Friday, January 30, 2009
Mortgage Chaos you have not seen anything yet
YMortgage Chaos? With Bankruptcy Laws, You Have Seen Nothing Yet!
By Michael Doan on Dec 15, 2007 in mortgage reform, yield spread premium
There are many bright Real Estate Attorneys out there. Likewise, there are many bright Bankruptcy Attorneys out there. But I don’t think there are that many bright Bankruptcy Real Estate Attorneys out there. And the few that do exist…..well, I don’t think they worked for the Mortgage Companies. Why? Well if they did, the transfer of loans would not have existed the way that it did for the past several years.
Lately, the big news in foreclosures has been the Ohio cases where Judge Boyko dismissed 14 foreclosures on October 31, 2007, and his Colleague, Judge Kathleen O’Malley of the same court, followed suite ordering another 32 dismissals on November 14, 2007. But that’s only the beginning. It gets worse.
Add a bankruptcy filing to the mix and it’s like adding gas to the fire and recipe for disaster. The reason is a little bankruptcy code section called 11 USC 544. Basically, that section allows a Trustee appointed by the Bankruptcy Court to avoid non-perfected liens.Non-perfected liens are liens that exist, but are not fully noticed to everyone, sort of like secret liens. It’s like if someone loans you $50,000 and takes a lien out on your house, but never records their lien with the county recorder. If that house sells, the lien is not paid since escrow was not aware of it. Had it been recorded by a “deed of trust” or “mortgage,” the Title Company and Escrow Company would not have closed once they saw it, unless it was paid.
Because of all the crazy real estate financing, securitization, and reselling of all the mortgages, sort of the same thing has happened with all the mortgages and trust deeds, but on a much larger scale. Normally, most states require that when a mortgage or real estate loan is sold or transferred to another lender, certain things must happen to maintain perfection, that is, in order to make sure that lien gets paid at a later date. Generally, the purchaser of the Mortgage has it recorded at the County Recorders Office. This is usually done thru a recorded assignment of the underlying note and mortgage or a new Mortgage being recorded and transfer of the Note. The Note is the most important part of any Mortgage or Deed of Trust. The Mortgage or Deed of Trust is useless without the Note, and usually can not exist without it. It’s a negotiable instrument, just like a check. So when it’s transferred, it needs to be endorsed, just like a check. So essentially, all real estate has documents recorded to evidence the lien, and which are linked to the “checks.” Well, this is where the problem lies.
In most of the Mortgage Transfers which took place recently, the Mortgage or Deed of Trust was transferred, but not the Note. Whoops! Why? It was just too expensive to track down every note for every mortgage since they were all bundled up together and sold in large trusts, then resold, resold, etc. Imagine trying to find 1 note among thousands, which were sold in different trust pools over time. Pretty hard to do! So shortcuts happened. Soon enough, shortcuts were accepted and since there were very little foreclosure activity during the last 7 year real estate bubble, no one really noticed in the few foreclosures that took place. Until recently. That’s where the Ohio cases come in. Times have now changed. That little shortcut stopped the foreclosures in Ohio since the most basic element of any lawsuit is that the party bringing the lawsuit is the “real party in interest.” That is, they are the aggrieved party, injured party, relief seeking party. So in Ohio, the Judge dismissed all the cases since they did not possess the Notes or Assignments on the date of filing, and technically were not the real party in interest to file the suit at the time.But that maybe only a temporary problem until they find the note or assignment. At that point, they will probably just file the foreclosure lawsuit again. So it’s just a delay.
But the bigger problem exists in Bankruptcy. You see, once a Bankruptcy Case is filed, the Automatic Stay goes into effect. Everything is frozen. Mistakes can no longer be corrected. And if the lender did not have the note or recorded assignment when the bankruptcy case was filed, it was an “unperfected lien” at the time of filing. Unperfected liens get removed in Bankruptcy. So finding the note or recording an assignment after filing will no longer fix the problem! Finding the note or or recording an assignment is now simply too late and futile. That $12 shortcut may now have cost the lender a $500,000 mortgage!The Bankruptcy Trustee now is in charge, puts his 11 USC 544 hat on, and voila, removes the mortgage! Yes, that house that once had no equity worth $450,000 with $500,000 owed on it, is now FREE AND CLEAR! He sells it, and disburses all the proceeds to the creditors.
Next Issue, I’ll explain the ramifications of this chaos….both beneficial and detrimental.
Trackback URL
1 Trackback(s)
From How do I fight my Florida foreclosure? : Mortgage Law Network Mar 28, 2008
Post a Comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.
window.onload = function() {
document.getElementById('archivesUL').style.display = 'none';
}
Archives ShowHide
June 2008 (21)
May 2008 (86)
April 2008 (77)
March 2008 (89)
February 2008 (70)
January 2008 (63)
December 2007 (80)
November 2007 (98)
October 2007 (409)
September 2007 (119)
August 2007 (186)
July 2007 (129)
June 2007 (112)
May 2007 (103)
April 2007 (112)
March 2007 (113)
February 2007 (148)
January 2007 (52)
-->
Find a Lawyer
Categories
Crime
Featured
Foreclosure Defense
Foreclosure News
Foreclosure Process
Foreclosure Rescue Scams
Mortgage Issues
Mortgage Issues In Bankruptcy
mortgage reform
Mortgage Servicer Abuses
predatory lending
respa
service yield premium
Tax Issues
Uncategorized
yield spread premium
Recent Articles
How Bankruptcy Can Help Save Your Home
Fannie And Freddie Foreclosure Freeze To End
$3.4 Million Dollar Jury Verdict In Las Vegas For Wrongful Foreclosure
Should I make my mortgage payment?
Mortgage Modification Bill Advances in Congress
Attorneys In Our Network
California - Bay Area
California - Chico
California - Southern
Connecticut
Florida (Northeast)
Florida (Southwest)
Georgia (Atlanta Area)
Illinois
Kansas
Louisiana
Maryland
Massachusetts (Boston)
Massachusetts (Springfield)
Michigan
Minnesota
Missouri (Kansas City)
Missouri (St. Louis Area)
New York (Downstate)
New York (Upstate)
North Carolina
Oregon (South)
Oregon (Willamette Valley)
Pennsylvania
South Carolina
Texas - Houston
Personal Finance Blogs
Bankruptcy Law Network
Credit Law Network
Debt Law Network
Browse Our Archives Select Month January 2009 December 2008 November 2008 October 2008 September 2008 August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008 March 2008 February 2008 January 2008 December 2007 November 2007
Bankruptcy Law Network Articles
Contributions to Retirement Plan OK says Wisconsin Bankruptcy Court
Wah, Wah, Wah, Wah, Wah.
Should I Try to Negotiate a Mortgage Modification or Should I Just Go Ahead With Chapter 13?
Defending a Fraud Complaint
Three Bankruptcy Filings in 12 Months Equals No Automatic Stay
Protect your income tax refund in bankruptcy
An odd provision in HR 200
The Means Test: Increasing Punishment for Consumers as the Economy Declines?
Do I Have to File Bankruptcy all my Credit Cards?
Debt, Divorce, And Dealing With Both In Bankruptcy
© Copyright Bankruptcy Law Network, LLC 2007-2009. All rights reserved. Powered by WordPress. Design by Pixelhaven Blog Design. XHTML.
var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www.");
document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + gaJsHost + "google-analytics.com/ga.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E"));
var pageTracker = _gat._getTracker("UA-226360-16");
pageTracker._initData();
pageTracker._trackPageview();
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

No comments:
Post a Comment