Fannie Mae to Sell Foreclosed Vacant Properties to Detroit Land Bank

On November 24, DS News published an article announcing the agreement of Fannie Mae to sell 44 foreclosed vacant properties to the Detroit Land Bank Authority as part of an effort to stabilize greater Detroit neighborhoods.

Fannie Mae to Sell Foreclosed Vacant Properties to Detroit Land Bank

Fannie Mae announced it has agreed to sell 44 foreclosed vacant properties to the Detroit Land Bank Authority as part of a partnership to stabilize neighborhoods in the greater Detroit area, which has seen a dramatic spike on the number of foreclosures in the last two years.

According to the announcement, 26 of the properties are slated for rehabilitation and 18 of them are scheduled to be demolished. Fannie Mae will also contribute funds to the demolition of those 18 properties as part of the agreement.

“Vacant properties are a strain on the neighborhood and can depress property values for other homeowners,” said P.J. McCarthy, Fannie Mae’s VP of alternative dispositions and real estate asset management. “We are happy to partner with the Detroit Land Bank Authority to help transform these properties into homes for local families, or new community spaces. It is our goal to continue to work closely with local organizations to help bring life back into these neighborhoods. We look forward to additional transactions with the Detroit Land Bank.”

The agreement is line with the mission of the Detroit Neighborhood Stabilization Initiative (NSI), a pilot program developed jointly by the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), Freddie Mac, and Fannie Mae and announced by the FHFA in May 2014 as a way to stabilize neighborhoods in the areas most affected by the housing crisis. One of the goals outlined in the Detroit NSI is to match distressed properties with non-profit organizations that will develop or renovate those properties.

“This deal with Fannie Mae is a very important piece of the Detroit Land Bank’s larger strategy to stabilize neighborhoods through our auction program, demolition, and side lot sales,” said Kevin Simowski, executive director of the Detroit Land Bank Authority. “The Detroit Land Bank is working with multiple financial institutions on similar deals so we can address every vacant house in our target neighborhoods.”

In a program similar to the Detroit NSI, Fannie Mae has partnered with the Cuyahoga Land Bank in Ohio since 2009 to help stabilize neighborhoods in Cleveland. That partnership has resulted in returning nearly 1,000 distressed properties back to productive use. Some of the properties were converted into bigger yards for neighbors, new homes, or community gardens.

Please click here to view the article online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

Cleveland and Others Fight Blight with Parks and Greenhouses

On November 13, CNN Wire posted an article titled Why this city ‘removes cancer cells’ of foreclosed and abandoned homes.

Why this city ‘removes cancer cells’ of foreclosed and abandoned homes

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — In and around Cleveland, nearly 6,000 foreclosed and abandoned homes are being destroyed in an effort to save neighborhoods from blight, crime and sinking home prices.

Instead of trying to rebuild on these properties, however, the city has been turning the empty lots into parks, greenhouses, even vineyards.

“For the larger body — the neighborhood — to survive, you have to remove those cancer cells,” said Frank Ford, a policy adviser for the nonprofit Thriving Communities Institute of Cleveland.

During the housing bust, Ford worked at a community redevelopment group that renovated 50 foreclosed homes in Cleveland for $180,000 each. They sold the rehabbed homes for about $90,000 apiece, taking a $90,000 hit on each.

If they had spent that money to demolish nine or 10 foreclosed homes instead and turned the land into green space, it would have had an immediate beneficial impact, said Ford.

“There’s a direct relationship,” said Ford’s colleague Jim Rokakis, a director at Thriving Communities. “If there are two bad houses on a block, people will move away and their houses go vacant. Take them down and people will stay.”

In June 2013, Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland, was granted permission to use more than $10 million of Ohio’s Hardest Hit Fund money to tear down up to 1,000 abandoned buildings.

The Hardest Hit Fund, which was established by the Treasury Department in 2010, was initially set up to back efforts that prevented foreclosures. The money could be used to lower a troubled borrower’s mortgage balance, for example.

But in cities like Cleveland, there were so many blighted, vacant homes plaguing whole neighborhoods that funds started being reallocated toward demolition instead.

Tearing down houses has been so effective in Cleveland, that last month Cuyahoga County issued a $50 million bond so it can demolish another 5,000 houses, said Rokakis.

The house cleaning extends beyond Cleveland.

Michigan is using $175 million in Hardest Hit Fund money to demolish homes across 16 cities, including Detroit, Flint and Grand Rapids. In Detroit alone, where there are about 80,000 abandoned properties, 250 homes are being demolished a week.

Gary, Ind., is using $6.6 million in Hardest Hit funds to demolish 700 of its 8,000 vacant homes and buildings.  Meanwhile, long suffering Youngstown, Ohio, is spending Treasury money to knock down a few hundred of its 4,000 vacant buildings, according to Councilman John R. Swierz.

Many of the emptied lots will be offered to neighbors who agree to maintain the properties. Others will be planted with trees or other plants.

Youngstown, which has seen its population fall by 60% since the 1960s, has even paid homeowners to relocate away from otherwise abandoned blocks so the city can shut down neighborhoods entirely, saving on sewer, sanitation, water and other services.

Back in Cleveland, big empty lots have been re-purposed into orchards, greenhouses and food production facilities, said Ford.

Entrepreneur Mansfield Frazier even founded a vineyard, called Chateau Hough after the neighborhood, on a three-quarter acre lot where a 30-unit apartment building once stood.

In 2010, the Cuyahoga County Land Bank said it would give Frazier the land if he could make a go of the vineyard within five years. He was able to claim it in three.

Excavating and planting the land was tough, though.

“Digging down, I found everything but dead bodies,” said Frazier. “I even found a kitchen sink.”

But the whole neighborhood pitched in — as did ex-cons from a nearby halfway house, who did much of the heavy work, and college professors from nearby Case Western University.

The vineyard’s impact on the neighborhood, long known for the 1966 racial riots, has been deep, said Frazer.

Chateau Hough produced its first wines last year and Frazier expects to produce about 1,000 bottles of the 2014 vintage and double that when the vines fully mature in a few more years.

Please click here to view the article online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

CFPB Fines Franklin Loan for Ripping Off Customers

On November 14, National Mortage News published an article discussing the $730,000 fining of Franklin Loan Corporation by the Consumer Financial Protection Agency for allegedly incentivizing loan officers to guide customers into mortgages with higher interest rates.

CFPB Fines Franklin Loan for Ripping Off Customers

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau slapped Franklin Loan Corp. with a $730,000 fine on Thursday for allegedly incentivizing loan officers to guide customers into mortgages with higher interest rates.

“Paying bonuses for steering borrowers into more expensive loans violates their trust and is against the law,” CFPB Director Richard Cordray said in a statement.

The CFPB said Franklin Loan — which operates primarily in California — was in violation of the Federal Reserve Board’s Loan Originator Compensation rule which prohibits tying a mortgage broker’s compensation to the terms of a loan.

The regulator said Franklin Loan paid 32 loan officers at least $730,000 in quarterly bonuses between 2011 and 2013 and tied compensation to interest rates, rewarding employees for closing loans with higher rates.

“Today’s consent order will ensure that all affected consumers are repaid and that no more consumers are harmed by the illegal compensation system,” the CFPB said.

According to a CFPB release, Franklin Loan originated roughly $887 million in loans between 2011 and 2013 and that more than 1,400 customers fell victim to the illegal practices.

“Today’s action will put $730,000 back in the pockets of consumers who may have never suspected that they had been harmed,” Cordray said.

Please click here to view the article online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

Bank of America Mortgage Cases go to the Supreme Court

On November 17, HousingWire published an article discussing the decision by the U.S. Supreme Court to hear two cases brought by Bank of America involving underwater mortgages.

Bank of America mortgage cases go to the Supreme Court

SCOTUS to hear if bankruptcy voids underwater second mortgages

The nation’s highest court is taking on the burning issue of underwater mortgages, agreeing Monday to hear not one but two cases brought by Bank of America (BAC).
 
The U.S. Supreme Court will examine the question of whether a second mortgage on an underwater property can be voided during Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
 
This could potentially affect thousands of similar cases in lower courts, and it’s a departure from the high court’s approach toward mortgage litigation.
 
Typically, the Supreme Court refuses to hear cases involving mortgage finance.  In 2013, the U.S. Supreme Court punted on a chance to hear a case that could have a significant impact on the scope and size of residential mortgage-backed securities cases in the Second Circuit.
 
In that case, an institutional investor claimed Goldman Sachs (GS) made material misrepresentations and omissions in offerings of mortgage-backed securities, leading to losses on those securities later on.
 
Then, in 2011, the Supreme Court declined to review a case brought against Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems by a California man.
 
The two cases the Supreme Court will hear both involve homeowners in Florida, a state hit particularly hard by the housing crash, who sued to void second mortgages when the debt owed to the holder of the first mortgage exceeded the property.
 
David Caulkett and Edelmiro Toledo-Cardona sued and won before the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, the court which oversees Florida.
 
That appellate ruling stated that Bank of America, the lender, lose its ability to foreclose on the property even when the property’s value increased.
 
Bank of America appealed to the Supreme Court that the 11th Circuit was out of line and it sets a dangerous for thousands of cases pending in lower courts.
 
The high court should rule by summer 2015.

Please click here to view the article online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

$50m Demolition Fund Passes Cuyahoga County Council Unanimously

On October 29, Cleveland Magazine posted a report about the passing of legislation by the Cuyahoga County Council that will allow for a major demolition fund for blighted buildings.

$50m demolition fund passes Cuyahoga County Council unanimously

Cuyahoga County will soon give cities tens of millions of dollars to tear down blighted buildings.  A $50 million bond issue for demolition, debated all year, passed the county council unanimously last night.

The aggressive action addresses one of Cleveland’s most urgent and overwhelming problems.  Many city neighborhoods are still scarred by abandoned homes from the recession and foreclosure crisis.

“No one has done anything as ambitious in this nation as $50 million,” said councilman Pernel Jones, a strong supporter of the legislation.

The vote, seven days before Election Day, gave county executive Ed FitzGerald a new accomplishment in the last days of his run for governor.  It also affected the race to replace FitzGerald.  Jack Schron, the county councilman who’s the Republican candidate for county executive, voted for the demolition plan, even though his attempts to amend it failed.

The council’s Republicans and Democrats ironed out their differences about the demolition program by approving 11th-hour amendments.

The council adopted Republican Dave Greenspan’s idea of letting cities apply for a grant or a loan.  The idea is to stretch out the $50 million bond issue, which isn’t nearly enough to demolish the area’s estimated 20,000 abandoned homes.  If cities go for a loan, they’ll get a grant of half the loaned money when they pay it back.  Cities are expected to apply for grants at first, then loans as the fund dwindles.

Schron’s amendment lost 9-2.  He wanted to make the grants competitive and establish an independent review committee to make the awards.

“If we don’t change this, that means the county executive, whoever that’ll be, will be making the determination of how the money will be utilized,” Schron said.  But council went instead for Pernel Jones’ amendment, which says council intends to create a committee to oversee the program.

Schron dropped his earlier idea of favoring demolition applications for land with high development interest.  The county’s bond counsel advised that restrictions on the use of sales tax bonds prevented it.

Schron’s vote for the final legislation prevents his opponent in the executive race, Democrat Armond Budish, from making demolition a defining issue a week before the election.  Budish has said he “strongly supports” the program.

FitzGerald adopted the $50 million demolition proposal in his February State of the County address.  (Former county treasurer Jim Rokakis had promoted it for years before.)  At the meeting’s end, Democratic councilwoman Sunny Simon praised FitzGerald’s leadership on the issue.  Her remarks contrasted with complaints two weeks ago from Greenspan and council president Ellen Connally, who said FitzGerald had offered a vague proposal and left the details to council.

The county will borrow the $50 million and pay it back over several years — despite concerns that county is already borrowing heavily to finance projects such as the convention center hotel.

The county council went forward despite complaints from Cleveland city councilmen Zack Reed and Jeff Johnson that favoring demolition over rehabilitation might hurt the historic character of their neighborhoods.  County councilwoman Yvonne Conwell argued two weeks ago that some of the money should go to rehabbing houses, but she also dropped her idea on the advice of the bond counsel.

The Cuyahoga Land Bank will get $9 million to demolish properties it owns.  Cities will be able to apply for up to $1 million in the first round of funding and possibly $2 million in later rounds.  Every city that shows a need will get an award. Once a city uses 80 percent of the award, it can come back for more.

Under that system, most suburbs will get the money to demolish all their eligible blighted buildings in the first round.  The cities with the greatest need — Cleveland and East Cleveland, and perhaps a couple more inner-ring suburbs – will come back for many later rounds.

Please click here to view the full text of the final ordinance.

Please click here to view the article online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

Wayne County Begins Foreclosure Proceedings on 75,000 Homes

Updated 1/30:  On January 29, DS News released an article titled Wayne County, Michigan, Begins Tax Foreclosure Hearings.

Link to article

Updated 11/25:  On November 24, DS News released an article titled Foreclosure Campaign Gets Underway in Wayne County, Michigan.

Link to article

On October 16, DS News released an article titled Michigan County Launches Aggressive Foreclosure Campaign.

Michigan County Launches Aggressive Foreclosure Campaign

Wayne County, Michigan, is launching an aggressive campaign to begin foreclose proceedings on 75,000 residential properties whose owners are three months or more behind on paying property taxes.

By comparison, Wayne County began the foreclosure process on 56,000 homes last year, 42,000 in 2012, and 26,000 in 2011.  The majority of the 75,000 homes targeted for foreclosure are located in Detroit, which is the county seat of Wayne County.

The county’s goal is not necessarily to complete the foreclosure process on these properties, however.  Wayne County Treasurer David Szymanski said that of the 56,000 homes the county began the foreclosure process on last year, the process was completed on only 20,000 of them, meaning that the county helped 36,000 of them stay in their homes.

Szymanski said there are three reasons for the county’s latest aggressive foreclosure campaign: to help homeowners find a successful solution that allows them to stay in their homes, to eliminate blight, and to enroll eligible homeowners who are behind on their mortgage or taxes in the state’s “Step Forward” program.

“The earlier in the process we contact a distressed taxpayer, the more likely we are to find a successful resolution,” Szymanski said.  “The earlier we contact them, the more options they have available.”

Detroit’s population has been steadily declining in the last 60 years or so, from a peak of about 1.8 million in 1950 down to about 700,000 in the 2010 census, resulting in “a lot of housing for people who don’t exist any longer,” Szymanski said. “That leads to a staggering number of foreclosures.”

In some parts of Detroit, property values have plummeted by as much as 90 percent, according to Szymanski, and in many of those cases, the amount of money owed in delinquent taxes is more than the house is worth.  Due to the large number of empty or abandoned homes, blight has become a significant problem in Wayne County for many years, and Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan is making a push to eliminate blight, Szymanski said, which is important because “blight breeds blight in communities.”

“If we don’t foreclose on all the properties that are eligible for foreclosure, we leave blight behind,” Szymanski said.

The third reason for the aggressive foreclosure campaign in and around Detroit is the Step Forward program, which was created in response to the 2008 housing crisis to help distressed borrowers pay their taxes.  The federal government provided $500 million for the program and so far it has helped about 4,000 distressed homeowners in Wayne County pay a combined total of about $40 million in taxes, according to Szymanski.  Borrowers must meet certain requirements to be eligible for Step Forward, such as: they must own and live in the home, they must be pursuant to a deed, and they must have experienced a financial hardship that was not of their own doing.

Though the program has helped 4,000 homeowners, that is “a drop in the bucket compared to what we want to accomplish,” Szymanski said.  There are many more who have applied for relief through Step Forward and are waiting for the county to determine their eligibility.

Szymanski said they are touting Step Forward more heavily recently because there is about $200 million left in the program, and county officials fear the federal government might discontinue the program and reclaim the remaining funds.

Please click here to view the article online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

Supreme Court Case to Decide if Banks are Responsible for Sale of Foreclosed Houses

On October 1, Philip Babler, associate and litigation lawyer with Foley & Lardner LLP posted an article discussing Bank of New York v. Carson, No. 2013AP544, currently awaiting a ruling from the Wisconsin Supreme Court.

01 October 2014
Wisconsin Appellate Law

After the Bank Forecloses, Must It Actually Sell Your House?

The Wisconsin Supreme Court will answer this question in Bank of New York v. Carson, No. 2013AP544. It heard argument in this case last Tuesday.

The case began more than 3 1/2 years ago when a widow—physically and financially unable to care for her house—vacated her house and did not answer or dispute foreclosure.  During the redemption period, the property fell into disrepair and was burglarized.  (The court of appeals blamed the bank for failing to keep up the property.)  The bank decided not to sell the property in its dilapidated state.

The owner then moved to amend the judgment, arguing that the circuit court should order the bank to sell the property within 5 weeks of the amended judgment, pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 846.102(1) (“In an action for enforcement of a mortgage lien if the court makes an affirmative finding upon proper evidence being submitted that the mortgaged premises have been abandoned by the mortgagor and assigns, judgment shall be entered as provided in s. 846.10 except that the sale of such mortgaged premises shall be made upon the expiration of 5 weeks from the date when such judgment is entered. . . .”).

The bank opposed the owner’s motion, arguing that the circuit court did not have the power to order it to sell the foreclosed property.  The circuit court agreed and denied the motion, and therefore did not consider whether grounds existed to modify the judgment.

The court of appeals reversed.  In a published opinion, the court held that the language of the statute—twice using the word ”shall”—gave the circuit court authority to order the sale of a foreclosed property, enforceable with its contempt power.  The court of appeals reversed and remanded for the circuit court to consider if grounds existed to modify the judgment.

The court of appeals decision is in tension with its unpublished decision a few months earlier, where the court, interpreting similar language in Wis. Stat. § 846.103, held that a bank was not required to sell a property after obtaining a judgment of foreclosure.  Deutsche Bank Nat. Trust Co. v. Matson, No. 2012AP1981, unpublished op. (Wis. Ct. App. July 30, 2013).

The supreme court now takes up the question.  A decision is expected by the end of July.

Please click here to view the article online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.

 

Nevada Supreme Court Maintains Foreclosures of HOA Liens May Eliminate First Priority Deeds of Trust

Updated 11/25:  On November 21, InfoBytes Blog (Buckley Sander LLP) posted an article titled Nevada District Court Bars Foreclosure Sale of First Lien HUD-Insured Mortgage.

Link to article

In a recent publication, Bob L. Olsen, attorney and Las Vegas partner for Snell and Winter discusses the state of Nevada adopting the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act of 1982 and one particular provision enacted by the state (NRS 116.3116), which concerns HOA liens.

Lenders Beware: the Nevada Supreme Court Holds That Foreclosures of Homeowners’ Association Liens May Extinguish First Priority Deeds of Trust

Nevada has adopted the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act of 1982 (the “Act”) which governs homeowners’ associations (“HOA”).  One particular provision of that Act, enacted by Nevada in 1991 and later amended, and codified as NRS 116.3116 (the “Statute”), states that HOA liens are “prior to all other liens and encumbrances on a unit” except for, among other liens:

(b) A first security interest on the unit recorded before the date on which the assessment sought to be enforced became delinquent . . . :

NRS 116.3116(2)(b) (emphasis added).

At first glance the Statute unconditionally subordinates the HOA’s lien to a first priority mortgage or deed of trust (hereinafter “first priority lien” and the holder, the “mortgage holder”) recorded against the unit before the date on which the assessment sought to be enforced became delinquent.  The Statute is not as simple as it seems because it later takes away part of the priority it gives to first priority lien holders.  The Statute goes on to state that:

The [HOA] lien is also prior to all security interests described in paragraph (b) to the extent of any [maintenance and nuisance-abatement] charges incurred by the association on a unit pursuant to NRS 116.310312 and to the extent of the assessments for common expenses [i.e., HOA dues] based on the periodic budget adopted by the association pursuant to NRS 116.31156 which would have become due in the absence of acceleration during the 9 months immediately preceding institution of an action to enforce the lien, unless federal regulations adopted by the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation or the Federal National Mortgage Association require a shorter period of priority for the lien. . . .

NRS 116.3116(2) (emphasis added).

Although the Statute has been in effect in Nevada since 1991, it had little effect until the recession, when defaults on both HOA dues and mortgage loans became common.  Since then, the Statute’s granting the mortgage holder priority over the HOA and then taking away part of that priority has spawned a great deal of litigation in Nevada.  Prior to the decision in SFR Investments Pool I, LLC v. U.S. Bank, N.A., (“SFR Investments”) lenders believed that the first priority lien survived a foreclosure sale by the HOA because of the express subordination provision of the Statute.  A number of real estate speculators, however, have recently challenged the lenders’ view by purchasing property at HOA foreclosure sales and then suing the holders of the first priority liens for quiet title and declaratory relief.  The real estate speculators’ position is that the sale of property at an HOA’s foreclosure sale extinguishes the first priority lien notwithstanding the express subordination contained in the Statute.

The Nevada Supreme Court was given an opportunity to interpret the Statute and rule on the competing priorities between the holder of a first priority lien and the purchaser of property at an HOA foreclosure sale in SFR Investments Pool I, LLC v. U.S. Bank, N.A., 130 Nev. Adv. Op. 75 (Sept. 18, 2014).  There the appellant, a real estate speculator, purchased property at an HOA foreclosure sale for pennies on the dollar and later sued U.S. Bank alleging that the foreclosure sale by the HOA extinguished U.S. Bank’s first priority lien.  The trial court dismissed the suit, holding that the HOA could not foreclose on its lien and extinguish the first priority lien unless it did so at a judicial foreclosure sale. SFR Investments Pool I, LLC (“SFR Investments”) then appealed to the Nevada Supreme Court.

The Nevada Supreme Court, in a four to three decision, reversed the trial court.  In doing so, the Court held that:

  1. The Statute splits the lien of the HOA into a “superpriority piece” and a “subpriority piece.”
  2. The superpriority piece of the HOA’s lien consists of the “last nine months of unpaid HOA dues and maintenance and nuisance-abatement charges,” and is prior to the first priority lien.
  3. The subpriority piece consists of “all other HOA fees or assessments” and is subordinate to the first priority lien.
  4. The superpriority piece of the lien could be foreclosed upon non-judicially and such a sale will extinguish the first priority lien.
  5. Provisions contained in the Conditions Covenants & Restrictions (“CC&Rs”) for the HOA that subordinate the entire HOA lien to a first priority lien, often referred to as “mortgagee protection clauses,” are unenforceable under the Act.

The majority was not persuaded by U.S. Bank’s argument that the foreclosure notices prepared by the HOA did not indicate that it was only foreclosing on the superpriority portion of the HOA’s lien, nor did those notices describe the amount of the superpriority.  Instead, the majority shifted the burden to the lender to pay what was demanded by the HOA by stating that “nothing appears to have stopped U.S. Bank from determining the precise superpriority amount in advance of the sale or paying the entire amount and requesting a refund of the balance.”

The majority stated that it was premature to rule on U.S. Bank’s arguments that the foreclosure by the HOA deprived it of due process of law and declined to address U.S. Bank’s argument that the foreclosure by the HOA was commercially unreasonable.

The three dissenting justices would have affirmed the trial court.  They interpreted the Act to require an HOA to judicially foreclose upon a unit in order to extinguish a first priority lien.  The dissent also noted that a nonjudicial foreclosure deprived the mortgage holder of the opportunity to “determine whether an association is even foreclosing on superpriority portions of its lien such as to prompt it to purchase the property at the association’s sale.”  It also noted that the majority’s holding may leave the former owner of the property liable for the entire amount of the first priority mortgage or deed of trust without any “mechanism by which to obtain the property’s value as an offset against the amount still owed.”

It is important to note that the appeal was from an order dismissing SFR Investment’s complaint for failing to state a claim for relief.  Thus, the Nevada Supreme Court did not hold that the real estate speculator obtained title to the property free and clear of U.S. Bank’s loan, nor did it hold that the foreclosure sale conducted by the HOA could not be set aside by the trial court.  Instead, it remanded the matter for further proceedings. The Nevada Supreme Court also noted on several occasions that the record had not been adequately developed.  Thus, SFR Investments is far from the last word on priority disputes.

There are a number of unresolved issues related to the Statute and the Court’s ruling in SFR Investments.  Those issues include, but are not limited to, the following:

  1. What happens if the mortgage holder tenders payment of the superpriority portion of the lien and the tender is rejected?  In our experience, many of the collection agencies that HOAs employ to foreclose on HOA liens refuse to accept a tender unless the mortgage holder pays everything that the HOA alleges it is owed regardless of whether it is the superpriority piece or the subpriority piece of the lien. 
  2. Does the purchase of the property at the HOA foreclosure sale have priority over the mortgage holder if the HOA simultaneously forecloses on the subpriority piece of the lien?  HOAs typically foreclose on the HOA’s entire lien, not just the superpriority piece of those liens.  The appeals court in the District of Columbia, which has a similar statute, recently upheld the priority of nonjudicial HOA foreclosure sale but in that case, unlike the Nevada case, the HOA only foreclosed on the superpriority piece of the HOA’s lien.  Chase Plaza Condominium Association, Inc. v. JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., 2014 WL 4250949 (D.C. App. August 28, 2014) (unpublished).
  3. Is a foreclosure sale conducted by an HOA that is not strictly in compliance with the Act void or voidable?
  4. Is the purchaser of property at an HOA sale, which likely paid a small fraction of the value of the property, a bona-fide purchaser for value?
  5. Can the sale of property by an HOA be avoided by a court because it was commercially unreasonable, a fraudulent conveyance or for inadequate consideration?
  6. Can the sale of property by an HOA be avoided by the holder of a first priority lien because it was not given adequate notice or due process of law?
  7. Does the Nevada Supreme Court’s construction of the Act in SFR Investments conflict with the duties and obligations of lenders, Nevada’s public policy to keep homeowners in their homes, and the legislative intent set forth in Nevada’s foreclosure mediation statute and the Homeowner’s Bill of Rights.

Please click here to view the article online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com

Florida City Considering New Code to Combat Bank Owned Properties in Violation

Updated 2/10:  On February 4, the Miami Herald published an article titled New law allows Coral Gables to seize some abandoned and neglected properties

Link to article

On October 14th, the Coral Gables Commission discussed the possible addition of a new section to the municipal code titled, “Forfeiture of Abandoned Real Property”.

Please Note:  As previously reported, the Coral Gables Commission recently approved an ordinance (2014_ 2/25/14) that increased the annual cost of keeping a property on the city’s registry of abandoned homes and could allow the city to take legal action against lenders. The city now is considering legislation which will augment that section of city code. 

Per The City of Coral Gables’ E-3 Cover Memo:

Title

An Ordinance of the City Commission of Coral Gables, Florida, amending the Code of the City of Coral Gables, Florida, by creating Sections 34-175 through 34-185 of the City Code, “Forfeiture of Abandoned Real Property” of Chapter 34 “Nuisances“, to create a process by which the city can take and perfect right, title, and interest in and to such properties which are or remain in violation of the City Code or Zoning Code; and providing for severability, repealer, codification, and an effective date.

History

As a result of the foreclosure crisis, which has been widely reported since 2008, several bank owned properties within the Coral Gables Community have been found to be in violation of the City Code. The properties are not being maintained by the various financial institutions in accordance with the City Code, despite being notified of the deficiencies. This ordinance will provide additional tools for the City to address situations where a bank owned property is found to be in violation of the City Code for an extended period of time, specifically exceeding 6 months.

To view the Signed Cover Memo, please click here.

To view the proposed ordinance, please click here.

California MBA Chairman Publishes Editorial Opposing San Francisco Eminent Domain Proposal

On October 6, the San Francisco Examiner released an editorial titled Mortgage-seizure idea:  A solution in search of a problem?


Mortgage-seizure idea: A solution in search of a problem?

If you own a home in San Francisco, or one day would like to try, you soon might have more to worry about than skyrocketing housing prices. The Board of Supervisors will likely vote Tuesday on whether to approve a policy enabling it to seize mortgages through eminent domain. The resolution would allow The City to explore partnering with Richmond to seize mortgages at less than market cost through eminent domain and rewrite them at lower value.

At first glance, this would seem to create instant equity for underwater homeowners.  But with a closer look, it’s clear that the policy will make it significantly more expensive to buy, sell or refinance a home in San Francisco — already one of the nation’s most difficult housing markets.

I’ve lived and worked in our area, including Richmond, my entire life, and as somone involved in small business, I know how important the housing market is to our economy’s health.  I want the best for our community, and this plan is a foolish effort that isn’t even designed to help struggling homeowners.  We can do better.

How would this hurt our housing market?  Lenders exposed to eminent domain risk would be forced to price not only the risk of borrower default, but also the risk of future price declines.  As a result, lenders would require much larger down payments and charge higher interest rates to compensate for this new risk.  The result would be that all future homebuyers, and homeowners seeking to refinance, would be forced to the bear the costs of an ill-conceived policy.  The only real impact of this public policy will be to push housing affordability farther away from middle-class San Franciscans.

But this bad idea keeps on giving.  The damage will not be limited to the local housing market. Proponents of this plan argue that loans will be seized from big banks or Wall Street investors, but in reality, the securities that these mortgages were put into are held in retirement accounts or college savings plans owned by middle-class families and teacher, police and firefighter pensions.  That is why the California Public Employees’ Retirement System, which holds approximately $11 billion in mortgage-backed investments, has gone on the record with its strong concerns.

The so-called necessity for the program is built on the false notion that vast numbers of San Francisco homeowners would be eligible for eminent domain.  But it would target a narrow percentage of underwater mortgages, focusing only on those held by private-label, mortgage-backed securities.  From this group, only homeowners with good credit who are current on their mortgages, who have no existing home equity loans or property liens would be considered.  Importantly, as of first-quarter 2014, CoreLogic reports that fewer than 2 percent of homeowners with mortgages in the San Francisco-Redwood City-South San Francisco area have negative equity — and only a fraction of these borrowers might be eligible for the proposed program.  The resolution itself suggests that just 300 borrowers are underwater and have their loans held in private-label securities — roughly one-tenth of 1 percent of all San Francisco mortgages.  And the program clearly does not target struggling homeowners, making it likely that the number eligible would be far fewer than 300. In the end, the program would only further enrich investors and raise the cost of borrowing for everyone.

The simple fact is that this is an untested and legally dubious plan.  Even if enacted, we are all but guaranteed a lengthy and costly legal battle.  Federal regulators have expressed grave concerns and warned they would have to take aggressive action if a city moved forward with an eminent domain program.

The Board of Supervisors should focus on efforts that will help support our housing market and grow our economy, and reject this for-profit scheme that won’t help struggling homeowners and will come at a steep cost to middle-class families.  San Franciscans can spot a bad deal when they see one.

Please click here to view the editorial online.

About Safeguard 
Safeguard Properties is the largest mortgage field services company in the U.S. Founded in 1990 by Robert Klein and based in Valley View, Ohio, the company inspects and maintains defaulted and foreclosed properties for mortgage servicers, lenders, and other financial institutions. Safeguard employs approximately 1,700 people, in addition to a network of thousands of contractors nationally.
Website: www.safeguardproperties.com.