Merscorp Lacks Right to Transfer Mortgages, Judge Says
By Thom Weidlich - Feb 14, 2011 3:02 PM ET (Corrects to show parties would come before the judge to lift the automatic ban in 20th paragraph.)Merscorp Inc., operator of the electronic-registration systemthat contains about half of all U.S. home mortgages, has no right to transfer the mortgages under its membership rules, a judge said.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert E. Grossman in Central Islip, New York, in a decision he said he knew would have a significant impact, wrote that the membership rules of the companys Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, or MERS, dont make it an agent of the banks that own the mortgages.
MERSs theory that it can act as a common agent for undisclosed principals is not supported by the law, Grossman wrote in a Feb. 10 opinion. MERS did not have authority, as nominee or agent, to assign the mortgage absent a showing that it was given specific written directions by its principal.
Merscorp was created in 1995 to improve servicing after county offices couldnt deal with the flood of mortgage transfers, Karmela Lejarde, a spokeswoman for MERS, said in an interview last year.The company tracks servicing rights and ownership interests in mortgage loans on its electronic registry, allowing banks to buy and sell the loans without having to record the transfer with the county. It played a major role in Wall Streets ability to quickly bundle mortgages together in securitized trusts.
MERS was still reviewing Grossmans decision and didnt have an immediate comment, Lejarde said in an e-mail Feb. 11. Lejarde didnt immediately respond to an e-mail seeking comment today.
Proper Status
Dont come around here no more, is basically the message to MERS, said April Charney, a senior attorney with Jacksonville Area Legal Aid in Jacksonville, Florida. The judge basically deconstructed MERS and said theres no possible way in any case you can come in and show you have this appropriate proper status to transfer the note.MERS and its partners made the decision to create and operateunder a business model that was designed in large part to avoid the requirements of the traditional mortgage-recording process,Grossman wrote. The court does not accept the argument that because MERS may be involved with 50 percent of all residential mortgages in the country, that is reason enough for this court to turn a blind eye to the fact that this process does not comply with the law.
Automatic Shield
In the case Grossman ruled on, Credit Suisse Group AGs Select Portfolio Servicing, a mortgage servicer, sought to bypass the automatic shield against legal claims triggered by Ferrel L. Agards filing for personal bankruptcy in September.Select Portfolio wanted permission to foreclose on Agards home in Westbury, New York, on behalf of U.S. Bancorps U.S. Bank unit, the trustee for the mortgage-backed trust the home loan was in. The house is worth about $350,000 and the mortgage amount was $536,921, according to the decision.
Grossman ruled in favor of Select Portfolio because he couldnt overrule a November 2008 foreclosure judgment the servicer won in state court, he said. Without that state-court ruling, Select Portfolio wouldnt have had the right to bring its motion,Grossman said.
He then addressed whether a mortgage transfer by MERS is valid, because MERSs role in the ownership and transfer of real-property notes and mortgages is at issue in dozens of cases before this court, including those where there have been no prior dispositive state-court decisions, he wrote.
Original Lender
Select Portfolio argued in part that MERSs February 2008 assignment of the mortgage to U.S. Bank was valid because Agard agreed that MERS would hold title to it for the original lender, Bank of America Corp.s First Franklin, and for whichever banks it was further assigned to. First Franklin transferred the promissory note the mortgage secured to Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.s Aurora Bank and Aurora to U.S. Bank, according to the decision.An adverse ruling regarding MERSs authority to assign mortgages or act on behalf of its member/lenders could have asignificant impact on MERS and upon the lenders which do business with MERS throughout the United States, Grossman wrote. It is up to the legislative branch, if it chooses, to amend the current statutes to confer upon MERS the requisite authority to assign mortgages under its current business practices.
MERS intervened in the case and argued that Agards mortgage, the terms of its membership agreement and New York state law gave it the authority to assign the mortgage. MERS says it holds title to mortgages for its members as both nominee and mortgagee of record.
Select Portfolio
Grossman said Select Portfolio had to show that U.S. Bank owned both the note and the mortgage, and there was no evidence that it held the note. The judge disagreed with Select Portfolios argument that U.S. Bank held the note because the note follows the mortgage, which it said U.S. Bank owned.By MERSs own account, the note in this case was transferred among its members, while the mortgage remained in MERSs name, Grossman wrote. MERS admits that the very foundation of its business model as described herein requires that the note and mortgage travel on divergent paths.
The judge said that the membership agreement wasnt enough to assign the mortgage and that to do so the lender would have to give power of attorney or similar authority to MERS.
MERSs membership rules dont create an agency or nominee relationship and dont clearly grant MERS authority to take any action with respect to mortgages, including transferring them,Grossman wrote. Because the interests at issue concern real property -- land and buildings -- under state law, any transfer has to be in writing, which isnt done under the MERS system, he said.
Nominee Status
Without more, this court finds that MERSs nominee status and the rights bestowed upon MERS within the mortgage itself, are insufficient to empower MERS to effectuate a valid assignment of mortgage, the judge wrote. MERSs position that it can be boththe mortgagee and an agent of the mortgagee is absurd, at best.Grossman said parties coming to him to seek to lift the automatic ban on legal claims in cases involving MERS will have to show they own both the mortgage and the note.
The case is In re Agard, 10-77338, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Eastern District of New York Central Islip).
To contact the reporter on this story: Thom Weidlich in Brooklyn, New York, federal court attweidlich@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: John Pickering at jpickering@bloomberg.net.
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