Roy Diaz's          above-linked article could generate more readership for you if          you allowed people to register and comment.  I submit these          comments because the topic needs discussion. The point Roy makes, that courts merely want to enforce a                contract, while true, simply does not address two serious,                glaring problems: 1.  The Legislature provided a foreclosure limitation of                Five years.  That constitutes more than ample time to sue                for foreclosure of a mortgage loan in default.                 Acceleration constitutes an arbitrary but binding and                optional change of the terms of the note from a monthly                payment scheme till maturity into an immediate payment of                the entire balance plus accrued escrow, interest, and                legal fees.  Thus, at acceleration, the plaintiff has a                full 5 years to sue for foreclosure sale of the mortgaged                property, even though the loan balance, etc., remains                collectable for 20 years. 2.  The vast majority of mortgage notes lack validity                because of appraisal fraud, mortgage broker fraud, and a                variety of other injuries to the borrower perpetrated at                the inception of the loan or during servicing of the                loan.   Unfortunately, Roy did not address point 2 at all, but he                should have.  Mortgagors in foreclosure hire an attorney to help them                defeat the foreclosure.  Attorneys know they deal with a                contract dispute, and they know that government and                lenders colluded in a nationwide predatory lending scheme                that collapsed the economy and destroyed homeowner                equities, driving many into job loss and foreclosure.  But                they don't attack the predatory team members, such as the                lender who underwrote the bad loan, or the appraiser,                mortgage broker, title company, realtor, and lawyers who                facilitated it.  Instead, they tell the feckless mortgagor                that they'll drag out the foreclosure as long as possible,                and they often don't even bother showing up at the summary                judgment hearing.  And such dilatory efforts violate the                rules regulating the Florida Bar, and the Bar should                discipline such attorneys who engage in them. In other words, no defense will prevail against                foreclosure of a valid mortgage note, but a mortgage loan                that lacks validity constitutes fair, juicy game for an                aggressive contract breach and tort attorney.
                      
              
              
              
              
              
              
Because they follow a different business model, one recommended        by arch Kool-Aid Drinker Neil Garfield.  The vast majority, or        maybe ALL, of foreclosure defense attorneys in Florida charge        their foreclosure victim clients $1000 to $20,000 down and $300,        $500, or $1000 per month (whatever they think they can get) to        file cookie-cutter or copy-machine pleadings and then abandon the        client at the last minute, OR earn a fat commission for setting up        a loan mod or short sale.  They don't examine the mortgage for        evidence of injuries, and they don't mount an attack for the        injuries they discovered because it takes way too much work,        resources, and skill to do it properly.  
      
With the failing, flailing foreclosure defense model they use, they might handle 200 clients at a time and make $20,000 to $50,000 each. By contrast, they could only handle 5 or 10 clients in a full-bore mortgage attack action, and in most cases they would have to finance the action because most foreclosure victims, though badly injured, do not have the up-front money to fight a legal battle.
Thus, the dispute and debate over the statute of limitation constitutes a smoke screen that obscures the real issue - foreclosure victims have kool-aid-drinkers for their attorneys - lawyers who know they cannot save the house from foreclosure but who bilk their clients for a sideshow that inevitably leads the client to loss of the house. Meanwhile, most of those clients suffered real injuries at the inception of the loan, and the lawyers' legal malpractice will leave the injuries undiscovered while the client loses the house.A mortgage examination by a competent professional could provide those attorneys with proof of injuries to the client. In my opinion, an attorney's failure to get the mortgage examined constitutes legal malpractice because I know, and every attorney should know, that numerous causes of action underlie most mortgage loans of the past 15 years. Litigation consultant Storm Bradford, the nation's premier mortgage examiner knows this from personal experience, and he shared his view of the issue with me today:
"We have done well over a thousand mortgage examinations since 2007. In every exam we have ever done there was at least something that could be negotiated with the bank or used in a lawsuit against the injurious parties."I personally believe judges have a duty to "do the right thing" in equity proceedings like foreclosures. Even so, the Legislature, not the judiciary, has the authority to make the law, and the law (Florida Statute chapter 96) provides 5 years for commencement of a foreclosure action.
Storm Bradford, Mortgage Fraud Examiners.
95.11 Limitations other than for the recovery of real property.—
(2) WITHIN FIVE YEARS.—Actions other than for recovery of real property shall be commenced as follows:
Plaintiffs nearly always come forward with an action within 5 years after breach of the note. But when they do a bad job with the complaint, the court dismisses the action with prejudice. Any more recent breach restarts the Limitation clock. If the Plaintiff does not file a new action within 5 years of the most recent breach, the Statute of Limitations prohibits the court from hearing the case.
Plaintiffs have argued that even though they accelerated the note properly, making the full balance due and payable at once, the originally scheduled payment stream also remains due, and that extends their window of opportunity to 5 years after the term of the note. Their opponents argue that acceleration slams that window of opportunity shut because it converts the original schedule of, for example, 360 monthly payments into a single payment due immediately. But they argue that it remains due immediately forever, until the court orders a final judgment of foreclosure.
This has become a sticky mess. I believe government precipitated it by requiring lenders to drag out foreclosures through offering loan modifications, and Plaintiffs made foreclosures even worse by failing to show up with the real person entitled to enforce the note, having the actual, correctly indorsed note, in-hand. That opened the door for foreclosure defendants to demand dismissal of the case for lack of standing. And all of that backed up the courts and the plaintiffs in a very messy snarl of litigation.
The Florida Supreme Court does have to sort out this mess. But the fact remains that borrowers should attack the lenders, appraisers, mortgage brokers, title companies, and others who injured them at the inception of the loan. THAT, Mortgage Attack, constitutes the best defense against foreclosure, and it moots the issue now before the Supreme Court.
Bob Hurt
http://bobhurt.com
http://mortgageattack.com
727 669 55511
bob@bobhurt.com
 
 
1 comment:
It really is interesting to be able to learn all the different things that can be done to ensure that someone is getting the most out of their home. Something that really does make sense is that a foreclosure would be a means of breaking the contract. Hopefully this situation is able to be avoided by those who are struggling, and need their homes and pay their bills. Thank you for sharing.
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