.5 – Assignment”Where a power to sell real property is
    given to a mortgagee, or other encumbrancer, in an instrument intended
    to secure the payment of money, the power is part of the security and
    vests in any person who by assignment becomes entitled to payment of the
    money secured by the instrument. The power of sale may be exercised by
    the assignee if the assignment is duly acknowledged and recorded.”

    Landmark vs Kesler – While this is a matter of first impression in
    Kansas, other jurisdictions have issued opinions on similar and related
    issues, and, while we do not consider those opinions binding in the
    current litigation, we find them to be useful guideposts in our analysis
    of the issues before us.”

    “Black’s Law Dictionary defines a nominee as “[a] person designated to
    act in place of another, usu. in a very limited way” and as “[a] party
    who holds bare legal title for the benefit of others or who receives and
    distributes funds for the benefit of others.” Black’s Law Dictionary
    1076 (8th ed. 2004). This definition suggests that a nominee possesses
    few or no legally enforceable rights beyond those of a principal whom
    the nominee serves……..The legal status of a nominee, then, depends
    on the context of the relationship of the nominee to its principal.
    Various courts have interpreted the relationship of MERS and the lender
    as an agency relationship.”

    “LaSalle Bank Nat. Ass’n v. Lamy, 2006 WL 2251721, at *2 (N.Y. Sup.
    2006) (unpublished opinion) (“A nominee of the owner of a note and
    mortgage may not effectively assign the note and mortgage to another for
    want of an ownership interest in said note and mortgage by the
    nominee.”)”

    The law generally understands that a mortgagee is not distinct from a
    lender: a mortgagee is “[o]ne to whom property is mortgaged: the
    mortgage creditor, or lender.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1034 (8th ed.
    2004). By statute, assignment of the mortgage carries with it the
    assignment of the debt. K.S.A. 58-2323. Although MERS asserts that,
    under some situations, the mortgage document purports to give it the
    same rights as the lender, the document consistently refers only to
    rights of the lender, including rights to receive notice of litigation,
    to collect payments, and to enforce the debt obligation. The document
    consistently limits MERS to acting “solely” as the nominee of the
    lender.

    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. [Citation omitted.] Without the agency relationship, the person
    holding only the note lacks the power to foreclose in the event of
    default. The person holding only the deed of trust will never experience
    default because only the holder of the note is entitled to payment of
    the underlying obligation. [Citation omitted.] The mortgage loan becomes
    ineffectual when the note holder did not also hold the deed of trust.”
    Bellistri v. Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, 284 S.W.3d 619, 623 (Mo. App.
    2009).

    “MERS never held the promissory note,thus its assignment of the deed of
    trust to Ocwen separate from the note had no force.” 284 S.W.3d at 624;
    see also In re Wilhelm, 407 B.R. 392 (Bankr. D. Idaho 2009) (standard
    mortgage note language does not expressly or implicitly authorize MERS
    to transfer the note); In re Vargas, 396 B.R. 511, 517 (Bankr. C.D. Cal.
    2008) (“[I]f FHM has transferred the note, MERS is no longer an
    authorized agent of the holder unless it has a separate agency contract
    with the new undisclosed principal. MERS presents no evidence as to who
    owns the note, or of any authorization to act on behalf of the present
    owner.”); Saxon Mortgage Services, Inc. v. Hillery, 2008 WL 5170180
    (N.D. Cal. 2008) (unpublished opinion) (“[F]or there to be a valid
    assignment, there must be more than just assignment of the deed alone;
    the note must also be assigned. . . . MERS purportedly assigned both the
    deed of trust and the promissory note. . . . However, there is no
    evidence of record that establishes that MERS either held the promissory
    note or was given the authority . . . to assign the note.”).

    What stake in the outcome of an independent action for foreclosure could
    MERS have? It did not lend the money to Kesler or to anyone else
    involved in this case. Neither Kesler nor anyone else involved in the
    case was required by statute or contract to pay money to MERS on the
    mortgage. See Sheridan, ___ B.R. at ___ (“MERS is not an economic
    ‘beneficiary’ under the Deed of Trust. It is owed and will collect no
    money from Debtors under the Note, nor will it realize the value of the
    Property through foreclosure of the Deed of Trust in the event the Note
    is not paid.”). If MERS is only the mortgagee, without ownership of the
    mortgage instrument, it does not have an enforceable right. See Vargas,
    396 B.R. 517 (“[w]hile the note is ‘essential,’ the mortgage is only ‘an
    incident’ to the note” [quoting Carpenter v. Longan, 16 Wall. 271, 83
    U.S. 271, 275, 21 L. Ed 313 (1872)]).

    * MERS had no Beneficial Interest in the Note,
    * MERS and the limited agency authority it has under the dot does
    not continue with the assignment of the mortgage or dot absent a
    ratification or a separate agency agreement between mers and the
    assignee.
    * The Note and the Deed of Trust were separated at or shortly
    after origination upon endorsement and negotiation of the note rendering
    the dot a nullity
    * MERS never has any power or legal authority to transfer the note
    to any entity;
    * mers never has a beneficial interest in the note and pays
    nothing of value for the note.

    Bankr. Code 547 provides, among other things, that an unsecured
    creditor who had won a race to an interest in the debtor’s property
    using the state remedies system within 90 days of the filing of the
    bankruptcy petition may have to forfeit its winnings (without
    compensation for any expenses it may have incurred in winning the race)
    for the benefit of all unsecured creditors. The section therefore
    prevents certain creditors from being preferred over others (hence,
    section 547 of the Bankruptcy Code is titled “Preferences).” An
    additional effect of the section (and one of its stated purposes) may be
    to discourage some unsecured creditors from aggressively pursuing the
    debtor under the state remedies system, thus affording the debtor more
    breathing space outside bankruptcy, for fear that money spent using the
    state remedies system will be wasted if the debtor files a bankruptcy
    petition.

    . Bankr. Code 547(c) provides several important exceptions to the
    preference avoidance power.

    Bankr. Code 547 permits avoidance of liens obtained within the 90 day
    (or one year) period: the creation of a lien on property of the debtor,
    whether voluntary, such as through a consensual lien, or involuntary,
    such as through a judicial lien, would, absent avoidance, have the same
    preferential impact as a transfer of money from a debtor to a creditor
    in payment of a debt. If the security interest was created in the
    creditor within the 90 day window, and if other requirements of section
    547(b) are satisfied, the security interest can be avoided and the real
    property sold by the trustee free of the security interest (subject to
    homestead exemption). All unsecured creditors of the debtor, including
    the creditor whose lien has been avoided, will share, pro rata, in the
    distribution of assets of the debtor, including the proceeds of the sale
    of the real estate


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2932.5, bankruptcy, Foreclosure, lis pendence

    Categories : 2924, Foreclosure, bankruptcy, stop foreclosure


    An individual Chapter 11 bankruptcy may be better for you than Chapter 13

    28 01 2010

    by Chip Parker, Jacksonville Bankruptcy Attorney on October 25, 2009 · Posted in Chapter 11 Bankruptcy

    In my 17 years of practicing bankruptcy law, I have never been as excited by anything as the development of the individual Chapter 11 case.

    Traditionally, Chapter 13 has been used for personal reorganizations while Chapter 11 has been reserved for more complex corporate reorganizations. However, a small handful of sophisticated bankruptcy lawyers, like Brett Mearkle of Jacksonville, Florida and BLN contributors Brett Weiss and Kurt OKeefe, are taking advantage of the debtor-friendly rules of Chapter 11, to provide more meaningful debt restructuring for individual consumers.

    Before 2005, individual Chapter 11 cases were virtually non-existent. However, the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005, which has generally been horrible for individual debtors, changed a critical rule in Chapter 11 that has made it the choice for bankruptcy lawyers seeking the best restructuring options for many middle-class Americans. That rule, known as the Absolute Priority Rule, no longer applies to individuals filing under Chapter 11. The result is that, unlike corporate debtors, an individual (or married couple) filing under Chapter 11 does not have to repay 100% of his unsecured debts. Rather, the individual need only pay his disposable income over a 5 year period, just like in Chapter 13 cases.

    The challenge for bankruptcy lawyers is streamlining the Chapter 11 case for consumers to bring the overall cost of filing down. Currently, my firm has managed to bring down the cost of a typical Chapter 11, but even so, the individual Chapter 11 case costs $10,000 to $30,000, depending on the facts. However, in as many as half of all consumer reorganizations, these increased fees and costs are far outweighed by the savings and convenience of Chapter 11.

    These savings, like cram down of automobiles and elimination of the trustees administrative fee, will be discussed in more detail in my upcoming articles.

    The change to the Absolute Priority Rule has gone widely unnoticed by consumer bankruptcy lawyers, largely because so few understand Chapter 11. However, we are starting to realize the power of Chapter 11 for consumers, and a concerted effort is being made by many to understand this complicated area of bankruptcy law. I’ll be in Tucson next week, attending a three day seminar conducted by The National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys to learn how to identify which consumers will benefit from Chapter 11 and how to file these types of bankruptcies. Of course a three-day seminar is really the beginning of an education in Chapter 11, and I predict there will be more advanced seminars to follow.

    Be on the lookout for more articles and videos by me and other BLNers on the advantages and nuances of the individual Chapter 11.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: bankruptcy, California cram down, Chapter 13

    Categories : Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Mortgage modification, bankruptcy, pedatory lending


    Fabrication of Documents: MERS GAP Illuminated

    23 12 2009

    Posted on July 30, 2009 by livinglies

    Another example of why a TILA audit is grossly inadequate. A forensic audit is required covering all bases. Although dated, this article picks up on a continuing theme that demonstrates the title defect, the questionable conduct of pretender lenders and the defects in the foreclosure process when you let companies with big brand names bluff the system. The MERS GAP arises whether MERS is actually the nominee on the deed of trust (or mortgage deed) or not. It is an announcement that there will be off record transactions between parties who have no interest in the loan but who will assert such an interest once they have successfullly fabricated documents, had someone without authority sign them, on behalf of an entity with no real beneficial interest or other economic interest in the loan, and then frequently notarized by someone in another state. we have even seen documents notarized in blank and forged signatures of borrowers on loan closing papers.

    NYTimes.com
    Lender Tells Judge It ‘Recreated’ Letters
    Tuesday January 8, 2008 11:38 pm ET
    By GRETCHEN MORGENSON
    The Countrywide Financial Corporation fabricated documents related to the bankruptcy case of a Pennsylvania homeowner, court records show, raising new questions about the business practices of the giant mortgage lender at the center of the subprime mess.The documents — three letters from Countrywide addressed to the homeowner — claimed that the borrower owed the company $4,700 because of discrepancies in escrow deductions. Countrywide’s local counsel described the letters to the court as “recreated,” raising concern from the federal bankruptcy judge overseeing the case, Thomas P. Agresti.

    “These letters are a smoking gun that something is not right in Denmark,” Judge Agresti said in a Dec. 20 hearing in Pittsburgh.

    The emergence of the fabricated documents comes as Countrywide confronts a rising tide of complaints from borrowers who claim that the company pushed them into risky loans. The matter in Pittsburgh is one of 300 bankruptcy cases in which Countrywide’s practices have come under scrutiny in western Pennsylvania.

    Judge Agresti said that discovery should proceed so that those involved in the case, including the Chapter 13 trustee for the western district of Pennsylvania and the United States trustee, could determine how Countrywide’s systems might generate such documents.

    A spokesman for the lender, Rick Simon, said: “It is not Countrywide’s policy to create or ‘fabricate’ any documents as evidence that they were sent if they had not been. We believe it will be shown in further discovery that the Countrywide bankruptcy technician who generated the documents at issue did so as an efficient way to convey the dates the escrow analyses were done and the calculations of the payments as a result of the analyses.”

    The documents were generated in a case involving Sharon Diane Hill, a homeowner in Monroeville, Pa. Ms. Hill filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy protection in March 2001 to try to save her home from foreclosure.

    After meeting her mortgage obligations under the 60-month bankruptcy plan, Ms. Hill’s case was discharged and officially closed on March 9, 2007. Countrywide, the servicer on her loan, did not object to the discharge; court records from that date show she was current on her mortgage.

    But one month later, Ms. Hill received a notice of intention to foreclose from Countrywide, stating that she was in default and owed the company $4,166.

    Court records show that the amount claimed by Countrywide was from the period during which Ms. Hill was making regular payments under the auspices of the bankruptcy court. They included “monthly charges” totaling $3,840 from November 2006 to April 2007, late charges of $128 and other charges of almost $200.

    A lawyer representing Ms. Hill in her bankruptcy case, Kenneth Steidl, of Steidl and Steinberg in Pittsburgh, wrote Countrywide a few weeks later stating that Ms. Hill had been deemed current on her mortgage during the period in question. But in May, Countrywide sent Ms. Hill another notice stating that her loan was delinquent and demanding that she pay $4,715.58. Neither Mr. Steidl nor Julia Steidl, who has also represented Ms. Hill, returned phone calls seeking comment.

    Justifying Ms. Hill’s arrears, Countrywide sent her lawyer copies of three letters on company letterhead addressed to the homeowner, as well as to Mr. Steidl and Ronda J. Winnecour, the Chapter 13 trustee for the western district of Pennsylvania.

    The Countrywide letters were dated September 2003, October 2004 and March 2007 and showed changes in escrow requirements on Ms. Hill’s loan. “This letter is to advise you that the escrow requirement has changed per the escrow analysis completed today,” each letter began.

    But Mr. Steidl told the court he had never received the letters. Furthermore, he noticed that his address on the first Countrywide letter was not the location of his office at the time, but an address he moved to later. Neither did the Chapter 13 trustee’s office have any record of receiving the letters, court records show.

    When Mr. Steidl discussed this with Leslie E. Puida, Countrywide’s outside counsel on the case, he said Ms. Puida told him that the letters had been “recreated” by Countrywide to reflect the escrow discrepancies, the court transcript shows. During these discussions, Ms. Puida reduced the amount that Countrywide claimed Ms. Hill owed to $1,500 from $4,700.

    Under questioning by the judge, Ms. Puida said that “a processor” at Countrywide had generated the letters to show how the escrow discrepancies arose. “They were not offered to prove that they had been sent,” Ms. Puida said. But she also said, under questioning from the court, that the letters did not carry a disclaimer indicating that they were not actual correspondence or that they had never been sent.

    A Countrywide spokesman said that in bankruptcy cases, Countrywide’s automated systems are sometimes overridden, with technicians making manual adjustments “to comply with bankruptcy laws and the requirements in the jurisdiction in which a bankruptcy is pending.” Asked by Judge Agresti why Countrywide would go to the trouble of “creating a letter that was never sent,” Ms. Puida, its lawyer, said she did not know.

    “I just, I can’t get over what I’m being told here about these recreations,” Judge Agresti said, “and what the purpose is or was and what was intended by them.”

    Ms. Hill’s matter is one of 300 bankruptcy cases involving Countrywide that have come under scrutiny by Ms. Winnecour, the Chapter 13 trustee in Pittsburgh. On Oct. 9, she asked the court to sanction Countrywide, contending that the company had lost or destroyed more than $500,000 in checks paid by homeowners in bankruptcy from December 2005 to April 2007.

    Ms. Winnecour said in court filings that she was concerned that even as Countrywide had misplaced or destroyed the checks, it levied charges on the borrowers, including late fees and legal costs. A spokesman in her office said she would not comment on the Hill case.

    O. Max Gardner III, a lawyer in North Carolina who represents troubled borrowers, says that he routinely sees lenders pursue borrowers for additional money after their bankruptcies have been discharged and the courts have determined that the default has been cured and borrowers are current. Regarding the Hill matter, Mr. Gardner said: “The real problem in my mind when reading the transcript is that Countrywide’s lawyer could not explain how this happened.”

    Filed under: CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, GTC | Honor, Investor, Mortgage, bubble, currency, foreclosure, securities fraud | Tagged: borrower, countrywide, disclosure, foreclosure defense, foreclosure offense, fraud, rescission, RESPA, TILA audit, trustee
    « Lucrative Fees May Deter Efforts to Alter Loans


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2932.5, eviction, Foreclosure, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act

    Categories : Foreclosure, Lender Class action, Loan Audit, Predatory Lending, bankruptcy



    A ‘Little Judge’ Who Rejects Foreclosures, Brooklyn Style

    2 09 2009

    By Michael Powell – NY Times – 8/30/09

    The judge waves you into his chambers in the State Supreme Court building in Brooklyn, past the caveat taped to his wall — “Be sure brain in gear before engaging mouth” — and into his inner office, where foreclosure motions are piled high enough to form a minor Alpine chain.

    “I don’t want to put a family on the street unless it’s legitimate,” Justice Arthur M. Schack said.

    Every week, the nation’s mightiest banks come to his court seeking to take the homes of New Yorkers who cannot pay their mortgages. And nearly as often, the judge says, they file foreclosure papers speckled with errors.

    He plucks out one motion and leafs through: a Deutsche Bank representative signed an affidavit claiming to be the vice president of two different banks. His office was in Kansas City, Mo., but the signature was notarized in Texas. And the bank did not even own the mortgage when it began to foreclose on the homeowner.

    The judge’s lips pucker as if he had inhaled a pickle; he rejected this one. “I’m a little guy in Brooklyn who doesn’t belong to their country clubs, what can I tell you?” he says, adding a shrug for punctuation. “I won’t accept their comedy of errors.”

    The judge, Arthur M. Schack, 64, fashions himself a judicial Don Quixote, tilting at the phalanxes of bankers, foreclosure facilitators and lawyers who file motions by the bale. While national debate focuses on bank bailouts and federal aid for homeowners that has been slow in coming, the hard reckonings of the foreclosure crisis are being made in courts like his, and Justice Schack’s sympathies are clear. He has tossed out 46 of the 102 foreclosure motions that have come before him in the last two years. And his often scathing decisions, peppered with allusions to the Croesus-like wealth of bank presidents, have attracted the respectful attention of judges and lawyers from Florida to Ohio to California. At recent judicial conferences in Chicago and Arizona, several panelists praised his rulings as a possible national model.

    His opinions, too, have been greeted by a cry of affront from a bank official or two, who say this judge stands in the way of what is rightfully theirs. HSBC bank appealed a recent ruling, saying he had set a “dangerous precedent” by acting as “both judge and jury,” throwing out cases even when homeowners had not responded to foreclosure motions. Justice Schack, like a handful of state and federal judges, has taken a magnifying glass to the mortgage industry. In the gilded haste of the past decade, bankers handed out millions of mortgages — with terms good, bad and exotically ugly — then repackaged those loans for sale to investors from Connecticut to Singapore. Sloppiness reigned. So many papers have been lost, signatures misplaced and documents dated inaccurately that it is often not clear which bank owns the mortgage.

    Justice Schack’s take is straightforward, and sends a tremor through some bank suites: If a bank cannot prove ownership, it cannot foreclose. “If you are going to take away someone’s house, everything should be legal and correct,” he said. “I’m a strange guy — I don’t want to put a family on the street unless it’s legitimate.”

    Justice Schack has small jowls and big black glasses, a thin mustache and not so many hairs combed across his scalp. He has the impish eyes of the high school social studies teacher he once was, aware that something untoward is probably going on at the back of his classroom. He is Brooklyn born and bred, with a master’s degree in history and an office loaded with autographed baseballs and photographs of the Brooklyn Dodgers. His written decisions are a free-associative trip through popular, legal and literary culture, with a sideways glance at the business pages.

    Confronted with a case in which Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs passed a defaulted mortgage back and forth and lost track of the documents, the judge made reference to the film classic “It’s a Wonderful Life” and the evil banker played by Lionel Barrymore. “Lenders should not lose sight,” Justice Schack wrote in that 2007 case, “that they are dealing with humanity, not with Mr. Potter’s ‘rabble’ and ‘cattle.’ Multibillion-dollar corporations must follow the same rules in the foreclosure actions as the local banks, savings and loan associations or credit unions, or else they have become the Mr. Potters of the 21st century.”

    Last year, he chastised Wells Fargo for filing error-filled papers. “The court,” the judge wrote, “reminds Wells Fargo of Cassius’s advice to Brutus in Act 1, Scene 2 of William Shakespeare’s ‘Julius Caesar’: ‘The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves.’ ”

    Then there is a Deutsche Bank case from 2008, the juicy part of which he reads aloud:

    “The court wonders if the instant foreclosure action is a corporate ‘Kansas City Shuffle,’ a complex confidence game,” he reads. “In the 2006 film ‘Lucky Number Slevin,’ Mr. Goodkat, a hit man played by Bruce Willis, explains: ‘A Kansas City Shuffle is when everybody looks right, you go left.’ “The banks’ reaction? Justice Schack shrugs. “They probably curse at me,” he says, “but no one is interested in some little judge.”

    Little drama attends the release of his decisions. Beaten-down homeowners rarely show up to contest foreclosure actions, and the judge scrutinizes the banks’ papers in his chambers. But at legal conferences, judges and lawyers have wondered aloud why more judges do not hold banks to tougher standards.

    “To the extent that judges examine these papers, they find exactly the same errors that Judge Schack does,” said Katherine M. Porter, a visiting professor at the School of Law at the University of California, Berkeley, and a national expert in consumer credit law. “His rulings are hardly revolutionary; it’s unusual only because we so rarely hold large corporations to the rules.”

    Banks and the cottage industry of mortgage service companies and foreclosure lawyers also pay rather close attention. A spokeswoman for OneWest Bank acknowledged that an official, confronted with a ream of foreclosure papers, had mistakenly signed for two different banks — just as the Deutsche Bank official did. Deutsche Bank, which declined to let an attorney speak on the record about any of its cases before Justice Schack, e-mailed a PDF of a three-page pamphlet in which it claimed little responsibility for foreclosures, even though the bank’s name is affixed to tens of thousands of such motions. The bank described itself as simply a trustee for investors.

    Justice Schack came to his recent prominence by a circuitous path, having worked for 14 years as public school teacher in Brooklyn. He was a union representative and once walked a picket line with his wife, Dilia, who was a teacher, too. All was well until the fiscal crisis of the 1970s.

    “Why’d I go to law school?” he said. “Thank Mayor Abe Beame, who froze teacher salaries.”

    He was counsel for the Major League Baseball Players Association in the 1980s and ’90s, when it was on a long winning streak against team owners. “It was the millionaires versus the billionaires,” he says. “After a while, I’m sitting there thinking, ‘He’s making $4 million, he’s making $5 million, and I’m worth about $1.98.’ ”

    So he dived into a judicial race. He was elected to the Civil Court in 1998 and to the Supreme Court for Brooklyn and Staten Island in 2003. His wife is a Democratic district leader; their daughter, Elaine, is a lawyer and their son, Douglas, a police officer.Justice Schack’s duels with the banks started in 2007 as foreclosures spiked sharply. He saw a plague falling on Brooklyn, particularly its working-class black precincts. “Banks had given out loans structured to fail,” he said.

    The judge burrowed into property record databases. He found banks without clear title, and a giant foreclosure law firm, Steven J. Baum, representing two sides in a dispute. He noted that Wells Fargo’s chief executive, John G. Stumpf, made more than $11 million in 2007 while the company’s total returns fell 12 percent. “Maybe,” he advised the bank, “counsel should wonder, like the court, if Mr. Stumpf was unjustly enriched at the expense of W.F.’s stockholders.”

    He was, how to say it, mildly appalled. “I’m a guy from the streets of Brooklyn who happens to become a judge,” he said. “I see a bank giving a $500,000 mortgage on a building worth $300,000 and the interest rate is 20 percent and I ask questions, what can I tell you?”


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: Audit, bailout, bankruptcy, borrower, brad keiser, credit, credit crisis, depression, FDG, Federal Bailout, foreclosure defense, Foreclosure Defense Group, foreclosure offense, foreclosures, Fraud, HAMP, lawyers, Lender Liability, Loan Mod, LOAN MODIFICATION, lost note, Mortgage, quiet title, rescission, respa, RICO, TILA audit

    Categories : 2924, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, bankruptcy, eviction


    Homecomings TILA complaint GMAC

    27 06 2009

    homecomingstila


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, stop foreclosure, usury


    Leman Tila complaint

    27 06 2009

    Lemantilacomp


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, bankruptcy, eviction, stop foreclosure, truth in lending


    Lender class action

    27 06 2009

    Mortgageinvestorgroupclass


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Option One Complaint Pick a payment lawsuit

    27 06 2009

    optionone


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 2 Comments »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, civil code 2923.5, truth in lending, Mortgage modification, eviction, california, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, bankruptcy, Chapter 13, 2924, 2923.5, 2932.5, Recoupment, Fraud, Predatory Lending, FCRA, 2923.6, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Uncategorized, California cram down, Audit, Countrywide, United First, usury, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Standing argument

    7 06 2009

    judge-youngs-decision-on-nosek

    Ameriquest’s final argument, that the sanctions are a
    criminal penalty, is bereft of authority. Ameriquest cites F.J.
    Hanshaw Enterprises, Inc. v. Emerald River Development, Inc., 244
    F.3d 1128 (9th Cir. 2001), a case about inherent powers – not
    Rule 11 –

    This is an excerpt from the decision just this bloggers note the Hanshaw Case was my case. I argued this case at the 9th circuit court of appeals

    http://openjurist.org/244/f3d/1128/fj-v-emeraldfj-v-emerald

    If you will grasp the implications of this judge-youngs-decision-on-nosekdecision all or most all the evictions and  foreclosures are being litigated by the wrong parties that is to say parties who have no real stake in the outcome. they are merely servicers not the real investors. They do not have the right to foreclose or evict. No assignment No note No security interest No standing They do not want to be listed anywhere. They (the lenders) have caused the greatest damage to the American Citizen since the great depression and they do not want to be exposed or named in countless lawsuits. Time and time again I get from the judges in demurer hearings ” I see what you are saying counsel but your claim does not appear to be against this defendant” the unnamed investment pool of the Lehman Brothers shared High yield equity Fund trustee does not exist and so far can’t be sued.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5, truth in lending, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, respa, stop foreclosure


    Exponential Usury On Wall Street

    24 05 2009

    By Edward W. Miller, MD

    Thou hast taken usury and increase, and thou hast greedily gained of thy neighbors by extortion, and thou hast forgotten me saith the Lord.” – Ezekiel 22:12 (King James Version)

    And Jesus entered the temple of God and drove out all who sold and bought in the temple and turned the tables of the money changers and the seats of those who sold pigeons. He said to them, ‘It is written, ‘My house show be called a house of prayer’; but you make it a den of robbers.'” -Matthew 21: 12

    AS for our economy, the ongoing failure of millions of “sub-prime” mortgages with 9 million threatened foreclosures across the country, the increasing reported lack of “affordable housing”, along with a consumer debt of $2.52 trillion, and a major economic recession stretching across the industrial world comes as no surprise to those who have watched Congress, again and again surrender to Wall Street lobbying over the past half century. The first major slide downhill took place on June 23rd, 1947, when a newly elected Republican Congress passed the Taft-Hartley Act over president Truman’s veto. The results of this assault on American labor appeared gradually over the years. Beginning in 1972, statistics show that wages were already falling below the costs of living for the American middle class.

    The present huge pyramid of debt, both public and private was made possible by the weakening of labor’s political input plus thirty years of Congress’ relentless deregulation of our financial markets, culminating, during the Clinton Administration, in the 1999 repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, which Act had prohibited banks from dealing in high-risk securities. In effect, Washington supposed regulators had become passive enablers to Wall Street’s financial binge drinkers.

    As columnist Robert Scheer pointed out (March 12th SF Chronicle): “The Clinton-backed Gramm-Leach-Baily Act of 1999 called the “Financial Services Modernization Act,” permitted banks, stock brokers, and insurance companies to merge and was exacerbated by Bush’s appointment of rapacious corporate foxes to watch the corporate hen house.” They will take care of their own…Their action was made possible only by the federal government’s using our tax dollars to pick up the bad debt of the banks.”


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2924, eviction, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, stop foreclosure, usury

    Categories : Foreclosure, bankruptcy, usury


    Coalition sues lenders

    9 05 2009

    Coalition Sues lenders


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Loan Audit, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, pedatory lending


    FORECLOSURE DEFENSE: CALIFORNIA SOMETIMES IT’S THE LITTLE THINGS THAT COUNT

    25 04 2009

    As I continue through this journey through the maze created by lenders, investment bankers, title agents and closing/escrow agents I keep discovering things that end up being quite interesting.

    For example: In California the requirements for posting Notice of sale are very clear and yet, I am told that they are routinely ignored. This would invalidate the notice of sale on the most basic of concepts “notice,” by definition and therefore could be attacked at any time as a defect of service and jurisdiction while at the same time bring your claims under TILA, usury, identity theft, fraud, etc. California requires public and private posting as do most other states. The public part is what they ordinarily ignore. see notice-of-the-sale-thereof-shall-be-given-by-posting-a-written-notice

    With the new law changes Civil code 2923.5  that became effective Sept 6, 2008 it adds more procedures that are routinely not followed ie. a Declaration must be attached and recorded that recites that the lender has met and assessed the borrowers financial condition and made alternatives to forclosure ie. modification. First they don’t do it and second the declaration is not even under penalty of pujury. So on its face the sale could be set aside.

    After the notice of default the lender routinely switches trustee’s and records a Substitution of trustee with an affidavit that is not under penalty of perjury. Again the sale could be set aside for this.

    For example. MERS, whose legal status is dubious at best anyway inasmuch as it plainly violates the recording requirements of every state and which supposedly has not one but multiple corporate entities, one of which has been suspended from operation in California, is subject to specific instructions as to what to do with the “master Deed of Trust and what to do with the individual deed of trust, the procedures, language to be inserted etc. These too I am told are routinely ignored especially when it comes to (a) showing that you have provided a copy of the Master Deed of Trust and (b) having the proof as specifically required in the FNMA/Freddie instruction sheet.

    As stated in my other posts, the entire MERS concept causes, in my opinion, a separation between the alleged security instrument and provisions, the Trustee’s authority and the note, all of which end up being different people who were all “real parties in interest” receiving fees and value not disclosed in the GFE or settlement statement. In all these closings the borrower is subjected to a series of documents that hide the true nature of the transaction, the true source of funds, the true lender, and the application of funds contrary to the terms of the note.

    All of these new requirements create questions of fact, that if not correct, create a method to set aside the sale by way of court action. I guess that’s the point the lenders trustees and servicers are banking on the victims not fighting it.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 2 Comments »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, civil code 2923.5, civil code 2924, Foreclosure, HOEPA, litigation, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, bankruptcy, stop foreclosure


    Borrowers’ Defenses to Forclosure

    19 04 2009

    A great source of information you can use, and since the Guy is in Washington I can give him all the credit
    defensestoforeclosure


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: eviction, Foreclosure, Fraud, HOEPA, lis pendence, litigation, Predatory Lending, stop foreclosure, tila, truth in lending 2923.5, truth in lending

    Categories : Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, respa, stop foreclosure, tila, truth in lending


    Doan deal 2

    18 04 2009

    Mortgage Chaos? Add a Bankruptcy and its a Recipe for Disaster! Part II

    My last article laid out the framework for the bankruptcy real estate cocktail. This article will attempt to predict how that cocktail will be served and its ramifications. Remember, this recipe for disaster requires two things: a “Non-Perfected” Mortgage and a Bankruptcy.

    So far, about 70 to 80% of the mortgages I see in local Bankruptcy cases here in the Southern District of California Bankruptcy Court appear to be non-perfected. Despite my continued requests to the mortgage companies to produce either proof they possess the underlying note or proof of a recorded assignment, I have received neither. Instead I get the run around, “Yes we have the original note. Really, can I see? Actually no, I thought we had the original, but we have a copy…………Yes we have the assignment. Really, can I see? Sure, here you go. But that was not recorded. Oh…….” Its the same song and dance. So what becomes of this?

    Chapter 7: The trustee will most likely put on his “544 hat” and now “strip the lien off the house.”

    When he does this, he creates an unencumbered piece of real estate in most cases, with the exception of a small amount of past taxes and HOA fees remaining as liens on the property. The property is then sold and net profits held in trust. A notice is then sent to the creditors of the bankruptcy to submit a claim if they want to get paid.

    The claims are then reviewed, and paid pro-rata or objected to with the Bankruptcy Court issuing the final ruling. The Claims process is a complex area too lengthy to discuss for this Blog, but suffice to say, many claims will be objected to as well, since most credit card debt and collection agents have similar problems in proving they too own their debts. Moreover, you might ask what happens to the mortgage lien which has now become a large unsecured debt? It might be paid, provided they can prove they own the note. However, it also may not. There is a Bankruptcy Code section, 11 USC 502(d) which states that a creditor may not be able to share in the distribution if they did not give up there lien when requested by the trustee under 544. So, it could be that any remaining monies may even go back to the debtor if the new unsecured mortgage claim is disallowed! But this remains a grey area, and time will tell.

    But what if the debtor wants to keep the house? No problem. Time to make a deal with the trustee. Suppose that the House was bought for $650,000 in 2006 with 100% financing and now is worth $500,000. The debtor is negative $150,000 in equity. Upside Down! Now lets say a bankruptcy is filed. The Mortgage Note was not perfected so Bankruptcy Trustee avoids the lien. Now he has this $500,000 piece of real estate that he wants to sell, but the debtor wants to keep it. So the debtor makes an offer of $430,000 to keep the house and the Trustee agrees. Trustee agrees since he would only net $430,000 anyways after costs of sale, attorney fees, marketing, etc. Debtor gets the $430,000 from a new loan he might qualify for, have cosigned, or have a family member engage their credit. Trustee then takes the $430,000 and distributes to creditors, which include the debtor’

    s non-dischargeable taxes, non-dischargeable child support obligations, and non-dischargeable student loans.

    Wow! Lets get this straight: Mortgage reduced from $650,000 to $430,000, and over $100,000 in non-dischargeable bankruptcy debt consisting of student loans, taxes, and support obligations also paid, and all other debt wiped out? Sounds like the lemon just turned into lemonade! Also, time to also read the blog on why the credit score is much better after bankruptcy than before now.

    Chapter 13: In Chapter 13, the Trustee does not liquidate assets. Instead, he administers a three to five year plan by distributing the monthly payments from the debtor to the creditors, and the avoidance powers of the Chapter 7 Trustee are given to the Debtor(at least here in the Ninth Circuit….western states in the US). This includes the power to remove unperfected liens such as unperfected mortgages.

    So now the debtor can remove the mortgage just like a Chapter 7 Trustee.

    But that might be a problem. The Chapter 13 Trustee may object now to the bankruptcy since the debtor has too many assets. Well, as discussed above, time to get another smaller mortgage, pay that money into the Chapter 13 plan, and again pay off the non-dischargeable debt. Even better, if not all the creditors filed claims, the money then reverts to the debtor!

    In the alternative, the simple threat of litigating the issues to remove the mortgage sure makes for a great negotiating tool to deal with the lender and rewrite the mortgage…..knocking off possibly hundreds of thousands of dollars and also lowering the interest rate substantially.

    Involuntary Bankruptcies? Is there such a thing? Unfortunately, YES. And this could be very problematic. If several creditors are owed substantial sums of money, say a SBA Loan, large Medical Bill, or even large credit cards, they could petition the court for an involuntary bankruptcy. The debtor has no control to stop it. Next thing the debtor knows, he is in a bankruptcy and all the property is being liquidated, less the property allowed by exemption law. Then steps up the Chapter 7 Trustee and discovers that the Mortgage is not perfected. Well, there goes the house now! Or does it?

    Once again, a smart debtor would argue to the trustee that he will get a loan to pay the trustee as discussed above. Problem solved, and what appears to be disaster at first, may be a blessing in disguise. The debtor keeps his home with a much smaller mortgage and removes non-dischargeable debts. He is better off now than before, even though he did not want this!

    So the Recipe for Disaster appears to only affect the Mortgage Companies. They are the losing parties here, and rightly so for getting sloppy…..attempting to save $14 per loan times thousands of loans. Why didn’t they compute losing hundreds of thousands of dollars per loan times thousands of loans? Couldn’

    t they connect the dots? No…..like I said, lots of smart Real Estate Attorneys and lots of smart Bankruptcy Attorneys, but not too many Bankruptcy Real Estate Attorneys and none of them worked for the Mortgage industry.

    But everyone else now seems to win. The debtor reduces his mortgage, gets a better interest rate, and eliminates the rest of his debts. The trustee makes a healthy profit on distributing such a large dividend to creditors. And the creditors who obey the law now share in a large dividend.

    Of course, all the forgoing is Brand New. It has not been done yet in any cases I am aware of. But since talking with other Bankruptcy Attorneys across the Nation for the past couple weeks, its starting to catch on. I’

    m told a few trustees back east have started this procedure now. And just today, I get an announcement from our local Chapter 7 Trustee that he is making new requirements concerning producing documents in all cases before him so that he can start avoiding these liens. Coincidentally, this also comes after three of our Local Bankruptcy Judges started denying relief to Mortgage Creditors when coming before the Bankruptcy Court during the past week! Its brand new…but catching on like wildfire.

    Housing Bubble? Mortgage Bubble? Well now it’

    s a Housing Mortgage Bubble disaster about to happen in Bankruptcy Court. Congress was not able to reform the predatory lending abuses. The Lenders certainly do not seem interested in workout programs. I guess its time for a Bankruptcy Cocktail!

    Written by Attorney Michael G. Doan


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: bankruptcy, California cram down, Chapter 13, Foreclosure, stop foreclosure

    Categories : Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, bankruptcy


    United First Class Action

    9 03 2009

    On Saturday March 7,2009 a meeting was held for 200 plus victims of the United First equity save your house scam. At that meeting it was determined that a class action should be filed to recover the funds lost by the victims of the unconscionable contract.

    As a first step an involuntary Bankruptcy is being filed today March 9, 2009. To be considered as a creditor of said Bankruptcy please Fax the Joint Venture agreement and retainer agreement to 909-494-4214 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              909-494-4214      end_of_the_skype_highlighting.
    Additionally it is this attorneys opinion that said Bankruptcy will act as a “stay” for all averse actions being taken by lenders as against said victims. This opinion is based upon the fact that United First maintained an interest in the real property as a joint venture to 80% of the properties value(no matter how unconscionable this may be) this is an interest that can be protected by the Bankruptcy Stay 11 USC 362.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 8 Comments »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, Cramdown, eviction, FCRA, Federal Jurisdiction, Foreclosure, Fraud, HOEPA, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, respa, stop foreclosure, tila, truth in lending 2923.5, truth in lending, United First

    Categories : 2923.6, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, United First, bankruptcy, eviction, respa, stop foreclosure, tila, truth in lending


    Mortgage Chaos? Add a Bankruptcy and its a Recipe for Disaster!

    7 03 2009

    There are many bright Real Estate Attorneys out there.  Likewise, there are many bright Bankruptcy Attorneys out there.  But I don’t think there are that many bright Bankruptcy Real Estate Attorneys out there.  And the few that do exist…..well, I don’t think they worked for the Mortgage Companies. Why?  Well if they did, the transfer of loans would not have existed the way that did for the past several years.  Lately, the big news in foreclosures has been the Ohio cases where Judge Boyko dismissed 14 foreclosures on October 31, 2007, and his Colleague, Judge Kathleen O’Malley of the same court, followed suite ordering another 32 dismissals on November 14, 2007.    But that’s only the beginning.  It gets worse.  Add a bankruptcy filing to the mix and its like adding gas to the fire.  The reason being, from a little bankruptcy code section called 11 USC 544.  Basically, that section allows a Trustee appointed by the Bankruptcy Court to avoid non-perfected liens.  Non-perfected liens are liens that exist, but are not fully noticed to everyone, sort of like secret liens.  Its like if someone loans you $50,000 and takes a lien out on your house, but never records their lien with the county recorder.  If that house sells, the lien is not paid since escrow was not aware of it.  Had it been recorded by a “deed of trust” or “mortgage,” the Title Company and Escrow Company would not have closed once they saw it, unless it was paid. Because of all the crazy real estate financing, securitization, and reselling of all the mortgages, sort of the same thing has happened with all the mortgages and trust deeds, but on a much larger scale.    Normally, most states require that when a mortgage or real estate loan is sold or transferred to another lender, certain things must happen to maintain perfection, that is, in order to make sure that lien gets paid at a later date.  Generally, the purchaser of the Mortgage has it recorded at the County Recorders Office.  This is usually done thru a recorded assignment of the underlying note and mortgage or a new Mortgage being recorded and transfer of the Note.The Note is the most important part of any Mortgage or Deed of Trust.  The Mortgage or Deed of Trust is useless without the Note, and usually can not exist without it.  It’s a negotiable instrument, just like a check.  So when its transferred, it needs to be endorsed, just like a check.  So essentially, all real estate has documents recorded to evidence the lien, and which are linked to the “checks.”  Well, this is where the problem lies.  In most of the Mortgage Transfers which took place recently, the Mortgage or Deed of Trust was transferred, but not the Note.  Whoops!  Why?  It was just too expensive to track down every note for every mortgage since they were all bundled up together and sold in large trusts, then resold, resold, etc.  Imagine trying to find 1 note among thousands, which were sold in different trust pools over time.  Pretty hard to do!  So shortcuts happened.  Soon enough, shortcuts were accepted and since there were very little foreclosures during the last 7 year real estate bubble, no one really noticed in the few foreclosures that took place.    Until recently. That’s where the Ohio cases come in. Times have now changed.  That little shortcut stopped the foreclosures in Ohio since the most basic element of any lawsuit is that the party bringing the lawsuit is the “real party in interest.”  That is, they are the aggrieved party, injured party, relief seeking party.  So in Ohio, the Judge dismissed all the cases since they did not possess the Notes or Assignments on the date of filing, and technically were not the real party in interest to file the suit at the time.  But that maybe only a temporary problem until they find the note or assignment.  At that point, they will probably just file the foreclosure lawsuit again.  So its just a delay.  But the bigger problem exists in Bankruptcy.  You see, once a Bankruptcy Case is filed, the Automatic Stay goes into effect.  Everything is frozen.  Mistakes can no longer be corrected.  And if the lender did not have the note or recorded assignment when the bankruptcy case was filed, they are no longer “perfected.” And this problem can not be fixed!  Finding the note or assignment at that point is simply too late.  That $12 shortcut may now have cost the lender a $500,000 mortgage!    The Bankruptcy Trustee now is in charge, puts his 11 USC 544 hat on, and voila, removes the mortgage!  Yes, that house that once had no equity worth $450,000 with $500,000 owed on it, is now FREE AND CLEAR!  He sells it, and disburses all the proceeds to the creditors.  Next Issue, I’ll explain the ramifications of this chaos….both beneficial and detrimental.

    But the bigger problem exists in Bankruptcy.  You see, once a Bankruptcy Case is filed, the Automatic Stay goes into effect.  Everything is frozen.  Mistakes can no longer be corrected.  And if the lender did not have the note or recorded assignment when the bankruptcy case was filed, they are no longer “perfected.” And this problem can not be fixed!  Finding the note or assignment at that point is simply too late.  That $12 shortcut may now have cost the lender a $500,000 mortgage!    The Bankruptcy Trustee now is in charge, puts his 11 USC 544 hat 

    2924.3. (a) Except as provided in subdivisions (b) and (c), a
    person who has undertaken as an agent of a mortgagee, beneficiary, or
    owner of a promissory note secured directly or collaterally by a
    mortgage or deed of trust on real property or an estate for years
    therein, to make collections of payments from an obligor under the
    note, shall mail the following notices, postage prepaid, to each
    mortgagee, beneficiary or owner for whom the agent has agreed to make
    collections from the obligor under the note:
    (1) A copy of the notice of default filed in the office of the
    county recorder pursuant to Section 2924 on account of a breach of
    obligation under the promissory note on which the agent has agreed to
    make collections of payments, within 15 days after recordation.
    (2) Notice that a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to
    Section 2924 on account of a breach of an obligation secured by a
    mortgage or deed of trust against the same property or estate for
    years therein having priority over the mortgage or deed of trust
    securing the obligation described in paragraph (1), within 15 days
    after recordation or within three business days after the agent
    receives the information, whichever is later

    Sec. 2932.5

    Where a power to sell real property is given to a
    mortgagee, or other encumbrancer, in an instrument intended to secure
    the payment of money, the power is part of the security and vests in
    any person who by assignment becomes entitled to payment of the
    money secured by the instrument. The power of sale may be exercised
    by the assignee if the assignment is duly acknowledged and recorded.

    FROM TIM MCLANDLESS
    Most all foreclosures in California can be set aside. The power of sale by non judicial means is contained in the civil code 2932. In order to be valid the assignment must be recorded California civil code 2932.5. Most all notices of default recorded by the “Sub-Prime” lenders have not recorded an assignment till just before or just after the Trustee’s sale. They rely on the MERS agency agreement to protect them but under California law they are wrong.
    Law Offices of
    TIMOTHY McCandless
    15647 Village Dr
    Victorville, Ca 92392
    TEL (760) 733-8885 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting              (760) 733-8885      end_of_the_skype_highlighting; FAX (909)494-4214

    Sec. 2934

    Any assignment of a mortgage and any assignment of the
    beneficial interest under a deed of trust may be recorded, and from
    the time the same is filed for record operates as constructive notice
    of the contents thereof to all persons; and any instrument by which
    any mortgage or deed of trust of, lien upon or interest in real
    property, (or by which any mortgage of, lien upon or interest in
    personal property a document evidencing or creating which is required
    or permitted by law to be recorded), is subordinated or waived as to
    priority may be recorded, and from the time the same is filed for
    record operates as constructive notice of the contents thereof, to
    all persons.

    NOTE SECURED BY REAL ESTATE
    HON. SAMUEL L. BUFFORD
    UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE
    CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
    (FORMERLY HON.) R. GLEN AYERS
    LANGLEY & BANACK
    SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
    AMERICAN BANKRUPTCY INSTUTUTE
    APRIL 3, 2009
    WASHINGTON, D.C.
    WHERE’S THE NOTE, WHO’S THE HOLDER
    INTRODUCTION
    In an era where a very large portion of mortgage obligations have been securitized, by assignment to a trust indenture trustee, with the resulting pool of assets being then sold as mortgage backed securities, foreclosure becomes an interesting exercise, particularly where judicial process is involved. We are all familiar with the securitization process. The steps, if not the process, is simple. A borrower goes to a mortgage lender. The lender finances the purchase of real estate. The borrower signs a note and mortgage or deed of trust. The original lender sells the note and assigns the mortgage to an entity that securitizes the note by combining the note with hundreds or thousands of similar obligation to create a package of mortgage backed securities, which are then sold to investors.
    Unfortunately, unless you represent borrowers, the vast flow of notes into the maw of the securitization industry meant that a lot of mistakes were made. When the borrower defaults, the party seeking to enforce the obligation and foreclose on the underlying collateral sometimes cannot find the note. A lawyer sophisticated in this area has speculated to one of the authors that perhaps a third of the notes “securitized” have been lost or destroyed. The cases we are going to look at reflect the stark fact that the unnamed source’s speculation may be well-founded.
    UCC SECTION 3-309
    If the issue were as simple as a missing note, UCC §3-309 would provide a simple solution. A person entitled to enforce an instrument which has been lost, destroyed or stolen may enforce the instrument. If the court is concerned that some third party may show up and attempt to enforce the instrument against the payee, it may order adequate protection. But, and however, a person seeking to enforce a missing instrument must be a person entitled to enforce the instrument, and that person must prove the instrument’s terms and that person’s right to enforce the instrument. §3-309 (a)(1) & (b).
    WHO’S THE HOLDER
    Enforcement of a note always requires that the person seeking to collect show that it is the holder. A holder is an entity that has acquired the note either as the original payor or transfer by endorsement of order paper or physical possession of bearer paper. These requirements are set out in Article 3 of the Uniform Commercial Code, which has been adopted in every state, including Louisiana, and in the District of Columbia. Even in bankruptcy proceedings, State substantive law controls the rights of note and lien holders, as the Supreme Court pointed out almost forty (40) years ago in United States v. Butner, 440 U.S. 48, 54-55 (1979).
    However, as Judge Bufford has recently illustrated, in one of the cases discussed below, in the bankruptcy and other federal courts, procedure is governed by the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy and Civil Procedure. And, procedure may just have an impact on the issue of “who,” because, if the holder is unknown, pleading and standing issues arise.
    BRIEF REVIEW OF UCC PROVISIONS
    Article 3 governs negotiable instruments – it defines what a negotiable instrument is and defines how ownership of those pieces of paper is transferred. For the precise definition, see § 3-104(a) (“an unconditional promise or order to pay a fixed amount of money, with or without interest . . . .”) The instrument may be either payable to order or bearer and payable on demand or at a definite time, with or without interest.
    Ordinary negotiable instruments include notes and drafts (a check is a draft drawn on a bank). See § 3-104(e).
    Negotiable paper is transferred from the original payor by negotiation. §3-301. “Order paper” must be endorsed; bearer paper need only be delivered. §3-305. However, in either case, for the note to be enforced, the person who asserts the status of the holder must be in possession of the instrument. See UCC § 1-201 (20) and comments.
    The original and subsequent transferees are referred to as holders. Holders who take with no notice of defect or default are called “holders in due course,” and take free of many defenses. See §§ 3-305(b).
    The UCC says that a payment to a party “entitled to enforce the instrument” is sufficient to extinguish the obligation of the person obligated on the instrument. Clearly, then, only a holder – a person in possession of a note endorsed to it or a holder of bearer paper – may seek satisfaction or enforce rights in collateral such as real estate.
    NOTE: Those of us who went through the bank and savings and loan collapse of the 1980’s are familiar with these problems. The FDIC/FSLIC/RTC sold millions of notes secured and unsecured, in bulk transactions. Some notes could not be found and enforcement sometimes became a problem. Of course, sometimes we are forced to repeat history. For a recent FDIC case, see Liberty Savings Bank v. Redus, 2009 WL 41857 (Ohio App. 8 Dist.), January 8, 2009.
    THE RULES
    Judge Bufford addressed the rules issue this past year. See In re Hwang, 396 B.R. 757 (Bankr. C. D. Cal. 2008). First, there are the pleading problems that arise when the holder of the note is unknown. Typically, the issue will arise in a motion for relief from stay in a bankruptcy proceeding.
    According F.R.Civ. Pro. 17, “[a]n action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.” This rule is incorporated into the rules governing bankruptcy procedure in several ways. As Judge Bufford has pointed out, for example, in a motion for relief from stay, filed under F.R.Bankr.Pro. 4001 is a contested matter, governed by F. R. Bankr. P. 9014, which makes F.R. Bankr. Pro. 7017 applicable to such motions. F.R. Bankr. P. 7017 is, of course, a restatement of F. R. Civ. P. 17. In re Hwang, 396 B.R. at 766. The real party in interest in a federal action to enforce a note, whether in bankruptcy court or federal district court, is the owner of a note. (In securitization transactions, this would be the trustee for the “certificate holders.”) When the actual holder of the note is unknown, it is impossible – not difficult but impossible – to plead a cause of action in a federal court (unless the movant simply lies about the ownership of the note). Unless the name of the actual note holder can be stated, the very pleadings are defective.
    STANDING
    Often, the servicing agent for the loan will appear to enforce the note. Assume that the servicing agent states that it is the authorized agent of the note holder, which is “Trust Number 99.” The servicing agent is certainly a party in interest, since a party in interest in a bankruptcy court is a very broad term or concept. See, e.g., Greer v. O’Dell, 305 F.3d 1297, 1302-03 (11th Cir. 2002). However, the servicing agent may not have standing: “Federal Courts have only the power authorized by Article III of the Constitutions and the statutes enacted by Congress pursuant thereto. … [A] plaintiff must have Constitutional standing in order for a federal court to have jurisdiction.” In re Foreclosure Cases, 521 F.Supp. 3d 650, 653 (S.D. Ohio, 2007) (citations omitted).
    But, the servicing agent does not have standing, for only a person who is the holder of the note has standing to enforce the note. See, e.g., In re Hwang, 2008 WL 4899273 at 8.
    The servicing agent may have standing if acting as an agent for the holder, assuming that the agent can both show agency status and that the principle is the holder. See, e.g., In re Vargas, 396 B.R. 511 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2008) at 520.
    A BRIEF ASIDE: WHO IS MERS?
    For those of you who are not familiar with the entity known as MERS, a frequent participant in these foreclosure proceedings:
    MERS is the “Mortgage Electronic Registration System, Inc. “MERS is a mortgage banking ‘utility’ that registers mortgage loans in a book entry system so that … real estate loans can be bought, sold and securitized, just like Wall Street’s book entry utility for stocks and bonds is the Depository Trust and Clearinghouse.” Bastian, “Foreclosure Forms”, State. Bar of Texas 17th Annual Advanced Real Estate Drafting Course, March 9-10, 2007, Dallas, Texas. MERS is enormous. It originates thousands of loans daily and is the mortgagee of record for at least 40 million mortgages and other security documents. Id.
    MERS acts as agent for the owner of the note. Its authority to act should be shown by an agency agreement. Of course, if the owner is unknown, MERS cannot show that it is an authorized agent of the owner.
    RULES OF EVIDENCE – A PRACTICAL PROBLEM
    This structure also possesses practical evidentiary problems where the party asserting a right to foreclose must be able to show a default. Once again, Judge Bufford has addressed this issue. At In re Vargas, 396 B.R. at 517-19. Judge Bufford made a finding that the witness called to testify as to debt and default was incompetent. All the witness could testify was that he had looked at the MERS computerized records. The witness was unable to satisfy the requirements of the Federal Rules of Evidence, particularly Rule 803, as applied to computerized records in the Ninth Circuit. See id. at 517-20. The low level employee could really only testify that the MERS screen shot he reviewed reflected a default. That really is not much in the way of evidence, and not nearly enough to get around the hearsay rule.
    FORECLOSURE OR RELIEF FROM STAY
    In a foreclosure proceeding in a judicial foreclosure state, or a request for injunctive relief in a non-judicial foreclosure state, or in a motion for relief proceeding in a bankruptcy court, the courts are dealing with and writing about the problems very frequently.
    In many if not almost all cases, the party seeking to exercise the rights of the creditor will be a servicing company. Servicing companies will be asserting the rights of their alleged principal, the note holder, which is, again, often going to be a trustee for a securitization package. The mortgage holder or beneficiary under the deed of trust will, again, very often be MERS.
    Even before reaching the practical problem of debt and default, mentioned above, the moving party must show that it holds the note or (1) that it is an agent of the holder and that (2) the holder remains the holder. In addition, the owner of the note, if different from the holder, must join in the motion.
    Some states, like Texas, have passed statutes that allow servicing companies to act in foreclosure proceedings as a statutorily recognized agent of the noteholder. See, e.g., Tex. Prop. Code §51.0001. However, that statute refers to the servicer as the last entity to whom the debtor has been instructed to make payments. This status is certainly open to challenge. The statute certainly provides nothing more than prima facie evidence of the ability of the servicer to act. If challenged, the servicing agent must show that the last entity to communicate instructions to the debtor is still the holder of the note. See, e.g., HSBC Bank, N.A. v. Valentin, 2l N.Y. Misc. 3d 1123(A), 2008 WL 4764816 (Table) (N.Y. Sup.), Nov. 3, 2008. In addition, such a statute does not control in federal court where Fed. R. Civ. P. 17 and 19 (and Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7017 and 7019) apply.
    SOME RECENT CASE LAW
    These cases are arranged by state, for no particular reason.
    Massachusetts
    In re Schwartz, 366 B.R.265 (Bankr. D. Mass. 2007)
    Schwartz concerns a Motion for Relief to pursue an eviction. Movant asserted that the property had been foreclosed upon prior to the date of the bankruptcy petition. The pro se debtor asserted that the Movant was required to show that it had authority to conduct the sale. Movant, and “the party which appears to be the current mortgagee…” provided documents for the court to review, but did not ask for an evidentiary hearing. Judge Rosenthal sifted through the documents and found that the Movant and thecurrent mortgagee had failed to prove that the foreclosure was properly conducted.
    Specifically, Judge Rosenthal found that there was no evidence of a proper assignment of the mortgage prior to foreclosure. However, at footnote 5, Id. at 268, the Court also finds that there is no evidence that the note itself was assigned and no evidence as to who the current holder might be.
    Nosek v. Ameriquest Mortgage Company (In re Nosek), 286 Br. 374 (Bankr D Mass. 2008).
    Almost a year to the day after Schwartz was signed, Judge Rosenthal issued a second opinion. This is an opinion on an order to show cause. Judge Rosenthal specifically found that, although the note and mortgage involved in the case had been transferred from the originator to another party within five days of closing, during the five years in which the chapter 13 proceeding was pending, the note and mortgage and associated claims had been prosecuted by Ameriquest which has represented itself to be the holder of the note and the mortgage. Not until September of 2007 did Ameriquest notify the Court that it was merely the servicer. In fact, only after the chapter 13 bankruptcy had been pending for about three years was there even an assignment of the servicing rights. Id. at 378.
    Because these misrepresentations were not simple mistakes: as the Court has noted on more than one occasion, those parties who do not hold the note of mortgage do not service the mortgage do not have standing to pursue motions for leave or other actions arising form the mortgage obligation. Id at 380.
    As a result, the Court sanctioned the local law firm that had been prosecuting the claim $25,000. It sanctioned a partner at that firm an additional $25,000. Then the Court sanctioned the national law firm involved $100,000 and ultimately sanctioned Wells Fargo $250,000. Id. at 382-386.
    In re Hayes, 393 B.R. 259 (Bankr. D. Mass. 2008).
    Like Judge Rosenthal, Judge Feeney has attacked the problem of standing and authority head on. She has also held that standing must be established before either a claim can be allowed or a motion for relief be granted.
    Ohio
    In re Foreclosure Cases, 521 F.Supp. 2d (S.D. Ohio 2007).
    Perhaps the District Court’s orders in the foreclosure cases in Ohio have received the most press of any of these opinions. Relying almost exclusively on standing, theJudge Rose has determined that a foreclosing party must show standing. “[I]n a foreclosure action, the plaintiff must show that it is the holder of the note and the mortgage at the time that the complaint was filed.” Id. at 653.
    Judge Rose instructed the parties involved that the willful failure of the movants to comply with the general orders of the Court would in the future result in immediate dismissal of foreclosure actions.
    Deutsche Bank Nat’l Trust Co. v. Steele, 2008 WL 111227 (S.D. Ohio) January 8, 2008.
    In Steele, Judge Abel followed the lead of Judge Rose and found that Deutsche Bank had filed evidence in support of its motion for default judgment indicating that MERS was the mortgage holder. There was not sufficient evidence to support the claim that Deutsche Bank was the owner and holder of the note as of that date. Following In re Foreclosure Cases, 2007 WL 456586, the Court held that summary judgment would be denied “until such time as Deutsche Bank was able to offer evidence showing, by a preponderance of evidence, that it owned the note and mortgage when the complaint was filed.” 2008 WL 111227 at 2. Deutsche Bank was given twenty-one days to comply. Id.
    Illinois
    U

    Not all federal district judges are as concerned with the issues surrounding the transfer of notes and mortgages. Cook is a very pro lender case and, in an order granting a motion for summary judgment, the Court found that Cook had shown no “countervailing evidence to create a genuine issue of facts.” Id. at 3. In fact, a review of the evidence submitted by U.S. Bank showed only that it was the alleged trustee of the securitization pool. U.S. Bank relied exclusively on the “pooling and serving agreement” to show that it was the holder of the note. Id.
    Under UCC Article 3, the evidence presented in Cook was clearly insufficient.
    New York
    HSBC Bank USA, N.A. v. Valentin, 21 Misc. 3D 1124(A), 2008 WL 4764816 (Table) (N.Y. Sup.) November 3, 2008. In Valentin, the New York court found that, even though given an opportunity to, HSBC did not show the ownership of debt and mortgage. The complaint was dismissed with prejudice and the “notice of pendency” against the property was canceled.
    Note that the Valentin case does not involve some sort of ambush. The Court gave every HSBC every opportunity to cure the defects the Court perceived in the pleadings.
    California
    In re Vargas, 396 B.R. 511 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2008)
    and
    In re Hwang, 396 B.R. 757 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2008)
    These two opinions by Judge Bufford have been discussed above. Judge Bufford carefully explores the related issues of standing and ownership under both federal and California law.
    Texas
    In re Parsley, 384 B.R. 138 (Bankr. S.D. Tex. 2008)
    and
    In re Gilbreath, 395 B.R. 356 (Bankr. S.D. Tex. 2008)
    These two recent opinions by Judge Jeff Bohm are not really on point, but illustrate another thread of cases running through the issues of motions for relief from stay in bankruptcy court and the sloppiness of loan servicing agencies. Both of these cases involve motions for relief that were not based upon fact but upon mistakes by servicing agencies. Both opinions deal with the issue of sanctions and, put simply, both cases illustrate that Judge Bohm (and perhaps other members of the bankruptcy bench in the Southern District of Texas) are going to be very strict about motions for relief in consumer cases.
    SUMMARY
    The cases cited illustrate enormous problems in the loan servicing industry. These problems arise in the context of securitization and illustrate the difficulty of determining the name of the holder, the assignee of the mortgage, and the parties with both the legal right under Article 3 and the standing under the Constitution to enforce notes, whether in state court or federal court.
    Interestingly, with the exception of Judge Bufford and a few other judges, there has been less than adequate focus upon the UCC title issues. The next round of cases may and should focus upon the title to debt instrument. The person seeking to enforce the note must show that:
    (1) It is the holder of t his note original by transfer, with all necessary rounds;
    (2) It had possession of the note before it was lost;
    (3) If it can show that title to the note runs to it, but the original is lost or destroyed, the holder must be prepared to post a bond;
    (4) If the person seeking to enforce is an agent, it must show its agency status and that its principal is the holder of the note (and meets the above requirements).
    Then, and only then, do the issues of evidence of debt and default and assignment of mortgage rights become relevant.
    Filed under: CDO, CORRUPTION, Eviction, Investor, MODIFICATION, Mortgage, bubble,foreclosure, securities fraud | Tagged: borrower, disclosure, foreclosure defense, foreclosure offense, fraud, Lender Liability, mortgage meltdown, predatory lending, securitization, trustee
    « Text of Obama Speech on Foreclosure Crisis Happy Birthday to our Founder – Neil Garfield »
    28 Responses to “This is it! WHERE’S THE NOTE, WHO’S THE HOLDER: ENFORCEMENT OF PROMISSORY NOTE SECURED BY REAL ESTATE”
    Alina, on March 6th, 2009 at 2:41 PM Said:
    Here is another interesting tidbit. Yesterday, I searched all recorded assignments in my county for the servicing company on my loan. The guy who signed the assignement as Asst. Sec. for MERS, has also signed as Document Control Officer for the servicing company and as either an asst. sec or Document Control Officer for other banks. Each signature was notarized by the same person and witnessed by the same persons acknowledging that this person is ________ of _________ company. Assignors and assignees all have the same address.
    Additionally, same law firm and same company prepared the assignment, a company out of Missouri. Definitely smells of fraud, a big smelly fish.
    This is right along the lines of the King County, NY decision.
    Don’t know how to present this evidence to the Court. Any suggestions? I was thinking of doing a Request for Judicial Notice. Thanks.
    MSoliman, on March 6th, 2009 at 12:44 PM Said:
    The structure for the Real Estate Trust prohibits ownership of Assets. Depositor and the Pass-through enitities including custodial roles and Master Servicer. must remin bankrupt insulate. Otherwise its debt and a big hypotheication.
    If the assets are detemined to be held by any of the above the affilliates the Trust falls apart (I assue that would begin with the Sponsor / Depositor who acts as the TRS in a REIT).
    These loans are treated as recievables with no regard for regulatory requirements – NO CAN DO.
    SEC and HUD are in conflict and markets remain confused. The security remains tied into the UCC filing and the investors interest is fractionalized as are the other interests in the cash flow.
    I have been waiting for this and that is the governments intereference into the real determination of accountability. Bernake revealed a sweeping change to GAAP and FASB interpretations of accounting policy….accountability rests with IRS reporting under the appropriate method of accoounting,
    In other words the combinations will pass through revenue or show income and earings on a profit and loss. Basis accountig for the assets and any gain or loss on sale / reversion will likley fall onto the Federal Saving Bank. This is a capital reserves maintenance crisis for the FSB’s who are sheltered uner this mess.
    M Soliman admin@borrowerhotline.com
    livinglies, on March 6th, 2009 at 1:51 AM Said:
    Allan: File motion with the court declaring you have not been served. If you want, go to Florida Bar Website and file grievance.
    Allan (still trying to understand “holder in due course”!), on March 5th, 2009 at 6:23 PM Said:
    I recorded a lien back in 2004 that put everyone on notice that borrower lacked capacity, that her identity was stolen, that her signatures were forged.
    In 2005, after I reinstated the mortgage, it got securitized and placed by WAMU in SASCO 2005 RF5.
    USBank N.A. claims it is the trustee for SASCO certificate holders. When I attempt to track down SASCO, all I come up with is Barclay’s. How does one track if SASCO still exists?
    The IMPORTANT question here is, in this scenario, with assignments unrecorded and hastily assembled well after the lawsuit, WHO is “holder in due course”? and what rights do they have?
    Also, Florida Default Law Group has been engaging in unethical tricks, including scheduling hearings on Summary Judgment Motions WITHOUT notice to me, though it certifies to the Court it has sent copies to me. What to do with such antics? Is there a Board of Bar Overseers? Do they have any teeth?
    RSVP
    Allan
    BeMoved@AOL.com
    Bryan Brey, on March 4th, 2009 at 7:07 PM Said:
    @ Alina
    Brilliant Alina, brilliant!
    Alina, on March 4th, 2009 at 6:09 PM Said:
    Bryan,
    My argument exactly. U.S. Bank would fall under the definition of a “business trust.”
    The business trust and its assets are managed for the benefit of persons who hold transferable certificates issued by the trustees. The ownership shares into which the beneficial interest in the property is divided are called “shares of beneficial interest.” These shares can be issued in the names of the beneficiaries or held by the trustees in “bearer form” (no designated owner name for each share).
    Both Willey and Corcoran deal with a trust trying to foreclose. Per Willey, the trust cannot bring suit without including the trustee(s).
    And per Corcoran, no business trust can bring suit on a mortgage and note in the State of Florida without authorization from its original state.
    In my case, the purported assignment is to the trustee, not the trust.
    Still researching all this. Also, reseraching FTC Holder in Due Course.
    Bryan Brey, on March 4th, 2009 at 4:56 PM Said:
    @ Alina
    Reading

     Consumer and Saxon lack standing to pursue this litigation. 2 It is well
    established that a plaintiff must prove standing by showing: (1) injury in
    fact; (2) a causal connection between the injury and the defendant’s
    conduct; and (3) a likelihood that a favorable outcome will redress the
    injury. See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560-61, 112 S. Ct.
    2130, 119 L. Ed. 2d 351 (1992).
    Consumer [*14] seeks, in essence, to “enforce the [Promissory] Note and
    Deed of Trust if [Ms.] Hillery does not pay the Rescission Balance by a date
    set by this Court.” Compl. P 27. Thus, as Consumer itself acknowledges, to
    proceed with this action, it must demonstrate that it is the holder of not
    only the deed of trust but also the promissory note. If not, it has no
    injury in fact. See In re ForeclosureCases, 521 F. Supp. 2d 650, 653 (S.D.

    UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE COMMITTEE

    WHERE’S THE NOTE, WHO’S THE HOLDER: ENFORCEMENT OF PROMISSORY NOTE SECURED BY REAL ESTATE

    HON. SAMUEL L. BUFFORD
    UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY JUDGE
    CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA

    (FORMERLY HON.) R. GLEN AYERS
    LANGLEY & BANACK
    SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS

    AMERICAN BANKRUPTCY INSTUTUTE
    APRIL 3, 2009
    WASHINGTON, D.C.

     

    INTRODUCTION

    In an era where a very large portion of mortgage obligations have been securitized, by assignment to a trust indenture trustee, with the resulting pool of assets being then sold as mortgage backed securities, foreclosure becomes an interesting exercise, particularly where judicial process is involved. We are all familiar with the securitization process. The steps, if not the process, is simple. A borrower goes to a mortgage lender. The lender finances the purchase of real estate. The borrower signs a note and mortgage or deed of trust. The original lender sells the note and assigns the mortgage to an entity that securitizes the note by combining the note with hundreds or thousands of similar obligation to create a package of mortgage backed securities, which are then sold to investors.

    Unfortunately, unless you represent borrowers, the vast flow of notes into the maw of the securitization industry meant that a lot of mistakes were made. When the borrower defaults, the party seeking to enforce the obligation and foreclose on the underlying collateral sometimes cannot find the note. A lawyer sophisticated in this area has speculated to one of the authors that perhaps a third of the notes “securitized” have been lost or destroyed. The cases we are going to look at reflect the stark fact that the unnamed source’s speculation may be well-founded.

    UCC SECTION 3-309

    If the issue were as simple as a missing note, UCC §3-309 would provide a simple solution. A person entitled to enforce an instrument which has been lost, destroyed or stolen may enforce the instrument. If the court is concerned that some third party may show up and attempt to enforce the instrument against the payee, it may order adequate protection. But, and however, a person seeking to enforce a missing instrument must be a person entitled to enforce the instrument, and that person must prove the instrument’s terms and that person’s right to enforce the instrument. §3-309 (a)(1) & (b).

    WHO’S THE HOLDER

    Enforcement of a note always requires that the person seeking to collect show that it is the holder. A holder is an entity that has acquired the note either as the original payor or transfer by endorsement of order paper or physical possession of bearer paper. These requirements are set out in Article 3 of the Uniform Commercial Code, which has been adopted in every state, including Louisiana, and in the District of Columbia. Even in bankruptcy proceedings, State substantive law controls the rights of note and lien holders, as the Supreme Court pointed out almost forty (40) years ago in United States v. Butner, 440 U.S. 48, 54-55 (1979).

    However, as Judge Bufford has recently illustrated, in one of the cases discussed below, in the bankruptcy and other federal courts, procedure is governed by the Federal Rules of Bankruptcy and Civil Procedure. And, procedure may just have an impact on the issue of “who,” because, if the holder is unknown, pleading and standing issues arise.

    BRIEF REVIEW OF UCC PROVISIONS

    Article 3 governs negotiable instruments – it defines what a negotiable instrument is and defines how ownership of those pieces of paper is transferred. For the precise definition, see § 3-104(a) (“an unconditional promise or order to pay a fixed amount of money, with or without interest . . . .”) The instrument may be either payable to order or bearer and payable on demand or at a definite time, with or without interest.

    Ordinary negotiable instruments include notes and drafts (a check is a draft drawn on a bank). See § 3-104(e).

    Negotiable paper is transferred from the original payor by negotiation. §3-301. “Order paper” must be endorsed; bearer paper need only be delivered. §3-305. However, in either case, for the note to be enforced, the person who asserts the status of the holder must be in possession of the instrument. See UCC § 1-201 (20) and comments.

    The original and subsequent transferees are referred to as holders. Holders who take with no notice of defect or default are called “holders in due course,” and take free of many defenses. See §§ 3-305(b).

    The UCC says that a payment to a party “entitled to enforce the instrument” is sufficient to extinguish the obligation of the person obligated on the instrument. Clearly, then, only a holder – a person in possession of a note endorsed to it or a holder of bearer paper – may seek satisfaction or enforce rights in collateral such as real estate.

    NOTE: Those of us who went through the bank and savings and loan collapse of the 1980’s are familiar with these problems. The FDIC/FSLIC/RTC sold millions of notes secured and unsecured, in bulk transactions. Some notes could not be found and enforcement sometimes became a problem. Of course, sometimes we are forced to repeat history. For a recent FDIC case, see Liberty Savings Bank v. Redus, 2009 WL 41857 (Ohio App. 8 Dist.), January 8, 2009.

    THE RULES

    Judge Bufford addressed the rules issue this past year. See In re Hwang, 396 B.R. 757 (Bankr. C. D. Cal. 2008). First, there are the pleading problems that arise when the holder of the note is unknown. Typically, the issue will arise in a motion for relief from stay in a bankruptcy proceeding.

    According F.R.Civ. Pro. 17, “[a]n action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.” This rule is incorporated into the rules governing bankruptcy procedure in several ways. As Judge Bufford has pointed out, for example, in a motion for relief from stay, filed under F.R.Bankr.Pro. 4001 is a contested matter, governed by F. R. Bankr. P. 9014, which makes F.R. Bankr. Pro. 7017 applicable to such motions. F.R. Bankr. P. 7017 is, of course, a restatement of F.R. Civ. P. 17. In re Hwang, 396 B.R. at 766. The real party in interest in a federal action to enforce a note, whether in bankruptcy court or federal district court, is the owner of a note. (In securitization transactions, this would be the trustee for the “certificate holders.”) When the actual holder of the note is unknown, it is impossible – not difficult but impossible – to plead a cause of action in a federal court (unless the movant simply lies about the ownership of the note). Unless the name of the actual note holder can be stated, the very pleadings are defective.

    STANDING

    Often, the servicing agent for the loan will appear to enforce the note. Assume that the servicing agent states that it is the authorized agent of the note holder, which is “Trust Number 99.” The servicing agent is certainly a party in interest, since a party in interest in a bankruptcy court is a very broad term or concept. See, e.g., Greer v. O’Dell, 305 F.3d 1297, 1302-03 (11th Cir. 2002). However, the servicing agent may not have standing: “Federal Courts have only the power authorized by Article III of the Constitutions and the statutes enacted by Congress pursuant thereto. … [A] plaintiff must have Constitutional standing in order for a federal court to have jurisdiction.” In re Foreclosure Cases, 521 F.Supp. 3d 650, 653 (S.D. Ohio, 2007) (citations omitted).

    But, the servicing agent does not have standing, for only a person who is the holder of the note has standing to enforce the note. See, e.g., In re Hwang, 2008 WL 4899273 at 8.

    The servicing agent may have standing if acting as an agent for the holder, assuming that the agent can both show agency status and that the principle is the holder. See, e.g., In re Vargas, 396 B.R. 511 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2008) at 520.

    A BRIEF ASIDE: WHO IS MERS?

    For those of you who are not familiar with the entity known as MERS, a frequent participant in these foreclosure proceedings:

    MERS is the “Mortgage Electronic Registration System, Inc. “MERS is a mortgage banking ‘utility’ that registers mortgage loans in a book entry system so that … real estate loans can be bought, sold and securitized, just like Wall Street’s book entry utility for stocks and bonds is the Depository Trust and Clearinghouse.” Bastian, “Foreclosure Forms”, State. Bar of Texas 17th Annual Advanced Real Estate Drafting Course, March 9-10, 2007, Dallas, Texas. MERS is enormous. It originates thousands of loans daily and is the mortgagee of record for at least 40 million mortgages and other security documents. Id.

    MERS acts as agent for the owner of the note. Its authority to act should be shown by an agency agreement. Of course, if the owner is unknown, MERS cannot show that it is an authorized agent of the owner.

    RULES OF EVIDENCE – A PRACTICAL PROBLEM

    This structure also possesses practical evidentiary problems where the party asserting a right to foreclose must be able to show a default. Once again, Judge Bufford has addressed this issue. At In re Vargas, 396 B.R. at 517-19. Judge Bufford made a finding that the witness called to testify as to debt and default was incompetent. All the witness could testify was that he had looked at the MERS computerized records. The witness was unable to satisfy the requirements of the Federal Rules of Evidence, particularly Rule 803, as applied to computerized records in the Ninth Circuit. See id. at 517-20. The low level employee could really only testify that the MERS screen shot he reviewed reflected a default. That really is not much in the way of evidence, and not nearly enough to get around the hearsay rule.

    FORECLOSURE OR RELIEF FROM STAY

    In a foreclosure proceeding in a judicial foreclosure state, or a request for injunctive relief in a non-judicial foreclosure state, or in a motion for relief proceeding in a bankruptcy court, the courts are dealing with and writing about the problems very frequently.

    In many if not almost all cases, the party seeking to exercise the rights of the creditor will be a servicing company. Servicing companies will be asserting the rights of their alleged principal, the note holder, which is, again, often going to be a trustee for a securitization package. The mortgage holder or beneficiary under the deed of trust will, again, very often be MERS.

    Even before reaching the practical problem of debt and default, mentioned above, the moving party must show that it holds the note or (1) that it is an agent of the holder and that (2) the holder remains the holder. In addition, the owner of the note, if different from the holder, must join in the motion.

    Some states, like Texas, have passed statutes that allow servicing companies to act in foreclosure proceedings as a statutorily recognized agent of the noteholder. See, e.g., Tex. Prop. Code §51.0001. However, that statute refers to the servicer as the last entity to whom the debtor has been instructed to make payments. This status is certainly open to challenge. The statute certainly provides nothing more than prima facie evidence of the ability of the servicer to act. If challenged, the servicing agent must show that the last entity to communicate instructions to the debtor is still the holder of the note. See, e.g., HSBC Bank, N.A. v. Valentin, 2l N.Y. Misc. 3d 1123(A), 2008 WL 4764816 (Table) (N.Y. Sup.), Nov. 3, 2008. In addition, such a statute does not control in federal court where Fed. R. Civ. P. 17 and 19 (and Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7017 and 7019) apply.

    SOME RECENT CASE LAW

    These cases are arranged by state, for no particular reason.

    Massachusetts

    In re Schwartz, 366 B.R.265 (Bankr. D. Mass. 2007)

    Schwartz concerns a Motion for Relief to pursue an eviction. Movant asserted that the property had been foreclosed upon prior to the date of the bankruptcy petition. The pro se debtor asserted that the Movant was required to show that it had authority to conduct the sale. Movant, and “the party which appears to be the current mortgagee…” provided documents for the court to review, but did not ask for an evidentiary hearing. Judge Rosenthal sifted through the documents and found that the Movant and the current mortgagee had failed to prove that the foreclosure was properly conducted.

    Specifically, Judge Rosenthal found that there was no evidence of a proper assignment of the mortgage prior to foreclosure. However, at footnote 5, Id. at 268, the Court also finds that there is no evidence that the note itself was assigned and no evidence as to who the current holder might be.

    Nosek v. Ameriquest Mortgage Company (In re Nosek), 286 Br. 374 (Bankr D Mass. 2008).

    Almost a year to the day after Schwartz was signed, Judge Rosenthal issued a second opinion. This is an opinion on an order to show cause. Judge Rosenthal specifically found that, although the note and mortgage involved in the case had been transferred from the originator to another party within five days of closing, during the five years in which the chapter 13 proceeding was pending, the note and mortgage and associated claims had been prosecuted by Ameriquest which has represented itself to be the holder of the note and the mortgage. Not until September of 2007 did Ameriquest notify the Court that it was merely the servicer. In fact, only after the chapter 13 bankruptcy had been pending for about three years was there even an assignment of the servicing rights. Id. at 378.

    Because these misrepresentations were not simple mistakes: as the Court has noted on more than one occasion, those parties who do not hold the note of mortgage do not service the mortgage do not have standing to pursue motions for leave or other actions arising form the mortgage obligation. Id at 380.

    As a result, the Court sanctioned the local law firm that had been prosecuting the claim $25,000. It sanctioned a partner at that firm an additional $25,000. Then the Court sanctioned the national law firm involved $100,000 and ultimately sanctioned Wells Fargo $250,000. Id. at 382-386.

    In re Hayes, 393 B.R. 259 (Bankr. D. Mass. 2008).

    Like Judge Rosenthal, Judge Feeney has attacked the problem of standing and authority head on. She has also held that standing must be established before either a claim can be allowed or a motion for relief be granted.

    Ohio

    In re Foreclosure Cases, 521 F.Supp. 2d (S.D. Ohio 2007).

    Perhaps the District Court’s orders in the foreclosure cases in Ohio have received the most press of any of these opinions. Relying almost exclusively on standing, the Judge Rose has determined that a foreclosing party must show standing. “[I]n a foreclosure action, the plaintiff must show that it is the holder of the note and the mortgage at the time that the complaint was filed.” Id. at 653.

    Judge Rose instructed the parties involved that the willful failure of the movants to comply with the general orders of the Court would in the future result in immediate dismissal of foreclosure actions.

    Deutsche Bank Nat’l Trust Co. v. Steele, 2008 WL 111227 (S.D. Ohio) January 8, 2008.

    In Steele, Judge Abel followed the lead of Judge Rose and found that Deutsche Bank had filed evidence in support of its motion for default judgment indicating that MERS was the mortgage holder. There was not sufficient evidence to support the claim that Deutsche Bank was the owner and holder of the note as of that date. Following In re Foreclosure Cases, 2007 WL 456586, the Court held that summary judgment would be denied “until such time as Deutsche Bank was able to offer evidence showing, by a preponderance of evidence, that it owned the note and mortgage when the complaint was filed.” 2008 WL 111227 at 2. Deutsche Bank was given twenty-one days to comply. Id.

    Illinois

    U.S. Bank, N.A. v. Cook, 2009 WL 35286 (N.D. Ill. January 6, 2009).

    Not all federal district judges are as concerned with the issues surrounding the transfer of notes and mortgages. Cook is a very pro lender case and, in an order granting a motion for summary judgment, the Court found that Cook had shown no “countervailing evidence to create a genuine issue of facts.” Id. at 3. In fact, a review of the evidence submitted by U.S. Bank showed only that it was the alleged trustee of the securitization pool. U.S. Bank relied exclusively on the “pooling and serving agreement” to show that it was the holder of the note. Id.

    Under UCC Article 3, the evidence presented in Cook was clearly insufficient.

    New York

    HSBC Bank USA, N.A. v. Valentin, 21 Misc. 3D 1124(A), 2008 WL 4764816 (Table) (N.Y. Sup.) November 3, 2008. In Valentin, the New York court found that, even though given an opportunity to, HSBC did not show the ownership of debt and mortgage. The complaint was dismissed with prejudice and the “notice of pendency” against the property was cancelled.

    Note that the Valentin case does not involve some sort of ambush. The Court gave every HSBC every opportunity to cure the defects the Court perceived in the pleadings.

    California

    In re Vargas, 396 B.R. 511 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2008)

    and

    In re Hwang, 396 B.R. 757 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. 2008)

    These two opinions by Judge Bufford have been discussed above. Judge Bufford carefully explores the related issues of standing and ownership under both federal and California law.

    Texas

    In re Parsley, 384 B.R. 138 (Bankr. S.D. Tex. 2008)

    and

    In re Gilbreath, 395 B.R. 356 (Bankr. S.D. Tex. 2008)

    These two recent opinions by Judge Jeff Bohm are not really on point, but illustrate another thread of cases running through the issues of motions for relief from stay in bankruptcy court and the sloppiness of loan servicing agencies. Both of these cases involve motions for relief that were not based upon fact but upon mistakes by servicing agencies. Both opinions deal with the issue of sanctions and, put simply, both cases illustrate that Judge Bohm (and perhaps other members of the bankruptcy bench in the Southern District of Texas) are going to be very strict about motions for relief in consumer cases.

    SUMMARY

    The cases cited illustrate enormous problems in the loan servicing industry. These problems arise in the context of securitization and illustrate the difficulty of determining the name of the holder, the assignee of the mortgage, and the parties with both the legal right under Article 3 and the standing under the Constitution to enforce notes, whether in state court or federal court.

    Interestingly, with the exception of Judge Bufford and a few other judges, there has been less than adequate focus upon the UCC title issues. The next round of cases may and should focus upon the title to debt instrument. The person seeking to enforce the note must show that:

    It is the holder of this note original by transfer, with all necessary rounds;
    It had possession of the note before it was lost;
    If it can show that title to the note runs to it, but the original is lost or destroyed, the holder must be prepared to post a bond;
    If the person seeking to enforce is an agent, it must show its agency status and that its principal is the holder of the note (and meets the above requirements).

    Then, and only then, do the issues of evidence of debt and default and assignment of mortgage rights become relevant.

     Whether or not Saxon, the servicer of the loan, has standing in the instant
    case rises and falls with whether or not Consumer has standing. See In re
    Kang Jin Hwang, 393 B.R. 701, 712 (C.D. Cal. 2008)(indicating that a loan
    servicer cannot bring an action without the holder of the promissory note).
    That is, if Consumer can demonstrate that it is the owner of both the deed
    of trust and the promissory note, then it was proper for Saxon to have been
    named a plaintiff at the outset of the litigation along with Consumer.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: bankruptcy, California cram down, Chapter 13, Foreclosure, Predatory Lending, stop foreclosure

    Categories : Foreclosure, bankruptcy


    California Issues Foreclosure Moratorium

    25 02 2009

    Carrie Bay | 02.25.09

    California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger approved a bill appended to the state’s budget package last week that institutes a 90-day foreclosure moratorium throughout the Golden State. Introduced by Sen. Ellen Corbett (D-San Leandro), the moratorium applies to first mortgages recorded between January 1, 2003 and January 1, 2008.

    State regulators, however, can deem loan servicers and lenders exempt from the new law if they have a mortgage modification program already in place that includes principal deferral, interest rate reductions for five years or more, or extended loan terms. The lender’s loan restructuring program also has to ensure new monthly payments are no more than 38 percent of the borrower’s income. The state’s stipulated debt-to-income ratio is significantly lower than the 31 percent target called for in the Obama Administration’s Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan.

    Kevin Stein, associate director of the California Reinvestment Coalition, told the San Francisco Chronicle, “It was a step backward from where things were going from an industry standpoint and a federal standpoint.”

    According to the Chronicle, Corbett herself said that she would have liked a bill with stronger enforcement for modifications but was limited from more aggressive measures by the state’s banking regulators.

    Mortgageorb.com reported that California’s banking groups, including the California Bankers Association and the California Mortgage Bankers Association, have written strong oppositions to the bill, arguing the moratorium will negatively impact home sales and further delay recovery.

    Beth Mills, a spokesperson for the California Bankers Association, told the Chronicle that struggling borrowers and their lenders already have more than enough time to search for mutual solutions. Mills pointed out that a state law passed in 2008 increased the required time span between first notification of foreclosure and final sale of the property by 30 days, to a total of 141 days. According to Mills, more time is not the silver bullet to every troubled loan, the Chronicle said.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, California cram down, eviction, Foreclosure, Mortgage modification, stop foreclosure

    Categories : Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Mortgage modification, bankruptcy, eviction, stop foreclosure

     

    90% Forclosures Wrongful

    1 01 2010

    A wrongful foreclosure action typically occurs when the lender starts a non judicial foreclosure action when it simply has no legal cause. This is even more evident now since California passed the Foreclosure prevention act of 2008 SB 1194 codified in Civil code 2923.5 and 2923.6. In 2009 it is this attorneys opinion that 90% of all foreclosures are wrongful in that the lender does not comply (just look at the declaration page on the notice of default). The lenders most notably Indymac, Countrywide, and Wells Fargo have taken a calculated risk. To comply would cost hundreds of millions in staff, paperwork, and workouts that they don’t deem to be in their best interest. The workout is not in there best interest because our tax dollars are guaranteeing the Banks that are To Big to Fail’s debt. If they don’t foreclose and if they work it out the loss is on them. There is no incentive to modify loan for the benefit of the consumer.

    Sooooo they proceed to foreclosure without the mandated contacts with the borrower. Oh and yes contact is made by a computer or some outsourcing contact agent based in India. But compliance with 2923.5 is not done. The Borrower is never told that he or she have the right to a meeting within 14 days of the contact. They do not get offers to avoid foreclosure there are typically two offers short sale or a probationary mod that will be declined upon the 90th day.

    Wrongful foreclosure actions are also brought when the service providers accept partial payments after initiation of the wrongful foreclosure process, and then continue on with the foreclosure process. These predatory lending strategies, as well as other forms of misleading homeowners, are illegal.

    The borrower is the one that files a wrongful disclosure action with the court against the service provider, the holder of the note and if it is a non-judicial foreclosure, against the trustee complaining that there was an illegal, fraudulent or willfully oppressive sale of property under a power of sale contained in a mortgage or deed or court judicial proceeding. The borrower can also allege emotional distress and ask for punitive damages in a wrongful foreclosure action.

    Causes of Action

    Wrongful foreclosure actions may allege that the amount stated in the notice of default as due and owing is incorrect because of the following reasons:

    * Incorrect interest rate adjustment
    * Incorrect tax impound accounts
    * Misapplied payments
    * Forbearance agreement which was not adhered to by the servicer
    * Unnecessary forced place insurance,
    * Improper accounting for a confirmed chapter 11 or chapter 13 bankruptcy plan.
    * Breach of contract
    * Intentional infliction of emotional distress
    * Negligent infliction of emotional distress
    * Unfair Business Practices
    * Quiet title
    * Wrongful foreclosure
    * Tortuous violation of 2924 2923.5 and 2923.5 and 2932.5
    Injunction

    Any time prior to the foreclosure sale, a borrower can apply for an injunction with the intent of stopping the foreclosure sale until issues in the lawsuit are resolved. The wrongful foreclosure lawsuit can take anywhere from ten to twenty-four months. Generally, an injunction will only be issued by the court if the court determines that: (1) the borrower is entitled to the injunction; and (2) that if the injunction is not granted, the borrower will be subject to irreparable harm.

    Damages Available to Borrower

    Damages available to a borrower in a wrongful foreclosure action include: compensation for the detriment caused, which are measured by the value of the property, emotional distress and punitive damages if there is evidence that the servicer or trustee committed fraud, oppression or malice in its wrongful conduct. If the borrower’s allegations are true and correct and the borrower wins the lawsuit, the servicer will have to undue or cancel the foreclosure sale, and pay the borrower’s legal bills.

    Why Do Wrongful Foreclosures Occur?

    Wrongful foreclosure cases occur usually because of a miscommunication between the lender and the borrower. Most borrower don’t know who the real lender is. Servicing has changed on average three times. And with the advent of MERS Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems the “investor lender” hundreds of times since the origination. And now they then have to contact the borrower. The don’t even know who the lender truly is. The laws that are now in place never contemplated the virtualization of the lending market. The present laws are inadequate to the challenge.

    This is even more evident now since California passed the Foreclosure prevention act of 2008 SB 1194 codified in Civil code 2923.5 and 2923.6. In 2009 it is this attorneys opinion that 90% of all foreclosures are wrongful in that the lender does not comply (just look at the declaration page on the notice of default). The lenders most notably Indymac, Countrywide, and Wells Fargo have taken a calculated risk. To comply would cost hundreds of millions in staff, paperwork, and workouts that they don’t deem to be in their best interest. The workout is not in there best interest because our tax dollars are guaranteeing the Banks that are To Big to Fail’s debt. If they don’t foreclose and if they work it out the loss is on them. There is no incentive to modify loan for the benefit of the consumer.This could be as a result of an incorrectly applied payment, an error in interest charges and completely inaccurate information communicated between the lender and borrower. Some borrowers make the situation worse by ignoring their monthly statements and not promptly responding in writing to the lender’s communications. Many borrowers just assume that the lender will correct any inaccuracies or errors. Any one of these actions can quickly turn into a foreclosure action. Once an action is instituted, then the borrower will have to prove that it is wrongful or unwarranted. This is done by the borrower filing a wrongful foreclosure action. Costs are expensive and the action can take time to litigate.
    Impact

    The wrongful foreclosure will appear on the borrower’s credit report as a foreclosure, thereby ruining the borrower’s credit rating. Inaccurate delinquencies may also accompany the foreclosure on the credit report. After the foreclosure is found to be wrongful, the borrower must then petition to get the delinquencies and foreclosure off the credit report. This can take a long time and is emotionally distressing.

    Wrongful foreclosure may also lead to the borrower losing their home and other assets if the borrower does not act quickly. This can have a devastating affect on a family that has been displaced out of their home. However, once the borrower’s wrongful foreclosure action is successful in court, the borrower may be entitled to compensation for their attorney fees, court costs, pain, suffering and emotional distress caused by the action.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.5 2923.6 2924 2932.5 Audit bankruptcy california California cram down Chapter 13 civil code 2923.5 civil code 2924 Countrywide Cram down Cramdown criminal acts eviction FCRA FDCPA Federal Jurisdi, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, civil code 2924, Countrywide, Foreclosure, Fraud, stop foreclosure

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, Foreclosure, Lender Class action



    Countrywide complaint

    27 06 2009

    countrywide_fin_class_action_defense_mdl


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stay of eviction2923.5, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, pedatory lending, respa, stop foreclosure


    Homecomings TILA complaint GMAC

    27 06 2009

    homecomingstila


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, stop foreclosure, usury


    Leman Tila complaint

    27 06 2009

    Lemantilacomp


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, bankruptcy, eviction, stop foreclosure, truth in lending


    Lender class action

    27 06 2009

    Mortgageinvestorgroupclass


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Option One Complaint Pick a payment lawsuit

    27 06 2009

    optionone


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 2 Comments »

    Tags: stop foreclosure, civil code 2923.5, truth in lending, Mortgage modification, eviction, california, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, bankruptcy, Chapter 13, 2924, 2923.5, 2932.5, Recoupment, Fraud, Predatory Lending, FCRA, 2923.6, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Uncategorized, California cram down, Audit, Countrywide, United First, usury, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, usury


    Win the eviction by Summary judgement

    27 06 2009

    When title to the property is still in dispute ie. the foreclosure was bad. They (the lender)did not comply with California civil code 2923.5 or 2923.6 or 2924. Or the didn’t possess the documents to foreclose ie. the original note. Or they did not possess a proper assignment 2932.5. at trial you will be ignored by the learned judge but if you file a Motion for Summary Judgmentevans sum ud
    template notice of Motion for SJ
    TEMPLATE Points and A for SJ Motion
    templateDeclaration for SJ
    TEMPLATEProposed Order on Motion for SJ
    TEMPLATEStatement of Undisputed Facts
    you can force the issue and if there is a case filed in the Unlimited jurisdiction Court the judge may be forced to consider title and or consolidate the case with the Unlimited Jurisdiction Case2nd amended complaint (e) manuel
    BAKER original complaint (b)
    Countrywide Complaint Form
    FRAUDULENT OMISSIONS FORM FINAL
    sample-bank-final-complaint1-2.docx


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, civil code 2923.5, eviction, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, eviction, stop foreclosure, truth in lending


    What is worse bankruptcy or foreclosure?

    25 06 2009

    So what is worse, bankruptcy or foreclosure? Which will have the biggest impact on my credit score? Both bankruptcy and foreclosure will have serious negative affects on your personal credit report and your credit score as well. With re-established credit after a bankruptcy and/or foreclosure you can possibly qualify for a good mortgage once again in as little as 24 months. Therefore, it is very difficult to say one is worse than the other, but the bottom line is that they are both very bad for you and should be avoided if all possible.

    Foreclosure is worse then bankruptcy because you are actually losing something of value, your home. Once you are in foreclosure you will lose any and all equity in your home. If there is no equity in the home you will be responsible for the remaining balance after the property auction. With chapter 7 bankruptcy all of your unsecured debts are erased and you start over and in most cases you will not lose anything other then your credit rating.

    Many times qualifying for a mortgage after a foreclosure is more difficult than applying for a home after a bankruptcy. With that said, that could possibly lead you to believe that foreclosure is worse than bankruptcy. Most people who have a home foreclosed upon end up filing bankruptcy as well.

    Bankruptcy and Foreclosure filings are public records, however no one would know about your proceedings under normal circumstances. The Credit Bureaus will record your bankruptcy and a foreclosure. Bankruptcies will remain on your credit record for 10 years while foreclosures can stay on your report for up to 7 years.

    In some cases, one can refinance out of a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy with a 12 month trustee payment history and a timely mortgage history. It is much more difficult to obtain financing with a foreclosure on your record.

    Foreclosure is worse because of the loss of value. You will not receive any compensation for the equity in your home if it proceeds to foreclosure.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, eviction, stop foreclosure


    Standing argument

    7 06 2009

    judge-youngs-decision-on-nosek

    Ameriquest’s final argument, that the sanctions are a
    criminal penalty, is bereft of authority. Ameriquest cites F.J.
    Hanshaw Enterprises, Inc. v. Emerald River Development, Inc., 244
    F.3d 1128 (9th Cir. 2001), a case about inherent powers – not
    Rule 11 –

    This is an excerpt from the decision just this bloggers note the Hanshaw Case was my case. I argued this case at the 9th circuit court of appeals

    http://openjurist.org/244/f3d/1128/fj-v-emeraldfj-v-emerald

    If you will grasp the implications of this judge-youngs-decision-on-nosekdecision all or most all the evictions and  foreclosures are being litigated by the wrong parties that is to say parties who have no real stake in the outcome. they are merely servicers not the real investors. They do not have the right to foreclose or evict. No assignment No note No security interest No standing They do not want to be listed anywhere. They (the lenders) have caused the greatest damage to the American Citizen since the great depression and they do not want to be exposed or named in countless lawsuits. Time and time again I get from the judges in demurer hearings ” I see what you are saying counsel but your claim does not appear to be against this defendant” the unnamed investment pool of the Lehman Brothers shared High yield equity Fund trustee does not exist and so far can’t be sued.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 1 Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5, truth in lending, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Cramdown, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, bankruptcy, eviction, respa, stop foreclosure


    Using the countrywide complaint in your own case

    9 05 2009

    Using the countrywide complaint in your own casecounrtrywidelanderscomplaintand countrywidelanders and word versionsCountrywide attorney general Complaint Form and templetsCountrywide Complaint Form


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2932.5, civil code 2923.5, Foreclosure, Predatory Lending, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan


    Coalition sues lenders

    9 05 2009

    Coalition Sues lenders


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, bankruptcy, california, California cram down, Chapter 13, civil code 2923.5, Countrywide, eviction, FCRA, Foreclosure, Fraud, lis pendence, litigation, mortgage meltdown, Mortgage modification, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Recoupment, stop foreclosure, truth in lending, truth in lending 2923.5, Uncategorized, United First, usury

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, FCRA, I Have a Plan, Lender Class action, Loan Audit, bankruptcy, eviction, lis pendence, pedatory lending


    Doan on “produce the Note”

    3 05 2009

    Are Courts in California Truly Limited by Non-Judicial Foreclosure Statutes?

    By Michael Doan on May 2, 2009 in Foreclosure Defense, Foreclosure News

    Recently, many California Courts have been dismissing lawsuits filed to stop non-judicial foreclosures, ruling that the non-judicial foreclosure statutes occupy the field and are exclusive as long as they are complied with. Thus, in the case where a notice of default is recorded and a lawsuit then filed in response to stop the foreclosure since the foreclosing party does not possess the underlying note, all too often the Court will simply dismiss the case and claim “2924 has no requirement to produce the note.”

    Thus, these Courts view the statutes that regulate non-judicial foreclosures as all inclusive of all the requirements and remedies in foreclosure proceedings. Indeed, California Civil Code sections 2924 through 2924k provide a comprehensive framework for the regulation of a nonjudicial foreclosure sale pursuant to a power of sale contained in a deed of trust. This comprehensive statutory scheme has three purposes: ‘”(1) to provide the creditor/beneficiary with a quick, inexpensive and efficient remedy against a defaulting debtor/trustor; (2) to protect the debtor/trustor from wrongful loss of the property; and (3) to ensure that a properly conducted sale is final between the parties and conclusive as to a bona fide purchaser.” [Citations.]’ [Citation.]” (Melendrez v. D & I Investment, Inc. (2005) 127 Cal.App.4th 1238, 1249–1250 [26 Cal. Rptr. 3d 413].)

    Notwithstanding, the foreclosure statutes are not exclusive. If someone commits murder during an auction taking place under Civil Code 2924, that does not automatically mean they are immune from criminal and civil liability. Perhaps this is where some of these courts are “missing the boat.”

    For example, in Alliance Mortgage Co. v. Rothwell (1995) 10 Cal. 4th 1226, 1231 [44 Cal. Rptr. 2d 352, 900 P.2d 601], the California Supreme Court concluded that a lender who obtained the property with a full credit bid at a foreclosure sale was not precluded from suing a third party who had fraudulently induced it to make the loan. The court concluded that ” ‘the antideficiency laws were not intended to immunize wrongdoers from the consequences of their fraudulent acts’ ” and that, if the court applies a proper measure of damages, ” ‘fraud suits do not frustrate the antideficiency policies because there should be no double recovery for the beneficiary.’ ” (Id. at p. 1238.)

    Likewise, in South Bay Building Enterprises, Inc. v. Riviera Lend-Lease, Inc. [*1071] (1999) 72 Cal.App.4th 1111, 1121 [85 Cal. Rptr. 2d 647], the court held that a junior lienor retains the right to recover damages from the trustee and the beneficiary of the foreclosing lien if there have been material irregularities in the conduct of the foreclosure sale. (See also Melendrez v. D & I Investment, Inc., supra, 127 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1257–1258; Lo v. Jensen (2001) 88 Cal.App.4th 1093, 1095 [106 Cal. Rptr. 2d 443] [a trustee’s sale tainted by fraud may be set aside].)

    In looking past the comprehensive statutory framework, these other Courts also considered the policies advanced by the statutory scheme, and whether those policies would be frustrated by other laws. Recently, in the case of California Golf, L.L.C. v. Cooper, 163 Cal. App. 4th 1053, 78 Cal. Rptr. 3d 153, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 850 (Cal. App. 2d Dist. 2008), the Appellate Court held that the remedies of 2924h were not exclusive. Of greater importance is that the Appellate Court reversed the lower court and specifically held that provisions in UCC Article 3 were allowed in the foreclosure context:

    Considering the policy interests advanced by the statutory scheme governing nonjudicial foreclosure sales, and the policy interests advanced by Commercial Code section 3312, it is clear that allowing a remedy under the latter does not undermine the former. Indeed, the two remedies are complementary and advance the same goals. The first two goals of the nonjudicial foreclosure statutes: (1) to provide the creditor/beneficiary with a quick, inexpensive and efficient remedy against a defaulting debtor/trustor and (2) to protect the debtor/trustor from a wrongful loss of the property, are not impacted by the decision that we reach. This case most certainly, however, involves the third policy interest: to ensure that a properly conducted sale is final between the parties and conclusive as to a bona fide purchaser.

    This is very significant since it provides further support to lawsuits brought against foreclosing parties lacking the ability to enforce the underlying note, since those laws also arise under Article 3. Under California Commercial Code 3301, a note may only be enforced if one has actual possession of the note as a holder, or has possession of the note not as a non-holder but with holder rights.

    Just like in California Golf, enforcing 3301 operates to protect the debtor/trustor from a wrongful loss of the property. To the extent that a foreclosing party might argue that such lawsuits disrupt a quick, inexpensive, and efficient remedy against a defaulting debtor/trustor, the response is that “since there is no enforceable obligation, the foreclosing entity is not a party/creditor/beneficiary entitled to a quick, inexpensive, and efficient remedy,” but simply a declarant that recorded false documents.

    This is primarily because being entitled to foreclose non-judicially under 2924 can only take place “after a breach of the obligation for which that mortgage or transfer is a security.” Thus, 2924 by its own terms, looks outside of the statute to the actual obligation to see if there was a breach, and if the note is unenforceable under Article 3, there can simply be no breach. End of story.

    Accordingly, if there is no possession of the note or possession was not obtained until after the notice of sale was recorded, it is impossible to trigger 2924, and simple compliance with the notice requirements in 2924 does not suddenly bless the felony of grand theft of the unknown foreclosing entity. To hold otherwise would create absurd results since it would allow any person or company the right to take another persons’ home by simply recording a false notice of default and notice of sale.

    Indeed, such absurdity would allow you to foreclose on your own home again to get it back should you simply record the same false documents. Thus it is obvious that these courts improperly assume the allegations contained in the notice of default and notice of sale are truthful. Perhaps these courts simply can not or choose not to believe such frauds are taking place due to the magnitude and volume of foreclosures in this Country at this time. One can only image the chaos that would ensue in America if the truth is known that millions of foreclosures took place unlawfully and millions more are now on hold as a result of not having the ability to enforce the underlying obligation pursuant to Article 3.

    So if you are in litigation to stop a foreclosure, you can probably expect the Court will want to immediately dismiss your case. These Courts just can not understand how the law would allow someone to stay in a home without paying. Notwithstanding, laws can not be broken, and Courts are not allowed to join with the foreclosing parties in breaking laws simply because “not paying doesn’t seem right.”

    Accordingly, at least for appeal purposes, be sure to argue that 2924 was never triggered since there was never any “breach of the obligation” and that Appellate Courts throughout California have routinely held that other laws do in fact apply in the non-judicial foreclosure process since the policies advanced by the statutory non-judicial foreclosure scheme are not frustrated by these other laws.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 3 Comments »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Foreclosure, lis pendence, litigation, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan


    Sample complaint template

    26 04 2009

    this is the type of complaint to get the lender to the table sample-bank-final-complaint1-2


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 4 Comments »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, California cram down, civil code 2924, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Predatory Lending, Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, eviction, respa, stop foreclosure


    FORECLOSURE DEFENSE: CALIFORNIA SOMETIMES IT’S THE LITTLE THINGS THAT COUNT

    25 04 2009

    As I continue through this journey through the maze created by lenders, investment bankers, title agents and closing/escrow agents I keep discovering things that end up being quite interesting.

    For example: In California the requirements for posting Notice of sale are very clear and yet, I am told that they are routinely ignored. This would invalidate the notice of sale on the most basic of concepts “notice,” by definition and therefore could be attacked at any time as a defect of service and jurisdiction while at the same time bring your claims under TILA, usury, identity theft, fraud, etc. California requires public and private posting as do most other states. The public part is what they ordinarily ignore. see notice-of-the-sale-thereof-shall-be-given-by-posting-a-written-notice

    With the new law changes Civil code 2923.5  that became effective Sept 6, 2008 it adds more procedures that are routinely not followed ie. a Declaration must be attached and recorded that recites that the lender has met and assessed the borrowers financial condition and made alternatives to forclosure ie. modification. First they don’t do it and second the declaration is not even under penalty of pujury. So on its face the sale could be set aside.

    After the notice of default the lender routinely switches trustee’s and records a Substitution of trustee with an affidavit that is not under penalty of perjury. Again the sale could be set aside for this.

    For example. MERS, whose legal status is dubious at best anyway inasmuch as it plainly violates the recording requirements of every state and which supposedly has not one but multiple corporate entities, one of which has been suspended from operation in California, is subject to specific instructions as to what to do with the “master Deed of Trust and what to do with the individual deed of trust, the procedures, language to be inserted etc. These too I am told are routinely ignored especially when it comes to (a) showing that you have provided a copy of the Master Deed of Trust and (b) having the proof as specifically required in the FNMA/Freddie instruction sheet.

    As stated in my other posts, the entire MERS concept causes, in my opinion, a separation between the alleged security instrument and provisions, the Trustee’s authority and the note, all of which end up being different people who were all “real parties in interest” receiving fees and value not disclosed in the GFE or settlement statement. In all these closings the borrower is subjected to a series of documents that hide the true nature of the transaction, the true source of funds, the true lender, and the application of funds contrary to the terms of the note.

    All of these new requirements create questions of fact, that if not correct, create a method to set aside the sale by way of court action. I guess that’s the point the lenders trustees and servicers are banking on the victims not fighting it.


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : 2 Comments »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, 2924, 2932.5, Audit, civil code 2923.5, civil code 2924, Foreclosure, HOEPA, litigation, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, I Have a Plan, Loan Audit, bankruptcy, stop foreclosure


    they-must-call-and-offer-to-work-it-out-2923.5

    31 03 2009

    they-must-call-and-offer-to-work-it-out-29235


    Edit : Edit
    Comments : Leave a Comment »

    Tags: 2923.5, 2923.6, California cram down, eviction, Foreclosure, stop foreclosure, truth in lending 2923.5

    Categories : 2923.5, 2923.6, Foreclosure, Mortgage modification, eviction