Massachusetts Supreme Court Affirms Lower Court’s Judgment in Favor of Plaintiff Who Claimed the Bank Pursuing Foreclosure on His Property, Lacked Legal Standing to Do So
In U.S. Bank National Ass’n v. Ibanez, 458 Mass. 637, 941 N.E.2d 40 (2011), the Massachusetts Supreme Court affirmed a lower court’s ruling in favor of a plaintiff who alleged that the bank pursuing foreclosure on his property had no legal standing to do so.
The Supreme Court held that; the first purchaser failed to show it was the mortgage holder at time of foreclosure, the second purchaser failed to show it was the mortgage holder at time of foreclosure, the holding of note was insufficient to show authority to foreclose, post foreclosure sale assignments were insufficient to show authority, and the ruling did not warrant prospective application.
In reviewing the lower court’s ruling, the Massachusetts Supreme Court found that the lower court judge did not err in concluding that the securitization documents submitted by the plaintiffs failed to demonstrate that they were the holders of the Ibanez and LaRace mortgages, respectively, at the time of the publication of the notices and the sales. The judge, therefore, did not err in rendering judgments against the plaintiffs and in denying the plaintiffs’ motions to vacate the judgments
On appeal, the plaintiff raised three other arguments. First, the plaintiffs initially contended that the assignments in blank, identifying the assignor but not the assignee, not only “evidence and confirm the assignments that occurred by virtue of the securitization agreements,” but “are effective assignments in their own right.” But in their reply briefs they conceded that the assignments in blank did not constitute a lawful assignment of the mortgages.
The court noted that their concession was appropriate, citing the long-standing principle that a conveyance of real property, such as a mortgage, that does not name the assignee conveys nothing and is void; thus the court did not regard an assignment of land in blank as giving legal title in land to the bearer of the assignment.
Second, the plaintiffs contended that, because they held the mortgage note, they had a sufficient financial interest in the mortgage to allow them to foreclose. However, the court found that under Massachusetts’s law, where a note has been assigned but there is no written assignment of the mortgage underlying the note, the assignment of the note does not carry with it the assignment of the mortgage.
Third, the plaintiffs argued that post-sale assignments were sufficient to establish their authority to foreclose when taken in conjunction with the evidence of a presale assignment. However, the court disagreed, finding that where an assignment is confirmatory of an earlier, valid assignment made prior to the publication of notice and execution of the sale, that confirmatory assignment may be executed and recorded after the foreclosure, and doing so will not make the title defective.
June 13, 2013 | Permalink | No Comments
June 12, 2013
Don’t Show Me The Note in Georgia!
The Georgia Supreme Court recently decided You v. JP Morgan Chase, No. S13Q0040 (May 20, 2013) which held that the “law does not require a party seeking to exercise a power of sale in a deed to secured a debt [a deed of trust] to hold, in addition to to the deed, the promissory note evidencing the underlying debt.” (1) The Georgia Supreme Court thus joins the Arizona Supreme Court which reached the same result in Hogan v. Wash. Mut. Bank, 277 P.3d 781 (Ariz. 2012). I discuss Hogan and cases reaching the opposite result in Show Me The Note!
The Georgia Supreme Court reached this result after reviewing the history of non-judicial foreclosure in Georgia. It found nothing in recent statutory enactments that was inconsistent with the longstanding practice of allowing foreclosure on the mortgage alone. The Court dismissed a number of arguments, including the contention that the UCC “prohibits a party who does not hold the note from exercising the power of sale in the deed securing the note.” (12) The Court notes that Chase is just seeking to enforce the deed of trust, not the note. The Court also acknowledges that it might be more sensible not to split the note from the mortgage, but it also notes that the Georgia legislature did not take that approach.
The court concludes the opinion with something of a cri de coeur, the type of statement one sees from a court that feels that its conscience is being constrained by binding authority:
As members of this State’s judicial branch, it is our duty to interpret the laws as they are written. See Allen v. Wright, 282 Ga. 9(1), 644 S.E.2d 814 (2007). This Court is not blind to the plight of distressed borrowers, many of whom have suffered devastating losses brought on by the burst of the housing bubble and ensuing recession. While we respect our legislature’s effort to assist distressed homeowners by amending the non-judicial foreclosure statute in 2008, the continued ease with which foreclosures may proceed in this State gives us pause, in light of the grave consequences foreclosures pose for individuals, families, neighborhoods, and society in general. Our concerns in this regard, however, do not entitle us to overstep our judicial role, and thus we leave to the members of our legislature, if they are so inclined, the task of undertaking additional reform.
(HT William Hart)
June 12, 2013 | Permalink | No Comments
Ohio Bankruptcy Court Rules in Favor of Wells Fargo: Failure to Properly Record Mortgage Assignment Does Not Invalidate Mortgage
In In re Williams, 395 B.R. 33 (Bankr. S.D. Ohio 2008), the Ohio Bankruptcy Court granted the defendant, Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.’s motion to dismiss the Plaintiff’s complaint, holding that mortgage assignments must be recorded under Ohio law, but that failure to do so does not terminate the underlying mortgage. Additionally, the Trustee could not be a bona fide purchaser and avoid the mortgage since he possessed constructive knowledge of this mortgage.
On May 2, 2005, Earl and Belinda Williams (the Debtors) executed a promissory note in the amount of $137,730 to United Wholesale Mortgage (UWM), secured by Debtors real property, and named MERS as a “nominee for UWM, its successors and assigns.” In November 2007, the Debtors filed a petition for relief under Chapter 7 of Title 11, under the US Bankruptcy Code. Plaintiff Thomas Nolan was appointed Chapter 7 Trustee. In February 2008, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) filed a motion for relief from the automatic stay on the Property, and subsequently the Trustee initiated an adversarial proceeding to avoid the mortgage lien filed in the name of MERS and alleged that under Ohio law, the assignment of the mortgage must be recorded on behalf of the holder of the note.
The plaintiff brought suit on two accounts. First, under the Trustee’s strong arm powers granted by the Bankruptcy Code § 544, he alleged that “as a bona fide purchaser for value, he may avoid the mortgage held by Wells Fargo on account of the failure to record an assignment of the Mortgage.” The court elucidates that the Bankruptcy Code gives the Trustee power of a bona fide purchase for value if a hypothetical purchaser could have obtained that bona fide status. Under Ohio law, the assignment of a mortgage must be “recorded to protect those lien interests from avoidance by a bona fide purchaser of real property.” The parties disagree whether mortgages must be recorded under the terms of the Bankruptcy Code, and the Court ultimately determined that the Bankruptcy Code did include mortgages under the requirement to record “instruments of writing properly executed for the conveyance or unencumbrance of lands. . . . ” but that the failure to record the assignment of the mortgage did not terminate “the underlying mortgage and the lien of the underlying mortgage.” Since the Trustee had constructive knowledge of the mortgage, he could not then avoid and acquire bona fide purchaser status due to Wells Fargo’s failure to record its assignment. The Court then dismissed the first cause of action.
Second, the Trustee argued for the Disallowance of Wells Fargo’s claim on based his ability to avoid the mortgage (as argued above). The Trustee’s claim falls under § 502(b) of the Bankruptcy Code, which establishes “grounds upon which a claim that has been objected to by a party in interest may be disallowed.” The Court relied upon subsection 1 which permits disallowance of a claim that is “unenforceable against the debtor or property of the debtor.” The claim was then dismissed “without prejudice to the Trustee’s ability to object under Code § 502 and the Bankruptcy Rules of Procedure to any proof of claim filed by Wells Fargo or any other party claiming to be a creditor of the Debtors in connection with the Note on grounds not determined through this adversary proceeding.”
June 12, 2013 | Permalink | No Comments
June 11, 2013
Show Me The Note!
KeAupuni Akina, Brad Borden and I have posted Show Me The Note! to SSRN and BePress. The abstract reads
News outlets and foreclosure defense blogs have focused attention on the defense commonly referred to as “show me the note.” This defense seeks to forestall or prevent foreclosure by requiring the foreclosing party to produce the mortgage and the associated promissory note as proof of its right to initiate foreclosure.
The defense arose in two recent state supreme-court cases and is also being raised in lower courts throughout the country. It is not only important to individuals facing foreclosure but also for the mortgage industry and investors in mortgage-backed securities. In the aggregate, the body of law that develops as a result of the foreclosure epidemic will probably shape mortgage law for a long time to come. Courts across the country seemingly interpret the validity of the “show me the note” defense incongruously. Indeed, states appear to be divided on its application. However, an analysis of the situations in which this defense is raised provides a framework that can help consumers and the mortgage industry to better predict how individual states will rule on this issue and can help courts as they continue to grapple with this matter.
June 11, 2013 | Permalink | No Comments
Oregon District Court Dismisses Borrower’s Suit to Invalidate Foreclosure in Favor of BOA and MERS, Stating Lack of Merit
In Moreno v. Bank of America., N.A., 3:11-CV-1265-HZ, (D. Or. Apr. 27, 2012) the U.S. District Court of Oregon, granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. Plaintiff had alleged violations under several federal and state Acts, each of which the Judge rejected based on lack of merit.
The plaintiff brought action to invalidate a foreclosure sale, which, although dated earlier than the filed complaint, had not yet occurred. On March 29th, 2007, Moreno borrowed $220,000 from Aegis Wholesale Corporation. A promissory note in favor of Aegis was secured by a Deed of Trust (DOT) against the plaintiff’s real property and identified Fidelity National Title Insurance Company of Oregon (Fidelity) as trustee, and Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (MERS) as the “beneficiary under this Security Instrument.” MERS later assigned the DOT to BAC Home Loans Servicing (BACHLS) in June of 2010. On the same day, BACHLS appointed ReconTrust Co. as successor trustee to Fidelity. Fidelity filed a Notice of Default and Election to Sell (NODES), initiating foreclosure proceedings against Moreno, who had been in default since July, 2009.
The Court dismissed each of the plaintiff’s complaints in turn, starting with his first two claims of relief based on violations of the Oregon Trust Deed Act (OTDA). The plaintiff claimed that under the DOT, MERS lacked authority to assign beneficial interests to BACHLS, who in turn, lacked power to appoint ReconTrust as successor trustee. The Judge, Marco A. Hernandez, stated that he had previously held that “naming MERS as a beneficiary in a DOT does not violate the OTDA,” and while other judges in the district have found otherwise, he would continue to uphold this ruling. The plaintiff alleged that a 3-year gap between the execution of the DOT and MERS’s assignment to BACHLS showed there “must have” been unrecorded assignments (in violation of ORS 86.735(1)). The Court found that allegation was both speculative and based on an erroneous assertion of fact (the Complaint mistakenly names Bank of America as the original lender, whereas the DOT names Aegis, and subsequent documents state Bank of America was assigned interest only in 2010). The second OTDA based claim was that the defective notice was invalid for failure to include a correct statement of the amount in default. The Court dismissed it because the plaintiff had not “plead his ability to cure the default, that his damages resulted from the lost opportunity to cure the default, and that he requested information from the trustee under O.R.S. § 86.757 and O.R.S. § 86.759.”
Next, the Court dismissed the plaintiff’s claim brought under the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) for both the failure to meet the 1-year statute of limitations and for having incorrectly brought the action against Bank of America rather than Aegis, the original lender. Under TILA a claim may only be brought against the Creditor, who is the person who “regularly extends… consumer credit” and “to whom the debt arising from the consumer credit transaction is initially payable.” 15 U.S.C. Sect. 1602(g). The plaintiff further argued that he is Hispanic and “as a result” did not understand the nature of the loan documents. He therefore requested equitable tolling, which suspends the “limitation period until the borrower discovers or had reasonable opportunity to discover the fraud or nondisclosure that form the basis of the TILA action,” which he stated was in 2011 after having spoken to a translator who explained his loan audit. The Court found this unconvincing on several accounts. First, since the complaint brought no allegations in support of equitable tolling, it failed to state a TILA violation. Second, the plaintiff never alleged he did not speak English. Third, equitable tolling is applied when the 1-year period would be “unjust” or “frustrate the purpose” of the TILA. Fourth, the plaintiff must bring allegations “that the defendant had fraudulently concealed information that would have allowed plaintiff to discover his claim,” engaged in action to prevent plaintiff from discovering a claim, or encountered “some other extraordinary circumstance would have made it reasonable for Plaintiff not to discover his claim within the limitations period.” Garcia v Wachovia Mortg. Corp. 676 F. Supp.2d 895, 905 (C.D. Cal. 2009).
The Court dismissed the plaintiff’s claim under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) for failure to meet the statute of limitations since his claim arose out of the origination of the loan in 2007, and his arguments for equitable tolling “are unavailing.” Plaintiff also failed to allege that a RESPA violation resulted in actual damage, a requirement of a RESPA claim.
The plaintiff’s claim under Oregon’s Unfair Trade Practices Act (UTPA) was dismissed because at the time of the loan, in 2007, UTPA had not yet been amended to include “loans and extensions of credit,” O.R.S. 646.605(6) (2010), therefore plaintiff’s loan was not covered by the Act. Additionally, UTPA claims must be brought within a year from the discovery of the “unlawful method, act or practice,” but the plaintiff failed to assert that the discovery of a UTPA violation could not have been made at the time of the loan
June 11, 2013 | Permalink | No Comments
Fieldstone Mortgage Company’s Bankruptcy Won’t Impact HSBC’s Right to Foreclose in Massachusetts
In Marron v. HSBC Bank USA, N.A., Bankruptcy Appeal No. 11-40191-NMG (D. Mass. September 26, 2012), the District Court denied homeowners’ request for certification regarding MERS’s authority to assign their mortgage, and dismissed homeowners’ bankruptcy appeal holding that the Bankruptcy Court properly lifted the automatic stay allowing HSBC to foreclose.
The homeowners procured a loan from Fieldstone Mortgage Company, with MERS designated as nominee and mortgagee. MERS assigned the mortgage to HSBC, which began foreclosure proceedings in 2007 after the homeowners defaulted. In November of 2007, Fieldstone filed for bankruptcy. The homeowners filed for bankruptcy in 2010, automatically staying foreclosure proceedings. In response, HSBC filed a petition for relief from the automatic stay, which was granted by the Bankruptcy Court.
Here, Trustee appeals from the Bankruptcy Court’s order lifting the stay and seeks to certify the following questions: 1) whether the assignment by MERS is valid under Massachusetts law without proof of authorization from the note holder, and 2) if the recorded assignment alone can establish the truth of its contents. The District Court upheld the decision of the Bankruptcy Court, holding that certification is not warranted, as Massachusetts law is reasonably clear regarding assignment validity.
There is no Massachusetts statute preventing MERS from assigning its mortgages, and the court notes that the Massachusetts Land Court acknowledged the validity of MERS’s assignments in several cases. Randle v. GMAC Mortgage, LLC, No. 09 MISC 408202 GHP (Mass. Land Ct. Oct. 12, 2010); Amtrust Bank v. T.D. Banknorth, N.A., No. 07 MISC. 350750 KCL (Mass. Land Ct. 2010). The court also notes that it has, on numerous occasions, held that MERS has authority to assign mortgages, citing Kiah, in which the court held that even if MERS doesn’t hold the beneficial interest in the property, MERS has authority to transfer the mortgage on behalf of the beneficial owner. CIV.A. No. 10-40161-FDS (D. Mass. Mar. 4, 2011).
As to the bankruptcy of the lender, the court held that “a lender’s bankruptcy does not affect the ability of MERS to assign a mortgage,” citing Kiah. The clear language of the mortgage grants MERS authority as the nominee for the “lender and its assigns” to transfer the mortgage, unaffected by the lender’s bankruptcy status. The court notes that similar reasoning was used in Rosa, holding “the dissolution of the original lender does not affect MERS’s authority to assign a mortgage.” 821 F. Supp. 2d at 431.
The court further found the assignment valid pursuant to M.G.L. Ch. 183 § 54B. MERS’s assignment complies with the statute’s requirements and is therefore presumed valid. The court cites Culhane for this explanation of validity, finding no way in which MERS’s method for assigning mortgages contradicts the statute. 826 F. Supp. 2d at 373.
The court dismissed appellant’s argument that the foreclosure was improper, as HSBC didn’t hold the note. In Eaton , the court held that the term “mortgagee” refers to “the person or entity then holding the mortgage and also either holding the mortgage note or acting on behalf of the note holder.” Eaton v. Fed. Nat. Mortg. Ass’n, 462 Mass. 569 (2012). To avoid overuse of this broad interpretation, the court held that the ruling in Eaton would not impact foreclosures commenced before the Eaton decision. Since HSBC’s foreclosure occurred pre-Eaton, HSBC was entitled to foreclose. As a result, appellant’s argument that an evidentiary hearing should have been held to determine ownership of the note was also dismissed by the court as immaterial. The appeal was denied, and the foreclosure sale upheld.
June 11, 2013 | Permalink | No Comments
June 13, 2013
The Potentially Far Reaching Affects of The Ibanez Holding on Foreclosure Proceedings
By Ebube Okoli
The holding in U.S. Bank National Ass’n v. Ibanez, 458 Mass. 637, 941 N.E.2d 40 (2011) potentially may have far reaching affects on foreclosure litigation outcomes across the nation.
Although a state case, Ibanez has national implications for several reasons; the Massachusetts Supreme Court is one of the most respected state supreme courts in the country, a majority of states have laws similar to Massachusetts, and the questions in the case stemming from irregularities in the residential securitized mortgage industry are wide spread.
In Ibanez the Massachusetts Supreme Court was faced with the issue of the validity of foreclosures when the mortgages are part of securitized mortgage lending pools. It is typical practice for mortgages to be bundled and dealt to Wall Street investors. The ownership of mortgage loans are then divided and transferred numerous times with little to no restrictions. However, the mortgage loan transfers’ recordation and documentation often times lag far behind.
The mortgage assignment in the case of Ibanez was executed “in blank” and was not actually recorded until over a year after the foreclosure process had begun. The court’s major problem with the banks was that they did not possess – and could not establish evidence of – a legally effective mortgage assignment showing that they actually held the mortgage. The banks did not posses the mortgage note, thus they lacked standing to sue. Additionally, the banks put the endorsement in blank, without naming the entity to which they were assigning the mortgage. This was a violation of Massachusetts’s law.
Accordingly, the court found that the plaintiff banks – who were not the original mortgagees – failed to make the required showing that they were the holders of the mortgages at the time of foreclosure. As a result their requests for a declaration of clear title were denied.
The court explicitly held that there must be evidence of a valid assignment of the mortgage at the time the foreclosure process commences. However, the court did not specify exactly what type of evidence would suffice to establish what evidence satisfies this requirement.This holding, if applied in its broadest sense, has the potential to ban most securitized mortgages in the country from being foreclosed upon.
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June 13, 2013 | Permalink | No Comments