ABC Article Directory banner displaying blue butterfly logo. Click to go directly to the main Homepage
Your Ad Here

Home | Finance | Credit & Credit Cards | Mortgage

Add This Social Bookmark Button


animated blue butterfly symbol for the ABC Article Directory

Foreclosure - Why the Note Holder is So Important


By: Nick Adama Click author's name for more of his/her articles

There is a growing trend among homeowners to fight foreclosure lawsuits by requesting mortgage lenders and servicing companies to show the original note. When the lenders can not find the original note, judges are deciding that any foreclosure proceedings must be postponed until the note can be produced. Without this document, it can be almost impossible to prove that one corporation has the right to foreclose on the home.

Few borrowers, though, truly understand the importance of finding out who or what is the real owner of their mortgage debt. Obviously, the owner is the only party that can approve any final loan modification or other negotiation scenario, or move ahead with a foreclosure in the case of default, but there are numerous other legal aspects that make proving ownership of a loan extremely important.

In fact, the owner is the only party that has a right to foreclosure on the mortgage, as it is the owner of the contract. While the origination company may once have been the owner and may retain servicing rights, the vast majority of mortgages over the past few years have been securitized and sold to investors. The actual owner may be a trust, which retains the loan documents for those investing in the mortgage security.

These trusts, though, are often empty boxes, simply legal fictions created on paper that own these notes and documents, but have no resources or locations in which to store all of the paperwork. Documents are easily lost and the chain of ownership from one party to another may be confused or simply missing.

This creates a problem for these owners of the notes, as they can be held liable for a long list of actions taken by themselves or third parties. For instance, the owner of a loan can be held liable for actions regarding abusive lending practices, their own misconduct in the transaction, actions of third parties including the originator of the loan, and abuses by mortgage servicing companies hired to collect payments and pursue foreclosure.

Under the concept of assignee liability, the holder of a note may be held liable for abusive lending practices engaged in the originator of the loan. If a mortgage is later determined to be fraudulent, abusive, or predatory, the owners of the debt security may find they own nothing more than a worthless investment that ends up costing them more than they bought it for.

As well, under the various theories of agency relationships, the trust owners of these mortgage documents can be held accountable for abuses that mortgage servicers engage in. And it is no secret that servicing companies engage in a long list of fraudulent tactics against borrowers. If the owner of the note can not be adequately proven, it may be impossible to hold the right party accountable.

The real issue of ownership of a note is raised during the foreclosure process. The courts have stated that forfeiture of property is a harsh legal remedy and should only be used as a last resort. The borrowers and lenders, in the case of foreclosure, should attempt to work out an agreement to avoid the loss of the home through the legal process.

But when the courts can not determine which company owns the debt, and no company moving ahead with foreclosure can produce the note, how can a judge be sure that foreclosure is being used as a last resort? The owner of the note is the final authority on any mortgage modification, short sale, or forbearance agreement, any of which may help borrowers stop foreclosure before the house is sold at a public auction.

From liability issues to ensuring that foreclosure is the final remedy for the discharge of a debt, the actual holder of a note is extremely important. When lenders can not provide the note in court, the entire process is called into question, and no party can be certain the foreclosure is anything but an enormous fraud, with banks just making up ownership rights in order to evict homeowners from their properties.

Article Source: ABC Article Directory



About The Author: Nick publishes articles to give advice to homeowners who are the in the process of stopping foreclosure on their properties and learning how to repair their finances afterward. His other articles examine various solutions to foreclosure, including mortgage modification, obtaining a hard money refinance, and even answering a foreclosure complaint to get more time from the courts to work out a better solution. Visit his site today to read more about how foreclosure works and how you can stop he process while you still have time: www.foreclosurefish.net/



Bookmark and Share eMail This Article to Friends

Please Rate this Article


Not yet Rated



RSS feeds on demand
Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Mortgage Articles Via RSS!



Copyright ABC Article Directory All rights protected. Script Services by: Sustainable Website Design
Use of our free service is protected by our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service Contact Us
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.

Wind Powered Hosting

Powered by Article Dashboard