WORLD Law Direct Forums  





Go Back   WORLD Law Direct Forums > Real Estate & Property Law > Other Real Estate Law Matters
REGISTER FAQ SEARCH Today's Posts Mark Forums Read
Personal Lawyer Legal Forms Calendar

Suing mortage broker and bank?

Consult Your Own Personal Lawyer Now!
Reply
AddThis Feed Button
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Rate Thread Display Modes
Old 08-22-2007, 10:26 AM     #1
Unregistered
 
Unregistered's Avatar
 
Posts: n/a

Default Suing mortage broker and bank?

How easy or difficult really is it to file this kind of suit below. Our family was deceived 100% as to the terms of the mortage we signed!

Angered in Tuscon

_______________________
Mortgage meltdown: Here come the judgments
Tuesday August 21, 6:11 am ET

Earlier this year, a Wisconsin couple won a judgment against Chevy Chase Bank that said the bank deceived them over the terms of their mortgage.
The judge ordered Chevy Chase to rescind the loan and certified the lawsuit as class-action, which could potentially release thousands of other borrowers who felt misled.

According to their attorney, Bryan and Susan Andrews believed they were getting a loan with a fixed 1.95 percent annual interest rate for the first five years. What they got was an option adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM); the 1.95 percent rate only applied for the first month and rose every month afterwards.

"The second month, the interest rate was about 5 percent," said their attorney Kevin Demet. "After a year it was about 7 percent and now it's in the 8s."

The bank said it clearly spelled out the loan terms, but the judge found that Chevy Chase violated the Truth in Lending Act (TILA), which mandates that mortgage documents must be clear and understandable. Chevy Chase is appealing the judgment, and did not respond for comment for this article.

The Andrews' victory is just an early skirmish in what could be a prolonged battle between borrowers and lenders in the mortgage meltdown mess.

"It's a three-part business cycle now," said Don Lampe, a partner with the law firm Womble Carlyle, whose specialty is mortgage matters. "Boom, bust and recrimination. We're moving into the recrimination phase."

"Most claims will be against mortgage brokers for putting them into loans where they shouldn't have been," said Dan Mulligan, a California-based real estate attorney.

One reason that borrowers often did not understand the terms of their mortgages according to Jo Carillo, a property law professor with the University of California, Hastings College of Law, was the novelty of many of these loans.

"Many originators had no experience explaining them," she said. "It appears to be hard to explain the true costs."

According to Carillo, some bad advice from mortgage originators may have been made in good faith. Caught up in red-hot housing markets, overly exuberant brokers and loan officers told clients not to worry about concerns like their ARMs resetting; they could always refinance and, anyway, interest rates were bound to fall.

"They can't refinance it, they can't sell it, and they can't afford it," said Paul Hancock, a Florida attorney specializing in mortgage brokering and real estate law.

Aside from bad advice, out-and-out lying also seems to have added to the mess. Borrowers often exaggerated income in order to qualify for larger loans. According to Michael Seng, a professor with the John Marshall School of Law Fair Housing Legal Support Center, mortgage brokers were behind much of this.

"We're running into stated-income loans where brokers got borrowers to sign blank forms that the brokers filled in; they often did not accurately reflect the borrowers' incomes," he said.

Class action suits are often the only way for borrowers to gain a remedy, according to Seng. "If [individuals] can't make the mortgage payment, they can't pay a lawyer."

But a ruling earlier this year by an appeals court in Boston casts doubt on whether class-action suits will be allowed in mortgage rescission cases, whose remedy is that borrowers turn back their mortgages and get back their fees and expenses. They then have to find a new loan.

The court ruled that rescission didn't apply in class-actions because it is a strictly personal matter. Furthermore, Congress limited TILA violation judgments to a maximum of $500,000, a mere fraction of the kinds of sums a class action suit would generate.

How the cases will play out is in doubt but there's one thing for sure: There'll be a lot of work for attorneys over the next few months.
  Reply With Quote
Old 08-23-2007, 04:50 PM     #2
Unregistered
 
Unregistered's Avatar
 
Posts: n/a

Default Re: Suing mortage broker and bank?

Lots of those suits exist now. I don't think it is always easy to win so calculate the cost and benefit,
  Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Add Forum to Google Toolbar | Format Your Messages

Posting Rules

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Looking to avoid a broker!!! Ashford Buying & Selling Property 2 10-17-2008 07:26 AM
does my husband have to be on the mortage? Unregistered Mortgages, Refinancing, Foreclosure 0 02-16-2008 12:25 AM
Broker Unregistered Other Business & Finance Law Issues 1 02-06-2007 03:03 PM
Mortgage Broker Cancellation fees JulieMazet Other Real Estate Law Matters 2 01-29-2007 03:01 PM
HSBC Mortage Corp. USA Angela Ramos Other Business & Finance Law Issues 1 10-20-2006 12:55 PM


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:10 AM.


Powered by U.S. Legal Forms

Subscribe

Use of the Forums is subject to our Disclaimer which prohibits unapproved advertisements, solicitations or other commercial messages, and false, harassing or abusive statements. All postings reflect the views of the author but become the property of WORLD Law Direct.

Questions and information submitted in the Forums are assumed inquiries for general information and not legal advice.

Copyright 2000-2008 by WORLDLawDirect.com, Inc.