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As a homeowner begins research into
the lending and foreclosure crisis, there will be many unfamiliar terms, names
and companies that come to their attention. Chief among these will be MERS.
MERS is the acronym for Mortgage
Electronic Registration Systems. It is a national electronic registration and
tracking system that tracks the beneficial ownership interests and servicing
rights in mortgage loans. The MERS website says:
“MERS is an innovative process that
simplifies the way mortgage ownership and servicing rights are originated, sold
and tracked. Created by the real estate finance industry, MERS eliminates the
need to prepare and record assignments when trading residential and commercial
mortgage loans. “
In simple language, MERS is an
on-line computer software program for tracking ownership.
MERS was conceived in the early
1990’s by numerous lenders and other entities. Chief among the entities were
Bank of America, , Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and a host of other such entities.
The stated purpose was that the creation of MERS would lead to “consumers
paying less” for mortgage loans. Obviously, that did not happen.
This article will attempt to explain
MERS in very general detail. It will cover a few issues related to MERS and
foreclosure, in order to introduce the reader to the issue of MERS. It is not
meant to be a complete discussion of MERS, nor of the legal complexities
regarding the arguments for and against MERS. For a more in depth reading of
MERS and findings coming out of courts, it is recommended that the reader look
at Hawkins, Case No. BK-S-07-13593-LBR (Bankr. Nev. 3/31/2009) (Bankr. Nev.,
2009) . It gives a good reading of the issues related to MERS, at least for
that particular case. Though in Nevada, it is relevant for California.
(Please note. I am not an attorney
and am not giving legal advice. I am just reporting arguments being made
against MERS, and also certain case law and applicable statutes in California.
The MERS Process
Traditionally, when a loan was
executed, the beneficiary of the loan on the Deed of Trust was the lender. Once
the loan was funded, the Deed of Trust and the Note would be recorded with the
local County Recorder’s office. The recording of the Deed and the Note created
a Public Record of the transaction. All future Assignments of the Note and Deed
of Trust were expected to be recorded as ownership changes occurred. The recording
of the Assignments created a “Perfected Chain of Title” of ownership of the
Note and the Deed of Trust. This allowed interested or affected parties to be
able to view the lien holders and if necessary, be able to contact the parties.
The recording of the document also set the “priority” of the lien. The priority
of the lien would be dependent upon the date that the recording took place. For
example, a lien recorded on Jan 1, 2007 for $20,000 would be the first
mortgage, and a lien recorded on Jan 2, 2007, for $1,500,000 would be a second
mortgage, even though it was a higher amount.
Recordings of the document also
determined who had the “beneficial interest” in the Note. An interested party
simple looked at the Assignments, and knew who held the Note and who was the
legal party of beneficial interest.
(For traditional lending prior to
Securitization, the original Deed recording was usually the only recorded
document in the Chain of Title. That is because banks kept the loans, and did
not sell the loan, hence, only the original recording being present in the
banks name.
The advent of Securitization,
especially through “Private Investors” and not Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac,
involved an entirely new process in mortgage lending. With Securitization, the
Notes and Deeds were sold once, twice, three times or more. Using the
traditional model would involve recording new Assignments of the Deed and Note
as each transfer of the Note or Deed of Trust occurred. Obviously, this
required time and money for each recording.
(The selling or transferring of the
Note is not to be confused with the selling of Servicing Rights, which is
simply the right to collect payments on the Note, and keep a small portion of
the payment for Servicing Fees. Usually, when a homeowner states that their
loan was sold, they are referring to Servicing Rights.)
The creation of MERS changed the
process. Instead of the lender being the Beneficiary on the Deed of Trust, MERS
was now named as either the “Beneficiary” or the “Nominee for the Beneficiary”
on the Deed of Trust. This meant that MERS was simply acting as an Agent for
the true beneficiary. The concept was that with MERS assuming this role, there
would be no need for Assignments of the Deed of Trust, since MERS would be
given the “power of sale” through the Deed of Trust.
Black’s Law Dictionary defines a
nominee as “[a] person designated to act in place of another, usually in a very
limited way” and as “[a] party who holds bare legal title for the benefit of
others or who receives and distributes funds for the benefit of others.”
Black’s Law Dictionary 1076 (8th ed. 2004). This definition suggests that a
nominee possesses few or no legally enforceable rights beyond those of a
principal whom the nominee serves……..The legal status of a nominee, then,
depends on the context of the relationship of the nominee to its principal.
Various courts have interpreted the relationship of MERS and the lender as an
agency relationship.
The naming of MERS as the
Beneficiary meant that certain other procedures had to change. This was a
result of the Note actually being made out to the lender, and not to MERS.
Before explaining this change, it would be wise to explain the Securitization
process.
Securitizing a Loan
Securitizing a loan is the process
of selling a loan to Wall Street and private investors. It is a method with
many issues to be considered, especially tax issues, which is beyond the
purview of this article. The methodology of securitizing a loan generally
followed these steps:
· A Wall Street firm would approach
other entities about issuing a “Series of Bonds” for sell to investors and
would come to an agreement. In other words, the Wall Street firm “pre-sold” the
bonds.
· The Wall Street firm would
approach a lender and usually offer them a Warehouse Line of Credit. The
Warehouse Credit Line would be used to fund the loans. The Warehouse Line would
be covered by restrictions resulting from the initial Pooling & Servicing
Agreement Guidelines and the Mortgage Loan Purchase Agreement. These documents
outlined the procedures for creation of the loans and the administering of the
loans prior to, and after, the sale of the loans to Wall Street.
· The Lender, with the guidelines,
essentially went out and found “buyers” for the loans, people who fit the general
characteristics of the Purchase Agreement,. (Guidelines were very general and
most people could qualify.” The Lender would execute the loan and fund it,
collecting payments until there were enough loans funded to sell to the Wall
Street firm who could then issue the bonds.
· Once the necessary loans were
funded, the lender would then sell the loans to the “Sponsor”, usually either a
subsidiary of the Wall Street firm, of a specially created Corporation of the
lender. At this point, the loans are separated into “tranches” of loans, where
they will be eventually turned into bonds.
Next, the loans were “sold” to the
“Depositor”. This was a “Special Purpose Vehicle” designed with one purpose in
mind. That was to create a “bankruptcy remote vehicle” where the lender or
other entities are protected from what might happen to the loans, and/or the
loans are “protected” from the lender. The “Depositor” would have once again
been created by the Wall Street firm or the Lender.
Then, the “Depositor” places the
loans into the Issuing Entity, which is another created entity solely used for
the purpose of selling the bonds.
Finally, the bonds would be sold,
with a Trustee appointed to ensure that the bondholders received their monthly
payments.
As can be seen, each Securitized
Loan has had the ownership of the Note transferred two to three times at a
minimum, but, no Assignments of Beneficiary are executed under most
circumstances. If such an Assignment occurs, it will usually occur after a
Notice of Default was filed.
(Note: This is a VERY simplified
version of the process, but it gives the general idea. Depending upon the
lender, it could change to some degree, especially if Fannie Mae bought the
loans. The purpose of such a convoluted process was so that the entities
selling the bonds could become a “bankruptcy remote” vehicle, protecting lenders
and Wall Street from harm, and also creating a “Tax Favorable” investment
entity known as an REIMC. An explanation of this process would be cumbersome at
this time.)
New Procedures
As mentioned previously,
Securitization and MERS required many changes in established practices. These
practices were not and have not been codified, so they are major points of
contention today. I will only cover a few important issues which are now being
fought out in the courts.
One of the first issues to be
addressed was how MERS might foreclose on a property. This was “solved” through
an “unusual” practice.
· MERS has only 44 employees. They
are all “overhead”, administrative or legal personnel. How could they handle
the load of foreclosures, Assignments, etc to be expected of a company with
their duties and obligations?
When a lender, title company,
foreclosure company or other firm signed up to become a member of MERS, one or
more of their people were designated as “Corporate Officers” of MERS and given
the title of either Assistant Secretary or Vice President. These personnel were
not employed by MERS, nor received income from MERS. They were named “Certify
Officers” solely for the purpose of signing foreclosure and other legal
documents in the name of MERS. (Apparently, there are some agreements which
“authorize” these people to act in an Agency manner for MERS.)
This “solved” the issue of not
having enough personnel to conduct necessary actions. It would be the
Servicers, Trustees and Title Companies conducting the day-to-day operations
needed for MERS to function.
As well, it was thought that this
would provide MERS and their “Corporate Officers” with the “legal standing” to
foreclose.
However, this brought up another
issue that now needed addressing:
* When a Note is transferred, it
must be endorsed and signed, in the manner of a person signing his paycheck
over to another party. Customary procedure was to endorse it as “Pay to the
Order of” and the name of the party taking the Note and then signed by the
endorsing party. With a new party holding the Note, there would now need to be
an Assignment of the Deed. This could not work if MERS was to be the
foreclosing party.
Once a name is placed into the
endorsement of the Note, then that person has the beneficial interest in the
Note. Any attempt by MERS to foreclose in the MERS name would result in a
challenge to the foreclosure since the Note was owned by “ABC” and MERS was the
“Beneficiary”. MERS would not have the legal standing to foreclose, since only
the “person of interest” would have such authority. So, it was decided that the
Note would be endorsed “in blank”, which effectively made the Note a “Bearer
Bond”, and anyone holding the Note would have the “legal standing” to enforce
the Note under Uniform Commercial Code. This would also suggest to the lenders
that Assignments would not be necessary.
MERS has recognized the Note
Endorsement problem and on their website, stated that they could be the
foreclosing party only if the Note was endorsed in blank. If it was endorsed to
another party, then that party would be the foreclosing party.
As a result, most Notes are endorsed
in blank, which purportedly allows MERS to be the foreclosing party. However,
CA Civil Code 2932.5 has a completely different say in the matter. It requires
that the Assignment of the Deed to the Beneficial Interest Holder of the Note.
CA Civil Code 2932.5 – Assignment
Where a power to sell real property
is given to a mortgagee, or other encumbrancer, in an instrument intended to
secure the payment of money, the power is part of the security and vests in any
person who by assignment becomes entitled to payment of the money secured by
the instrument. The power of sale may be exercised by the assignee if the
assignment is duly acknowledged and recorded.
As is readily apparent, the above
statute would suggest that Assignment of the Deed to the Note Holder is a
requirement for enforcing foreclosure.
The question now becomes as to
whether a Note Endorsed in Blank and transferred to different entities as indicated
previously does allow for foreclosure. If MERS is the foreclosing authority but
has no entitlement to payment of the money, how could they foreclose? This is
especially important if the true beneficiary is not known. Why do I raise the
question of who the true beneficiary is? Again, from the MERS website……..
* “On MERS loans, MERS will show as
the beneficiary of record. Foreclosures should be commenced in the name of
MERS. To effectuate this process, MERS has allowed each servicer to choose a
select number of its own employees to act as officers for MERS. Through this
process, appropriate documents may be executed at the servicer’s site on behalf
of MERS by the same servicing employee that signs foreclosure documents for
non-MERS loans.
Until the time of sale, the
foreclosure is handled in same manner as non-MERS foreclosures. At the time of
sale, if the property reverts, the Trustee’s Deed Upon Sale will follow a
different procedure. Since MERS acts as nominee for the true beneficiary, it is
important that the Trustee’s Deed Upon Sale be made in the name of the true
beneficiary and not MERS. Your title company or MERS officer can easily
determine the true beneficiary. Title companies have indicated that they will
insure subsequent title when these procedures are followed.”
There, you have it. Direct from the
MERS website. They admit that they name people to sign documents in the name of
MERS. Often, these are Title Company employees or others that have no knowledge
of the actual loan and whether it is in default or not.
Even worse, MERS admits that they
are not the true beneficiary of the loan. In fact, it is likely that MERS has
no knowledge of the true beneficiary of the loan for whom they are representing
in an “Agency” relationship. They admit to this when they say “Your title
company or MERS officer can easily determine the true beneficiary.
To further reinforce that MERS is
not the true beneficiary of the loan, one need only look at the following
Nevada Bankruptcy case, Hawkins, Case No. BK-S-07-13593-LBR (Bankr.Nev.
3/31/2009) (Bankr.Nev., 2009) – ”A “beneficiary” is defined as “one designated
to benefit from an appointment, disposition, or assignment . . . or to receive
something as a result of a legal arrangement or instrument.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY
165 (8th ed. 2004). But it is obvious from the MERS’ “Terms and Conditions”
that MERS is not a beneficiary as it has no rights whatsoever to any payments,
to any servicing rights, or to any of the properties secured by the loans. To
reverse an old adage, if it doesn’t walk like a duck, talk like a duck, and
quack like a duck, then it’s not a duck.”
If one accepts the above ruling,
which MERS does not agree with, MERS would not have the ability to foreclose on
a property for lack of being a true Beneficiary. This leads us back to the MERS
as “Nominee for the Beneficiary” and foreclosing as Agent for the Beneficiary.
There may be pitfalls with this argument.
When the initial Deed of Trust is
made out in the name of MERS as Nominee for the Beneficiary and the Note is
made to ABC Lender, there should be no issues with MERS acting as an Agent for
ABC Lender. Hawkins even recognizes this as fact.
The issue does arise when the Note
transfers possession. Though the Deed of Trust states “beneficiary and/or successors”,
the question can arise as to who the successor is, and whether Agency is any
longer in effect. MERS makes the argument that the successor Beneficiary is a
MERS member and therefore Agency is still effective. But does this argument
hold up under scrutiny?
The original Note Holder, AB Lender,
no longer holds the note, nor is entitled to payment.
Furthermore, the Note is endorsed in
blank, and no Assignment of the Deed has been made to any other entity, so who
is the true beneficiary and Note Holder?
It is now the contention of many
that the Agency/Nominee relationship has been completely terminated between
MERS and the original lender, so MERS has no authority to foreclose, or even to
Assign the Deed.
In Vargas, 396 B.R. 511, 517 (Bankr.
C.D. Cal. 2008) (”[I]f FHM has transferred the note, MERS is no longer an
authorized agent of the holder unless it has a separate agency contract with
the new undisclosed principal. MERS presents no evidence as to who owns the
note, or of any authorization to act on behalf of the present owner.”);
Saxon Mortgage Services, Inc. v.
Hillery, 2008 WL 5170180 (N.D. Cal. 2008) (unpublished opinion) (”[F]or there
to be a valid assignment, there must be more than just assignment of the deed
alone; the note must also be assigned. . . . MERS purportedly assigned both the
deed of trust and the promissory note. . . . However, there is no evidence of
record that establishes that MERS either held the promissory note or was given
the authority . . . to assign the note.”).
Separation of the Note and the Deed
In the case of MERS, the Note and
the Deed of Trust are held by separate entities. This can pose a unique problem
dependent upon the court. There are many court rulings based upon the
following:
“The Deed of Trust is a mere incident
of the debt it secures and an assignment of the debt carries with it the
security instrument. Therefore, a Deed Of Trust is inseparable from the debt
and always abides with the debt. It has no market or ascertainable value apart
from the obligation it secures.
A Deed of Trust has no assignable
quality independent of the debt, it may not be assigned or transferred apart
from the debt, and an attempt to assign the Deed Of Trust without a transfer of
the debt is without effect. “
This very “simple” statement poses
major issues. To easily understand, if the Deed of Trust and the Note are not
together with the same entity, then there can be no enforcement of the Note.
The Deed of Trust enforces the Note. It provides the capability for the lender
to foreclose on a property. If the Deed is separate from the Note, then
enforcement, i.e. foreclosure cannot occur.
MERS, actually the servicer, will
Assign the Deed to the Note Holder, almost always after the Notice of Default
has been filed. This will be an attempt to reunite the Deed and Note. But, as
noted previously, MERS would likely no longer have the ability to Assign the
Deed, since the Agency/Nominee status has been terminated. This could pose
major issues, especially if the original lender is no longer in business.
When viewing a MERS loan, the
examiner or attorney must pay careful attention to the following issues.
* The recorded history of the Deed
to determine not just the current Deed Holder, but also who the Note Holder is.
Are they one and the same, or are they separated, leading to an inability to
foreclose unless reunited.
* When the Notice of Default was
filed, were the Note and Deed separated, which would suggest that the Notice of
Default was potentially unlawful.
* Did MERS have the authority to Foreclose,
or even to make Assignments? There are a number of court cases suggesting
otherwise.
* Who is signing for MERS? Is it a
person with the Title Company, Trustee, or Servicer?
* Does the signer have legitimate
authority to sign? Is the person holding factual knowledge of the homeowner
being in default?
The entire subject of MERS is
fraught with controversy and questions. Certainly, at the very least, MERS
actions pose legal issues that are still being addressed each and every day. As
to where these actions will ultimate lead, it is anybody’s guess. With some
courts, the court sides with the lender, and others side with the homeowner.
However, there does appear to be a trend developing that suggests, at least in
Bankruptcy Courts, MERS is losing support.
Update:
I would like to point out that there
is significant case law developing in other states regarding MERS. However,
these are actions in other jurisdictions that do not necessarily apply in
California. As a matter of fact, these arguments are generally not being
accepted by most judges.
Currently, the state of California litigation is confused to say the least.
Most judges are accepting the the California Foreclosure Statutes, Civil Code
2924, is all encompassing with regards to foreclosures. But 2924 only covers
the procedural process. It does not take into account other relevant statutes
related to Assignments of Beneficiary and Substitution of Trustee. Until such
concerns are addressed and there is effective case law to cite, there will
continue to be issues.
Edit : Edit
Comments : 1 Comment »
Tags: stop foreclosure, wrongful foreclosure, mers, nominee
Categories : Foreclosure
1 07 2010
MERS
Basic Corporate Information
• MERS is incorporated within the State of Delaware.
• MERS was first incorporated in Delaware in 1999.
• The total number of shares of common stock authorized by MERS’ articles of
incorporation is 1,000.
• The total number of shares of MERS common stock actually issued is 1,000.
• MERS is a wholly owned subsidiary of MERSCorp, Inc.
• MERS’ principal place of business at 1595 Spring Hill Road, Suite 310,
Vienna, Virginia 22182
• MERS’ national data center is located in Plano, Texas.
• MERS’ serves as a “nominee” of mortgages and deeds of trust recorded in all
fifty states.
• Over 50 million loans have been registered on the MERS system.
• MERS’ federal tax identification number is “541927784”.
The Nature of MERS’ Business
• MERS does not take applications for, underwrite or negotiate mortgage loans.
• MERS does not make or originate mortgage loans to consumers.
• MERS does not extend any credit to consumers.
• MERS has no role in the origination or original funding of the mortgages or
deeds of trust for which it serves as “nominee”.
• MERS does not service mortgage loans.
• MERS does not sell mortgage loans.
• MERS is not an investor who acquires mortgage loans on the secondary market.
• MERS does not ever receive or process mortgage applications.
• MERS simply holds mortgage liens in a nominee capacity and through its
electronic registry, tracks changes in the ownership of mortgage loans and
servicing rights related thereto.
• MERS© System is not a vehicle for creating or transferring beneficial
interests in mortgage loans.
• MERS is not named as a beneficiary of the alleged promissory note.
Ownership of Promissory Notes or Mortgage Indebtedness
• MERS is never the owner of the promissory note for which it seeks
foreclosure.
• MERS has no legal or beneficial interest in the promissory note underlying
the security instrument for which it serves as “nominee”.
• MERS has no legal or beneficial interest in the loan instrument underlying
the security instrument for which it serves as “nominee”
• MERS has no legal or beneficial interest in the mortgage indebtedness
underlying the security instrument for which it serves as “nominee”.
• MERS has no interest at all in the promissory note evidencing the mortgage
indebtedness.
• MERS is not a party to the alleged mortgage indebtedness underlying the
security instrument for which it serves as “nominee”.
• MERS has no financial or other interest in whether or not a mortgage loan is
repaid.
• MERS is not the owner of the promissory note secured by the mortgage and has
no rights to the payments made by the debtor on such promissory note.
• MERS does not make or acquire promissory notes or debt instruments of any
nature and therefore cannot be said to be acquiring mortgage loans.
• MERS has no interest in the notes secured by mortgages or the mortgage
servicing rights related thereto.
• MERS does not acquire any interest (legal or beneficial) in the loan
instrument (i.e., the promissory note or other debt instrument).
• MERS has no rights whatsoever to any payments made on account of such
mortgage loans, to any servicing rights related to such mortgage loans, or to
any mortgaged properties securing such mortgage loans.
• The note owner appoints MERS to be its agent to only hold the mortgage lien
interest, not to hold any interest in the note.
• MERS does not hold any interest (legal or beneficial) in the promissory notes
that are secured by such mortgages or in any servicing rights associated with
the mortgage loan.
• The debtor on the note owes no obligation to MERS and does not pay MERS on
the note.
MERS’ Accounting of Mortgage Indebtedness / MERS Not At Risk
• MERS is not entitled to receive any of the payments associated with the
alleged mortgage indebtedness.
• MERS is not entitled to receive any of the interest revenue associated with
mortgage indebtedness for which it serves as “nominee”.
• Interest revenue related to the mortgage indebtedness for which MERS serves
as “nominee” is never reflected within MERS’ bookkeeping or accounting records
nor does such interest influence MERS’ earnings.
• Mortgage indebtedness for which MERS serves as the serves as “nominee” is not
reflected as an asset on MERS’ financial statements.
• Failure to collect the outstanding balance of a mortgage loan will not result
in an accounting loss by MERS.
• When a foreclosure is completed, MERS never actually retains or enjoys the
use of any of the proceeds from a sale of the foreclosed property, but rather
would remit such proceeds to the true party at interest.
• MERS is not actually at risk as to the payment or nonpayment of the mortgages
or deeds of trust for which it serves as “nominee”.
• MERS has no pecuniary interest in the promissory notes or the mortgage
indebtedness for which it serves as “nominee”.
• MERS is not personally aggrieved by any alleged default of a promissory note
for which it serves as “nominee”.
• There exists no real controversy between MERS and any mortgagor alleged to be
in default.
• MERS has never suffered any injury by arising out of any alleged default of a
promissory note for which it serves as “nominee”.
MERS’ Interest in the Mortgage Security Instrument
• MERS holds the mortgage lien as nominee for the owner of the promissory note.
• MERS, in a nominee capacity for lenders, merely acquires legal title to the
security instrument (i.e., the deed of trust or mortgage that secures the
loan).
• MERS simply holds legal title to mortgages and deeds of trust as a nominee
for the owner of the promissory note.
• MERS immobilizes the mortgage lien while transfers of the promissory notes
and servicing rights continue to occur.
• The investor continues to own and hold the promissory note, but under the
MERS® System, the servicing entity only holds contractual servicing rights and
MERS holds legal title to the mortgage as nominee for the benefit of the
investor (or owner and holder of the note) and not for itself.
• In effect, the mortgage lien becomes immobilized by MERS continuing to hold
the mortgage lien when the note is sold from one investor to another via an
endorsement and delivery of the note or the transfer of servicing rights from
one MERS member to another MERS member via a purchase and sale agreement which
is a non-recordable contract right.
• Legal title to the mortgage or deed of trust remains in MERS after such
transfers and is tracked by MERS in its electronic registry.
Beneficial Interest in the Mortgage Indebtedness
• MERS holds legal title to the mortgage for the benefit of the owner of the
note.
• The beneficial interest in the mortgage (or person or entity whose interest
is secured by the mortgage) runs to the owner and holder of the promissory note
and/or servicing rights thereunder.
• MERS has no interest at all in the promissory note evidencing the mortgage
loan.
• MERS does not acquire an interest in promissory notes or debt instruments of
any nature.
• The beneficial interest in the mortgage (or the person or entity whose
interest is secured by the mortgage) runs to the owner and holder of the
promissory note (NOT MERS).
MERS As Holder
• MERS is never the holder of a promissory note in the ordinary course of
business.
• MERS is not a custodian of promissory notes underlying the security instrument
for which it serves as “nominee”.
• MERS does not even maintain copies of promissory notes underlying the
security instrument for which it serves as “nominee”.
• Sometimes when an investor or servicer desires to foreclose, the servicer
obtains the promissory note from the custodian holding the note on behalf of
the mortgage investor and places that note in the hands of a servicer employee
who has been appointed as an officer (vice president and assistant secretary)
of MERS by corporate resolution.
• When a promissory note is placed in the hands of a servicer employee who is
also an MERS officer, MERS asserts that this transfer of custody into the hands
of this nominal officer (without any transfer of ownership or beneficial
interest) renders MERS the holder.
• No consideration or compensation is exchanged between the owner of the
promissory note and MERS in consideration of this transfer in custody.
• Even when the promissory note is physically placed in the hands of the
servicer’s employee who is a nominal MERS officer, MERS has no actual authority
to control the foreclosure or the legal actions undertaken in its name.
• MERS will never willingly reveal the identity of the owner of the promissory
note unless ordered to do so by the court.
• MERS will never willingly reveal the identity of the prior holders of the
promissory note unless ordered to do so by the court.
• Since the transfer in custody of the promissory note is not for
consideration, this transfer of custody is not reflected in any contemporaneous
accounting records.
• MERS is never a holder in due course when the transfer of custody occurs
after default.
• MERS is never the holder when the promissory note is shown to be lost or
stolen.
MERS’ Role in Mortgage Servicing
• MERS does not service mortgage loans.
• MERS is not the owner of the servicing rights relating to the mortgage loan
and MERS does not service loans.
• MERS does not collect mortgage payments.
• MERS does not hold escrows for taxes and insurance.
• MERS does not provide any servicing functions on mortgage loans, whatsoever.
• Those rights are typically held by the servicer of the loan, who may or may
not also be the holder of the note.
MERS’ Rights To Control the Foreclosure
• MERS must all times comply with the instructions of the holder of the
mortgage loan promissory notes.
• MERS only acts when directed to by its members and for the sole benefit of
the owners and holders of the promissory notes secured by the mortgage
instruments naming MERS as nominee owner.
• MERS’ members employ and pay the attorneys bringing foreclosure actions in
MERS’ name.
MERS’ Access To or Control Over Records or Documents
• MERS has never maintained archival copies of any mortgage application for
which it serves as “nominee”.
• In its regular course of business, MERS as a corporation does not maintain
physical possession or custody of promissory notes, deeds of trust or other
mortgage security instruments on behalf of its principals.
• MERS as a corporation has no archive or repository of the promissory notes
secured by deeds of trust or other mortgage security instruments for which it
serves as nominee.
• MERS as a corporation is not a custodian of the promissory notes secured by
deeds of trust or other mortgage security instruments for which it serves as
nominee.
• MERS as a corporation has no archive or repository of the deeds of trust or
other mortgage security instruments for which it serves as nominee.
• In its regular course of business, MERS as a corporation does not routinely
receive or archive copies of the promissory notes secured by the mortgage
security instruments for which it serves as nominee.
• In its regular course of business, MERS as a corporation does not routinely
receive or archive copies of the mortgage security instruments for which it
serves as nominee.
• Copies of the instruments attached to MERS’ petitions or complaints so not
come from MERS’ corporate files or archives.
• In its regular course of business, MERS as a corporation does not input the
promissory note or mortgage security instrument ownership registration data for
new mortgages for which it serves as nominee, but rather the registration
information for such mortgages are entered by the “member” mortgage lenders,
investors and/or servicers originating, purchasing, and/or selling such
mortgages or mortgage servicing rights.
• MERS does not maintain a central corporate archive of demands, notices,
claims, appointments, releases, assignments, or other files, documents and/or
communications relating to collections efforts undertaken by MERS officers
appointed by corporate resolution and acting under its authority.
Management and Supervision
• In preparing affidavits and certifications, officers of MERS, including Vice
Presidents and Assistant Secretaries, making representations under MERS’
authority and on MERS’ behalf, are not primarily relying upon books of account,
documents, records or files within MERS’ corporate supervision, custody or
control.
• Officers of MERS preparing affidavits and certifications, including Vice
Presidents and Assistant Secretaries, and otherwise making representations
under MERS’ authority and on MERS’ behalf, do not routinely furnish copies of
these affidavits or certifications to MERS for corporate retention or archival.
• Officers of MERS preparing affidavits and certifications, including Vice
Presidents and Assistant Secretaries, and otherwise making representations
under MERS’ authority and on MERS’ behalf are not working under the supervision
or direction of senior MERS officers or employees, but rather are supervised by
personnel employed by mortgage investors or mortgage servicers.
This should be a pretty good start
for those of you faced with a foreclosure in which MERS is falsely asserting
that it is the owner of the promissory note. Whether MERS is or was ever the
holder is a FACT QUESTION which can be determined only by ascertain the chain
of custody of the promissory note. When the promissory note is lost, missing or
stolen, MERS is NOT the holder.
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Tags: mers, nominee
Categories : Foreclosure
Another
win against Downey Savings
29 06 2010
645068 – US BANK VS. MARTIN, A –
Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment – DENIED. The Plaintiff as moving party
has established a prima facie showing that it is entitled to judgment for
possession against Defendant as a matter of law. However, Defendant’s
objections Nos. 1, 3-6, 8, 9, and 11 to the Johnson Declaration are overruled;
and objections Nos. 2, 7 and 10 are sustained, based on a lack personal
knowledge and/or hearsay, regarding the alleged transfer of the beneficial
interest to Plaintiff and as to the reasonable rental value.
Further, the Court finds the Defendant
has met his burden of establishing triable issues of fact to rebut the
presumption of validity of the sale and the issue of whether Plaintiff had the
right to proceed with foreclosure. Namely the evidence of a gap in title and
security interest from Downey Savings & Loan through the FDIC to Plaintiff
during the time of the foreclosure proceeding, as well as missing evidence to
show whether the Trustee, DSL Service Company, was authorized to act as
Plaintiff’s agent in continuing to pursue the sale once Downey Savings &
Loan had lost its security interest. (See Plaintiff’s undisputed fact # 7 and
Defendant’s objection thereto; and Declaration of Defense counsel, McCandless,
paragraphs 2, 8, 9, 10, 12 and 13). As such, triable issues of material fact
remain and the motion for summary judgment is denied.
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Tags: stop foreclosure, mortgage meltdown, Foreclosure, litigation, Fraud
Categories : 2924, Foreclosure
Where and when does the fraud begin
26 06 2010
This document is meant to take the
reader down a road they have
likely never traveled. This is a layman’s explanation of what has
been happening in this country that most have no idea or inkling
of. It is intended to give the reader an overview of a systemic
Fraud in this country that has reached epic proportions and
provoke action to eradicate this scourge that has descended upon
the people of America. This is intended as an overview of the process. Is
is one thing to have a grasp on what actually happened in our capitalistic
society it is quit another to convince a judge on these facts. The Judge
has his or her hands tied by the very system that allowed the
fraud in the first place.
Depending on what your situation is, you
may react with disbelief, fear, anger or outright disgust at what you
are about to learn. The following information is supported with
facts, exhibits, law and is not mere opinion.
Let’s start our journey of discovery
with the purchase of a home
and subsequent steps in the financial process through the life of
the “mortgage loan”. It all starts at the “closing” where we gather
with other people that are “involved” in the process to sign the
documents to purchase our new home. Do we really know what
goes on at the closing? Are we ever told who all the participants
are in that entire process? Are we truly given “full disclosure” of all
the various aspects of that entire transaction regarding what, for
most people, is the single largest purchase they will make in their
entire life?
Let’s start with the very first part
of the transaction. We have a
virtual stack of papers placed in front of us and we are instructed
where we are supposed to start signing or initialing on those
“closing documents”. There seems to be so many different
documents with enough legal language that we could read for
hours just to get through them the first time, much less begin to
fully understand them. Are we given a copy of all these documents
at least 7 days prior to the closing so we can read and study these
documents so we fully understand what it is that we are signing
and agreeing to? That has never happened for the average
consumer and purchaser of a property in the last 30 years or more
if it ever has at all. WHY? We have a stack of documents placed
before us at the “closing” that we haven’t ever seen before and are
instructed where to sign or initial to complete the transaction and
“get our new home”. We depend on the real estate agent, in most
cases, to bring the parties together at the closing after we have
supplied enough financial data and other requested information so
that the “lender” can determine whether we can qualify for our
“loan”. Obviously we have the “three day right of rescission” but do
we really stop to read all the documents after we have just
purchased our home and want to move in? Is the thought that
there might be something wrong with what we have just signed a
primary thought in our mind at that time? Did we trust the people
involved in the transaction? Are we naturally focusing on getting
moved into our new home and getting settled with our family?
Who are the players involved in the
transaction from the
perspective of the consumer purchasing a property and signing a
“Mortgage Note” and “Deed” or similar “Security Instrument” at the
closing? There is, of course, the seller, the real estate agent(s), title
insurance company, property appraiser who is supposed to
properly determine the value of the property, and the most
obvious one being who we believe to be “the lender” in the
transaction. We are led, by all involved, to believe that we are, in
fact, borrowing money from the “lender” which is then paid to the
current owner of the property as compensation for them
relinquishing any “claim of ownership” to the property and
transferring that “claim of ownership” to us as the purchaser. It all
seems so simple and clear on its face and then the transaction is
completed. After the “closing” everyone is all smiles and you
believe you have a new home and have to repay the “lender”, over a
period of years, the money which you believe you have “borrowed”.
IS THERE SOMETHING WE DON’T KNOW?
Everything appears to be relatively
simple and straightforward
but is that really the case? Could it be that there are other players
involved in this whole transaction that we know nothing about that
have a very substantial financial interest in what has just
occurred? Could it be that those players that we are totally
unaware of have somehow used us without our knowledge or
consent to secure a spectacular
financial gain for themselves with
absolutely no investment or risk to themselves whatsoever? Could
it be that there is a hidden aspect of this whole transaction that is
“standard operating procedure” in an industry where this hidden
“aspect of a transaction” occurs every single banking day across
this country and beyond? Could it be that this hidden “aspect of a
transaction” is a deliberate process to unjustly enrich certain
individuals and entities at the expense of the public as a whole?
Could it be that there was not full disclosure of the “true nature” of
the transaction as it actually occurred which is required for a
contract to be valid and enforceable?
THE DOCUMENTS INVOLVED
The two most important and valuable
documents that are signed
at a closing are the “Note” and the “Deed” in various forms. When
looking at the definition of a “Mortgage Note” it is obvious that it is
a “Security Instrument”. It is a promise to pay made by the maker
of that “Note”. When looking at a copy of a “Deed of Trust” such as
the attached Exhibit “A”, which is a template of a Tennessee “Deed
of Trust” form that is directly from the freddiemac.com website, it
is very obvious that this document is also a “Security Instrument”.
This is a template that is used for MOST government purchased
loans. You will note that the words “Security Instrument” are
mentioned no less than 90 times in that document. Is there ANY
doubt it is a “Security”? When at the closing, the “borrower” is led
to believe that the “Mortgage Note”
that he signs is a document that
binds him to make repayment of “money” that the “lender” is
loaning him to purchase the property he is acquiring. Is there
disclosure to the “borrower” to the effect that the “lender” is not
really loaning any of their money to the “borrower” and therefore
is taking no risk whatsoever in the transaction? Is it disclosed to
the “borrower” that according to FEDERAL LAW, banks are not
allowed to loan credit and are also not allowed to loan their own or
their depositor’s money? If that is the case, then how could this
transaction possibly take place? Where does the money come
from? Is there really any money to be loaned? The answer to this
last question is a resounding NO! Most people are not aware that
there has been no lawful money since the bankruptcy of the United
States in 1933.
Since House Joint Resolution 192
(HJR 192) (Public law 7310)
was passed in 1933 we have only had debt, because all property
and gold was seized by the government as collateral in the
bankruptcy of the United States. Most people today would think
they have money in their hand when they pull something out of
their pocket and look at the paper that is circulated by the banks
that they have been told is “money”. In reality they are looking at a
“Federal Reserve Note” which is stated right on the face of the piece
of paper we have come to know as “money”. It is NOT really
“money”, it is debt, a promise to pay made by the United States! If
you take a “Federal Reserve Note” showing a value of ten dollars
and buy something, you are then
making a purchase with a “Note”
(a promise to pay). There is absolutely no gold or silver backing
the Federal Reserve Notes that we refer to as “money” today.
When you sit down at the closing
table to complete the
transaction to purchase your home aren’t you tendering a “Note”
with your signature which would be considered money? That is
exactly what you are doing. A “Note” is money in our monetary
system today! You can deposit the “Federal Reserve Note” (a
promise to pay) with a denomination of $10 at the bank and they
will credit your account in that same amount. Why is it that when
you tender your “Note” at the closing that they don’t tell you that
your home is paid for right on the spot? The fact is that it IS PAID
FOR ON THE SPOT. Your signature on a “Note” makes that “Note”
money in the amount that is stated on the “Note”! Was this
disclosed to you at the “closing” in either verbal or written form?
Could this be the place where the other players come into the
transaction at or near the time of closing? What happens to the
“Note” (promise to pay) that you sign at the closing table? Do they
put it in their vault for safe keeping as evidence of a debt that you
owe them as you are led to believe? Do they return that note to you
if you pay off your mortgage in 5, 10 or 20 years? Do they disclose
to you that they do anything other than put it away for safe keeping
once it is in their possession?
WHAT ACTUALLY HAPPENS TO THE “NOTE”?
Unknown to almost everyone, there is
something VERY different
that happens with your “Mortgage Note” immediately after closing.
Your “Mortgage Note” is endorsed and
deposited in the bank as a
check and becomes “MONEY”! See attached (Exhibit “B” para 13)
The document that you just gave the bank with your signature on
it, that you believe is a promise to pay them for money loaned to
you, has just been converted to money in THEIR ACCOUNT. You
just gave the “lender” the exact dollar value of what they said they
just loaned you! Who is the REAL creditor in this “Closing
Transaction”? Who really loaned who anything of value or any
money? You actually just paid for your own home with your
promissory “Mortgage Note” that you gave the bank and the bank
gave you what in return? NOTHING!!! For any contract to be valid
there must be consideration given by both parties. But don’t they
tell you that you must now pay back the “Loan” that they have
made to you?
How can it be that you could just
write a “Note” and pay for your
home? This leads us back to the bankruptcy of the United States in
1933. When FDR and Congress took all the property and gold from
the people in 1933 they had to give something in return for that
confiscation of property. See attached (Exhibit “B” para 6) What
the people got in return was the promise that all of their needs
would be met by the government because the assets and the labor
of the people were collateral for the debt of the United States in the
bankruptcy. All of their debts would
be “discharged”. This was
done without the consent of the people of America and was an act
of Treason by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. The problem
comes in where they never told us how we could accomplish that
discharge and have what we were entitled to after the bankruptcy.
Why has this never been taught in the schools in this country?
Could it be that it would expose the biggest fraud in the history of
this entire country and in the world? If the public is purposely not
educated about certain things then certain individuals and entities
can take full financial advantage of virtually the entire population.
Isn’t this “selective education” more like “indoctrination”? Could
this be what has happened? In Fina Supply, Inc. v. Abilene Nat.
Bank, 726 S.W.2d 537, 1987 it says “Party having superior
knowledge who takes advantage of another’s ignorance of the law
to deceive him by studied concealment or misrepresentation can
be held responsible for that conduct.” Does this mean that if there
are people with superior knowledge as a party in this “Loan
Transaction” that take advantage of the “ignorance of the law”,
(through indoctrination) of the public to unjustly enrich
themselves, that they can be held responsible? Can they be held
responsible in only a civil manner or is there a more serious
accountability that falls into the category of criminal conduct?
It is well established law that
Fraud vitiates (makes void) any
contract that arises from it. Does this mean that this intentional
“lack of disclosure” of the true nature of the contract we have
entered into is Fraud and would make
the mortgage contract void
on its face? Could it be that the Fraud could actually be “studied
concealment or misrepresentation” that makes those involved in
the act responsible and accountable? What happens to the “Note”
once it is deposited in the bank and is converted to “money”? Are
there different kinds of money? There is money of exchange and
money of account. They are two very different things. See attached
(Exhibit “B” para 11), Affidavit of Expert Witness Walker Todd.
Walker Todd explains in his expert witness affidavit that the banks
actually do convert signatures into money. The definition of
“money” according to the Uniform Commercial Code: “Money” means a
medium of exchange authorized or adopted by a domestic or foreign
government and includes a monetary unit of account established by an
intergovernmental organization or by agreement between two or more nations.
Money can actually be in different forms other than what we are
accustomed to thinking. When you sign your name on a
promissory note it becomes money whether you are talking a
mortgage note or a credit card application! Did the bankers ever
“disclose” this to us? Were we ever taught anything about this in
the school system in this country? Could it be that this whole idea
of being able to convert our signature to money is a “studied
concealment” or “misrepresentation” where those involved
become responsible if we are harmed by their actions? What
happens if you have signed a “Mortgage Note” and already paid for
your home and they come at a later date and foreclose and take it
from you? Would you consider yourself to be harmed in any way?
We will bring this up again very shortly but we need to look at the
other document that is signed at the
“closing” that is of great
significance.
THE DEED OF TRUST
Why do we need a Deed of Trust? What
exactly IS a Deed of
Trust or other similar “Security Instrument”? It spells out all the
details of the contract that you are signing at the “closing”,
including such things as insurance requirements, preservation and
maintenance and all of the financial details of how, when, where
and why you are going to make payments to the “lender” for years
and years. Wait a minute!!!!! Make payments to the “lender”????
Why do you have to make payments to the “lender”??? Didn’t we
just establish the fact that your house was paid for by YOU, with
your “Mortgage Note” that is converted to money by THE BANK
DEPOSITING IT? Is there something wrong with this picture? We
have just paid for our “home” but now we are told we have to sign a
Deed of Trust or similar “Security Instrument” that binds us to pay
the “lender” back? Pay the “lender” back for what? Did they loan
us any money? Remember the part about banks not being able to
loan “their or their depositors money” under FEDERAL LAW? What
about: “In the federal courts, it is well established that a national bank
has no power to lend its credit to another by becoming surety, indorser,
or guarantor for him.” Farmers and Miners Bank v. Bluefield Nat ‘l
Bank, 11 F 2d 83, 271 U.S. 669; “A national bank has no power to lend
its credit to any person or corporation.” Bowen v. Needles Nat. Bank, 94
F 925, 36 CCA 553, certiorari denied
in 20 S.Ct 1024, 176 US 682, 44
LED 637?
What is happening here with this
“Deed of Trust” or similar
“Security Instrument” that says we have to pay all this money back
and if we don’t, they can foreclose and take our home? Why do we
have to have this kind of agreement when we have already paid for
our home through our “Mortgage Note” which was converted to
money BY THE BANK? Could this possibly be another example of
“studied concealment or misrepresentation” where those involved
could be held accountable for their conduct? What happens to this
Deed of Trust or similar “Security Instrument” after we sign it?
Where does it go? Does it go into the vault for safekeeping like we
might think? See attached Exhibit “C” for substantially more
information.
WHO ARE THE OTHER PLAYERS?
We have already found out that the
“Note” doesn’t go into the vault
for safe keeping but instead is deposited into an account at the
bank and becomes money. Where does the Note go then? This is
where things get VERY interesting because your “Mortgage Note” is
then used to access your Treasury Account (that you know nothing
about) and get credit in the amount of your “Mortgage Note” from
your “Prepaid Treasury Account”. If they process the “Note” and
get paid for it then they have received the funds from YOUR
account at Treasury to pay for YOUR
home correct? They then turn
around and bundle the “Note” and sell it to investors on Wall Street
and get paid again! Now let’s see what happens to the “Deed of
Trust” or similar “Security Instrument” after you have signed it.
You may be quite surprised to know that not only does it not go
into “safekeeping” it is immediately SOLD as an INVESTMENT
SECURITY to one of any number of investors tied to Wall Street.
There is a ready, and waiting, market for all of the “mortgage
paper” that is produced by the banks. What happens is the “Deed
of Trust” or other similar “Security Instrument” is bundled and
SOLD to a buyer and the BANK GETS PAID FOR THE VALUE OF THE
MORTGAGE AGAIN!! Haven’t the bankers just transferred any risk
on that mortgage to someone else and they have their money?
That is a pretty slick way of doing things! They ALWAYS get their
money right away and everyone else connected to the transaction
has the liabilities! Is there something wrong with THIS picture?
How can it possibly be that the bank has now been paid three times
in the amount of your “purported” mortgage? How is it that you
still have to pay years and years on this “purported” loan? Was any
of this disclosed to you before you signed the “Deed of Trust” or
other similar “Security Instrument”? Would you have signed ANY
of those documents including the “Mortgage Note” if you knew that
this is what was actually happening? Do you think there were any
“copies” of the “Mortgage Note” and “Deed of Trust” or other
similar “Security Instrument” made during this process? Are those
“copies” just for the records to be
put in a file somewhere or is
there another purpose for them?
CAN REPRODUCING A NOTE OR DEED OF
TRUST BE
ILLEGAL?
We have already established that the
“Mortgage Note” and the
“Deed of Trust” or other similar “Security Instrument” are
“Securities” by definition under the law. Securities are regulated
by the Securities and Exchange Commission which is an agency of
the Federal Government. There are very strict regulations about
what can and cannot be done with “Securities”. There are very
strict regulations that apply to the reproduction or “copying” of
“Securities”:
The Counterfeit Detection Act of
1992, Public Law 102-550, in Section 411 of Title 31 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, permits color illustr
ations of U.S. currency provided: .
The illustration is of a size less than three-fourths or more than one and
one-ch part of the item illustrated
half, in linear dimension, of ea
. The illustration is one-sided All
negatives, plates, positives, digitized storage medium, graphic files, magnetic
medium, optical storage devices, and any other thing used in the making of the
illustration that contain an image of the illustration or any part thereof are
destroyed and/or deleted or erased after their final use
Other
Obligations and Securities
. Photographic or other likenesses of other United States obligations and
securities and foreign currencies are permissible for any non-fraudulent
purpose, provided the items are reproduced in black and white and are less
than three-quarters or greater than
one-and-one-half times the size, in linear dimension, of any part of the
original item being reproduced. Negatives and plates used in making the
likenesses must be destroyed after their use for the purpose for which they
were made.
Title 18 USC § 472 Uttering
counterfeit obligations or securities
Whoever, with intent to defraud, passes, utters, publishes, or sells, or
attempts to pass, utter, publish, or sell, or with like intent brings into the
United States or keeps in possession or conceals any falsely made, forged,
counterfeited, or altered obligation or other security of the United States,
shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both.
Title 18 USC § 473 Dealing in
counterfeit obligations or securities Whoever buys, sells, exchanges,
transfers, receives, or delivers any false, forged, counterfeited, or altered
obligation or other security of the United States, with the intent that the
same be passed, published, or used as true and genuine, shall be fined under
this title or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both.
Title 18 USC § 474 Plates, stones,
or analog, digital, or electronic
images for counterfeiting
obligations or securities Whoever, with intent to defraud, makes, executes,
acquires, scans, captures, records, receives, transmits, reproduces, sells, or
has in such person’s control, custody, or ossession, an analog, digital, or
electronic image of any obligation or other security f the United States is
guilty of a class B felony.
p
o
Are these regulations always adhered
to by the “lender” when
they have possession of these “original” SECURITIES and make
reproductions of them before they are “sold to investors? How
much has been in the media in the past 2 years about people
demanding to see the “wet ink signature Note” when there is a
foreclosure action initiated against them? You hear it all the time.
Why is that such a big issue? Shouldn’t the “lender” be able to just
bring the “Note” and the “Deed of Trust” or similar “Security
Instrument” to the Court and show that they have the original
documents and are the “holder in due
course” and therefore have a
legal right to foreclose? To foreclose they must have BOTH the
“Mortgage Note” and “Deed of Trust” or other similar “Security
Instrument” ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS in their possession at the time
the foreclosure action is initiated. Furthermore, IS there a real
honest to goodness obligation to be collected on?
Why is it that there is such a
problem with “lost Mortgage Notes”
as is claimed by numerous lenders that are trying to foreclose
today? How could it be that there could be so many “lost”
documents all of a sudden? Could it be that the documents weren’t
really lost at all, but were actually turned into a source of revenue
that was never disclosed as being a part of the transaction? To
believe that so many “original” documents could be legitimately
“lost” in such a short period of time stretches the credibility of such
claims beyond belief. Could this be the reason that MERS (Mortage
Electronic Registration Systems) was formed in the 1990’s as a way
to supposedly “transfer ownership of a mortgage” without having
to have the “original documents” that would be required to be
presented to the various county recorders? Could it be they KNEW
THEY WOULDN’T HAVE THE ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS FOR
RECORDING and had to devise a system to get around that
requirement? When the foreclosure action is filed in the court the
attorney for the purported “party of interest”, usually the “lender”
who is foreclosing, files a “COPY” of the “Deed of Trust” or similar
“Investment Security” with the Complaint to begin foreclosure
proceedings. Is that “COPY” of the
“Security Instrument” within the
“regulations” of Federal Law under 18 U.S.C. § 474? Is it usually the
same size or very nearly the same size as the original document?
Yes it is and without question it is a COUNTERFEIT SECURITY! Who
was it that produced that COUNTERFEIT SECURITY? Who was
involved in taking that COUNTERFEIT SECURITY to the Court to file
the foreclosure action? Who is it that is now legally in possession
of that COUNTERFEIT SECURITY? Has everyone from the original
“lender” down to the Clerk of the Court where the foreclosure is
now being litigated been in possession or is currently in possession
of that COUNTERFEIT SECURITY? What about the Trustees who are
involved in the process of selling foreclosed properties in nonjudicial
states? What about the fact that there is no judicial
proceeding in those states where the documentation purported to
be legal and proper to bring a foreclosure action can be verified
without expensive litigation by the alleged “borrower”? All the
trustee has to do is send a letter to the alleged “borrower” stating
they are in default and can sell their property at public auction. It
is just ASSUMED that they have the “ORIGINAL” documents in their
possession as required by law. In reality, in almost every situation,
they do NOT!!! They are using a COUNTERFEIT SECURITY as the
basis to foreclose on a property that was paid for by the person
who signed the “Mortgage Note” at the closing table that was
converted to money by the bank. When it is demanded they
produce the actual “original signed documents” they almost always
refuse to do so and ask the Court to “take their word for it” that
they have
. They have,
instead, submitted a COUNTERFEIT SECURITY to the Court as their
“proof of claim” to attempt to unjustly enrich themselves through a
blatantly fraudulent foreclosure action. One often cited example of
this was the decision handed down by U. S. Federal District Court
Judge Christopher A. Boyko of Ohio, who on October 31, 2007
dismissed 14 foreclosure actions at one time with scathing
footnote comments about the actions of the Plaintiffs and their
attorneys. See (Exhibit “E”). Not long after that came the dismissal
of 26 foreclosure cases in Ohio by U.S. District Court Judge Thomas
M. Rose who referenced the Boyko ruling in his decision. See
(Exhibit “F”). How many other judges have not been so brave as to
stand on the principles of law as Judges Boyko and Rose did, but
need to start doing so TODAY?
BOTH of the original documents which are absolutely
required to be in their possession to begin foreclosure actions.
Almost every time the people that are being foreclosed on are able
to convince the Court (in judicial foreclosures) to demand that
those “original documents” be produced in Court by the Plaintiff,
the foreclosure action stops and it is obvious why that happens!
THEY DON’T HAVE THE “ORIGINAL” DOCUMENTS
Has any of this foreclosure activity
crossed state lines in
communications or other activities? Have there been at least two
predicate acts of Fraud by the parties involved? Have the people
involved used any type of electronic communication in this Fraud
such as telephone, faxing or email? It is obvious that those
questions have to be answered with a
resounding YES! If that is the
case, then the Fraud that has been discussed here falls under the
RICO statutes of Federal Law. Didn’t they eventually take down the
mob for Racketeering under RICO statutes years ago? Is it time to
take down the “NEW MOB” with RICO once again?
HOW RAMPANT IS THIS FRAUD?
How could this kind of situation
ever occur in this country?
Could it be that this whole entire process could be “studied
concealment or misrepresentation” where the parties involved are
responsible under the law for their conduct? Could it be that it is
no “accident” that so many “wet ink signature” Notes cannot be
produced to back up the foreclosure actions that are devastating
this country? Could it be that the overwhelming use of
COUNTERFEIT SECURITIES, as purported evidence of a debt in
foreclosure cases, is BY DESIGN and “studied concealment or
misrepresentation” so as to strip the people of this country of their
property and assets? Could it be that a VERY substantial number of
Banks, Mortgage Companies, Law Firms and Attorneys are guilty of
outright massive Fraud, not only against the people of this country,
but of massive Fraud on the Court as well because of this
COUNTERFEITING? How could one possibly come to any other
conclusion after learning the facts and understanding the law?
How many other people are implicated in this MASSIVE FRAUD
such as Trustees and Sheriffs that have sold literally millions of
homes after foreclosure proceedings
based on these COUNTERFEIT
SECURITIES submitted as evidence of a purported obligation? How
many judges know about this Fraud happening right in their own
courtrooms and never did anything? How many of them have
actually been PAID for making judgments on foreclosures?
Wouldn’t that be a felony or at the very least, misprision of felony,
to know what is going on and not act to stop it or make it known to
authorities in a position to investigate and stop it?
How is it that so many banks could
recover financially, so
rapidly, from the financial debacle of 200809,
with foreclosures
still running at record levels, and yet pay back taxpayer money that
was showered on them and do it so quickly? Could it be that when
they take back a property in foreclosure where they never risked
any money and actually were unjustly enriched in the previous
transaction, that it is easy to make huge sums by reselling that
property and then beginning the whole “Unconscionable” process
all over again with a new “borrower”? How is it that just three
years ago a loan was available to virtually almost anyone who
could “fog a mirror” with no documentation of income or ability to
repay a loan? Common sense makes you ask how “lenders” could
possibly take those kinds of risks. Could it be that the ability to
“repay a loan” was not an issue at all for the lenders because they
were going to get their profits immediately and risk absolutely
nothing at all? Could it be that, if anything, they stood to make
even more money if a person defaulted on the “alleged loan” in a
short period of time? They could literally
obtain the property for
nothing other than some legal fees and court filing costs through
foreclosure. They could then resell the property and reap
additional unjust profits once again! One does not need to have
been a finance major in college to figure out what has been
happening once you are enlightened to the FACTS.
WHAT ACTIONS HAVE PEOPLE TAKEN TO
AVOID LOSING
THEIR HOMES IN FORECLOSURE?
There have been a number of
different actions taken by people
to keep from losing their homes in foreclosure. The first and most
widely used tactic is to demand that the party bringing the
foreclosure action does, in fact, have the standing to bring the
action. The most important issue of standing is whether that party
has actual possession of the “original wet ink signature”
documents from the closing showing they are the “holder in due
course”. As previously mentioned, in almost ALL cases the Plaintiff
bringing the action refuses to make these documents available for
inspection by the Defendant in the foreclosure action so they can,
in fact, determine the authenticity of those documents that are
claimed to be “original” and purportedly giving the legal right to
foreclose. The fact that the Courts allow this to happen repeatedly
without demanding the Plaintiff bring the ”wet ink signature
documents” into the court for inspection by the Defendant, begs
the question of whether some of the judiciary are involved in this
Fraud. Where is due process under
the law for the Defendant when
the Plaintiff is NOT REQUIRED by the Court to meet that burden of
proof of standing, when demanded, to bring their action of
foreclosure?
One other option that has been used
more and more frequently
in recent months to deal with foreclosure actions is the issuing of a
“Bonded Promissory Note” or “Bill of Exchange” as payment to the
alleged “lender” as satisfaction of any amounts allegedly owed by
the Defendant. As was earlier described, a “Note” is money and as
the banks demonstrated after the closing, it can be deposited in the
bank and converted to money. SOME of the “Bonded Promissory
Notes” and “Bills of Exchange” are, in fact, negotiated and credit is
given to the accounts specified and all turns out well. See (Exhibit
“B” para 12) The problem that has occurred is that MANY of the
“lenders” say that the “Bonded Promissory Notes” and “Bills of
Exchange” are bogus documents and are worthless and fraudulent
and they refuse to give credit for the amount of the “Note” they
receive as payment of an alleged debt even though they are given
specific instructions on how to negotiate the “Note”. Isn’t it
interesting that THEY can take a “Note” that THEY print and put
before you to sign at the closing table and deposit it in the bank
and it is converted to money immediately, but the “Note” that YOU
issue is worthless and fraudulent? The only difference is WHO
PRINTS THE NOTE!!!! They are both signed by the same
“borrower” and it is that person’s credit that backs that “Note”.
The “lenders” don’t want the people
to know they can use your
“Prepaid Treasury Account”, just as the banks do without your
knowledge and consent. See (Exhibit “D”) for more information on
“Bills of Exchange”. The fact that SOME of the “Bonded Promissory
Notes” are negotiated and accounts are settled, proves beyond a
shadow of a doubt that they are legal SECURITIES just like the one
that the bank got from the “borrower” at the closing. Why then
aren’t ALL of the “Notes” processed and credit given to the accounts
and the foreclosure dismissed? Because by doing so you would be
lowering the National Debt and the bankers would make less
money!!!!
One very interesting thing that
happens with these “Bonded
Promissory Notes” or “Bills of Exchange” that are submitted as
payment, is that they are VERY RARELY RETURNED TO THE ISSUER
yet credit is not given to the intended account. They are not
returned, and the issuer is told they are “bogus, fraudulent and
worthless” but they are NOT RETURNED! Why would someone
keep something that is allegedly “bogus, fraudulent and
worthless”? Could it be that they are NOT REALLY “BOGUS,
FRAUDULENT AND WORTHLESS” and the “lender” has, in fact,
actually negotiated them for YET EVEN MORE UNJUST
ENRICHMENT? That is exactly what happens in many instances.
There could be no other explanation for the failure to return the
allegedly “worthless” documents WHICH ARE ACTUALLY
SECURITIES!!! Does the fact that they keep the “Note” that was
submitted and refuse to credit the
account that it was written to
satisfy, rise to the level of THEFT OF SECURITIES? This is just one
more example of the Fraud that is so obvious. This is but one more
example of the ruthless nature of those who would defraud the
people of this country.
CONCLUSIONS
One of the incredible aspects of
this whole debacle is the fact
that the very people who are participants in this Fraud are victims
as well. How many bank employees, judges, court clerks, lawyers,
process servers, Sheriffs and others have mortgages? How many of
the people who work in law offices, Courthouses, Sheriffs
Departments and other entities that are directly involved in this
Fraud have been fraudulently foreclosed on themselves? How
many people in our military, law enforcement, firefighting and
medical fields have lost their homes to this Fraud? How many of
your friends or neighbors have lost their homes to these
fraudulent foreclosures? Everyone who has a mortgage is a VICTIM
of this fraud but some of the most honest, trusting, hardest
working and most dedicated people in this country have been the
biggest victims. Who are those who have been the major
beneficiaries of this massive Fraud? Those with the “superior
knowledge” that enables them to take advantage of another’s
ignorance of the law to deceive them by “studied concealment or
misrepresentation”. This group of beneficiaries includes many on
Wall Street, large investors, and most notoriously, the bankers at
the top and the lawyers who work so hard to enhance their profits
and protect the Fraud by them from
being exposed. The time has
now come to make those having superior knowledge who HAVE
taken advantage of another’s ignorance of the law to deceive them
by studied concealment or misrepresentation to be held
responsible for that conduct. This isn’t just an idea. It is THE LAW
and it is time to enforce it starting with the criminal aspect of the
fraud! Under the doctrine of “Respondeat Superior” the people at
the top of these organizations are responsible for the actions of
those in their employ. That is where the investigations and arrests
need to start.
What is it going to take to put a
stop to the destruction of this
country and the lives of the people who live here? It is going to
take an uprising of the people of this country, as a whole, to finally
say that they have had enough. The information presented here is
but one part of the beginning of that uprising and the beginning of
the end of the Fraud upon the people of America. It is obvious, as
has been pointed out here, with supporting evidence, that Fraud is
rampant. You now know the story and can no longer say you are
totally uninformed about this subject. This is only an outline of
what needs to, and will, become common knowledge to the people
and law enforcement agencies in this country. If you are in law
enforcement it is YOUR DUTY to take what you have been given
here and move forward with your own intense investigation and
root out the Fraud and stop the theft of people’s homes. Your
failure to do so would make you an
accessory to the fraud through
your inaction now that you have been noticed of what is occurring.
If you are an attorney and receive
this information it would do
you well to take it to heart, and understand there is no place for
your participation in this Fraud and if you participate you will
likely become liable for substantial damages, if not more severe
consequences such as prison. If you are in the judiciary you would
do well to start following the letter of the law if you haven’t been,
and start making ALL of those in your Court do likewise, lest you
find yourself looking for employment as so many others are, if you
are not incarcerated as a result of your participation in the fraud.
If you are part of the law enforcement community that enforces
legal matters regarding foreclosure you would do well to make
sure that ALL things have been done legally and properly rather
than just taking the position “I am just doing my job” and turn a
blind eye to what you now know. If you are a banker, you must
know that you are now going to start being held accountable for
the destruction you have wreaked on this country. You have every
right to be, and should be, afraid…….very afraid. If you are one of
the ruthless foreclosure lawyers that has prayed on the numerous
people who have lost their homes, you need to be afraid also. Very
VERY afraid. When people learn the truth about what you have
done to them you can expect to see retaliation for what you have
done. People are going to want to see those who defrauded them
brought to justice. These are not threats by any stretch of the
imagination. These are very simple
observations and the study of
human behavior shows us that when people find out they have
been defrauded in such a grand manner as this, they tend to
become rather angry and search for those who perpetrated the
fraud upon them. The foreclosure lawyers and the bankers will be
standing clearly in their sights.
The question of WHERE DOES THE FRAUD
BEGIN has been
answered. It began right at the closing table and was perpetuated
all the way to the loss of property through foreclosure or the
incredible payment of 20 or 30 years of payments and interest by
the alleged “borrower” to those who would conspire to commit
Fraud, collusion and counterfeiting and practice “studied
concealment or misrepresentation” for their own unjust
enrichment.
The simplest of analogies: What
would happen if you were to
make a copy of a $100 Federal Reserve Note and go to Walmart and
attempt to use it to fraudulently acquire items that you wanted?
You more than likely would be arrested and charged with
counterfeiting under Title 18 USC § 474 and go to prison. What is
the difference, other than the magnitude of the fraud, between that
scenario and someone who makes a copy of a mortgage security,
and using it through foreclosure, attempts to fraudulently acquire
a property? Shouldn’t they be treated exactly the same under the
law? The answer is obvious and now it is starting to happen.
Title 18 USC § 474
Whoever, with intent to defraud,
makes, executes,
acquires, scans, captures, records, receives, transmits,
reproduces, sells, or has in such person’s control, custody,
or possession, an analog, digital, or electronic image of any
obligation or other security of the United States is guilty of
a class B felony.
“Fraud vitiates the most solemn
Contracts, documents and
even judgments” [U.S. vs. Throckmorton, 98 US 61, at pg.
65].
“It is not necessary for rescission
of a contract that the
party making the misrepresentation should have known
that it was false, but recovery is allowed even though
misrepresentation is innocently made, because it would be
unjust to allow one who made false representations, even
innocently, to retain the fruits of a bargain induced by
such representations.” [Whipp v. Iverson, 43 Wis 2d 166].
“Any false representation of
material facts made with
knowledge of falsity and with intent that it shall be acted
on by another in entering into contract, and which is so
acted upon, constitutes ‘fraud,’ and entitles party deceived
to avoid contract or recover damages.” Barnsdall Refining
Corn. v. Birnam Wood Oil Co. 92 F 26 817.
Exhibit B Walker Todd_Note Expert Witness
Exhibit D Mem of Law Bills of Exch
Exhibit C Mem of Law Bank Fraud_Foreclosures
Exhibit E Boyko_Foreclosure Case
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Tags: stop foreclosure, Foreclosure, Fraud, Predatory Lending, wrongful foreclosure
Categories : Foreclosure
Eviction and the issue of “Duly perfected”
foreclosure sale
24 06 2010
The Lender has already foreclosed on
your house at the time they bring a Unlawful
Detainer action against you. The Unlawful Detainer is just an eviction and not
a
foreclosure proceeding. If you want to stop the eviction, you have to claim
that they
have no right to evict because of a defective deed due to fact that they are
not true
lender, etc.
A qualified exception to the rule that title cannot be tried in an unlawful
detainer
proceeding [see Evid Code § 624; 5.45[1][c]] is contained in CCP § 1161a. By
extending
the summary eviction remedy beyond the conventional landlord-tenant
relationship to
include purchasers of the occupied property, the statute provides for a narrow
and
sharply focused examination of title. A purchaser of the property as described
in the
statute, who starts an unlawful detainer proceeding to evict an occupant in
possession,
must show that he or she acquired the property at a regularly conducted sale
and
thereafter “duly perfected” the title [CCP § 1161a; Vella v. Hudgins (1977) 20
C3d 251,
255, 142 CR 414, 572 P2d 28 ]. To this limited extent, as provided by the
statute, title
may be litigated in the unlawful detainer proceeding [ Cheney v. Trauzettel
(1937) 9 C2d
158, 159, 69 P2d 832 ].
CCP § 1161
1. In General; Words and Phrases
Term “duly” implies that all of those elements necessary to valid sale exist.
Kessler v.
Bridge (1958, Cal App Dep’t Super Ct) 161 Cal App 2d Supp 837, 327 P2d 241,
1958
Cal App LEXIS 1814.
Title that is “duly perfected” includes good record title, but is not limited
to good record
title. Kessler v. Bridge (1958, Cal App Dep’t Super Ct) 161 Cal App 2d Supp
837, 327
P2d 241, 1958 Cal App LEXIS 1814.
Title is “duly perfected” when all steps have been taken to make it perfect,
that is, to
convey to purchaser that which he has purchased, valid and good beyond all
reasonable doubt. Kessler v. Bridge (1958, Cal App Dep’t Super Ct) 161 Cal App
2d
Supp 837, 327 P2d 241, 1958 Cal App LEXIS 1814.
The purpose of CCP 1161a, providing for the removal of a person holding over
after a
notice to quit, is to make clear that one acquiring ownership of real property
through
foreclosure can evict by a summary procedure. The policy behind the statute is
to
provide a summary method of ouster where an occupant holds over possession
after
sale of the property. Gross v. Superior Court (1985, Cal App 1st Dist) 171 Cal
App 3d
265, 217 Cal Rptr 284, 1985 Cal App LEXIS 2408.
Go to Topic List 2. Construction, Interpretation, and Application
This section extended the former statute to permit persons not in the
relationship of
landlord and tenant to maintain an action in unlawful detainer. Hewitt v.
Justice’s Court
of Brooklyn Township (1933, Cal App) 131 Cal App 439, 21 P2d 641, 1933 Cal App
LEXIS 731.
Under this section, which was added to the code in 1929, an action in unlawful
detainer
by a purchaser at a trustee’s sale under a deed of trust is a proper proceeding
to
remove persons from the demised premises; and, the remedy being purely
statutory, if
the determination of the question of title to realty becomes necessary, the
legislature
had the right to provide for the trial of that issue in such a proceeding.
Nineteenth Realty
Co. v. Diggs (1933) 134 Cal App 278, 25 P 2d 522, 1933 Cal App LEXIS 54.
In an action to recover possession of premises under this section, the record
title owner
is sufficiently the owner, notwithstanding that he holds title as trustee for
some other
person, to maintain the suit. Kraemer v. Coward (1934, Cal App) 2 Cal App 2d 506,
38
P2d 458, 1934 Cal App LEXIS 1455.
This section does not create a new right and an exclusive remedy to enforce it,
but
merely creates a new remedy without excluding the old remedy of ejectment where
it
may apply. Mutual Bldg. & Loan Asso. v. Corum (1934, Cal App) 3 Cal App 2d
56, 38
P2d 793, 1934 Cal App LEXIS 1138.
This section does not apply to a quiet title action. Duckett v. Adolph Wexler
Bldg. &
Finance Corp. (1935) 2 Cal 2d 263, 40 P2d 506, 1935 Cal LEXIS 321.
This section, which extends the summary remedy of unlawful detainer to certain
cases
where property has been sold, has no application where the party in possession
raises
complete issues as to title and the right of possession in an action to quiet
title in a court
of equity; and under such circumstances the court has power not only to decide
the
issues presented but to carry its decrees into effect, and it may grant relief
by directing
the issuance of a writ of possession even though another and different remedy
might
have been available had an action to quiet the title not been brought. Furlott
v. Security-
First Nat’l Bank (1936, Cal App) 14 Cal App 2d 118, 57 P2d 952, 1936 Cal App
LEXIS
829.
This section is not unconstitutional. St. George v. Meyer (1937) 9 Cal 2d 161,
69 P2d
993, 1937 Cal LEXIS 373.
The unlawful detainer statutes, including CCP 1161 of this section are purely
statutory
remedies created by the legislature; hence, it is competent for the legislature
to
determine the scope of the issues that may be tried in such an action. Altman
v.
McCollum (1951, Cal App Dep’t Super Ct) 107 Cal App 2d Supp 847, 236 P2d 914,
1951 Cal App LEXIS 1990.
CCP 1161a, governing unlawful detainer proceedings, does not require a
defendant to
litigate, in a summary action within the statutory time constraints, a complex
fraud claim
involving activities not directly related to the technical regularity of a
trustee’s sale. Vella
v. Hudgins (1977) 20 Cal 3d 251, 142 Cal Rptr 414, 572 P2d 28, 1977 Cal LEXIS
192.
So long as a person’s possession of real property is achieved through the
landlordtenant
relationship, unlawful detainer may be properly used to regain possession in
the
event of the tenant’s default (CCP 1161, 1161a). Neither the relationship nor
the
remedy is eliminated by the mere fact that, in addition, there is an executory
contract of
sale between the parties under which the rent is credited against the purchase
price, in
whole or in part. Provouskivitz v. Snow (1977, Cal App 2d Dist) 74 Cal App 3d
554, 141
Cal Rptr 531, 1977 Cal App LEXIS 1943.
Go to Topic List 3. Service and Effect of Notice
Failure to serve the three-day notice upon the trustor of a trust deed, as well
as upon his
subtenant, does not vitiate a proceeding under this section, where the
subtenant only
and not the trustor contested the plaintiff’s right to possession as a
purchaser under the
trust deed, and such failure may be deemed waived by the subtenant. Mailhes v.
Investors Syndicate (1934) 220 Cal 735, 32 P2d 610, 1934 Cal LEXIS 595.
Service of a notice to quit on subtenants is not jurisdictional. San Jose
Pacific Bldg. &
Loan Asso. v. Corum (1934, Cal App) 2 Cal App 2d 276, 37 P2d 866, 1934 Cal App
LEXIS 1418.
Go to Topic List 4. Persons by and Against Whom Action May Be Brought
A purchaser or trustee at an execution sale or under a deed of trust may
maintain an
action under this section. Pacific States Sav. & Loan Co. v. Hoffman (1933,
Cal App)
134 Cal App 601, 25 P2d 1006, 1933 Cal App LEXIS 180.
In an action to recover possession of premises under this section, after sale under
a
deed of trust, a foreign corporation, which made the loan to defendants, was
not doing
business in this state in making said loan, where the notes and deed of trust
were
executed by defendants in favor of a party secured by defendants’ agent, and said
documents, with draft attached, were forwarded by defendants’ agent to an
eastern city
where they were approved and accepted by said foreign corporation, which had
theretofore been a stranger to the transaction, and which, upon such
acceptance,
honored the draft and sent the money to the state, payable to the order of
defendants.
Kraemer v. Coward (1934, Cal App) 2 Cal App 2d 506, 38 P2d 458, 1934 Cal App
LEXIS 1455.
An action under this section is not restricted to cases covered by 1161 where a
tenant
holds possession “in person, or by subtenant,” and may be brought against any
person
claiming the right of possession as a successor to or under one whose title is
terminated
on sale of the property through a deed of trust, pursuant to CC 2924. Stockton
Morris
Plan Co. v. Carpenter (1936, Cal App) 18 Cal App 2d 205, 63 P2d 859, 1936 Cal
App
LEXIS 191.
Where a vendor remaining in possession for a limited period as part of the
consideration
for the sale of realty failed to surrender possession within two years after
completion of
the sale as provided by the contract, unlawful detainer was the proper form of
action
and the court was authorized to award treble damages. Moss v. Williams (1948,
Cal
App) 84 Cal App 2d 830, 191 P2d 804, 1948 Cal App LEXIS 1278.
Mortgagee is not entitled to possession of property, either before or after
default, and he
has no right of entry except when he is vested with title to property on
foreclosure and
sale; hence, applying provisions of CC 2924 that transfer of interest in property
made
only as security for performance of another act is to be deemed mortgage,
plaintiff’s
right to maintain unlawful detainer action was not impaired by existence of
deed naming
defendant as grantee of property where such deed recited on its face that it
was for
security only and said defendant made no attempt to show there had been any
foreclosure of any security interest asserted by him which would have entitled
him to
possession. Byrne v. Baker (1963, Cal App 2d Dist) 221 Cal App 2d 1, 34 Cal
Rptr 178,
1963 Cal App LEXIS 2099.
Judgment creditor who purchases at his own execution sale and first records
sheriff’s
certificate of sale is protected by provisions of CC 1107, 1214, and his rights
are
therefore superior to those of holder of unrecorded deed; any interest
defendant
acquired by deed in property which is subject of action for unlawful detainer
would not
operate as bar to plaintiff’s right to maintain action where defendant’s deed
was not
recorded until after plaintiff’s title under execution sale had been perfected
and
marshal’s deed to property recorded. Byrne v. Baker (1963, Cal App 2d Dist) 221
Cal
App 2d 1, 34 Cal Rptr 178, 1963 Cal App LEXIS 2099.
A subsequent purchaser from a purchaser at a foreclosure sale was entitled to
bring
unlawful detainer actions pursuant to former CCP 1161a, subd. (3) (see now CCP
1161a(b)), against occupants of condominium units; the policy of the statute,
to provide
a summary method of ouster when an occupant holds over possession after sale of
the
property, would not be served by restricting availability of the action to the
original
purchaser at the foreclosure sale. Moreover, the requirements that the
subsequent
purchaser prove his acquisition of title from the foreclosure sale purchaser
does not
destroy the summary nature of the action. Evans v. Superior Court (1977, Cal
App 2d
Dist) 67 Cal App 3d 162, 136 Cal Rptr 596, 1977 Cal App LEXIS 1215.
Homeowners cannot be evicted, consistent with due process guarantees, without
being
permitted to raise affirmative defenses which if proved would maintain their
possession
and ownership. Accordingly, in an unlawful detainer action brought in municipal
court by
a corporation that had acquired title to homeowners’ property through a loan
transaction
after the homeowners had defaulted on a prior loan, the homeowners were
entitled to
defend the eviction action based on their claims of fraud and related causes
which they
asserted; therefore the action necessarily exceeded the jurisdiction of the
municipal
court and could not be tried there. Asuncion v. Superior Court of San Diego
County
(1980, Cal App 4th Dist) 108 Cal App 3d 141, 166 Cal Rptr 306, 1980 Cal App
LEXIS
2038.
The procedure in unlawful detainer is covered in CCP 1161 et seq. The remedy,
as
broadened by statutory changes, is available in three situations: (1) landlord
against
tenant for unlawfully holding over or for breach of the lease (the traditional
and most
important proceeding), (2) owner against servant, employee, agent, or licensee,
whose
relationship has terminated, and (3) purchaser at sale under execution,
foreclosure, or
power of sale in mortgage or deed of trust, against former owner and possessor.
The
statutory situations in which the remedy of unlawful detainer is available are
exclusive,
and the statutory procedure must be strictly followed. Berry v. Society of
Saint Pius X
(1999, Cal App 2d Dist) 69 Cal App 4th 354, 81 Cal Rptr 2d 574, 1999 Cal App
LEXIS
42, review or rehearing denied (1999, Cal) 1999 Cal LEXIS 2245.
Go to Topic List 5. Action Involving Issue of Title and Right to Possession
On a sale under a deed of trust, the purchaser has an immediate right to
possession;
and where a party exchanged property for an apartment house encumbered by a
deed
of trust, under which notice of default and election to sell was filed before
the exchange,
but the sale was conducted after the date of exchange, regardless of the right
of
possession prior to foreclosure the party who would have received the property
under
the exchange was not entitled to a judgment for possession of it after the
sale. Farris v.
Pacific States Auxiliary Corp. (1935) 4 Cal 2d 103, 48 P2d 11, 1935 Cal LEXIS
506.
Proof that he has duly perfected his title by a sale regularly conducted may be
made by
the plaintiff in a proceeding under subd 3. Mortgage Guarantee Co. v. Smith
(1935, Cal
App) 9 Cal App 2d 618, 50 P2d 835, 1935 Cal App LEXIS 1196.
Matters affecting the validity of a trust deed, primary obligation, or other
basic defects in
the title of a plaintiff who purchased at a sale under the trust deed may not
be raised by
the defendant in an unlawful detainer action. Cheney v. Trauzettel (1937) 9 Cal
2d 158,
69 P2d 832, 1937 Cal LEXIS 372.
Right to possession alone is involved in a summary proceeding under this
section, and
the broad question of title cannot be raised and litigated by a cross-complaint
or
affirmative defense. Cheney v. Trauzettel (1937) 9 Cal 2d 158, 69 P2d 832, 1937
Cal
LEXIS 372; Delpy v. Ono (1937, Cal App) 22 Cal App 2d 301, 70 P2d 960, 1937 Cal
App LEXIS 116.
The title of a purchaser at a sale under a trust deed is involved in an action
in unlawful
detainer brought by him to the limited extent that he must prove his
acquisition of title by
purchase at the sale, and the defendant may attack the sufficiency of the sale.
Cheney
v. Trauzettel (1937) 9 Cal 2d 158, 69 P2d 832, 1937 Cal LEXIS 372; Delpy v. Ono
(1937, Cal App) 22 Cal App 2d 301, 70 P2d 960, 1937 Cal App LEXIS 116; Seidell
v.
Anglo-California Trust Co. (1942, Cal App) 55 Cal App 2d 913, 132 P2d 12, 1942
Cal
App LEXIS 146.
The validity of a trust deed attacked as part of a conspiracy to evade the
Alien Land Law
was an issue relating to title which could not be raised in an unlawful
detainer action by
the purchaser at the trust deed sale. Delpy v. Ono (1937, Cal App) 22 Cal App
2d 301,
70 P2d 960, 1937 Cal App LEXIS 116.
Where after a sale of trust property the purchaser sued the trustor in a
justice’s court for
unlawful detainer and alleged ownership by virtue of purchase at a trustee’s
sale
regularly conducted, denial of such allegations put in issue title to the
property and a
judgment which restored possession to such purchaser was sufficient
adjudication of
title to render applicable the doctrine of res judicata. Bliss v.
Security-First Nat’l Bank
(1947, Cal App) 81 Cal App 2d 50, 183 P2d 312, 1947 Cal App LEXIS 1021.
While the broad question of title cannot be raised in an unlawful detainer
action, where
the action is brought under subd 4, the plaintiff must establish the sale of
the property
and the title perfected under such sale before recovery can be allowed.
Kelliher v.
Kelliher (1950, Cal App) 101 Cal App 2d 226, 225 P2d 554, 1950 Cal App LEXIS
1103.
Where purchaser at trustee’s sale proceeds in unlawful detainer under section,
he must
prove his acquisition of title by purchase at sale but is not required to prove
more with
respect to title. Abrahamer v. Parks (1956, Cal App 2d Dist) 141 Cal App 2d 82,
296 P2d
341, 1956 Cal App LEXIS 1814.
Under subd 3, title, to the extent required by this section, not only may, but
must, be
tried in actions if provisions of statute extending remedy beyond cases where
conventional relation of landlord and tenant exist are to be judicially
nullified. Kartheiser
v. Superior Court of Los Angeles County (1959, Cal App 2d Dist) 174 Cal App 2d
617,
345 P2d 135, 1959 Cal App LEXIS 1746.
Question of title is not triable in unlawful detainer action, but only question
of right of
possession. Patapoff v. Reliable Escrow Service Corp. (1962, Cal App 2d Dist)
201 Cal
App 2d 484, 19 Cal Rptr 886, 1962 Cal App LEXIS 2618.
Broad questions of title may not be litigated in unlawful detainer action;
though
purchaser at execution sale who proceeds in unlawful detainer action under
provisions
of this section must prove his acquisition of title by purchase at sale, it is
only to this
limited extent, as provided by statute, that title may be litigated in such
proceeding.
Byrne v. Baker (1963, Cal App 2d Dist) 221 Cal App 2d 1, 34 Cal Rptr 178, 1963
Cal
App LEXIS 2099.
A proceeding for unlawful detainer is summary in character, and ordinarily,
only claims
bearing directly on the right of immediate possession are cognizable. Also,
crosscomplaints
and affirmative defenses, legal or equitable, are permissible only insofar as
they would, if successful, preclude removal of the tenant from the premises. As
a
consequence, a judgment in unlawful detainer usually has very limited res
judicata
effect and will not prevent one who is dispossessed from bringing a subsequent
action
to resolve questions of title or to adjudicate other legal and equitable claims
between
the parties. However, to the limited extent provided by CCP 1161a, subd. 3,
providing
that a person who continues possession of real property may be removed where
the
property has been duly sold and the title of the sale has been duly perfected,
title may
be litigated in such a proceeding. Vella v. Hudgins (1977) 20 Cal 3d 251, 142
Cal Rptr
414, 572 P2d 28, 1977 Cal LEXIS 192.
In an unlawful detainer action against occupants of condominium units by a
subsequent
purchaser from a purchaser at a foreclosure sale, pursuant to CCP 1161a, subd.
(3),
questions of title unrelated to compliance with Civ. Code, 2924, concerning a
power of
sale contained in a trust deed, and issues which would have been unavailable to
the
occupants’ predecessor in interest, the maker of the trust deed, could not be
raised as
defenses, but would have to be litigated in a quiet title action. Since such
issues were
not cognizable in the unlawful detainer action, the judgment in that action would
not be
res judicata as to those issues, nor would the pendency of the unlawful
detainer action
be a bar to the simultaneous maintenance of a quiet title action. Evans v.
Superior Court
(1977, Cal App 2d Dist) 67 Cal App 3d 162, 136 Cal Rptr 596, 1977 Cal App LEXIS
1215.
In an action for unlawful detainer, the trial court erred in dismissing the
tenants’
affirmative defense that raised the issue of title, where the landlord had
previously filed
an action seeking declaratory relief and quiet title thereby putting the title
in issue.
Greenhut v. Wooden (1982, Cal App 2d Dist) 129 Cal App 3d 64, 180 Cal Rptr 786,
1982 Cal App LEXIS 1304.
Go to Topic List 6. Procedure
Adoption of specific findings on each detail of the proceeding for the sale of
the property
under a deed of trust were not necessary, where the court found that the
defendant,
who died pending the action, took a deed and possession with full knowledge
that his
grantors had no title, that he was in unlawful possession, and had no right
thereto at any
time. Stockton Morris Plan Co. v. Carpenter (1936, Cal App) 18 Cal App 2d 205,
63 P2d
859, 1936 Cal App LEXIS 191.
A judgment in unlawful detainer is res adjudicata in a subsequent suit to set
aside a
trustee’s deed on the ground of irregularity in the foreclosure proceedings,
where the
unlawful detainer action brought by the purchaser at the trust deed sale
involved the
same issues which were determined in favor of the regularity of the foreclosure
proceedings and the validity of the deed. Seidell v. Anglo-California Trust Co.
(1942, Cal
App) 55 Cal App 2d 913, 132 P2d 12, 1942 Cal App LEXIS 146.
It was improper to grant summary judgment in an unlawful detainer action
instituted
under this section, where a supporting affidavit related facts concerning a
transfer of title
not within the personal knowledge of the plaintiff concerning which he was
incompetent
to testify. Kelliher v. Kelliher (1950, Cal App) 101 Cal App 2d 226, 225 P2d
554, 1950
Cal App LEXIS 1103.
Municipal court has jurisdiction of an unlawful detainer action by the
purchaser at a
trustee’s sale against the trustor where the purchaser alleges the reasonable
rental
value of the premises to be $100 a month and seeks damages for less than two
months. Karrell v. First Thrift of Los Angeles (1951, Cal App) 104 Cal App 2d
536, 232
P2d 1, 1951 Cal App LEXIS 1656.
Facts that owner of realty was not in default under trust deed executed by her,
that the
note secured by such instrument had been fully paid, and that she had no notice
that
property was to be sold were available to her as a defense in a prior unlawful
detainer
action brought against her by a successor of the purchaser at a trust deed
sale, and
having failed to appear in that action she is precluded from asserting such
matters in a
subsequent suit instituted by her for a decree setting aside the deed from the
trustee to
the original purchaser, the sale to such purchaser and his successor, and the
judgment
in the unlawful detainer action. Freeze v. Salot (1954, Cal App) 122 Cal App 2d
561, 266
P2d 140, 1954 Cal App LEXIS 1085.
In summary proceeding of unlawful detainer, only the right to possession is
involved, but
when purchaser at trustee sale proceeds under this section, title may be
litigated to
limited extent that purchaser must prove his acquisition of title by purchase
at sale.
Cruce v. Stein (1956, Cal App 2d Dist) 146 Cal App 2d 688, 304 P2d 118, 1956
Cal App
LEXIS 1522.
Go to Topic List 7. –Pleadings
Conclusions of law and not facts are stated by a complaint alleging that the
plaintiff
became the owner in fee and entitled to the possession of the premises by
virtue of a
sale under CC 2924, where nothing more about the deed and sale is alleged.
American
Nat’l Bank v. Johnson (1932, Cal App Dep’t Super Ct) 124 Cal App 783, 124 Cal
App 4th
Supp 783, 11 P2d 916, 1932 Cal App LEXIS 6.
Although a complaint is insufficient as a statement of facts to bring the case
within CCP
1161 where the answer shows that the fact and validity of the sale under the
deed of
trust is made an issue by the defendants, they cannot on appeal question the
sufficiency of the complaint. Harris v. Seidell (1934, Cal App) 1 Cal App 2d
410, 36 P2d
1104, 1934 Cal App LEXIS 1289.
Taking of the necessary steps to a valid sale is sufficiently alleged by a
complaint under
subd 3 alleging that the plaintiff duly performed and caused to be performed
all the
conditions on his part required by CC 2924, and by other applicable laws and
provisions of the deed of trust. San Jose Pacific Bldg. & Loan Asso. v.
Corum (1934, Cal
App) 2 Cal App 2d 276, 37 P2d 866, 1934 Cal App LEXIS 1418.
A complaint based on subd 3, substantially in the language of the statute is
sufficient.
Quinn v. Mathiassen (1935) 4 Cal 2d 329, 49 P2d 284, 1935 Cal LEXIS 547.
An allegation of due compliance with CC 2924 is sufficient without alleging
compliance
in haec verba. Quinn v. Mathiassen (1935) 4 Cal 2d 329, 49 P2d 284, 1935 Cal
LEXIS
547.
In action by lessee for damages for eviction, where it was obvious from
allegations of
the complaint that the parties to the lease intended that the lessee should not
be
disturbed in its possession and use of the premises by the foreclosure of a
trust deed or
mortgage securing a bond issue, and the complaint alleged facts sufficient to
show the
assertion of a paramount title and right to possession by the purchaser on
foreclosure
under said deed of trust, the allegations of eviction were sufficient against
demurrer.
Stillwell Hotel Co. v. Anderson (1935) 4 Cal 2d 463, 50 P2d 441, 1935 Cal LEXIS
569.
In action in unlawful detainer for rent and possession of property held in part
by oral
agreement and in part under a written lease, there was no merit in the
contention that
the property covered by the written lease was not sufficiently described in the
complaint
where the description was sufficient to enable the appealing defendant to enter
on the
same and make avail thereof, and, at the trial, said defendant testified that
at all times
he understood what land was referred to both by the lease and the notice to pay
or
surrender possession; and, under the circumstances, the addition in the lease
of the
word “station,” after the name of a town near which the land was located, did
not make
the description doubtful or imperfect. Mendoza v. Castiglioni (1936, Cal App)
14 Cal App
2d 710, 58 P2d 939, 1936 Cal App LEXIS 951.
A cause of action under subd 3 is stated by a complaint alleging that the
property was
sold to the original plaintiff in accordance with the terms of a deed of trust
executed by
the former owners, and in accordance with CC 2924, where a supplemental
complaint
details the proceedings required by CC 2924, including notice of default.
Stockton
Morris Plan Co. v. Carpenter (1936, Cal App) 18 Cal App 2d 205, 63 P2d 859,
1936 Cal
App LEXIS 191.
An allegation of due compliance with CC 2924, as authorized by 459, is not
merely a
conclusion of law, but an allegation of fact which, if not denied, must be
deemed to have
been admitted. Bank of America Nat’l Trust & Sav. Asso. v. McLaughlin Land
&
Livestock Co. (1940, Cal App) 40 Cal App 2d 620, 105 P2d 607, 1940 Cal App
LEXIS
150, cert den (1941) 313 US 571, 61 S Ct 958, 85 L Ed 1529, 1941 US LEXIS 686.
An unlawful detainer proceeding is summary in character, and use of
cross-complaint in
such case would frustrate remedy and render it inadequate. Tide Water
Associated Oil
Co. v. Superior Court of Los Angeles County (1955) 43 Cal 2d 815, 279 P2d 35,
1955
Cal LEXIS 387.
It is proper to sustain, without leave to amend, demurrer to a complaint
seeking to set
aside a sale under a trust deed, based on alleged failure to comply with the
legal
requirements as to notice, where the trust deed, which was made a part of the
complaint, discloses a provision making the recital in the trustee’s deed
conclusive, and
where such deed, also made part of the complaint, recites that sale and notice
complied
with the law. Pierson v. Fischer (1955, Cal App 3d Dist) 131 Cal App 2d 208,
280 P2d
491, 1955 Cal App LEXIS 2037.
Complaint in unlawful detainer against defaulting trustors of trust deed states
facts
sufficient to constitute cause of action where it alleges that plaintiff, to
whom property
was sold by trustee, “is owner and entitled to possession of,” property, and
where there
is attached to complaint as exhibit a copy of trustee’s deed which recites that
default
was made in payment due on note and obligation secured by trust deed specified
them.
Abrahamer v. Parks (1956, Cal App 2d Dist) 141 Cal App 2d 82, 296 P2d 341, 1956
Cal
App LEXIS 1814.
In unlawful detainer action based on sale of property by defendants to
plaintiff and
agreement to vacate property by specified date “if it is possible,” it is not
necessary to
allege facts showing that it was possible for defendants to vacate premises by
date set,
and complaint alleging that real property involved had been duly sold to
plaintiff and title
under sale had been duly perfected, that plaintiff was entitled to possession,
that threeday
notice to quit premises had been personally served on defendants, and that they
held over and continued in possession after three-day notice had been served,
is
sufficient. Johnson v. Hapke (1960, Cal App 2d Dist) 183 Cal App 2d 255, 6 Cal
Rptr
603, 1960 Cal App LEXIS 1746.
Go to Topic List 8. –Defenses
Equitable defense of cancellation of escrow and withdrawal of defendant’s consent
to
transfer before made is properly raised in action by vendee for removal of
vendor from
premises and award of damages for withholding possession. Kessler v. Bridge
(1958,
Cal App Dep’t Super Ct) 161 Cal App 2d Supp 837, 327 P2d 241, 1958 Cal App LEXIS
1814.
Equitable defense of delivery of deed to plaintiff in violation of escrow is
properly raised
in action by vendee for removal of vendor from premises and award of damages
for
withholding possession. Kessler v. Bridge (1958, Cal App Dep’t Super Ct) 161
Cal App
2d Supp 837, 327 P2d 241, 1958 Cal App LEXIS 1814.
Equitable defense of failure of consideration is properly raised in action by
vendee for
removal of vendor from premises and award of damages for withholding
possession.
Kessler v. Bridge (1958, Cal App Dep’t Super Ct) 161 Cal App 2d Supp 837, 327
P2d
241, 1958 Cal App LEXIS 1814.
Equitable defense of fraud in inducement for relinquishment of property is
properly
raised in action by vendee for removal of vendor from premises and award of
damages
for withholding possession. Kessler v. Bridge (1958, Cal App Dep’t Super Ct)
161 Cal
App 2d Supp 837, 327 P2d 241, 1958 Cal App LEXIS 1814.
Equitable defense of rescission of transaction prior to suit is properly raised
in action by
vendee for removal of vendor from premises and award of damages for withholding
possession. Kessler v. Bridge (1958, Cal App Dep’t Super Ct) 161 Cal App 2d
Supp
837, 327 P2d 241, 1958 Cal App LEXIS 1814.
Equitable defense of unauthorized unilateral change in escrow instructions by
plaintiff to
effect delivery of deed is properly raised, in action by vendee for removal of
vendor from
premises and award of damages for withholding possession. Kessler v. Bridge
(1958,
Cal App Dep’t Super Ct) 161 Cal App 2d Supp 837, 327 P2d 241, 1958 Cal App
LEXIS
1814.
Summary proceeding in unlawful detainer is subject to control of equity in
proper case;
hence, if defendant in such action possessed valid equitable rights in property
that
would make it inequitable for plaintiff to proceed, defendant could, by seeking
injunction
in quiet title suit pending between parties, prevent plaintiff from proceeding.
Byrne v.
Baker (1963, Cal App 2d Dist) 221 Cal App 2d 1, 34 Cal Rptr 178, 1963 Cal App
LEXIS
2099.
In an unlawful detainer action under CCP 1161a, subd. (3), by a subsequent
purchaser
from a purchaser at a foreclosure sale, the subsequent purchaser may not claim
the
status of a bona fide purchaser without notice against one in open and
notorious
possession of the premises, so as to cut off defenses which would have been
available
to the occupant against the original purchaser. Evans v. Superior Court (1977,
Cal App
2d Dist) 67 Cal App 3d 162, 136 Cal Rptr 596, 1977 Cal App LEXIS 1215.
The statutory remedies for recovery of possession and of unpaid rent (CCP
1159-1179a; Civ. Code, 1951 et seq.) do not preclude a defense based on
municipal
rent control legislation enacted pursuant to the police power imposing rent
ceilings and
limiting the grounds for eviction for the purpose of enforcing those rent ceilings.
Thus,
CCP 1161 (unlawful detainer), does not preempt a defense based upon local rent
control legislation. Also, since 1161 does not preempt such a defense, it
follows that
CCP 1161a (removal of person holding over after notice to quit), does not preempt
such
a defense. Accordingly, 1161a did not preempt that portion of a local rent
stabilization
ordinance limiting the grounds for eviction. Passage of such legislation by a
local
government was an exercise of police power which substantively placed a
limitation on
an owner’s property rights. Gross v. Superior Court (1985, Cal App 1st Dist)
171 Cal
App 3d 265, 217 Cal Rptr 284, 1985 Cal App LEXIS 2408.
The county’s motion for summary judgment on plaintiff’s claim of excessive
force in
evicting her should be granted, absent evidence the county had a policy or
custom other
than to lawfully enforce writs of possession. Under CCP 1161a, a writ of
possession
may be effectuated without a warrant; peace officers may obtain possession
through
eviction under a valid writ of possession. Busch v. Torres (1995, CD Cal) 905 F
Supp
766, 1995 US Dist LEXIS 19998.
Go to Topic List 9. –Evidence
To prevail, in action by vendee against vendor for removal of vendor from
premises and
award of damages for withholding possession, plaintiff must prove affirmatively
that
property was “duly sold” and that “the title under the sale has been duly
perfected,” and,
contrary to rule applying to unlawful detainer where landlord-tenant
relationship is
involved, title thus becomes issue. Kessler v. Bridge (1958, Cal App Dep’t
Super Ct) 161
Cal App 2d Supp 837, 327 P2d 241, 1958 Cal App LEXIS 1814.
In unlawful detainer action, property involved is shown to have been duly sold
by
defendants to plaintiff, within meaning of CCP 1161, by evidence that at
request of
defendant husband, joined in by defendant wife as evidenced by her active
participation, both executed escrow constructions and grant deed conveying
title to
plaintiff, and that no material representations were made by plaintiff to defendants
concerning escrow instructions, reconveyance of second trust deed, grant deed
or
general agreement of parties. Johnson v. Hapke (1960, Cal App 2d Dist) 183 Cal
App
2d 255, 6 Cal Rptr 603, 1960 Cal App LEXIS 1746.
In unlawful detainer action based on sale of property to plaintiff and
agreement by
defendants to vacate premises by stated date “if it is possible,” such
agreement
conditioned defendants’ performance on event that was within their control,
placing
collateral duty on them to bring about happening of event of vacating premises
within
reasonable time, and placing burden on them to show any reason why it was
impossible
to vacate on or before agreed date, and where such burden was not fulfilled
finding that
it was possible for defendants to vacate on or before agreed date was
supported.
Johnson v. Hapke (1960, Cal App 2d Dist) 183 Cal App 2d 255, 6 Cal Rptr 603,
1960
Cal App LEXIS 1746.
In fixing plaintiff’s damages for unlawful detention of real property purchased
at a nonjudicial
sale under a trust deed, the trial court did not err in considering, in part,
the rents
received by defendant during the period of unlawful detention. The proper
measure of
damages in an unlawful detainer action is the detriment to the owner because of
the
detention of the property, and the detriment to plaintiff caused by defendant’s
unlawful
detention was measurable in the amount of a reasonable rental value that
plaintiff might
have realized had it not been denied possession. MCA, Inc. v. Universal
Diversified
Enterprises Corp. (1972, Cal App 2d Dist) 27 Cal App 3d 170, 103 Cal Rptr 522,
1972
Cal App LEXIS 838
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Categories : I Have a Plan
Self-Help Eviction: Don’t Even Think About It! Wrongful
Foreclosure=Wrongful eviction
24 06 2010
Posted on May 24, 2010 by Julie
Brook
Here’s an all-too-common scenario
these days: A property goes into foreclosure, the owner who buys the foreclosed
property wants to evict the current tenants, who are living there lawfully. The
owner decides to skirt the normal legal processes and engage in a self-help
eviction. This is a very risky and potentially illegal course of action!
Additionally when it is the lender evicting. If the foreclosure was Wrongful
that makes the eviction Wrongful and substantial damages may be available as
against the biggest banks in the world.
A self-help eviction can take many
forms: changing the lock on a unit, adding a lock without providing keys to the
tenant, cutting off utilities, and forcibly entering the rental unit and
refusing to permit the tenant to reenter. These practices have one thing in
common: to oust the tenant from possession without complying with the legal
requirements for eviction.
California law is clear that an
owner who has purchased property at a foreclosure sale cannot take possession
after the foreclosure unless the occupants’ consent has been freely obtained or
a judge has awarded possession following a court proceeding. See CCP
§§1159-1179a. Also note that the law governing evictions after foreclosure is
rapidly changing. In rent-controlled cities, the eviction of tenants of the
borrower following foreclosure is prohibited unless the tenant defaults.
Unlawful self-help by a landlord or
owner can result in
* Criminal penalties (see Pen C
§§418, 602.5), and
* Actual and punitive damages (see Jordan v Talbot (1961) 55 C2d 597, 12 CR
488).
OwnerSecrets.com warns that
self-help evictions can result in suits for the common law intentional torts of
conversion, trespass to chattels, and trespass.
Self-help is never a good choice for
evictions. Instead, evictions should always be handled through legal processes,
generally by an unlawful detainer action, i.e., a fast, summary procedure that
is generally limited to the issues of possession of the premises and associated
damages.
On how to legally conduct a lawful
eviction, see CEB’s online book Handling Unlawful Detainers and Landlord-Tenant
Practice book (evictions following foreclosure are governed by both state and
federal law and are covered in chap 8 of that book). On defending evictions,
see CEB’s Eviction Defense Manual.
Also, check out our June programs on
Representing Residential Landlords and Tenants in Unlawful Detainer Actions,
which will be available On Demand beginning June 29th.
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Comments : 2 Comments »
Tags: wrongful foreclosure, wrongful eviction
Categories : eviction
Challenges to Foreclosure Docs Reach a Fever Pitch
20 06 2010
American Banker | Wednesday, June
16, 2010
By Kate Berry
Correction: An earlier version of
this story misidentified the court
where Judge J. Michael Traynor presides. It is a Florida state court,
not a federal one. An editing error was to blame.
The backlash is intensifying against
banks and mortgage servicers that
try to foreclose on homes without all their ducks in a row.
Because the notes were often sold
and resold during the boom years, many
financial companies lost track of the documents. Now, legal officials
are accusing companies of forging the documents needed to reclaim the
properties.
On Monday, the Florida Attorney
General’s Office said it was
investigating the use of “bogus assignment” documents by Lender
Processing Services Inc. and its former parent, Fidelity National
Financial Inc. And last week a state judge in Florida ordered a hearing
to determine whether M&T Bank Corp. should be charged with fraud after
it changed the assignment of a mortgage note for one borrower three
separate times.
“Mortgage assignments are being
created out of whole cloth just for the
purposes of showing a transfer from one entity to another,” said James
Kowalski Jr., an attorney in Jacksonville, Fla., who represents the
borrower in the M&T case.
“Banks got away from very basic
banking rules because they securitized
millions of loans and moved them so quickly,” Kowalski said.
In many cases, Kowalski said, it has
become impossible to establish when
a mortgage was sold, and to whom, so the servicers are trying to
recreate the paperwork, right down to the stamps that financial
companies use to verify when a note has changed hands.
Some mortgage processors are “simply
ordering stamps from stamp makers,”
he said, and are “using those as proof of mortgage assignments after the
fact.”
Such alleged practices are now
generating ire from the bench.
In the foreclosure case filed by
M&T in February 2009, the bank
initially claimed it lost the underlying mortgage note, and then later
claimed the mortgage was owned by First National Bank of Nevada, which
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. shut down in 2008, before the
foreclosure had been started.
M&T then claimed Wells Fargo
& Co. owned the note, “contradicting all of
its previous claims,” according to Circuit Court Judge J. Michael
Traynor, who ordered the evidentiary hearing last week into whether M&T
perpetrated a fraud on the court.
“The court has been misled by the
plaintiff from the beginning,” Judge
Traynor said in his order, which also dismissed M&T’s foreclosure action
with prejudice.
The Marshall Watson law firm in Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., which represents
M&T in the case, declined to comment and the bank said it could not
comment.
In a notice on its website, the
Florida attorney general said it is
examining whether Docx, an Alpharetta, Ga., unit of Lender Processing
Services, forged documents so foreclosures could be processed more
quickly.
“These documents are used in court
cases as ‘real’ documents of
assignment and presented to the court as so, when it actually appears
that they are fabricated in order to meet the demands of the institution
that does not, in fact, have the necessary documentation to foreclose
according to law,” the notice said.
Docx is the largest lien release
processor in the United States working
on behalf of banks and mortgage lenders.
Peter T. Sadowski, an executive vice
president and general counsel at
Fidelity National in Fort Lauderdale, said that more than a year ago his
company began requiring that its clients provide all paperwork before
the company would process title claims.
Michelle Kersch, a spokeswoman for
Lender Processing Services, said the
reference on the Florida attorney general’s website to “bogus
assignments” referred to documents in which Docx used phrases like
“bogus assignee” as placeholders when attorneys did not provide specific
pieces of information.
“Unfortunately, on occasion,
incomplete documents were inadvertently
recorded before the missing information was obtained,” Kersch said. “LPS
regrets these errors and the use of this particular placeholder
phrasing.”
The company, which was spun off from
Fidelity National two years ago, is
cooperating with the attorney general and conducting its own internal
investigation.
Lender Processing Services disclosed
in its annual report in February
that federal prosecutors were reviewing the business processes of Docx.
The company said it was cooperating with that investigation.
“This is systemic,” said April Charney,
a senior staff attorney at
Jacksonville Area Legal Aid and a member of the Florida Supreme Court’s
foreclosure task force.
“Banks can’t show ownership for many
of these securitized loans,”
Charney continued. “I call them empty-sack trusts, because in the rush
to securitize, the originating lender failed to check the paper trial
and now they can’t collect.”
In Florida, Georgia, Maryland and
other states where the foreclosure
process must be handled through the courts, hundreds of borrowers have
challenged lenders’ rights to take their homes. Some judges have
invalidated mortgages, giving properties back to borrowers while lenders
appeal.
In February, the Florida state
Supreme Court set a new standard
stipulating that before foreclosing, a lender had to verify it had all
the proper documents. Lenders that cannot produce such papers can be
fined for perjury, the court said.
Kowalski said the bigger problem is
that mortgage servicers are working
“in a vacuum,” handing out foreclosure assignments to third-party firms
such as LPS and Fidelity.
“There’s no meeting to get everybody
together and make sure they have
their ducks in a row to comply with these very basic rules that banks
set up many years ago,” Kowalski said. “The disconnect occurs not just
between units within the banks, but among the servicers, their bank
clients and the lawyers.”
He said the banking industry is
“being misserved,” because mortgage
servicers and the lawyers they hire to represent them in foreclosure
proceedings are not prepared.
“We’re tarring banks that might
obviously do a decent job, and the banks
are complicit because they hired the servicers,” Kowalski said.
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Tags: Foreclosure,
mortgage meltdown, stop foreclosure, truth in lending
Categories : Foreclosure,
Predatory Lending,
stop foreclosure,
truth in lending
Tort damges for Wrongful Foreclosure
19 06 2010
It will be interesting to see how
the damages in tort cases develop with the holding in the Mabry case.The
case holds that tender is not necessary. Most likely contract damages would be
waived because the value of the property lost most likely is less than the
loan. Soooo…. whats left tort damage. In tort what is the value of a case where
the lender refuses to, and factually fails, to comply with 2923.5 and in good
faith negotiate with a homeowner. Bad Faith ??? punitive ??? Class action tort
??? intentional infliction of emotional distress??? what’s more stressful than
being evicted ??? I have one client who had to undress in front of a Marshall
so she could be put out of her home !!!
Munger v. Moore (1970) 11 Cal.App.3d
1 , 89 Cal.Rptr. 323
[Civ. No. 25853. Court of Appeals of California, First Appellate District,
Division One. September 3, 1970.]
MAYNARD MUNGER, JR., Plaintiff and
Respondent, v. ROBERT MOORE, Defendant and Appellant
(Opinion by Molinari, P. J., with Sims
and Elkington, JJ., concurring.) [11 Cal.App.3d 2]
COUNSEL
Bruce Oneto for Defendant and
Appellant.
Field, DeGoff & Rieman and
Sidney F. DeGoff for Plaintiff and Respondent. [11 Cal.App.3d 5]
OPINION
MOLINARI, P. J.
Defendant appeals from a judgment in
the sum of $30,000 plus accrued interest entered in favor of plaintiff after a
trial by the court upon a supplemental complaint for tortious damages for
wrongfully effecting a trustee’s sale of a parcel of real property. fn. 1
The facts, essentially undisputed,
are as follows: In 1959 defendant was the owner of a parcel of unimproved real
property situated in Santa Clara County. Defendant exchanged such property with
Mr. and Mrs. Atwill for a parcel in Los Angeles. The Atwills then sold the
Santa Clara property to Geld, Inc. Geld gave the Atwills and defendant notes
and executed a deed of trust as security. Defendant’s note was for $13,393.41,
while the Atwills’ was for $36,606.59. Thus, the total encumbrance against the
property was $50,000. Valley Title Company (hereinafter “Valley”), a
codefendant below, was named trustee.
Geld, Inc. then granted the subject
property to one Reichert. Reichert, who intended to build an apartment complex
on the parcel, executed a second deed of trust in favor of Home Foundation
Savings and Loan (hereafter “Home”) as security for a $283,000 building loan
from the latter. Shortly thereafter, the Atwills and defendant agreed with Home
to subordinate their deed of trust to that of Home. Accordingly, the
Atwill-defendant deed of trust, although first in time, became second in
priority.
Plaintiff then entered the picture
by lending Reichert some $15,000 for construction of the apartment building.
This loan was represented by a promissory note in the face value of $18,000 and
was secured by a third deed of trust on the subject parcel. Shortly thereafter,
plaintiff advanced an additional sum of $10,000 to Reichert to be used to
defray costs in the construction of said apartment building. In exchange for
this loan plaintiff received a grant deed to the property from Reichert, but
gave Reichert an option to repurchase the property for the sum of $25,000.
Subsequently, the payments on the
Atwill-defendant note became in default. Accordingly, defendant caused to be
published a notice of default and intent to sell. Apprised of such default
notice, plaintiff duly and timely tendered to Valley the sum of $4,000
representing the sum needed [11 Cal.App.3d 6] to cure the default. Contrary to
its advice to defendant and based upon his insistence, Valley refused
plaintiff’s tender. Defendant advised Valley that the note to Home, fn. 2 which
was secured by the first deed of trust, was also in default and therefore
plaintiff’s tender was an insufficient cure of the default. Accordingly, the
trustee’s sale was had on May 22, 1963, and defendant, along with the Atwills,
purchased the property at such sale for $57,920.94. Defendant held the property
for several years and in 1965 “exchanged” the property for a price of $475,000.
On appeal defendant makes two
contentions: (1) That the trial court used the wrong standard for measuring
damages; and (2) that in any event there was no evidentiary support for the
court’s finding as to damages. We observe here that no contention is made that
damages may not be assessed where a trustee illegally, fraudulently or
oppressively sells property under a power of sale contained in a deed of trust.
We note that in California the traditional method by which such a sale is
attacked is by a suit in equity to set aside the sale. (See Taliaferro v.
Crola, 152 Cal.App.2d 448, 449-450 [313 P.2d 136]; Crummer v. Whitehead, 230
Cal.App.2d 264, 266, 268 [40 Cal.Rptr. 826]; Central Nat. Bank v. Bell, 5
Cal.2d 324, 328 [54 P.2d 1107].)
The only California case which has
come to our attention involving an analogous situation is Murphy v. Wilson, 153
Cal.App.2d 132 [314 P.2d 507]. In that case the plaintiff and the defendant
entered into an agreement whereby the defendant loaned $50,000 to the plaintiff
who, pursuant to the agreement, placed a bill of sale to and chattel mortgage
on certain personalty and a deed to his home in escrow and agreed that if he
did not pay the sum of $75,000 to the defendant before a certain date the
conveyances would go to the defendant. The defendant subsequently took
possession of the property and sold it. The plaintiff then brought a
declaratory relief action to have the conveyances adjudged to be mortgages. The
trial court found that the agreement was in fact a mortgage loan and that since
the defendant had not foreclosed the chattel mortgage and had sold the home
outright he was liable to the plaintiff for damages. (At p. 134.) The reviewing
court, although it disagreed with the computation of the damages, upheld the
trial court’s determination that the plaintiff was entitled to damages. The
appellate court held that the defendant had converted the property to his own
use and that he was required to pay to the plaintiff the fair market value of
the property converted as of the date he took it into his possession together
with interest on the value of the property converted. (At pp. 135-136.) [11
Cal.App.3d 7]
In analyzing the holding in Murphy
we observe that it makes no distinction between the real and personal property
and holds that both had been converted. We note here that it is generally
acknowledged that conversion is a tort that may be committed only with relation
to personal property and not real property. (See Graner v. Hogsett, 84
Cal.App.2d 657, 662 [191 P.2d 497]; Reynolds v. Lerman, 138 Cal.App.2d 586, 591
[292 P.2d 559]; Vuich v. Smith, 140 Cal.App. 453, 455 [35 P.2d 365]; 48
Cal.Jur.2d, Trover and Conversion, § 8; but see Katz v. Enos, 68 Cal.App.2d
266, 269 [156 P.2d 461] where an action was brought for what was there stated
as an action “to recover damages for the alleged wrongful conversion by her of
42 acres of land” and damages were assessed.) fn. 3
Since conversion is a tort which
applies to personal property, we disagree with the Murphy case to the extent
that it purports to indicate that there may be a conversion of real property.
fn. 4 We are inclined, however, to believe that with respect to real property
the Murphy case was articulating a rule that has been applied in other
jurisdictions. [1] That rule is that a trustee or mortgagee may be liable to
the trustor or mortgagor for damages sustained where there has been an illegal,
fraudulent or wilfully oppressive sale of property under a power of sale
contained in a mortgage or deed of trust. (See Davenport v. Vaughn, 193 N.C.
646 [137 S.E. 714, 716]; Sandler v. Green, 287 Mass. 404 [192 N.E. 39, 40];
Edwards v. Smith (Mo.) 322 S.W.2d 770, 776; Dugan v. Manchester Federal Sav.
& Loan Assn., 92 N.H. 44 [23 A.2d 873, 876]; Harper v. Interstate Brewery
Co., 168 Ore. 26 [120 P.2d 757, 764]; Black v. Burd (Tex. Civ. App.) 255 S.W.2d
553, 556; Holman v. Ryon (D.C. App.) 56 F.2d 307, 310-311; Royall v. Yudelevit,
268 F.2d 577, 580 [106 App. D.C. 1].) fn. 5 This rule of liability is also
applicable in California, we believe, upon the basic principle of tort
liability declared in the Civil Code that every person is bound by law not to
injure the person or property of another or infringe on any of his rights.
(Civ. Code, § 1708; see Dillon v. Legg, 68 Cal.2d 728 [69 Cal.Rptr. 72, 441
P.2d 912, 29 A.L.R.3d 1316].)
Accordingly, since the subject tort
liability inures to the benefit of a [11 Cal.App.3d 8] mortgagor or trustor, it
also inures to the benefit of the successor in interest to the trust property.
[2] Pursuant to Civil Code section 2924c, such successor has the statutory
right to cure a default of the obligation secured by a deed of trust or
mortgage within the time therein prescribed. Plaintiff, therefore, as
Reichert’s successor in interest in the trust property was entitled to tender
the amount due to cure any default in the obligation to defendant and to
institute the instant action for damages for the illegal sale which resulted
from the failure to accept the timely tender.
Before proceeding to discuss the
proper measure of damages we observe that in the instant case plaintiff has
brought the instant action against both the trustee and the beneficiary of the
deed of trust. [3] Since the trustee acts as an agent for the beneficiary,
there can be no question that liability for damages may be imposed against the
beneficiary where, as here, the trustee in exercising the power of sale is
acting as the agent of the beneficiary. (See Davenport v. Vaughn, supra, 137
S.E. 714, 716; Edwards v. Smith, supra, 322 S.W.2d 770, 777.) In the instant
case the trial court made unchallenged findings that the trustee Valley was
acting as the agent for and pursuant to the instructions and directions of
defendant and the Atwills, the beneficiaries of the subject deed of trust.
Adverting to the measure of damages
we observe that defendant asserts that the proper measure in the instant case
is that which applies to damages occasioned by the wrongful loss of security.
fn. 6 In this context defendant argues that plaintiff has only suffered a loss
of security for the promissory notes executed and delivered by Reichert to
plaintiff. In essence defendant is contending that the deed absolute in form
from Reichert to Plaintiff was in fact a mortgage because it was intended as
security for a debt. (See Civ. Code, § 2924.) In considering this contention we
note initially that the trial court found that plaintiff purchased the subject
property from Reichert and that such purchase was evidenced by a grant deed
given for a valuable consideration.
The record is silent as to whether
the issue was tendered below that defendant had no standing to make the claim
that the subject deed was in fact a mortgage. [4] As we apprehend the rule
declaring that a deed absolute may be shown to have been intended as a
mortgage, it applies only to the parties to the transaction and those claiming
under them. (See Jackson v. Lodge, 36 Cal. 28, 40 [overruled on another ground
by Hughes v. Davis, 40 Cal. 117]; Ahern v. McCarthy, 107 Cal. 382, 383-384 [11
Cal.App.3d 9] [40 P. 482]; Taylor v. McClain, 60 Cal. 651, 652; Bell v.
Pleasant, 145 Cal. 410, 417-418 [78 P. 957]; 33 Cal.Jur.2d, Mortgages and Trust
Deeds, §§ 54, 56 and 57.) Accordingly, Reichert and those claiming under him
were entitled to assert that the deed was in fact a mortgage and that plaintiff
acquired merely a lien. They could not, however, make this assertion against an
innocent purchaser or encumbrancer from plaintiff since such purchaser or
encumbrancer was entitled, on the theory of estoppel, to claim that he was the
real owner of the property. (See Civ. Code, § 2925; Carpenter v. Lewis, 119
Cal. 18, 21 [50 P. 925]; Bell v. Pleasant, supra; Jackson v. Lodge, supra.) [5]
Here defendant was not claiming under any of the parties to the subject
transaction, but he was a stranger to it. Moreover, since defendant’s
encumbrance was prior in time and superior to Reichert’s interest, defendant’s
interest was unaffected by the transaction between Reichert and plaintiff.
Assuming arguendo that defendant has
standing to challenge the nature of the deed from Reichert to plaintiff, our
inquiry would be directed, in view of the court’s finding, to whether the
subject instrument was in fact a deed and to whether this finding is supported
by substantial evidence. We shall proceed to do so mindful that in making this
determination our power begins and ends in ascertaining whether there is any
substantial evidence, contradicted or uncontradicted, which will support the
finding. (Green Trees Enterprises, Inc. v. Palm Springs Alpine Estates, Inc.,
66 Cal.2d 782, 784 [59 Cal.Rptr. 141, 427 P.2d 805]; Brewer v. Simpson, 53
Cal.2d 567, 583 [2 Cal.Rptr. 609, 349 P.2d 289].)
[6] We first observe that Civil Code
section 1105 provides that “A fee simple title is presumed to be intended to
pass by a grant of real property, unless it appears from the grant that a
lesser estate was intended.” This statute establishes a rebutable presumption.
(Evid. Code, § 602.) Such presumption is one affecting the burden of proof
since it is a presumption which, in addition to the policy of facilitating the
trial of actions, is established to implement the public policy favoring the
stability of titles to property. (See Evid. Code, § 604, and Law Revision Com.
comment thereto.) [7] Accordingly, the effect of this presumption was to impose
upon defendant the burden of proving the nonexistence of the presumed fact,
i.e., that the grant deed conveyed a fee simple title to plaintiff. (See Evid.
Code, § 606.) fn. 7 This burden required that defendant [11 Cal.App.3d 10]
produce clear and convincing proof. (Beeler v. American Trust Co., 24 Cal.2d 1,
7 [147 P.2d 583]; Spataro v. Domenico, 96 Cal.App.2d 411, 413 [216 P.2d 32];
Cavanaugh v. High, 182 Cal.App.2d 714, 718 [6 Cal.Rptr. 525]; Borton v. Joslin,
supra, 88 Cal.App. 515, 520 [263 P. 1033]; see Legislative Committee comment to
Evid. Code, § 606.) [8] The question whether the evidence offered to change the
ostensible character of the instrument carries that much weight is for the
trial judge and not the court of review. (Beeler v. American Trust Co., supra;
Cavanaugh v. High, supra; Spataro v. Domenico, supra.) “On appeal the question
is governed by the substantial evidence rule like any other issue of fact.”
(Cavanaugh v. High, supra, at p. 718; Beeler v. American Trust Co., supra;
Borton v. Joslin, supra.)
[9] In the present case there is
conflicting evidence on the cardinal issue of the intent of the parties in
deeding the property. Although there was testimony that plaintiff took the
grant deed as better security for his loan, plaintiff testified that when he
made the second loan to Reichert, plaintiff, at Reichert’s instructions, paid
the proceeds of the loan directly to the contractor who was constructing the
apartment building; that Reichert gave plaintiff a grant deed which he
recorded; and that Reichert’s indebtedness to plaintiff was cancelled. Under
familiar appellate principles we must, where there is conflicting evidence,
accept as established that evidence which is favorable to plaintiff. That
evidence is sufficient to sustain the trial court’s finding upon the conclusion
that defendant has failed to overcome by clear and convincing evidence the
presumption which arises from the face of the deed. We note here that an
important consideration is whether plaintiff’s notes evidencing the indebtedness
from Reichert survived the conveyance. (See Borton v. Joslin, supra, 88 Cal.
App. 515, 518; Cavanaugh v. High, supra, 182 Cal.App.2d 714, 718; Spataro v.
Domenico, supra, 96 Cal.App.2d 411, 416.) Here, there was evidence adduced by
plaintiff’s testimony that there was no survival of the indebtedness upon the
execution and delivery of the grant deed. This circumstance is strongly
indicative of a grant rather than a mortgage. (Beeler v. American Trust Co.,
supra, 24 Cal.2d 1, 17-18; Cavanaugh v. High, supra, 182 Cal.App.2d 714, 718;
Workmon Constr. Co. v. Weirick, supra, 223 Cal.App.2d 487, 492.)
Having determined that plaintiff was
not a security holder but the owner of the subject property, we proceed to
inquire as to the proper standard for measuring plaintiff’s loss. In making
this inquiry we first note that the trial court found that defendant, in
instructing Valley to foreclose upon the subject real property, did so
intentionally, wrongfully and pursuant to an intentional design with regard to
plaintiff and that because of such conduct plaintiff lost all of his right,
title and interest in [11 Cal.App.3d 11] said property, damaging plaintiff in
the sum of $30,000. The trial court also found that the fair market value of
the subject property on the date of the foreclosure was $30,000 more than the
composite liens and encumbrances against it on that date.
Civil Code section 3333 provides
that the measure of damages for a wrong other than breach of contract will be
an amount sufficient to compensate the plaintiff for all detriment, foreseeable
or otherwise, proximately occasioned by the defendant’s wrong. [10] In applying
this measure it must be noted that the primary object of an award of damages in
a civil action, and the fundamental theory or principle on which it is based is
just compensation or indemnity for the loss or injury sustained by the
plaintiff and no more. (Estate of De Laveaga, 50 Cal.2d 480, 488 [326 P.2d
129].) Accordingly, where a mortgagee or trustee makes an unauthorized sale
under a power of sale he and his principal are liable to the mortgagor for the
value of the property at the time of the sale in excess of the mortgages and
liens against said property. fn. 8 (Murphy v. Wilson, supra, 153 Cal.App.2d
132, 135-136; Edwards v. Smith, supra, 322 S.W.2d 770, 777; Silver v. First
Nat. Bank, 108 N.H. 390 [236 A.2d 493, 495]; Black v. Burd, supra, 255 S.W.2d
553, 556-557.) In Murphy this rule was applied when the court awarded the
plaintiff his equity in the home sold by the defendant.
[11] We turn now to the question
whether there was substantial evidence to support the trial court’s finding of
damages. Defendant points out that the composite of the two prior encumbrances
amounted to $411,562.74, that is, $352,562.74 plus $9,000 interest on the Home
obligation and $50,000 on the defendant-Atwill obligation. This computation is
conceded to be correct. It is defendant’s contention, therefore, that such
aggregate sum exceeds the sum of $408,000 which plaintiff’s expert appraiser
testified was the fair market value of the property. Accordingly, he argues
that since this valuation was the highest appraisal and the fair market value
of the property was less than the sum of encumbrances, there was no evidence to
support the trial court’s finding that the fair market value at the time of the
sale exceeded by $30,000 the sum of the outstanding encumbrances. This
contention is without merit since it assumes that the trial court was bound to
accept the valuation placed upon the property by plaintiff’s appraiser. We
observe that although there was testimony by defendant’s [11 Cal.App.3d 12]
appraiser that on the date of the foreclosure sale the fair market value of the
property was $360,000 and that defendant himself testified that on said date
said value was $400,000, there was also evidence from which the trial court
could infer that on the subject date the fair market value of the property was
approximately $450,000.
When defendant testified that the
fair market value was $400,000 on the date of the foreclosure, he was
cross-examined as to whether this was not in fact his valuation on the date of
the recordation of the notice of completion of the apartment building, since in
his deposition defendant had so testified. Defendant responded that the value
on the date the notice of completion was recorded was approximately $350,000
and explained that in his deposition he understood the reference to the notice
of completion to mean the completion of the building so that it was ready for
occupancy. The trial court was not required to accept this explanation but was
justified in believing that from the time the notice of completion was recorded
and the foreclosure sale the value of the building had enhanced approximately
$50,000. Moreover, the trial court was justified in believing, in the light of
defendant’s experience, fn. 9 that when he testified that the value of the
property was $400,000 at the time the notice of completion was filed he
understood the meaning of “notice of completion.” Under the state of the record
the trial court would have been justified in concluding that plaintiff’s equity
was the difference between $450,000 and $411,562.74 or $38,437.26, and a
finding to that effect would have been supportable. The trial court, however,
found this equity to be the sum of $30,000 apparently on the basis that
defendant’s valuations were approximations. fn. 10 Under the circumstances
defendant cannot complain.
The judgment is affirmed.
Sims, J., and Elkington, J.,
concurred.
FN 1. Defendant also appealed from
that portion of the judgment in the sum of $4,500 entered in favor of defendant
and cross-complainant Valley Title Company, a corporation. We have been advised
that the matter has been settled with respect to Valley and that it is no
longer a party to the proceedings. Defendant has not argued or presented any
points with respect to any issues having to do with Valley. Accordingly, under
the circumstances, although no formal dismissal as to Valley has been filed, we
deem the appeal as to Valley abandoned. (See White v. Shultis, 177 Cal.App.2d
641, 648 [2 Cal.Rptr. 414].)
FN 2. Home, in the meantime, had
made an additional advance under the terms of the first deed of trust in the
sum of $69,562.74, making the total sum loaned by Home $352,562.74.
FN 3. Katz does not discuss whether
the tort of conversion may be committed with relation to real property but
apparently assumed that it was the subject of conversion since the issue was
not tendered.
FN 4. No petition for a hearing in
the Supreme Court was made in the Murphy case.
FN 5. We note that in 59 C.J.S.,
Mortgages, section 603, subdivision a, footnote 91 (1970 Cum. Annual Pocket
Part) the Murphy case is cited as authority for this principle which is there
stated thusly: “Where a sale by a mortgagee or by a trustee in a deed of trust
is illegal, fraudulent, or willfully oppressive, the mortgagor may maintain an
action for damages against the mortgagee or trustee, …” (At p. 1068.)
FN 6. We observe in passing that as
defendant properly asserts, the proper standard for wrongful deprivation of
security is the fair market value at the time of sale less outstanding
encumbrances and/or taxes due at such time, not in any event to exceed the
amount due plaintiff on his loans. (See Howe v. City Title Ins. Co., 255 Cal.App.2d
85, 87 [63 Cal.Rptr. 119]; Stephans v. Herman, 225 Cal.App.2d 671, 673-674 [37
Cal.Rptr. 746].)
FN 7. A deed absolute on its face
may be shown to be a mortgage by parol evidence of such contradictory intent.
(Workmon Constr. Co. v. Weirick, 223 Cal.App.2d 487, 490 [36 Cal.Rptr. 17];
Greene v. Colburn, 160 Cal.App.2d 355, 358 [325 P.2d 148]; Borton v. Joslin, 88
Cal.App. 515, 520 [263 P. 1033]; see Civ. Code, §§ 1105, 2925.)
FN 8. We observe here that this is
the same measure of damages for loss of security urged by defendant, except
that in such case the damages may not exceed the amount due on the note for
which the real property was security. (Stephans v. Herman, supra, 225
Cal.App.2d 671, 673-674; Howe v. City Title Ins. Co., supra, 255 Cal.App.2d 85,
87.) It would appear that even under this theory plaintiff could recover
damages up to $28,000, the amount of plaintiff’s notes, if that sum exceeded
the fair market value of the real property security, less prior liens and
taxes.
FN 9. The record discloses that
defendant had a law school degree.
FN 10. In testifying to the
$400,000 and $350,000 valuations, defendant stated “These are both rough
guesses.” Although defendant used the term “guesses” it is obvious from his
testimony generally that he equated the term “guess” to an opinion.
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Tags: damages, Foreclosure,
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Categories : Foreclosure
MABRY tip no injunction needed to stop foreclosure TERRY
MABRY et al., opinion 2923.5 Cilvil code
12 06 2010
(A) Upon the order of any court of competent jurisdiction.
For all you non lawyers out there this is key.
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Tags: stop foreclosure, civil code 2924, Foreclosure, 2923.5
Categories : 2924, Mortgage modification, mortgage meltdown,
pedatory lending,
stop foreclosure
12 06 2010
CA Foreclosure Law – Civil Code 2924
Civil Code 2924
2924.
(a) Every transfer of an interest in property, other than in trust, made only
as a security for the performance of another act, is to be deemed a mortgage,
except when in the case of personal property it is accompanied by actual change
of possession, in which case it is to be deemed a pledge. Where, by a mortgage
created after July 27, 1917, of any estate in real property, other than an
estate at will or for years, less than two, or in any transfer in trust made
after July 27, 1917, of a like estate to secure the performance of an
obligation, a power of sale is conferred upon the mortgagee, trustee, or any
other person, to be exercised after a breach of the obligation for which that
mortgage or transfer is a security, the power shall not be exercised except
where the mortgage or transfer is made pursuant to an order, judgment, or
decree of a court of record, or to secure the payment of bonds or other
evidences of indebtedness authorized or permitted to be issued by the
Commissioner of Corporations, or is made by a public utility subject to the
provisions of the Public Utilities Act, until all of the following apply:
(1) The trustee, mortgagee, or
beneficiary, or any of their authorized agents shall first file for record, in
the office of the recorder of each county wherein the mortgaged or trust
property or some part or parcel thereof is situated, a notice of default. That
notice of default shall include all of the following:
(A) A statement identifying the
mortgage or deed of trust by stating the name or names of the trustor or
trustors and giving the book and page, or instrument number, if applicable,
where the mortgage or deed of trust is recorded or a description of the
mortgaged or trust property.
(B) A statement that a breach of the
obligation for which the mortgage or transfer in trust is security has
occurred.
(C) A statement setting forth the
nature of each breach actually known to the beneficiary and of his or her
election to sell or cause to be sold the property to satisfy that obligation
and any other obligation secured by the deed of trust or mortgage that is in default.
(D) If the default is curable
pursuant to Section 2924c, the statement specified in paragraph (1) of
subdivision (b) of Section 2924c.
(2) Not less than three months shall
elapse from the filing of the notice of default.
(3) After the lapse of the three
months described in paragraph (2), the mortgagee, trustee or other person
authorized to take the sale shall give notice of sale, stating the time and
place thereof, in the manner and for a time not less than that set forth in
Section 2924f.
(b) In performing acts required by
this article, the trustee shall incur no liability for any good faith error
resulting from reliance on information provided in good faith by the
beneficiary regarding the nature and the amount of the default under the
secured obligation, deed of trust, or mortgage. In performing the acts required
by this article, a trustee shall not be subject to Title 1.6c (commencing with
Section 1788) of Part 4.
(c) A recital in the deed executed
pursuant to the power of sale of compliance with all requirements of law
regarding the mailing of copies of notices or the publication of a copy of the
notice of default or the personal delivery of the copy of the notice of default
or the posting of copies of the notice of sale or the publication of a copy
thereof shall constitute prima facie evidence of compliance with these
requirements and conclusive evidence thereof in favor of bona fide purchasers
and encumbrancers for value and without notice.
(d) All of the following shall
constitute privileged communications pursuant to Section 47:
(1) The mailing, publication, and
delivery of notices as required by this section.
(2) Performance of the procedures
set forth in this article.
(3) Performance of the functions and
procedures set forth in this article if those functions and procedures are
necessary to carry out the duties described in Sections 729.040, 729.050, and
729.080 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
(e) There is a rebuttable
presumption that the beneficiary actually knew of all unpaid loan payments on
the obligation owed to the beneficiary and secured by the deed of trust or
mortgage subject to the notice of default. However, the failure to include an
actually known default shall not invalidate the notice of sale and the
beneficiary shall not be precluded from asserting a claim to this omitted
default or defaults in a separate notice of default.
2924.3.
(a) Except as provided in subdivisions (b) and (c), a person who has undertaken
as an agent of a mortgagee, beneficiary, or owner of a promissory note secured
directly or collaterally by a mortgage or deed of trust on real property or an
estate for years therein, to make collections of payments from an obligor under
the note, shall mail the following notices, postage prepaid, to each mortgagee,
beneficiary or owner for whom the agent has agreed to make collections from the
obligor under the note:
(1) A copy of the notice of default
filed in the office of the county recorder pursuant to Section 2924 on account
of a breach of obligation under the promissory note on which the agent has
agreed to make collections of payments, within 15 days after recordation.
(2) Notice that a notice of default
has been recorded pursuant to Section 2924 on account of a breach of an
obligation secured by a mortgage or deed of trust against the same property or
estate for years therein having priority over the mortgage or deed of trust
securing the obligation described in paragraph (1), within 15 days after
recordation or within three business days after the agent receives the information,
whichever is later.
(3) Notice of the time and place
scheduled for the sale of the real property or estate for years therein
pursuant to Section 2924f under a power of sale in a mortgage or deed of trust
securing an obligation described in paragraphs (1) or (2), not less than 15
days before the scheduled date of the sale or not later than the next business
day after the agent receives the information, whichever is later.
(b) An agent who has undertaken to
make collections on behalf of mortgagees, beneficiaries or owners of promissory
notes secured by mortgages or deeds of trust on real property or an estate for
years therein shall not be required to comply with the provisions of
subdivision (a) with respect to a mortgagee, beneficiary or owner who is
entitled to receive notice pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 2924b or for
whom a request for notice has been recorded pursuant to subdivision (b) of
Section 2924b if the agent reasonably believes that the address of the
mortgagee, beneficiary, or owner described in Section 2924b is the current
business or residence address of that person.
(c) An agent who has undertaken to
make collections on behalf of mortgagees, beneficiaries or owners of promissory
notes secured by mortgages or deeds of trust on real property or an estate for
years therein shall not be required to comply with the provisions of paragraph
(1) or (2) of subdivision (a) if the agent knows or reasonably believes that
the default has already been cured by or on behalf of the obligor.
(d) Any failure to comply with the
provisions of this section shall not affect the validity of a sale in favor of
a bona fide purchaser or the rights of an encumbrancer for value and without
notice.
2924.5.
No clause in any deed of trust or mortgage on property containing four or fewer
residential units or on which four or fewer residential units are to be
constructed or in any obligation secured by any deed of trust or mortgage on
property containing four or fewer residential units or on which four or fewer
residential units are to be constructed that provides for the acceleration of
the due date of the obligation upon the sale, conveyance, alienation, lease,
succession, assignment or other transfer of the property subject to the deed of
trust or mortgage shall be valid unless the clause is set forth, in its
entirety in both the body of the deed of trust or mortgage and the promissory
note or other document evidencing the secured obligation. This section shall
apply to all such deeds of trust, mortgages, and obligations secured thereby
executed on or after July 1, 1972.
2924.6.
(a) An obligee may not accelerate the maturity date of the principal and
accrued interest on any loan secured by a mortgage or deed of trust on
residential real property solely by reason of any one or more of the following
transfers in the title to the real property:
(1) A transfer resulting from the
death of an obligor where the transfer is to the spouse who is also an obligor.
(2) A transfer by an obligor where
the spouse becomes a coowner of the property.
(3) A transfer resulting from a
decree of dissolution of the marriage or legal separation or from a property
settlement agreement incidental to such a decree which requires the obligor to
continue to make the loan payments by which a spouse who is an obligor becomes
the sole owner of the property.
(4) A transfer by an obligor or
obligors into an inter vivos trust in which the obligor or obligors are
beneficiaries.
(5) Such real property or any
portion thereof is made subject to a junior encumbrance or lien.
(b) Any waiver of the provisions of
this section by an obligor is void and unenforceable and is contrary to public
policy.
(c) For the purposes of this
section, “residential real property” means any real property which contains at
least one but not more than four housing units.
(d) This act applies only to loans
executed or refinanced on or after January 1, 1976.
2924.7.
(a) The provisions of any deed of trust or mortgage on real property which
authorize any beneficiary, trustee, mortgagee, or his or her agent or successor
in interest, to accelerate the maturity date of the principal and interest on
any loan secured thereby or to exercise any power of sale or other remedy
contained therein upon the failure of the trustor or mortgagor to pay, at the
times provided for under the terms of the deed of trust or mortgage, any taxes,
rents, assessments, or insurance premiums with respect to the property or the
loan, or any advances made by the beneficiary, mortgagee, or his or her agent
or successor in interest shall be enforceable whether or not impairment of the
security interest in the property has resulted from the failure of the trustor
or mortgagor to pay the taxes, rents, assessments, insurance premiums, or
advances.
(b) The provisions of any deed of
trust or mortgage on real property which authorize any beneficiary, trustee,
mortgagee, or his or her agent or successor in interest, to receive and control
the disbursement of the proceeds of any policy of fire, flood, or other hazard
insurance respecting the property shall be enforceable whether or not
impairment of the security interest in the property has resulted from the event
that caused the proceeds of the insurance policy to become payable.
2924a.
If, by the terms of any trust or deed of trust a power of sale is conferred
upon the trustee, the attorney for the trustee, or any duly authorized agent,
may conduct the sale and act in the sale as the auctioneer for the trustee.
2924b.
(a) Any person desiring a copy of any notice of default and of any notice of
sale under any deed of trust or mortgage with power of sale upon real property
or an estate for years therein, as to which deed of trust or mortgage the power
of sale cannot be exercised until these notices are given for the time and in
the manner provided in Section 2924 may, at any time subsequent to recordation
of the deed of trust or mortgage and prior to recordation of notice of default
thereunder, cause to be filed for record in the office of the recorder of any
county in which any part or parcel of the real property is situated, a duly
acknowledged request for a copy of the notice of default and of sale. This
request shall be signed and acknowledged by the person making the request,
specifying the name and address of the person to whom the notice is to be
mailed, shall identify the deed of trust or mortgage by stating the names of
the parties thereto, the date of recordation thereof, and the book and page
where the deed of trust or mortgage is recorded or the recorder’ s number, and
shall be in substantially the following form:
“In accordance with Section 2924b,
Civil Code, request is hereby made
that a copy of any notice of default and a copy of any notice of sale
under the deed of trust (or mortgage) recorded ______, ____, in
Book_____ page ____ records of ____ County, (or filed for record with
recorder’s serial number ____, _______County) California, executed
by ____ as trustor (or mortgagor) in which ________ is named as
beneficiary (or mortgagee) and ______________ as
trustee be mailed to
_________________ at ____________________________.
Name Address
NOTICE: A copy of any notice of
default and of
any notice of sale will be sent only to the address contained in this
recorded request. If your address changes, a new
request must be recorded.
Signature _________________”
Upon the filing for record of the
request, the recorder shall index in the general index of grantors the names of
the trustors (or mortgagor) recited therein and the names of persons requesting
copies.
(b) The mortgagee, trustee, or other
person authorized to record the notice of default or the notice of sale shall
do each of the following:
(1) Within 10 business days
following recordation of the notice of default, deposit or cause to be
deposited in the United States mail an envelope, sent by registered or
certified mail with postage prepaid, containing a copy of the notice with the
recording date shown thereon, addressed to each person whose name and address
are set forth in a duly recorded request therefor, directed to the address
designated in the request and to each trustor or mortgagor at his or her last
known address if different than the address specified in the deed of trust or
mortgage with power of sale.
(2) At least 20 days before the date
of sale, deposit or cause to be deposited in the United States mail an
envelope, sent by registered or certified mail with postage prepaid, containing
a copy of the notice of the time and place of sale, addressed to each person
whose name and address are set forth in a duly recorded request therefor,
directed to the address designated in the request and to each trustor or
mortgagor at his or her last known address if different than the address
specified in the deed of trust or mortgage with power of sale.
(3) As used in paragraphs (1) and
(2), the “last known address” of each trustor or mortgagor means the last
business or residence physical address actually known by the mortgagee,
beneficiary, trustee, or other person authorized to record the notice of
default. For the purposes of this subdivision, an address is “actually known”
if it is contained in the original deed of trust or mortgage, or in any
subsequent written notification of a change of physical address from the
trustor or mortgagor pursuant to the deed of trust or mortgage. For the
purposes of this subdivision, “physical address” does not include an e-mail or
any form of electronic address for a trustor or mortgagor. The beneficiary
shall inform the trustee of the trustor’s last address actually known by the beneficiary.
However, the trustee shall incur no liability for failing to send any notice to
the last address unless the trustee has actual knowledge of it.
(4) A “person authorized to record
the notice of default or the notice of sale” shall include an agent for the
mortgagee or beneficiary, an agent of the named trustee, any person designated
in an executed substitution of trustee, or an agent of that substituted
trustee.
(c) The mortgagee, trustee, or other
person authorized to record the notice of default or the notice of sale shall
do the following:
(1) Within one month following
recordation of the notice of default, deposit or cause to be deposited in the
United States mail an envelope, sent by registered or certified mail with
postage prepaid, containing a copy of the notice with the recording date shown
thereon, addressed to each person set forth in paragraph (2), provided that the
estate or interest of any person entitled to receive notice under this
subdivision is acquired by an instrument sufficient to impart constructive
notice of the estate or interest in the land or portion thereof which is
subject to the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed, and provided the
instrument is recorded in the office of the county recorder so as to impart
that constructive notice prior to the recording date of the notice of default
and provided the instrument as so recorded sets forth a mailing address which
the county recorder shall use, as instructed within the instrument, for the
return of the instrument after recording, and which address shall be the
address used for the purposes of mailing notices herein.
(2) The persons to whom notice shall
be mailed under this subdivision are:
(A) The successor in interest, as of
the recording date of the notice of default, of the estate or interest or any
portion thereof of the trustor or mortgagor of the deed of trust or mortgage
being foreclosed.
(B) The beneficiary or mortgagee of
any deed of trust or mortgage recorded subsequent to the deed of trust or
mortgage being foreclosed, or recorded prior to or concurrently with the deed
of trust or mortgage being foreclosed but subject to a recorded agreement or a
recorded statement of subordination to the deed of trust or mortgage being
foreclosed.
(C) The assignee of any interest of
the beneficiary or mortgagee described in subparagraph (B), as of the recording
date of the notice of default.
(D) The vendee of any contract of
sale, or the lessee of any lease, of the estate or interest being foreclosed
which is recorded subsequent to the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed,
or recorded prior to or concurrently with the deed of trust or mortgage being
foreclosed but subject to a recorded agreement or statement of subordination to
the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed.
(E) The successor in interest to the
vendee or lessee described in subparagraph (D), as of the recording date of the
notice of default.
(F) The office of the Controller,
Sacramento, California, where, as of the recording date of the notice of
default, a “Notice of Lien for Postponed Property Taxes” has been recorded
against the real property to which the notice of default applies.
(3) At least 20 days before the date
of sale, deposit or cause to be deposited in the United States mail an
envelope, sent by registered or certified mail with postage prepaid, containing
a copy of the notice of the time and place of sale addressed to each person to
whom a copy of the notice of default is to be mailed as provided in paragraphs
(1) and (2), and addressed to the office of any state taxing agency,
Sacramento, California, which has recorded, subsequent to the deed of trust or
mortgage being foreclosed, a notice of tax lien prior to the recording date of
the notice of default against the real property to which the notice of default
applies.
(4) Provide a copy of the notice of
sale to the Internal Revenue Service, in accordance with Section 7425 of the
Internal Revenue Code and any applicable federal regulation, if a “Notice of
Federal Tax Lien under Internal Revenue Laws” has been recorded, subsequent to
the deed of trust or mortgage being foreclosed, against the real property to
which the notice of sale applies. The failure to provide the Internal Revenue
Service with a copy of the notice of sale pursuant to this paragraph shall be
sufficient cause to rescind the trustee’s sale and invalidate the trustee’s
deed, at the option of either the successful bidder at the trustee’s sale or
the trustee, and in either case with the consent of the beneficiary. Any option
to rescind the trustee’s sale pursuant to this paragraph shall be exercised
prior to any transfer of the property by the successful bidder to a bona fide
purchaser for value. A recision of the trustee’ s sale pursuant to this
paragraph may be recorded in a notice of recision pursuant to Section 1058.5.
(5) The mailing of notices in the
manner set forth in paragraph (1) shall not impose upon any licensed attorney,
agent, or employee of any person entitled to receive notices as herein set
forth any duty to communicate the notice to the entitled person from the fact
that the mailing address used by the county recorder is the address of the
attorney, agent, or employee.
(d) Any deed of trust or mortgage
with power of sale hereafter executed upon real property or an estate for years
therein may contain a request that a copy of any notice of default and a copy
of any notice of sale thereunder shall be mailed to any person or party thereto
at the address of the person given therein, and a copy of any notice of default
and of any notice of sale shall be mailed to each of these at the same time and
in the same manner required as though a separate request therefor had been
filed by each of these persons as herein authorized. If any deed of trust or
mortgage with power of sale executed after September 19, 1939, except a deed of
trust or mortgage of any of the classes excepted from the provisions of Section
2924, does not contain a mailing address of the trustor or mortgagor therein
named, and if no request for special notice by the trustor or mortgagor in
substantially the form set forth in this section has subsequently been
recorded, a copy of the notice of default shall be published once a week for at
least four weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in which
the property is situated, the publication to commence within 10 business days
after the filing of the notice of default. In lieu of publication, a copy of
the notice of default may be delivered personally to the trustor or mortgagor
within the 10 business days or at any time before publication is completed, or
by posting the notice of default in a conspicuous place on the property and
mailing the notice to the last known address of the trustor or mortgagor.
(e) Any person required to mail a
copy of a notice of default or notice of sale to each trustor or mortgagor
pursuant to subdivision (b) or (c) by registered or certified mail shall
simultaneously cause to be deposited in the United States mail, with postage
prepaid and mailed by first-class mail, an envelope containing an additional
copy of the required notice addressed to each trustor or mortgagor at the same
address to which the notice is sent by registered or certified mail pursuant to
subdivision (b) or (c). The person shall execute and retain an affidavit
identifying the notice mailed, showing the name and residence or business
address of that person, that he or she is over the age of 18 years, the date of
deposit in the mail, the name and address of the trustor or mortgagor to whom
sent, and that the envelope was sealed and deposited in the mail with postage
fully prepaid. In the absence of fraud, the affidavit required by this
subdivision shall establish a conclusive presumption of mailing.
(f) No request for a copy of any
notice filed for record pursuant to this section, no statement or allegation in
the request, and no record thereof shall affect the title to real property or
be deemed notice to any person that any person requesting copies of notice has
or claims any right, title, or interest in, or lien or charge upon the property
described in the deed of trust or mortgage referred to therein.
(g) “Business day,” as used in this
section, has the meaning specified in Section 9.
2924c.
(a)
(1) Whenever all or a portion of the
principal sum of any obligation secured by deed of trust or mortgage on real
property or an estate for years therein hereafter executed has, prior to the
maturity date fixed in that obligation, become due or been declared due by
reason of default in payment of interest or of any installment of principal, or
by reason of failure of trustor or mortgagor to pay, in accordance with the
terms of that obligation or of the deed of trust or mortgage, taxes,
assessments, premiums for insurance, or advances made by beneficiary or
mortgagee in accordance with the terms of that obligation or of the deed of
trust or mortgage, the trustor or mortgagor or his or her successor in interest
in the mortgaged or trust property or any part thereof, or any beneficiary
under a subordinate deed of trust or any other person having a subordinate lien
or encumbrance of record thereon, at any time within the period specified in
subdivision (e), if the power of sale therein is to be exercised, or, otherwise
at any time prior to entry of the decree of foreclosure, may pay to the
beneficiary or the mortgagee or their successors in interest, respectively, the
entire amount due, at the time payment is tendered, with respect to (A) all
amounts of principal, interest, taxes, assessments, insurance premiums, or
advances actually known by the beneficiary to be, and that are, in default and
shown in the notice of default, under the terms of the deed of trust or
mortgage and the obligation secured thereby, (B) all amounts in default on
recurring obligations not shown in the notice of default, and (C) all
reasonable costs and expenses, subject to subdivision (c), which are actually
incurred in enforcing the terms of the obligation, deed of trust, or mortgage,
and trustee’s or attorney’s fees, subject to subdivision (d), other than the
portion of principal as would not then be due had no default occurred, and
thereby cure the default theretofore existing, and thereupon, all proceedings
theretofore had or instituted shall be dismissed or discontinued and the
obligation and deed of trust or mortgage shall be reinstated and shall be and
remain in force and effect, the same as if the acceleration had not occurred.
This section does not apply to bonds or other evidences of indebtedness
authorized or permitted to be issued by the Commissioner of Corporations or
made by a public utility subject to the Public Utilities Code. For the purposes
of this subdivision, the term “recurring obligation” means all amounts of
principal and interest on the loan, or rents, subject to the deed of trust or mortgage
in default due after the notice of default is recorded; all amounts of
principal and interest or rents advanced on senior liens or leaseholds which
are advanced after the recordation of the notice of default; and payments of
taxes, assessments, and hazard insurance advanced after recordation of the
notice of default. Where the beneficiary or mortgagee has made no advances on
defaults which would constitute recurring obligations, the beneficiary or
mortgagee may require the trustor or mortgagor to provide reliable written
evidence that the amounts have been paid prior to reinstatement.
(2) If the trustor, mortgagor, or
other person authorized to cure the default pursuant to this subdivision does
cure the default, the beneficiary or mortgagee or the agent for the beneficiary
or mortgagee shall, within 21 days following the reinstatement, execute and
deliver to the trustee a notice of rescission which rescinds the declaration of
default and demand for sale and advises the trustee of the date of reinstatement.
The trustee shall cause the notice of rescission to be recorded within 30 days
of receipt of the notice of rescission and of all allowable fees and costs.
No charge, except for the recording
fee, shall be made against the trustor or mortgagor for the execution and
recordation of the notice which rescinds the declaration of default and demand
for sale.
(b)
(1) The notice, of any default
described in this section, recorded pursuant to Section 2924, and mailed to any
person pursuant to Section 2924b, shall begin with the following statement,
printed or typed thereon:
“IMPORTANT NOTICE (14-point boldface
type if printed or in
capital letters if typed)
IF YOUR PROPERTY IS IN FORECLOSURE
BECAUSE YOU ARE BEHIND IN YOUR
PAYMENTS, IT MAY BE SOLD WITHOUT ANY COURT ACTION, (14-point boldface
type if printed or in capital letters if typed) and you may have the
legal right to bring your account in good standing by paying all of
your past due payments plus permitted costs and expenses within the
time permitted by law for reinstatement of your account, which is
normally five business days prior to the date set for the sale of
your property. No sale date may be set until three months from the
date this notice of default may be recorded (which date of
recordation appears on this notice).
This amount is ___________________
as of ______________________
(Date)
and will increase until your account becomes current.
While your property is in
foreclosure, you still must pay other
obligations (such as insurance and taxes) required by your note and
deed of trust or mortgage. If you fail to make future payments on
the loan, pay taxes on the property, provide insurance on the
property, or pay other obligations as required in the note and deed
of trust or mortgage, the beneficiary or mortgagee may insist that
you do so in order to reinstate your account in good standing. In
addition, the beneficiary or mortgagee may require as a condition to
reinstatement that you provide reliable written evidence that you
paid all senior liens, property taxes, and hazard insurance premiums.
Upon your written request, the
beneficiary or mortgagee will give
you a written itemization of the entire amount you must pay. You may
not have to pay the entire unpaid portion of your account, even
though full payment was demanded, but you must pay all amounts in
default at the time payment is made. However, you and your
beneficiary or mortgagee may mutually agree in writing prior to the
time the notice of sale is posted (which may not be earlier than the
end of the three-month period stated above) to, among other things,
(1) provide additional time in which to cure the default by transfer
of the property or otherwise; or (2) establish a schedule of payments
in order to cure your default; or both (1) and (2).
Following the expiration of the time period referred to in the
first paragraph of this notice, unless the obligation being
foreclosed upon or a separate written agreement between you and your
creditor permits a longer period, you have only the legal right to
stop the sale of your property by paying the entire amount demanded
by your creditor.
To find out the amount you must pay, or to arrange for payment to
stop the foreclosure, or if your property is in foreclosure for any
other reason, contact:
______________________________________
(Name of beneficiary or mortgagee)
______________________________________
(Mailing address)
______________________________________
(Telephone)
If you have any questions, you
should contact a lawyer or the
governmental agency which may have insured your loan.
Notwithstanding the fact that your property is in foreclosure, you
may offer your property for sale, provided the sale is concluded
prior to the conclusion of the foreclosure.
Remember, YOU MAY LOSE LEGAL RIGHTS IF YOU DO NOT TAKE PROMPT
ACTION. (14-point boldface type if printed or in capital letters if
typed)”
Unless otherwise specified, the
notice, if printed, shall appear in at least 12-point boldface type.
If the obligation secured by the
deed of trust or mortgage is a contract or agreement described in paragraph (1)
or (4) of subdivision (a) of Section 1632, the notice required herein shall be
in Spanish if the trustor requested a Spanish language translation of the
contract or agreement pursuant to Section 1632. If the obligation secured by
the deed of trust or mortgage is contained in a home improvement contract, as
defined in Sections 7151.2 and 7159 of the Business and Professions Code, which
is subject to Title 2 (commencing with Section 1801), the seller shall specify on
the contract whether or not the contract was principally negotiated in Spanish
and if the contract was principally negotiated in Spanish, the notice required
herein shall be in Spanish. No assignee of the contract or person authorized to
record the notice of default shall incur any obligation or liability for
failing to mail a notice in Spanish unless Spanish is specified in the contract
or the assignee or person has actual knowledge that the secured obligation was
principally negotiated in Spanish. Unless specified in writing to the contrary,
a copy of the notice required by subdivision (c) of Section 2924b shall be in
English.
(2) Any failure to comply with the
provisions of this subdivision shall not affect the validity of a sale in favor
of a bona fide purchaser or the rights of an encumbrancer for value and without
notice.
(c) Costs and expenses which may be
charged pursuant to Sections 2924 to 2924i, inclusive, shall be limited to the
costs incurred for recording, mailing, including certified and express mail
charges, publishing, and posting notices required by Sections 2924 to 2924i,
inclusive, postponement pursuant to Section 2924g not to exceed fifty dollars
($50) per postponement and a fee for a trustee’s sale guarantee or, in the
event of judicial foreclosure, a litigation guarantee. For purposes of this
subdivision, a trustee or beneficiary may purchase a trustee’s sale guarantee
at a rate meeting the standards contained in Sections 12401.1 and 12401.3 of
the Insurance Code.
(d) Trustee’s or attorney’s fees
which may be charged pursuant to subdivision (a), or until the notice of sale
is deposited in the mail to the trustor as provided in Section 2924b, if the
sale is by power of sale contained in the deed of trust or mortgage, or,
otherwise at any time prior to the decree of foreclosure, are hereby authorized
to be in a base amount that does not exceed three hundred dollars ($300) if the
unpaid principal sum secured is one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000)
or less, or two hundred fifty dollars ($250) if the unpaid principal sum
secured exceeds one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000), plus one-half of
1 percent of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding fifty thousand dollars
($50,000) up to and including one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000),
plus one-quarter of 1 percent of any portion of the unpaid principal sum
secured exceeding one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) up to and
including five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000), plus one-eighth of 1
percent of any portion of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding five
hundred thousand dollars ($500,000). Any charge for trustee’s or attorney’s
fees authorized by this subdivision shall be conclusively presumed to be lawful
and valid where the charge does not exceed the amounts authorized herein. For
purposes of this subdivision, the unpaid principal sum secured shall be
determined as of the date the notice of default is recorded.
(e) Reinstatement of a monetary
default under the terms of an obligation secured by a deed of trust, or
mortgage may be made at any time within the period commencing with the date of
recordation of the notice of default until five business days prior to the date
of sale set forth in the initial recorded notice of sale.
In the event the sale does not take
place on the date set forth in the initial recorded notice of sale or a
subsequent recorded notice of sale is required to be given, the right of
reinstatement shall be revived as of the date of recordation of the subsequent
notice of sale, and shall continue from that date until five business days
prior to the date of sale set forth in the subsequently recorded notice of
sale.
In the event the date of sale is
postponed on the date of sale set forth in either an initial or any subsequent
notice of sale, or is postponed on the date declared for sale at an immediately
preceding postponement of sale, and, the postponement is for a period which
exceeds five business days from the date set forth in the notice of sale, or
declared at the time of postponement, then the right of reinstatement is
revived as of the date of postponement and shall continue from that date until
five business days prior to the date of sale declared at the time of the
postponement.
Nothing contained herein shall give
rise to a right of reinstatement during the period of five business days prior
to the date of sale, whether the date of sale is noticed in a notice of sale or
declared at a postponement of sale.
Pursuant to the terms of this
subdivision, no beneficiary, trustee, mortgagee, or their agents or successors
shall be liable in any manner to a trustor, mortgagor, their agents or
successors or any beneficiary under a subordinate deed of trust or mortgage or
any other person having a subordinate lien or encumbrance of record thereon for
the failure to allow a reinstatement of the obligation secured by a deed of
trust or mortgage during the period of five business days prior to the sale of
the security property, and no such right of reinstatement during this period is
created by this section. Any right of reinstatement created by this section is
terminated five business days prior to the date of sale set forth in the
initial date of sale, and is revived only as prescribed herein and only as of
the date set forth herein.
As used in this subdivision, the
term “business day” has the same meaning as specified in Section 9.
2924d.
(a) Commencing with the date that the notice of sale is deposited in the mail,
as provided in Section 2924b, and until the property is sold pursuant to the power
of sale contained in the mortgage or deed of trust, a beneficiary, trustee,
mortgagee, or his or her agent or successor in interest, may demand and receive
from a trustor, mortgagor, or his or her agent or successor in interest, or any
beneficiary under a subordinate deed of trust, or any other person having a
subordinate lien or encumbrance of record those reasonable costs and expenses,
to the extent allowed by subdivision (c) of Section 2924c, which are actually
incurred in enforcing the terms of the obligation and trustee’s or attorney’s
fees which are hereby authorized to be in a base amount which does not exceed
four hundred twenty-five dollars ($425) if the unpaid principal sum secured is
one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) or less, or three hundred sixty
dollars ($360) if the unpaid principal sum secured exceeds one hundred fifty
thousand dollars ($150,000), plus 1 percent of any portion of the unpaid
principal sum secured exceeding fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) up to and
including one hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000), plus one-half of 1
percent of any portion of the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding one
hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) up to and including five hundred
thousand dollars ($500,000), plus one-quarter of 1 percent of any portion of
the unpaid principal sum secured exceeding five hundred thousand dollars
($500,000). For purposes of this subdivision, the unpaid principal sum secured
shall be determined as of the date the notice of default is recorded. Any
charge for trustee’s or attorney’ s fees authorized by this subdivision shall
be conclusively presumed to be lawful and valid where that charge does not
exceed the amounts authorized herein. Any charge for trustee’s or attorney’s
fees made pursuant to this subdivision shall be in lieu of and not in addition
to those charges authorized by subdivision (d) of Section 2924c.
(b) Upon the sale of property
pursuant to a power of sale, a trustee, or his or her agent or successor in
interest, may demand and receive from a beneficiary, or his or her agent or
successor in interest, or may deduct from the proceeds of the sale, those
reasonable costs and expenses, to the extent allowed by subdivision (c) of
Section 2924c, which are actually incurred in enforcing the terms of the
obligation and trustee’s or attorney’s fees which are hereby authorized to be
in an amount which does not exceed four hundred twenty-five dollars ($425) or
one percent of the unpaid principal sum secured, whichever is greater. For
purposes of this subdivision, the unpaid principal sum secured shall be
determined as of the date the notice of default is recorded. Any charge for
trustee’s or attorney’s fees authorized by this subdivision shall be
conclusively presumed to be lawful and valid where that charge does not exceed
the amount authorized herein. Any charges for trustee’s or attorney’s fees made
pursuant to this subdivision shall be in lieu of and not in addition to those
charges authorized by subdivision (a) of this section and subdivision (d) of
Section 2924c.
(c)
(1) No person shall pay or offer to
pay or collect any rebate or kickback for the referral of business involving
the performance of any act required by this article.
(2) Any person who violates this
subdivision shall be liable to the trustor for three times the amount of any
rebate or kickback, plus reasonable attorney’s fees and costs, in addition to
any other remedies provided by law.
(3) No violation of this subdivision
shall affect the validity of a sale in favor of a bona fide purchaser or the
rights of an encumbrancer for value without notice.
(d) It shall not be unlawful for a
trustee to pay or offer to pay a fee to an agent or subagent of the trustee for
work performed by the agent or subagent in discharging the trustee’s obligations
under the terms of the deed of trust. Any payment of a fee by a trustee to an
agent or subagent of the trustee for work performed by the agent or subagent in
discharging the trustee’s obligations under the terms of the deed of trust
shall be conclusively presumed to be lawful and valid if the fee, when combined
with other fees of the trustee, does not exceed in the aggregate the trustee’s
fee authorized by subdivision (d) of Section 2924c or subdivision (a) or (b) of
this section.
(e) When a court issues a decree of
foreclosure, it shall have discretion to award attorney’s fees, costs, and
expenses as are reasonable, if provided for in the note, deed of trust, or
mortgage, pursuant to Section 580c of the Code of Civil Procedure.
2924e.
(a) The beneficiary or mortgagee of any deed of trust or mortgage on real
property either containing one to four residential units or given to secure an
original obligation not to exceed three hundred thousand dollars ($300,000)
may, with the written consent of the trustor or mortgagor that is either
effected through a signed and dated agreement which shall be separate from
other loan and security documents or disclosed to the trustor or mortgagor in
at least 10-point type, submit a written request by certified mail to the
beneficiary or mortgagee of any lien which is senior to the lien of the
requester, for written notice of any or all delinquencies of four months or
more, in payments of principal or interest on any obligation secured by that
senior lien notwithstanding that the loan secured by the lien of the requester
is not then in default as to payments of principal or interest.
The request shall be sent to the
beneficiary or mortgagee, or agent which it might designate for the purpose of
receiving loan payments, at the address specified for the receipt of these
payments, if known, or, if not known, at the address shown on the recorded deed
of trust or mortgage.
(b) The request for notice shall
identify the ownership or security interest of the requester, the date on which
the interest of the requester will terminate as evidenced by the maturity date
of the note of the trustor or mortgagor in favor of the requester, the name of
the trustor or mortgagor and the name of the current owner of the security
property if different from the trustor or mortgagor, the street address or
other description of the security property, the loan number (if available to
the requester) of the loan secured by the senior lien, the name and address to
which notice is to be sent, and shall include or be accompanied by the signed
written consent of the trustor or mortgagor, and a fee of forty dollars ($40).
For obligations secured by residential properties, the request shall remain
valid until withdrawn in writing and shall be applicable to all delinquencies
as provided in this section, which occur prior to the date on which the
interest of the requester will terminate as specified in the request or the
expiration date, as appropriate. For obligations secured by nonresidential
properties, the request shall remain valid until withdrawn in writing and shall
be applicable to all delinquencies as provided in this section, which occur
prior to the date on which the interest of the requester will terminate as
specified in the request or the expiration date, as appropriate. The
beneficiary or mortgagee of obligations secured by nonresidential properties
that have sent five or more notices prior to the expiration of the effective
period of the request may charge a fee up to fifteen dollars ($15) for each subsequent
notice. A request for notice shall be effective for five years from the mailing
of the request or the recording of that request, whichever occurs later, and
may be renewed within six months prior to its expiration date by sending the
beneficiary or mortgagee, or agent, as the case may be, at the address to which
original requests for notice are to be sent, a copy of the earlier request for
notice together with a signed statement that the request is renewed and a
renewal fee of fifteen dollars ($15). Upon timely submittal of a renewal
request for notice, the effectiveness of the original request is continued for
five years from the time when it would otherwise have lapsed. Succeeding
renewal requests may be submitted in the same manner. The request for notice
and renewals thereof shall be recorded in the office of the county recorder of
the county in which the security real property is situated. The rights and
obligations specified in this section shall inure to the benefit of, or pass
to, as the case may be, successors in interest of parties specified in this
section. Any successor in interest of a party entitled to notice under this
section shall file a request for that notice with any beneficiary or mortgagee
of the senior lien and shall pay a processing fee of fifteen dollars ($15). No
new written consent shall be required from the trustor or mortgagor.
(c) Unless the delinquency has been
cured, within 15 days following the end of four months from any delinquency in
payments of principal or interest on any obligation secured by the senior lien
which delinquency exists or occurs on or after 10 days from the mailing of the
request for notice or the recording of that request, whichever occurs later,
the beneficiary or mortgagee shall give written notice to the requester of the
fact of any delinquency and the amount thereof.
The notice shall be given by
personal service, or by deposit in the mail, first-class postage paid.
Following the recording of any notice of default pursuant to Section 2924 with respect
to the same delinquency, no notice or further notice shall be required pursuant
to this section.
(d) If the beneficiary or mortgagee
of any such senior lien fails to give notice to the requester as required in
subdivision (c), and a subsequent foreclosure or trustee’s sale of the security
property occurs, the beneficiary or mortgagee shall be liable to the requester
for any monetary damage due to the failure to provide notice within the time
period specified in subdivision (c) which the requester has sustained from the
date on which notice should have been given to the earlier of the date on which
the notice is given or the date of the recording of the notice of default under
Section 2924, and shall also forfeit to the requester the sum of three hundred
dollars ($300). A showing by the beneficiary or mortgagee by a preponderance of
the evidence that the failure to provide timely notice as required by
subdivision (c) resulted from a bona fide error notwithstanding the maintenance
of procedures reasonably adapted to avoid any such error shall be a defense to
any liability for that failure.
(e) If any beneficiary or mortgagee,
or agent which it had designated for the purpose of receiving loan payments,
has been succeeded in interest by any other person, any request for notice
received pursuant to this section shall be transmitted promptly to that person.
(f) Any failure to comply with the
provisions of this section shall not affect the validity of a sale in favor of
a bona fide purchaser or the rights of an encumbrancer for value and without
notice.
(g) Upon satisfaction of an
obligation secured by a junior lien with respect to which a notice request was
made pursuant to this section, the beneficiary or mortgagee that made the
request shall communicate that fact in writing to the senior lienholder to whom
the request was made. The communication shall specify that provision of notice
pursuant to the prior request under this section is no longer required.
2924f.
(a) As used in this section and Sections 2924g and 2924h, “property” means real
property or a leasehold estate therein, and “calendar week” means Monday
through Saturday, inclusive.
(b)
(1) Except as provided in
subdivision (c), before any sale of property can be made under the power of
sale contained in any deed of trust or mortgage, or any resale resulting from a
rescission for a failure of consideration pursuant to subdivision (c) of
Section 2924h, notice of the sale thereof shall be given by posting a written
notice of the time of sale and of the street address and the specific place at
the street address where the sale will be held, and describing the property to
be sold, at least 20 days before the date of sale in one public place in the
city where the property is to be sold, if the property is to be sold in a city,
or, if not, then in one public place in the judicial district in which the
property is to be sold, and publishing a copy once a week for three consecutive
calendar weeks, the first publication to be at least 20 days before the date of
sale, in a newspaper of general circulation published in the city in which the
property or some part thereof is situated, if any part thereof is situated in a
city, if not, then in a newspaper of general circulation published in the
judicial district in which the property or some part thereof is situated, or in
case no newspaper of general circulation is published in the city or judicial
district, as the case may be, in a newspaper of general circulation published
in the county in which the property or some part thereof is situated, or in
case no newspaper of general circulation is published in the city or judicial
district or county, as the case may be, in a newspaper of general circulation
published in the county in this state that (A) is contiguous to the county in
which the property or some part thereof is situated and (B) has, by comparison
with all similarly contiguous counties, the highest population based upon total
county population as determined by the most recent federal decennial census
published by the Bureau of the Census. A copy of the notice of sale shall also
be posted in a conspicuous place on the property to be sold at least 20 days
before the date of sale, where possible and where not restricted for any
reason. If the property is a single-family residence the posting shall be on a
door of the residence, but, if not possible or restricted, then the notice
shall be posted in a conspicuous place on the property; however, if access is
denied because a common entrance to the property is restricted by a guard gate
or similar impediment, the property may be posted at that guard gate or similar
impediment to any development community. Additionally, the notice of sale shall
conform to the minimum requirements of Section 6043 of the Government Code and be
recorded with the county recorder of the county in which the property or some
part thereof is situated at least 14 days prior to the date of sale. The notice
of sale shall contain the name, street address in this state, which may reflect
an agent of the trustee, and either a toll-free telephone number or telephone
number in this state of the trustee, and the name of the original trustor, and
also shall contain the statement required by paragraph (3) of subdivision (c).
In addition to any other description of the property, the notice shall describe
the property by giving its street address, if any, or other common designation,
if any, and a county assessor’s parcel number; but if the property has no
street address or other common designation, the notice shall contain a legal
description of the property, the name and address of the beneficiary at whose
request the sale is to be conducted, and a statement that directions may be
obtained pursuant to a written request submitted to the beneficiary within 10
days from the first publication of the notice. Directions shall be deemed
reasonably sufficient to locate the property if information as to the location
of the property is given by reference to the direction and approximate distance
from the nearest crossroads, frontage road, or access road. If a legal
description or a county assessor’s parcel number and either a street address or
another common designation of the property is given, the validity of the notice
and the validity of the sale shall not be affected by the fact that the street
address, other common designation, name and address of the beneficiary, or the
directions obtained therefrom are erroneous or that the street address, other
common designation, name and address of the beneficiary, or directions obtained
therefrom are omitted. The term “newspaper of general circulation,” as used in
this section, has the same meaning as defined in Article 1 (commencing with
Section 6000) of Chapter 1 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the Government Code.
The notice of sale shall contain a
statement of the total amount of the unpaid balance of the obligation secured
by the property to be sold and reasonably estimated costs, expenses, advances
at the time of the initial publication of the notice of sale, and, if
republished pursuant to a cancellation of a cash equivalent pursuant to
subdivision (d) of Section 2924h, a reference of that fact; provided, that the
trustee shall incur no liability for any good faith error in stating the proper
amount, including any amount provided in good faith by or on behalf of the
beneficiary. An inaccurate statement of this amount shall not affect the
validity of any sale to a bona fide purchaser for value, nor shall the failure
to post the notice of sale on a door as provided by this subdivision affect the
validity of any sale to a bona fide purchaser for value.
(2) If the sale of the property is
to be a unified sale as provided in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of
subdivision (a) of Section 9604 of the Commercial Code, the notice of sale shall
also contain a description of the personal property or fixtures to be sold. In
the case where it is contemplated that all of the personal property or fixtures
are to be sold, the description in the notice of the personal property or
fixtures shall be sufficient if it is the same as the description of the
personal property or fixtures contained in the agreement creating the security
interest in or encumbrance on the personal property or fixtures or the filed
financing statement relating to the personal property or fixtures. In all other
cases, the description in the notice shall be sufficient if it would be a
sufficient description of the personal property or fixtures under Section 9108
of the Commercial Code. Inclusion of a reference to or a description of
personal property or fixtures in a notice of sale hereunder shall not
constitute an election by the secured party to conduct a unified sale pursuant
to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section 9604 of the
Commercial Code, shall not obligate the secured party to conduct a unified sale
pursuant to subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (a) of Section
9604 of the Commercial Code, and in no way shall render defective or
noncomplying either that notice or a sale pursuant to that notice by reason of
the fact that the sale includes none or less than all of the personal property
or fixtures referred to or described in the notice. This paragraph shall not
otherwise affect the obligations or duties of a secured party under the Commercial
Code.
(c)
(1) This subdivision applies only to
deeds of trust or mortgages which contain a power of sale and which are secured
by real property containing a single-family, owner-occupied residence, where
the obligation secured by the deed of trust or mortgage is contained in a
contract for goods or services subject to the provisions of the Unruh Act
(Chapter 1 (commencing with Section 1801) of Title 2 of Part 4 of Division 3).
(2) Except as otherwise expressly
set forth in this subdivision, all other provisions of law relating to the
exercise of a power of sale shall govern the exercise of a power of sale
contained in a deed of trust or mortgage described in paragraph (1).
(3) If any default of the obligation
secured by a deed of trust or mortgage described in paragraph (1) has not been
cured within 30 days after the recordation of the notice of default, the
trustee or mortgagee shall mail to the trustor or mortgagor, at his or her last
known address, a copy of the following statement:
YOU ARE IN DEFAULT UNDER A
___________________________________________________,
Deed of trust or mortgage
DATED ______. UNLESS YOU TAKE ACTION TO PROTECT
YOUR PROPERTY, IT MAY BE SOLD AT A PUBLIC SALE.
IF YOU NEED AN EXPLANATION OF THE NATURE OF THE
PROCEEDING AGAINST YOU, YOU SHOULD CONTACT A LAWYER.
(4) All sales of real property
pursuant to a power of sale contained in any deed of trust or mortgage
described in paragraph (1) shall be held in the county where the residence is
located and shall be made to the person making the highest offer. The trustee
may receive offers during the 10-day period immediately prior to the date of
sale and if any offer is accepted in writing by both the trustor or mortgagor
and the beneficiary or mortgagee prior to the time set for sale, the sale shall
be postponed to a date certain and prior to which the property may be conveyed
by the trustor to the person making the offer according to its terms. The offer
is revocable until accepted. The performance of the offer, following
acceptance, according to its terms, by a conveyance of the property to the
offeror, shall operate to terminate any further proceeding under the notice of
sale and it shall be deemed revoked.
(5) In addition to the trustee fee
pursuant to Section 2924c, the trustee or mortgagee pursuant to a deed of trust
or mortgage subject to this subdivision shall be entitled to charge an
additional fee of fifty dollars ($50).
(6) This subdivision applies only to
property on which notices of default were filed on or after the effective date
of this subdivision.
2924g.
(a) All sales of property under the power of sale contained in any deed of
trust or mortgage shall be held in the county where the property or some part
thereof is situated, and shall be made at auction, to the highest bidder, between
the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on any business day, Monday through Friday.
The sale shall commence at the time
and location specified in the notice of sale. Any postponement shall be
announced at the time and location specified in the notice of sale for
commencement of the sale or pursuant to paragraph (1) of subdivision (c).
If the sale of more than one parcel
of real property has been scheduled for the same time and location by the same
trustee, (1) any postponement of any of the sales shall be announced at the
time published in the notice of sale, (2) the first sale shall commence at the
time published in the notice of sale or immediately after the announcement of
any postponement, and (3) each subsequent sale shall take place as soon as
possible after the preceding sale has been completed.
(b) When the property consists of
several known lots or parcels, they shall be sold separately unless the deed of
trust or mortgage provides otherwise. When a portion of the property is claimed
by a third person, who requires it to be sold separately, the portion subject
to the claim may be thus sold. The trustor, if present at the sale, may also,
unless the deed of trust or mortgage otherwise provides, direct the order in
which property shall be sold, when the property consists of several known lots
or parcels which may be sold to advantage separately, and the trustee shall
follow that direction. After sufficient property has been sold to satisfy the
indebtedness, no more can be sold.
If the property under power of sale
is in two or more counties, the public auction sale of all of the property
under the power of sale may take place in any one of the counties where the
property or a portion thereof is located.
(c)
(1) There may be a postponement or
postponements of the sale proceedings, including a postponement upon
instruction by the beneficiary to the trustee that the sale proceedings be
postponed, at any time prior to the completion of the sale for any period of
time not to exceed a total of 365 days from the date set forth in the notice of
sale. The trustee shall postpone the sale in accordance with any of the
following:
(A) Upon the order of any court of
competent jurisdiction.
(B) If stayed by operation of law.
(C) By mutual agreement, whether
oral or in writing, of any trustor and any beneficiary or any mortgagor and any
mortgagee.
(D) At the discretion of the
trustee.
(2) In the event that the sale
proceedings are postponed for a period or periods totaling more than 365 days,
the scheduling of any further sale proceedings shall be preceded by giving a
new notice of sale in the manner prescribed in Section 2924f. New fees incurred
for the new notice of sale shall not exceed the amounts specified in Sections
2924c and 2924d, and shall not exceed reasonable costs that are necessary to
comply with this paragraph.
(d) The notice of each postponement
and the reason therefor shall be given by public declaration by the trustee at
the time and place last appointed for sale. A public declaration of
postponement shall also set forth the new date, time, and place of sale and the
place of sale shall be the same place as originally fixed by the trustee for
the sale. No other notice of postponement need be given. However, the sale
shall be conducted no sooner than on the seventh day after the earlier of (1)
dismissal of the action or (2) expiration or termination of the injunction,
restraining order, or stay that required postponement of the sale, whether by
entry of an order by a court of competent jurisdiction, operation of law, or
otherwise, unless the injunction, restraining order, or subsequent order
expressly directs the conduct of the sale within that seven-day period. For
purposes of this subdivision, the seven-day period shall not include the day on
which the action is dismissed, or the day on which the injunction, restraining
order, or stay expires or is terminated. If the sale had been scheduled to
occur, but this subdivision precludes its conduct during that seven-day period,
a new notice of postponement shall be given if the sale had been scheduled to
occur during that seven-day period. The trustee shall maintain records of each
postponement and the reason therefor.
(e) Notwithstanding the time periods
established under subdivision
(d), if postponement of a sale is
based on a stay imposed by Title 11 of the United States Code (bankruptcy), the
sale shall be conducted no sooner than the expiration of the stay imposed by
that title and the seven-day provision of subdivision (d) shall not apply.
2924h.
(a) Each and every bid made by a bidder at a trustee’s sale under a power of
sale contained in a deed of trust or mortgage shall be deemed to be an
irrevocable offer by that bidder to purchase the property being sold by the
trustee under the power of sale for the amount of the bid. Any second or
subsequent bid by the same bidder or any other bidder for a higher amount shall
be a cancellation of the prior bid.
(b) At the trustee’s sale the
trustee shall have the right (1) to require every bidder to show evidence of
the bidder’s ability to deposit with the trustee the full amount of his or her
final bid in cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, a check
drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or
federal savings and loan association, savings association, or savings bank
specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business
in this state, or a cash equivalent which has been designated in the notice of
sale as acceptable to the trustee prior to, and as a condition to, the
recognizing of the bid, and to conditionally accept and hold these amounts for
the duration of the sale, and (2) to require the last and highest bidder to
deposit, if not deposited previously, the full amount of the bidder’s final bid
in cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by
a state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings
and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified in Section
5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state, or a
cash equivalent which has been designated in the notice of sale as acceptable
to the trustee, immediately prior to the completion of the sale, the completion
of the sale being so announced by the fall of the hammer or in another
customary manner. The present beneficiary of the deed of trust under
foreclosure shall have the right to offset his or her bid or bids only to the
extent of the total amount due the beneficiary including the trustee’s fees and
expenses.
(c) In the event the trustee accepts
a check drawn by a credit union or a savings and loan association pursuant to
this subdivision or a cash equivalent designated in the notice of sale, the
trustee may withhold the issuance of the trustee’s deed to the successful
bidder submitting the check drawn by a state or federal credit union or savings
and loan association or the cash equivalent until funds become available to the
payee or endorsee as a matter of right.
For the purposes of this
subdivision, the trustee’s sale shall be deemed final upon the acceptance of
the last and highest bid, and shall be deemed perfected as of 8 a.m. on the
actual date of sale if the trustee’s deed is recorded within 15 calendar days
after the sale, or the next business day following the 15th day if the county
recorder in which the property is located is closed on the 15th day. However,
the sale is subject to an automatic rescission for a failure of consideration
in the event the funds are not “available for withdrawal” as defined in Section
12413.1 of the Insurance Code. The trustee shall send a notice of rescission
for a failure of consideration to the last and highest bidder submitting the
check or alternative instrument, if the address of the last and highest bidder
is known to the trustee.
If a sale results in an automatic
right of rescission for failure of consideration pursuant to this subdivision,
the interest of any lienholder shall be reinstated in the same priority as if
the previous sale had not occurred.
(d) If the trustee has not required
the last and highest bidder to deposit the cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a
state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a
check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association,
or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized
to do business in this state, or a cash equivalent which has been designated in
the notice of sale as acceptable to the trustee in the manner set forth in
paragraph (2) of subdivision (b), the trustee shall complete the sale. If the
last and highest bidder then fails to deliver to the trustee, when demanded,
the amount of his or her final bid in cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state
or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit union, or a check
drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings association,
or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code and authorized
to do business in this state, or a cash equivalent which has been designated in
the notice of sale as acceptable to the trustee, that bidder shall be liable to
the trustee for all damages which the trustee may sustain by the refusal to
deliver to the trustee the amount of the final bid, including any court costs
and reasonable attorneys’ fees.
If the last and highest bidder
willfully fails to deliver to the trustee the amount of his or her final bid in
cash, a cashier’s check drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a
state or federal credit union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings
and loan association, savings association, or savings bank specified in Section
5102 of the Financial Code and authorized to do business in this state, or a
cash equivalent which has been designated in the notice of sale as acceptable
to the trustee, or if the last and highest bidder cancels a cashiers check
drawn on a state or national bank, a check drawn by a state or federal credit
union, or a check drawn by a state or federal savings and loan association, savings
association, or savings bank specified in Section 5102 of the Financial Code
and authorized to do business in this state, or a cash equivalent that has been
designated in the notice of sale as acceptable to the trustee, that bidder
shall be guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not more than two
thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500).
In the event the last and highest
bidder cancels an instrument submitted to the trustee as a cash equivalent, the
trustee shall provide a new notice of sale in the manner set forth in Section
2924f and shall be entitled to recover the costs of the new notice of sale as
provided in Section 2924c.
(e) Any postponement or
discontinuance of the sale proceedings shall be a cancellation of the last bid.
(f) In the event that this section
conflicts with any other statute, then this section shall prevail.
(g) It shall be unlawful for any
person, acting alone or in concert with others, (1) to offer to accept or
accept from another, any consideration of any type not to bid, or (2) to fix or
restrain bidding in any manner, at a sale of property conducted pursuant to a
power of sale in a deed of trust or mortgage. However, it shall not be unlawful
for any person, including a trustee, to state that a property subject to a recorded
notice of default or subject to a sale conducted pursuant to this chapter is
being sold in an “as-is” condition.
In addition to any other remedies,
any person committing any act declared unlawful by this subdivision or any act
which would operate as a fraud or deceit upon any beneficiary, trustor, or
junior lienor shall, upon conviction, be fined not more than ten thousand
dollars ($10,000) or imprisoned in the county jail for not more than one year,
or be punished by both that fine and imprisonment.
2924i.
(a) This section applies to loans secured by a deed of trust or mortgage on
real property containing one to four residential units at least one of which at
the time the loan is made is or is to be occupied by the borrower if the loan
is for a period in excess of one year and is a balloon payment loan.
(b) This section shall not apply to
(1) open end credit as defined in Regulation Z, whether or not the transaction
is otherwise subject to Regulation Z, (2) transactions subject to Section 2956,
or (3) loans made for the principal purpose of financing the construction of
one or more residential units.
(c) At least 90 days but not more
than 150 days prior to the due date of the final payment on a loan that is
subject to this section, the holder of the loan shall deliver or mail by
first-class mail, with a certificate of mailing obtained from the United States
Postal Service, to the trustor, or his or her successor in interest, at the
last known address of that person, a written notice which shall include all of
the following:
(1) A statement of the name and
address of the person to whom the final payment is required to be paid.
(2) The date on or before which the
final payment is required to be paid.
(3) The amount of the final payment,
or if the exact amount is unknown, a good faith estimate of the amount thereof,
including unpaid principal, interest and any other charges, such amount to be
determined assuming timely payment in full of all scheduled installments coming
due between the date the notice is prepared and the date when the final payment
is due.
(4) If the borrower has a
contractual right to refinance the final payment, a statement to that effect.
If the due date of the final payment
of a loan subject to this section is extended prior to the time notice is
otherwise required under this subdivision, this notice requirement shall apply
only to the due date as extended (or as subsequently extended).
(d) For purposes of this section:
(1) A “balloon payment loan” is a
loan which provides for a final payment as originally scheduled which is more
than twice the amount of any of the immediately preceding six regularly
scheduled payments or which contains a call provision; provided, however, that
if the call provision is not exercised by the holder of the loan, the existence
of the unexercised call provision shall not cause the loan to be deemed to be a
balloon payment loan.
(2) “Call provision” means a loan
contract term that provides the holder of the loan with the right to call the
loan due and payable either after a specified period has elapsed following
closing or after a specified date.
(3) “Regulation Z” means any rule,
regulation, or interpretation promulgated by the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System under the Federal Truth in Lending Act, as amended (15
U.S.C. Sec. 1601 et seq.), and any interpretation or approval thereof issued by
an official or employee of the Federal Reserve System duly authorized by the
board under the Truth in Lending Act, as amended, to issue such interpretations
or approvals.
(e) Failure to provide notice as
required by subdivision (a) does not extinguish any obligation of payment by
the borrower, except that the due date for any balloon payment shall be the
date specified in the balloon payment note, or 90 days from the date of
delivery or mailing of the notice required by subdivision (a), or the due date
specified in the notice required by subdivision (a), whichever date is later.
If the operation of this section acts to extend the term of any note, interest
shall continue to accrue for the extended term at the contract rate and
payments shall continue to be due at any periodic interval and on any payment
schedule specified in the note and shall be credited to principal or interest
under the terms of the note. Default in any extended periodic payment shall be
considered a default under terms of the note or security instrument.
(f)
(1) The validity of any credit
document or of any security document subject to the provisions of this section
shall not be invalidated solely because of the failure of any person to comply
with this section. However, any person who willfully violates any provision of
this section shall be liable in the amount of actual damages suffered by the
debtor as the proximate result of the violation, and, if the debtor prevails in
any suit to recover that amount, for reasonable attorney’s fees.
(2) No person may be held liable in
any action under this section if it is shown by a preponderance of the evidence
that the violation was not intentional and resulted from a bona fide error
notwithstanding the maintenance of procedures reasonably adopted to avoid any
such error.
(g) The provisions of this section
shall apply to any note executed on or after January 1, 1984.
2924j.
(a) Unless an interpleader action has been filed, within 30 days of the
execution of the trustee’s deed resulting from a sale in which there are
proceeds remaining after payment of the amounts required by paragraphs (1) and
(2) of subdivision (a) of Section 2924k, the trustee shall send written notice
to all persons with recorded interests in the real property as of the date
immediately prior to the trustee’s sale who would be entitled to notice
pursuant to subdivisions (b) and (c) of Section 2924b. The notice shall be sent
by first-class mail in the manner provided in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c)
of Section 2924b and inform each entitled person of each of the following:
(1) That there has been a trustee’s
sale of the described real property.
(2) That the noticed person may have
a claim to all or a portion of the sale proceeds remaining after payment of the
amounts required by paragraphs (1) and (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 2924k.
(3) The noticed person may contact
the trustee at the address provided in the notice to pursue any potential
claim.
(4) That before the trustee can act,
the noticed person may be required to present proof that the person holds the
beneficial interest in the obligation and the security interest therefor. In
the case of a promissory note secured by a deed of trust, proof that the person
holds the beneficial interest may include the original promissory note and
assignment of beneficial interests related thereto. The noticed person shall
also submit a written claim to the trustee, executed under penalty of perjury,
stating the following:
(A) The amount of the claim to the
date of trustee’s sale.
(B) An itemized statement of the
principal, interest, and other charges.
(C) That claims must be received by
the trustee at the address stated in the notice no later than 30 days after the
date the trustee sends notice to the potential claimant.
(b) The trustee shall exercise due
diligence to determine the priority of the written claims received by the
trustee to the trustee’ s sale surplus proceeds from those persons to whom
notice was sent pursuant to subdivision (a). In the event there is no dispute
as to the priority of the written claims submitted to the trustee, proceeds
shall be paid within 30 days after the conclusion of the notice period. If the
trustee has failed to determine the priority of written claims within 90 days
following the 30-day notice period, then within 10 days thereafter the trustee
shall deposit the funds with the clerk of the court pursuant to subdivision (c)
or file an interpleader action pursuant to subdivision (e). Nothing in this
section shall preclude any person from pursuing other remedies or claims as to
surplus proceeds.
(c) If, after due diligence, the
trustee is unable to determine the priority of the written claims received by
the trustee to the trustee’s sale surplus of multiple persons or if the trustee
determines there is a conflict between potential claimants, the trustee may
file a declaration of the unresolved claims and deposit with the clerk of the
superior court of the county in which the sale occurred, that portion of the
sales proceeds that cannot be distributed, less any fees charged by the clerk
pursuant to this subdivision. The declaration shall specify the date of the
trustee’s sale, a description of the property, the names and addresses of all
persons sent notice pursuant to subdivision (a), a statement that the trustee
exercised due diligence pursuant to subdivision (b), that the trustee provided
written notice as required by subdivisions (a) and (d) and the amount of the
sales proceeds deposited by the trustee with the court. Further, the trustee
shall submit a copy of the trustee’s sales guarantee and any information
relevant to the identity, location, and priority of the potential claimants
with the court and shall file proof of service of the notice required by
subdivision (d) on all persons described in subdivision (a).
The clerk shall deposit the amount
with the county treasurer or, if a bank account has been established for moneys
held in trust under paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 77009 of the
Government Code, in that account, subject to order of the court upon the
application of any interested party. The clerk may charge a reasonable fee for
the performance of activities pursuant to this subdivision equal to the fee for
filing an interpleader action pursuant to Chapter 5.8 (commencing with Section
70600) of Title 8 of the Government Code. Upon deposit of that portion of the
sale proceeds that cannot be distributed by due diligence, the trustee shall be
discharged of further responsibility for the disbursement of sale proceeds. A
deposit with the clerk of the court pursuant to this subdivision may be either
for the total proceeds of the trustee’ s sale, less any fees charged by the
clerk, if a conflict or conflicts exist with respect to the total proceeds, or
that portion that cannot be distributed after due diligence, less any fees
charged by the clerk.
(d) Before the trustee deposits the
funds with the clerk of the court pursuant to subdivision (c), the trustee
shall send written notice by first-class mail, postage prepaid, to all persons
described in subdivision (a) informing them that the trustee intends to deposit
the funds with the clerk of the court and that a claim for the funds must be
filed with the court within 30 days from the date of the notice, providing the
address of the court in which the funds were deposited, and a telephone number
for obtaining further information.
Within 90 days after deposit with
the clerk, the court shall consider all claims filed at least 15 days before
the date on which the hearing is scheduled by the court, the clerk shall serve
written notice of the hearing by first-class mail on all claimants identified
in the trustee’s declaration at the addresses specified therein. Where the
amount of the deposit is twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) or less, a
proceeding pursuant to this section is a limited civil case. The court shall
distribute the deposited funds to any and all claimants entitled thereto.
(e) Nothing in this section
restricts the ability of a trustee to file an interpleader action in order to
resolve a dispute about the proceeds of a trustee’s sale. Once an interpleader
action has been filed, thereafter the provisions of this section do not apply.
(f) “Due diligence,” for the
purposes of this section means that the trustee researched the written claims
submitted or other evidence of conflicts and determined that a conflict of
priorities exists between two or more claimants which the trustee is unable to
resolve.
(g) To the extent required by the
Unclaimed Property Law, a trustee in possession of surplus proceeds not
required to be deposited with the court pursuant to subdivision (b) shall
comply with the Unclaimed Property Law (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section
1500) of Title 10 of Part 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure).
(h) The trustee, beneficiary, or
counsel to the trustee or beneficiary, is not liable for providing to any
person who is entitled to notice pursuant to this section, information set
forth in, or a copy of, subdivision (h) of Section 2945.3.
2924k.
(a) The trustee, or the clerk of the court upon order to the clerk pursuant to
subdivision (d) of Section 2924j, shall distribute the proceeds, or a portion
of the proceeds, as the case may be, of the trustee’s sale conducted pursuant
to Section 2924h in the following order of priority:
(1) To the costs and expenses of
exercising the power of sale and of sale, including the payment of the
trustee’s fees and attorney’s fees permitted pursuant to subdivision (b) of
Section 2924d and subdivision (b) of this section.
(2) To the payment of the
obligations secured by the deed of trust or mortgage which is the subject of
the trustee’s sale.
(3) To satisfy the outstanding
balance of obligations secured by any junior liens or encumbrances in the order
of their priority.
(4) To the trustor or the trustor’s
successor in interest. In the event the property is sold or transferred to
another, to the vested owner of record at the time of the trustee’s sale.
(b) A trustee may charge costs and
expenses incurred for such items as mailing and a reasonable fee for services
rendered in connection with the distribution of the proceeds from a trustee’s
sale, including, but not limited to, the investigation of priority and validity
of claims and the disbursement of funds. If the fee charged for services
rendered pursuant to this subdivision does not exceed one hundred dollars
($100), or one hundred twenty-five dollars ($125) where there are obligations
specified in paragraph (3) of subdivision (a), the fee is conclusively presumed
to be reasonable.
2924l.
(a) In the event that a trustee under a deed of trust is named in an action or
proceeding in which that deed of trust is the subject, and in the event that
the trustee maintains a reasonable belief that it has been named in the action
or proceeding solely in its capacity as trustee, and not arising out of any
wrongful acts or omissions on its part in the performance of its duties as
trustee, then, at any time, the trustee may file a declaration of nonmonetary
status. The declaration shall be served on the parties in the manner set forth
in Chapter 5 (commencing with Section 1010) of Title 14 of the Code of Civil
Procedure.
(b) The declaration of nonmonetary
status shall set forth the status of the trustee as trustee under the deed of
trust that is the subject of the action or proceeding, that the trustee knows
or maintains a reasonable belief that it has been named as a defendant in the
proceeding solely in its capacity as a trustee under the deed of trust, its
reasonable belief that it has not been named as a defendant due to any acts or
omissions on its part in the performance of its duties as trustee, the basis
for that knowledge or reasonable belief, and that it agrees to be bound by
whatever order or judgment is issued by the court regarding the subject deed of
trust.
(c) The parties who have appeared in
the action or proceeding shall have 15 days from the service of the declaration
by the trustee in which to object to the nonmonetary judgment status of the
trustee. Any objection shall set forth the factual basis on which the objection
is based and shall be served on the trustee.
(d) In the event that no objection
is served within the 15-day objection period, the trustee shall not be required
to participate any further in the action or proceeding, shall not be subject to
any monetary awards as and for damages, attorneys’ fees or costs, shall be
required to respond to any discovery requests as a nonparty, and shall be bound
by any court order relating to the subject deed of trust that is the subject of
the action or proceeding.
(e) In the event of a timely
objection to the declaration of nonmonetary status, the trustee shall
thereafter be required to participate in the action or proceeding.
Additionally, in the event that the
parties elect not to, or fail to, timely object to the declaration of
nonmonetary status, but later through discovery, or otherwise, determine that
the trustee should participate in the action because of the performance of its
duties as a trustee, the parties may file and serve on all parties and the
trustee a motion pursuant to Section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure that
specifies the factual basis for the demand. Upon the court’s granting of the
motion, the trustee shall thereafter be required to participate in the action
or proceeding, and the court shall provide sufficient time prior to trial for
the trustee to be able to respond to the complaint, to conduct discovery, and
to bring other pretrial motions in accordance with the Code of Civil Procedure.
(f) Upon the filing of the
declaration of nonmonetary status, the time within which the trustee is
required to file an answer or other responsive pleading shall be tolled for the
period of time within which the opposing parties may respond to the
declaration. Upon the timely service of an objection to the declaration on
nonmonetary status, the trustee shall have 30 days from the date of service
within which to file an answer or other responsive pleading to the complaint or
cross-complaint.
(g) For purposes of this section,
“trustee” includes any agent or employee of the trustee who performs some or
all of the duties of a trustee under this article, and includes substituted
trustees and agents of the beneficiary or trustee.
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Tags: Foreclosure
Categories : 2924
8 06 2010
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES …………………………………………………………………………. i
INTERESTS OF AMICI CURIAE…………………………………………………………………..1
PRELIMINARY STATEMENT …………………………………………………………………….2
ARGUMENT……………………………………………………………………………………………….4
I. The MERS System Was Designed Without Regard to Consumers’ Rights4
II. MERS’ Claims That the MERS System Is Beneficial to
Consumers Are Unsupported. …………………………………………………………….6
III. Homeowners Have a Right to Know Who Owns Their Loans………………..8
IV. The MERS System Causes Significant Confusion Among Borrowers,
and Has a Particularly Detrimental Impact on the Elderly and
Other Vulnerable Borrowers Frequently Victimized by
Predatory Lenders. ………………………………………………………………………… 14
V. The Public Has a Significant and Enduring Interest in Preserving and
Protecting the Free Public Databases Created by the Land and Court
Records of This Nation. …………………………………………………………………. 18
A. Public land and court data records facilitate research investigating
the root causes of a variety of mortgage and other land related
problems………………………………………………………………………………….. 18
B. The public databases have played an important role in facilitating
understanding and government response to the recent “foreclosure
boom.”…………………………………………………………………………………….. 23
C. Through its penetration of the public databases MERS has caused
a dramatic deterioration in the quality and quantity of publicly
available information. ……………………………………………………………….. 28
D. The MERS Shield Creates an Irretrievable Void in the Property
Records that Harms Many Constituencies……………………………………. 32
ii
E. Restoration and enhancement of the public database is critical to enable
government to function effectively……………………………………………… 33
F. More, not less public data is needed to enable a carefully targeted and
rapid governmental response to problems in the housing market. …… 35
VI. MERS’ Subversion of the Public Policy Behind Public Recordings Costs
County and City Clerks Over a Billion Dollars. ………………………………… 38
VII. MERS Lacks Standing to Bring Foreclosure Actions in Its Name……….. 39
CONCLUSION…………………………………………………………………………………………. 46
i
TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
Cases
Altegra Credit Co. v. Tin Chu et al.,
No. 04326-2004 (Kings County Supreme Ct. March 25, 2004) ………………. 24, 36
Associates Home Equity v. Troup,
343 N.J. Super. 254 (App. Div. 2001)……………………………………………………….. 21
Countrywide Home Loans v. Hannaford,
2004 WL 1836744 (Ohio Ct. App. Aug. 18, 2004). ……………………………………. 17
Deutsche Bank National Trust Company as Trustee v. Primrose,
No. 05-25796 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Suffolk Cty., July 13, 2006);…………………………. 46
Everhome Mortgage Company v. Hendriks,
No. 05-024042 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Suffolk Cty., June 27, 2006);………………………. 46
Freedom Mortg. Corp. v. Burnham Mortg., Inc.,
2006 WL 695467 (N.D. Ill., Mar. 13, 2006) ………………………………………………. 17
In re BNT Terminals, Inc.,
125 B.R. 963, 970 (Bankr. N.D. Ill. 1990)…………………………………………………. 45
Kluge v. Fugazy,
145 A.D.2d 537, 536 N.Y.S.2d 92 (2d Dept. 1988)…………………………………….. 44
LaSalle Bank v. Holguin, No. 06-9286, slip opinion (N.Y. Sup. Ct. Suffolk Cty.,
Aug. 9, 2006);…………………………………………………………………………………… 43, 45
LaSalle Bank v. Lamy,
2006 N.Y. Misc. Lexis 2127 (NY. Sup. Ct., Suffolk Cty., Aug. 17, 2006)……. 46
MERS v. Bomba,
No. 1645/03 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Kings County). ……………………………………………… 48
MERS v. DeMarco,
No. 05-1372, slip op. (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Suffolk Cty., April 11, 2005) ……………… 46
MERS v. Griffin,
No.16-2004-CA-002155, slip op. (Fla. Cir. Ct. May 27, 2004)…………………….. 49
MERS v. Ramdoolar,
No. 05-019863 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Suffolk Cty., Mar. 7, 2006);………………………… 46
MERS v. Shuster,
No. 05-26354/06 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Suffolk Cty., July 13, 2006)………………… 44, 46
MERS v. Trapani,
No. 04-19057, slip op. at 1 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Suffolk Cty., Mar. 7, 2005):………..
48
MERS v. Wells,
No. 06-5242, slip op. at 2 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Suffolk Cty., Sept. 25, 2006)………… 45
MERS v.Delzatto,
No. 05-020490 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Suffolk Cty., Dec. 9, 2005)…………………………. 46
ii
MERS, Inc. v. Parker,
No. 017622/2004, slip op. at 2 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Suffolk Cty. Oct. 19, 2004) ……
46
MERS, Inc. v. Schoenster,
No. 16969-2004, (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Suffolk Cty., Sept. 15, 2004); …………………… 47
MERS. v. Burek,
798 N.Y.S.2d 346 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2004)…………………………………………………….. 44
MERS. v. Burek,
798 N.Y.S.2d 346, 347 (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Richmond Cty. 2004)……………………… 46
Merscorp, Inc. v. Romaine,
No. 9688/01, slip op. (N.Y. Sup. Ct., Suffolk Co. May 12, 2004)…………………….8
Miguel v. Country Funding Corp.,
309 F.3d 1161 (9th Cir. 2002). …………………………………………………………………. 16
Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys. v. Estrella,
390 F.3d 522 (7th Cir. 2004) ……………………………………………………………………. 16
Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys. v. Neb. Dep’t of Banking & Fin.,
704 N.W.2d 784 (Neb. 2005) ……………………………………………………………… 16, 17
Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys., Inc. v. Griffin,
No.16-2004-CA-002155, slip op. (Fla. Cir. Ct. May 27, 2004)…………………….. 47
Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys., Inc. v. Azize,
No. 05-001295-CI-11 (Fla. Cir. Ct. Pinellas Cty. Apr. 18, 2005)………………….. 47
Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. v. Rees,
2003 Conn. Super. LEXIS 2437 (Conn. Superior Ct. September 4, 2003). ……. 44
People v. Albertina,
09141-2005 (Kings County Supreme Ct. Sept. 28, 2006) ………………………. 24, 36
People v. Constant,
No. 01843A-2006 (Suffolk Supreme Ct. Oct. 12, 2006)( ……………………….. 24, 36
People v. Larman,
No. 06253-2005 (Kings County Supreme Ct. Sept. 20, 2006) ………………… 24, 36
People v. Sandella,
No. 02899-2006 (Kings County Supreme. Ct. Sept. 27, 2006) ……………….. 24, 36
Roberts v. WMC Mortg. Corp.,
173 Fed. Appx. 575 (9th Cir. 2006). …………………………………………………………. 16
Taylor, Bean & Whitaker, Mortg. Corp. v. Brown,
583 S.E.2d 844 (Ga. 2003) ………………………………………………………………………. 47
Statutes
Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, 12 USC § 2801 et. seq ………………………………… 28
N.Y. Banking Law § 6-1…………………………………………………………………………….. 31
N.Y. General Business Law § 349……………………………………………………………….. 18
iii
N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 771-a……………………………………………………………………….. 31
N.Y. Real Prop. Acts. Law § 1302 ………………………………………………………………. 31
Truth-in-Lending Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1601 et seq………………………………………… 15, 16
Truth in Lending Act, Regulation Z § 226.23 ……………………………………………….. 15
U.C.C. §§ 9-203(g), 9-308(e); …………………………………………………………………….. 44
Regulations
69 Fed. Reg. 16,769 (Mar. 31, 2004),…………………………………………………………… 16
Secondary Sources
40 Millionth Loan Registered on MERS (Inside MERS, May/ June 2006),
available at http://www. mersinc.com/newsroom/currentnews.aspx …………….. 42
Alan M. White and Cathy Lesser Mansfield,
Literacy and Contract, 13 STAN. L & POL’Y REV 233 …………………………………. 19
Andrew Harris,
Suffolk Judge Denies Requests by Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems,
N.Y. LAW J. (Aug. 31, 2004) ……………………………………………………………………. 47
Bunce, Harold, Gruenstein, Debbie et al.,
Subprime Lending: The Smoking Gun of Predatory Lending? (HUD 2001),
http://www.huduser.org/Publications/pdf/brd/12Bunce.pdf ………………. 24, 27, 32
D. Rose, Chicago Foreclosure Update 2005, http://www.nticus.
org/currentevents/press/pdf/chicagoforeclosure_update.pdf…………………….. 25
D. Rose, Chicago Foreclosure Update 2006 (July), http://www.nticus.
org/documents/ChicagoForeclosureUpdate2006.pdf ………………………………. 25
Daniel Immergluck & Geoff Smith,
The External Costs of Foreclosure: The Impact of Single-Family Mortgage
Foreclosures on Property Values,
17 Housing Pol’y Debate, Issue 1 (2006)……………………………………………… 28, 39
David Rice, Predatory Lending Bill Caught in Debate, Winston-Salem Journal,
April 27, 1999………………………………………………………………………………………… 30
Debbie Gruenstein & Christopher Herbert,
Analyzing Trends in Subprime Originations and Foreclosures: A Case Study of
the Boston Metro Area, 1995-1999 (2000), http://www.abtassociates.com
/reports/20006470781991.pdf ………………………………………………………………….. 27
Duda & Apgar, Mortgage Foreclosures in Atlanta: Patterns and Policy Issues,
2000-2005 (2005) …………………………………………………………………… 30, 35, 38, 39
Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council,
A Guide to HMDA: Getting it Right! (Dec. 2003). ……………………………………… 41
iv
Jill D. Rein,
Significant Changes to Commencing Foreclosure Actions in the Name of MERS,
available at http://www.usfn.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=
Article_Library&template=/CM/HTMLDisplay.cfm&ContentID=3899……….. 49
Kathe Newman & Elvin K. Wyly,
Geographies of Mortgage Market Segmentation: The Case of Essex County,
New Jersey, 19 Housing Stud. 53, 54 (Jan. 2004) ………………………………………. 38
Kathleen C. Engel, Do Cities Have Standing? Redressing the Externalities of
Predatory Lending, 38 Conn. L. Rev. 355 (2006). ……………………………………… 25
Kimberly Burnett, Bulbul Kaul, & Chris Herbert,
Analysis of Property Turnover Patterns in Atlanta, Baltimore, Cleveland and
Philadelphia (2004), http://
www.abtassociates.com/reports/analysis_property_turnover_patterns.pdf 27, 31
Kimberly Burnett, Chris Herbert et al.,
Subprime Originations and Foreclosures in New York State: A Case Study of
Nassau, Suffolk, and Westchester Counties (2002)……………………… 21, 24, 30, 31
Les Christie, “Foreclosures Spiked in August,” (Sept. 13, 2006), available at:
http://money.cnn.com/2006/09/13/real_estate/foreclosures_spiking/index.htm?po
stversion=2006091305 …………………………………………………………………………….
39
Lindley Higgins, Effective Community-Based Strategies for Preventing
Foreclosures,1993-2004 (2005) ………………………………………………………….. 26, 27
Lorain County Reinvestment Fund,
The Expanding Role of Subprime Lending in Ohio’s Burgeoning Foreclosure
Problem: A Three County Study of a Statewide Problem, (2002),
http://cohhio.org/projects/ocrp/SubprimeLendingReport.pdf……………………….. 23
Lynne Dearborn, Mortgage Foreclosures and Predatory Lending in St. Clair
County, Illinois 1996-2000 (2003) ……………………………………………………………. 23
Margot Saunders and Alys Cohen,
Federal Regulation of Consumer Credit: The Cause or the Cure for Predatory
Lending? (Joint Center for Housing Studies 2004)……………………………………… 28
Neal Walters & Sharon Hermanson,
Subprime Mortgage Lending and Older Borrowers (AARP Public Policy
Institute), Data Digest Number 74 (2001)………………………………………………….. 28
Neighborhood Housing Services (NHS) of Chicago,
Preserving Homeownership: Community-Development Implications of the New
Mortgage Market (2004) …………………………………………………………………………. 26
Paul Bellamy, The Expanding Role of Subprime Lending in Ohio’s Burgeoning
Foreclosure Problem: A Three County Study of a Statewide Problem, 1994-2001
(2002)……………………………………………………………………………………………………. 29
v
Phyllis K. Slesinger and Daniel McLaughlin,
Mortgage Electronic Registration System, 31 IDAHO L. REV. 805, 811, 814-15
(1995)……………………………………………………………………………………………………….9
Ramon Garcia, Residential Foreclosures in the City of Buffalo,
1990-2000 (2003) ……………………………………………………………………………… 24, 27
Richard Lord, AMERICAN NIGHTMARE: PREDATORY LENDING AND THE
FORECLOSURE OF THE AMERICAN DREAM 157 (Common Courage Press 2005). 22
Richard Stock, Center for Business and Economic Research,
Predation in the Sub-Prime Lending Market: Montgomery County Vol. I., 1994-
2001 (2001), http://www.mvfairhousing.com/cber/pdf/
Executive%20summary.PDF………………………………………………………………. 26, 29
Robert Avery, Kenneth Brevoort, Glenn Canner,
Higher-Priced Home Lending and the 2005 HMDA Data (Sept. 8, 2006) …….. 28
Steve C. Bourassa, Predatory Lending In Jefferson County: A Report to the
Louisville Urban League (Urban Studies Institute, University of Louisville)
(December 2003) ……………………………………………………………………………………. 35
T. Nagazumi & D. Rose,
Preying on Neighborhoods: Subprime mortgage lending and Chicagoland
foreclosures, 1993-1998 (Sept. 21, 1999 …………………………………… 25, 26, 31, 34
The Reinvestment Fund, Mortgage Foreclosure Filings in Delaware (2006) …… 23
The Reinvestment Fund, A Study of Mortgage Foreclosures in Monroe County and
The Commonwealth’s Response (2004) …………………………………………………….. 23
The Reinvestment Fund, Mortgage Foreclosure Filings in Pennsylvania (2005). 23
William C. Apgar & Mark Duda, Collateral Damage: The Municipal Impact of
Today’s Mortgage Foreclosure Boom 1996-2000 (May 11, 2005),
http://www.nw.org/Network/neighborworksprogs/
foreclosuresolutions/documents/Apgar-DudaStudyFinal.pdf………………….
passim
William Apgar, The Municipal Cost of Foreclosures: A Chicago Case Study
(Feb. 27, 2005) http://www.hpfonline.org/PDF/Apgar-
Duda_Study_Full_Version.pdf………………………………………………………. 25, 26, 38
Zach Schiller, Foreclosure Growth in Ohio (2006) ………………………………………… 23
Zach Schiller and Jeremy Iskin, Foreclosure Growth in Ohio: A Brief Update
(2005), http://www.policymattersohio.org/pdf/
Foreclosure_Growth_Ohio_2005.pdf………………………………………………………… 23
Zach Schiller, Whitney Meredith, & Pam Rosado, Home Insecurity 2004:
Foreclosure Growth in Ohio, available at
http://www.policymattersohio.org/pdf/Home_Insecurity_2004.pdf………………. 23
Treatises
Restatement (3d), Property (Mortgages) § 5.4(a) (1997) ………………………………… 44
vi
Other Authorities
American Community Survey, U.S. Census Bureau (2005). …………………………… 21
Black’s Law Dictionary 727 (6th ed. abr.) ……………………………………………………. 17
Consumer Protection: Federal and State Agencies in Combating Predatory
Lending, United States General Accounting Office, Report to the Chairman and
Ranking Minority Member, Special Committee on Aging, U.S. Senate (January
2004), pp. 99-102……………………………………………………………………………………. 20
Curbing Predatory Home Mortgage Lending, U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban
Development and U.S. Dept. of the Treasury, 47 (2000), available at
http://www.huduser.org/publications/hsgfin/curbing.html ………………… 19, 32, 41
Housing Characteristics: 2000 (US Census Bureau 10/01)……………………………… 19
Informal Op. New York State Att’y Gen 2001-2 (April 5, 2001);………………… 8, 13
Inside B&C Lending at 2 (February 3, 2006)………………………………………………… 13
Pennsylvania Department of Banking, Losing the American Dream: A Report on
Residential Mortgage Foreclosures and Abusive Lending Practices in
Pennsylvania (2005). ………………………………………………………………………………. 23
Press Release, Office of Attorney General, N.J. Div. of Criminal Justice
Targets
financial crime (Nov. 14, 2004),
http://nj.gov/lps/newsreleases04/pr20041117b.html……………………………………. 25
Press Release, Sen. Mikulski Formed Task Force and Secured Federal Assistance
to Address Flipping Problem (Oct. 9, 2003) ………………………………………………. 25
U.S. Census 2000………………………………………………………………………………………. 21
1
INTERESTS OF AMICI CURIAE
Amici are non-profit legal services and public interest organizations who
have special expertise in defending foreclosures and in documenting how the
mortgage market works. Amici South Brooklyn Legal Services, Jacksonville Area
Legal Aid, Inc., Empire Justice Center, Legal Services for the Elderly, Queens
Legal Aid, Legal Aid Bureau of Buffalo, Legal Services of New York City–Staten
Island, Fair Housing Justice Center of HELP USA, and AARP’s Foundation
Litigation and Legal Counsel for the Elderly provide free legal representation
to
low-income individuals and families who are victims of abusive mortgage lending
and servicing practices, and who are at risk of foreclosure. Amici Center for
Responsible Lending, National Consumer Law Center, National Association of
Consumer Advocates, and Neighborhood Economic Development Advocacy
Project are non-profit research and policy organizations dedicated to exposing
and
eliminating abusive practices in the mortgage market. AARP advocates on behalf
of consumers in the mortgage marketplace and through its Public Policy
Institute
conducts research on a wide variety of issues affecting older persons,
including
subprime mortgage lending and mortgage broker practices.
Collectively, amici represent or counsel thousands of low to moderate
income homeowners each year. Amici prevent foreclosures through defense of
foreclosure actions in court; negotiating with foreclosing lenders to address
2
servicing abuses that inflate mortgage balances and to modify mortgages to give
homeowners a fresh start; filing administrative claims with city, state, and
federal
agencies; conducting community outreach and education to address predatory
lending and abusive servicing; and working on various policy issues to protect
consumers and prevent abusive mortgage lending and servicing practices.
The Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (“MERS”) has a
substantial and detrimental impact on amici as it curtails their ability to
conduct
research and advocacy and impairs the rights of their homeowner clients. In
particular, MERS’ failure to conform to New York law significantly undermines
the public interest in preserving the free public database created by land and
court
records and imposes substantial harms on amici’s homeowner clients. Therefore
amici urge this court to reverse the decision below and to find in favor of
Respondents-Appellants.
PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
Through their extensive experience representing individual homeowners and
closely studying both the national and local mortgage markets, amici have
learned
first-hand the detrimental effect of MERS’ electronic registration system on
homeowners, and its destructive impact on the public land records that serve
the
public interest in a variety of critical ways. Although this case turns on a
question
of New York law, amici and the homeowners they represent nationwide have
3
experienced the same obstacles, confusion, and frustration that are created by
the
MERS system in New York State.
The MERS system harms homeowners and undermines the public interest
by concealing information that is essential both to the maintenance of accurate
public land and court records, and to individual homeowners, particularly those
who seek redress for predatory mortgages or face foreclosure. Three issues
highlight the importance of these concerns to homeowners and to the public
interest. First, because MERS obfuscates the true owner of the note, MERS
creates significant and detrimental confusion among borrowers and homeowners,
their advocates, and the courts. Second, MERS frustrates established public
policy, which dictates that title information must be publicly available, thus
causing harm to state and local governments, advocacy groups, and academic
researchers who routinely rely on public database information to inform
legislative
decision-making, to support law enforcement, and to advance policy solutions to
a
wide variety of housing and mortgage issues. Third, MERS’ routine practice of
improperly commencing foreclosure actions solely in its name, even though it is
not the true owner of the note, flaunts courts rules and raises significant
standing
concerns. Accordingly, amici urge this Court to reverse the decision of the
court
below and find in favor of Respondents-Appellants Edward P. Romaine and the
County of Suffolk, and against Petitioners-Respondents MERS.
4
ARGUMENT
I. The MERS System Was Designed Without Regard to Consumers’
Rights
MERS is the brainchild of the mortgage industry, designed to facilitate the
transfer of mortgages on the secondary mortgage market and save lenders the
cost
of filing assignments. See, e.g., Br. for Petitioners-Respondents MERS
(hereinafter “MERS Br.”) at 6-7 (listing the founding members of MERS as, inter
alia, Mortgage Bankers Association of America, the Federal National Mortgage
Association…and others within the real estate finance industry); Record on
Appeal
(hereinafter “R.__”) at 604-6. (MERS is in an “administrative capacity to serve
the
sole purpose of appearing in the county land records”). MERS is not a mortgage
lender; nor does it ever own or have any beneficial interest in the note or
mortgage.
See, e.g., Merscorp, Inc. v. Romaine, No. 9688/01, slip op. at 2 n.3 (N.Y. Sup.
Ct.,
Suffolk Co. May 12, 2004); Informal Op. New York State Att’y Gen 2001-2 (April
5, 2001), 2001 N.Y. AG LEXIS 2; R. at 727-28. Nevertheless, MERS substitutes
its name on the public records for the name of the actual owners of mortgage
loans.
In so doing, MERS is rapidly undermining the accuracy of the public land and
court records databases, establishing in their place a proprietary national
electronic
registry system that “tracks” beneficial ownership and servicing rights and
whose
information is inaccessible to the public. Yet the design of MERS’ registration
system and foreclosure procedures considered neither the public’s interest, nor
the
5
rights and interests of consumers. See, e.g., Phyllis K. Slesinger and Daniel
McLaughlin, Mortgage Electronic Registration System, 31 IDAHO L. REV. 805,
811, 814-15 (1995) (MERS initially sought input from industry representatives;
no
input sought from consumers).
Not surprisingly, MERS operates in derogation of the rights and interests of
consumers and the public interest. MERS claims that the MERS system is
beneficial to consumers because the “cost savings are substantial,” the flow of
funds are sped up, and the consumer can determine which company services her
mortgage by calling a toll-free number. MERS Br. at 9-11, 37-38. However, these
arguments are unsupported and disregard the significant obstacles and confusion
that MERS creates. As described below, the detrimental effects of MERS—the
hiding of the true note and mortgage holder and the insulation of the holder
from
potential liability in situations involving predatory loans— substantially
outweigh
any purported benefit to consumers of the MERS system. Indeed, MERS is
fundamentally unfair to homeowners who are trapped in the system because it
transmutes public mortgage loan ownership information, required to be recorded
in
the public databases, into secret and proprietary information, inaccessible to
both
the borrower and the public.
6
II. MERS’ Claims That the MERS System Is Beneficial to Consumers Are
Unsupported.
MERS has not ushered in a beneficent new regime in the mortgage lending
industry, nor does it impart cost savings or greater access to information to
homeowners. See MERS Br. at 11, 37, 39. In fact, the opposite is true. The only
beneficiaries of the MERS system are MERS and its member lenders and servicers.
The losers are millions of homeowners who are unwittingly drawn into MERS’
virtual black hole of information, and the public at large. Far from filling an
information void, the MERS system creates an information drain, removing the
true note holder’s identity from the public records and substituting MERS in
its
stead. Significantly, while systematically eliminating any public record of
mortgage loan ownership and assignments, MERS has not even bothered to
maintain a private database of intermediate assignments—tracking only the
identity of the loan servicer. R. at 635-637. As a result, the judges and court
staff
who are forced to deal with the confusion spawned by the increasing number of
land records and foreclosures filed in the name of MERS can also be counted
among the casualties of the MERS system.
Any cost savings resulting from the MERS system benefit its member
lenders, who are freed from the costs of filing mortgage assignments, not
homeowners or the public. These cost savings are touted as MERS’ core purpose:
“This [MERS process] eliminates the need to record an assignment to your
7
MERS® Ready buyer, saving on average $22 per loan.” (“What is MERS?”
promotional materials) and “Save at least $22 on each loan by eliminating
assignments.” (MERS benefit materials). See also
http://www.mersinc.com/why_mers (last visited September 20, 2006).
Moreover, MERS’ assertion that homeowners are the beneficiaries of the
MERS system simply cannot be reconciled with the practices espoused by MERS
or those of its members. MERS Br. at 11, 38. While MERS claims that its
member lenders pass on savings to their borrowers, MERS Br. at 11, there is no
indication this is actually happening; nor is it any part of the MERS sales
pitch to
lenders. To the contrary, thanks to MERS, an additional fee frequently appears
on
the HUD-1 Settlement Statement: a MERS fee of $3.95. See R. at 48. MERS
encourages its members to charge this additional fee:
Q. Can I pass the MERS registration fee on to the borrower?
A. YES. On conventional loans you may be able to pass this fee
on to the borrower, but you should check with your legal
advisors to ensure that you are in compliance with federal and
state laws. On government loans, please check with your local
field office for availability and approval.
(MERS promotional FAQ).
There is no record evidence that any costs savings are passed on to
borrowers. The opposite is true. The $3.95 MERS assignment fee is built into
the
standard fees charged by lenders at closing and variously denominated as
8
“origination fee,” “underwriting fee,” “processing fee,” “administration fee,”
“funding fee,” etc. on the HUD-1 settlement sheet. Under the MERS system, it is
MERS and its members who are gaining financially, clerk’s offices which are
deprived of valuable operating funds, and consumers who are losing ground.
MERS erroneously touts its system as providing greater access to
information through the availability of a toll-free number to identify the
homeowner’s loan servicer. See R. at 48; MERS Br. at 37, 39. MERS’ repeated
emphasis, MERS Br. at 9-10, 39, on this issue is a red herring. The identity of
the
servicer is well known to the homeowner, who receives the servicer’s monthly
bills
and makes mortgage payments to the servicer. In fact, the identity of the
servicer
is perhaps the only information homeowners know about their loan once MERS is
involved. MERS does not offer homeowners a toll-free number to learn who
actually owns their note and mortgage; indeed MERS does not track that
information itself. Yet this is the key piece of information that homeowners no
longer possess and are unable to access because MERS has eliminated it from the
public records.
III. Homeowners Have a Right to Know Who Owns Their Loans.
MERS’ existence is justified by a slender reed of an opinion letter of its
counsel, a letter which cavalierly asserts that “there is no reason why, under
a
mortgage, the entity holding or owning the note may not keep the fact of its
9
ownership confidential. . . The public has no significant interest in learning
the true
identity of the holder of the note.” R. at 731. This self-serving opinion is
utterly
incorrect, and dangerously ignores consumer rights and the strong public
interest in
maintaining an accurate and complete public recordation system.
The 2001 Opinion of the Attorney General of the State of New York is a
clear refutation of MERS’ foundational principle that MERS’ elimination of
public
records does not violate public policy:
Designating MERS as the mortgagee in the mortgagor-mortgagee
indices would not satisfy the intent of Real Property Law’s recording
provisions to inform the public about the existence of encumbrances,
and to establish a public record containing identifying information as
to those encumbrances. If MERS ever went out of business, for
example, it would be virtually impossible for someone relying on the
public record to ascertain the identity of the actual mortgagee if only
MERS had been designated as the mortgagee of record.
2001 N.Y. Op. Attorney General 1010; 2001 N.Y. AG LEXIS 2.
Moreover, the importance of maintaining public records that accurately
identify the mortgage holder has assumed greater importance in recent years, as
mortgages are increasingly transferred into the secondary market and are only
rarely retained by the originating mortgage lender. A booming secondary
mortgage market has emerged with the issuance of mortgage-backed securities
which are sold to Wall Street firms in pools and securitized. These securitized
mortgages have skyrocketed from $11 billion in 1994 to more than $500 billion
in
2005. Inside B&C Lending at 2 (February 3, 2006).
10
What this securitization boom means for consumers is that the entity that
owns the note and mortgage is likely to change several times over the life of
the
loan. Before MERS, the easiest way to determine the current owner was to check
the public records for the last assignment of the mortgage.1 In the MERS
system,
however, assignments are never filed except when the mortgage is initially
assigned to MERS or assigned to a non-MERS member mortgagee. As a result,
when MERS is the nominee for a mortgage, the homeowner cannot determine who
owns her note by checking the public records, nor can she obtain this
information
from MERS. The MERS system thus actively subverts the public policy of
maintaining a transparent, public title history of real property.
It is essential for consumers to be able to identify the owner of their loan,
since the owner alone retains the power to make certain decisions about the
loan,
particularly when borrowers fall behind. Knowing the identity of the servicer
is
rarely sufficient for consumers who are having problems with their loans, as
servicers often lack the necessary authority to enter into loan modifications
with
borrowers or restructure overdue payments. Borrowers may also benefit from
direct contact with owners when servicers’ interests in collecting late fees
and
collection fees run counter to borrowers’ interests in bringing their loans
current.
1 The recording of an assignment is beneficial to the borrower, and the public,
by openly stating
the current owner of the mortgage.
11
Thus, the homeowner’s ability to locate the owner of the note and mortgage is
important both to informal resolution of payment delinquencies and when more
serious problems arise.
The homeowner’s inability to determine quickly who owns the note and
mortgage also prevents the exercise of important rights under federal and state
law
and makes it difficult to adequately defend foreclosure proceedings. Federal
law
creates a right of rescission whenever a homeowner refinances a home, or
otherwise enters into a nonpurchase money mortgage. If the lender fails to
comply
fully with the dictates of the Truth-in-Lending Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1601 et seq.,
the
borrower is entitled to exercise the right of rescission for an extended three
year
period. 15 U.S.C. § 1635(f). When exercised, this right is extremely powerful:
it
cancels the lender’s security interest or mortgage, credits all payments
entirely to
principal, relieves the homeowner of the obligation to repay any closing costs
or
fees financed, and provides the possibility of recovering statutory and
compensatory damages. 12 C.F.R. § 226.23. Of critical importance in the context
of this proceeding, the right to rescind may be asserted against assignees of
the
obligation, i.e. the note holder itself; in fact, rescission is one of the few
tools
available to homeowners to stop a foreclosure. 15 U.S.C. § 1641(c).
Unlike note holders, servicers are not liable for rescission, 15 U.S.C.
§1641(f)(1), and some courts have refused to honor a homeowner’s rescission
even
12
where the servicer’s identity is the only information available to the
homeowner.
See Miguel v. Country Funding Corp., 309 F.3d 1161 (9th Cir. 2002). While the
Federal Reserve Board subsequently amended its Official Staff Commentary to
clarify that service upon an agent of the holder, as defined by state law, is
sufficient, where the creditor does not designate a person to receive the
notice of
rescission, 69 Fed. Reg. 16,769 (Mar. 31, 2004), many ambiguities remain and
courts have continued to question the adequacy of notice unless given to the
holder
of the loan. See, e.g., Roberts v. WMC Mortg. Corp., 173 Fed. Appx. 575 (9th
Cir.
2006). Prudent practice makes it essential for a rescinding homeowner to
identify
and notify the holder.
Identifying the holder of the note is dependent upon accurate land records, as
servicers incur no liability for withholding this information. While the
Truth-in-
Lending Act requires servicers to tell borrowers, upon request, who the holder
is,
15 U.S.C. §1641(f)(2), there is no requirement that the response be timely and
there is no remedy for its violation. The experience of amici is that servicers
rarely,
if ever, provide this information.
Service upon MERS is likewise ineffective, as MERS is neither the holder
nor the servicer. See Mortg. Elec. Registration Sys. v. Estrella, 390 F.3d 522
(7th
Cir. 2004) (MERS is a nominee on the mortgage only); Mortg. Elec. Registration
Sys. v. Neb. Dep’t of Banking & Fin., 704 N.W.2d 784 (Neb. 2005) (MERS
argues
13
that it is only nominee of mortgages). As “nominee,” MERS is not an agent of
the
holder for purposes of receipt of rescission notices. Cf., e.g., Black’s Law
Dictionary 727 (6th ed. abr.) (defining nominee as “one designated to act for
another as his representative in a rather limited sense”); Mortg. Elec.
Registration
Sys. v. Neb. Dep’t of Banking & Fin., 704 N.W.2d 784 (Neb. 2005) (MERS
argues
that it is only nominee of mortgages and is contractually prohibited from
exercising any rights to the mortgages). Moreover, the history of litigation
involving MERS confirms that it would be foolish to rely on notice to MERS as
notice to the holder of the mortgage. See, e.g., Freedom Mortg. Corp. v.
Burnham
Mortg., Inc., 2006 WL 695467 (N.D. Ill., Mar. 13, 2006) (lender arguing that it
is
not bound by foreclosure bids of MERS as its nominee); Countrywide Home Loans
v. Hannaford, 2004 WL 1836744 (Ohio Ct. App. Aug. 18, 2004).
This leaves a homeowner in a trick box. In order to exercise an important
right, the homeowner must provide notice to the holder of the note or its
agent.
MERS does not serve as the holder, nor does it serve as the holder’s agent for
this
purpose; it does not believe it is required to comply with the Truth-in-Lending
Act
at all, according to a memo prepared by MERS’ counsel (R. at 745-6); and it
refuses or is incapable of providing the homeowner with the name or address of
the
holder of the note. Surely this is not an unexpected consequence of the MERS
system. As architect of a system that, by design, withholds information from
14
homeowners that is key to their exercising a critical federal right, MERS has
and
continues to infringe on homeowners’ rights of rescission.
MERS’ obfuscation of the true holder of the note further infringes on
homeowners’ rights to rescind abusive, high-cost home loans pursuant to New
York State’s Banking Law 6-l, which was enacted in October 2002 to counter
predatory lending abuses in the mortgage market. Many other state and common
law rights of borrowers are also imperiled by the MERS system. In foreclosure
proceedings, assignee note holders often claim that they are a holder in due
course
when a consumer raises certain defenses such as common law fraud or deceptive
acts and practices (codified in New York State as General Business Law § 349).
Before MERS, consumers could easily access the complete chain of title through
the public records by identifying each assignment of the loan. Under the MERS
system, all of this information is lost to the homeowner, putting homeowners at
a
significant and unwarranted disadvantage in defending foreclosures.
IV. The MERS System Causes Significant Confusion Among Borrowers,
and Has a Particularly Detrimental Impact on the Elderly and Other
Vulnerable Borrowers Frequently Victimized by Predatory Lenders.
In the last decade scholars and government regulatory agencies examining
mortgage lending practices, including predatory lending, have spotlighted the
importance of creating transparency in the mortgage marketplace through
improved disclosures to borrowers and enhanced consumer literacy. See Curbing
15
Predatory Home Mortgage Lending, U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban
Development and U.S. Dept. of the Treasury, 47 (2000), available at
http://www.huduser.org/publications/hsgfin/curbing.html (“HUD-Treasury
Report”). The MERS system flies in the face of this goal—obfuscating the
mortgage process and violating consumers’ right to know. The confusion
engendered by MERS has a particularly detrimental impact on the most vulnerable
homeowners.
According to the 2000 Census, 12.9 percent of New York State’s population
is comprised of people who are 65 years and older. Of these elderly state
residents,
over 66% are homeowners, while 42.8% of seniors residing in New York City own
their homes.2 These numbers suggest that a large number of the consumers
affected by the MERS system are older New Yorkers.
Declining vision, hearing, mobility and cognitive skills make it more
difficult for older borrowers to extract the critical information they need
from
federally mandated disclosure documents. See Alan M. White and Cathy Lesser
Mansfield, Literacy and Contract, 13 STAN. L & POL’Y REV 233. Like many
consumers, older adults often can not understand mortgage documents, as they
are
written in extremely complex and technical language. MERS amplifies this
2 See Housing Characteristics: 2000 (US Census Bureau 10/01).
16
problem by intentionally layering new legal terms, and inserting a new and
foreign
legal entity, into already complicated consumer contracts and transactions.
As a result, many of amici’s clients are unaware of MERS’ involvement and
are thoroughly confused when MERS begins to act on behalf of their servicer or
mortgagee. The confusion and obstacles that are created by this MERS system are
significant, particularly for homeowners whose predatory loans put them at an
increased risk of default and foreclosure. For example, one of SBLS’ elderly
clients, in default on her mortgage, was receiving a tremendous number of
solicitations from “foreclosure rescue” companies and mortgage brokers and
lenders which promised to save her from foreclosure. When she received the
foreclosure summons and complaint naming MERS as the plaintiff, she
disregarded it because she thought that MERS was simply another company trying
to scare her. As a result of her confusion over MERS, the client nearly lost
her
home.
Government agencies and consumer organizations consistently report that
older citizens are disproportionately victimized by predatory mortgage brokers
and
lenders. See Consumer Protection: Federal and State Agencies in Combating
Predatory Lending, United States General Accounting Office, Report to the
Chairman and Ranking Minority Member, Special Committee on Aging, U.S.
Senate (January 2004), pp. 99-102. Older homeowners are more likely to have
17
substantial equity in their homes, making them attractive targets. Their fixed
incomes (over 20% of elderly city residents live below the poverty level) and
agerelated
mental and physical impairments, affecting nearly half of city residents,
make them more vulnerable to mortgage abuse. 3 In addition, many older New
Yorkers living in inner-city homes lack access to traditional lending
institutions,
placing them at greater risk of becoming victims of high cost, predatory,
subprime
lenders. See Associates Home Equity v. Troup, 343 N.J. Super. 254 (App. Div.
2001).4
Subprime lending has proven to offer opportunities for unscrupulous – or
predatory-lenders to take advantage of borrowers by charging excessive
interest rates and fees and using mortgage proceeds to pay inflated costs for
home repairs or insurance products. The most common victims of these
predatory lending practices have been found to include the elderly,
minorities, and low income households.
Kimberly Burnett, Chris Herbert, et al., Subprime Originations and Foreclosures
in New York State: A Case Study of Nassau, Suffolk, and Westchester Counties
(2002) at ii.
By creating an additional, confusing overlay to the predatory loan
transaction, MERS’ involvement serves to compound the very significant problems
3 See U.S. Census 2000; see also American Community Survey, U.S. Census Bureau
(2005).
4 After finding that the lender had targeted a 74 year old African American
home owner in
Newark, the Court in Troup held that the lender “participated in the targeting
of inner-city
borrowers who lack access to traditional lending institutions, charged them a
discriminatory
interest rate, and imposed unreasonable terms.” Associates Home Equity, 343
N.J. Super.254
(App. Div. 2001).
18
that already exist for homeowners with predatory loans. MERS shields these
unscrupulous lenders, hiding the identities of assignees and muddying records
which are vital to victims seeking immediate redress.
V. The Public Has a Significant and Enduring Interest in Preserving and
Protecting the Free Public Databases Created by the Land and Court
Records of This Nation.
MERS . . . represents the future of foreclosure: a brave new world of
anonymity and unaccountability . . . The ostensible purpose is to save
companies the county filing fees they often must pay when they buy
mortgages or transfer servicing. An added benefit: if a foreclosure
filing becomes necessary that filing, too, can be in MERS’ name.
That makes it harder for journalists, community groups and
researchers to determine whose mortgages are actually ending in
foreclosure. If MERS has its way, it will become increasingly
difficult to tell whose mortgages are failing.
Richard Lord, AMERICAN NIGHTMARE: PREDATORY LENDING AND THE
FORECLOSURE OF THE AMERICAN DREAM 157 (Common Courage Press 2005).
A. Public land and court data records facilitate research
investigating the root causes of a variety of mortgage and other
land related problems.
The public land and court records have served as a vitally important, free
and accessible source of data that have been relied upon by broad
constituencies,
including government, academics, non-profit advocacy organizations, businesses
and private individuals throughout the past century. These records have
assisted
the legislative branches of government in formulating policy and providing a
legislative response to crises, including redressing abusive mortgage lending
19
practices. 5 See Zach Schiller, Foreclosure Growth in Ohio (2006), available at
available at: http://www.policymattersohio.org/pdf/foreclosure_growth_
ohio_2006 (supporting recently enacted Amended Substitute Senate Bill No. 185,
126th Cong., which expanded the Ohio Consumer Sales Practices Act to cover
mortgage lending; 6 TRF, Mortgage Foreclosure Filings in Pennsylvania (2005),
available at http://www.trfund.com/resource/downloads/policypubs/Mortgage-
Foreclosure-Filings.pdf (Study resulting from Pennsylvania state legislative
request to gather information and analyze foreclosures); 7 Burnett et.al,
Subprime
5 The studies listed represent only a small sampling of the numerous studies
and reports reliant
on public land and court records data that have influenced legislative
decision-making. See e.g.,
The Reinvestment Fund (“TRF”), Mortgage Foreclosure Filings in Delaware (2006),
http://www.trfund.com/resource/downloads/policypubs/Delaware_Foreclosure.pdf
(Study
commissioned by the Office of the State Bank Commissioner to analyze
foreclosure activity in
Delaware); TRF, A Study of Mortgage Foreclosures in Monroe County and The
Commonwealth’s Response (2004), http://www.banking.state.pa.us/banking/cwp/
view.asp?a=1354&q=547305 (Study commissioned by the Pennsylvania Department
of Banking
and the Housing Finance Agency to investigate foreclosure trends in Monroe
County); Lynne
Dearborn, Mortgage Foreclosures and Predatory Lending in St. Clair County,
Illinois 1996-
2000 (2003) (U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) funded
study of
loan terms and foreclosure trends commissioned by St. Clair County); Lorain
County
Reinvestment Fund, The Expanding Role of Subprime Lending in Ohio’s Burgeoning
Foreclosure Problem: A Three County Study of a Statewide Problem, (2002),
http://cohhio.org/
projects/ocrp/SubprimeLendingReport.pdf (Study of foreclosure trends in three
Ohio counties).
6 See also Zach Schiller and Jeremy Iskin, Foreclosure Growth in Ohio: A Brief
Update (2005),
http://www.policymattersohio.org/pdf/Foreclosure_Growth_Ohio_2005.pdf; Zach
Schiller,
Whitney Meredith, & Pam Rosado, Home Insecurity 2004: Foreclosure Growth in
Ohio,
available at http://www.policymattersohio.org/pdf/Home_Insecurity_2004.pdf.
7See also Pennsylvania Department of Banking, Losing the American Dream: A
Report on
Residential Mortgage Foreclosures and Abusive Lending Practices in Pennsylvania
(2005),
available at
http://www.banking.state.pa.us/banking/lib/banking/about_dob/special%20
initiatives/mortgage%20forecloser/statewide%20foreclosure%20report.pdf. This
report was
presented to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives by the Secretary of the
Pennsylvania
20
Originations and Foreclosures in New York State (Study supported passage of
New York predatory lending law, N.Y. Banking Law § 6-1).8
The land and court records data have been utilized by the executive branches
of government to inform their regulatory activities related to land ownership,
see
e.g. Ramon Garcia, Residential Foreclosures in the City of Buffalo, 1990-2000
(2003)9 (New York Federal Reserve Bank investigation),10 and are a source of
information for law enforcement agencies seeking to prosecute offenders for
mortgage fraud, property flipping and other criminal mortgage-related
offenses.11
See e.g. People v. Larman, No. 06253-2005 (Kings County Supreme Ct. Sept. 20,
2006) (Indictment for fraudulent mortgage transactions); People v. Sandella,
No.
02899-2006 (Kings County Supreme. Ct. Sept. 27, 2006) (indictments for multi-
Department of Banking and includes information from several sources, including
TRF, Mortgage
Foreclosures in Pennsylvania.
8 Executive Summary available at: http://www.abtassociates.com/reports/ESSuburban_
NY_Foreclosures_study_final.pdf (Public records and HMDA data demonstrated that
subprime foreclosures impacted both urban and suburban communities)
9 This report is available at: http://www.newyorkfed.org/aboutthefed/
buffalo/foreclosure_study.pdf (10 year study of foreclosure trends in Buffalo)
10 The following are a small sampling of executive branch studies relying on
data in the public
domain. See e.g., Bunce, Harold, Gruenstein, Debbie et al., Subprime Lending:
The Smoking Gun
of Predatory Lending? (HUD 2001), http://www.huduser.org/Publications/
pdf/brd/12Bunce.pdf;
Dearborn, Mortgage Foreclosures in St. Clair.
11 For a sampling of New York criminal indictments relying on land records
data, see People v.
Albertina, 09141-2005 (Kings County Supreme Ct. Sept. 28, 2006) (Attorney
General indictment
for a multi-million dollar scheme to sell houses with fake deeds); People v.
Constant, No.
01843A-2006 (Suffolk Supreme Ct. Oct. 12, 2006)(Suffolk County grand jury indictment
of six
for roles in real estate scam); Altegra Credit Co. v. Tin Chu, et al., No.
04326-2004 (Kings
County Supreme Ct. March 25, 2004)
21
million dollar residential property flipping scheme).12 These data also inform
local
governments about the cost and impact of abusive lending practices on both
their
constituents and the public purse. See T. Nagazumi & D. Rose, Preying on
Neighborhoods: Subprime mortgage lending and Chicagoland foreclosures, 1993-
1998 (Sept. 21, 1999) 13 (NTIC study investigated the effects of subprime
mortgage
lending on foreclosures in Chicago); Kathleen C. Engel, Do Cities Have
Standing?
Redressing the Externalities of Predatory Lending, 38 Conn. L. Rev. 355 (2006).
12 Criminal property flipping is rampant throughout the country. For a sampling
of this problem
see e.g. Press Release, Office of Attorney General, N.J. Div. of Criminal
Justice Targets
financial crime (Nov. 14, 2004),
http://nj.gov/lps/newsreleases04/pr20041117b.html (Indictment
of North Jersey businessman for mortgage fraud scheme that netted more than
$677,000 in
fraudulent loans); Lessons learned from the laboratory (Community Law Center
(CLC) 2002)(A
report by the CLC – Baltimore City flipping and Predatory Lending Task Force
(47 individuals
were indicted, pled guilty, or were convicted in federal court for property
flipping and mortgage
fraud)), http://www.communitylaw.org/Executive%20 Summary.htm; see also Press
Release,
Sen. Mikulski Formed Task Force and Secured Federal Assistance to Address
Flipping Problem
(Oct. 9, 2003), http://mikulski.senate.gov/record.cfm?id=213248 (70 people
convicted of
property flipping in Baltimore); Press Release, FBI, U.S. Attorney’s Office,
Ohio, (May 9,
2006); Press Release, U.S. Attorney’s Office, S.D. Mississippi (Feb.16, 2006);
Press Release,
Office of the Attorney General, Florida (June 25, 2004)
13 This report is available at: http://www.ntic-us.org/preying/preying.pdf ;
For a sampling of
other relevant studies, see D. Rose, Chicago Foreclosure Update 2006 (July),
http:// www.nticus.
org/documents/ChicagoForeclosureUpdate2006.pdf (NTIC study analyzes foreclosure
trends
in Chicago); D. Rose, Chicago Foreclosure Update 2005, http://www.nticus.
org/currentevents/press/pdf/chicagoforeclosure_update.pdf; William C. Apgar
& Mark Duda.
Collateral Damage: The Municipal Impact of Today’s Mortgage Foreclosure Boom
1996-2000
(May 11, 2005), http://
www.nw.org/Network/neighborworksprogs/foreclosuresolutions/documents/Apgar-
DudaStudyFinal.pdf (Documents the financial costs of foreclosure to
municipalities); Apgar, The
Municipal Cost of Foreclosures: A Chicago Case Study (Feb. 27, 2005), http://
www.hpfonline.org/PDF/Apgar-Duda_Study_Full_Version.pdf (Also documents
indirect costs
that result from the domino effect that foreclosures have on communities).
22
Non-profit groups and academics rely upon data in the public domain to
illustrate trends, spotlight the impact of various mortgage practices on
minority and
low income communities and uncover abusive practices that injure their
constituencies. They use this information to advocate for policy initiatives
that
benefit the public interest. See e.g. Nagazumi, Chicago Update 2006; Apgar and
Duda, Collateral Damage; Apgar, Municipal Cost of Foreclosures; Lindley
Higgins, Effective Community-Based Strategies for Preventing Foreclosures,1993-
2004 (2005), 14 (A 2005 analysis of the factors that led to foreclosure
generated
proposals for foreclosure prevention programs)15; Neighborhood Housing Services
(NHS) of Chicago, Preserving Homeownership: Community-Development
Implications of the New Mortgage Market (2004) (Study of foreclosures from
1998-2003 proposes foreclosure prevention initiatives for community based
organizations working cooperatively with private industry and federal, state,
and
local governments).16
14 This report is available at:
http://www.nw.org/network/pubs/studies/documents
/foreclosureReport092905.pdf.
15 See also Nagazumi, Preying on Neighborhoods; Richard Stock, Center for
Business and
Economic Research (CBER), Predation in the Sub-Prime Lending Market: Montgomery
County
Vol. I., 1994-2001 (2001),
http://www.mvfairhousing.com/cber/pdf/Executive%20summary.PDF
(Study examines predatory lending in Montgomery County, Ohio).
16 This report is available at: http://www.nw.org/network/pubs/studies/documents/
preservingHomeownershipRpt2004_000.pdf. See also Nagazumi, Preying on
Neighborhoods at
36-37 (urging legislature to pass Illinois legislation to end predatory
subprime lending and to
disclose predatory pricing and practices to Illinois regulators and the
public); Higgins,
Community-Based Strategies at i. (Objective is to increase capacity of local
community based
23
Businesses utilize the public land and court records data as the providers of
research services that convert public information into customized databases.
See
e.g. NYForeclosures.com; Atlanta Foreclosure Report;17 Boston Foreclosure
Report and Foreclosure Report of Chicago 18). These data collection businesses
serve a wide variety of business customers, including mortgage brokers seeking
leads, bankruptcy attorneys, and real estate agents, as well as government and
nonprofit
research entities. See id.19
B. The public databases have played an important role in facilitating
understanding and government response to the recent
“foreclosure boom.”
Land and court records data have become a particularly important public
resource over the past decade, as the nation has experienced what some have
characterized as a “foreclosure boom.” See generally Apgar and Duda, Collateral
organizations to revitalize communities); Apgar & Duda, Collateral Damage
at 16 (Report
identifies foreclosure avoidance strategies for municipalities).
17 See http://www.equitydepot.net.
18 See http://www.chicagoforeclosurereport.com.
19 Non-profit and government researchers that have relied on these data
collection businesses to
do the primary research legwork that provides them with land and court records
data to support
their analyses include, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Buffalo Branch,
see Ramon
Garcia, Residential Foreclosures in the City of Buffalo, 1990-2000 (2003); see
Bunce, Subprime
Lending; Kimberly Burnett, Bulbul Kaul, & Chris Herbert, Analysis of
Property Turnover
Patterns in Atlanta, Baltimore, Cleveland and Philadelphia (2004),
http://www.abtassociates.com/reports/analysis_property_turnover_patterns.pdf;
Debbie
Gruenstein & Christopher Herbert, Analyzing Trends in Subprime Originations
and
Foreclosures: A Case Study of the Boston Metro Area, 1995-1999 (2000),
http://www.abtassociates.com/reports/20006470781991.pdf; Nagazumi, Preying on
Neighborhoods; Rose, Chicago Foreclosure Update 2006.
24
Damage; see also Daniel Immergluck & Geoff Smith, The External Costs of
Foreclosure: The Impact of Single-Family Mortgage Foreclosures on Property
Values, 17 Housing Pol’y Debate, Issue 1 (2006).20 As subprime mortgage lending
escalated from $35 billion in 1994 to $140 billion in 200021 to more than $600
billion in 2005, foreclosure rates jumped by an alarming 335.6%. See Robert
Avery, Kenneth Brevoort, Glenn Canner, Higher-Priced Home Lending and the
2005 HMDA Data at A125 (Sept. 8, 2006).22 These skyrocketing subprime
foreclosures disproportionately impacted low-income and minority communities.
Id. at 63.
Struggling to understand the origins of this foreclosure crisis, government
and researchers have turned to the public data. See supra Schiller; TRF,
Delaware;
TRF, Pennsylvania; Dearborn, Mortgage Foreclosures in St. Clair; Paul Bellamy,
The Expanding Role of Subprime Lending in Ohio’s Burgeoning Foreclosure
20 This report is available at:
http://www.fanniemaefoundation.org/programs/hpd/pdf/
hpd_1701_immergluck.pdf#search=%22%22Immergluck%22%20and%20%22Geoff%22%22
21 See Neal Walters & Sharon Hermanson, Subprime Mortgage Lending and Older
Borrowers
(AARP Public Policy Institute), Data Digest Number 74 (2001). Data Digest
available at:
http://assets.aarp.org/rgcenter/consume/dd74_finance.pdf
22 This report is available at:
http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/bulletin/2006/hmda/bull06hmda.pdf; “HMDA”
refers to the
Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, 12 USC § 2801 et. seq.; see also Margot Saunders
and Alys
Cohen, Federal Regulation of Consumer Credit: The Cause or the Cure for
Predatory Lending?
at 11 (Joint Center for Housing Studies 2004),
http://www.jchs.harvard.edu/publications/finance/babc/babc_04-21.pdf
25
Problem: A Three County Study of a Statewide Problem, 1994-2001 (2002).23 This
effort to learn the root causes of the “foreclosure boom,” to understand
whether
particular regions or demographic groups are most affected by rising
foreclosures,
to evaluate the impact of these foreclosures on the surrounding community, and
to
address and seek to remedy any abuses that enabled this crisis to develop, has
spawned a virtual explosion of research studies. See e.g. TRF, Delaware; Rose,
Chicago (2006); Engel, Do Cities Have Standing?; Rose, Chicago Foreclosure
Update 2006; Rose, Chicago Foreclosure Update 2005 (Updating foreclosure
activity in Chicago); Apgar & Duda, Collateral Damage; Apgar, Municipal
Cost of
Foreclosures; TRF, Pennsylvania; TRF, Monroe County; Nagazumi, Preying on
Neighborhoods; NHS of Chicago, Preserving Homeownership; Dearborn,
Mortgage Foreclosures in St. Clair; Paul Bellamy, The Expanding Role; Burnett,
Subprime Originations; Garcia, Buffalo supra note 10; Bunce, Subprime Lending;
Nagazumi, Preying on Neighborhoods.
Standing alone, land and court records data serve as a valuable resource to
confirm the existence of the foreclosure boom, identify any key participants in
the
foreclosure process, and identify those geographic areas hardest hit. See
supra,
Dearborn, Mortgage Foreclosures in St. Clair; Stock, Predation at 8; Apgar,
23 This report is available at: http://www.cohhio.org/projects/ocrp/
SubprimeLendingReport.pdf
26
Chicago at 5.24 In fact, research derived from courthouse and public land
records
motivated the North Carolina legislature to become one of the first states to
crack
down on predatory mortgage lending. See Habitat for Humanity Refinances,
Coalition for Responsible Lending (updated July 25, 2000) (This ground breaking
study examined refinances of affordable Habitat for Humanity mortgages into
unaffordable predatory loans); David Rice, Predatory Lending Bill Caught in
Debate, Winston-Salem Journal, April 27, 1999.
Land and court records data are even more valuable and informative when
analyzed in conjunction with several other “puzzle pieces” of publicly
available
data. See e.g. Duda & Apgar, Mortgage Foreclosures in Atlanta: Patterns and
Policy Issues, 2000-2005 (2005)25; see Apgar, Collateral Damage; Rose, Chicago
Foreclosure Update 2006; Burnett, Subprime Originations. When combined with
other sources of data, such as census tract and HMDA data, land and court
records
data enable researchers to layer information to develop a comprehensive picture
that identifies the leading foreclosure filers, the geographic location and
racial
composition of foreclosure hotspots and the loan characteristics associated
with
concentrated and quick foreclosures. See e.g. Duda, Atlanta at 15; see also
24Similarly, Mountain State Justice, a West Virginia legal services
organization that represents
victims of predatory lending, has conducted an annual review of foreclosure
filings in the state
since July 2001. See Report of West Virginia Foreclosures, available from Mount
State Justice.
25This report is available at: http://www.nw.org/network/neighborworksprogs/
foreclosuresolutions/documents/foreclosure1205.pdf
27
Burnett, Atlanta, Baltimore, Cleveland and Philadelphia at iii; Nagazumi,
Preying
on Neighborhoods at 9; Stock, Predation at 1.
In the past, the availability of detailed public information has enabled
researchers to pinpoint some of the root causes of increased foreclosures and,
for
example, informed the New York State legislature in crafting a legislative
response
to abusive practices associated with high cost loans. There, a New York study
which combined public records data with HMDA data to identify subprime lenders
and the distribution of subprime foreclosures demonstrated that subprime
foreclosures were prevalent in suburban as well as urban areas.26 See Burnett,
Subprime Originations. Comprehensive research similarly enabled the State of
Illinois and the City of Chicago to redress abusive lending practices and
thereby
put the brakes on the foreclosure boom in Chicago. See e.g. Nagazumi, Preying
on
Neighborhoods (study demonstrated that subprime foreclosures were both an urban
and suburban problem; that most non-performing loans were subprime, and
identified the top foreclosers of high interest loans); see also, subsequently
enacted
Illinois predatory lending law, 815 ILCS § 137. Data from land and court
records
26 The New York predatory lending law enacted April 1, 2003 can be found at
N.Y.
Banking Law § 6-1, N.Y. Gen. Bus. Law § 771-a, and N.Y. Real Prop. Acts. Law §
1302.
28
has played an important role in analyzing other trends in the mortgage market,
such as identifying unfair or discriminatory lending patterns and practices.27
Unfortunately, in recent years MERS’ increasing emergence as a
placeholder for the true note and mortgage holders in land and court records
databases has corrupted these sources of data and undermined their utility as a
research source.
C. Through its penetration of the public databases MERS has caused
a dramatic deterioration in the quality and quantity of publicly
available information.
In New York city alone, MERS has rapidly replaced true owners in the city
maintained public database—ACRIS—increasing its filings from a nominal fewer
than 100 in 2000, to approximately 90,000 in 2005 and an expected 120,000
filings
in 2006.28 Since the MERS label on the public records shields the identity of
the
27 Bunce, Subprime Lending; In 2001, a joint HUD and U.S. Dept. of the Treasury
report found
that “[i]n predominantly black neighborhoods, subprime lending accounted for 51
percent of
refinance loans in 1998 – compared with only 9 percent in predominantly white
neighborhoods.”
Curbing Predatory Home Mortgage Lending, U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban
Development
and U.S. Dept. of the Treasury, 47 (2000),
http://www.huduser.org/publications/hsgfin/curbing.html.
28 AARP accessed the New York City
Department of Finance’s Automated City Register
Information System (ACRIS) website on September 12, 2006 to research the number
of MERS,
MERS as nominee and Mortgage Electronic Registration System filings in all
boroughs for each
of two months—March and August during the years 2000 through 2006. The results
of this
search are included below.
March 2000 7; August 2000 8; March 2001 610; August 2001 126;
March 2002 414; August 2002 663; March 2003 1,277; August 2003 2,785;
March 2004 4,384; August 2004 4,697; March 2005 7,064; August 2005 8,009;
March 2006 10,619; August 2006 10,411.
29
actual participants in the mortgage and foreclosure processes—the true
noteholders
and mortgagees, the MERS filings have created a significant hole in this
important public database.
The void in the mortgage database will directly and measurably harm the
constituents of community groups, such as the University Neighborhood Housing
Program (UNHP), who will no longer reap benefits achieved through negotiations
with the largest foreclosing entities in the Bronx, entities which have been
identified through UNHP’s tracking of information about Bronx residential
lending.29 These benefits have included negotiated loss mitigation procedures
and
the creation of an Asset Control Area program to renovate and sell 300 FHA
insured foreclosed homes to qualified first time moderate-income homebuyers.
Moreover, MERS’ anticipated penetration of the Bronx multi-family market will
likely cripple UNHP’s Building Indicator Project (BIP), whose database has
enabled the identification and repair of distressed rental housing. The BIP’s
database of more than 7,000 Bronx multifamily apartment buildings, including
ownership, building size, housing code violation, city lien, and critically,
mortgage
Estimated annual filings for 2000 and 2006 were based on the two months of
filings for those
years.
29 UNHP’s research shows MERS was plaintiff in 305 (11%) of the 2,770 auctions
scheduled in
the Bronx over the past 4 ½ years. If the use of MERS continues to grow, it
will become
increasingly difficult for groups like UNHP to track who is foreclosing in
their neighborhoods
and to undertake remediation efforts with the foreclosers that they have
successfully engaged in
the past.
30
holder data, has enabled UNHP to engage lenders who, in turn, have pressured
building owners to make numerous repairs to Bronx rental housing stock.30
New York is not alone in facing the deterioration of its public mortgage
databases. MERS’ penetration of the City of Chicago’s database starkly presents
this problem. In 1999, NTIC undertook its comprehensive study of subprime
lending in the Chicago area over a five year period from 1993-1998. At that
time,
no lender or mortgagee’s identity was hidden by the MERS label. See Nagazumi,
Preying on Neighborhoods at 25. (Figure 10 displays the top 34 lenders
responsible for high interest rate foreclosures in 1998). By 2005 MERS itself
was
identified as the largest foreclosing entity in Chicagoland, with 1,100
foreclosure
filings. Hidden from public view were the identities of the actual foreclosing
lenders and possibly the perpetrators of the most egregious lending practices.
See
Rose, Chicago Update 2006 at 11 (Table 8 shows the most active foreclosing
institutions in 2005). As in Chicago, MERS topped the list of the largest
foreclosure filers during the period 2000-2005 in Atlanta, named as the
foreclosing
agent on 41,467 or 16.1 percent of all filings, and was the largest filer in
30 Similarly, St. Ambrose Housing Aid Center, a housing advocacy group in
Baltimore,
Maryland representing homeowners victimized by predatory mortgage lending
regularly
searched the land records to identify homeowner victims of suspect lenders and
to identify any
assignees. St. Ambrose is no longer able to identify many of these assignees
and can no longer
assess their complicity in promoting the origination of abusive mortgages.
31
foreclosure tracts with very high foreclosure rates. Duda, Atlanta at 15 -17
&
Figure 3-1.31
The erroneous identification of MERS as lender of record in Jefferson
County and throughout the state during 2000 to 2002 tainted research into
foreclosure trends in Kentucky. See Steve C. Bourassa, Predatory Lending In
Jefferson County: A Report to the Louisville Urban League, 2 (Urban Studies
Institute, University of Louisville) (December 2003).32 As one of the largest
foreclosers of predatory loans, MERS’ presence on the public record masked the
identity of its constituent lenders, the true mortgagees, and obscured the true
make
up of the loan portfolio foreclosed upon.
The MERS filing spreads a cloak of invisibility over any member
mortgage/note-holder that purchases a loan following origination. The lender
whose loose underwriting guidelines or careless oversight facilitated the
origination and sale of foreclosure-prone loans is carefully hidden from public
view by the MERS system. See e.g. Duda, Atlanta at 19. In shielding the
identity
of these mortgage transaction participants, the MERS label hobbles researchers,
who, because of missing data, are less able to ascertain whether escalating
31Over the past year, from July 1, 2005-June 30, 2006, MERS, has also become
one of the four
top foreclosers in West Virginia. See Report of West Virginia Foreclosures,
available from
Mountain State Justice.
32 This report is available at:
http://www.lul.org/Predatory%20Lending%20Report.pdf
32
foreclosures are caused by a small number of rogue players—who may be dealt
with through enforcement actions—or are part of a systemic problem that
requires
a targeted legislative response. Whether this cloaking of its members’
transactions
resulted from a conscious plan or was simply a felicitous byproduct of MERS’
money saving scheme, the result is the same—a dangerous and destructive attack
on the public databases.
D. The MERS Shield Creates an Irretrievable Void in the Property
Records that Harms Many Constituencies.
The void in the property records harms a broad array of entities and, unless
this process is reversed, these data will be irretrievably lost to the public.
Law
enforcement agencies may be stymied in their efforts to investigate and
prosecute
criminal mortgage fraud and property flipping if deprived of important data
sources on which they have relied in the past. See, e.g., People v. Albertina;
People v. Larman; People v. Sandella; People v. Constant; Altegra Credit Co. v.
Tin Chu, supra. State legislatures will face obstacles to understanding the
root
causes of mortgage-related problems and will be unable to identify offending
entities if they can no longer rely on public databases that have served to
inform
them about past foreclosure crises in their jurisdictions. Similarly, local
governments which have turned to the land and court records data to understand
the origins of escalating foreclosures in their communities will no longer have
the
necessary data upon which to base their analyses. Instead, those lenders and
33
investors who are the primary offenders will be able to hide behind the cloak
of
invisibility provided by MERS.
E. Restoration and enhancement of the public database is critical to
enable government to function effectively.
It is essential that the land and court records of this nation remain public
and
contain the information required by law—namely, the true identity of the
participants in the mortgage transaction. Governments and researchers must
continue to have the ability to evaluate the full range of public data,
including the
land and court records, in investigating the root causes of foreclosures and
other
problems and trends in the housing markets. Without this data they will be
unable
to discover whether specific entities are primarily responsible for increased
foreclosures, or whether there is an industry-wide problem. They will be unable
to
assess which secondary market lenders facilitate abusive lending, or which
servicers are quick to foreclose.
State and local government have a particular interest in preserving the
integrity of the public data sources in the land and court records, as these
records
have been a key component of research analyzing the costs imposed by
foreclosures on municipalities and neighboring homeowners and businesses.
Concentrations of foreclosures impose a particularly high societal cost on
surrounding neighborhoods (through reduced property values) and on government
for neighborhood services (for increased policing, social services, fire and
trash)
34
and reductions in the tax base. One recent study estimated that foreclosures in
high
foreclosure areas imposed costs up to $34,000 on the city and up to $220,000 on
neighboring homeowners. See Apgar, Municipal Cost of Foreclosures; Apgar,
Collateral Damage; Duda, Atlanta at 15 33 These studies have also revealed the
devastating impact of predatory lending on long overdue gains in inner city
minority homeownership, as foreclosures have decimated equity and destroyed
neighborhood vitality virtually overnight. See Kathe Newman & Elvin K.
Wyly,
Geographies of Mortgage Market Segmentation: The Case of Essex County, New
Jersey, 19 Housing Stud. 53, 54 (Jan. 2004); Housing Council (2003),
Residential
Foreclosures in Rochester, New York 10 (foreclosures erode sales prices of
nearby
homes). Government has a right to seek to minimize these societal costs and to
transfer those costs to the mortgage participants responsible for the
transactions.
However, since foreclosure avoidance strategies, targeted legislation and
regulation depend on the availability of data to inform decision-making, where
MERS has caused a critical source of heretofore public data to disappear,
states,
cities and advocates no longer have sufficient information to respond in a
carefully
33 See also Immergluck, External Costs of Foreclosure; Daniel Immergluck &
Geoff Smith,
There Goes the Neighborhood: The Effect of Single-Family Mortgage and
Foreclosures on
Property Values at 9. (2005). This report is available at:
http://www.woodstockinst.org/publications/task,doc_download/gid,52/Itemid,%2041/
(Homes in low and moderate income
neighborhoods in Chicago experience between 1.44 and 1.8
percent decline in value for every home foreclosed within one-eighth of a
mile).
35
targeted and not overly inclusive way. See Duda, Atlanta at viii. Thus, “in
Fulton
County [GA] and other places with foreclosure problems, the fact that entities
without the legal ability to make servicing decisions [MERS] are registered
with
the county has been identified as a major obstacle to municipal
foreclosureavoidance
efforts. . . .” Duda, Atlanta at 15. Similarly, the University
Neighborhood Housing Program in the Bronx and many other community groups
are losing an important tool that has enabled them to improve the communities
of
their constituents.
F. More, not less public data is needed to enable a carefully targeted
and rapid governmental response to problems in the housing
market.
Foreclosure remains34 a key problem in today’s housing markets.
Particularly in low-income neighborhoods, foreclosures can lead to vacant or
abandoned properties that, in turn, contribute to physical disorder in a
community.
See Immergluck, External Costs of Foreclosure, supra. This disorder can create
a
haven for criminal activity, discourage the formation of social capital, and
lead to
disinvestment in communities.
34 Foreclosure rates continue their meteoric rise, presenting significant
problems and hardships
for affected homeowners, their surrounding communities and local governments.
In August
2006, 115,292 properties throughout the nation entered foreclosure, a 24
percent increase over
the foreclosure level in July and 53 percent increase over foreclosures in
2005. See Les Christie,
“Foreclosures Spiked in August,” (Sept. 13, 2006), available at:
http://money.cnn.com/2006/09/13/real_estate/foreclosures_spiking/index.htm?postversion=2006
091305.
36
The costs flowing from problems in the housing market impact not only
lenders and borrowers directly involved in the sale or purchase of homes. The
costs can have a significant effect on entire communities. See id. For
instance,
concentrated foreclosures can affect the property values of homes in the same
or
adjoining neighborhoods. If policymakers are to truly understand the context in
which foreclosures take place and subsequently create legislation to obviate
the
problems created by foreclosures (and thereby alleviate related social and
economic difficulties faced by individuals and communities), more data is
necessary and its accessibility to the public is imperative.
Researchers agree and have suggested that the solution to understanding
complex mortgage related problems is to require more not less information and
to
further impose more not fewer costs on mortgage participants. See NHS of
Chicago, Preserving Homeownership, supra. Contrary to the attack on the public
databases and public revenues undertaken by MERS, the authors recommend
creating loan performance and foreclosure databases that contain sufficient
information to enable the tracking and assessment of key causes of delinquency
and default.35 These databases would be used to shape more effective
legislation,
mitigate public costs and abusive practices and target foreclosure hotspots
“without
35 Apgar and Duda recommend tracking all loans, all parties to the loans, loan
terms, and would
at a minimum require the disclosure of the note holder and servicer whenever
foreclosure is
threatened.
37
stemming the flow of credit to low-income, low-wealth and credit-impaired
borrowers. Id. at 84.
States such as Illinois have already demonstrated a strong interest in
gathering more information about high cost mortgage loans. Illinois’s newly
created data collection program requires all licensed mortgage brokers and loan
originators to enter detailed information into a database for residential
mortgage
loans in designated areas in Chicago. See Public Act 094-0280 (HB 4050). This
database project is designed to address predatory practices and high
foreclosure
rates. The federal government has also moved to increase data collection for
high
cost loans.36
Another key recommendation that has emerged from municipal studies is to
increase public awareness of the significant foreclosure costs imposed on
communities by mortgage participants and reallocate those costs that are
“rightfully the responsibility of borrowers, lenders and others that are direct
parties
to the mortgage transaction” to the transactions that created them through
increased
filing fees and creation of an industry fund. Duda, Atlanta at 26-27; see also
36 Reacting to a 2001 joint HUD-U.S. Department of the Treasury report that
found a
disproportionately high level of high cost, subprime refinance lending in
predominantly black
neighborhoods, as compared to predominantly white neighborhoods, the Federal
Reserve Board
ramped up its HMDA data reporting requirements in 2004. See HUD-Treasury Report
2000,
supra. Lenders who make high cost, subprime loans must now provide pricing
information for
these loans. See Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, A Guide to
HMDA: Getting
it Right! (Dec. 2003).
38
Apgar, Municipal Cost of Foreclosures at 35. Such fees would reduce the
municipal expenditures and loss of neighboring equity that currently function
as
effective subsidies to the most abusive transactions.
Land and court records serve as vitally important research tools for
government, community organizations and academic researchers. A private entity,
such as MERS, must not be allowed to deplete the public databases of land and<