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What’s on their Minds: Some Post Schwartzwald Foreclosure Standing Stuff. Bank of America v. Kuchta. — 6 Comments

  1. Respectfully, I believe Professor Bettman’s opinion is in error. In addition to it being contrary to Professor Whaley’s, Mr. Bettman states that “the reason the Bank did not have standing in Schwartzwald was not because the common pleas court did not have subject matter jurisdiction. It was because the Bank was not the real party in interest when it filed suit, because at the time of filing, it had suffered no injury.” This does not square with citing Justice O’Donnell for the proposition that “in Schwartwald the Court clearly held that if a party was not the holder of the note and mortgage at the time suit was filed, it had no standing to file the action. ” In these cases, when either an Ohio court lacks jurisdiction or a movant lacks standing, the judgment is void ab initio.

    Justice O’Donnell’s statement that folks have “morphed [Schwartzwald] into a lack of subject matter jurisdiction of a court to hear a foreclosure case” was only a clarification that cases with properly-negotiated original promissory notes should not be subject to collateral 60(B) attacks. Not all foreclosure cases are frauds. After all, the “proverbial floodgates” should not open to cases where the movant for judgment has valid holder status and enforcement rights in a note.

    The trial court judge is the gatekeeper in these cases. Many trial courts judges in Ohio require counsel for the movants to personally certify the accuracy of the complaint and pleadings in these cases. Other judges do not. Regardless, the floodgates wouldn’t open to bad cases if judges understood negotiation, indorsements and allonges . . . and reviewed promissory notes in accordance with the UCC as codified by the ORC, and in a light most favorable to the non-moving party. This is the only way to preserve constitutional standing doctrines and judicial economy, while also ensuring that home owners will not have their property stolen by banks and lawyers who are committing criminal fraud by endeavoring to foreclose on notes that they knowingly have no legal rights in. This is an epidemic in Ohio that starts – and needs to end – with the education (and/or restraint) of trial court judges.

  2. What’s going on here?

    Bank of America was sued by prosecutors in 2012 for what they had called brazen mortgage fraud. A case which they lost. This past month, BofA reached a settlement with the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) for a total of $9.5 billion to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, In the settlement BofA agreed to pay $6.3 billion in cash and repurchase about $3.2 billion of mortgage bonds from the firms. – See more at: http://www.loansafe.org/bank-of-america-13-billion#sthash.r6d2nw4y.dpuf

    US prosecutors seek more than $13 billion from Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC) to resolve federal and state investigations of the lender’s sale of mortgage-backed securities. Bank of America had become the second largest bank in the nation after they purchased the subprime giant Countrywide Home Loans in 2008. Together they issued approximately $640 billion in questionable mortgage bonds on the secondary market. – See more at: http://www.loansafe.org/bank-of-america-13-billion#sthash.b5q5QePH.dpuf

    All this taking place after:

    Big banks request intervention in FHFA lawsuits
    More than a dozen banking giants filed a joint petition, urging a U.S. Appeals Court to step in and reverse several rulings by U.S. District Court Judge Denise Cote, who is accused of depriving the companies of evidence to defend their cases.
    In 2011, the Federal Housing Finance Agency sued fifteen major banks including Bank of America (BAC), Citigroup(C) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM), on claims that Fannie Maeand Freddie Mac purchased $200 billion in residential mortgage-backed securities sold in 500 securitizations, representing the largest collection of litigation ever filed in the U.S., the petition noted.
    The lawsuits filed accuse the banks of violating securities laws by “misleading” the government-sponsored enterprises about the quality of the home loans packaged into RMBS deals worth billions of dollars.
    The companies argued that “the District Court has deprived petitioners of their rights to obtain evidence that the GSEs either knew the extent to which those mortgage originators had abandoned their guidelines or, more likely, had concluded that originators did not materially deviate from the guidelines disclosed in petitioner’s offering documents.”
    The banks added, “The District Court has also barred discovery on other important issues – including statute of limitations, loss causation, the materiality of any alleged defects, the adequacy of petitioners’ due diligence, and justifiable reliance – on the grounds that any discovery beyond the business units that purchased the securitizations at issue is irrelevant and burdensome.”
    The petition explained that of the 18 lawsuits the FHFA filed, 16 were given to Cote in 2011 and since then, the banks believe they must proceed under a series of “gravely prejudicial rulings, some aimed at pressuring petitioners to settle.”
    Cote denied the motion to dismiss the cases and also limited depositions and document discovery as well as set an immediate trial schedule, the petition stated.
    The first trial is set for Jan. 2014 against UBS AG (UBS). Trials for the other cases are scheduled for later on next year and even Jan. 2015. Additionally, most banks will be tried before different federal district court judges.
    The banks also complained that Cote limited the companies to 20 depositions of the GSEs and FHFA for all lawsuits, but granted the FHFA to take more than 400 depositions.
    “These one-sided rulings operate to excise from litigation what the GSEs knew about the mortgage underwriting and origination practices at the heart of FHFA’s claims – and when they knew it – as well as GSE admissions about the existence and materiality of the alleged misrepresentations, the adequacy of Petitioners’ due diligence, and loss causation,” the banks said in court filings.
    The banks added, “The rulings prejudge facts a jury should decide based on a full evidentiary record. Neither a fair and reasonable compromise of FHFA’s claims nor a fair determination of them at trial can come from placing the parties on such uneven footing.”

    The big banks are claiming the GSEs and the FHFA knew all about their malfeasance and did nothing about it.

    Could this whole thing be about a scheme bilking the Taxpayers with the culprits all pointing the fingers at one another?

  3. Interesting how many people missed the obvious question. Why did the assignment occur after BofA filed the complaint of foreclosure instead of before?

    It’s a little more obvious in non-judicial states like CA, where a notice of default and intent to sell is publicly noticed. By showing a conflict of recorded beneficiary with the beneficiary on the complaint / notice of default, a clouded title to the subject property is presented to the public interest as potential bidders to the auction. Certainly a property with a clouded title is not as marketable as one with a clear title. In other words, this is blatant bid-rigging, openly done in millions of foreclosures, and condoned by the judiciary.

    How is standing of a party affected when a felony has been committed in a civil action?

    1st Dist Appellate Court, CA #A139655

    • Mr. Perry:

      No one missed the timing of the mortgage assignment. That isn’t the issue in this case. The issue is whether Ohio law permits a post-judgment collateral attack on a judgment for lack of standing.

      Neither is this bid-rigging. Until Schwartzwald was decided, the timing of the mortgage assignment and transfer of the note wasn’t really an issue, i.e. there were no title issues raised by such defects.