EXTRAORDINARY
HOME MORTGAGE RELIEF
By Wayne S. Bell
Chief Counsel, California
Department of Real Estate
HOME MORTGAGE
RELIEF THROUGH LITIGATION (and “Too Good to Be True” Claims Regarding Its Use
to Avoid and/or Stop Foreclosure, Obtain Loan Principal Reduction, and to Let
You Have Your Home “Free and Clear” of Any Mortgage).
This alert is written to warn
consumers about marketing companies, unlicensed entities, lawyers, and
so-called attorney-backed, attorney-affiliated, and lawyer referral entities that
offer and sell false hope and request the payment of upfront fees for so-called
“mass joinder” or class litigation that will supposedly result in extraordinary
home mortgage relief.
The California Department of Real
Estate (“DRE” or “Department”) previously issued a consumer alert and fraud
warning on loan modification and foreclosure rescue scams in California. That
alert was followed by warnings and alerts regarding forensic loan audit fraud,
scams in connection with short sale transactions, false and misleading designations
and claims of special expertise, certifications and credentials in connection with
home loan relief services, and other real estate and home loan relief scams.
The Department continues to
administratively prosecute those who engage in such fraud and to work in
collaboration with the California State Bar, the Federal Trade Commission, and
federal, State and local criminal law enforcement authorities to bring such
frauds to justice.
On October 11, 2009, Senate Bill
94 was signed into law in California, and it became effective that day. It
prohibited any person, including real estate licensees and attorneys, from
charging, claiming, demanding, collecting or receiving an upfront fee from a homeowner
borrower in connection with a promise to modify the borrower’s residential loan
or some other form of mortgage loan forbearance.
Senate Bill 94’s prohibitions
seem to have significantly impacted the rampant fraud that was occurring and
escalating with respect to the payment of upfront fees for loan modification
work. Also, forensic loan auditors must now register with the California
Department of Justice and cannot accept payments in advance for their services
under California law once a Notice of Default has been recorded. There are
certain exceptions for lawyers and real estate brokers.
On January 31, 2011, an important
and broad advance fee ban issued by the Federal Trade Commission became
effective and outlaws providers of mortgage assistance relief services from
requesting or collecting advance fees from a homeowner. Discussions about
Senate Bill 94, the Federal advance fee ban, and the Consumer
Alerts of the DRE, are available
on the DRE’s website at www.dre.ca.gov.
Lawyer Exemption
from the Federal Advance Fee Ban
The advance fee ban issued by the
Federal Trade Commission includes a narrow and
conditional carve out for
attorneys. If lawyers meet the following four conditions, they are generally
exempt from the rule:
- They are engaged in the practice of law, and mortgage assistance relief is part of their practice.
- They are licensed in the State where the consumer or the dwelling is located.
- They are complying with State laws and regulations governing the “same type of conduct the FTC rule requires”.
- They place any advance fees they collect in a client trust account and comply with State laws and regulations covering such accounts. This requires that client funds be kept separate from the lawyers' personal and/or business funds until such time as the funds have been earned.
It is important to note that the
exemption for lawyers discussed above does not allow lawyers to collect
money upfront for loan modifications or loan forbearance services, which
advance fees are banned by the more restrictive California Senate Bill 94. But
those who continue to prey on and victimize vulnerable homeowners have not
given up. They just change their tactics and modify their sales pitches to keep
taking advantage of those who are desperate to save their homes. And some of
the frauds seeking to rip off desperate homeowners are trying to use the lawyer
exemption above to collect advance fees for mortgage assistance relief
litigation.
This alert and
warning is issued to call to your attention the often overblown and exaggerated
“sales pitch(es)” regarding the supposed value of questionable “Mass Joinder”
or Class Action Litigation.
Whether they call themselves
Foreclosure Defense Experts, Mortgage Loan Litigators, Living Free and Clear
experts, or some other official, important or impressive sounding title(s),
individuals and companies are marketing their services in the State of
California and on the Internet. They are making a wide variety of claims and
sales pitches, and offering impressive sounding legal and litigation
services, with quite extraordinary remedies promised, with the goal of
taking and getting some of your money.
While there are lawyers and law
firms which are legitimate and qualified to handle complex class action or
joinder litigation, you must be cautious and BEWARE. And certainly check out
the lawyers on the State Bar website and via other means, as discussed below in
Section III.
II. QUESTIONABLE
AND/OR FALSE CLAIMS OF THE SO-CALLED MORTGAGE LOAN DEFENSE OR “MASS JOINDER”
AND CLASS LITIGATORS.
A. What are the
Claims/Sales Pitches?
- You can join in a mass joinder or class action lawsuit already filed against your lender and stay in your home. You can stop paying your lender.
- The mortgage loans can be stripped entirely from your home.
- Your payment obligation and foreclosure against your home can be stopped when the lawsuit is filed.
- The litigation will take the power away from your lender.
- A jury will side with you and against your lender.
- The lawsuit will give you the leverage you need to stay in your home.
- The lawsuit may give you the right to rescind your home loan, or to reduce your principal.
- The lawsuit will help you modify your home loan. It will give you a step up in the loan modification process.
- The litigation will be performed through “powerful” litigation attorney representation.
- Litigation attorneys are “turning the tables on lenders and getting cash settlements for homeowners”.
In one Internet advertisement,
the marketing materials say, “the damages sought in your behalf are nothing
less than a full lien strip or in otherwords [sic] a free and clear house if the
bank can’t produce the documents they own the note on your home. Or at the very
least, damages could be awarded that would reduce the principal balance of the
note on your home to 80% of market value, and give you a 2% interest rate for
the life of the loan”.
B. Discussion.
Please don’t be fooled by slick
come-ons by scammers who just want your money. Some of the claims above might
be true in a particular case, based on the facts and evidence presented before
a Court or a jury, or have a ring or hint of truth, but you must carefully examine
and analyze each and every one of them to determine if filing a lawsuit against
your lender or joining a class or mass joinder lawsuit will have any value for
you and your situation. Be particularly skeptical of all such claims, since
agreeing to participate in such litigation may require you to pay for legal or
other services, often before any legal work is performed (e.g., a
significant upfront retainer fee is required).
The reality is
that litigation is time-consuming (with formal discovery such as depositions,
interrogatories, requests for documents, requests for admissions, motions, and
the like), expensive, and usually vigorously defended. There can be no
guarantees or assurances with respect to the outcome of a lawsuit. Even if a
lender or loan owner defendant were to lose at trial, it can appeal, and the entire
process can take years. Also, there is no statistical or other competent data that
supports the claims that a mass joinder and class action lawsuit, even if performed
by a licensed, legitimate and trained lawyer(s), will provide the remedies that
the marketers promise.
There are two other important
points to be made here: First, even assuming that the lawyers can identify
fraud or other legal violations performed by your lender in the loan
origination process, your loan may be owned by an investor – that is, someone
other than your lender. The investor will most assuredly argue that your claims
against your originating lender do not apply against the investor (the
purchaser of your loan). And even if your lender still owns the loan, they are
not legally required, absent a court judgment or order, to modify your loan or
to halt the foreclosure process if you are behind in your payments. If they
happen to lose the lawsuit, they can appeal, as noted above. Also, the
violations discovered may be minor or inconsequential, which will not provide
for any helpful remedies. Second, and very importantly, loan modifications and
other types of foreclosure relief are simply not possible for every homeowner,
and the “success rate” is currently very low in California. This is where the
lawsuit marketing scammers come in and try to convince you that they offer you
“a leg up”. They falsely claim or suggest that they can guarantee to stop a
foreclosure in its tracks, leave you with a home “free and clear” of any mortgage
loan(s), make lofty sounding but hollow promises, exaggerate or make bold statements
regarding their litigation successes, charge you for a retainer, and leave you with
less money.
III. THE KEY
HERE IS FOR YOU TO BE ON GUARD AND CHECK THE LAWYERS OUT (Know Who You Are or May Be Dealing With) -
Do Your Own Homework (Avoid The Traps Set by the Litigation Marketing Frauds).
Before entering into an
attorney-client relationship, or paying for “legal” or litigation services,
ascertain the name of the lawyer or lawyers who will be providing the services.
Then check them out on the State Bar's website, at www.calbar.ca.gov. Make
certain that they are licensed by the State Bar of California. If they are
licensed, see if they have been disciplined.
Check them out through the Better
Business Bureau to see if the Bureau has received any complaints about the
lawyer, law firm or marketing firm offering the services (and remember that
only lawyers can provide legal services). And please understand that this is
just another resource for you to check, as the litigation services provider
might be so new that the Better Business Bureau may have little or nothing on
them (or something positive because of insufficient public input).
Check them out
through a Google or related search on the Internet. You may be amazed at what
you can and will find out doing such a search. Often consumers who have been
scammed will post their experiences, insights, and warnings long before any
criminal, civil or administrative action has been brought against the scammers.
Also, ask them lots of specific,
detailed questions about their litigation experience, clients and successful
results. For example, you should ask them how many mortgage-related joinder or
class lawsuits they have filed and handled through settlement or trial. Ask them
for pleadings they have filed and news stories about their so-called successes.
Ask them for a list of current and past “satisfied” clients. If they provide
you with a list, call those people and ask those former clients if they would
use the lawyer or law firm again. Ask the lawyers if they are class action or
joinder litigation specialists and ask them what specialist qualifications they
have. Then ask what they will actually do for you (what specific services they
will be providing and for what fees and costs). Get that in writing, and take
the time to fully understand what the attorney-client contract says and what
the end result will be before proceeding with the services. Remember to always
ask for and demand copies of all documents that you sign.
IV. CONCLUSION.
Mortgage rescue frauds are
extremely good at selling false hope to consumers in trouble with regard to
home loans. The scammers continue to adapt and to modify their schemes as soon
as their last ones became ineffective. Promises of successes through mass
joinder or class litigation are now being marketed. Please be careful, do your
own diligence to protect yourself, and be highly suspect if anyone asks you for
money up front before doing any service on your behalf. Most importantly, DON’T
LET FRAUDS TAKE YOUR HARD EARNED MONEY.
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