Friday, September 21, 2007

Sacramento-Area Mortgage Fraud Suspects Still Working In Lending Business, Despite State Cease & Desist Order

The KCRA 3 (Sacramento, California) mortgage fraud investigative reports involving over 20 homes - over $9 million of real estate - in Elk Grove continues as KCRA updates us on the whereabouts of Jim Martin and Gabriel Viramontes, two of the suspected ringleaders in an alleged scam that has left eight investors facing foreclosure on all the homes:

  • Despite a cease-and-desist order issued by the state, it appears two of the targets of our investigation are now operating through a loophole in the law that's allowing them to continue processing loans. [...] Although the state issued a cease-and-desist order, [Jim] Martin is still operating as a loan officer in Northern California. KCRA 3 found Martin online solciting loans and working for Set To Go Inc. Martin admits he never told that company he's under federal investigation. Despite that cease-and-desist order issued by the state, Martin isn't breaking the law because he is operating through a loophole that allows him to work under another company's license.

  • Martin's former business partner, Gabriel Viramontes, is also operating under that loophole and is working at Folsom Lake Mortgage. Viramontes is also under a cease-and-desist order.

Reportedly, a California state senator is ready to introduce legislation to close the loophole that the KCRA 3 investigation has amply illuminated. For more, see:

Go here for other posts on the KCRA 3 mortgage fraud investigation.

Friday, May 11, 2007

More On Sacramento Area Alleged Mortgage Fraud Scam

This is a follow up post on KCRA Channel 3's investigative mortgage fraud report by Josh Bernstein involving homes in Elk Grove, California to supplement the May 2, 2007 post on this blog (Sacramento Area Real Estate Group Accused Of Duping Investors).

A May 10 report by KCRA Channel 3 reports that:
  • "Many industry insiders have been sounding off about [Jim] Martin and his partners and are calling for a federal investigation. Mike McGee, past president of the California Association of Mortgage Brokers, said Martin and others deserve to be prosecuted. Since KCRA 3's investigation, Martin and his partners have switched business names. They are now operating at Esnian Mortgage and Realty Network."
Those reportedly involved in the alleged mortgage fraud operation include:
  • Jim Martin, VFM Investment Group LLC, Gabriel Viramontes, Freedom Capital Mortgage, Inc., Joseph S. Gallo, Esnian Mortgage & Realty Network, Mario Fellini III, real estate agent Yajen Huang - aka Jennifer Huang, and others.
For more, see Mortgage Brokers Association Condemns Real Estate Scheme (Investment Organizers Now Doing Business As Esnian Mortgage)

Go here to watch the latest KCRA report (no longer available online).
---------------------

For previous online reports from KCRA on the Elk Grove mortgage fraud, see:

To watch the previous KCRA Channel 3 Elk Grove mortgage fraud TV reports by Josh Bernstein (no longer available online):

  • Elk Grove Mortgage Fraud Part 1
  • Elk Grove Mortgage Fraud Part 2

.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

KCRA 3 Investigation Results In Federal Mortgage Fraud Indictments

A Federal and state mortgage fraud investigation involving four Sacramento-area men who were suspected of falsifying millions of dollars in loan applications so investors could qualify for loans they couldn't afford, and triggered by a KCRA 3 investigation by Investigative Reporter Josh Bernstein, has resulted in a 120 count Federal grand jury indictment of the four men on various charges. According to the KCRA 3 report:

  • In an indictment unsealed Tuesday, a federal grand jury charged James Roy Martin [Jim Martin], 36, Mario Fellini III, 38, Gabriel Richard Viramontes, 44, and Joseph Salvatore Gallo, 34, with bank fraud and conspiracy to launder money, [U.S. Attorney McGregor W.] Scott said. Martin, Fellini and Gallo were also indicted on charges of making false statements in loan applications, and Martin, Fellini and Viramontes were indicted on mail fraud charges, Scott said.
Go here to watch Josh Bernstein's report. To read the KCRA 3 online story, see Four Indicted In Mortgage Fraud Investigation (Charges Follow Extensive KCRA 3 Investigation).

For a copy of the grand jury charges, see Indictment - U.S. v. Martin, et al.

See also, the U.S. Attorney Press Release, and Four indicted in mortgage scheme (Sacramento Bee).

Go here for other posts on this investigation.

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

Sacramento Area Real Estate Group Accused Of Duping Investors

A recent report by Investigative Reporter Josh Bernstein of KCRA-TV Channel 3 in Sacramento, California describes an alleged mortgage fraud scam where seven unsophisticated investors where lured into a "real estate investment opportunity" where they purchased over twenty homes, and then were left with their credit destroyed and stuck with unrented homes and unaffordable mortgage payments. The real estate group who is accused of providing the investment opportunity, reportedly made all the arrangements in the investors' purchase of the homes, including allegedly submitting false loan applications on behalf of the investors. Those identified by the investors as being involved in the alleged fraud scheme are:

  • James Martin (aka Jim Martin), VFM Investment Group LLC, Gabriel Viramontes, Freedom Capital Mortgage, Inc., Joseph S. Gallo, Esnian Mortgage & Realty Network, Mario Fellini III, real estate agent Yajen Huang (aka Jennifer Huang), and others.

An impromptu, on camera interview was attempted with some of the accused at their office; however, they didn't seem to interested in answering any questions. While their attorney agreed to appear on camera, he didn't seemed to relish the opportunity to answer Josh Bernstein's questions, either (he sounded like he had "marbles in his mouth" and he looked like "a deer caught in the headlights." I actually felt sorry for him. He looked like a young guy; maybe he needed to earn the legal fees from representing these clients so he could pay his own mortgage.)

All the investors have reportedly filed lawsuits. A lawsuit filed by one of the investors is currently pending in Sacremento County, California Superior Court alleging fraud, constructive fraud and breach of fiduciary duty, civil conspiracy, negligent misrepresentation, and unlicensed practice of law, among other claims against some or all of the above named accused. Representing the investor in this lawsuit are Dennis B. Hill and Andrew E. Bakos of Hill Law Firm, Lincoln, California.

To read that lawsuit, see Romano vs. Martin, et al. (6.51 MB)

Go here to watch the KCRA3 report by Josh Bernstein (no longer available online).

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Sacramento-Area Mortgage Fraud Investigation Continues

The saga of the alleged mortgage fraud scam that reportedly duped investors into buying homes financed with unaffordable, fraudulently obtained mortgages in Elk Grove, California continues as KCRA-TV Channel 3 in Sacramento reports that an administrative complaint has been filed with the California Department of Real Estate against Jim Martin, Gabriel Viramontes, Mario Fellini, Joseph Gallo and Jennifer Huang -- accusing them of misleading investors and lying on loan applications.

Further, KCRA reports that, according to officials, Federal indictments are expected in the coming weeks. Federal investigators have already raided the offices of Freedom Capitol Mortgage, VFM Investment Group and several other locations. At the offices of Lyon Real Estate, the brokerage where real estate agent Jennifer Huang worked, agents seized records relating to the sale of just about every house involved in the alleged scheme. Reportedly, Huang is no longer affiliated with Lyon Real Estate. The firm is not named in the complaint and is cooperating with the investigation.

Go here to watch the updated KCRA 3 TV report (by Josh Bernstein) (no longer available online).

To read online story, see KCRA 3 Investigates: Indictments Possible In Alleged Real Estate Scheme (State Files Civil Complaint Against Mortgage Company Officials, Real Estate Agent).

For the legal documents filed in the administrative action, see:

Go here for other posts and links to other articles on this story.

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

"KCRA 3-Triggered" FBI Mortgage Fraud Investigation Yields 5th Arrest

In Northern California, the Sacramento-area FBI mortgage fraud investigation triggered by a series of KCRA 3 television reports by Investigative Reporter Josh Bernstein has resulted in the arrest of a fifth suspect, according to a source close to the case.

25-year-old Sennett Swift was arrested Friday night at the Sacramento International Airport. In addition to his passport, he was found to have thousands of dollars in cash on his person and authorities believe he was trying to flee the country. Swift reportedly worked as a loan processor for VFM Investment Group and was trained by Jim Martin before leaving and setting up several companies on his own. Martin, along with three others, is currently under indictment for allegedly falsifying millions of dollars in mortgage loan applications so investors could qualify for loans they couldn't afford.

Swift is currently in custody and being held without bond on charges of bank fraud and money laundering. Arraignment is scheduled for today in a Sacramento Federal Court. Swift is considered a flight risk and will likely be remanded until he goes to trial. Authorities allege Swift began preying on the elderly after leaving VFM Investment Group in a similar scheme.

At least a dozen additional arrests in this investigation are expected. For KCRA 3 story, see Agents Believe Loan Officer Tried To Flee State (Man Was Former Employee Of VFM Investment Group).

See also, FBI: Man set up refinance scheme (The Sacramento Bee).

Go here for other posts on this investigation.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Sacramento Feds Get Guilty Plea In Mortgage Fraud Case

From the U.S Attorney's Office in Sacramento, California:
  • United States Attorney McGregor W. Scott announced today that Sennett H. Swift, 25, of Sacramento, pleaded guilty today to bank fraud and money laundering. [...] According to [the prosecutor in the case], Swift defrauded two homeowners and the corresponding lenders by fraudulently refinancing the two homes, the goal of which was to receive the substantial loan broker commissions.

For more, see the U.S. Attorney News Release - Unlicensed Loan Officer Pleads Guilty To Fraud.

Go here for an earlier post on the arrest of Sennett Swift. jim martin

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Sacramento-Area Mortgage Fraud Suspect Thrown In Jail On Unrelated Charges

KCRA 3 in Sacramento, California reports:
  • "One of the brokers at the center of our [mortgage fraud] investigation was convicted for molesting a 14-year-old girl last April. Now he's facing additional charges. Joseph Gallo was arrested again on July 16. He is charged with failure to report as a registered sex offender. Now he's back behind bars."

He had been on probation for the April incident and it appears that he may be serving out the remainder of his sentence as a result of this apparent probation violation, in addition to facing the new criminal charge of failure to report. By the way, the Federal mortgage fraud investigation into Gallo and his business associates spurred by KCRA 3 Josh Bernstein's investigative reports continues, with indictments reportedly expected next month.

(My guess is that now that Gallo finds himself in scalding hot water, it may be easier for the Feds to strike some type of a plea bargain deal with him where he agrees to turn on, and testify against, his business associates in the mortgage fraud investigation in exchange for a bit of leniency.)

For more, see Mortgage Fraud Suspect Faces Sex Offender Charges (Broker Failed To Report As Sex Offender After Molestation Conviction), or watch the KCRA 3 TV report.

Go here for prior posts on the KCRA 3 mortgage fraud investigative reports. Jim Martin

Thursday, June 07, 2007

More On FBI, IRS Raid Of Sacramento-Area Real Estate Offices

KCRA-TV Channel 3 has provided updated information on its website in connection with raid of the Sacramento area real estate offices by Federal investigators earlier this week related to an investigation of possible real estate and mortgage fraud involving Freedom Capital Mortgage, VFM Investment Group, Lyon Real Estate, Gabriel Viramontes, Jim Martin, Mario Fellini, Joseph Gallo, and Jennifer Huang.

Go here to watch the updated KCRA Channel 3 TV report (no longer available online) (by investigative reporter Josh Bernstein) and go here for Application And Affidavit For Search Warrant, which sets forth the necessary probable cause for the Federal agents to conduct their raid of the real estate offices and homes - about a half dozen locations (Note: this document is a 22.2 MB "monster", just in case you're using a "dial-up" connection).

Go here for prior posts on this story, with links to prior KCRA reports.

P.S. Thanks to one of my Northern California readers for the "heads-up" on this additional information.

Saturday, February 25, 2017

Disbarred Attorney Faces Multiple Felony Charges For Alleged Pre-Disbarment Pilfer Of $50K In Connection With Settling Estate

In Allentown, Pennsylvania, The Morning Call reports:
  • A former South Whitehall attorney took $50,000 from his client, who happened to be a Lehigh County detective, to pay off an estate tax in 2009 but instead kept the money for himself,(1)(2) District Attorney Jim Martin announced Friday [February 3].

    Glenn D. McGogney, 70, of [...] Upper Macungie was charged Friday with theft by failure to make required disposition of funds received, theft by deception and receiving stolen property, all felonies. He was arraigned by District Judge Rod Beck and released on $50,000 unsecured bail.

    McGogney was disbarred in 2012 for bilking a client of $25,000 in an effort to salvage his investment in a failing Bucks County strip club.

    In 2009, McGogney was practicing law on Route 309 in South Whitehall and represented Christopher Cruz and his wife after they became executors for the estate of their friend, Charles J. Knautz, authorities said.

    In November of that year, McGogney drafted a document that showed the estate owed $42,507.53 in tax liability to the state Department of Revenue, authorities said. Cruz wrote a check for $50,049.15 to cover the tax and attorney fees.

    For several years after that, Cruz received several tax delinquency notices that said he failed to pay the estate tax, authorities said. Cruz contacted McGogney and gave him the documents he received and McGogney told him he would take care of the problem, authorities said.

    After receiving another delinquency notice in 2014, Cruz's wife requested a copy of the original check from her bank. The bank found that the check had been deposited in McGogney's bank account, authorities said.

    For two years, Christopher Cruz attempted to resolve the issue with McGogney, but was unable to, so he filed a theft report in September, and South Whitehall police Detective Chad Moyer began an investigation.

    Moyer confirmed the taxes were not paid.
Source: Attorney stole $50,000 tax check from client, Lehigh County DA says.
------------------------
(1) See generally, Frederick Miller, "If You Can't Trust Your Lawyer .... ?", 138 Univ. of Pennsylvania Law Rev. 785 (1990) for more on the apparent, long-standing tolerance for deceit by many in the legal profession (while Professor Miller's essay is over a quarter-century old, it appears that his observations maintain their vitality to this day):
  • This tolerance to deception is encouraged by the profession's institutional civility. Seldom is a fig called a fig, or a shyster a shyster. No, our euphemisms are wonderfully polite: "frivolous conduct," or a "lack of candor;" or "law-office failure;" or, heaven forbid, a "peculation," a "defalcation," or a "negative balance" in a law firms's trust account.

    There is also widespread reluctance on the part of lawyers --- again, some lawyers --- to discuss publicly, much less acknowledge, that they have colleagues who engage in deceit and unprofessional conduct.

    This reluctance is magnified when the brand of deceit involves the theft of client money and property, notwithstanding that most lawyers would agree that stealing from clients is the ultimate ethical transgression.
    ***
    The fact is, however, that theft of client property is not an insignificant or isolated problem within the legal profession. Indeed, it is a hounding phenomenon nationwide, and probably the principal reason why most lawyers nationwide are disbarred from the practice of law.
(2) The Pennsylvania Lawyers Fund for Client Security which was established by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in 1982 to reimburse clients who have suffered a loss as a result of a misappropriation of funds by their Pennsylvania attorney.

For similar "attorney ripoff reimbursement funds" that attempt to clean up the financial mess created by the dishonest conduct of lawyers licensed in other states and Canada, see:
Maps available courtesy of The National Client Protection Organization, Inc.

Thursday, August 09, 2007

KCRA 3 TV Sacramento-Area Mortgage Fraud Investigative Reports Continue

The most recent KCRA 3 TV report on investigative reporter Josh Bernstein's Elk Grove, California mortgage fraud investigation is available here.

Mario Fellini, one of the mortgage brokers at the center of KCRA 3's investigation has surrendered his license and is no longer allowed to operate as a mortgage broker in California.

Reportedly, this action has no effect on a currently ongoing FBI and IRS investigation into the alleged falsification of more than $9 million worth of loan applications by Fellini and his business associates. KCRA 3 reports that sources close to the investigation say the investigation continues to move forward and will likely go before a grand jury in a matter of weeks. In addition to Fellini, others that have reportedly had some connection with the alleged mortgage fraud scheme are:
  • Jim Martin, Gabriel Viramontes, Joseph Gallo and Jennifer Huang; and the firms Freedom Capitol Mortgage, VFM Investment Group, and Esnian Mortgage & Realty Network.
Go here to watch the latest KCRA 3 TV report. To read KCRA 3's online report, see Mortgage Broker Under Fire Surrenders License (Offices Raided By FBI).

Go here for prior posts on the KCRA 3 investigation, which include links to KCRA 3 Josh Bernstein's previous investigative reports on this alleged mortgage scam.

Friday, June 22, 2007

More On KCRA 3 Sacramento-Area Mortgage Fraud Investigation

The most recent KCRA 3 TV report on investigative reporter Josh Bernstein's ongoing Elk Grove, California mortgage fraud investigation is available here (no longer available online). Those who are being investigated by law enforcement authorities as a result of the initial KCRA investigation are Jim Martin, Gabriel Viramontes, Mario Fellini, Joseph Gallo and Jennifer Huang. The firms reportedly involved are Freedom Capitol Mortgage, VFM Investment Group, and Esnian Mortgage & Realty Network.

Go here for prior posts on the KCRA 3 investigation.

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

California Feds Storm Sacramento-Area Real Estate Offices; Seize Records

KCRA-TV Channel 3 in Sacramento, California reports:
  • "More than 20 agents stormed the offices of Freedom Capital Mortgage, VFM Investment Group, Lyon Real Estate and several homes in the surrounding area. During one of the raids in Elk Grove, Gabriel Viramontes was arrested. Viramontes and his business partners Jim Martin and Mario Fellini allegedly falsified millions of dollars in loan applications so investors could qualify for loans they couldn't afford. The FBI and IRS seized hundreds of files, computers and other records. At Freedom Capital Mortgage, they detained Joesph Gallo, the company's president and the mortgage broker who handled almost all of the transactions. At Lyon Real Estate, agents seized records relating to Jennifer Huang, the real estate agent who handled the sale of almost 20 of the homes involved in our investigation."

For more, watch the KCRA-TV report (no longer available online) (by reporter Josh Bernstein). To read the online report, see FBI, IRS Take Action On Mortgage Fraud (Indictments Could Soon Be On The Way).


Go here for prior posts on the KCRA-TV investigation of this case.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Denver Pastor Charged In Flipping Scam; Used Two Unwitting Churchmembers As Straw Buyers On 8 Homes Ultimately Ending In Foreclosure, Say Authorities

In Denver, Colorado, KMGH-TV Channel 8 reports:
  • A Denver pastor, indicted for alleged mortgage fraud, turned himself into authorities late Thursday. The indictment alleges that Harold Joe Hicks used surrogates to purchase property and then falsified mortgage applications to get lower interest rates.

  • "He would bring nearly completed mortgage applications... and (would) have the surrogate buyer simply sign off without reading it," said Lynn Kimbrough of the Denver District Attorney's office.

  • Pastor Harold Joe Hicks, 64, of Mount Carmel Community Baptist Church was formally charged, Thursday, with eight counts of theft and eight counts of forgery.(1) The two surrogates listed in the indictment attended Mt. Carmel. According to court documents, Hicks told both Richard Martin and Sherri Wrightsil that he would rent the properties, pay the mortgages, taxes, insurance and other expenses.

For more, see Grand Jury Indicts Pastor In Alleged Mortgage Fraud Scheme (Eight Properties Purchased Through Surrogates End Up In Foreclosure).

See also:

  • Rocky Mountain News: Minister indicted on 16 counts (Harold Hicks accused of stealing $80,000 in mortgage scheme) - "It is one of the most heinous examples of real estate fraud I've ever seen," said Jim Spray, a mortgage fraud expert familiar with details of the Hicks case. "To use his level of trust and abuse it severely, and hurt people so deeply that it shatters their faith . . . heinous doesn't even describe it."

  • Rocky Mountain News (July 7, 2007): Signing on faith (Ex-church members say pastor misused trust to conduct shady real estate deals).

(1) It should be noted that the forgery charges relate to the signatures appearing on the allegedly fraudulent mortgage applications used to obtain the loans. According to the indictment, the signatures are alleged to be the authentic signatures of the unwitting straw buyers; Pastor Harold Joe Hicks, while accused of filling out the mortgage applications with fraudulent information, has not been accused of actually signing these documents. Notwithstanding, he is facing the forgery charges in connection with those signatures.

Regardless of whether forgery convictions are obtained against Hicks, this case should serve as a reminder that, in Colorado as well as in some other states, the act of forgery need not be done by the hand of the person being charged; fraudulently procuring the signature of another to an instrument which the signer either has no intention of, or is otherwise tricked into, signing constitutes forgery on the part of the procurer in some states. It is sufficient that the forgerer caused or procured it to be done. See also:

  • May 27, 2008 post (1): New York Court Decisions A Reminder That Viable Forgery Claim May Arise When Homeowner Is Tricked Into Signing Deed; and
  • May 27, 2008 post (2): California Appeals Court Says Genuine Homeowner Signature On Instruments In Foreclosure Rescue Scheme Not A Bar To Scammer's Forgery Conviction.

By the way, in the State of Ohio, the crime of tricking someone into signing any writing that either conveys an interest in property, or creates a monetary obligation, is called "Securing Writings by Deception." Sec. 2913.43, Ohio Rev. Code. ForgeryGenuineSignatureKappa

Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Illinois Steps In To Stop Niece From Selling 100-Year Old Aunt's Farm Out From Under Her As State Probes Dubious Land Transactions

In Will County, Illinois, the SouthtownStar reports:
  • State officials have told the niece of a 100-year-old Monee woman known as "Aunt Aggie" to stop trying to sell the woman's 70-acre farm. A cease and desist order was issued against Bridget Gruzdis and her firm, Phoenix Horizon LLC, to immediately stop marketing and attempting to sell the home of Agnes Albinger.

***

  • For the past few months, the SouthtownStar has chronicled Aunt Aggie's struggle to stay on her farm. Aunt Aggie's niece formed Phoenix Horizon and engaged in a series of transactions with her aunt that resulted in the farm being subdivided and annexed to the village for commercial development in 2003. The state, after learning of transactions between Aunt Aggie and her niece through news reports, launched an investigation into why the farm was at risk for foreclosure.

***

  • Phoenix Horizon annexed the land to the village of Monee in 2003 with hopes of developing hotels and shopping centers. Gruzdis borrowed $700,000 against the property but paid back only $49 before the bank filed for foreclosure in 2006.(1)

  • The Monee police launched an investigation into whether Aunt Aggie knew what she was doing when she was signing transactions with Phoenix over the past decade. They turned over their findings to the Will County state's attorney's office. The state's attorney's financial crimes prosecutor is still investigating, Will County state's attorney's office spokesman Chuck Pelkie said Thursday.

  • Aunt Aggie, who turns 101 in August, has farmed the Monee property since 1949. Her husband died in 1956, and Aunt Aggie is well known in her community for raising as many as 40 foster children over the course of nearly five decades. On May 3, Gruzdis sent Aunt Aggie an eviction notice giving her 30 days to vacate the farm - a threat that was never carried out. Jim Armstrong is a longtime friend of Aunt Aggie's who acted as a whistleblower by alerting the media to Aggie's predicament.

For the story, see State to Aunt Aggie's niece: Stop right there (Woman blocked from trying to sell centenarian's property).

In a follow-up story, see In summer heat, Aunt Aggie finds strength.

For another story on an Illinois property owner falling victim in a real estate equity ripoff, see Blind Victim Of Sale Leaseback, Equity Stripping Scam Peddled As A Refinance Now Faces The Boot, Despite "Successful" Civil Prosecution By Illinois AG.

(1) With some exceptions, under Illinois law, a lender looking to take real estate as collateral for a loan generally has a duty to inquire into the rights and equities of anyone in open possession of the premises who is not the owner of record. Failure to do so could leave the lender's security interest subordinate to any legal rights and equities the party in possession who is not the owner of record can establish.

See Ambrosius v. Katz, 2 Ill. 2d 173; 117 N.E.2d 69; 1954 Ill. LEXIS 321 (Ill. 1954) (bold text is my emphasis, not in the original text):

  • A purchaser is bound to inquire of the person in possession by what tenure he holds and what interest he claims in the premises. It is well settled that whatever is sufficient to put a party on inquiry is notice of all facts which pursuit of such inquiry would disclose, and without such inquiry no one can claim to be an innocent purchaser as against him whose possession raises the inquiry. (Bryant v. Lakeside Galleries, Inc. 402 Ill. 466; Miller v. Bullington, 381 Ill. 238.)

  • This rule protects a grantor whose grant was induced by fraud, but who, remaining in possession, can show such possession as notice of his equity against a subsequent grantee. (White v. White, 89 Ill. 460; Ronan v. Bluhm, 173 Ill. 277.) The purchaser cannot excuse himself by merely obtaining information as to how possession was obtained or inquiring of the grantor or of other persons as to the rights of the person in possession, but he is bound to inquire of the person in possession by what tenure he holds and what interest he claims. Open possession is sufficient to charge such purchaser with notice of all legal and equitable claims of the occupant. German-American Nat. Bank v. Martin, 277 Ill. 629.

See also, Bullard v. Turner, 357 Ill. 279, 192 N.E. 223 (Ill. 1934) (bold text is my emphasis, not in the original text):

  • Under the system of recording the evidences of title to real estate in force in this State, the actual occupancy of land is equivalent to the record of the instrument under which the occupant claims so far as notice to subsequent purchasers and incumbrancers is concerned. McDonnell v. Holden, 352 Ill. 362; Garlick v. Imgruet, 340 id. 136; Moore v. Machinery Sales Co. 297 id. 564; Merchants and Farmers State Bank v. Dawdy, 230 id. 199; Coari v. Olsen, 91 id. 273.

  • A purchaser or incumbrancer is bound to inquire of a person in possession of real estate by what right he holds possession and what interest he claims; and in case the purchaser or incumbrancer fails to make such inquiry, the law charges him with constructive notice of all those facts which he would have ascertained respecting the claim or title of the person in possession had inquiry been made of him. (Nelson v. Joshel, 305 Ill. 420; Williams v. Brown, 14 id. 200; White v. White, 89 id. 460; Coari v. Olsen, 91 id. 273; Ford v. Marcall, 107 id. 136; Tillotson v. Mitchell, 111 id. 518; Rock Island and Peoria Railway Co. v. Dimick, 144 id. 628; German-American Nat. Bank v. Martin, 277 id. 629; Moore v. Machinery Sales Co. 297 id. 564).

The foregoing principles were applied by a Federal court in Chicago last year in Davis v. Elite Mortg. Servs., 592 F. Supp. 2d 1052 (USDC D. Ill., East. Div. 2009), in the context of a foreclosure rescue scam. The Court found that the mortgage lender that unwittingly financed the scam was not entitled to the protection accorded to a bona fide purchaser, saying that, despite the lack of evidence that the lender had any actual knowledge of the scam, it had constructive notice of any claim the screwed-over homeowner can establish in the property by reason of his open, exclusive possession thereof.

For more on the duty to inquire of persons in possession in real estate transactions in Illinois, see Illinois Bona Fide Purchaser, Possession, Duty Of Inquiry (Illinois Supreme Court cases), and Illinois Bona Fide Purchaser, Possession, Duty Of Inquiry - State Appellate Cases, Federal Cases.

For more on this duty to inquire in other states, see Bona Fide Purchaser Doctrine, Possession Of Property By Occupants Other Than The Vendor & The Duty To Inquire.