Archives: December 2009

Wishing you a Great 2010!

Please share your Favorite Motivational Quote.

Mine is:  ” A walk of 1000 miles starts with the first step”  Ghandi


Richard Simpson

Desk:  770-623-6341  / Cell:    404-788-4420
See me at: http://atlantahomesaleshelp.com
My web site: http://helptoavoidmortgageforeclosure.com

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Are you now at the Cross Roads????

Frequently Asked Questions about Mortgage Foreclosures

Many people have little idea about the finer details of a foreclosure.

Most wait for the creditor to come knocking at the door to try and access some information about foreclosure.  The following are some Frequently Asked Questions or FAQs, which usually arise:  Atlanta Home Sales Help will try to help you with the below Questions and Answers.

Please call  (Richard Simpson 770-623-6341) if you are at the Cross Roads of your decision on how to keep your home.

Web: http://www.HelpToAvoidMortgageForeclosure.com


Q. What is a foreclosure?

A. Usually, when banks make an attempt to recover money owed, it is based on promissory notes after selling the collaterals. In simpler terms, the money you borrowed in order to refinance or buy a home is given to you only under the promise that you will repay in time or the house would be confiscated.

Q. Does the bank has the right to kick me out of my house?

A. No. Only court orders can give anyone the right to ask you to leave your home. Eventually, you might be forced to leave, but there are court-procedures that the mortgage holder is expected to abide by.

Q. Can you explain the pre-fore closure steps?

A. Pre-Foreclosure follows:

. Customer missing the mortgage payment.
. Bank sending a late notice.
. Customer missing the additional payments as well.
. Bank trying to contact the customer over the phone and through mail in writing and via the phone to contact the customer and resolve the situation.
. No agreements, but the customer continues to default.
. Bank demanding for payment under the note in full. This is based on the acceleration clause.
. No arrangements or payments acceptable to the bank are made.

Q. What makes a workout better for me?

A. Workouts allow a person to avoid the credit and emotional scars caused due to bankruptcy. In the case of people with hard assets like real property, workouts allow them to retain greater control and increase possibilities of retaining the assets. Soft assets like cash can also be secured.

Q. What are deficiencies?

A. Suppose you make a promissory note of $ 100,000 to the bank. This is loaned to you for recovering or buying a new house. You owe the bank $100,000. After five years, you go through a foreclosure and the bank acquires $ 90,000 after sale, but you still owe them $10,000 more. This is called a deficiency. In addition to the $10,000, other charges like the legal and foreclosure charges applicable will also be added. Very often the deficiency becomes an unsecured debt after foreclosure.

Q. How can a person work out the unsecured debt?

A. A common way of working out unsecured debts is to pay them off in lump sum amounts. This is done to establish a long-term payoff plan. This policy also applies to credit cards.

Q. How would a person know what is the best option?

A. This is a very complicated question and the answer depends on the assets a person owns, income, liabilities, expenses and the other underlying reasons for foreclosure. Solutions depend on the type of mortgage a person has opted for and how he plans to save the house.

Q. Do the potential bidders and attorneys have to come inside the house during a foreclosure sale?

A. No. Mostly, they limit themselves to the front lawn. You could opt to invite them inside the house, but there is no such obligation. If the debtor feels that he is about to lose the house and would be left with no deficiency, he may choose to invite the attorneys and bidders inside the home.

Half million dollar house in Salinas, Californ...
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Richard Simpson / 770-623-6341 /

http://www.helptoavoidmortgageforeclsoure.com

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Honorable Judges of Kansas:

“MERS had no right to the underlying debt repayment secured by the mortgage”

LANDMARK NATIONAL BANK V KESLER - KANSAS MERS CASESYLLABUS BY THE KANSAS SUPREME COURT

1. A party is not contingently necessary in a mortgage-foreclosure lawsuit when that party is called the mortgagee in a mortgage but is not the lender, has no right to the repayment of the underlying debt, and has no role in handling mortgage payments.

2. In a mortgage-foreclosure lawsuit, a district court does not abuse its discretion when it denies a motion to intervene that is filed by an unrecorded mortgage holder or its agent after the mortgage has been foreclosed and the property has been sold.

Conclusion

The district court properly determined that MERS was not a contingently necessary party in Landmark’s foreclosure action. The district court also was well within its discretion in denying motions from MERS and Sovereign to intervene after a foreclosure judgment had been entered and the foreclosed property had been sold. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

LANDMARK NATIONAL BANK,

Plaintiff/Appellee,

v.

BOYD A. KESLER,

Appellee/Cross-Appellant,

MILLENNIA MORTGAGE CORP.,

Defendant,

MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION

SYSTEMS, INC. AND SOVEREIGN BANK,

Appellants/Cross-Appellees,

and

DENNIS BRISTOW AND TONY WOYDZIAK,

Intervenors/Appellees.

Appeal from Ford District Court; E. LEIGH HOOD, judge. Opinion filed September 12, 2008. Affirmed.

Tyson C. Langhofer and Court T. Kennedy, of Stinson Morrison Hecker, L.L.P., of Wichita, for appellants/cross-appellees.
Ted E. Knopp, of Ted E. Knopp, Chartered, of Wichita, for appellee/cross-appellant Boyd A. Kesler.

Ted E. Knopp, of Ted E. Knopp, Chartered, of Wichita, for intervenors/appellees Dennis Bristow and Tony Woydziak.

Before GREENE, P.J., MARQUARDT and LEBEN, JJ.
LEBEN, J.: Landmark National Bank brought a suit to foreclose its mortgage against Boyd Kesler and joined Millennia Mortgage Corp. as a defendant because a second mortgage had been filed of record for a loan between Kesler and Millennia. In a foreclosure suit, it is normal practice to name as defendants all parties who may claim a lien against the property. When neither Kesler nor Millennia responded to the suit, the district court gave Landmark a default judgment, entered a journal entry foreclosing Landmark’s mortgage, and ordered the property sold so that sale proceeds could be applied to pay Landmark’s mortgage.

Need HELP?

call Richard Simpson

770-623-6341

http://helptoavoidmortgageforeclosure.com

Avoid Mortgage Foreclosure

MERS

60 Million Mortgages

May Have Fatal Flaws

RISMEDIA, September 29, 2009—The latest chapter in the mortgage meltdown is being written in court, as one by one, judges are putting a halt to foreclosures. The latest was a recent Kansas Supreme Court case. In Landmark National Bank v. Kesler, the court held that a nominee company called MERS had no standing to bring a foreclosure action.

Nor was Kansas the first. In August 2008, Federal Judge for the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Nevada ruled MERS had no standing. ”Indeed, the evidence is to the contrary, the Note has been sold, and the named nominee no longer has any interest in the Note.”

In September of 2008, A California Judge ruling against MERS concluded, “There is no evidence before the court as to who is the present owner of the Note. The holder of the Note must join in the motion.”

On March 19, 2009, the Supreme Court of Arkansas determined that MERS was not the true beneficiary because the Note had been sold. Alabama and Florida have made similar rulings.

In each case, the reason stems from a fundamental misstep in the handling of Notes and Trust Deeds that runs contrary to established court policies which require that the real parties identify themselves to the court. Each of these cases involved MERS and, in each case, the courts’ rationales were almost identical.

First, a little background. Over the last 40 years, mortgage lending has evolved from a bank holding the mortgage to the mortgage being bundled and sold as part of an investment pool, usually in the form of a bond.

As a registered security, the Note is a negotiable instrument, like money or a cashier’s check, and under securities law that Note must be given to the investor. In this case, mortgage backed securities, (MBS) were bundled together in a pool and shipped to…well, we don’t really know.

One of the impediments to an MBS is the need to file assignments for the beneficiaries in each county each time the mortgage is resold. And apparently, no one holds them for very long because most have been passed around several times.

In order to avoid the logistical nightmare of trying to maintain a public chain of title, the biggest lenders joined MERS, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.

MERS was created with the sole intent of evading the recording fees due to the county in which the security is located.

In so doing, in my opinion, they also destroyed the age-old practice of making a public record of information concerning real property in general, and legal interest specifically. The chain of title is a vital record produced to resolve many a dispute.

Now, that’s gone. I believe, erased simply so they themselves, MERS, could siphon off the recording fees for themselves. They sold their business model to lenders as a better way to track mortgages that were being sold and resold all over the world.

But, as there often is with a BIG IDEA, there were also unintended consequences. Only now are they coming to light. Until MERS was challenged in a foreclosure proceeding, no one had taken a look at the law.

The law, according to a Nevada Judge, is that for purposes of foreclosure, both the Note and the Deed of Trust must be assigned. When the Note is split from the Deed of Trust, the Note becomes unsecured. A person holding only a Note lacks the power to foreclose because it lacks the security.

MERS lost track of the Notes. In some cases, according to my research, they deliberately destroyed them.

Every thing was fine until the economy contracted. MERS began foreclosing on delinquent home loans and then one day; someone said “show me the Note.”

In reviewing the judge’s rulings in the above matters, several key points have been determined:

• MERS is not the beneficiary of the Notes and has no skin in the game. It did not lend any money, collect any payments or do anything more than track the sale of the securities.

• Judicial procedure requires that parties identify themselves and prove their standing.

• Splitting the Note and Trust Deed leaves no party with standing to foreclose. The true holder of the Note, the security, paid the lender so the lender is covered. The true holder of the Note was insured by AIG so they are covered. AIG and the banks were bailed out by taxpayers. So, unless the American tax payer can produce a “blue-ink” original Note, no one has standing to foreclose.

• Allowing a foreclosure to proceed without the original Note places the homeowner in double jeopardy. If the original Note were to surface, the holder of the Note would be entitled to payment, but from whom? The borrower is still on the hook.

MERS currently holds 50 to 60 million loans so this is no small matter. And, just because they have lost repeatedly doesn’t mean they will give up. They will keep right on foreclosing in hopes that the homeowner won’t fight back and, in most cases, they won’t be stopped.

Richard Simpson,, Mortgage Loan Counsler

call me  770-623-6341

rsimpson@helptoavoidmortgageforeclosure.com

Countrywide Decision:

Investor is owner of loan

BofA’s

Countrywide loses court ruling on mortgages —

Modifications Not Authorized By Investor May be Invalid

There is lots of significance about this decision. First it shows that if the investor is going to sue it is going to be against the intermediary pretender lenders and not the borrower — because they don’t want to expose themselves to liability for predatory loan tactics, usury, securities violations, TILA, RESPA and HOEPA violations. Second it shows that as we have said all along here, the servicers don’t have the right or authority to actually negotiate and execute a loan modification.  And third it shows that the investor who bought bonds that were mortgage backed securities are the OWNERS OF THE LOAN.

This decision is essentially fatal to ALL foreclosure actions based upon securitized loans. It identifies the investors as the owners of the loan and negates the alleged authority of intermediary pretender lenders to do ANYTHING in the way of enforcement, modification, collection through legal means etc. because they simply have no standing (because the alleged debt is not owed to anyone other than the investor). The foundation is crumbling. These decisions are coming out one after the other because of a simple fact — the tacit deal between Wall Street and loan servicers and loan data administrators (MERS) may exist, but it has no legal effect without the investor and the borrower signing on to these new terms with extra conditions and co-obligors.

A federal judge has ruled that Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC – News) cannot have a lawsuit by investors seeking to force it to buy back mortgages heard in federal court, saying he lacks jurisdiction to decide the case. Tuesday’s ruling by Judge Richard Holwell of the U.S. District Court in Manhattan means the case will move to state court. Holwell did not decide the merits of the case. “Congress passed two statutes within a year of each other to address the mortgage crisis,” the judge wrote. “In neither of these statutes did Congress federalize the case.”

The ruling is a win for investors, to the extent that Holwell rejected a claim by the bank’s Countrywide Financial Corp unit that new federal laws to encourage loan modifications to help struggling borrowers stay in their homes govern this case. Countrywide had argued that the laws negated obligations it might have had to buy back modified loans. In 2008, Countrywide agreed with some 11 state attorneys general to modify $8.4 billion of loans made to roughly 400,000 borrowers.Investors who own mortgage securities typically receive interest and principal payments. If servicers modified the underlying loans to reduce borrower obligations, investors would be harmed because they would receive lower payments.

Richard Simpson

770-623-6341

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Do you know your Credit Scores

R.S.How can I view my credit report?

An important key point  to Help Avoid Foreclosure is to know your current credit score for when a Keep your Home consultant meets with you.   Need A Credit Report? Get the information you need on one report.  Start Here! Sign-Up now for FREE! Credit Report Summaries, Credit Score Comparisons.   Get your 100% free credit score instantly, securely, and safely. Completely free.

Credit Karma™ Believes All Consumers Should Have Access to Free Credit Scores. A credit score is one of the most important components of a consumer’s financial profile. At Credit Karma™, we believe free access to one’s credit score and report is a fundamental consumer right. That is why our site allows consumers to access their credit score anytime they want for free without the sneaky “free” trials or subscription requirements. In addition to free credit scores, Credit Karma™ has a wealth of tools and content to help consumers better understand how credit scores and credit reports work.

Credit Karma™ is a completely free pro-consumer service dedicated to demystifying the credit landscape. With our credit simulators, free credit scores, credit advice, and credit score comparisons, our goal is to empower consumers to more actively manage their credit and their financial health.

How Credit Karma™ Works

Credit Karma™ is always free and will never charge for access to credit scores or its interactive tools. Credit Karma™ works by selling advertising on the site and using those advertising revenues to pay for the credit score costs. Rest assured, Credit Karma™ NEVER sells or shares your private information as part of our strong belief in consumer advocacy. View what others are saying about us in the press.

Richard Simpson

rsimpson@helptoAvoidMortgageForeclosure.com

770-623-6341

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The Problems with you doing a Loan Modification:

10 POINTS TO CONSIDER

SUBMITTED BY Richard Simpson / Problems with a Loan Modification:

  1. The borrowers will think they are modifying their current loan when in fact they are starting all over again.
  2. The Foreclosing entity which lacks standing to bring lawsuit, is not authorized to modify anything since they are not the owner of the loan in question.
  3. Since the real parties in interest are no where to be found, they are taking it upon themselves with the help of their lawyers to steal your property.
  4. The borrower is actually getting a new loan which may enjoin borrower from rescinding new transaction.
  5. The foreclosing entity is STILL not using their own funds to modify (new loan) loan. They are getting funds to lend borrowers through Federal bail outs, insurance proceeds and believe it or not Investors. [same process]
  6. Their lawyers are not acting in a lawyer’s capacity but as BROKERS; [middlemen] they are getting paid commission on every new loan they help brokered.
  7. What Does Loan Modification Mean?
    A modification to an existing loan made by a lender in response to a borrower’s long-term inability to repay the loan. Loan modifications typically involve a reduction in the interest rate on the loan, an extension of the length of the term of the loan, a different type of loan or any combination of the three. A lender might be open to modifying a loan because the cost of doing so i
    s less than the cost of default.
  8. Why would they need to re-qualify if they claim they would make the borrowers payments and rates to be less?
  9. The borrower took the loan out with lender “A” but an unknown lender “B” is trying to modify it.
  10. When the modification is said and done, the borrower will have lender “B” as the lender. What happened to lender “A”???

Richard Simpson

770-623-6341

http://helptoavoidmortgageforeclosure.co9m

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Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddi...
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The United States of America is a stockholder of MERS

Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc

FYI – Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac became owned by and part of the United States on September 6, 2008 when FHA took them over. Consider the implications to any cause of action(s), constitutional or otherwise, and defenses, if the United States is a stock holder of MERS. In professor Christopher Peterson’s work entitled “FORECLOSURE, SUBPRIME MORTGAGE LENDING, AND THE MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEM” at page 11 he stated:

“Two years after releasing the initial white paper, MERS, Inc. incorporated in Delaware as a non-stock corporation owned by mortgage banking companies that made initial capital contributions ranging from $10,000 to $1,000,000. (fn 61) [Editor's Note: Maybe Borrowers and Investors ought to get together and do the same thing in reverse]

Foot Note 61 states: The charter members of MERS, Inc. were: 1st Nationwide Mortgage; Allied Group Mortgage, Inc.; American Home Funding; American Land Title Association; Crestar Mortgage Corp.; Fannie Mae; Freddie Mac; GE Capital Mortgage Services, Inc.; GMAC Residential Funding Corp.; HomeSide Lending, Inc.; Knutson Mortgage Corp; Lau Capital Funding; Merrill Lynch Credit Corp; Mortgage Bankers Association of America; Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corp.; Northwest Mortgage, Inc.; ReliaStar Mortgage Corp.; Source One Mortgage Services Corp.; Texas Commerce Bank, NA; Chase Manhattan Mortgage; and, Weyerhaeuser Mortgage Company. Id. Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. is actually a wholly owned subsidiary of MERSCORP, Inc. The dual structure of the company was designed to prevent creditors of MERSCORP from attempting to seize loans recorded in the Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.’s name in the event that MERSCORP, Inc. declares bankruptcy. Mullen, supra note X, at 62.
Dale A. Calomeni
Attorney at Law
599 West Crossville Road,
Suite 111
Roswell, GA 30075-2561
GA Bar 101153
PH Direct: 770-597-6111
Office: 678-387-1815
Fax: 678-387-1801
dacalomeni1@bellsouth.net

Filed under: CDO, Eviction, GTC | Honor, Investor, Mortgage, bubble, currency, foreclosure | Tagged: borrower, disclosure, Federal reserve, foreclosure defense, foreclosure offense, Lender Liability, predatory lending, securitization

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