Monday, August 30, 2010

Foreclosure Mills' Failure To Attach All Records Referred To In Affidavits Filed In Court May (Should) Stall Legal Actions

In West Palm Beach, Florida, the South Florida Daily Business Review reports:

  • When it comes to fighting foreclosures, homeowners and their lawyers may have found a new strategy to score courtroom victories. Defense lawyers across the state are increasingly attacking the validity of affidavits that owners of notes must file with the courts as part of the foreclosure process.

  • Attorneys like Dustin Zacks, of the firm Ice Legal in West Palm Beach, are successfully arguing that plaintiffs — usually a trust that owns the note or the servicer of the note — are violating court rules by filing affidavits with no records attached to support their foreclosure suits. The records include details of the loan, borrower fees and payment history.

  • The Florida Rules of Civil Procedure (Rule 1.510) states that “sworn or certified copies” of all records referred to in the affidavit must be attached as evidence in the foreclosure case. The rule helps ensure that homeowners’s due process rights aren’t violated — namely that the lender has to prove it is entitled to press its claim.(1)

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  • A deficient affidavit can be the difference between homeowners losing their properties through a summary judgment or going to trial, Zacks said. “These affidavits are the linchpin of cases when they are trying to win a house at summary judgment,” he said. “A summary judgment cuts short [a homeowner’s] right to a full trial.”

  • Several judges and lawyers say deficient affidavits are rare in most other civil cases, but are rampant in foreclosure cases. “Our entire judicial system is under attack as a result of this foreclosure process,” said St. Petersburg lawyer Matthew Weidner, who blogs about foreclosures. “Judges, just like us, have just sort of overlooked this in the midst of this crisis.”(2)

For more, see New Strategy in Foreclosure Battles Attacks Validity of Affidavits.

(1) In addition to requiring a copy of the records, Rule 1.510(e) also says that the person signing the affidavit must have personal knowledge of the facts of the case, which might be tough for the affiant to have since most loans have been flipped around a number of times subsequent to their origination and have been serviced by different servicers, the story states.

  • Rule 1.510(e): Form of Affidavits; Further Testimony. "Supporting and opposing affidavits shall be made on personal knowledge, shall set forth such facts as would be admissible in evidence, and shall show affirmatively that the affiant is competent to testify to the matters stated therein. Sworn or certified copies of all papers or parts thereof referred to in an affidavit shall be attached thereto or served therewith. The court may permit affidavits to be supplemented or opposed by depositions, answers to interrogatories, or by further affidavits."

(2) According to the story, some judges say they don’t have the resources nor it is their job to make sure every affidavit is proper, but at least two said they are interested in hearing the argument. “It is a genuine question that should be raised,” said Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Jennifer Bailey. “The question is, where should each judge draw the line about the degree of investigation they are going to do on these affidavits? There is no clear answer.” In June, Zacks persuaded Palm Beach Circuit Judge Howard Harrison Jr. to deny a motion for summary judgment because of a flawed affidavit.

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