Sunday, February 22, 2009

"Multiple Hat-Wearing" Mortgage Servicing Exec Back In The News; May Be "Contemporary Millinery Rival" To Hopper, Abzug, Says Respected B'klyn Jurist

A recent New York Times' story on mortage companies offering financially strapped homeowners an opportunity to modify their mortgage loans contained the following blurb:

  • Our biggest hurdle is reaching out and talking to people,” said Margery A. Rotundo, Ocwen’s senior vice president for residential loss mitigation. “If a borrower has a desire and the ability to stay in the home, we can help them.” Ms. Rotundo said the company’s decades-long experience with borrowers with blemished credit histories informed its approach.

The last time Ms. Rotundo made the news (at least on this blog) was last summer, when Brooklyn, New York Supreme Court Justice Arthur Schack, in a foreclosure action over which he presided, commented in his written opinion that he found court documents filed in various foreclosure actions in which Ms. Rotundo swore that she was Senior Vice President for:

  1. Residential Loss Mitigation of Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC,
  2. Residential Loss Mitigation of HSBC Bank USA, N.A.,
  3. Loss Mitigation for Nomura Credit & Capital, Inc., and
  4. an unnamed servicing agent for HSBC.

The perplexed Justice Schack then went on to make this observation on Ms. Rotundo's apparent knack to freely move from mortgage company employer to mortgage company employer, as the need appeared to demand ("Ms. Rotundo's merry-go-round of employment" as he referred to it):

  • [T]he late gossip columnist Hedda Hopper and the late United States Representative Bella Abzug were famous for wearing many colorful hats. With all the corporate hats Ms. Rotundo has recently worn, she might become the contemporary millinery rival to both Ms. Hopper and Ms. Abzug. The Court needs to know the employment history of the peripatetic Ms. Rotundo. Did she truly switch employers or did plaintiff have her sign the "affidavit of merit and amount due" as its Senior Vice President solely to satisfy the Court?(1)

I don't know how this issue was ultimately resolved, but as of press time of the above-referenced New York Times' article, Ms. Rotundo was apparently wearing her "Ocwen corporate hat."

For Justice Schack's written opinion containing his observations on Ms. Rotundo's alleged "multiple hat-wearing activities," see HSBC Bank USA, N.A. v Charlevagne, 2008 NY Slip Op 51652 [20 Misc 3d 1128]; Decided on August 4, 2008.

(1) Justice Schack also commented on his discovery that multiple financial giants, including the plaintiff, were all listing "the ever popular Suite 100" at the same South Florida street address as their place of business. Inaddition to demanding an affidavit describing Ms. Rotundo's employment history for the last three years, Justice Schack also went on to demand an affidavit from the plaintiff explaining "why the plaintiff HSBC BANK USA, N.A., [...], shares office space at Suite 100, 1661 Worthington Road, West Palm Beach, Florida 33409, with Ocwen Loan Servicing, LLC, Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs." ThetaMissingDocsMtg

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