Monday, December 06, 2010

Widespread Unauthorized Practice Of Law Under Cover Of Philadelphia Foreclosure Mill To Throw Title To Foreclosed Homes Into Question?

Attorney Abigail Field writes at AOL's Daily Finance:
  • Two Pennsylvania cases, one state and one federal, have exposed new types of document problems in foreclosure cases. One of the cases has potentially transformative consequences for thousands of troubled Pennsylvania homeowners.

  • At the center of each is the same law firm: Goldbeck McCafferty & McKeever (GMM). A lawsuit filed by Patrick Loughren against GMM details how the firm allowed -- and perhaps still allows -- nonlawyers in its firm to file and prosecute thousands(1) of foreclosures. As long as a lawyer supervises foreclosure filings, and at least reads them before they're submitted to the court, that is acceptable.

  • But Loughren is suing because all three named partners of GMM, Joseph Goldbeck, Gary McCafferty and Michael McKeever, have admitted under oath -- during depositions last September and in a separate case in December 2009 -- that no attorney ever read the filings.(2) The partners made clear that the practice has gone on for the past several years.

***

  • [L]oughren's complaint is so detailed, and the partners' admissions so damning, that if this case is decided on the merits, it's hard to see how Loughren could lose. If Loughren does win, the consequences could be far-reaching: All current foreclosure actions filed by GMM could be dismissed on the grounds that lawsuits filed by nonlawyers are a "nullity," meaning they don't count. That's hundreds, potentially thousands, of cases across Pennsylvania.

  • All completed foreclosures that were brought using this method could also be called into question for the same reason, and given that the practice has been going on for years, a Loughren win could throw into question the title to thousands of Pennsylvania properties. In addition, any homeowners who paid legal fees to the banks and GMM during their foreclosures could get that money back.

***

  • Although the practice of having nonlawyers file suit wasn't at issue in that case, learning of it upset U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Thomas Agresti [in an unrelated case] so much he wrote in his Oct. 5, 2010 order:(3)

    "During the trial the Court also became aware of some apparently routine practices at GMM that raise issues that cannot be ignored. McKeever testified to a procedure at his firm whereby foreclosure complaints are prepared and filed by non-attorneys and never reviewed by an attorney, even though the "signature" of an attorney appears on the document. . . . Even though these actions are not being filed in this Court. . .concern for our sister courts in this Commonwealth compel the Court to at least make publicly known what it learned during the trial. Furthermore, often these fundamentally flawed foreclosure actions, form the basis for related relief in this Court should the state court defendant subsequently file a bankruptcy petition. Therefore, the Court is concerned about the continuation of this practice by GMM."

For more, see Thousands of Pennsylvania Foreclosures Could Be on Shaky Ground.

See also, ABA Journal: Law Firm Accused of UPL, After Admittedly Filing Foreclosures Without Attorney Review.

(1) Robinson v. Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. et al. (W.D. Pa. Motion to Compel - filed Oct. 8, 2010).

(2) Loughren v. Lion, et al. (Court of Common Pleas, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania - Complaint In Equity).

(3) DeAngelis v. Countywide Home Loans, Inc., et al. (In re Hill) (Bankr. W.D. Pa. Oct. 5, 2010 - Memorandum Opinion And Order sanctioning Countrywide).