Archive for October, 2009

Greed and Apathy

Monday, October 19th, 2009

The current U.S. culture relies on greed by those in control and apathy of the voting masses.  Just gimme my Dallas Cowboys on Sunday and I’m happy.  By the way, thanks for the new billion dollar stadium, Jerry.  The President is going to send Social Security recipients $250 since there will be no annual increase this next year.  Isn’t it great that inflation is under control for all of those non-essentials!  However if you look at true core inflation, the rate is notably higher.

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It is too bad the our retirees can’t choose the Pre-Clinton Era CPI.  Will the retirees respond as depicted in the movie “Network”?

Warning: (Rated: R for language)

 

Will the average Joe on the street finally get fed up with the attitude of “entitlement” for the few, well-connected people in power?  The Tea Party held in Washington D.C. had hundreds of thousands of protestors but was under-reported by the network media.  We must ask ourselves why?  It appears that this country and the globe are moving toward an inflection point.  How long will the masses tolerate decisions of self-interest by those in charge?  Expect a Second American Revolution to surface in 2010.

However, If the apathy continues, the country may dig an economic hole that cannot be salvaged.  Other countries see it and are taking steps to distance themselves for the plight of the U.S. Dollar.

Bolivia summit adopts new currency

Leaders from Latin America and the Caribbean have agreed during a summit in Bolivia on creation of a regional currency aimed at reducing the use of the US dollar. See: http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/2009/10/2009101712255748516.html

Harvard University, where many of the leaders were educated, announced they had a serious investment portfolio problem to the tune of a half of a billion dollars: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aZnoUgi6NwXQ 

 

Smartest Man in the World

A doctor, a Harvard graduate, a little boy and a priest were out for a Sunday afternoon flight on a small private plane. Suddenly, the plane developed engine trouble.
In spite of the best efforts of the pilot, the plane started to go down. Finally, the pilot grabbed a parachute, yelled to the passengers that they had better jump, and bailed out.
Unfortunately, there were only three parachutes remaining.
The doctor grabbed one and said “I’m a doctor, I save lives, so I must live,” and jumped out.
The Harvard graduate then said, “I graduated from Harvard  and Harvard graduates are the smartest people in the world. I deserve to live.”
He also grabbed a parachute and jumped.
The priest looked at the little boy and said, “My son, I’ve lived a long and full life. You are young and have your whole life ahead of you. Take the last parachute and live in peace.”
The little boy handed the parachute back to the priest and said, “Not to worry, Father. The ‘smartest man in the world’ just took off with my back pack.”

Peak Oil Update

Sunday, October 18th, 2009

The current U.S. Administration is moving toward enacting a “punishment” tax against the oil & gas industry.  This will surely reduce capital expenditures by the industry thus reducing new reserve discovery, development and production.  Expect $100+ oil as this predatory tax and accelerated existing field decline rates create the Perfect Storm.  Additional taxes will be sucked out of exploration budgets and into government control.  Is that the best use of money?  I guess we could move that money to the financial industry to facilitate more bonuses for their execs.

The first detailed assessment of more than 800 oil fields in the world, covering three quarters of global reserves, has found that most of the biggest fields have already peaked and that the rate of decline in oil production is now running at nearly twice the pace as calculated just two years ago.

See: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/warning-oil-supplies-are-running-out-fast-1766585.html

Expected Shift in Healthcare: Part 3 (The Shift to Reality)

Sunday, October 18th, 2009

“The body is designed to heal itself” and “The body is designed to live forever”.  Those two statements of reality must become the foundation of medical pursuit.  In the Garden of Eden there was no reported death or decay but life everlasting.  Once Adam and Eve were removed from the Garden (and its revelation) their bodies began to die.  It took generations for mankind to settle down to the 70 year to 120 year range of physical life.  Nowadays, we all marvel at anyone who lives to be 100 years of age.  In the U.S. life expectancy is currently in the 70’s for both men and women.  In recent years there has been much attention focused on the “Blue Zones” where people tend to live longer.  Researchers are looking for the silver bullet of health in order to package it and sell it to the Baby Boomer Generation.  Those Blue Zones surely do not have the healthcare infrastructure of the U.S. and that actually may be one reason they live longer.  Another reason may be that they don’t have the chemical exposure we here in this country.  Thirdly, they seem to live a simpler life.

In recent decades, the medical schools have shifted toward the “pharma” method of treating symptoms and hoping to achieve a cure on a chemical based solution.  Have you noticed how many pharmacies have sprung up on every corner in the city?  Have you noticed how many drug advertisements there are on television?  Have you noticed how the drug companies are suggesting that you tell your doctor you are interested in their product?  This drug based mentality has become entrenched in our culture.

A primary issue of the current paradigm is one of “focus”.  The body is designed to be in equilibrium and a study of cellular structure brings out this point clearly.  See: http://library.thinkquest.org/12413/structures.html  When the body chemistry is in balance, all is well.  However when the equilibrium is adversely affected, trouble arises.  The body has a synchronous nature.  My definition of Synchronicity: the experience of two or more events which appear unrelated but occurring together in a meaningful manner.  The universe is working in a synchronous manner.  Even though the thousands of galaxies appear to be independent of each other, they are all connected by the Spirit of GOD.  Time and distance are no issue in the spiritual realm.  The medical community has lost focus of the synchronous manner in which the body functions.  The body’s electrical system utilizes “pathways” to communicate the status of equilibrium of all aspects of the body, everything is interconnected.  There has been this “isolationist” view of medical practice that has permeated the thinking of the medical community.

For years my dentist would warn me of the consequences of poor dental health during my periodic visits.  She told me that if I didn’t improve my brushing, I would lose my teeth due to my gums receding.  A few years ago, I sat in a presentation where the presenter explained the impact of metal amalgams on the body with a specific focus on cancer.  My mouth was loaded with metal.  I went back to my dentist and explained that I wanted the metal removed from my mouth and why.  Her reply was “Your fillings do not affect the rest of your body and the non-metallic fillings are not reliable”.  I switched dentists.  My new dentist removed the metal and immediately my gums began to heal.  In addition, a nagging irritation in my cervical vertebrae was gone.  Dentistry has assumed that their activities had little or no effect on the rest of the body.  Wrong!  Once they introduce a new “interference” of metal in the body, equilibrium is disturbed and functions are affected.  By the way, the dentist treated that metal being removed as hazardous waste once it left my mouth.  That’s scary!

Government acceptable studies of pharmaceutical trials are flawed.  Lack of consideration of a person’s specific “toxic imprint” could have a dramatic impact in the test results.  Statistical results do not provide comfort to the family of a loved one who died from a side effect of an approved drug.  Everyone knows that we can make statistics prove any position or outcome we desire.  9 out of 10 people may not suffer side effects including death, but who is to say you’re not that “1”.  “Bam, said the Lady!”

Specialization has moved the focus away from treating the whole body.  In the past, Orthopaedic surgeons often prescribed excessive Lori-tab or other strong pain medications without regard to one’s tendency to become “hooked” on pain medication.  Some people have a proclivity to chemical dependency.  The surgeon’s primary concern is to fix the shoulder and get paid.  What happens to the soon-to-be chemical dependent patient is someone else’s problem.  His prescription may be the beginning of a multi-decade disaster of drug addiction for the patient and his or her family.

Specialization looks for a prime cause of an illness. The problem is that there may be more than just one cause to an illness.  The human body is very complex and maintains an equilibrium that rivals any other complex system you could imagine.  A person could easily have a couple hundred toxic chemicals or their residual “wave forms” residing in their body when a new toxin, bacteria, or virus invades the body.  The new invader could simply be the “trigger” to start the formation of cancer.  The immune system reaches a point where it is overtaken and can no longer manage the additional levels of adverse agents in the body.

Have you ever noticed how babies and infants have a somewhat restricted diet yet grow and maintain healthy bodies?  Their bodies have not yet had the influx of external “invaders” that bog down their immune system. Their creation of nutritional building blocks works very effectively.  As we grow older and with our continuous exposure to environmental adversity, the body’s immune system has to work overtime to deal with these factors.  Add to this fact that we all want to enjoy air conditioning which reduces the amount of time we perspire.  Perspiration is a primary method of disposing of toxins.  Hmmm!  I wonder if this could be a reason more children are being diagnosed with adult illnesses.  So much for video games being used as a “baby sitter”.

In man, the spirit, soul, and body are all connected.  Therefore, the physiology of man is impacted by his constitutional state.  If you are under extreme mental stress, your body will respond and be more susceptible to illness.  If you have bitterness in your heart, your immune system will be impacted.  That bitterness may be the underlying reason your body will not respond to cancer treatment and until you remove the bitterness, the cancer will spread.  The medical community has disregarded the spiritual aspect of human physiology.  No one is acknowledging the elephant in the room.  To treat the body disregarding the spiritual and/or mental state is simply a disservice to the patient.  Even though it is currently not politically correct, for the practice of medicine to move forward with true and sustained healing, physicians must consider all influences to the physiology of the body.  Once they acknowledge that truth, they will become “healers”.

Remember, 99% of the universe is invisible; only 1% is visible. 

 

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See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_matter  Could this explain “outer darkness”?

A Potential Jubilee for Borrowers facing Home Foreclosure

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

In Scripture the revelation of Jubilee is powerful.  Grace and Mercy from Our Heavenly Father is the basis of Jubilee, or the wiping out of all debt.  The Blood of Jesus Christ paid the price for all sin thus we have a legal remedy to the issue of sin.

In the U.S., million of homeowners were sucked into the complex mortgage transactions by lenders who made their money on the front-end only to leave taxpayers holding the bag.  However, Judge Keith C. Long of the Massachusetts Land Court, Department of the Trial Court ruled in favor of the borrower and against the Trustees of securitization trusts.  This ruling may have an epic effect on the U.S. and could become a “Jubilee” for many.  The following is a copy of the judgement:

 

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COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS
THE TRIAL COURT
LAND COURT DEPARTMENT
HAMPDEN, ss.
____________________________________
)
U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, )
as trustee for the Structured Asset )
Securities Corporation Mortgage Pass- )
Through Certificates, Series 2006-Z, )
)
Plaintiff, ) 08 MISC 384283 (KCL)
v. )
)
ANTONIO IBANEZ, )
Defendant. )
____________________________________)
)
WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., as trustee )
for ABFC 2005-OPT1 Trust, ABFC Asset )
Backed Certificates Series 2005-OPT1, )
)
Plaintiff, ) 08 MISC 386755 (KCL)
v. )
)
MARK A. LARACE and TAMMY L. )
LARACE, )
Defendants. )
____________________________________)
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER ON THE PLAINTIFFS’ MOTIONS TO VACATE JUDGMENT1
Introduction
Each of the above-captioned cases,2 along with a third that was previously coordinated
1 I wish to thank the parties and amici who made submissions in connection with these motions. Briefs for the parties were submitted by Walter Porr, Jr. of Ablitt Law Offices, P.C. (for the plaintiffs/moving parties in both cases); Paul Collier III, Max Weinstein of the Wilmer/Hale Legal Services Center of Harvard Law School, and Eloise Lawrence and David Dineen of Greater Boston Legal Services (for defendant Antonio Ibanez); and Glenn Russell, Jr. (for defendants Mark and Tammy Larace). Amici briefs were submitted by Reneau Longoria of Doonan Graves & Longoria LLC; Marie McDonnell of Truth in Lending Audit & Recovery Services LLC; Edward Rainen, Ward Graham, Martin Haller and Robert Moriarity, Jr. for the Real Estate Bar Association for Massachusetts; Kevin Costello, Gary Klein and Shennan Kavanaugh of Roddy Klein & Ryan; and Robert Hobbs of the National Consumer Law Center.
2 U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee for the Structured Asset Securities Corporation Mortgage Pass-
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with them but is not currently in issue,3 involved a mortgage foreclosure sale of a residential property in Springfield that was noticed and conducted by an entity without any record interest in that mortgage at the time of notice and sale. In each case, notice was published in the Boston Globe rather than a Springfield-based newspaper. In each case, the plaintiff was both the foreclosing party and the only bidder at the sale. In each case, the plaintiff purchased the property at a substantial discount from its appraised value, wiping out all of the defendants‘ equity in the properties and leaving one of them with a substantial loan deficiency that would not have been owed had the property sold for its appraised value. In each case, the plaintiff could not obtain insurance for the title it purportedly received from that sale. The plaintiffs thus brought these actions to ―remove a cloud from the title‖ of the properties in question. G.L. c. 240, § 6.
The relief requested to remove that cloud was the same in each case4 — ―that the Court adjudge and decree:
 [T]hat [Ibanez‘s and Larace‘s] right, title and interest in the Property was extinguished by the Judgment on the Complaint to Foreclose Mortgage [the judgment in the Servicemembers case5] and the execution of the Power of Sale contained in the mortgage by [U.S. Bank (in Ibanez) and Wells Fargo (in Larace)].
 That there is no cloud on title to the foreclosed property due to the fact that Notice of Sale was published in the Boston Globe.
 That title is vested in [U.S. Bank (in Ibanez) and Wells Fargo (in Larace)] in fee simple.
Through Certificates, Series 2006-Z v. Antonio Ibanez, Misc. Case No. 08-384283 (KCL) (hereafter ―Ibanez‖); and Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as trustee for ABFC 2005-OPT1 Trust, ABFC Asset Backed Certificates Series 2005-OPT1 v. Mark Larace and Tammy Larace, Misc. Case No. 08-386755 (KCL) (hereafter ―Larace‖).
3 LaSalle Bank National Association, as trustee for the certificate holders of Bear Stearns Asset Backed Securities I, LLC Asset-Backed Certificates Series 2007-HE2 v. Freddy Rosario, Misc. Case No. 08-386018 (KCL) (hereafter ―Rosario‖). The lawyers for the plaintiffs were the same in each of the three cases and their motions for entry of default judgment were scheduled and heard together. Neither the plaintiff nor the defendant in Rosario has challenged or appealed the final judgment in that case.
4 The only difference was the name of the plaintiff and the name of the defendant(s).
5 The Servicemembers Judgments so referenced only adjudicated that the defendant/equity holders were not entitled to the benefits of the Servicemembers‘ Civil Relief Act. Beaton v. Land Court, 367 Mass. 385 (1975). No other aspect of the foreclosures was addressed in those proceedings. Id.
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 For such other and further relief as the Court deems just and appropriate.‖
Ibanez, Complaint at 3-4, ¶¶ 1-4 (Sept. 12, 2008); Larace, Complaint at 3-4, ¶¶ 1-4 (Oct. 23, 2008); Rosario, Complaint at 3-4, ¶ 1-4 (Oct. 17, 2008). None of the complaints was ever amended, none of their allegations was ever changed or modified, and none of the four requests for relief was ever modified or withdrawn.
Ibanez and Larace each presented the same two substantive issues for resolution, both arising under G.L. c. 244, § 14 (foreclosure under power of sale; procedure; notice; form): (1) was the Boston Globe, the newspaper in which the notices of foreclosure sale were published, a ―newspaper with general circulation in the town where the land lies‖ (Springfield) within the meaning of G.L. c. 244, § 14 (the ―Boston Globe issue‖); and, (2) as the plaintiffs themselves phrased it, did the plaintiffs have ―the right . . . to foreclose the subject mortgage in light of the fact that the assignment of the foreclosed mortgage into the Plaintiff was not executed or recorded until after the exercise of the power of sale‖ (the ―present holder of the mortgage issue‖).6 Ibanez, Plaintiff‘s Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 1-2 (Jan. 30, 2009) (emphasis added); Larace, Plaintiff‘s Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 2 (Feb. 2, 2009) (same).7 Both of these issues were identified at early conferences in the cases and both were
6 In the Notice of Mortgagee‘s Sale of Real Estate in both Ibanez and Larace, the plaintiffs (U.S. Bank in Ibanez and Wells Fargo in Larace) represented themselves to be ―the present holder of said mortgage.‖
7 The ―present holder of the mortgage issue‖ was present in a different form in Rosario. There (as proved decisive, see Memorandum and Order on Plaintiffs‘ Motions for Entry of Default Judgment at 14-17 (Mar. 26, 2009)), a mortgage assignment to the foreclosing party in recordable form had been executed, but it was not recorded prior to the notice and sale. Thus, the issue as phrased in Rosario was whether the plaintiff had ―the right . . . to foreclose the subject mortgage in light of the fact that the assignment of the foreclosed mortgage into the Plaintiff was not recorded until after the exercise of the power of sale.‖ Rosario, Plaintiff‘s Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 2 (Feb. 2, 2009) (emphasis added). As the court‘s Memorandum reflected, Massachusetts law requires that a foreclosing party have a valid assignment of the mortgage at the time of notice and sale, but it does not require the assignment to be ―of record‖ at that time. Memorandum and Order on Plaintiffs‘ Motions for Entry of Default Judgment at 14-17. Thus, the foreclosure sale in Rosario was valid and the sales in Ibanez and Larace were not. Id.
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briefed and argued by the plaintiffs in connection with their motions for default judgment.8
The Boston Globe issue was resolved favorably to the plaintiffs in all three cases and judgment entered declaring that none of the three foreclosures was rendered invalid because notice was published in the Boston Globe. Judgment (Mar. 26, 2009). The ―present holder of the mortgage issue,‖ however, was decided against the plaintiffs in Ibanez and Larace. Id. This was because the factual allegations in the complaints (binding on the plaintiffs pursuant to G.L. c. 231, § 87) showed that neither U.S. Bank (in Ibanez) nor Wells Fargo (in Larace) was the holder of the mortgage (either on or off record) at the time notice of the foreclosure sale was given or at the time the sale took place. According to those allegations, both were assigned the mortgage long after the foreclosure sales occurred.9 Thus, on those facts, as a matter of law, the sales were invalid. See Memorandum and Order on Plaintiffs‘ Motions for Entry of Default Judgment at 2-4, 8-17 (Mar. 26, 2009). Final judgment was entered making that declaration. Judgment (Mar. 26, 2009).
U.S. Bank (in Ibanez) and Wells Fargo (in Larace) have now timely moved to vacate that judgment making, in essence, five arguments. First, they contend that the ―present holder of the
8 See Ibanez, Plaintiff‘s Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 1-2 (Jan. 30, 2009), oral argument of motion (Feb. 11, 2009) and Plaintiff‘s Second Supplemental Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 1-2 (Feb. 16, 2009); Larace, Plaintiff‘s Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 2 (Feb. 2, 2009), oral argument of motion (Feb. 11, 2009), and Plaintiff‘s Second Supplemental Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 1-2 (Feb. 16, 2009); and Rosario, Plaintiff‘s Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 1-2 (Feb. 2, 2009), oral argument of motion (Feb. 11, 2009) and Plaintiff‘s Second Supplemental Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 1-2 (Feb. 16, 2009).
The issues were addressed in the context of a motion for default judgment because the defendants in Ibanez, Larace, and Rosario each had been defaulted for failure timely to respond to the complaints. The defendants in Ibanez and Larace have subsequently (post-judgment) entered an appearance through counsel and oppose the plaintiffs‘ motions to reconsider and vacate that judgment.
9 As set forth in the complaints, the notices in Ibanez and Larace were published on June 14, 21, and 28, 2007 for auctions that took place on July 5, 2007. Ibanez, Complaint at 2, ¶ 5; 3, ¶ 8; Larace, Complaint at 2, ¶ 5; 3, ¶ 8. The Ibanez notice named U.S. Bank as the foreclosing party, the Larace notice named Wells Fargo as the foreclosing party, and the foreclosure sales were conducted in their respective names. Ibanez, Complaint at 2, ¶ 5; 3, ¶ 8; Larace, Complaint at 2, ¶ 5; 3, ¶ 8. As established by the allegations in the Complaints, however, U.S. Bank was not assigned the Ibanez mortgage until September 2, 2008, fourteen months after the sale (Ibanez, Complaint at 2, ¶ 3), and Wells Fargo was not assigned the Larace mortgage until May 7, 2008, ten months after the sale (Larace, Complaint at 2, ¶ 3).
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mortgage issue‖ came as a surprise to them and should not have been decided in connection with these cases.10 Second, they argue that had they known the issue was going to be addressed, they would have pled their case differently and either limited their request for relief to the ―Boston Globe issue‖ or further supplemented their evidentiary offerings.11 Third, they insist that since the defendants had been defaulted,12 it was inappropriate for judgment to be entered against the plaintiffs and, at worst, their motion for default judgment should simply have been denied with leave for them to amend and try again.13 Fourth, based on new evidence and new arguments they have now submitted post-judgment,14 they maintain they were the ―present holder of the mortgage‖ within the scope and meaning of G.L. c. 244, § 14 at the time of notice and sale. This is so, they say, because they possessed the note (endorsed in blank), an assignment of the mortgage in blank (i.e., without an identified assignee), and a contractual right to obtain the mortgage at those times.15 Fifth, in the event the court disagrees that their possession of the note, a mortgage assignment in blank, and a contractual right sufficed to make them ―present holders of the mortgage,‖ they contend that the foreclosure sales were nonetheless valid because they were authorized by the last record holder of the mortgage and the plaintiffs acted as the ―agent‖ of that holder.
For the reasons more fully set forth below, each of these arguments fails. I thus DENY the motions to vacate. The plaintiffs cannot credibly claim surprise at the judgment that was entered and, having asked for (and received) a declaration on the issues they chose and on the
10 See Ibanez, Motion to Vacate Judgment at 3, 4 (Apr. 6, 2009); Larace, Motion to Vacate Judgment at 3, 4 (Apr. 6, 2009).
11 Id.
12 As noted above, the defendants have since each entered an appearance through counsel.
13 See Ibanez, Motion to Vacate Judgment at 7; Larace, Motion to Vacate Judgment at 7.
14 These post-judgment evidentiary submissions were allowed by leave of court. Ibanez, Notice of Docket Entry (Apr. 21, 2009); Larace, Notice of Docket Entry (Apr. 21, 2009).
15 They concede, however, that the mortgage assignment they ultimately recorded (an assignment specifically to them) was an entirely new and different document, executed months after the notice and sale.
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facts exactly as they pled them, they have no right to a ―do-over‖ because the declaration was not entirely as they wished. Moreover, their newly-presented facts do not lead to a different result. Instead, they show that the plaintiffs themselves recognized that they needed mortgage assignments in recordable form explicitly to them (not in blank) prior to their initiation of the foreclosure process, that the plaintiffs‘ ―authorized agent‖ argument fails both on its facts and as a matter of law, and reaffirm the correctness of the original judgment. They also show that the problem the plaintiffs face (the present title defect) is entirely of their own making as a result of their failure to comply with the statute and the directives in their own securitization documents. Simply put, the foreclosure sales were invalid because they failed to meet the requirements of G.L. c. 244, § 14. What the plaintiffs truly seek is a change in the foreclosure sale statute (G.L. c. 244, § 14), which can only come from the legislature.
Analysis
The Plaintiffs Were Not Surprised That Their Status as Mortgage Holders at the Time of Notice and Sale Would Be an Issue in Connection With Their Motions for Default Judgment
The plaintiffs cannot credibly claim they were surprised that their status as mortgage holders at the time of notice and sale would be an issue in these cases. Nor can they be surprised that a judgment might be entered against them on that issue. The relief they requested included a broad declaration that the defendant/equity holders‘ right, title and interest in the properties at issue was extinguished by the judgments in the Servicemembers‘ cases and the execution of the powers of sale contained in the mortgages. They further sought a declaration that title in fee simple was vested in the plaintiffs as a result of those sales.16 This necessarily involved their
16 Ibanez, Complaint at 3-4, ¶¶ 1-4 (Sept. 12, 2008); Larace, Complaint at 3-4, ¶¶ 1-4 (Oct. 23, 2008); see also Ibanez, Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 8 (Jan 30, 2009) (―plaintiff moves the Court for entry of judgment thereby order[ing], adjudging and decreeing that defendant‘s right, title and interest in the property was extinguished by the judgment on the complaint to foreclose mortgage and the execution of the power of sale contained in the mortgage by plaintiff‖). The plaintiffs‘ current argument that these actions ―presented only one
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compliance with G.L. c. 244, § 14 since they could only conduct a valid sale if they met its requirements. Bottomly v. Kabachnick, 13 Mass. App. Ct. 480, 483-484 (1982); McGreevey v. Charlestown Five Cents Savings Bank, 294 Mass. 480, 484 (1936) and cases cited therein.
The plaintiffs‘ complaints each stated that the mortgages containing the power of sale were assigned to them only after the sales took place.17 In a widely-noticed decision, the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Massachusetts previously held that ―[a]cquiring the mortgage after the entry and foreclosure sale does not satisfy the statute [G.L. c. 244, § 14]. While ‗mortgagee‘ has been defined to include assignees of a mortgage, in other words the current mortgagee, there is nothing to suggest that one who expects to receive the mortgage by assignment may undertake any foreclosure activity.‖ In re Sima Schwartz, U.S. Bankr. Ct., D. Mass., Chap. 7 Case No. 06-42476-JBR, Memorandum of Decision on Motion for Relief at 7 (Apr. 19, 2007). The plaintiffs were thus requested to address this issue in connection with their motions for entry of default judgment. Indeed, each of those motions explicitly noted that this request had been made18 and proceeded to argue the point at length.19 In short, the plaintiffs
issue: was the Boston Globe a newspaper of general circulation in Springfield for purposes of G.L. c. 244, § 14 for purposes of the subject foreclosure‖ (Ibanez, Motion to Vacate Judgment at 4 (Apr. 6, 2009); Larace, Motion to Vacate Judgment at 4 (Apr. 6, 2009)) is thus without basis.
17 See n. 9, supra. Indeed, their motions for entry of default judgment reaffirmed this fact. Ibanez, Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 2 (Jan. 30, 2009) (―the assignment of the foreclosed mortgage was not executed or recorded until after the exercise of the power of sale‖); Larace, Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 2 (Feb. 2, 2009) (―the assignment of the foreclosed mortgage was not executed or recorded until after the exercise of the power of sale‖). The court‘s judgment assumed these facts to be true and, confining itself to these and the other facts contained in the complaints, ruled accordingly. Prudential-Bache Securities, Inc. v. Comm’r of Revenue, 412 Mass. 243, 249 (1992); Eagle Fund, Ltd. v. Sarkans, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 79, 82 n. 8 (2005); see also Bright v. American Felt Co., 343 Mass. 334, 336 (1961). The plaintiffs‘ current argument that ―the court undertook to adopt facts and make rulings of law outside the scope of the pleadings and the record before it‖ (Ibanez, Motion to Vacate Judgment at 1-2; Larace, Motion to Vacate Judgment at 1-2) is thus without basis.
18 ―Sua sponte, the Court has also raised an additional issue concerning the right of the Plaintiff to foreclose the subject mortgage in light of the fact that the assignment of the foreclosed mortgage into the Plaintiff was not executed or recorded until after the exercise of the power of sale.‖ Ibanez, Plaintiff‘s Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 2 (Jan. 30, 2009); Larace, Plaintiff‘s Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 2 (Feb. 2, 2009).
19 Ibanez, Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 5-6 (Jan. 30, 2009), Second Supplemental Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 1-8 (Feb. 16, 2009); Larace, Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 5-6 (Feb. 2, 2009), Second Supplemental Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 2-8 (Feb. 16, 2009); see also oral argument of the motions (Feb. 11, 2009) (digitally
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were not surprised in the slightest that the ―present holder of the mortgage issue‖ would be addressed in the court‘s ultimate resolution of the case and cannot credibly argue otherwise.
Having Requested a Broad Declaration That They Held Fee Simple Title as a Result of the Foreclosure Sales and Having Been Put on Notice That Their Status as the “Present Holder of the Mortgage” at the Time of Notice and Sale Was an Issue In Connection With That Declaration, the Plaintiffs Cannot Now Narrow That Request and Vacate the Part of the Judgment That They Dislike
Lawsuits are a serious matter and are not a place for ―do-overs.‖ When a point is in issue, a litigant cannot wait for the court‘s decision and, if dissatisfied, amend its pleadings to remove that issue. See Johnston v. Box, 453 Mass. 569 (2009) (denying motion to amend after complaint had been dismissed). The principle behind this is simple and fundamental. Litigants are expected to ―investigate their claims before filing a complaint so that they have a basis at the outset to make particularized factual allegations in the complaint.‖ Id. at 575, n.11 (quoting White v. Panic, 783 A.2d 543, 555-56 (Del. 2001)). Likewise, when a plaintiff requests a declaration of the parties‘ rights as its prayer for relief, it has no grounds to object when that declaration is made, even if it is different from the one it desired. Bright v. American Felt Co., 343 Mass. 334, 336 (1961) (―The decree taking the petition for confessed did not ensure a decree for the petitioner. It only established as true the facts properly pleaded, and required the entry of whatever decree those facts demanded.‖). If the plaintiffs wanted something different or narrower than what their complaints requested, they were obligated to say so explicitly.
The plaintiffs‘ complaints requested two broad declarations. First, they sought a declaration that the defendant/equity holder‘s rights in the property were totally extinguished by the foreclosure sale. Second, they sought a declaration that, as a result of that sale, the plaintiffs now held fee simple title. Those requests were never amended or withdrawn, in whole or in part. Having been asked to declare the parties‘ rights and with nothing in the record showing
recorded).
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―sufficient reasons‖ for refusal, the court was required to give that declaration and did so. G.L. c. 231A, §§ 1-2.
Having Been Requested to Give a Declaratory Judgment, the Court Is Not Restricted, Even in a Default Situation, to Give a Judgment Favorable to the Moving Party
When presented with a motion for entry of default judgment, the court is required to take as true all properly pleaded factual allegations in the plaintiff‘s complaint. Eagle Fund, Ltd. v. Sarkans, 63 Mass. App. Ct. 79, 82 n.8 (2005). But the court is not bound by the legal conclusions in the complaint. Id. Rather, it ―has the duty to enter a judgment that is lawful in light of the facts established, even in the absence of a contest before him‖ and even when that judgment may be unfavorable to the moving party. Prudential-Bache Securities, Inc., 412 Mass. 243, 249 (1992); Bright, 343 Mass. at 336. The plaintiffs are thus wrong when they argue it was inappropriate for an unfavorable judgment to be entered against them. The facts alleged in their complaints (a post-notice, post-sale mortgage assignment to the plaintiffs) were taken as true, exactly as pled. Those facts required the judgment that was entered. Memorandum and Order on Plaintiffs‘ Motions for Entry of Default Judgment at 2-4, 8-17 (Mar. 26, 2009).
The Plaintiffs’ Arguments in Support of their Motions to Vacate Fail on Their Merits
The plaintiffs‘ motions to vacate the judgment could be denied simply on the basis of the facts and analysis outlined above. The plaintiffs were not surprised, but instead were on full notice of the matters at issue and the precise issues decided,20 all of which were inherent in the scope of the relief they sought. The judgment entered by the court was based on the facts
20 The issue relevant here, as the plaintiffs themselves recognized, was ―[t]he right of the Plaintiff to foreclose the subject mortgage in light of the fact that the assignment of the foreclosed mortgage into the Plaintiff was not executed or recorded until after the exercise of the power of sale.‖ Ibanez, Plaintiff‘s Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 1-2 (Jan. 30, 2009) (emphasis added); Larace, Plaintiff‘s Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 2 (Feb. 2, 2009) (same).
10
contained in their complaints, and solely on those facts.21 The plaintiffs were given full opportunity to make their case, factually and legally, at the time they briefed and argued their motions for entry of default judgment. Indeed, they were given (and took) the opportunity to file supplemental memoranda even after oral argument. The law has not changed and the judgment was a straightforward application of the law to the facts as the plaintiffs pled them. See
21 The plaintiffs‘ argument that I went outside the pleadings to make ―findings‖ regarding the foreclosure auctions and the subsequent months-long delay before the plaintiffs received assignments of the mortgages is, once again, completely without basis. The actual facts recited (the appraised value of the properties, the amount of the mortgages, the amount of the plaintiffs‘ bids, the fact that the plaintiffs were the only bidders, and the fact that the plaintiffs took months to prepare and execute the assignment documents) came directly from the plaintiffs‘ pleadings and (with respect to the plaintiffs being the only bidders) from the plaintiffs‘ admission at oral argument. They were confirmed, once again, in their motions to vacate. Ibanez, Motion to Vacate Judgment at 19; Larace, Motion to Vacate Judgment at 19. The further discussions based on those facts (the likely chilling of other bids due to the plaintiffs‘ inability at the time of sale to show (by proof of a valid mortgage assignment) their legal capacity to convey title and the consequent damage to the borrower) were not ―factual findings‖ per se, but rather (by fair inference) a demonstration of a rational basis for the statutory requirement that the party conducting the sale have a valid mortgage assignment in recordable form and in its possession at the time of notice and sale. Moreover, the plaintiffs’ own post-judgment submissions have made the soundness of these discussions even more apparent. It took the plaintiffs over two months after they filed their motions to vacate the judgment (from April 6 to June 8, 2009) to gather the documents that they believed were necessary to show their status as purportedly valid assignees of the mortgages at the time of the notice and sale. The reasons they gave for needing that time (what they themselves described as ―the problem‖) are telling — ―the size of the documents themselves,‖ ―the number of documents which must be taken together to capture the entire transaction,‖ ―the fact that some of the documents contain industry sensitive and confidential business practices information‖ (if so, none were produced), and ―[f]inally, the economic crisis itself [which] has impacted both the Custodians of these documents (the Trustees for the Securitized Trusts or their designee) and the loan servicers employed by them (increased foreclosure workload compounded by decreased staffing due to financial losses).‖ Ibanez, [Plaintiff‘s] Motion for Extension of Time to File Third Supplemental Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 5 (May 27, 2009); Larace, [Plaintiff‘s] Motion for Extension of Time to File Third Supplemental Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion for Entry of Default Judgment at 5 (May 27, 2009). This does not inspire confidence. Indeed, many of the documents were never produced. Moreover, left unsaid (and equally telling) is the fact that the major entities now revealed as central to these transactions are presently either in bankruptcy (Lehman Brothers), out of business (Option One Mortgage Corporation, some of whose assets were sold to AH Mortgage Acquisition Co., Inc., now renamed American Home Mortgage Servicing, Inc.), or required billions of dollars in government aid (Bank of America). It is surely a fair inference that this would make potential bidders even more unwilling to bid (or sharply discount their bids) without the plaintiffs‘ ability to show that they were valid ―holders of the mortgage‖ and thus were able to convey title at the time of the sale. How else would they have any assurance that potentially critical documents and authorizations could be obtained in timely fashion thereafter? See Memorandum and Order on Plaintiffs‘ Motions for Entry of Default Judgment at 9-10.
In any event, no factual demonstration of rationality was needed to uphold the statute (G.L. c. 244, § 14) since its rationality is apparent on its face. A mortgage is a contract. It is fundamental and basic that a party seeking to exercise a contractual right (here, the power of sale) has the contractual right to do so at the time of its exercise. As the statute recognizes, these are the mortgagee or his valid assignee, a person specifically authorized by the power of sale, or an attorney, legal guardian or conservator of those persons acting in the name of those persons. See McGreevey, 294 Mass. at 484 (―It is familiar law that one who sells under a power must follow strictly its terms. If he fails to do so there is no valid execution of the power and the sale is wholly void‖); see also G.L. c. 183, § 21 (―statutory power of sale‖ in mortgage, recognizing that person seeking to exercise the power must ―first comply[] with the terms of the mortgage and with the statutes relating to the foreclosure of mortgages by the exercise of a power of sale‖).
11
Memorandum and Order on Plaintiffs‘ Motions for Entry of Default Judgment at 8-17.
Having said this, however, it is clearly of importance, not only to the litigants, but also to others, that the plaintiffs‘ new facts and new arguments be addressed on their merits since they are alleged to be common to many securitized loans.22 In essence, the plaintiffs argue that those facts — none of which were on record at the Registry at the time of notice and sale, all of which require a close reading of a complex set of securitization documents, and many of which lack proper evidentiary support23 — show them to have been ―the mortgagee or person having his [the mortgagee‘s] estate in the land mortgaged‖ at the time of notice and sale or, in the alternative, that their foreclosure was valid because they acted at the direction (although not in the name) of an alleged agent ―of such mortgagee or person.‖ G.L. c. 244, § 14. Even taking the new facts as the plaintiffs allege them as true, however, does not change the result in this case. As discussed below, the plaintiffs were not the present holders of the mortgage at the time of the notice and sale. They were not properly authorized by the mortgage holder at those times. Even if their counsel were acting at the direction of an agent for a party that, in another capacity, coincidentally was the mortgage holder, the notice and conduct of the foreclosure sale in the plaintiffs’ names under the incorrect representation that the plaintiffs were the mortgage holders makes the sales invalid. And, for the reasons previously held, retroactive assignments, long after notice and sale have taken place, do not cure the statutory defects.
22 I am puzzled at this since, as noted above and discussed more fully below, the plaintiffs‘ own securitization documents required mortgage assignments to be made to the plaintiffs in recordable form for each and every loan at the time the plaintiffs acquired them. Surely, compliance with this requirement would (and certainly should) have been a priority for an entity issuing securities dependent on recoveries from loans, such as these, known from the start to have a higher than normal risk of delinquency and default. See Structured Asset Securities Corporation Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-Z Private Placement Memorandum at 21-43 (Dec. 26, 2006) (hereafter ―Ibanez Private Placement Memorandum‖) (discussion of ―Risk Factors‖); ABFC Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2005-OPT1 Prospectus Supplement at S-14 – S-25 (Oct. 27, 2005) (hereafter ―Larace Prospectus Supplement‖) (discussion of ―Risk Factors‖).
23 See Memorandum of Antonio Ibanez in Opposition to Plaintiff‘s Motion to Vacate Judgment at 1-27 (Jun. 29, 2009).
12
The Facts As Newly Supplemented
In relevant part, if taken as alleged, the facts in Ibanez and Larace are roughly parallel and can be summarized as follows.24
Both Ibanez and Larace involved adjustable-rate, subprime loans for the purchase of residential property in Springfield.25 In both, the borrower signed a promissory note and gave an immediately-recorded mortgage to the original lender (Rose Mortgage in Ibanez, Option One Mortgage Corporation in Larace). In Ibanez, Rose endorsed the note and properly assigned the mortgage to Option One.26 In both Ibanez and Larace, Option One then executed an endorsement of the note in blank, making the note ―payable to bearer‖ and ―negotiated by transfer alone until specially endorsed.‖ G.L. c. 106, § 3-205(b). In both, Option One also executed an assignment of the mortgage in blank (i.e., without a specified assignee) (hereafter, the ―blank mortgage assignments‖). These blank mortgage assignments were never recorded and they were not legally recordable. G.L. c. 183, § 6C (for a mortgage or assignment of a mortgage to be recordable in Massachusetts, the mortgage or assignment must ―contain or have endorsed upon it the residence and post office address of the mortgagee or assignee if said mortgagee or assignee is a natural person, or a business address, mail address or post office address of the mortgagee or assignee if the mortgagee or assignee is not a natural person‖). Moreover, since the blank mortgage assignments failed to name an assignee, they were ineffective to transfer any
24 In light of my rulings on these motions, I need not and do not decide if each of these facts (other than those appearing in the Registry records) is true. The defendants have noted many that lack proper evidentiary support in the present record (see, e.g., n. 23, supra) and they argue that now that they have entered appearances, it is inappropriate to enter a judgment against them in any way dependent upon these challenged facts.
25 Subprime loans are those that ―do not meet the customary credit standards of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac‖ and are made to borrowers ―that typically have limited access to traditional mortgage financing for a variety of reasons, including impaired or limited past credit history, lower credit scores, high loan-to-value ratios or high debt-to-income ratios.‖ Larace Supplemental Prospectus at S-14. ―As a result of these factors, delinquencies and liquidation proceedings are more likely with these mortgage loans than with mortgage loans that satisfy customary credit standards.‖ Id.
26 This assignment of the mortgage was duly recorded at the Registry.
13
interest in the mortgage.27 Flavin v. Morrissey, 327 Mass. 217, 219 (1951); Macurda v. Fuller, 225 Mass. 341, 344-345 (1916); A. Eno & W. Hovey, 28 Mass. Practice: Real Estate Law, § 4.50 at 109 (4th ed. 2004) (hereafter, ―Eno & Hovey‖) and cases cited therein.
The securitization process then began, with Option One becoming the ―Originator‖ for Lehman Brothers in Ibanez and for Bank of America in Larace.
In Ibanez, Lehman Brothers (as ―Sponsor‖ and ―Seller‖) purchased the loan from Option One (as the Originator). Lehman then sold it (with hundreds of other loans that originated from Option One and other sources) to its wholly-owned subsidiary, Structured Asset Securities Corporation (the ―Depositor‖). Structured Asset Securities Corporation subsequently sold the loans to the Structured Asset Securities Corporation Mortgage Loan Trust 2006-Z (with U.S. Bank as trustee)28 (the ―Issuing Entity‖), which the grouped them into a ―pool‖ (the ―Ibanez pool‖) and issued ten classes of certificates (two senior and eight subordinate) with varying rates of return, ranked in order of their payout priority in the event of shortfalls. Lehman purchased the certificates (presumably as the underwriter of the offering) and sold them in an offering to qualified investors.
The loans in the Ibanez pool were administered by five ―Servicers,‖ one of which was Option One (now acting in a different capacity than Originator).29 Option One is alleged to be
27 This is so because Massachusetts follows the ―title theory‖ of mortgages, making them a type of deed. Faneuil Investors Group, L.P. v. Bd. of Selectmen of Dennis, 75 Mass. App. Ct. 260, 264-265 (2009) (―Under our title theory of mortgages, a mortgage of real estate is a conveyance of the title or of some interest therein defeasible upon the payment of money or the performance of some other condition. Literally, in Massachusetts, the granting of a mortgage vests title in the mortgagee to the land placed as security for the underlying debt. The payment of the mortgage note terminates the interests of the mortgagee and revests the legal title in the mortgagor.‖); see also Lamson & Co. v. Abrams, 305 Mass. 238, 240-241 (1940) (mortgage grants legal title to mortgaged premises); Faneuil Investors, 75 Mass. App. Ct. at 265-266 and cases cited therein (mortgage is ―conveyance in fee,‖ a ―deed of conveyance‖); MacFarlane v. Thompson, 241 Mass. 486, 489 (1922); Adams v. Parker, 78 Mass. 53, 53 (1858)
28 I assume that this is the same entity as the plaintiff in Ibanez and that the plaintiff, therefore, was misnamed in that complaint.
29 The Ibanez Private Placement Memorandum is quite explicit regarding the separateness of ―Originators‖ and ―Servicers‖ and the reasons for that separateness. See Private Placement Memorandum at 84 (explaining the ―information barrier policies‖ intended to protect the trust‘s status as a holder in due course of the notes and insulate
14
the Servicer for the Ibanez loan.30 These Servicers were supervised by Aurora Loan Services LLC (a wholly-owned Lehman subsidiary) (the ―Master Servicer‖). The loan documents themselves were kept by ―Custodians‖ — Deutsche Bank, Wells Fargo, or U.S. Bank.31
Assuming that events proceeded in the way described, the Ibanez loan thus changed ownership at least four times prior to foreclosure — Rose Mortgage to Option One, Option One to Lehman Brothers, Lehman Brothers to Structured Asset Securities Corporation, and Structured Asset Securities Corporation to Structured Asset Securities Corporation Mortgage Loan Trust 2006-Z (with U.S. Bank as trustee) — without any of this appearing on the public record. Two of those entities (Lehman Brothers and its subsidiary Structured Asset Securities Corporation) are currently in bankruptcy and a third (Option One) has ceased operations.32 The Ibanez note, Rose‘s endorsement of the note to Option One, Option One‘s endorsement of the note in blank, Ibanez‘s mortgage to Rose, Rose‘s assignment of the mortgage to Option One, and Option One‘s blank mortgage assignment were all placed into a ―collateral file‖ and, presumably, were passed from hand to hand along the chain of entities just listed, ending with the Custodian. The note (endorsed in blank and thus ―bearer paper‖) was negotiable by whichever entity possessed it. Since the blank mortgage assignment was ineffective, the mortgage remained with Option One (as Originator).
In Larace, Bank of America (as ―Seller‖) purchased the loan from Option One (as Originator). Bank of America then sold it (with hundreds of other loans that originated from Option One and other sources) to its wholly-owned subsidiary Asset Backed Funding
it from claims of fraud, misrepresentation, etc. in the making of the loans).
30 There is no admissible proof in the record to establish this, but, as with the other facts set forth herein, I assume it to be true for the purpose of these motions.
31 Both this and the Larace structures seem oddly complex, particularly when so many of the entities are effectively the same (either Lehman Brothers or its subsidiaries in Ibanez and either Bank of America or its subsidiaries in Larace). But see n. 29, supra.
32 Massachusetts Secretary of State‘s Office, Option One Mortgage Corporation, Foreign Certificate of Withdrawal (Jul. 14, 2008).
15
Corporation (the ―Depositor‖). Asset Backed Funding Corporation then sold the loans to the ABFC 2005-OPT1 Trust (with Wells Fargo as trustee)33 (the ―Issuing Entity‖), which grouped them into a ―pool‖ (the ―Larace pool‖) and issued fourteen classes of certificates (two super-senior, three senior, and nine subordinate) with varying rates of return, ranked in order of their payout priority in the event of shortfalls. Bank of America Securities LLC (as ―Underwriter‖) purchased the certificates and sold them in an offering to the public. The loans in the Larace pool were administered by Option One as ―Servicer‖ (again, as in Ibanez, acting in a different capacity than Originator).
Assuming that events proceeded in the way described, the Larace loan thus changed ownership at least three times — Option One to Bank of America, Bank of America to Asset Backed Funding Corporation, and Asset Backed Funding Corporation to ABFC 2005-OPT1 Trust (with Wells Fargo as trustee) — without any of this appearing on the public record. The Larace note to Option One, Option One‘s endorsement of the note in blank, Larace‘s mortgage to Option One, and Option One‘s blank mortgage assignment were all placed into a ―collateral file‖ and, presumably, were passed from hand to hand along the chain of entities just listed, ending with the Custodian. The note (endorsed in blank and thus ―bearer paper‖) was negotiable by whichever entity possessed it. Since the blank mortgage assignment was ineffective, the mortgage remained with Option One (as Originator).
As noted above, the plaintiffs sold certificates in offerings to investors and, in that connection, issued offering documents. These included the Ibanez Private Placement Memorandum and the Larace Prospectus Supplement. Both contained detailed descriptions of the characteristics of the subprime residential loans that the plaintiffs were acquiring, the ―risk
33 I assume that this is the same entity as the plaintiff in Larace and that the plaintiff, therefore, was misnamed in that complaint.
16
factors‖ involved with those loans, and the documentation that the trusts purportedly would receive to obtain and secure their interests in the loans and lessen those risks. The provisions regarding that documentation are substantially similar.
In Ibanez they stated the following:
The Mortgage Loans will be assigned by the Depositor [Structured Asset Securities Corporation] to the Trustee [U.S. Bank], together with all principal and interest received with respect to such Mortgage Loans on and after the Cut-off Date [December 1, 2006] (other than Scheduled Payments due on that date). . . . Each Mortgage Loan will be identified in a schedule appearing as an exhibit to the Trust Agreement which will specify with respect to each Mortgage Loan, among other things, the original principal balance and the Scheduled Principal Balance as of the close of business on the Cut-off Date, the Mortgage Rate, the Scheduled Payment, the maturity date, the related Servicer and the Custodian of the mortgage file, whether the Mortgage Loan is covered by a primary mortgage insurance policy and the applicable Prepayment Premium provisions, if any.
As to each Mortgage Loan, the following documents are generally required to be delivered to the applicable Custodian on behalf of the Trustee in accordance with the Trust Agreement: (1) the related original mortgage note endorsed without recourse to the Trustee or in blank, (2) the original mortgage with evidence of recording indicated thereon (or, if such original recorded mortgage has not yet been returned by the recording office, a copy thereof certified to be a true and complete copy of such mortgage sent for recording), (3) an original assignment of the mortgage to the Trustee or in blank in recordable form (except as described below),34 (4) the policies of title insurance issued with respect to each Mortgage Loan and (5) the originals of any assumption, modification, extension or guaranty agreements.
Each transfer of a Mortgage Loan from the Seller [Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.] to the Depositor [Structured Asset Securities Corporation] and from the Depositor to the Trustee will be intended to be a sale of that Mortgage Loan and will be reflected as such in the Sale and Assignment Agreement35 and the Trust Agreement, respectively. . . .
34 The ―exception‖ (not applicable here) is where ―the mortgages or assignments of mortgage [had] been recorded in the name of an agent [e.g., Mortgage Electronic Registration Services (―MERS‖)] on behalf of the holder of the related mortgage note.‖ Ibanez Private Placement Memorandum at 119. Here, the mortgage was recorded in the name of the original mortgagee (Rose) and subsequently assigned by Rose to Option One (in Option One‘s own name and not as an agent). Any argument plaintiff seeks to make that Option One was acting as an agent for the Trust (or any other entity) is belied not only by the wording of the assignment (Option One named individually), but also by the Private Placement Memorandum that made both the separateness of the trust and the reason for that separateness explicit and clear. See Private Placement Memorandum at 84 (explaining ―information barrier policies,‖ plainly designed to protect the Trust‘s status as a holder in due course of the notes).
35 The plaintiff has not provided this document to the court. According to the Private Placement Memorandum, it was ―the mortgage loan sale and assignment agreement dated as of December 1, 2006 between the Seller [Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.] and the Depositor [Structured Asset Securities Corporation].‖ Ibanez Private Placement Memorandum at 193. According to the Private Placement Memorandum, Lehman Brothers had previously purchased the mortgage loans directly from the Transferors (including Option One) in a series of separate
17
Ibanez Private Placement Memorandum at 119 (emphasis added). Moreover, the Memorandum further states that each Transferor of a mortgage loan (here, Option One) represented and warranted to Lehman ―as direct purchaser or assignee‖ that ―the assignment of mortgage [to Lehman] [was] in recordable form and acceptable for recording under the laws of the relevant applicable jurisdiction.‖ Id. at 120-121. Assignments in recordable form to each successive entity were thus required at every step in the securitization chain.
In Larace they stated the following:
On or about October 31, 2005 . . . the Depositor [Asset Backed Funding Corporation] will transfer to the Trust Fund all of its right, title and interest in and to each Mortgage Loan, the related mortgage notes, mortgages and other related documents (collectively, the ―Related Documents‖), including all scheduled payments with respect to each such Mortgage Loan due after the Cut-Off Date. . . .
The Pooling and Servicing Agreement will require that, within the time period specified therein, the Seller [Bank of America] will deliver or cause to be delivered to the Trustee on behalf of the Certificateholders (or a custodian, as the Trustee‘s agent for such purpose) the mortgage notes endorsed in blank and the Related Documents. In lieu of delivery of original mortgages or mortgage notes, if such original is not available or lost, the Seller may deliver or cause to be delivered true and correct copies thereof, or, with respect to a lost mortgage note, a lost note affidavit executed by the Seller or the originator of such Mortgage Loan.
Unless otherwise required by Fitch or S&P, assignments of the Mortgage Loans to the Trustee (or its nominee) will not be recorded in any jurisdiction, but will be delivered to the Trustee in recordable form, so that they can be recorded in the event recordation is necessary in connection with the servicing of a Mortgage Loan.36
Larace Supplemental Prospectus at S-54 (emphasis added).37
Sale Agreements. Id. at 193, 199.
36 The Supplemental Prospectus makes only one exception to this requirement, not applicable here. This exception is for mortgage loans recorded in the name of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (―MERS‖) or its designee, in which case all that was required was ―all actions as are necessary to cause the Trust to be shown as the owner of the related Mortgage Loan on the records of MERS for purposes of the system of recording transfers of beneficial ownership of mortgages maintained by MERS.‖ Larace Supplemental Prospectus at S-54.
37 The Pooling and Servicing Agreement required the Depositor (Asset Backed Funding Corporation), at the time of the execution and delivery of that agreement, to provide the Trustee (Wells Fargo) ―the original Mortgage with evidence of recording thereon,‖ ―an original Assignment of Mortgage (which may be in blank), in form and substance acceptable for recording,‖ and an original copy of any intervening assignment of mortgage showing a
18
Despite the requirement in both Ibanez and Larace for an assignment of the mortgage to the trusts in recordable form at the time the loans were transferred to the trusts, no such assignments were made. As the collateral files for both loans reveal, the only mortgage assignments executed prior to the foreclosure sales were the one from Rose Mortgage to Option One (in Ibanez) and the ineffective blank mortgage assignments by Option One (in both Ibanez and Larace). Thus, at the time the foreclosure sales were noticed and conducted, the notes (endorsed in blank without recourse and thus ―bearer paper‖) were held by the plaintiffs, but the mortgages securing those notes were both still held by Option One (as Originator).
At some point (the record does not indicate when) both the Ibanez and Larace loans became delinquent and a new entity (Fidelity National Foreclosure and Bankruptcy Solutions) (―Fidelity‖) became involved. On April 10, 2007, purporting to act on behalf of Option One in Option One‘s capacity as the Servicer of the loan,38 Fidelity sent an email with an attached pdf referral package39 to the plaintiffs‘ counsel (the Ablitt law firm) with instructions to bring a
complete chain of assignments‖ for each and every loan. Larace, Pooling and Servicing Agreement at Art. II, § 2.01 (ii), (iii) & (iv) (Oct. 1, 2005) (emphasis added). The same provisions appear in the Mortgage Loan Purchase Agreement in identical language. Mortgage Loan Purchase Agreement at Art. II, § 2.02 (ii), (iii) & (iv) (Oct. 1, 2005). As noted above, a blank mortgage assignment is neither recordable nor effective in Massachusetts. Thus, the assignment required by these agreements was one from the holder of the mortgage directly and explicitly to the trust, with the trust‘s name, business address, and mailing address or post office address either contained or endorsed on the assignment. G.L. c. 183, § 6C.
38 I say this based on the affidavits of Walter Porr, Jr. in which he claimed that the foreclosure referrals in both Ibanez and Larace came ―from Option One Mortgage Corporation‖ even though the documents he attached and/or referenced in support of that statement came from Fidelity. Ibanez, Aff. of Walter Porr, Jr. (Jan 30, 2009); Larace, Aff. of Walter Porr, Jr. (Feb. 2, 2009). That the foreclosure instructions in both Ibanez and Larace were given on behalf of Option One in its capacity as the Servicer of those loans and not for Option One as the ―holder of the mortgage‖ (Originator) is clear from both the referral documents themselves and the affidavits filed at the Hampden County Registry of Deeds in connection with the subsequent foreclosure sales. See Ibanez, Aff. of Cindi Ellis (May 7, 2008) (submitted to the Registry for Option One ―as attorney in fact for U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for the Structured Asset Securities Corporation Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006‖); Ibanez, Massachusetts Foreclosure Deed By Corporation (May 7, 2008) (signed by Ms. Ellis for Option One as ―attorney in fact‖ for U.S. Bank‖); Larace, Power of Attorney (May 7, 2008) (signed by Ms. Ellis and referring to Option One as ―attorney in fact for Wells Fargo‖). Indeed, at oral argument, the plaintiffs‘ attorney stated that the foreclosure referrals came from ―the loan servicers.‖ Statement of Walter Porr, Jr. at oral argument (Apr. 17, 2009).
39 The record does not include a copy of the referral package, so its contents (most of which are cryptically described as ―screen prints‖) are unknown. Ibanez, Aff. of Walter Porr, Jr. at Ex. A (Jan. 30, 2009).
19
foreclosure action against Mr. Ibanez and his property ―in the name of U.S. Bank National Association, as Trustee for the Structured Asset Securities Corporation Mortgage Pass-Through Certificates, Series 2006-Z.‖ Ibanez, Aff. of Walter Porr, Jr. at Exs. A-C (Jan. 30, 2009). On April 18, 2007, again purportedly on behalf of Option One in Option One‘s capacity as the Servicer of the loan,40 Fidelity sent a similar email and pdf referral package to Ablitt with instructions to commence a foreclosure action against the Laraces and their property ―in the name of the investor below: Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as Trustee for ABFC 2005-OPT1 Trust, ABFC Asset-Backed Certificates, Series 2005-OPT1,‖ with the representation that the Larace mortgage was ―currently held‖ by Wells Fargo.41 Larace, Aff. of Walter Porr, Jr. at Ex. A (Feb. 2, 2009).
The Ablitt firm then filed a Servicemembers‘ Complaint against Mr. Ibanez, naming U.S. Bank as the plaintiff under the representation that U.S. Bank was ―the owner (or assignee) and holder of a mortgage with a statutory power of sale given by Antonio Ibanez to Rose Mortgage, Inc.‖ Complaint to Foreclose Mortgage, Land Court 07 Misc. 345456 (Apr. 17, 2007). As noted above, this was incorrect. Option One was that holder. The Notice of Mortgagee‘s Sale of Real Estate, published on June 14, 21, and 28, 2007 for a foreclosure sale on July 5, 2007, stated that U.S. Bank was the ―present holder‖ of the Ibanez mortgage. As noted above, this was incorrect. Option One was that holder. The Ibanez sale was conducted in the name of U.S. Bank, U.S. Bank was the only bidder, and the ―foreclosure deed‖ executed ten months later named U.S. Bank as the grantor pursuant to that sale.42 Massachusetts Foreclosure Deed By Corporation
40 See n. 38, supra.
41 Again, the record does not include a copy of the referral package, so its contents (most of which, again, are described as ―screen prints) are unknown. Larace, Aff. of Walter Porr, Jr. at Ex. A (Feb. 2, 2009).
42 U.S. Bank bought the property for $94,350, which was $16,437.27 less than the purported amount of the outstanding loan ($110,787.27) (leaving Mr. Ibanez liable for that deficiency) and $16,650 (15%) less than the bank‘s calculation of the property‘s actual market value ($111,000). Ibanez, Complaint at 3, ¶ 8; Aff. of Walter Porr, Jr. at Ex. G (Jan. 30, 2009).
20
(May 7, 2008). There was no mention or suggestion in any of these documents that U.S. Bank was proceeding to foreclose the mortgage on behalf of anyone other than itself. An assignment of the Ibanez mortgage to U.S. Bank from American Home Mortgage Servicing, Inc. as the purported ―successor in interest to Option One Mortgage Corporation‖ was not executed until September 2, 2008, fourteen months after the foreclosure sale and over three months after the recording of the foreclosure deed.43
The Ablitt firm brought a Servicemembers‘ Complaint against the Laraces, naming Wells Fargo as the plaintiff under the representation that Wells Fargo was ―the owner (or assignee) and holder of a mortgage with a statutory power of sale given by Mark A. Larace and Tammy L. Larace to Option One Mortgage Corporation.‖ Complaint to Foreclose Mortgage, Land Court 07 Misc. 346369 (Apr. 27, 2007). As noted above, this was incorrect. Option One was the holder. The Notice of Mortgagee‘s Sale of Real Estate, published on June 14, 21, and 28, 2007 for a foreclosure sale on July 5, 2007, stated that Wells Fargo was the ―present holder‖ of the Larace mortgage. As noted above, this was incorrect. Option One was the holder. The Larace sale was conducted in Wells Fargo‘s name, Wells Fargo was the only bidder, and the ―foreclosure deed‖ executed ten months later named U.S. Bank as the grantor pursuant to that sale.44 Massachusetts
43 It is not clear from the record if American Home Mortgage Servicing, Inc. was, in fact, the ―successor in interest‖ to Option One‘s interest in the mortgage (as Originator) and thus able to make a valid assignment of that interest. It may have been Option One‘s successor as the Servicer of the loan for U.S. Bank, but the two are not the same. So far as can be discerned from the record and a review of corporate filings at the Massachusetts Secretary of State‘s office, Option One ceased active operations in early 2008 (it withdrew its corporate registration in Massachusetts in July of that year) and American Home Mortgage Servicing (a newly-formed corporation, previously named AH Mortgage Acquisition Co., Inc.) purchased some of Option One‘s assets, but apparently not all and (so far as the record shows) only Option One‘s Servicing contracts. See Larace, Aff. of Michelle Halyard (Jun. 4, 2009) (describing American Home as ―a [not the] successor in interest to Option One Mortgage Corporation‘s Loan Servicing operations‖ (emphasis added)). The asset purchase agreement has not been produced, so it is impossible to determine if Option One‘s interest in the Ibanez mortgage was among the assets purchased by American Home.
44 Wells Fargo bought the property for $120,397.03, which was purportedly the amount of the outstanding loan, ―plus all outstanding fees and costs‖ (i.e., leaving no deficiency owed), but $24,602.97 (17%) less than the bank‘s calculation of the property‘s actual market value ($145,000). Larace Complaint at 3, ¶ 8; Aff. of Walter Porr, Jr. at Ex. E (Feb. 2, 2009).
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Foreclosure Deed By Corporation (May 7, 2008). As in Ibanez, there was no mention or suggestion in any of these documents that Wells Fargo was proceeding to foreclose the mortgage on behalf of anyone other than itself. An assignment of the Larace mortgage to Wells Fargo from American Home Mortgage Servicing, Inc. as the purported ―successor in interest to Option One Mortgage Corporation‖ was not executed until September 2, 2008, fourteen months after the foreclosure sale and over three months after the recording of the foreclosure deed.45
Analysis of the Newly Supplemented Facts
The Plaintiffs Were Not the Present Holders of the Mortgage at the Time of the Notice and Sale
To the extent the plaintiffs and their supporting amici request that I reconsider and reverse my previous ruling that the foreclosing party is statutorily required to be the ―present holder of the mortgage‖ at the time of the notice and sale (i.e., that post-sale mortgage assignments to the successful bidder, even if backdated, do not suffice), I decline. My reasons are explained in my previous Memorandum and I reaffirm them again. The statute‘s commands are clear, the plaintiffs‘ own securitization documents show that they knew of those requirements, and if they failed to follow them, the responsibility for the consequences is theirs. Martha’s Vineyard Land Bank Comm’n v. Bd. of Assessors of West Tisbury, 62 Mass. App. Ct. 25, 27-28 (2004) (―Where the language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, it is conclusive as to legislative intent and the courts enforce the statute according to its plain wording, which we are constrained to follow so long as its application would not lead to an absurd result. When a statute speaks with clarity to an issue, judicial inquiry into the statute‘s meaning, in all by the most extraordinary circumstance, is finished.‖ (internal citations and quotations omitted)).
If they believe a change is warranted to reflect ―industry standards and practice,‖ they
45 Again, it is not clear from the record if American Home Mortgage Servicing, Inc. was in fact the ―successor in interest‖ to Option One‘s interest in the mortgage (as Originator) and thus able to make a valid assignment of that interest. See n. 43, supra.
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must seek that change from the legislature. I note, however, that if those ―standards and practice‖ have brought us to the present situation (see, e.g., Chairman Ben Bernanke, Financial Innovation and Consumer Protection, speech at the Federal Reserve System‘s Sixth Biennial Community Affairs Research Conference (Apr. 17, 2009); R. Posner, A Failure of Capitalism: The Crisis of ’08 and the Descent Into Depression (Harvard University Press 2009)), ―we should learn something from that experience.‖ Korematsu v. United States, 323 U.S. 214, 242 (1944) (Jackson, J., dissenting).
Perhaps in recognition of this, the plaintiffs argue that they were the ―present holder of the mortgage‖ or, for statutory purposes, should be deemed to be because they possessed the note, a blank mortgage assignment, and a series of off-record agreements by which they were entitled to (and should have received) a mortgage assignment in recordable form. That argument fails as well, for two reasons.
First, if, as here, the power being exercised is contract based, the party seeking to exercise it must be authorized by that contract. See Roche v. Farnsworth, 106 Mass. 509, 513 (1871) (―power must be executed in strict compliance with its terms‖). Here, the only entities authorized by the mortgages to exercise the power of sale contained therein are the original mortgagees and the valid assignees of those mortgagees.46 The plaintiffs were neither at the time
46 The only person authorized by the Ibanez mortgage to invoke the power of sale is the ―Lender,‖ defined in the mortgage as Rose Mortgage, Inc. in its capacity as mortgagee. Ibanez Mortgage at 11, ¶ 22; 1, Definition (C). Thus, in full accordance with Massachusetts law (see Ibanez Mortgage at 9, ¶ 16, governing law is ―federal law and the law of the jurisdiction in which the Property is located‖), the mortgage authorizes only the mortgagee or a valid assignee of the mortgagee to invoke the statutory power of sale. See Lamson & Co. v. Abrams, 305 Mass. 238, 242 (1941) (assignee of properly-assigned mortgage succeeds to all of the mortgagee‘s rights in the property, leaving the assignor with none). This does not include a person or entity which only holds the note. See Ibanez Mortgage at 7, third full paragraph (distinguishing between ―Lender‖ and ―any purchaser of the Note‖). Making this even more crystal clear is the mortgage‘s reference to the power of sale as the statutory power of sale (Ibanez Mortgage at 11, ¶ 22), which can be invoked only by ―the mortgagee or his executors, administrators, successors or assigns.‖ G.L. c. 183, § 21.
The same is true of the Larace mortgage. Only the original mortgagee or the valid assignee of the mortgagee can act under the power of sale. ―Lender‖ is defined as Option One Mortgage Corporation. Larace Mortgage at 1. The law that governs the interpretation of the mortgage is ―federal law and the law of the jurisdiction
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of notice and sale because, as discussed above, there had never been an assignment of the mortgage to them. The blank mortgage assignments they possessed transferred nothing.
Second, in Massachusetts, a mortgage is a conveyance of land. Nothing is conveyed unless and until it is validly conveyed. The various agreements between the securitization entities stating that each had a right to an assignment of the mortgage are not themselves an assignment and they are certainly not in recordable form.47 At best, the agreements gave those entities a right to bring an action to get an assignment. But actually holding something and having only the right to be its holder are two very different things. To obtain a mortgage assignment you do not actually possess presumes, at the least, that you have a demonstrable right to get it, that you will be able to determine the entity that validly holds the mortgage you need assigned (not always easy when all previous assignments have not been recorded at the Registry),48 that that entity will still be operational,49 that it will be able to find the relevant paperwork, that it will have someone with authority to execute the relevant paperwork, and that it will be able to do so in a timely fashion. These presumptions are not always accurate. See n. 21, supra. As noted above, even the plaintiffs, armed with all their contractual rights, knowledge, and (presumably) access to the relevant files and authorized persons, took ten months in Ibanez, and fourteen months in Larace, to get actual mortgage assignments in recordable form. And
in which the Property is located,‖ i.e., Massachusetts. Larace Mortgage at 4, ¶ 15. The assigns that are benefited by the covenants and agreements in the mortgage (Larace Mortgage at 4, ¶ 12) are thus limited to the assigns recognized by Massachusetts law (i.e., valid assignees of the mortgage). And the power of sale in the mortgage is identified as the statutory power of sale (Larace Mortgage at 5, ¶ 21), which, as noted above, can only be invoked by ―the mortgagee or his executors, administrators, successors or assigns.‖ G.L. c. 183, § 21.
47 It is also important to note that, at every step in the securitization process, the contractual right to immediate transfer of a mortgage assignment in recordable form was breached. See discussion at 12-18, supra.
48 An assignment simply from the last assignee of record may not be sufficient. That assignee may have previously assigned the mortgage in an off-record transaction and that off-record assignment may be recorded (even if erroneously) while you are waiting for yours to be processed — a process that the plaintiffs‘ counsel conceded currently takes anywhere from ―two to three months‖ to ―as long as ten to twelve as is observed in some of these cases. And quite frankly, who knows why.‖ Statement of Walter Porr, Jr. at oral argument (Apr. 17, 2009). If so, you would need to pursue an assignment from that entity, with associated additional potential problems and delay.
49 As noted above, Lehman Brothers and its subsidiaries are currently in bankruptcy and Option One has ceased operations.
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even those assignments may be problematic.50
The plaintiffs make much of the fact that they were the holders of the note at the time the foreclosure sale was noticed and conducted. But even a valid transfer of the note does not automatically transfer the mortgage. ―[T]he holder of the mortgage and the holder of the note may be different persons.‖ Lamson, 305 Mass. at 245. The holder of the note may have an equitable right to obtain an assignment of the mortgage by filing an action in equity, but that is all it has. Barnes v. Boardman, 149 Mass. 106, 114 (1889). The mortgage itself remains with the mortgagee (or, if properly assigned, its assignee) who is deemed to hold ―the legal title in trust for the purchaser of the debt‖ until the formal assignment of the mortgage to the note holder or, absent such assignment, by order of the court in an action for conveyance of the mortgage. Id.; see also Eno & Hovey, § 9.49 at 299 and cases cited therein. But, as noted above, the right to get something and actually having it are two different things. When a bidder goes to a foreclosure sale, he or she is promised and expects to get a conveyance of the property. A bidder does not expect to purchase the right to a potential lawsuit, which will only entitle him or her to actually obtain the property if such lawsuit is successful.51 G.L. c. 244, § 14 recognizes this, and limits the right of foreclosure by sale to ―the mortgagee or person having his [the mortgagee‘s] estate in the land mortgaged,‖52 ―a person authorized by the power of sale,‖53 and the duly
50 See n. 43 & 45, supra.
51 This is why G.L. c. 244, § 14 requires the foreclosing party to be in possession of a valid assignment of the mortgage in recordable form at the time of notice and sale. Without the ability to ―go to record‖ immediately, the title is in doubt and potential bidders cannot help but be chilled. To say that bidders are absolutely confident that the foreclosing party will be able to produce the requisite assignment at some point and they are not deterred in the slightest by the prospect of delays of up to fourteen months to do so, is to ignore reality. G.L. c. 244, § 14, with its mandate for clarity, permits no such assumptions. Bottomly, 13 Mass. App. Ct. at 483-84 (statute requires strict compliance). The legislature has not forgotten that a person‘s home, his or her equity in that home, and the potential of thousands of dollars in avoidable deficiency debt are at stake.
52 The original statutory language, making absolutely clear that the phrase ―or person having his estate in the land mortgaged‖ refers to the mortgagee’s estate in the land, was the following:
In all cases, in which a power of sale is contained in a mortgage deed of real property, the mortgagee, or any person having his estate therein, or in or by such power authorized to act in the premises, may, upon a breach of the condition thereof, give such notices and do all such acts as are authorized or required by such
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authorized attorney, legal guardian, or conservator of such mortgagee or person ―acting in the name of such mortgagee or person.‖ G.L. c. 244, § 14. The words ―having his estate in the land mortgaged‖ make clear that the assignment required (exactly as required by ―title theory‖ case law) is a valid conveyance of the mortgagee‘s interest in the land with all the ―deed‖ requirements that that entails.
The Plaintiffs’ Foreclosures Did Not Become Valid Because They Purportedly Were “Authorized” By the Actual Mortgage Holders
The plaintiffs‘ fallback argument — that their foreclosures were valid because they were done at the direction of the actual mortgage holder (Option One) — also fails, for two reasons.
First, the direction did not come from Option One, but rather from another entity (Fidelity) acting for Option One in its capacity as Loan Servicer. There is nothing in the record that shows Fidelity‘s capacity to act for Option One generally (and, more specifically, as Originator and holder of the mortgage) and certainly nothing that shows it had any authority to order the disposition of Option One’s assets. This is no mere technicality. It should never be forgotten that the subjects of these purported directions were interests in land, with all the proofs and safeguards that that necessarily entails. See, e.g., G.L. c. 259, § 1 (statute of frauds).
Second, and most importantly, G.L. c. 244, § 14 requires complete transparency. See, e.g., Roche, 106 Mass. at 513 (―These are obscurities that are inconsistent with the degree of clearness that out to exist in such an advertisement.‖). What is at stake is of utmost importance and finality — the complete extinguishment of a person‘s rights in his or her property (often the
power. . . .
St. 1857, c. 229.
53 As previously noted, the only person authorized by the Ibanez mortgage to invoke the power of sale is the ―Lender‖ (Mortgage at 11, ¶ 22), defined in the mortgage as Rose Mortgage, Inc. in its capacity as mortgagee (Mortgage at 1, Definition (C)). Thus, in full accordance with Massachusetts law (see Mortgage at 9, ¶ 16, governing law is ―federal law and the law of the jurisdiction in which the Property is located‖), the mortgage authorizes only the mortgagee or a valid assignee of the mortgagee to invoke the statutory power of sale. This does not include a person or entity which only holds the note. See Mortgage at 7, third full paragraph (distinguishing between ―Lender‖ and ―any purchaser of the Note‖).
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home where that person and his or her family live) and the transfer of those rights to someone who wants (and is entitled) to complete assurance of good title to that property so that he or she can live there without concern. Thus, when a foreclosure is noticed and conducted for one party by another, the name of the principal must be disclosed in the notice. G.L. c. 244, § 14. Here, the plaintiffs were explicitly represented to be the ―present holders of the mortgage‖ and the sale was conducted in reliance on that representation. They cannot now claim to have been something else. As Bottomly v. Kabachnick, 13 Mass. App. Ct. 480, 483-484 (1982) and McGreevey v. Charlestown Five Cents Savings Bank, 294 Mass. 480, 484 (1936) make clear, G.L. c. 244, § 14 requires strict compliance and a failure to do so means that the foreclosure is invalid.
Conclusion
The issues in this case are not merely problems with paperwork or a matter of dotting i‘s and crossing t‘s. Instead, they lie at the heart of the protections given to homeowners and borrowers by the Massachusetts legislature. To accept the plaintiffs‘ arguments is to allow them to take someone‘s home without any demonstrable right to do so, based upon the assumption that they ultimately will be able to show that they have that right and the further assumption that potential bidders will be undeterred by the lack of a demonstrable legal foundation for the sale and will nonetheless bid full value in the expectation that that foundation will ultimately be produced, even if it takes a year or more. The law recognizes the troubling nature of these assumptions, the harm caused if those assumptions prove erroneous, and commands otherwise.
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For the foregoing reasons, the plaintiffs‘ motions to vacate the Judgment in these cases are DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
By the court (Long, J.)
Attest: ___________________________________
Deborah J. Patterson, Recorder
Dated: 14 October 2009

Expected Shift in Healthcare: Part 2 (Suppression Medicine)

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

Suppression Medicine centers around the concept of pain relief, removal of a problem, and/or arresting the growth of a sickness or disease.  The one thing that it does not focus on is the cause of the disease or sickness.  In this paradigm, doctors are classified as “Treaters” for they simply treat the symptoms.  In the late 1990’s my wife began to have pain in her joints and her skin became extremely sensitive.  She went to her local physician and he diagnosed her as having Fibromyalgia. Fibromyalgia is a common condition characterized by long-term, body-wide pain and tender points in joints, muscles, tendons, and other soft tissues. Fibromyalgia has also been linked to fatigue, morning stiffness, sleep problems, headaches, numbness in hands and feet, depression, and anxiety.  This doctor claimed to be a Fibromyalgia expert.  He said that there was no known cure but there were medications to “manage” the pain.  He prescribed 3 different pharmaceuticals, all having substantial side effects.  Her body began to respond to the drugs in an adverse way.  Yes, the pain and sensitivity decreased but her memory, eyes, and overall well being suffered.  The monthly pharmacy bill exceeded $400 and was paid by our health insurance.  Naturally, our insurance premium cost went up.

In 2000, we attended a seminar for health supplements at the urging of a friend of mine.  He had signed up as a distributor and believe in the benefits of the product.  The company brought in a physician & consultant, Dr. Lee Cowden of Dallas.  As I recall, he shared his understanding of “alternative” medicine and its applicability to illnesses.  When he was in medical school, he developed an illness that had no solutions based upon current medical understanding (orthodox medicine).  He made inquiries of his instructors and found there to be no treatment available.  Finally, he mentioned his ailment to his grandmother and she suggested a homeopathic alternative.  It worked!  This opened his eyes to homeopathic remedies.  At a break in the session, my wife and I introduced ourselves to him and explained her illness.  He said casually, “You have toxins in the joints and they can be removed with higher amounts of Vitamin C and other antioxidants”.  The supplement we were hearing about also had excellent detoxification properties.  We signed up to receive the supplement.  She went back to the doctor and told him she wanted off of the medications.  He argued with her and tried to convince her that her condition would worsen.  She scheduled another visit and this time I went with her.  I told the doctor to wean her off the medicine.  His reply was “Don’t you want her to have an acceptable quality of life?”  My reply was “Yes, so get her off the medicine.”  I upset the doctor but he prescribed the reduced dosages to wean her off.  Isn’t it a little scary to have to be weaned off of any medicine that is suppose to help you?  In a short period of time, she was totally off of her medicine.  At the same time she was taking the supplement with additional vitamin C.  Her joint pain and tissue sensitivity ceased.  So did the $400 per month pharmacy bill.

Have you noticed that Fibromyalgia is a recent ailment?  Why?  Could it be due to the 70,000 chemicals that the population is potentially being exposed to now?  Fifty years ago there was no wide spread use of chemicals but that has changed.  If you walk barefooted in your yard that has been treated for weed control, you now have absorbed some toxins.  What about those carpets you walk on?  Remember the new carpet smell?  That is the out-gassing of chemicals used in carpet dyeing.  What about paint thinner?  What about insect repellant?  The list goes on.  Each of us has our own unique “toxin exposure” history.  How can a doctor produce a quality diagnosis without knowing what you have been exposed to?  He can’t.  The medical and pharmaceutical community has found it expedient and highly profitable to treat symptoms.  An aspirin may control the inflammation occurring in your head, but what caused the inflammation to begin with?

Where are the Healers?

Expected Shift in Healthcare: Part 1

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

For the last 70+ years the healthcare industry has based its treatment on the petrochemical based paradigm.  The pharmaceutical industry has embraced products that treat symptoms rather than focus on the source of the problem.  For instance, chemotherapy is designed to kill cancer cells in the patient but does not address what caused a change in function of those cells in the first place.  It is critical that we understand the following truth- a change in function precedes a change in structure.  With improvements in technology, the scientific community has discovered the extreme complexity of a single cell in our bodies.  The Genome Mapping Project failed to provide the answers researchers were hoping for thus the Epigenome Mapping Project ensued.

A chromosome (our genetic material) is made up of genes.  Genes account for hair color, eye color, and all those other characteristics supplied by our parents.  However, scientists have discovered that something is going on between the genes that effect their activities.  They continue to drill down deeper into the cellular structure hoping to find a precise “key” that will unlock the mysteries of health and disease.  It is my expectation that they will discover the impact of wave forms and will conclude that the pharmaceutical method of treatment has been a great failed experiment that has cost millions of lives and maimed a like number.  Administering a pharmaceutical is an attempt to only “suppress” symptoms but at the same time introduces a toxic side effect that may cause unintended consequences to the patient.  Every person on earth is unique in their genetic structure and exposure to chemicals, vapors, bacteria, viruses, allergens, etc.  Drug companies cannot conclusively determine the petrochemical impact on any one person since they are not privy to that person’s life history.  When they conduct their “double-blind” studies, they use statistical assumptions that fail to guarantee the safety of the patient.  This is why you see all of the contradictions listed on the warning labels.

What is the solution?  There must be a method of identifying interferences within the cellular structure.  Surely the body has some mechanism for dealing with these sub-cellular “triggers” that cause the cell to function improperly.  I believe there is.  Homeopathic remedies were used prior to the petrochemical paradigm.  Those remedies had reasonable success in dealing with many illnesses and chronic conditions.  They still did not produce the results medical practitioners had hope for.  The complexity of our bodies demands a technology that can focus on multiple interferences residing in various parts of our bodies.  Unfortunately each of us has an abundance of “interferences” in our bodies.  How many chemicals has the average person been exposed to?  Gasoline, cement, auto exhaust, cleaning chemicals, mercury from those old thermometers and tooth fillings, chlorine in pools, the list goes on.  What about bacteria, viruses, allergens, fungi, and other external stimuli?  Even though our bodies may remove a toxic chemical through the liver, its wave form (or imprint) may continue to reside inside the cell structure and produce a negative impact on its function.  Once the function changes, the structure changes.  Cancer starts growing or our heart begins to develop an arrhythmia.  That chemical trigger caused a misfiring of heart muscle. 

We rely on electrocardiograms to provide us invaluable information in analyzing the heart’s irregularity by tapping into the body’s own electrical system.  The sun generates electromagnetic waves that react with the human body where a chemical reaction takes place and produces vitamin D.  The body has a rather complex electrical system that operates in low voltage and is very effective in sending information down the pathways.  What if we could tap into those pathways and analyze the information being transmitted by the various bio-systems such as the liver, heart, intestine, lymphatic, etc.?

Good news!  Those pathways are accessible because they come close to the skin at specific, identifiable points.  Over thousands of years, the Chinese mapped out the points and developed the discipline of acupuncture.  In the last 40 years, researchers have been able to confirm these points by comparing known electromagnetic signals with those found at specific “meridians”.

What if we could find the source of the cancer “trigger”?  What if we could find the “interference” causing an irregular heartbeat?  By removing the toxic influence at a specific focus point, it is reasonable for us to expect a favorable outcome.  Removal of a toxin does not heal the patient, the body is designed to heal itself.  If you remove a splinter from your finger with a pair of tweezers, the wound begins to heal.  The tweezers did not heal you, your body did once the splinter was removed.  Researchers and practitioners have technology available to them that can measure “interferences” at these meridian points and compare those signals against a table of known signals.  This information can be used to develop a method to cancel out those toxic signals and effectively remove them.  There are hundreds, maybe thousands of external stimuli found in the body of an average person.  Those signals have been acquired over the lifetime of that person.  Inside the egg and sperm are signals transmitted through the body water of the parents, grandparents, on up the family tree.  Though it may be hard to believe, your parents’ exposure to toxic, viral, and bacterial signals may have been passed to you at the moment of conception.

Reality favors no one.  It is the consistent, measurable, unbiased, and uniformly predictable nature of existence.  The job of science is to observe, experience, and report reality honestly.  Fundamental reality is available to everyone.  If the medical community really wants to solve the healthcare crisis rather than just make money at the expense of all, then we must pursue and fund the research that looks for “triggers” rather than just suppression of symptoms.

Circumcision of the Heart

Friday, October 9th, 2009

The desire of the Overcomers is to be empowered by Our Heavenly Father to operate in a calling without leaven (or sin).  The Church Age has fulfilled its leavened ministry which disallows it to enter into the Holy of Holies for sin cannot stand before Our Heavenly Father.  There has been much writing describing the three Feasts and all of their implications and attributes so I will not rehash them here.  My focus has been and will be on the “barley” company, those who are called into the first squadron by Our Heavenly Father.

In 1996, I was asleep one Sunday morning in August and both of my calves cramped.  I immediately awoke and hopped out of bed to relieve the cramping.  It was successful.  Never before had that event happened.  This coincided with my study in the Book of Malachi.  In chapter 3 there were two types of followers: the disgruntled (the Pentecostal church, wheat company) and the obedient (the Overcomers, barley company).  The following Scripture was a prophetic reference to the cramps:

Mal 4:2
“But for you who fear my name, the Sun of Righteousness will rise with healing in his wings. And you will go free, leaping with joy like calves let out to pasture.  (NLT)

The day this happened to me, a Pentecostal prophet from Iowa had come to the church we were attending and preached on the same passages I had been studying.  Our Heavenly Father told us in Malachi chapter 3, the messenger was coming: For He [is] like a refiner’s fire And like launderers’ soap.  He will sit as a refiner and a purifier of silver.  Further: And I will come near you for judgment; I will be a swift witness Against sorcerers, Against adulterers, Against perjurers, Against those who exploit wage earners and widows and orphans, And against those who turn away an alien– Because they do not fear Me,” Says the LORD of hosts.

The Church prophet had attempted to assign the obedient ones in Chapter 3 to be likened to the Pentecostal church today but Our Heavenly Father had already revealed to me that they were the disobedient ones.  The prophet read Malachi 3 and when he came to the “obedient” followers, he solicited a verbal response to his question: “And who are these people that are obedient?”  The congregation responded, “The Church”.  For emphasis, he asked the question again.  And again the congregation responded, “The Church”.  A third time, he walked from the other side of the sanctuary over to the section I sat in and pointed directly at me and said, “Who do you say it is?”  As he was walking toward my section, Our Heavenly Father told me “not to challenge Saul’s anointing”.  I responded, “The Church”.  At the end of that month, Our Heavenly Father removed us from the Pentecostal church.  That was 13 years ago.  Our removal was necessary in order that we would receive direct instruction from Our Heavenly Father without an intermediary “telling” us what Our Heavenly Father said.  Don’t get me wrong, I am not critical of the church or its five-fold ministers.  It was time for me and my family to move to a different realm of revelation and understanding associated with our callings.

This year during the night of the Feast of Trumpets, we were in Norfolk, Nebraska for a birthday celebration.  In the middle of the night I was awoken once again by the cramping of both calves, however it only happened long enough to wake me up without forcing me to jump out of bed for relief.  Thank you Lord!  I said nothing about the event.  That morning our friends shared that the wife had awoken early at 5:05 AM and was given the Scripture Psalm 50:5.  That day was the celebration at a hilltop state park visitor center in Iowa with an excellent 360 degree view.  At the end of the party, my wife and I were watching the sun setting. We could see downtown Omaha in the distance.  There were many clouds in the sky but one drew our attention for it was uniquely luminous with various shades of colors from white, yellow, orange, pink, and purple.  It looked like an open book and did not change shapes.  Another cloud caught my wife’s attention.  Suddenly, she saw a vision.  There were large, purple arms extending from the cloud and had a “scooping or gathering” motion.  She looked away for a few moments and then looked back.  The arms reappeared with the same motion.  Later that night she told me of the vision.

The next day, Our Heavenly Father directed us to Deut 30:1-6:

1 “NOW it shall come to pass, when all these things come upon you, the blessing and the curse which I have set before you, and you call them to mind among all the nations where the LORD your God drives you,

2 “and you return to the LORD your God and obey His voice, according to all that I command you today, you and your children, with all your heart and with all your soul,

3 “that the LORD your God will bring you back from captivity, and have compassion on you, and gather you again from all the nations where the LORD your God has scattered you.

4 “If any of you are driven out to the farthest parts under heaven, from there the LORD your God will gather you, and from there He will bring you.

5 “Then the LORD your God will bring you to the land which your fathers possessed, and you shall possess it. He will prosper you and multiply you more than your fathers.

6 “And the LORD your God will circumcise your heart and the heart of your descendants, to love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul, that you may live. (NKJV)

The sign of the cramps were an indication of a new move and understanding.  The vision was an indication that the “gathering in” was now at hand.  We were instructed by Our Heavenly Father to celebrate the Feast of Tabernacles with friends in Virginia thus we had to fly to Norfolk, Virginia. When notifying our friends of our intention, the husband called a small meeting for me to share.  Our Heavenly Father instructed me to share on the “Circumcision of the Heart” and to disclose the events of the “other” Norfolk.  This was done on the 1st day of Tabernacles and was to be a double witness of the events.

The cloud we saw was a reference to Rev 10:  I saw still another mighty angel coming down from heaven, clothed with a cloud

Its book-like shape is found in the same chapter: He had a little book open in his hand.

The vision referenced Psalm 50:5 Gather my saints together unto me; those that have made a covenant with me by sacrifice.

I believe we are now in the “circumcision” phase of entering into the Promised Land.  Before Joshua could conquer the land, all the men had to be circumcised.  The flesh had to be removed and It took 3 days to heal.  In order for us to satisfy Deut 30:6, we must go through a circumcision.  It may be painful but that will pass.  The reward will be the ability to love Our Heavenly Father in a way we currently don’t fully comprehend.  In addition, we have been given a promise, “that we may live”.  Selah.