A
group of homeowners who sued the nation's fourth-biggest bank and the
real estate firm Long & Foster real estate failed to prove that
Wells Fargo funneled referral fees to Long & Foster, a Maryland jury
found last Friday.
The verdict ended a class-action lawsuit filed
in 2007 with the U.S. District Court in Baltimore by homeowners who
obtained mortgages from Prosperity Mortgage, an entity the homeowners
alleged that Wells Fargo and Long & Foster formed to facilitate the
collection of fees and payments.
Wells Fargo solicited loan
originations from Long & Foster by promising that the real estate
firm could collect additional funds for loan applications it referred to
the bank, according to the lawsuit.
Both companies denied the allegations.
"We
thought it was a very unfair lawsuit to begin with and we clearly feel
vindicated that we were doing it the right way," Tim Wilson, a Long
& Foster spokesman, told American Banker. "Our customers are getting great service, and we think the jury affirmed that."
A Wells Fargo spokesman did not respond to a request for comment. Lawyers for the homeowners also did not respond to a request for comment.
For
their part, the homeowners alleged that Wells Fargo and Long &
Foster overcharged them for fees attributable to Prosperity Mortgage
that instead were split between the companies in violation of the Real
Estate Settlement Procedures Act, which governs information about the
cost of mortgage settlement that lenders provide to borrowers.
Denise
Minter, a homeowner from Baltimore who settled on her house in 2006,
charged that Long & Foster required her to use Prosperity as her
lender and that at closing, Wells Fargo, which funded her loan, withheld
$945 in fees that the bank and realtor later divided between
themselves.
Jason and Rachel Alborough made similar charges in
connection with a home purchase in 2007 they said required them to pay
$777 in allegedly illegal fees, while Lizbeth Binks alleged she paid
$2,382 in fees attributable to Prosperity that were later divided
between Wells Fargo and Long & Foster.
The borrowers charged
that paperwork they received in connection with their loan originations
misled them about the services Prosperity provided.
I wonder.. hmmmm... how much was paid to the jurors and court to swallow this one from Wells? A court case since 2007 (6 years) and they couldn't of found these answers sooner.. I smell a RAT! Wells Fargo didn't fund these loans back than and they damn well know it, INVESTORS funded these loans.. you know the ones Wells Fargo.. you kept their money .
wow -- Wells Fargo is just criminal thank you
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