Upstate New York Foreclosure Mill Operation Continues To Attract Media Spotlight
Bloomberg News recently ran a less-than-flattering 'profile' on Buffalo, NY-based foreclosure mill law firm Steven J. Baum, P.C. that highlights some of the attention this outfit has recently attracted. A couple of excerpts:
- Steven J. Baum’s New York foreclosure law firm has attracted lawsuits and fines for its actions during the housing crisis, with one judge likening its arguments to something out of the “Twilight Zone.” As recently as last month, Baum’s firm, which one lawyer for homeowners said processes about half the foreclosures in New York state, was ordered to pay $14,532.50 in legal fees and costs and a $5,000 fine by Nassau County District Court Judge Scott Fairgrieve in Hempstead, New York.
- The judge said that when Paul Raia refused to vacate a Garden City co-op after foreclosure, Baum’s firm filed an eviction petition that misidentified the lender. “Falsities were contained in five paragraphs out of only ten paragraphs in the entire petition,” Fairgrieve wrote in his Nov. 23 decision
.(1)
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- New York State Supreme Court Justice Arthur M. Schack in Brooklyn called the firm’s explanations in one case “so incredible, outrageous, ludicrous and disingenuous that they should have been authored by the late Rod Serling.” [...] “Steven J. Baum PC appears to be operating in a parallel mortgage universe, unrelated to the real universe,” the judge wrote in that May decision
.(2) “Next stop, the Twilight Zone,” he said, quoting from Serling’s TV series about science fiction and the supernatural.
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- In January, Diana Adams, the U.S. trustee monitoring bankruptcy cases in Manhattan, reserved the right to seek sanctions against Baum’s firm in the bankruptcy case of a Bronx homeowner. The trustee accused Baum client JPMorgan of filing documents “that appear to be either patently false or misleading,” according to a court a filing recommending sanctions against the bank.
For more, see `Twilight Zone' Foreclosure Law Firm Draws Fine, Suits in New York Courts.
See also:
- NY Trial Judge: Buffalo-Based Foreclosure Mill Law Firm's Actions "A Dereliction Of Professional Responsibility!" (which notes that Suffolk County, New York, State Supreme Court Justice Melvyn Tanenbaum has also given the foreclosure mill law firm Steven J. Baum, P.C. a real hammering as evidenced by these short form copies of Justice Tanenbaum's 30 recent orders excoriating this outfit over its court filings in which "The court deems plaintiff's counsel's actions to be an intentional failure to comply with the directions of the court and a dereliction of professional responsibility").
(1) Federal Home Loan Mtge. Corp. v Raia, 2010 NY Slip Op 52003 (Dist. Ct. Nassau Cty, 1st Dist., November 23, 2010).
See also Federal Home Loan Mtge. Corp. v Raia, 28 Misc 3d 1212, 2010 NY Slip Op 51287 (Dist. Ct. Nassau Cty, 1st Dist., July 22, 2010) for an earlier ruling in this litigation from Judge Fairgrieve that ultimately led to the sanctions imposed on the Baum law office in the latest ruling.
(2) HSBC Bank USA, N.A. v Yeasmin, 27 Misc 3d 1227, 2010 NY Slip Op 50927 (NYS Sup. Ct. Kings County, May 24, 2010).
In his ruling, Justice Schack gives this parting shot that merits some note if you're a plaintiff's attorney or stockholder in HSBC Bank contemplating a future stockholder derivative action against HSBC:
- The Court can only wonder if this journey through the mortgage twilight zone and the dissemination of this decision will result in [Vice President Loan Documentation Thomas] Westmoreland's affidavit used as evidence in future stockholder derivative actions against plaintiff HSBC. It can't be comforting to investors to know that an officer of a financial behemoth such as plaintiff HSBC admits that "[a]n investigation of each and every loan included in a particular mortgage pool, however, is not conducted, nor is it feasible" and that "the fact that a particular mortgage pool may include loans that are already in default is an ordinary risk of participating in the secondary market."
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