Tag Archives: HAMP

Thompson v. Bank of America: Sixth Circuit Rejects Claims Challenging Loan Securitization And Denial Of HAMP Loan Modification

On Friday, December 5, 2014, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit recently issued its decision inThompson v. Bank of America, et al., — F.3d —, No. 14-5561, 2014 WL 6844931, a case involving various statutory, tort, and contractual challenges to the securitization of a mortgage loan and the denial of a loan modification under the Home Affordable Modification Program (“HAMP”). In an opinion designated for publication, the Sixth Circuit affirmed the district court’s dismissal of the lawsuit, holding that the borrower did not state any claim for relief.

The Sixth Circuit used its comprehensive opinion in Thompson to address and reject so-called “securitization” and HAMP claims that borrowers have increasingly asserted in the past few years. The Sixth Circuit addressed the theories “in detail” to “assist the district courts in addressing this wave of creative litigation.”

Here are a few key aspects of the Court’s ruling:

First , the Sixth Circuit rejected the borrower’s “argument that the securitization of her mortgage note altered her obligations under the note.” The court emphasized that “Federal law provides for the creation of mortgage-related securities” and “[t]he pooling of mortgages into investment trusts is not some sort of illicit scheme that taints the underlying debt.” It also unequivocally held that the “[s]ecuritization of a note does not alter the borrower’s obligation to repay the loan” because “[s]ecuritization is a separate contract, distinct from the borrower’s debt obligations under note.” The court further reaffirmed the propriety of using Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. (“MERS”) in the transfer of mortgage notes.

Read on.

Treasury announces HAMP changes

Approximately one million homeowners whose mortgage has already been modified under the Home Affordable Modification Program are now eligible for increased benefits as the government continues its push to aid struggling homeowners.

Under the modified HAMP guidelines, announced Thursday in a joint statement by the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, all homeowners in the HAMP program will now be eligible to earn an additional $5,000 in the sixth year of their modification.

Prior to the change, homeowners in the HAMP program were eligible to earn up to $5,000 over the first five years of their modification, which is applied in repayment of their outstanding principal balance.

The newly established guidelines will provide an additional $5,000 to borrowers in the sixth year, which will allow borrowers to reduce their outstanding principal balance by as much as $10,000.

Read on.

Special Inspector General of the Troubled Asset Relief Program report: Homeowners lost in the shuffle

RefinBlog:

The Special Inspector General of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP) issued a report, Homeowners Can Get Lost in the Shuffle And Suffer Harm When Their Servicer Transfers Their Mortgage But Not the HAMP Application or Modification, that highlights some of the structural problems in the servicing industry. The report notes, for instance, that, “Homeowner calls to SIGTARP’s Hotline about difficulties experienced in HAMP as a result of mortgages being transferred from one servicer to another have persisted throughout the life of the program and have escalated in the last year.” (1) This is just the most recent reminder that servicing transfers continue to be a major source of trouble for homeowners.

SIGTARP concludes,

Given the scale of the reported problems related to transfers to new servicers, and the potentially serious harm to struggling homeowners who need relief from HAMP, Treasury must be aggressive and swift in sending the message to servicers that Treasury will not tolerate harm to homeowners in HAMP from servicing transfers. HAMP is five years old, and servicers have had ample time to understand the rules and to follow them. Treasury should no longer tolerate a failure to follow HAMP rules. Treasury should report on violations publicly, and permanently withhold incentive payments from servicers that do not comply with HAMP rules on transfers. (12)

HAMP limitations frustrate homeowners trying to avoid foreclosure

Pat Cupido’s biggest wish last Christmas was to keep the three-bedroom ranch house where she had lived for 50 years.

Cupido and her husband refinanced their home in Jefferson Hills 11 years ago to pay off debts and help their daughters financially. But they couldn’t keep up with the $1,800 monthly payments when Cupido lost her civilian job with the Army Reserve.

She recalls discussing options the day after Christmas with her attorney and a representative from Atlanta-based Ocwen Loan Servicing, which handled her mortgage. At one point, she said, her attorney asked about the federal Home Affordable Modification Program.

“‘Billions of dollars were given to the banks to help people like her,’ ” Cupido, 71, remembered her attorney telling the representative.

But Cupido was disappointed to hear that the program known by its acronym, HAMP, couldn’t help. She and her husband, living on Social Security, did not qualify because their income is too high. Months behind on mortgage payments, they needed help to save their home.

Read more: http://triblive.com/business/headlines/6659825-74/hamp-program-mortgage#ixzz3ChQkRmpm
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Homeowner Program Faces Mounting Application Backlog

The Obama administration’s signature program to aid struggling homeowners has hit another speed bump: The mortgage companies processing applications can’t keep up with demand.

More than 221,000 applications to the Home Affordable Modification Program were waiting to be processed by mortgage servicers at the end of May, according to a government report scheduled for release Wednesday. That is up from a backlog of 133,649 unprocessed applications at the end of November.

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Wells Fargo sued in a False Claim Act

MANHATTAN – Wells Fargo Bank wrongfully took more than $690 million from Uncle Sam, through false statements in the Home Affordable Modification Problem, and kept $222 million of it for itself, a legal assistant/relator says in a False Claims Act complaint in Federal Court.

 Source: Courthouse News

Wells Fargo Hit With $1B Whistleblower Suit Over HAMP

Case Title

ABC v. DEF

Case Number

1:13-cv-01460

Court

New York Southern

Nature of Suit

Other Statutory Actions

Judge

Laura Taylor Swain

Law360, Los Angeles (July 08, 2014, 10:54 PM ET) — Wells Fargo Bank NA has been slapped with a False Claims Act whistleblower suit seeking more than $1 billion in damages over allegations that the bank falsely certified that it was in full compliance with relevant laws in a Home Affordable Modification Program servicer agreement, according to court documents made public Tuesday.

In a complaint unsealed June 17, relator Michael J. Fisher — who assisted attorneys in processing home loan modifications via Wells Fargo and other servicers from 2008-12 — claimed the bank falsely certified on…

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SunTrust pays $320M to resolve HAMP violations

SunTrust Mortgage (STI) agreed to pay $320 million to resolve the criminal investigation into the company’s Home Affordable Modification Program by the U.S. Department of Justice.

According to the DOJ, SunTrust misled numerous mortgage servicing customers who sought mortgage relief through HAMP.

“Specifically, SunTrust made material misrepresentations and omissions to borrowers in HAMP solicitations, and failed to process HAMP applications in a timely fashion,” the report said.

“This resolution will provide much-needed restitution for victims,” said Attorney General Eric Holder. “It will make available substantial funds to help other homeowners avoid foreclosure. And it will result in the kinds of systemic changes needed to ensure that this will not happen again.”

Read on.

Link

Obama administration reveals plan to jump-start housing, extends HAMP to 2016

Obama administration reveals plan to jump-start housing, extends HAMP to 2016

Speaking Thursday at the Making Home Affordable five-year anniversary summit, U.S. Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew announced several initiatives designed to spur the flailing housing market.

Lew identified three specific issues that are holding back housing in the United States and announced plans to address each of those issues.

Citing the lack of private capital in the market, the dearth of affordable rental options and the abundance of Americans who are facing foreclosure or are underwater on their mortgages, Lew announced three new plans:

  • The extension of the Making Home Affordable program until “at least December 31, 2016”
  • A plan to expand access to credit by working to revive the private-label mortgage-backed securities market
  • A new partnership between the Treasury and theDepartment of Housing and Urban Developmentto build new, affordable rental housing
Link

JPMorgan, Homeowners Settle In Mortgage Modification MDL

JPMorgan, Homeowners Settle In Mortgage Modification MDL

Case Information

Case Title

Durmic et al v. J.P. Morgan Chase Bank, NA

Case Number

1:10-cv-10380

Court

Massachusetts

Nature of Suit

Contract: Other

Judge

Richard G. Stearns

Law360, Los Angeles (May 28, 2014, 9:20 PM ET) — A Massachusetts federal judge on Wednesday preliminarily approved a settlement deal between JPMorgan Chase Bank NA and a class of mortgage loan borrowers who said the bank breached mortgage modification agreements under the federal Home Affordable Modification Program, tentatively resolving the long-running multidistrict litigation.

The agreement, which was reached May 14 after extensive, arm’s length settlement negotiations, would end claims brought by class representatives Virginia and Theodore Luscinski on behalf of the settlement class in the heavily litigated MDL. The plaintiffs alleged that JPMorgan failed to…