Court Dismisses Mortgage Claims vs Morgan Stanley

(Reuters) – A mortgage servicing company’s claims that would push responsibility for faulty mortgage loans onto Wall Street titan Morgan Stanley were dismissed by a Delaware court, according to a court filing.

The dismissal concerns Central Mortgage Co’s assertion that Morgan Stanley Mortgage Capital Holdings repurchase loans it allegedly failed to screen properly before selling them to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

After Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac demanded that CMC, the Little Rock, Arkansas-based servicer, repurchase mortgages, Morgan Stanley repurchased or repaid CMC for about half of the loans, the filing showed. Morgan Stanley refused further repurchases, and CMC sued for breach of contract.

The dispute is a vignette in the larger fight Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are waging against mortgage lenders, servicing companies and insurers over loans that failed to meet strict underwriting requirements. As the two government-chartered companies have stepped up their efforts, banks and insurers have boosted defenses and increased reserves.

But the lawsuit also shows risks faced by the hundreds of servicing companies used by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Between March 2006 and August 2007, CMC purchased servicing rights on six pools of loans, mostly between $232 million and $636 million, the filing showed.

The court, in its ruling last week, found that CMC failed to provide required notice to Morgan Stanley of breach of contract, among other things, the filing showed. But CMC “appears to have otherwise viable breach of contract claims,” so the servicer could “replead” the case if the proper protocols are followed, the ruling stated.

Steven Fineman, an attorney with Richards, Layton & Finger who is representing Morgan Stanley, did not return a call seeking comment. R. Judson Scaggs, a CMC attorney with the firm Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell, declined to comment.

(Editing by Dan Grebler)

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Fannie and Freddie’s Foreclosure Barons

How the federal housing agencies—and some of the biggest bailed-out banks—are helping shady lawyers make millions by pushing families out of their homes.

Andy Kroll, Mother Jones

LATE ONE NIGHT IN February 2009, Ariane Ice sat poring over records on the website of Florida’s Palm Beach County. She’d been at it for weeks, forsaking sleep to sift through thousands of legal documents. She and her husband, Tom, an attorney, ran a boutique foreclosure defense firm called Ice Legal. (Slogan: “Your home is your castle. Defend it.”) Now they were up against one of Florida’s biggest foreclosure law firms: Founded by multimillionaire attorney David J. Stern, it controlled one-fifth of the state’s booming market in foreclosure-related services. Ice had a strong hunch that Stern’s operation was up to something, and that night she found her smoking gun.

It involved something called an “assignment of mortgage,” the document that certifies who owns the property and is thus entitled to foreclose on it. Especially these days, theassignment is key evidence in a foreclosure case: With so many loans having been bought, sold, securitized, and traded, establishing who owns the mortgage is hardly a trivial matter. It frequently requires months of sleuthing in order to untangle the web of banks, brokers, and investors, among others. By law, a firm must execute (complete, sign, and notarize) an assignment before attempting to seize somebody’s home.

A Florida notary’s stamp is valid for four years, and its expiration date is visible on the imprint. But here in front of Ice were dozens of assignments notarized with stamps that hadn’t even existed until months—in some cases nearly a year—after the foreclosures were filed. Which meant Stern’s people were foreclosing first and doing their legal paperwork later. In effect, it also meant they were lying to the court—an act that could get a lawyer disbarred or even prosecuted. “There’s no question that it’s pervasive,” says Tom Ice of the backdated documents—nearly two dozen of which were verified by Mother Jones. “We’ve found tons of them.”

This all might seem like a legal technicality, but it’s not. The faster a foreclosure moves, the more difficult it is for a homeowner to fight it—even if the case was filed in error. In March, upon discovering that Stern’s firm had fudged an assignment of mortgage in another case, a judge in central Florida’s Pasco County dismissed the case with prejudice—an unusually harsh ruling that means it can never again be refiled. “The execution date and notarial date,” she wrote in a blunt ruling, “were fraudulently backdated, in a purposeful, intentional effort to mislead the defendant and this court.”

More often than not in uncontested cases, missing or problematic documents simply go overlooked. In Florida, where foreclosure cases must go before a judge (some states handle them as a bureaucratic matter), dwindling budgets and soaring caseloads have overwhelmed local courts. Last year, the foreclosure dockets of Lee County in southwest Florida became so clogged that the court initiated rapid-fire hearings lasting less than 20 seconds per case—”the rocket docket,” attorneys called it. In Broward County, theepicenter of America’s housing bust, the courthouse recently began holding foreclosure hearings in a hallway, a scene that local attorneys call the “new Broward Zoo.” “The judges are so swamped with this stuff that they just don’t pay attention,” says Margery Golant, a veteran Florida foreclosure defense lawyer. “They just rubber-stamp them.”

But the Ices had uncovered what looked like a pattern, so Tom booked a deposition with Stern’s top deputy, Cheryl Samons, and confronted her with the backdated documents—including two from cases her firm had filed against Ice Legal’s clients. Samons, whose counsel was present, insisted that the filings were just a mistake. She refused to elaborate, so the Ices moved to depose the notaries and other Stern employees whose names were on the evidence. On the eve of those depositions, however, the firm dropped foreclosure proceedings against the Ices’ clients.

Read more here: http://motherjones.com/politics/2010/07/david-stern-djsp-foreclosure-fannie-freddie?page=1

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Derivatives Lobby Links with New Democrats to Blunt Obama Plan

As President Barack Obama vowed in a Sept. 14 speech in New York’s Federal Hall to correct “reckless behavior and unchecked excess” on Wall Street, Mike McMahon and Barney Frank sat in the audience discussing how to ease proposed rules for the $592 trillion over-the-counter derivatives market.

Side by side at 26 Wall St., across from the New York Stock Exchange, freshman congressman McMahon told House Financial Services Committee Chairman Frank he was worried that Obama’s derivatives plan, released in August, would penalize a wide swath of U.S. corporations and could push jobs in his home district overseas, McMahon said in an interview. Read more about derivatives lobbyists

Let’s get one thing straight: It’s patently insane that $592 trillion in derivatives even exist. They cannot be safely unwound. The standard definition of them is that they’re derivatives of underlying assets. The underlying assets are, in some cases, subprime mortgages. These mortgages only retain value as derivatives for as long as homeowners can continue to make the payments. When homeowners default, the derivatives become worthless. See the problem?

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MFI-Miami Launches Service Investigating Securities Fraud by Lenders

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–MFI-Miami, LLC, a mortgage fraud investigation company, announced today that it’s launching a nationwide service investigating the mortgage securitization process. The service will be managed by Elizabeth Jacobson, who will oversee this project for MFI-Miami’s sister company, MFI-DC, LLC.
MFI-Miami will investigate the pooling and servicing agreements, as well as the contents of the certificate that the trustee alleges to contain the mortgage. MFI-Miami will also determine if the certificate was part of a credit default swap that may have been paid as part of TARP or by a third party. These three items are essential for determining if the lender can legitimately enforce the terms of a homeowner’s mortgage or if the lender or trustee is committing securities fraud.
“I’m very excited about starting this new service,” says MFI-Miami President, Steve Dibert. “Not only will we be able to prove or disprove the legitimacy of any claims made by the lender, but we’ll also be able to determine if the lender is trying to collect from the homeowner after already being paid with TARP funds.”
Massachusetts Attorney Glenn Russell, Jr. agrees. “This is a valuable tool for any attorney doing foreclosure defense or loan modifications,” he says. “This report is like firing a first strike nuclear missile at the lender. With one shot, the battle is over!”
About MFI-Miami
Headquartered in Boynton Beach, Florida, MFI-Miami, LLC and its sister companies — MFI-DC, LLC, MFI-Boston, LLC, and MFI-New York, LLC — conduct compliance examinations and mortgage fraud investigations. These four companies are also the only firms that investigate the securitization instruments of clients’ mortgages. For more information, visit www.mfi-miami.com, contact 561-317-9978, or email info@mfi-miami.com.
About Glenn F. Russell, Jr.
Glenn F. Russell, Jr. is located in Fall River, MA. He’s a member of the Massachusetts and Connecticut Bars, where he specializes in foreclosure defense, bankruptcy, personal injury and divorce law. For more information, visit www.foreclosuresinmass.com, call 508-324-4545, or email russ45esq@gmail.com.
About Elizabeth Jacobson
Elizabeth Jacobson was the top retail sales manager for Wells Fargo before leaving to become a paralegal specializing in foreclosure defense. She’s now the City of Baltimore’s key witness in its multimillion dollar predatory lending lawsuit against Wells Fargo.

Press Release

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.–MFI-Miami, LLC, a mortgage fraud investigation company, announced today that it’s launching a nationwide service investigating the mortgage securitization process. The service will be managed by Elizabeth Jacobson, who will oversee this project for MFI-Miami’s sister company, MFI-DC, LLC.

MFI-Miami will investigate the pooling and servicing agreements, as well as the contents of the certificate that the trustee alleges to contain the mortgage. MFI-Miami will also determine if the certificate was part of a credit default swap that may have been paid as part of TARP or by a third party. These three items are essential for determining if the lender can legitimately enforce the terms of a homeowner’s mortgage or if the lender or trustee is committing securities fraud.

“I’m very excited about starting this new service,” says MFI-Miami President, Steve Dibert. “Not only will we be able to prove or disprove the legitimacy of any claims made by the lender, but we’ll also be able to determine if the lender is trying to collect from the homeowner after already being paid with TARP funds.”

Massachusetts Attorney Glenn Russell, Jr. agrees. “This is a valuable tool for any attorney doing foreclosure defense or loan modifications,” he says. “This report is like firing a first strike nuclear missile at the lender. With one shot, the battle is over!”

About MFI-Miami

Headquartered in Boynton Beach, Florida, MFI-Miami, LLC and its sister companies — MFI-DC, LLC, MFI-Boston, LLC, and MFI-New York, LLC — conduct compliance examinations and mortgage fraud investigations. These four companies are also the only firms that investigate the securitization instruments of clients’ mortgages. For more information, visit www.mfi-miami.com, contact 561-317-9978, or email info@mfi-miami.com.

About Glenn F. Russell, Jr.

Glenn F. Russell, Jr. is located in Fall River, MA. He’s a member of the Massachusetts and Connecticut Bars, where he specializes in foreclosure defense, bankruptcy, personal injury and divorce law. For more information, visit www.foreclosuresinmass.com, call 508-324-4545, or email russ45esq@gmail.com.

About Elizabeth Jacobson

Elizabeth Jacobson was the top retail sales manager for Wells Fargo before leaving to become a paralegal specializing in foreclosure defense. She’s now the City of Baltimore’s key witness in its multimillion dollar predatory lending lawsuit against Wells Fargo.

Contact:

MFI-Miami
Stephen Dibert, President, 561-317-9978
steve@mfi-miami.com or www.mfi-miami.com

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