Thursday, August 26, 2010

Foreclosure Mills' Failure To Attach All Records Referred To In Affidavits Filed In Court May (Should) Stall Legal Actions

In West Palm Beach, Florida, the South Florida Daily Business Review reports:
  • When it comes to fighting foreclosures, homeowners and their lawyers may have found a new strategy to score courtroom victories. Defense lawyers across the state are increasingly attacking the validity of affidavits that owners of notes must file with the courts as part of the foreclosure process.

  • Attorneys like Dustin Zacks, of the firm Ice Legal in West Palm Beach, are successfully arguing that plaintiffs — usually a trust that owns the note or the servicer of the note — are violating court rules by filing affidavits with no records attached to support their foreclosure suits. The records include details of the loan, borrower fees and payment history.

  • The Florida Rules of Civil Procedure (Rule 1.510) states that “sworn or certified copies” of all records referred to in the affidavit must be attached as evidence in the foreclosure case. The rule helps ensure that homeowners’s due process rights aren’t violated — namely that the lender has to prove it is entitled to press its claim.(1)

***

  • A deficient affidavit can be the difference between homeowners losing their properties through a summary judgment or going to trial, Zacks said. “These affidavits are the linchpin of cases when they are trying to win a house at summary judgment,” he said. “A summary judgment cuts short [a homeowner’s] right to a full trial.”

  • Several judges and lawyers say deficient affidavits are rare in most other civil cases, but are rampant in foreclosure cases. “Our entire judicial system is under attack as a result of this foreclosure process,” said St. Petersburg lawyer Matthew Weidner, who blogs about foreclosures. “Judges, just like us, have just sort of overlooked this in the midst of this crisis.”(2)

For more, see New Strategy in Foreclosure Battles Attacks Validity of Affidavits.

(1) In addition to requiring a copy of the records, Rule 1.510(e) also says that the person signing the affidavit must have personal knowledge of the facts of the case, which might be tough for the affiant to have since most loans have been flipped around a number of times subsequent to their origination and have been serviced by different servicers, the story states.

  • Rule 1.510(e): Form of Affidavits; Further Testimony. "Supporting and opposing affidavits shall be made on personal knowledge, shall set forth such facts as would be admissible in evidence, and shall show affirmatively that the affiant is competent to testify to the matters stated therein. Sworn or certified copies of all papers or parts thereof referred to in an affidavit shall be attached thereto or served therewith. The court may permit affidavits to be supplemented or opposed by depositions, answers to interrogatories, or by further affidavits."

(2) According to the story, some judges say they don’t have the resources nor it is their job to make sure every affidavit is proper, but at least two said they are interested in hearing the argument. “It is a genuine question that should be raised,” said Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Jennifer Bailey. “The question is, where should each judge draw the line about the degree of investigation they are going to do on these affidavits? There is no clear answer.” In June, Zacks persuaded Palm Beach Circuit Judge Howard Harrison Jr. to deny a motion for summary judgment because of a flawed affidavit.

California Homeowner Finally Gets Loan Modification After Year & A Half Struggle As Media Exposure Apparently Lights Fire Under Mortgage Servicer

ProPublica reports:
  • Wells Fargo finally gave a loan modification to a long frustrated homeowner—after we profiled her last week. After ProPublica first contacted Wells Fargo about her, [Californian Suzanna] Wertheim received a call denying her a modification because of insufficient income. Then, after we published our story and Wertheim appeared on "The Rachel Maddow Show," Wells Fargo called her again. Wertheim feared bad news—that the bank was proceeding with foreclosure. Instead, Wells Fargo offered her a modification, bringing her payment down to an amount she says she can afford. Wertheim says the bank also eliminated over $20,000 in fees.

For more, see Profiled Homeowner Gets a Mortgage Modification.

Newark Feds Obtain Indictment Of Previously-Charged Brooklyn Man Peddling Sale Leaseback, Equity Stripping Foreclosure Rescue Scams

From the Office of the U.S. Attorney (Newark, New Jersey):
  • A federal grand jury indicted former co-owner of Home Savers Consulting Corporation Phil A. Simon today in connection with an alleged mortgage fraud scheme in which he falsely promised to help homeowners facing foreclosure keep their homes and repair their damaged credit, United States Attorney Paul J. Fishman announced.

  • Simon, 35, of Brooklyn, N.Y., was previously charged by Complaint with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and arrested by special agents of the FBI on August 5, 2009, in Brooklyn. The Indictment charging Simon adds five substantive counts of wire fraud based on five specific fraudulent transactions regarding properties in Bergenfield, Elizabeth, and Paterson, N.J.

  • Former Home Savers co-owner Garth Celestine, who was arrested along with Simon last August, pleaded guilty in March before United States District Judge Dennis M. Cavanaugh to an Information charging him with conspiracy to commit wire fraud. He is scheduled to be sentenced on November 22, 2010.

For the entire press release, see Co-Owner Of Home Savers Consulting Corp. Indicted For Mortgage Foreclosure Rescue Scheme.

For the indictment, see U.S. v. Simon.

Go here for more on the now-defunct Brooklyn-based Home Savers Consulting Corp.

Tenant Who Allegedly Targeted His Landlord In Real Estate Equity Refinancing Ripoff Tracked Down In Canada; Feds Seek Extradition

Buried in a recent story on mortgage fraud in The Wall Street Journal is this excerpt on a recent indictment of a tenant who attempted to rip off the equity in the house he was renting from his landlord:
  • [T]he Federal Bureau of Investigation in June indicted a Phoenix man for mail and wire fraud among other alleged crimes when the agency says he tried to steal a house from his landlord.

***

  • Fraudsters have adapted to the new restrictions. With banks less apt to lend to borrowers with shaky finances, criminals rely more on falsifying documents, recruiting loan officers and other bank insiders to work for them, and stealing identities to get loans, federal investigators and mortgage industry research reports.

  • In the Phoenix case, prosecutors allege, Jose Victor Buencamino did all three. Some people who knew Mr. Buencamino describe him as a large, friendly man devoted to his children, the life of many a party and a passionate golfer. Gary Weaver, who rented a home to Mr. Buencamino last year, has a different impression. He said the Arizona businessman tried to snare him in an elaborate mortgage scheme.

  • According to a federal indictment unsealed in June, while Mr. Buencamino was renting Mr. Weaver's house on the golf course at Moon Valley Country Club, he intercepted mail intended for Mr. Weaver and obtained his social security number, then applied for a driver's license in Mr. Weaver's name.

  • Then, the indictment alleges, with the help of a friend who worked as a loan officer at a local branch of Compass Bank, a unit of Spanish bank Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA, Mr. Buencamino obtained a $245,000 cash-out mortgage on the property. A homeowner using a cash-out mortgage refinances the home loan for more than the mortgage is currently worth and pockets the difference in cash.

  • A Compass Bank spokesman didn't respond to requests for comment. Mr. Buencamino, who couldn't be located for comment, has not responded to the charges. A federal agent said he had been tracked to Vancouver, where the agent said he is applying for Canadian residency. Prosecutors involved in the case said he didn't have an attorney on whom they could serve court papers. U.S. authorities said they were seeking his extradition.

Source: Mortgage Fraud Is Rising, With a Twist (Adapting to Tighter Rules After Collapse, Scammers Turn to More Complex Plots).

200 Signs That A False Legal Document Has Been Filed In A Foreclosure Action

Homeowners facing foreclosure who are wondering whether the legal documents filed in their case by the lender and/or foreclosure mill are bogus may find this list of 200 clues to be of some help.

For the list, see Max Gardner's 200 Signs that You have a False Document (made available online courtesy of Matt Weidner's Law Blog).

Foreclosure Rescue Scams Reading List

Anyone new to the area of foreclosure rescue scams may want to avail themselves of the following reading list (materials listed in reverse chronological order of their publishing date) in an effort to get up to speed on how to recognize and prevent these rackets:
  • United States Government Accountability Office, Homeownership Preservation (Federal Efforts to Combat Foreclosure Rescue Schemes Are Under Way, but Improved Planning Elements Could Enhance Progress) (July 2010);
  • National Consumer Law Center, Dreams Foreclosed: The Rampant Theft of Americans' Homes Through Equity-stripping Foreclosure 'Rescue' Scams (June 2005);

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Homebuying Couple Claim Attorney/Closing Agent Failed To Pay Off Undisclosed Lien; Discover Problem 10+ Years Later When Hit w/ Foreclosure

In Canton, North Carolina, the Smoky Mountain News reports:
  • A Canton couple has sued town Alderman Eric Dills and three attorneys after learning their home was unknowingly being used as collateral by Dills’ for a revolving loan.

  • For more than 10 years, Carol and Joseph Hannah were unaware that their home was tied up in Dills’ equity line of credit — until May when they received a baffling notice of foreclosure from Champion Credit Union after Dills defaulted on his loan. Dills claims innocence in the mixup, however. He argues that lawyers botched delivery of the loan payoff to the bank.

  • Carol and Joseph Hannah had bought the home from Dills in March 2000 for $85,000. They made a down payment of $8,500 and Dills financed the remainder. Asheville lawyer Richard Maita inked the real estate deal on behalf of both parties. A year earlier, Maita had arranged for Dills’ loan, which used the same home as collateral. The couple claims that at no point during the property transfer did Maita inform them of Dills’ prior loan.

  • Maita charged the couple for a title search — which makes sure the property is free and clear of any encumbrances — and for title insurance — which provides protection in case the title search fails to turn up a hidden claim against the property. The couple accuses Maita of never carrying out the title search and failing to take out a title insurance policy despite charging them for both.

For more, see Unsuspecting couple faces foreclosure after chain of events.

Felony Theft Conviction For DE Man Who Pocketed R/E Sale Proceeds w/out Paying Off, Disclosing Existing Liens; Unwitting Buyers Left In Foreclosure

In Bridgeville, Delaware, The Daily Times reports:
  • Sussex County businessman James Tennefoss, [...] has been convicted of felony theft in two property sales cases. Prosecutors charged that Tennefoss used properties near Bridgeville and Georgetown as collateral in loans in 1999 and 2001, totalling $97,500.

  • But in 2005 and 2006, his companies sold the properties, without Tennefoss disclosing that their uses as collateral. Tennefoss eventually stopped paying on the loans, and the lender began foreclosure proceedings against the new owners, which are still pending. Tennefoss' two corporations, Jim Lee Inc., and Southern Delaware Developers Inc., were together paid more than $251,000 for the two properties.(1)

For the story, see Former Sussex restaurateur convicted of felony theft.

(1) The story is silent as to whether:

  • the new buyers possibly paid all cash for the properties and failed to obtain a title search and purchase title insurance protection, or
  • in the event title work was performed on the properties, the title agent either screwed-up or played a role in the fraud, thereby possibly leaving the title insurance underwriter issuing the policy as an additional victim of the scam.

Home Purchaser Loses Life Savings After Seller Pledges Property As Loan Collateral After Pocketing Buyer's Cash & Failing To Give Recorded Title

In Sullivan City, Texas, KRGV-TV Channel 5 reports:
  • A father used his life savings to buy a home for his daughter. He was hoping she would never have to worry about a mortgage. Now, they've learned they don't own the home.
  • Frank Gonzalez made a deal directly with the owner of the house on Alamo Street four years ago. [...] He paid $68,000 cash. It was money he saved over 30 years of working construction jobs. Gonzalez says he signed some papers, got a deed, and a receipt. He thought he was finally a homeowner.
  • A few months ago, Gonzalez became concerned when he never got a property tax bill. He learned through the Hidalgo County Tax Assessor's Office, the house was not in his name. It was still under Hernandez Homes, owned by a man named Frank Hernandez. Hernandez is the same man who Gonzalez made the deal with. The house was thousands of dollars behind in taxes.
  • Soon after, Gonzalez and his daughter got a foreclosure notice. Turns out, Compass Bank now owns the house. The lawyer representing the bank told them Frank Hernandez took out a loan for $78,000 after he made the deal with Gonzalez.(1) He never paid it back and the bank foreclosed on the home.
***
  • The bank says they must be out of the home by September 15. Gonzalez is back where he started, looking for a place to live. This time, it's a struggle because his entire life savings is gone.
For the story, see Man Loses Home He Spent Life Savings On.

For a similar Texas story, see More Contract For Deed Horror Stories - Texas Homebuyers Lose Home To Foreclosure Despite Making All Payments As Seller Pockets Cash & Stiffs Bank.

(1) A prospective purchaser of, or lender proposing to take a mortgage on, real estate generally has a duty not only to examine defects in the record chain of title but, also, to discover anyone who is in open possession of land.

If, as reported in this story, the seller pledged the home as collateral after the sale to Gonzalez and after the latter took possession of the premises, said possession, if "visible, open, exclusive, and unequivocal possession -- affords notice of title equivalent to the constructive notice deed registration affords" under Texas case law to subsequent purchasers and lenders proposing to take a mortgage as collateral for a loan, even though the occupant's deed is otherwise unrecorded. Madison v. Gordon, 39 S.W.3d 604 (Tex. 2001) (citing Strong v. Strong, 128 Tex. 470, 98 S.W.2d 346, 348 (Tex. 1936).

The Texas Supreme Court, in Madison, made these statements regarding the application of the bona fide purchaser doctrine to subsequent purchasers and lenders in situations like those described in this story (some citations omitted, bold text is my emphasis, not in the original text):
  • Status as a bona fide purchaser is an affirmative defense to a title dispute. A bona fide purchaser is not subject to certain claims or defenses. To receive this special protection, one must acquire property in good faith, for value, and without notice of any third-party claim or interest. Notice may be constructive or actual. Actual notice rests on personal information or knowledge. Constructive notice is notice the law imputes to a person not having personal information or knowledge.

  • One purchasing land may be charged with constructive notice of an occupant's claims. This implied-notice doctrine applies if a court determines that the purchaser has a duty to ascertain the rights of a third-party possessor. See Collum v. Sanger Bros., 98 Tex. 162, 82 S.W. 459, 460 (Tex. 1904); American Surety Co., 82 S.W.2d at 183. When this duty arises, the purchaser is charged with notice of all the occupant's claims the purchaser might have reasonably discovered on proper inquiry. Dixon v. Cargill, 104 S.W.2d 101, 102 (Tex. Civ. App.--Eastland 1937, writ ref'd); see also Flack, 226 S.W.2d at 632. The duty arises, however, only if the possession is visible, open, exclusive, and unequivocal. See Strong v. Strong, 128 Tex. 470, 98 S.W.2d 346, 350 (Tex. 1936).
***
  • In Strong, we described the kind of possession sufficient to give constructive notice as "consisting of open, visible, and unequivocal acts of occupancy in their nature referable to exclusive dominion over the property, sufficient upon observation to put an intending purchaser on inquiry as to the rights of such possessor." Strong, 98 S.W.2d at 350. Possession that meets these requirements--visible, open, exclusive, and unequivocal possession -- affords notice of title equivalent to the constructive notice deed registration affords. Strong, 98 S.W.2d at 348.
See Bank of Am., N.A. v. Schwartz (In re Hayes), 194 Fed. Appx. 217; 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 21139 (5th Cir. 2006) (affirming In re Hayes, Case # SA-03-CA-1228, 2004 WL 2926006 (W.D. Tex. San Antonio Div. 2004)) for a relatively recent Federal appeals court case that is substantially on point - where a homebuyer's equitable title to a purchased home in an arrangement where no deed was recorded was found to have priority under Texas law over a mortgage loan subsequently placed on the property by the seller after the sale to the homebuyer (the lower court's 23-page ruling in In re Hayes gives an extensive analysis on the Texas law involving the effect of the bona fide purchaser doctrine to subsequent purchasers and mortgage lenders where one is in possession of land under an unrecorded instrument and how it was applied to the facts in this case).

Based on the reported facts in the KRGV-TV Channel 5 story, above, assuming the foreclosing lender failed in its duty to ascertain the rights of the occupants, and possession was visible, open, exclusive, and unequivocal, the homeowner's rights in the home are superior to those of the lender and, accordingly, has no business being booted out of his home.

Unfortunately, the combination of unaffordable legal representation to some homeowners, and the fact that this area of law (ie. bona fide purchaser doctrine) is regrettably beyond the scope of many attorneys' expertise, this homeowner stands to wrongfully lose his home.

See this post, footnote 2 more on the duty to inquire into the rights of occupants in possession of land when applying the bona fide purchaser doctrine under Texas law.

For other states, see Bona Fide Purchaser Doctrine, Possession Of Property By Occupants Other Than The Vendor & The Duty To Inquire.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Loan Servicer Gets Tagged With Class Action Suit Accusing It Of Pocketing Cash For Bogus Loan Modifications, Then Foreclosing With Little Or No Notice

From a press release from the Seattle, Washington-based law firm Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP:
  • A group of homeowners [] filed a class-action lawsuit against Aurora Loan Services LLC, claiming the mortgage company duped them into paying tens of thousands of dollars each to have troubled mortgages reviewed by the company with promises of loan modifications, only to have their property foreclosed with little or no notice.(1)

  • The suit states that Aurora reaped more than $100 million in what the court documents call "illicit profits" from the alleged scheme. Filed in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California in San Jose, the suit seeks to represent homeowners who paid the Littleton, Colo.-based company money in exchange for the company's help in 'curing' delinquent home mortgages.

  • In exchange for between three and six large monthly payments, Aurora said it would halt the foreclosure process and work with homeowners to restructure, modify or resell the loan, allowing homeowners a chance to keep their homes, the suit states.

For more, see Hagens Berman Files Class-Action Suit Against Aurora Loan Services LLC.

(1) The complaint accuses Aurora of negligent misrepresentation, unjust enrichment, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, violation of the California Unfair Business Practices Act and other violations of California law, the press release states.

Suspected Loan Modification Racket Seeks Return Of $500K Seized By Feds In Raid As Criminal Probe Continues

In Oceanside County, California, North County Times reports:
  • The government seized about a half-million dollars in assets from the bank accounts of two Oceanside businesses dealing in loan modifications for struggling homeowners, according to federal court documents filed this week.

  • Dean Chandler, a lawyer who owns the 1st American Law Center in downtown Oceanside, and Gary Bobel, who owns the Lead Source, a marketing business on El Camino Real that runs a call center and performs other services for 1st American, recently filed a joint motion for the return of the assets, which were seized on June 23 when the FBI raided the offices.

  • Chandler said this week that 1st American has been unable to pay employees, buy new national television ad time or process client paperwork since the raid. Assistant U.S. Attorney Valerie Chu, a prosecutor with the major fraud unit of the U.S. attorney's office in San Diego, said she will oppose the motions. She declined to discuss any accusations against the pair.

  • There have been no indictments, and the federal search warrants in the case remain sealed, but Chandler said the government suspects him of mail fraud, wire fraud, money laundering and conspiracy, crimes he vehemently denies.

For more, see Records show feds seized half-million in assets from loan modification business.

GAO Cautions Against Four Scams Targeting Financially Strapped Homeowners

The Sacramento Business Journal recently ran a story on a General Accountability Office report cautioning financially strapped homeowners against four types of scams targeting them:
  • The GAO said consumers are being confronted with “advance-fee loan modification schemes” -- in which the homeowner will pay a fee up-front, then receive little or no service -- and sales-leaseback schemes, in which a homeowner is convinced to transfer the deed to the scammer with the false promise of being able to remain in the home.

  • The two newer schemes, according to the GAO are:

    • a forensic mortgage loan audit scam, which the report called a “new twist on foreclosure rescue fraud." The homeowner pays a fee in hopes of using audit results to uncover regulatory violations in the mortgage loan origination and thereby reduce the loan principal or even cancel the loan;

    • a variation of the advance-fee scam, in which “a person promises to eliminate a homeowner's mortgage or other debt on the premise that the debts were illegal or the government would assume responsibility,” according to Matsui’s statement.

For more, see GAO report targets new mortgage scams.

For the GAO report (43 pages), see Homeownership Preservation (Federal Efforts to Combat Foreclosure Rescue Schemes Are Under Way, but Improved Planning Elements Could Enhance Progress). Go here for report summary.

Monday, August 23, 2010

NYS F'closure Mill, MERS Named In Class Action Racketeering Suit; Action Seeks To Void "Tens Of Thousands" Of F'closures, Impose Million$ In Punitives

From a press release from New York City attorney Susan Chana Lask:
  • On August 17, 2010, attorney Susan Chana Lask filed a Federal Class Action Complaint on behalf of tens of thousands of New York State homeowners who lost their homes to an alleged foreclosure fraud orchestrated for years by a New Yorkforeclosure mill” attorney and major mortgage companies. The case is filed in the US District Court, Eastern District of New York, entitled “Connie Campbell against Steven Baum, MERSCORP, Inc, et al.”, Case #10CV3800.
  • It alleges RICO civil racketeering, RESPA, Fair Debt Collection Practices Act violations and that homeowners paid inflated foreclosure and other fees fictionalized by Mr. Baum who profited from the scheme since 2005. The action seeks to return tens of thousands of foreclosed homes to their owners or the values thereof and hundreds of millions in punitive damages against Mr. Baum, MERSCORP and HSBC.
  • Attorney Susan Chana Lask discovered the alleged foreclosure scheme after her client lost her 1.7 Million Dollar Brooklyn Caroll Gardens Brownstone home to a $190,000 mortgage foreclosure filed by attorney Steven Baum for HSBC. The foreclosure court filings were false as filed in HSBC v. Cncepcion Campbell, et al, New York Supreme Court, Kings County, Index #20393/07.
  • Steven Baum’s foreclosure complaint he filed was for HSBC against Ms. Campbell . It admits the loan was never assigned to HSBC, yet he sued for HSBC. A later Satisfaction of Mortgage was not filed for HSBC but for a company named MERS, admitting HSBC never owned the loan and the foreclosure complaint should have never been filed in the first place. The actual Mortgage was always in MERSCORP's name and never assigned as required by law. Just who owns the loans Steven Baum forcloses on is a deliberate mystery and potentially tens of thousands of New York homeowners lost their homes on a mystery.
  • But there's more. The documents filed in the Courts are signed by attorneys from Mr. Baum's office under penalty of perjury that they are filing with knowledge of the transaction; however, they have no knowledge as they admit they do not have the documents they attest to in their office. In fact, in the later case filed of [plaintiff] Concepcion Campbell [...], New York Supreme Court, Kings County, Index # 08-3467, when Ms. Lask subpoenaed Mr. Baum's firm for the original Note, they responded it was not needed and refused to produce it; implying they never had it yet they swear they reviewed it in their court filings "under penalty of perjury."
  • Also, in the original foreclosure case of HSBC, they file documents by an alleged officer of MERS named Rebecca A. Cosgrove by a notary in "Erie County". But MERS is located in Virginia and Erie County is in Buffalo New York where Steven Baum's office is. It is suspect that Ms. Cosgrove is even an officer of MERS, no less that she flew all the way to Buffalo NY for the day just to sign a document before a notary. In fact, other courts recently discovered these same false notaries and "officer" claims in other cases involving Mr. Baum and MERS.
***
  • Courts blast Mr. Baum for his sloppy filings claimed to be deliberate to hasten foreclosures on unwitting homeowners and courts. On July 29, 2010 NY County Supreme court Judge Alice Schlessinger summed up a MERS foreclosure as “I am unable to say with any confidence that this was an honest transaction." (Index #109824/05).(1) The Manhattan US Trustees office started an investigation of Steven Baum months ago.
For the entire press release, see Class Action RICO Suit Alleges Tens of Thousands of New York Foreclosure Frauds Orchestrated by "Foreclosure Mill" Attorney & Banks (Hundreds of Millions in Damages Demanded for New York Homeowners).
For the lawsuit, see Campbell v. Baum, et al., Case #10-CV-3800 (E.D. N.Y. August 17, 2010).
(1) See Mortgage Elec. Registration Sys., Inc. v Folkes, 2010 NY Slip Op 32007(U) (NY Sup. Ct. New York County, July 21, 2010). Justice Schlessinger summarizes her decision in this particular case in the following excerpt (bold text is my emphasis, not in the original text):
  • I am not prepared to grant plaintiffs cross-motion for summary judgment. Beyond that and despite the fact, as counsel points out, that Folkes does not oppose their motion, I am dismissing the action. I am doing this for essentially three reasons. Some of which has to do with deficiencies in documentation.

  • Even without opposition, a plaintiff in a foreclosure action must satisfy a court that it has proper standing or title to bring the action, that the mortgage and note was actually funded by the plaintiff, and that the transaction itself, the one sued upon, has the indicia of reliability and is free of fraud. Kluge v Fugazy, 145 AD2d 537 (2nd Dep’t 1988); Katz v East-Ville Realty Co, 249 AD2d 243 (1st Dep’t 1998). None of those criteria have been satisfied here.

Judge Gets Bagged Rubber-Stamping A Foreclosure Judgment Against Homeowner Mistakenly Believed To Be "Pro Se" At Least An Hour Before Court Hearing???

Florida foreclosure defense attorney Mark P. Stopa writes in Stopa Law Blog about a recent experience representing a homeowner in the courtroom of Pinellas County, Florida Circuit Court Judge Pamela Campbell:
  • Yesterday, I had an experience in court that has absolutely rocked my world, causing me to wonder: When do judges decide who wins a foreclosure case?

***

  • My experience yesterday, though, as outlined in this Motion to DQ Judge, makes me wonder, not about myself, but about the thousands of cases in Florida where homeowners don’t have an attorney. I strongly encourage you to read the entire Motion to DQ Judge, as it’s a matter of public record, but here’s the cliff notes version.

  • On August 19, 2010 at 9:30, a summary judgment hearing was set on a mass-motion calendar. My clients were pro se until just a few days prior, so the documents I filed in opposition to summary judgment had not yet made it into the Court file yet. As such, the Judge thought my clients were pro se. At or before 8:15 a.m. on August 19, 2010, the Judge entered conformed copies of a Final Judgment of foreclosure even though the summary judgment hearing was not scheduled until 9:30 a.m. that day. That’s worth repeating: The judge entered a Final Judgment of foreclosure more than an hour BEFORE the scheduled hearing.

  • Sounds impossible to believe, but it’s true. I learned about this, in fact, only by happenstance - my associate went to the courthouse to review the court file before the hearing, and, upon review of the court file, saw conformed copies of the Final Judgment in the file. The hearing was not set to begin for more than an hour, yet the Judge had already made copies of the executed Final Judgment, to be mailed to all parties.

For more, see When do judges decide who wins a foreclosure case?

Thanks to Deontos .is for the heads-up on this story.

(1) The following excerpts from the Motion to Disqualify Judge (paragraphs 7-12, 18-20) provides Mr. Stopa's account of part of what he alleges went on at the summary judgment hearing (bold text is my emphasis, not in the original text; "Mr. Del ‘Etoile" is the bank's attorney from foreclosure mill law firm Florida Default Law Group; "Mr. Healy" is the homeowner's attorney and Mr. Stopa's associate; "Mr. Hoffman" is the homeowner facing foreclosure):

  • 7. As the hearing began, it was uncomfortable from the start. The Judge, very oddly, volunteered that Mr. Del ‘Etoile had been her intern, apparently just recently (since Mr. Del Etoile is a very young attorney), and spoke of him glowingly. It was as if the Judge was introducing Mr. Del Etoile to Mr. Stopa, Mr. Healy, and Mr. Hoffmann (an experience which Mr. Stopa can never recall seeing before in ten years of practicing law). The relationship and introduction was so odd that Mr. Hoffmann would indicate, after the hearing, he felt the hearing was "doomed" from that point forward.

  • 8. As the hearing began, Mr. Stopa informed the Judge that Mr. Healy had found the conformed copy of the Final Judgment, in the Court file, that morning. Mr. Stopa advised the Judge that he was troubled by this and requested an explanation (of why there was a conformed Final Judgment in the court file before the hearing had begun).

  • 9. The Judge was clearly and visibly annoyed at being "called out" like this, and told Mr. Stopa that he did not understand "procedures." The Judge indicated she was "not hiding anything," as seen by her willingness to provide the file, including her "notes," to Mr. Healy, but that "next time," she would refrain from showing Mr. Healy her "notes." (Apparently, the Judge was referring to the conformed copies of the Final Judgment as her "notes, even though there were no "notes" on that document.) The Judge then attempted to show Mr. Stopa an unsigned Final Judgment, taking the position that she had not signed a Final Judgment, as if she had done nothing wrong.

  • 10. Unfortunately, despite Mr. Stopa’s request, the Judge was unwilling or unable to explain why there were conformed copies of the Final Judgment in the court file, as if the Final Judgment had already been entered, before the hearing had begun. Mr. Stopa was hoping for an innocent explanation, but none was forthcoming. In retrospect, and under the circumstances, the explanation seems clear. The Judge did not realize that Mr. Hoffmann had retained counsel (given that Mr. Stopa appeared in the case just before the summary judgment hearing and his filings had not yet appeared in the Court file), thought he was pro se (like many of the other defendants on the mass-motion calendar that morning), and had predetermined that Final Judgment would be entered, so she made conformed copies of the Final Judgment before the hearing even began. Whether the Judge predetermined the case because of her relationship with Mr. Del Etoile is unclear, but it was clear that the Judge had predetermined the outcome.

  • 11. Worse yet, it seems that this is a routine practice of the Judge – to prepare conformed copies of Final Judgments in cases where the Defendants are pro se. This sounds harsh, but there seems to be no other explanation (particularly in light of the Judge’s inability or unwillingness to provide one).

  • 12. Notably, the Final Judgment of foreclosure was many pages long, yet the Judge made multiple conformed copies to mail to the parties before the hearing. It was clearly a fair amount of work to prepare those conformed copies, and the envelopes that went with them, which of course begs the question – why did the Judge make these copies before the hearing rather than after? Was she so determined to get this case (and other foreclosure cases) off her desk that she predetermined the outcome of the case before the hearing even began? Respectfully, it certainly appears that way. Again, that sounds harsh, but if the Judge was willing to give the parties a "fair shake," why not wait until after the hearing to make the conformed copies? What was the rush?

***

  • 18. As the hearing ended, Mr. Stopa, Mr. Healy, and Mr. Hoffmann left the Judge’s chambers, but Mr. Del Etoile remained in chambers, alone, with the Judge (apparently since Mr. Del Etoile was counsel in the next hearing).

  • 19. When Mr. Hoffmann left chambers with Mr. Stopa, Mr. Hoffman immediately expressed his concerns about the Judge’s partiality, as set forth therein. These concerns were heightened even more, after the hearing, when Mr. Del Etoile confirmed to Mr. Healy that the Judge had engaged in ex parte communications with Mr. Del Etoile after the hearing and said "bad things" to Mr. Del Etoile about Mr. Stopa and Mr. Healy.

  • 20. The fact that the Judge said "bad things" (in Mr. Del Etoile’s words) about Mr. Stopa and Mr. Healy, behind their backs, merely because they were concerned about the fact that the Judge had entered conformed copies of a Final Judgment before the hearing even began, says all that needs to be said about the Judge’s partiality.

Jacksonville Trial Judge Bags Foreclosure Mill, Chase, WAMU For Fraud On The Court In Foreclosure Action; Dismisses Suit With Prejudice

In Jacksonville, Florida, Duval County Circuit Court Judge Jean Johnson dismissed with prejudice a foreclosure action against a local homeowner after making a finding of fraud on the court being committed by the plaintiffs and the foreclosure mill law firm representing them. One of the choice excerpts, from paragraph 12-13 of the ruling (bold text is my emphasis, not in the original text):
  • 12. The Court finds that WAMU and Chase made representations to this court during the course of the instant action that are known to be false. The court also finds that Shapiro & Fishman had acutal knowledge of the falsity of any averments and representations made on behalf of the current servicer of the Mortgage. Throughout the litigation, WAMU and Chase and Shapiro & Fishman have represented to this Court that plaintiff owns and holds the note and mortgage. It did so in its original complaint on March 27, 2008; in its First Amended Complaint filed on January 29, 2009 and in its Exparte Motion to Substitute Party Plaintiff on February 5, 2009. Moreover WAMU and Shapiro & Fishman created a false Assignment of Mortgage dated April 11, 2008 as evidence of these assertions.

  • 13. The Court finds by clear and convincing evidence that these acts committed by WAMU, Chase and Shapiro & Fishman amount to a "knowing deception intended to prevent the discovery essential to defending the claim" and are therefore fraud. Gerhmann v. City of Orlando, 962 So. 2nd. 1059, 1061 (Fla. 5th DCA 2007).(1)

For the ruling, see JP Morgan Chase Bank v. Pocopanni, Case # 16-2008-CA-3989 (Fla. Cir. Ct. 4th Dist. Duval County, August 9, 2010).

The homeowner was represented by Chip Parker, Jacksonville, Florida.

Thanks to Carrie Luft for the heads up on this ruling.

(1) Possibly in a futile attempt to slither its way out of any possible trouble, the foreclosure mill law firm Shapiro & Fishman, who originally represented the foreclosing bank, apparently had itself replaced as attorney of record during the proceedings by Greenspoon Marder, P.A. The latter, possibly because it wanted to avoid being "soiled" by the "sewage" it found itself involved in, was then replaced by Shapiro & Fishman (a 2nd appearance in the proceedings for this outfit). Finally, a third law firm, Greenberg Traurig P.A. filed a notice of appearance in this matter and was the only counsel of record appearing at the hearing which resulted in Judge Johnson's ruling. Shapiro & Fishman was nowhere to be seen at this hearing. See JP Morgan Chase Bank v. Pocopanni (footnote 1).

I wonder if this attempted "fancy footwork" by the foreclosure mills is common when they get nailed filing its allegedly bogus paperwork in a proceeding where the presiding judge refuses to "roll over" and simply rubber-stamp the foreclosure judgment. For another example of this, see Fla. Foreclosure Mill Voluntarily Withdraws Lawsuit After Being Caught Using Dubious Mortgage Assignment; Efforts Begin Again With Different Law Firm.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Fla. Foreclosure Mill Voluntarily Withdraws Lawsuit After Being Caught Using Dubious Mortgage Assignment; Efforts Begin Again With Different Law Firm

In Lauderdale Lakes, Florida, the South Florida Sun Sentinel reports:
  • After months of wrangling with CitiMortgage, Dennis and Joyce Brown got fed up and hired an attorney to fight CitiMortgage's foreclosure on their Lauderdale Lakes home. The Browns claim they are victims of fabricated documents used to foreclose after CitiMortgage failed to credit them for mortgage payments.(1) "They ran my blood pressure up so bad," said Dennis Brown, who hired Fort Lauderdale lawyer Kenneth Eric Trent to fight the foreclosure.

  • CitiMortgage and its lawyers, David Stern Law Offices, voluntarily withdrew the case against the Browns in Broward County Circuit Court on June 16. But the Browns can't rest easy. Recently, they've received new foreclosure letters from another lawyer representing CitiMortgage.

  • The Browns' story is just one example of foreclosures resulting from allegedly fraudulent mortgage assignments and other tactics that "eliminate due process for the homeowner," Trent said.(2)

***

  • University of Utah law professor Christopher Peterson said MERS mortgage processing system goes against long-standing principles of property law in assigning rights to a note or mortgage. He said the "owner" of a mortgage can't be the same as the "agent" representing the homeowner, for example. Yet MERS records "false documents" with names of people who are not executives of the registry system, but often paralegals and clerks of law firms, he said. "It's an extremely controversial and arguably fraudlent practice," Peterson said.(3)

For more, see Homeowner fights foreclosure in lawsuit claiming documents are fraudulent.

(1) Reportedly, one of the issue in the Browns' case is the signature on the assignment of Brown's mortgage, giving rights to CitiMortgage, Trent said. The signature is by Cheryl Samons, who is identified as "assistant secretary of Merscorp" when, in reality, Samons is nothing more than an employee of the David J. Stern law office, the story states.

(2) Reportedly, Trent also is suing Stern and Stern's Plantation law firm in federal court in a separate case with similar allegations (see Lawsuit claims that Florida's largest foreclosure firm faked documents). In that lawsuit, on behalf of Oakland Park homeowner Ignacio Damian Figueroa, Trent contends that Stern and a mortgage registration firm generated fraudulent mortgage documents that are intentionally ambiguous to cloud the real ownership of Figueroa's mortgage note, the story states.

For the lawsuit, see Figueroa v. Merscorp, et al.

(3) For Professor Peterson's 46-page article on MERS, see Foreclosure, Subprime Mortgage Lending, and the Mortgage Electronic Registration System.

Could 62 Million Homes Be Foreclosure-Proof???

Attorney/author Ellen Brown writes in Seeking Alpha:
  • Over 62 million mortgages are now held in the name of MERS, an electronic recording system devised by and for the convenience of the mortgage industry. A California bankruptcy court, following landmark cases in other jurisdictions, recently held that this electronic shortcut makes it impossible for banks to establish their ownership of property titles — and therefore to foreclose on mortgaged properties. The logical result could be 62 million homes that are foreclosure-proof.

***

  • MERS was convenient for the mortgage industry, but courts are now questioning the impact of all of this financial juggling when it comes to mortgage ownership. To foreclose on real property, the plaintiff must be able to establish the chain of title entitling it to relief. But MERS has acknowledged, and recent cases have held, that MERS is a mere “nominee” — an entity appointed by the true owner simply for the purpose of holding property in order to facilitate transactions.

  • Recent court opinions stress that this defect is not just a procedural but is a substantive failure, one that is fatal to the plaintiff’s legal ability to foreclose. That means hordes of victims of predatory lending could end up owning their homes free and clear — while the financial industry could end up skewered on its own sword.

For more, see Homeowners’ Rebellion: Could 62 Million Homes Be Foreclosure-Proof?

More Underwater Homeowners Combine "Strategic Default" With "Straw Buyer" Purchasing As "Technique" To Keep From Losing Homes?

On Long Island, New York, Newsday reports:
  • More Long Islanders faced with mortgages that are more than their homes' worth are turning to an illegal tactic. They intentionally default and convince lenders to take less than owed in a "short sale" of the house, then covertly arrange for someone they trust to buy the home back for them at today's lower prices, say attorneys, lenders, real estate agents and federal officials.

  • Or they wait for foreclosure, then give money to relatives or friends to buy new homes on their behalf. It's hard to pull off, hard to catch and risky, but waning home prices have made the combination of "strategic default" and straw purchase tempting.

***

  • At least one Long Island lender and several agents say they have noticed an uptick in default-straw-purchase attempts but don't think it's widespread. Because it's illegal, participants don't come forward to talk.(1)

For more, see LI home borrowers turning to illegal default schemes (More Long Islanders faced with mortgages that are more than their homes' worth are turning to an illegal tactic).

(1) An Atlanta man who tried to combine straw buyer purchases with short sales to reduce the amounts owed on properties he already owned (he allegedly used stolen identities, created fictitious straw buyers, and negotiated phony short sale deals for properties in an effort to defraud FDIC of millions of dollars he owed on mortgages) recently got 39 months in prison after copping a guilty plea. See Atlanta Man Sentenced to Prison for Fraud Related to Failed Omni National Bank (Defendant Used Stolen Identities for Short Sale “Buyers” When He Sought Forgiveness of $2.2 Million in Loans).

Hard-Hit HOAs Ramp Up Pressure On Foot-Dragging 1st Mortgage Holders To Force Legal Action Against Delinquent Unit Owners

In South Florida, the South Florida Sun Sentinel recently ran a story on how financially strapped condominium and homeowners' associations unable to collect substantial amounts of unpaid maintenance fees from unit owners are directing their efforts to stimulate collections at the banks holding the first mortgages on the delinquent units in an effort to stay afloat, as explained in this excerpt:
  • Associations now are attempting so-called reverse foreclosures, which force lenders to seize homes more quickly than they otherwise would. Banks often delay taking back these troubled properties to avoid having to pay past-due assessments.(1)

***

  • Many boards felt they had little recourse, except to charge higher fees to the remaining owners. Last fall, though, the Association Law Group in Miami decided to try something different for one of its clients. The firm, representing the Keys Gate Community Association in Homestead, maneuvered to force a lender into court for a hearing that resulted in the bank seizing a home within the development.

  • The association, which already had taken title when the owner stopped paying fees, asked a judge to assign a certificate of title to the lender on the same day as the hearing. The judge granted the request, making the bank the legal owner. And with that came the responsibility of paying association fees.

  • Since then, the firm has completed at least 10 reverse foreclosures in Miami-Dade and Broward counties and has dozens more in the pipeline, said Ben Solomon, co-founder of the Association Law Group.

  • "We came up with this new legal strategy to address the flagrant stalling of lenders," Solomon wrote in an e-mail. "Each month of delay by the bank in its foreclosure process will typically turn into an additional month of bad debt to the association, which then must be paid unfairly by the [existing] owners."

For the story, see South Florida homeowner associations get tough collecting delinquent fees.

(1) The story points out that while the crash in condo prices during the past few years pushed many unit owners into foreclosure, banks have been dragging their feet in foreclosing on the apartments, causing widespread maintenance fee delinquencies vacancies leaving the state's 50,000 community associations starving for cash to pay for such services as cable, water and building maintenance & repair.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Cops Probe Central Florida Network Of Squatters In Vacant, Foreclosed Home Takeovers

In Ocoee, Florida, the Orlando Sentinel reports:
  • Police think family members arrested at an Ocoee home this week are part of a network of squatters who live in houses facing foreclosure. Detectives are investigating whether three other houses in the city are occupied by people with no legal authority to be there, Ocoee police Sgt. Mike Bryant said. At least some of those residents are thought to be related, he said.

  • A day-care center was being operated in one of the homes until the state Department of Children and Families shut it down in July. More people were suspected to be living in unsold town houses not long ago. These takeovers of empty homes have increased as foreclosures have skyrocketed, authorities said. In July, the Orlando area had the eighth-highest foreclosure activity in the nation. Florida has thousands of empty dwellings where the homeless can stay.

For more, see Cops: Vacant, foreclosed houses attract homeless squatters.

Recession, Cubs' Lousy Record Leaves One Wrigley Rooftop In Foreclosure, Others On Shaky Ground

In Chicago, Illinois, the Chicago Tribune reports:
  • The Lakeview Baseball Club apartment building across from Wrigley Field is best known for the tote board under its rooftop seats that details the years elapsed since the Cubs' last division, league and World Series titles. But after Lakeview slipped into foreclosure this year, it is the numbers outlined in court filings that are particularly telling. They offer a rare glimpse into the shaky finances of a rooftop club operating in a bad economy.

***

  • Other rooftops are scrambling to feed their own multimillion-dollar mortgages as the recession leaves their corporate customer base gun-shy from spending $30,000 on an outing that revolves around watching the Cubs play. Throw in the Cubs' dismal record, which depresses ticket demand, and several rooftops are now selling entire blocks of games on half-price online coupon sites such as Groupon.

For more, see Wrigley rooftop owners on shaky financial ground (Multimillion-dollar mortgages no match for recession, Cubs' dismal season).

See also, Cubs Wrigley Rooftops Struggle, Recycling Booms.

F'closing Bank's Failure To Assume Management Duties Of 4-Plex Results In Unpaid Utility Bill; Leads To City "Red-Tags", Tenants Get The Boot

In Albuquerque, New Mexico, KRQE-TV Channel 13 reports:
  • The city of Albuquerque red-tagged four apartments Thursday after tenants were without hot water for nearly a week. It’s all due to a recent foreclosure on the property that led to a gap in management.

  • It was the latest blow for Shane Netherly. He lives in the recently red-tagged four-plex along with three other families. Last month he found out the building was foreclosed. The city said the building was bought by a bank out of Florida but the bank has yet to hire a manager to take care of the property or collect the rent. “Nobody here wants to move,” Netherly said. "We're all paying rent.”

  • Netherly said August was the first month the tenants didn’t pay because they don’t know where to send the money. A portion of their rent pays for water and gas service. "They shut our gas off; now we no longer have any hot water,” Netherly said.

  • Last week, the gas company removed the main gas meter to the entire building. That shut off hot water to all four apartments. The city said that is against city code and is why the city had to shut down the four-plex.

***

  • The city said it also discovered some more health issues. “The vent pipe is not properly attached to the water heater,” said Joe Martinez, who manages the Safe City Strike Force. Martinez said the city has tried several times to get the Florida bank to respond to the issues but has had little luck. So on Thursday, Martinez hand-delivered the bad news.

  • They're just caught in limbo," Martinez said. "They're caught in midstream before the bank can make the necessary arrangements to have somebody manage this property,” Martinez said. “It’s like where would I go, and finding the place is even more difficult part,” Netherly said. Tenants were moved to a hotel Thursday night. The city said if the Florida bank does not fix the problems soon the tenants will have to permanently move out.(1)

Source: Foreclosure leads to evictions (4 families forced to move out).

(1) One may wonder whether the foreclosing lender's (actually the loan servicer's) foot-dragging in this story that led to the tenants' eviction is a not-so-subtle way for it to circumvent the Federal Protecting Tenants At Foreclosure Act, which requires the lender (as well as any 3rd party foreclosure sale purchaser not intending to reside on the premises) to respect any existing tenant leases, and provide at least 90 days notice when vacating month-to-month renters. See Section 702(a)(2) of the Protecting Tenants at Foreclosure Act of 2009.

Law Students Take To Orlando-Area Streets Warning Vulnerable Homeowners Away From Foreclosure Rescue Scams, Loan Refinance Rackets

In Orlando, Florida, Voice of America News reports:
  • A group of students in the southern state of Florida is taking its studies to the streets. The law students from Florida A&M University are going door-to-door in low-income neighborhoods to educate residents about property foreclosures and loan refinancing scams. The program is backed by a national nonprofit organization created by Congress to help revitalize communities.

  • As they walk the streets of Pine Hills, a suburb of Orlando, the students don't have to go far to find victims of the collapse of the US housing market. People like Louvon and Thomas Roberson, who are struggling to stay in their home. They paid a company to help them get a mortgage loan modification but their loan was not modified and, they say, the money they paid to the company was not returned. [...] The Robersons now attend a clinic at Florida A&M's law school. The law students [...] are helping them take action in small claims court to recover their money.

For the story, see Law Students Help Homeowners Facing Foreclosure (Last line of defense for families facing loss of their homes).

Condo Officer/Unit Owner Facing Foreclosure Again Invokes "Mental Illness" Defense To Dodge Jail Time After Swiping $82K From HOA; Gets Probation

In DuPage County, Illinois, Chicago Breaking News Center reports:
  • A former Addison condominium association official who admitted stealing about $82,000 from the association was sentenced to four years of probation [] by DuPage Judge Kathryn Creswell, who cited the defendant's long history of mental illness.

  • Patricia Wilkinson, 54, wrote herself association checks and signed the names of other condo officials to pay medical and other personal bills in 2008 and 2009, said DuPage County Assistant State's Attorney Diane Michalak. Wilkinson was president of King's Point 3, a bookkeeper for King's Point 1, and the treasurer of the master association for all four groups, which include a total of about 150 units in four buildings [...].

  • "I was stressed out and I had a lot of medical bills," Wilkinson said. "I felt so depressed that I didn't have any other choice." Creswell cited the defendant's clinical depression, obsessive compulsion disorder, her use for 20 years of psychotropic medication and the fact that she is in remission for cervical cancer.

  • Wilkinson was arrested last December as she was about to flee the condo parking lot with $34,000 in cash after her own condo was placed in foreclosure. Creswell ordered that the $34,000 be used for restitution and that she still owes $8,550 to the condo association, with insurance paying about $40,000. She also ordered that Wilkinson take all medications, as ordered by the county probation department.

  • Michalak had asked for a six-year prison sentence out of a range of three to seven years, stating "a lot of people have a lot of serious personal issues in this economy, but that's not a license to steal."

  • Wilkinson had received probation following several robberies of Subway stores in the early 1990s in Schaumburg. That sentence came after she received court-ordered mental health treatment at a state facility.

For the story, see Probation for woman who stole $82,000 from condo association.

Some Property/Casualty Insurers Note Pattern Of Higher Fire Loss Claims In States With Above-Average Foreclosure Rates

InsuranceNewsNet.com reports:
  • A pattern involving higher incidents of fire loss in states with above-average foreclosure rates has the attention of State Auto Financial Corp. Bob Restrepo, chairman, president and chief executive of the Columbus, Ohio-based property/casualty insurer, said the trend materialized last year and his company has taken steps in response.

  • "We have an inspection program in place now for any homeowner who is behind on their mortgage by more than 150 days," Restrepo said. The purpose is to make sure any homes falling within that category are properly maintained and occupied. During a recent earnings call, Restrepo explained that State Auto Financial [] is taking appropriate underwriting action when warranted.

***

  • State Farm has experienced an increase over the past couple of years in arson-related homeowners claims, according to company spokesman Dick Luedke. "While we don't have data that definitively proves it, we do attribute at least some of that increase to the proliferation of foreclosed upon homes in the U.S.," Luedke said in an e-mail.

For more, see Insurers Connect Rise in Home Fires to Financial Hardship.

Florida Keys Elected Officials Suspected Of Improperly Claiming Real Estate Tax Exemption For Homestead Property

In Monroe County, Florida, KeysNet.com reports:
  • An elected Mosquito Control Board member faces stiff civil penalties for apparently claiming homestead exemptions on houses in both the Keys and Levy County, near the Panhandle. Commissioner Charles Langstaff, who lives on Mahogany Drive in Key Largo, has a 2,088-square-foot mobile home on five acres of land in the town of Morriston. He has received a $25,000 homestead exemption on that home since 2002, Levy County property appraiser records show.

***

  • Karl Borglum, with the Monroe County Property Appraisers office, said his office sent a letter to Langstaff on Wednesday notifying him that they are aware he is claiming homestead exemptions in both counties. Borglum said both counties could put a lien on Langstaff's homes seeking back taxes and a civil penalty equaling his back taxes plus another 50 percent. He also faces interest payments, which are determined by the county tax collector.

For more, see Mosquito Control commissioner faces stiff fines.

See State Lawmaker Among Many Bagged By Central Florida County Appraisers For Illegal Homestead Exemption Claim for another recent story involving a Central Florida elected public official who was caught this year improperly claiming a tax exemption for homestead property.

Revised Flood-Plain Maps Stir Uproar From Some SW Florida Residents; Add'l Insurance Expense Could Push Homeowners On Financial Brink Over The Edge

In Collier County, Florida, the Naples Daily News reports:
  • Maps usually only create angst if rival country boundaries or political districts are in play. But a set of flood-plain maps released recently is causing a great deal of uproar, especially for residents of Golden Gate Estates. Why? Because as many as 50,000 structures in Collier County could need to start buying flood insurance within the next nine months to 18 months.

***

  • While local insurance agents declined to give much guidance on pricing without a specific property to insure, the going rates seem to be between $400 and $1,500.

For more, see New Collier flood maps rolling out, tide of anger rising in Golden Gate Estates.

Friday, August 20, 2010

11,000-Unit NYC Housing Complex Becomes "Pawn In A Financial Chess Game" As 1st Mtg Holder Sues To Stop Next Week's 2nd Mortgagee's Foreclosure Sale

In New York City, Crain's New York Business reports:
  • Hedge fund honcho William Ackman’s plan to takeover Stuyvesant Town/Peter Cooper Village hit a major snag Wednesday afternoon. Bank of America and U.S. Bancorp, trustees for the senior lenders of the giant residential complex sued to block his plan to foreclose on the 110-building property(1) next week.

  • Last week, Mr. Ackman, through a joint venture of his firm, Pershing Square Capital Management, and Winthrop Realty Trust snapped up a $300 million mezzanine loan, a key piece of the complex’s debt that stands between the owner’s equity and the first mortgage. They bought their stake for a mere $45 million, or 15 cents on the dollar. With that in hand they quickly scheduled a foreclosure auction for Aug 25, which they hoped to win.

  • Wednesday’s suit, which was filed in New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan,(2) said Pershing and Winthrop violate the terms of the inter-creditor agreement for the property, which outlines how the loan will be paid by all the different creditors. The suit says that Pershing and Winthrop will file for bankruptcy once they take control of the property and will seek to avoid paying the mortgage.(3)

For more, see Banks sue to block Stuy Town foreclosure (BofA and U.S. Bancorp race to court to block an auction of the sprawling 110-building Manhattan residential complex, that had been set for Aug. 25).

See also The New York Times: Opening Legal Salvos in Stuyvesant Town Battle:

  • Dan Garodnick, a city councilman who grew up and lives in Peter Cooper Village, said that he was disappointed but not surprised that the complexes were being treated as a “pawn in a financial chess game.”

For story update, see Court suspends Stuy Town foreclosure (On Sept. 2, Pershing Square Capital Management, Winthrop Realty Services and creditors will come together to haggle over the 110-building complex).

(1) The property consists of over 11,000 apartments and sits on about 80 acres of land. Reportedly, the current owner bought the complexes for a record-breaking $5.4 billion in 2006.

(2) The case is Bank of America Corp. v. PSW NYC LLC, 10-651293, New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan (New York County).

(3) With all this multi-million dollar jockeying around going on to snatch ownership of this complex, which on of these financiers does a tenant call to get a toilet unclogged?

NY Fed Reserve Joins Others In Bid To Make Big Banks Eat Crappy Mortgage Loans; Stonewalling Servicers, Trustees Refuse To Turn Over Requested Info

Reuters reports:
  • The Federal Reserve Bank of New York [...] said it may try to force banks to repurchase bad home loans backing securities it holds, joining the ranks of other big investors who have been gaining momentum with identical demands. The effort from the New York Fed to boost the value of its Maiden Lane portfolio is similar to what U.S. mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have been doing as they try to hold accountable sources of irresponsible lending that caused steep losses.

  • The investors are seeking to enforce representations and warranties that ensure the quality of loans put in bonds, such as residential mortgage-backed securities and collateralized debt obligations sold by Wall Street during the housing boom. [...] The three Maiden Lane funds combined held an average $67.4 billion in assets in the week ending July 28, Fed data shows.

  • The Fed's acknowledgment comes after Reuters last month reported that investors representing $500 billion in bonds—or a third of the private mortgage bond market—said they have taken the biggest steps yet in their effort to force banks to repurchase loans sold in error.(1)

  • These investors have topped the key 25 percent threshold for voting rights on 2,300 "private-label" mortgage bonds, which will give them the ability to force trustees to act on repurchase requests. Investors heretofore have been frustrated by trustees and servicers, who have said they are limited in the information they can share.(2)

For the story, see NY Fed joins other investors on loan repurchase bid.

(1) See Mortgage bond holders get legal edge; buybacks seen (U.S. mortgage bond investors have quietly banded together to gain the long-sought power needed to challenge loan servicers over losses the investors claim resulted from violations in securities contracts).

(2) Apparently, financially strapped homeowners seeking sustainable loan modifications aren't the only ones getting the jerk-around from the mortgage servicers and trustees.

Nevada AG Announces Public Awareness Campaign Against Real Estate Scams Targeting Financially Strapped Homeowners

In Las Vegas, Nevada, the Las Vegas Sun reports:
  • Nevada’s foreclosure pandemic has attracted a slew of scam artists hoping to take advantage of homeowners desperate to avoid losing their homes. In response, Nevada Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto [...] announced a new public awareness campaign to help citizens spot fraud and point them toward legitimate businesses.

***

  • Cortez Masto rattled off a list of statistics to illustrate the crisis: Her office has received complaints against more than 200 companies, opened 14 cases in criminal court, obtained five felony convictions and sent 51 cases to civil courts, she said. The plan now is to catch the problem before it expands, she explained.

***

  • One common scam happens when a company requires a large down payment and then sends the homeowner a small refund after completing no work — called an automatic refund scam. Or, a company will guarantee to reduce a homeowner’s principal on a mortgage as a marketing ploy.

  • In other instances, a company will pledge that, if the homeowner sells the house to a group of investors, they will sell it back with a reduced mortgage — called a “phantom investor scam.” Officials advised citizens to be wary of any business that make guarantees or pressures them to sign and pay.

For the story, see AG announces campaign to fight foreclosure scams.