Some In Congress Seek To Make "Produce The Note" Strategy Mandatory To Level Playing Field In Defending Against Sloppy Foreclosing Lenders, Servicers
- Modern-day home mortgages have been so sliced and diced by rapacious financiers that some homeowners are successfully delaying -- or even blocking -- foreclosures through the simple tactic of demanding that banks produce the original mortgage note, which amazingly enough is often not so easy for them to do. As the foreclosure rate continues to set new highs, a little-noticed legal provision that requires bankers, if challenged, to prove they hold the original mortgage documents before getting possession has spawned a minor homeowner rebellion, alternately called "produce the note" or "show me the note". For homeowners trying desperately to keep their homes, the tactic is one way to buy some time -- and maybe even get the upper hand on the lender.
***
- The fouled-up paperwork or other lack of legal compliance "has resulted in a much higher rate of negotiated [mortgage] modifications" [...], said [North Carolina congressman and House Financial Services Committee member Rep. Brad] Miller. "It gave the homeowner additional defenses and counterclaims that strengthened their hands substantially."
***
- Some in Congress are trying to make it easier for homeowners. Rep. Marcy Kaptur, an Ohio Democrat, introduced a bill in February with Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.) that would actually prohibit foreclosures unless lenders produced necessary documentation in court, including the note and evidence that the homeowner was, in fact, notified each time the note was transferred.
- "I am encouraging [homeowners] to stay in their homes [and] go through the court proceedings until the institution in question can produce [the] note, because chances are, they can't," Kaptur said in an interview Monday. "Somehow the playing field has to be leveled here, and [the bill] provides a very strong means of doing that." The bill is languishing in the House Financial Services Committee, headed by Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), she said.
For more, see Who Owns Your Mortgage? "Produce The Note" Movement Helps Stall Foreclosures. EpsilonMissingDocsMtg
<< Home