Update (2/25/10)–Mass. High Court May Take Ibanez Case
Today, Massachusetts Land Court Judge Keith Long reaffirmed his controversial ruling made back in March 2009 that invalidated foreclosure proceedings involving two Springfield homes because the lenders did not hold clear titles to the properties at the time of sale. A copy of the decision can be found here.
As I outlined in my prior post on this case, the problem the Land Court dealt with in this case is what happens when modern securitized mortgage lending practices meets outdated foreclosure laws. When mortgages are packaged to Wall Street investors, the ownership of a mortgage loan may be divided and freely transferred numerous times on the lenders’ books. But the mortgage loan documentation actually on file at the Registry of Deeds often lags far behind.
Here is a diagram of the securitized mortgage process (click to enlarge):
The Ruling
Judge Long ruled that foreclosures were invalid when the lender failed to bring the ownership documentation (known as an assignment) up-to-date until after the foreclosure sale had already taken place. An assignment is a legal document confirming that a mortgage loan has been transferred from one lender to another. Assignments must be recorded with a registry of deeds so anyone researching a property’s title can track the loan’s origin and ownership. Oftentimes, as in the Ibanez case, lenders will sell bundles of loan and record backdated assignments with an effective date before the first foreclosure notice. Judge Long effectively prohibited this practice.
Despite the lender’s attempt to convince him otherwise, Judge Long came out (again) in favor of consumers:
The issues in this case are not merely problems with paperwork or a matter of dotting i’s and crossing t’s. Instead, they lie at the heart of the protections given to homeowners and borrowers by the Massachusetts legislature. To accept the plaintiffs’ arguments is to allow them to take someone’s home without any demonstrable right to do so, based upon the assumption that they ultimately will be able to show that they have that right and the further assumption that potential bidders will be undeterred by the lack of a demonstrable legal foundation for the sale and will nonetheless bid full value in the expectation that that foundation will ultimately be produced, even if it takes a year or more. The law recognizes the troubling nature of these assumptions, the harm caused if those assumptions prove erroneous, and commands otherwise.
Judge Long also had some choice words for lenders:
[T]he problem the [lenders] face (the present title defect) is entirely of their own making as a result of their failure to comply with the statute and the directives in their own securitization documents… What the plaintiffs truly seek is a change in the foreclosure sale statute (G.L. c. 244, § 14), which can only come from the legislature.
What Now?
That’s a good question and one not readily answerable. To be sure, the current state of flux and confusion surrounding foreclosure titles affected by an Ibanez issue will remain intact until an appellate court considers the case or some action by the Legislature (which may be unlikely). Given the importance of the decision, I predict that the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court will take the unusual step of taking the case directly from the Land Court.
As for what happens in the year or so the case may be in appellate limbo, I asked an in house counsel for a leading title insurance company, and his response was essentially that it’s going to take a fair amount of time and research to figure this one out. If there’s an existing title insurance policy on the property, some but not all of the title companies may be willing to insure over the problem. If there’s no title policy in place, affected parties are going to have to ride this one out for awhile.
Once title insurance companies offer some further guidance, I will post it here.
My Two Cents
While I see both sides of the argument, the decision is troubling to me because Judge Long gave short shrift to the fundamental legal principle that the mortgage follows the note. A valid mortgage is security for some type of underlying obligation, whether it’s a loan or the promise to do something in the future. There’s no question that the millions (or billions) of dollars in loans secured by all these mortgages were validly transferred from one bank/lender to securitized lenders. The money was lent and it didn’t just evaporate into the ether. If the lenders can ultimately demonstrate ownership of the underlying loan which follows the mortgage and produce a valid assignment (albeit late), why isn’t this enough? The borrowers owe the money, and now after this ruling they are immunized from foreclosure by what many folks in the real estate industry view as elevating form over substance.
“For many years, real estate attorneys in Massachusetts have understood that the assignment of a mortgage can be recorded at any time and be effective,” Christopher S. Pitt, chairman of the Title Standards Committee of the Real Estate Bar Association tells Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly.
Now that doesn’t mean lenders don’t need to get their act together. They do. The net effect of this decision will be that lenders must get loan documentation up to date and recorded promptly. Indeed, the Ibanez loan changed ownership at least four times prior to foreclosure — without any of this appearing on the public record. Two of those entities (Lehman Brothers and its subsidiary) are currently in bankruptcy and a third (Option One) has ceased operations. This is a huge wake up call to the securitized lending industry.
But the question remains, what about all the foreclosures that have already been conducted? And the new homeowners who own these properties and are now saddled with unresolvable title defects? What about these “innocent victims” and the neighborhoods blighted by foreclosed properties which cannot be sold? I guess we can all blame Wall Street once again…
The Consumer Advocate’s Point of View
Attorney Meyer Potashman of Greater Boston Legal Services which filed a brief in the Ibanez case offers this analysis:
This case has the potential to do a lot of damage (or rather reveal the damage that foreclosing lenders did over the past few years), but I think Judge Long was completely right about the law. Both the statute and all of the securitization documents were clear, and these foreclosures violated both of them. These banks had sophisticated lawyers who knew real estate law when they planned to securitize these loans, but they never bothered to consult their own agreements when the time came to actually securitize, or foreclose, on the loans. As a result, mortgages were never properly transferred, and the foreclosing lenders never had the right to foreclose.
As with any controversial legal decision, there’s always compelling arguments for both points of view.
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Mr. Vetstein, my understanding is that the securitization process broke the basic agency/principal law.
Here is what a lawyer in Tennessee states:
davidgmills, on September 23rd, 2009 at 11:35 pm Said:
Yes.
Mers is listed as a nominee of the lender on the Deed of Trust which is the document that puts a lien on your property and allows the lender to foreclose. What the Kansas court has said is that you can’t be a nominee of a lender who has sold the note. Most lenders have sold the note. This is very basic agency/principal law. A nominee is an agent. When the principal changes, a new agent is required. But the common Deed of Trust used in these securitized transactions, which is used all over, makes MERS the agent of the lender until the loan is paid off, no matter who the lender is. The law simply does not allow MERS to continue to be an agent of a new owner. So MERS has no authority to act as agent. Someone new would have to be the agent but the new owners of the loan never appoint a new agent.
It gets worse for the banks. MERS is also listed as the beneficiary of the Deed of Trust. A recent ARK Supreme Court has said MERS can’t be the beneficiary of the Deed of Trust even though the Deed of Trust says so. That means there is no trust at all because MERS is the sole beneficiary and you can’t have a trust without a beneficiary. No trust means no valid lien.
I get emails daily from people wanting my complaint. It explains why the court should stop my lender from demanding any more money from me and why the court should remove the lien on my property. Many lawyers now have read it and agree I am right. (I am a lawyer as well).
MERS opinion:
http://webofdebt.wordpress.com/2009/09/21/landmark-decision-promises-massive-relief-for-homeowners-and-trouble-for-banks/
Comments that has additional information from Mr. Mills the attorney who is also establishing precedence with his own filed complaint (brief):
http://webofdebt.wordpress.com/2009/09/21/landmark-decision-promises-massive-relief-for-homeowners-and-trouble-for-banks/#comments
Rich, thanks for posting this. I just wanted to comment on your analysis from a consumer lawyer’s perspective:
An assignment does not merely “confirm” that a mortgage loan has been transferred. A mortgage loan has two components: the note and the mortgage. If the note is properly transferred to the ultimate owner, this does not actually transfer the mortgage with it. As Judge Long explained very clearly, the mortgage is an interest in the property itself, and it contains the right to foreclose. This right to foreclose is not transferred to the owner of the note unless and until the mortgage is validly assigned from one mortgagee to another. It was clear in these cases that the banks purporting to foreclose did not own the mortgage and had no right to foreclose.
As for the “fundamental legal principle” that the mortgage follows the note, the law is not that simple. The principal is that the holder of the note has the right to have the mortgage assigned to it by the holder of the mortgage. Until the noteholder exercises this right, or an assignment is otherwise made, the noteholder simply does not own the mortgage, and has no right to foreclose.
In many cases it is simply not true that “[t]here’s no question” the loans were validly transferred. It has been widely reported that often the lenders attempting to foreclose cannot produce the relevant note (see Gretchen Mortgenston’s related column here: http://bit.ly/2F1dCa). Without the note, the bank has no evidence that it, and not some other bank, owns the mortgage loan.
Judge Long was correct in saying that this is not a question of form over substance. The foreclosure statute provides very little protection to homeowners, who never have the chance to contest a foreclosure in court, or to force the foreclosing lender to prove that it owns the loan. The requirement that the lender has to actually hold the mortgage, and announce this fact to the public before the auction, is one of the only protections that homeowners have. The lenders who clearly did not follow this requirement undermined this minimal consumer protection in the statute.
Hopefully this case will help prod the Legislature to change the foreclosure statute by requiring lenders to actually prove they own a loan before foreclosing. This would resolve many of these issues in the future.
May I comment as a person whose home was foreclosed back in 1990?
This ruling is stunning to say the least. The news brought up old emotions of a kind of trauma which were surprisingly ready to surface.
When the foreclosure occurred, I was exhausted and did not have the means to fight the foreclosure proceedings. I merely accepted the events as my fate.
Oh, and the people who bid for my house got it for a SONG, and the interest rates had come down by then, too, lucky them! Plus, they bought it for less than what the mortgage was, so the lender lost money, and they would have lost nothing if they had been at all flexible.
After that, the value of that property skyrocketed in the next boomlet, and even today the property is worth way more than when I had it.
May I appeal to people concerned that, in my humble opinion, I was no deadbeat. Here’s what happened:
After a divorce, it was time for one more bad/luck bad/timing circumstance for this young end baby boomer. (Unaffordable home prices when I came of age, and then those glorious years of 18% mortgage rates, what blessings!) I had worked HARD and always paid obligations for decades. The house was put up for sale, but, the real estate market had crashed as a bubble, and the old axiom that real estate is a safe investment was shown to be false, for the first time in MY life.
There were some financial difficulties over a period of a couple of months for various reasons. When I owed three months’ payments (think about this, this happens within 8 weeks), I had scraped back together two months’ payments (including taxes and insurance) and tried to make the payments. I also had a plan to make the next two payments within 30 days and told the bank this, and it was doable. But they had already tacked on a hefty “lawyers fee” as well, and they would not take “partial” money owed, and they were piling on extra interest and penalties. The bank refused to work with me in this way or any way. The major problem in this case was the swiftness of the foreclosure proceedings. I begged the bank to work with me and promised they would not be out one red cent if they would just give me a tiny bit more time.
Later in that real estate crash I read in the news that the banks eventually did “work with” lenders and help them afford to catch up and stay in their homes, and I thought, lucky them!
So, not only had I lost all equity in the downturn, I lost my home and was homeless. It was also very humiliating. After working so hard to acquire and pay for this home since I was a child, for decades, I now had nothing to show for that effort.
I do think the way we conduct business in this country could improve by being more just, and could create more prosperity for all.
>>If the lenders can ultimately demonstrate ownership of the underlying loan which follows the mortgage…
It should be incumbent on the lenders doing the foreclosing that they can *immediately* demonstrate ownership of the loan, not ultimately. This is plainly a documentation issue, and if the banks had bothered to do their paperwork promptly and thoughtfully, they wouldn’t have this problem.
The state’s interest (both as supported by the Legislature, and just in plain common sense) is in fostering home ownership until the homeowner clearly has no legal right to be there. To let someone foreclose without clear possession of the title makes as much sense as letting a homeowner sell the property without clear title either.
Personally this story is fascinating, because I have direct experience in MA land recording and legal procedure, so the finding of the judge in these cases is quite clear to me. He is saying that the collective creditor complex put foreclosure documents on record before recording any of the usual liens and claims and assignments. Thus, they nuked the legitimacy of their own foreclosure demand. This makes alot of sense to me. Each piece of land has a flow chart, if you will: every subsequent action draws its legitimacy from previous actions/documents. I can’t believe the creditor-complex was trying to backdate actions/assignments. Even if factually correct, backdating could not be allowed in such a system, lest you undermine the system itself. Some who are critical of the judge’s decision assert this is elevating form over substance. While I agree with that point thematically, surely in many systems it’s the case that the procedure is the substance.
The Promissory Notes issued in these real estate transactions are negotiable instruments. To be considered a “holder in due course” of a negotiable instrument requires endorsement and delivery of the Note. Also, a proper assignment of the mortgage is required to have standing to the begin forclosure proceedings. If the entity that is foreclosing is not the Holder of the Note and the assignee of the morgagee that entity does not have the legal right to foreclose – period. That is the essence of Judge Long’s ruling. It’s fundamental consumer protection.
The banks have no one to blame but themselves. The banks have lost all credibility with good reason. When the banks are ask to substantiate their positions they cannot.
As a consumer bankruptcy attorney I have a client who came within 1 day of losing his house to foreclosure to a lender who did not have the legal right to foreclose. Upon further investigation the lender could not produce the promissory note nor the mortgage assignment. It has became apparent that the lender cannot even ascertain how or if it ever became the holder of the note or mortgage.
Granted this may be an isolated case; but should not even one person be entitled to the protection of our laws.
I suspect lenders will solve these issues for the same reason that they created this labyrinth – Greed.
Anyone know where affected property owners can find out about their options? Still getting up to speed on this. My wife and I bought a property out of foreclosure in 2008 that may be affected by this judge’s ruling. Can’t say I’m amused by this possible sudden change in our circumstances.
As a recently sworn in attorney*, I am glad to see that what I was taught in law school is actually practiced in the real world. In this instance, Judge Long hit the nail on the head. This is how the recording statute is taught in conveyancing classes in law school, so why are attorneys shocked and upset when a judge actually requires adherence to the statute. As to whether the statute makes sense in the 21st century, I don’t know. However, that is a decision for the General Court to make, not the Land Court, the SJC, or a bunch of bankers.
Go Judge Long!!!
* Massachusetts School of Law, Class of ’09. Sworn in 11/30/09.
When a lender in California or wherever for that matter, moves to foreclose on a borrower that has failed to live up to their obligation as set forth in their note they hire an attorney in the state where the property is located. Unfortunately for a lot of lenders that chose to do business in Massachusetts they hired attorneys that did not follow the correct procedure laid out in the statute. This is not a problem that the lenders need to correct, this is a problem that the “professionals” that these lenders entrust and hire need to correct. So when I hear that the lenders have no one to blame but themselves I don’t agree, they can blame the attorneys that they hired with the impression that they were competant and would follow the correct procedures.
Very informative post except for your 2 cents which is opinion based in the world as you perceive it.
However I linked to this post in an article in my blog foolish fish dot com “who is mortgage electronic”
Without Mers the current collapse could not have happened and though it is considered best practice to blame foreclosure on delinquent dead beat home owners my 2 cents places the lions share of the blame firmly at the feet of Mers which is an AKA alias for Freddie, Fannie, Chase, BoA, Wells, and any other mega lender who comes to mind. And isn’t it hilarious that the first two players on the above list are AKA aliases for Uncle Sam himself.
Chris.
Chris, thanks for the comment. You certainly have a right to disagree with my opinion–it is just that.
MERS is simply a servicing vehicle and aggregator for securitized mortgages. You have to look at the broader macroeconomic forces for the cause of the mortgage crisis. While Wall St. certainly has much responsibility for the crisis, also remember that no one had guns to the heads of many of these borrowers–they were borrowing way too much that they could afford–a mind set that unfortunately became part of the American way. It’s the credit card mentality. With the devaluation of the real estate market, these borrowers couldn’t refinance with the expectation of rising values.
It’s amazing that judges are cooperating with this crazy spectacle of an idea that a lender can suffer forfeiture their interest in the principal and in the property by transferring the note in a manner that is found retrospectively to be out of compliance with state law.
Often the issue is the corporations stealing from the public, but in this case it’s homeowners stealing from banks. No homeowner deserves a windfall because of something the bank did which had no effect on them. Even if the lender is denied funds, the state should foreclose on the property and seize the proceeds from the sale, then give the lender the opportunity to prove they’re entitled to get the money. Or even if foreclosure is disallowed, the lender should still be able to pursue the owner in court, sue for judgment and garnishment of wages and other remedies debtors are entitled to.