Monday, January 24, 2011

SW Florida Courts Sees 100s Of F'closures Dropped; Failure To Properly Transfer Notes Into Securitization Trusts May Leave Lenders Behind 'Eight-Ball'

In Lee County, Florida, The Fort Myers News Press reports:

  • Banks in recent weeks have been dropping hundreds of their Southwest Florida foreclosure lawsuits instead of facing defendants at trial, according to local attorneys and court records.

  • Opinions varied sharply on whether that means banks are just taking a breather before refiling with stronger evidence - or giving up for good on hopelessly flawed cases.

  • Some foreclosures at large law firms were never actually read by the attorneys who filed them here and elsewhere, and some of the mortgages that ended up in mortgage-backed securities sold to investors were never legally transferred by the banks, defense attorneys have alleged.

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  • [E]ight voluntary dismissals were filed Tuesday alone by seven different banks including Bank of America, one of the largest filers of foreclosures in this area. Bank of America did not reply to a request for comment Tuesday. At one court hearing alone, attorney Kevin Jursinski said, one of his associates watched as "50 in a row" were withdrawn.

  • "Can they re-litigate?" Fort Myers-based attorney Carmen Dellutri asked. "I don't think so." [...] He said he's seeing cases withdrawn in large numbers in Lee, Collier and Charlotte counties, and he heard from an attorney in Jacksonville the situation is the same there.

  • April Charney, a Jacksonville-area legal aid attorney who's an expert on foreclosure issues, said for the most part banks have no way to prosecute their cases because the mortgages in mortgage-backed securities were never actually legally transferred to the trusts.

  • She said much of the recent wave of voluntary dismissals may be a result of a Massachusetts Supreme [Judicial] Court ruling Jan. 7 upholding a judge's decision two foreclosures were invalid because the banks didn't prove they owned the mortgages, which he said were improperly transferred into two mortgage-backed trusts.

  • Now, she said, many mortgages simply aren't fixable. "You can't go back and securitize. You run a red light, you can't go back and unrun it."

For the story, see Banks drop foreclosures in Southwest Florida (Hundreds of lawsuits dismissed).

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