Texas Attorney General Suspends Foreclosures

October 6th, 2010

On Tuesday, Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott sent thirty mortgage companies’ letters demanding the immediate suspension of foreclosures in Texas, selling foreclosed properties in Texas and evicting people living in those properties. This moratorium should be obeyed at least thru October 15, giving the companies’ time to identify any employees who participated in unlawful practices and assure the state that the targeted companies are following Texas laws.

Dallas Attorney Mark Nacol of The Nacol Law Firm PC discusses with  NBC Channel 5 Reporter, Susy Solis, on the impact of Robo -  Signing on the Mortgage Business and current foreclosures.

 

Homeowners Beware: Mistaken Foreclosures are Occurring Due to Disorganization in Banks

September 15th, 2010

In the continuing foreclosure crisis, millions of people are losing their homes.  Disorganization within big banks that service mortgages is making a growing problem even worse.  The number of cases is growing wherein the breakdown within the banking system is so absolute that it leads to mistaken and/or premature foreclosures.  Many have lost their homes.  Some homeowners, however, with the assistance of an attorney or housing counselor, have been able to reverse a foreclosure.

 

In the worst case scenario banks actually work at odds within themselves, with one arm of the company foreclosing on the home while the other arm offers assistance to the homeowner.  This problem is occurring even among the servicers participating in the administration’s current $75 billion Home Affordable Modification Program.  Servicers operating under the year-old program are forbidden from auctioning someone’s home while a modification decision is pending.  However, homes are still being foreclosed on and auctioned off anyway.

 

The problem seems to lie in a lack of enforcement, lack of punishment and oversight.  The Treasury Department has failed to penalize the servicer for breaking the program’s rules.  Treasury officials overseeing the program say they’re aware of the problems and have moved to fix them. However, some states are moving forward to protect the homeowners with recent rules that stop the foreclosure process if the homeowner requests a modification.

 

Many homeowners have sought assistance through the courts to reclaim their homes.  At a minimum 50 homeowners have recently filed lawsuits alleging a servicer foreclosed on their home while a loan modification was pending and while they were on a payment plan.

 

Homeowners commonly wait 6 months for a decision on a loan modification request.  The new federal program for encouraging loan modifications includes a 3 month trial period, after which servicers are to decide whether to make the modifications permanent.  Some homeowners are saying they have waited as long as 10 months for an answer only to be turned down resulting in misrepresentation and failure of the modification.

 

Millions of struggling homeowners have inundated banks and other servicers – Bank of America is the biggest, followed by Chase and Wells Fargo Bank – for assistance in an effort to avoid foreclosure proceedings.  Communication breaks down because of the way in which the servicers are structured.  While one division typically deals with loan modifications, another division deals with foreclosures.  Often one division is not communicating with the other division. 

 

Homeowners need to beware of companies that state they work with large banks to avoid foreclosure and of companies charging fees for their assistance.  Many homeowners are entering into the loan modification process only to learn that while the modification is being reviewed their home is being foreclosed on and ultimately losing their home.

 

Under the new federal program, servicers must give borrowers a written denial before foreclosing.  However, the servicer is allowed to push along the foreclosure process and even set a sale date.  This allows the servicer to foreclose more quickly if it is determined that the homeowner doesn’t qualify for a modification.  Ultimately, a homeowner may find that they get a modification offer one day and a foreclosure notice the next. 

 

It is possible to contest a foreclosure under the new federal program.  New rules issued by the Treasury Department say the servicer must first give the homeowner a shot at a modification before beginning the foreclosure process.  If your home is being foreclosed on and you have sought to modify your existing loan, make sure you seek proper legal advice.  The sooner the better and preferably, BEFORE the foreclosure date.

Improper Home Foreclosure – Know Your Rights

August 23rd, 2010

Knowledge of the rules, regulations and laws governing Texas home foreclosures can help homeowners protect their interests from an improper or irregular foreclosure.  Foreclosures may be judicial (ordered by a court following a judgment in a lawsuit) or non-judicial (done without court involvement by auction “on the courthouse steps”).  Most foreclosures are non-judicial.

 

Among other things, a proper foreclosure’s involve three core conditions:

 

1.             real estate lien note executed by the mortgagor (borrower) at closing for the balance of the purchase price;

2.             deed of trust signed by the buyer at closing giving the mortgagee (lender or its successor(s)) a security interest in the property being purchased; and

3.             pertinent Texas statutory and case law. 

 

Generally, a foreclosure is proper if it complies with the procedure outlined in the deed of trust.  Texas law is relevant only where the deed of trust is silent on a mandatory statutory issue or where the deed of trust conflicts with Texas law.

 

To initiate a foreclosure the borrower must, among other things, default on a periodic payment required by the real estate lien note as described in the note and deed of trust.  The lender then has the option of accelerating the collection of the remaining balance of the note.  The entire amount of remaining indebtedness, not just the periodic payment in arrears, may then become immediately due and payable in full.  This is known as the acceleration clause.

 

If the collateral securing the note is the debtor’s residence, the lender may not accelerate the not immediately following default.  Instead, the lender must give the debtor at least a 20-day written notice (unless the deed of trust is on the FNMA form, then 30 days notice of default must be given) to cure the payments in arrears thereby reinstating the Note.  The notice must be sent by certified mail, return receipt requested.  This notice cannot be waived and is required in all instances.

 

The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act requires that a borrower be given 30 days to request and obtain verification of the debt.  The lender may give notice of default, accelerate the debt, and even post the property for foreclosure in less time, but the foreclosure sale itself should not be conducted until the 30-day debt verification period has expired and only then with proper statutory notice to the Debtor.  There is also an equivalent state statute (the “Texas Debt Collection Practices Act”) contained in Texas Finance Code Chapter 392.  Failure to provide verification of the debt when the borrower has requested it in writing has serious penalties under both laws.

 

If the debtor does not make the payments in default during the 20 or 30-day period, the lender may accelerate the debt by sending notice of the acceleration to the debtor.

 

If the collateral serves as the debtor’s residence, the lender must give the following notice via certified mail unless they are waived in the deed of trust:

 

1.             A demand notice for the installment in arrears and thereafter affording the debtor an opportunity to remedy the default;

2.             A clear and unequivocal notice of the lender’s intent to accelerate the debt after the debtor has been given a reasonable time to cure the installment in arrears;

3.             A final notice that acceleration has in fact occurred.

 

It has been held proper to combine the first notice concerning the default with the second one involving the intent to accelerate.

 

The trustee is the central character in the foreclosure process.  The trustee has the sole authority to sell the property and to convey title to a Buyer.  The debtor grants this authority to the trustee in the deed of trust.  Texas statutes restrict, to some degree, persons eligible to serve as trustees or substitute trustees.  Dual functions under the security agreement disqualify an individual to serve as a trustee.  Likewise, the person cannot be a debt collector.

 

Lenders may authorize a mortgage servicer to appoint a substitute trustee or trustees to serve under the deed of trust.  The name and street address of the substitute trustee or trustees must be disclosed on the appointments and in the notices timely posted and filed at the courthouse and sent to the debtor.

 

Conditions stated in the deed of trust for the appointment of a substitute trustee must be strictly followed.  Unless the deed of trust provides otherwise, a trustee or trustees need not formally resign before another is appointed.  If the original trustee has posted, filed and sent the required notices, the substitute trustee or trustees should postpone the sale. 

 

The sale may occur only on the first Tuesday of each month occurring 21 days after the new notices have been properly posted, filed and sent.  Generally, the sale is conducted at the courthouse steps.

 

The trustee is the only one who can conduct a valid sale.  However agents of the trustee may sign, post, file and send the notices. 

 

After notice has been posted, filed and sent and the required 21-day period has elapsed, the trustee may proceed with the sale on the first Tuesday of the following month anytime between 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m., but within three hours after the time designated in the notices. 

 

A mortgage servicer has the same authority as a lender as long as these conditions are met:

 

1.             the lender grants the current mortgage servicer the administrative authority to act on its behalf in the servicing agreement;

2.             all notices, filings and postings preceding the foreclosure sale show that the mortgage servicer represents the mortgagee under the service agreement between the two; and

3.             the notices, postings and filings preceding the foreclosure contain the name and address of the mortgagee or the name and address of the mortgage servicer if the lender has granted the mortgage servicer the authority to service the mortgage.

 

As of May 20, 2009 a new federal statute impacts the possession date of rental property purchased at foreclosure.  If the foreclosure involves a federally related mortgage on a dwelling or residential property, the purchaser must give any bona fide tenant in possession at least 90 days notice to vacate.  The term bona fide tenant is defined as one who acquired the lease at an arms-length transaction where the rent is not substantially less than the fair market value for the area. 

 

Inadequacy of the consideration at a foreclosure sale can be grounds to have the sale set aside under federal bankruptcy laws.  If the sales price does not equal or exceed 70 percent of the property’s fair market value, the sale can be voided as a fraudulent transfer if the debtor files for bankruptcy within one year of the sale.

 

An action to set aside a sale must be initiated within four years.

 

If the debtor does attack the foreclosure sale under Texas law because of an irregularity, the attack most likely will be for damages and not to rescind.  To set aside the sale, the debtor first must repay or offer to redeem the property from the purchaser at the price brought at the foreclosure sale.  If the debtor was in possession of such resources, the foreclosure probably would not have occurred.

 

It is, therefore, imperative that one seeking to attack foreclosure do so “before” rather than “after” a sale to maximize probability of a good result.

Serving clients throughout Texas, including Collin, Dallas, Denton, Ellis, Grayson, Kaufman, Rockwall and Tarrant counties and the communities of Addison, Allen, Arlington, Carrollton, Dallas, Fort Worth, Frisco, Garland, Grapevine, Highland Park, McKinney, Mesquite, Plano, Richardson, Rowlett and University Park, Murphy,Wylie, Lewisville, Flower Mound, Irving, along with surrounding DFW areas.