2014-03-27

Principal Reductions Through Strategic Litigation- Under Homeowner Bill of Rights (CA) III – April 5, 2014 in San Diego, CA
Event on 2014-04-05 09:00:00

Principal Reductions Through Strategic Litigation- Under Homeowner Bill of Rights (CA) III
with Patricia Rodriguez, Esq.

CALIFORNIA STATE BAR APPROVED CLE

 

April 5, 2014 | San Diego, CA

 

(9:00 am – 4:00 pm PST)

 

 

Location

Carlsbad By The Sea Resort
850 Palomar Airport Rd, Carlsbad, CA 92011
760-476-0800

 

Instructor

Patricia Rodriguez, Esq.
Rodriguez Law Group, Inc.

Member of the State Bar of California
Admitted in Central, Northern and Eastern Federal District Courts of California
Temple University Law School – J.D.
Temple University Law School – Law Program in Japan
University of Southern California (USC) – B.S. in Business 

Ms. Rodriguez obtained her Juris Doctor from Temple University.  While there, she participated in their National Trial Team and received exceptional advocacy training from one of the best law school programs in the country. Ms. Rodriguez previously worked for the Camden Public Defenders Office, the Philadelphia Public Defenders Office, the Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office and the Los Angeles Public Defenders Office. She currently runs her own boutique law firm in Los Angeles County specializing in Criminal Defense, Foreclosure Defense, and Bankruptcy Law.

 

Course Syllabus    

 

Download Syllabus

 

Trial Techniques:

 

Courtroom Decorum

Professional attire

Positioning

Verbal Communication

Knowing the judge

Rising/Standing

Addressing the court

Opening Statement

Structure

Impact opener

Clarity of explanation

Strong ending requesting verdict for defendant/plaintiff

Substance

Theory of case

Broad brush strokes

No first person

Emphasize facts, not conclusions

Staging

Clear logical organization

Use of exhibits where appropriate

Good “storytelling”

Direct Examination

Structure

No leading questions

Witness introduction/background

Background appropriate to witness and purpose of testimony

Strong ending

Diminish reliance on notes

Substance

Organization

Description of scene from occurrence and appropriate witness

Description of events and damages

Theory-developed and clear from questions

Completeness

Who? What? When? Where? Why? And How?

Foundation questions

Staging

Demeanor-professional but conversational

Pace and delivery of questions

Cross-Examination

Structure

Form of question-single fact leading question throughout

Diminish reliance on notes

Impeachment

Substance

Organization

Good witness control – repeat questions to get answers when necessary

Staging

Demeanor – appropriate to witness

Placement in courtroom – in jury’s line of vision

Closing

Structure

Impact opener

Develops theory of case

Strong ending requesting verdict for plaintiff/defendant

Substance

Clear forceful explanations of why facts prove theory

Refutation of opponent’s case

Repetition

Alliteration

Rhetorical questions

Staging

Appropriate use of rhetorical devices

Use of exhibits where appropriate

Jury Selection

Preemptory Strikes

For Cause Strikes

Race, Age, Ethnicity, Etc.

Biases

Pre-Litigation

Loan Originators

See Redacted Hybrid Audit

Securitization Audit Experts

See Redacted Hybrid Audit

Non-Judicial Foreclosure (CA)

Notice of Default – Bank is giving the Homeowner notice that according to the Bank HO owes the bank and hasn’t paid

Notice of Trustee Sale – This is notice to the HO the bank is electing to sale the property under the allege authority of the Deed of Trust

Trustee Sale Date – date the bank sales the house

California Civil Procedure 2932.5 – no longer valid claim  

Delaying Trustee Sale Dates

Advertisements of Trustee Sale Delays

Litigation – Ownership/Title – CA

Complaint – See Redacted Markham Complaint

When to file?

Upon belief – Plaintiffs allege

Summons; Civil Case Cover Sheet; Attachments; Complaint; Complaint Signature Page; Exhibits 

Filing/Serving Defendants – Jurisdiction Specific

Temporary Restraining Orders/Preliminary Injunctions

Bond

Lis Pendens – two page document which attaches the lawsuit over title to the property; thus when its sold at a trustee sale date no one but the bank will buy the lawsuit – bank must buy it back

Answer

Defendant has 30 days to Answer – unless Trustee files objection to non-monetary status – if Plaintiff objects – Defendant is given 30 days from proof of service of objection to non-monetary status 

Three choices: Admit, Deny, Demur (motion to dismiss in federal court)

 

Demur Hearing

Case Management Conference – CMC Trial Set – 6 months out from 

Case Management Conference Statement

Discovery Trial – 4 to 5 Days

Form Interrogatories

Special Interrogatories

Request for Documents

Depositions

 

Litigation – Possession/Unlawful Detainer – CA

Plaintiff must prove three issues

Defendant in possession

Defendant properly served with three day notice to quit

Plaintiff has a duly perfected security interest

Issues when no evidence of securitization

Temporary Restraining Order – temporary stop to the sell of the house

Preliminary Injunction – permanent restraint from selling the house the entire duration of the litigation

Unlawful detainer action

Complaint

Three elements: proper notice; still in possession; plaintiff has right to possess

Answer – 5 days for homeowner; 10 days for renter

Motion to consolidate with matter involving Title

If judgment entered – motion to stay judgment until after Title matter decided – irreparable harm (for actually homeowner residing on premises)

Not granted – must appeal BC by law MUST be granted

Litigation in Bankruptcy Court

Effect of Filing Bankruptcy

On Federal Title Case

On State Title Case

On State/Federal Appeals Case

Automatic Stay

Motion to extend automatic stay

State Court – Title Action Substance

Defendants – Originator, Servicer, Trustee of Securitized Trust; Foreclosure Trustee (if applicable) and MERS (if applicable)

Origination Documents –

Uniform Residential Loan Application

Type of mortgage and terms of loan

Property information and purpose of loan

Borrower information

Employment information

Monthly income and combined housing expense information

Assets and liabilities

Federal Truth-In-Lending Disclosure Statement

Amount of payment

Income v. payment

Buyer’s Closing Statement

New loan charges

Loan processing fee

Banking fee

Appraisal fee

Processing fee

Breach of fiduciary duty

Conspiracy to defraud

Settlement Statement

Adjustable Rate Note

Balloon Rider

Failure to disclose balloon payment Uniform Residential Loan Application

Type of mortgage and terms of loan

Property information and purpose of loan

Borrower information

Employment information

Monthly income and combined housing expense information

Assets and liabilities

Federal Truth-In-Lending Disclosure Statement

Amount of payment

Income v. payment

Buyer’s Closing Statement

New loan charges

Loan processing fee

Banking fee

Appraisal fee

Settlement Statement

Processing fee

Origination Fraud Servicing Fraud

Fraud – Allegations need to meet specificity requirements 

Actual Fraud – California Civil Code § 1572(3)(5)

Knowledge of borrower’s lack of ability to afford monthly payments due to income

Violations of Business & Professions Code §17200 Unfair and Deceptive Acts and Practices (UDAP) [Fraudulently Procured Documents];

Robosigners – individuals who signed on behalf of companies they don’t work for, never had any agency relationship, nor were they attorney-in-fact; many of these individuals have admitted publicly in deposition or otherwise that he/she signed 1000s of documents without knowing what the document was, who they were signing on behalf, etc.

Substitution of Trustees, Corporate Assignments, and Assignments are red flags for transfer problem

Violation of UDAP [Fairness Doctrine]

Intentional Misrepresentation

The misrepresentation of a material fact;

Knowledge of falsity (scienter);

Intent to induce reliance

Actual and justifiable reliance on the misrepresentation; and resulting damages

Negligent Misrepresentation

the misrepresentation of a material fact;

false statement is made without a reasonable ground for a belief in the truth of the misrepresented fact

intent to induce reliance;

actual and justifiable reliance on the misrepresentation; and

resulting damage

Fraudulent Concealment

affirmative duty to disclose all material facts;

concealment of facts in order to induce plaintiff to enter into a transaction or relationship;

resulting damage

Cancellation of Contract

California Civil Code §1670.5, §1689, §3412

Existence of written instrument

That is void or voidable

Grounds for rescission / when facts discovered

Reasonable apprehension if left outstanding may cause serious injury to Plaintiff

Violation of Finance Lender Law

California Finance Code §§ 4973, et seq., 22000, et seq. and 50000, et seq.

Plaintiff must allege that their loan is covered under this provision. A consumer loan more than 7K is not covered. No exceptions to this rule have been identified.

Conspiracy to Defraud

Falsification of loan application

Set up borrower for certain default

Waiver/Promissory Estoppel

Contractual issue – bank has told HO to stop making payments to be considered for a modification; thus, the bank has waived any right to enforcement of the terms of the contract under the note; it gave that right up to enforce the contract by telling the home owner to stop making payments; homeowner relied on that waiver, stopped making payments for a modification, is denied modification, – bank cannot then come back and state it is entitled to enforce the payments

Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress

Outrageous Behavior

Injury Breach of Contract

Make sure to allege all elements

What is the breach? Find a provision in the Deed of Trust to support the breach of contract claim

Breach of Oral Contract

Existence of a contract

Terms that establish obligation

Specify whether contract is oral, written or implied by conduct

Plaintiff’s performance or excuse for non-performance

Defendant’s breach

Resulting damage

Breach of fiduciary duty

Conspiracy to defraud

Falsification of loan application

B.     Set up borrower for certain default

Statute of Limitations – The SOL has passed for most if not all of our claims. Therefore, we must allege that Equitable Tolling applies, otherwise, the court may dismiss without leave to amend.

Unjust Enrichment

Unwarranted fees/overcharging

Violation of Buss. & Prof. Code Section 17200 (Overcharging of Fees – Unfair, Business Practices)

Unlawful, Unfair, or Fraudulent business practice

Instituting improper or premature foreclosure to generate unwarranted fees

NOD inflates default amount

NTS shows balance owed which is too hig

Violation of California Civil Code of Procedure 2923.5

NOD filed without due diligence to contact borrower and assess financial situation and explore options to avoid foreclosure

Certificate of compliance by agent

Only applies to owner-occupied principal residence

Only remedy is postponement of sale (Mabry v Superior Court)

California Homeowner Bill of Rights – SB 900

Procedural History

Enacted by CA Senate and Assembly on July 2, 2012

Signed into law by Governor on July 12, 2012

Effective Date: January 1, 2013

Expires: January 1, 2018

Goals of the California Homeowner Bill of Rights

Stabilize CA housing economy

Stop foreclosure abuse by lenders and servicers

Ensure meaningful foreclosure alternatives for borrowers

Meeting the Goals

Expand existing foreclosure protections and add new protections to apply to broadly defined “mortgage servicers”

Prevent mortgage servicers from proceeding with a foreclosure until certain contact with or notice to the borrower

Prevent the recordation of a notice of default or notice of sale while a foreclosure prevention alternative is in process

Require a single point of contact for the borrower once they have requested a foreclosure prevention alternative; and

Give borrowers the right to sue the mortgage servicer for injunctive relief, actual damages and treble damages, for violation of the Act and the right to recover their attorney’s fees and costs if they prevail

Application of the Law

Eligibility

First lien Mortgages and Deeds of Trust

Secured by owner-occupied residential property

Containing no more than four dwelling units

Large Lenders

Most of the provisions of the Act only apply to lenders that foreclose on more than 175 residential properties per year.

Some provisions, including dual tracking, apply to smaller lenders, as well

Exclusions Relevant Provisions

Entity Borrowers

Investment Property

Borrowers in default who are already in bankruptcy

Borrowers who have already surrendered their property to lender

Borrowers who have contracted with someone or an entity whose primary business is advising people on how to extend their foreclosure and avoid their contractual obligations under the loan

Mortgage Servicer Defined

A person or entity who directly services a loan, or who is responsible for interacting with the borrower, managing the loan account on a daily basis either as the current owner of the promissory note or as the current owner’s authorized agent, or subservicing agent to a master servicer by contract.

“Mortgage Servicer” does not include the trustee or the trustee’s authorized agent acting under a power of sale in a deed of trust

Prevent lenders from contracting with separate entities to manage and service the loans to avoid application of the current laws

Dual Tracking

The Act seeks to prevent a lender from proceeding with a foreclosure, while at the same time negotiating with a delinquent residential borrower on a loan modification

If Borrower submits a complete application for modification, the Mortgage Servicer may not record Notice of Default or Notice of Sale until loan modification process has been completed and the time for an appeal of any adverse decision has passed

NOD can be recorded:

If borrower doesn’t accept offer within 14 days

If borrower doesn’t appeal denial within 30 days

If borrower accepts the offer but default

Changes to Loan Modification Process Mortgage servicer is not obligated to evaluate applications from borrowers who have already been evaluated or afforded a fair opportunity to be evaluated for a first lien loan modification prior to January 1, 2013, unless there has been a material change in the borrower’s financial circumstances

Mortgage servicer must provide a written acknowledgement of receipt within five days of the receipt of the document(s) or completed application

Written acknowledgment of receipt to the borrower must include a description of the loan modification process, its timeframes and any deadlines, any expiration dates for documents submitted, and specify any deficiencies in the application

Written response if the lender denies the application. This written notice must include the specific reasons for the denial and the deadline for the borrower to appeal the denial (30 days).

Single Point of Contact Established

Single point of contact throughout the loan modification process and with at least one direct method to reach the point of contact.

The mortgage servicer must ensure that the single point of contact has the knowledge, responsibility and authority to:

Communicate to the borrower the process by which the borrower may apply for available foreclosure prevention alternatives;

Coordinate receipt of all necessary documents and notifying the borrower of any missing documents;

Timely, adequately and accurately inform the borrower of the current status of the foreclosure prevention alternative;

Ensure the borrower is considered for all of the foreclosure prevention options offered by the mortgage servicer; and

Have access to persons with the power to stop foreclosure proceedings

Single point of contact can be a team of personnel, each of whom is knowledgeable about borrower’s current situation

Does not apply to small lenders

Robo-Signing Eliminated

Recorded Documents

Any declaration, notice of default, notice of sale, assignment of a deed of trust, or substitution of trustee recorded in a foreclosure or filed in a court must be accurate and complete and supported by reliable evidence.

Before filing or recording, the mortgage servicer shall have reviewed competent and reliable evidence that substantiates the borrower’s default and the mortgage servicer’s right to foreclose

Civil penalties of ,500 for repeated violations

Beneficiaries

No entity shall initiate the foreclosure process or record a notice of default unless and until it is the holder of the beneficial interest under the mortgage or deed of trust, the original or substituted trustee under the deed of trust, or the designated agent of the holder of the beneficial interest.

No liability for good faith error by trustees resulting from information provided by beneficiary regarding nature and amount of default  

New Notice Requirements Postponed Trustee Sale Date

After Notice of Default Recorded

Within 5 days of the recording of a notice of default, the mortgage servicer that offers foreclosure prevention alternatives must send a written notice to the borrower informing the borrower of foreclosure prevention alternative

Does not apply to any borrowers who have already exhausted the loan modification process described above in Civil Code section 2924.6.

Postponement of at least 10 business days require written notice to the borrower of the new sale date and time within five business days of the date of the postponement.

Failure to comply does not invalidate an otherwise valid trustee’s sale

No Application Fees or Late Fees

Prohibits mortgage servicers from charging borrowers application fees for a first lien loan modification or other foreclosure prevention alternative.

Forbids a mortgage servicer from charging borrowers late fees under the loan for the period during which the loan modification is under consideration, while a borrower has filed an appeal of the denial of a loan modification, or the borrower is making timely modification payments.

Right to Sue Mortgage Servicers

Borrowers can sue mortgage servicers for injunctive relief before the trustee’s deed upon sale has recorded, or if it has already recorded, to sue for actual economic damages, if the mortgage servicer has not corrected any “material” violation before the trustee’s deed upon sale recorded.

If a court finds that the violation was intentional, reckless or willful, the court can award the borrower the greater of treble (triple) damages or ,000.

A violation of the Act is also deemed to be a violation of the licensing laws if committed by a person licensed as a consumer or commercial finance lender or broker, a residential mortgage lender or servicer, or a licensed real estate broker or salesman.

Court may award reasonable attorney’s fees and costs to borrower as the prevailing party.

Lenders defense: Compliance

Selling Fraud

Securitization

Mortgage Backed Bonds – bonds are not created equal

Table Funding – illegal for a bank to NOT use its own money

Originator – bank that originated the loan

Sponsor/Seller – middle bank bought note from originator and sold it to depositor to package in the trust – most missed the closing date

Depositor – bank that sold the Note to the investor

Lack of Standing

Cause of Action – yes

Title doesn’t matter – only substance

Each court will determine differently whether or not it is a named cause of action

Injury – each time the note was illegal sold the equity in the home significantly decreased

MERS – Mortgage Electronic Registry

 Each time the NOTE was transferred by law there was supposed to be a duly signed assignment (from Originator to Sponsor/Seller to Depositor); this did not occur in most cases.

Every mortgage is supposed to registered on this system

Intended during the 1990s to cut  recording costs/fees for the banking industry; also helped hide chain of title from the public

Approximately 65 million mortgages MERS is beneficiary or nominee

Viable Causes of Actions Against MERS

Violation of CCP 2932.5 – not valid

Violation of B&P Code 17200

Wrongful Foreclosure (Lack of Standing) – for failing to transfer the loan to the trust by the closing date – See Glaski v. Bank of America

Agent/Principal Issue

Current Law

Ibanez – Massachusetts (View Oral Arguments)

Phyllis – AL – Summary Judgment – Breach of Contract 3rd Party Beneficiary

In re Doble (2011) WL 1465559 (Bkrtcy.S.D.Cal.)

Bank of New York v. Silverberg, 2011 NY Slip Op 5002, 6.

In Re Jessie M. Arizmendi, 09-19263-PB13, United States Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of California, 2011

Aguilar v, III v. Bear Sterans Resid. MTG., et. al.,

Kanno v. First Liberty Mortgage, Superior Court of California, County of Riverside, Case Number 539556, 2010

O’Dell v. Washington Mutual Bank FA et. al., United States Central District Court of California, CV 10-09195 GAF (PLAx), 2011

Javaheri v. JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., et. al. , United States Central District Court of California, CV 10-09195 GAF (PLAx), 2011

SB1259 – AZ statute requiring log of assignments – Passed House/Not Senate

Nevada & Hawaii Statutes requiring assignment logs

Orange County Ruling on 2932.5

Gomes v. Countrywide

Robinson v. Countrywide

Calvo v. HSBC Bank

Lona v. Citibank

Glaski v. Bank of America

Bloomberg Level Three Audit

Shows exactly how many times the note has been sold and into which trust (classes); in some instances the note has been sold multiple times as if it was the first time the Note was sold – CLEAR SECURITIES FRAUD

Shows the note has been paid off – answer to tender rule

Violation of CCP 2932.5

Only applies to deeds of trust

Truth In Lender Act Section 1641(g)

Best Cause of Action

Wrongful Foreclosure

Foreclosure based on fraud, deceit and unenforceable contract

Offering alternatives to foreclosure

Unjust Enrichment

Payments made to entity who is NOT the lawful note-holder

Violations of Business & Professions Code §17200 Unfair and Deceptive Acts and Practices (UDAP) [Fraudulently Procured Documents]

Robosigners – individuals who signed on behalf of companies they don’t work for, never had any agency relationship, nor were they attorney-in-fact; many of these individuals have admitted publicly in deposition or otherwise that he/she signed 1000s of documents without knowing what the document was, who they were signing on behalf, etc.

Agency/Principal Relationship & Power of Attorney – violations of additional statutes to be used as underlying violations of Buss. & Prof. Code Section 17200

Express or implied agreement

Granting authority for one party to act on behalf of another

Actions of agent bind the principal

Substitution of Trustees, Corporate Assignments, and Assignments are red flags for transfer problems

Violation of Cal. Civil Code Section 2934a (Substitution of Trustee)

Trustee named in recorded Substitution acted as trustee prior to date of execution of Substitution = unlawfully initiated foreclosure

Substitution is executed but not recorded prior to or concurrently with NOD

Notice of substitution NOT mailed to all interested parties

Affidavit NOT attached to Substitution confirming that such notice was given

Substitution is effected AFTER NOTD recorded but prior to Notice of Sale

Notice of substitution NOT mailed to all interested parties (i.e. current trustee)

Affidavit NOT attached to Substitution confirming that such notice was given

Notice of Sale MUST be resent with substituted trustee information, otherwise sale is void.

Effective date drastically different from recordation date = evidence of robo signors attempts to comply with time-sensitive regulations/ back-dating of instruments

Security First Rule

Lender must foreclose before looking to borrower’s other assets

Either judicial foreclosure and seek deficiency judgment OR nonjudicial foreclosure

Violation of CCP 726 if lender accepts payments from Plaintiff WHILE foreclosing

HAMP Guidelines – Breach of Contract

Qualification under HAMP guidelines

Trial Period Modification Plan

Borrower complies with all requirements under trial mod

Lender nevertheless fails to provide permanent modification or fails to suspend foreclosure proceedings

Violation of California Civil Code of Procedure 2924

Failure to comply with non-judicial foreclosure requirements

Notice of default, notice of trustee’s sale  not sent

Foreclosure sale held within 3 months of filing of NOD

Slander of Title

Publication of dispara

 

Testimonials from Past Students

"It is a life-changing experience—both in knowledge and spirit."
Guido Gil

"If you open your mind and listen, they will lead you to the promised land. Very educational and will enhance my business forever."
Corey Davinport

"Buckle your seats belts, you’re in for a real treat! Your in for the greatest information of the Information Age!!"
Kymosh Myrick

"If you have but one thing you do to further your education, make it this course. This is something that can be utilized in almost every real estate situation that exist today. What you can do with the information you learn will change lives."
Carlos J. Rice Perez, Esq.

"This was an outstanding training. If you want to learn Securitization and become and auditor, this is the class for you!"
Craig Barrett

"This class will change the direction of your life as a professional. It offers a gateway into the world of securitization and inherently valuable navigation tools to uncover the lack of integrity being performed in secondary investor trusts. This class is for anyone, but highly benefits professionals of foreclosure proceedings. Thank you CFLA! Thank "
Michal Y. Valdez

"My expectations were exceeded. I have been a Real Estate professional since 1993 and have simply followed guidelines established. This course has opened my eyes to all the reasons of 'why'."  
Michael Bakkers

"CFLA is one of the only business entities offering a one-stop shop where an attorney can get education, pleadings, research and practice support in the field of foreclosure defense. The attorney networking opportunities provided by CFLA are very valuable."
Charles Christmas, Esq.

"The class was extremely informative. The instructors were exceptional. I will use this information in all my reports, which in turn will help my clients." 
Rhonda Arellano

"Everyone in life has a mission and a purpose. It’s a matter of actually finding out what your purpose is. This class was the missing piece of the puzzle for me. I can now do what so many have attempted and failed. Help every and anyone who has the motivation to help themselves to be not only successful in my own mission, but also be able to help others accomplish theirs."
Cecelia Moreno

"This course was the missing link in putting together all the knowledge I’ve already been accumulating, but was not able to assimilate into a prosecutable document for submission which an attorney can use in litigation. Thanks!" 
Warren D. Goldstein

"Although I have prior experience of 20 years of Mortgage Banking and Real Estate, this class has given me a comprehensive edge over the average attorney and ultimate foreclosure defense! Thank you for taking me to the top."
Kartika Kelley

"Attorneys, Brokers, Loan Officers and others definitely need to get certified from the Certified Forensic Loan Auditors. It’s a very, very powerful tool to use it against predatory Lending Act violation when banks violate the

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