A guide to
self reliant living
THE
SUBPRIME TRUMP CARD: STANDING UP TO THE BANKS
If you get foreclosed, make them
produce the note!
Ellen Brown, June 26th, 2008
http://www.webofdebt.com/articles/subprime_defense.php
“If the American people ever allow private banks to control the
issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the
banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive
the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on
the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be
taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly
belongs.”
– Thomas Jefferson, Letter to Treasury Secretary Albert Gallatin
(1802)
Jefferson had it right. More than 1.5 million homeowners are
expected to enter foreclosure this year, and about half of them are
expected to have their homes repossessed. If the dire consequences
Jefferson warned of 200 years ago have been slow in coming, it is
because they have been concealed by what Jerome a Paris calls the
Anglo Disease – “the highly unequal economy whereby the rich and the
financial sector . . . capture most of the income but hide it by
providing cheap debt to the middle classes so that they can continue
to spend.” He calls “finance” the “cannibalistic” sector in today’s
economy. Writing in The European Tribune this month, he states:
“[O]ne of the more attractive features of the financial world, for
its promoters, is its ability to concentrate huge fortunes in a
small number of hands, and promote this as a good thing (these
people are said to be creating wealth, rather than capturing it). .
. . [O]f course, the reality is that such wealth concentration is
created by squeezing the rest, as is obvious in the stagnation of
incomes for most in the middle and lower rungs of society. This is
not so much wealth creation as wealth redistribution, from the many
to the few. But what has made this unequality . . . tolerable is
that the financial world itself was able to provide a convenient
smokescreen, in the form of cheap debt, provided in abundance to
all. The wealthy used it to grab real assets in funny money, and the
rest were kindly allowed to keep on spending by tapping their future
income rather than their insufficient current one; in a nutshell,
the debt bubble hid the class warfare waged by the rich against
everybody else.”1
Now the debt bubble is bursting, with the anticipated real estate
crash, banking crisis, foreclosures, and inevitable recession. “The
income capture mechanisms set up during the bubble have not been
reversed, so the pain is falling disproportionately on the poorest,”
writes Jerome a Paris. Meanwhile, finance is being bailed out.
What’s to be done? “[T]he financiers . . . will say that more
‘reform’ and ‘deregulation’ and tax cuts are needed,” he says, but
“maybe it’s time to stop listening to what is highly self-interested
drivel, and take back what they grabbed: it’s not theirs.”
Good idea, but how? The financiers own the media, and their massively
funded lobbies control Congress. How can we the people get enough clout
to take on the giant financial and corporate giants? What can we do that
will make politicians sit up and take notice?
How about swarming the courts? New case law indicates that a majority of
the 750,000 homeowners expected to lose their homes this year could have
a valid defense to foreclosure. As much as $2 trillion in real estate
may be vulnerable to this defense, providing a very big stick for a
lobby of motivated debtors. Mobilizing that group, in turn, could light
a fire under the investors in mortgage-backed securities -- the pension
funds, money market funds and insurance companies holding these “orphan”
mortgages. These investors also wield a very big stick, in the form of
major law firms on retainer. When the embattled banks demand a bailout
because they are “too big to fail,” the taxpayers can respond, “You have
already failed. It is time to try something new.”
The Legal Trump Card: Make Them Produce the Note
A basic principle of contract law is that a plaintiff suing on a written
contract must produce the signed contract proving he is entitled to
relief. If there is no signed mortgage note or recorded assignment,
foreclosure is barred. The defendant must normally raise this defense,
and most defaulting homeowners, unaware of legal procedure and concerned
about the expense of hiring an attorney, just let their homes go
uncontested. But when the plaintiffs bringing subprime foreclosure
actions have been challenged, in most cases they haven’t been able to
produce the notes.
Why not? It appears to be more than just sloppy paperwork. The banks
that originally entered into these risky subprime arrangements generally
did so because they had no intention of holding the loans on their
books. The mortgages were immediately sliced and diced, bundled up as
mortgage-backed securities (MBS), and sold off to investors. Loan
originators sold the mortgages to financial institutions or other banks,
which then sold the rights to the monthly mortgage payment income to
investors, while transferring the responsibility to collect these
payments to specialized mortgage servicing companies. The result has
been to slice up the mortgage contract, with no party really having
ownership of the original paperwork. When foreclosure has been
initiated, the servicer or trustee acting as plaintiff now has trouble
proving that it originated the mortgage or owned the loan. In order for
a second bank or financial institution to have standing to bring a
foreclosure lawsuit in court, it must have been assigned the mortgage;
and with the collapse of the housing market, many of the subprime
lenders have gone out of business, making it impossible to contact the
originating mortgage company. Other paperwork has just been lost in the
shuffle.2
Why weren’t the mortgage notes assigned to the MBS holders when they
were first sold? Apparently because the investors aren’t even matched up
with specific properties until after default. Here is how the MBS scheme
works: when the mortgages are first bundled by the banks, all of the
subprime mortgages go into the same pool. The bundled mortgages are
chopped into “securities” that are sold to many investors -- banks,
hedge funds, money market funds, pension funds -- with different
“tranches” or levels of risk. The first mortgages to default are then
assigned to the high-risk “BBB-” tranche of investors. As defaults
increase, later defaulting mortgages are assigned down the chain of risk
to the supposedly more secure tranches.3 That means the investors get
the mortgages only after the defendants breached the agreement to pay.
It also means the investors weren’t a party to the agreement when it was
breached, making it hard to prove they were injured by the breach.
The investors have another problem: the delay in assigning particular
mortgages to particular investors means there was no “true sale” of the
security (the home) at the time of securitization. A true sale of the
collateral is a legal requirement for forming a valid security (a
secured interest in the property as opposed to simply a debt obligation
backed by collateral). As a result, the investors may have trouble
proving they have any interest in the property, secured or unsecured.4
The Dog-Ate-My-Note Defense
When the securitizing banks acting as trustees for the investors are
unable to present written proof of ownership at a time that would
entitle them to foreclose, they typically file what’s called a lost-note
affidavit. April Charney is a Florida legal aid attorney well versed in
these issues, having gotten foreclosure proceedings dismissed or
postponed for 300 clients in the past year. In a February 2008 Bloomberg
article, she was quoted as saying that about 80 percent of these cases
involved lost-note affidavits. “Lost-note affidavits are pattern and
practice in the industry,” she said. “They are not exceptions. They are
the rule.”5
In the past, judges have let these foreclosures proceed; but in October
2007, an intrepid federal judge in Cleveland put a halt to the practice.
U.S. District Court Judge Christopher Boyko ruled that Deutsche Bank had
not filed the proper paperwork to establish its right to foreclose on
fourteen homes it was suing to repossess.6 That started the ball
rolling, and by February 2008, judges in at least five states had
followed suit. In Los Angeles in January, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Samuel
L. Bufford issued a notice warning plaintiffs in foreclosure cases to
bring the mortgage notes to court and not submit copies. In Ohio, where
foreclosures were up by a reported 88 percent in 2007, Attorney General
Marc Dann was reported to be challenging ownership of mortgage notes in
forty foreclosure cases.7
Few defendants, however, are lucky enough to have advocates like Charney
and Dann in their corner, and most defaulting debtors just let their
homes go. A simple challenge can be filed to the complaint even without
an attorney, and some subprime borrowers have successfully defended
their own foreclosure actions; but retaining an attorney is strongly
recommended. People representing themselves are often not taken
seriously, and they are likely to miss local rule requirements. With
that warning, here is some general information on challenging standing
to foreclose:
Some states are judicial foreclosure states and some are non-judicial
foreclosure states. In a judicial foreclosure state (meaning the matter
is heard before a judge), if a promissory note or recorded assignment
naming the plaintiff is not attached to the complaint, the defendant can
file a response stating the plaintiff has failed to state a claim. This
can be followed with a motion called a demurrer to the complaint.
Different forms of demurrers can be found in legal form books in most
law libraries. In essence the demurrer states that even if everything in
the complaint were true, the complaint would lack substance because it
fails to set out a copy of the note, and it should therefore be
dismissed. Ordinarily there is no need to cite much in the way of
statutes or case law other than the authority reciting the necessity of
showing the note proving the plaintiff is entitled to relief.
In a non-judicial foreclosure state such as California, foreclosure is
done by a trustee without a court hearing, so the procedure is a bit
trickier; but standing to foreclose can still be challenged. If the
homeowner has filed for bankruptcy, the proceedings are automatically
stayed, requiring the lender to bring a motion for relief from stay
before going forward. The debtor can then challenge the lender’s right
to the security (the house) by demanding proof of a legal or equitable
interest in it.8 A homeowner facing foreclosure can also get the matter
before a court without filing for bankruptcy by filing a complaint and
preliminary injunction staying the proceedings pending proof of standing
to foreclose. A judge would then have to rule on the merits. A complaint
for declaratory relief might also be brought against the trustee,
seeking to have its rights declared invalid.9
An Equitable Settlement for Everyone
These defenses can help people who are about to lose their homes, but
there is another class of victims in the sub-prime mortgage crisis:
investors in MBS, including the pension funds and 401Ks on which many
people depend for their retirement. If the trustees representing the
investors cannot foreclose, the lucky debtors may be able to stay in
their homes without paying. However, the hapless investors will be left
holding the bag. If the investors manage to shift liability back to the
banks, on the other hand, the banks could go down and take the economy
with them. How can these tricky issues be resolved in a way that is
equitable for all? That question will be addressed in a followup
article. Stay tuned.
___________________
1 Jerome a Paris, “Countdown to $200 Oil Meets Anglo Disease,” European
Tribune (June 7, 2008).
2 “Contesting a Foreclosure Lawsuit: Who Owns the Mortgage?”,
ForeclosureFish.com (April 22, 2008).
3 CNBC, “Subprime Derivatives,” youtube.com/watch?v=0YNyn1XGyWg (June
2007).
4 Vinod Kothari, “The True Sale Question,” vindkothari.com.
5 Bob Ivry, “Banks Lose to Deadbeat Homeowners as Loans Sold in Bonds
Vanish,” Bloomberg.com (February 22, 2008).
6 Judge Christopher A. Boyko, Opinion and Order, In re Foreclosure
Cases, Case 1:07-cv-02282-CAB, U.S. District Court, Northern District of
Ohio, Eastern Division, filed 10/31/2007.
7 B. Ivry, op. cit.; Jimmy Higgins, “Judge Boyko’s Snowball Starts
Rolling Downhill,” Fire on the Mountain (blogspot) (February 26, 2008);
Wendy Davis, “Finding It Hard to Be a Loan,” ABA Journal (March 2008).
8 “More Trouble for Mortgage Securitizers?”,
http://bigpicture.typepad.com (December 9, 2007).
9 Aaron Krowne, et al., “True Sale, False Securitizations,”
iamfacingforeclosure.com (November 16, 2007).
Ellen Brown, J.D., developed her research skills as an attorney
practicing civil litigation in Los Angeles. In Web of Debt, her latest
book, she turns those skills to an analysis of the Federal Reserve and
“the money trust.” She shows how this private cartel has usurped the
power to create money from the people themselves and how we the people
can get it back. Her websites are webofdebt.com and ellenbrown.com.
http://www.webofdebt.com/articles/subprime_defense.php
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