Finding Pooling and Servicing Agreements is Key to Killing Your Foreclosure Case!
Individual mortgages originated by lenders like New Century and Argent were pooled into groups of approximately 8,000 mortgages from around the country to form a Mortgage Trust which held mortgages which had (on paper at least) cumulative values of between 10-12 million dollars. These mortgages that were grouped together and given a name like “HSI ASSETT SECURITIZATION CORPORATION TRUST 2006-OPT2″. Interests in these mortgage trusts were then sold to teachers unions, investment funds and other institutional sources around the world. Before selling the interests in these trusts, the institutional investors were required to prepare the contract that would govern the rights between the depositor of the mortgages, trustee of the new trust and the company that would be responsible for collecting payments from homeowners and sending those payments out to those who had invested in the trust. This contract is called the Pooling and Servicing Agreement. The important thing about the Pooling and Servicing Agreement is you will find in virtually every case that all of the parties who are involved violate nearly every provision of their own Pooling and Servicing Agreement. This has important consequences that we will talk more about later, but the Securities and Exchange Commission rules requires these trusts to provide important other reporting information that was widely ignored or worse, falsified by the entities in control of these trusts. Finding such information can be a key to defending your case.
The Securities and Exchange Commission Edgar Database can be found here. You can also put the name of your Frakenstein, Alphabet Soup Trust into quotes, “The IXIX 2006-A Trust” into a straight google search and see what comes up. Here are Step-By-Step instructions:
Finding Pooling And Servicing Agreements (PSA’s)
For Securitized Mortgage Loans
The ” Pooling and Servicing Agreement” is the legal document that contains the
responsibilities and rights of the servicer, the trustee, and others over a pool of mortgage
loans. The Pooling and Servicing Agreement can be a stand-alone document or it can be
part of another paper, usually called the ” Prospectus.” If the securitization is public,
these documents must be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and
will be available to the public at www.sec.gov. Locating a Pooling and Servicing
Agreement on the SEC website can be a challenge. The most important information you will
need to find the Pooling and Servicing
Agreement is the name of the original lender and the title of the pool of loans. We will
work through an example below. Assume that the lender is Ameriquest Mortgage Co.
We don’t know the name of the pool that the homeowner’s mortgage ended up in, but we
do know that the mortgage was made on June 1, 2002.
Step One:
Go to www.sec.gov and click on ” Search for Company Filings” under ” Filing & Forms
(EDGAR).” Under ” General-Purpose Searches,” click on ” Companies & other filers.”
Then, in the ” Enter your search information” box, type in ” Ameriquest” next to ” Company name” and click on the ” Find Companies” button.
Step Two:
The page you are now looking at shows a long list of the names of securitized pools of
loans. We know the mortgage was made on June 1, 2002. Look for the entry titled
” AMERIQUEST MORT SEC INC ASS BK PAS THR CERTS SER 2002 2.” The
document number is CIK 0001175125. Click on that number. We selected this entry
because it said 2002 on it and the loan in question was made in 2002. There may be
several other pools of mortgage loans that Ameriquest securitized in 2002 but this is the
first one we come to on this list (when reviewed in late February 2007) so we will pull it
up.
Step Three:
Now you see a list of documents filed with the SEC that are related to this pool of loans.
Scroll down to the bottom and you will see a document titled ” Prospectus.” This is the
document that will likely be the one you want, assuming that the mortgage loan you are
concerned about is in this pool. We can only make an educated guess, unless you know
the name of the securitized pool in advance (which is unlikely). Click on either ” htm or text”
next to this document and the Prospectus will appear. Now,
bookmark this document on your web browser, so you can come back to it easily in the future.
Step Four
Is this likely to be the document you want? Scroll down to page S-2 and you will see a
Table of Contents. Included in that is the ” Pooling and Servicing Agreement” which
starts on page S-76. Also, scroll down one more page, past the Table of Contents, and
you will see a ” Summary of Prospectus Supplement.” Certain important information is
listed there, including the cut-off and closing dates for loans that will be included in this
pool. The closing date is June 7, 2002. Based on this information, you can assume that
this document governs the responsibilities of the servicer of the mortgage loan in
question, unless that servicer tells you otherwise and can back it up with a reference to a
different agreement or pool. Other important information listed in this Summary includes
the title of the pool, and the
identity of the servicer and trustee. The servicing rights may have been sold since this
document was filed and the current servicer may be a different company but the trustee
(the legal holder of the mortgage) should be accurate.
Step Five:
Go the Pooling and Servicing Agreement to find what you need to know. It should
describe how the servicer is paid and by how much, who keeps late and other fees, what
authority it has to modify the loan or engage in workouts with homeowners, and its
obligations to pass mortgage payments on to the trustee.
Some of the best information I get comes from intrepid consumer researchers out there who care enough to dig into these things. Perhaps the most powerful thing about this and other online forums is the ability for consumers and advocates to share what they’ve found. In my estimation, what this pro-se Defendant found is enough to blow the lid off his foreclosure case…..read on:
I was served Lis Pendens last month, (April 2010), naming the plaintiff Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, As Trustee for HSI ASSETT SECURITIZATION CORPORATION TRUST 2006-OPT2 MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-OPT2
I looked into the records for that entity in the SEC EDGAR online database and discovered that the last annual report was filed in 2007, contemporaneously with a FORM 15 filing.That Form 15 filing claimed a standing under 15d-6 of the 1934 SEC regulations which exempts the entity of filing an annual report, whereby the number of claimed investors had fallen below the SEC registration and reporting threshold of 300 persons. ( To my understanding, the same Form 15 filing is also used when a registered, reporting, entity is dissolved.)
I then began looking at many other securitized trusts in the EDGAR database. Literally dozens and dozens of these securitized trusts have done exactly the same thing. he trust is established and appropriate SEC documents are filed for a period of time, usually 1 or 2 years. The trust then files a Form 15 claiming exemption of the obligation to file reports with the SEC under 15d-6
The paper trail for the Trust with the SEC thereby *ends* Many of these trusts have not filed anything with the SEC for years. Many as far back as 2005 and 2006
Some of the SEC Form 15d-6 filings disclosed as few as 15 or less investors. Bear in mind, these are for trusts that purportedly hold well over $1 BILLION in mortgages, and there are dozens and dozens of these trusts with a mere hand full of investors! I also noted that the ” agent of record” of many of these trusts have changed many times, and are very infrequently ” named”, but list only an address and phone number, (usually in New York). In several of the cases I’ve looked at in the EDGAR database, I actually called some of the phone number listed at 3:00am EST and got the voicemail of someone at a bank in N.Y. Note that the answering party was NEVER a bank listed as the Trustee, (as Deutsche Bank is in my case), or the trust ” administrator” as listed in the PSA or any subsequent SEC filings.
I actually got the voicemail of some fellow at HSBC Bank who was the ” anonymous” contact in my case! My point is this;
Has anyone actually verified that the securitized trusts claimed to be under the trusteeship of some of these banks still ACTUALLY EXIST?
We’ve been so focused on the NOTE and the fraudulent paper being
slung about for assignment of those notes, and whether or not the ”
plaintiff” has standing to bring the foreclosure action, has anyone
thought to see if the ” plaintiff trust” is even still active or not?
Were many of these trusts actually dissolved after
payouts from credit default swaps and TARP funds and the actual
investors now long gone? We have no records to show whether they are
alive or dead. Most of these trusts haven’t filed anything with anyone in years as far as I can tell.
Certainly, as in my case, Deutsche Bank, (as Trustee), still exists, but can these plaintiff securitized trusts be made to *prove* they still exist?
No comments:
Post a Comment