Tuesday, October 05, 2010

Florida Judge Sticks Standing-Lacking Lender With $30K Tab For Homeowner's Legal Bill After Booting Case

In Loxahatchee, Florida, The Wall Street Journal reports:
  • Israel Machado's foreclosure started out as a routine affair. In the summer of 2008, as the economy began to soften, Mr. Machado's pool-cleaning business suffered and like millions of other Americans, he fell behind on his $400,000 mortgage.
  • But Mr. Machado's response was unlike most other Americans'. Instead of handing his home over to the lender, IndyMac Bank FSB, he hired Ice Legal LP in nearby Royal Palm Beach to fight the foreclosure. The law firm researched the history of Mr. Machado's loan and found two interesting facts.
  • First, the affidavits IndyMac used to file the foreclosure were signed by a so-called robo-signer named Erica A. Johnson-Seck, who routinely signed 6,000 documents a week related to foreclosures and bankruptcy. That volume, the court decided, meant Ms. Johnson-Seck couldn't possibly have thoroughly reviewed the facts of Mr. Machado's case, as required by law.
  • Secondly, IndyMac (now called OneWest Bank) no longer owned the loan—a group of investors in a securitized trust managed by Deutsche Bank did. Determining that IndyMac didn't really have standing to foreclose, a judge threw out the case and ordered IndyMac to pay Mr. Machado's $30,000 legal bill.(1)

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  • Mr. Ice, who started Ice Legal four years ago, portrays his firm's work as defending the integrity of the legal process surrounding foreclosures. Banks can't repossess houses if they're using sloppy, and in some cases fraudulent paperwork, or if they can't prove that they own the loan. He says his firm has between 300 and 500 similar cases pending.

For more, see Foreclosure? Not So Fast.

(1) Florida foreclosure defense attorneys have got their motions ready for attorneys fees requests as courts have begun dismissing foreclosures based on these bogus documents. In Florida, where an agreement allows for an attorney fee award to one of the contracting parties (mortgage loan agreements typically allow a foreclosing lender to tack on its attorney fee to the amount owed on a loan when suing a homeowner to enforce the mortgage terms), state statute mandates an award of prevailing party attorney's fees to the other party under the reciprocity provisions of section 57.105(7), Florida Statutes; Landry v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc., 731 So. 2d 137 (Fla. 1st DCA 1999).

Not only might the lender and servicer be court-ordered to cough up fees to the homeowners' attorneys, it's possible that the foreclosure mill law firms representing the lenders/servicers (at least in Florida) may also be ordered to foot part of the tab as well by reason of
section 57.105(1), Florida Statutes (bold text is my emphasis, not in the original text):

  • Upon the court’s initiative or motion of any party, the court shall award a reasonable attorney’s fee, including prejudgment interest, to be paid to the prevailing party in equal amounts by the losing party and the losing party’s attorney on any claim or defense at any time during a civil proceeding or action in which the court finds that the losing party or the losing party’s attorney knew or should have known that a claim or defense when initially presented to the court or at any time before trial:

    (a) Was not supported by the material facts necessary to establish the claim or defense; or

    (b) Would not be supported by the application of then-existing law to those material facts.

(For an old (July/August, 2000) article in The Florida Bar Journal that may be of some value in providing guidance to lawyers in requesting court-ordered, prevailing party attorneys fees from losing defendants (ie. lenders, servicers, etc.), see Pleading Requirements for a Claim for Attorneys' Fees.)