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Category Archives: Judicial States

What HomeOwners Needs To Know for (Pro Se) Self Representation

06 Tuesday May 2014

Posted by BNG in Federal Court, Foreclosure Defense, Judicial States, Litigation Strategies, Non-Judicial States, Pro Se Litigation, State Court, Your Legal Rights

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Many struggling homeowners whose mortgage is under the water, also find themselves in double dilemma due to high cost of legal representation.

The Banks that caused the mortgage breakdown problems also have all the money in the world to higher costly Attorneys to help them intimidate homeowners in order to cover their fraudulent activities and steal your homes right under your nose. However, it takes a willing and courageous mind to stand firm and fight the lenders to the finish. Why do you need to fight this good fight? because your survival and your future especially (the equity in your home) is at stake. Don’t let criminals steal them away from you.

The court system can be confusing and it is a good idea to get a lawyer if you can afford one. The law, the proofs necessary to present your case, and the procedural rules governing cases in the Law Division, Civil Part are complex. Since valuable claims or potentially heavy judgments may be at stake, most litigants appearing in the Law Division, Civil Part usually
have a lawyer, but some don’t due to the ridiculous amounts of legal fees Attorneys charges for representation.

For Homeowners who could not afford an Attorney, what you need is courage and strength like a LION! to successfully fight and win your case. While it may appear stressful when you don’t know how to begin the fight, once you learn how the court system works and the procedures and follow the rules and instructions, you will successfully challenge and win your foreclosure case. You need to pursue the Banks from the point of strength , not from weakness. Once you show them that you know what they know and will fight them with everything you got, just watch and see them slightly backing away and looking for opportunities to settle your case and modify your loan which they had refused to do for months.

If you are being sued by the Bank, and you have no knowledge at all about the legal procedures, you might want to contact your insurance company to see if it might provide a lawyer for you. Most likely, your opponent will be represented by a lawyer. For a start, you may contact the legal services program in your county to see if you qualify for free legal services. Their telephone number can be found in your local
yellow pages under “Legal Aid” or “Legal Services”.

If you do not qualify for free legal services and need help in locating an attorney, you can contact the bar association in your county. That number can also be found in your local yellow pages. Most county bar associations have a Lawyer Referral Service. The County Bar Lawyer Referral Service can supply you with the names of attorneys in your area willing to handle your particular type of case and will sometimes consult with you at a reduced fee.

There are also a variety of organizations of minority lawyers throughout any given State, as well as organizations of lawyers who handle specialized types of cases. Ask your county court staff for a list of lawyer referral services that include these organizations. Bear in mind that it is not always easy to obtain a free lawyer as the profession of law is a complex one.

It is recommended that you make every effort to obtain the assistance of a lawyer, at lease for some form of guidance if you don’t know how the legal procedures works, but if you are a Homeowner who cannot afford a lawyer, and cannot afford to lose your home, (THEN WHAT YOU NEED IS COURAGE AND STRENGTH), even if you don’t have prior experience in legal procedure. The Pro se package at http://www.fightforeclosure.net has numerous step by step guides how the legal system works and if your are willing to follow simple instructions, you can successfully challenge and defend your home without a lawyer.

If you decide to proceed without an attorney, these materials explain the procedures that must be followed to have your papers properly filed and considered by the court. These materials do not provide information on the law governing your claims or defenses; information on how to conduct pretrial discovery; information on alternative dispute resolution procedures, such as arbitration or mediation, that may be available or required in your case; information on the kinds of evidence you
need to prove your claims or defenses at trial; or information on other procedural and evidentiary rules governing civil law suits. These types of information as well as pleadings for effective challenge of your foreclosure case can be found in our foreclosure defense package which can be found http://www.fightforeclosure.net

For Homeowners who represents themselves, there are few things you need to bear in mind.

WHAT YOU SHOULD EXPECT IF YOU REPRESENT YOURSELF

While you have the right to represent yourself in court, you should not expect special treatment, help, or attention from the court. The following
is a list of some things the court staff can and cannot do for you. Please read it carefully before asking the court staff for help.

The following is what you need to know about how the court works.

WHAT COURT STAFF CAN DO!
— Court Staff can tell you what the requirements are to have your case considered by the court. — We can give you some information from
your case file.
— Court Staff can provide you with samples of court forms that are available.
— Court Staff can provide you with guidance on how
to fill out forms.
— Court Staff can usually answer questions about court deadlines.

WHAT COURT STAFF CANNOT DO!

— Court Staff cannot give you legal advice. Only your lawyer can give you legal advice.
— Court Staff cannot tell you whether or not you should bring your case to court.
— Court Staff cannot give you an opinion about what will happen if you bring your case to court.
— Court Staff cannot recommend a lawyer, but can provide you with the telephone number of a local lawyer referral service.

— Court Staff cannot talk to the judge for you about what will happen in your case.
— Court Staff cannot let you talk to the judge outside of court.
— Court Staff cannot change an order issued by a judge.

RECOMMENDATIONS:

KEEP COPIES OF ALL PAPERS!
Make and keep copies of all completed forms and documents related to your case.

DEFINITIONS OF SOME OF THE WORDS USED IN THE COURT.

Pro Se: Pro se means by oneself. A pro se litigant represents him or herself in court without the aid of counsel.

Brief: A brief is a written argument submitted to the court in which you present the facts and the history of your case and the legal argument supporting the request you have made to the court in your motion.

Calendar Motion: A calendar motion asks the court for a ruling related to the scheduling or timing of your case, such as a motion for more time to file papers. Before filing a calendar motion, the moving party must try to resolve the matter with the other party(ies) in the case.

Certification: A certification is a written statement you make when you file your papers with the court in which you state that all the information contained in the papers is true to the best of your knowledge.

Discovery Motion: A discovery motion asks the court for a ruling on some phase of the discovery process such as a motion for more specific answers to interrogatories, a motion to compel depositions. Before filing a discovery motion, the moving party must try to resolve the matter with the other party in the case.

Docket Number: The docket number is the number the court assigns to your case so that it may be identified and located easily. Once you have a docket number, you must include it on all your communications with the court.

Motion: A motion is an application to the court for a specific order or ruling to be made in favor of the person making the motion (the movant).
Motion Day: Courts hear motions on specified days in some jurisdiction, it is usually on (Tues or Fridays) on the court calendar called motion days. While in other Jurisdiction, the motion days can fall on any day, so please check your local jurisdiction when filing your motions. A schedule of the court’s motion days can be obtained from the court staff or on Internet at the Judiciary’s website.

Movant or Moving Party: The movant or moving party is the person who is bringing the motion.

Notice of Motion: A notice of motion is the form used to inform the court and all opposing parties that the moving party is seeking a specific ruling or order from the court.

Oral Argument: Oral argument refers to the appearance in court by the parties to present their positions to the judge in person. Either side may request oral argument, but the decision on whether there will be oral argument is up to the judge. If oral argument is not requested by either of the parties or the judge, the motion will be decided “on the papers.”

Proof of Mailing: Proof of mailing is the form in which you provide the dates and the method you used to give the other parties copies of the papers that you filed in court.

Proposed Form of Order: A proposed order is a form that the judge can use to either grant or deny the relief sought in the motion. Every motion must be accompanied by a proposed form of order.

Return date: The return date is the date on which the court will consider the motion. If you request oral argument, you must appear before the judge. If no oral argument is requested, the matter will be decided “on the papers.” That is, the judge will decide the motion on what has been submitted in the moving papers and in the opposition papers, without having anyone appear in court.

Summary Judgment: A motion for summary judgment asks the court to resolve the case in the moving party’s favor without a trial because there is no dispute over the facts of the case and the law supports the moving party’s position.

Response in Opposition Motion: This is type of Motion an opposing litigant needs to file in response to the motion for summary judgment. The purpose of filing this response is to tell the court that there are “genuine issues of material fact”, in dispute which requires that the opponent’s motion for summary judgment should not be granted as a matter of law.

In certain Jurisdiction, the opposition motion can be called by certain names, but Pro se litigants should ensure that the caption motion they are filing indicates either the phrase “response in opposition to Motion to Summary Judgment” or “Objection to Motion to Summary Judgment”, this is to ensure that the Court understands that you are opposing such Motion otherwise, it might be granted by default without an opposition in place, which will automatically end your case unless you appeals that final judgment.

STEPS TO TAKE TO RESPOND TO A MOTION

STEP 1: COMPLETE THE CERTIFICATION IN OPPOSITION TO MOTION AND CERTIFICATION OF SERVICE. In some jurisdictions, it is called (FORM A).

The Certification in Opposition to Motion tells the court the reasons why you object of the ruling requested by your adversary and why the court should deny the request. Fill in the required information.

You must indicate whether you want to waive oral argument and let the judge decide the motion on the papers or not. If you request oral
argument you must tell the court why you think it is necessary. Note: The judge makes the decision on whether there should be oral argument. The judge may request it even if neither party asked for it. Similarly, the
judge may deny the request for oral argument. The Certification of Service tells the court the date on which you mailed the copies of your response to your adversary.

STEP 2: PREPARE YOUR RESPONSE FOR MAILING.
Checklist: You will need the following items:
___ The original of your Certification in
Opposition to Motion for filing in court. If you want the court to return a copy stamped “filed,” you should include a copy and a stamped self-
addressed envelope or take a copy with you to the Clerk of Courts when you are filing it to have the second copy stamped.
___ One copy of the Certification for each party to the lawsuit.

STEP 3: MAIL THE CERTIFICATION IN OPPOSITION TO MOTION TO YOUR ADVERSARY AND ANY OTHER PARTY TO THE LAWSUIT.

Check with your local rules to ensure what the time of service is. In some jurisdictions, you must serve your adversary no later than 8 days before the specified return date of the notice of motion (10 days if it is opposition to a motion for summary judgment). IT IS IMPORTANT THOUGH TO CHECK TO ENSURE WHAT YOUR LOCAL RULES INDICATES AS TO HOW MANY DAYS YOU HAVE FOR SERVICE.

While some court rules do not require you to send your papers by certified mail, it is suggested that you send your certification by regular and certified mail, return receipt requested. You will then have the green card when it is returned to you as proof of service.

STEP 4: MAIL OR DELIVER THE CERTIFICATION TO THE COURT. You may deliver your papers to the court in person or you may mail them. The court address is usually available on line at their website.
If you mail the papers, we recommend that you use certified mail, return receipt requested.

Mail or deliver to the court the original of the Certification. If you want the court to return a copy marked “filed” to you, include a copy of the certification along with a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Remember to sign everything you file with the court with Original “Ink Pen” impression before filing. (Photocopies are usually not accepted for filing unless, you sign it again in front of the clerk with “ink pen” impression).

If you find yourself in an unfortunate situation of losing or about to your home to wrongful fraudulent foreclosure, and need a complete package  that will help you challenge these fraudsters and save your home from foreclosure visit: http://www.fightforeclosure.net

 

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How Homeowners Can Identify the Right Parties to Their Mortgage

30 Wednesday Apr 2014

Posted by BNG in Banks and Lenders, Federal Court, Foreclosure Defense, Judicial States, Loan Modification, Mortgage Laws, Non-Judicial States, RESPA, Your Legal Rights

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I.        Finding the Right Party

  1. A.   Send a “Request for Information” under RESPA

The party most often known to your client is the servicer of the mortgage. This is the party that deals most regularly with the client, by requesting and accepting payments and providing mortgage and escrow statements. As agent for the mortgage owner, the servicer is also the party that should have accurate information about the entity that owns and holds the mortgage. Several federal statutes require the servicer to identify the mortgage owner if a proper request is made.

Sending a “qualified written request” under the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) has been one method used to compel disclosure of this information from a servicer. The problem with this approach, however, has been that RESPA gave servicers almost three months to comply — the servicer had 20 business days to acknowledge receipt of the request, and 60 business days to provide the information. RESPA regulations that go into effect on January 10, 2014, create a new procedure for information requests and significantly reduce the response period to 10 business days for a request for the mortgage owner.

A written inquiry that seeks information with respect to the borrower’s mortgage loan will now be referred to as “request for information,” rather than a qualified written request. For most requests for information that do not seek information about the mortgage owner, a servicer will need to acknowledge the request within 5 business days of receipt, and respond within 30 business days of receipt. If the borrower or borrower’s agent sends a written request seeking the identity, address or other relevant contact information for the owner or assignee of a mortgage loan, the servicer must respond within 10 business days. Moreover, a servicer is not permitted to extend the time period for responding to such a request by an additional 15 days, as can be done for other requests for information.

The Commentary to Regulation X instructs that a servicer complies with a request for the owner or assignee of a mortgage loan by identifying the person on whose behalf the servicer receives payments from the borrower. To assist in compliance, the CFPB Commentary provides the following examples:

1)    A servicer services a mortgage loan that is owned by the servicer or its affiliate in portfolio. The servicer therefore receives the borrower’s payments on behalf of itself or its affiliate. A servicer complies by responding to a borrower’s request with the name, address, and appropriate contact information for the servicer or the affiliate, as applicable;

2)    A servicer services a mortgage loan that has been securitized. In general, a special purpose vehicle such as a trust is the owner or assignee of a mortgage loan in a securitization transaction, and the servicer receives the borrower’s payments on behalf of the trust. If a securitization transaction is structured such that a trust is the owner or assignee of a mortgage loan and the trust is administered by an appointed trustee, a servicer complies with a borrower’s request by providing the name of the trust and the name, address, and appropriate contact information for the trustee. If a mortgage loan is owned by “Mortgage Loan Trust, Series ABC-1,” for which “XYZ Trust Company” is the trustee, the servicer should respond by identifying the owner as “Mortgage Loan Trust, Series ABC-1,” and providing the name, address, and appropriate contact information for “XYZ Trust Company” as the trustee.

With respect to investors or guarantors, such as Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae, the Commentary further notes that although these entities might be exposed to some risk related to mortgage loans held in a trust, either in connection with their role as an investor in securities issued by the trust or as guarantor to the trust, they are not the owners or assignees of the mortgage loans solely as a result of their roles as investors or guarantors. Rather than name Fannie Mae as the owner or assignee of a mortgage held in a securitized trust in which Fannie Mae is a guarantor but does not serve as the trustee for the trust, the Commentary would therefore suggest that the servicer should identify the trustee of the trust as the owner or assignee of the mortgage.

However, the Commentary also recognizes that a party such as a guarantor may in certain circumstances assume multiple roles for a securitization transaction. For example, a mortgage loan subject to a request may be held in a trust as part of a securitization transaction in which Fannie Mae serves as trustee, master servicer, and guarantor. Because Fannie Mae is the trustee of the trust that owns the mortgage loan, a servicer complies with the regulation in responding to a borrower’s request by providing the name of the trust, and the name, address, and appropriate contact information for Fannie Mae as the trustee.

A servicer that fails to comply with a request for information is subject to a cause of action for recovery of the borrower’s actual damages, costs and attorney’s fees, as well as statutory damages up to $2,000 in the case of a pattern and practice of noncompliance.

  1. B.   Send a TILA § 1641(f)(2) Request to the Servicer

Similar to RESPA, the Truth in Lending Act contains a provision that requires the loan servicer to tell the borrower who is the actual holder of the mortgage. Upon written request from the borrower, the servicer must state the name, address, and telephone number of the owner of the obligation or the master servicer of the obligation.

One problem with enforcement of this provision had been the lack of a clear remedy. However, a 2009 amendment to TILA explicitly provides that violations of this disclosure requirement may be remedied by TILA’s private right of action found in section 1640(a), which includes recovery of actual damages, statutory damages, costs and attorney fees. Still, because section 1640(a) refers to “any creditor who fails to comply,” some courts have held that there is no remedy against a servicer who fails to comply if the servicer is neither the original creditor nor an assignee. Arguments supporting the view that servicers are liable in this situation are set out in § 11.6.9.4 of NCLC’s Truth in Lending (8th ed. and Supp.).

Another problem with the TILA provision is that it does not specify how long the servicer has to respond to the request. To be consistent with the virtually identical requirement under RESPA, courts may conclude that a reasonable response time should not exceed 10 business days after receipt.

  1. C.   Review Transfer of Ownership Notices

TILA also requires that whenever ownership of a mortgage loan securing a consumer’s principal dwelling is transferred, the creditor that is the new owner or assignee must notify the borrower in writing, within 30 days after the loan is sold or assigned, of the following information:

  • the new creditor’s name, address, and telephone number;
  • the date of transfer;
  • location where the transfer of ownership is recorded;
  • the name, address, and telephone number for the agent or other party having authority to receive a rescission notice and resolve issues concerning loan payments; and
  • any other relevant information regarding the new owner.

This law applies to any transfers made after May 20, 2009. Attorneys should ask their clients for copies of any transfer ownership notices they have received under this law. Assuming that there has been compliance with the statute and the client has kept the notices, the attorney may be able to piece together a chain of title as to ownership of the mortgage loan (for transfers after May 20, 2009) and determine the current owner of the mortgage. Failure to comply with the disclosure requirement gives rise to a private right of action against the creditor/new owner that failed to notify the borrower.

  1. D.   Check Fannie & Freddie’s Web Portals

Both Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have implemented procedures to help borrowers to determine if Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac owns their loan. Borrowers and advocates can either call a toll-free number or enter a street address, unit, city, state, and ZIP code for the property location on a website set up to provide the ownership information. The website information, however, may in some cases refer to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac as “owners” when in fact their participation may have been as the party that had initially purchased the loans on the secondary market and later arranged for their securitization and transfer to a trust entity which ultimately holds the loan.

  1. E.   Check the Local Registry of Deeds

Checking the local registry where deeds and assignments are recorded is another way to identify the actual owner. However, attorneys should not rely solely on the registry of deeds to identify the current holder of the obligation, as many assignments are not recorded. In fact, if the Mortgage Electronic Registration System (MERS) is named as the mortgagee, typically as “nominee” for the lender and its assigns, then assignments of the mortgage will not be recorded in the local registry of deeds. A call to MERS will not be helpful as MERS will only disclose the name of the servicer and not the owner. In addition, some assignments may be solely for the administrative convenience of the servicer, in which case the servicer is the owner of the mortgage loan.

  II.        Sample Request for Identity of Mortgage Owner under RESPA

[attorney letterhead]

[date]

[name of servicer]

[address]

Attn: Borrower Inquiry Department

Re: [name of debtors, address, account number]

Dear Sir or Madam:

Please be advised that I represent [debtors] with respect to the mortgage loan you are servicing on the property located at [address]. My clients have authorized me to send this request on their behalf (see Authorization below). As servicer of my client’s mortgage loan, please treat this as a “request for information” pursuant to the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, subject to the response period set out in Regulation X, 12 C.F.R.§ 1024.36(d)(2)((i)(A).

Please provide the following information:

The name of the owner or assignee of my clients’ mortgage loan;

The address and telephone number for the owner or assignee of my clients’ mortgage loan;

The name, position and address of an officer of the entity that is the owner or assignee of my clients’ mortgage loan; and

Any other relevant contact information for the owner or assignee of my clients’ mortgage loan.

Thank you for taking the time to respond to this request.

Very truly yours,

_____________________

[attorney]

  1. III.        Authorization of Release Information

To: [servicer]

Re: Borrowers: [name of debtors]

Account No: [account no.]

Property Address: [address]

We are represented by the law office of [name of firm] and attorney [name of attorney] concerning the mortgage on our home located at [address]. We hereby authorize you to release any and all information concerning our mortgage loan account to the law office of [name of firm] and attorney [name of attorney] at their request. We also authorize you to discuss our case with the law office of [name of firm] and attorney [name of attorney].

Thank you for your cooperation.

Very truly yours,

_____________________

[debtor 1]

_______________________

[debtor 2]

Summaries of Recent Cases

Published State Cases

Servicer Estopped from Asserting the Statute of Frauds as a Defense to Contract Claim Based on Permanent Mod; Wrongful Foreclosure & Tender

Chavez v. Indymac Mortg. Servs., __ Cal. App. 4th __, 2013 WL 5273741 (Sept. 19, 2013): This case involves the relationship between two principles, the statute of frauds and the doctrine of estoppel. The statute of frauds requires certain types of contracts (and agreements modifying existing contracts) to be memorialized in writing, and invalidates contracts not meeting this standard. Agreements pertaining to the sale of real property are covered by the statute of frauds. A statute of frauds defense, however, is not allowed to fraudulently void a contract. In those cases, “[the doctrine of] equitable estoppel may preclude the use of a statute of frauds defense.” To estop a statute of frauds defense, a plaintiff must show, in part, that the defendant intended (or led the plaintiff to believe they intended) the plaintiff to act upon defendant’s conduct, and that plaintiff did so, to their detriment. Here, the trial court sustained servicer’s demurrer because borrower had not specifically “plead around the statute of frauds” in her complaint. The Court of Appeal disagreed. Both the language of the TPP and the Modification Agreement, combined with the facts alleged in the complaint, preclude a statute of frauds defense. The modification agreement’s language, which was “ambiguous at best and illusory at worse,” promised to “automatically” modify borrower’s loan if she agreed to its terms, fully performed under the TPP, and if her representations continued to be true, but at the same time predicated contract formation on servicer’s execution and return of the Modification Agreement to the borrower. “Under [servicer’s] proposed reading of the Modification Agreement, [borrower] could do everything required of her to be entitled to a permanent modification, but [servicer] could avoid the contact by refusing to send [her] a signed copy of the Modification Agreement for any reason whatsoever.” Despite this language, servicer “objectively intended” to modify borrower’s loan: not only did servicer respond to borrower’s successful TPP completion by sending her the Modification Agreement, but it then accepted borrower’s continued payments. This conduct and the conflicting contractual language in the TPP and Modification Agreement show servicer’s “intent” that borrower act upon this conduct. Borrower detrimentally relied on servicer’s conduct by signing the Modification Agreement, which obligated her to pay additional fees and costs she would otherwise not have paid. Servicer’s statute of frauds defense failed and the demurrer to her breach of contract claim was overturned.

After finding the Modification Agreement enforceable, the court also overturned the demurrer of borrower’s wrongful foreclosure claim, based on a breach of the Modification Agreement. The court did not require tender here, where the servicer “lacked a contractual basis to exercise the power of sale,” which would void the foreclosure. Borrower’s additional claims, that servicer did not provide proper pre-foreclosure notice, would make the foreclosure sale voidable, not void. Under this notice claim alone, borrower would have to tender the amount due, but because her case is partly based on her breach of contract claim, tender is not required.

CC § 2923.5 Pleading Specificity; Damage Causation for Promissory Fraud Claim; Statute of Frauds Applies to Modifications

Rossberg v. Bank of Am., N.A., __ Cal. App. 4th __, 2013 WL 5366377 (Aug. 27, 2013): CC § 2923.5 prevents servicers from filing a notice of default until 30 days after contacting (or diligently attempting to contact) a borrower to discuss foreclosure alternatives. In other words, the servicer must make contact more than 30 days before initiating a foreclosure. Failing to contact or attempting to contact the borrower within the 30 days immediately preceding an NOD does not violate the statute. Here, borrowers alleged their servicer failed to personally meet with them or call them to discuss foreclosure alternatives “in the 30-days leading up to [the NOD].” This insufficient pleading, coupled with the multiple servicer-borrower contacts made before the 30-day window, led the court to affirm the demurrer to borrower’s § 2923.5 claim.

Promissory fraud includes the elements of fraud, but couches them within a promissory estoppel-like structure: 1) a promise made; 2) the intent not to perform at the time of the promise; 3) intent to deceive; 4) reasonable reliance; 5) nonperformance; and 6) damages caused by the reliance and nonperformance. Importantly, a borrower must demonstrate “how the actions he or she took in reliance on the defendant’s misrepresentations caused the alleged damages.” If the borrower would have been harmed even without the promise, reliance, and nonperformance, “causation cannot be alleged and a fraud cause of action cannot be sustained.” Here, borrowers alleged reliance on Bank of America’s promises to modify their loan by providing financial documents, disclosing confidential information, and by continuing to make loan payments. These actions, borrowers alleged, led to their inability to obtain a “replacement loan.” First, borrowers make no causal connection between providing personal information and harm. Second, continuing to make loan payments on a debt owed allowed borrowers to remain in their home and is not causally linked to any damages. Borrowers also fail to show sufficient equity to obtain a replacement loan. Finally, borrowers did not allege that their detrimental reliance led to their default, the real harm. The court affirmed the demurrer to the fraud claim.

The statute of frauds requires certain types of contracts to be memorialized in writing, including contracts involving real property. Additionally, a contract to modify a contract subject to the statute of frauds is also within the statute of frauds. Here, borrowers alleged BoA orally promised to modify their promissory note and deed of trust— contracts that fall within the statute of frauds. Following, any modification to those instruments also falls within the statute of frauds and had to be written to be enforceable. Even though BoA’s communications were about modifying borrower’s loan, and not purchasing real property, it still fell within the statute of frauds because it would modify the contract that did convey real property. Since all BoA’s representations were oral, there was no enforceable contract and no viable contract claims

“Dual Tracking” as Basis for an “Unfair” UCL Claim; Duty of Care

Aspiras v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., __ Cal. App. 4th __, 2013 WL 5229769 (Aug. 21, 2013): To bring a UCL claim under the “unfair” prong, borrowers may identify a practice that violates legislatively stated public policy, even if that activity is not technically prohibited by statute. Here, borrowers based their UCL claim on the “unfair” practice of dual tracking, relying on Jolley v. Chase Home Fin., LLC, 213 Cal. App. 4th 872 (2013) (“[W]hile dual tracking may not have been forbidden by statute at the time, the new legislation and its legislative history may still contribute to its being considered ‘unfair’ for purposes of the UCL.”). This court of appeal both distinguished Jolley and declined to follow its “dicta.”

First, the court did not find dual tracking in this case. Before the foreclosure sale, Wells Fargo denied borrowers’ modification application. In a subsequent communication, borrowers were told their modification was still “under review” (though borrowers inadequately pled the specifics of this communication). Here, the court zeroed in on a footnote from Jolley quoting from the California Senate floor analysis of AB 278, which ultimately prohibited dual tracking: “‘[B]orrowers can find their loss-mitigation options curtailed because of dual-track processes that result in foreclosures even when a borrower has been approved for a loan modification.’” (emphasis original to Aspiras). Dual tracking is commonly known as the practice of negotiating a loan modification while simultaneously foreclosing, and the Jolley court used this general conception of dual tracking to find a duty of care. See Jolley, 213 Cal. App. 4th at 905-06. This court seems to regard an approved modification, as opposed to a modification “under review,” as the sole basis for a UCL dual tracking based claim. Since borrowers were never approved for a loan modification in this case, the court reasoned that dual tracking never took place.

The court also disagrees with the Jolley court’s interpretation of “unfair” prong of the UCL. “[I]t is not sufficient to merely allege the [unfair] act violates public policy or is immoral, unethical, oppressive or unscrupulous. . . . [T]o establish a practices is ‘unfair,’ a plaintiff must prove the defendant’s ‘conduct is tethered to an [ ] underlying constitutional, statutory or regulatory provision.’” This court found, unlike Jolley, that dual tracking occurring before HBOR became effective (2013) did not offend any public policy underlying a constitutional, statutory, or regulatory provision.

Finally, this court declined to follow Jolley dicta finding a duty of care arising from modification negotiations. This court followed several federal district courts finding that “‘offering loan modifications is sufficiently entwined with money lending so as to be considered within the scope of typical money lending activities.’” This court opined that finding a duty of care arising from modifications would disincentivize servicers from modifying loans because they could be held liable afterwards. The court attributed much of its disagreement with Jolley to the construction loan at the center of that case. With construction loans, “the relationship between the lender and the borrower . . . is ‘ongoing’ with contractual disbursements made throughout the construction period.” The Jolley court found a duty of care arising from this situation, and then “expanded its analysis beyond lenders involved in construction loans” to more conventional lender-borrower relationships. This court declined to follow that interpretation.

Disputing Title in an Unlawful Detainer: Consolidation

Martin-Bragg v. Moore, 219 Cal. App. 4th 367 (2013): “Routine” unlawful detainers are summary proceedings, meant to resolve quickly and determine possession only. Title, however, can complicate a UD and render it irresolvable as a summary proceeding. Outside of the landlord-tenant context, UD defendants can make title an issue by asserting rightful title as an affirmative defense. In that case, “the trial court has the power to consolidate [the UD] proceeding with a simultaneously pending action in which title to the property is in issue.” Alternatively, the UD court may stay the UD until the other action resolves title. The court may not, however, decide title as part of the UD by affording it full adversarial treatment, as this would impermissibly turn a summary proceeding into a complex trial. Similarly, a court cannot resolve title as part of a UD summary proceeding, as it did here. This unfairly infringes on a defendant’s due process and right to a full, adversarial trial on the title issue (which can include discovery). Once title is put at issue, a defendant’s due process rights are given priority over a plaintiff’s right to a summary proceeding to decide possession. Not only did this court improperly attempt a summary resolution to the title issue as part of the UD case, but it did so in full recognition of the extremely complex nature of this particular title claim and in the face of defendant’s repeated requests for consolidation. This was an abuse of discretion that prejudiced defendant’s case and the court of appeal accordingly reversed.

Unpublished & Trial Court Decisions

CC § 1367.4(b): HOA Must Accept Partial Payments on Delinquent Assessments

Huntington Cont’l Town House Ass’n, Inc. v. Miner, No. 2013-00623099 (Cal. Super. Ct. App. Div. Sept. 26, 2013): The Davis-Sterling Act governs HOA-initiated judicial foreclosures on assessment liens. Specifically, CC § 1367.4 regulates how HOAs may collect delinquent assessment fees less than $1,800 (any legal manner apart from foreclosure) and more than $1,800 (foreclosure, subject to conditions). Here, the homeowners attempted to pay $3,500 to the HOA during foreclosure litigation. This payment more than covered homeowner’s delinquent assessment, but was below the “total” amount owed, which included the assessment, late fees, interest, and attorney’s fees. The HOA refused to accept this “partial payment” and the trial court allowed foreclosure. The appellate division reversed because the plain language of § 1367.4(b) “allows for partial payments and delineates to what debts, and in which order, payments are to be applied.” The HOA should have accepted the payment, which would have brought homeowners current and tolled the 12-month clock that allows HOAs to proceed with foreclosures under § 1367.4.

Dual Tracking Preliminary Injunction: “Pending” vs. “Under Review”

Pearson v. Green Tree Servicing, LLC, No. C-13-01822 (Cal. Super. Ct. Contra Costa Co. Sept. 13, 2013): CC § 2923.6 prevents servicers from foreclosing while a first lien loan modification is “pending.” Here, borrowers submitted their application in January, a servicer representative confirmed it was the correct type of application to qualify borrowers for a modification, and without making a decision, servicer recorded the NOD in May. Whether or not the application was literally “under review” by the servicer when they recorded the NOD does not affect whether they violated § 2923.6. To resolve a “pending” application under the statute, a servicer must give a written determination to the borrower. Only then can they move forward with foreclosure. Servicer also argued that borrower had not demonstrated a “material change in financial circumstances” that would qualify her for a modification review. CC § 2923.6(g) only requires borrowers submitting a second (or subsequent) modification application to demonstrate a change in finances. Here, borrower’s application was her first attempt to modify her loan. An earlier telephone call with a servicer representative does not constitute a “submission” of an application, as servicer argued. Because borrower has shown she is likely to prevail on the merits of her dual tracking claim, the court granted the preliminary injunction, declining tender and setting a one-time bond of $1,000, plus borrower’s original monthly loan payments.

Motion to Compel Discovery in Wrongful Foreclosure Fraud Claim

Pooni v. Wells Fargo Home Mortg., No. 34-2010-00087434-CU-OR-GDS (Cal. Super. Ct. Sacramento Co. Sept. 12, 2013): Discovery requests must be “reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.” Here, borrowers sent Wells Fargo interrogatories asking: 1) “DESCRIBE all policies, which YOUR underwriter uses in modifying a loan;” and 2) “DESCRIBE all criterion YOU use to determine if YOU are going to modify a loan.” (emphasis original). Wells Fargo objected to these questions because they sought “confidential information, trade secrets and proprietary business information” and because Wells Fargo’s internal decision making was irrelevant. The only issue being litigated, Wells claimed, was what Wells communicated to the borrowers regarding their modification. The court disagreed, ordering Wells Fargo to answer the interrogatories. To prevail on their fraud claim, borrowers must show that Wells orally represented that they would qualify for a modification, and that 1) Wells mishandled their application, or 2) they did not qualify under Wells’ policies. Under either scenario, Wells Fargo’s internal modification policies are relevant to borrower’s fraud claim and the interrogatories are therefore reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence bearing directly on that claim. Further, Wells Fargo provided no evidence that the information sought was a trade secret, and borrowers have agreed to a protective order.

Subsequent Servicer-Lender’s Assumed Liability for Original Lender’s Loan Origination Activities

Sundquist v. Bank of Am., N.A., 2013 WL 4773000 (Cal. Ct. App. Sept. 5, 2013): “[T]ort liability of one corporation can be ‘assumed voluntarily by the contract’ by another corporation.” Here, borrowers seek to hold BoA liable for the actions of Mission Hills, borrowers’ original lender. BoA purchased the loan from Mission Hills sometime after loan origination and borrowers assert that through this purchase agreement, BoA assumed all of Mission Hills’ tort liabilities. The trial court disagreed, finding no factual or legal basis for assumed liability. The court of appeal reversed, liberally construing the complaint to adequately allege BoA’s assumption of liability by its purchase of the subject loan from Mission Hills. BoA argued that the assignment from MERS to BAC Home Loans contains no language that would give rise to assumed liability. This agreement, however, may have nothing to do with an agreement assigning the loan itself from Mission Hills to BoA. “[I]t is entirely possible that Mission Hills sold the loan to Bank of America by means of some other agreement, and even after that transfer MERS continued to act as ‘nominee’ –now on behalf of Bank of America instead of Mission Hills—until . . . MERS assigned its interest in the deed of trust the note to BAC.” The court instructed the trial court to vacate its order and to overrule the demurrer with respect to the deceit, breach of fiduciary duty, and aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty causes of action, all of which were pled against BoA, as well as Mission Hills. The court affirmed the sustaining of the demurrers on borrowers’ other causes of action (promissory estoppel, civil conspiracy, negligence, and wrongful foreclosure).

Motion to Compel Responses to Requests for Production & Interrogatories; Sanctions

Becker v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., No. 56-2012-00422894-CU-BT-VTA (Cal. Super Ct. Aug. 23, 2013): The court agreed with borrower that Wells Fargo must provide responses to the following requests for production of all documents regarding: 1) all communications with borrowers; 2) the servicing of the loan; 3) credit applied against the balance due on the loan; 4) the disposition of payments made in connection with the loan; and 5) regarding the treatment of taxes applied to the loan. Additionally, the court compelled Wells Fargo to answer interrogatories involving the documents reviewed, employees who worked on the loan, the specific documents requested and submitted for a loan modification, the exact amount owed by borrowers, and an itemized statement for every charge during the life of the loan. The court described Wells Fargo as “a sophisticated company, [capable of] tracking . . . who contacts the borrowers,” and noted that borrower’s request to know all parties who received fees or proceeds from the loan was reasonably related to produce evidence of who had a stake in the loan’s modification. The court sanctioned Wells Fargo $1,500 for its failure to answer borrower’s discovery requests.

Fraud and UCL Claims Based on Dual Tracking: Bank’s Failed Motion for Summary Judgment and Settlement

Rigali v. OneWest Bank, No. CV10-0083 (Cal. Super. Ct. San Luis Obispo Co. Feb. 14, 2013):[20] For a fraud claim to reach a jury, a borrower must show “the existence of some evidence” of: 1) false representation; 2) defendant’s knowledge of falsity; 3) defendant’s intention to deceive borrowers; 4) borrower’s justifiable reliance on the representation; 5) causal damages. Here, borrowers could not produce a “smoking gun” – an exact moment where OneWest misrepresented facts with a clear fraudulent intent—but taken as a whole, borrowers’ facts are enough to let a jury decide if OneWest’s string of (mis)communications with borrowers constituted fraud. Borrowers have produced some evidence that OneWest never intended to modify their loan: OneWest assigned of the DOT to U.S. Bank while they were sending borrowers multiple loan modification proposals; OneWest accepted borrower’s modification payment, and then assigned the loan to U.S. Bank; OneWest waited to refund the modification payment until after U.S. Bank completed the foreclosure sale. While this action stems from events occurring before dual tracking was prohibited by statute, “[d]istilled to its very essence, Plaintiffs are claiming that they were ‘given the runaround’ and then ‘double-crossed’ by OneWest” in a manner identical to dual tracking. Relying on West and Jolley, this court determined that summary judgment was inappropriate.

As to damages, the court pointed to borrowers’ assertions that OneWest convinced them their modification would be approved, delaying borrowers’ decision to hire an attorney and to sue to prevent the foreclosure. Also, had borrowers known the sale was proceeding (defective notice is part of their fraud claim), they allege they would have accessed various family funds to save their home. These damages constitute a viable fraud claim that survives summary judgment.

Tender is not required to state a claim for wrongful foreclosure if doing so would be inequitable. In their tender analysis, this court assumed that borrowers would eventually prevail on the fraud claim, and found it would then be “inequitable to require tender of the full amount due under the note.”

Federal Cases

Servicer’s Failure to Endorse Insurance Carrier’s Reimbursement Check May Constitute Breach of Contract

Gardocki v. JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., __ F. App’x __, 2013 WL 4029214 (5th Cir. Aug. 8, 2013): In this action to nullify a completed foreclosure sale, the servicer and holder of the loan, JP Morgan, failed to endorse an insurance reimbursement check for storm damage repairs, as required by borrower’s insurance carrier. Under the terms of the mortgage agreement, JP was entitled to inspect the repairs before endorsing a reimbursement check. Borrower claims JP Morgan neither inspected the home nor endorsed the check, as requested. Borrower had made repairs with his own funds, so JP Morgan’s refusal to sign-off on the reimbursement left borrower with insufficient funds to pay his mortgage. After borrower’s default, JP Morgan foreclosed and sold the home. The district court dismissed all of borrower’s claims without explanation. The Fifth Circuit, however, reversed and remanded the case, finding borrower’s arguments to be questions of fact. If the facts in the complaint are true, JP Morgan breached the mortgage agreement for failing to endorse the insurance check, and that the breach could have caused the default, resulting in a wrongful foreclosure.

Discovery Dispute: Bank’s Motion to Strike Expert Disclosure of Handwriting Witness, Borrower’s Motion to Compel Interrogatory Responses

Becker v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., Inc., 2013 WL 5406894 (E.D. Cal. Sept. 25, 2013): Borrower seeks to introduce testimony of an expert witness to determine whether borrowers’ loan documents were “robo-signed.” Defendant objected because borrower’s robo-signing related claims involving forged documents were dismissed. Borrower claimed robo-signing was still pertinent to his negligence, emotional distress and UCL claims. The court denied defendant’s motion to strike the disclosure of the witness: defendant had neither alleged a “live” discovery issue, nor had it determined the expert would absolutely not provide relevant testimony.

Borrower brought a motion to compel responses to many interrogatory requests. Most notable was his request that Wells Fargo and Wachovia explain how they became the owners/holders of the borrower’s loan. The court declined to compel a response because defendant’s explanation of corporate succession was sufficient. Borrower also asked defendants to identify how many of their trial modifications eventually became permanent. The court agreed with borrower that “the number of times defendant has permitted a trial modification to transform into a permanent modification has at least some degree of relevance to the fraud and unfair business practices claims.” Parties were ordered to meet and confer to determine that the borrower only wants the number of permanent modifications offered, not details about individual cases.

Loan Owner in Bankruptcy May Sell Loan “In the Ordinary Course of Business” without Bankruptcy Court Approval

Miller v. Carrington Mortg. Servs., 2013 WL 5291939 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 19, 2013): Bankruptcy trustees “may enter into transactions, including the sale or lease of property . . . in the ordinary course of business, without a hearing.” Previously, this court granted a very limited summary judgment motion in favor of borrower, determining “that there is no genuine dispute that the loan at issue was transferred by [loan holder] while it was in bankruptcy (as [borrower] contends) and not before (as Defendants contend).” Now, the court addresses whether the loan holder – while in bankruptcy – could have sold borrower’s loan to a second entity without the bankruptcy court’s explicit approval. In selling either borrower’s loan by itself, or as part of a securitization with other loans, the owner of the loan did not violate bankruptcy law because the sale was in its “ordinary course of business.” The assignment of the loan from the original lender (in bankruptcy) to Wells Fargo was valid, and the eventual foreclosure proper. All borrower’s claims were dismissed.

Glaski-type Claim Fails Because Borrower Could Not Show Defect in Foreclosure Process was Prejudicial

Dick v. Am. Home Mortg. Servicing, Inc., 2013 WL 5299180 (E.D. Cal. Sept. 18, 2013): To state a valid wrongful foreclosure claim, a borrower must show that the problems in the foreclosure process that made it “wrongful” prejudiced borrower in some way, specifically, in their ability to pay their mortgage. Fontenot v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 198 Cal. App. 4th 256, 272 (2011). California courts have failed to find prejudice if a defaulting borrower cannot show that the improper foreclosure procedure (like an invalid assignment) “interfered with the borrower’s ability to pay or that the original lender would not have foreclosed under the circumstances.” If the proper party could have foreclosed, in other words, the borrower cannot sue the improper party who actually foreclosed. This court acknowledged borrower’s possible standing under Glaski v. Bank of America, 218 Cal. App. 4th 1079 (2013) to bring a wrongful foreclosure claim based on an improper assignment of a loan to a trust after the trusts’ closing date, but declines to determine that question because the wrongful foreclosure claim was dismissed on Fontenot grounds.

HOLA Applies to a National Bank, Preempts HBOR

Marquez v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 2013 WL 5141689 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 13, 2013): California federal district courts have adopted several different analyses to determine whether national banks, like Wells Fargo, can invoke HOLA preemption despite HOLA’s application to federal savings associations (FSA). The court acknowledged this split in authority: a majority of courts have applied HOLA preemption to national banks if the loan originated with a federal savings association, while a minority have analyzed what conduct is being litigated—if committed by the FSA, then HOLA is applicable, but if committed by a national bank, HOLA is inapplicable. This court sided with the majority, reasoning that borrowers originally contracted with an FSA and agreed to be bound by the terms of the DOT, which include regulation by HOLA and the OTS.

After establishing HOLA as the appropriate preemption analysis, the court determined that each of borrower’s claims, including four HBOR claims, are preempted by HOLA. State laws regulating or affecting the “processing, origination, servicing, sale or purchase of . . . mortgages” are expressly preempted by HOLA. CC § 2923.55, which prevents servicers from taking foreclosure actions until contacting, or attempting to contact, a borrower to discuss foreclosure alternatives, “fall squarely” within HOLA express preemption. Dual tracking, prohibited by CC § 2923.6, also falls under “processing” mortgages, as does the requirement that servicers provide a single point of contact to borrowers seeking loan modifications (CC § 2923.7). Finally, requiring servicers to verify foreclosure documents before recording them is also preempted, as it also relates to “processing” and “servicing” of a loan. The court dismissed all of borrower’s claims.

Dual Tracking: “Complete” Application & A Private Right of Action under CC § 2924.12

Massett v. Bank of Am., N.A., 2013 WL 4833471 (C.D. Cal. Sept. 10, 2013):  To receive a TRO based on a dual tracking claim, a borrower must demonstrate: 1) they submitted a “complete” application and 2) the application is still pending, but the servicer has initiated or continued foreclosure proceedings. Here, to prove they were likely to succeed on the merits on both the “complete” and pending elements, borrowers submitted two emails from a servicer representative, the first acknowledging receipt of their application and noting, “[w]e do not need any further documentation at this point in time.” The second, dated just 13 days before the TRO hearing and 15 before the scheduled sale stated: “The account is currently still in review.” These emails provided sufficient evidence that borrower’s application was complete, still pending, and that they were likely to prevail on a CC § 2923.6 claim. The court found a possible foreclosure sale to constitute “irreparable harm,” not based on the usual loss-of-home argument, but based on HBOR’s statutory scheme. CC § 2924.12 “only authorizes relief ‘[i]f a trustee’s deed upon sale has not been recorded.’ If the scheduled sale goes forward, then, plaintiffs will have no means of contesting Nationstar’s alleged dual-tracking.” Compared to the type of harm likely to be experienced by the borrowers, the TRO will only delay Nationstar’s ability to foreclose, should they deny borrower’s modification application. The balance then, tips in borrowers’ favor. Lastly, the court cited Jolley v. Chase Home Finance, LLC, 213 Cal. App. 4th 872, 904 (2013) in finding a public interest in prohibiting dual tracking. The court granted borrowers a TRO to postpone the foreclosure sale.

Borrower’s “Counter Offer” to a Loan Modification Can Extinguish a Dual Tracking Claim

Young v. Deutsche Bank Nat’l Tr. Co., 2013 WL 4853701 (E.D. Cal. Sept. 10, 2013): HBOR prevents servicers from foreclosing while a first lien loan modification is pending. If a servicer offers a loan modification, a borrower has 14 days in which to accept. If they do not, the servicer can proceed with the foreclosure. CC § 2923.6(c)(2). Here, borrower responded to a loan modification offer, within 14 days, but did so with a “counter offer,” not an acceptance. Servicer did not respond to the counter offer and proceeded with the foreclosure after several months. The court found no dual tracking since borrowers failed to comply with the statute. Borrowers argued their counter offer responded to what they believed to be a modification offered related to the present litigation and settlement communications. Since settlement negotiations cannot be admitted as evidence, borrowers argued, their counter offer should not be considered by the court. Nothing, however, was offered in exchange for accepting the modification (like dismissing the action, for example), so the court did not find this argument persuasive. Additionally, borrowers’ claim that the modification offer was unreasonable and/or not in good faith also failed. Nothing in HBOR requires servicers to provide modifications, or instructs them on the quality of those modifications. The court denied the TRO.

Borrower’s Motion to Strike Bank’s Affirmative Defenses

Burton v. Nationstar Mortg., LLC, 2013 WL 4736838 (E.D. Cal. Sept. 3, 2013): Defendants must “affirmatively state any avoidance or affirmative defense[s]” when responding to a complaint. Fed.R. Civ. Proc. 8(c)(1). Affirmative defenses will be stricken, though, if legally or factually deficient. A legally insufficient affirmative defense will fail under any set of facts stated by defendant. A factually insufficient affirmative defense fails to give the plaintiff fair notice, i.e., state the “nature and grounds” for the defense. If the defense simply states a legal conclusion, without linking it to the facts of the case, it does not provide fair notice. Under each rubric, defendants bear the burden of proof. Here, borrower moved to strike all 20 of Nationstar’s affirmative defenses to his breach of contract and fraud claims as both legally and factually insufficient. The court agreed that 13 affirmative defenses were “bare bones” conclusions of law, devoid of facts, and ordered them stricken with leave to amend. Borrowers’ legally insufficient challenge to Nationstar’s statute of limitations and lack-of-tender defenses failed. Moving to strike a SOL defense “seeks resolution of legal and factual issues not available at this pleading stage.” If Nationstar amends their SOL defense to overcome its factual insufficiencies, it will remain as both legally and factually well-pled. Nationstar’s defense related to tender also remains, as borrower’s use of a tender exception (that the sale would be void, not merely voidable), is premature at this stage.

Rescinded NOD Moots CC §§ 2923.5 & 2924 Claims; Fraud-Based Detrimental Reliance & Damages

Tamburri v. Suntrust Mortg., Inc., 2013 WL 4528447 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 26, 2013): Before recording an NOD, servicers must contact, or attempt to contact, borrowers to discuss foreclosure alternatives. CC § 2923.5. Under the previous version of this statute, and the operative one in this case, the sole remedy was postponing the sale. There was no remedy after a sale occurred. (Under HBOR, economic damages are available under CC § 2924.12 & 2924.19.) In this case, defendants rescinded the NOD and there is no pending foreclosure sale. The court granted summary judgment to defendants because borrower’s § 2923.5 claim was mooted by the NOD rescission.

Wrongful foreclosure claims are based on: 1) an illegal, fraudulent, or willfully oppressive foreclosure; 2) prejudicing the borrower; 3) who tendered the amount due under the loan. Here, the court granted summary judgment to defendants because the rescinded NOD negated the first two elements. Additionally, California courts have found no “preemptive right of action to determine standing to foreclose.”

To allege fraud, a borrower must establish (along with servicer’s fraudulent conduct) detrimental reliance and damages. Here, borrower alleged she “would have behaved differently,” had her servicer not “misrepresented the identity of the owner of [the] loan,” allowing it to profit from a foreclosure, rather than modify the loan. “[B]ehaving differently, by itself, does not establish a claim for fraud. Plaintiff must have relied to her detriment in order to state a claim for fraud.” (emphasis original). Borrower could not demonstrate damages either; she was in default, knew her servicer, attempted to work with them to modify her loan, and was unsuccessful. Knowing who owned the loan would not have changed borrower’s situation. The court accordingly granted summary judgment to defendants on borrower’s fraud claim.

Servicer Wrongfully Foreclosed After Borrower Tendered the Amount Due on the NOD; Damages Assessed According to Loss of Home Equity

In re Takowsky, 2013 WL 5183867 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. Mar. 20, 2013); 2013 WL 5229748 (Bankr. C.D. Cal. July 22, 2013): Notices of default must specify the “nature of each breach actually known to the [loan] beneficiary,” including a statement of how much the borrower is in default. Whatever the actual default amount, the amount listed on the NOD controls. Here, the NOD stated that borrower had breached the second deed of trust, and listed amounts due accordingly. It made no mention of senior liens. Borrower paid her servicer the amount due on the NOD. “In doing so, Plaintiff cured the only default explicitly listed in the NOD,” and by accepting that payment, servicer was prevented from foreclosing. Borrower’s actual default on the senior lien is not relevant because that default was not listed on the NOD. Servicer’s subsequent foreclosure was wrongful because servicer had no power of sale under the NOD. Further, borrower made servicer aware of its confusing misstatements regarding the amount required to prevent foreclosure, so servicer either knew, or should have known, that borrower believed she only had to cure the default on the second lien to prevent foreclosure.

To determine damages, the bankruptcy court assessed borrower’s loss of home equity resulting from the wrongful foreclosure. Equity was calculated by taking the total value of the home and subtracting what borrower owed. The parties contested the property valuation, but the court accepted borrower’s estimation, based on expert testimony and appraisal. Borrower had significant home equity pre-foreclosure, so her damages were substantial (over $450,000). The court denied borrower’s request for damages to compensate her for moving and storage costs. She would have had to sell her home, or lost it to foreclosure eventually, the court reasoned, incurring those costs in due course. The court also denied damages related to emotional distress, pointing again to her likely property loss even without this foreclosure, her pre-existing bankruptcy proceedings, and her choice to remain in the home until the sheriff came to evict her, rather than leaving voluntarily before that stage.

Out of State Cases

HAMP Guidelines Provide Benchmark for “Good Faith” Standards in Foreclosure Settlement Conferences

U.S. Bank, N.A. v. Rodriguez, __ N.Y.S.2d __, 2013 WL 4779543 (Sup. Ct. Sept. 5, 2013): Parties involved in residential foreclosures in New York state must undergo settlement conferences where both servicer and borrower must “negotiate in good faith” to reach a resolution, which includes a loan modification if possible. If the servicer evaluates borrower for a HAMP modification, the un-modified monthly payment must be greater than 31% of the borrower’s monthly gross income for the borrower to qualify. Here, servicer denied borrower a HAMP modification on two grounds. First, borrower’s mortgage payments fell below 31% of their gross monthly income. Borrowers pointed out (on multiple occasions) servicer’s incorrect principal and interest figures which set the mortgage payment too low. Second, the principal and interest could not be reduced by 10% or more, as required in a HAMP Tier 2 analysis. Borrowers objected to the use of a Tier 2 standard when they should have first been evaluated under Tier 1, according to HAMP guidelines. Servicer refused to comply with either request—for using the correct inputs or for evaluating under Tier 1 before Tier 2. The court found this conduct violated the duty to negotiate in good faith under New York law governing foreclosure settlement conferences. As a gauge for evaluating “good faith” conduct, the court used the HAMP guidelines themselves as “an appropriate benchmark [that] would enable the bank to abide by both state and federal regulations.” Since this servicer chose not to abide by the guidelines in evaluating borrower’s financial information, they did not make a “good faith” effort to negotiate. The court made clear that making a good faith effort will not, necessarily, result in a loan modification. The court ordered servicer to give borrower a “final detailed determination on his loan modification application, after review of all possible HAMP options,” and stopped interest accrual on borrower’s loan from the date servicer formally denied a modification.

Servicers Cannot Use “Investor Restrictions” as Excuse Not to Negotiate Settlement Conferences in Good Faith

Deutsche Bank Nat’l Tr. Co. v. Izraelov, 2013 WL 4799151 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. Sept. 10, 2013): Parties involved in residential foreclosures in New York state must undergo settlement conferences where both servicer and borrower must “negotiate in good faith” to reach a resolution, which includes a loan modification if possible. Servicers who refuse to modify a loan because of an investor restriction “must provide the court or referee with suitable documentary evidence of the obstacle, and the court or referee may appropriately direct its production.” Further, if an investor restriction does exist, the servicer must make a good faith effort to convince the investor to waive the restriction for the borrowers in question, and to produce documentary evidence of this effort.

Here, after servicer (HSBC) refused to consider borrowers for a HAMP modification, the referee required documentation of an investor restriction. HSBC produced a one-page document, an agreement between them and another HSBC entity, stating that they are not allowed to participate in HAMP modifications without “express permission.” Deutsche Bank was not mentioned. The referee also required evidence of HSBC’s good faith effort to obtain an investor waiver. Specifically, she required the documentation outlined by HAMP’s guidance on “good faith” efforts (See HAMP, “Q2301.”). The reviewing court agreed this was a reasonable request and that HAMP “good faith” standards are an acceptable gauge to judge a servicer’s conduct, “whether or not the loan qualifies for HAMP.” In this case, the court assumed HSBC made a good faith effort to obtain a waiver. But, after it received a waiver, it refused to consider borrower for a modification. This violated the “good faith” requirement for mandated settlement conferences under New York law. The court ordered the servicer(s) to request documentation from borrowers and to consider them, at least, for a HAMP modification. It also ordered that borrowers are not responsible for interest on their loan accruing from the date HSBC announced it could not offer any modification to borrowers (totaling over three years’ worth of interest).

Recent Regulatory Updates

FHA Mortgagee Letter 2013-32 (Sept. 20, 2013, must be adopted by Dec. 1, 2013)

Active Bankruptcies & Bankruptcy Discharge

Borrowers in active chapter 7 and 13 bankruptcies are FHA Loss Mitigation Option eligible, if otherwise compliant with bankruptcy law and orders from their particular bankruptcy court.

Borrowers who received chapter 7 bankruptcy discharge but did not reaffirm the FHA-insured mortgage debt are still eligible for Loss Mitigation Options.

Treatment of “Continuous” and “Unearned” Income

“Continuous income” includes income received by the borrower, “that is reasonably likely to continue” from the date of modification evaluation through the next year. To determine continuous income, servicers must evaluate the borrower’s sources of net and gross income and expenses, and input those numbers to determine if borrower has the income necessary to qualify for a loss mitigation program. Continuous income may include employment income, but it also can encompass “unearned income,” like social security, VA benefits, child support, survivor benefits, and pensions.

Capitalization & Arrears

Loan Modifications and FHA-HAMP Partial Claims can include arrearages of unpaid interest, escrow fees, and foreclosure attorney fees. “Outstanding arrearages capitalized into modifications are not subject to the statutory limit [30% of the unpaid principle balance at default] on Partial Claims. However, arrearages and related foreclosure costs included in Partial Claims are subject to statutory limit . . . .”

Fannie Mae Announcements SVC-2013-18 & SVC-2013-19 (Sept. 18, 2013)

Announcement SVC-2013-18: Extension of Programs & New NPV Test

Fannie Mae’s HAMP and Second-Lien Modification Programs have been extended. All HAMP-eligible borrowers must be in a Trial Period Plan by March 1, 2016. All HAMP or Second-Lien Modification Program participants must have permanent modifications by September 1, 2016.

Beginning January 1, 2014, loans evaluated for Fannie Mae HAMP will only be eligible “if the value of the ‘modification’ scenario equals or exceeds the value of the ‘no-modification’ scenario.” A negative NPV result can no longer qualify a loan for HAMP “if the value of the ‘modification scenario is below the value of the ‘no-modification’ scenario.” Even if this is the case, though, the servicer must then evaluate the borrower for other foreclosure alternatives within the Fannie Mae guidelines, before foreclosing.

Announcement SVC-2013-19

Establishes processes servicers must follow in eliminating and rescinding foreclosure sales.

Freddie Mac Single-Family Seller/Servicer Guide Bulletin 2013-17 (Sept. 16. 2013)

Streamlined Modification program is extended to include all loans entering into a Streamlined Modification TPP by December 1, 2015. Freddie Mac HAMP program is extended to include all borrowers entering into a TPP by March 1, 2016 and a permanent modification by September 1, 2016.

All loans evaluated for HAMP on or after January 1, 2014, will only be eligible if they have a positive NPV result (an NPV of $0 or greater). Servicers must consider borrowers with a negative NPV result for other foreclosure alternatives.

MHA Update, Supplemental Directive 13-07: HAMP Handbook Version 4.3 (Sept. 16, 2013)

The new HAMP Handbook includes and supersedes Supplemental Directives 13-01 through 13-06, and includes revisions to v.4.2.

If you find yourself in an unfortunate situation of losing or about to your home to wrongful fraudulent foreclosure, and need a complete package  that will help you challenge these fraudsters and save your home from foreclosure visit: http://www.fightforeclosure.net

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What Homeowners Needs to Know About Chapter 13 Bankruptcy

02 Wednesday Apr 2014

Posted by BNG in Bankruptcy, Federal Court, Foreclosure Defense, Judicial States, Non-Judicial States, Pro Se Litigation

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In chapter 13 Bankruptcy, homeowners can use the Bankruptcy proceeding known as “Adversarial Proceeding” to challenge the lender’s authority to enforce or collect the mortgage payments. In most cases, the mortgage loan have been securitized and the assignments were not done in accordance of the law. That is when the Bankruptcy laws that in place in Chapter 13 is designed to protect the homeowners. However, due to numerous changes in the Bankruptcy laws, not all homeowner could meet the “means test” required to retain their homes under Chapter 13 which could lead to a conversion to chapter 7 for liquidation of assets to pay creditors. When homeowners with income could show that they could pay certain bills even if they did not have enough to pay all, the Bankruptcy laws were there to protect the homeowner. Once the Chapter 13 is filed, then the homeowner could use “Bankruptcy Adversarial proceeding” to challenge the Lenders’ authority to collect the debt. When the lenders fails to prove their standing in the mortgage loan transaction, their rights to collect payments from the borrowers were therefore not met and the Bankruptcy judges usually sanctions them for that and in certain cases may outright dismiss their cases which could result to the homeowner owning the property free and clear.

Homeowners should have know that using the Bankruptcy option to save their homes also means that they may give up their rights to sue in the State or Federal Jurisdiction to collect damages for the violations and wrongs done in their mortgage loan transaction as damages are not awarded in the Bankruptcy courts. Reasons being that “you can not sues the same defendants in different jurisdictions using the same set of facts” The keyword here is (“The same set of facts”). So whatever the allegations you are going to make to save your home for mortgage law violations to collect damages in State or Federal courts are most likely the same allegations you will make in the adversarial proceedings in the Bankruptcy court. Therefore, the lenders well paid Attorneys will most likely challenge those sets of facts in their motion to dismiss on the new jurisdiction you filed. That is why Bankruptcy is usually reserved as the last option to “save  the home” but without monetary damages, so smart homeowners seeking to collect monetary damages in the State or Federal court as well as saving the home usually start on those courts. However, the problem is that waiting for a few years before proceeding with Bankruptcy chapter 13 to save the home means that the homeowner should be able to make both the payment of the current mortgage, as well as the portion needed to bring the past due payments current. For Example if a homeowner missed 3 years of payment on a $2500/mth mortgage. The homeowner would have owed $90,000 ($2500×36), in the past due payments, then when in Chapter 13 Bankruptcy, the homeowner will then take the “means test” in order to be able to meet both $2500/month payment plus additional ($1500/month payments ($90,000 divided by 60 months), plus other payments needed to pay other secured and unsecured creditors such as car loans, student loans, back taxes and credit cards etc. The Bankruptcy trustee administrative fees that will also be included in the plan for that 5 years of your plan will amount to approximately $27000. Homeowner also must be current in all taxes meaning that all taxes must have been filed in order to determine if you owe extra taxes than needed to be included in your chapter 13 plan. The last 4 years is mandatory before the judge will approve the plan. You may also request an extension for 120 days in order to file those taxes.
It is important however to note that there are more favorable laws in the Bankruptcy jurisdiction than in the Federal and State jurisdiction and homeowners needs to be aware of that. Bankruptcy Judges are now becoming lenient towards homeowners in default and in order to help keep homeowners in their homes, many BK judges have forced the lenders to modify the loans they had refused to modify for years. (Bankruptcy judges looks at the case as “Borrowers that recognize their delinquency and needed to reorganize their debt and pay those debt only to Bona Fide Creditors”.), some state courts depending on where you are located has similar views. However, Federal courts only address federal questions and in most cases approach the case with a view that a (“Borrower defaulted on a mortgage or failed to pay his/her mortgage, but rather wish to seek for a free home using mortgage law violations in the federal jurisdiction). There is a big difference between these views that is why most federal judges frown on home owners unless you can proof that you know “exactly what you are doing” then it raises their curiosity towards your case as a pro-se litigant, but you must have the rights allegations in your complaint to succeed or you have a better chance having your case thrown out.
Chapter 13 bankruptcy divides debts into several categories. How much you must pay on each type of debt differs. General unsecured claims in Chapter 13 Bankruptcy are those debts that are not secured (examples of secured debts include mortgages and car loans) and not deemed as “priority” by bankruptcy law (examples of priority debts include child support and certain incomes tax debts).

For the most part, you must pay 100% of your secured and priority debts (there are some exceptions). This is not the case with nonpriority, unsecured debts. How much you must pay to your general unsecured creditors in Chapter 13 bankruptcy depends on several factors.
• Disposable income. You must devote all of your disposable income to your plan — so what your unsecured creditors get depends on how much money you have left over each month after paying expenses, secured debts, and priority claims.
• Best interest of the creditors. In addition, at a minimum, your unsecured creditors must get what they would have received had you filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
Disposable Income – How Much You Can Afford?
In Chapter 13 bankruptcy, you must devote all of your “disposable income” to repayment of your debts over the life of your Chapter 13 plan. Disposable income is what you have left over at the end of every month after you pay your reasonable and necessary living expenses. Your disposable income first goes to your secured and priority creditors, and the remainder is split among your unsecured creditors.
The court determines your disposable income first by reviewing your means test, then by reviewing your income and expense schedules.
What is the means test? When you file for Chapter 13 bankruptcy, you fill out a “means test” form, which calculates your income based on the six-month period prior to the month you filed bankruptcy. The test compares your average income to the median income of others in your county or state of the same household size.
If your income is higher than the median. If your income is higher than the median, you must complete the entire means test, taking deductions for certain expenses, including secured debt payments such as car payments and mortgages. The result will show a monthly figure which, multiplied by 60, will decide how much your unsecured creditors will receive over the life of your case.
If your income is lower than the median income. If your income is lower than the median, you do not have to complete the rest of the means test, and your disposable income is based on your income and expense schedules. When you file Chapter 13, you will also file a Schedule I, which lists your actual monthly income from all sources, and a Schedule J, which lists your actual monthly expenses. Reasonable and necessary living expenses include items such as rent, groceries, utilities, cable, pet care, gas, and insurance. The difference between your income on Schedule I and your expenses on Schedule J will be your Chapter 13 plan payment. Your unsecured creditors will receive whatever percentage that income yields after other secured and priority creditors are paid.
Best Interest of Creditors: The Hypothetical Chapter 7
The “best interest of creditors” test calculates the minimum amount you must pay to your nonpriority unsecured creditors through your Chapter 13 plan. If you can’t repay this minimum amount, the court will not confirm your Chapter 13 plan (which means you can’t proceed with your case).
The best interest of creditors test figures out how much your creditors with nonpriority, unsecured claims would have received had you filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. You must repay these creditors at least this much in your Chapter 13 bankruptcy. The idea is that creditors should not be disadvantaged just because you filed for Chapter 13 rather than Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
How much your unsecured creditors get in Chapter 7.

A Chapter 7 bankruptcy is a liquidation; if you have any property in a Chapter 7 case that you cannot exempt, the Chapter 7 trustee can sell the property and pay your creditors with the money. However, bankruptcy law allows Chapter 7 debtors to protect some of their property through exemptions. Exemptions allow you to keep certain property up to a certain value. If you have property that the bankruptcy exemptions don’t protect (called nonexempt property), the value of this property goes to the bankruptcy estate and will be distributed to your unsecured creditors.

The minimum amount your unsecured creditors get in Chapter 13. The Chapter 13 trustee will look at what your unsecured creditors would have received in Chapter 7, and then make sure those creditors get at least this much through your Chapter 13 plan.

Example. Say you own a car worth $10,000 and you can only exempt $3,450. The nonexempt value is $6,550. If you had filed Chapter 7, hypothetically the trustee would have sold your car, paid you your exemption, and paid the remaining $6,550 to your general unsecured creditors pro rata. That means that in your Chapter 13 case, your general unsecured creditors must receive, as a group, at least $6,550. Each creditor will receive a percentage of that amount, depending on the amount of its claim.

How Much Do You Have to Pay Nonpriority Unsecured Creditors?
When completing the Chapter 13 means test, you must provide your average monthly income for the six-month period prior to filing for bankruptcy. You then compare your average income against the median state income for a household of the same size. How much you must pay nonpriority unsecured creditors depends on whether your income is above or below the state median.
If You Have Below Median Income
If your income is below the state median, you are not required to complete the entire means test form. As a result, a monthly disposable income figure is not calculated. Essentially, if you are below median, the court assumes that you have no disposable income and your plan payment is primarily based on your budget. This means that the bankruptcy court will usually approve your Chapter 13 plan even if you are paying little or nothing to your nonpriority unsecured creditors. In addition, your plan can be only three years long instead of five.
Example. Brian is single and makes $35,000 a year. The median income for a single person household is $45,000 in his state. Since Brian’s income is below median, he does not have to complete the entire means test form and may end up paying nothing to nonpriority unsecured creditors.
If Your Income Is Above the State Median
You must complete the entire means test form if your income is above the state median. To calculate your monthly disposable income, the means test uses national and local standards for most living expenses. However, you are also allowed to deduct your actual expenses for certain items such as your mortgage, taxes, and health insurance. If you have a positive monthly disposable income figure, you multiply it by 60 to figure out how much you must pay nonpriority unsecured creditors in your plan. This is because above median debtors are required to be in a five-year bankruptcy plan.
Example. Emily and Brad are married and have a combined annual income of $90,000. Their state has a median income of $60,000 for a household of two. After completing the means test, their monthly disposable income is determined to be $500. Since they have to be in a five year (60 month) bankruptcy plan, they would have to pay nonpriority unsecured creditors at least $30,000 ($500 multiplied by 60) over the course of their Chapter 13.
If you find yourself in an unfortunate situation of losing or about to your home to wrongful fraudulent foreclosure, and need a complete package that will help you challenge these fraudsters and save your home from foreclosure visit: http://www.fightforeclosure.net

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In Texas, Mortgage Servicing Fraud is REAL !

21 Tuesday Jan 2014

Posted by BNG in Foreclosure Defense, Fraud, Judicial States, Loan Modification, Non-Judicial States, Pro Se Litigation, Scam Artists, Your Legal Rights

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Avoid being cheated out of your home before it’s too late!
DO IT THE WAY THEY DO IT: SUE FIRST, ASK QUESTIONS
LATER!
The mortgage servicing fraud scam is real. I personally have lived and litigated it in court from beginning to end. Your mortgage servicer will take thousands of dollars from you, lose or misapply your payments,
and then kick you and your family right out of your home. I know
that this scam is real because I have lived though
it. I also know that the scam is real because in the course of my lawsuit against the mortgage servicer and their debt collector, I have read a lawsuit against the debt collector where the owners of the debt collection firm were sued by a
former mortgage servicer employee that they promised an ownership i
nterest in their business if she would teach them how to setup the “high-volume foreclosure” scam. The same debt collector also saw fit to brag on his company’s own website that he “specialized in foreclosures and evictions… using specially-trained paralegals and computer technology.” Their website also bragged that they would provide the mortgage servicer with a monthly status report on the number of foreclosures and evictions they had done for them.
The scam from beginning to end…
I think this scam has grown out of the “real estate
boom” that we’re in. People are buying 3 or 4 houses at a
time and getting the mortgages to go along with the
m. The homeowners buy the homes, get the mortgages, and the
mortgage servicing companies are there waiting to get the servicing rights, skim fees off the top, and then eventually move in with foreclosures and forbearance agreements. The real estate broker gets paid, the mortgage
processor gets paid, the lender gets paid, the mortgage servicer gets paid, the debt collector gets paid, and the consumer loses all their money and eventually their home. The economics of this scam break down into two parts: the servicing part and the legal cost part.• The servicing part of the scam is very straight forward. The servicer is buying your Note from the lender or previous servicer with their credit, but taking your real cash to make their payments. Nothing or next
to nothing from each of your mortgage payments is going to your principal balance. So the mortgage servicer is just plain pocketing all that money. The mortgage servicer is pocketing the entire payment plus whatever
other fees they can get you to pay. Over the course of five years as a customer, you’ll have paid none of your principal, plus then they find a way to sell your home all at once for complete, immediate cash at a foreclosure sale auction. The mortgage servicer then recycles that money into their own business cash flow and for buying servicing rights for another loan and pulling the same scam on someone else. There is no risk at all for the servicer.
• The legal cost part of the scam is when you as a customer fight them in court to keep your house. You’ll hear a lot of people say that these guys have infinite legal resources. The bottom-line is that they do have lawyers and debt collector that process so many of these foreclosures that they have the written forms, including the lawsuit forms, all prepared and do many, many of these foreclosures at once. The way it usually works, I believe, is that these debt collectors get paid by the debt they collect (by adding their own fees to
the reinstatement amount) or by the foreclosure. If the debt collector doesn’t get the homeowner to pay their fees or foreclose, then they don’t get paid. If you can get the debt collector sued and into court, you’ll
hear a lot about how they want you to pay their fees. The bottom-line is that you can’t get blood from a stone. Even if the debt collector could win the lawsuit, most home owners don’t have anything of value to satisfy a
judgment and pay the debt collector anyway. As such, all through litigation the mortgage servicer ends up paying the debt collector themselves. Basic math shows that the more litigation costs the mortgage servicer, the
less worthwhile it is to continue foreclosure proceedings and litigation against the homeowner.
REMEMBER: These guys pull this scam on many people
every day. As a consumer, you only deal with it once. These guys make their money by pulling the scams as quick as possible. The goal is to get you foreclosed or to sign a forbearance agreement as quickly as possible. They
want it resolved as quickly as possible. The home owner survives and prevails by making the lawsuit and the process take as much time as it needs to be to get done properly and put the mortgage servicer and debt collector in their p
lace. The house belongs to you, not them. They just made a written
promise to finance the money to pay for the house. They break the promise when they try to sell your house.
Scam 0 – You can’t get away from us
Your loan gets transferred or sold from the lender or some sort of “
trustee” or a previous servicer. In addition, somehow there
’s also some other ‘attorney in fact’ company or trustee involved.
The actual paperwork they would provide to the court if you were to sue them would say something like “<homeowner> executed a Note and a Deed of Trust for the benefit of <original lender>. The Note and Deed were assigned to <some company you’ve never heard of> as Trustee. <Current servicer> is the current servicer and attorney in fact for <Trustee>.” There’s an old ma
gic trick where someone puts a ball under one of three cups and then moves the cups around. This is the legal equivalent of that.
The goal is to keep you from knowing who the hell to sue. It’s also to set everything up where none of the companies has to take responsibility. It’s
also to keep you from getting away from them. Once your loan is obtained by the servicer, you only have three ways to get away from them: just plain let them foreclose on your house, refinance (and pay all the $5,000 or $10,000 refinancing fees), or sue them. There’s no other way out. While you “be
long” to them during their servicing, they can charge you whatever fees they feel like and you’re in no position to argue.
Scam 1 – Lose or misapply payments to charge fees
and interest-on-top-of-the fees
First, the mortgage servicer will lose or misapply your payments or put them in an escrow. They will then charge you fees and interest-on-top-of-the-fees for
the misapplied funds.
Scam 2 – Fabricate a default to sell home or talk
homeowner into forbearance
After losing or misapplying your payments, the mortgage servicer will fabricate a default. The default is intended to either sell your home and get all their
money at once, or talk the homeowner into paying money they
don’t owe for fees and a forbearance agreement.
BE CAREFUL: THE FORBEARANCE AGREEMENT WAIVES YOUR RIGHT TO FUTURE NOTICES OF INTENT TO SELL YOUR HOME.
Scam 3 – Harass the homeowner, scare them with foreclosure, and don’t follow legal guidelines for notices
Unable to talk the homeowner into paying money they
don’t owe or sign the forbearance agreement, the mortgage servicer hands off the debt to a third-party debt collector, whose job it is to harass and threaten foreclosure of the home. The goal is to provide as little notice as possible before foreclosure of the home so that the homeowner can’t get his paperwork ready or file suit and they can just sell the home. The mortgage servicer and the debt collector have no intention of stopping during a dispute.
Another goal is to keep leading the homeowner on long
enough to prevent him from filing suit, getting a restraining order,
or filing for bankruptcy. The goal is to make selling the homeowner’s home as quick and efficient and “clean” as possible. As soon as it’s sold, they’ve won and gotten their money. The homeowner can only argue a wrongful foreclosure after-the-fact. At that point, it’s too late and the debt collector is moving in with procedures to get the homeowner and his family out of there and eventually the homeowner just plain gives up fighting them because they’ve already lost their home. Keep all the envelopes and letters you receive! Those postmark dates on the envelopes are VERY important.
In Texas, the law (Texas Property Code section 51.002) requires the mortgage servicer to give the homeowner 20 days notice BEFORE posting public notice of intent to sell. The public notice of intent to sell must also be posted 21 days BEFORE the sell. So all in all, you legally have at least 41 days to find a way to deal with this situation.
Scam 4 – Make homeowner think he has to keep making
payments after filing suit
If the homeowner can get a restraining order or a preliminary injunction, the debt collector will send a litigator that won’t let the homeowner get a word in edgewise. The main goal is to prevent the homeowner from getting a restraining order/injunction. The secondary goal if they can’t get the tro/injunction is to make the homeowner feel obligated to keep making payments (the debt collectors and mortgage servicers have a name for this. The term is the “post-petition payments”).
THE HOMEOWNER DOES NOT HAVE TO KEEP MAKING PAYMENTS. THEGOAL WITH MAKING THE HOMEOWNER CONTINUE TO MAKE PAYMENTS IS TO FORCE THE
HOMEOWNER TO GIVE UP HIS RIGHT TO SUE FOR TOTAL BREACH OF CONTRACT.
The court has its own form of a bank called the “registry of the court”. The homeowner should argue to the court to NOT make payments at all until a trial can be held. If the homeowner can’t convince the court for that, the homeowner should argue to place ALL subsequent payments until trial into the court’s registry. To preserve your rights to sue the mortgage servicer for total breach, the homeowner MUST convince the court to either disregard payments until trial or put all payments into the registry of the court.
Scam 5 – Create second default by making homeowner
pay after filing suit
By making the homeowner continue to make payments even if there’s a tro/injunction, the mortgage servicer and their debt collector can create a second default that trivializes the previous default.
The mortgage servicer and their debt collector can put a foreclosure on the homeowner’s credit report and mess up the homeowner’s credit so that there’s a second default even after the tro/in
junction. Putting the foreclosure on the homeowner’s credit also virtually guarantees that the homeowner can’t do any sort of refinancing during this time. The mortgage servicer can then say “well,
he’s fallen behind again. Please dissolve the injunction and let us sell his home.” Alternatively, the mortgage servicer or their “attorney” (the third-party debt collector) will tell the homeowner that they’ll be thrown in jail or held in contempt of court for refusing to pay the mortgage company more money and try and convince the homeowner that they’re “stealing” use of the home.
Check your state laws. I would guess in ALL states, “debtor’s prisons” are illegal. You can’t be thrown in jail
for refusing to pay a debt (except child support, which isn’t actually considered a debt but an obligation). In Texas, Texas Constitution Article 1, Section 18 states specifically, “No person shall ever be imprisoned for debt.” REMEMBER: YOUR MORTGAGE IS NOT A RENTAL
AGREEMENT. IT’S A PROMISE TO FINANCE THE PURCHASE OF YOUR HOME
Scam 6 – Make homeowner think filing for bankruptcy
gives up right to sue
If the homeowner files for bankruptcy during the
injunction period, the mortgage servicer will argue
for judicial estoppel to try and get out of the lawsuit
and the injunction.
Scam 7 – Debt collector’s get-out-quick scam
The third-party debt collector and its officers are
used to being sued constantly. As soon as the
homeowner files suit, the debt collector will follow-up with
a motion to dismiss the claims against them and get
out of the lawsuit. The goal for the debt collector is to get out of
the lawsuit permanently (with a “dismissal with
prejudice”) before the homeowner can prepare a response or know what the debt collector is doing. The debt collector will
say that your issues are with the mortgage servicer and not them.
That is wrong. You’re entitled to sue everyone
and every company that had involvement in selling your house.
They’ll say “we’re the trustees and not liable.”
That’s not true. Don’t let them out of the lawsuit.
Scam 8 – Make the homeowner think its his own fault
The actual lawsuit scam itself is to hope that the
homeowner doesn’t have any receipts or paperwork.
“Sub-prime” homeowners are easy targets because they’re
not usually prepared or organized to produce
paperwork fast enough (if at all). If the homeowner can prove the
payments and can get the mortgage servicer to the
trial, the goal is to show the jury (or judge, in bench trial) that th
e homeowner is at fault. If the homeowner can prove
liability, the goal is to convince the jury that the homeowner is
only entitled to applying the payments that the
mortgage company should have applied in the first place. The truth
is that the mortgage servicer broke the contract an
d tried to sell the plaintiff’s home. When the mortgage servicer broke
the contract, they stopped being entitled to more
money. They try to sell the home to get their money. When they
get caught and restrained before they get away with it, they try to still get more money from the homeowner as a backup
plan or tell the homeowner that he can refinance.
Trying to get more money from the homeowner or get the homeowner
to refinance doesn’t hold the mortgage servicer liable. It just
insures that they get their money one way or another.
The mortgage servicer and their debt collector prey
on the fears of the homeowner by using the lien that they have on the homeowner’s house as “ransom” for more
money. Most people can’t afford to get a jury trial or adequate legal representation, so the homeowner gives in to
the ransom even though at this point the mortgage s
ervicer and debt collector are only entitled to NOTHING from the homeowner. The legal terms for this are “duress
of property” and “unjust enrichment.”
Scam 9 – Make the homeowner think he has to post a
bond to sue them.
If the homeowner files suit, the mortgage servicer
and their debt collector will want the homeowner to
post a bond to maintain the suit. Texas law (Texas Civil
Practice & Remedies Code section 65.041 & 65.042)
specifically prevents the courts from making a homeowner post a
bond in a lawsuit to prevent foreclosure of their
home but the debt collector knows that most homeowners don’t kno
w that. Not being able to post the bond is another
way that the servicer/debt collector can strong-arm the homeowner out of the lawsuit.
Scam 10 – Make the homeowner think they have to deal with them
One of the debt collector’s jobs is to draw the homeowner into dealing with them. They have to draw the homeowner into “working with” them to talk them into money or doing what they want. The entire time, the debt
collector is planning on selling the consumer’s home or working towards a forbearance agreement. The goal in this scam is specifically to get the
homeowner to feel like they have to answer to the debt collector
and mortgage servicer and convince the homeowner that they owe the debt collector and mortgage servicer something. The other goal is to convince the homeowner that they need to work directly with the debt
collector or mortgage servicer and that they need to answer to
the servicer/collector and not go to the courts or
deal with the courts. DON’T DEAL WITH THESE DEBT COLLECTORS OR SERVICERS AT ALL COSTS. GO STRAIGHT
TO THE COURT AND FILE SUIT AGAINST EVERYONE
INVOLVED BEFORE YOUR HOME IS SOLD. GET
A RESTRAINING ORDER. REFUSE TO SIGN ANYTHING THE DEBT COLLECTOR GIVES YOU TO SIGN.
Scam 11 – Make debt collector appear legitimate
The debt collectors hired by the mortgage servicer
may contain attorneys to appear legitimate. The debt
collector may even be owned by an attorney. These
attorneys are shady characters that are the bottom
of the barrel attorneys that got licensed simply so that they could find a way to rip people off and con them by telling them that they’re lawyers. Check your state laws. Texas law (Texas Finance Code 392.101) requires debt collect
ors to have a bond on file with the secretary of state to engage
in third-party debt collection. The secretary of s
tate will provide any consumer with a “certificate of no record” if the debt collector does not have the bond on file.
If the debt collector doesn’t have the bond on file, then they have no right to be engaging in debt collection in the first place. If the debt collector is soliciting money from you and they don’t have that bond on file, then they’re engaging in illegal debt collection activity. Don’t pay them anything and file a complaint with the attorney general’s office.
In Texas, we have the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act. It’s designed to protect consumers from false, misleading, and deceptive businesses. If a debt collector does not have a bond on file with the state
to engage in debt collection, then that is specifically defined by law (Texas Business & Commerce Code section 17.46(b)(24)) as
“failing to disclose information concerning goods or services which was known at the time of the transaction if such failure to disclose such information was intended to induce the consumer into a transaction into which
the consumer would not have entered had the information been disclosed.” Would you pay the debt collector if you knew they had no right to solicit money from you? Absolutely not.
Scam 12 – Make the homeowner think he has to pay the legal fees
When the mortgage servicer and the debt collector get sued, they have a legal fees scam they use to con the homeowner into thinking the homeowner can’t afford to fight the lawsuit. The mortgage servicer and debt collector will add a paragraph in every one of their filings with the court that asks the court to award them some giant attorney fee (like $500 or $700) for the filing of that pleading. No court in their right mind would ever award the attorney any
money for filing a routine pleading, let alone a giant $500 or $700 fee for filing a pleading. But there’s no law against requesting it, and the fee is only requested for the purpose of harassing the homeowner and scaring them into thinking they might have to pay it. Also, as a matter of  law, the “winner” to a lawsuit doesn’t pay the loser’s fees. It’s the opposite: the loser pays the winner’s fees, but even then only if the court awards the winner the fees.
Scam 13 – Prior breaches scam
When you sue a mortgage servicer or debt collector,
they will argue that your prior breaches still allow them to sell your house. As a matter of law, it is a well-established principal of contract law that when
one party to a contract honors a contract in any way, such as accepting your money as payment on the contract, they waive all breaches prior to that as a defense for breaking the contract later. In short, whenever the mortgage servicer accepts your money, they give up the right to sue or break the contract for anything

before that moment

If you find yourself in an unfortunate situation of losing or about to your home to wrongful fraudulent foreclosure, and need a complete package  that will help you challenge these fraudsters and save your home from foreclosure visit: http://www.fightforeclosure.net
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How Homeowners Can Effectively Use TROs to Save Their Home from Foreclosure

20 Monday Jan 2014

Posted by BNG in Appeal, Federal Court, Foreclosure Defense, Judicial States, Litigation Strategies, Non-Judicial States, Pleadings, Pro Se Litigation, Trial Strategies, Your Legal Rights

≈ 1 Comment

How hard it is to fight a foreclosure depends to a great extent on where you live. If your state requires the foreclosing party to sue you (this is called judicial foreclosure), then it’s easier (and less expensive) to jump into the existing lawsuit. If, in your state, foreclosures proceed without court supervision (nonjudicial foreclosure), then you’ll have to bring your own lawsuit—a more worky and costly process.

Because nonjudicial foreclosures proceed outside of court, you’ll have to file a lawsuit to get a judge’s attention. And you’ll have the burden of proof because you want the judge to stop a proceeding—the foreclosure—that is already authorized by the mortgage.

Fightforeclosure will provide extremely helpful guidance if you choose to do this yourself, or you may hire a lawyer if you wish at a more costly price. Unfortunately, litigation in which an attorney’s services are used is always expensive when you have the burden of proof. So unless the lawyer thinks you have a very good case, you may not want to bother with a lawsuit. If the only basis for your challenge is that the foreclosing party made a technical procedural violation, you’ll probably gain only a few weeks of delay even if you win, but if you follow the well crafted causes of auction in fight Foreclosure defense package, you have a better chance of stopping foreclosure in its tracks.

To get your day in court to challenge a nonjudicial fore­closure, you must sue the lender and the foreclosing agent (typically, the trustee). In the lawsuit, you ask the court to enjoin (stop) the foreclosure proceedings until a judge can hear your reasons as to why the foreclosure shouldn’t proceed.

In this kind of lawsuit, you typically ask the court for three things, in this order:

  • a temporary restraining order
  • a preliminary injunction, and
  • a permanent injunction.

Your application for a temporary restraining order (TRO) must convince the judge that you will suffer “irreparable injury” if the judge doesn’t stop the foreclosure immediately. Because you will lose your home if the foreclosure is allowed to proceed, most courts accept that a foreclosure causes irreparable injury.

TROs are typically granted without a formal notice or hearing, which means the foreclosing party may have only a day or two of notice in which to prepare a response. If no response is filed, the judge may well grant the TRO, but require you to post a bond to protect the foreclosing party from economic harm in case you lose. A bond can be costly, assuming you can get one at all. You might be able to get the bond requirement waived if your income is low enough.

Getting the Bond Requirement Waived

The court may grant a waiver if:

* the delay required by the lawsuit will not cause unreason­able harm to the lender

* the validity of your mortgage is in question (for example, the deed was not properly acknowledged or recorded), or

* the lender’s interest in pushing ahead with the foreclosure can be protected by some other method, such are requiring you to make reasonable monthly payments during the course of the lawsuit.

The TRO will typically last until the date set for a hearing on whether the court should issue a preliminary injunction—which would stop the foreclosure pending a full trial on the matter. A hearing on the preliminary injunction is typically held between ten days and two weeks after the TRO is issued.

At the preliminary injunction hearing, the court will review each party’s paperwork—essentially the same paperwork submitted in a judicial foreclosure hearing, described earlier. At this hearing, the court must decide whether or not:

* you are likely to prevail at a trial, and

* the injury that you would suffer from the foreclosure outweighs the injury that the foreclosing party is suffering by not getting paid (called balancing the equities).

If the judge decides these issues in favor of the foreclosing party, the TRO will end, and your lawsuit will be dismissed.

But if the judge decides these issues in your favor, then the judge will issue a preliminary injunction. The preliminary injunction may order the foreclosing party to take corrective action—for example, by issuing a new pay-off statement and giving you a chance to reinstate the mortgage. Or it may simply keep the TRO in effect.

Because it often takes a year or two to bring a case to trial on a permanent injunction, getting a preliminary injunction is pretty much equivalent to a victory for you. Typically, the foreclosing party will either attempt to reach a settlement with you, drop the current foreclosure and begin from scratch, or meet any conditions laid down by the court and then go back into court asking that the injunction be lifted.

The burden is on you to prove that the foreclosing party didn’t comply with state laws or the terms of the deed of trust. You meet this burden with the documents you file—typically, declarations or affidavits from you and various witnesses that establish the facts you believe entitle you to stop the foreclosure. For example, if you contest the accuracy or legality of the fees the foreclosing party required you to pay to reinstate the mortgage, you would attach a sworn statement to your application for a TRO or preliminary injunction, setting out the facts as you know them.

If the foreclosing party produces documents that contradict yours, then you will need to convince the judge at the pre­liminary injunction stage that you deserve to have the fore­closure put on hold until you can produce your full case at trial. Because most preliminary injunction hearings don’t involve live witnesses, your paperwork may have to carry the day.

Consider Recording a Lis Pendens

Instead of seeking a TRO or preliminary injunction to delay the fore­closure sale until you can have a hearing, consider recording a “lis pendens” and filing a regular civil complaint attacking the foreclosure. A lis pendens is a simple document providing notice to the world that title to the property is a subject of litigation. As long as it is on record, any sale of the property can be undone if your lawsuit succeeds, because the buyer had notice of the controversy. Also, no title company will insure title to property subject to a lis pendens.

Due Process Suffers in Nonjudicial Foreclosures

When attempting to foreclose on your house, the lender must comply not just with your state’s laws and the terms of your deed of trust. It must also comply with the due process requirements of the United States Constitution.

In the foreclosure context, this means:

* You must receive adequate notice of the proceedings that may cause you to lose your house;

* You must have an opportunity to question the legality of the foreclosure proceedings before a neutral magistrate.

By agreeing to a nonjudicial foreclosure (as a practical matter, you have no choice) when you get a loan, you give up a fundamental due process right: the right to an evaluation of the foreclosure’s legality by a neutral magistrate before a foreclosure sale. To challenge a nonjudicial foreclosure in court and come out successful, you almost certainly will needs a well crafted package like Fightforeclosure.net package. Because people facing fore­closure are almost always strapped for cash, lawyers are often unaffordable. For that reason, for many people, the ability to file an action in court challenging a foreclosure is only theoretical. Is the entire nonjudicial foreclosure scheme even constitutional? I don’t think it is, but the courts say otherwise.

If you find yourself in an unfortunate situation of losing or about to your home to wrongful fraudulent foreclosure, and need a complete package  that will help you challenge these fraudsters and save your home from foreclosure visit: http://www.fightforeclosure.net

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What Homeowners Must Know About Appealability and Reviewability of Court Orders and Judgments

16 Thursday Jan 2014

Posted by BNG in Appeal, Case Laws, Case Study, Federal Court, Foreclosure Defense, Judicial States, Legal Research, Litigation Strategies, Non-Judicial States, Pro Se Litigation, State Court, Your Legal Rights

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This Post is to guide Homeowners in deciding whether to appeal their cases to the higher courts upon judgment or order.
A. Definitions

The concepts of appealability and reviewability are constitutional limitations on the Court’s power to hear cases. More precisely, appealability rules act to limit the kinds of cases which may be heard by the Court of Appeals. Reviewability rules, on the other hand, limit the issues which the Court may determine once the case is before the Court. Article VI, § 3(b) of the State Constitution prescribes what kinds of orders are appealable to the Court, and article VI, § 3(a) states that in most cases “the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals shall be limited to the review of questions of law.”

B. Appealability

In addition to the jurisdictional requirements discussed above for appeals as of right and motions for leave to appeal, certain other appealability requirements must be met.

1. Appropriate Court

Action must originate in an appropriate court. For example, the Court lacks jurisdiction to entertain a motion for leave to appeal from an order of the Appellate Division where the appeal to that court was from a judgment or order entered in an appeal from a third court (Matter of Thenebe v Ansonia Assocs., 89 NY2d 858). This jurisdictional problem will arise when an action originates in a court other than Supreme Court, County Court, Surrogate’s Court, Family Court, Court of Claims or an administrative agency or an arbitration. The motion will be dismissed regardless of whether the Appellate Division order is final.

Note: The Court does not have jurisdiction to entertain a motion for leave to appeal from a determination of a court other than the Appellate Division, except in the circumstances specified in CPLR 5602(a)(1)(ii). Regarding appeals as of right, see CPLR 5601.

2. Aggrievement

a. CPLR 5511 states that only an aggrieved party may appeal (see, Hecht v City of New York, 60 NY2d 57, 61). A party may appeal if the order appealed from does not grant complete relief to it. A party which is granted complete relief but is dissatisfied with the court’s reasoning is not aggrieved within the meaning of CPLR 5511 (see, Matter of Sun Co. v City of Syracuse Indus. Dev. Agency, 86 NY2d 776; Parochial Bus Sys. v Board of Educ., 60 NY2d 539, 545).

b. No appeal lies from an Appellate Division order dismissing an appeal from a determination entered upon a default judgment (CPLR 5511; Matter of Lizette Patricia C., 98 NY2d 688).

c. Where the Appellate Division reverses a trial court’s judgment and orders a new trial limited to the issue of damages unless plaintiff stipulates to a reduction of damages, and plaintiff so stipulates, plaintiff is not aggrieved by the Appellate Division order (see, Whitfield v City of New York, 90 NY2d 777, 780 n *; see also, Smith v Hooker Chem. & Plastics Corp., cross mot for lv dismissed 69 NY2d 1029). Similarly, where the Appellate Division reverses and grants a new trial on the issue of damages unless defendant stipulates to an increase in damages and defendant stipulates, defendant’s attempt to appeal to the Court and to argue liability issues will be dismissed for lack of aggrievement (see, Whitfield, supra; see also, Sharrow v Dick Corp., mot to dismiss appeal granted 84 NY2d 976). Note that a party who, as a result of a conditional order, stipulates at the trial or appellate court to a different amount of damages in lieu of a new trial on a cause of action forgoes review of other issues raised by that order, including those pertaining to any other cause of action and, therefore, is not a party aggrieved (see, Batavia Turf Farms v County of Genesee, lv dismissed 91 NY2d 906). Only the non-stipulating party may appeal or move for leave to appeal (Whitfield, supra).

3. Finality — covered in detail in Section VI of this outline.

4. Miscellaneous Appealability Problems

a. Dual Review — Where the same party both appeals to the Appellate Division and appeals to the Court of Appeals, the appeal to the Court will be conditionally dismissed. Where the same party both appeals to the Appellate Division and moves for leave to appeal to the Court of Appeals, the motion will be dismissed outright. Dual review is generally not permitted (Parker v Rogerson, 35 NY2d 751, 753; see also, CBS Inc. v Ziff Davis Pub., lv dismissed 73 NY2d 807). However, where different parties pursue different avenues of appeal or motion before the Court will be permitted to continue (Defler Corp. v Kleeman, 18 NY2d 797).

b. Appealable paper — An appeal will be dismissed where the improper paper is sought to be appealed.

i. No order or judgment — Where appellant/movant seeks to appeal from something other than an order or judgment, the appeal/motion will be dismissed (Matter of Sims v Coughlin, appeal dismissed 86 NY2d 776 [decision]; Matter of Abdurrahman v Berry, lv dismissed 73 NY2d 806 [letter]).

ii. Subsequent Supreme Court order or judgment — CPLR 5611 reads in part “If the Appellate Division disposes of all the issues in the action its order shall be considered a final one, and a subsequent appeal may be taken only from that order and not from any judgment or order entered pursuant to it” (see, American Acquisition Co. v Kodak Electronic Printing Sys., 87 NY2d 1049).

iii. Order of individual Appellate Division Justice — No appeal lies from an order of an individual Justice of the Appellate Division (People ex rel. Mahler v Jablonsky, appeal dismissed 82 NY2d 919).

iv. The finality of an Appellate Division order dismissing an appeal to that court is determined by an examination of the finality of the underlying order (Langeloth Found. v Dickerson Pond Assocs., lv dismissed 74 NY2d 841).

v. No civil motion for leave to appeal or appeal as of right lies directly from the order of the Appellate Term of Supreme Court (Williamson v Housing Preservation and Dev. of City of New York, lv dismissed 82 NY2d 919).

c. Dismissal of Prior Appeal for Failure To Prosecute — A prior dismissal of an appeal for failure to prosecute is a determination on the merits and acts as a bar to a subsequent appeal raising the issues that could have been raised on the prior appeal (see, Bray v Cox, 38 NY2d 350). Thus, the subsequent motion/appeal may be dismissed (see, id.; compare Rubeo v National Grange Mut. Ins. Co., 93 NY2d 750; Faricelli v TSS Seedman’s, 94 NY2d 772 [Appellate Division has discretion to entertain appeal notwithstanding dismissal of prior appeal for failure to prosecute]).

d. Criminal Appeals — Appeals in criminal cases must be taken pursuant to the Criminal Procedure Law, not CPLR 5601 or 5602 (Matter of Newsday, Inc. 3 NY3d 651 [newspaper’s motion to intervene and obtain access to record in criminal case]; People v Blake, appeal dismissed 73 NY2d 985 [CPL 450.15, 460.15 application]; People v Dare, appeal dismissed 74 NY2d 707 [application for writ of error coram nobis]).

e. Corporation Appearance — CPLR 321(a) dictates that a motion or appeal by a corporate party must be filed by an attorney.

f. Mootness — Where the issues presented are no longer determinative of a live controversy, the Court will not entertain an appeal or motion for leave to appeal. The Court cannot entertain the motion or appeal because it cannot give advisory opinions (see, Matter of Hearst Corp. v Clyne, 50 NY2d 707, 713-714). However, the Court may entertain an appeal or motion when each of the three prongs of the mootness exception is satisfied: “(1) a likelihood of repetition * * *; (2) a phenomenon typically evading review; and (3) a showing of significant or important questions not previously passed on, i.e. substantial and novel issues” (id. at 714-715).

C. Reviewability

Once it is determined that an order is appealable, a litigant must consider which issues and orders that arose in the litigation are reviewable by the Court of Appeals.

1. Preservation — Issues Reviewable

a. The Court of Appeals’ power to review lower court rulings made on motions, applications and points of evidence is, in part, limited by statutes and case law requiring that appropriate objections be registered below as a prerequisite to appellate review (see, CPLR 4017, 4110-b and 5501[a][3] and [4]). The Court will, on its own, determine whether an issue has properly been preserved below, whether or not the parties raise the question of preservation (see, Halloran v Virginia Chems., 41 NY2d 386, 393). Counsel bears the responsibility of showing the Court where each issue raised has been preserved in the record.

b. Differences in Appellate Division and Court of Appeals review

The Appellate Division may reach questions of trial error, even if unpreserved, in an exercise of its “interest of justice” jurisdiction (see, Martin v City of Cohoes, 37 NY2d 162, rearg denied 37 NY2d 817, on remand 50 AD2d 1035, appeal dismissed 39 NY2d 740, lv denied 39 NY2d 910). The Court of Appeals, on the other hand, generally may only review questions of law and, therefore, may not review unpreserved error even if the Appellate Division has chosen to do so (see, Brown v City of New York, 60 NY2d 893, 894).

c. Preservation of legal issues and theories

i. As a general matter, appellate courts are reluctant to review legal arguments raised for the first time on appeal. Several policy reasons underlie this rule, such as avoiding unfairness to the other party, giving deference to the lower courts and encouraging the proper administration of justice by demanding an end to litigation and requiring the parties and trial courts to focus the issues before they reach the Court of Appeals (Bingham v New York City Trans. Auth., 99 NY2d 355, 359 [2003]).

Under appropriate circumstances, however, the Court of Appeals may entertain new legal arguments and theories raised on appeal. Those very limited circumstances include: (1) new arguments based on a change in statutory law while the appeal is pending (see, Post v 120 East End Ave. Corp., 62 NY2d 19, 28-29); (2) where the new argument could not have been obviated or cured by factual showings or legal countersteps had the arguments been tendered below (People ex rel. Roides v Smith, 67 NY2d 899, 901); (3) questions of pure statutory interpretation (Matter of Richardson v Fiedler Roofing, 67 NY2d 246, 250). These “exceptions” are narrowly construed.

ii. The general rule requires that constitutional questions be raised at the first available opportunity as a prerequisite to review in the Court of Appeals (see, e.g., Matter of Barbara C., 64 NY2d 866, 868). There is some indication that the Court may make an exception to this doctrine and examine a constitutional issue raised for the first time in the Court of Appeals if the issue implicates grave public policy concerns (see, Park of Edgewater v Joy, 50 NY2d 946, 949, citing Massachusetts Natl. Bank v Shinn, 163 NY 360, 363).

d. Preservation in the administrative agency context

The Court’s reluctance to review new legal arguments is equally applicable in the administrative agency context for policy reasons similar to those discussed above. Thus, arguments which were not raised by a party at the administrative level are considered unpreserved and not reviewable by the Court of Appeals, subject to very limited exceptions (see, Matter of Crowley v O’Keefe, mot to dismiss appeal granted 74 NY2d 780; Matter of Samuels v Kelly, lv denied 73 NY2d 707).

2. CPLR 5501(a) — Review of Prior Nonfinal Orders and Determinations

a. CPLR 5501(a) provides that an appeal from a final judgment brings up for review, among other things:

i. any nonfinal judgment or order which necessarily affects the final judgment, including any which was adverse to the respondent on appeal from the final judgment and which, if reversed, would entitle the respondent to prevail in whole or in part on that appeal (CPLR 5501[a][1]),

ii. any order denying a new trial or hearing which was not previously reviewed by the court to which the appeal was taken (CPLR 5501[a][2]), and

iii. any ruling to which the appellant objected or had no opportunity to object or which was a refusal or failure to act as requested by the appellant, any charge to the jury, or failure to charge as requested by the appellant, to which the appellant objected (CPLR 5501[a][3]).

b. Note that CPLR 5501(a)(1), which applies to prior nonfinal orders and judgments, contains the “necessarily affects” requirement. CPLR 5501(a)(3), which applies to trial rulings, however, does not.

c. For an in-depth discussion of the “necessarily affects” requirement, see Section VII of this outline.

3. Scope of Review

Once it is determined which orders, determinations, and issues are reviewable, the scope of the Court’s review must be considered.

a. Limited to questions of law

As noted earlier, the State Constitution limits the Court’s review powers to questions of law. Questions of fact are not reviewable except in:

i. death penalty cases (CPL 470.30[1]);

ii. Commission on Judicial Conduct matters (see, e.g., Matter of Edwards, 67 NY2d 153);

iii. cases where the Appellate Division reverses or modifies and finds new facts, in which case the Court’s review power is limited as discussed further below (CPLR 5501[b]); and

iv. defamation cases involving a public figure defendant — where the issue concerns whether plaintiff has proven the essential element of actual malice, the Court has a constitutional duty to review the evidence and to “exercise independent judgment to determine whether the record establishes actual malice with convincing clarity” (Prozeralik v Capital Cities Communications, 82 NY2d 466, 474-475, quoting Harte-Hanks Communications v Connaughton, 491 US 657, 659).

b. Questions that are never reviewable

i. An Appellate Division determination whether the trial judge correctly decided a CPLR 4404(a) motion to set aside the verdict as “contrary to the weight of the evidence” is not reviewable (Levo v Greenwald, 66 NY2d 962; Gutin v Frank Mascali & Sons, Inc., 11 NY2d 97, 98-99 [emphasis added]).

However, where a jury verdict has been set aside on the ground that, as a matter of law, the verdict is not supported by sufficient evidence, that determination is reviewable. The relevant inquiry is whether there is any “valid line of reasoning and permissible inferences which could possibly lead rational [people] to the conclusion reached by the jury on the basis of the evidence presented at trial” (Cohen v Hallmark Cards, 45 NY2d 493, 499). Where it is not clear from the Appellate Division writing whether the Appellate Division has set aside a verdict on sufficiency of evidence or weight of evidence grounds in a jury tried case, examine the court’s corrective action. New trial ordered — weight; dismissal of complaint — sufficiency (see, id. at 498). The foregoing analysis cannot be used in bench trial cases because the Appellate Division can render judgment for the appealing party as a matter of fact without the need for a new trial. When, in a jury case, the Appellate Division reverses a judgment entered on a plaintiff’s verdict, on both sufficiency and weight of the evidence grounds, the Court can review whether the legal sufficiency ruling was correct. If the Court disagrees with the Appellate Division and concludes that the verdict is supported by legally sufficient evidence, the Court cannot reinstate the judgment entered on the verdict; instead, it must order a new trial because it cannot disturb the Appellate Division’s weight of evidence determination (Sage v Fairchild-Swearingen, 70 NY2d 579, 588).

ii. A determination of excessiveness (or inadequacy) of the jury’s verdict (Rios v Smith, 97 NY2d 647, 654; Woska v Murray, 57 NY2d 928; Zipprich v Smith Trucking Co., 2 NY2d 177, 188).

iii. An Appellate Division determination to reverse a judgment in a civil action on the basis of unpreserved legal error (Brown v City of New York, 60 NY2d 893). The Court of Appeals has no power to review either the unpreserved error or the Appellate Division’s exercise of discretion in reaching the issue (see, Elezaj v Carlin Constr. Co., 89 NY2d 992, 994).

c. Limited Review

i. Findings of fact that are affirmed by the Appellate Division are only reviewable to determine if there is evidence in the record to support them (Cannon v Putnam, 76 NY2d 644, 651; Morgan Servs. v Lavan Corp., 59 NY2d 796, 797).

ii. In situations where the Appellate Division reverses or modifies and expressly or impliedly finds new facts, the Court of Appeals can determine which of the findings more nearly comports with the weight of the evidence (CPLR 5501[b]; Matter of Y.K., 87 NY2d 430, 432; Loughry v Lincoln First Bank, N.A., 67 NY2d 369, 380).

iii. Provided the lower courts had the power to exercise discretion (Brady v Ottaway Newspapers, 63 NY2d 1031), the Court of Appeals will not interfere with the exercise of that discretion absent an abuse (Herrick v Second Cuthouse, 64 NY2d 692). However, an issue of law will be presented where the Appellate Division in exercising its discretion expressly fails to take into account all the various factors that are properly entitled to consideration (Varkonyi v Varig, 22 NY2d 333, 337). In such cases, the Court can set out the proper factors and, if judgment cannot be rendered as a matter of law, remit the case to the Appellate Division to exercise its own discretion on the basis of all the relevant factors (id. at 338).

Consider these facts: The federal district court grants the defendant’s motion to dismiss and states that the court may amend its order with a more specific statement of grounds for its decision.
However, the court never amends its order. Is the order appealable?
No, answered the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in National Distribution Agency v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, 117 F.3d 432 (9th Cir. 1997). The court said: “A district court ruling is not final if the court reserves the option of further modifying its ruling.” Therefore, the plaintiff’s appeal is dismissed.

This is a specific application of the general rule that to invoke federal-appellate jurisdiction, the appellant must timely appeal from an appealable judgment. Price v. Seydel, 961 F.2d 1470, 1473 (9th Cir. 1992). Stating that rule is simple. Applying it, however, presents formidable challenges for the appellate practitioner. Virtually every aspect of the rule is subject to interpretation and debate, and there is little leeway for error. Had the plaintiff in National not appealed, and the order later was deemed a final judgment, the plaintiff’s opportunity for appellate review would have been lost.

In determining whether a judgment or an order is appealable, the practitioner should consider
the following issues:

Is the challenged judgment or order appealable by statute?
Federal appeals courts (other than the Federal Circuit, which has unique jurisdiction) have jurisdiction of appeals from “all final decisions of the district courts.” 28 U.S.C. Section 1291. In addition, they have
jurisdiction over appeals from specified interlocutory orders in injunction, receivership and admiralty cases. 28 U.S.C. Section 1292(a). Appellate courts also have discretion to hear appeals from interlocutory orders when the district court determines, in its discretion, that the order involves a controlling question of law and immediate appeal may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation. 28 U.S.C. Section 1292(b).

When a case involves more than one claim or multiple parties, the district court also has the option of entering judgment on all or some of the claims or parties. That judgment is immediately appealable if the district court expressly determines there is no just reason for delay. Fed. R. Civ. P. 54(b).

If the appeal is from a judgment, is the judgment final?
For a judgment to be final — absent any of the exceptions noted above — it must end the litigation on the merits for all claims and all parties.
FirsTier Mortg. Co. v. Investors Mortg. Ins. Co., 498 U.S. 269, 273-74
(1991). For example, a judgment is not final if the court has yet to resolve a claim for prejudgment interest. Pace Communications Inc. v. Moonlight Design Inc., 31 F.3d 587, 591 (7th Cir. 1994). On the other hand, a judgment is final even though the court has not yet determined costs. Budinich v. Becton Dickinson & Co., 486 U.S. 196, 202 (1988).

Moreover, the court’s ruling itself is not an appealable final judgment. The clerk is supposed to enter judgment as a separate document. Fed. R. Civ. P. 58. The mere fact that the court added a seemingly final and dispositive phrase such as “judgment accordingly” to its findings of fact and conclusions of law does not make the order a final judgment.

Whether a ruling is final depends ultimately on its substance. Thus, a ruling entitled a “judgment” may not be final for purposes of appeal where further issues remain to be resolved. Zucker v. Maxicare Health Plans Inc., 14 F.3d 477, 483 (9th Cir. 1994). But a ruling entitled an
“order” may be a final judgment for purposes of appeal where there is no substantive issue left for the court to resolve. United States v. Lee, 786 F.2d 951, 955-56 (9th Cir. 1986).

Although the appeals courts will apply a common-sense interpretation to the finality requirement, Sutton v. Earles, 26 F.3d 903, 906 n.1 (9th Cir. 1994), the parties cannot stipulate to appellate jurisdiction where there is none, Dannenberg v. Software Toolworks Inc., 16 F.3d 1073, 1076-78 (9th Cir. 1994), nor can they create appellate jurisdiction by dismissing unresolved claims and reserving the option of litigating them at some future time, Cheng v. Commissioner, 878 F.2d 306, 310 (9th Cir. 1989)

The finality requirement has only rare exception, usually involving cases in the “‘twilight zone’ of finality.” Gillespie v. United States Steel Corp.
, 319 U.S. 148, 152-54 (1964). In extraordinary circumstances, a federal appeals court will consider an appeal from a seemingly nonappealable ruling where the ruling is “marginally final,” involves an issue of “national significance” and has been “fully briefed and argued.” Service Employees Int’l Union, Local 102 v. County of San Diego, 60 F.3d 1346, 1350 (9th Cir. 1995)

Is the appeal timely?
If notice of appeal is filed either too early or too late, and no
exception applies, the appeal is invalid and cannot be heard. Generally, the prescribed time within which to file notice of appeal is 30 days after entry of the judgment or other appealable order. If the United States or one of its officers or agencies is a party, the prescribed time is 60 days. Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)(1).

Time to appeal is extended to accommodate certain post-judgment proceedings that may affect the judgment. If any party timely files one of several specified post-judgment motions, including a motion for new trial or for judgment as a matter of law, the time for all parties to appeal begins to run from the entry of the order disposing of the post-trial motion. Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)(4). The district court may deem a motion for attorney fees to be in the nature of a motion to amend the judgment and
thus extend the time for appeal. Fed. R. Civ. P. 38. If the post-judgment motion is not timely, the time to appeal is not extended. Cel-A-Pak v. California Agric. Labor Relations Bd., 680 F.2d 664, 666 (9th Cir. 1982).

An appeal filed while one of the specified post-judgment motions is pending is held until the motion is decided; then the appeal becomes effective. Leader Nat’l Ins. Co. v. Industrial Indem.
Ins. Co., 19 F.3d 444, 445 (9th Cir. 1994). When it becomes effective, that appeal still applies only to the original judgment; if the appellant intends to challenge the ruling on the postjudgment motion or any modifications to the judgment, the existing notice of appeal must be amended. Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)(4).

There is some leeway on either side of the prescribed time period for appeal. A notice of appeal is treated as filed on the date of entry, if it’s filed before entry of the appealable order or judgment but after the district court-announced decision. Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)(2). This is a relatively recent liberalization in federal appellate procedure. Previously, a premature appeal was invalid and a new notice of appeal had to be filed at the appropriate time. Schroeder v. McDonald, 55 F.3d 454, 458-60 (9th Cir. 1993). However, even under the present rule, a notice of appeal remains invalid if it’s filed before the court announces the decision that will ripen into an appealable judgment. Kennedy v. Applause Inc., 90 F.3d 1477, 1482 (9th Cir. 1996).

On a motion filed within 30 days after the filing deadline, and on a showing of excusable neglect or good cause, the district court may extend the time for filing a notice of appeal up to 30 days or 10
days from the order’s entry date, whichever occurs later. Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)(5).

The courts abide by strict standards for excusable neglect in failing to file a timely notice of appeal. Oregon v. Champion Int’l Corp., 680 F.2d 1300, 1301 (9th Cir. 1982). An extension to appeal will be granted only in “extraordinary circumstances.” National Industries Inc. v. Republic
Nat’l Life Ins. Co., 677 F.2d 1258, 1264 (9th Cir. 1982). One such circumstance is provided by express rule. The court may reopen the appeal time for 14 days if the aggrieved party files a motion within 180 days of the judgment’s entry or within seven days of receiving notice of the judgment’s entry, whichever is earlier – and if the district court finds that the party didn’t receive notice of the judgment’s entry within 21 days, and no party would be prejudiced. Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)(6)

Yet another wrinkle in the rules for timely filing of federal appeals is that the time begins to run only upon entry of judgment. Fuller v. M.G. Jewelry
, 950 F.2d 1437, 1441 n.4 (9th Cir. 1991). Nevertheless, absent objection, the court can consider an appeal from a judgment that has been
rendered but not entered. Allah v. Superior Court of California, 871 F.2d 887, 890 n.1 (9th Cir. 1989). The appellate court will not engage in the “pointless exercise of dismissing the appeal and waiting for the district court to enter a separate judgment.” Vernon v. Heckler , 811 F.2d 1274, 1276-77 (9th Cir. 1987).

As National demonstrates, despite potential loopholes in the rules of appealability, the practitioner cannot count on extraordinary exceptions or discretionary relief to salvage an unauthorized or untimely appeal. To ensure a timely and valid appeal in federal court, the practitioner must carefully monitor the district court’s actions, diligently follow the rules, and count the days precisely.

A fundamental rule of appellate law is that an appeal only lies from an order or judgment that is appealable. An appellate court does not have jurisdiction to hear the case unless there is an appealable order or judgment.
The following is an overview of appeal-able orders and judgments under California law. Note that judgments and orders issued in federal courts are subject to different rules.

Right to Appeal is Statutory
The right to appeal in California is wholly statutory.
Thus, no appeal may be taken unless there is a statute that expressly allows the appeal. Most of the appeal-able orders and judgments are listed in Code of Civil Procedure §904.1. Some orders are made
appealable by other statutes as well.

The most common type of appealable order is a judgment.
See Code Civ. Proc. §904.1(a)(1). Judgments are generally appealable, except for most interlocutory judgments, judgments of contempt
(they may be reviewed by writ), and judgments in limited civil cases
(appeal is to the superior court).

One Final Judgment Rule

Under the “one final judgment” rule, an appeal from a judgment
can only be from a single, final judgment in the action. The rule is codified in Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1(a), which authorizes an appeal “[f]rom a judgment, except … an interlocutory judgment.” The California Supreme Court has held that this means that the appeal must be “from a judgment that is not intermediate or nonfinal but is the one final
judgment.” Morehart v. County of Santa Barbara, 7 Cal.4th 725, 741 (1994). “Judgments that leave nothing to be decided between one or more parties and their adversaries, or that can be amended to encompass all controverted issues, have the finality required by section 904.1, subdivision (a).” Id. Conversely, a “judgment that disposes of fewer than all of the causes of action framed by the pleadings, however, is necessarily „interlocutory‟ … and not yet final, as to any parties be
tween whom another cause of action remains pending.” Id.

The reason for this rule is to avoid multiple appeals in the same case, which places a huge burden on the courts and the parties.
See id. at 741 n.9. Moreover, if the parties have to wait until a
final judgment is entered, “the trial court may completely obviate an appeal by altering the rulings from which an appeal would otherwise have been taken.” Id. It also gives the appellate court a more comprehensive record. Id

To determine if a judgment is final, courts look to the substance and effect, rather than the form or title. The judgment is considered
final when it ends the litigation between the parties on the merits of the case, and nothing is left to be done other than to enforce the judgment.
See San Joaquin County Dept. of Child Services v. Winn, 163 Cal.App.4th 296, 300 (2008). If the judgment contemplates any future judicial action
— other than simple enforcement of the judgment — essential to determining the rights or responsibilities of the parties, the judgment is not final.

Once a final judgment is entered, the appellate court may generally review any order or ruling made in the proceeding leading up to that final, appealable judgment. See Code Civ. Proc. §906.

Judgments Where There Are Multiple Parties

A judgment is immediately appealable if it terminates the litigation with respect to one or more parties. So, if a plaintiff sues several defendants, and the court dismisses the lawsuit against one of the defendants, the
judgment is final as to that defendant, and plaintiff may appeal the
judgment without waiting for the rest of the case to be resolved.
See Nguyen v. Calhoun, 105 Cal.App.4th 428, 437 (2003). Likewise, if there are multiple plaintiffs, and judgment is entered against some of the plaintiffs but not against others, the plaintiffs against whom judgment was entered may immediately appeal. See Panicov. Truck Ins. Exchange, 90 Cal.App.4th 1294, 1300-1301 (2001). With respect to defendants, there is an exception where the liability of one defendant is intertwined with and dependent on the liability of other defendants and their liability
has not yet been established. See Entertainment, Inc. v. Arthur J. Gallagher & Co., 125 Cal.App.4th 1022 (2005)(liability of insurance agency and insurance company in duty to defend and bad faith action were intertwined, and therefore appeal of dismissal of insurance agency was
premature)

Note that if you file an appeal with respect to one party, but there are claims against other parties remaining in the trial court, it might be prudent to ask the trial court to stay the action until the appeal has been decided.

Other Appealable Orders

Some other types of orders are made appealable by statute. For example, orders made after a final judgment are appealable. Code Civ. Proc. §904.1(a)(2). Other types of appealable orders listed in Code of Civil Procedure section 904.1 include: orders granting a motion to quash service of a summons or granting a motion to stay an action on the
grounds of an inconvenient forum; orders granting a new trial or denying a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict; orders granting, discharging or refusing to discharge an attachment; orders granting or dissolving an injunction; orders appointing a receiver; certain orders in partition actions; certain orders issued under the Family and Probate Code; orders directing the payment of sanctions over $5,000; an orders granting or denying a special motion to strike in anti-SLAPP cases.
Certain orders related to arbitration proceedings are also made appealable under Code of Civil Procedure section 1294

Non-Appealable Orders

Any judgment or order that is not expressly appealable by statute is non
– appealable. Many orders that fall into this category. Some of the more common types include: orders overruling a demurrer; orders sustaining a demurrer (an appeal lies from the judgment dismissing the complaint with prejudice); discovery orders; orders denying a motion for a new trial; orders granting a mistrial due to a hung jury; orders directing a verdict (an appeal lies from the judgment issued); orders granting or denying a motion for summary judgment (a judgment following the order granting summary judgment is appealable); tentative decisions; and statements of decision.

Keep in mind that it is the substance and effect, not the form, that governs whether an order is appealable. For example, if a court sustains a demurrer and in the same document dismisses the complaint with prejudice, then that document likely would be considered a final judgment.
But if the court sustains the demurrer without dismissing the complaint,
the order sustaining the demurrer is not appealable.
See City of Morgan Hill v. Bay Area Quality Management Dist., 118 Cal.App.4th 861, 867 n. 3 (2004).

Finally, remember that interlocutory orders may be reviewed after a final
judgment has been entered, so long as the appealing party has preserved his or her arguments on appeal by raising those arguments in the trial court.

Conclusion
Before filing an appeal, a litigant must ensure that the order or judgment he or she wishes to challenge is appealable, or risk dismissal of the appeal. Determining whether an order is appealable is also important
to identify when the time to appeal will expire.

Respondents should also evaluate whether the order being appealed is appealable, and if not, should immediately file a motion to dismiss the appeal. Taking these simple steps at the outset of an appeal can save a party significant time and money in the long run

If you find yourself in an unfortunate situation of losing or about to your home to wrongful fraudulent foreclosure, and need a complete package  that will help you challenge these fraudsters and save your home from foreclosure visit: http://www.fightforeclosure.net

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What Homeowners Must Know About Appealing Their Wrongful Foreclosures

16 Thursday Jan 2014

Posted by BNG in Appeal, Federal Court, Foreclosure Defense, Judicial States, Non-Judicial States, Pro Se Litigation, State Court, Your Legal Rights

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Appeal

Timely resort by an unsuccessful party in a lawsuit or administrative proceeding to an appropriate superior court empowered to review a final decision on the ground that it was based upon an erroneous application of law.

A person who initiates an appeal—the appellant, sometimes called the plaintiff in error, must file a notice of appeal, along with the necessary documents, to commence appellate review. The person against whom the appeal is brought, the appellee, then files a brief in response to the appellant’s allegations.

There are usually two stages of review in the federal court and in many state court systems: an appeal from a trial court to an intermediate appellate court and thereafter to the highest appellate court in the jurisdiction. Within the appellate rules of administrative procedure, there might be several levels of appeals from a determination made by an Administrative Agency. For example, an appeal of the decision of an administrative law judge may be heard by a reviewing body within the agency, and from that body, the appeal may go to a trial court, such as a federal district court. Thereafter, the appeal might travel the same route as an appeal taken from a judicial decision, going from an intermediate to a superior appellate court, or it might go directly to a superior appellate court for review, bypassing the intermediate stage. The rules of appellate procedure applicable to a particular court govern its review of cases.

Right to Appeal

There is no absolute right of appeal for all decisions rendered by a lower court or administrative agency. Federal and state constitutions and statutory provisions create appellate courts and prescribe the types of cases that are within their jurisdiction. An appeal may be granted as a matter of right, such as from a trial court to an intermediate appellate court or only at the discretion of a superior appellate court, for example, by a grant of certiorari by the Supreme Court. If the decision presented does not meet the statutory requirements for review, the appellate court is powerless to hear the appeal and review is denied.

The right to appeal a decision is limited to those parties to the proceeding who are aggrieved by the decision because it has a direct and adverse effect upon their persons or property. In addition, an actual case or controversy must exist at the time of review. Issues that have become moot while the appeal is pending and cases that have been settled during that time are not reviewable.

Final Decision

A final judgment or order must have been reached by the trial court in order for a case to be appeal-able. A judgment is considered final for purposes of appeal when it ends the action in the court in which it was brought and nothing more is to be decided. This rule is intended to prevent the piecemeal litigation of a lawsuit, to avoid delay resulting from Interlocutory appeals, and to give the trial court the opportunity to render a decision in the case to the satisfaction of both parties, thereby obviating the need for appeal. The consideration of incidental matters, such as the computation of interest, attorneys’ fees, or court costs, does not prevent a judgment or order from being appealed.

Grounds

Error is the basis for review of a final decision rendered by a court or administrative agency. Error is called to the attention of a court through the use of objections, protests made during the course of a proceeding that an action taken by the opposing side in a controversy is unfair or illegal. Decisions rendered in favor of one party at trial level are presumed by an appellate court to be correct unless objections have been made to the issues in question during the trial. Failure to do so will preclude their review on appeal. An objection must be made as promptly and specifically as possible for each act to which it is directed so that the court may make an intelligent decision regarding its merits. The trial judge rules on the objection, and the decision is included in the trial record. If the attorney for either party disagrees with the ruling, he or she may take an exception, an objection taken to a decision of a court on a Matter of Law, which is noted in the trial record to be preserved for purposes of appeal. Appellate jurisdiction is limited only to a review of actions taken by an inferior court. No new objections can be raised before an appellate court for its consideration unless exceptional circumstances exist to justify the appellate court raising the issues sua sponte, on its own motion. Exceptional circumstances mean the presence at trial of plain error, a mistake in the proceedings that substantially affects the rights of the party against whom the decision has been made and undermines the fairness and integrity of the judicial system, causing a miscarriage of justice.

Time of Appeal

Appeals must be made within the time prescribed by statute or by the governing rules of the appellate court. Such statutes begin to run only after a final decision has been made. The timely filing of the notice of appeal with the clerk of the appellate court and the appellee completes, or perfects, the procedure. If the appeal is not taken and perfected within the time set by statute, the right to appeal is foreclosed. Extensions of time for the filing of an appeal may be granted, however, if extenuating circumstances exist, such as if either party is adjudicated incompetent or dies.

Notice of Appeal

A notice of appeal—a written document filed by the appellant with the court and a copy of which is sent to the appellee—is the initial step in the appeals process. It informs the court and the party in whose favor a judgment or order has been made that the unsuccessful party seeks a review of the case. Failure to file a notice of appeal according to the statutory requirements will preclude appeal.

Bonds

An appeal bond, a promise to pay a sum of money, must often be posted by an appellant to secure the appellee against the costs of the appeal, if the appellee is successful and the appellant fails to pay. Its amount is determined by the court itself or by statute. The imposition of such a bond discourages frivolous appeals. If successive appeals are taken from an intermediate appellate court to a superior one, a new bond is usually required.

Record on Appeal

The function of the appellate court is limited to a review of the trial record sent up from the lower court and the briefs filed by the appellant and appellee. Amicus Curiae briefs, if permitted by the appellate court, also become part of the record on appeal. The trial record, sometimes called the record proper, must show the pleadings that initiated the case, the complete transcript (in cases of jury trial) of lower court proceedings, the verdict, and the entry of the final judgment or order. The appellant must clearly demonstrate that the grounds for review had been raised and unsuccessfully decided upon at the trial level and, therefore, prejudicial error exists to warrant the reversal of the decision of the lower court.

In some jurisdictions, a bill of exceptions—a written statement of the objections made by a party to the ruling, decision, charge, or opinion of the trial judge—must be submitted to the appellate court to provide a history of the trial proceedings. It should not include matters that belong in the record proper but, instead, should state those points concerning questions of law raised by the exceptions taken during the trial. The appellant’s attorney prepares the bill and presents it to the trial judge for settlement, an agreement between the trial judge and the appellant that the bill contains a truthful account of the events of the trial. If there is disagreement, the judge returns the bill to the appellant with an explanation. The appellee must be given notice of the time and place of the settlement of the bill of exceptions in order to object to or approve its contents. The settled bill of exceptions becomes part of the trial transcript, which is part of the record on appeal. The appellant must submit a complete unabridged transcript of the trial that is prepared by the clerk of the trial court.

The entire trial record is printed and filed with the appellate court, and a copy is also sent to the appellee.

Assignment of Errors

A statement by the appellant of the errors alleged to have been committed in the lower court is an assignment of errors, a type of appellate Pleading used to point out to the appellate court the grounds for review. It controls the scope of an appeal because if a ground for review is not contained in it, it will not ordinarily be considered by the court. The assignment of errors is usually part of the notice of appeal, the bill of exceptions, the transcript of the record, or the brief, although in some jurisdictions, it is a separate document.

Appellate Brief

The appellant and appellee must file individual briefs to aid the appellate court in its consideration of the issues presented. Failure to do so results in a dismissal of the appeal. The facts of the case, the grounds for review, and the arguments relating to those questions must be concisely stated. Any statements referring to the trial record must be supported by an appropriate reference to it.

The appellant’s brief must specifically discuss the alleged errors that entitle the appellant to a reversal and discuss why each ruling of the lower court was wrong, citing authority, such as a case in which a similar point of law has been decided or a statute that applies to the particular point in issue. Disrespectful or abusive language directed against the lower court, the appellate court, the parties, witnesses, or opposing counsel cannot be used. If it is, it will be stricken from the brief, and the costs of the brief that might have been awarded are disallowed.

Review

Appellate courts have jurisdiction to decide only issues actually before them on appeal and nothing else. They cannot render opinions on controversies or declare principles of law that have no practical effect in settling the rights of the litigants.

Only conclusions of law, not findings of fact made by a lower court, are reviewable.

Harmless Error The appellate court must decide whether the errors alleged to have been made by the trial court are harmless or prejudicial. An error that substantially injures the rights of one party is called a prejudicial or reversible error and warrants the reversal of the final judgment or order. However, an error that is technical or minimally affects the rights of the parties or the outcome of the lawsuit is considered a Harmless Error, insufficient to require a reversal or modification of the decision of the lower court.

Hearing

The clerk of the appellate court schedules on the court calendar the date of the hearing on which each side may present an oral argument. Oral arguments, usually ten to fifteen minutes for each side, help the court understand the issues argued in the brief and persuade the court to rule in favor of the arguing party. During the arguments of appellant and appellee, it is not unusual for the appellate judge to interrupt with questions on particular issues or points of law.

The appellant’s argument briefly discusses the facts on which the Cause of Action is based and traces the history of the case through the lower courts. It includes the legal issues raised by the exceptions taken to the allegedly erroneous rulings of the trial judge. Thereafter, the appellee’s counsel presents arguments in favor of affirming the original decision.

Determination

An appellate court has broad powers over the scope of its decision and the relief to be granted. After reviewing the controlling issues in an action, it may affirm the decision of the inferior tribunal, modify it, reverse it, or remand the case for a new trial in the lower court pursuant to its order.When a decision is affirmed, the appellate court accepts the decision of the lower court and rejects the appellant’s contention that it was erroneously made. The modification of a decision by an appellate court means that, while it accepts part of the trial court’s decision, the appellant was correct that the decision was partly erroneous. The trial court’s decision is then modified accordingly.

A reversal of a decision means that the appellate court agrees with the appellant that the decision was erroneously made. The party who lost the case at the trial level becomes the winning party in appellate court.

In some cases, a decision might be reversed but the lawsuit is still unresolved. The appellate court then orders the reversal with the direction that the case be remanded to a lower court for the determination of the issues that remain unsettled.

If a judgment or order is reversed in an intermediate appellate court, the losing party may file an appeal with a superior appellate court for relief, and the appellate process begins again. The decision rendered by a superior appellate court cannot ordinarily be reviewed. In state cases involving issues based on federal statutes or the Constitution, however, an appeal may be brought in the federal court system on those questions that are within its jurisdiction.

If you find yourself in an unfortunate situation of losing or about to your home to wrongful fraudulent foreclosure, and need a complete package  that will help you challenge these fraudsters and save your home from foreclosure visit: http://www.fightforeclosure.net

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How Homeowners Can Effectively Defend Their Foreclosure

07 Tuesday Jan 2014

Posted by BNG in Affirmative Defenses, Federal Court, Foreclosure Defense, Judicial States, Litigation Strategies, MERS, Non-Judicial States, Pleadings, Pro Se Litigation, RESPA, Trial Strategies, Your Legal Rights

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If you have found yourself in an unfortunate situation of having to challenge a foreclosure lawsuit. Before you file your answer, I recommend that you have the Plaintiff’s attorney verify your debt. The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, or FDCPA for short, states that any borrower undergoing a foreclosure proceeding against them has the opportunity to question the amounts owed, as long as the request for verification is made within thirty days of the Complaint being filed. It is very important to act quickly. The FDCPA verification letter does more than just verify the amount of money you owe; it also acts like a pause button to the foreclosure action.

The Plaintiff’s attorney may not proceed with the foreclosure until they verify your debt by sending the FDCPA debt verification letter to the same address where you were originally served, or to a different address that you specify. The production and mailing of this letter usually takes about a month, so you just bought yourself thirty days just by mailing a letter to the Plaintiff’s attorney. In this game, time is more valuable than money. Any stall tactics we can successfully implement are priceless.

If you’ve been served with a foreclosure lawsuit or expect one in the near future, it’s essential to know what foreclosure defenses may be available to help you dismiss, delay or win your case.

Because foreclosure laws differ from state to state and sometimes county to county within each state, we strongly urge you to hire a lawyer in your area to handle the case if at all possible. Whether you hire an attorney or defend your own foreclosure lawsuit, the more you know the more likely you’ll succeed so learn all you can about the foreclosure phases in your state as well as possible foreclosure defenses applicable to your situation.

Types of Foreclosure Defenses

There are six general categories of foreclosure defenses, also known as “affirmative defenses” in Florida and other states – defective service of the lawsuit documents, loan closing related defenses, breach of contract, standing/chain of title issues, fraud and misrepresentation and “catch all” defenses that may protect your rights if other defenses fail.

Once you identify your foreclosure defenses, you’ll either list them in the Answer to Your Foreclosure Lawsuit, as part of a Motion to Dismiss before filing your answer or as grounds for a counterclaim against the bank. Depending on the foreclosure defense involved, you may be able to use a combination of two and even all three of these options.

1. Defective Service of Process

In Judicial Foreclosure states which require the use of the court system to process foreclosures, the lawsuit itself and a summons must be personally delivered to you by a licensed process server. Referred to as “service of process”, there will be at least two documents involved consisting of the actual lawsuit and a summons for each defendant with instructions when and where to respond.

If the process server makes several legitimate but unsuccessful attempts to serve you, they’ll simply serve you by publishing notice of the lawsuit in the local newspaper so its generally better to accept the papers than hiding and hoping it goes away. The process server only gets paid if you get served so don’t expect them to give up and it’s safer to know what’s going on than missing important court deadlines because you never saw the legal notice in your newspaper.

Although it sounds pretty basic, sloppy paperwork and fraudulent practices have once again conspired to make this an important foreclosure defense for homeowners who were never served or served improperly. Defective service of process obviously includes instances when you were never served despite living in the property, but can also be when the process server didn’t take all the state required steps to find you, served a minor or the house next door, files false affidavits in court about who they served and when, forged signatures or backdated documents and a host of similar intentional and unintentional actions that may justify dismissing the lawsuit.

If this defense applies to you, it may be grounds for a motion to dismiss the foreclosure lawsuit and/or part of your answer to the lawsuit as an affirmative defense. Consult with an attorney in your area familiar with the local requirements for process servers if possible and include the defense as part of your lawsuit answer by stating something similar to “As a first affirmative defense, the service of process was defective.” This is just an example that should be modified in accordance with the local pleading rules for each county and state to make sure you meet the local requirements.

2. Loan Closing Related Defenses

There are several related foreclosure defenses we’ve grouped under this category that arise from federal disclosure requirements under the Truth in Lending Act(“TILA”)and the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act(“RESPA”).

Each of these federal laws were created to help consumers by forcing lenders to disclose the material terms of your loan including the actual dollar amount of all finance charges over the life of your loan, a good faith estimate of potential closing costs provided to you prior to closing, an explanation of your three day right to cancel the entire loan transaction and other essential disclosure requirements that may result in the actual rescission of your loan documents under certain circumstances.

Because this is a very technical area requiring expertise in evaluating your HUD-1 closing statement and related documents that is beyond the scope of this discussion, we strongly suggest that you retain an attorney or experienced realtor to help you analyze your loan documents and determine if violations exist. If you suspect that there are deficiencies, there are several critical steps that must be taken to protect your rights including sending a “Notice of Rescission” to your lender before the lender corrects the defects.

3. Breach of Contract

Breach of Contract is one of the strongest foreclosure defenses available to homeowners and investors and may also be grounds for a motion to dismiss or counterclaim against the bank. Although the specific allegations can be similar to those made in other foreclosure defenses, breach of contract claims should almost always be used as a stand alone defense if sufficient facts exist.

Without providing a seminar on contract law, there are three basic elements to every breach of contract claim-a valid contract, breach of some obligation imposed by that contract, and damages specifically resulting from the breach itself. For example,your obligation as borrower under the contract (the loan documents) is to make timely payments of the amount you’ve agreed to pay, while the bank must also comply with its contractual requirements.

One of the most frequent breaches by the bank is purchasing “forced placed” insurance that is either unnecessary, overly expensive or both. The damage from the breach is your inability to make monthly payments because of the higher insurance costs and as a result, you would not have breached your obligation to make monthly payments if the bank hadn’t first breached its obligations by forcing you to pay more than your contract requires.

Other possible breaches by the bank include failing to comply with its own underwriting requirements in giving you loan terms that were unfair or not supported by your income. By offering no interest or adjustable rate loans that later skyrocketed upwards, balloon payments due in the midst of an economic crisis or even providing too much money for a loan they knew you couldn’t afford, the bank breached its contractual obligations in many respects.

Finally, additional examples include breach of the disclosure requirements in RESPA or TILA discussed above or failing to provide adequate notice of default and its intent to accelerate the payment requirements as specified in paragraph 22 or 23 of most mortgages.

No matter where you allege the breach of contract – in a motion to dismiss, answer or counterclaim – you need to be very specific about the facts. Thus, breach of contract as a defense in your answer should read something like “As a third affirmative defense, the bank breached the contract by purchasing forced place insurance that was either unnecessary or too expensive” or ” by failing to provide proper notice of its intent to accelerate the loan as required by paragraph 22/23 of my mortgage.”

Of course modify these examples to reflect your specific circumstances and to comply with local court rules and procedure. Even if you decide not to hire an attorney to defend your case, you can always hire a lawyer for an hour or two to help you meet local requirements.

4. Lack of Standing/Defective Chain of Title

Ask homeowners who owns their mortgage and most will confidently tell you its the company they pay each month. However, the answer is much more complicated as the original loan was almost certainly transferred several times since closing and at best you’re likely paying the loan servicing company not the original owner.

The importance of this defense – called “lack of standing” or “defective chain of title” – can’t be overstated as several courts have found fraudulent, backdated and inadequate loan documents in many cases and have actually dismissed foreclosure lawsuits with prejudice as a result. Lack of standing to sue and/or not owning the loan documents can be the grounds for a motion to dismiss, an affirmative defense in your answer or the basis for a counterclaim against the bank.

There are at least three important documents to review before deciding if this defense can help you – the mortgage or deed of trust, the promissory note and any assignments involved in transferring the loan from one bank to another. The current owner of your loan must have physical possession of each of these original “wet ink” documents and every transfer must be properly endorsed on the documents and recorded in the county where the property is located together with payment of recording and doc stamp fees. Finally, make sure the current assignment was dated prior to the the date the foreclosure lawsuit is filed with the court.

With the huge number of mortgages transactions, many banks have no idea where the original documents are, most failed to properly record each transfer or assignment and in too many situations actually forged or backdated documents in an effort to meet legal requirements. In fact a recent Reuters investigation involved a random review of foreclosure files from five different states and found more than 1000 questionable mortgage assignments, promissory notes with missing or faulty endorsements and foreclosure lawsuits containing multiple inaccurate facts.

During the early stages of the foreclosure crisis, the bank’s strategy of filing lawsuits without proper documentation worked well and many people unnecessarily lost their homes as a result. However, recent court decisions have refused to endorse these illegal bank schemes and have required compliance with basic evidence standards instead. To proceed with foreclosure lawsuits, most courts now require proof that the banks have physical possession of the original documents and further require evidence to show how they got the documents and that the chain of title is not defective.

A couple of additional issues to watch out for are any cases involving “MERS” as the plaintiff in your foreclosure lawsuit and whether or not a loan servicing company has authority from the mortgage owner to file suit and confirming that the owner even has authority to do so. MERS stands for the “Mortgage Electronic Registration System” banks created in an attempt to hide mortgage transactions from public scrutiny and avoid paying recording fees for each transfer. Most courts have finally decided that MERS has no standing to sue homeowners so be sure to raise any and all defenses related to this issue.

For more information on MERS and the illegal and fraudulent actions of banks and lenders involved in the foreclosure fiasco, we strongly recommend an excellent site by Greg Hunter called USA Watchdog.com which contains numerous interesting and well researched articles on the subject overall.

As you can see from this very brief discussion, lack of standing and figuring out who owns your mortgage is both an important defense and complicated subject. As a result, we strongly urge you to retain an attorney to handle your case if these issues arise or at minimum consult with a lawyer for a couple of hours to help you focus on the right issues and discuss strategies to get documents the banks refuse to provide.

When raising this issue as an affirmative defense in your answer, it should read something like “As a fourth affirmative defense, the plaintiff lacks standing to sue as a result of a defective chain of title and related issues.” As always, modify this example to reflect your specific circumstances and to comply with local court rules.

5. “Catch All” Foreclosure Defenses

“Catch All” foreclosure defenses refer to procedural devices and general defenses to make sure you raise all possible issues that may help you and/or to supplement other applicable defenses that are missing one or more of their required elements.

The first defense in this category is called “failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted” and the second is “the failure to comply with conditions precedent.”

The failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted is similar in concept to the breach of contract and lack of standing defenses raised above and generally addresses deficiencies in the required documentation and whether or not the plaintiff is the actual owner of your loan and has the right to sue you. The defense can be used as grounds for a motion to dismiss or as an affirmative defense in your answer, but is rarely used to support a counterclaim against the bank. Even though the defense may overlap with other applicable defenses, it’s almost always worthwhile to list as an additional affirmative defense.

The second “catch all” defense is the failure to comply with conditions precedent and covers issues ranging from the failure to provide proper and timely notice of default and the bank’s intention to accelerate your loan payments and/or failing to properly attach the required documents to the foreclosure lawsuit. Again, it’s almost always worthwhile to list this as an additional affirmative defense to cover areas you may have missed.

6. Fraud and Misrepresentation Foreclosure Defenses

The final category of defenses addressed in this article are fraud and misrepresentation by the bank, the loan servicing company or the mortgage broker on behalf of the bank. Although this defense may be right on point for many of the improper actions by the bank, the pleading requirements are much more difficult for anything related to fraud and thus require far more detail than the defenses raised above.

This doesn’t mean you shouldn’t use this defense if sufficient grounds exist, but be prepared to state the exact nature of the fraud or misrepresentation, when it occurred and in what context as well as any additional information you may have. Because many of these issues require discovery and review of bank documents you may not have at the time you respond to the foreclosure lawsuit, courts may dismiss your defense until you have more information. Remember you can always amend your answer at a later date once you have the necessary information, so make sure you have enough evidence initially before deciding to include this as a defense. The idea is not to throw everything in and hope something works as the bank and courts will see through this strategy and minimize your credibility even though legitimate defenses exist.

Your affirmative defense should read something like “As a sixth affirmative defense, the bank is guilty of fraud and misrepresentation in the following manner” and then include the facts necessary to support your allegations. If possible, meet with an attorney to help you identify any potential fraud and help comply with local court pleading requirements.

If you find yourself in an unfortunate situation of losing or about to your home to wrongful fraudulent foreclosure, and need a complete package  that will help you challenge these fraudsters and save your home from foreclosure visit: http://www.fightforeclosure.net

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Foreclosure Defenses v Motion to Dismiss Strategy

28 Saturday Dec 2013

Posted by BNG in Affirmative Defenses, Federal Court, Foreclosure Defense, Judicial States, Non-Judicial States, Pleadings, Pro Se Litigation, State Court, Your Legal Rights

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Affirmative defense, Complaint, Defendant, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Lawsuit, Motions, Summary judgment, United States federal courts

§ 6.5 Motions to Dismiss Generally

(a) Motions to Dismiss: Strategy

Why is discussion of motions to dismiss placed before the section on answering the complaint? The reason is that every complaint must at one point be evaluated to determine whether or not dismissal would be appropriate, even though many such motions fail. If a strong motion to dismiss can be made, it should be seriously considered. This is especially true where the motion is to be based on a fundamental insufficiency in the complaint, such that little factual investigation is required by the defense, and where answering the complaint and preparing affirmative defenses, counterclaims, cross claims or third party complaints would be a substantial undertaking.

There is also a conceptual reason: the idea of a motion to dismiss is that the complaint — or more specifically, the claim — is so lacking in merit that no answer is necessary. Certainly if that is the case, and it seems likely that the judge can be made to agree that dismissal is appropriate, there is no reason to start drafting an answer.

(b) Practical Considerations

Successful motions to dismiss a complaint are a rarity, more the subject of law school civil procedure classes than actual practice. There are several reasons for this. One is the modern doctrine mandating liberal pleadings standards. In effect this means that courts will look not so much at the artfulness in the drafting of the complaint as much as the substance of the purported claim. There is also a corollary to this doctrine: The courts have a general policy of determining actions on the merits.

The effect of these approaches must be fully appreciated when considering the seeming promise of motions to dismiss, especially motions for failure to state a claim under FRCP 12(b)(6). Too often a brilliant motion to dismiss the complaint that ruthlessly exposes holes and inconsistencies in the pleadings results only in the plaintiff’s filing, at the court’s invitation, an amended complaint now free of all the deficiencies pointed out in the motion. All that is accomplished substantively is that the plaintiff has been forced to focus on its case and, with the assistance of the court’s decision on the dismissal motion, recast areas in which its complaint was weak. In the process the defendant has helped the plaintiff eliminate sinkholes and traps in the complaint that may have been useful to the defense on a later summary judgment motion or at trial.  Furthermore, judges sometimes become de facto “advocates” of claims “revived” in their opinions denying motions to dismiss.

For these reasons a motion to dismiss a fundamentally meritorious claim based on technical deficiencies may not be worth the price of the motion and of the defense’s credibility with the judge. Faced with obvious weaknesses in the plaintiff’s case, it may be worth considering whether a stronger motion may be brought as a summary judgment application following a limited amount of discovery. In this instance keep in mind that many judges will not permit summary judgment motions prior to the close of discovery because of their wariness of “dueling affidavits” as a basis for making substantive rulings.

None of this is to say that there is no place for Rule 12(b) motions. There are times when the defendant simply should not have to appear in federal court, or at least not in the venue where suit has been brought. Perhaps there is an arbitration clause, bargained for at some cost, on which the defendant is entitled to rely. Some complaints are just too lacking in merit to be worthy of the defendant’s time and money. And though the phrase has become a cliche, in the right circumstance there is something to be said for “educating the judge” about a case by bringing a Rule 12 motion early on, even if, while meritorious, the motion may not be enough to end the proceedings.

§ 6.6 FRCP 12(b) Motions to Dismiss

(a) Time to Move

Just as with any other response to a complaint, a motion to dismiss under FRCP 12(b) must be made within 20 days of receipt of the summons and complaint. Making the motion stops the clock on the answer itself, pursuant to FRCP 12(a)(4). This applies to the whole of the pleadings, regardless of what part of the complaint is the subject of the motion to dismiss. Therefore, it has been held that a motion to dismiss one count of a 10-count complaint stays the time to answer the entire complaint. Note, however, that this fact should not give rise to “creative” approaches to obtaining more time to answer the complaint. Courts have defaulted parties for filing frivolous FRCP 12 motions solely to extend time. If the motion is denied or postponed, the answer is due within 10 days of receiving notice of the court’s action.

As usual, an eye must be kept on discovery. Here local rules may govern whether discovery is stayed; or the judge may have a policy that is embodied in a standing order or that is simply stated to the parties when the motion is filed. The parties also may seek from the court either a stay of discovery or permission to proceed.

(b) Strategy: Defenses vs. Motions to Dismiss

FRCP 12(b) requires all defenses to be asserted in the answer, but directs that the following seven of them may be resolved by motion or merely left as defenses:

1. Lack of subject matter jurisdiction

2. Lack of personal jurisdiction

3. Improper venue

4. Insufficiency of process

5. Insufficiency of service of process

6. Failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted

7. Failure to join a party under Rule 19.

These seven are the Rule 12 bases for motions to dismiss. The question arises whether they should be invoked in such a motion, asserted as a defense, or both.

These grounds for dismissal should always be asserted as defenses if available in good faith, regardless of whether motion practice is intended when the answer is filed or even if motions have been brought and have failed on these bases. Ultimately, however, FRCP 12(d) requires that the merits of FRCP 12 defenses must be decided at some point before trial, unless the court decides otherwise. The exception to this is where the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, discussed in the next section.

(c) Subject Matter Jurisdiction, FRCP 12(b)(1)

As discussed in Chapter 1 “Subject Matter Jurisdiction” supra, federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. The complaint must state that the requirements of subject matter jurisdiction are met in the matter. More importantly, they must actually be met. If a court lacks subject matter jurisdiction, it simply has no authority to decide the case — even if the parties are willing to waive objection or stipulate to the federal court’s jurisdiction.

For this reason, a challenge to the court’s subject matter jurisdiction may be brought at any time, even after final judgment is entered and regardless of the prejudice that would result by dismissing the action after proceedings have been under way. On a motion challenging jurisdiction, the court tests the existence of subject matter jurisdiction as of the date the lawsuit was filed, not later. It is not a useful strategy, therefore, to attempt to deprive the court of jurisdiction in a diversity case after the suit is filed by having the defendant move its domicile to the same state as the plaintiff.

As the party invoking the federal court’s jurisdiction, the plaintiff must show that it has the right to do so. Therefore, once the defendant attacks the basis of the court’s subject matter jurisdiction, it has shifted the burden of coming forward to the plaintiff.

§ 6.7 Motions to Dismiss Under FRCP 12(b)(6)

(a) Introduction

The successful FRCP 12(b)(6) application is the home run of motions. It is a challenge made at the very beginning of a case and strikes at the very heart of the lawsuit. It is a statement that even if the plaintiff were given every benefit of the doubt and everything it claimed were true, the plaintiff’s claim should be dismissed — either because it is not legally cognizable or because sufficient facts have not been alleged to make out a cognizable claim.

When considering a 12(b)(6) motion, the court presumes that all the allegations of the complaint are true; it resolves all doubts or inferences in the plaintiff’s favor; and it reads the complaint in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. Needless to say, the burden of proof on such a motion is on the party making it. No material from outside the pleadings may be considered or the motion will be considered one for summary judgment (see Section 6.7(d), infra).

Given all these benefits and the liberal pleading requirements of the Rules, all the plaintiff has to do to survive the motion is make out some sort of claim for which a court might provide relief. For every home run, therefore, there are innumerably more strikeouts or at best routine hits (i.e., when partial dismissal is granted as to some claims). The purpose of this section is to assist in picking the right pitches, and to consider when a “long out” (see Section 6.7(c)(3), “Educating the Judge,” infra) can have the desired effect, even though the ball stays in the park.

(b) Issues to Raise with Clients

There is little that is more satisfying in commercial litigation defense than winning a dramatic 12(b)(6) motion on behalf of a defendant eager to end a potentially expensive and vexatious court case. Conversely, the attorney should visualize the expression on the client representative’s face as he realizes the implications of an unsuccessful 12(b)(6) motion in a commercial case — unless he has been adequately counseled about the potential costs, risks and rewards involved in the undertaking.

Because the plaintiff is given every benefit of the doubt in both law and fact, the 12(b)(6) motion theoretically requires the movant to “play out” every factual scenario demonstrate that the pleading alleges enough facts to state a claim to relief that is “plausible” within the four corners of the complaint. Similarly, every plausible legal theory that might provide relief to the plaintiff, based on the facts pleaded, must be considered.

For this reason the 12(b)(6) motion can, in some instances, be more costly and difficult than a summary judgment motion, though the motion to dismiss does not usually involve extensive affidavits as does a summary judgment application. In the latter proceeding, however, it is easier to limit the factual scenario that must be considered by submission of competent evidence that circumscribes the possibilities sketched out by the pleadings. That is harder to do under 12(b)(6), though much depends on the judge’s inclinations.

Indeed, as a final caveat to the 12(b)(6) approach, practitioners should advise their clients that granting the motion takes a certain level of judicial confidence that not every court can muster. The number of cases overturning 12(b)(6) dismissals surely dwarfs those that affirm such rulings, and it is the path of least resistance simply to decree that it would be more appropriate to decide the issues after “some discovery” has been taken. This seems to the judge like not deciding the motion, and in a sense it is; yet it is a denial of the motion, for the effects of which the defendant must be prepared.

Still and all there is a place for the judicious use of a 12(b)(6) motion. That place is not only the obvious case where the complaint puts forth a cause of action that is plainly not justifiable (e.g., seeking damages for invasion of privacy arising from the defendant’s alleged use of microwave beams to read the plaintiff’s mind5). The scenarios in which a 12(b)(6) motion is appropriate will be discussed below in Section 6.7(c). The critical point is to lay out the risks, rewards and benefits clearly for the client to allow a maximally informed choice about whether to proceed.

(c) Reasons to Bring a 12(b)(6) Motion

Despite the long odds, there are several reasons why a defendant might bring a 12(b)(6) motion, only one of which is that it might succeed in full:

(1) Elimination of Plainly Nonjusticiable Cases

It should go without saying that a 12(b)(6) motion is the appropriate vehicle for certain lawsuits that, on simple inspection, do not make out claims for legal relief. There is some point where even the minimal pleading requirements are not met, where even given every benefit of the doubt, the facts alleged cannot in any way be scrambled to create a cause of action. Identifying the line between the obvious and the less obvious candidates for inclusion in this category requires a certain amount of experience, but it can fairly be said that some complaints fall into the category of “I [the judge] know it when I see it.”

This must be contrasted, however, with the situation where the plaintiff has pleaded facts that in themselves may add up to a valid legal claim but has set forth inappropriate legal theories as the basis for recovery. Dismissal will not be granted when this is the case, though if the complaint is truly incomprehensible, the defendant may be entitled to relief under FRCP 12(e), a motion for a more definite statement (see Section 6.8(c), infra).

(2) Cutting off Novel Legal Theories

Faced with a complaint, some commercial clients may have an interest, eminently reasonable, in “snuffing out” novel legal theories put forth or even suggested by the complaint. Such theories of recovery may pose a larger threat to some defendants’ interests than the immediate pending litigation. In such cases clients might put a very high premium on delivering a crashing blow to the plaintiff and discouraging similar litigation by those similarly situated.

These are the situations, however, where fully apprising the client of the range of possibilities under 12(b)(6) is essential. The unsuccessful 12(b)(6) motion in this situation may be far worse than no motion at all and will, in all likelihood, have precisely the opposite effect from the one intended because the judge may help the plaintiff articulate the theory better. Since most 12(b)(6) motions are unsuccessful, taking this approach is one of the more daring maneuvers in commercial litigation.

The risk of this preemptive strike strategy, great as it is inherently, is heightened by a line of authority stating that it is precisely where novel legal theories are proffered that dismissal is inappropriate, on the theory that development in discovery — the bugaboo of motions to dismiss — can help the court assess the propriety of the claim.

(3) “Educating the Judge”

There may be some situations, as discussed in Section 6.5(b), supra, where a 12(b)(6) motion is an appropriate vehicle to put the defendant’s prima facie case in front of the judge, even though it is not likely to prevail. (Of course, it must still be brought in good faith, i.e., counsel must believe that it could prevail.) For example, a motion driven by the “educating the judge” goal could be useful if a fairly short track until trial is anticipated and collateral issues, or some “straw man” in the complaint, could unduly sway the court to the plaintiff’s point of view, affecting interlocutory decisions or even the trial. Similarly, the 12(b)(6) motion could clarify for the court early on just how high a burden of proof the plaintiff will have to meet to make its case. Here the 12(b)(6) motion is a way of amplifying and framing the defense in a way that the answer, even with properly crafted affirmative defenses, cannot do.

There are risks in this strategy. One is that judges can usually recognize it from afar and may not appreciate what may seem like manipulation. Another is the likelihood that in complex litigation a long discovery and motion schedule, and the attendant involvement of a magistrate, stand between the pleadings stage and trial. In that case the judge’s preliminary opinion on the merits of the respective parties will matter less than the magistrate’s view of the proper scope of interrogatories.

(4) Educating the Adversary

When facing a plaintiff whose litigation posture is vulnerable, a forceful motion may be the right tactic. Even a less assailable plaintiff may greet a motion to dismiss, and the attendant effort required to defend against it, with a new sense of realism about the ultimate sustainability of its claim or its desire to proceed as well as about the defendant’s resources and abilities.

(5) Partial Dismissal

Finally, the utility of a motion to dismiss under 12(b)(6) should be considered in light of the availability of partial dismissal, i.e., dismissal of only part of a complaint or of some but not all counts of a complaint.

This tool can be very powerful in the defense of commercial cases. Many cases involving multiple counts, often including fraud, conspiracy or RICO claims, merely come down to a basic dispute over a contract. Besides providing spurious bases for federal jurisdiction, illegitimate counts such as those are added because they make available punitive, treble or other enhanced damages as well as attorneys’ fees, none of which are normally available in contract actions. Often these “add ons” can be eliminated early, even before discovery, because many such claims have specific pleading requirements that act as gatekeepers at the earliest stage of the litigation. If it is successful with a partial dismissal motion, the defendant can:

– close off potentially dangerous or unreasonably burdensome areas of discovery;

– knock the wind out of a complaint’s sails and perhaps cause the plaintiff to question its counsel’s judgment; and

– fulfill the “education of the judge” function by undermining the credibility of the plaintiff’s claims as well as its way of presenting them to the court.

(d) Conversion into Summary Judgment Motion

If materials extrinsic to the pleadings are submitted to the court in support of or in opposition to a 12(b)(6) motion, the court does not have to consider them. Under FRCP 12(b), however, once the court does consider such matter the motion is automatically “converted” to a motion for summary judgment pursuant to FRCP 56.

Material does not literally have to be bound into the complaint to be considered “intrinsic” to it and a proper part of the consideration of a 12(b)(6) motion, without a “conversion” taking place. Courts have considered, on motions under 12(b)(6), SEC filings and other public records, legislative histories, concurrently or earlier filed pleadings and papers not part of the motion, and any documents incorporated by reference in the pleadings. It can fairly be said that any oral or written evidence not already “in the record” — public or court, physically or by reference — is regarded as “extrinsic” and will spur a conversion.

If the court does convert the 12(b)(6) motion to a summary judgment motion, it opens the door for all parties to submit their own evidence in support of the motion. [Update:  It must therefore give the parties an opportunity to make the appropriate submissions.]  Rather than entertain a full blown summary judgment motion at this stage, most judges will simply deny the motion until “the record is developed.”

(e) Procedure

Motion practice in general is discussed in Chapter 24 “Motion Practice,” infra. Regarding the 12(b)(6) motion in particular, take note of FRCP 12(d) which authorizes, subject to the court’s discretion, the motion hearing that is the essence of 12(b)(6) practice.

If you find yourself in an unfortunate situation of losing or about to your home to wrongful fraudulent foreclosure, and need a complete package  that will help you challenge these fraudsters and save your home from foreclosure visit: http://www.fightforeclosure.net

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How Backlog of Court Cases In Nevada & Other States Will Help Homeowners Save Their Homes

23 Monday Dec 2013

Posted by BNG in Discovery Strategies, Federal Court, Judicial States, Non-Judicial States, State Court

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Appellate court, Courts of Nevada, Kristina Pickering, Las Vegas, National Center for State Courts, Nevada, Nevada Supreme Court, Tuesday

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A report released Tuesday detailing caseloads at Nevada courthouses has administrators urging voters to approve a constitutional amendment next year to create a statewide appellate court.

“The numbers show the unrelenting demand for court services in Nevada,” Supreme Court Chief Justice Kristina Pickering said in a statement accompanying the Annual Report of the Nevada Judiciary.

Pickering said Nevada courts meet the needs of Nevada business and citizens, despite limited resources and declines in staffing.

But she also called the Nevada appeals caseload one of the largest in the nation and a serious problem for people held for months pending criminal trials and for litigants waiting years for the resolution of civil cases.

Nevada is one of 11 states, plus the District of Columbia, without an intermediate appeals court.

Among those states, the seven justices on the Nevada Supreme top the list in cases per justice, the report states.

The Nevada high court received 2,333 appeals in 2013 — far more than the next-highest, West Virginia, with 1,524. The Nevada court disposed of 2,373 cases but it still had almost 1,900 cases pending.

Backlogs can be a key measure of court performance, said Greg Hurley, an analyst with the National Center for State Courts. The nonprofit, based in Williamsburg, Va., studies court issues around the country.

“Clearance rate is probably the single most important thing for case managers to monitor,” Hurley said. “Backlogs, once established, can be very difficult to clear.”

A study of 2010 court caseloads around the country put Nevada last among 25 states with courts of general jurisdiction in clearance rate for civil cases. Forty-six states have general jurisdiction courts, which hear a range of cases including criminal, civil, family and probate.

Nevada also ranked last among 23 states in a comparison of clearance rates for domestic relations cases.

Nevada Supreme Court spokesman Bill Gang said Nevada’s district court clearance rates for civil cases improved from 82 percent in 2010 to 119 percent in fiscal 2013, after the state added 10 judges in Las Vegas. The clearance rate in domestic relations cases remained about the same as in 2010, Gang said.

The 52-page annual Nevada courts report released Tuesday projects the cost of establishing a three-judge appeals court at about $1.5 million, and suggests it might save other costs.

Overall, the state court administration and management budget was just under $62 million in 2013. About one-third, or almost $21 million, went to the salaries of justices and district judges.

In all, courts in the 10 districts around the state took in 129,026 non-traffic cases in 2013, or 1,300 more than the previous year. The 82 judges in those courts disposed of 128,170 cases, down 2.5 percent from the previous year.

The 52 state judges in the Clark County courthouse handled an average of 1,840 cases each during the fiscal year ending June 30. That made the Las Vegas-area courts by far the busiest in the state.

By comparison, the 15 state court judges in Washoe County each handled an average of 1,308 cases in fiscal 2013. The two judges in the 7th District covering Eureka, Lincoln and White Pine counties handled 400 cases each.

If you find yourself in an unfortunate situation of losing or about to lose your home to wrongful fraudulent foreclosure, and need a complete package  that will help you challenge these fraudsters and save your home from foreclosure visit: http://www.fightforeclosure.net The backlog of Nevada as well as other states where homeowners needs home saving foreclosure solutions may result to the delay needed to plan your effective legal strategy to save your home.

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