REMIC AND UCC EXPLAINED BY plus notes

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REMIC AND UCC EXPLAINED BY “SUI JURIS JURIS    249″  Posted on January 12, 2011 by Neil Garfield FROM THE EDITOR: REQUIRED READING Under FAS (Financing Accounting Standards) 140, 1 40, the original lender sold it to the REMIC and forever lost their rights to enforce the note. The REMIC holds all the loans together into a pooling and servicing agreement. However, because they chose to avoid the IRS tax rules for double taxing, they pass on the real party of interest/ownership of the asset to the individual shareholders. So neither the REMIC nor the Trustee may foreclose. The Servicer is Not a Real Party of Interest. The Servicer can only collect the money and pass it to the REMIC. That’s the extent of their job. Once a loan has been written off, it is discharged. Once a loan has been securitized, reattachment is impossible. Reattachment is impossible for the following reasons: 1) Permanent Conversion The promissory note had been converted co nverted into a stock as a permanent fixture. Its nature is forever  changed. It is now and forever a stock. It is treated as a stock and governed as a stock under the SEC. Since the Deed of Trust secures the promissory note, once the promissory promissory note is destroyed, the Deed of Trust secures nothing. Therefore, the Trust is invalid. 2) Asset has been written off. Once an asset is written off, the debt is discharged since the owner of the asset has received compensation for the discharge in the form of tax credits from the IRS. The d debt ebt has been settled. The servicer acts as a debt collector of an unsecured note. The servicer is deceiving the court, the county, and the borrower when it tries to re-attach the note to the Deed of Trust as if nothing has happened. It’s called adhesion. 3) Broken Chain of Assignment under Uniform Commercial Code (UCC). The promissory note is is a one of a kind instrument. instrument. All assignments (much (much like endorsements on the back of a check) have to be done as a permanent fixture onto the original promissory note. The original promissory note has the only legally binding chain of title. Without a proper chain of title, the instrument is faulty. Rarely can a lender “produce the note” because by law, the original note has to be destroyed. Remember? The note and the stock cannot exist at the same time. Often times, the lender would come into court with a photocopy of the original note made years ago. Another popular method of deceit “lenders” would wou ld perform is to use State Civil Code in non-judicial states to state that “there is no law requiring a lender to produce the note or any other proof of claim.” THEY DON’T HAVE IT and CANNOT PRODUCE IT. The DOT referencing following all State and 1

 

Federal Laws applies to their statement “there is no law requiring a lender to produce the note or any other proof of claim.” Oftentimes, the pretender lender would do blank assignments of the original promissory note into the REMIC. Then, when they need the note to perform the foreclosure, they will magically produce a blank  assignment. Again, this is not legal and is bringing fraudulent documents before the courts and at the county records. *****Let’s be very clear here. Once a loan has been securitized, the note is no more. Anything the lender  brings to court as evidence is prima facia evidence of fraud. The attorney for the lender is either an accessory to the fraud through ignorance or willful intent. Either way, as an informed borrower, it is your job to bring this deception to light so these lawyers can be sanctioned**** From: The Foreclosure Defense Handbook google it to get the pdf.

Federal Rules of Evidence Rule 1002. Requirement of Original To prove the content of a writing, recording, or photograph, the original writing, recording, or  photograph is required, except as otherwise provided in these rules or by Act of Congress.

Rule 1002 is commonly known as the original document rule or  best evidence rule. It states that an original document should be produced in court when its terms are material to the argumentwhen it is the "best evidence" available.

Federal Rules of Evidence Rule 1003. Admissibility of Duplicates A duplicate is admissible to the same extent as a s an original unless (1) a genuine question is raised as to the authenticity of the original or (2) in the circumstances it would be unfair to admit the duplicate in lieu of the original.

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Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 17, “an action must be pursued by a real party in interest.” Under Uniform Commercial Code, a note is a one of a kind negotiable instrument that has the only legally binding chain of assignment. This is where Federal Rules of Evidence 1002 and 1003 enter. The promissory note as well as the DOT must be together at all times and there must always be a clear  and unambiguous chain of title that is traceable in public records for all the parties p arties of interest in real estate. Both the DOT and the Promissory note must always point to the same party at all times to have perfection. When a promissory note is sold or assigned, it therefore must be recorded in public record to maintain perfected chain of title for the security. This is stated in Carpenter v Longan . If there is a break in the chain of title, then bifurcation occurs where the DOT points to one party, while the promissory note points to another party. Once bifurcation occurs, then the security has been broken. In every DOT, it states that the instrument is subject to applicable State and Federal laws. In the current case at bar in paragraph 16 of the DOT titled “Governing Law; Severability; Rules of Construction.” States, inter alia, “This security instrument shall be governed by federal law and the law of jurisdiction in which the Property is located. All rights and obligations ob ligations contained in this Security Instruments are subject to any requirements and limitations of Applicable Law.” Since an assignment of the promissory note occurs without the corresponding DOT, then the instrument has violated State law. Thus, violating the terms of the DOT, making the instrument invalid. Need to prove the loan has been securitized. Once shown it  was securitized, then there exists a serious breach of the terms of the DOT. If interest in the promissory note has been sold to a REMIC and proper assignment was never done at the county, then the terms of the DOT has been violated, making it invalid. This will convert the debt from a secured instrument to an unsecured instrument. This means that the lender might be able to sue to collect the money, but can never sell your property to collect on the collateral. In paragraph 24 of the DOT it states, inter alia, that the only the “ Lender, at its option, may from time to time appoint a successor trustee to any Trustee appointed appo inted hereunder by an instrument executed and acknowledged by lender and recorded in the office of the Recorder of the county in which the Property is located. The instrument shall contain the name of the original Lender, Trustee and Borrower, …. This procedure for substitution of trustee shall govern to the exclusion ex clusion of all other provisions for substitution.” The “Substitution of Trustee” recorded October 23, 2009 states inter alia, that the undersigned beneficiary under said Deed of Trust substitutes a new Trustee under said Deed of Trust. The undersigned is a Chamagne Williams authorized signatory of OneWest Bank, FSB. F SB. No where in the county cou nty records does it show that OneWest or any other banking bank ing entity was assigned the beneficiary interest of this Deed of Trust. This is Fraud. The elements for fraud include: 1. a false statement (verbal or in writing) OneWest OneWest was the the beneficiary. 2. the false statement concerns a material fact, the Bank was not the Lender  3. the defendant knew the statement was false false at the time the false false statement was made 4. defendant intended all parties to act in reliance on the false statement. 5. the stateme statement nt was relied relied and acted acted upon upon 3

 

6. Plaintiff suffered suffered damages by relying relying on the false statement. (“loosing her home and being removed from same) The terms of the DOT are the underlying terms which bind the trust together, and must not be violated. When we have a situation where State Law is being violated through improper assignment, the Deed of  Trust is made invalid. When the Trustee is being appointed by “some party” that is not given proper  authority to do so, this also casts issue to make the Deed of Trust defective. In Lambert v. Firstar Bank  , 83 Ark.App.259,127 S.W. 3d 523(2003), complying with the Statutory Foreclosure Act does not insulate a financial institution from liability and does not prevent a party from timely asserting claims or defenses it may have concerning a mortgage foreclosure A.C.A. §18-50-116(d) (2) and violates honest services Title 18 Fraud. Notice to credit reporting agencies of overdue payments/foreclosure on a fraudulent debt is defamation of character and a whole separate fraud. A Court of Appeals does not consider assertions of error that are unsupported by convincing legal authority au thority or  argument, unless it is apparent without further research that the argument is well taken. FRAUD is a point po int well taken! Lambert Supra. “A lawful consideration must exist and be tendered to support the Note” and demand under TILA full disclosure of any such consideration. No lawful consideration tendered by Original Lender and/or  Subsequent mortgage and/or Servicing Company to support the alleged debt. Anheuser-Busch Brewing  Company v Emma Mason, 44 Minn. 318, 46 N.W. 558 (1890) Jenkins v. Lamark Mortg. Corp. of Virginia, 696 F.Supp. 1089(W.D. Va. 1988), Plaintiff was also misinformed regarding the effects of a rescission. The pertinent regulation states that “when a consumer  rescinds a transaction, the security interest giving rise to the right of rescission becomes void and the consumer shall not be liable for any amount, including any finance charge.” 12 CFR §226.23(d)(1). Even technical violations will form the basis for liability. The mortgagors had a right to rescind the contract in accordance with 15 U.S.C. §1635(c). New Maine Nat. Bank v. Gendron, 780 F.Supp. 52 (D.Me. 1992). The court held that defendants were entitled to rescind loan under strict liability of TILA because plaintiff violated TILA’s provisions.

EXPLANATION OF SECURITIZATION Introduction Securitization takes a commonplace, mundane transaction and makes very strange things happen. This explanation will show that, in the case of a securitized mortgage note, there is no real party who has the lawful right to enforce a foreclosure, and the payments alleged to have been in default, in fact, have been paid to the party to whom such payments were due. Additionally, in the case of a securitized note, there are rules and restrictions that have been imposed upon the purported debtor that are extrinsic to the note and mortgage as executed by the mortgagor and mortgagee, rendering the note and mortgage unenforceable. This explanation, including its charts, will demonstrate how securitization is a failed attempt to use a note and mortgage for purposes for which neither was ever intended. Securitization consists of a four way amalgamation. It is partly 1) a refinancing with a pledge of assets, 2) a sale of assets, 3) an issuance and sale or registered securities which can be traded publicly, and 4) the 4

 

establishment of a trust managed by third party managers. Enacted law and case law apply to each component of securitization. However, specific enabling legislation to authorize the organization of a securitization and to harmonize the operation of these components does not exist. Why would anyone issue securities collateralized by  mortgages using the structure of a securitization? Consider the following benefits. Those who engage in this practice are able to… 1. Immediately liquidate liquidate an illiquid illiquid asset such as a 30 year mortgage. 2. Maximize the amount obtained from a transfer of the mortgages and immediately immediately realize pr profits ofits now. 3. Use the liquid liquid funds to enter enter into new transactions transactions and to earn profits that are immediately immediately realized … again and again (as well as the fees and charges associated with the new transactions, and the profits associated with the new transactions… and so on). 4. Maximize earnings by transferring the assets so that the assets assets cannot be reached by creditors of  the transferor institution or by the trustee in the event of bankruptcy. b ankruptcy. (By being “bankruptcyremote” the value to the investors of the illiquid assets is increased and investors are willing to pay more.) 5. Control management of the illiquid assets assets in the the hands of the transferee by appointing appointing managers who earn service fees and may be affiliated with the transferor. 6. Be able to empower the transferor by financially supporting the transferred transferred asset by taking a portion of the first losses experienced, if any, from default, and entering into agreements to redeem or replace mortgages in default and to commit to providing capital contributions, if needed, in order to support the financial condition of the transferee (In other words, provide a 100% insured protection against losses). 7. Carry the reserves reserves and the contingent contingent liability (for the support support provided in paragraph paragraph 6) off the balance sheet of the transferor, thereby escaping any reserve requirements imposed upon contingent liabilities that would otherwise be carried on the books. 8. Avoid the effect of double taxation of, first, the trust to which the assets have allegedly been transferred and second, the investor who receives income from the trust. 9. Insulate the transferor transferor from liability and moves the liability liability to the the investors. 10. Leverage the mortgage transaction by creating a mortgage backed certificate that can be pledges as an asset which can be re-securitized and re-pledged to create a financial pyramid. 11. Create a new financial vehicle so mind numbingly complicated that almost no one understands what is going on. The obvious benefits of the above #11 is that courts are predisposed to disbelieve the allegation that a securitized note is no longer enforceable. To a reasonable person, the claim that a mortgage note is unenforceable merely because it gas been securitized does sound outlandish. And frankly, the more complex and difficult the securitized arrangement is to explain and perceive, the more likely a judgment in favor of the “lender” will be in litigation. 5

 

Simply stated, the vast majority of litigants – and judges – have h ave not been properly informed as to the true nature of this type of transaction. This is said not to insult anyone. Quite the contrary, this is to say that the true identity of the real party in interest is able to be obfuscated in the labyrinth of the securitization scheme such that whoever steps forward claiming to be that party and showing do documentation cumentation appearing to be legitimate is assumed to have standing, and there are too few knowledgeable challengers of that mistaken assumption. WHAT IS A SECURITIZATION? In the mortgage securitization process, collateralized securities are issued by, and receive payments from, mortgages collected in al collateralized mortgage pool. The collateralized mortgage pool is treated as a trust. This trust is organized as a special purpose vehicle veh icle (“SPV”) and a qualified special purpose entity (“QSPE”) which receives special tax treatment. The SPV is organized by the securitizer so that the assets of the SPV are shielded from creditors of the securitizer and the parties who mange it. This shielding is described as making the assets “bankruptcy remote”. To avoid double taxation of both the trust and the certificate holders, mortgages are held in Real Estate Mortgage Investment Conduits (“REMIC”). To qualify for the single taxable event, all a ll interest in the mortgage is supposed to be transferred forward to the certificate holders. The legal basis of REMICs was established by the Tax Reform Act of 1986 (100 Stat. S tat. 2085, 26 U.S.C.A. §§ 47, 1042), which eliminated double taxation from these securities. The principal advantage of forming a REMIC for the sale of mortgage-backed securities is that the REMIC’s are treated as pass-thru vehicles for tax purposes helping avoid double taxation. For instance, in most mortgage-backed securitizations, the owner of a pool of mortgage loans (usually the Sponsor of Master Servicer) sells and transfers such loans to a QSPE, usually a trust, that is designed specifically to qualify as a REMIC, and, simultaneously, the QSPE issues securities that are backed by cash flows generated from the transferred assets to investors in order to pay for the loans along with a certain return. If the special purpose entity, or the assets transferred, qualify as a REMIC, then any income of the QSPE is “passed-through” and, therefore, not taxable until the income reaches the holders of the REMIC, also known as ben beneficiaries eficiaries of the REMIC trust. Accordingly, the trustee, the QSPE, and the other parties servicing the trust, have no legal or equitable interest in the securitized mortgages. Therefore, any servicer who alleges that they are, or that they have the rightm or have been assigned the right , to claim that the are the agent for the ho holder lder of the note for  purposes of standing to bring an action of foreclosure, are stating a legal impossibility. Any argument containing such an allegation would be a false assertion. Of course, that is exactly what the servicer of a securitized mortgage that is purported to be in default claims.

The same is the case when a lender makes that same claim. The party shown as “Lender” on the mortgae note was instrumental in the sale and issuance of the certificate to certificate holders, which means they knew that they were not any longer the holder of the note. The QSPE is a weak repository and is not engaged in active management of the assets. So, a servicing agent is appointed. Moreover, all legal and equitable interest in the mortgages are required by the REMIC to be passed through to the certificate holders. Compliance with the REMIC and insulating the trust assets from creditors of third parties (who create or service the trust) leads to unilateral restructuring of the terms and conditions of the original note and mortgage. 6

 

The above fact, and the enormous implications of it, cannot be more emphatically stressed. A typical mortgage pool consists of anywhere from 2,00 to 5,000 loans. This represents millions of  dollars in cash flow payments each month from a servicer (receiving payments from borrowers) to a REMIC (QSPE) with the cash flow “passing-through”, tax free, to the trust (REMIC). Those proceeds are not taxed until received as income to the investors. Only investors have to pay taxed on the payments of  mortgage interest received. The taxesbenefit a trustdidn’t wouldexist havewould to paybe onsubstantial 30, 50, or and 100 it million per year lower if this the “pass-through” taxation would,dollars sunsequently, value of the certificates to the investors, the true beneficiaries of these trusts. Worse, what would be the case if a trust that was organized in February 2005 were found to have violated the REMIC guidelines outlined in the Internal Revenue Code? At $4 million per month in cash flow, there would arise over $200 million in income that would now be considered taxable. It is worth repeating that in order for one of these investment trusts to qualify for the “pass-through” tax benefit of a REMIC (in other words, to be able to qualify to be referred to as a REMIC), ALL LEGAL AND EQUITABLE INTEREST IN THE MORTGAGES HELD IN THE NAME OF THE TRUST ARE  VESTED IN THE INVESTORS  AT ANY TIME  ,  not in anyone elseAT . If legal and/or equitable interest in the mortgages held in the name of the trust are claimed by anyone other than the investors, those that are making those claims are either defrauding the investors, or the homeowners and courts, or both. So, if the trust, or a servicer, or a trustee, acting on behalf of the trust, is found to have violated the very strict REMIC guidelines (put in place in order to qualify qu alify as a REMIC), the “pass-through” tax status of  the REMIC can be revoked. This of course, would be the equivalent of financial Armageddon for the trust and its investors. A REMIC can be structured as an entity (i.e., partnership, corporation, or trust) or simply as a segregated pool of assets, so long as the entity e ntity or pool meet certain requirements regarding the composition of assets and the nature of the investors interests. No tax is imposed at the REMIC level. To qualify as a REMIC, all of the interests in the REMIC must be consist of one on e or more classes of “regular interests” and a single class of “residual interests.” Regular interest can be in the form of debt, stock, partnership interests, or trust certificates, or any form of  securities, but must provide the holder the unconditional right to receive a specified principal amount and  interest payments. REMIC regular interests are treated as debt for federal tax purposes. A residual interest in a REMIC, which is any REMIC interest other than a regular interest, is, on the other hand, taxable as an equity interest. According to Section 860 of the Internal Revenue Code, in order for an investment entity to qualify as a REMIC, all steps in the “contribution” and transfer process (of the notes) no tes) must be true and complete sales between the parties and must be accomplished within the three month time limit from the “start-up” of the entity. Therefore, every transfer of the note(s) must be a true purchase p urchase and sale, and, consequently consequ ently the note must be endorsed from one entity to another. Any mortgage note/asset identified for inclusion in an entity seeking a REMIC status must be sold into the entity en tity within the three month time period calculated from the official startup day of the REMIC. Before securitization, the holder of the enforceable note has a financial responsibility for any possible losses that may occur arising from a possible default, which means that holder also has the authority to 7

 

take steps to avoid any such losses (the right to foreclose). Securitization, however, effectively severs any such financial responsibility for losses from the authority to incur or avoid those losses. With securitization the mortgage is converted into something different from what was originally o riginally represented to the homeowner. For one thing, since the party making the decidion to foreclose does not actually hold any legal or equitable interest in any securitized mortgage, they have not realized any losses or damages resulting from the purported defaults. Therefore, it also follows that the foreclosing party avoids the liability which could result if a class of certificate holders claimed wrongful injury resultin from a modification made to achieve an alternate dispute resolution. Securitization also makes the mortgage and note n ote unalienable. The reason is simple: once certificates have been issued, the note cannot canno t be transferred, sold or conveyed; at least not in the sense that such a transfer, sale or conveyance should be considered lawful, legal, and legitimate. This is because the securitized note forever changes the nature of that instrument in an irreversible way, much in the same way that individual strawberries and individual bananas can never be extracted , in their “whole” form, from a strawberry banana milkshake once they’ve been dropped in the blender and the blending takes place. An SPV cannot sell any individual mortgage because individual mortgages are not held induvidually by the certificate holders; the thousands os mortgages held in the REMIC are owned collectively by the certificate holders. Likewise, the certificate holders cannot sell the mortgages. All the certificate holders have are the securities, each of which is publicly traded. The certificate holders are, in no sense, holders of any specific individual note ans hav havee no legal or  beneficial interest in any specific note. The certificate holders do not each hold un undivided divided fractional interests in a note which, added together, total 100%. The certificate holders also are not the assignees of  one or more specific installment payments made pursuant to the note. For the certificate holder there is no note. n ote. A certificate holder does not look to a specific nte for their  investment’s income payment. Instead, the certificate holder holds a security similar to a bond with specific defined payments. The issuer of trust certificates is selling segments of cash flow. The concept of securitization is brilliant. It began as a simple idea; a way to convert co nvert illiquid, long term debt into liquid, tradable short term debt. It cashes out the lender, allowing the lender to make new “loans” while realizing an immediate profit on the notes sold. The Charts

The parties to a securitization and their relationships to each other, is referred to on Wall Street as “The Deal”. The Deal is created and defined by what functions as a declaration of trust, also known as “master  servicing and polling agreement”, hereafter “pooling agreement”. The following diagram demonstrates the “original” deal as initially set up on Wall Street. Chart 1 shows a Net Asset Trust created to convert con vert long term mortgage debt into short term, publicly traded securities.

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t  s  u  rt  Transferor    o  t    s  e  g  a  g rt  o  m  s  lle  S 

The of

Receives cash flow payments from trust

Investors Holds beneficial interest

Receives payment from investors for  mortgages

Truste e

Payment for initial purchase

  o    t  e  lt  it  l  s  Collateral Pool a  e  g  g  a  le  (Trust)   g  d  l t  r o  o  h  m e  e  t  u  s  r T

Types of certificates issued to investors

Bond Certificates

Tranche A Tranche B Tranche C-n

transferor purchases a portfolio of mortgages and sells them to a trust. The trust purchases the mortgages. The Trustee holds the mortgages and becomes the holder  legal title. The trust under the direction of the trustee, issues a bond and the corresponding certificates to the investors; debenture-like certificates. The bond issues different classes of  certificates, called tranches.

The certificate entitles the certificate purchaser to certain stated, repeated segments segmen ts of cash flow paid by the trust. The certificate holders do not hold fractional, undivided interests in the mortgages. Instead, each tranche is entitled to an identified, segmented pool of money payable in an order of priority. A senior  tranche will get paid before a junior tranche. A junior rate provides a h higher igher promised rate of return because it has a higher risk than a senior tranche. Another tranche exists that p pays ays interest, but does not pay out principal. The type and variety of tranche that is created is limited only by the limits of financial ingenuity. Tranches have been created which pay only a portion of principal repaid on the mortgage but no interest. The investors buy the mortgages from the transferor by paying cash to the trustee who pays the transferor. The investor purchases securities (the bond certificates) which are collateralized by the mortgages held in trust in the collateral pool. Legal title to the mortgages is held by the trustee and ben beneficial eficial title is owned by the investors. The homeowners, the people that provide the income that funds the entire securitization scheme have no say in the matter because they are never told what will be done with their note. It is never disclosed in the transaction. In summation the trust purchased mortgages and sold certificates. Another way to describe it: the trust bought cattle and wound up selling ground beef. The fact remains that s simple net asset trust ae previously described above is likely not the type of  securitization vehicle to hold a debtor’s mortgage. WHY? This is because Wall Street decided to improve the “asset trust paradigm”. If the Deal could be made safer for, and more lucrative to, the investor, the investor would pay more for the investment. This was accomplished by adding objectives 2-11 to the list already referred to above shown again below: 9

 

1. Immediately liquidate liquidate an illiquid illiquid asset such as a 30 year mortgage. 2. Maximize the amount obtained from a transfer of the mortgages and immediately immediately realize pr profits ofits now. 3. Use the liquid liquid funds to enter enter into new transactions transactions and to earn profits that are immediately immediately realized … again and again (as well as the fees and charges associated with the new transactions, and the profits associated with the new transactions… and so on). 4. Maximize earnings by transferring the assets so that the assets assets cannot be reached by creditors of  the transferor institution or by the trustee in the event of bankruptcy. b ankruptcy. (By being “bankruptcyremote” the value to the investors of the illiquid assets is increased and investors are willing to pay more.) 5. Control management of the illiquid assets assets in the the hands of the transferee by appointing appointing managers who earn service fees and may be affiliated with the transferor. 6. Be able to empower the transferor by financially supporting the transferred transferred asset by taking a portion of the first losses experienced, if any, from default, and entering into agreements to redeem or replace mortgages in default and to commit to providing capital contributions, if needed, in order to support the financial condition of the transferee (In other words, provide a 100% insured protection against losses). 7. Carry the reserves reserves and the contingent contingent liability (for the support support provided in paragraph paragraph 6) off the balance sheet of the transferor, thereby escaping any reserve requirements imposed upon contingent liabilities that would otherwise be carried on the books. 8. Avoid the effect of double taxation of, first, the trust to which the assets have allegedly been transferred and second, the investor who receives income from the trust. 9. Insulate the transferor transferor from liability and moves the liability liability to the the investors. 10. Leverage the mortgage transaction by creating a mortgage backed certificate that can be pledges as an asset which can be re-securitized and re-pledged to create a financial pyramid. 11. Create a new financial vehicle so mind numbingly complicated that almost no one understands what is going on. The “original Deal” included only step 1, whose purpose was to immediately liquidate an illiquid asset, such a as 30 year mortgage. It did not provide the additional ten benefits of securitization listed above (items 2 through 11). Under the original net asset trust, the income received by the co collatral llatral pool from the mortgage debtors is taxed and the interest paid to each investor is taxed again. To achieve the goals listed above, abo ve, it became necessary to structure the Deal to create a pass through trust and replace the net asset trust. The first part is pretty straight forward. It is referred here as the Pre-Securitization stage.

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Step one: The transaction takes place between the debtor (mortgagor) and the creditor called the “originator” a.k.a. the mortgagee. The transaction consists of the mortgage note/promissory note and the  mortgage/Deed of Trust.The originator becomes the note holder  . Step two the originator sells the transaction to the warehouser. The warehouser then becomes the note holder  . The object of the warehouser w arehouser is to purchase other mortgages and then assemble them into a portfolio of mortgages. In step three, the warehouser po rtfolio portfolio to a Transferor securitization. The transferor sells then the becomes the note holder  . who is the initiating party of the The portfolio for securitization typically contains 2,000 to 5,000 mortgages. There many different structures for securitization but the potential negative impact of securitization on the debtor is the same. The following chart shows a typical securitization.

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Collect payment from Investors

Master Servicer 

Underwriter 

Transfers mortgage

Supervises all managing parties

r

  s  e  i  ti r u  c  e  s    &    oi   l o  f  rt o  ps   r ef   s  na  T

Transfero r 

r

or   e  fs  na 

.  ct    e    ,  y  rt  a  p  y  t  n u  o  c      rs, e  ic  v  r   e  s  b  u  S    ,  s  r e  c  i v  r e  S      , e  e  t  s  u  r T  s  e  is  rv  e  p  u  S 

r T    o  t    s  e   o  g    s  t  n e  m y  a   P

s  t  n  e

Issues securities

Issuer  Organized as SPV

Collects payment from Investor 

Investors

s  o  li fo  tr   o  P e    g  a   g  tr   o 

Trustee Oversees day to day operations of  QSPE operations   QSPE

Payment flows to Investors

M r  e  fs  n ar   T

Counterparty Insures investors payments

Payments from Debtors

s  r o  t   b  e   D  m ofr    t  n e  m y  a   P

QSPE (Collateral Pool)

s  e  g  a  g  g  rt  o  m   sr   ef   s  n a   Tr

Custodian Acts as Bailee for mortgages

Subservicer  Deals with Property Owners, collects monthly payments, etc.

Payments

Mortgage Debtors

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emc   n   a  h n e    t  i   de  r   C r    of   s  e    g n a  rr A

 

The structure seen above is called the “Deal”. The Deal is created through a complex instrument that, among other things… 1. Serves as a declaration declaration of trust, trust, 2. Identifies the parties who manage the the Deal and describes their duties, responsibilities, responsibilities, liabilities liabilities and obligations. 3. Defines the the different classes of investment securities, securities, and 4. Is called the the Master Pooling and Servicing Agreement. Agreement. The instrument is filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and is a public record. This document is the most important source for discovery as it provides the who, the how, the where, and the when of the Deal. In the Pre-securitization stage the mortgage portfolio ended up u p in the hands of the transferor who was the note holder. The Transferor. In the “new and improved” securitization process shown in the previous chart, the transferor transfers the mortgages to the underwriter. In addition, the transferor may arrange for credit enhancements to be transferred for the benefit bene fit and protection of investors. Such enhancements may

include liquid assets, other securities, and performing mortgages in excess of the mortgage portfolio being sold. NOTE: The transferor also usually obligates itself to redeem and replace any mortgage in default. The Underwriter. The underwriter creates the securities and arranges to place the various tranches of  securities (different classes of certificates) with investors. The underwriter then transfers the mortgage portfolio and securities to the issuer.

condu it to the The Issuer. The issuer is organized as a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV); a passive conduit investors. The issuer issues the securities to the investors and collects payment from the investors. The payments from the investors are transferred through the underwriter to the transferor. The QSPE. The mortgage portfolio is conveyed from the issuer to the collateral pool which is organized as a Qualifying Special Purpose Entity (“QSPE”). As previously stated, what makes the entity “qualified” is strict adherence to a set of rules. Among other things, these rules make the QSPE a passive entity which has no legal or equitable title to the mortgages in the mortgage portfolio and restrict modification of the mortgages in the portfolio.

As a result, the QSPE provides to the investors the benefit of its earnings (paid to it by the mortgage debtors) not being taxed. These earnings flow through the QSPE to the investors. Only the investors are taxed at the individual level. Custodian . The QSPE transfers the mortgage portfolio to the custodian who acts as a bailee of the assets. The custodian is a mere depository depo sitory for safekeeping of the mortgages. Tranches. The investor invests in different classes of securities. Each class is called a tranche. Each tranche is ranked by order of preference in receipt of payment and the segment of cash flow to be received and resembles a bond. The basic stratification by order of priority of payment from highest to lowest is categorized as: senior notes, mezzanine notes n otes and unrated equity.

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Parties described in the Master Pooling and Service Agreement. The Seal establishes a management structure to supervise the investment. The specific parties for a Deal are identified in the master Pooling and Service Agreement which states their duties and obligations, their compensation, and their liability. Typically the managers include: the Master Servicer, the Trustee, the Subservicer, and the Custodian.

other  ther  Master Servicer. The Master Servicer is in overall charge of the deal and supervises the o managing parties. Trustee . Thevery daylittle to day operations the collateral pool isThe administered the have trustee. However, trustee does since the trustofmust remain passive. trustee does doby es not legal title or the equitable interest in any mortgage in the portfolio because the trust is a mere passive cond conduit. uit. Subservicer . The Subservicer is responsible for dealing with the property owners; collecting monthly payments, keeping accounts and financial records and paying the monthly proceeds to the trustee for  distribution to the investors by order of tranche.

The Subservicer may also be responsible for foreclosure in the event a mortgage is in default or some deals call for the appointment of a special subservicer to carry out a foreclosure. Usually the subservicer is obligated to make monthly advances to the investors for each mortgage in default. In addition, the subservicer may also have undertaken to redeem or replace any mortgage in default. Counterparty . Finally, there is a counterparty to make sure that investors get paid on time. The counterparty is like an insurer or guarantor on steroids; a repository of all kinds of financial arrangements to insure payment to the investors. Such financial arrangements include derivatives, credit default swaps and other hedge arrangements.

The term “counterparty” is frequently associated with “counterparty risk” which refers to the risk that the counterparty will become financially unable to make the “claims” to the investors if there are a substantial number of mortgage defaults. The counterparty cou nterparty may guarantee the obligation of the transferor or servicer to redeem or replace mortgages in default. The counterparty may also guarantee the obligation of the subservicer to make monthly payments for mortgages that are said to be in default. Questions worth asking. We now know that an examination of the Master Servicing and Pooling Agreement filed with the SEC will reveal substantial barriers to a lawful foreclosure. We also know that there are parties involved in this arrangement, as well as insurance products in place, intended to financially “cover” certain “losses” in certain situations, such as an alleged default.

In light of this, there are a few questions q uestions the Subservicer and/or the Successor Trustee and/or the foreclosure law firm who claim to have the legal right and authority to conduct a foreclosure, ought to be prepared to answer before foreclosure goes forward: •



Have you read, and are you familiar with, the Master Servicing and Pooling Agreement  relating to this mortgage that was filed with the SEC? The Servicer, Subservicer, or some other party (counterparty) likely made a payments to the party who allegedly owns the purpored debt obligation. This payment, if made, was intended  to cover sums are alleged in default. thebeen partydamaged who allegedly purported debtthat obligation has, to bybe virtue of thatTherefore, payment, not in anyowns way. the

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Therefore, if any sums have thusly been paid, how is it being truthfully stated that a default  has occurred? •

If the investment trust that ostensibly owns the mortgage obligation is a REMIC, the trustee, the QSPE, and the othr parties servicing the trust, have no legal or equitable interest in the securitized mortgages. Therefore, any servicer who alleges that they have the right or that  they have been assigned the right , to claim that they are the agent for the holder of the note for purposes of standing to bring an action of foreclosure, are stating a legal impossibility. In light of this, by what authority can you show that you can administer a lawful foreclosure?

There are many more questions that can and should be asked in such a situation. They all stem from one central fact: a note that has been securitized and submitted to an entity qualifying as a REMIC and organized as a Qualifying Special Purpose Entity, is not enforceable. That is an incontrovertible fact that servicers of securitized mortgage will have to cope with as more and more homeowners discover the truth. Conclusion

Previously, it was stated that, in order for the investment entity to be a REMIC (in other words, in order  for the entity to be able to qualify for the single taxable event as a pass through entity), all interest in the mortgage is supposed to be transferred forward to the certificate holders. Well, in fact, such a transfer never occurs. Either this is the case, or the parties who state that they have a right to foreclose on a securitized note are not being truthful when they present themselves as the real party in interest. In any case, they cannot have it both ways. The servicer cannot cclaim laim to hold legal and/or equitable interest in the mortgages held in the name n ame of an investment trust that also provides the (REMIC) pass through tax benefit to its investors. Does the Master Servicing Agreement – made public through its filing with the Securities and Excha Exchange nge Commission – show that the entity is a REMIC? If so, the note has become unenforceable because the unnamed parties who are receiving the pre-tax income from the entity are the real parties in interest. They hold legal and/or equitable interest in the mortgages held, but they do not have the ability to foreclose on any one individual mortgage because the mortgages held by the REMIC have all been bundled into one big income-producing unit. The introduction explains that the securitization consists of a four way w ay amalgamation. It is partly 1) a refinancing with a pledge of assets, 2) a sale of assets, 3) an issuance and sale of registered securities which can be traded publicly, and 4) the establishment of a trust managed by third party managers. Also discussed is the fact that enacted law and case law apply to ea each ch component of securitization, but that specific enabling legislation to authorize the organization of a securitization, and to harmonize the operation of these diverse components, does not exist  . This bears repeating even more explicitly because this is central to the rights of a homeowner facing foreclosure shose undrlying mortgage has been securitized: specific enabling legislation to authorize the pass through structure of a trust holding a mortgage portfolio does not exist  . Many unresolved legal issues could be addressed if the Uniform Commercial Code Commissioners added a chapter for securitization. However, that has yet to happen. 15

 

So, as it now stands, a lawful foreclosure cannot occur against a mortgage whose note has been securitized because of the lack of o f an actual damaged party who has standing to state a claim.  

The Securitization process explained another way:

Securitization is the name for the process by which the final investor for the loan ended up with the loan. It entitled the following: 1. Mortgage broker had client who who needed a loan and delivered delivered the loan package to the the lender. 2. The lender approved the loan and funded it. This was usually through “warehouse” “warehouse” lines of credit. The lender hardly ever used their own money istesad using the warehouse line that had been advanced to the lender by Major Wall Street firm like J.P. Morgan. 3. The lender “sold” the loan to the the Wall Street Street lender, earning from from 2.5 – 8 points per loan. This This entity is known as the mortgage aggregator. 4. The loan, and thousands like it, are sold together to an investment banker. 5. Investment banker sells the loans to a securities banker. 6. Securities banker sells sells the loan to the final investors, as a Securitized Instrument, Instrument, where a Trustee Trustee is named for the investors, and the Trustee will administer all bookkeeping and disbursement of  funds. 7. The issue with the securitization process process is that when the Securitized Instrument Instrument was sold, sold, it was split apart and sold into tranches, (in slices like a pie). There were few or no records kept of which notes went into which tranche. Nor were there records of how many investors bought into each particular tranche. Additionally, there were no assignments designed or signed in anticipation of  establishing legal standing to foreclose. 8. The tranches were rated rated by Rating Agencies at the request of the Investment Bankers who paid the Rating Agencies. 9. When the tranches were created, each “slice” “slice” was given a rating, “AAA, AA, A, BBB, BB, B, etc. The ratings determined which tranche got “paid” first out of the monthly proceeds. If significant numbers of loans missed payments, or went into default, the AAA tranche would receive all money due, and this went on down the line. The bottom tranche with the most risk would receive the leftover money. These were the first tranches to fail. Even if the defaulting loans were in the AAA tranche, the AAA tranche would still be paid and the lowest tranche would not. Wall Street, after the 2000 Dot.com crash, had large amount of money sitting on the sidelines, looking for new investment opportunities. Returns on investments were dismal, and investors were looking for new opportunities. Wall Street recognized that creating Special Investment Vehicles offered a new investment that could generate large commissions.

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R.K. Arnold, Senior Vice President, General Counsel Coun sel and Secretary of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., stated: MERS® will act as mortgagee of record for any mortgage loan registered on the computer system MERS® maintains, called the MERS® System. It will then track servicing rights and beneficial interests in those loans and provide a platform for mortgage servicing rights to be recorded electronically among its members without the need to record a mortgage assignment in the public land records each time…. Members paySystem…. annual fees belong and execute electronic transactions on the MERS® A to mortgage notetransaction holder can fees sell atomortgage note to another in what has become a gigantic secondary market…. For these servicing  . The companies to perform their duties satisfactorily, the note and mortgage were bifurcated  investor or its designee held the note and named the servicing company as mortgagee, a structure that became standard…. When a mortgage loan is registered on the MERS® System, it receives a mortgage identification number (MIN). The borrower executes a traditional paper mortgage naming the lender as mortgagee, and the lender executes an assignment of the mortgage to MERS®. Both documents are executed according to state law and recorded in the public land records, making MERS® the mortgagee of record. From that point on, no additional mortgage assignments will be recorded because MERS® will remain the mortgagee of record throughout the life of the loan…. MERS® keeps track of the new servicer electronically and acts as nominee for  the servicing companies and investors. Because MERS® remains the mortgagee of record in the public land records throughout the life of the loan, it eliminates the need to record later  assignments in the public land records. Usually, legal title to the property is not affected again until the loan is paid and the mortgage is released. (R.K. Arnold, Yes, There is Life on MERS  , Prob.& Prop., Aug. 1997, at p.16: http//www.abanet.org/genpractice/magazine/1998/springbos/arnold.html)

THE ISSUE OF A DEFECTIVE INSTRUMENT.

If the promissory note is owned by thousands of parties, then there is no one party that may come forth to lay claim on the promissory note. If no one party can be named “the beneficiary” or the “lender”, then the promissory note is defective. If no loan assignment was properly done, it cannot be “fixed”. A lender cann cannot ot reverse engineer the title of the Deed of Trust or Promissory note to make it better. Once an instrument is defective, it canno cannott be used to collect a debt. If the terms of the Deed of Trust can be shown to violate applicable State law, then it also is defective. If  it is defective, then it cannot be used to give the lender the “due on sale” clause. The terms of the Deed of  Trust must be respected in whole and one cannot pick and choose which part to respect and which part to ignore. U.S. Code Title 12: Banks and Banking, Part 226 – Truth in Lending Regulation Z § 226.39 Mortgage and Transfer Disclosures, (a)(1) reads in part, “For purposes of this section, a servicer of a mortgage loan shall not be treated as the owner own er of the obligation ….”

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Case of Quiet Title in Missouri

To prove a point about abo ut the differences in arguments … Caranchini then went through some of the issues involving securitized loans; the judge did not understand the importance of it. The argument then got down to the note (which you knew it would at some point). The judge looked at the trustee and asked  him if he had the original note. Then she asked him if he ever had the original note. Then she asked  him if he had ever seen the original note (which he previously attempted to foreclose on). Then she asked him whether the alleged lender had the original note. To all of these inquiries, the trustee responded … NO

From Caranchini’s own observations, she is totally convinced that the judge understood the issues involving agency, quiet title, declaratory judgments, breach of fiduciary duty and negligence (some of  which have damage claims attached). According to Caranchini however, the judge did not understand all of the terms and arguments involving securitization and essentially admitted that on the record. This goes back to the problems the author has previously written about regarding what is fundamental in proving agency and what is not. Education of the Court in pointing out the flaws on your recorded  documents is extremely important  . The declination letter is also on the record. The Ibanez decision in this instance proved to gain impetus with the Court as well as to its applicability regarding proving agency. The judge ordered deposition of a Chicago Title expert witness (That’s part of discovery folks!) by the end of March and set a trial date for October 24, 2011 (unless the parties settle beforehand). Needless to say, the trustee wasn’t happy. He’s still a Defendant in the lawsuit. Not having even seen the Note didn’t sit well with the judge either. You can probably surmise where this case is headed. Two days later, Caranchini received an Order in the mail from another judge in Jackson County Circuit Court, where she had a motion for temporary restraining order against Bank of America et al: “Now on the 5th day of January, 2011, the Court takes up and considers Defendants Bank of America and BAC Home Loan Servicing, LP’s Motion to Dismiss for Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction and Request to Quash Hearing on Plaintiff’s Request for TRO. After being duly advised adv ised on the premises and for good cause shown, the Court hereby denies the same without prejudice. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that additional proceedings be STAYED due to this cause pending in federal court and the possibility of  remand back to circuit court. IT IS SO ORDERED.” This would certainly cause the author to surmise that there is the possibility for a remand of the original case from the federal court back to the Jackson County Circuit Court, where the action to quiet title in the county in which the property is located is supposed to be heard. Because there are both state and federal judges involved, it would also probably be safe to assume that both state judges are in agreement on the procedural aspects of this case and that they’ve also had at least telephone conferences with both judges in the U.S. District Court. Look for a lot of action on this case in February (the case was filed last April). Look for possible settlements and an agreement to allow quiet title with the purchase of homeowner’s indemnity coverage! Caranchini is following my suggestions as I outlined in the book “Clouded Titles.”

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THE SHOCKWAVES OF THE IBANEZ-LaRACE CASE CREATE NATIONAL RIPPLE EFFECT; BANKS HAVE A REASON TO BE NERVOUS; E&O CARRIERS WATCH OUT! January 12th, 2011 By Dave Krieger  This opinion is based on legal research only and cannot be construed as legal advice!

IT’S HOMEOWNER-PLAINTIFF QUIET TITLE ACTION IN REVERSE The point being here … if you didn’t learn anything about quieting titles in the book “Clouded Titles”, it would be best suited perhaps to espouse the deeds of U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo as they attempted to do what I call “a quiet title action in reverse”. At first glance, this case involves procedural and agency relationship errors. For those of you in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, you’ll note from the slip order issued by the Massachusetts Supreme Court that the actions preceding their ruling were brought “in the Land Court under G.L. c. 240 § 6, which authorizes actions to quiet or establish the title to land situated in the commonwealth or to remove a cloud from the title thereto.” The analysis by the High Court points to the law firms experienced with studying quiet title actions, yet the attorneys missed the boat on proving agency, agen cy, which is a fundamental element of quiet title actions. Proving standing to foreclose on a mortgage or deed of trust is one thing; proving how you got the n note ote to enforce on the other hand is part of what makes up the chain of title. When those assignments are not recorded, because they happen to be in the MERS system, or simply sold willy-nilly willy-nilly several times over  without perfected security interests being recorded in the land records in the county where the property lies, you’ve got a problem. In these cases, c ases, the banks created their own problems without them even knowing it. Read more…  

Both U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo were seeking the same thing … they wanted the lower court to issue a judgment that they were entitled to full right, title and interest of both defendant-homeowners upon which they foreclosed; declaratory judgment on the fact there was no cloud on title arising out of o f publication of  the sale in the Boston Globe, and they wanted declaratory judgment in favor of themselves respectively that title was vested fee simple. The homeowners that are looking into matters quieting title might take note of what the banks were asking for. The problem was … while the original o riginal homeowners had title in fee simple established by virtue of a general warranty deed, the banks had to connect the dots coming in the other way … and they couldn’t do it because they were attempting to prove agency AFTER THEY ALREADY FORECLOSED ON THE PROPERTIES! According to the High Court, the banks foreclosed FIRST. Then after the foreclosures, the lenders attempted to record newly-executed assignments in the Register of Deeds office. The gaps in the chain of title were created by the foreclosure actions themselves, so agency was negated from the point of foreclosure forward up to the point po int the actions to quiet title were filed. Both lenders claimed to be the bona fide credit bid purchasers, even though neither had actually proven 19

 

they had standing to foreclose in the first place! The Land Court invalidated the foreclosure sales, claiming that at the time of publication, the banks didn’t really own the properties! When asked to produce paperwork, the banks came c ame back with securitization-related documents … another bad mistake when trying to tie agency ends together! THE UNSIGNED LOTTERY TICKET In Ibanez, the lender (Rose Mortgage) executed a note and mortgage on December 1, 2005. The original mortgage in was recorded the following day.lottery Days later, executed an assignment of o f the mortgage blank (handing the unsigned ticketRose off toMortgage another entity) to Option One Mortgage Corporation as the assignee, who recorded the assignment on June 7, 2006. The odd thing is however, is that on January 23, 2006, Option One executed an assignment in blank and assigned the mortgage to Lehman Brothers Bank FSB; who assigned it to Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.; who assigned it to Structured Asset Securities Corporation; who assigned it to U.S. Bank NA as trustee for the Structured Asset Securities Corporation Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-Z. None of this was recorded in the Register of Deeds office [but you can probably bet that MERS was involved somehow]. The Land Court wasn’t provided with any paperwork identifying whether the Ibanez loan even made it into the mortgage pool. More unfortunately for U.S. Bank, it wore two hats (one as the purported holder and one as the purported purchaser) when it recorded a statutory foreclosure affidavit on May 23, 2008. On September 2, 2008, FIVE MONTHS after the foreclosure affidavit was recorded (which also had a gap of the several intervening assignees, further clouding the chain of title) American Home Mortgage Servicing, Inc. (where’d they come from?) as “successor-in-interest” to Option One, executed a written assignment of  that mortgage to U.S. Bank, as trustee, to try to fill in the blanks. This assignment was recorded on September 11, 2008, almost a year-and-a-half AFTER the sale! [HINT: For those of you who are confused as to procedure, the gaps in the chain of title began the moment Option One assigned the note to Lehman Brothers Bank FSB.] In the LaRace case, Option One set up a loan for Mark and Tammy LaRace on May 19, 2005, who gave a mortgage to Option One as security for the loan. A week later, Option One issued an assignment in blank  to Bank of America; who later assigned it to Asset Banked Funding Corporation in a mortgage loan purchase agreement; who then later pooled the LaRace’s mortgage into ABFC 2005-OPT 1 Trust, AFBC Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2005-OPT 1, with Wells Fargo as the Trustee of this trust. As with U.S. Bank, the Land Court wasn’t provided with any paperwork identifying whether the LaRace loan was actually assigned to Bank of America. [HINT: For those of you looking to identify intervening assignees here, the chain of title was broken when Option One failed to record its assignment to Bank of America in the land records.] After the foreclosure sale, Wells Fargo did not execute a statutory foreclosure affidavit until May 7, 2008. The Land Court determined that Option One was still the holder of record of that mortgage! Now … talk about backdating documents (this is fraud by the way because the affidavits don’t add up to the real actions in the case) … Option One executed a backdated mortgage to Wells Fargo as Trustee on May 12, 2008, TEN MONTHS AFTER AF TER THE FORECLOSURE SALE! But the assignment was backdated to a date preceding the publication of the notice of sale and actual sale. Thus, when discovered, Wells Fargo couldn’t prove agency either. A NEW TWIST TO THE HUMPTY DANCE

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Since the loans were securitized, no one bothered to record their successive interests in the land records (where the recordation counts). Under the Massachusetts statutes, when Plaintiff P laintiff banks come in and ask  for a declaration of clear title, a judge gets to ask for proof they owned the note at the time they foreclosed. Neither one of them could, so the sales were vacated. A All ll the securitization documents that both banks produced “couldn’t put Humpty back together again!” It’s like showing up to class without your homework. What do d o you expect? In proper Massachusetts, you show up withthe a signed lottery lawful andThat convincing evidence of conveyances establishing chain of title)ticket or you(adon’t getassignment to cash it in! was the banks’ first mistake. Here they try to prove agency going through a gap in the chain of intervening assignees … both banks conceded that assignments in blank did not constitute lawful assignments of the mortgages. Duh. The second mistake that came back to bite the banks in the proverbial kiesters is they did not have perfected assignments proving they actually owned the mortgages they were foreclosing on. In the 1912 statute that established the statutory power of sale, power to conduct the sale is reserved to the mortgagee or his executors, administrators, successors or assigns, but not to a party that is the equitable beneficiary of a mortgage held by another. (Wait a minute … doesn’t that sound a bit like a MOM mortgage?) The third mistake is reinventing your arguments when the first ones don’t work. When you argue a case in the lower court, that argument stays with the case all the way up the appellate ladder. The fact remained that the lenders did not have proper assignments necessary to foreclose, so they lacked the authority to foreclose under statute. Post-foreclosure assignments can’t be backdated to reflect “effective dates”. I should point out here that Massachusetts Law does give the valid holder of a mortgage assignment the right to foreclose even if it’s unrecorded … but at some point in time, a judge may ask the lender to “own up” to their chain of title, which neither bank could prove. How do you think that will fair when you start comparing chain of title issues like this to a title company? Do you really think the title company will stick its neck out that far, knowing that this case is out and haunting lenders everywhere? In short, if you don’t have valid assignments at the time you foreclose … you can’t foreclose! Yet, this case gets better … CONCURRING OPINION … DON’T LET THE DOOR HIT YOU IN THE A** ON THE WAY OUT! Judges Cordy and Botsford together issued a concurring opinion in this case … interesting to note the following, before I close this mini-dissertation: • The Plaintiff banks exercised utter carelessness in documenting the titles to their assets! • There is no question that the respective homeowners were in default on their mortgages! • Foreclosures in Massachusetts have strict guidelines, which were not followed here! • You can’t backdate assignments and expect the court to give you what you want! • Complicated by securitization arguments, the High Court saw through the smoke screen! Now for the noteworthy part of this opinion … while there were several underlying comments issued as part of this slip order, two things stuck out in my mind …

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• The Plaintiffs were seeking quiet title so they could obtain title insurance and needed a declaration by the court (a decree if you will) to quiet q uiet title to those properties. • Massachusetts case law clearly identifies that foreclosure by entry may provide a separate ground for  claim of clear title apart from the foreclosure by execution of the power of sale. This means that a mortgage holder who peaceably enters a property and remains for three years after recording a certificate or memorandum of entry forecloses the mortgagor’s right of redemption. [This was never cited by the banks; so the High Court didn’t need to discuss it!] • It doesn’t matter whether you’re a bank or a homeowner, before filing a quiet title action; the outcome of such a case will depend on who identifies the gaps in the chain of title and who eestablishes stablishes prima facie case evidence first, to make the other side prove a negative. • Also of last-minute noteworthiness is the fact that I have repeatedly stated that even though you may have studied up a bit on quiet title actions, when you serve up a dose of litigation on the banks seeking what U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo failed to do here, you ccan an pretty much surmise that these lenders will not make the same mistake again; yet they still continue to press forward with robosigned documents and falsified notarizations in an attempt to wrongfully take something they can’t really prove they own, because the chain of title is broken and thus clouded. THE RIPPLE EFFECT Just hours after the release of this decision, Plaintiff Gwen Caranchini handed h anded a copy of the slip order of  this case to a Jackson County, Missouri Circuit Court Judge, who became very quickly educated. As a result of invalid assignments, trustees now face damage complaints for gross negligence and breach of  fiduciary duty, for which the E&O carriers and title companies had better keep both eyes and ea ears rs open if  they want their pocketbooks to survive what’s to come. c ome.

The actions of the Trustee failed to substantiate their authority to initiate any foreclosure proceedings because they failed to act in a responsible manner in substantiating the “Lenders” authority to request  the foreclosure.

Clouded Title as a result of the actions by MERS and the trusteess

FROM KEN MCLEOD EDITOR’S COMMENT: I maintain that the limit on the equitable tolling of the right to rescind ONLY applies with respect to the delivery of the right forms regarding rescission and NOT for failure to to make important disclosures (such as the true APR, the identity of the real creditor, and all the people who are taking fees as a result of the borrower signing the mountain of papers. I still believe that the transaction has not been consummated unless the substantive disclosures and forms havefrom been the delivered and those signed. Thus the period for rescission can properly be argued be three days time when documents and disclosures are delivered. If they haven’tto been

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delivered and disclosed, then the transaction is not complete and the borrower, in my opinion, can rescind at anytime. Fraud is not a basis for invoking limitation on the right to rescind.

I successfully used the following (attached case) in a Opposition to Defendants Motion for Summary Judgment early in my case (around 9/2008). Regards Vernon Handy v Anchor Mortgage 464 F.3d 760 Ken McLeod see  464 F.3d 760 see  Vernon HANDY, Administrator of the Estate of Geneva H. Handy, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. ANCHOR MORTGAGE CORPORATION and Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., Defendants-Appellees. No. 04-3690. No. 04-4042. United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit. Argued April 6, 2006. Decided September 29, 2006. Page 761

“The sufficiency of TILA-mandated disclosures is determined from the standpoint of the ordinary consumer.” Rivera v. Grossinger Autoplex, Inc., 274 F.3d 1118, 1121-22 (7th Cir.2001) (citing Smith v. Cash Store Mgmt., Inc., 195 F.3d 325, 327-28 (7th Cir.1999)). As a result, Anchor’s argument that “[t]he most illuminating illuminatin g fact demonstrati demonstrating ng the clarity of Anchor’s Notice is that the Plaintiff simply was not confused” misses the point.  point.  Whether a particular      disclosure is clear for purposes of TILA is a question of law that “depends on the contents of the form, not on how it affects any particular reade reader.”  r.”  Smith v. Check-N-Go of Ill., Inc., 200 F.3d 511, 515 (7th Cir.1999). TILA does not easily forgive “technical” errors. See Cowen v. Bank United of  Texas, FSB, 70 F.3d 937, 941 (7th Cir.1995)

Having established that Anchor violated TILA, we turn now to the issue of remedies. Under TILA’s civil liability provisions, a creditor that violates 15 U.S.C. § 1635 is liable for: “actual damage damage[s] [s] sustained” by the debtor, 15 U.S.C. § 1640(a)(1); “not less than $200 or greater than $2,000″ in statutory damages, § 1640(a)(2) 1640(a)(2)(A)(iii); (A)(iii); and “the costs of the action, together with a reasonable attorney’s fee,” § 1640(a) (3). In addition, § 1635(b) itself provides that when a debtor rescinds she is “not liable for any finance or other charge”; “any security interest . . . becomes void”; and “[w]ithin 20 days after receipt of a notice of rescission,” the creditor must “return to the [borrower] any money or property given as earnest money, downpayment, downpaym ent, or otherwise.” We agree with the Sixth Circuit’s well-reasoned opinion in Barrett and hold that the remedies associated with rescission remain available even after the subject loan has been paid off and, more generally, that the right to rescission “encompasses a right to return to the status quo that existed before the loan.”

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Congress enacted TILA “to assure a meaningful disclosure of credit terms so that the consumer will be able to compare more readily the various credit terms available to him and avoid the uninformed use of credit.” 15 U.S.C. § 1601(a). As is relevant to this case, TILA mandates for borrowers involved in “any consumer credit transaction . . . in which a security interest . . . is or will be retained or acquired in any property which is used as the principal dwelling of the person to whom credit is extended” a three-day period in which the borrower may rescind the loan transaction and recover “any finance or other charge,” earnest money, or down payment previously made to the creditor. See 15 U.S.C. § 1635(a), (b). In the context of “[a] refinancing or consolidation by the same creditor an extension of credit already secured theamount consumer’s principal dwelling,” the right ofofrescission applies only “to the extent theby new financed exceeds the unpaid principal balance, any earned unpaid finance charge on the existing debt, and amounts attributed solely to the costs of the refinancing In addition to creating the right of rescission, TILA requires creditors “clearly and conspicuously” to disclose to borrowers their right to rescind and the length of the rescission period, as well as to provide borrowers with “appropriate forms . . . to exercise [their] right to rescind [a] transaction.” 15 U.S.C. § 1635(a). The Federal Reserve Board (FRB), one of the agencies charged with implementing TILA, has promulgated an implementing regulation, known as Regulation Z, 12 C.F.R. § 226 et seq., that, among other things, requires creditors to disclose the following elements to borrowers: (i) The retention or acquisition of a security interest in the consumer’s principal dwelling. (ii) The consumer’s right to rescind the transaction. (iii) How to exercise the right to rescind, with a form for that purpose, designating the address of  the creditor’s place of business. (iv) The effects of rescission. . . .

(v) The date the rescission period expires. Nor are we persuaded by Anchor’s argument that TILA’s safe harbor provision protects it, an argument Anchor raised below but the district court did not reach. This provision requires a creditor to “show[] 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.” 15 U.S.C. § 1640(c). As far as we can tell, there is no evidence in the record that Anchor maintains any such procedures. Although Anchor’s general counsel, who was called as a witness by the company, was asked twice what procedures the company had in place to prevent the type of mix-up that occurred in Handy’s case, she was unable to describe any system used to ensure that the correct rescission forms are provided to borrowers.

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EDITOR’S NOTE: Equitable tolling IS effective for common law fraud like appraisal fraud which is easy, simple and credible. Piggy back your TILA rescission on top of the common law fraud cause of action. Judge can’t first decide if you have a right to rescission without hearing the whole case. Rescission is equitable remedy so even if the statute obviously implies that everything works automatically, you can argue statutory imperative giving the Judge no discretion, but they don’t like that. I spoke to a new customer today  trader and broker from Wall Street. Pretty smart on law too. What he did is get a bona fide escrow agent to say they are holding “legal tender” to pay off the whole mortgage. In order to get it, they have to come up with the canceled note, proof of who cancelled it and an affidavit, satisfaction of mortgage etc. Then he sued them for failure to allow him to pay off his loan or fraudulently fraudulently posing as the Lender. He ordered an estoppel letter as though he was selling the property. They ignored that too.

WHEN DOES THE 3 YEAR RIGHT TO BEGING START? WHEN IS A LOAN “CONSUMMATED”? IS THERE EQUITABLE TOLLING OF THE TILA RIGHT TO RESCIND? Posted by  by  Foreclosure Defense Attorney Steve Vondran on January 11, 2011 · Leave a Comment The following is an overview of a few cases I was looking at in the area of Truth in Lending (“TILA”) law.  We get a lot of questions about when TILA three years begins to run.  THIS IS NOT LEGAL ADVICE AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS LEGAL ADVICE.  RATHER THESE ARE A FEW CASES THAT DISCUSS TILA RESCISSION, AND GIVE YOU SOME S OME IDEAS OF SOME OF THE CASES OUT THERE.  PLEASE CONSULT CO NSULT A LITIGATION ATTORNEY BEFORE FILING A CIVIL LAWSUIT FOR TRO OR INJUNCTION. CAN TILA THREE YEAR RIGHT TO RESCIND BE EXERCISED BEYOND THREE  YEARS?

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The general rule you will normally see in regard to TILA 3 year right of rescission is the following:

“Section 1635 of TILA allows consumers to rescind “any consumer credit transaction . . . in which wh ich a security interest . . .is or will be retained or acquired acqu ired in any property which is used as the principal dwelling of the person to whom credit is extended,” so long as such rescission takes place within three days of the consummation of the transaction or the delivery of required disclosures under TILA, whichever occurs later. 15 U.S.C. § 1635. If the lender nev never er submits the required disclosures, the borrower’s right to rescission expires three years after the consummation of the transaction. 15 U.S.C. § 1635(f).” the seminal case of Beach v., Ocwen, U.S. 410,from the United “the right of In rescission is completely extinguished after523 three years the dateState of theSupreme loan’s Court held: consummation.”  See also15 15 U.S.C. § 1635(f). 1635(f).  Equitable tolling does not apply to an action for  rescission under TILA. See Mays v. U.S. Bank National Association, 2010 WL 318537 (E.D. Cal.2010). This then begs the question, when is a loan “consummated” under TILA. According to the FDIC on this website, consummation means when a consumer becomes obligated on a loan.” loan.”  See also 12 C.F.R. § 226.2(a)(13). Under Regulation Z, which specifies a lender’s disclosure obligations, “consummation” of the loan occurs when the borrower is “contractually obligated.” 12 C.F.R, C.F .R, §226.2(a)(13). The point at which a “contractual obligation … is created” is a matter of  state law. 12 C.F.R. pt. 226, Supp. 1 (Official Staff  Interpretation), cmt. 2(a)(13). Under California law, a contract is formed when there are (1) parties capable of contracting, (2) mutual consent, con sent, (3) a lawful object, and (4) sufficient cause or consideration. See California Civil Code Section 1550 and Grimes v. New Century Mortgage Corp., 340 F.3d 1007, 1009 (9th Cir. 2003). Under TILA, the Courts must look to state law in determining when a borrower becomes contractually obligated on a loan.  At   At the very least, before you can hav havee a contract, there must be specifically identified parties to the contract (meaning an identified lender and an identified borrower) – “parties capable of  contracting” as set forth above and sufficient consideration. Now, in the god old days a borrower and a bank would contract to lend money.  The borrower would borrow the money and offer a security interest in its property, and the bank would lend money off its balance sheet and hold both the note and mortgage (deed of trust) in the event you failed to pay.  Those days are gone for a large number of “securitized loans” (loans that are bundled into pools and sold off on Wall Street).  Nowadays, you have a loan “originator” posing as a “lender” and the loan originator is not loaning you a dime (rather, someone else or some other entity is funding, lending, or table funding the loan).  In this scenario, the originating lender, purporting to contract to “lend” you money, is no nott actually lending you any money.  In reality, they are doing nothing more than earning a commission on the money SOMEONE ELSE IS LENDING YOU (i.e. some Wall Street investor in your loan pool who is funding the loan, who is NOT IDENTIFIED AT ANY STAGE OF THE LOAN PROCESS, and who expects a return on their investment).  These hidden investors are a re the true “lender” who is the source of funds for  your loan.  Strange, but true. So, when you contract with the “originator” of the loan (as opposed to the lender), has the true lender ever  been identified?  No, they have not.  So shouldn’t the promissory note be between you and the real lender?  After all, the “lender” on the note and deed of trust never lent you any money, and this can be verified by scenario? looking at That their balance sheet.   Do you have an enforceable contract to lend money under unde law in this is an issue to  Do litigate under TILA – in my opinion.    The The originator is r state representing that they are lending you money,, when wh en in fact they are not.    They They are serving as an intermediary for someone else to lend you money.  Is   Is there a meeting of the minds u under nder this scenario? 26

 

There are a few other cases I have come across in my research that indicate, that under this scenario (usually involving MERS securitized loans, and other hard money loans where undisclosed entities are table funding the loan), the LENDER MUST BE IDENTIFIED BEFORE THE THREE YEARS BEGINS TO RUN, WHICH MEANS, IF YOU DO NOT KNOW WHO THE REAL “LENDER” IS, OR THE TRUE “SOURCE OF FUNDS” FOR YOUR LOAN, THE THREE YEAR CLOCK TO EXERCISE YOUR RESCISSION RIGHTS MAY NOT BEGIN TO RUN. (1) Ramsey v. Vista Mortgage Corp, 176 BR 183 (TILA RESCISSION IN BANKRUPTCY CHAPTER  13  In tackles this case, court laid downa the of when the three Several year rightinternal to rescind begins to run andCASE). specifically thethe concept of when loantest is “consummated.” citiations also help clarify this point.  Here is what the Ramsey Court said: “When Ramsey signed the loan documents on September 13, 1989, he knew who was going to provide . Courts recognize the date of signing a binding loan contract as the date of consummation the financing  when the lender is identifiable.”   The Court also cited to the Jackson v. Grant, 890 F.2d case (9th Circuit 1989), a NON-BANKRUPTCY CASE, and said: “the Ninth Circuit held that under California law a loan contract was not consummated when the borrower signed the promissory note and deed of trust  because the actual lender was not known at that time. Under these circumstances, the loan is not “consummated” until the actual lender is identified, because until that point there is no legally enforceable contract.” ANALYSIS: It seems fair to say that the Courts are not willing to find a contractual obligation exists under State Law until a true and actual lender is identified. “Pretender lenders” – as Neil Garfield calls them – and intermediary “originators” who make false representations to the effect that they are “lending money” and are your “lender” should not n ot be sufficient to set the three year TILA rescission clock in motion.  Until the real Wall Street entity, or Wall Street Investor, or true source of the table funded loan is identified, the loan should not be deemed “consummated” under TILA and the three year right to rescind should remain open until such disclosure is made.  That   That is TRUTH IN LENDING WHICH IS THE WHOLE POINT OF TILA IN THE FIRST PLACE. P LACE. THIS MEANS, IF YOU STILL DO NOT KNOW WHO YOUR LENDER IS AFTER DUE DILIGENCE (AND BELIEVE ME WE TRY WITH DEBT VALIDATION LETTERS, CHAIN OF TITLE REVIEWS, FANNIE AND FREDDIE LOAN LOOKUPS, QUALIFIED WRITTEN REQUESTS, 15 US.C. 1641 LETTERS, UCC PRESENTMENT LETTERS, ETC.) AND IF THE ORIGINATING “LENDER” TRULY NEVER LENT YOU A SINGLE PENNY, PERHAPS THERE IS AN ARGUMENT TO BE MADE, USING THE LAW CITED ABOVE, THAT THE THREE YEARS HAS NOT YET BEGUN TO RUN.  NOW,   NOW, THIS IS A NOVEL THEORY OF LAW THAT I HAVE NOT SEEN ANYONE PUT FORTH AS OF YET.  BUT REVIEWING THE CASE LAW, IT SEEMS TO OFFER SOME HOPE TO 4,5 OR EVEN 10 YEAR OLD LOANS.  OF COURSE, YOU SHOULD CONSULT WITH FORECLOSURE AND TILA LAWYER BEFORE PROCEEDING ON SUCH A THEORY, BUT WHERE THE BANKS ARE ACTIVELY ENGAGED IN THE “HIDE THE EIGHTBALL” GAME WHERE THEY DO NOT WANT YOU TO KNOW WHO OWNS YOUR  LOAN, AND THEY NORMALLY CANNOT EVEN LEGALLY PROVE WHO OWNS YOUR LOAN, IF YOU HAVE NO OTHER OPTIONS THIS MAY BE A THEORY TO BRING TO THE ATTENTION OF YOUR FORECLOSURE, BANKRUPTCY OR LITIGATION COUNSEL.  THE FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS USE EVERY LAW IN THE BOOKS TO TAKE YOUR HOME, THIS MAY BE A POTENTIAL ARGUMENT TO FIGHT BACK. We have talked about the consequences of TILA rescission in many other posts.  Google “Vondran TILA lawyer” (or got http://www.RescindMyLoan.net or  http://www.ForeclosureDefenseResourceCenter.com) 27

 

and you will see more articles.  AS WITH EVERYTHING ELSE IN FORECLOSURE DEFENSE, DO NOT WAIT UNTIL THE LAST MINUTE BEFORE SEEKING A FORECLOSURE F ORECLOSURE LAWYER.  IF YOU GET A NOTICE OF DEFAULT OR NOTICE OF SALE, DO NOT WAIT, CONTACT A FORECLOSURE AND BANKRUPTCY, TILA LAWYER TO PUT TOGETHER A SOUND LITIGATION PLAN. PLEASE NOTE, EVEN IF YOU ARE CONSIDERING FILING BANKRUPTCY, YOU CAN RESCIND YOUR LOAN IN AN ADVERSARY PROCEEDING IN BANKRUPTCY COURT AND THIS CAN HAVE POTENTIALLY DRAMATIC IMPLICATIONS AS ONCE YOU RESCIND YOUR LOAN UNDER TILA, THE SECURITY INSTRUMENT IS VOID AS A MATTER OF LAW, AND THE LOAN IS ESSENTIALLY AN UNSECURED DEBT.  THESE ARE THINGS YOU WILL OFTEN FIND GO UNNOTICED AND UNCHALLENGED TO THE DEBTORS DETRIMENT.

Your

 

Lender

Address Attention Customer Service: Loan

 

Consumer

 

Number: Name:Â Â

 

ÂÂÂÂ

 

ÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂÂ  

Your

 

Name

 

  ÂÂ

#   

ÂÂÂ

Your Property Address (Street, City, State, Zip Code) This is a "qualified written request" under the Federal Servicer Act, which is a part of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, 12 U.S.C. 2605(e). This request is made by me, as the above-named borrower(s), based on a dispute that has arisen with regard to my loan account. I am writing to you to complain about the accounting and servicing of this mortgage and my need for understanding and clarification of various sale, transfer, funding source, legal and beneficial ownership, charges, credits, debits, transactions, reversals, actions, payments, analyses and records related rel ated to the servicing of this account from its origination to the present date. To date, the documents and information I have, from origination and those that you have sent me, and the conversations with your service representatives have been unproductive and have not answered my questions. Needless to say, I am very concerned. With all the news lately regarding the stori stories es of preda predatory tory lending and servicing, you have left me feelin feelingg that there is someth something ing you are trying to hide. I worry that potential potential fraudulent and decep deceptive tive practices practices by unscrupulous unscrupulous mortga mortgage ge broke brokers; rs; sales and transfers of mortgage mortg age servic servicing ing rights rights;; decep deceptive tive and fraudu fraudulent lent servicing practices to enhanc enhancee balanc balancee sheets sheets;; decep deceptive, tive, abusive and fraudulent accounting tricks and practices may have also negatively affected any credit rating, mortgage account and/or the debt or payments that I am currently, or may be legally obligated to.

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In order to ensure that I am not a victim of such predatory practices I need to conduct an examination and audit of this loan. I need to have full and immediate disclosure including copies of all pertinent information regarding this loan. I also request that you conduct your own investigation and audit of this account since its inception to validate the debt you currently curr ently claim I owe. Specifically, I am writing to request copies of all documents pertaining to the origination of the mortgage including:

Settlement Statement HUD-1

Appraisal

Loan Application

All Right to Cancel Forms

All Good Faith Estimates

Commitment Letter

FHA FH A Mor ortg tgaage In Insu sura ranc ncee Ce Cert rtif ifiica cate te

FEM FE MA Fl Floood Not otif ifiica cati tion on

Hazzar Ha ardd/F /Flo lood od Po Poli licy cy

ARM Program Disclosure

CHARM Booklet

Title Commitment

First Payment Letter

Adverse Notice

Purchase Agreement

Buy-Down Agreement

Mortgage Broker Agreement

Privacy Policy

Credit Documents

All State-Specific Disclosures

Closing Instructions

Lock-In Agreement

Section 32 Disclosures

Note

Mort Mo rtga gage ge/D /Dee eedd of Tr Trus ustt

Alll Tr Al Trut uthh-In In-L -Len endi ding ng Di Disc sclo losu sure re St Stat atem emen ents ts

HELOC Agreement & Disclosures

Private Mortgage Insurance Certificate

Asset Verification Documentation

Income Verification Documentation

Gift Fund Letters and Verification

Itemization of Amount Financed

Spec Sp ecia iall In Info form rmat atio ionn Bo Book okle lett on Cl Clos osin ingg Co Cost stss

Cont Co ntro roll lled ed Bu Busi sine ness ss Ar Arra rang ngem emen entt Di Disc sclo losu sure re

A copy of the loan history including all payments made, all fees incurred, what has been   paid out of the escrow account, and how all payments were applied. This information should cover the entire life of the loan. Additionally, this letter shall serve as my written request under TILA 15 USC 1641(f)(2), which mandates that you, as the servicer, provide me the identity of the true note holder, including their name, address and telephone number of the owner of  this obligation.

The reason for obtai obtaining ning this information information is to assure that the terms and conditions conditions are reason reasonable able and affordable throughout throughout the term of the loan and that I was not a victim of predatory lending and/or servicing practices. You should be advised that you must acknowledge a cknowledge receipt of this qualified written request within 20 business days, pursuant to 12 U.S.C. Section 2605(e)(1)(A) and Reg. X, Section 3500.21(e)(1). Thank you in advance for taking the time to acknowledge and answer this request as required by the Real Estate Settlement and Procedures Act (section 2605(e)). Sincerely, Your

 

Name

(Signature)

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ANOTHER Version DATE

Via Certified MAIL Insert Lender Information Below: Name: Address: Phone:

Attention Customer Service:  Loan Number: Consumer Name: Property address: City: State: Zip:   This is a "qualified written request" under the Federal Servicer Act, which is a part of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, 12 U.S.C. 2605(e). This request is made by me, as the above-named borrower(s), based on a dispute that has arisen with regard to my loan account. I am writing to you to complain about the accounting and servicing of this mortgage and my need for understanding and clarification of various sale, transfer, funding source, legal and beneficial ownership, charges, credits, debits, transactions, reversals, actions, payments, analyses and records related to the servicing of this account from its origination to the present date.

To date, the documents and information I have, from origination and those that you have sent me, and the conversations with your service representa representatives tives have been unproductiv unproductivee and have not answered my questions. questions. Needles Needlesss to say, I am very concerned. With all the news lately regarding the stories of predatory lending and servicing, you have left me feeling that there is something you are trying to hide. I worry that potential fraudulent and deceptive practices by unscrupulous mortgage brokers; sales and transfers of mortgage servicing rights; deceptive and fraudulent servicing practices to enhance balance sheets; deceptive, abusive and fraudulent accounting tricks and practices may have also negatively affected any credit rating, mortgage account and/or the debt or payments that I am currently, or may be legally obligated to. In order to ensure that I am not a victim of such predatory practices I need to conduct an examination and audit of this loan. I need to have full and immediate disclosure including copies of all pertinent information regarding this loan. I also request that you conduct your own investigation and audit of this account since its inception to validate the debt you currently claim I owe.

Specifically, I am writing to request: Copies of all documents pertaining to the origination of the mortgage including:

•S •Set ettl tlem emen entt Stat Statem emen entt HUDHUD-1 1 •A •App ppra rais isal al •Alll Right •Al Right to Cancel Cancel Forms Forms

•L •Loa oan n Ap Appl plic icat atio ion n

•Al •Alll Good Good Fai Faith th Est Estim imate atess •Co •Commi mmitme tment nt Letter  Letter 

FHA Mortgage Insurance Certificate

•FEMA Flood Notification•Hazard/Flo Notification•Hazard/Flood od Policy

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•ARM •ARM Pr Prog ogrram Di Disc sclo lossure ure •Fir •First st Paym Paymen entt Le Lett tter er •Buydown Agree •Buydown Agreement ment

•C •CHA HARM RM Bo Book okle lett

•Tit •Title le Co Comm mmit itm men entt

•A •Adv dver erse se Noti Notice ce •P •Pur urch chas asee Agre Agreem emen entt •Mortgage •Mortgage Broke Brokerr Agree Agreement ment •Privacy •Privacy Polic Policy y

•Credi •Cr editt Doc Docume uments nts

•All •All Sta State te Spe Specif cific ic Dis Disclo closur sures es •Cl •Closi osing ng Ins Instru tructi ctions ons

•Lock In agreement

•Section 32 Disclosures

•Mortgage/ •Mort gage/Deed Deed of Trust

•All Truth In Lending Lending Disc Disclosur losuree State Statement mentss

•HELOC Agree Agreement ment & Di Disclos sclosures ures

•Note

•Private •Private Mortgage Mortgage Insu Insuranc rancee Certifi Certificate cate

•Asset Verification Documentation •Income Verification Documentation •Gift Fund letters and ver verification ification •Itemization of Amoun Amountt Financ Financed ed •Special Information Booklet on Closing Costs •Controlled Business Arrangement Disclosure •A copy of the loan history including all payments made, all fees incurred, what has been   paid out of the escrow account, and how all payments were applied. This information should cover the entire life of the loan. Additionally, this letter shall serve as my written request under TILA 15 USC 1641(f)(2), which mandates that you, as the servicer, provide me the identity of the true note holder, including their name, address and telephone number of the owner of  this obligation. The reason for obtaining this information is to assure that the terms and conditions are reasonable and affordable throughout the term of the loan and that I was not a victim of predatory lending and/or servicing practices. You should be advised that you must acknowledge receipt of this qualified written request within 20 business days, pursuant to 12 U.S.C. Section 2605(e)(1)(A) and Reg. X, Section 3500.21(e)(1). Thank you in advance for taking the time to acknowledge and answer this request as required by the Real Estate Settlement and Procedures Act (section 2605(e)). Sincerely,

Public Law 111-22 sec 404 (May 20, 2009) SEC. 404. NOTIFICATION OF SALE OR TRANSFER OF MORTGAGE LOANS.

(a) IN GENERAL.Section 131 of the Truth in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. 1641) is amended by adding at the end the following: ‘‘(g) NOTICE OF NEW CREDITOR. ‘‘(1) IN GENERAL.In addition to other disclosures required by this title, not later than 30 days after the date on which a mortgage loan is sold or otherwise transferred transferred or assigned to a third party, the creditor that is the new owner or assignee of the debt shall notify the borrower in writing of such transfer, including ‘‘(A) the identity, address, telephone number of the new creditor; ‘‘(B) the date of transfer; ‘‘(C) how to reach an agent or party having authority to act on behalf of the new creditor; ‘‘(D) the location of the place where transfer of ownership of the debt is recorded; and ‘‘(E) any other relevant information regarding the new creditor. ‘‘(2) DEFINITION.As used in this subsection, the term ‘mortgage loan’ means any consumer credit transaction transacti on that is secured by the principal dwelling of a consumer.’’. (b) PRIVATE RIGHT OF ACTION.Section 130(a) of the Truth in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. 1640(a)) is amended by i

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Truth in Lending or Truth in Ownership of Residential Mortgage Notes posted by O. Max Gardner III During my last two Bankruptcy Boot Camps, one of the topics we have discussed has been the recent amendments to the Truth in Lending Act, brought about by Section 404 of Public Law 111-22. Specifically, our interest has been focused on the new statutory requirement that a consumer-borrower  must be sent a written notice within 30 days of any sale or assignment of a mortgage loan secured by his or her principal residence. Violations of this Section provide for statutory damages of up to $4,000 and reasonable legal fees. The amendments also clearly provide that the new notice rules are enforceable by a private right of action. 15 USC 1641.  This amendment raises several issues. In a securitization context, it is challenging to figure out what the statute might require. First, if the note is sold from the originator to the sponsor for a securitized trust and then from the sponsor to the depositor and then from the depositor to the Trustee for the Trust how many notices must be given to the consumer? Since each transaction is alleged to be a "true sale," it would appear that 3 notices would have to be given. Second, what if the mortgage or deed of trust is also "assigned" from the originator to the sponsor and then to the depositor and finally to the Trustee for the Trust? How many notices are required in this situation? Again, 3 would appear to be the correct number. Third, can the notices be combined into a single document? Fourth, can a notice of the assignment of the mortgage or deed of trust be combined with a notice of the negotiation and transfer of the mortgage note? Fifth, what notice, if any, must be given to the consumer if the Trustee simply "transfers the note" to the mortgage servicer in an effort to create "standing" to enforce the note?    Is Is this transfer one covered by the statute? It could certainly be characterized as a "temporary" assignment of possession of the note. Sixth, what is the real difference between a "sale or assignment." We know that mortgage notes are sold by negotiation under Article 3 of the UCC and the mortgages or deeds of trust are assigned. Was the statute drafted to deal with both instruments? The amendments also for the very first time create a private right of action for violations of Section 13 131(f) 1(f) of TILA (15 USC 1641(f)), which provides as follows: "Upon written request by the obligor, the servicer  shall provide the obligor, to the best be st knowledge of the servicer, with the n name, ame, address and telephone number of the owner of the obligation or the master servicer of the obligation." The statute does not provide a time period for compliance. And, it is not clear to me if the consumer has the power und under er the statute to require the response to list the Owner instead of the Master Servicer. What is clear is that these amendments give consumers and their attorneys two new powerful tools to use in connection with the issue of "who owns and holds" my mortgage. Truth in lending may indeed now include Truth in Ownership with some serious financial penalties for non-compliance.

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Demand  Foreclosure Defense: Rescission Letter, Demand  Letter  Posted on May 29, 2008 by Neil Garfield events-coming-up-for-garfield-continuum-and-garfield-handbooks New comment on your post #214 “Glossary: Mortgage Meltdown and Foreclosure” Comment: A question on TILA and Non-judicial Foreclosure for anyone who knows the answer; Does a rescission letter that is timely and certifiably mailed to all appropriate parties (lender, assignee, servicer, trustee) prevent/nullify a pending non-judicial foreclosure sale? Would appreciate any information that may help find that answer. bootcamp-04_08_newsletter  xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Complicated answer: technically speaking the purchase money first mortgage is exempted from TILA rescission but is still available under little FTC and common law fraud. This exemption was carved out ou t after exhaustive lobbying by lenders. The actual answer to your question is MAYBE. It depends upon the auctioneer’s assessment, but if you let everyone know at the auction au ction that they are buying into a lawsuit ou ourr experience shows that generally speaking nobody bids  not even the lender. Now if you accompany your letetr with the TILA audit a udit and an attorney’s demand letter, you are in a stronger position. The TILA/Mortgage audit is the key and most people don’t know how to do it even though they are advertising otherwise on fancy websites etc. We have two on our site that we are currently referring to and we are looking for others that are actually competent and not fly by night take your money and run places. And if you are willing to file suit against the lender, there are a number of ways to prevent the sale and turn the tables on the lender. There The re are even strategies that are ou outlined tlined in this blog that show how in certain cases the borrower walked away with the house free and clear of the mortgage and note. Here is some verbiage that has been be en used, but frankly without an attorney to de deal al with the lender, your  position is not going to be taken as seriously as it would with a competent attorney who understands the complex issues: Dear Sir or Madam: Please accept this letter on behalf of the above-named property owner and borrower. While this letter is written in part for purposes of settlement and compromise it is already a demand letter  which can and will be used as necessary. It is therefore not a confidential communication protected under  the rules of settlement disclosures and correspondence.

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You have previously been presented with proper notices of deceptive lending practices in the closing on the above-referenced loans. Said notices were accompanied by Proposed Resolutions under the Federal Truth in Lending Act and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act. Notwithstanding the above, your agents have threatened foreclosure, sale and eviction of the homeowner/borrower, despite the facts that the borrower is not in default, the lender and trustee are ignorant of any facts to state affirmatively that the borrower is or is not in default, the lender is in default of its obligations under applicable Federal and State laws, the lender at the closing the servicing agent are not the real parties in interest (i.e., they lack standing to proceed to judicial or non-judicial sale), the trustee and lender lack authority to proceed but have intentionally and fraudulently filed papers and posted notices as though the authority was present. WE HEREWITH DEMAND THE NAMES AND CONTACT INFORMATION ALONG WITH A DESCRIPTION OF THE SECURITY SOLD, THE ASSIGNMENT MADE, AGREEMENTS SIGNED, BETWEEN ALL OF THE MORTGAGE BROKERS, REAL ESTATE BROKERS, DEVELOPERS, APPRAISERS, MORTGAGE AGGREGATORS, INVESTMENT BANKERS, RETAIL OR OTHER  SELLER OF SECURITIES AND THE INVESTORS WHO PURCHASED THE SECURITIES. Based upon information received from the experts in this case and based upon our own factual and legal investigation there appear to be claims in addition to the claims stated in prior correspondence, which claims based upon the following summary, are in most cases not exclusive and therefore the demands stated in this letter and prior correspondence you have received, which is incorporated herein h erein as specifically as if set forth at length hereat, should all be considered cumulative. Usury: As a result of the artificially inflated “fair market values” utilized by LENDER et al, its agents, servants and/or employees, to induce the borrower bo rrower to sign the mortgage documents and purchase the property, the effective yield now vastly exceeds the legal lending limit in the State of Florida, if the borrower pays in accordance with the mortgage and note indentures. A quick review of the usury law in Florida will reveal that while it has been relaxed somewhat to accommodate predatory lending through credit cards and payday loans, it remains somewhat stringent in connection with other loans and allows the borrower to to cancel the loan and collect damages. Hence, just for the record, in the unlikely event we do not settle this case, demand is herewith h erewith made for full satisfaction of the mortgage and note n ote plus three times the value of the note in damages, plus attorney fees and costs of 10 10% % of the value of the of the claim which is the principal of the note plus three times the principal of the note. Security Violation: The subject mortgage was part of a purchase transaction in which the property was sold with promises and assurances that the value would wo uld go up, the rental value v alue would assure a return on investment, and that the investor need not perform any work, since the maintenance and other factors would be done by third parties  the Condominium Association, the real estate broker, the management managemen t office etc. This constitutes, despite the appearance of o f other “uses” the sale of a security under the Securities Act of 1933 and other applicable Federal and state Securities laws. The sale of this security was improper, lacking disclosure, rights to rescind under the securities laws, and lacking in disclosure as to the true nature of the transaction and the true position of the parties, including but not limited to the fact that the “lender” was in actuality acting as a conduit, removing the essential aspect of risk-sharing in the normal lender-borrower relationship, that the risk of loss was not only real but unavoidable because of the artificially inflated values, and that the Buyer should consider the purchase p urchase to be a high-risk investment with the possibility total false loss. Since sale of THIS security was part oftogether larger plan securities “qualified” investorsofusing ratingsthe and false assurances of insurance, withtoa sell promised rate to of return in excess of the revenue produced by the underlying efforts, the sale of THIS security was part of larger Ponzi scheme wherein securities were sold at both ends of the spectrum of the supplier of capital 34

 

(the investor) and the consumer of the capital (the borrower and the seller of the property). Since compensation arising from the transaction with this borrower was not disclosed to the borrower, the transaction lacked proper disclosure and is subject to rescission, compensatory and punitive damages. Hence, just for the record, in the unlikely event we do not settle this case, demand is herewith made for  full satisfaction of the mortgage and note plus three times the value of the note in damages, plus attorney fees of 10% of the value of the of the claim which is the principal of the note plus three times the principal of the note. Common Law Fraud in the Inducement and Fraud in the execution of the closing documents including but not limited to the settlement statement, the mortgage and note. Hence, just for the record, in the unlikely event we do not settle this case, demand is herewith made for full satisfaction of the mortgage and note plus three times the value of the note in damages, plus punitive and/or exemplary damages plus attorney fees of 10% of the value of the of the claim which is the principal of the note plus three times the principal of the note. Little FTC Act (Florida): while the transaction clearly involves interstate commerce, Florida law provides for much the same remedies as described above for unfair and deceptive lending or business practices. Hence, just for the record, in the unlikely event we do not settle this case, demand is herewith made for  full satisfaction of the mortgage and note plus three times the value of the note in damages, plus punitive and/or exemplary damages plus attorney fees of 10% of o f the value of the of the claim which is the principal of the note plus three times the principal of the note. TILA claims have been summarized in prior correspondence. Because the transaction is not a pure first mortgage residential transaction, the TILA exception for rescission does not apply ap ply and we therefore demand rescission in addition to the above-stated above -stated claims. Hence, just for the record, in the unlikely event we do not settle this case, demand is herewith made for full satisfaction of the mortgage and note plus three times the value of the note in damages, plus punitive and/or exemplary damages plus attorney fees of 10% of the value of the of the claim which is the principal of the note plus three times the principal of  the note. RESPA: You have failed to properly respond to the claims under the act are are currently in violation. Hence, just for the record, in the unlikely event we do not settle this case, demand is herewith made for  full satisfaction of the mortgage and note plus three times the value of the note in damages, plus punitive and/or exemplary damages plus attorney fees of 10% of o f the value of the of the claim which is the principal of the note plus three times the principal of the note. RICO: As stated above there were multiple parties in multiple states in a scheme spanning virtually all continents in which false, misleading and non-conforming statements were made to investors and borrowers alike, wherein LENDER et al acted in concert with other ”lenders” and investment bankers to artificially create the appearance of higher market values for property and the false appearance of o f trends that did not in actuality exist, but for the “free money” (secured under false pretenses) pumped into a financial system and real estate market consisting of false and deceptive high pressure sales tactics whose objectives were to get the borrower’s signature without regard for the consequences to either the borrower  b orrower  or the investor. Hence, just for the record, in the unlikely event we do not settle this case, demand is herewith made for full satisfaction of the mortgage and note plus three times the value of the note in damages, plus punitive and/or exemplary damages plus attorney fees of 10% of the value of the of the claim which is the principal of the note n ote plus three times the principal of the n note. ote. Under Federal Law, you are a provider of financial services and/or products to a borrower whom you or  your agents, predecessors, or successors intentionally deceived at the closing of the loan, conspired to 35

 

misrepresent the proper appraised value of the property, and an d have now ignored your basic responsibilities of presenting a response to the notices and correspondence already on file with you and regulatory agencies, who have been informed of your illegal and improper conduct. Notwithstanding the above, the borrowers are now faced with the apparent prospect of losing their house, their credit rating, and have been required to seek the services of legal counsel to forestall the loss, for  which services demand is herewith made under the terms of the mortgage and all applicable Federal (TILA, RESPA, RICO) and State Law.. YOUR CONDUCT, IF YOU PROCEED, CONSTITUTES CRIMINAL THEFT AND CIVIL THEFT OF THE REAL PROPERTY SUBJECT TO THE MORTGAGE, NOTE AND PROCEEDINGS YOU HAVE POSTED AND FILED. Accordingly your position, in the absence of any authority to do so under law is invalid and illegal. ON BEHALF OF THE BORROWER/HOMEOWNER DEMAND IS HEREWITH MADE THAT ALL EFFORTS AT SALE, EVICTION OR FORECLOSURE BE STOPPED IMMEDIATELY AS THE PROPERTY IS SCHEDULED FOR EVICTION/SALE WITHIN A FEW DAYS. Any further attempts at collection will result in further action taken on behalf of the borrowers for all remedies available in law and equity in both administrative proceedings, and judicial forums possessing competent jurisdiction, which will seek damages for unfair trade trade practices, treble damages under  applicable law for RICO, FTC and little FTC violations, consequential damages and refunds, attorney fees, court costs, and all other available remedies in law or equity. PLEASE GOVERN YOURSELVES ACCORDINGLY

Thursday, January 27, 2011 Homeowners' Motto for 2011: MODIFY, BUT ALSO NULLIFY! Following the old adage of "Trust, But Verify" I propose a new slogan for homeowners in 2011 in response to the foreclosure crisis: Modify, But Also Nullify." While attempting to modify your loans with banks that either don't own such loans or have no incentive to give you a fare deal, don't get your hopes up too high.  Instead, nullify your mortgages (deeds of trust) so that they don't encumber your property. Make your bank (servicer, etc.) a NOBODY with respect to your loan before they ever have a chance to wake up and smell the roses.  Then settle with the bank on your terms with respect to the remaining unsecured note!  They didn't ask for your opinion when they developed the tricks to blow up the bubble and severely distort the real estate market. The financial crisis (depression) and the housing crisis are here for a reason. The entity claiming to be your current "lender" is usually just a disguised distress debt buyer or its agent, but claiming nonetheless to have the right not only to collect the debt, but also to so by way of foreclosure.  The problem is that it's one thing to buy a debt, but it's quite another to buy thepreserved  security that backs up that debt and provides an extra avenue of collection (levy on the property pledged as collateral). The U.S. Supreme Court held in 1883 that where a deed of trust is released  (whether with or without authority), the parties claiming to be secured by such deed of trust later had no remedy, because their interest was not recorded  and thus there was no notice to the public of such claimed interest. The majority rule appears to be that the holder of a note secured by a recorded deed of trust ("DOT") that is released  may later  prevail over some member of the public only if the DOT was (1) fraudulently  released and (2) without the participation or  of the original beneficiary of the DOT.  By contrast, if the DOT was releasedwithout fraud  (e.g., by court order) and enabling  was at least in some way enabled  (participation) by the original beneficiary (e.g., MERS and its members attempting to save on taxes), such claimed "holders" cannot subsequently prevail over the release of the DOT. Read between the lines: you get your  property free and clear.

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The minority rule (which Virginia follows!) is ever harsher toward the banksters, as it is more bright-line and appears to be that an innocent member of the public prevails over the holder of a released DOT even where the DOT has been released without authority. Nullifying deeds of trusts and mortgages boils down to application of the above principles in each particular case.  As always, it's all about the details, e.g., the extent of actual and/or constructive (i.e., imputed) notice that each party is deemed to have and to be entitled to, etc.  But the path to fight the crisis and to transfer the wealth back to the middle class, as well as to correct the distortion of the real estate market, is clear: MODIFY, BUT ALSO NULLIFY. Posted by Attorney Gregory Bryl at  at  3:44 PM  PM  Email This  This  BlogThis!  BlogThis!   Share to Twitter    Share to Facebook  Facebook  Share to Google Buzz  Buzz 

BB&T PRIVATE LABEL  LABEL  SECURITIZATIONS  Posted on January 27, 2011 by Neil Garfield

ONE ON ONE WITH NEIL GARFIELD COMBO ANALYSIS TITLE AND SECURITIZATION

BB&T is knee deep in securitizations but it appears that nearly all of them were “private label” meaning they were not registered directly with the SEC. Hence our normal search engines are unable to find the actual securitization documents. A sweep of foreclosures in your area might reveal the underwriter  (BB&T may have been the underwriter itself) or the Pooling and Servicing Agreement. We are continuing the research. Anybody with additional information please write in. Based upon an examination of the 10k (Annual Report) of BB&T the odds are 6:1 that their involvement in a loan was the subject of securitization documents and the receivables from the loan were split up accordingly. This does not mean that in fact the loan was actually securitized  it just means that there are documents describing an “asset-backed” pool that claims to have the note and mortgage and claims an interest in the loan obligation. Based upon previous experience with thousands of such situations, it is unlikely that the the loan was ever actually transferred, delivered or indorsed or assigned within the 90day limit imposed by the REMIC statute which is normally repeated in the Pooling and Servicing Agreement. Thus the legal consequence could be (check with attorney) that the original lender of record could be wiped off the record with a quiet title action since they have no interest in the loan and would not  contest that fact. Even if the declaration from the court was limited to the originator, it would give you an opportunity to show that that the note was made payable to a party who was not the lender and that  the lender referenced in the mortgage was also incorrect. Thus the written instruments describe a transaction that never existed. The transaction that actually occurred was a loan to you by unidentified  parties and is undocumented and therefore unsecured.

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J CURLEY AZ BKR CT: “No Docs To Show Ownership Of Loan Or  Or   Standing”  Posted on January 28, 2011 by Neil Garfield

ONE ON ONE WITH NEIL GARFIELD COMBO ANALYSIS TITLE AND SECURITIZATION EDITOR’S COMMENT: Judge Curley has been wrestling with these issues for more than 2 years. She has heard every argument, seen every memorandum, Expert Declaration (mine) and considered everything else possible. She was led to the inescapable conclusion that BOA’s position was a farce. She denied the Motion to Lift Stay, which effectively puts into question whether BAC or BOA is a creditor at all. In this well-reasoned and extremely well-written opinion, she outlines her analysis and reasoning. IN plain language, we are a nation of laws and civil procedure and not a nation of men and power. Not even the largest Bank on Earth can escape the requirements of our laws.

Arizona Bankruptcy Court Denies BAC “No Docs To Show Ownership Of Loan Or Standing” In re: ZITTA

In re MIKE ZITTA AND IRENA ZITTA, Debtors. BAC HOME LOANS SERVICING, LP FKA COUNTRYWIDE HOME LOANS SERVICING LP, its assignees and/or successors in interest, Movant, v. MIKE ZITTA AND IRENA ZITTA, Respondents.

No. 09-bk-19154-SSC UNITED STATES BANKRUPTCY COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF ARIZONA

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DATED: January 21, 2011. Not for Publication-Electronic Docketing ONLY AMENDED1 MEMORANDUM DECISION I. PRELIMINARY STATEMENT This Court recently received a Notice of Appeal filed by BAC Home Loans Servicing, L.P., f/k/a

Countrywide Home Loans Servicing, L.P.(“BAC”) on December 23, 2010. The Notice of Appeal concerns the Court’s denial of a Motion for Reconsideration filed by BAC relating to its Motion for Relief  from Stay in the Chapter 11 bankruptcy ban kruptcy case of Mike and Irena Zitta (“Debtors”). Because BAC may have prematurely filed its Notice of Appeal, and because this Court had anticipated an opportunity to execute some sort of Order, with an appended ap pended memorandum decision on the issues presented, this Court will amplify its reasoning in denying the Motion for Reconsideration and clarify the record so that the Motion for Reconsideration may be heard on appeal. BAC filed its Motion for Relief from Stay on August 30, 2010.2 Copies of the interest-only promissory note (“Note”), along with an allonge (“Allonge”), the recorded deed of trust (“Deed of Trust”), and the Broker’s price opinion were attached to the Motion.3 BAC also filed a declaration in support of the Motion.4 However, no assignment of the Deed of Trust from any entity to BAC was included . The Debtors filed a response/objection to the relief requested.5 The Court denied BAC’s Motion by Minute Entry Order issued on October 20, 2010 (the “Minute Entry Order”), because BAC had failed to provide a copy of an assignment of the Deed of Trust with its Motion.6 The October 20 Minute Entry Order was not executed by this Court. On October 29, 2010, BAC filed a Motion for Reconsideration of the Minute Entry Order, asserting that under Arizona law, an assignment of the Deed of Trust was not necessary to establish standing to move for relief from the automatic stay.7 The Court heard the Motion for Reconsideration on December 15, 2010, and denied the requested relief. BAC never submitted a form of order denying the Motion for Reconsideration, and although a minute entry order was generated that same day outlining briefly the Court’s denial of the Motion, the minute entry order was never executed by this Court.8 Rather than wait for an appropriate form of order to be entered, BAC chose to file a Notice of Appeal on December 23, 2010. In this Memorandum Decision, the Court has set forth its findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Rule 7052 of the Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure. The issues addressed herein constitute a core proceeding over which this Court has jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1334(b) and 157(b) (West 2010). II. FACTUAL DISCUSSION In the Motion for Relief from Stay filed on August 30, 2010, BAC asserted that it was the “holder in due course” and that it was the “payee and a holder in due course under that certain Promissory Note dated March 20, 2007.”9 The Note attached to the Motion for Relief from Stay stated that GreenPoint Mortgage Funding, Inc., had provided the financing to the Debtors so that the Debtors could acquire the real property located at 5100 East Blue Jay Lane, Flagstaff, Arizona (“Property”).10 The Note further stated that anyone taking the Note “by transfer and who [was] entitled to receive payments under [the] Note [was] called the “Note Holder.”11 The Allonge, dated March 20, 2007, stated as follows: “Pay to the Order of BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP f/k/a Countrywide Home Loan Servicing, LP without recourse.”12 GreenPoint Mortgage Funding, Inc. had executed the Allonge, although the signature is difficult to discern.13 The Deed of Trust

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attached to the Motion for Relief from Stay stated that GreenPoint Mortgage Funding, Inc. was the lender and that MERS was the nominee for the lender. Specifically, the Deed of Trust stated: (E) “MERS” is Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. MERS is a separate corporation that is acting solely as a nominee for Lender and Lender’s successors and assigns. MERS is the beneficiary under this Security Instrument.14

The Deed of Trust stated that the Debtors acknowledged or executed the document on March 21, 2007, although the Allonge and the Note had an execution date of March 20, 2007. Finally, the Declaration submitted in support of the Motion for Relief from Stay stated that “[it] is in the regular course and scope and business for BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP f/k/a Countrywide Home Loans Servicing LP to prepare and maintain books and records relating to the status of the servicing of Movant’s Deed of  Trust.”15 The Declaration also stated that “Movant is the payee under that certain Promissory Note dated March 20, 2007…. Further, Movant is the present holder and owner o off that certain First Deed of Trust of  same date…. securing said Note against Debtors’ property….”16 Thus, BAC’s Declaration creates an ambiguity as to whether BAC is the servicer of the loan or whether it is the Note Holder who is entitled to payments under the Debtors’ Note obligation. The documentation d ocumentation presented by BAC also includes a security agreement, granting BAC a security interest in the Note.17

A review of the Motion for Relief from Stay reflects the myriad problems that this and other Courts are facing in attempting to handle the tremendous volume of such motions that are filed in the numerous bankruptcy cases that are pending across the country. First, the Motion that was filed in this case appears to be a form that may have been imperfectly tailored to the facts of  this case. For instance, the Motion for Relief from Stay alleges that GreenPoint Mortgage Funding, Inc. “was the original lender on the subject Note and Deed of Trust. Thereafter, GreenPoint Mortgage Funding, Inc. assigned all of its rights, title and interest in and to said [N]ote and Deed of  Trust to BAC Home Loans Servicing, L.P., f/k/a Countrywide Home Loans Servicing, L.P. by way of an Allonge….”18 However, as noted previously, the Declaration seems to indicate that BAC was acting as a servicer. If BAC was simply the servicer, then for whom was BAC receiving payments under the Note? BAC was holding the as the servicer, whom was itthe acting? If BAC Ifwas the Note Holder, asNote defined in the Note, for then why does Declaration state that BAC operates as a servicer? Another way to state the problem is that the Motion for Relief from the Stay and the Declaration seem to reflect imperfectly the transfer of the various interests in the Note and Deed of Trust. Given the posture of the record presented to the Court, and the lack of clarity, the Court denied the Motion for Relief from Stay by Minute Entry Order on October 20, 2010. Rather than clarify the record by filing the appropriate appropria te assignment, a further declaration or affidavit, or some other  documentation, BAC filed its Motion for Reconsideration. BAC chose to provide no further information to the Court from a factual standpoint. III. LEGAL DISCUSSION The Motion for Reconsideration

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As outlined above, part of the problem with the issues to be decided is the context in which the matters have been presented to the Court. When a motion for relief from stay is filed, the Bankruptcy Code, the Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, and the Local Rules of this Court are immediately applicable or  implicated. 11 U.S.C. §362 (d) states that the bankruptcy court may, for instance, terminate, modify, or condition the automatic stay (1) “for cause, including the lack of adequate protection of an interest in property of such party in interest,” or (2) “with respect to a stay of an act against property under subsection (a) of this section if-(A) the debtor does not have an equity interest in such property; and (B) such property is not necessary to an effective reorganization.”19 Section 362(g) states that the party requesting relief from the automatic stay has the burden bu rden of proof of whether the debtor deb tor has any equity in the property at issue.20 The Local Loca l Rules of the Arizona Bankruptcy Court further require that a party filing a motion for relief from the automatic stay be able to provide some support for the relief  requested. For instance, if the party is stating that it is a secured creditor requesting relief from the automatic stay to pursue a trustee’s sale under Arizona law, the secured creditor should be able ab le to provide support in the motion that it has a perfected security interest in property of the estate in which the debtor  or debtor in possession also has an interest.21 In reviewing the sufficiency of any motion for relief from the automatic stay, the court must also consider  under what provision of the Bankruptcy Code the debtor has filed. For instance, if the individual debtor  has filed a chapter 7 petition, a trustee in bankruptcy is appointed that must collect and liquidate property of the estate, that has not been claimed exempt by the debtor, for distribution to the debtor’s creditors, according to the priorities set forth in the Bankruptcy Code.22 The trustee in bankruptcy may increase the amount of property of the estate available for distribution to creditors by exercising ex ercising certain avoidance powers enumerated, inter alia, in Bankruptcy Code Sections 544, 547, and 548.23 An individual debtor  may acquire the same duties and responsibilities of a trustee in bankruptcy by filing a chapter 11 petition, p etition, seeking to reorganize or to file a plan of liquidation.24 Because the debtor in possession is vested with the same powers of the trustee, the debtor in possession may pursue avoidance actions as well.25 In this case, the individual Debtors filed a chapter 11 petition seeking to reorganize, and no bankruptcy trustee has yet been appointed in this case. As a result, the Debtors exercise the rights of a bankruptcy trustee concerning the ability to avoid certain transfers or transactions. Because of the avoidance powers of the bankruptcy trustee or the debtor in possession, this Court requires that if a party seeking relief from the automatic stay asserts a perfected security interest in any property of the estate, that moving party must be able to present at least a prima faciecase that it has such a perfected security interest under applicable law.26 The fact that the transaction is not avoidable between the parties to the underlying loan transaction is not dispositive of whether the transaction may be avoided by third parties that are, for instance, bona fidepurchasers.27

Turning to the standards of a motion for reconsideration, the moving party must show a manifest error of  fact, a manifest error of law, or newly discovered evidence. e vidence. School Dist. No. 1J Multnomah County, OR  v. ACandS, Inc., 5 F.3d 1255, 1263 (9th Cir. 1993); In re Gurr, 194 B.R. 474 (Bankr. D. Ariz. 1996). A motion for reconsideration is not specifically contemplated by the Federal Rules. Ru les. To the extent it is considered by the Court, it is under Fed. F ed. R. Civ. P. 59(e) to alter or amend an order or judgment. In re Curry and Sorensen, Inc., 57 B.R. 824, 827 (Bankr. 9th Cir. 1986). Because BAC presented no new evidence to this Court and has h as not outlined any manifest error of fact, the sole basis for the BAC Motion for Reconsideration must be a manifest error of law by this Court. BAC has outlined several bases for  what it believes is this Court’s manifest error of law.   41

 

(A) Is the Movant the Real Party in Interest? A colleague in the Arizona Bankruptcy Court has stated that a party that brings a motion for relief from the automatic stay must first establish a “colorable claim.” “In order to establish [such a claim], a movant…. bears the burden of proof that it has standing to bring the motion.” In re Weisband, 427 B.R. 13, 18 (Bankr. D. Ariz. 2010) (citing In re Wilhelm, 407 B.R. 392, 400 (Bankr. D. Idaho 2009)). In the Weisband decision, the Court states that the moving party may establish standing by showing that it is a “real party in interest.”28 The Weisband Court next states that a holder of a note is a “real party pa rty in interest” under FRCP 17 because, under the Arizona Revised Statute (“ARS”) § 47-3301, the note holder  has the right to enforce it. Weisband at 18. Relying on a decision from a bankruptcy court in Vermont, the Weisband Court next opines that “[b]ecause there is no n o federal commercial law which defines who is a note holder, the court must look to Arizona law to determine whether [movant] is [such] a holder.” Id. (citing In re Montagne, 421 B.R. 65, 73 (Bankr. D. Vt. 2009)). Finally, the Weisband Court states that under Arizona law, a holder of a note is defined as, inter alia, “the person in possession of a negotiable instrument that is payable either to bearer or to an identified person that is the person in possession.” Id. (citing ARS § 47-1201(B)(21)(a)). BAC’s citation to Weisband fails to address this Court’s concerns. In the Motion for Relief, BAC contends that it is the “payee and a holder in due course.” However, the Declaration that it filed appears to reflect that BAC is the servicer for some other party. Obviously there is a difference. A servicer acts pursuant to ahave separate with the Note and is paid a separate determine what payments beenagreement made, or not made, by aHolder given borrower. However, thefee to servicer would not normally list the loan on its balance sheet as one of its assets. The Note Holder, according to the definition in the Note, is the party that is entitled to receive the payments under the Note, because it has arguably paid some consideration for the transfer of the obligation to it, and has listed the obligation as an asset in its books and records.29 BAC has not provided any additional facts to clarify whether it is the servicer pursuant to an agreement with the Note Holder, or contrary to its Declaration, it actually acquired the loan and has placed the loan on its balance sheet as one of its assets. From the documentation provided by BAC, it appears that GreenPoint provided the original funding for the loan to the Debtors so that they could acquire the Property. Yet, at the time of the closing, GreenPoint immediately assigned its interest in the Note to BAC. The Declaration submitted by BAC, however, seems to indicate that BAC is only in the business of servicing loansperhaps for some other entity associated or related to BAC. If BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP, is acting as the servicer of a Bank of America entity, for which entity is it acting? Conversely, if  GreenPoint transferred the Debtors’ loan from its books and records to some other entity, was it BAC? If BAC alleges in its Motion for Relief from the Stay that it is the Note Holder, is it, in fact, the one legally entitled, because of the purchase of the Debtors’ obligation, to receive the Debtors’ payments?

As a part of its prima faciecase, BAC should shou ld have provided the Cou Court rt with more factual information in support of its position. As a result, this Court may deny the Motion for Reconsideration, and the underlying Motion for Relief from the Stay, on the basis that BAC has failed to provide sufficient documentation to this Court so that the Court may ensure that BAC is the proper Note Holder, or servicer  if appropriate, to pursue such a Motion for Relief from the Stay. Thus, the focus of the BAC’s Motion for Reconsideration does not consider all of the factual and legal issues that it should. It does not address whether BAC, in this matter, has presented an appropriate factual 42

 

and legal basis to proceed on this loan concerning the Deb Debtors tors and their Property. BAC could have eeasily asily supplemented the record to provide the appropriate documentation to proceed, but chose not to do so.

(B) Has BAC Set Forth a Prima Facie Case That It Has A Perfected Security Interest in the Property Given the Status Of the Debtors As Debtors In Possession? In its Motion for Reconsideration, BAC relies on ARS § 33-817, which states, “The transfer of any contract or contracts secured by a trust deed shall operate as a transfer of the security for such contract or  contracts.” ARS § 33-817. BAC further points out that the Supreme Court of Arizona has held that a mortgage is a “mere incident to the debt,” d ebt,” and its “transfer or assignment does not transfer or assign the debt or the note,” but “the mortgage automatically goes along with the assignment or transfer” of the note. Hill v. Favour, 84 P.2d 575, 578 (Ariz. 1938) (emphasis added). However, at the hearing on December  15, 2010, the Court expressly stated its concern about the ability of BAC to proceed given that it had not provided any information as to a recorded assignment of the Deed of Trust. The Court asked counsel how her analysis was appropriate given (1) the status of the Debtors as Debtors in Possession who had objected to the relief requested, and (2) ARS § 33-818 which p provides, rovides, in pertinent part, as follows: [A]ssignment of a beneficial interest under a trust deed,… shall from the time of being recorded impart notice of the content to all persons, including subsequent purchasers and encumbrancers for value. As outlined above, the Debtors, as Debtors in Possession, acquire the status of a bona fide purchaser and are able to set aside any real estate transaction, concerning their Property, for which the creditor has h as not taken appropriate steps under Arizona law. See S ee 11 U.S.C. § 544(a)(3) (West 2010). Arizona law requires that if a secured creditor with a lien on the Debtors’ Property wishes to ensure that said interest is not subject to the claims of a bona fide purchaser, that said secured creditor record an assignment of its interest with the Recorder in the County where the Debtors’ Property is located. If notice of the assignment has not been provided, through recordation, the secured creditor may have its interest avoided by a bona fide purchaser. See Rodney v. Arizona Bank, 836 P.2d 434, 172 Ariz. 221 (Ariz. App. Div. 2 1992) (Unless and until the transferee of the beneficial interest in the deed of trust records an assignment of the deed of trust, the security interest in the real property remains unperfected.)

At the time of the hearing on o n the Motion for Reconsideration, BAC’s counsel agreed that although vis-avis the original parties to the transaction, no assignment of the Deed of Trust need be b e produced or  recorded, because of the Debtors’ filing of a bankruptcy petition, ARS § 33-818 required that an assignment be prepared and properly recorded given the new status of the Debtors as Debtors in Possession.30 It is unclear why BAC has not simply supplemented the record to provide the assignment of the Deed of Trust. The request that an assignment be recorded is not a burdensome requirement. MERS, through its registration system, keeps track of the transfers of the beneficial interests, under a deed of trust, from member to member in the system. When there is some type of default under the loan transaction, MERS generally prepares an assignment of the beneficial interest in the deed of trust for signature and then records the assignment with the appropriate state authority, which in Arizona A rizona would be the Recorder in the County where the real property that is subject to the secured creditor’s lien is located. This recordation of the assignment provides the requisite notice to third parties, p arties, as required under Arizona law. 43

 

Although BAC relies on the decision of Rodney v. Arizona Bank, 836 P.2d 434, 172 Ariz. 221 (Ariz. App. Div. 2 1992), the decision actually supports this Court’s understanding of the importance of  the recordation of the assignment of the deed of trust. In Rodney, the borrowers were the Vasquezes, who received purchase money financing from the initial lender, Hal Clonts (“Clonts”), to purchase real property (“Property”) located in Mohave County. The Vasquezes executed a promissory note and deed of  trust in favor of Clonts to provide him with a lien on their Property to secure repayment of the note. It is important to keep in mind that the Vasquezes remained the borrowers throughout a series of subsequent transactions that only affected the lender or the party p arty that had a security interest in the promissory note

and deed of trust. Clonts transferred his interest to the Fidlers through an assignment of the beneficial b eneficial interest in the promissory note and deed of trust. Id. at 435. 4 35. However, on April 11, 1985, the Fidlers entered into a separate loan transaction in which they borrowed money from a third party, State Bank, later called Security Pacific Bank Arizona (“Security Pacific”). The Fidlers provided security to Security Pacific for  their loan transaction by pledging “all monies” received by b y the Fidlers in “Escrow # 85-02-9290.” Id. Security Pacific immediately notified the title company, for the subject escrow, as to Security Pacific’s interest in the escrow funds. In September 1986, the Fidlers again transferred their beneficial interest in the promissory note and deed of trust to Theron Rodney (“Rodney”). The Fidlers received $20,000 from Rodney for the transfer of their interest. The Fidlers executed an assignment of the beneficial interest under the deed of trust. Rodney recorded his interest in the deed of trust with the Mohave County Recorder’s Officer where the Property was located. Not surprisingly, Security Pacific and Rodney disagreed as to the priority of their respective security interests in the loan proceeds. Security Pacific argued that the interest in the loan proceeds could only be p perfected erfected pursuant to the Uniform Commercial Code. Conversely, Rodney argued that the real property provisions of Arizona law were applicable. Id. at 436. The sole issue to be addressed by b y the Appellate Court was whether Article Nine of the Uniform Commercial Code (as adopted in Arizona) applied to the creation and perfection of a security interest in a promissory note when the note itself was secured by a deed of trust in real property. Id. Before considering the analysis by the Court, let’s diagram the various loan transactions. +–+ + | The Vasquezes | Clonts | | - | | +–+ + | initial borrowers purchase money financing |   nitial lender | +–+ + | Vasquezes continue to pay on the original note and deed of trust to the title company, as escrow agent | (1) transfer of the interest in the note and deed of trust for consideration to the Fidlers | | (2) separate loan to the Fidlers–security interest in the note and deed of trust given to Security Pacificconsideration given to Fidlers | | (3) Fidlers again seek financing–security interest in the note and deed of trust given to Rodney | | | for $20,000. | 44

 

+–+ –+ ||| +–+ –+ Thus, it is only the parties on one side of the initial loan transaction that are in disagreement as to the priority of their security interests. Noting that Security Pacific only wanted to obtain a perfected security interest in the promissory note proceeds, the Court stated “we find that Security Pacific received a corollary security interest in the real property evidenced by the deed of trust, along with its interest in the note, although the corollary interest remained unperfected.” Id. The Court then stated that Security Pacific need not have a perfected security interest in the real property, because Security Pacific’s interest was only in the note which was a security interest in personal property under ARS § 47-1201(37). Id. at 43637. The Court concluded that “Arizona case law holds that a mortgage note and the debt evidenced thereby are personal property (citing to Hill v. Favour, 52 Ariz. at 571, 84 P.2d at 579). Article Nine of  the UCC applies to security interests in personal property….” Id. at 437. However, Article Nine of the Uniform Commercial Code does not apply to obtaining ob taining a lien on real property. In co considering nsidering the somewhat murky area of “realty paper,” the Court relied on Commentators J White and R. Summers, who described “realty paper” as follows: B mortgages his real estate to L. L gives B’s note and the real estate mortgage to Bank as security for a loan. Article Nine does not apply to the transaction between L and B, but does apply to that between L and Bank.

Id.31 Turning to the facts of this case, BAC is arguing that its security interest in the Note and Deed of  Trust is perfected as to all others, rather than to just other mortgagees. It has forgotten the other side of the transaction, which is the “mortgagor” in the White and Summers analysis, or someone that may acquire an interest from the mortgagor, such as a bona fide purchaser. To perfect its interest as to the “mortgagor,” which would be the Zittas, or someone who may acquire an interest in the Property from the Zittas, BAC needed to record its assignment in the Deed of Trust, as required under real property p roperty law, such as ARS § 33-818 (West 2010). BAC has not shown this Court that any such assignment exists, so its Motion for Reconsideration must be denied as a matter of law. BAC in also relies on re Smith, 366 149 (Bank. Colo. 2007), which is inapposite. The Bank debtorof  had been a chapter 13Inproceeding, but B.R. had converted hisD.case to one under chapter 7. Id. at 150. New York, N.A. (“Bank of New York”) Y ork”) subsequently requested relief from the automatic stay as to the real property owned by the debtor. The debtor did not oppose the motion, and a foreclosure sale, pursuant to Colorado law, subsequently occurred. Bank of New York then recorded a deed upon sale as to the debtor’s real property. Without seeking any stay of the foreclosure proceedings, the debtor filed an adversary proceeding with the bankruptcy court. The debtor asserted that the Bank of New York was not the real party in interest, and therefore, it was unable to proceed with a foreclosure of o f his real property. The bankruptcy court reviewed the evidence presented and determined that Bank of New York was the holder of the promissory note at the time it commenced its foreclosure sale. The court stated that Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., which had originally provided the financing to the debtor, had endorsed the promissory note in blank. Under Colorado law, such a blank endorsement allowed the promissory note to become “payable to bearer.” However, Ho wever, Bank of New York did submit a Certification of Owner and Holder of the Evidence Debt, which allowed the Colorado court to conclude that Bank of New York was the “holder of the original evidence of debt.” The court then reviewed the deed of trust, determining that it was recorded at approximately the same time as the loan closing between the debtor and Countrywide Home Loan, Inc. The bankruptcy court then concluded that the promissory note was assigned to the Bank  45

 

of New York. As such, once the promissory note was assigned to the Bank of New York, MERS then functioned as the nominee for the Bank of New York. Id. aatt 151. Presumably, as a result of MERS nominee status, the bankruptcy court concluded, sub silentio, that no additional action needed to be taken by Bank of New York vis-a-vis the debtor. deb tor. This Court questions the analysis by the Smith court.32 Although the Smith court relies on a 2002 decision from the Colorado Supreme Court, the court does not analyze the concept of “realty paper” or  discuss White and Summers. As noted by this Court supra, the lender in the original loan transaction or a party that may subsequently obtain a security interest in the promissory note, as a result of a separate loan transaction, may be protected, but this Court is viewing the transaction from a different viewpoint: that of  the Debtors in Possession that acquire the status of bona bon a fide purchasers. There is no discussion, in S Smith, mith, as to how Colorado law would treat such third parties. Moreover, it is unclear whether Colorado has a similar provision as Arizona’s ARS § 33-818 that focuses on the separate requirements of a creditor that may have a beneficial interest under a deed of trust assigned to it. In considering the ability of the debtor to pursue a claim under 11 U.S.C. § 544, the Colorado court concludes that the debtor does not have the standing of the bankruptcy trustee. Smith at 152. Such an analysis is correct, since the debtor pursued his claim against the Bank of New York only after he h e had converted his case to one under chapter 7. The chapter 7 trustee also failed to join with the debtor in the adversary proceeding or to pursue the claim separately.33 However, as to the facts before this Court, the Debtors, as Debtor in Possession, in this chapter 11 proceeding p roceeding do have the standing to pursue claims under Section 544.34 Thus, this Court must reject the analysis in the Smith case. This Court concludes that given the summary nature of motions for relief from the automatic stay, 35 the general requirements in the case law and the Local Rules of this Court36 that a creditor alleging a security interest in certain property of the debtor and/or the bankruptcy estate at least set forth a prima facie case as to its perfected security interest, 37 BAC should have provided an assignment of the Deed of Trust. It failed to do so; however, the Motion for Relief from the Automatic Stay was denied without prejudice. BAC still has the opportunity to refile the Motion with the appropriate app ropriate documents as exhibits thereto. IV. CONCLUSION For the foregoing reasons, the Court denies den ies BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP’s Motion for  Reconsideration of this Court’s Denial of the Motion for Relief from the Automatic A utomatic Stay. The Court

SARAH SHARER CURLEY, Bankruptcy Judge

NJ: GAME OVER  STANDING REQUIRED  NO PRETENDER LENDERS ALLOWED  PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE REQUIRED TO  TO  AUTHENTICATE  Posted on January 31, 2011 by Neil Garfield

ONE ON ONE WITH NEIL GARFIELD COMBO ANALYSIS TITLE AND SECURITIZATION

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BORROWER APPEARED PRO SE GAME OVER: EVIDENCE REQUIRED, NOT PRESUMPTIONS EVEN IF HOLDER, THEY ARE NOT HOLDER IN DUE COURSE; DEFENSES APPLY -WELLS-FARGO-BANK-N-ASEE 01.28.2011 NJ CT OF APPEALS REVERSE NO STANDING -WELLS-FARGO-BANK-N-AAs-Trustee-Respondent-V-SANDRA-a-FORD-Appellant[1] NOTABLE QUOTES: This appeal presents significant issues regarding the evidence required  (E.S.) to establish the standing of an alleged assignee of a mortgage and negotiable note to maintain a foreclosure action. Wells Fargo claims that it acquired the status of a holder in due course as a result of this assignment and therefore is not subject to any of the defenses defendant may have been able to assert against Argent. Wells Fargo asserted that Argent had assigned the mortgage and note to Wells Fargo but that the assignment had not yet been recorded. Wells Fargo subsequently filed a motion for summary judgment. This motion was supported by a certification of Josh Baxley, who identified himself as “Supervisor of Fidelity National as an attorney in fact for HomEq Servicing Corporation as attorney in fact for [Wells Fargo].” Baxley’s certification stated: “I have knowledge of the amount due Plaintiff for principal, interest and/or other charges pursuant to the mortgage due upon the mortgage made by Sandra A. Ford dated March 6, 2005, given to Argent Mortgage Company, LLC, to secure the sum of $403,750.00.” Baxley did not indicate the source of this purported knowledge. Baxley’s certification also alleged that Wells Fargo is “the holder and owner of the said Note/Bond and Mortgage” The documents defendant alleged were forgeries included a purported handwritten note by her stating that she was employed by Bergen Medical Center at a monthly salary of $9500, even though her actual income was only approximately $10,000 per year. Defendant also alleged that “[t]he estimate for closing fees that was given to me prior to closing was around $13,000.00 and the Good Faith Estimate of Closing Costs was for $13,673.90 but on the closing statement they were $36,259.06.” On appeal, defendant argues that (1) Wells Fargo failed to establish that it is the holder of the negotiable note she gave to Argent and therefore lacks standing to pursue this foreclosure action; (2) even if Wells Fargo is the holder of the note, it failed to establish that it is a holder in due course and therefore, the trial court erred in concluding that Wells Fargo is not subject to the defenses asserted by defendant based on Argent’s alleged predatory and fraudulent acts in connection with execution of the mortgage and note; and (3) even if Wells Fargo is a holder in due course, it still would be subject to certain defenses and statutory claims defendant asserted in her answer and counterclaim.

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We conclude that Wells Fargo failed to establish its standing to pursue this foreclosure action. Therefore, the summary judgment in Wells Fargo’s favor  must be reversed and the case remanded to the trial court. This conclusion makes it unnecessary to address defendant’s other arguments. we note that Wells Fargo argues in its answering brief that “[defendant] is estopped to contest Wells Fargo’s standing”; “defendant’s brief exceeds the scope of this appeal,” and “[defendant's] arguments are counterintuitive.” These arguments are clearly without merit and do not warrant discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E). “As a general proposition, a party seeking to foreclose a mortgage must own or control the underlying debt.” Bank of N.Y. v. Raftogianis, ___ N.J. Super. ___, ___ (Ch. Div. 2010) (slip op. at 3). In the absence of a showing of such ownership or control, the plaintiff lacks standing to proceed with the foreclosure action and the complaint must be dismissed. See id. at ___ (slip op. at 35-36).1 If a debt is evidenced by a negotiable instrument, such as the note executed by defendant, the answer to this question is governed by Article III of the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), N.J.S.A. 12A:3-101 to -605, in particular N.J.S.A. 12A:3-301. See generally Raftogianis, supra, ___ N.J. Super. at ___ (slip op. at 3-8). N.J.S.A. 12A:3-301 states in pertinent part: “Person entitled to enforce” an instrument means [1] the holder of the instrument, [2] a nonholder in possession of the instrument who has the rights of the holder, or [3] a person not in possession of  the instrument is entitled to enforce the instrument pursuant [N.J.S.A.]12A:3-309 subsection d. ofwho [N.J.S.A.] 12A:3-418. [EDITOR'S NOTE: A KEY to POINT NOT RAISED or BY THE HOMEOWNER NOR DISCUSSED BY THE COURT IS THAT ARGENT DID NOT LOAN THE MONEY CONTRARY TO REPRESENTATIONS AT CLOSING. THEREFORE THE DEBT IS NOT EVIDENCED BY A NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENT. HENCE THE PREMISE OF THIS COURT AND ALL COURTS IS WRONG. THE DEBT IS NOT EVIDENCED BY ANY WRITING BUT IT STILL EXISTS. SINCE THE NOTE DOES NOT DESCRIBE THE DEBT IT DESCRIBES A NON-EXISTENT TRANSACTION. THUS THE MORTGAGE SECURING THE DEBT REFERENCED IN THE NOTE SECURES A FICTITIOUS TRANSACTION AND IS SUBJECT TO QUIET TITLE] N.J.S.A. 12A:3-201(b) provides in pertinent part that “if an instrument is payable to an identified person, negotiation requires transfer of possession of the instrument and its indorsement by the holder.” Therefore, even if Wells Fargo had presented satisfactory evidence that it was in “possession” of the note executed by defendant (which is discussed later in this opinion), Wells Fargo admittedly presented no evidence of “its indorsement by [Argent].” Therefore, Wells Fargo was not a “holder” of the note within the first category of “person entitled to enforce” an instrument under N.J.S.A. 12A:3-301. See Raftogianis, ___ N.J. Super. at ___ (slip op. at 6).

the question is whether Wells Fargo presented adequate evidence that it fell within the second category of “person entitled to enforce” an instrument under  N.J.S.A. 12A:3-A-3627-06T1 301; that is, “a nonholder in possession of the instrument who has the rights of a holder.” Transfer of an instrument occurs “when it is delivered by a person other than its issuer for the purpose of giving to the person receiving delivery the right to enforce the instrument.”

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the documents that Wells Fargo relied upon in support of its motion for summary judgment to establish its status as a holder were not properly authenticated. A certification will support support the grant of summary judgment judgment only if the material facts alleged therein are based, as required by Rule 1:6-6, on “personal knowledge.” See Claypotch v. Heller, Inc., 360 N.J. Super. 472, 489 (App. Div. 2003). Baxley’s certification does not allege that he has personal knowledge that Wells Fargo is the holder and owner of the note. In fact, the certificati certification on The does not give any indication Baxley obtained this alleged knowledge. certification also does nothow indicate the source of Baxley’s alleged knowledge that the attached mortgage and note are “true copies.” Furthermore, the purported assignment of the mortgage, which an assignee must produce to maintain a foreclosure action, see N.J.S.A. 46:9-9, was not authenticated authentica ted in any manner; it was simply attached to a reply brief. The trial court should not have considered this document unless it was authenticated by an affidavit or certification based on personal knowledge. See Celino v. Gen. Accident Ins., 211 N.J. Super. 538, 544 (App. Div. 1986). On the remand, defendant may conduct appropriate discovery  , (e.s.) including taking the and deposition Baxley andon the person who purported to assign the mortgage note to of Wells Fargo behalf of Argent. for the guidance of the trial court in the event Wells Fargo is able to establish its standing on remand, we note that even though Wells Fargo could become a “holder” of the note under N.J.S.A. 12A:3-201(b) if Argent indorsed the note to Wells Fargo even at this late date, see UCC Comment 3 to A-3627-06T1 N.J.S.A. 12A:3-203, Wells Fargo would not thereby become a “holder in due course” that could avoid whatever defenses defendant would have to a claim by Argent because Wells Fargo is now aware of those defenses. See N.J.S.A. 12A:3-203(c); UCC Comment 4 to N.J.S.A. 12A:3-203; see generally 6 William D. Hawkland & Larry Lawrence, Hawkland and Lawrence UCC Series [Rev.] § § 3-203:14R. 3-203:7 (2010); 6B Anderson on the Uniform Commercial Consequently, if Wells Fargo produces an Code, supra, indorsed copy of the note on the remand, the date of that indorsement would be a critical factual issue in determining whether Wells Fargo is a holder in due course. =================================

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My point is simply this: let’s start with the facts of what really occurred  . Who loaned money? Who borrowed money? who was a payor, payee, guarantor, insurer? Did the originating documents actually describe the real transaction? If the documents described a fictitious transaction, what difference does it make whether the assignment was valid? Isn’t the assignment of zero a simple product of  multiplication in which the answer is zero? After we get the facts straight then it’s easy  either the documents are on point, compliant and truthful or they are not. Either way the law has plenty of precedent and statutes to deal with the outcome. The cornerstone of the argument in this white paper is a lie and it isn’t a white lie. li e. The authors want you to first look at the documents document s and ASSUME their CURRENT recitations recitations of PAST facts and recitations are true even though they are mostly in direct conflict with the reality of  the actual transactional events. ====================\ The problem that cannot be overcome even if their tortured reasoning was accepted, is that the actual initiation of the foreclosure would need to be bifurcated (split from) the sale itself unless the initiator of the foreclosure paid cash at the auction. As it stands now, non-creditors are “winning” the auction by (a) setting a minimum bid that is clearly unauthorized and (b) submitted a “credit bid” that could only come from the creditor. Thus the same party that said it didn’t need to be an actual creditor to start a foreclosure proceeding is pretending to be a creditor at the foreclosure auction. The net effect, notwithstanding the sounds bites on TV, is that it is non-creditors that are getting a free house, and in no case has a borrower obtained a “free house” in the sense that they had no money in the deal. Any money the borrower had in the deal, even in the rare no-money down closing, is MORE THAN the money (zero) that the non-creditor has invested or at risk in the foreclosure or sale ============== “We’re about to witness the main event in financial institution internecine warefare: investment funds (MBS buyers) vs. banks (MBS sellers).”  The catalyst he identifies is that a group of large institutional investors has banded together and filed suit, in what Levintin calls the first “A-list litigation.”  This would be the case filed by Dexia, New York Life, and TIAA-CREF, among others, against Countrywide and BAC.

=====================================

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Special Kudos to Charles “POPPA KOPPA” for bringing b ringing the credit bid to my attention and the interesting fact that the minimum bid instruction comes from Wall Street corresponding with securities reports and has nothing to do with the real estate market.

THE CREDIT BID IS THE ACHILLES HEEL OF SECURITIZATION EDITOR’S ANALYSIS: Sorry to keep throwing terms around that nobody nob ody used to talk about but the CREDIT BID is one of the weakest points in the pretender lender game and it should be exploited by those seeking to protect their homes. A Credit Bid is a bid at the auction of a foreclosed home that says “I’m buying this house  with no money.”THE CREDIT BID IS THE ACHILLES HEEL OF SECURITIZATION. Silly as that sounds it actually usually makes sense in conventional mortgages  because the creditor is the lender and the source of funds and the holder and possessor of the note and mortgage each of which accurately describe the true transaction. So when the Judge says OK this house will be sold on a certain sale date, the bank goes to the auction and bids the amount that the borrower owes, including fees, costs etc. If someone bids higher, the bank is thrilled  it gets paid in full and the whole thing is over. (By the way you are entitled to ask for the original note after the sale.)

But now we have something far different. It is a sleight of hand trick in which the wool is pulled over the eyes of everyone and the result is that a free house goes to a bidder who never offered or paid a penny for the house, the loan, the obligation, the note or the mortgage. By pointing out that the case needs to be either bifurcated into the right to foreclose and the right to submit a credit bid OR that the Plaintiff must prove that they are a real bona fide creditor to begin with, the Judge is more likely to see where you are heading. It underscores the point that you are not seeking a free house, you are looking to clean house, and prevent a completely disinterested party from taking title. You can point out, accurately that the parties who actually advanced the money are not being represented and that their interests are adverse to the party seeking foreclosure. You can cite to the many lawsuits of  investors (now joined by Trustees) against the investment bankers and servicers. You can further point out that when the investors are done with the investment banks they still will have the option of coming after  the homeowner whether he is dispossessed of the house or not. And you can get a little high brow by pointing out that it is against public policy to allow the Court’s ruling on the right to INITIATE  foreclosures is being misinterpreted as a finding that the would-be forecloser is a real creditor with money and risk in the game. Because that leads to corrupting the county’s title system.

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Thus the non-creditor who manages to get by the Judge with artful argument on the issue of whether they can BRING suit, sidesteps the essential question of what can and should happen if an auction date is set. It is essentially the same as when a pretender convinces a Judge in a non-judicial state that they can start the foreclosure proceedings, and they use that innocuous order to bootstrap themselves into being perceived as the creditor who can submit a credit bid. Your answer to a Judge who is hostile to your position should beto something like this “If youBut want let willing them order foreclosure sale date go forward, fine Judge. areto you to letthe them say you specifically found that they are a creditor who could submit a credit bid instead of cash at the auction? Because if you want that, then you need something in the record here that shows they are a true creditor with risk on the table.” (make sure the proceedings are recorded) If that party wants to submit a credit bid, the foreclosure judgment needs to say that they are the creditor  and not that the borrower failed to pay and the house is subject to forced sale. And if the Judge wants to put that in the FINAL Judgment or Order, then he/she needs to hav havee something in the record that shows that the forecloser is the creditor  or else when they show up at auction they have to bid with MONEY like everyone else. Check your state statutes and you’ll see what I’m talking about. The current status quo is corrupting title every day there is another “sale” at auction that goes to a party submitting a “credit bid.” That sale is NOT subject to the issuance of title and is either voidable or void depending upon which state the property is located in. Either way title is clouded or defective. AND THAT means title IS unmarketable. It all comes down to the same thing no matter how you approach it. The origination of the transaction was defective if it was intended to be treated as a secured mortgage loan transaction. Each document produced that was based upon the faulty origination simply compounded the stupidity of the process further. By piling up the paper the pretenders gave the appearance that they had done their homework and that everything was in order. In fact they had been engaged in monkey business with fraudulent notaries (18 notaries took the fifth Amendment in Maryland recently), robo-signed documents and otherwise defective affidavits that cannot be fixed. And THAT brings us to the political p olitical decision that needs to be made. If justice takes its course, it is obvious that most courts are going to overturn the foreclosures and stop the rest that are in the pipeline. If  the legislature pushes the reset the button then they are giving a legislative pardon to the perpetrators of  the worst fraud in human history. =======

STATUS OF 50% OF ALL MORTGAGES NOW QUESTIONABLE

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BLOOMBERG: U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert E. Grossman in Central Islip, New York, in a decision he said he knew would have a “significant impact,” wrote that the membership rules of  the company’s Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, or MERS, don’t make it an agent of  the banks that own the mortgages…” ““MERS and its partners made the decision to create and operate under a business model that was designed in large part to avoid the requirements of the traditional mortgage-recording process,” Grossman wrote. “The court does not accept the argument that because MERS may be involved

with 50 percent of all residential mortgages in the country, that is reason enough for this court to turn a blind eye to the fact that this process does not comply with the law.” EDITOR’S NOTE: “Significant impact” is an understatement. By finding that the enabling documents of MERS membership do NOT create an agency relationship, Judge Grossman has correctly pointed out one of the most important reasons why our title systems throughout all 50 states are now corrupted. His finding casts a very dark shadow on the question of whether ANY mortgage involving MERS is secured by the property, and finds no doubt that virtually all foreclosures of MERS-related (nominee) mortgages were invalid. This clearly means that the requirements for a clear chain of title are left unsatisfied. Any certificate or deed issued in which MERS was previously named in the chain of title is probably void (not voidable). Any homeowner who thinks they lost their home in foreclosure probably still legally owns that home. Any petitioner in bankruptcy whose estate included a home on which there was a purported encumbrance with MERS named as nominee had a much larger estate than the one filed with the help of automated computer schedules. Any Motion to Lift Stay that involved MERS that was granted was done improperly  and is subject to reversal by an action to quiet title, an action for wrongful foreclosure, or a motion for reconsideration based upon representations being a fraud upon the court. Any modification, short-sale or mediated settlement involving MERS, any auction sale or post auction sale of property, will need to be unwound and returned back to status quo with the homeowner possessed of fee ownership of the property. And then there is this question: if the party identified as “lender” did not lend the borrower the money, and if MERS is not an agent that can be recognized at law, was a mortgagee or beneficiary identified in the mortgage or deed of trust? Clearly, not. Does that mean the instrument purporting to create an encumbrance is simply a wild instrument to be ignored, or is some court action required to either remove it or correct it? Who has standing to correct it? For 3 1/2 years I’ve been saying, contrary to many other analysts including those on the borrowers’ side, that the mortgages and notes were invalid and that the only thing left was a liability owed to an unknown third party that for its own reasons has not sought to collect on that liability and whose claim was both undocumented and unsecured. This conclusion is corroborated by extrapolating the consequences of Judge Grossman’s decision, which is the only decision that could be made if we are to follow the rule of law. “We’re big and this is how we have been doing it for years” does not trump “this is the law and you didn’t comply with it.”

=========== A party cannot foreclose on a mortgage without having title, giving it standing to bring the action. (See Kluge v. Fugazy, 145 AD2d 537, 538 (2 nd Dept 1988 ), holding that a “foreclosure of a mortgage may not be brought by one who has no title to it and absent transfer of the debt, the assignment of the mortgage is 53

 

a nullity”. Katz v. East-Ville Realty Co., 249 AD2d 243 (1st Dept 1998), holding that “[p]laintiff’s attempt to foreclose upon a mortgage in which he had n no o legal or equitable interest was without foundation in law or fact”. “To have a proper assignment of a mortgage by an authorized agent, a power  of attorney is necessary to demonstrate how the agent is vested with the authority to assign the mortgage.” [*2]HSBC BANK USA, NA v. Yeasmin, 19 Misc 3d 1127(A), 866 NYS2d 92 (Table) N.Y.Sup.,2008. “No special form or language is necessary to effect an assignment as long as the language shows the intention of the owner of a right to transfer it”. Emphasis added, Id., citing Tawil v. Finkelstein Bruckman Wohl Most & Rothman, 223 AD2d 52, 55 (1st Dept 1996); Suraleb, Inc. v. International Trade Club, Inc., 13 AD3d 612 (2nd Dept 2004). The claim in this case is that the mortgage was assigned by MERS, as the nominee, to the Plaintiff. However Plaintiff submits no evidence that America’s Wholesale Lender authorized au thorized MERS to make the assignment. MERS submits only its own statement that it is the nominee for America’s Wholesale Lender, and that it has authority au thority to effect an assignment on America’s Wholesale Lender’s behalf. The mortgage states that MERS is solely a nominee. The Plaintiff, in its Memorandum of Law, admits that MERS is solely a nominee, acting in an administrative capacity. In its Memoranda, Plaintiff quotes the Court in Schuh Trading Co., v. Commisioner of Internal Revenue, 95 F.2d 404, 411 (7th Cir. 1938), which defined a nominee as follows: The word nominee ordinarily indicates one designated de signated to act for another as his representative in a rather  limited sense. It is used sometimes to signify an agent or trustee. It has no connotation, however, other  than that of acting for another, or as the grantee of another.. Id. Emphasis added. Black’s Law Dictionary defines a nominee as “[a] person designated to act in place of another, ano ther, usually in a very limited way”. Agency is a fiduciary relationship which results from the manifestation of consent by one person to another that the other shall act on his behalf and subject to his control, and consent by the other so to act. Hatton v. Quad Realty Corp., 100 AD2d 609, 473 NYS2d 827, (2nd Dept 1984). “[A]n agent constituted for a particular purpose, and under a limited and circumscribed power, cannot bind his principal by an act beyond his authority.” Andrews v. Kneeland, 6 Cow. 354 N.Y.Sup. 1826. MERS, as nominee, is an agent of the principal, for limited purposes, and has o only nly those powers which are conferred to it and authorized by its principal. In the mortgage in this case, MERS claims, as nominee, that it was granted the right “(A) to exercise any or all of those rights, including, but not limited to the right to foreclose and sell the Property, and (B) to take any action required of the Lender including, but not limited to, releasing and canceling this Security Instrument.” However, this language quoted by MERS is found in the mortgage under the section “BORROWER’S TRANSFER TO LENDER OF RIGHTS IN THE PROPERTY” and therefore is facially an acknowledgment borrower. fact that the borrower acknowledged and consented togranted MERS acting as nominee ofby thethe lender has noThe bearing on what specific powers and authority the lender MERS. The problem is not whether the borrower can object to the assignees’ standing, b but ut whether the original lender, who is not before the Court, actually transferred its rights to the Plaintiff. To allow a purported assignee to foreclosure in the absence of some proof that the original lender authorized the assignment would throw into doubt the validity of title of subsequent purchasers, should the original lender challenge the assignment at some future date. Furthermore, even accepting MERS’ position that the lender acknowledges MERS’ authority exercise any or all of the lenders’ rights under the mortgage, the mortgage does not convey the specific right to assign the mortgage. The only specific rights enumerated in the [*3]mortgage is the right to foreclose and sell the Property. The general language “to take any action required of the Lender including, but not limited to, releasing and canceling this Security Instrument” is not sufficient to give the nominee authority to alienate or assign a mortgage without getting the mortgagee’s explicit authority for the particular  assignment. Alienating a mortgage absent specific authorization is not an administrative act. Plaintiff submitted no other documents which purport to authorize MERS to assign or otherwise convey the right of the mortgagor to assign the mortgage to another party. A party who claims to be the agent of another bears the bu burden rden of proving the agency relationship by a 54

 

preponderance of the evidence, Lippincot v. East River Mill & Lumber Co., 79 Misc. 559, 141 NYS 220 (1913), and “[t]he declarations of an alleged agent may not be shown for the purpose of proving the fact of agency”. Lexow & Jenkins, P.C. v. Hertz Commercial Leasing Corp., 122 AD2d 25, 504 NYS2d 192 (2nd Dept 1986). See also Siegel v. Kentucky Fried Chicken of Long Island, Inc., 108 AD2d 218, 488 NYS2d 744 (2nd Dept 1985), Moore v. Leaseway Transp. Corp., 65 AD2d 697, 409 NYS2d 746 (1st Dept 1978). “The acts of a person assuming to be the representative of an another other are not competent to p prove rove the agency in the absence of evidence tending to show the principal’s knowledge of such acts or assent to them”. (2 NY Jur 2d, Agency and Independent Contractors, 26). Plaintiff has submitted no evidence to demonstrate that the original lender, the mortgagee America’s Wholesale Lender, authorized MERS to assign the secured debt to Plaintiff. Thus, Plaintiff has not made out a prima facie case that it is entitled to foreclose on the mortgage in question.WHEREFORE, it is ORDERED that the Plaintiff’s application for an Order appointing referee to compute amounts due to the Plaintiff is denied with leave to renew upon proof of au authority. thority. This shall constitute the decision and order of this Court.

I’m probably partly to blame for this notion so I want to correct it. The goal is NOT to get your house for  free, although that COULD be the result, as we have seen in a few hundred cases. The simple answer is “No Judge I am not trying to get my house for free, I’m trying to stop THEM from getting my house for  free. They don’t have one dime invested in this deal and payments have been received by the real creditors for which they refuse to give an accounting.” accou nting.” The obligation WAS created. The question is not who holds the note but to whom the note is payable, and what is the balance due on the note after a full accounting from the creditor. So don’t leave your mouth hanging hang ing open when the Judge says something like that. Tell him or her that they have the wrong impression because they are getting misinformation from the other side which is trying to get a lawyer’s argument admitted as evidence. Tell him you want the deal you signed up for   including the appraised value that the lender represented to you at closing. Don’t you won’tbut pay Offerof tothe make a monthly payment court registry not in the amountsay demanded, foranything. perhaps 25% amount demanded. Tellinto himthe you refuse to paysomeone who never lent you the money, who is not on the closing d documents ocuments and is relying on securitization documents which contain multiple conditions, many of which they have violated. Tell the Judge you deny the default because you know they received third party payments and they refuse to allocate the payments to your loan, and they refuse to inform you or the Co Court urt as to whether these third party insurers and guarantors have equitable or legal rights of subrogation. Subrogation is taking the place of another person because you are the real party in interest. “Why should I lose my house just because I didn’t pay p ay them. The note isn’t payable to them. Even if they have an assignment, it violates the terms under unde r which they are permitted to accept it, and even if they were permitted to accept it, it would be on behalf of the true creditors who were the investors who advanced the funds and now could be anyone because of the transactions in which the investors were paid or settled.

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“The question is not whether I made a payment, it is whether a payment is du duee after allocation of third party insurance, credit default swap and guarantee payments. Who are they to declare a default when they refuse to give a full accounting?”

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I have researched these common law theories, focusing on the extent to which courts have and may continue to deploy them in predatory mortgage lending disputes. 1. Aiding and Abetting It is a long standing common law principle that a business or individual can b bee held liable for aiding and abetting the wrongful acts of another. The Restatement of Torts (Second) suggests that, “for harm resulting to a third person from the tortious conduct of another, a person is liable if he … (b) knows that the other’s conduct constitutes a breach of a duty and gives substantial assistance or encouragement to the other so to conduct himself.” The alleged aider-abetter itself need not owe a du duty ty of care to the victim. n368 And most courts agree that the alleged aider-abetter need not reap a personal financial benefit from the wrongful conduct to be held liable. But many courts consider financial gain by the alleged aiderabetter as evidence of knowledge of and/or assistance to the tortious behavior. Moreover, the alleged aider  and abetter need not even posses a wrongful intent, provided that she knows the conduct in question is tortious. Courts are also amenable to use of the common law doctrine of aider-abetter liability to enforce statutes which do not by their own terms define or contemplate liability for aiding and abetting. While most aider-abetter liability cases involve allegations of fraud, some courts have been receptive to applying aider-abetter liability to unfair and deceptive trade practice claims as well. w ell. A small, but growing line of cases apply aider-abetter liability to a variety of different parties involved in predatory lending. For example, in a payday lending case, the New York Attorney General’s office successfully argued that a bank criminally facilitated evasion of the state’s usury law by allowing a nonbank agent to originate, service, and retain an ownership interest in payday loans. A federal district court in New York denied a motion to dismiss an aider-abetter liability claim against a mortgage closing attorney, who allegedly claimed to represent the borrowers when in fact he did not. A Pennsylvania case held that a real estate appraiser was potentially liable for predatory lending related claims because she acted in concert with other defendants. defendan ts. And an Illinois federal district court case refused to dismiss a common law fraud claim against an assignee a ssignee of a predatory mortgage based on the allegation that the assignee “knew of the fraud, but nonetheless funded the loan.” In the context of securitization of mortgage loans, the most emblematic recent aider-abetter liability case involves Lehman Brothers and First Alliance Mortgage Company. In In re First Alliance Mortgage Co., the Centrallending Districtby of First California heldThroughout that Lehman Brothers could be held liable for aiding and abetting fraudulent Alliance. the mid-to-late 1990s, a parade of state attorneys general, private consumers, and public interest organizations accused First Alliance of targeting senior  citizens with misleading and fraudulent home refinance loans. Discovery revealed that Lehman Brothers was fully aware of these allegations. Nevertheless, Lehman Brothers extended First Alliance a large secured warehouse line of credit to initially fund predatory loans. After originating the mortgage loans, First Alliance then used Lehman Brothers’ services to securitize the loans for resale to investors on Wall Street. First Alliance used the proceeds of loans sold into securitization pools to pay down its line of  credit, cover overhead costs, and initially reap handsome profits. First Alliance also retained the servicing rights to the loans, which gave the company the opportunity to make additional profits from servicing compensation paid by the trust, as well as other servicing related revenue, such as that gathered from late fees and refinancing delinquent loans. But, when predatory lending litigation brought by state attorneys general and the FTC (along with exposes in the Wall Street Journal and on national television) began to make First Alliance’s prospects look dim, First Alliance filed for bankruptcy. But before petitioning the bankruptcy courts for protection, First Alliance drew down 77 million dollars on its warehouse line of  credit with Lehman Brothers. In bankruptcy proceedings, the bankruptcy trustee argued that because Lehman aided and abetted a betted First Alliance’s fraudulent lending, Lehman’s security interest on the 57

 

warehouse credit line should be equitably equ itably subordinated to other creditors, including First Alliance’s predatory lending victims. Ultimately the district court concluded that Lehman Brothers’ security interest would not be subordinated since the 77 million dollars Lehman had already coughed up had enriched the bankrupt company’s estate. But, before doing so, the court made clear that Lehman had aided and abetted fraud against the First Alliance’s customers. Given this finding, For their part, consumers involved in the class action have still not been compensated compen sated for fraudulent loans, many of which led to the loss of a family home. Lehman, which was a secured creditor, had its bankruptcy claim paid in full. 2. Conspiracy A second possible avenue of asserting liability for concerted wrongdoing in predatory lending securitization is civil co-conspirator liability. Generally a civil conspiracy is defined as “a malicious combination of two or more persons to injure another in person or property, in a way not competent for  one alone, resulting in actual damages.” A conspiracy requires demonstration of an underlying unlawful act upon which the claim c laim is based, as well as some form of combination co mbination or agreement between the coconspirators. It is well settled that where a conspiracy exits, liability for actions by one co-conspirator taken in furtherance of the conspiracy can be attributed to every co-conspirator, making each equa equally lly liable for the others’ acts. Courts treat parties to a civil conspiracy as joint tortfeasors with joint and several liability for  all damages “ensuing or naturally flowing” from the act. Moreover, courts hold co-conspirators liable irrespective of whether they are the direct actor, and irrespective of the degree of involvement. n389 Courts distinguish co-conspirator liability from aider-abetter liability liability because, unlike a co-conspirator, an aider-abetter does not adopt as her own the wrongful act of the p primary rimary violator through concerted action or agreement. Co-conspirator liability seems to have some promise in attributing wrongful actions of front-line players to behind the scenes financiers in securitization. In Williams v. Aetna Finance Company the Supreme Court of Ohio found a mortgage lender liable for fraud committed by a door-to-door salesman. The mortgage lender had an agreement to give the salesman a commission for loans he facilitated with the lender. The “pitchman” targeted neighborhoods with senior citizens who owned their homes free and clear, convincing them to borrow money for home repairs. The lender was liable for the pitchman’s behavior because it gave “access to loan money that was necessary to further his fraudulent actions against customers… .” Other decisions have denied dismissal of civil co-conspirator liability claims for a range of mortgage lending industry participants, including brokers, home sellers, lenders, appraisers, and attorneys. In Herrod v. First Republic Mortgage, the Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia rejected the notion that the mere fact of securitization changes the application of co-conspirator liability rules, explaining that: “[a] securitization model – a system wherein parties that provide the money for loans and drive the entire origination process from afar and behind the scenes – does nothing to abolish the basic right of a borrower  to assert a defense to the enforcement of a fraudulent loan, regardless of whether it was induced by another party involved in the origination of the loan transaction, be it a broker, ap appraiser, praiser, closing agent, or  another.” While none of these cases involved extending liability to a seller, underwriter, or trustee in a securitization deal, the notion of a “pitchman” and a “financier” seems plausibly applicable to a lender and a seller or  58

 

underwriter respectively. Although a pooling and servicing agreement will never explicitly say that an investment bank agrees to a deal d eal despite an originator, broker, or servicer’s modus operandi of violating predatory lending laws, agreement can be shown through circumstantial evidence such as the financial incentives, available information, and tacit understanding amongst the parties. 3. Joint Venture A final common law doctrine which may hold promise in creating greater accountability for structured financing of predatory lending is joint venture liability. A joint venture is an a n association of two or more persons designed to carry out a single business enterprise for profit, for which purpose they combine their  property, money, effects, skill, and knowledge. Joint ventures arise out of contractual relationships, be they oral, written, express, or implied. While the precise formulation of elements varies, generally to form a joint venture: [1] two or more persons must enter into a specific agreement to carry on an enterprise for profit; [2] their  agreement must evidence their intent to be joint venturers; [3] each must make a contribution of property, financing, skill, knowledge, or effort; [4] each must have ha ve some degree of joint control over ov er the venture; and [5] there must be a provision for the sharing of both profits and losses. Where a joint venture does exist, courts co urts generally rely on partnership law in judging the rights of the parties. Thus, courts hold joint venturers may be jointly and severally liable for debts of the venture including those incurred from tortious conduct. In general, a co-venturer is not liable for the willfully unlawful acts of another. But, where the unlawful act was within the actual or apparent scope of the joint venture, or where the co-venturer gave express or implied consent to the act, or even where the coventurer failed to protect the victim from the act, he or she can be liable for the primary wrongdoer’s behavior. As with aider-abetter and co-conspirator liability, a growing line of cases find co-venturer liability with respect to predatory lending allegations. For example, in George v. Capital South Mortgage Investments, the Kansas Supreme Court considered a large punitive damage award against a mortgage lender and an assignee. The case involved a defunct mortgage brokerage called Creative Capital Investment Bankers. The consumer-plaintiffs in the case hired Creative to assist them in obtaining a loan to purchase a home from a relative for $ 40,000. After swamping the family with a parade of silly and unnecessary documents, the mortgage broker obtained a signature on a loan contract with a principle of $ 60,000. The broker thenlender, instructed closing agent toaware distribute than the agreed purchase pricetofor the home to the seller. The whoawas apparently of theless unusual terms, assigned the loan a private individual at closing and gave the closing agent instructions to not inform the borrowers of the assignment. When the family learned that they had borrowed $ 20,000 that they never wanted nor  received, they sued. Creative Capital did not n ot appear at trial and the court gave the family a default judgment, which in all likelihood was uncollectible. unco llectible. Of greater import was the family’s claim that the lender and the broker were engaged in a joint venture ve nture to profit from the broker’s fraud and usury. At trial the jury agreed. On appeal, the Kansas Supreme Court found sufficient evidence to sustain the co-venturer  verdict against the lender and assignee. The lender argued that it was a distinct corporation, located in a different state, and did not share office space, administrative services, or telephone lines. Looking past these arguments, the court pointed to frequent contact between the lender and the broker, as well as the lender’s insolvency in structuring the loan immediately preceding closing. The court sustained the jury verdict against the assignee by pointing to the undisclosed assignment at closing as evidence that the assignee was a participant in the joint venture. v enture. Moreover, the court pointed out that the fact that the assignee received much of the financial benefit from the unlawful charges suggested that the assignee had agreed to the joint venture. 59

 

While the George case did not involve securitization, there does not appear to be a principled reason why joint venture rules would be inapplicable to structured finance. In securitization deals, the pooling and servicing agreement is an explicit agreement to carry on an enterprise for profit by the different businesses involved in the conduit, including mortgage brokers, lenders, MERS, servicers, sellers, underwriters, trustees, and trusts, or an SPV taking a different legal form. Each of these parties fulfill a specific function within a structured finance deal and all a ll have control over their own p particular articular role. At least some of the parties in some cases agree to share in the losses and profits of the venture. For example, mortgage lenders frequently agree to repurchase non-performing loans from the trust. Mortgage brokers are only paid if any given loan closes and conforms to the underwriting standards of the loan pool. Servicers agree that their fees are contingent on performance aspects of the loan, such as whether borrowers pay on time. Sellers and underwriters und erwriters agree to accept the price they can receive from selling securities, which is in turn dependent on the reputation and behavior of the originators, brokers, and servicers. Trustees agree to share in profits and losses, since they accept compensation out of the proceeds of consumers’ monthly payments. And certainly a trust (or other type of SPV) itself agrees to share in profits and losses, given that trust income is completely dependent on performance of the loans it houses. Following this reasoning, at least one court has h as found a triable issue of fact on the question of whether a securitization pooling and servicing agreement created a joint venture with respect to predatory lending allegations. In Short v. Wells Fargo Michael Short alleged that employees of Delta Funding, a mortgage lending company, closed a mortgage loan on his home when they came to his house with a stack of  documents for him to sign. Mr. Short alleged that Delta never provided him any copies of the loan documents, nor gave any explanation exp lanation of them at the informal closing. Delta Fu Funding nding sold Mr. Short’s loan along with many others into a trust pursuant to a pooling and servicing agreement with Wells Fargo, a national bank regulated by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, agreeing to act as trustee. Under  the pooling and servicing agreement, Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. agreed to service the loans. Eventually Mr. Short alleged that Countrywide gave Mr. Short S hort notice that he owed two payments on his loan in one month. After several unsuccessful un successful (and no doubt frustrating) attempts to contact Countrywide’s customer service, Countrywide eventually informed Mr. Short that he also owed nearly n early a thousand dollars in attorneys’ fees and other penalties in addition add ition to his regular payment, plus the still unexplained extra monthly payment – all immediately due by certified check. Mr. Short also alleged that Countrywide had charged him fees that were not authorized under West Virginia statutes. Eventually Mr. Short obtained counsel sued.out Thethat federal districtexplicitly court reviewed principles joint fees in venture. Then, the courtand po inted pointed the parties dividedthe upgeneral the revenue from of various the pooling and servicing agreement. The court concluded that “taking the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiffs, it would not be unreasonable for a jury to conclude that Delta Funding, Countrywide and Wells Fargo entered into a joint venture.” IV. The Consumer Protection Critique of Mortgage Securitization Law A. Ambiguity: Consumer Protection Laws Presume an Antiquated Model of Finance Perhaps the one uniform feature of predatory p redatory lending law is its failure to recognize and account acc ount for the complex financial innovations that have facilitated securitization structures. Most consumer protection statutes, including the TILA (1968), the FDCPA (1977), the ECOA (1974), the FHA (1968), and the FTC’s holder in due course notice rule (1975) all preceded widespread securitization of subprime mortgages by over a decade. While this time frame is not meaningful in itself, it hints at a fundamental structural problem in the law. 60

 

One would expect little controversy in a term as fundamental as “creditor.” But, the word suggests a unitary notion of a single individual or business that solicits, documents, and an d funds a loan. For example, ex ample, under the TILA, a creditor is “the person p erson to whom the debt arising from the consumer credit transaction is initially payable on the face of the evidence e vidence of indebtedness.” This definition is important since the private cause of action creating the possibility of liability under the act extends only to “any creditor who fails to comply” with the Act’s requirements. While this definition resonates with the notion of a lender as we commonly think of it, this notion is increasingly discordant with reality. In the vast va st majority of  subprime home mortgage loans, most of the actual tasks associated with origination of the loan, including especially face-to-face communication with the borrower, are conducted by a mortgage loan broker. Because brokers usually do not fund the loan, they are not the party to whom the loan is initially payable. The absurd result is that the federal statute which purports p urports to promote useful and accurate disclosure of  credit prices, does not govern the business or individual that actually speaks to a mortgage applicant. Rather, liability for the statute is confined to errors in the complex paperwork, p aperwork, which many consumers have difficulty reading, and which are typically ignored in hurried loan closings long after borrowers arrive at decision on which broker and/or lender to use. Arguably the credit advertising restrictions in Part C of the statute reach mortgage loan solicitations by mortgage brokers. But these provisions are quite limited in their substantive reach. For example, they never n ever explicitly prohibit misleading advertising or  even false descriptions of loans. And even if they did, the statute does not grant a private cause of action to sue for advertising violations anyway. ========================

Allocating Bailout to YOUR    LOAN  Posted on April 18, 2010 by Neil Garfield

Editor’s Note: Here is the problem. As I explained to a Judge last week, if Aunt Alice pays off my obligation then the fact that someone still has the note is irrelevant. The note is unenforceable and should be returned as paid. That is because the note is EVIDENCE of the obligation, it isn’t THE obligation. And by the way the note is only one portion of the evidence of the obligation in a securitized loan. Using the note the only evidence in a currency securitized loan is like paying for groceries with seaasshells. They were once in some places, but they don’t go very far anymore. The obligation rises when the money is funded to the borrower and extinguished when the creditor receives payment  regardless of who they receive the payment from (pardon the grammar). The Judge agreed. (He had no choice, it is basic black letter law that is irrefutable). But his answer was that Aunt Alice wasn’t in the room saying she had paid the obligation. Yes, I said, that is right. And the reason is that we don’t know the name of Aunt Alice, but only that she exists and that she paid. And the reason that we don’t know is that the opposing side who DOES know Aunt Alice, won’t give us the information, even though the attorney for the borrower has been asking for it formally and informally through discovery for 9 months.

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I should mention here that it was a motion for lift stay which is the equivalent of a motion for summary judgment. While Judges have discretion about evidence, they can’t make it up. And while legal presumptions apply the burden on the moving party in a motion to lift stay is to remove any conceivable doubt that they are the creditor, that the obligation is correctly stated and to do so through competent witnesses and authenticated business records, documents, recorded and otherwise. All motions for lift stay should be denied frankly because of thee existence of multiple stakeholders and the existence of multiple claims. Unless the motion for lift stay is predicated on proceeding with a judicial foreclosure, the motion for lift stay is the equivalent of circumventing due process and the right to be heard on the merits. But I was able to say that the the PSA called for credit default swaps to be completed by the cutoff  date and that obviously they have been paid in whole or in part. And I was able to say that AMBAC definitely made payments on this pool, but that the opposing side refused to allocate them to this loan. Now we have the FED hiding the payments it made on these pools enabling the opposing side (pretender lenders) to claim that they would like to give us the information but the Federal reserve won’t let them because there is an agreement not to disclose for 10 years notwithstanding the freedom of information act. So we have Aunt Alice, Uncle Fred, Mom and Dad all paying the creditor thus reducing the obligation to nothing but the servicer, who has no knowledge of those payments, won’t credit them against the obligation because the servicer is only counting the payments from the debtor. And so the pretender lenders come in and foreclose on properties where they know third party payments have been made but not allocated and claim the loan is in default when some or all of the loan has been repaid. Thus the loan is not in default, but borrowers and their lawyers are conceding the default. DON’T CONCEDE ANYTHING. ALLEGE PAYMENT EVEN THOUGH IT DIDN’T COME FROM THE DEBTOR. This is why you need to demand an accounting and perhaps the appointment of a receiver. Because if the servicer says they can’t get the information then the servicer is admitting they can’t do the job. So appoint an accountant or some other receiver to do the job with subpoena power from the court. Practice Hint: If you let them take control of the narrative and talk about the note, you have already lost. The note is not the obligation. Your position is that part or all of the obligation has been paid, that you have an expert declaration computing those payments as close as  possible using what information has been released, published or otherwise available, and that the pretender lenders either refuse or failed to credit the debtor with payments from third party sources credit default swaps, insurance and other guarantees paid for out of the proceeds of the loan transaction, PLUS the federal bailout from TARP, TALF, Maiden Lane deals, and the Federal reserve. The Judge may get stuck on the idea of giving a free house, but how many times is he going to require the obligation to be paid off before the homeowner gets credit for the issuance that was paid for out of the proceeds of the borrowers transaction with the creditor?

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THE ERROR OF THE SERVICING LENDER  More often than not, the servicing agent for the loan will appear to enforce the note. For  example, let’s assume that the “servicing agent” states that it is the authorized agent of  the note holder, which is “Trust Number 99” (obviously evidence of a securitization). 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, c oncept, as stated in 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 au thorized 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 h ave jurisdiction.” In re Foreclosure Cases, 521 F.Supp. 3d 650, 653 (S.D. Ohio, 2007). 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. ========== Then there are the perjury statutes and other applicable penal codes which cover the filing of erroneous or misleading documents or false financing statements that are used to defraud a homeowner. The level of punishment on these penal codes depends a lot on how far the fraud got. If the homeowner was wrongfully foreclosed on and the lender  (who really didn’t own the loan) actually got his house h ouse and sold it, then the damages and jail time would be severe and the fines and sanctions would be astronomical. ============ Now let’s cover one final aspect of HUD regulations that could spell treble-damage trouble for lenders who fail to engage in loss mitigation. On September 26, 2008, HUD issued a mortgagee letter (2008-27), identifying the potential for civil money penalties for  failing to work with borrowers that possess HUD-approved mortgages. In order to avoid these damages, lenders must (1) ensure that the loss mitigation evaluations are completed for all delinquent mortgages four full monthly arethose due and unpaid; (2) mortgagees must ensure that before the appropriate action is installments taken based on evaluations; and (3) they must maintain documentation of all initial and subsequent loss mitigation evaluations and actions taken. Check out 24 CFR §203.605 to see what the code has to say about compliance regulations. This is all basically an administrative-type hearing against lenders that don’t comply with these loss mitigation requirements. Treble damages however cannot be assessed on defaults that occurred before May 26, 2005, the rule’s effective date. ========

ORAL ARGUMENT IN HEARINGS AND APPEALS In listening to the questions of BAP Judges sitting on a 3 Judge panel in appeals from rulings of the sitting Bankruptcy Judge, there were a few things that jumped out at me besides what I have

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already reported. The fundamental argument on appeal is , in theory, that pretenders are foreclosing on property despite the fact that if the rules of procedure and rules of evidence were applied they would not only be dismissed, they would be sanctioned. Cases from around the country corroborating this premise have been reported on these pages where the lawyer and the client (including large institutions like BOA, Wells Fargo etc.) have been fined huge amounts of money. Setting apart bias and prejudiced and conflicts of interests with their own pension funds, as well as worrying about opening flood gates of litigation that could not be contained, the question that sticks out  like a sore thumb is why the Judges are ruling so often against the borrower? Answer is abysmally clear: Lawyers are not lawyering. In my seminars, DVD’s, media appearances and writing I keep making the point that you should be objecting as soon as the opposing attorney starts talking and you should keep objecting until you are in handcuffs threatened with contempt  not that you should be disrespectful to a Judge (that is just stupid) but you should be persistent far past annoying. Having a Judge annoyed with you is very different from having mad at you in a personal way. Very frequently, when I sat on the bench as a substitute master or judge, my annoyance was actually a reflection of my rising discomfort. PASSION, communicated in a consistent, respectful way without fear of intimidation, will often turn the head of the Judge. The example is an attorney who is really good at at this stuff  knows chain of title, securitization, TILA, RESPA etc. But he or she is not prepared for the drop dead question: “counselor, are you questioning the authenticity of the note or mortgage.” The answer is “YES” but 99 out of 100 lawyers are afraid to say that. Most lawyers are as hypnotized by the Wall Street myth as the Judges, and so when even a copy of the note shows up attached to an unverified pleading, the lawyer feels compelled to admit the “obvious.” That is exactly what happens on appeal and in the record, the attorney is often quoted in the record from the trial proceedings as saying “NO we are not objecting to their authenticity, we are objecting to their enforceability”.OOPS. If they are authentic then they are presumed to be enforceable unless they have something illegal or against public policy in the document itself. So if you admit authenticity, you lose. Here is a little tip for you would-be litigators: if your position is that you know your client is wrong or has violated a contract but that for some technical or equitable reason you want the Judge to turn the law on its head, you are (1) going to lose that case and (2) you will have very little credibility in the next 10 cases you have in front of that Judge. Here is another tip: if your position is that you know the facts don’t look good the way the other side has presented it, but that you object to everything opposing counsel has proffered and you object to the authenticity of the copies AND the originals based upon advice of experts who have examined the available evidence, then your Judge will know that this is going to be a fight AND the next ten times you appear in front of that Judge, the Judge will be listening for issues that could result in being overturned on appeal. Specifically, here are some SAMPLE objections you can raise at the trial level, so you don’t sound like an idiot when you go in front of an appellate panel:

1. Objection: Counsel has represented facts that are not in evidence. If Counsel is testifying, I would like to voir dire counsel to determine whether counsel is a material witness, whether

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counsel is a competent witness with personal knowledge and whether counsel is attempting to proffer argument in lieu of inadmissible hearsay. 2. Objection: Counsel has stated that he/she represents Wells Fargo when in fact the homeowner received a letter from another law firm and another lawyer stating that they represented the real party in interest. If that other letter was referring to Wells Fargo, then we have two lawyers who each claim to represent Wells Fargo, in which case, I am demanding that counsel provide proof of authority to represent Wells Fargo naming he/she and the law firm. If the party referred to in the prior correspondence is not Wells Fargo, then we obviously have two different financial institutions who are competitors in the open market, each making a claim to enforce a note and mortgage, each of which documents is subject to numerous objections as to authenticity and admissibility as evidence. The only thing we know is that they both want to buy this home without offering any money to anyone by submitting a credit bid. 3. Objection: Counsel is attempting to refer to an exhibit to pleadings that have not been admitted into evidence. We object to those copies being used and we will object to the use of  any purported original until we can examine and determine the authenticity of the so-called original, since there are now numerous cases on record involving these same parties wherein the documents offered as originals were in fact mechanically produced, fabricated and forged. WE DO NOT ADMIT THE AUTHENTICITY A UTHENTICITY OF THE NOTE, MORTGAGE, ASSIGNMENT, INDORSEMENT OR ANY OTHER DOCUMENT THEY HAVE OFFERED. QUITE THE CONTRARY, WE BELIEVE THEY ARE FAKE AND THAT LIKE ANY OTHER CASE THEY SHOULD BE REQUIRED TO PLEAD AND PROVE THEIR CASE. 4. Objection: Counsel is arguing for a presumption in favor of his alleged client in lieu of  presenting evidence that can be tested on the merits. Counsel is also arguing and attempting to raise the presumption in favor of his client that in a judicial forum the burden of proof is on the party with the least information. First they stonewall us despite Federal law that requires them to answer and then they say we lack specificity. They can’t have it both ways. 5. Objection: We are the defending party (same statement in both judicial and non-judicial state). They want to sell real property without the requirement of proof that would be admissible in a judicial forum  a forum in which they would lose every time and in which, when pushed they always dismiss the day of trial. They are the party seeking affirmative relief  they want a home that currently belongs to my client and they want to be able to take it without paying forthe it by submitting credit bid as though they were thealso creditor. So they are not only asking court to allow athe foreclosure to go forward, they will use your order as proof of a judicial finding that they are in fact the creditor and can submit a credit bid at auction without using any money whatsoever. And they want you to do all this for them because their client has the word “bank” in it  and that should be enough with no pleadings or proof from the party seeking affirmative relief  namely his client who wants to sell my client’s property without a hearing and buy it without any money. Now it is your turn counselors  add to this list and I’ll publish it… ========================

JON LINDEMEN: FILE DISCOVERY THE MOMENT YOU LAY HANDS ON THE FILE

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The pretenders like to get you in a Catch-22. Actually you can hardly blame them. As many have privately told me and other lawyers “we know we can’t win this on the merits.” Jon has 10 years military experience so he thinks in terms of winning and not necessarily following precise rules. His orders are to win, not to play around and have coffee and tell jokes with opposing counsel. Like most lawyers, Jon had followed the conventional rules and filed discovery at the “appropriate time.” As anyone else who followed that procedure quickly found out, in the “opposite-day” of  foreclosure litigation, you can’t file discovery until you do  other things like mediate, and then on appeal, you can’t complain that you didn’t have the facts, because you didn’t even try to conduct discovery. That’s another thing I saw happen at the BAP oral argument last week. The lawyer didn’t even have 3 days to get discovery requests in, but the panel deemed him to have waived it for purposes of the appeal. So taking my queue from Jon, who changed his entire procedure around, I now strongly and urgently recommend that you (1) send out a QWR, (2) send out a DVL (3) send out discovery the moment you lay hands on the file  including when you file a motion for enlargement of time. Once it is in the record then nothing can take it out. THEN when  the issue of mediation, modification or other issues as to standing or real party in interest or whether the decider is present for negotiations, you can say they never responded to the the QWR, DVL or discovery. The issue is present and the other side is left to whine that you filed discovery too early. By the way, the rules allow early discovery, they just allow a little extra time to answer. “We have no sworn statement or representation as to the facts of where the original documents are being kept, who has them and why they have them and to whom a debt is owed, and if a debt is owed, how many people are paying on it besides the alleged borrower? Who are we litigating with? With whom are we supposed to negotiate for modification or mediation?” THEN whether you are coming up from state civil, federal civil or bankruptcy court, you CAN say that you lack specificity because they refused to answer the requests for discovery and violated court orders in the process. PRACTICE HINT: DO NOT GRANT EXTENSIONS. EX TENSIONS. FILE MOTIONS TO COMPEL THE DAY THE DISCOVERY IS DUE (NOT A MOMENT BEFORE BECAUSE THEN IT IS PREMATURE) AND SET IT DOWN FOR HEARING ON MOTION CALENDAR. NEXT TIME MOVE FOR  SANCTIONS. NEXT TIME UP MOVE FOR CONTEMPT. Send the appropriate letter on state statute or rule of civil procedure for spurious pleadings. MAKE SURE YOU INCLUDE REQUESTS FOR ADMISSIONS AND THAT YOU MOVE ASAP TO DEEM THEIR EVASIVE ANSWERS AS ADMISSIONS AND SET THAT DOWN FOR HEARING AS WELL

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