Foreclosure Mill's Apparent Failure To Arrange For Orderly Transfer Of Cases To New Counsel Leads To Chaos At South Florida Foreclosure Sales
- The transfer of thousands of files from the deposed David J. Stern law firm caused not just a foul-up in recent Palm Beach County foreclosure auctions, but is shutting down cases to the point that one defense attorney called the lack of action "malpractice."
- Between Nov. 29 and Friday, there were 110 foreclosure sales in Palm Beach County in which the bank made no bid for the home, according to the Palm Beach County Clerk's office.
- Unwitting investors put in winning offers as low as $200 for homes they'll probably never get because the auctions were not properly advertised, likely lost in the shuffle from Stern's office to other firms.
- Foreclosure defense attorneys said hearings are being canceled, they don't know who is representing the banks in their cases, and that motions for Stern to withdraw from cases aren't being filed, leaving the firm as attorney of record.
- The problems led Broward County Chief Judge Victor Tobin to issue a temporary administrative order outlining how Stern cases should be handled and requiring legal evidence be shown that the firm was terminated and new counsel hired. "It appears that Stern has not made arrangements for the orderly transfer of cases from him or his firm to new counsel for pending cases," Tobin wrote.
- And Palm Beach County Clerk of Court Sharon Bock said the transfers are "just adding to the misery that is already happening" in the foreclosure courts.
For more, see Foreclosed homes hit auctions with no legal representation.
See also A house for $200? Foreclosure confusion leads to rock bottom auction prices.
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